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

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or whether it kepeth still any percell vnhurte from whense doo growe good desires They that do attribute to the First grace of God that we wil effectually seme on the other side to saye secretly that there is in the soule a power of it selfe to aspire to good but it is so weake that it can not growe to a perfecte affection or rayse vp any endeuour And there is no doubte that the Schoolemen haue commonly embraced this opinion or which was borowed of Origen and certaine of the olde wryters for so muche as they are wont to consider man in pure naturall thinges as they terme it suche a one as the Apostle describeth hym in these wordes I doe not the good that I would but the euell that I would not that I doe To will is present vnto me but to performe it I finde not But after this maner is the discourse that Paule there followeth altogether wrongfully peruerted For he entreateth of the Christian wrastling whiche he shortly toucheth to the Galatians whiche the faithfull continually fele within them selues in the battel of the flesh and the spirit But the spirit is not of nature but of regeneration And that the Apostle doeth there speake of the regenerate appeareth by this that whē he had said that there dwelleth no goodnesse in him he addeth an exposition that he meaneth it of his fleshe And therfore he saith that it is not he that doeth the euill but sinne that dwelleth in him What meaneth this correction in me that is in my flesh Euen as muche as if he had sayd thus God dwelleth not in me of my selfe for there is no good to be founde in my fleshe Hereupō foloweth that maner of excuse I my self do not the euil ▪ but sinne that dwelleth in me Whiche excuse belongeth only to the regenerate whiche do with the chiefe part of their soule tende vnto good Nowe the conclusion that is adioyned after declareth all this matter euidently I am delited saith he with the lawe according to the inward man But I see an other lawe in my membres fighting against the lawe of my minde Who hath suche a stryuing in him selfe but he that being regenerate by the spirite of God carieth the leauinges of his flesh about with him Therfore Augustine wheras ones he had thought that that had ben spoken of the nature of man reuoked his expositiō as false and ill agreyng together And truelie if we allowe this that menne without grace haue some motions to good though thei be but small what shall we aunswere to the Apostle whiche sayeth that we are not sufficient so muche as to thinke any thyng What shall wee aunswere to the Lorde that pronounceth by Moses that euery inuention of mans hearte is only euell Wherefore sithe they haue stombled by false takyng of one place there is no cause why we shuld staye vpon their iudgement Let rather this sayeng of Christe preuayle He that doeth sinne is the seruaunt of sinne We are all sinners by nature therefore we be all holden vnder the yoke of sinne Nowe yf whole manne be subiect to the dominiō of sinne then must it needes be that the will it selfe which is the chiefe seate thereof ▪ be bounde faste wyth moste streight bondes For otherwise that sayeng of Paule wold not stande together that it is God whyche worketh will in vs if any will did goe before the grace of the holy ghost Awaye therefore with all that many haue triftingly spoken concernyng preparation For although sometime the faithfull doe praye to haue their heart formed to the obedience of the lawe as Dauid doth in many places yet it is to be noted that euen that desire of prayeng is from God Whiche we may gather of his wordes for when he wisheth to haue a cleane heart created within him surely he taketh not on him selfe the beginnyng of creation Therefore let rather this sayeng of Augustine haue place with vs God will preuent thee in all thinges And sometime preuent thou his wrath Howe Confesse that thou haste all these thinges of God that what so euer good thou haste is of him what soeuer euell it is of thy selfe And a little after Nothing is oures but sinne The third Chapter ¶ That out of the corrupt nature of man procedeth nothing but damnable BUt manne can not be any waye better knowen in eyther parte of his soule than yf he come forth with his titles wherewith the Scripture doth set him out If he bee paynted whole in these woordes of Christe That whiche is borne of fleshe is fleshe as it is easy to proue then is he proued to bee a very miserable creature For the affection of the fleshe as the Apostle witnesseth is death for asmuche as it is enimitie agaynste God and so is not subiecte nor can be subiecte to the lawe of God Is fleshe so peruerse that with al her affection she continually vseth enmitie agaynste God that she can not agree with the rightousnesse of the lawe of God Finally that she can bryng forth nothing but matter of death Nowe graunt that in the nature of manne is nothy●yge but fleshe and gather any good out of it yf thou canste But they saye the name of fleshe belongeth onely to the sensuall and not the hyer par●e of the soule But that is sufficiently confuted by the woordes of Chryste and of the Apostle It is the Lordes argumente that manne muste bee borne agayne bycause he is fleshe He commaundeth not to bee borne agayne accordynge to the bodye But in mynde he is not borne agayne yf a parte of it bee amended but when it is all renewed And that doth the comparison sette in bothe places confirme For the spirite is so compared agaynste the fleshe that there is lefte no meane thynge betwene them Therefore whatsoeuer is not spirituall in mā is after the same reason called fleshly But we haue nothynge of the Spirite but by regeneration It is therefore fleshe whatsoeuer we haue of nature But of that matter if otherwise we coulde haue any doubte that is taken awaye from vs by Paule where after we had described the ould●man whom he had saide to be corrupt with concup●scences of erroure he biddeth vs to be renewed in the spirite of oure minde you see he doth not place vnlawefull and euell lustes onely in the sensitiue part but also in the very minde and therefore requyreth a renuinge of it And truly a lyttle before he had painted oute suche an image of mans nature as did shewe that there was no part wherein we were not corrupted and peruerted for whereas he writeth that al nations do walke in the vanitie of their minde are darkened in vnderstāding estrāged from the life of God by reason of the ignoraunce that is in them and the blindenesse of their hearte it is no doubt that this is spoken of all them whom the Lorde hathe not reformed
without the directyng grace praieth God to create a newe heart within hym to renewe a righte spirite within his bowelles doeth he not acknowledge that all the partes of his heart are full of vnclennesse and hys spirite writhen wyth croked peruersenesse and in callynge the cleannesse whyche he prayeth for the creature of God doeth he not attribute it wholly to God But yf anye manne take exception and saye that the verye prayer is a token of a godly and holy affection oure aunswere is ready that though Dauid were by that time somewhat come to amendement yet doeth he still compare his firste state with that sorrowefull fall that he had felte Therefore takyng vpon hym the person of a manne enstranged from God he for good cause prayeth to haue geuen hym all these thynges that God geueth to his electe in regeneration And so beyng like a dead manne he wisheth hym selfe to bee created of newe that of the bondeslaue of Satan he maye bee made the instrumente of the holyghoste Maruellous and monstrous surely is the luste of our pryde God requyreth nothyng more earnestly than that wee should moste religiously kepe his Sabbat that is in resting from our owne workes but of vs nothyng is more hardly obteyned than bidding our owne workes farewell to geue due place to the workes of God If sluggishnesse hindered not Christe hath geuen testimonie euident enough of his graces to make them not to bee enuiously suppressed I am sayeth he the Uine you bee the branches My Father is a husbandeman As the branche can not beare fruite of it selfe vnlesse it abide in the Uine no more can you vnlesse you abide in me For without me you can do nothyng If we beare fruite none otherwise than a braunche buddeth beyng plucked out of the grounde and without moysture we neede no more to seke what is the aptnesse of our nature to goodnesse And this is a playne cōclusion Without me ye can do nothing He doeth not saye that we are to weake to be sufficiēt for our selues but in bryngyng vs to nothyng he excludeth all opinion of power be it neuer so little If we beyng graffed in Christe beare fruite lyke a Uine whiche taketh her efficacie of liuelinesse both from the moisture of the earth and from the deaw of heauen and from the cherishyng of the sonne I see nothinge remayne for vs in doyng a good worke yf we kepe whole for God that whyche is his That fonde suttle deuise is alledged in vayne that there is a iuyce already enclosed wythin the branche and a certayne power to bryng forth frute and that therefore it taketh not all from the earth or from the firste roote bycause it bringeth somewhat of her owne For Christe doeth meane nothing els but that we are a drye sticke and nothing worth when we be seuered from him bicause by our selues beyng separate we haue no power to doe well as also in an other place he sayeth Euery tree that my father hath not plāted shal be rooted vp Wherfore the Apostle ascribeth all the whole vnto him in the place alredy alleged It is God sayth he that worketh in vs bothe to will and to performe The firste parte of a good worke is will the seconde is a stronge endeuour in doyng it the authour of bothe is God Therefore we steale it from God if we take to our selues any thinge eyther in will or in effectuall workyng If it were sayde that God doth help our weake will then somewhat were lefte for vs. But when it is sayde that he maketh will nowe all the good that is in it is set out of vs. And bicause the good will is yet still oppressed with weight of our fleshe that it can not rise vp He sayde further that to ouercome the hardenesse of that battell there is ministred vnto vs stedfastnesse of endeuour euen to the effect For otherwise it coulde not stande together whyche he teacheth in an other place that it is God alone that bryngeth to effect all thynges in all wherein we haue before taught that the whole course of spirituall life is comprehended For whyche reason Dauid after he had prayed to haue the wayes of the Lorde opened vnto hym that he mighte walke in his trueth by and by addeth Unite thou my heart to feare thy name In whyche wordes he signifieth that euen they that are well minded are subiecte to so many withdrawynges of minde that they easily vanish or fal awaye if they bee not stablisshed to constantie For whiche reason in an other place after he had prayed to haue his steppes directed to kepe the worde of God he requireth also to haue strength geuen him to fight Lette not any iniquitie sayeth he beare rule ouer me After this sorte therefore doeth the Lorde bothe beginne and ende good worke in vs that it maye all be his worke that wil conceyueth a loue of that whiche is right that it is enclined to the desire thereof that it is stirred vp and moued to endeuour of followyng it And then that our choyse desire ▪ and endeuour fainte not but do procede euen to the effecte laste of all that manne goeth forward constantly in them and continueth to the ende And he moueth the will not in suche sorte as hath in many ages ben taught and beleued that it is afterwarde in our choyse eyther to obeye or withstande the motion but wyth mightyly strengthnyng it Therefore that muste bee reiected whyche Chrysostome so ofte repeteth whome he draweth he draweth beyng willyng Wherby he secretly teacheth that God doeth only reache out his hande to see yf wee will be holpen by his ayde We graunte that suche was the state of manne whyle he yet stoode that he might bowe to eyther parte But sithe he hath taught by his example howe miserable is freewill vnlesse God bothe will and can in vs what shall become of vs yf he geue vs his grace accordyng to that small proportion But rather wee dooe obscure and extenuate it with our vnthankefulnesse For the Apostle doeth not teache that the grace of a good will is offred vs yf we doe accepte it but that he will performe it in vs whiche is nothyng els but that the Lorde by his spirite dothe direct howe and gouerne our heart and reigneth in it as in his owne possession Neyther doeth he promise by Ezechiel that he will geue to the electe a newe spirite onely for this ende that they maye be able to walke in his commaundementes but to make them walke in deede Neyther can Christes sayeng euery one that hath hearde of my Father cometh to me be otherwyse taken than to teache that the grace of God is effectuall of it selfe as Augustine also affirmeth Whyche grace God vouchesaueth not to geue to all menne generally without regarde as that sayeng as I thynke of Occam is commonly spoken among the people that it denieth nothyng to hym that doeth what lieth in him
it was drawen to those signes whiche had a reuerende representation of hie and spiritual thinges Which Augustine also noteth in one place It were long sayth he to dispute of the diuersitie of signes which when they perteine to diuine thinges are called Sacramentes Now of this definitiō which we haue set we vnderstande that a Sacrament is neuer without a promise going before it but rather is adioined as a certaine addition hanging to it to this ende that it should confirme and seale the promise it selfe and make it more approued vnto vs yea after a certaine maner ratified Which meane the Lord foreseeth to be nedefull first for our ignorance and dullnesse and thē for our weaknesse and yet to speake properly not so much to cōfirme his holy word as to stablish vs in the Faith therof For the truth of God is by it selfe sounde and certaine enough and can not frō any other where receiue better confirmation than from it selfe But our Faith as it is smal and weake vnlesse it be stayed on euery side and be by al meanes vpholden is by and by shaken wauereth staggereth yea and fainteth And herein verily the mercifull Lorde according to his great tender kindnesse tempereth himselfe to our capacitie that whereas we be naturall men which alway creping vpon the grounde and sticking fast in the flesh dooe not thinke nor so much as cōceiue any spiritual thing he vouchesaueth euen by these earthly elementes to guide vs vnto himselfe and in the fleshe it selfe to set fourth a mirror of spirituall good thinges For if we were vnbodily as Chrysostome sayth he would haue geuen vs the very same thinges naked and vnbodily Now because we haue soules putte within bodies he geueth spirituall thinges vnder visible thinges Not because there are suche giftes planted in the natures of the thinges which are set fourth to vs in the Sacramentes but because they were signed by God to this signification And this is it which they cōmonly say that a Sacramēt cōsisteth of the word the outward signe For we must vnderstande the worde to be not that which being whispered wtout meaning Faith with onely noise as it were with a magical enchauntment hath power to cōsecrate the element but which being preached maketh vs to vnderstande what the visible signe meaneth Therfore that which was vsually done vnder the tyrānie of the Pope was not without a great profaning of the mysteries For they thought it inough if the Prest while the people stode amasedly gazing at it without vnderstanding did mumble vp the forme of consecration Yea they of set purpose prouided this that no whit of doctrine shoulde thereof come to the people for they spake all thinges in Latine before vnlearned men Afterwarde superstitiō brake out so farr that they beleued that the consecration was not formally made vnlesse it were with a hoarse whispering sounde which fewe might heare But Augustine teacheth farr otherwise of the Sacramental worde Let the word sayth he be added to the element and there shal be made a Sacramēt For whense cometh this so great strength to the water to touch the body and washe the soule but by the word making it not because it is spoken but because it is beleued For in the very worde it selfe the sounde which passeth is one thing and the power whiche abideth is an other This is the worde of Faith which we preach sayth the Apostle Wherevpon in the Actes of the Apostles it is said by Faith cleansing their hartes And Peter the Apostle sayth So Baptisme also saueth vs not the putting away of the filthinesse of the flesh but the examination of a good cōscience This is the worde of Faith which we preach by which without dout that it may be able to cleanse Baptisme also is halowed You se how it riquireth preaching wherupō Faith may growe And we nede not to trauaile much in profe hereof forasmuch as it is clere what Christ did what he commaunded vs to do what the Apostles folowed what the purer Chirch obserued Yea euen from the beginning of the world it is knowen that so oft as God offred any signe to the holy Fathers there was added an vnseparable knot of doctrine without which our senses should be made amased with bare beholding Therfore whē we heare mention made of the Sacramental worde let vs vnderstand the promise which being with a loude voice preached of the minister may leade the people thether as it were by the hande whether the signe tendeth and directeth vs. Neither are some to be heard which trauail to fight against this with a doble horned argument rather suttle than sounde Either say they we know or we knowe not that the worde of God which goeth before the Sacrament is the true will of God If we knowe it then we learne no new thing of the Sacrament which foloweth after If we know it not then neither wil the Sacramente teach it whoe 's whole force standeth in the worde Wherunto let this brefely be for an answere that the seales which are hanged at patentes and other publike instrumentes takē by themselues are nothing forasmuche as they shoulde be hanged in vaine if the parchemente had nothing written in it yet they doe not therefore not confirme and seale that which is written when they be added to writinges Neither can they say that this similitude is lately fayned by vs whiche Paule himselfe vsed calling Circumcisiō a seale where he purposely trauaileth to proue that Circumcision was not righteousnesse to Abraham but a sealyng of that couenaunte by faith whereof he had alredy ben iustified before And what I beseche you is there that may muche offende any man if we teache that the promise is sealed with Sacramentes when of the promises themselues it is euidente that one is confirmed with an other For as euery one is manifester so is it more fit to vpholde faith But the Sacramētes do both bring most clere promises and haue this peculiar more than the worde that they liuely represent them to vs as it wer painted out in a table Neither ought that distinction any thing to moue vs which is wont to be obiected betwene Sacramentes and seales of patentes that wheras both consist of carnall elementes of this world those can not suffice or be mete to seale the promises of God which are spirituall and euerlasting as these are wont to be hāged to for sealing of the grauntes of Princes concerning fading and fraile thinges For a faithfull man when the Sacramentes are pr●sente before his eyes sticketh not in that fleshly sighte but by those degrees of proportion whiche I haue spoken of he riseth vp with godly consideration to the hie mysteries which lie hidden in the Sacramentes And sith the Lord calleth his promises couenantes and his Sacramentes seales of couenantes a similitude may wel be brought frō the couenantes of men What can a sowe killed worke if wordes were not vsed
disciples ▪ Althoughe they be vexed with extreme madnesse yet I thynke they are not caryed with suche gyddinesse that they dare so boast But what maner of spirite dyd he speake of in his promise euen that spirite whiche shoulde not speake of it selfe but shulde mynister and inspire into their myndes those thynges whyche he the Lorde hymselfe hadde taught by his woorde It is not therfore the office of the spirite whyche is promised vs to fayne newe and vnhearde of reuelations or to coyne a newe kynde of doctrine wherby we shuld be led from the receiued doctrine of the gospell but to seale in our mindes the selfe same doctrine that is commended vnto vs by the gospell Wherby we playnly vnderstand that we ought right studiously to apply the redyng hearyng of the scripture if we list to take any vse and fruite of the spirite of God As also Peter praiseth their diligence that are hedefull to the doctrine of the Prophetes which yet myght seme to haue geuen place after the risyng of the light of the gospell On the other syde yf any spirite leauynge the wysedome of the worde of God doth thrust vnto vs an other doctrine that the same spirite ought rightfully to be suspected of vanitie and lyenge For what when Sathan transformeth hymselfe into ●n aungell of lyght what credite shall the holy ghoste haue among vs if it be not seuerally knowen by some assured marke And truely it hath been playnly poynted oute vnto vs by the woorde of the Lorde but that these miserable men doo wyllyngly couete to erre to their owne destruction while thei seeke a spirite rather from them selues than from him But say they it is dishonorable that the spirite of God whom all thynges ought to obey should be subiect to the scripture As if this were a dishonour to the holy ghost to be euery where egall and lyke to it selfe to agree with it self in all thynges and no where to varye In deede if it were to be tried by the rule either of men or of angels or any others rule whatsoeuer then it myght well be thought that it were brought into obedience or if ye lyst so to terme it into bondage But when it is compared with it selfe when it is consydered in it selfe who canne therfore say that there is any wrong doone vnto it But thus it is brought to tryall I graunte but suche a triall wherewith it was his owne pleasure to haue his maiestie established It ought to content vs so soone as he entreth into vs. But lest vnder his name the spirite of Sathan shoulde creepe in he wylle haue vs to knowe hym by that image of hym selfe whyche he hathe printed in the scriptures He is the authour of the scriptures he can not be dyuers and vnlyke hym selfe Therefore it muste needes bee that he contynually remayne suche as he hathe shewed hym selfe therein This is no dishonor vnto him vnlesse perhappe we count it honorable to swarue and goe out of kinde from himselfe Wheras they cauil that we rest vpon the letter that sleieth herein they suffer punishment for despising of the Scripture For it is plain enough that Paule there contendeth against the false Apostles which commending the law without Christ did cal away the people from the benefite of the new testament wherin the Lord doth couenant that he will graue his law within the bowels of the faithful and write it in their hartes The letter therfore is dead and the law of the Lord killeth the readers of it when it is seuered from the grace of Christ and not touching the heart only soundeth in the eares But if it be effectually printed in our hartes by the holy gost if it present Christ vnto vs then is it the worde of life conuerting soules geuing wisedome to little ones c. Also in the same place the Apostle calleth his preaching the ministerie of the holy ghost meaning that the holy ghost doth so sticke fast in his truth which he hath expressed in the scriptures that then only he putteth forth and displaieth his force when the Scripture hath her due reuerence and dignitie And it disagreeth not here with which I before said that the woorde it selfe is not much assured vnto vs vnlesse it be cōfirmed by the witnesse of the holy ghost For with a certain mutuall knot the Lorde hath coupled together the assuraunce of his worde and of his spirite so that perfecte reuerence to the worde doth then settle in our mindes when the holy ghost shineth vpon vs to make vs therin beholde the face of God and on the other side without al feare of being deceiued we do embrace the holy ghost when we reknowledge him in his own image that is in his worde Thus it is vndoutedly God brought not abrode his worde among men for a sodeine shewe meaning at the comming of his spirit by and by to take it away againe but he after sent the same spirite with whose power he had distributed his word to make an end of his worke with effectual confirmacion of his worde In this sorte Christe opened the mindes of the two disciples not that they shold cast away the Scriptures and waxe wise of themselues but that they should vnderstand the Scriptures Likewise Paule when he exhorteth the Thessaloniās not to extinguishe the spirite doth not carry them vp on hie to vaine speculations without the worde but by and by saith further that prophecies are not to be despised wherby without dout is meant that the lighte of the spirite is choked vp so sone as prophecies come to be despised What say these proudely swelling mē rauished with the spirit to these things which recken this onely to be an excellent illumination when carelesly forsaking and saying farewel to the word of God they both boldly and rashly do take holde of al that they haue cōceiued in their slepe Truely a farre other sobrietie becommeth the children of God whiche as they see that without the spirite of God they are voide of al light of trueth so do they knowe that the worde is the instrumente wherwith the Lorde distributeth to the faithfull the light of his spirite For they know none other spirite but that which dwelte and spake in the Apostles by whose oracles they are continually called to the hearyng of the worde The .x. Chapter That the Scripture to correct all supersticion doth in comparison set the true God against al the Gods of the gentiles reckening hym for none of them BUt because we haue shewed that the knowledge of God which in the frame of the world and al the creatures is somwhat plainly set forth is yet more familiarly and plainly declared in the worde now is it good to consider whether the Lord shew himselfe suche in the Scripture as it pleased him first to be represented in his workes But I shall at this time be contented only to point vnto it wherby the godly mindes
of synne Therefore let thys summe of that distinction be kepte that manne syns hee ys corrupted synneth in deede wyllyngely and not agaynste his will nor compelled by a moste bente affection of minde and not by vyolente compulsion by motion of hys owne luste and not by forren constraynte but yet of suche peruersenesse of nature as hee ys hee canne not but bee moued and dryuen to euell If thys bee true then surely yt is playnely expressed that hee ys subiecte to necessytye of ●yn●ynge Bernarde agreeynge to Augustine wryteth thus onely manne among all liuinge creatures is free and yet by meane of sinne hee also suffreth a certaine violence but of will and not of nature that euen thereby also hee shoulde not bee depryued of freedome for that whyche is wyllynge is free And a lyttle after wyll beynge chaunged in it selfe into worse by I woote not what corrupte and marueylous manner so maketh necessitie that very necessitie for as muche as it is willinge can not excuse wyll and wyll forasmuche as it is drawen by aluremente can not exclude necessitie for this necessitie is after a certaine manner willing Afterwarde he saith that we are pressed down wyth a yoke but yet none other but of a certaine wyllynge bondage therefore by reason of oure bondage we are miserable by reason of our wil we are inexcusable bicause wil when it was free made it selfe the bond seruaunt of sinne At length he concludeth that the soule is so after a certaine marueilous and euell manner holden both a bonde seruaunt and free vnder this certaine willinge and yll free necessitie a bonde seruante by reason of necessitie free by reason of wyll and that whiche is more maruelous and more miserable therein gylty wherin it is free therein bonde wherein it is gylty and so therein bond wherin it is free Herby truely the readers do perceiue that I brynge no new shynge whyche longe agoe Augustine broughte fourthe oute of the consent of all godlye men and almoste a thousande yeares after was kepte styll in monkes Cloysters But Lombarde when he coulde not distynguyshe necessitie from compulsion gaue matter to a pernitious erroure On the otherside it is good to consider what manner remedie is that of the grace of God whereby the corruption of nature is amenhed and healed For whereas the Lorde in helpyng vs geueth vs that whyche we wante when we shall knowe what his worke is in vs it will streightwaye appeare on the other side what is our nedynesse When the Apostle sayeth to the Philippians that he trusteth that he whiche beganne a good worke in them will performe it vnto the daye of Iesus Christe is no doubte that by the beginnynge of a good worke he meaneth the very beginnyng of conuersion whiche is in will Therefore God beginneth a good worke in vs by stirryng vp in our heartes the loue desire endeuour of righteousnesse or to speake more properly in bowyng framyng and directyng our heartes to righteousnesse he endeth it in confirmyng vs to perseuerance And that no manne should cauill that good is begonne by the Lorde when will beyng of it selfe weake is holpen the holy ghost in an other place declareth what will is able to doe beyng lefte vnto it selfe I will geue you sayeth he a newe heart I will put a newe spirit in the middes of you And I will take awaye the stony heart from your flesh and I will geue you a heart of fleshe And I will put my spirite in the middes of you and I will make you to walke in my cōmaundementes Whoe shall saye that the weakenesse of mans will is strengthened with helpe whereby it maye effectually aspire to the choise of that that is good when it must be whole transformed renewed If there be any softenesse in a stone which by some help being made tenderer will abide to be bowed euery way then wil I graunt that the heart of man is pliable to obey that whiche is right so that that whiche in it is vnperfecte be supplied by the grace of God But if he meante to shewe by this similitude that no goodnesse coulde euer be wroong out of our heart vnlesse it be made throughly new let vs not parte betwene him and vs that which he chalēgeth to him self alone If therefore a stone be transformed into fleshe when God turneth vs to the desire of that whiche is right then is all that whiche was of our owne will taken awaye and that which cōmeth in place thereof is all of God I saye that will is taken awaye not in that it is will bicause in the conuersion of man that whiche was of the firste nature abideth whole also I saye that it is created newe not that will then beginneth to be but that it be turned from an euell will into a good And this I affirme to be wholy done by God bycause we are not able so much as to thinke as the same Apostle witnesseth therefore in an other place he sayeth that God doth not only helpe our weake will or amende our peruerse will but that he worketh in vs to will Whereupon is easely gathered that whiche I saide before that what so euer good is in will it is the worke of only grace In whyche sence in an other place he sayeth that it is God that worketh all in all Neyther doth he there entreate of the vniuersal gouernement but geueth vnto God alone the prayse of al good thinges that the faythfull haue And in sayeng all ▪ truely he maketh God the authour of spiritual life euen from the beginning to the end Whiche self same thing he had taught before in other wordes sayeng that the faythful are of God in Christ. where he playnly maketh mention of the newe creation wherin that whiche was of common nature before is destroied For there is to be vnderstanded a comparyson betwene Adam and Christe whyche in an other place he more plainely expresseth where he teacheth that we are the worke of God created in Christe to good workes whyche hee hathe prepared that we shoulde walke in them For he goeth aboute by this reason to proue that oure saluation is of free gifte bicause the beginninge of all goodnesse is at the seconde creation whiche wee obteyne in Christe But if there were any power of oure selues were yt neuer so smale we shoulde haue also some portion of merite But hee to proue vs altogether nothing worthe resoneth that we haue deserued nothing bicause we are create in Christe to good workes whiche God hathe prepared In whiche wordes he signifieth againe that all partes of good workes euen from the first motiō are propre to God only For this reason the Prophete after he had said in the Psalme that we are the workemanshipe of God that there shoulde be no particion addeth by and by We made not our selues That he speaketh ther of regeneration whiche is the beginning of spirituall life appeareth
one then foloweth his reason bycause it is wrytten Hys mercie hath preuented me And his mercie shall followe me It preuenteth manne not willyng to make hym will and it followeth him willyng that he will not in vayne With whome Bernarde agreeth bringing in the church speakyng thus Drawe me in a manner vnwillyng that thou mayste make me willyng drawe me lyeng slouthfull that thou mayest make me runne Nowe let vs heare Augustine speaking in his owne wordes least the Pelagians of our age that is to saye the Sophisters of Sorbon shoulde as they are wonte laye to our charge that all antiquitie is agaynste vs wherein they followe their father Pelagius by whome longe agoe Agustine was drawen forth into the same contention In his booke of Correption and Grace wrytten to Ualentine he entreateth largely that whyche I will reherse shortly but yet doe it in his owne wordes that to Adam was geuen the grace of continuyng in good yf he would and to vs is geuen to will and by will to ouercome concupiscence that he therefore had to be able if he would but not to will that he might be able to vs is geuen bothe to will and to bee able That the firste libertie was to be able not to sinne oures is much greater not to be able to sinne And leaste he should be thought to speake of the perfection to come after immortalitie as Lombard wrongfullly draweth it to that meanyng within a little after he plucketh out this doubt For sayth he the wil of holy mē is so much kindled by the holy ghost that they therfore are able bicause they so will they therefore wil bicause God worketh that they so will For if in so great weaknesse in which yet behoueth the power to be made perfect for repressing of pride their owne will were left vnto them that by the helpe of God they maye if they will and God doth not worke in them to will then amonge so many temptations will shoulde needes fall downe for weakenesse and therfore could not continue Therefore is succour geuen to the weakenesse of mans will that it should be moued without swaruyng or seueryng by the grace of God and therfore shoulde not afinte howe weake so euer it be Then he entreateth more largely howe our heartes doe of necessitie follow the mouing of God that worketh affection in them And he sayeth that the Lorde doeth drawe menne in deede with their owne willes but with suche as he him selfe hath wrought Nowe haue we that thyng testified by Augustines mouth whyche we principally desire to obteyne that grace is not onely offered by God to be receyued or refused at euery mans Free election but also that grace is the same that formeth the electiō and will in the heart so that euery good worke that foloweth after is the frute and effecte thereof and that it haue no other will obeyeng it but the same whiche it hath made For these are also his wordes out of an other place that nothyng but grace maketh eeuery good worke in vs. But whereas he sayeth in an other place that will is not taken awaye by graee but from an euell will turned into a good and holpen when it is good he meaneth onely that manne is not so drawen that without any motion of heart he is carried as by an outwarde impulsion but that he is inwardely so affected that from his very heart he obeyeth That grace is specially and freely geuen to the elect he wryteth thus vnto Boniface We knowe that grace is not geuen to all menne and to them to whome it is geuen it is not geuen accordynge to the merites of workes nor accordynge to the merites of will but of free fauour and to them to whome it is not geuen we knowe that it is by the iuste iudgement of God that it is not geuen And in the same Epistle he strongly fighteth agaynst that opinion that the grace folowyng is geuen to the deseruynges of menne bycause in not refusinge the firste grace they shewed themselues worthy For he will haue Pelagius graunt that grace is necessarie to vs for euery of our doynges and is not geuen in recompense to workes that it maye bee grace in deede But the matter can not be comprehended in a shorter summe than out of the eight chapter of his boke to Ualentine of Correptione and Grace where firste he teacheth that mans will obteyneth not grace by libertie but libertie by grace and that by the same grace by affection of delite printed in him it is framed to continuance that it is strengthened wyth inuincible force that while grace gouerneth it neuer falleth awaye when grace forsaketh it by and by tombleth downe That by the free mercie of God it bothe is conuerted to good and beyng conuerted abideth in it that the direction of mans wyll to good and stedfastnesse after direction hangeth vpon the onely will of God and not vpon any merite of his owne And so to manne is lefte suche a free will if we liste so to call it as he wryteth of in an other place that can neyther be turned to God nor abide in God but by grace and by grace is able all that it is able The fourth Chapter ¶ How God worketh in the heartes of men YT is sufficiently proued as I thynke that man is so holden captiue with the yoke of Sinne that of his owne nature he can neyther aspire by desire nor trauaile by endeuour to goodnesse byside that we haue rehersed a distinction betwene compulsion and necessitie whereby it might appere that when he sinneth of necessitie yet neuerthelesse he sinneth willingly But for asmuch as while he is subiect in bondage to the Deuell he semeth rather to be led by the deuels will than his owne it resteth nowe to be declared of what sorte are bothe kindes of workyng And then is this question to be assoiled whether in euel workes there be any thing to be attributed to God in whiche the Scripture sheweth that there is vsed some working of his In one place Augustine compareth mans will to a horse whiche is ready to be ruled by the will of his ryder and God and the Deuell he compareth to ryders If God sayth he sit vpon it he like a sober and connyng rider gouerneth it temperatly spurreth it forwarde if it be to slowe plucketh it backe if it be to quicke restrayneth the wantonnesse and wildenesse of it tameth the stubbornnesse of it and guideth it into the right way But if the Deuell haue possessed it he like a foolish and wanton rider violently carrieth it through places where no waye is driueth it into diches rolleth it downe steepe places spurreth it forward to stubbornnesse and fearcenesse which similitude we wil for this time be contēted with sithe there cometh not a better in place Where it is sayde that the will of a naturall man is subiect to the rule of the Deuell to be stirred
haue desired to see the thinges that ye see and haue not seen them and to heare the thynges that ye heare and haue not hearde them Therefore blessed are your eyes bicause they see and your eares bicause they heare And truely it was meete that the presence of Christ sholde haue this excellencye of prerogatiue that from it shoulde arise the clere reuelinge of the heauenly mysteries And for this purpose also maketh that which euen we nowe alleaged out of the firste epistle of Peter that yt was opened to them that their trauaile was profitable principally for oure age Nowe I come to the thirde dyfference whiche is taken oute of Ieremie whose woordes are these Beholde the dayes shall come saithe the Lorde and I wyll make a newe couenant with the house of Israel and the house of Iuda not accordinge to the couenant that I made wyth your Fathers in the daye when I toke them by the hand to leade them oute of the launde of Egypt the couenant that thei made voyde althoughe I ruled ouer them But thys shall be the couenant that I will make with the house of Israel I wyl put my lawe in theyr bowelles and I wyll wryte it in their heartes and I will be mercifull to their iniquitie And no man shall teache hys neighboure and no man his brother For they shall al knowe me from the leaste vnto the moste Of whyche wordes the Apostle tooke occasion to make thys comparison betweene the lawe and the Gospell that hee called the lawe a literall and Gospel a spiritual doctrine the lawe he sayde was fashioned oute in Tables of stone the Gospell wrytten in heartes that the lawe was the preachinge of deathe the Gospell the preachinge of lyfe the lawe the preachinge of damnation the Gospel the preachinge of righteousnesse that the lawe is made voyde that the Gospell abydeth Sithe the Apostles purpose was butte to declare the meanynge of the Prophete it shall bee suffycient that wee weye the woordes of one of them to atteyne the meanynge of them bothe All bee it there is some vnly●enesse betweene them For the Apostle speaketh more odiouslye of the lawe than the Prophete dothe and that not in symple respecte of the ●●we but bycause there were certayne naughty menne hauinge a wronge zeale to the lawe whyche did with peruerse loue of the ceremonies obscure the brightnesse of the Gospel He disputeth of the nature of the lawe accordinge to their erroure foolish affection Therefore it shall be good to note that peculiarly in Paule But both of them bycause they do by comparison sette the olde and the newe testament the one against the other do consider nothing in the law but that whiche proprely belongeth vnto it As for example The lawe dothe commonly in euery place containe promises of mercie but bycause they are borowed from ells where therfore they are not reckened as part of the lawe when the mere nature of the lawe is spoken of The onely thing they ascribe vnto it to commaunde thinges that are right to forbidde wicked doynges to promyse reward to the folowers of righteousnesse to threaten punishmente to the transgressors but in the meane time neither to change nor amende the peruersenesse of heart y● is naturally in all men Nowe let vs expounde the Apostles comparison one peece after an other The olde testament is literall bicause it was published without the effectuall workinge of the spirit The newe is spiritual whyche the Lorde hathe spiritually grauen in the heartes of men Therefore the seconde diuersitie is as it were a declaration of the fyrste The olde is deadly bicause it can do nothinge but wrappe all mankinde within the curse The newe is the instrumente of lyfe bycause it deliuereth from curse and restoreth into fauoure with God The olde is the ministerie of damnation bycause it condemneth all Adams children of vnrighteousnesse The newe is the ministerie of ryghteousnesse bicause it reue●eth the mercie of God by whyche we are made ryghteous The last diuersitie is to be referred to the ceremonies Bycause the olde testament had an ●mage of thynges absent it behoued that it shoulde in tyme de●aye and vanyshe away but the Gospell bycause it geueth the true bodye in deede kepeth styll a fyrme and perpetuall stedfast●esse Ieremie in dede calleth euen the morall lawes a weake and fraile couenant but that is for an other reason bycause by the sodeine fallynge away of the vnthankfull people it was by and by broken but forasmuche as suche breakynge of it was the faulte of the people it can not proprely be layed vpon the testamente But the ceremonies forasmuche as by theyr owne weakenesse were dissolued by the comminge of Christe had the cause of their weakenesse within them selues Nowe that dyfference of the letter and spirite is not so to be taken as thoughe the Lorde hadde geuen his lawes to the Iewes wythout any frute at all hauyng none of them conuerted vnto hym But it is spoken by waye of comparison to aduaunce the abundance of grace wherewyth the same lawemaker as it were puttinge on a newe personage did honorably sette forth the preachinge of the Gospell For yf wee recken vp the multitude of these whome the Lorde oute of al peoples hath by the preaching of the Gospell regenerate wyth hys spirite and gathered into the communion of his Churche we shall saye that there were very fewe or in a manner none in the olde time in Israell that wyth affection of mynde and entirely from their heart embraced the couenant of the Lorde whoe yet were very many yf they bee reckened in theyr owne numbre wythoute comparison Out of the third difference riseth the fourth For the Scripture calleth the old testament the testament of bondage for that it ingendreth feare in mens myndes but the newe testament the testament of libertie bycause it rayseth them vp to confydence and assurednesse So sayth Paule in the eyght to the Romames Ye haue not receyued the spirit of bondage agayne to feare but the spirite of adoption by whiche we crie Abba father ▪ Hervnto serueth that in the epistle to the Hebrues that the faithefull are not nowe come to the bodyly mount and to kind led fyre an whirlewinde darkenesse and tempest where nothing can be heard or seen but that striketh menns mindes with terrore in so much that Moses hym selfe quaked for feare when the terryble voyce sounded whyche they all besoughte that they myghte not heare Butte that wee are come to the Mounte Syon and the Cytye of the sy●ynge God the heauenly Hierusalem Butte that whyche Paule shortly toucheth in the sentence that we haue alleged out of the epistle to the Romaines he setteth out more largely in the Epistle to the Galatians when he maketh an allego●●e of the twoo sonnes of Abraham after this manner that Agar the bondwoman is a fygure of the mount Sinai where the people of Israel receiued the lawe Sara the
more largely shewed how vnfit men are to beleue Therefore I wil not wery the readers with repeting the same againe Let this be sufficient that the spirit of faith is called of Paule faith it selfe which the spirit geueth vs but not which we haue naturally Therfore he praieth that god fulfil in the Thessalonians al his good pleasure the worke of faith in power Wherin calling faithe the worke of God geuing it that title for a name of additiō calling it by figure of appositiō Gods good pleasure he denieth that it is of mans own motion not contented therwith he addeth further that it is a declaratiō of Gods power writing to the Corynthians where he saith that faithe hangeth not vpon the wisedome of men but is grounded vpon the power of the holy ghoste He speaketh in dede of outewarde miracles but bicause the reprobate are blynde at the beholding of them hee comprehendeth also that inwarde seale wherof he maketh mention in an other place And God the more gloriously to set forthe his liberalitie in so noble a gifte vouchesaueth not to graunt it to al vniuersally without difference but by singular priuilege geueth it to whome he will For proofe whereof we haue alleged testimonies before Of which Augustine being a faithfull expositor crieth out that it woulde please the sauioure to teache him and that the very beleuing it selfe is of gifte and not of deseruing Noman saith he commeth to me vnlesse my father drawe him and to whome it is geuen of my father It is maruellous that twoo do heare the one despyseth the other ascendeth vp Let him that despiseth impute it to himselfe let him that ascende not yt arrogantly assigne to himselfe In an other place Why is it geuen to one and not to an other It greueth me not to say it this is the depth of the crosse Out of I wote not what depth of the iudgmentes of God which we mate not searche procedeth all that we can What I can I see whereby I can I see not sauinge that I see thus farre that it is of God But why hym and not hym That is muche to me It is a bottomelesse depth it is the depth of the crosse I maie crie out with woundering but not shewe it in disputing ▪ Finally the summe commeth to this that Christ when he enlightneth vs vnto faith by the power of hys spirite doth there withall graffe vs into his bodie that wee maie be made partakers of all good thynges Nowe remaineth that that whiche the minde hathe receiued may be further conueied into the heart For the word of God is not throughly receiued by faith if it swimme in the toppe of the braine but when it hath taken roote in the bottome of the heart that it may be an inuincible defense to beare and repulse all the engines of tentations Now if it be true that the true vnderstanding of the mynde is the enlightning thereof then in such confyrmation of the hearte his power much more euidently appeareth euen by so muche as the distrustfulnesse of the hearte is greater than the blindnesse of the witte and as it is harder to haue the mynde furnyshed wyth assurednesse than the witte to bee instructed with thinking Therefore the Spirit perfourmeth the office of a seale to seale vp in our heartes those same promyses the assurance whereof it fyrste emprinted in oure wittes and serueth for an earnest to confyrme and stablyshe them Sithe ye beleued saith the Apostle ye are sealed vp with the holy Spirite of promyse whiche is the earnest of oure inheritance See you not how he teacheth that by the spirit the heartes of the fathfull are grauen as with a seale and how for the same reason he calleth him the Spirite of promise bycause he ratifieth the Gospell vnto vs Lykewyse to the Corynthians he saithe God whiche annoynted vs whiche hath also sealed vs and geuen the earnest of hys Spirite in oure heartes And in an other place when he speaketh of confidence and boldnesse of hopigne well hee maketh the pledge of the Spirite the foundation thereof Neither yet haue I forgotten that whyche I sayde before the remembrance whereof experience continually reneweth that is that faithe is tossed wyth dyuerse doubtynges so that the myndes of the godly are seldome quyet or at least doe not alwaie enioye a peafable state but wyth what soeuer engine they be shaken either thei rise vp out of the very gulfe of temptations or do abide faste in their standing Truely thys assurednesse onely nourisheth and defendeth faithe when we holde fast that whiche is saide in the Psalme The Lorde ys oure protection oure helpe in trouble therefore we will not feare whē the earthe shall tremble and the mountaines shal leape into the heart of the sea Also this moste swete quietnesse is spoken of in an other place I laye downe and slepte and rose againe bycause the Lorde hathe susteined me It is not meante thereby that Dauid was alwaie wyth one vndisturbed course framed to a merry cherefulnesse but in respect that hee tasted the grace of God according to his proportion of faith therefore hee gloryeth that hee wythoute feare despiseth all that euer might disquiet the peace of his minde Therfore the Scripture meaning to exhort vs to faith biddeth vs to be quiet In Esaie it is saide In hope and silence shall be your strength In the Psalme Holde thee stil in the Lorde and waite for him Wherwith agreeth that saieng of the Apostle to the Hebrues Patience is needefull c. Hereby we may iudge how pestilent is that doctrine of the Scholemen that we can no otherwise determine of the grace of God towarde vs than by morall coniecture as euery man thinketh himselfe worthy of it Truely if we shall weie by oure workes howe God is minded towarde vs I graunt that we can atteine yt wyth any coniecture be yt neuer so sclender but sith faithe oughte to haue relation to a simple free promise there is lefte no cause of doubtiong For with what confidence I beseache you shall we be armed if we saie that God is fauourable vnto vs vpon this condition so that the purenesse of oure life do deserue it But bycause I haue appoynted one place proprely for the discussing herof therfore I wil speake no more of them at this present specially for asmuche as it is plaine enoughe that there is nothinge more contrarie to faith than either coniecture or any thinge nere vnto doubting And thei do very ill writhe to this purpose that testimonie of the Preacher whiche thei haue ofte in their mouthes Noman knoweth whether he be worthy of hatred or loue For to speake nothinge how this place is in the common translation corruply turned yet very children can not be ignorant what Salomon meaneth by such words that is that if any man will iudge by the present state of things whom God hateth or whom God
boasted concernyng the merites of workes do ouerthrow as well the praise of God in geuing of righteousnesse as also the assurednesse of saluation NOw we haue declared that which is the chefe point in this matter that bycause yf righteousnesse be vpholden with workes it must needes by by fal downe before the sight of God it is conteined in the only mercie of God the only cōmunicating of Christ therefore in only faith But let vs diligētly mark that this is the chefe stay of the matter least we be entangled with that general error not only of the cōmon people but also of learned mē For so sone as question is moued of the iustificatiō of faith workes they flee to those places which seme to geue to workes some merit in the sight of God as though the iustification of workes were fully wonne if it be ones proued that they be of any value with God But we haue aboue plainely shewed that the righteousnesse of workes cōsisteth only in the perfect and ful keping of the law Wherupon foloweth that no mā is iustified by workes but he that hauyng climbed vp to the hiest top of perfection can not be proued gilty of any offense be it neuer so litle Therefore it is an other a seueral questiō Howsoeuer workes suffice not to iustifie a man whether yet do they not deserue fauour with God First of the name of merit I must needes say this afore hand y● whosoeuer first applied it to workes of mē cōpared to the iugemēt of God he did very ill prouide for the purenesse of faith Truely I do by my good wil absteine frō striues about words but I wold with that this sobrietie bad alway bē vsed amōg Christian writers that they wold not haue foūd in their heartes to vse words strange frō the Scriptures which engēdred much offense no frute For whereto I beseche you was it needeful to haue the name of Merit brought in when the price of good workes might be fittly expressed by an other name wtout offense But how much offense the word cōteineth in it is euident with the great hurt of the world Surely as it is most proude it cā do nothing but darkē the grace of God and fill mē with froward pride The old writers of the Church I graūt haue cōmonly vsed it I wold to God they had not with the abusyng of one litle word geuē to posteritie matter of error Howbeit they thēselues also do in many places testifie how in no case thei meant to geue any preiudice against the truth For thus sayth Augustine in one place Let Merites of men here hold their peace which haue perished by Adā let the grace of God reigne by Iesus Christ. Againe The saintes geue nothing to their owne Merites they will geue al to none but to thy mercie O God In an other place Whē mā seeth that whatsoeuer good he hath he hath it not frō himself but frō his God he seeth that al that which is praised in him is not of his own Merites but of the mercie of God You see how taking frō men the power of doing wel he also throweth downe the dignitie of Merit And Chrysostome sayth Our workes if there be any which folow the free calling of God are repayment det but the g●●tes of God are grace boūtifulnesse the greatnesse of liberall geuing But leauing the name let vs rather loke vpō the thing I haue verily before alledged a sentence out of Bernard ▪ As it sufficeth to Merit not to presume of Merites so to want Merites sufficeth to iudgemēt But by adding forth with an expositiō he sufficiētly mitigateth the hardinesse of the word where he sayth Therfore care thou to haue Merites whē thou hast thē know y● thei are geuē hope for frute the mercie of God so thou hast escaped al dāger of pouertie vnthākfulnesse presumptiō Happy is the church which neither wāteth Merites without presumptiō nor presumptiō without merites And a litle before he had largely shewed how godly a meaning he vsed For of Merites saith he why shold the Church be careful which hath a stedfaster surer cause to glorie of the purpose of God God cā not denie himself he wil do that which he hath promised If there be no cause why the shuldest aske by what merites may we hope for good thinges specially sith y● hearest it sayd Not for your sakes but for my sake it sufficeth to Merit to know that Merites suffice not What al our workes deserue the scripture sheweth whē it saith that thei can not abide the sight of God bicause thei are ful of vncleannesse then what the perfect obseruing of the law if any such could be found shal deserue whē it teacheth that we should think ourselues vnprofitable seruātes when we haue done al thinges that are cōmaunded vs bicause we shal haue geuē nothing freely to the Lord but only haue performed our due seruices to whiche there is no thanke to be geuen But those good workes which he himself hath geuen vs the Lord both calleth oures testifieth that thei are not only acceptable to him but also that they shal haue reward It is our duetie againe for our part to be encouraged with so great a promise to gather vp our heartes that we be not weried with wel doyng to yeld true thankfulnesse to so great boūtifulnesse of God It is vndouted that it is the grace of God what soeuer there is in workes that deserueth prayse that there is not one droppe which we ought properly to ascribe to our selues This if we do truely earnestly acknowlege there vanisheth away not only all affiance but also opinion of Merit We I say do not part the prayse of good workes as the Sophisters do betwene god mā but we reserue it whole perfect vnminished to the lord Only this we assigne to man that euē the self same workes that were good he by his vncleannes corrupteth defileth For nothing cōmeth out of mā how perfect so euer he be that is not defiled with some spot Therefore let the Lord cal into iudgement euē these things that are best in the workes of mē he shal verily espie in them his owne righteousnesse but mans dishonestie shame Good workes therfore do please God are not vnprofitable to the doers of them but rather they receiue for reward the most large benefites of God not bicause thei so deserue but bicause the goodnesse of god hath of it self apointed this price vnto thē But what spitefulnesse is this that men not contented with that liberalitie of God which geueth vndue rewardes to workes that deserue no such thing do with ambitiō full of sacrilege endeuor further that that which is wholly of the liberalitie of God maye seme to be rēdred to the merites of mē Here I appelle to the cōmon iudgement of euery man If any
nothyng of spirituall thynges But for one benefite of God which they set foorth we consider three For fyrst the Lord teacheth and instructeth vs with his worde then he strengtheneth vs with sacramētes last of all he shineth into our myndes with the lyghte of his holye Spirite and openeth an entrie for the woorde and Sacramentes into our hartes whiche otherwyse should but strike our eares and bee present before our eies and nothyng moue the inward partes Wherfore as touchyng the confirmation and encrease of Faith I wold haue the reader warned which I thinke I haue already in plaine wordes expressed that I do so assigne that ministerie to the sacramentes not as though I thought that there is perpetually in them I wote not what secrete force by which they may of themselues be able to further or confirme Faith but because they are ordeined of the Lorde to this ende that they shoulde serue to the stablishyng and encreasyng of Faith But then onely they do truely performe their office when that inwarde schoolemaister the Spirite is come to them with whoe 's onely power bothe the hartes are pearced and affections are moued and the entrie is sette open for the Sacramentes into oure soules If he be absente Sacramentes can do no more to our myndes than if either the brightnesse of the sunne shoulde shine vppon blynde eies or a voice sounde to deafe eares Therfore I so make diuision betwene the Spirite and sacramentes that the power of working remaine with the Spirite and to the Sacramentes be left only the ministration yea and the same voide and triflyng without the workyng of the Spirite but of muche effectualnesse when he inwardly woorketh and putteth foorth his force Nowe it is plaine in what sorte accordyng to this sentence a godly mynde is confirmed in the faith by Sacramentes that is to say euen as the eies see by the brightnesse of the sunne and the eares heare by the sounde of a voice of whiche neither the eies should any whitte perceiue any light vnlesse they had a sight in them selues that might naturally be enlightened and the eares should in vaine be knocked at with any crieng whatsoeuer it were vnlesse they wer naturally made and fitt to heare But if it be true whiche ought at ones to be determined among vs that what the sight worketh in our eies to seyng of the light what the hearyng worketh in our eares to the perceiuyng of a voice the same is the worke of the Holy ghost in our hartes bothe to the conceiuyng and susteinyng and cherishing and stablishing of faith then bothe these thynges do likewise folowe that the Sacramentes do nothyng at all profite without the power of the Holy ghoste that nothyng withstandeth but that in hartes alredy taught of that scholemaister they may make faith bothe stronger and more encreased Only this difference there is that the power of hearyng and seyng is naturally set in our eares and eyes but Christ beside the measure of nature doth by speciall grace worke the same in our myndes Wherby those obiections also which comber some men are dissolued That if we ascribe to creatures either the encrease or confirmation of Faith there is wrong done to the Spirite of God whom we ought to acknowlege the onely author therof For neither doo we in the meane tyme take from hym the praise either of confirming or encreasyng it but rather we affirme that euen this that he encreseth confirmeth faith is nothing els but with his inward enlightning to prepare our myndes to receiue that confirming which is set foorth by the Sacraments But if it be yet to darkly spokē it shal be made very clereby a similitude which I will bryng If thou purpose with woordes to persuade a man to do any thyng thou wilt search out all the reasons wherby he may be drawen to thy opinion and may be in a maner subdued to obey thy counsel But thou haste hetherto nothyng preuailed vnlesse he likewise haue a pearcyng and sharpe iudgement whereby he may wey what pitth is in thy reasons vnlesse also he haue a tractable witt ready to harken to teachyng finally vnlesse he haue conceiued such an opinion of thy faithfulnesse and wisedome as may be to him like a certaine foreiudgemēt to cause him to subscribe For both there are many stubborne heads which a man can neuer bowe with any reasons and also where credite is suspected where authoritie is despised little good is done euen with the willyng to learne On the other syde lett all those thynges be present they wyll truely bryng to passe that the hearer to whome thou geuest counsel will obey the selfe same counsels which otherwise he wold haue laughed to scorne The same woorke also the Spirite woorketh in vs. For least the worde should beate our eares in vayne least the Sacramentes shoulde stryke oure eyes in vayne he sheweth vs that it is God which speaketh therin he softeneth the stubbornesse of oure harte and frameth it to the obedience which is due to the word of the Lorde Finally he conueyeth those outward woordes and Sacramentes from the eares into the soule Therfore both● the worde and the Sacraments do confirme our Faith when they set before our eies the good wil of the heuenly Father toward vs by knowlege of whom both the whole stedfastnesse of our Faith standeth fast and the strengthe of it encreaseth the Spirite confirmeth it when in engrauing the same confirmation in in our myndes he maketh it effectual In the meane tyme the Father of lightes can not be forbidden but as he enlightneth the bodily ei●s with the beames of the sunne so he may enlighten our myndes with sacramentes as with as brightnesse set meane betwene Whiche propretie the Lorde taught that there was in his outewarde worde when in the parable he called it sede For as sede if it fall vpon a desert and vntilled pece of grounde will do nothyng but die but if it be throwen vpon arable lande well manured and tylled it wyll bryng foorth her fruite with very good encrease so the word of God if it light vpon a stiffe necke it will growe barrein as that whiche is sowen vpon sande but if it light vpon a soule manured with the hande of the heauenly Spirite it will be moste fruitefull But if there be like reason of sede and of the worde as we say that out of sede corne bothe springeth and encreaseth and groweth vp to ripenesse why may we not say that Faith taketh out of the worde of God bothe begynnyng encrease and perfection Paule very well expresseth both these thyngs in sundry places For when he goeth about to put the Corynthians in remembrance howe effectually God vsed his trauaile he glorieth that he hath the ministerie of the Spirite as though the power of the Holy ghost wer with an vnseperable knot ioyned with his preachyng to enlighten and thoroughly moue the mynde But in an other place when he myndeth
of witt iudgement and mynde doo worship onely their faultes and errors and those thynges which are well spoken they eyther marke not or fayne as if they knew them not or do corrupt them so as a man may say that their care was altogether to gather dong in of the golde of the Fathers Then they oppresse vs with importunate cryeng out agaynst vs as despisers and ennemies of the Fathers But wee doo so not despise them that if it were the mater of my present purpose I could very easily proue by their consentyng voices the greater part of these thynges that we say at this daye But we so reade their writynges that we alway remembre that all thynges are ours to serue vs not to haue dominion ouer vs and that we are Christes alone whome we muste obeye in all thynges withoute exception Who so keepeth not this choise shall haue nothyng certaine in religion forasmuch as those holye men were ignorant of many thynges doo oftentymes striue one with an other yea and sometymes fyghte with themselues Not without cause say they we are warned of Salomō that we passe not the old boundes whiche our Fathers haue sett But there is all not all one rule in the boundyng of fieldes and the obedience of Faith which ought to be so framed that it forget her people and the house of her Father If they haue so great delite to vse allegories why doo they not rather expound the Apostles than any other to be their Fathers whoe 's appointed boundes it is not lawfull to plucke vp for so did Hierome expounde it whoe 's woordes they haue registred among their canons But if they will haue the boundes of the same Fathers whome they meane to be stedfastly kept why doo they so oft as they list so licentiously passe them Of the number of the Fathers were they of whome the one sayd that our God eateth not nor drinketh and that therfore he nedeth neither cuppes nor dyshes the other sayd that the holy thynges require not golde and that those thynges please not with golde whiche are not bought with golde Therefore they passe the bound which are in the holy thynges so muche delited with golde syluer yuory marble precious stones and silkes and thynke that God is not rightly worshypped vnlesse altogether be dissolutely set out with exquisite gorgeousnesse or rather with outragious excesse A Father was he whiche sayde that he therfore dyd freely eate fleshe on the daye in which other absteined because he was a Christian. Therfore they passe the boundes when they accurse the soule that tasteth fleshe in Lent Fathers were they of whom the one sayd that a Monke whiche laboureth not with his handes is iudged as euell as a violent taker or if you will a robber the other sayd that it is not lawful for monkes to lyue of other mens goodes although they be continually busied in contemplations in prayers in studie This bounde also they haue passed when they placed the ydoll and harrell bealies of monkes in stewes and brothelhowses to be fatted with other meanes substance A Father was he which said that it is a horrible abhominatiō to se any image painted eyther of Christ or of any Sainte in the temples of Christians Neither was this pronounced by the mouth of one man alone absteyned from the other and the other Father stoutely mainteyneth that to the Christian people the blood of the Lorde ought not to be denied for the confession wherof they are commaunded to shedde their owne blood These boundes also they haue taken away when they haue by an inuiolable law commaūded the selfe same thyng which the one of these Fathers punished with excommunication and the other reproued with a strong reason A Father was he whiche affirmed it to be rashenesse to determine any thyng of a doutefull mater on the one side or the other without cleere and euident witnessyngs of the Scripture This bound they forgot when they stablished so many constitutions so many canons so many maisterly determinations without any woord of God A Father was he which among other heresies reproched Montanus with this that he was the firste that had charged men with lawes of Fastynges This bounde also they haue farre passed when they commaunded fastyng with moste streyght lawes A Father was he whyche denied that mariage ought to be forbidden to ministers of the Chirch and pronounced a mans lyeng with his owne wyfe to be chastitie and Fathers were they whiche agreed to his authoritie Beyonde these boundes haue they gone when they seuerely enioyned vnmaried life to theyr sacrificers A Father was he which iudged that onelye Christe oughte to be heard of whō it is sayd Heare him that we ought not to haue regard what other mē which wer before us haue sayd or done but what Christ which the first of all hath cōmaunded This bounde neither doo they appoynt to themselues nor doo suffer other to haue it appointed them when they set bothe ouer themselues and other any maisters whatsoeuer they be rather than Christe A Father was he whiche affirmed that the Chirche ought not to sett it self before Christe because he alway iudgeth truely but the iudges of the chirche as men are commonly deceaued They breakyng through this bounde also sticke not to affirme that the whole authoritie of the Scripture hangeth vppon the awardement of the Chirch All the Fathers haue with one harte accursed and with one mouth pronounced it abhominable that the holy woorde of God should be entangled with the suttleties of Sophisters and brawlynges of Logitians Doo they holde themselues within these boundes when they goe about nothyng ells in their whole lyfe but with endlesse striues and more then Sophisticall brablynges to wrappe and encombre the simplicitie of the Scripture so that if the Fathers were nowe raysed to lyfe agayn and shoulde heare suche an arte of brawlyng whiche these men call Speculatiue Diuinitie they woulde beleue that nothyng lesse is doone than any disputation had of God But my talke shoulde sprede it selfe beyonde due boundes yf I woulde recken vp howe boldely these menne shake of the yoke of the Fathers whose obediente chyldren they would seme to be Truly bothe moneths and yeares woulde be to lyttle for me And yet they are of so extreme and desperate shamelesnesse that they dare blame vs for that we sticke not to passe the auncient boundes But nowe wheras they call vs to Custome they nothyng preuayle For we shoulde be moste vniustly dealt with if we should be driuen to yelde to Custome Truely if the iudgementes of men were right Custome should be taken of the good But it oftentymes happeneth that men doo otherwise For that whiche is sene to be done of many by and by obteineth the right of a Custom But the state of men hath scarcely at any time ben in so good case that the better thynges pleased the greater numbre Therefore for the most parte of the priuate vices
and corrupcion of nature I will omit also to entreate of the remedy therof Therefore let the readers remember that I do not yet speake of the couenaunt whereby God hath adopted to hymselfe the children of Abraham and of that specyal parte of doctrine wherby the faithful haue alway been peculiarly seuered frō the prophane nations because that doctrine was founded vpon Christ but I speake how we ought to learne by the Scripture that god which is the creator of the world is by certaine markes seuerallye discerned from the counterfait multitude of false gods And thē the order it selfe shal conueniently bring vs to the redemer But although we shal allege may testimonies out of the new testamēt some also out of the law and the Prophetes wherin is expresse menciō made of Christ yet they shall al tende to this ende to proue that in the Scripture is disclosed vnto vs God the creator of the world and in the scripture is set foorth what we ought to thinke of him to the end that we should not seke about the busy for an vncertaine godhead But whether God were knowen to the fathers by oracles and visions or whether by the mean and ministraciō of men he informed them of that which they should from hande to hand deliuer to their posterity yet it is vndoutedly true that in their hartes was engrauen a stedfaste certaintie of doctrin so as they might be perswaded and vnderstand that it which they had learned came from God For God alwaies made vndouted assuraunce for credit of his worde which farre exceaded all vncertaine opinion At length that by continual proceding of doctrine the trueth suruiuing in al ages might stil remaine in the world the same oracles which he had left with the fathers his pleasure was to haue as it were enrolled in publike tables For this entent was the law publyshed wherunto after were added the Prophetes for expositors For though there were diuerse vses of the law as hereafter shal better appeare in place conuenient and specially the principall purpose of Moises and al the Prophetes was to teach the maner of reconciliacion beetwene God and men for which cause also Paule calleth Christ the end of the law yet as I say once againe beside the proper doctrine of faith and repētance which sheweth forth Christe the mediatour the Scripture doth by certaine markes and tokens paint out the onelye and true God in that that he hath created and doeth gouerne the worlde to the ende he should be seuerally knowen and not reckened in the false nomber of fained gods Therefore although it behoueth man earnestlye to bend his eies to consider the workes of God forasmuch as he is set as it were in this gorgeous stage to be a beholder of them yet pryncipally ought he to bende his eares to the word that he may better profit therby And therfore it is no maruel that they which ar borne in darkenesse do more and more waxe hard in their amased dulnesse because verye fewe of them do geue themselues pliable to learne of the word of God whereby to kepe them within their boundes but they rather reioyse in their own vanity Thus then ought we to holde that to the ende true religion may shyne among vs we must take our beginning at the heauenly doctrine And that no man can haue any tast be it neuer so little of true and sounde doctrine vnlesse he haue ben scholer to the Scrypture And from hense groweth the original of true vnderstanding that we reuerently embrace whatsoeuer it pleaseth God therin to testifye of himselfe For not onely the perfect and in al pointes absolute faith but also al right knowledge of God springeth from obedience And truelye in thys behalfe God of his singular prouidence hath prouided for men in and for al ages For if we consider how slipperye an inclinacion mans minde hath to slide into forgetfulnes of God how great a redinesse to fal into al kind of errors how great a lust to forge oftentimes new counterfayt religions we may therby perceiue how necessarie it was to haue the heauenly doctrine so put in writing that it should not either perish by forgetfulnes or grow vaine by errour or be corrupted by boldnes of men Sith therfore it is manifest that God hath alway vsed the helpe of hys word toward al those whom it pleased him at any time frutefully to instruct because he foresaw that his image emprinted in the most beautifull forme of the world was not sufficiently effectual Therfore it behoueth vs to trauaile this straight way if we earnestly couet to attayne to the true beholding of God We must I say come to his word wherin God is well and liuely set out by his workes when his workes be weyed not after the peruersuesse of our own iudgemēt but according to the rule of the eternall trueth If we swarue from that worde as I saied euen now although we runne neuer so fast yet we shall neuer attaine to the marke because the course of our running is out of the way For thus we must thinke that the brightnesse of the face of God which the Apostle calleth such as cannot be atteined vnto is vnto vs like a maze out of which we cannot vnwrappe our selues vnlesse we be by the line of the word guided into it so that it is much better for vs to halt in this way than to runne neuer so fast in an other And therfore Dauid oftē times when he teacheth that supersticions are to be taken away out of the world that pure religion maye floryshe bringeth in God reigning meaninge by this worde reigning not the power that he hath but the doctryne wherby he chalengeth to himselfe a lawfull gouernement because errors can neuer be rooted out of the hartes of men till the true knowledge of God be planted Therfore the same Prophete after that he hath recited that the heauens declare the glory of God that the firmament sheweth fourth the woorkes of his handes that the orderly succeding course of daies and nightes preacheth his maiestie then descendeth to make mentiō of his worde The law of the Lord saieth he is vndefiled conuerting soules the witnesse of the Lord is faithful geuing wisedome to little ones the righteousnesses of the Lord are vpryght makyng hartes cherefull the commaundemēt of the Lord is bryght geuing light to the eies For although he comprehendeth also the other vses of the law yet in generalitie he meaneth that forasmuch as God doeth in vaine call vnto hym al nations by the beholdyng of the heauen and earth therfore this is the peculiar schole of the children of God The same meanyng hath the xxix Psalme where the Prophet hauing preached of the terrible voice of God whiche in thunder windes showres whirlewindes stormes shaketh the earth maketh the mountains to tremble and breaketh the cedre trees in the ende at last he goeth further and sayth that his praises are
fayth of the godly is grounded vpon the authoritie of the church nor meaneth that the certaintie of the gospel doth hang therupon but simplye and onely that there should be no assurednesse of the gospel to the infidels wherby they might be wonne to Chryst vnlesse the consent of the church did driue them vnto it And the same meanyng a litle before he doth plainly confirme in this saying When I shall praise that which I beleue and scorne that which thou beleuest what thīkest thou mete for vs to iudge or do but that we forsake such men as first call vs to come and knowe certaine truethes and after commaunde vs to beeleue thinges vncertaine and that we folowe thē that require vs first to beleue that which we are not yet able to see that being made strong by beleuing we may atteine to vnderstande the thing that we beleue not menne nowe but God himselfe inwardly strengthning and geuing lighte to oure minde These are the very words of Augustine wherby euery man may easely gather that the holy man had not this meaning to hang the credite that we haue to the Scriptures vpon the wil and awardemente of the churche but onely to shewe this which we our selues also do confesse to be true that they which are not yet lightened with the spirite of god are brought by the reuerence of the churche vnto a willyngnesse to bee taught so as they can finde in their hartes to learne the faith of Christ by the gospel and that thus by this meane the authoritie of the church is an introduction wherby we are prepared to beleue the gospel For as we see his minde is that the assuraunce of the godly be staied vpon a farre other foundacion Otherwise I do not deny but that he often presseth the Manichees with the consent of the whole churche when he seketh to proue the same Scripture which they refused And from hence it came that he so reproched Faustus for that he did not yelde hymselfe to the trueth of the gospel so grounded ▪ so stablished so gloriously renomed from the very time of the Apostles by certaine successions perpetuallye commended But he neuer trauaileth to this ende to teach that the authoritie which we acknowledge to be in the Scripture hangeth vppon the determinacion or decree of men But onely this which made much for him in the mater that he disputed of he bringeth forth the vniuersal iudgemēt of the church wherein he had the auaūtage of his aduersaries If any desire a fuller proufe herof let him reade his boke concernynge the profit of beleuing Where he shall finde that there is no other redinesse of beliefe commended vnto vs by him but that which only geueth vs an entrie and is vnto vs a conuenient beginning to enquire as he termeth it and yet not that we ought to rest vpon bare opinion but to leane to the certaine and sounde trueth We ought to holde as I before sayd that the credit of this doctrine is not established in vs vntil such time as we be vndoutedly perswaded that God is the author therof Therfore the principal profe of the Scripture is cōmonly taken of the person of God the speaker of it The Prophetes and Apostles bost not of their own sharpe wit or any such thigs as procure credit to m●n that speake neither stande they vpon proues by reason but they bring forth the holy name of God therby to compell the whole world to obedience Now we haue to see howe not onely by probable opinion but by apparant truth it is euidēt that in this behalfe the name of God is not without cause nor deceitfully pretēded If then we wil prouide wel for consciences that they be not continually caryed about with vnstedfast douting nor many wauer nor stay at euery small stop this maner of perswasion must be fetched deper then from either the reasons iudgementes or the coniectures of men euen from the secrete testimony of the holy ghoste True in dede it is that if we lysted to worke by way of argumētes many thinges might be alleged that may easily proue if there be any God in heauen that the law the prophecies and the gospell came from hym Yea although men learned and of depe iudgemente would stande vp to to the contrary and would employ and shew forth the whole force of their wittes in this disputacion yet if they be not so hardened as to become desperatly shamelesse they woulde be compelled to confesse that there are seen in the Scripture manifest tokens that it is God that speaketh therin wherby it maye appeare that the doctrine therof is frō heauē And shortly hereafter we shal se that al the bokes of the holy Scripture do farre excel al other writinges what soeuer they be Yea if we bring thether pure eies and vncorrupted senses we shal forthwith finde there the maiestie of God which shall subdue al hardnesse of gainesaying and enforce vs to obey him But yet they do disorderly that by disputacion trauaile to establishe the perfecte credit of the Scripture And truely although I am not furnished with great dexteritie nor eloquence yet if I were to contende with the moste luttle despisers of God that haue a desier to shew themselues wytty and plesaunt in febling the authoritie of Scripture I trust it should not be harde for me to put to silence their bablinges And if it 〈◊〉 profitable to spende labor in confuting their cauillations I would with no great businesse shake in sunder the bragges that they mutter in corners But though a man do deliuer the sounde word of God from the reproches of men yet that sufficeth not fourthwith to fasten in theyr hartes that assurednesse that godlynesse requireth Prophane men because they thynke religion standeth onely in opinion to the ende they woulde beleue nothing fondly or lightly do couet and require to haue it proued to them by reason that Moises and the Prophetes spake from God But I answere that the testimonie of the holy ghost is better thā all reason For as onely God is a conueniente witnesse of hymselfe in hys owne worde so shal the same worde neuer finde credit in the hartes of men vntil it be sealed vp with the inwarde witnesse of the holy ghost It behoueth therfore of necessitie that the same holy ghost whiche spake by the mouth of the Prophetes do entre into our hartes to perswade vs that they faythfully vttered that which was by God commaunded them And this order is very aptly set fourth by Esay in these words My spirite which is in thee and the wordes that I haue to put in thy mouth and in the mouth of thy sede shal not faile for euer It greueth some good men that they haue not ready at hande some cleare proufe to allege when the wicked do without punishment murmure against the worde of God As though the holy ghost were not for this cause called both a seale and a
pledge because vntill he do lighten mens minds they do alway wauer among many doutinges Let this therfore stande for a certainly perswaded trueth that they whom the holy ghost hath inwardly taught doe wholy reste vppon the Scripture and that the same Scripture is to be credited for it selfsake ought not to be made subiect to demonstraciō and reasons but yet that the certaintie which it getteth among vs it atteineth by the witnesse of the holy ghost For though by the only maiestie of it selfe it procureth reuerence to be geuen to it yet then only it throughly perceth our affectiōs when it is sealed in our hartes by the holy gost So being lightened by his vertue we do then beleue not by our own iudgemēt or other mēs that the Scripture is frō God but aboue al mans iudgement we holde it most certainly determined euen as if we behelde the maiestie of God himselfe there present that by the ministery of men it came to vs from the very mouth of God We seke not for argumentes and likelhodes to rest our iudgement vpon but as to a thing without al compasse of consideracion we submit our iudgement and wit vnto it And that not in such sort as some are wont sometime hastily to take holde of a thing vnknowen which after being throughly perceiued displeaseth them but because we are in our consciences wel assured that we hold an inuincible truth Neither in such sort as silly men ar wont to yelde their mynde in thraldom to superstitions but because we vndoutedly perceiue therin the strength and breathing of the diuine maiestie wherewith we are drawen and stirred to obey both wittingly and willingly and yet more liuely and effectually than mans wil or wit can attaine And therefore for good cause doth God cry out by Esay that the Prophetes wyth the whole people do beare him witnesse because being taughte by the prophecies they did vndoutedly beleue without guile or vncertaintie that God himselfe had spoken Such therfore is our perswasion as requireth no reasons such is our knowledge as hath a righte good reason to maintaine it euen such a one wherin the minde more assuredly and stedfastly resteth than vpon any reasons suche is oure feling as cannot procede but by reuelacion from heauen I speake nowe of none other thing but that which euery one of the faithful doth by experiēce find in himselfe sauing that my wordes do much want of a full declaratiō of it I leaue here many thinges vnspoken because there wil be els where againe a conuenient place to entreate of this matter Onely now let vs know that onely that is the true faith which the spirite of God doth seale in our hartes Yea with this onely reason wil the sobre reder and willing to learne be contented Esay promeseth that al the childrē of the renewed churche shal be the scholars of God A singular priuilege therin doth God vouchsaue to graunt to his elect onely whom he seuereth from all the rest of mankinde For what is the beginning of true doctrine but a redy cherefulnesse to heare the voice of God But God requireth to be heard by the mouth of Moises as it is written say not in thy harte who shal ascende into heauen or who shal descende into the depe the worde is euen in thine own mouth If it be the pleasure of God that this treasure of vnderstanding be layed vp in store for hys chyldren it is no marueil nor vnlikely that in the common multitude of mē is seen such ignoraunce and dullnesse The common multitude I call euen the most excellent of them vntil such time as they be graffed into the bodye of the church Moreouer Esay geuing warning that the Prophetes doctrine should seme incredible not onely to straungers but also to the Iewes that woulde be accompted of the householde of God addeth this reason because the arme of God shall not be reueled to al men So oft therfore as the smallnesse of nūber of the beleuers doth trouble vs on the other side let vs call to minde that none can comprehende the misteries of God but they to whom it is geuen ¶ The .viii. Chapter That so farre as mans reason may beare there are sufficient proues to stablyshe the credite of Scripture VNlesse we haue this assuraunce whiche is bothe more excellent and of more force than any iudgement of man in vayne shall the authorytie of Scripture eyther bee strengthened with argumentes or stablished with consente of the churche or confyrmed with any other meanes of defence For vnlesse this fundation bee layde it still remayneth hangynge in doubte As on the other syde when exemptynge it from the common state of thynges we haue embraced it deuoutely and accordyng to the worthynesse of it then these thynges become very fitte helpes which before were but of small force to graffe and fasten the assurance therof in our myndes For it is meruaylous howe greate establishemente groweth herof when with earnest studye we consider howe orderly and well framed a disposition of the diuine wisedom appereth therin howe heauenly a doctrine in euery place of it and nothyng sauoryng of earthlynesse howe beautyful an agreement of all the partes amonge theym selues and suche other thynges as auayle to procure a maiestie to writynges But more perfectly are oure hartes confirmed when we consyder howe we are euen violently caried to an admiration of it rather with dignitie of matter than with grace of woords For this also was not done without the singular prouidence of God that the hye misteries of the heauenly kingdome should for the moste part be vttered vnder a contemptible basenesse of words least if it hadde ben beautified with more glorious speache the wicked shoulde cauill that the onely force of eloquence doeth reigne therein But when that roughe and in a maner rude simplicitie dooeth rayse vp a greater reuerence of it selfe than any rhetoricians eloquence what may we iudge but that there is a more myghty strength of truthe in the holye Scripture than that it nedeth any art of wordes Not withoute cause therefore the Apostle maketh his argument to proue that the faythe of the Corinthians was grounded vpon the power of God and not vpon mans wysedom bycau●e his preachyng among them was set foorth not with enticyng speche of mans wisedom but in playne euidence of the spirite and of power For the truthe is then sette free from all doubtyng when not vpholden by forayne aides it selfe alone suffiseth to susteyne it self But how this power is proprely alone belongyng to the scripture hereby appereth that of all the writynges of menne be they neuer so connyngly garnyshed no one is so farre able to pearce our affections Reade Demosthenes or Cicero reade Plato Aristotle or any other of all that sorte I graunt they shall meruailously allure delite moue and rauishe thee But if from them thou come to this holy readyng of Scriptures wylte thou or not it shall
woorde whiche can not be shewed in scripture as it is written in nombre of syllables then they bynde vs to a hard law wherby is condemned all exposition the is not pie●ed together with bare laying together of textes of scripture But if they meane that to be straunge whiche beyng curiousely deuised is superstitiousely defended whiche maketh more for contention than edification whiche is either vnaptely or to no profite vsed whiche withdraweth from the simplicitie of the word of God then with all my hart I embrace their sobre minde For I iudge that we ought with no lesse deuout reuerence to talke of God than to thynke of him for as muche as what soeuer we doo of our selues thinke of him is foolishe and what so euer we speake is vnsauorye But there is a certayn measure to be kepte We ought to learne out of the scriptures a rule bothe to thynke and speake wherby to examine all the thoughtes of our mynde and wordes of our mouth But what withstandeth vs but that suche as in scripture are to our capacitie doutfull and entangled we may in plainer woordes expresse theim beynge yet suche wordes as doo reuerently and faithfully serue the truthe of the scripture and be vsed sparely modestly and not without occasion Of whiche sort there are examples enowe And where as it shall by profe appere that the Churche of great necessitie was enforced to vse the names of Trinitie and Persones if any shall then fynde faulte with the newenesse of woordes shall he not be iustly thought to be greeued at the lyght of the truthe as he that blameth onely this that the truthe is made so playne and cleare to discerne Suche newnesse of woordes if it be so to bee called commeth then chiefly in vse when the truthe is to be defended against wranglers that doo mocke it out with cauillations Whiche thyng we haue at this daye to muche in experience who haue great businesse in vanquisshynge the enemies of true and sounde doctrine With suche foldyng and crooked windyng these slippery snakes doo slide away vnlesse they be strongly griped and holden hard when they be taken So the old fathers beyng troubled with contendyng againste false doctrines were compelled to shewe theyr meanynges in exquisite playnnesse least they should leaue any crooked bywayes to the wicked to whom the doutful constructions of woordes were hidyngholes of errours Arrius confessed Christe to be God and the sonne of God because he coulde not agaynsay the euident wordes of God and as if he had ben so sufficiently discharged did fayne a certayne consent with the rest But in the meane while he ceassed not to scatter abroade that Christe was create and had a beginnyng as other creatures But to the ende they myght drawe foorth his windyng sutteltie out of his denne the auncient fathers went further pronouncyng Christ to be the eternall sonne of the father and consubstanciall with the father Hereat wickednesse began to boile when the Arrians began to hate and deteste the name Omoousion consubstanciall But if in the beginnyng they had sincerely and with playn meanynge confessed Christ to be God they would not now haue denyed hym to be consubstantiall with the father Who dare nowe blame these good men as brawlers and contentious bycause for one litle woordes sake they were so whote in disputation and troubled the quiete of the churche But that little worde shewed the difference betwene the true beleuyng Christians and the Arrians that wer robbers of God Afterward rose vp Sabellius whiche accompted in a maner for nothyng the names of the Father the Sonne and the Holy ghost sayeng in disputation that they were not made to shewe any maner of distinction but onely were seuerall additions of God of whiche sorte there are many If he came to disputation he confessed that he beleeued the father God the sonne God the Holy ghost God But afterwarde he would redely slippe away with sayeng that he hadde in no otherwise spoken than as if he had named God a strong God iust God and wise God and so he song another songe that the Father is the Sonne and the Holy ghost is the father without any order without any distinction The good doctours which then had care of godlynesse to subdewe his wickednesse cried oute on the other side that there ought to be acknowleged in one God thre propreties And to the ende to fense themselues againste the crooked writhen suttleties with plaine and simple truthe they affirmed that there did truely subsist in one God or which came all to one effect that there did subsist in the vnitie of God a Trinitie of persons If then the names haue not ben without cause inuented we ought to take hede that in reiectyng them we be not iustly blamed of proude presumptuousnesse I woulde to God they wer buried in dede so that this faith were agreed of all men that the Father and the Sonne and the Holy ghost bee one God and yet that the Father is not the Sonne nor the Holy ghost the Sōne but distinct by certain propretie Yet am I not so precise that I can fynde in my harte to striue for bare wordes For I note that the olde fathers whiche otherwise spake very religiousely of such matters did not euery wher agree one with an other nor eueryone with himselfe For what formes of speeche vsed by the councels doothe Hilarie excuse ▪ To howe greate libertie doothe Augustine sometyme breake foorth Howe vnlyke are the Grekes to the Latins But of this variance one example shal suffise for this tyme. When the Latins ment to expresse the word Omoousion they called it Consubstancial declaring the substance of the Father and the Sonne to be one so vsyng the word substance for essence Whervpon Hierom to Damasus sayth it is sacrilege to say that there are thre substances in God and yet aboue a hundred tymes you shall fynde in Hilarie that there are three substances in God In the woorde Hypostasis howe is Hierome accombred For he suspecteth that there lurketh poison in namyng thre Hypostases in God And if a man do vse this word in a godly sense yet he plainly saith that is an impropre speeche if he spake vnfainedly and dyd not rather wittyngly and willyngly seeke to charge the bishoppes of the Eastlandes ▪ whome he soughte to charge with an vniuste sclaunder Sure this one thynge he speaketh not very truely that in all prophane schooles ousia essence is nothyng els but hypostasis whyche is proued false by the common and accustomed vse Augustine is more modeste and gentyll whiche although he say that the worde hypostasis in that sense is strange to latine eares yet so farre is it of that he taketh from the Grekes theyr vsuall maner of speakyng that he also gently beareth with the Latins that had folowed the greke phrase And that whiche Socrates writeth in the syxte booke of the Tripartite hystorie tendeth to this ende as though he ment that it hadde
a bare sufferance of hym to afflicte the holy man yet because that sayeng is true The Lorde hath geuen the Lord hath taken away as it pleased God so is it com to passe We gather that God was the author of that triall of Iob wherof Sathan and the wicked theues were ministers Sathan goeth about to dryue the holy man by desperation to madnesse The Sabees cruelly wickedly doo inuade and robbe his goodes that were none of theirs Iob knowledgeth that he 〈◊〉 by God stripped of all his goodes and made poore because it so pleased God Therfore whatsoeuer men or Satan hymselfe attempt yet God holdeth the sterne to tourne all their trauayles to the executyng of his iudgements It was Gods wil to haue the false kyng Achab deceiued the deuill offered his seruice therevnto he was sent with a certaine commaundement to be a lying spirite in the mouthe of all the Prophetes If the blyndyng and madnesse of Achab be the iudgement of God then the deuise of bare Sufferance is vaine For it were a fond thyng to say that the iudge doeth onely suffre and not also decree what he will haue doone and commaund the ministers to put it in execution It was the Iewes purpose to destroy Christ Pilate and the souldiors doo folowe their ragyng lust and yet in a solemne praier the disciples doo confesse that all the wicked men dyd nothyng els but that whiche the hande and counsell of God had determined euen as Peter had before preached that Christ was by the decreed purpose and foreknowledge of God deliuered to be slayne As if he shuld say that God from whome nothyng is hidden from the beginnyng did wittyngly and willyngly appoynt that whiche the Iewes did execute as in an other place he●●herseth that God whyche shewed before by all his Prophetes that Christ shuld suffer hath so fulfilled it Absolon defilyng his fathers bed with incestuous adulterie committed detestable wickednesse Yet God pronounceth that this was his owne worke For the wordes are these Thou haste doone it secretely but I will doo it openly and before the sunne Hieremie pronounceth that all the crueltie that the Chaldees vsed in Iury was the woorke of God For which cause Nabucadnezer is called the seruant of God God euery where crieth out that with his hissyng with the soūd of his trumpet with his power cōmandement the wicked ar stirred vp to warre He calleth the Assyrian the rod of his wrath the axe that he moueth with his hande The destruction of the holy citie ruine of the Temple he calleth his worke Dauid not murmuring against God but acknowledging him for a rightuous iudge yet confesseth that the cursings of Semei proceded of the cōmaūdement of God The Lord saith he cōmaunded him to curse We often finde in the holy historie that what soeuer happeneth it cometh of the Lord as the departing of the ten tribes the death of the sonnes of Hely and very many things of like sort They that be meanly exercised in the Scriptures do see that for shortnesses sake I bring forth of many testimonies but a few by which yet it appereth plainly enough that they do trifle talk fondly that thrust in a bare Sufferāce in place of the Prouidence of God as though God saie in a watche tower waityng for the chaunces of Fortune and so his iudgementes shoulde hang vppon the will of men Nowe as concerning secrete motions that which Salomō speaketh of the hart of a king that it is bowed hether or thether as pleaseth God extendeth surely to all mankind and is as muche in effecte as if he had said what soeuer we conceiue in myndes is by the secret inspiration of God directed to his ende And truly if he did not worke in the myndes of men it were not rightly said that he taketh away the lippe from the true speakers and wisedom from aged men that he taketh the hart frō the Princes of the earthe that they maye wander where is no beaten waie And hereto belongeth that whyche we ofte reade that men are fearefull so farre foorth as theyr hartes bee taken with his feare So Dauid went out of the campe of Saule and none was ware of it because the slepe of God was come vpon theim all But nothyng can be desyred to be more playnly spoken than where he so oft pronounceth that he blyndeth the eies of men striketh them with giddynesse that he maketh them drunke with the spirite of drowsynesse casteth them into madnesse hardneth their harts These things also many do referre to Sufferance as if in forsaking the reprobate he suffred thē to be blinded by Satan But that solution is to fonde forasmuch as the Holy ghost in plain words expresseth that they are striken with blindnesse madnesse by the iust iudgmēt of God It is said that he hardned the hart of Pharao also that he did make dull strengthen it Some do with an vnsauory cauillation mocke out these phrases of speche because where in an other place it is said that Pharao did harden his owne hart there is his owne will set for the cause of his hardenyng As though these thynges did not very well agree together although in diuers maners that man while he is moued in working by God doeth also worke himself And I doo turne back their obiection against them selues For if to harden do signify but a bare Sufferance then the very motion of obstinacie shall not be proprely in Pharao Now how weake and foolishe were it so to expounde as if Pharao did only suffer hym self to be hardened Moreouer the Scripture cutteth of all occasions from suche cauillations For God sayth I will holde his harte So of the inhabitauntes of the land of Canaan Moses saith that thei went forth to bataile because the Lord had hardned their harts Which same thing is repeted by an other Prophet saying He turned their harts that they should hate his people Agayne in Esaie he saieth that he will sende the Assyrians against the deceytfull nation and will commaunde them to cary awaie the spoiles and violently take the praie not meanyng that he will teache wicked and obstinate men to obey willyngly but that he wil bowe them to execute his iudgementes as if they dyd beare his commaundementes grauen in their myndes Wherby appeareth that they were moued by the certaine appointement of God I graunte that God doeth oftentymes worke in the reprobate by Satans seruice as a meane but yet so that Satan doeth his office by Gods mouing procedeth so farre as is geuen hym The euill Spirite troubled Saule but it is sayde that it was of God that wee may knowe that the madnesse of Saule came of the iuste vengeance of God It is also said that the same Satan doth blind the myndes of the vnfaithfull but how so but only because the effectuall workyng of errour cometh
it vs doth argue our need let no man nowe doubte to confesse that he is so much able to vnderstande the misteries of God as he is enlightened with his grace He that geueth to him selfe more vnderstanding is so much the more blinde for that he doth not acknoweledge his owne blindenesse Nowe remaineth the thirde pointe of knowyng the rule of well framynge of life whiche we doe rightly call the knoweledge of the workes of righteousnesse wherein mans wit semeth to bee of somewhat more sharpe sight than in the other two before For the Apostle testifieth that the Gentiles whiche haue no lawe while they doe the workes of the lawe are to themselues in stede of a lawe and do shewe the lawe written in their heartes their consciēces bearing them witnesse and their thoughtes accusyng them within themselues or excusing them before the iudgement of God If the Gentiles haue righteousnesse naturally grauē in their mindes surely we can not say that we are altogether blynde in the order of life And nothing is more cōmon than that man by the lawe naturall of whiche the Apostle speaketh in that place is sufficiently instructed to a right rule of life But let vs waye to what purpose this knowledge of the lawe is planted in men then it shall by and by appeare howe far it bringeth them toward the marke of reason and truthe The same is also euident by the wordes of Paul if a man do marke the placing of them He had sayde a litle before that they whiche sinned in the lawe are iudged by the lawe they that haue sinned without lawe do perishe without lawe Because this might seme vnreasonable that the gentils should perish without any iudgement going before he by and by addeth that their conscience is to them in steade of a lawe and therfore is sufficient for their iust damnation Therfore the ende of the lawe naturall is that man may be made inexcusable And it shal be defined not il after this sorte that it is a knowledge of conscience that sufficiently discerneth betwene iust and vniust to take away from men the pretence of ignoraunce while they are proued gilty by their owne testimony Such is the tendernesse of man toward him selfe that in doing of euyls he alway turneth away his mynde so muche as he may from the feling of sinne By whiche reason it semeth that Plato was moued to thynke that there is no sinne done but by ignorance That in dede were fitly sayd of him if mens hypocrisie went so farre in hiding of vices that the mynde might not knowe itselfe gilty before God But when the sinner seking to escheue the iudgement emprinted in him is now and then drawen back vnto it and not suffered so to winke but that he be compelled whether he wil or no some time to open his eies it is falsly sayd that he sinneth only by ignoraunce Themistius sayth more truly which teacheth that vnderstanding is seldome deceiued that it is blyndenesse when it goeth any further that is whē he cometh down to the speciall case Euery man if it be generally asked wil affirme that manslaughter is euell but he that conspireth to kil his enemies deliberateth vpon it as on a good thyng The adulterer generally will condemne adulterie but in his owne priuately he will flatter himself This is ignoraunce when a man cōmyng to the speciall case forgetteth the rule that he had lately agreed vpon in the generall question Of whiche thyng Augustine discourseth very finely in his exposition of the first verse of the .lvij. Psalme albeit the same thyng is not continuall For sometime the shamefulnesse of the euell deede so presseth the conscience that not deceyuynge him selfe vnder false resemblance of a good thing but wittingly and willingly he runneth into euell Out of whiche affectiō came these sayinges I see thee better and allowe it but I followe the worse Wherefore me thinke Aristotele hath very aptely made distinction betwene Incontinence and Temperance Where incontinence reigneth he sayeth that there by reason of troubled affection or passion knoweledge is taken away from the minde that it marketh not the euell in his owne acte which it generally seeth in the like and when the troubled affectiō is cooled repentaunce immediatly foloweth But intemperaunce is not extinguished or broken by feeling of sinne but on the other side obstinately standeth still in her conceyued choyse of euell Now when thou hearest iudgement vniuersally named in the difference of good and euell thinke it not euery sounde perfect iudgement For if mās heartes are furnished with choise of iust and vniust only to this ende that they should not pretēde ignorance it is not then nedefull to see the trueth in euery thyng But it is enough and more that they vnderstande so farre that they canne not escape awaye but beyng conuict by witnesse of their conscience they euen now already beginne to tremble at the iudgement seate of God And if we wil trie our reason by the lawe of God whych is the exampler of true righteousnesse we shal finde howe many wayes it is blinde Truely it atteineth not at all to those that are the chiefe things in the First table as of confidence in God of geuyng to hym the prayse of strength and righteousnesse of callyng vpon his name of the true kepyng of Sabbat What soule euer be naturall sense did smell out that the lawful worshippyng of God consisteth in these and like thinges For when prophane men will worshippe God although they be called awaye a hundred times from theyr vaine trifles yet they alwaye slyde backe thither agayne They denie in deede that sacrifices dooe please God vnlesse there be adioyned a purenesse of minde wherby thei declare that they tonceyue somewhat of the spirituall worshippyng of God whyche yet they by and by corrupte with false inuentions For it can neuer be persuaded thē that al is true that the lawe perscribeth of it Shall I saye that that wit excelleth in any sharpe vnderstandynge whych can neyther of it selfe be wise nor harken to teachyng In the commaundementes of the Second table it hath some more vnderstandyng by so much as they came nerer to the preseruation of ciuile felowshyppe among menne Albeit euen herein also it is founde many times to faile To euery excellēt nature is semeth moste vnresonable to suffer an vniuste and to imperious a manner of gouernyng ouer them if by any meane he may put it away and the iudgement of mās reason is none other but that it is the part of seruile and base courage to suffer it patiently and againe the part of an honest and free borne heart ▪ to shake it of And reuenge of iniuries is rekened for no fault among the Philosophers But the lorde condempning that to muche noblenesse of courage cōmaūdeth his to kepe the same patience that is so ill reported among men And in all the keping of the lawe our vnderstandinge marketh
required to obedience be denied him Naye rather why doth he excuse him selfe when he canne impute the hardenesse of heart to none but to hymselfe Therefore the wycked that are wyllyngely readye to mocke them oute yf the myght are throwen downe wyth the force of them whether they will or no. But the chefe profite towarde the faithfull is to be considered in whome as the Lorde woorketh all thinges by his spirite so hee leaueth not the instrumentes of his worde vseth the same not without effecte Let this therfore stande whyche is true that all the strength of the godly resteth in the grace of God accordyng to that sayinge of the Prophete I will geue them a newe heart that they maye walke in them But thou wylte saye Why are they nowe admonyshed of their duetye and not rather lefte to the direction of the holy ghoste why are they moued wyth exhortation sythe they canne make no more haste than the styrrynge forwarde of the holy ghooste woorketh why are thei chastised if at any tyme they be gone oute of the waye syth they fell by the necessarye weakenesse of the fleshe O man what arte thou to apoynte a lawe for God If it be his pleasure that we bee prepared by exhortation to receiue the selfe same grace whereby is wroughte that the exhortation is obeied what haste thou in thys ordre to bite or carpe at If exhortations and rebukynges dyd nothynge els profyte wyth the godlye but to reproue them of synne they were euen for that thing onely to be compted not alltogether vnprofitable Nowe for asmuche as by the holy ghooste woorkynge inwardly thei muche auaile to enflame the desire of goodnesse to shake of sluggyshnesse to take awaye the pleasure and venymo●●s swetenesse of wyckednesse and on the other syde to engendre a hatred and irkesomnesse therof whoe dare cauill that thei are superfluus If any manne require a plainer aunswere let him take thys God woorketh after twoo sortes in hys electe inwardly by his spirite outwardely by his worde By his spirite by enlyghtninge theyr myndes by framinge their heartes to the loue and keepinge of iustice hee maketh them a newe creature By his worde he stirreth them to desire to seke and atteine the same renuinge by them bothe hee sheweth fourth the effectuall woorkinge of his hande accordinge to the proportion of his dystributiō When hee sendeth the same woorde to the reprobate thoughe not for their amendement yet hee maketh it to serue for an other vse that bothe for the present time thei maie bee pressed with witnesse of conscience and maye againste the daie of iudgemente bee made more inexcusable So thoughe Christe pronounce that no manne commeth to hym but whome the Father draweth and that the electe do come when thei haue hearde and learned of the father yet doothe not hee neglecte the office of a teacher but with his voice dylygentlie calleth them whome it necessarily behoueth to bee inwardely taughte by the holly Ghoste that thei maie any thinge profyte And Paule teacheth that teachinge is not in vaine with the reprobate bicause it is to them the sauoure of deathe to deathe butte a swete sauoure to God Thei be verye laborious in heapinge together of testimonies of Scripture and that they dooe of purpose that when thei canne not oppresse vs wyth weyghte thei maie yet with numbre But as in battelles when it commeth to hande strookes the weaker multitude how muche pompe and shewe soeuer it hath is with a fewe strippes discomfyted and putte to flyghte so shall yt bee verye easye for vs to ouerthrowe them wyth all theyr route For bycause the places that they abuse agaynste vs when they are ones dyuyded into theyr ordres do meete vpon a fewe specyall poyntes wee shall wyth one aunswere satysfye many of them therefore yt shall not bee needefull to tarrye vpon dyssoluynge euerye one of them partycularlye Theyr cheefe force they sette in the commaundementes whyche they thynke to bee so tempered to oure strengthes that what soeuer ys proued to bee requyred by the one yt necessarylye foloweth that yt maye bee perfourmed by the other And therefore they runne throughe euerye of the commaundementes and by them doe measure the proportion of oure strengthe For saye they eyther God mocketh vs when hee chargeth vs wyth hollyenesse godlynesse obedyence chastitie loue and mekenesse and when hee forbiddeth vs vncleannesse ydolatrie vnchastenesse wrathe robberye pryde and suche lyke or hee requyreth onely those thynges that are in oure power Nowe we maye dyuyde into three sortes in manner all the commaundementes that they heape together Some requyre oure fyrste conuersion to God some speake symply of the keepynge of the lawe some commaunde vs to contynue in the grace of God that wee haue receyued Fyrste lette vs speake of them all in generalitie and then descende to the specyall sortes To extende the power of manne to the commaundementes of the lawe hathe in deede longe agoe begonne to bee commune and hathe some shewe butte yt proceded from mooste rude ignoraunce of the lawe For they that thynke yt a heynous offence yf yt bee sayde that the keepynge of the lawe ys ympossyble do reste forsoothe vpon thys moste stronge argumente that ells the lawe was geuen in vayne For they speake in suche sorte as yf Paule hadde noe where spoken of the lawe For I beseache them what meane these sayinges that the lawe was sette bycause of transgressions That by the lawe ys the knoweledge of synne That the lawe maketh synne that the lawe entred that synne myght abounde was yt meante that the lawe was to bee lymyted to oure strengthes leaste yt shoulde bee geuen in vayne or rather that yt was sette farre aboue vs to conuince oure weakenesse Truelye by the same mans defynition the ende and fullfyllynge of the lawe ys Charytye Butte when hee wysheth the myndes of the Thessalonians to bee fylled wyth charitie hee dothe sufficientlye confesse that the lawe soundeth in oure eares wythoute profyte vnlesse God inspire the whole summe thereof in oure heartes Truelye yf the Scrypture dyd teache nothynge ells butte that the lawe ys a rule of lyfe where vnto wee oughte to frame oure endeuours I woulde also wythoute delaye agree to theyr opinion but whereas yt dothe dylygently and playnely declare vnto vs the manyfolde vse of the lawe yt ys conueniente rather to consyder by that interpretation what the lawe maye doe in manne For so muche as concerneth thys presente cause yt teacheth that so sone as yt hathe appoynted what wee oughte to dooe the power to obeye commeth of the goodnesse of God and therefore moueth vs to prayer whereby wee maye requyre to haue it giuen vs. If there were onelye the commaundemente and no promise then were oure strengthe to be tryed whether they were sufficient to aunswere the commaundement but syth ther are promyses ioyned wythall whiche crye oute that not onely oure aide but also all oure whole power consysteth in the
Lorde ys bryghte that geueth lyghte to the eyes c. Agayne A launterne to my feete ys thy woorde and a lyghte vnto my pathes ▪ and innumerable other that hee reherseth in all that Psalme Neyther are these thynges agaynste the sayinges of Paule wherein vs shewed not what vse the lawe mynystreth to the regenerate butte what yt ys able to geue to manne of yt selfe Butte here the Prophete reporteth wyth howe greate profyte the Lorde doothe instructe them by readynge of hys lawe to whome hee inwardely inspyreth a readynesse to obeye And hee taketh holde not of the commaundementes onely butte also the promyse of grace annexed to the thynges whyche onely maketh the bytternesse to ware sweete For what were lesse ameable than the lawe yf yt shoulde onely wyth requyringe and threateninge trouble soules carefully wyth feare and vexe them wyth terroure Butte specially Dauid sheweth that hee in the lawe conceyued the Mediatoure wythoute whome there ys no delyte or sweetenesse Whyche whyle some vnskyllfull menne canne not discerne they boldely shake awaye all Moses and bydde the two tables of the lawe farrewell bycause they thynke yt ys not agreable for Christyans to cleaue to that doctrine that conteyneth the minustration of deathe Lette thys prophane opynyon departe farre oute of oure myndes For Moses taughte excellently well that the same Lawe whyche wyth synners canne engendre nothynge butte deathe oughte in the holly to haue a better and more excellente vse For thus when hee was reddy to dye hee openly sayde to the people Laye youre heartes vpon all the woordes that I doe testyfye to youe thys daye that ye maye commytte them to youre chyldren that ye maye teache them to keepe to doe and to fullfyll all the thynges that are wrytten in the volume of thys lawe bycause they are not vaynely commaunded you butte that euerye one shoulde lyue in them butte yf no manne canne denye that there appeareth in yt an absolute paterne of ryghteousnesse then eyther wee muste haue no rule at all to lyue iustely and vpryghtely or els yt ys not lawefull for vs to departe from yt For there are not manye butte one rule of lyfe whyche ys perpetuall and canne not bee bowed Therefore whereas Dauid maketh the lyfe of a ryghteous manne continually busied in the meditation of the lawe let vs not referre that to one age onely bycause it is moste meete for all ages to the cude of the woorlde and lette vs not therefore be frayed awaye or flee from beynge instructed by it bycause yt appoynteth a muche more exacte holynesse than we shall perfourme whyl● wee shall carry about the parson of our bodie For nowe yt executeth not against vs the office of a rygorous exacter that wyll not be satysfyed but wyth hys full taske perfourmed butte in thys perfection where vnto it exhorteth vs it sheweth vs a marke towarde whyche in all oure lyfe to endeuoure is no lesse profitable for vs than agreable wyth oure dutie In whyche endeuoure if we fa●le not it is well For all thys lyfe ys a race the space whereof beynge runne cute the Lorde wyll graunte vs to atteine to that marke towarde whyche our endeuoures do trauaile a farre of Nowe therefore whereas the lawe hathe towarde the faythfull a power to exhorte not suche a power as maye bynde theyr consciences with curse butte suche as wyth often callynge on maye shake of sluggyshnesse and pynche imperfection to awake it many when thei meane to expresse thys delyueraunce from the curse thereof do saye that the lawe is abrogate to the faythfull I speake yet of the lawe moral not that it dothe no more commaunde them that whyche is ryghte butte onely that it be no more vnto them that whych it was before that is that it do no more by makynge afrayde and confoundynge their consciences damne and destroye them And truely suche an abrogation of the lawe Paule dothe plainely teache and also that the Lorde himselfe spake of it appeareth by thys that he woulde not haue confuted that opinion that he shoulde dissolue the lawe vnlesse it hadde been commonly receyued amonge the Iewes Butte forasmuche as it could not ryse causelessly and wythoute any coloure it is lykely that it grewe vpon false vnderstandynge of hys doctryne as in a manner all erroures are wonte to take occasion of truthe but leaste we shoulde also stumble at the same stone let vs dylygently make distinction what is abrogate in the lawe and what remayneth yet in force Where the Lorde protesteth that he came not do destroye the lawe butte to fullfill yt and that till heauen and earthe passe awaie no one iote of the lawe sholde passe awaye butte that all shoulde be fullfylled he sufficiently confyuneth that by hys comminge nothinge shoulde be taken awaye from the out keepinge of the lawe And for good cause sithe he came rather for this ende to heale offences Wherefore the doctrine of the lawe remayneth for all Christians inuiolable which by teachynge admonyshynge rebukynge and correctynge maye frame and prepare vs to euerye good woorke As for those thynges that Paule speaketh of the curse it is euident that they belonge not to the verye instruction butte onely to the force of byndynge the conscience For the lawe not onely teacheth butte also wyth authoritie requyreth that whyche yt commaundeth If yt be not perfourmed yea yf duetye be stacked in any parte it bendeth her thunderboulte of curse For thys cause the Apostle sayth that all they that are of the woorkes of the lawe are subiecte to the curse bycause it is wrytten Cursed is euery one that fullfylleth not all And he sayeth that they be vnder the woorkes of the lawe that do not sette ryghteousnesse in the forgeuenesse of synnes by whyche we are loosed from the rigoure of the lawe He teacheth therefore that we muste bee loosed from the bondes of the lawe vnlesse we wyll miserablye peryshe vnder them But from what bondes the bondes of that rigerous and sharpe exactinge that releaseth nothing of the extremitie of the lawe and suffereth not any offense vnpunished From this curse I saye that Christe mighte redeeme vs he was made a curse for vs. For it is wrytten Cursed is euery one that hangeth vpon the tree In the capter folowinge in deede he sayth that Christe was made subiecte to the lawe to redeeme them that were vnder the lawe but all in one meanynge for he by and by addeth that by adoption we mighte receiue the righte of children What is that that we shoulde not be oppressed wyth perpetuall bondage that shoulde holde oure conscience fast strained with anguishe of death In the meane tyme thys alwaye remaineth vnshaken that there is nothinge withdrawen of the authoritie of the lawe but that it oughte styll to bee receyued of vs wyth the same reuerence and obedience Of ceremonies it is otherwise whiche were abrogate not in effecte but in vse onely And this that Christe by hys commynge
our giltynesse vpon himself he might deliuer vs from them bothe If he had ben murthered by theues or had ben ragyngly slayne in a commotiō of the common people in such a death there shoulde haue ben no apparance of satisfaction But when he was brought to be arrained before the iudgement seate when he was accused and pressed with witnesses agaynst him by the mouth of the iudge condemned to dye by these tokens we vnderstande that he dyd beare the persone of a gilty manne and of an euell doer And here are two thinges to be noted whiche bothe were afore spoken by the prophecies of the Prophetes and doe bryng a singular comforte and confirmation of fayth For when we heare that Christ was sent from the iudges seate to death and was hanged amonge theues we haue the fulfillynge of that prophecie whiche is alleged by the Euangelist He was accompted amonge the wicked And why so● euen to take vpon him the stede of a sinner not a man righteous or innocent bycause he suffred death not for cause of innocencie but for sinne On the other side when we heare that he was acquited by the same mouth whereby he was condemned for Pilate was compelled openly more than ones to beare witnesse of his innocencie let that come in our mynde whiche is in the other Prophet that he repayed that whiche he had not taken awaye And so we shall beholde the persone of a sinner and euell doer represented in Christe and by the open apparance of his innocencie it shall become playne to see that he was charged rather with others offence than his owne He suffred therefore vnder Ponce Pilate and so by the solemne sentence of the President was reckened in the number of wicked doers but yet not so but that he was by the same iudge at the same time pronounced righteous when he affirmed that he founde no cause of condemnation in him This is our acquitall that the giltynesse which made vs subiect to punishment is remoued vpō the head of the sonne of God For this settyng of the one agaynst the other we ought principally to holde faste leaste we tremble be carefull all our life long as though the iuste vengeance of God dyd hang ouer vs which the sonne of God hath taken vpon himselfe Byside that the very manner of his death is not without a singular mysterie The Crosse was accursed not onely by opinion of men but also by decree of the lawe of God Therefore when Christ was lyfted vp to the Crosse he made hymselfe subiecte to the curse And so it behoued to be done that when the curse was remoued from vs to him we might be deliuered from all curse that for our sinnes was prepared for vs or rather dyd alredy rest vpon vs. Whiche thynge was also by shadowe expressed in the lawe For the sacrifices and satisfactorie oblations that were offred for sinnes were called Ashemoth Whiche worde proprely signifieth sinne it selfe By whiche figuratiue chaunge of name the holy ghost meant to shewe that they were lyke vnto cleansyng playsters to drawe out to themselues and beare the curse due to sinnes But that same whiche was figuratiuely represented in the sacrifices of Moses is in deede deliuered in Christ the original paterne of all the figures Wherfore he ▪ to performe a perfect expiat●o gaue his owne soule to be an ashame that is a satisfactorie oblation as the Prophete calleth it vpon the whyche our fi lt and punishement might be caste and so cesse to be imputed to vs. The Apostle testifieth the same thyng more playnely where he teacheth that he whiche knewe no sinne was by his father made sinne for vs that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him For the sonne of God beyng most cleane from all faulte dyd yet put vpon him the reproche and shame of our iniquities and on the other side couered vs with his cleannesse It semeth that he meante the same when he speaketh of sinne that sinne was condemned in his fleshe For the father destroyed the force of sinne when the curse thereof was remoued and layed vpon the fleshe of Christ. It is therefore declared by this sayeng that Christ was in his death offred vp to his father for a satisfactorie sacrifice that the whole satisfaction for sinne beyng ended by his sacrifice we might cesse to dread the wrath of God Nowe is it playne what that sayeng of the Prophete meaneth that the iniquities of vs all were layed vpon him that is that he entendynge to wype awaye the filthinesse of our iniquities was hymselfe as it were by waye of enterchanged imputation couered with them Of this the crosse whereunto he was fastened was a token as the Apostle testifieth Christe sayeth he redemed vs from the curse of the lawe when he was made a curse for vs. For it is wrytten Accursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree that the blessynge of Abraham mighte in Christe come to the Gentiles And the same had Peter respect vnto where he teacheth that Christ dyd beare our sinnes vpon the tree Bycause by the very token of the curse we doe more playnely learne that the burden wherewyth we weare oppressed was layed vpon hym And yet it is not so to bee vnderstanded that he toke vpon hym suche a curse wherewith hymselfe was ouerloden but rather that in takyng it vpon him he dyd treade downe breake and destroye the whole force of it And so fayth conceyueth acquitall in the condemnation of Christ and blessyng in his beyng accursed Wherefore Paule dothe not without a cause honorably report● the triumph that Christe obteyned to hymselfe on the crosse as if the crosse whyche was full of shame had ben turned into a Chariot of triumphe For he sayth that the hande wrytyng whiche was against vs was fastened to the crosse and the Princely powers were spoyled and led openly And no maruell bycause as the other Apostle testifieth Christe offred vp hymself by the eternall spirit And therupon proceded that turnynge of the nature of thinges But that these thynges maye take stedfaste roote and be throughly settled in our heartes let vs alwaye thynke vpon his sacrifice and washyng For we coulde not certainely beleue that Christe was the raunsome redemption and satisfaction vnlesse he had ben a sacrificed hoste And therefore there is so often mention made of bloud where the Scripture sheweth the manner of our redemyng Albeit the bloud of Christ that was shed serued not only for sacrifice but also in steede of washyng to cleanse awaye our filthynesse It foloweth in the Crede that he was dead and buried Where agayne it is to be seene howe he dyd euerye where putte hymselfe in our stede to paye the pryce of our redemption Death held vs bound vnder his yoke Christ in our stede dyd yelde hymselfe into the power of death to deliuer vs from it This the Apostle meaneth where
prophetes manners of speaking are to be noted as A child is borne to vs. Again Reioce the daughter of Siō behold thy king cōmeth to thee Also that confyrmation of loue shoulde be very colde whyche Paule setteth oute that Christe suffered deathe for his enemies For therevpon we gather that he had no respect of himselfe that same he plainely affirmeth in saieng I sanctifie my selfe for them For he that geueth awaie the frute of his holynesse vnto other doth thereby testifie that he purchaceth nothing for hymselfe And truely this is moste worthyly to be noted that Christe to geue him selfe wholy to saue vs did after a certaine manner forget himselfe But to thys purpose thei doe wrongfully drawe this testimonie of Paule Therefore the father hath exalted him geuē him a name c. For by what deseruinges coulde man obteine to be iudge of the worlde and the heade of the Angeles and to enioye the soueraigne dominion of God and that in hym shoulde rest that same maiestie the thousandth parte whereof all the powers of men and Angeles can not reache vnto But the solution thereof is easy and playne that Paule doth not ther entreate of the cause of exalting of Christe but onely to shewe the effect ensuing thereof that it might be for an example to vs. And no other thing is meant by that whiche is spoken in an other place that it behoued that Christe shold suffer and so enter into the glorie of his Father The thirde booke of the Institution of Christian Religion Whiche entreateth of the manner howe to receiue the grace of Christ and what profites do growe vnto vs and what effectes ensue thereof The fyrste Chapter That those thinges which are spoken of Christ do profite vs by secret working of the holy Ghoste NOwe it is to be seen howe those good thinges doe come vnto vs whiche the Father hathe geuen to his only begotten Sonne not for his own priuate vse but to enriche them that were without them needed them And fyrste this is to be learned that so longe as Christe is oute of vs and we be seuered from him whatsoeuer he suffered or dyd for the saluation of mankinde is vnprofitable and nothinge auayleth for vs. Therefore that he maye enterparten wyth vs those thinges that he hathe receiued of hys Father it behoueth that he become oures and dwell in vs. And for that cause he is called our heade and the fyrste begotten amonge many brethren and on the other side it is saide that we are graffed into him and did putte on hym For as I haue before saide all that euer he possesseth belongeth nothinge to vs vntyll we growe together into one with hym But although it be true that wee obteyne thys by faythe yet forasmuche as we see that not al without dyfference do embrace this enterpartening of Christe whyche is offered by the Gospel therefore very reason teacheth vs to clymbe vp hyer and to enquire of the secret effectuall workinge of the Spirite by whyche it is brought to passe that we enioye Christe and all his good thynges I haue before entreated of the eternall godhede and essence of the Spirit at thys present let vs be content wyth thys one speciall article that Christe so came in water and bloode that the Spirite shoulde testifie of hym leaste the saluation that he hathe purchaced shold slippe awaie from vs. For as there are alleged three witnesses in heauen the Father the Worde and the Spirit so are there also three in earth Water Bloode the Spirit And not without cause is the testimonie of the Spirite twise repeted whiche we feele to bee engrauen in oure heartes in steede of a seale whereby commeth to passe that it sealeth the washinge and sacrifice of Christ. After whiche meaninge Peter also saith that the faythfull are chosen in santification of the spirit vnto obedience and sprynkling of the blood of Christ. By whiche woordes he telleth vs that to the entent the shedinge of that holy bloode shoulde not become voyde oure soules are cleansed wyth it by the secrete wateringe of the holy Spirite According whervnto Paule also speakinge of cleansinge and iustification saieth that we are made partakers of them bothe in the name of Iesus Christe and in the Spirite of oure God Finally thys is the summe that the holy Spyrite is the bonde wherewyth Christe effectually byndeth vs vnto hym For proofe whereof also do serue all that wee haue taughte in the laste booke before thys concernynge hys anoyntynge But that this being a matter specially worthy to be knowen may be made more certainly euident we must holde this in minde that Christ came furnished with the holy Spirit after a certaine peculiar manner to the ende that he might seuer vs from the worlde and gather vs together into the hope of an eternal inheritance For this cause he is called the Spirit of sanctification bicause he doth not onely quicken and nourish vs with that general power which appeareth as wel in mankinde as in all other liuinge creatures but also is in vs the roote and feede of heauenly life Therefore the Prophetes do principally cōmend the kingdome of Christe by this title of prerogatiue that then shoulde florishe more plentifull aboundance of the Spirit And notable aboue all the rest is that place of Ioel In that day I will poure of my Spirit vpon al fleshe For though the Prophet there seeme to restraine the giftes of the Spirit to the office of prophecieng yet vnder a figure he meaneth that God by the enlightning of his Spirite will make those his scholers whyche before were vnskilfull and voyde of all heauenly doctrine Nowe forasmuche as God the Father dothe for his Sonnes sake geue vs his holy Spirit yet hathe left with him the whole fulnesse thereof to the ende that he shoulde be a minister and distributer of his liberalitie he is sometime called the Spirite of the Father and sometime the Spirite of the Sonne Ye are not saith Paule in the fleshe but in the Spirit for the Spirit of God dwelleth in you But if any haue not the spirit of Christe he is not his And herevpon he putteth vs in hope of ful renuing for that he which raised vp Christ from the deade shall quicken our mortall bodies bicause of his Spirit dwelling in vs. For it is not absurditie that to the Father bee ascribed the praise of his owne giftes whereof he is the author yet that the same be ascribed to Christe with whome the giftes of the Spirite are lefte that he maie geue them to those that be his Therefore he calleth all them that thirste to come to him to drynke And Paule teacheth that the Spirit is distributed to euery one according to the measure of the gifte of Christ. And it is to be knowen that he is called the Spirite of Christ not onely in respect that the eternall Worde of God is
the definition of it and the propreties that it hathe are declared BUt al these thinges shal be easy to vnderstand when there is shewed a plaine definitiō of fayth that the readers may knowe the force and nature thereof But fyrste it is conuenient to call to minde againe these thynges that haue ben already spoken that syth God doth appoint vs by his law what we ought to do if we fall in any point thereof the same terrible iudgement of eternall death that he pronounceth doth rest vpon vs. Againe that forasmuch as it is not only hearde but altogether aboue oure strength and beyond all oure power to fulfill the lawe if we only beholde our selues w●ie what estate is worthy for our deseruinges there is no good hope left but we lie cast away from God vnder eternall destruction Thirdly this hath ben declared that there is but one meane of deliuerance to drawe vs out of so wretched calamitie wherin appeareth Christ the Redeemer by whose hand it pleased the heauenly father hauing mercie vpon vs of his infinite goodnesse clemencie to succoure vs so that we wyth sounde faith embrace thys mercie and with constant hope rest vpon it But now it is conuenient for vs to weie this what manner of faith this ought to be by which al thei that are adopted by God to be hys chyldren do enter vpon the possession of the heauenly kingdome forasmuch as it is certaine that not euery opinion nor yet euery perswasion is sufficient to bring to passe so great a thing And with so much the more care study must we loke about for and searche out the natural propretie of faith by how muche the more hurtfull at thys day is the erroure of many in this behalf For a great part of the world hearing the name of faith conceiueth no hier thing but a certaine common assent to the historie of the Gospel Yea when thei dispute of faith in the scholes in barely callynge God the obiecte of faithe thei do nothinge but as we haue saide in an other place by vaine speculation rather draw wretched soules out of the right way thā direct them to the true mark For wheras God dwelleth in a light that none can atteine to it behoueth of necessitie that Christe become meane betweene vs and yt For whyche cause he calleth hym selfe the light of the world in an other place The way the Truth the Life bicause no man commeth to the father which is the fountaine of life but by him bicause he onely knoweth the Father by him the faithful to whome it pleaseth him to disclose him According to this reason Paule affirmeth that he accompteth nothing excellent to be knowen but Christ and in the .xx. chapiter of the Actes he saith that he preached faith in Christ c. And in an other place he bringeth in Christ speakeinge after this manner I wil send thee amonge the Gentiles that thei maye receiue forgeuenes of sinnes por●ion among holy ones by the faith which is in me And Paule testifieth that the glorie of God is in his person visible vnto vs or whiche is all one in effect that the enlightning of the knowledge of Gods glorie shineth in his face It is true in dede that faith hath respect only to the one God but this also is to be added that it acknowledge him whome he hath sent euen Iesus Chrste Bicause God himselfe shoulde haue lyen secret and hydden farre from vs vnlesse the brightnesse of Christe did cast his beames vpon vs. For this entent the father left al that he had with his onely begotten sonne euen by the cōmunicatinge of good thynges wyth him to expresse the true image of his glorie For as it is saide that we must be drawen by the spirit that we maie be stirred to seeke Christ so againe we ought to be admonished that the inuisible father is no where els to be sought but in this image Of whiche mater Augustine speaketh excellently well whiche entreating of the marke that faith should shoote at saith that we must know whether we must goe and which waie and then by by after he gathereth that the safest waye against all erroures is he that is both God and man For it is God to whome we go and man by whom we go and bothe these are founde no where but in Christe Neyther dothe Paule when he speaketh of faith in God meane to ouerthrowe that whiche he so ofte repeteth of faith that hath her whole stay vpon Christe And Peter dothe most fittly ioyne them bothe together saieng that by him we beleue in God Therefore thys euell euen as innumerable other is to be imputed to the Scholemen whiche haue hidden Christe as it were with a veile drawen before hym to the beholdyng of whome vnlesse we be dyrectly bent we shall alwaie wander in many vncertaine mazes But bysyde thys that with theyr darke definition they doe deface and in a manner bring to naught the whole force of faithe they haue forged a deuyse of vnexpressed faith wyth which name thei garnyshing theyr most grosse ignorance doe with greate hurte deceyue the silly people yea to saye truely and plainely as the thinge is in deede thys deuyse doth not only burie but vtterly destroye the true faithe Is this to beleue to vnderstand nothing so that thou obediently submitte thy sense to the Churche Faythe standeth not in ignorance but in knoweledge and that not onely of God but of the wyll of God For neither do we obteine saluation by thys that wee eyther are ready to embrace for true whatsoeuer the Churche appoynteth or that we do committe to it all the office of searchyng and knowing but when we acknowledge God to be a mercifull father to vs by the reconciliation made by Christ and that Christe is geuen vs vnto ryghteousnesse sanctification and lyfe By thys knoweledge I saye not by submitting of oure sense we atteine an entrie into the kyngedome of heauen For when the Apostle saith that with the hearte we beleue to righteousnesse and wyth the mouthe confession is made to saluation hee sheweth that it is not enoughe if a man vnexpressedly beleue that whiche he vnderstandeth not nor seeketh to learne but he requyreth an expressed acknowleging of Gods goodnesse in whyche consysteth oure ryghteousnesse In dede I denie not such is the ignorance wherwith we are cōpassed that ther now be herafter shal be many thinges wrapped hidden from vs till hauing put of the burden of our flesh we come nerer to the presence of God in which very thinges that be hidden from vs nothing is more profitable than to suspend our iudgment but to stay our mind in determined purpofe to kepe vnitie with the Churche But vnder thys coloure to entitle ignoraunce tempered with humilitie by the name of faith is a great absurditie For faith lieth in knoledg of God of Christ not in reuerence of the
he saithe in an other place that by the comming of faith the lawe is taken awaie meaning by this word faith ye●ewe vnaccustomed manner of teaching wherby Christ sins he appeared our scholemaster hath more plainl● set forth the mercy of his father more certainly testified of our saluation Albeit it shal be the more easye more conuenient ordre if we descend by degrees from the generaltie to the specialtie First we must be put in minde that there is a general relation of faith to the word that faith can no more be seuered from the word than the sun beames from the sume frō whome thei procede Therfore in Esaie God cryeth out Heare me and your soule shall lyue And that the same is the fountaine of faythe Ihon sheweth in these woordes These thinges are written that ye may beleue And the prophete meaninge to exhorte the people to beleefe saythe This daie yī ye shall heare hys voyce And to heare is commmonly taken for to Beleue Moreouer God dothe not wythout cause in Esaie sette thys marke of difference betwene the children of the Churche and straungers that he will instructe them all that thei maie be taught of him For if it were a benefite vniuersall to all why shoulde he direct hys woordes to a fewe Wherewith agreeth thys that the Euangelistes do commonly vse the woordes Faithfull and Disciples as seuerall wordes expressing one thing specially Luke very oft in the Actes of the Apostles Yea and he stretcheth that name euen to a woman in the ninthe chapiter of the Actes Wherefore if faith do swerue neuer so little from this marke to which it ought to be directly leuelled it kepeth not her owne nature butte becometh an vncertaine lightnesse of belefe and wandring erroure of mynde The same Worde is the foundation wherwith faith is vpholden susteined from which if it swarue it falleth downe Therfore take awaie the Worde then there shal remaine no faith We do not here dispute whether the ministerie of man be necessarie to sowe the worde of God that faithe may be conceiued thereby which question we will els where entreate of but we saie that the worde it self howesoeuer it be conueied to vs is like a mirroure when faith may beholde God Whether God dothe therein vse the seruice of man or worke it by his owne onely power yet he doth alwaie shewe him selfe by his worde to those whome his will is to drawe vnto him wherevpon Paule defineth faithe to be an obedience that is geuen to the Gospell Rom. i. And in an other place he praiseth the obedience of faithe in the Philippians For this is not the onely purpose in the vnderstanding of faithe that we knowe that there is a God but this also yea this chefely that we vnderstande what wil he beareth toward vs. For it not so muche behoueth vs to knowe what he is in himself but what a one he will be to vs. Nowe therefore we are come to thys point that faithe is a knoweledge of the will of God perceyued by his worde And the foundation hereof is a foreconceiued persuasion of the truthe of God Of the assurednesse whereof so longe as thy minde shal dispute with it selfe the worde shall be but of doubtful and weake credit yea rather no credit at all But also it sufficeth not to beleue that God is a true speaker whiche can neither deceiue nor lie vnlesse thow further holde this for vndoubtedly determined that whatsoeuer procedeth from him is the sacred and inuiolable truthe But bicause not at euery word of God mans hearte is raised vp to faith we must yet further search what this faith in the word hath proprely respecte vnto It was the saieng of God to Adam Thou shalte die the death It was the saienge of God to Cain The bloode of thy brother crieth to me out of the earth Yet these are suche saiengs as of them selues canne doe nothynge butte shake faythe so muche lesse are they able to stablyshe faythe We denye not in the meane season that yt ys the offyce of faythe to agree to the truthe of God howe ofte soeuer what soeuer and in what sorte soeuer yt speaketh butte nowe oure question is onely what faythe fyndeth in the woorde of the Lorde to leane and rest vpon When oure conscience beholdeth onely indignation and vengeance howe canne it butte tremble and quake for feare And howe shoulde yt butte flee God of whome yt is afraide But faythe oughte to seeke God and not to flee from him It is plaine therefore that we haue not yet a full definition of faythe bycause it is not to be accompted for faithe to knowe the wyll of God of what sorte so euer it be But what yf in the place of wyll whereof many tymes the message is sorrowefull and the declaration dreadful we putte kindenesse or mercie Truely so we shal come nerer to the nature of faithe For wee are then allured to seeke God after that wee haue learned that saluation is laied vp in store with him for vs. Whyche thynge is confyrmed vnto vs when he declareth that he hath care and loue of vs. Therefore there needeth a promise of grace whereby he maie testifie that he is oure mercifull father for that otherwise wee canne not approche vnto hym and vpon that alone the hearte of man maie safely rest For thys reason commonly in the Psalmes these two thinges Mercie and Truth do cleaue together bicause neither should it any thynge profite vs to know that God is true vnlesse he did mercifully allure vs vnto him neither were it in our power to embrace his mercie vnlesse he did with his owne mouthe offer it I haue reported thy truth and thy saluation I haue not hidden thy goodnesse and thy truthe Thy goodnesse and thy trueth keepe me In an other place Thy mercie to the heauens thy trueth euen to the cloudes Againe All the wayes of the Lorde are mercie and trueth to them that keepe his couenant Againe His mercie is multiplied vpon vs and the truth of the Lorde abydeth for euer Againe I will singe to thy name vpon thy mercie and trueth I omitte that whiche is in the Prophetes to the same meaninge that God is mercifull and faythfull in hys promyses For wee shall rashly determine that God is merciefull vnto vs vnlesse himselfe do testifie of himselfe and preuent vs wyth his callinge leaste his wil shoulde be doubtful and vnknowen But we haue already seen that Christ is the onely pledge of his loue without whome on euery side appeare the tokens of hatred and wrath Nowe forasmuche as the knoweledge of Gods goodnesse shall not muche preuayle vnlesse he make vs to rest in it therefore suche an vnderstanding is to be banished as is mingled with doubting and doth not soundli agree in it selfe but as it were disputeth with it selfe But mans witte as yt is blinde and darkened is farre from
atteining and climbing vp to perceiue the very will of God and also the hearte of man as it wauereth with perpetuall doubting is farre from resting assured in that persuasion Therefore it behoueth bothe that our witt be lightned and oure heart strengthened by some other meane that the worde of God may be of ful credit with vs. Now we shal haue a perfect definition of fayth if we saie that it is a stedfast assured knowledge of Gods kindnes toward vs which being grounded vpō the trueth of the free promise in Christ is both reueled to our mindes and sealed in our heartes by the holy ghoste But before I procede any further it shal be necessary that I make some preambles to dissolue certain doubts that otherwise might make some stoppe to the readers And first I must confute the distinctiō that flieth about in the scholes betwene faith fourmed and vnformed For thei imagine that such as are touched with no feare of God with no feling of godlinesse do beleue all that is necessarie to saluation As though the holy ghooste in lyghtenyng oure heartes vnto faythe were not a witnesse to vs of oure adoption And yet presumptuously when all the Scripture crieth out againste it they geue the name of faith to suche perswasion voide of the feare of God Wee neede to striue no further with theyr definition but simply to reherse the nature of faith such as it is declared by the worde of God Whereby shall plainely appeare how vnskilfully foolishly thei rather make a noise than speake of it I haue alreadie touched parte the rest I wyll adde hereafter as place shall serue At this present I saie that there can not bee imagined a greater absurditie than this inuention of theires They wyll haue faith to be an assent whereby euery despyser of God maie receiue that whiche is vttered out of the Scripture But fyrste thei should haue seen whether euery manne of hys owne power do brynge faithe to hymselfe or whether the holy ghooste be by it a witnesse of adoption Therefore they do chyldyshly plaie the fooles in demaundinge whether faithe whiche qualitie addeth dothe fourme be the same faithe or an other and a newe faithe Whereby appeareth certainely that in so bablinge they neuer thought of the syngular gyfte of the holy ghooste For the begynning of beleuinge dothe already conteine in it the reconciliation whereby manne approcheth to God But if they dyd weye that sayeng of Paule With the hearte is beleued to righteousnesse thei wold cesse to fayne that same colde qualitie If we hadde but thys one reason it shoulde be sufficient to ende thys contention that the very same assent as I haue already touched and wyll againe more largely repete is rather of the hearte than of the brayne rather of affection than of vnderstandynge For whyche cause it is called the obeydience of faythe whyche is suche as the Lorde preferreth no kynde of obeydience aboue it and that woorthyly forasmuche as nothynge is more precious to hym than hys truthe whyche as Ihon the Baptist wytnesseth the beleuers doe as yt were subscribe and seale vnto Sythe the matter ys not doubtefull we doe in one woorde determinately saie that they speake fondly when they saie that faithe is fourmed by addynge of godly affection vnto assent whereas assent it selfe at least suche assent as ys declared in the Scriptures consisteth of godly affection Butte yet there ys an other playner argument that offereth yt selfe to be alleged For whereas faythe embraceth Christe as hee ys offered vs of the Father and Christe ys offered not onely for ryghteousnesse forgeuenesse of synnes and peace butte also for sanctification and a fountayne of lyuynge water wythoute doubte noe mann ecanne euer truely knowe hym vnlesse he doe therewythall receyue the sanctification of the Spirite Or if any manne desyre to haue it more plainely spoken Faythe consysteth in the knowledge of Christe And Christe canne not bee knowen butte wyth sanctification of hys Spirite therefore it foloweth that fayth can by no meane be seuered from godly affection Whereas they are wonte to laye thys agaynste vs that Paule sayeth If a manne haue all faythe so that hee remoue mountaynes yf he haue not charitie hee ys nothynge whereby they woulde deforme faythe in spoylinge it of charitie they consyder not what the Apostle in that place meaneth by faithe For when in the chapiter next before it he hadde spoken of the diuerse gyftes of the holy ghoste amonge the whyche he had reckened the diuerse kindes of languages power and prophecie and hadde exhorted the Corynthians to folowe the beste of these giftes that is to saie suche gyftes whereby more profit and commoditie myghte come to the whole body of the Churche he streyght waie saide further that he woulde shewe them yet a more excellent waie That all suche gyftes howe excellent soeuer they bee of them selues yet are nothinge to be esteemed vnlesse thei serue charitie For they were geuen to the edyfyeng of the Churche and vnlesse they bee applyed therevnto they loose theyr grace For proofe of thys he particularly reherseth them repetynge the selfe same gyftes that hee hadde spoken of before butte in other names And hee vseth the woordes Powers and Faythe for all one thynge that is for the power to do miracles Sythe therefore thys whether ye call it power or faithe is a particular gyfte of God whyche euery vngodly manne maye boothe haue and abuse as the gyfte of tongnes as prophecie and other gyftes of grace yt ys no maruell yf yt bee seuered from charitie Butte all the erroure of these menne standeth in thys that where thys woorde Faythe hathe dyuerse sygnifcations they not consyderinge the dyuersitie of the thinge sygnifyed dispute as though it were taken for one thynge in all places a lyke The place of Iames whyche they allege for mayntaynance of the same erroure shall bee els where dyscussed Butte althoughe for teachynges sake when wee meane to shewe what manner of knoweledge of God there ys in the wycked wee graunte that there are dyuerse sortes of faythe yet wee acknoweledge and speake of butte one faythe of the godly as the Scripture teacheth Many in deede doe beleue that there ys a God they thynke that the Hystorie of the Gospell and other partes of the Scripture are true as commonly wee are wonte to iudge of suche thynges as eyther are reported beynge done longe agoe or suche as wee oure selues haue beene presente at and seen There bee also some that goe further for bothe they beleue the woorde of God to be a moste assured oracle they do not altogether despyse hys commaundementes and they somewhat after a sorte are moued with hys threatenynges and promyses It is in deede testified that suche haue faythe butte that ys spoken oute by abuse bycause they do not wyth open vngodlynesse fyghte agaynste the woorde of God or refuse or despyse it butte rather pretende a certayne shewe
forraine nations whiche had ben transplanted into Samaria and the places borderynge there about feared the fayned Gods and the God of Israell whiche is as much as to mingle heauen and earth together But now our question is What is that fayth whiche maketh the chyldren of God different from the vnbeleuers by which we call vpon God by the name of our Father by whyche we passe from death to life and by which Christ the eternall saluacion and ●he dwelleth in vs. The force and nature thereof I thinke I haue shortly and plainely declared Now let vs againe goe through all the partes of it euen from the beginning which beyng diligently examined as I thinke there shal remaine nothing doubtefull When in defining faith we cal it a knowledge we meane not thereby a cōprehendyng such as men vse to haue of those thinges that are subiect to mans vnderstandyng For it is so far aboue it that mās wit must goe beyond surmount it self to come vnto it yea and when it is come vnto it yet doth it not atteyne that whiche it feleth but while it is persuaded of that whiche it conceiueth not it vnderstandeth more by the very assurednesse of persuasion than yf it did with mās owne capacitie throughly perceyue any thing familiar to man Therefore Paule sayth very well where he calleth it to comprehende what is the length bredth depth and heighth and to knowe the loue of Christ that farre surmounteth knowledge For his meanynge was to signifie that the thynge whiche our mynde conceyueth by faythe is euery waye infinite and that this kinde of knowledge is farre hyer than all vnderstandynge But yet bycause the Lorde hath disclosed to his Saintes the secret of his will whiche was hidden from ages and generations therefore by good reason fayth is in Scripture sometime called an acknowledging and Iohn calleth it a certayne knowledge where he testifieth that the faithfull doe certainely knowe that they are the children of God And vndoutedly they knowe it assuredly but rather by beyng confirmed by persuasion of Gods truthe than by beyng informed by naturall demonstration And his also the wordes of Paule doe declare sayeng that while we ●well in the body we are wanderyng abrode from the lord bycause we walke by fayth and not by sighte whereby he sheweth that those thynges whiche we vnderstande by fayth are yet absente from vs and are hidden from our sight And hereupon we determine that the knowledge of fayth stādeth rather in certaintie than in comprehendyng We further call it a sure and stedfaste knowledge to expresse thereby a more sound constantie of persuasion For as faith is not contented with a doubtefull and rowling opinion so is it also not cōtented with a darke and entangled vnderstāding but requireth a ful and fixed assurednesse ▪ such as men are wont to haue of thinges foūd by experience and proued For vnbelefe sticketh so faste and is so depe rooted in our heartes and we are so bent vnto it that this which all men confesse with their mouth to be true that God is faithfull no mā is without great contention persuaded in his heart Specially when it cōmeth to the profe then the waueryng of all menne discloseth the fault ●hat ●●ore was hidden And not without cause the Scripture with so n●●●ble cit●es of cōmendacion maineteyneth the authoritie of the worde of God but endeuoreth to geue remedie for the aforesayde disease that God maye obteyne to be fully beleued of vs in his promises The wordes of the Lorde sayth Dauid are pure wordes as the S●●●e●●ryed in a fornace of earth fined seuen times Agayne The worde o● the Lorde fined is a shielde to all that truste in him And Salomon confirmynge the same and in a manner in the same wordes sayth Euery worde of God is pure But sithe the whole .cxix. Psalme entreateth only in a manner vpon the same it weare superfluous to allege any moe places Truely so oft as God doth so cōmend his word vnto vs he doth therein by the waye reproche vs with our vnbeleuingnesse bycause that commendaciō tendeth to no other end but to roote vp all peruerse doubtinges out of our heartes There be also many which so cōceiue the mercie of God that they take litle cōfort thereof For they be euen therewithall pinched with a miserable carefulnesse while they doubte whether he will be mercifull to them or noe bicause they enclose within to narrow boundes the very same mercifulnesse of whiche they thinke themselues moste assuredly perswaded For thus they thinke with themselues that his mercie is in deede greate and plentiefull poured out vpon many offrynge it selfe and ready for all menne but that it is not certayne whether it will extende vnto them or no or rather whether they shal atteyne vnto it or no. This thought when it so stayeth in the midde race is but a halfe Therefore it doth not so confirme the spirite with assured quietnesse as it dothe trouble it with vnquiet doubtefulnesse But there is a far other felyng of full assurednesse whiche in the Scriptures is alwaye assigned to fayth euen suche a one as playnely settynge before vs the goodnesse of God dothe clearely put it out of doubte And that can not be but that we muste needes truely feele and proue in our selues the swetenesse thereof And therefore the Apostle out of fayth deriueth assured confidence and out of it agayne boldenesse For thus he sayeth that by Christe we haue boldenesse and an entrance with confidence whiche is through fayth in him By whiche wordes truely he sheweth that it is no right fayth but when we are bolde with quiet mindes to shewe our selues in the presence of God Which boldnesse procedeth not but of assured confidence of Gods good will and our saluation Whiche is so true that many times this word Faith is vsed for Confidence But herupon hangeth the chiefe staye of our faith that we do not think the promises of mercie which the Lord offreth to be true only in other biside vs not at all in our selues but rather that in inwardly embracing thē we make them our owne Frō hense procedeth that cōfidence which the same Paule in an other place calleth peace vnlesse some had rather say that peace is deriued of it It is an assurednesse that maketh the consciēce quiet cherefull before God without which the cōscience must of necessitie be vexed in a manner torne in peces with troublesome trembling vnlesse parhappes it do forget God it selfe so slōber a litle while I may truely say For a litle while for it doth not lōg enioy that miserable forgetfulnesse but is with often recourse of the remembrance of Gods iudgement sharply tormented Briefly there is none truely faithful but he that beyng persuaded with a soūd assurednesse that God is his mercyfull louyng father doth promise himselfe all thinges vpon trust of Gods goodnesse and none but he that trustyng
Lord in goodnesse Now it may be also perceiued what be the frutes of repentance euen the duties of godlinesse toward God and of charitie toward mē and therewithall a holinesse and purenesse in all our life Finally the more earnestly that any man examineth his life by the rule of Gods law so much the surer tokens he sheweth of his repētance Therfore the holy ghost oftentimes when he exhorteth vs to repentance calleth vs sometime to all the commaundementes of the lawe sometime to the duties of the secōd table Albeit in other places after that he hath condemned vncleannesse in the very fountayne of the heart he descende●h afterwarde to outwarde testimonies that doe set out true repentance of whiche thynge I will hereafter set before the readers eyes a table in the description of a Christian lyfe I will not gather testimonies out of the Prophetes wherein they partely scorne at their follies that goe about to appease God with ceremonies and do shewe that they be mere mockeries and partely doe teache that outwarde vpryghtnesse of lyfe is not the principall part of repentance bycause God loketh vpō the heart who so euer is euen meanely exercised in the scripture shall perceiue of himself without any other mās puttyng in minde that when we haue to do with God we labour in vayne vnlesse we beginne at the inward affectiō of the heart And the place of Ioel shall not a litle helpe to the vnderstandinge of the reste where he sayth Teare your heartes and not your garmēts Also both those pointes are expressed in these wordes of Iames Ye wicked doers cleanse your handes ye double men purge your heartes Where in deede there is an addition ioyned to the first part but after is shewed the very fountayne and beginning that they muste wipe awaye their secret filthynesse that there may be an altar set vp to God in the very heart Biside this there are also certaine outward exercises whiche we vse priuately as remedies to hūble our selues or to tame our flesh and publikely for the declaration of repentance And they procede frō that punishment of whiche Paule speaketh for these are the propreties of an afflicted minde to be in lothesomnesse mournyng and weping to flie gorgeousnesse and al trimmyng and to forsake al delites Then he that feleth how great an euell is the rebellion of the fleshe seketh al remedies to bridle it Moreouer he that wel bethinketh him how greuous a thing it is to haue offended the iustice of God can not rest vntill he haue in his owne humilitie geuen glorie to God Such exercises the olde writers do oftentimes rehearse when they speake of the frutes of repentance But albeit they doe not place the whole force of repētance in them yet the readers shall pardō me if I speake what I thinke it semeth vnto me that they stand to much vpon them And if any man will wisely weye it I truste he will agree with me that they haue two wayes gone beyond measure For when they so muche enforced and with inmesurable commendations aduaunced that bodyly discipline this in deede they obteyned that the people did the more earnestly embrace it but they in a manner darkened that whiche ought to haue ben of much greater importance Secondely in geuing punishmentes they were somewhat more rigorous than ecclesiasticall mildenesse maye beare as we shal haue occasion to shew in an other place But bicause many when they heare wepyng fastynge and ashes spoken of bothe often in other places and specially in Ioel they measure the chiefe part of repentance by fastyng and wepyng therefore theyr errour is to be taken awaye That which is there spoken of the turnyng of the whole heart to the lord of cuttyng their heartes and not their garmentes is proprely belonging to repētance but weping and fastyng are not ioyned as continuall or necessary effectes therof but are spoken of in respect of a speciall circumstance Bicause he had prophecied that there hāged ouer the Iewes a most greuous destruction therefore he counselleth them to preuent the wrath of God not only in repenting but also in vtteryng tokens of their sorrow For as a man standyng to be arrayned vseth humbly to abace hymself with an ouergrowen bearde vncombed heare and blacke apparel to moue the iudge to pitie so it behoued them when they stode accused before the iudgement seate of God in piteous array to besech him not to extend his rigour But although ashes and sackcloth did paraduenture more fitly agree with those times Yet it is certaine that wepyng and fastyng should be to a very conuenient good vse amonge vs so oft as the Lorde semeth to threaten vs any plague or calamitie For when he maketh any danger to appere he doth after a certaine maner geue warning that he is prepared or armed to reuenge Therfore the prophet did wel when he exhorted his contreemen to wepyng fasting that is to the sorrowful manner of accused menne whose offences he sayd a litle before were had in examination Euen as the Pastors of the Church should not doe ill at this daye if when they see any ruine hangyng ouer the neckes of their people they woulde crye out vpon them to make hast to fasting weping so that thei wold with greater and more inwarde care and diligence alwaye enforce that whiche is the principal point that they must cut their heartes and not their garmentes It is out of doubt that fastyng is not alway ioyned with repentance but is apointed peculiarly for times of miserable plagues therefore Christ ioyneth it with wayling when he acquiteth the Apostles from neede thereof vntill the time that beyng spoyled of his presence they should be tormented with grefe I speake of solēne fasting For the priuate life of the godly ought to be tēpered with honest sparyng and sobrietie that in the whole course thereof there may appere a certaine kinde of fasting But bicause all this matter shal be to be declared againe in the place where we shall entreate of the discipline of the Church therefore I doe now the more sclenderly touche it But this one thyng I will adde here by the waye when the name of repētance is applied to this outward profession then it is vnproprely turned from the naturall meanynge whiche I haue aboue set forth of it For it is not so muche a turnyng vnto God as a confession of fault with a besechyng of God not to charge them with the peyne and giltinesse So to do penance in ashes and sackcloth is nothing els than to vtter a displeasednesse when God is angry with vs for greuous offenses And this is a publike kinne of confession whereby we condemning our selues before the Angeles and the world do preuēt the iudgement of God For Paule rebukyng their slouthfulnesse that tenderly beare with their own faultes sayth Yf we did iudge our selues we shoulde not be iudged of God But it is not alwaye necessarie to
Sonne but it is also spoken agaynst the holy ghost They that stumble vnware against the truthe of God not knowyng it which do ignorantly speake euell of Christ hauyng yet this minde that they would not extinguish the truth of God disclosed vnto them or ones with one worde offend him whome they had knowen to be the lordes anoynted these men sinne agaynst the father and the sonne So there are many at this day that do most hatefully detest the doctrine of the Gospell whiche if they did know it to be the doctrine of the Gospell they would be redy to worship with all their heart But thei whose conscience is conuinced that it is the worde of God whiche they forfake and fight agaynst and yet cesse not to fight agaynst it they are sayd to blaspheme the holy ghost for asmuch as they wrastle against the enlightening that is the work of the holy ghost Such were many of the Iewes whiche when they could not resist the Spirit that spake by Stephen yet endeuored to resist It is no doubt but that many of them were carried vnto it with zele of the lawe but it appereth that there were some other that of malicious wickednesse dyd rage agaynst God himselfe that is to saye agaynst the doctrine whiche they were not ignoraunt to be of God And such were those Pharisees against whō the Lord inueyeth which to ouerthrow the power of the holy ghost defamed him with the name of Beelzebub This therfore is the Spirit of blasphemie when mans boldnesse of 〈◊〉 purpose leapeth forth to reproche of the name of God Which Paule signifieth whē he sayth that he obteined mercie bicause he had ig●orātly cōmitted those thinges through vnbelefe for whiche otherwise he had ben vnworthy of Gods fauour If ignorāce ioyned with vnbelefe was y● cause that he obteined pardō therupō foloweth that there is no place for pardon where knowlege is ioyned to vnbelefe But if thou marke it wel thou shalt perceiue that the Apostle speaketh not of one or other particular fal but of the vniuersal departyng whereby the reprobate do forsake saluation And it is no maruel that they whom Iohn in his canonical epistle affirmeth not to haue ben of the elect frō whom they went out do fele God vnappeasable For he directeth his speache against them that imagined that they might re●urue to the Christian religion although they had ones departed frō it and calling them from this false pestilent opinion he sayth that whiche is most true that there is no way of returne open for them to the cōmunion of Christ that wittingly willingly haue cast it awaye But they cast it not away that only in dissolute licentiousnesse of lyfe transgresse the word of the lord but thei that of set purpose cast away his whole doctrine Therfore the deceit is in these wordes of fallyng sinning Bicause the Nouatians expound Falling to be if a man beyng taught by the law of the Lord that he ought not to steale or to cōmit fornication absteineth not from stealing or fornication But cōtrarywise I affirme that there is a secret comparison of contraries wherein ought to be repeted althinges cōtrarie to that which was first spokē so that here is expressed not any particular fault but the whole turning away frō God and as I may so cal it the Apostasie of the whole mā Therfore when he sayth they which haue fallen after that they haue ones ben enlightened haue tasted the heauēly gift ben made partakers of the holy ghost also tasted the good worde of God and the powers of the world to come it is to be vnderstanded of them that with aduised vngodlinesse haue choked the light of the holy spirit haue spit out agayne the tast of the heauenly gift haue enstrāged themselues from the sanctificatiō of the holy ghost haue troden vnder foote the word of God the powers of the world to come And the more to expresse that aduised purpose of wickednesse in an other place afterwarde he addeth this worde by name Wilfully For when he sayth that there is left no sacrifice for them that sinne willingly after knowlege of the truthe receiued he doth not denie y● Christ is a continual sacrifice to purge the iniquities of the holy ones which he expresly crieth out almost in the whole epistle where he declareth y● priesthode of Christ but he sayth that there remaineth no other whē that is ones forsaken it is forsaken when the truth of the gospell is of set purpose renounced But whereas some do thinke it to harde and to far from the tender merciefulnesse of God that any are put awaye that flee to beseching the lords mercie that is easily answered For he doth not say that pardon is denied thē if they turne to the lord but he vtterly denieth that they can rise vnto repentance bycause they are by the iuste iudgement of God striken with eternall blindnesse for their vnthankefulnesse And it maketh nothyng to the contrarie that afterward he applieth to this purpose the example of Esau whiche in vaine attempted with howling and wepyng to recouer his right of the firste begotten And no more doth that threatenyng of the Prophet When they crie I wil not heare For in such phrases of speache is meante neyther the true conuersion nor callyng vpon God but that carefulnesse of the wicked wherewith beyng boūd they are compelled in extremitie to loke vnto that which before they carelesly neglected that there is no good thing for them but in the Lordes helpe But this they doe not so muche call vpon as they mourne that it is taken from them Therefore the Prophet meaneth nothing els by Cryeng and the Apostle nothing els by Weping but that horrible torment which by desperation fretteth and vexeth the wicked This it is good to marke diligently for els God should disagree with himself which crieth by the Prophet that he wil be merciefull so sone as the sinner turneth And as I haue alredy sayd it is certayne that the minde of man is not turned to better but by Gods grace preuentyng it Also his promise concernyng callynge vpon him will neuer deceyue But that blinde torment wherwith the reprobate are diuersly drawen when they see that they muste needes seeke God that they may finde remedie for their euels and yet do flee from his presence is vnproperly called Conuersion and prayer But a question is moued whereas the Apostle denieth that God is appeased with fained repentance how Achab obteined pardon and turned awaye the punishment pronounced vpon him whom yet it appereth by the reste of the course of his life to haue ben onely striken amased with sodeine feare He did in deede put on sacke cloth scattered ashes vpon him laye vpon the ground and as it is testified of him he was hūbled before God but it was not enough to cut his garmentes when his heart remayned thicke and swollen
I speake now of grosse and blockish hypocrites that thinke thei haue done sufficiently if they haue noted three or sower of the greatest sinnes but I speake of the true worshippers of God whiche when thei see themselues oppressed with the examinatiō that they haue made do adde also this saieng of Ihon If oure owne heart do accuse vs God is greater than oure heart and so thei quake for feare at the sight of that iudge whose knowledge farre sourmounteth oure vnderstandinge But whereas a greate parte of the worlde rested them vpon suche flatteries wherewith so deadely a poyson was tempered thys came not so to passe bycause they beleued that God was satisfied or bycause they them selues were fully satisfied but that the anchor caste as y● were in the midde sea shoulde reste a lyttle from saylinge or as a wayfaringe man weary and fainetynge shoulde lye downe in the waye I laboure not muche in prouinge thys For euery man maie be witnesse to hym selfe I will in a shorte summe shewe what manner of law thys was Fyrst simply it is impossible and therefore it can do nothinge but destroy damne confounde and cast in ruine and desperation And then when it hath ledde sinners from the true feeling of their sinnes it maketh then hypocrites and ignoraunce of God and themselues For whyle they are wholy busyed in reckenynge vppe of theyr synnes in the meane tyme they forgette the secrete sinke of vyces their hydden Iniquities and inwarde fylthynesse by knowledge whereof they shoulde cheefely haue weyed their myserie But thys was a moste certaine rule of confession to acknowledge and confesse the bottomlesse depth of our euell to be so great as passeth our vnderstandyng After thys rule wee see that the Publicanes confession was made Lorde be mercifull to me a synner as if he shoulde saie All that euer I am I am altogether a sinner and I can not atteine with witte or expresse with tongue the greatnesse of my sinnes let the bottomlesse depthe of thy mercie swallow vp the bottomles depth of my sinne But then thou wilt saie what are not all oure sinnes to be confessed is no confession acceptable to God but that whiche is knitte vp in these twoo woordes I am a sinner No but rather we muste endeuoure our selues as much as in vs lieth to poure out oure heart before the Lorde and not onely in one worde confesse oure selues sinners but also truely and heartyly acknowledge oure selues to be suche and with al oure thought record howe greate and diuerse is oure filth of sinnes not onely that wee bee vncleane but what howe great and in howe many partes is oure vncleannesse not onely that we be detters but with howe greate dettes wee bee loden and howe manie waies charged not onely that we bee wounded but also with howe manie deadly strokes we be wounded With this reknowleging when the sinner hath wholy poured out himselfe before God lette him earnestly and syncerely thinke that yet there remaine moe sinnes that the secret corners of their euels are so depe that thei can not be throughly disclosed And he crieth out with Dauid Whoe vnderstandeth his errours Lorde cleanse me from my hidden sinnes Now wher thei affirme that sinnes are not forgeuen but with an intent of confessing firmely conceiued and that the gate of paradise is shutte against him that neglecteth occasion offered when he may be confessed God forbidde that we shoulde graunt them that For there is no other forgeuenesse of sinnes than alwaie hath ben It is not reade that all thei haue confessed their sinnes in the eare of some preste that wee reade to haue obteined forgeuenesse of sinnes at Christes hande And truely thei coulde not confesse where there were neither any prestes confessors nor any confessing at all And in many ages after thys confession was vnhearde of at which time sinnes weare forgeuen with out thys condition But that we may not nede to dispute longer about this as about a doubtfull matter the worde of God is plaine which abideth for euer Whensoeuer the synner repenteth I will no more remembre all his iniquities He that dare adde any thinge to this worde byndeth not sinnes but the mercie of God For whereas thei saie that Iudgement canne not be geuen but when the cause is heard we haue a solution in readinesse that they doe presumptuously take that vpon them selues which haue made themselues iudges And it is a maruell that thei do so boldely frame to themselues suche principles as no man in his right wit wil graunt Thei boaste that the office of Binding and Loosing is committed to them as though it weare a certain iurisdictiō ioyned with Inquisition Moreouer their whole doctrine crieth oute that this authoritie was vnknowen to the Apostles Neither doth it belong to the preeste but to him whiche desireth absolution to knowe certainly whether the synner be loosed or no forasmuche as he that heareth can neuer know whether the reckning be iust perfect So shold ther be no absolution but suche as is restrained to his words that is to be iudged Moreouer the whole ordre of loosing stādeth of faith repētance which two things are hidden from the knowledg of man when sētence must be geuē vpō an other man It foloweth therfore ▪ that the assurāce of binding and loosing is not subiect to the iudgment of an earthly iudge bicause the minister of the worde when he dothe his office can not geue absolution but conditionally but that this is spoken for the sinnes sake Whose sinnes ye forgeue ▪ c. that thei should not doubte that the pardon whiche is promised by the commaundement and worde of God shall be ratified in heauen Therefore it is no maruel if we condemne and desire to haue vtterly taken awaie this Auricular confession a thinge so pestilent and so many waies hurtfull to the Churche but if it were a thinge by it selfe indifferent yet for asmuche as it is to no vse nor profite hathe geuen cause to so many wickednesses sacrileges and erroures whoe will not thinke that it ought to be presently abolished Thei do in deede recken vp some good vses whiche thei boaste vpon as very profitable butte these either false or of no valewe at all Due onely thei commend with a singular prerogatiue that shame is a great punishment of him that cōfesseth wherby the sinner both is for time to com made warer preuenteth the punishment of God in punishing himselfe As thoughe we dyd not humble a man with shamefastnesse enoughe when we call him to that hie iudgement seate of heauen I meane to the hearing of God It is forsoothe very wel profited if for shame of one mans knowledge we cesse to sinne and bee not ashamed to haue God witnesse of oure euell conscience Althoughe the very same is also moste false for it is to bee seen that by nothinge groweth greater confidence or licentiousnesse to sinne than when men hauing made
in shame no horrour in death what valiātnesse or temperance were it to beare them indifferently But when euery one of these doth with the natural bitternesse therof bitte the heartes of vs all herein doth the valiantnesse of a faythfull man shewe it self if beyng assayed with the felyng of such bitternesse how greuously so euer he be troubled with it yet with valiantly resistyng he ouercommeth it his patience vttereth it selfe herein yf beyng sharply prouoked he is yet so bridled with the feare of God that he bursteth not out into any distēper His cherefulnesse appereth herein yf beyng wounded with sadnesse and sorrowe he resteth vpon the spirituall comfort of God This conflict whiche the faithfull do susteyne agaynst the natural felyng of sorrow while they studie for patience and temperance Paul hath very wel described in these wordes We are put to distresse in al thinges but we are not made sorrowfull we labour but we are not lefte destitute we suffer persecution but we are not forsaken in it we are throwē downe but we perish not You see how to beare the crosse patiently is not to be altogether astonished and without al felyng of sorrow As the Stoikes in olde time did foolishly describe a valiant hearted man to be such a one as puttyng of all nature of man was a like moued in prosperitie and in aduersitie in sorrowfull and ioyefull state yea suche a one as like a stone was mo●ed with nothyng And what haue they profited with this hye wisedome Forsothe they haue painted out such an image of wisedome as neuer was found and neuer can herafter be among mē But rather while they coueted to haue to exact and precise a patience they haue taken awaye all the vse of patience out of mans life And at this day also amōg Christians there are newe Stoikes that recken it a fault not only to grone and w●pe but also to be sad and carefull But these strange conclusions do commonly procede from idle men whiche busieng themselues rather in speculation than doyng can do nothyng but brede vs such new found doctrines But we haue nothyng to do with that stony Philosophie whiche our maister and Lord hath condemned not only by his worde but also by his example For he mourned and wept both at his owne and other mens aduersities The worlde sayth he shall reioyse but you shall mourne and wepe And bicause no man should finde faulte therewith by his open proclamation he hath pronounced them blessed that mourne And no maruell For if all wepyng be blamed what shal we iudge of the Lord himself out of whose body dropped blouddy teares If euery feare be noted of infidelitie what shall we iudge of that quakyng feare wherewith we reade that he was not sclenderly striken If all sadnesse be mislyked how shal we like this that he confesseth his soule to be sad euen to the death This I thought good to speake to this ende to cal godly mindes from despear that they should not therfore altogether forsake the studie of patience bycause they can not put of the naturall affection of sorrow whiche must needes happen to them that make of patience a senslesse dulnesse and of a valiant and constant man a stocke For the Scripture geueth to the holy ones the prayse of patience when they are so troubled with hardnesse of aduersities that yet thei be not ouercome nor throwē downe with it when they be so pricked with bitternesse that they be also delited with spirituall ioye when they be so distressed with grefe that yet they receyue courage againe beyng cheared with the comfort of God Yet in the meane time that repugnancie abideth still in their heartes that naturall sense eschueth and dredeth those thinges that it knoweth to be against it but the affection of godlinesse trauaileth euen through all those difficulties to the obeyeng of Gods will This repugnancie the Lord expressed when he sayd thus to Peter Whē thou waste yong thou didst gird thy self didst walke whether thou woldest But when thou art old an other shall gyrde thee and leade thee whither thou shalt not be willyng Neyther is it likely that Peter when the time came that he must glorifie God by his death was drawen vnwillyngly and resistyng vnto it Els his martyrdome should haue but small prayse But howe so euer he did with great cherefulnesse of heart obeye the ordinance of God yet bicause he had not put of the nature of manne he was doubly strayned with two sortes of willes For when he dyd by himselfe cōsider the bloudly death that he should suffer beyng stryken with horrour thereof he would gladly haue escaped it On the other side when it came in his minde that he was called vnto it by the commaūdement of God then conqueryng and treadyng downe feare he gladly yea and cherefully toke it upon him This therefore we must endeuour yf we will be the Disciples of Christ that our mindes be inwardly filled with so great a reuerence and obedience to God as may tame and subdue to his ordinance all contrarie affections So shall it come to passe that with whatsoeuer kinde of crosse we be vexed euē in the greatest anguishes of minde we shall constantly kepe patience For aduersities shal haue their sharpnesse wherwith we shal be bitten so when we are afflicted with sicknesse we shal bothe grone and be disquieted desire health so beyng pressed with pouertie we shal be pricked with the s●inges of carefulnesse and sorrowe so shall we be striken with grefe of shame contempt and iniurie so shall we yelde due teares to nature at the burial of our frendes but this alway shal be the conclusion But the lord willed so therefore let vs folow his will Yea euen in the middest of the prickynges of sorrow in the middest of mourning and teares this thought must needes come betwene to incline our heart to take cherefully the very same thinges by reason whereof it is so moued But for asmuche as we haue taken the chefe cause of bearyng the crosse out of the cōsideratiō of the wil of God we must in few wordes define what difference is betwene Phylosophical Christian patiēce Truely very fewe of the Phylosophers climbed to so hie a reason to vnderstand that the hand of God doth exercise vs by afflictions and to thinke that God is in this behalf to be obeyed But they bryng no other reason but bicause we must so doe of necessitie What is this els but to say that thou must yeld vnto God bicause thou shalt trauail in vaine to wrastle against him For if we obey God only bicause we so must of necessitie then if we might escape we would cesse to obey But the Scripture biddeth vs to consider a far other thing in the wil of God that is to say first iustice and equitie then the care of our saluatiō These therfore be the Christian exhortations to patience whether pouertie or banishmēt or
minde throwen downe with feling of his owne miserie nedinesse For it is so eche where described in the word of God When the lord sayth thus in Zephanias I wil take away out thee him that outragiously reioyseth I wil leaue in the middes of thee the afflicted man the poore man thei shal trust in the lord doth he not there plainely shewe whoe be humble euen they that lie afflicted with knowledge of their owne pouertie On the other side he calleth the proude outragious reioysers bicause mē ioyeng in prosperitie ar wōt to reioyse without measure But to the hūble whom he purposeth to saue he leaueth nothing but to trust in the Lord. And likewise it is sayd in Esaye Whome shal I looke vnto but to the poore contrite in spirit him that feareth my wordes Againe The hie and excellent that inhabiteth eternitie his name is holy that dwelleth on hye and in the holy place and with the contrite and humble spirit to quicken the spirit of the humble and the heart of contrite When thou so oft hearest the name of contrition vnderstand thereby the wound of the heart that suffreth not a man throwen downe on the ground to ryse agayne With such contrition ought thy heart to be wounded if thou wilt accordyng to the sayeng of God be aduaunced with the humble If that be not done thou shalt be brought lowe with the mighty hāde of God to thy shame and disgracement And our beste Schoolemaister thinking it not enough to shewe it out in wordes hath also set out vnto vs in a parable the image of true humilitie as in a painted table For he bryngeth forth a Publicane that standyng a far of not daryng to lifte vp his eyes to heauē with much knocking his brest prayeth in this wise Lord be mercifull to me a sinner Let vs not thinke these to be tokens of fayned modestie that he dare not loke vp to heauen nor to come nerer that with knockynge his brest he confesseth himselfe a sinner but let vs know that they bee testimonies of inward affection On the other side he setteth the Pharisee whiche thanketh God that he is not of the common sorte of men eyther an oppresser or an vnrighteous man or an adulterer bycause he fasted twyse on the Sabbat and gaue tithes of all that he possessed He do the wyth open confession acknoweledge that the righteousnesse which he hath is the gift of God but bycause he standeth in confidence that he is righteous he departeth from God vnfauored and in hatred The Publicane by acknowledgyng of his owne wickednesse is iustified Hereby we may se how great is the estimatiō of our hūbling vs before God so that the heart can not be open to receiue his mercie vnlesse it be first voide of al opinion of his owne worthinesse When this opinion hath possessed the place it shutteth vp the way for Gods mercie to entre And that no man should doubte herof Christ was sent of his father into the earth with this cōmissiō to bryng glad tidinges to the poore to heale the contrite in heart to preache libertie to the captiue deliuerance to them that were shut vp in pryson and to cōfort them that mourne to geue them glorie for ashes oyle for mournyng the robe of prayse for the spirit of sorrowe According to this cōmission he calleth none but them that labour and are lodē to take part of his liberalitie And in an other place he sayth I came not to call the righteous but sinners Therfore if we will geue place to the callyng of Christ let all arrogancie carelesnesse depart far awaye from vs. Arrogancie groweth of a foolish persuasion of our owne righteousnesse when a man thinketh himself to haue somwhat by the deseruing wherof he may be cōmended before God carelesnesse may be euen without any persuasion of workes For many sinners bicause beyng drōke with swetenesse of vices they think not vpō the iudgement of God lie as it were senslesly amased with a disease of drousinesse that they aspire not to the mercie offred them But we must no lesse shake of such dull sluggishnesse than we must caste away all vaine confidence of our selues that we maye without encombrance hasten to Christ that we beyng empty hungry may be filled with his good thinges For we shal neuer sufficiētly haue trust in him vnlesse we vtterly distrust of our selues we shall neuer sufficiētly raise vp our courages in him vnlesse thei be first throwē downe in our selues We shal neuer sufficiētly haue consolatiō in him vnlesse we be first desolate in our selues Therfore we be then mete to take hold of obteyne the fauour of God casting away al trust of our selues but trusting vpon the only assurednesse of his goodnesse when as Augustine sayth forgettyng our owne deseruinges we embrace the giftes of Christ. Bicause if he sought deseruinges in vs we should not come to his giftes Wherewith Bernard very well accordeth cōparyng proude men to vnfaythful seruantes that arrogantly clayme any thyng be it neuer so litle to their owne deseruinges bicause they do wrongfully kepe to themselues the prayse of grace passyng by thē as if a wall would saye that it bryngeth forth the sunbeame whiche it receyueth through a window But not to tary longer herevpon let vs take a short but a generall and sure rule that he is prepared to take parte of the frutes of Gods mercie that hath vtterly emptied himselfe I will not saye of righteousnesse whiche is none at all but of the vayne and windye image of righteousnesse Bicause euery man so much hindereth his receiuing of the liberalitie of God as he resteth in himself The .xiii. Chapter ¶ That there are two thynges to be marked in free iustification ANd here are alwaye two thinges to be principally loked vnto that is to say that there maye remayne to the Lord his glorie vnminished and as it were wholly and perfectly mainteined and to our cōsciences an vntroubled quietnesse and calme tranquillitie before his iudgement We see how oft and howe earnestly the Scripture exhorteth vs to geue only to God a confession of praise when we entreate of righteousnesse And the Apostle testifieth that this was the Lordes principal purpose of geuing vs righteousnesse in Christe that he might shewe his owne righteousnesse And what a shewyng that should be hee declareth immediatly after that is if he alone be knowen to be righteous and that iustified him that is of the faith of Iesus Christ. Thou seest that the righteousnesse of God is not sufficiently set out vnlesse he alone be accompted righteous and do communicate the grace of righteousnesse to them that deserue it not By this meane he will haue euery mouth to be stopped and the whole World to be made subiect to him For whyle mā hath any thing to speake in his owne defence so longe there is somewhat taken away from the glory of God
confesse with mouth thei are Christes no further thē in name or thei be hypocrites which couer the wickednes of their hearts with vaine deceitful colors or being regenerate by the Spirit of God thei endeuoure themselues to true holines Specially when thei are to be iudged by their natural giftes from the croune of their heade to the soule of their foote ther shal not be found one sparcle of goodnesse vnlesse paraduenture we will accuse the Scripture of falshed whē it setteth out all the sonnes of Adam with these titles that thei bee of froward stubborne heart that al the imaginatiō of their heart is euel frō their infantie that their thoughtes be vaine that thei haue not the feare of God before their eies that none of them vnderstādeth or seketh God brefeli that thei be flesh by which word are vnderstāded al those workes which Paul reherseth fornicatiō vnclēanes vnchastitie riotousnes worshipping of ydoles witchcraftes enmities contentions emulations angers dissensions sectes enuies manslaughters whatsoeuer filthines abhomination mai be deuised This forsothe is the worthinesse with cōfidence wherof thei must be proued But if any among thē excel with such honestye of manners as may haue some shew of holynes amōg men yet bicause we know that God regardeth not the outward glistering we must searche the very fountaine of works if we wil haue them to auaile any thing to righteousnes We muste I saye throughly loke into them frō what affection of heart these workes procede But although here lieth open a most large fielde to discourse in yet bicause the matter may be declared in very few words I will folowe asmuch as I may a brefenesse in teaching First I deny not that whatsoeuer excellent giftes appeare in the vnbeleuers thei are the giftes of God Neither do I so differ frō common iudgement that I wold affirme that ther is no difference betwene the iustice temperance equitie of Titus Traianus the rage intemperāce crueltie of Caligula or Nero or Domitian betwene the filthy lustes of Tiberius in this behalfe the continence of Uespasian that wee may not tarry vpon some special vertues or vices betwene the obseruing the despising of right lawes For ther is so great difference of right wronge that it appeareth euen in the deade image therof For what thing shal ther remaine well ordered in the world if we cōfound these together Therfore such a differēce betwene honest vnhonest doinges the Lord hath not only engrauen in the mindes of al men but also doth oft confirme it with the dispensation of his prouidence For we see how he extendeth many blessinges of this present life to them that among men doe folowe vertue Not bicause the outwarde image of vertue deserueth so much as the leaste benefit of his but so it pleaseth him to declare by profe how much true righteousnes pleaseth him when he suffreth euen outwarde fained righteousnes not to be wtout reward Whervpō foloweth that which we euen now cōfessed that these vertues such as thei be or rather images of vertues are the giftes of God forasmuch as ther is nothing in any wise praise worthy whiche proceedeth not from him But neuerthelesse it is true whiche Augustine writeth that all they that are strangers frō the true religion of the one God howesoeuer they be accompted worthy of admiration for opinion of vertue are not onely worthy of no reward but rather are worthy of punishment bicause thei doe with defiling of hearte bespott the pure good thinges of God For though thei be the instrumentes of God to preserue the felowship of mē with iustice continence tēperance of minde valiantnesse wisdome yet they do very euelly execute these good workes of God because they are restrained from euil doing not by sincere loue of goodnesse but either by only ambition or by loue of thēselues or by some other crooked affectiō Wheras therfore they ar corrupt by the very vnclenesse of hart as by their beginning they are no more to be reckened amonge vertues than those vices which are wont to deceiue by reason of nerenesse likenes of vertue Finally whan we remēbre that th end of that which is right euer is that God be serued whatsoeuer tendeth to any other end fourthw t worthily loseth the name of right Bicause therfore they haue not respect to the mark which the wisdome of God apointeth although the thing that they do seme good in doyng yet by a wrongful end it is sin He cōcludeth therfore that al the Fabricii Scipiōes Catoes in al these excellent actes of theirs yet sinned in this behalfe that wheras they lacked the light of faith they did not apply them to that end to which they ought to haue applied them and that for that cause true righteousnes was not in them for as much as duties are not weyed by the doinges but by the endes Moreouer if it be true which Iohn saith that there is no life without the sonne of God who so haue no part in Christ what maner of men so euer they be whatsouer they do or goe about yet they run forward with their whole course into destruction the iugement of eternal death After this reasō is that said of Augustine Oure religiō disceneth the righteous from the vnrighteous not by law of workes but by the very lawe of faith wtout which those that seme good workes are turned into sinnes Wherfore the same Augustine saith very wel in an other place when he cōpareth the endeuour of such mē to running out of the way For how much faster a man runneth out of the way so much further he is from the mark therfore is made so much more miserable Wherfore he affirmeth that it is better to halt in the way than to run out of the way Finally it is certaine that thei are euel trees forasmuch as without the cōmunicating of Christ there is no sanctification They may therfore beare faire fruites beautifull to the eye yea swete in tast but in no wise good fruites Hereby we easily perceiue that whatsoeuer man thinketh purposeth or doeth before that he be reconciled to god by faith is accursed not only of no value to righteousnesse but of certaine deseruing to dānatiō And why dispute we herof as of a doutful thing sith it is alredy proued by the witnes of thapostle that it is impossible that any man mai please God wtout faith But there shall yet appere a plainer proufe if the grace of God be in comparison directly set against the naturall state of man For the scripture crieth out euery wher that God findeth nothing in man wherby he may be prouoked to do good to him but with his owne free goodnes preuenteth him For what can a dead do to atteine life But when he lightneth vs with the knowledg of himself he is said to raise vs from
honour not weyeng the worthinesse of them that he accompteth them of some value The third that he receiueth the very same workes with pardon not imputyng the imperfectiō wherwith they al beyng defiled should otherwise be rather reckened amōg sinnes than vertues And hereby appereth how much the Sophisters haue ben deceiued whiche thought that they had gaylye escaped al absurdities when they sayd that workes do not of their owne inwarde goodnesse auayle to deserue saluation but by the forme of the couenant bicause the Lord hath of his liberalitie so much estemed them But in the meane time they considered not howe far those workes whiche they would haue to be meritorious were from the conditiō of the promises vnlesse there went before bothe iustification grounded vpon only fayth and the forgeuenesse of sinnes by which euē the good workes themselues haue neede to be wiped from spottes Therefore of three causes of Gods liberalitie by which it is brought to passe that the workes of the faythfull are acceptable they noted but one suppressed two yea and those the principall They allege the sayeng of Peter whiche Luke rehearseth in the Actes I finde in truthe that God is not an accepter of persones but in euery nation he that doth righteousnesse is acceptable to him And hereupon they gather that which semeth to be vndouted that if man doth by right endeuors get himselfe the fauor of God it is not the beneficiall gift of God alone that he obteyneth saluation yea that God doth so of his mercie help a sinner that he is by workes bowed to mercie But you can in no wise make the Scriptures agree together vnlesse you note a double acceptyng of man with God For such as man is by nature God findeth nothyng in him whereby he maye be enclined to mercie but only miserie If therfore it be certayne that man is naked and needy of all goodnesse and on the other side full stuffed and loden with al kindes of euels when God first receyueth them for what qualitie I pray you shal we say that he is worthy of the heauēly calling ▪ Away therefore with the vaine imaginyng of merites where God so euidētly setteth out his free mercifulnesse For that which in the same place is sayde by the voice of the Angell to Cornelius that his prayers and almes had ascēded into the sight of God is by these men most lewdly wrested that man by endeuor of good workes is prepared to receiue the grace of God For it muste needes be that Cornelius was already enlightened with the Spirit of wisdome sithe he was endued with true wisdome namely with the feare of God that he was sanctified with the same Spirit sith he was a folower of righteousnesse which the Apostle teacheth to be a most certaine frute therof Al those things therefore whiche are sayd to haue pleased God in him he had of his grace so far is it of that he did by his own endeuor prepare himself to receiue it Truely there cā not one syllable of the Scripture be brought forth that agreeth not with this doctrine that there is none other cause for God to accept man vnto him but bicause he seeth that mā should be euery way lost if he be left to himselfe but bicause he will not haue him lost he vseth his own mercie in deliueryng him Now we see how this accepting hath not regard to the righteousnesse of man but is a mere token of the goodnesse of God toward men beyng miserable and moste vnworthy of so great a benefit But after that the Lord hath brought man out of the bottomlesse depth of destruction and seuered him to himselfe by grace of adoption bicause he hath nowe begotten him and newely formed him into a newe life he nowe embraceth him as a newe creature with the giftes of his Spirit This is that acceptyng whereof Peter maketh mention by whiche the faythfull are after their vocation allured of God euen in respecte also of workes for the Lorde can not but loue and kisse those good thinges whiche he worketh in them by his Spirit But this is alwaye to be remembred that they are none otherwise acceptable to God in respect of workes but in as muche as for their cause and for their sakes whatsoeuer good workes he hath geuen them in encreasyng of his liberalitie he also vouchesaueth to accept For whense haue they good workes ▪ but bicause the Lord as he hath chosen them for vessels vnto honor so will garnish thē with true godlinesse Whereby also are they accompted good as though there were nothing wanting in them but bicause the kinde Father tēderly graunteth pardon to those deformities spottes that cleaue to them Summarily he signifieth nothing els in this place but that to God his children are acceptable louely in whom he seeth the markes and features of his owne face For we haue in an other place taught that regeneratiō is a repairyng of the image of God in vs. For asmuch as therfore wheresoeuer the Lord beholdeth his owne face he both worthily loueth it and hath it in honor it is not without cause sayd that the life of the faithful beyng framed to holinesse righteousnesse pleaseth him but bycause the godly beyng clothed with mortall fleshe are yet sinners and their good workes are but begonne and sauoryng of the faultinesse of the fleshe he can not be fauorable neyther to those nor to these vnlesse he more embrace them in Christ than in themselues After this manner are those places to be taken whiche testifie that God is kinde mercifull to the folowers of righteousnesse Moses sayd to the Israelites The Lord thy God kepeth couenant to a thousand generations which sentēce was afteward vsed of the people for a common manner of speache So Salomon in his solemne prayer sayth Lord God of Israell whiche kepest couenant and mercie to thy seruātes which walke before thee in their whole heart The same wordes are also repeted of Nehemias For as in al the couenātes of his mercie the Lord likewise on their behalues requireth of his seruātes vprightnesse holinesse of life that his goodnesse should not be made a mockerie that no man swelling with vaine reioysing by reason therof should blesse his owne soule walking in the meane time in the peruersnesse of his own heart so his wil is by this way to kepe in their dutie them that are admitted into the cōmuniō of the couenāt yet neuerthelesse the couenāt it self is both made at the beginnyng free perpetually remayneth such After this māner Dauid when he glorieth that there was rēdred to him reward of the cleannesse of his hādes yet omitteth not that fountaine which I haue spoken of that he was drawen out of the wombe bicause God loued him where he so setteth out the goodnesse of his cause that he abateth nothyng from the free mercie whiche goeth before all giftes whereof it is
deriuatiō of the word For as when men do with minde and vnderstandyng conceyue the knowledge of thinges they are thereby sayd Scire to know wherupon also is deriued the name of science knowlege so when thei haue a felyng of the iudgemēt of God as a witnesse ioyned with them whiche doth not suffer them to hide their sinnes but that they be drawen accused to the iudgemēt seate of God that same felyng is called Conscience For it is a certayne meane betwene God and man bicause it suffreth not man to suppresse in himselfe that whiche he knoweth but pursueth him so farre till it bryng him to giltinesse This is it whiche Paule meaneth where he sayth that cōscience doth together witnesse with mē whē their thoughtes do accuse or acquite them in the iudgement of God A simple knowledge might remaine as enclosed within man Therefore this felyng whiche presenteth man to the iudgement of God is as it were a keper ioyned to man to marke and espie al his secretes that nothing may remaine buried in darknesse Whereupon also cōmeth that olde Prouerbe Conscience is a thousand witnesses And for the same reason Peter hath set the examination of a good cōscience for quietnesse of minde when beyng persuaded of the grace of Christ we do without feare present our selues before God And the author of the Epistle to the Hebrues setteth to haue no more conscience of sinne in stede of to be deliuered or acquited that sinne may no more accuse vs. Therefore as workes haue respect to men so cōscience is referred to God so that a good Consciēce is nothing els but the inward purenesse of the heart In whiche sense Paule writeth that charitie is the fulfillyng of the law out of a pure conscience and faith not fained Afterwarde also in the same chapter he sheweth howe muche it differeth from vnderstanding sayeng that some had suffred shipwreck frō the faith bicause thei had forsakē good Consciēce For in these wordes he signifieth that it is a liuely affection to worship God a sincere endeuor to liue holyly and godlyly Somtime in deede it extendeth also to men as in Luke where the same Paule protesteth that he endeuored himselfe to walke with a good conscience toward God and men But this was therfore sayd bicause the frutes of good cōscience do flowe and come euen to men But in speakynge properly it hath respect to God only as I haue already sayd Hereby it cōmeth to passe that the law is sayd to binde the conscience which simply bindeth a mā without respect of men or without hauing any consideration of them As for example God cōmaundeth not only to kepe the minde chaste and pure from al lust but also forbiddeth al māner of filthinesse of wordes outward wantonnesse whatsoeuer it be To the kepyng of this law my cōscience is subiect although there liued not one mā in the world So he that behaueth himself intemperantly not only sinneth in this that he geueth an euel exāple to the brethren but also hath his consciēce bound with giltinesse before God In thinges that are of themselues meane there is an other consideratiō For we ought to absteine from them if they brede any offense but the conscience still beyng free So Paule speaketh of flesh consecrate to Idoles If any sayth he moue any dout touch it not for cōsciēces sake I say for consciēce not thine but the others A faithfull mā should sinne which beyng first warned should neuerthelesse eate such fleshe But howsoeuer in respect of his brother it is necessarie for him to absteine as it is prescribed of God yet he cesseth not to kepe still the libertie of cōscience Thus we see how this law bindyng the outward worke leaueth the cōscience vnbound The .xx. Chapter ¶ Of prayer which is the chiefe exercise of faith and whereby we dayly receiue the benefites of God OF these thinges that haue ben hetherto spoken we plainely perceyue how needy and voyde mā is of al good things and how he wanteth al helpes of saluation Wherfore if he seke for relefes whereby he may succour his needinesse he must goe out of himselfe and get them els where This is afterward declared vnto vs that the Lord doth of his owne free will and liberally geue himself to vs in his Christ in whom he offreth vs in stede of our miserie all felicitie in stede of our neede welthinesse in whome he openeth to vs the heauenly treasures that our whole faith should behold his beloued sonne that vpon him our whole expectatiō should hang in him our whole hope should sticke fast and reste This verily is the secret and hidden Philosophie whiche can not be wrong out with Logiciall argumentes but they learne it whose eyes God hath opened that they may see light in his light But sins that we are taught by fayth to acknowledge that what so euer we haue neede of whatsoeuer wāteth in vs the same is in God and in our Lord Iesus Christ namely in whome the Lorde willed the whole fulnesse of his largesse to rest that from thense we should all drawe as out of a most plentifull fountaine now it remayneth that we seke in him and with praiers craue of him that which we haue learned to be in him Otherwise to know God to be the Lord and geuer of all good things which allureth vs to pray to him and not to goe to him praye to him shold so nothing profit vs that it should be alone as if a man should neglect a treasure shewed him buried and digged in the ground Therfore the Apostle to shewe that true fayth can not be idle from callyng vpon God hath set this order that as of the Gospell spryngeth faith so by it our heartes are framed to cal vpon the name of God And this is the same thyng which he had a litle before sayd that the Spirit of adoption which sealeth in our heartes the witnesse of the Gospell rayseth vp our spirites that they dare shewe forth their desires to God stirre vp vnspeakable gronynges and crie with confidence Abba Father It is mete therefore that this last poynt bycause it was before but only spoken of by the waye and as it were lightly touched should nowe be more largely entreated of This therefore we get by the benefit of prayer that we atteyne to those richesses whiche are layed vp for vs with the heauenly father For there is a certayne communicatyng of men with God whereby they entryng into sanctuarie of heauen do in his owne presence cal to him touchyng his promises that the same thyng whiche they beleued him affirmyng only in word not to be vayne they maye when neede so requireth finde in experience Therefore we see that there is nothing set forth to vs to be loked for at the hande of the Lord whiche we are not also cōmaunded to craue with praiers so true it is that by prayer are digged vp
expediente also to pray in other places but he sheweth that prayer is a certaine secrete thing whiche bothe is chefely placed in the soule and requireth the quiet therof farr from all trobles of cares Not wtout cause therfore the lord himselfe also when he was disposed to apply himselfe more earnestly to prayer cōueied himself into some solitarie place farr frō the troblesome cōpany of mē but to teach vs by his exāple that these helps ar not to be despised by which our minde being to slippry of it self is more bēt to earnest applyeng of praier But in the meane time euē as he in the middest of the multitude of men absteined not from praying if occasion at any tyme so serued so should we in al places where nede shal be lift vp pure handes Finally thus it is to be holden that whosoeuer refuseth to praye in the holy assemblie of the godly he knoweth not what it is to pray apart or in solitarinesse or at home Againe that he that neglecteth to pray alone or priuatly how diligently soeuer he haūt publike assemblies doth there make but vaine prayers because he geueth more to the opinion of men thā to the secrete iugement of God In the meane time that the common prayers of the Chirch shoulde not growe into contempte God in olde tyme garnished them with glorious titles specially where he called the temple the house of prayer For by thys sayeng he both taught that the chefe part of the worshipping of hym is the dutie of prayer and that to the ende that the faythful should with one consent exercise themselues in it the tēple was set vp as a standard for them There was also added a notable promise There abideth for thee O God prayse in Sion to thee the vow shal be payed By which wordes the Prophet telleth vs that the prayers of the Chirch are neuer voyde because the Lord alway ministreth to hys people mater to sing vpon with ioy But although the shadowes of the law are cessed yet because the Lordes wil was by thys ceremonie to nourish among vs also the vnitie of fayth it is no doute that the same promise belongeth to vs which both Christ hath stablished with hys owne mouth and Paule teacheth that it is of force for euer Now as the Lord by hys worde commaundeth the faithful to vse cōmon prayers so there must be common temples appointed for the vsing of them where whoso refuse to communicate their prayer with the people of God there is no cause why they should abuse thys pretense that they enter into their chamber that they may obey the commaundemente of the lord For he that promiseth that he wil do whatsoeuer twoo or three shall aske being gathered together in hys name testifieth that he despiseth not prayers openly made so that bosting and seking of glory of mē be absent so that vnfained true affectiō be present which dwelleth in the secret of the hart If this be the right vse of temples as truely it is we must againe beware that neither as they haue begon in certayne ages past to be accōpted we take them for the propre dwelling places of God from whense he may more nerely bende hys eare vnto 〈◊〉 ●ayne to them I wote not what secrete holinesse whiche maye 〈…〉 prayer more holy before God For sith we our selues be the 〈◊〉 tēples of God we must pray in our selues if we wil cal vpon God in his own holy temple As for that grossenesse let vs which haue a commaundement to call vpon the Lord in Spirite and truth without difference of place leaue it to the Iewes or the Gentiles There was in dede a temple in olde time by the commaundemente of God for offring of prayers and sacrifices but that was at such tyme as the truth lay hydde figured vnder suche shadowes which being now liuely expressed vnto vs doth not suffer vs to sticke in any materiall temple Neither was the temple geuen to the Iewes themselues with this condition that they shold enclose the presence of God within the walles therof but wherby they myght be exercised to beholde the image of the true temple Therefore they which in any wise thought that God dwelleth in temples made with handes were sharply rebuked of Esay and Stephen Here moreouer it is more than euident that neither voice nor song if they be vsed in prayer haue any force or do any whit profite before God vnlesse they procede from the depe affectiō of the hart But rather they prouoke his wrath against vs if they come only frō the lippes and out of the throte forasmuch as that is to abuse his holy name and to make a mockerie of his maiestie as we gather out of the wordes of Esay which although they extende further yet perteine also to reproue thys fault Thys people sayth he cometh nere to with their mouth and honoreth me with their lippes but their hart is farr frō me they haue feared me with the commaūdement and doctrine of men Therfore beholde I will make in this people a miracle great and to be wondred at For wisedome shall perish from their wise men and the prudence of the Elders shal vanishe away Neither yet doo we here condemne voice or singyng but rather doo hyely commende them so that they accompany the affection of the mynde For so they exercise the mynd and hold it intentiue in thynkyng vpon God which as it is slippery and rollyng easily slacketh and is diuersly drawen vnlesse it be stayed with diuers helpes Moreouer wheras the glorie of God ought after a certaine maner to shine in al the partes of our body it specially behoueth that the tong be applyed and auowed to this seruice both in singing and in speaking which is properly created to shew fourth and display the praise of God But the chefe vse of the tong is in publike prayers which are made in the assemblie of the Godly which tend to thys ende that we may all with one common voice and as it were with one mouth together glorifie God whō we worship with one Spirite and one Faith and that openly that all men mutually euery one of hys brother maye receiue the confession of Fayth to the example wherof they maye be bothe allured and stirred Is for the vse singyng in Chirches that I may touche this also by the waie it is certaine that it is not onely most aunciēt but that it was also in vse among the Apostles we maye gather by these wordes of Paule I will syng in Spirite I will syng also in mynde Agayne to the Colossians Teachyng and admonishing you mutually in hymnes psalmes and spirituall songes singyng with grace in your harts to the Lorde For in the first place he teacheth that we should syng with voice and harte in the other he commendeth spirituall songes wherewith the godly doo mutually edifie themselues Yet that it was not vniuersal Augustine
to be propre to his Father that our Faith may be stayed in hym then that we may be certainly persuaded that he is not carelesse of our safetie because he vouchesaueth euen to vs to extende his prouidence With whiche introductions Paule prepareth vs to pray rightely For before that he hiddeth our petitions to be opened before God he sayth thus Be ye carefull for nothyng the Lorde is at hande Wherby appeareth that they doutefully and with perplexitie tosse theyr prayers in their mynde whiche haue not this well settled in them that the eie of God is vpon the righteous The firste Petition is That the name of God be hallowed the neede wherof is ioyned with our greate shame For what is more shamefull than that the glorie of God should be partly by our vnthankefulnesse partly by our maliciousnesse darkened and so muche as in it lyeth by our boldenesse and furious stubbornesse vtterly blotted out Though all the wicked wolde burst themselues with their wylfulnesse full of sacrilege yet the holynesse of the name of God gloriously shineth And not without cause the Prophet crieth out As thy name O God so is ●hy praise into al the endes of the earth For wheresoeuer the name of God is knowen it can not be but that his strengthes power goodnesse wisdome righteousnesse mercie and truthe must shewe foorth themselues whiche may drawe vs into admiration of him and stirre vs vp to publyshe his praise Sithe therfore the holynesse of God is to shamefully taken from hym in earth if we be not able to reskue it we be at the least commaunded to take care of it in our prayers The summe is that we wishe the honor to be geuen to God whiche he is worthye to haue that men neuer speake or thinke of hym without moste hye reuerence wherunto is contrarie the vnholy abusyng whiche hath alway been to common in the worlde as at this day also it rangeth abroade And hereuppon commeth the necessitie of this petition whiche if there liued in vs any godlynesse though it were but little oughte to haue ben superfluous But if the name of God haue his holynesse safe when being seuered from all other it breatheth out nothyng but glorie here we are commaunded not only to pray that God wil deliuer that holy name from al contempt dishonor but also that he wil subdue al mankind to the reuerēce of it Now wheras God discloseth hymself to vs partly by doctrine partly by workes he is no otherwise sanctified of vs than if we geue to him in both behalfes that which is his so embrace whatsoeuer shal come from hym and that his seueritie haue no lesse praise among vs than his mercifulnesse forasmuche as he hath in the manifolde diuersitie of his workes emprinted markes of his glorie which may worthily drawe out of all tonges a confession of his praise So shall it comme to passe that the Scripture shall haue full authoritie with vs and that no successe shall hynder the blessyng whiche God deserueth in the whole course of the gouernyng of the worlde Agayne the petition also tendeth to this purpose that all vngodlynesse whiche defyleth this holy name may be destroyed and taken away that whatsoeuer thynges doo darken and diminishe this sanctifieng as well sclaunders as mockynges may be driuen away and when God subdueth al sacrileges his glorie may therby more and more shine abroade The seconde petition is that The Kyngdome of God may come which although it conteyne no newe thyng is yet not withoute cause seuered from the fyrst because if we consyder our owne drewsynesse in a thyng greatest of all other it is profitable that the thyng whiche oughte of it selfe to haue ben most well knowen be with many wordes ofte beaten into vs. Therfore after that we haue ben commaunded to pray to God to bryng into subiection and at length vtterly to destroye whatsoeuer spotteth his holye name nowe is added a like and in a maner the same request that his kingdome come But although we haue alredy sett fourth the definition of this kingdome yet I now brefely rehearse that God reigneth when men as wel with forsaking of themselues as with despising of the world and of the earthly life do so yelde themselues to his righteousnesse that they aspire to the heauenly lyfe Therfore there are twoo partes of this kyngdome the one that God correcte with the power of his Spirite all corrupt desires of the fleshe which do by multitudes make warre against hym the other that he frame all our senses to the obedience of hys gouernement Therfore none do kepe right order in thys prayer but they which beginne at themselues that is to say that they be cleansed from all corruptions which troble the quiet state of the kingdome of God and infect the purenesse therof Now because the worde of God is lyke a kyngly scepter we are here commaunded to pray that he wil subdue the myndes and hartes of al men to willing obedience of it Which is done when with the secret instinct of hys Spirite he vttereth the effectuall force of hys worde that it may be auaunced in such degree as it is worthi Afterward we must come down to the wicked which do obstinatly and with desperate rage resist his authoritie God therfore setteth vp hys kyngdome by humbling the whole world but that in diuerse maners because he tameth the wantonnesses of some and of other some he breaketh the vntamed pride Thys is daily to be wished that it be done that it may please God to gather to hymselfe Chirches out of all the coastes of the worlde to enlarge and encreasce them in number to enriche them with his giftes to stablishe right order in them on the other side to ouerthrowe all the enemies of pure doctrine and religion to scatter abrode their counsels to cast down their enterprises Wherby appeareth that the endeuor of daili proceding is not in vaine commaunded vs because the maters of men are neuer in so good case that filthinesse bring shaken away and cleansed full purenesse florisheth and is in liuely force But the fulnesse of it is differred vnto the last comming of Christ when Paule teacheth that God shal be al in al. And so thys prayer ought to withdrawe vs from all the corruptions of the world which do seuer vs from God that hys kyngdome should not florishe in vs and also to kindle our endeuor to mortifie the flesh finally to instruct vs to the bearing of the crosse forasmuch as God will in this wise haue hys kyngdome spred abrode Neither ought we to take it miscontentedly that the outward man be destroyed so that the inwarde man be renewed For thys is the nature of the kingdome of God when we submitt our selues to the righteousnesse therof to make vs partakers of his glorie Thys is done whē brightly setting fourth his light and truth with alway new encreasces wherby the darkenesse and
it may will leaue to God no secrete which it will not searche and turne ouer Into this boldnesse and importunacie forasmuch as we commonly se many to runne headlong and among those that are otherwise not euell men here is fit occasion to warne them what is in this behalfe the due measure of theyr duetie First therfore let them remembre that when they enquire vpon Predestination they pearce into the secrete closets of the wisedome of God wherinto if any man doo carelesly and boldly breake in he shall bothe not atteyne wherwith to satisfie his curiousnesse and he shal entre into a mase wherof he shall fynde no way to get out again For neither is it mete that man shoulde freely search those thynges which God hath willed to be hidden in himselfe and to turne ouer from very eternitie the height of wisedome which he willed to be honored and not to be conceiued that by it also he mought be meruailous vnto vs. Those secretes of his will whiche he hath determined to be opened vnto vs he hath disclosed in his worde and he hath determined so farre as he forsawe to pertayne to vs and to be profitable for vs. We are come sayth Augustine into the way of Faithe let vs stedfastly holde it It bringeth into the Kynges chamber in whiche all the treasures of knowlege and wisedome are hidden For the Lorde himselfe Christ did not enuie his excellent and moste chosen disciples when he said I haue many thynges to be sayde to you but ye can not beare them nowe We must walke we must profit we must encreasce that our hartes may be able to conceiue those thynges which now we can not cōceiue If the last day find vs profityng there we shal learne that whiche here we coulde not If this thought be of force with vs that the worde of the Lorde is the onely way that may leade vs to searche whatsoeuer is lawfull to be learned of him that it is the only light which may geue vs light to see whatsoeuer we ought to see of hym it shall easily holde backe and restraine vs from all rashenesse For we shall knowe that so soone as we be gone out of the boundes of the worde we runne oute of the waie and in darkenesse in which race we must needes oftentymes stray slippe and stumble First therfore let this be before our eyes that to couet any other knowlege of Predestination than that whiche is set foorth by the woorde of God is a poynt of no lesse madnesse than if a man haue a will to go by an vnpassable waie or to se in darknesse Neither lett vs be ashamed to be ignorant of somewhat in it wherein there is some learned ignorance But rather lett vs willyngly absteine from the serchyng of that Knowlege wherof the excessyue couetyng is both foolishe and p●rillous yea and deadly But if the wantonnesse of witt prouoke vs it shal be profitable alwaye to sett this agaynst it whereby it may be beaten backe that as to much of honey is not good so the serchyng of glorie dothe not turne vnto glorie to the curious For there is good cause why we shoulde be frayed away from that boldnesse whiche can do nothing but throwe vs downe headlong into ruine There be other which when they haue a will to remedy this euell doo commaunde all mention of Predestination to bee in a maner buried at the least they teache men to flee from euery maner of questionyng therof as from a rocke Although the moderation of these men bee herein worthily to be praysed that they iudge that mysteries shoulde be tasted of with suche sobrietie yet because they descende to muche beneath the meane they little preuaile with the witte of manne whiche doothe not lyghtly suffre it selfe to be restrained Therfore that in this behalf also we maie kepe a right ende we must returne to the worde of the Lorde in whiche we haue a sure rule of vnderstanding For the Scripture is the schoole of the Holy ghoste in whiche as nothyng is lefte out which is bothe necessarie profitable to be knowen so nothyng is taught but that whiche is behouefull to learne Whatsoeuer therfore is vttered in the Scripture concernyng Predestination we muste beware that we debarre not the faithfull from it least we should seme either enuiously to defraude them of the benefite of their God or to blame and accuse the Holy ghoste who hath published those thynges whyche it is in any wyse profitable to be suppressed Let vs I say geue leaue to a christian man to open his mynde and his eares to all the sayenges of God whiche are directed to hym so that it be doone with this temperance that so soone as the Lorde hath closed his holy mouth he may also forclose to himselfe all the way to enquire further This shall be the beste boūde of sobrietie if not only in learnyng we alway follow the Lord goyng before vs but also whē he maketh an ende of teaching we ceasse to will to learne Neither is the danger which they feare of so greate importance that we ought therfore to turne awaye our myndes from the oracles of God Notable is the sayeng of Salomon that the glorie of God is to concele a word But sithe bothe godlinesse and common reason teacheth that this is not generally meant of euery thyng we muste seke a difference least brutishe ignorance shoulde please vs vnder color of modestie and sobrietie That difference is in fewe woordes playnly sett out by Moses To the Lord our God sayth he belong his secretes b●t to vs and to our children he hath disclosed these thynges For we see how he commendeth to the people the studie of the doctrine of the law onely by reason of the decree of God because it pleased God to publish it ▪ and howe he withholdeth the people within those boūdes by this only reason because it is not lawfull for mortall men to thrust themselues into the secretes of God Prophane men I graunt do in the mater of Predestination sodenly catche hold of somewhat which they may carpe or cauill or barke or scoffe at But if their waywardnesse doo fray vs away from it the chefe articles of the faith must be kept secrete of whiche there is almost none which thei or such as thei be do leaue vntouched with blasphemie A frowarde wytt will no lesse prowdly outrage when he heareth that in the essence of God there are three persones than if he heare that God forsawe what shoulde becomme of man when he created hym Neyther will they absteyne from laughyng when they shall vnderstande that there is lyttell more than fiue thousande yeares passed sins the creation of the worlde for they wyll aske why the power of God was so long idell and asleape Fynally there can be nothyng brought foorthe whych they will not scoffe at For the restrainynge of these sacrileges must we holde our peace of the Godhead of
predestinate we ought so to be affectioned that we would al men to be saued So shal it come to passe that whome soeuer we finde we shall trauaile to make him partaker of peace But our peace shal rest vpon the children of peace Therfore for our part we must applie holsome and sharp rebukyng to all men like a medicine that they perish not nor destroye other but it shal be the worke of God to make it profitable to them whome he hath foreknowen and predestinate The .xxiiii. Chapter ¶ That Election is stablished by the callyng of God but that the reprobrate do bryng vpon themselues the iust destruction wherunto they are apoynted BUt that the matter maye more plainely appere we must entreate bothe of the callyng of the elect and of the blinding and hardening of the wicked Of the first of these I haue already spoken somwhat ▪ when I confuted their errour whiche thing that the generalnesse of the promises extendeth egally to all mankinde But this election which otherwise God hath hidden with himselfe he doth not without choyse at length disclose by his callyng which a man maye therefore call the testifieng of it For whome he hath foreknowen them he hath also fore apointed to be fashioned like the image of his sonne whome he hath fore apointed them he hath also called whome he hath called them he hath also iustified that in time to come he maye glorifie them When the Lord hath by electing already adopted his into the number of his children yet we see how they entre not into possession of so great a benefit but when they be called on the other side how beyng called they do nowe enioye a certaine communicatyng of his election For whiche reason Paule calleth the Spirit whiche they receiue bothe the Spirit of adoption and the seale and earnest of the inheritance to come namely bicause it doeth with the testimonie thereof stablish and seale to their heartes the assurednesse of the adoptiō to come For though the preachyng of the Gospell spryng out of the fountayne of election yet bycause it is also cōmon to the reprobate therfore it could not by it it selfe be a sure profe thereof But God effectually teacheth his elect that he may bryng them to fayth as we haue before alleged out of the wordes of Christ. Whoe so is of God he none other seeth the Father ▪ Againe I haue shewed thy name to the men whome thou haste geuen me Wheras he sayth in an other place No man can come to me vnlesse my Father drawe him Whiche place Augustine wisely weyeth whose wordes are these If as Truthe sayth euery one that hath learned cōmet whosoeuer cōmeth not certainely neyther hath he learned It doth not therefore folow that he which can come also cōmeth vnlesse he haue bothe willed and done it But euery one that hath learned of the father not only can come but also cōmeth whē now there is present bothe the profit of comming and the affection of willyng and the ●eled with this light that they should refuse to loke vpon electiō Yet in the meane time I denie not that to the ende we maye be certayne of our saluation we must beginne at the word and that our affiance ought therewith to be contented that we maye call vpon God by the name of Father For some quite contrarie to righte order that they maye be certified of the counsell of God which is nere vnto vs in our mouth and in our heart do couet to flie aboue the cloudes Therefore that rashnesse is to be restrained with sobrietie of faith that it maye suffice vs that God in his outward worde is a witnesse of his hidden grace to that the conduit pipe out of whiche there floweth water largely for vs to drinke doe not hinder but that the springhed maye haue his due honor Therefore as they do wrongfully whiche hang the strength of election vpon the faith of the gospel by which faith we fele that electiō perteyneth to vs so we shall kepe the beste order if in sekyng the certaintie of our election we sticke fast in these later signes whiche are sure witnessinges of it Satan do●● with no tētation either more greuously or more dangerously astonish the faithful than when disquieting them with doubt of their election he doth also moue them with a peruerse desire to seke it out of the way I cal it loking out of the way when a wretched man enterpriseth to breake into the hidden secretes of the wisedome of God and to pearce euen to the hi●st eternitie to vnderstand what is determined of himself at the iudgemēt seate of God For then he throweth himselfe hedlong to be swallowed vp into the depth of the vnmeasurable deuouryng pit then he wrappeth himselfe with innumerable snares and such as he cā not winde out of then he ouerwhelmeth himselfe with the bottōlesse depth of blinde darknesse For so is it rightfull that the foolishnesse of the wit of mā be punished with so horrible ruine when he attempteth of his owne force to rise vp to the height of the wisedome of God And so much more deadly is this tentation as there is none to which we are cōmonly all more bēt For there is most rarely any man to be foūd whose minde is not somtime striken with this thought Whens● hast thou saluation but of the Election of God And of Election what reuelation hast thou whiche thought if it haue ones taken place in any man eyther perpetually vexeth the miserable man with terrible tormentes or vtterly dismayeth him Truely I would haue no surer argument than this experiēce to proue howe wrongfully such men imagine of predestination For the minde can be infected with no error more pes●ilent thā that which plucketh downe and thrusteth the conscience from her peace and quietnesse toward God Therefore if we feare shipwreck we muste diligently beware of this rocke whiche is neuer stryken vpon without destruction And though the disputyng of predestination bee estemed like a dangerous Sea yet in passyng through it there is found a safe and quiet yea and pleasant saylyng vnlesse a man doe wilfully couet to be in danger For as they do drowne themselues in the deadly bottomlesse depth whiche to be certified of their election doe enquire of the secret Counsell of God without his worde so they whyche doe rightly and orderly searche it in suche sorte as it is conteyned in the worde receyue thereof a singular frute of comfort Let this therefore be our way to searche it that we beginne at the calling of God ende in the same Howebeit this withstandeth not but that the faithfull may thinke that the benefites whiche they dayly receiue at the hande of God doe descend from that secret adoption as they saye in Esaye Thou haste done maruels thy thoughtes are olde true and faithfull for asmuch as by that adoption as by a token the Lordes will is to cōfirme so much
but that thei may be made more dul he layeth to thē a remedie but not that thei may be healed And Iohn alleging this prophecie affirmeth that the Iewes could not beleue the doctrine of Christ bicause this curse of God lay vpō them Neither can this also be in cōtrouersie that whom God will not haue ●o be enlightened to them he deliuered his doctrine wrapped vp in darke speches that thei may nothing profit thereby but to be thrust into greater dulnesse Christ also testifieth that he doth therefore expound only to the Apostles the parables in whiche he had spoken to the multitude bycause to them it was geuen to know the misteries of the kingdome of God but to the common people not so What meaneth the Lorde wilt thou saye in teachynge them of whome he prouideth that he maye not bee vnderstanded Consider whense is the faulte and thou wilt cesse to aske For in the worde how great darknesse soeuer there be yet there is alwaie light enough to conuince the conscience of the wicked Now remaineth for vs to see why the lord doth the which it is plaine that he doth If it be answered that it is so done bicause men haue so deserued by their vngodlinesse wickednesse vnthankfulnesse the same shall in dede be wel truely saide but bicause there appeareth not yet the reasō of this diuersitie why when some are bowed to obedience other some continue hardened in searching it we must nedes go to that which Paule hath noted out of Moses namely that God hath raised them vp from the beginning that he might shew his name in the whole earthe Whereas therfore the reprobate do not obey the word of God opened vnto them that shal be wel imputed to the malice peruersenesse of their heart so that this be therwithal added that thei are therfore geuen into this peruersnesse bicause by the righteous but yet vnsearchable iudgement of God thei are raised vp to set forth his glorie with their damnation Likewise when it is said of the sonnes of Heli that thei harkened not to holsome warninges bicause the lord willed to kil them it is not denied that the stubbornesse proceded of their own naughtinesse but it is therwtal touched why thei were lefte in stubbornesse when the Lord might haue softened their heartes namly bicause his vnchangeable decree hadde ones appointed them to destruction To the same purpose serueth that saieng of Ihon When he had done so great signes no man beleued in him that the word of Esaie might be fulfilled Lorde whoe hath beleued our hearing For though he do not excuse the stifnecked frō blame yet he is content with that reasō that the grace of God is vnsauorie to men till the holy ghost bring taste And Christ alleging the prophecie of Esaie Thei shall al be taught of God lendeth to no other end but to proue that the Iewes ar reprobate strāgers frō the Church bicause they ar vnapt to learne he bringeth no other cause therof but for that the promise of God dothe not perteine to thē Which thīg this saieng of Paul cōfirmeth y● Christ which to the Iewes is an offense to the gentiles foolishnes is to the called the strength wisedome of God For when he hath tolde what cōmonly happeneth so ofte as the Gospel is preached namly y● some it maketh more obstinate of some it is despised he saith that it is had in price of the only which at called He had in dede a little before named thē beleuers but he meant not to take away the due degree frō the grace of God which goeth before faith but rather he added this seconde saieng by waie of Correction that thei which had embraced the Gospel shold geue the praise of their faith to the calling of God As also a litle after he teacheth that they are chosen of God When the vngodly heare these thinges thei crie oute that god with inordinate power abuseth his poore creatures for a sporte to his crueltie But we which know y● al men are so many waies endāgered to the iudgment seate of God that being asked of a thousand thynges thei can not satisfie in one doe confesse that the reprobate suffer nothing which agreeth not with the most iust iudgment of God Whereas we do not clerely atteine the reasō therof let vs not be discōtēt to be ignorāt of somwhat wher the wisedō of god lifteth vp it self into so great heigth But forasmuch as ther ar a few places of scripture wont to be obiected in which God semeth to denie that it is done by his ordinance that she wicked do perish but by this that he crieng out agaīst it thei wilfulli ●●ing death vpon themselues let vs by brefely declaring these places shewe that thei make nothing again the sentence aboue set Ther is brought forth a place of Ezechiel that God wil not the death of a sinner but rather that he may be touc●ed liue If thei wil extende this to all mankinde why doth he not moue many to repentance whose mindes are more pliable to obediēce than theirs which at his dayly allurements ware harder harder With the Sodomites as Christ witnesseth the preaching of the Gospel miracles wold haue brought forth more frute than in Iurie How commeth it to passe therfore if God wil al to be saued that he openeth not the gate of repentance to those miserable mē that wold haue been more ready to receiue grace Hereby we see that the place is violently wrested if the will of God whereof the Prophet maketh mention be set against his eternall counsel whereby he hathe seuered the elect from the reprobate Now if we seke for the true natural meaning of the Propet his purpose is to bryng hope of pardon to the penitent And this is the summe that it is to be douted but that God is readie to forgeue so sone as the sinner turneth Therefore he willeth not his death in so much as he willeth his repentāce But experience teacheth that he so wylleth them to repent whome he generally calleth to him that yet he toucheth not al their heartes Yet is it therfore to be said that he dealeth deceitfully bicause although that outward voice do but make them vnexcusable which heare do not obey it yet it is truly accōpted the testimonie of the grace of God by which testimonie he reconcileth mē to himself Therfore let vs holde this for the meaninge of the Prophet that the death of a sinner pleaseth not god that the godly may haue affiāce that so soue as thei shal be touched with repentance there is pardō ready for thē with God the wicked may fele that their fault is doubled because they answer not to so great mercifull kindenesse gentlenesse of God The mercie of God therfore wil alwaie mete repentance but to whome repentance is geuen both al the Prophetes Apostles Ezechiel
They all crie out with one voice that there was no one little woorde at all vttered of Christ which ought not necessarily to be obeyed And without any doutyng they do echewhere teache that these very same thinges by name were commaundementes whyche these good expositors triflyngly say that Christ did but counsell But forasmuche as we haue before taught that this is a moste pestilent error let it suffise here to haue brefely noted that the monkrie which is at this day is grounded vppon the same opinion whiche all the godly ought worthily to abhorre whiche is that there should be imagined some perfecter rule of life than this common rule which is geuen of God to the whole Chirch Whatsoeuer is bilded vpon this fundation can not be but abhominable But they bryng an other profe of their perfection which they thinke to be moste strong for them For the Lorde sayed to the yong man that asked hym of the perfection of righteousnesse If thou wilt be perfect sell all that thou hast and geue it to the poore Whether they do so or no I do not yet dispute but graunt them that for this present Therfore they boste that they be made perfect by forsakyng all theirs If the summe of perfection stande in this what meaneth Paule when he teacheth that he whiche hath distributed all his goodes to the poore vnlesse he haue charitie is nothyng What maner of perfection is this which if charitie be absent is brought with man to nothyng Here they must needes answere that this is the chiefest in dede but not the only worke of perfection But here also Paule crieth against them which sticketh not to make charitie the bonde of perfection without any suche forsakyng If it be certaine that betwene the maister and the disciple is no disagreement and the one of them clerely denieth the perfection of man to consist in this that he should forsake all his goodes and againe affirmeth that perfection is without it we must see howe that sayeng of Christe is to be taken If thou wilt be perfect sell all that thou hast Nowe it shal be no darke sense if we wey whiche we oughte alway to marke in all the preachynges of Christ to whom these woordes bee directed A yong man asketh by what workes he shall enter into euerlastyng lyfe Christ because he was asked of workes sendeth hym to the lawe and rightfully for it is the way of eternall life if it be considered in it selfe and is no otherwise vnable to bryng saluation vnto vs but by oure owne peruersnesse By this answere Christ declared that he teacheth no other rule to frame life by than the same that had in olde tyme ben taught in the lawe of the Lorde So did he bothe geue witnesse to the lawe of God that it was the doctrine of perfecte righteousnesse and therwithall dyd mete wyth sclaunders that he shoulde not seme by any newe rule of life to stirre the people to forsakyng of the law The yong man beyng in dede not of an euel mynde but swelling with vayne confidence answered that he had from his childhode kept al the commaundementes of the law It is most certaine that he was an infinite space distant from that to which he bosted that he had atteined And if his bostyng had ben true he had wanted nothyng to the hyest perfection For we haue before shewed that the lawe conteineth in it self perfect righteousnesse and the same appereth hereby that the kepyng of it is called the way of eternall saluation That he myght be taught to knowe how little he had profited in that righteousnesse which he had to boldly answered that he had fulfilled it was profitable to shake out a familiar fault of his When he abounded in richesse he had his hart fastened vppon them Therefore because he felte not this secrete wounde Christe launced him Goe sayth he sell all that thou haste If he hadde ben so good a keper of the lawe as he thought he was he wold not haue gone away sorowfull when he heard this word For who so loueth God with all his hart whatsoeuer disagreeth with the loue of hym he not onely taketh it for dong but abhorreth as bringyng destruction Therefore wheras Christe commaundeth the couetous richeman to leaue all that he hath it is all one as if he should commaunde the ambitious man to forsake all honors the voluptuous man all delites and the vnchast mā all the instrumentes of luste So consciences that are touched with no felyng of generall admonition must be called back to the particular felyng of their owne euell Therfore they doo in vayne drawe this speciall case to generall exposition as though Christe did set the perfection of man in forsaking of goodes whereas he mente nothyng els by this sayeng than to dryue the yong man that stoode to muche in his owne conceite to feele his owne sore that he mighte vnderstand that he was yet a great way distant from perfect obedience of the law which otherwise he did falsly take vpon him I graunt that this place hath ben euel vnderstāded of some of the Fathers and that therupon grew this couetyng of wilfull pouertie wherby they only were thought to be blessed which forsakyng all earthly thynges did dedicate themselues naked to Christ. But I trust that all the good and not contentious men will be satisfied with this my exposition so that they shall no more doute of the meanyng of Christ. Howbeit the Fathers thought nothyng lesse than to stablishe suche a perfection as hath sins ben framed by the cowled Sophisters thereby to rayse vp a double Christianitie For that doctrine full of sacrilege was not yet borne whych compareth the profession of monkrie to Baptisme yea and openlye affirmeth that it is a forme of seconde Baptisme Who can doute that the Fathers with all theyr harte abhorred this blasphemie Nowe as touchyng that laste thyng whyche Augustine sayeth to haue been among the olde Monkes that is that they applyed themselues whollye to Charitie what neede I to shewe in woordes that it is moste farre from thys newe profession The thyng it selfe speaketh that all they that goe into Monasteries departe from the Chirche For why Doo not they seuer themselues from the lawfull felowshippe of the faithfull in takyng to themselues a peculiar ministerie and priuate ministration of Sacramentes What is it to dissolue the Communion of the Chirche if this bee not it And that I may folowe the comparison which I beganne to make and may ones conclude it what haue they in this behalfe lyke to the olde monkes They although they dwelt seuerally from other men yet had not a seuerall Chirch they dyd partake of the sacramentes together with other they appered at solemne assemblies there they were a parte of the people These men in erectyng to themselues a priuate altar what haue they ells doone but broken the bonde of vnitie For they haue bothe excommunicate themselues from the
himselfe suche when being made partaker of our humane martalitie he made vs parteners of his diuine immortalitie when offring himselfe for sacrifice he toke our accursednesse vpon himself that he might fil vs with blessing when with his death he deuoured swalowed vp death when in his resurrection he raised vp this our corruptible flesh which he had put on to glory vncorruption It remaineth that by appliance all the same maye come to vs. That is done bothe by the Gospell and more cleerely by the holy Supper where bothe he offreth himselfe to vs with all his good thynges we receiue him by faith Wherfore the sacramēt maketh not that Christ first beginneth to be the bread of life but when it bringeth into remembrance that he was made the bread of life whiche we continually eate and when it geueth vnto vs the taste and sauor of that breade then it maketh vs to fele the strength of that bread For it promiseth vs that whatsoeuer Christ did or suffred the same was done to geue life to vs. Then that this geuing of life is euerlasting by which we may without ende be nourished susteined and preserued in life For as Christ should not haue bene to vs the bread of life vnlesse he had bene borne and had dyed for vs vnlesse he had risen agayne for vs so now he should not bee the same vnlesse the effectualnesse and fruite of his birth death and resurrection were an euerlasting and immortall thing All which Christe hath very well expressed in these wordes The bread which I wil geue is my flesh which I wil geue for the life of the world By which wordes without dout he signifieth that his body shoulde therfore bee to vs for bread to the spirituall life of the soule because it shold be geuen forth to death for our saluatiō and that it is deliuered to vs to eate of it when by faith he maketh vs partakers of it Ones therfore he gaue it that he might be made bread when he gaue foorth himselfe to be crucified for the redemption of the world daily he geueth it when by the word of the Gospell he offreth it vnto vs to be receiued so far as it was crucified where he sealeth that deliuerance with the holy mysterie of the Supper where he inwardly fulfilleth that which he outwardly betokeneth Now herein we must beware of twoo faultes that neither doing to muche in abaring the signes we seme to pluck them frō their mysteries to which they are in a maner knitte fast nor that being immeasurable in aduancing the same we seme in the meane tyme somwhat to darken the mysteries themselues That Christ is the bread of life wherewith the faithful are nourished into eternal saluation ther is no man but he graunteth vnlesse he be altogether without religiō But this point is not likewise agreed vpon among al men what is the maner of partaking of him For there be that in one worde define that to eate the fleshe of Christe and to drinke his blood is nothing els but to beleue in Christ himlsefe But I thinke that Christ meant some certainer and hyer thyng in that notable sermon where he cōmendeth to vs the eatyng of his fleshe namely that we are quickned by the true partaking of hym whiche also he therfore expressed by the woordes of eatyng and drynkyng least any man should thynke that the life whiche we receiue of hym is conceyued by bare knowlege only For as not the syghte but the eatyng of bread suffiseth the body for nourishment so it behoueth that the soule be truly and throughly made partaker of Christ that by the power of hym it may be quickened into a spirituall lyfe But in the meane tyme we confesse that there is no other eatyng but of faith as there can no other be imagined But this is the difference betwene my wordes and theirs that with them to eate is only to beleue but I say that the flesh of Christ is eaten with beleuing because by faith he is made ours and I say that eatyng is the fruite and effect of faith Or if you wil haue it plainer with them eatyng is faithe and I thynke it rather to followe of faith In wordes verily the difference is but smalle but in the thyng it selfe not small For though the Apostle teacheth that Christe dwelleth in oure hartes by Faithe yet no manne will expounde this dwelling to be Faith but all men doo perceyue that there is expressed a singular effect of faith for that by it the faithful do obteyne to haue Christ dwellyng in them After this maner the Lorde meant in callyng hymselfe the bread of lyfe not only to teache that in the faith of his death and resurrection saluation is reposed for vs but also that by true partakyng of himselfe it is brought to passe that his life passeth into vs and becometh oures like as bread when it is taken for foode ministreth lyuelinesse to the body Neither dyd Augustine whom they bryng in for their patron in any other meanyng write that we eate by beleuyng than to shewe that this eatyng is of faith not of the mouthe Which I also denye not but yet therwithall I adde that we do by faith embrace Christe not apperyng afarre of but makyng hymselfe one with vs that he may be oure head and we his membres Yet do not I vtterly disalow that maner of speakyng but only I deny it to be a full declaration if they meane to define what it is to eate the fleshe of Christ. Otherwyse I see that Augustine hath ofte vsed this forme of speche as when he saith in the thirde boke Of Christian doctrine Unlesse ye eate the fleshe of the sonne of man this is a figure teachyng that we must communicate with the passion of the Lorde and muste sweetely and profitably laye vp in remembrance that for vs his fleshe was crucified and wounded Agayne when he sayeth that the three thousande menne whyche were conuerted at Peters sermon dyd drynke the bloode of Christe by beleuyng whyche they had shedde by cruell dealyng But in manye other places he honorably setteth out that benefyte of Faith that by it oure soules are no lesse refreshed with the communicatyng of the fleshe of Christe than oure bodies are with the breade whiche they eate And the same is it whyche in a certayne place Chrysostome wryteth that Christe doeth not onely by Faith but also in dede make vs his body For he meaneth not that we doo from any other where than from Faithe obteyne suche a benefite but this onely he meaneth to exclude that none when he heareth faithe to be named shoulde conceyue a naked imagination As for them that will haue the Supper to be onely a marke of outwarde profession I do now passe them ouer because I thinke that I haue sufficiently confuted their error whē I entreated of Sacramentes generally Only thys thing let the reders marke that when the
cup is called the couenant in the blood there is a promise expressed that may be of force to confirme Faith Wherupō foloweth that vnlesse we haue respect to God and embrace that which he offreth we doe not rightly vse the holy Supper Moreouer they also do not satisfie me which acknowleging that we haue some communion with Christ when they meane to expresse it doe make vs partakers only of the Spirite without making any mention of flesh and blood As though al those thinges were spoken of nothing that hys flesh is verily meate that his blood is verily drinke that none hath life but he that eateth that flesh and drinketh that blood and such other sayenges that belong to the same ende Wherfore if it be certaine that the full communicating of Christ procedeth beyonde their description as it is to narowly strained I wil now go about to knit vp in few wordes how large it is and how farr it extendeth it selfe before that I speake of the contrarie fault of excesse For I shal haue a longer disputation with the excessiue teachers which when according to their owne grossnesse they frame a maner of eating drinking ful of absurditie do also transfigure Christ stripped out of hys fleshe into a fantasie if yet a man may with any wordes comprehende so great a mysterie whiche I se that I can not sufficiently comprehende with minde and therfore I doe willingly confesse it that no man should measure the hynesse therof by the smal proportion of my childishnesse But rather I exhorte the reders that they do not restrayne the sense of their minde within these to narrowe boundes but endeuor to rise vp much hyer thā they can by my guiding For I my selfe so oft as I speake of this thing whē I haue trauailed to say all thinke that I haue yet sayd but litle in respecte of the worthinesse therof And although the minde can do more in thinking than the tong in expressing yet with greatnesse of the thing the minde also is surmounted and ouerwhelmed Finally therefore nothing remaineth but that I must breake fourth into admiration of that mysterie whiche neither the mind can suffise to thinke of nor the tong to declare Yet after suche manner as I can I wil set fourth the summe of my sentence which as I nothing dout to be true so I trust that it will not be disallowed of godly hartes First of all we are taughte out of the Scripture that Christe was from the beginning that life bringing worde of the Father the fountaine and original of life from whense all thinges euer receiued their hauing of life Wherfore Ihon somtime calleth him the worde of life and somtime writeth that life was in him meaning that he euen then flowyng into al creatures poured into them the power of breathing and liuing Yet the same Ihon addeth afterwarde that the life was then and not tyll then openly shewed when the Sonne of God taking vpō him our fleshe gaue himselfe to be seen with eyes and felte with handes For though he did before also spred abrode his power into the creatures yet because man beyng by synne estranged from God hauing lost the communion of lyfe saw on euery side death hanging ouer hym that he myght recouer hope of immortalitie it behoued that he should be receiued into the communion of that worde For how small a confidence mayest thou conceiue therof if thou heare that the worde of God in dede from which thou art most farr remoued cōteyneth in it selfe the fulnesse of lyfe but in thy selfe and rounde about thee nothyng offreth it selfe and is present before thine eyes but death But sins that fountayne of lyfe beganne to dwell in our fleshe nowe it lyeth not a farr of hydden from vs but presently deliuereth it selfe to be partaken of vs. Yea and it maketh the very fleshe wherein it resteth to be of power to bryng lyfe to vs that by partaking therof we maye be fed to immortalitie I am sayth he the bred of lyfe that am come downe from heauen And the bred whiche I will geue is my fleshe whiche I will geue for the lyfe of the worlde In whiche woordes he teacheth not onely that he is lyfe in respecte that he is the eternall woorde of God whiche came downe to vs from heauen but that in comming downe he poured the same power into the fleshe whiche he did put on that from thense the communicatyng of lyfe mighte flowe fourth vnto vs. Hereupon also these thinges nowe followe that his fleshe is verily mente and his blood is verily drinke with whiche sustenances the faythfull are fostered into eternall life Herein therfore consisteth singular comfort to the godly that nowe they finde life in their owne fleshe For so they doe not onely with easy passage atteine vnto it but haue it of it selfe layd abrode for them and offring it selfe vnto them Only let them holde open the bosome of their hart that they may embrace it beeyng present and they shall obteyne it But although the fleshe of Christe haue not so greate power of it selfe that it can geue life to vs whiche bothe in the owne firste estate of it was subiecte to mortalitie and nowe being endued with immortalitie liueth not by it selfe yet it is rightfully called lifebringing whiche is filled with fulnesse of lyfe to poure it into vs. In which meaning I doe with Cyril expounde that sayeng of Christ As the Father hath lyfe in himselfe so he hath also geuen to the Sonne to haue life in himselfe For there he properly speaketh of his giftes not whiche he from the beginning possessed with the Father but with whiche he was garnished in the same fleshe in whiche he appeared Therefore he sheweth that in hys manhode also dwelleth the fullnesse of lyfe that whosoeuer partaketh of his flesh and blood may therwithall also enioy the partaking of life Of what sort that is we may declare by a familiar example For as out of a foūtaine water is somtime drōk somtime is drawen somtime by forrowes is conueied to the watering of groundes which yet of it selfe doth not ouerflow into so many vses but from the very spring it selfe which with euerlasting flowing yeldeth and ministreth vnto it from tyme to tyme newe abundance so the fleshe of Christ is like a riche and vnwasted fountaine whiche poureth into vs the life springing from the Godhead into it selfe Nowe whoe seeth not that the communion of the fleshe and blood of Christe is necessarie to al that aspire to heauenly lyfe Hereunto tendeth that sayeng of the Apostle that the Chirch is the body of Christe and the fulfilling of it and that he is the hed oute of whiche the whole body coupled and knit together by ioyntes maketh encrease of the body that our bodies are the members of Christ. Al which thinges we vnderstande to be impossible to be brought to passe but that he must whellye cleaue to vs in Spirite and body
terrible penall ordinaunces therein may be restrayned at least with feare of punishement But thei are restrained not bycause their inwarde minde is moued or affected withall but bicause beynge as it were brideled thei withholde their hande from outwarde worke and do kepe in their peruersenesse within them whiche otherwise thei woulde haue outragiously poured oute Thereby they become truelye nether the better nor the more righteous before God For although beinge letted either by feare or by shame thei dare not put that in practise which thei haue conceiued in their minde nor openly blowe abrode the rages of their lust yet haue thei not a hearte framed to the feare obedience of God yea the more that thei holde backe themselues so much the stronglier within thei are kindeled thei burne thei boyle redy to do any thinge and to breake fourth any whether if this terroure of the lawe did not staye them And not that onely but also thei moste spitefully hate the lawe and do detest God the lawemaker so that yf they coulde thei woulde very faine take him awaie whome thei canne not abide neither when he commaundeth rightfull thinges nor when he reuengeth him vpon the despisers of his maiestie In some in deede more darkely in some more plainely but in all generally that are not regenerate is this feelinge that thei are drawen to the folowinge of the lawe not by willinge submission but resisting and against their willes only by violence of feare But this constrained and enforced righteousnesse is necessarie for the publike common state of men the quiet wherof is herein prouided for while ordre is taken that all thinges be not cōfounded with vprore whiche woulde come to passe if all thinges were lawefull for all men Yea it is not vnprofitable for the chyldren of God to bee exercised wyth thys Schoolynge so longe as they before theyr callynge beynge yet destytute of the spyrite of sanctification are styll wanton with the follye of the fleshe For when they are drawen backe though it be but from outward licentiousnesse by the terroure of gods vengeance although for that thei are not yet tamed in minde thei goe for the present time but a little forwarde yet thei partely growe in vre to beare the yooke of Christe so that when thei are called they be not altogether rude and rawe to dysciplyne as to a thynge vnknowen Thys offyce the Apostle seemeth proprely to haue touched when hee sayeth that the lawe was not sette for the ryghteous manne butte for the vnryghteous and dysobedient wicked and synners euell doers prophane men slaiers of their parentes murtherers fornicators Sodomites robbers of children lyers and periured men what soeuer ells is againste sounde doctrine For he sayeth that it is a staye to the wylde outragynge lustes of the fleshe that ells woulde straye abroade without measure But to bothe maye that bee applyed whyche hee saythe in an other place that the lawe was to the Iewes a Schoolemayster to Christe for there are twoo sortes of menne whome wyth her schoolynge shee leadeth by the hande to Christe The one sorte of whome wee fyrste spake bycause they are to full of affyance of theyr owne strengthe or ryghteousnesse are not meete to receiue the grace of Christe vnlesse they bee fyrste emptyed therefore the lawe bryngeth them downe to humilitie by knoweledge of them selues that so they maye bee prepared to desyre that whyche before they thoughte thei wanted not The other sorte neede a brydle to be holden backe leaste they so geue loose the remes to the wantonnesse of theyr fleshe that they fall of alltogether from all studye of ryghteousnesse For where the spyryte of God doth not yet gouerne there sometime lustes do so boile that it is in greate perille leaste thei throwe downe the soule that is subiecte to them into the forgetfullnesse and despisinge of God and so wolde it come to passe if God did not with this remedie prouide for it Therefore those whom hee hathe apoynted to the inheritaunce of his kyngedome yf he do not by and by regenerate them he keepeth then by the workes of the lawe vnder feare vntyl the tyme of his visitation not that chaste and pure feare such as ought to be in chyldren but yet a profitable feare for this that they may according to their capacitie be taught by introduction to true godlynesse Of thys we haue so many proues that it needeth not example For who soeuer haue any tyme contynued in not knowynge of God wyll confesse that this happened vnto them that they were holden by the brydle of the lawe in some feare obedience of God vntil the time that beinge regenerate by hys spirite they beganne hartelye to loue hym The thirde vse whiche is also the principall vse and more nearely loketh vnto the propre ende of the law concerneth the faithful in whose heartes allready lyueth and reigneth the spirite of God For although they haue the lawe wrytten and grauen in their heartes by the finger of God that is to saye be so affectioned and mynded by the direction of the spirite that thei desire to obeye God yet doe they still twoo waies profite in the lawe For it is to them a verye good meane wherby they maie dayly better more assuredly learne what is the will of the Lord whyche they aspyre vnto and maye bee confyrmed in the vnderstandynge thereof As if a seruaunt be already bente with all the affection of hys hearte to please hys Lorde yet hathe hee neede dylygentelye to searche oute and marke the fashions of hys Lorde that hee maye frame and applye hym selfe vnto them And lette none of vs exempte hym selfe from thys neede For no manne hathe hetherto attained to so greate wysedome but that hee may by dayly instruction of the lawe gette newe profyte in proceedynge to the purer knoweledge of Godes wyll Then bicause wee neede not onely doctrine but also exhortation thys other profite shall the seruaunt of God take by the lawe to be by the often meditation thereof stirred vp to obedience to be strenghthened in it to be holden backe from the slyppery waye of offendinge For after thys manner muste these holly ones dryue forwarde them selues whyche wyth howe greate cherefullnesse so euer they trauayle to Godwarde accordynge to the spirite yet thei are alwaye loden with the sluggyshnesse of the fleshe that they procede not wyth suche ful redinesse as thei oughte To thys fleshe is the lawe geuen as a whyppe that lyke a slowe and dull Asse yt maye be prycked forwarde to worke yea to the spirituall manne bycause hee is not yet dyspatched of the burden of the fleshe yt shall bee a continuall pricke that suffcreth hym not to stande styll Euen to thys vse Dauid hadde respecte when hee dyd sette fourth the lawe with those notable praises The lawe of the Lorde ys vndefiled conuertynge soules the iustices of the Lorde are vpryghte and chearynge heartes the commaundemente of the