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A18772 A postil or orderly disposing of certeine epistles vsually red in the Church of God, vppon the Sundayes and holydayes throughout the whole yeere. Written in Latin by Dauid Chytræus, and translated intoo English by Arthur Golding. Seen and allowed according too the order appoynted Chytraeus, David, 1531-1600.; Golding, Arthur, 1536-1606. aut 1570 (1570) STC 5263; ESTC S107883 320,443 478

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not thrée eternals but one eternall As also there bée not thrée incomprehēsibles nor thrée vncreated but one vncreated and one incomprehensible So likewise is the father almightie the sonne almightie and the holy ghost almightie And yet they are not thrée almighties but one almighty So the father is God the sonne is God and the holye ghost is God. And yet are they not thrée Gods but one God. So likewise is the father Lord the sonne Lord and the holy ghost Lord. And yet not thrée Lordes but one Lord. For lyke as wée bée compelled by the Christian veritie too acknowledge euery person by himselfe too bée God and Lorde So are wée forbidden by the Catholike religion too say there bée thrée Gods or thrée Lordes The father is made of none neither created nor begotten The sonne is of the father alone not made nor created but begotten The holy ghost is of the father and of the sonne neyther made nor created nor begotten but procéeding So there is one father not thrée fathers one sonne not thrée sonnes one holy Ghost not thrée holy Ghostes And in this Trinitie none is afore or after other none is greater nor lesse than an other But the whole thrée persons bée coeternall together and coequall So that in al things as is aforsayd the vnitie in Trinitie and the Trinitie in vnitie is too bée woorshypped He therefore that wyll bée saued must thus thinke of the Trinitie Furthermore it is necessary too euerlasting saluatiō that he also béeléeue ryghtly in the Incarnacion of our Lord Iesu Chryst For the ryght Faythe is that wée béeléeue and confesse that our Lord Iesus Chryste the sonne of God is God and man. God of the substaunce of the father béegotten béefore the worldes and man of the substaunce of his mother borne in the world Perfect God and perfect man of a reasonable soule and humaine flesh subsisting Equall too the father as touching his Godhead and inferiour too the father touching his manhoode Who although hée bée God and man yet hée is not two but one Chryst One not by conuersion of the Godhead intoo flesh but by taking of the manhoode intoo God. One altoogither not by confusion of substance but by vnitie of persone For as the reasonable soule and flesh is one man so God and man is one Chryst Who suffered for our saluation descended intoo hell rose ageyn the third day from the dead He ascended intoo heauen he sitteth on the ryght hand of the father God almightie from whence he shall come too iudge the quicke and the dead At whose comming all men shall ryse ageyn with their bodyes and shal giue accompt for their owne workes And they that haue doone good shall goe intoo lyfe euerlasting and they that haue done euill intoo euerlasting fire This is the Catholike fayth which except a man beléeue faythfully he can not be saued Vppon the first Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Iohn iiij DEerely beloued let vs loue one another for loue commeth of god And euery one that loueth is borne of God and knoweth god Hee that loueth not knoweth not God for God is loue In this appeareth the loue of god too vs warde bycause that God sent his onely begotten sonne intoo the world that wee myght liue through him Herein is loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs and sent his sonne too bee the agreement for our sinnes Deerely beloued if God so loued vs we ought also one to loue another No man hath seen God at any tyme If wee loue one another GOD dwelleth in vs and his loue is perfect in vs Hereby knowe we that we dwell in him and hee in vs bycause he hath giuen vs of his spirite And wee haue seen and doo testifye that the Father sent the sonne too bee the Sauiour of the world whosoeuer confesseth that Iesus is the sonne of God in him dwelleth God and hee in god And wee haue knowen and beleeued the loue that God hath too vs God is loue and hee that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God ▪ and God in him Herein is the loue perfecte in vs that wee should trust in the daye of iudgement For as he is euen so are wee in this world There is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare for feare hath paynefulnesse Hee that feareth is not perfite in loue Wee loue him for hee loued vs first If a man say I loue God and yet hate his brother he is a lyer For how can he that loueth not his brother whom he hath seen loue GOD whom he hath not seen And this commaundement haue wee of him that he which loueth God should loue his brother also The disposement THe state of this Epistle is a doctrine concerning the loue of God and of our neyghbour The greatest part of Iohns whole Epistle is employed vppon twoo places In exhorting too fayth whiche is settled in the louingnesse or mercie of GOD who forgiueth sinnes for his sonne our Lord Iesus Chrystes sake and escheweth corruptions of the true doctrine concerning the sonne of god And vntoo new obedience or loue towardes GOD and our neyghbour For too this purpose chéefly did Iohn wryte this Epistle too roote out this common errour out of mennes myndes who when they héere that wée are iustifyed by faith alone for Chrystes sake doo gather thereuppon that good woorkes are not néedfull and that it skilles not after what sort wée liue Iohn therefore teacheth that wée attayne remission of sinnes and are clenzed from our sinnes not for our owne good woorkes but by fayth through the frée loue mercie of God and the only blud of the sonne of God howbeit that this fayth must of necessitie woorke effectually by loue towardes God and our neyghbour as is sayd more at large in the doctrine of iustification and good woorkes Now there are in the Epistle of this Sūday thrée places too bée chéefly considered 1 Of Gods loue toowardes vs which is the foundatiō of our rightuousnesse and euerlasting saluation ▪ 2 Of our loue towardes God and our neyghbour 3 Of the childly awe and the slauish feare The first place MOst graue and most woorthy too bée imprinted in the iunermost bowels of our hartes is the first sentēce of this Epistle which setteth foorth a summe of the whole Gospell and a most swéete comfort in all troubles and sorowes God is loue and hee that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God God in him But first and formost let the Readers consider that this saying of Iohns agréeth fully with Chrystes sermon Ioh. iij. God so loued the world that he gaue his only begottē sonne too the intent that al which beléeue in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting God is loue that is too say God loueth mankynde in very déed and earnestly and hath vttered his infinite and vnspeakable loue toowardes vs by this notable token that he hath not spared his only begotten sonne but hath
perteine these dueties of louing too woorke none euill too our neybor or too impaire no mannes body good name or goodes but too defend and mayntein them too our power Which vertue is named ryghtfulnesse and manlinesse Also too this commaundement perteineth frindship which is a cherisher of mutual good wil a faithfulnesse a séeking of cōcord a méeknesse which yéeldeth not to anger and desire of reuengement a gentlenesse which beareth with the blemishes or defaults of other men c. Vntoo the sixth commaundement thou shalt not commit aduoutry perteineth the mutual loue of maried couples earnest pure not lusting after other men or other womē Also chastitie which appaireth not the clēnesse of it self or of others And stayednesse which yéeldeth honor to the parties own body Vntoo the s●uenth thou shalt not steale belongeth ryghtfulnesse absteining from other mennes goods and weldoing or liberalitie towards whosoeuer is in néede Vntoo the eight thou shalt not bear false witnesse is referred not to hurt a mannes neibor by false witnesse slaūders back bitings raylings or other vntruths but in al a mannes dooings sayings to be soothfast frēdly curteous faithfull c. In the nynth commaundement thou shalt not couet is required a perfect soundnesse of all the powers and desires of mannes nature agréeable with the rule of Gods law burning with the pure and chast fire of the loue of God and our neybor and voyde of all lust or concupiscence or of all sinfull inclinations affections or desires of corrupted nature wherwith men being now stirred vp do set more by mony or glory than by God himself like as that foolish loouer in Plautus crieth out I had leuer this woman loued mee than all the Gods that ●n the world bee So Paule in this place referreth almost al the vertues of good woorks to this one poynt of louing and maketh the precepts of the. x commaundements too bee the ground and rule of loue or of all good woorks For God wil haue al the whole life of christen folke al their thoughts deuises endeuers and dooings too bée ruled by the squire of the woord which he hath left among vs as he sayth in Deut. xij What I commaund thée that doo thou vnto the Lord neither put thou too neither take thou away Ezech. xx Walk not in the cōmaundemēts of your Fathers for I am the Lord your God walke in my commaundements and keepe my iudgements and doo them Then are not the .x. cōmaundemēts to bée hissed out of the church out of the life of christiās as the Antinomians cauil which banish the law into the court of the ciuil magistrate or else bear folk in hād that the law serueth to none other purpose but too accuse condemn For wée see that Paul in this place vrgeth the .x. commaundements vpon christiās as the squire and rule of good woorks and of all their lyfe Of the third LOue is the fulfilling of the lawe that is to say sound perfect and continuall obedience towards al the commaundements of Gods law without any sinne or blemish such as is required in the law of god Deut. vj. Math. xxij Loue the Lord thy God with all thy hart with all thy soule thy neybor as thy self .j. Iohn ▪ v. This is the louing of God that wée kéepe al his cōmaundements Such a louing of God and our neybor burning perfect with the whole hart without any lusts or sinful inclinatiōs without any sin befalleth to no man Christ only excepted For in al men yēa euen in those the be regenerated the law of the members or y sinfull inclinations affectiōs keepe war like enimies ageinst the law of god Gal. v. Ro● vij and they striue against the spirit of god And in al mē yea euē in the holiest there remaines lothsom filthinesse of sin which hindereth our loue obedience that it cannot fully perfectly satisfie y law of God nor of it own woorthynesse please God .j. Ioh. ij If wee say wee haue no sin wée deceiue our selues and the truthe is not in vs. Then séeing no mannes loue bée he neuer so holy is the perfect fulfilling of Gods lawe it is plaine too bee séene that no man is iustified before God by his owne loue or his own good woorks but that wée are freely for Christes only sake deliuered by faith from the cursse of the law from sin death and restored too rightuousnesse and lyfe Gal. iij. Rom. iij. Now when wee through the frée mercy of God for Chrystes sake are receiued and iustified by faith and endued with the holy ghost then also is the law stablished by faith not only bicause that through faith the full perfect rightuousnesse which Gods lawe claimeth is imputed too vs as though wée our selues had throughly satisfied Gods law but also bicause that through faith the true knowledgment of Chryst foreshining in our harts through the help of the holy ghost mouing our harts ther is kindled in our mind a new brighter light a stedier assent a confidence gladnesse settling it selfe in God a childly awe a pure and more burning loue of God a stedier purpose of obeying God according too all the commaundements of his holy law Which newbegonne obedience liketh God not for the owne worthinesse thereof but through faith in Christ that is too wit bicause the person of him that obeyeth is accepted by faith for Chrystes sake as in .j. Pet. ij is sayd Offer spirituall sacrifices acceptable too God by Iesus Chryst Vpon the Sunday called Septuagesima ¶ The Epistle .j. Cor. ix and .x. PErceiue ye not how that they which run in a race run all yet but one receiueth the reward So run that yee may obteine Euery man that proueth masteryes absteyneth from all thinges And they doo it too obteine a corruptible crowne but wee too obteine an vncorruptible crowne I therefore so run not as at an vncertaine thing So fight I not as one that beateth the ayre but I tame my body and bring it vntoo subiection lest by any meanes after that I haue preached to other I my selfe should bee a castaway The .x. Chapter BRethren I would not that yee should be ignoraunt of this how that our fathers were all vnder a cloude and all passed thorowe the sea and were al baptised vnder Moses in the cloud and in the sea and did all eate of one spirituall meat and did all drinke of one maner of spirituall drinke For they dranke of the spiritual rock that folowed them and that rocke was Chryst The cheefe places are three 1 Of diligence and busying our selues in the woorks of our owne vocation and in the folowing of the actions of all our whole lyfe in suche wyse as they may serue too Gods glory and atteine reward in euerlasting life 2 A generall exhortation too new obedience or a lyfe agréeing with Gods will and too shunne the offences
giuen him for vs all Like as a little before the woordes of this dayes Epistle it is sayd Herein is the loue not that wée loued God but that he loued vs and sent his only begotten sonne too make agréement for our sinnes This excéeding great goodnesse and mercie or loue of God toowardes vs is the only fortresse of our ryghtuousnesse hauen of our welfare Too whiche who soeuer flée with stedie fayth are reconcyled too God or haue Gods fauour and dwell in God God dwelleth in thē bestowing vpon them al benefits cōfort rightuousnesse life ioy heauenly lyght These are verely and earnestly or perfectly beloued of GOD and at the day of iudgement haue a stedie trust settled in his fatherly good will feare not that they shall bée condemned but knowe themselues too bée clothed with the rightuousnesse of the sonne of God and that they are reputed and become as rightuouse and holy as if they thēselues had performed the perfect loue and obedience due too the Lawe This trust settled in the loue or good will of God embracing vs for his sonnes sake is the phisike of the mynde taking away fond thoughtfulnesse ridding vs of lusts driuing away feare and making the hart quiet and peaceable It is not full of thought and anguishe or it dooth not tremble or despayre in daungers whiche are bent ageinst it but is subiect too God and persuading it selfe too bee verely beloued of God it craueth and wayteth for helpe at his hand and obeyeth him and is not discouraged with the hugenesse of miseries that it should fall from God according as S. Paule sayeth ▪ Roma viij Who shall separate vs from the loue of God shall affliction or anguish or persecution or hunger c I am well assured that neyther death nor lyfe nor any creature can plucke vs from the loue of God wherewith he loueth vs for his sonne our Lord Iesus Chrystes sake So Moyses standing at the red Sea so Ezechias and Esay being beséeged by Sennacherib so Steuen whē he was going too execution through fayth assuring them that God loued them for his sonnes sake did put away the fearefulnesse anguish and torment of cōscience vnder which Saule Iudas and innumerable others did sinke of whiche sorte is sayd in the Epistle But he that feareth is not perfect in loue that is too say hée that yéeldeth too distrust too fearefulnesse and anguish and despayreth in sorow and tribulation he beléeueth not that God loueth him in déed neyther dwelleth he in God nor God in him The second place Of louing God and our neyghbour LEt vs loue him bycause he hath loued vs first By wonderfull prouidence hath God so framed mannes nature that in his mynd there should shyne certein sparks of knowledge too bée as gouerners of all his deuises and dooings and in his will and hart there should bée both the rest of affections and also charitie or loue whereby the hart dooth with a certeine gladnesse long for and drawe vntoo it and endeuour to knit vntoo itselfe the good thing which it liketh that it may enioy it and that as it were one thing may bée made of twoo Like as the sonne of God being led with excéeding great loue vnited mannes nature too himselfe Too this ende then is nature created in this wyse that men should before all things long after God as the souerein good thing and settle themselues vppon him and ioy in him and that men being cuppled in God should also bée linked one vntoo another and being ioyned toogither shold bée all one teaching all one thing and professing all one thing For there is no bond of mānes felowshippe more strong than the flames of loue ▪ sowen in mennes harts by the operation of God and afterward kindled and strengthened by the lykenesse of natures and conditions and by consent as touching God and other matters Loue towardes God is a burning fyre of longing wherewith mennes hartes vppon knowledge of Gods hartie loue towardes vs which he hath shewed by sending his sonne do on their behalfe ageine embrace God and with a certeyne gladnesse settled vppon him submit themselues too him and obey him according too all his commaundements as is sayd in the chapter folowing This is the louing of God that wée kéepe his commaundements And there bée three causes recited in this Epistle where by all the godly ought too bée stirred and inflamed too the true and earnest loue of God and our neyghbour The first is the true earnest and infinite loue of God towardes vs which he hath shewed by sending his onely begotten sonne who dyed and rose ageine for our saluation Wherefore the order of ryght and the eternall and vnchaūgeable necessitie of det requireth at our hands that we shold not bée thanklesse too God that loueth vs so hartely but that wee should render loue for loue and bée obedient too him according as it is sayd in the Text let vs loue him bycause he hath loued vs first The second is the most streigth commaundement of God as it is sayd in the Text This commaundement haue wée of God that he which loueth god shold also loue his neighbour The third is the most ample dignitie and profitablenesse For this is the hyghest and chéefest worshipping of GOD wherein God is most specially delighted who dwelleth in the hartes of those that loue one another and agrée toogither as in a house or temple that he liketh well of as is sayde in this chapter If we loue one another God dwelleth in vs On the contrarie part he shaketh of God from gouerning him whatsoeuer he is that soweth discord or nourisheth and confirmeth hatred yrefulnesse desire of reuenge discord and warres The loue of a mannes brother or neyghbour comprehendeth in a maner all the vertues of the second table as in the fourth commaundement brotherly loue kindhartednesse duetifulnesse towardes a mannes parentes and teachers loue of mannes childrē and kinsfolk of the magistrats c. In the fifth commaundement endeuer too kéepe concord frendship méeknesse mercie vprightnesse which hurteth not another mannes bodye or good name but dooth good vntoo others In the sixth commaundement the loue of maryed folkes eschewing whoredome and aduoutrie c. In the seuenth commaundement ryghtfulnesse whiche impeacheth not anothers mannes goods nor defraudeth another man in bargayning liberalitie towardes the poore In the eyght commaundement fréendlynesse faythfulnesse soothfastnesse which hurteth not another man by slaunders bakbytings raylings c. Of all these vertues which are apparant too bée partes of neyghbourly loue a man myght speake in order if this place were appoynted for the full opening of them But as nowe it suffyseth too haue poynted out the chéef poyntes of this most large doctrine as they are applyed too the Text of this present Epistle Vppon the second Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Iohn iij. MEruayle not my brethren thoughe the world hate
you VVee knowe that wee are translated from death vntoo lyfe bycause wee loue the brethren He that loueth not his brother abideth in death Whosoeuer hateth his brother is a manslear And yee knowe that no manslear hath eternall lyfe abyding in him Hereby perceyue wee loue bycause he gaue his lyfe for vs and wee ought too giue our liues for the brethren But who so hath this worldes good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him ▪ My babes let vs not loue in woorde neyther in tong but in deede and in veritie The disposement THis Epistle is of those sort that persuade For first there is a comfort too bée set ageinst the hatreds of the world Secondly there is an Exhortation too louingnesse and liberalitie towardes a mannes neyghbour The first place MAruell not my brethren though the world hate you Mannes reason iudgeth of the tooyles and troubles of the godly and specially of the contentions among the teachers euen for all the world after the same manner as Salust sayeth in his preface too the warres of Iugurth Too labour in vayne and too preache nothing else by ouertooyling a mānes selfe but hatred and slaunder is a poynt of vtter madnesse For all the godly and specially the Ministers of the Gospel who performe the déedes of most singular louingnesse and most earnestly séeke the euerlasting welfare of their héerers and execute their dutie most faithfully doo reape in manner none other reward than most bitter hatred and vtter vnthankfulnesse at the hands of those vppon whom they haue bestowed greatest benefites Ageinst this temptation and the bitter fordoomes spyghts and hatreds of the wysemē of the world whereby many are woont too bée withdrawen from the ministerie Iohn comforteth vs in these woordes Maruell not my brethren though the world hate you as if he had sayd the iudgement of God and of the godly is farre of another sort than is the iudgement of the wicked worlde The greater that any man is before God the more contemned and abiect is he before the world And seing that at many mennes hands there is no token of a thankfull mynd rendred too God for his excéeding great benefites which he poureth out by heapes vppon all men but all kynd of spyght Let not vs wonder if the world hate vs also For the Diuell enuying vs this so greate felicitie that wée are conueyed from death too euerlasting lyfe stirreth vp his instrumentes and inflameth mennes hatreds ageinst vs Therefore ageinst the most bitter hatred of the world and of the vngodly let vs set Gods good will and fatherly loue towardes vs which the sonne of God hath shewed by this notable token that he hath spent his lyfe for vs and deliuering vs from death by the death of him selfe hath restored vs to the possession of eternall life Wherefore let eche of vs bee so disposed in mynd that they may with a true harte say thus It is sufficient for mée hauyng my full delyght in Chryst too doo those things which are godly and to speake such as are godly The second place AN exhortation too louingnesse and liberalitie towards a mannes neybour and the argumentes of this exhortation are three Of the honestnesse of it Of the profitablenesse of it And of the example of Chryst FIrst of the honestnesse or the necessary couplyng of the cause and the effects I knowe that we are translated from death too lyfe bycause wee loue the brethren or bycause our fayth is effectuall by loue For too this end are wee washed from our sinnes by the bloud of Chryste and translated from death intoo lyfe that wee shoulde hereafter eschue sinne and earnestly execute loue towardes God and our neybour which is the fountayn of all vertues Now like as mouing in a mannes bodie is an vndouted token effect of lyfe yet left in the body euen so louingnesse is the next effect and an vnfallible signe of fayth shyning in the hart wherby wée are translated from deathe vntoo lyfe And like as in this Euthymeme I knowe there is lyfe still in him bycause there is stirring yet left in his bodye it foloweth not that stirring is the efficient cause of life but by the effect I gather according too reson that the cause is present so in this place of Iohns wee know wee are translated from death to life bycause wee loue the brethren this part of spéeche bycause betokeneth not the efficient cause of whiche is spoken in the fifth of Iohns Gospell in this wyse He that beleeueth in the sonne is passed from deathe vnto lyfe but it betokeneth the effect whervpon the argument is gathered that we are verely translated from deathe vntoo lyfe like as Luke in his vij Chapter reasoneth vppon the effect that many sinnes are forgiuen too the sinfull woman bycause she loued muche Likewise as if I should say I knowe for a certeintie that the Sunne is vp bycause I sée the sunne beames glaring in my chamber And in this selfesame Epistle is sayde In this haue wee knowne his loue bicause he hath spent his life for vs. The second argument of the profitablenesse or of the necessitie of holding faste Fayth lyfe and euerlasting saluation For he that loueth not hath not lyfe euerlasting abyding in him but he continueth in deathe according also as Paule sayth j. Cor. vj. No whoremongers Idolaters abusers of themselues with the mankynde pillers c. shall inherite the kingdome of god Therefore too the intent wee lose not the remission of sinnes receiued the deliueraunce from Deathe the grace of GOD and the euerlasting lyfe wée must of necessitie fall to louingnesse and new obedience agréeable with Gods will. And yet it foloweth not therevppon that oure louingnesse or newe obedience deserueth forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall lyfe For this louingnesse cannot so muche as bée begon neyther pleaseth it God except remission of sinnes be first freely giuen for Chrystes sake and that faith shyne in the hart Bréefly euen altoogyther after the manner of Logicke hath Iohn included this argument in the forme of reasonyng agréeing to the moode Celarent But in the first place he hath put the conclusion in the second the minor and in the last the maior Ce Euery murderer hath not lyfe euerlasting abyding in him or abydeth in death la Euery one that hateth or loueth not his brother is a murtherer before god Math. v. rent Ergo he that loueth not his brother abydeth in Death or hath not eternall lyfe abyding in him The third Argument OF the example of Chryste who spent his soule or his lyfe for vs as he sayth in Iohn xv Greater loue than this can no man haue than that a man shoulde giue hys lyfe for his freends Paule Rom. v. GOD commendeth his owne loue towardes vs in that when wée were his enemies Chryst dyed for vs. Vntoo these three arguments Iohn addeth a warnyng
demonstratiue The state or proposition of it is I am glad that it hath bin your good lucke too haue the full and riche knowledge of the Gospell whereby you are made parteners of saluation and euerlasting lyfe with Chryste It may bée referred too the first and second of the ten commaundements The cheefe places are foure 1 Of mannes souerein good which is the true knowledge of GOD and of his sonne our Lord Iesus Chryst according too the Gospell 2 Of Perseuerance 3 Of the last iudgement 4 Of fréendlynesse whiche hath a will too doo other mē good reioyceth alwayes in their good successes First Of the souerein good SOuerein good Blissednesse Blisse or Blisfulnesse whiche is the enioying of the souerein good and the end too whiche man tendeth are almost of one significatiō Howbéeit there is great disagréement not only among the common and vnskilfull sort but also euen among the wyse What is the souerein good of man which man ought chéefly too séeke after and too the atteynement whereof he ought too employe all his intentes deuyses and dooings and wherein he ought too settle The common sort the Country folk the Noble men Citizens and Marchant men déeme monye to bée the souerein good and thoughe they now and then speake somewhat discretly yet most of them thinke in their hartes as the Cyclops did in Euripides Riches are vnto the wise men a god O man as for other things they are but fables and pleasant tales The Ambitiouse doo chéefly couet honour and promotion The Epicures of whom there is the greatest number among men employe all their endeuer too enioy the pleasures of the bodye The sounder sort of Philosophers say that mannes blisse cōsisteth in vertue But yet neyther Aristotle in his Ethikes nor Cicero in his Offices where they purposely make discourse of vertue doo make any mention of God or of godlynesse too Godward of the feare of God of faith of the loue of God of prayer or of thankesgiuing Plato teacheth somwhat more diuinely that all mē ought too trauell chéefly in this behalf that they may speake things acceptable to God and doo things acceptable too god And he defineth vertue too bée a framing of a mannes self like vntoo God as much as is possible This is the true end of man according too the Lawe which teacheth that mānes souereine good is full agréeablenesse with Gods wil that is too wit the true knowledge and glorifying of God and hartye loue and perfect obedience as is sayd in this dayes Gospel that the souerein cōmaundement of the Lawe is Thou shalt loue thy Lord God with all thy hart c. Now like as if a mā shold shewe a néedye bodye a wedge of gold vppon the toppe of a high Toure yet not lend him a ladder wherwithal he might climb vp to the toppe and fetch downe the wedge So dooth Gods law only poynt men to the souerein good without shewing vs how wée may come by it sith that no man fulfilleth the Lawe But the Gospell setteth before vs both the ende and the meanes wherby wée may attayn too it namely Iesus Christ the mediator who is the way the truthe and lyfe the doore at which we enter the ladder by which we climb into heauē Therefore the souerein good is the true knowledge of god and of his sonne our Lord Iesu Chryst according to the gospell The knowledge of God cōprehendeth by the figure Synecdoche all the effects folowing that is too wit faith loue prayer praysegiuing fruition of light wisdome lyfe ioy euerlasting For all these things dooth Chryste comprehend Iohn xvij This is eternall lyfe that they may acknowledge thée the true God and Iesus Chryste whom thou hast sent For this souerein good dooth Paule reioyce on the behalfe of the Corinthians in this Epistle and he affirmeth them too bée enryched not with the transitorie riches of this lyfe but with the true and euerlasting riches that is with true and plentuous knowledge of the doctrine of the gospell and with stedfast faith and with all good things necessarie too saluation For in deed as it is sayd j. Tim. vj. The chéefest riches that can bée is Godlynesse ioyned with contentation And in this place Hée is true by whom you are called too the fellowship of Iesu Chryst that is too wit that yée might bée the children of God by adoption and brethren and coheires with Chryst of all good things in heauen Certeinly therefore yée shall bée glorified with Chryst and shall bée like vnto him The second Of Perseuerance PErseuerance is a stedfast and continuall abyding in the true acknowledgement of Chryst and in fayth euen vnto the last gaspe Now whereas Chryste sayeth Hée that holdeth out too the end shal bée saued and wée in so great weaknesse of nature in so great perilles and through the flyghtes of the Diuell may easly slyde and fall away The godly mynds that are distressed demaund how they may continue in true knowledge of God and in faith vntoo the end Saule fell whereas erst he had bin well liked of God and had bin the dwelling place of the holy Ghost Iudas the Apostle fel Our first parents who were created too the Image of God fell and finally there bée examples innumerable in all our lyfe Therefore that wée may stand stedfast in the faith let vs haue these most swéete comfortes alwayes before our eyes j. Cor. j. Chryst shall strengthen you vntoo the end that yée may bée blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus Chryst Luc. xxij I haue prayed for thée Peter that thy fayth may not fayle But Chryst prayeth not onely for Peter and the Apostles but for all that beléeue their preaching j. Corint x. God is faithfull who suffereth vs not too bée tempted aboue our strength but with the temptation maketh a way out that wée may bée able too endure it Iohn xvj I will pray my Father and he shall send you an other comforter which shal fary with you for euer Let the myndes of the godly being strengthned with these moste swéete promises fight ageynst wauering and wanhope and performe diligence in harty prayer and bée circumspect and watchfull in eschuing occasions of fallyng and the diuels snares dangers Let Fayth bee their buckler prayer their percing dart and Gods woorde their swoorde and let Chryste alone with the rest He wil strenghthen vs too the end that though sinne be stil remayning in vs yet wée may be blamelesse in the day of our Lorde Iesus Chryste who was made sin and curse for vs that we might be set frée from cōdemnation of the law and bée made the ryghtuousnesse of God in him Rom. viij There is no damnation too those that walke in Iesu Chryst The third COncerning the last iudgement or the day of our Lord Iesus Christ there is a notable testimonie in this Epistle perteyning to this article From
Hipocrites which haue no true reason lyghtened by the holy Ghost nor true knowledge of God nor true feare and fayth But let your seruice bée reasonable wherein your mynd may rightly acknowledge the being and will of God and vnderstand what seruices please God and what woorkes please not Let it haue the true feare of GOD and true fayth Let it not persuade it selfe that it pleaseth God by the woorke wrought And fashion not your selues like vntoo this world Bée not like vntoo this world acquaynt not your selues with vngodlynesse fleshly carelesnesse wanhope nor with any of the leawd lustes affections and wickednesses of the vngodly in this world But bee yee chaunged in your shape by the renewing of your mynd Get yée new knowledge and new affections as the feare of God fayth louingnèsse hope patience and such others in your hartes agréeable too the good and perfect will of GOD which is vttered in the Lawe and the Gospell The second part Of myldnesse which brydleth statelynesse curiositie ouerweening of a mannes self trust in a mannes own cunning or policie whiche maketh a man too take many thyngs vppon him without calling HEre would bée recited the whole doctrine of myldenesse and lowlynesse and of the contrarie vyces out of the exposition of the vertues of the fourth and firste commaundements For I say that is I warne you yea and I hartely beséeche all and euery of you in discharge of myne office and dutie which God hath committed vnto mée That no man be wyser in his owne concceit than needeth That no man haue a stately opinion of himself nor rashly proudly misdéem other mē nor deuyse new interpretations opinions of his own brayne as Arius the Anabaptistes all other Heretikes are wyser in their own conceits than they ought to be kéepe not thēselues within the measure of faith that is too say within the bounds of God woord But béeing puffed vp with an ouerwéening of their own wisdome they coyne new opinions and suttletyes Ageyn they are proud and attribute more to themselues in opinion concerning themselues and their owne sayings than is due too their infirmitie And afterward in their dooings they vaunt them selues aboue their power they thrust themselues into other mennes vocations they reforme and rule other mēnes matters and they neglect their owne Let him bee wyse according too meeldnesse The true and Christian wisdome is too hold a mans self mildly with the bounds of the woord that is left vs by Christ and to acknowledge GOD and to obey him according to the woord by him deliuered All mans wisdome without Gods woord is as Socrates sayeth in Plato a doutfull dreame And the same Socrates sayeth that therefore Apollo had iudged him wyse bycause he knew he was not wyse at all But the beginning or the summe of true wisdome is the feare of the lord That is too say the true acknowledgemēt inuocation and praysing of the euerlasting God and of his sonne our Lord Iesus Chryste according too Gods woord or the gospell taught by Chryst According as God hath delt to euery man the measure of fayth Let euery man abyde within the bounds of fayth or of Gods woord or of the whole doctrine of the Gospell And out of these let them not raunge vppon trust of their owne wisdome Ageyn let euery man estéeme of himself according to the measure of his own gifts which he hath receyued let him imploy the same too the comon welfare of the whole body of the church as in mannes body the giftes and offices of the dyuers members are directed too the cōmon preseruation of the whole body This similitude is handled more largely by Paule .j. Cor xij and Ephe. iiij Vppon the second Sunday after the Epiphanie ¶ The Epistle Rom. xij SEeing that wee haue diuers gifts according too the grace that is geuen vntoo vs if a man haue the gift of prophesie let him haue it that it bee agreeing too the fayth Let him that hath an office wait on his office Let him that teacheth take heede too his doctrine Let him that exhorteth geue attendance too his exhortation If any man geue let him doo it with singlenesse Let him that ruleth doo it with diligence If any man shew mercy let him doo it with cherefulnesse Let loue bee without dissimulation Hate that which is euill and cleaue too that which is good Bee kinde one too another with brotherly loue In giuing honor go one before another Be not slouthfull in the businesse which you haue in hand Bee feruent in spirite Applie your selues too the time Reioyce in hope Bee patient in tribulation Continue in prayer Distribute vntoo the necessitie of the Sainctes Bee ready to harbor Blesse them which persecute you blesse I say and cursse not Bee mery with them that are mery weepe with them that weepe bee of like affection one towardes another Bee not hie minded but make your selues equall too them of the lower sorte THis Epistle cleaueth too the last that went before And first it reckeneth vp the sundry gifts and diuers kinds of charges which God hath ordeyned in his churche that they should bée employed too Gods glory and the common profite of the whole church and not too the augmenting of pride and busie medling with many things Whither it bee prophesie according too the agreablenesse of faith Prophesie as it appereth by ▪ j. Cor. xiiij is in the new Testament the gift of the interpreting the Prophesies of the scripture Therfore he counselleth them that their expounding of the scripture should be y agréeablenesse of faith that is too say that it should agrée wyth the whole doctrine of the gospell or with all the Articles of the faith Let this precept bée made manifest by examples The interpretations which the Anabaptistes teache vppon the sayings in the v. of Mathew concerning othes and not reuenging doo fight with the rest of the Articles of Gods woorde which expresly aloweth lawful othes and the reuengement that is doone by Magistrates The popish interpretation of this principle we are iustified by fayth that is by faith countenaunced with loue or by faith and the rest of the vertues ioyntly to●gither agréeth not with the whole doctrin of the gospel which manifestly auoucheth y wée are fréely iustified by faith only for Iesus Chryst sake and not for any woorkes of our owne Or ministership in ministring These spéeches are clipt The méening of this is he that is a minister of the church or a deacon gathering distributing the almesses of the church let him minister in suche wise as he ought too doo This sentence therefore enioyneth faithfulnesse and diligence in all partes of the ministerie Or hee that teacheth in doctrine Let the teacher of the gospel in church or in schoole teache aright and let him faithfully spred abrode true doctrine concerning God .j. Tim. iiij Take héede too thy
place vnto wrath For it is writtē vengeaunce is mine I wil reward sayth the lord Therfore if thine enemy hunger feede him if he thirst giue him drink For in so dooing thou shalt heape coles of fire on his head Bee not ouercome of euill but ouercome euill with goodnesse HE procedeth in the register of precepts of vertues or good woorkes by the exercise wherof Christenfolk must shew their obedience too Godward 1 Bee not wise in your owne opinions Mildnesse and willingnesse too bée taught not chalenging greater wisdome too it selfe than is agréeable too ones infirmitie nor trusting in ones own gifts but héering others and giuing place too such as giue good aduice is a vertue that perteineth to the iiij and viij precept of the ten commaundements The vices that encounter it are pride stiffenesse of opinion or wilfulnesse and Academical douting 2 Render to no man euil for euil Méekenesse repressing desire of reuenge The ful doctrine of this vertue is woont to be recited in the opening of the fifth commaundement 3 Prouide things honest in the sight of al mē Warenesse of eschuing stumbling blocks which withdraw the minds of the weake from the true doctrine Now an offence or stumbling block is a false doctrine or a misbehauior in life which impeacheth Gods glory and other mennes saluation either bicause it seduceth or bicause it giueth occasion of slaūdering the gospell and the Church or else bicause it prouoketh other too doo like wise Too this poynt may al the whole doctrine bée referred which is set forth in the place that concerneth offences With the méening of this Epistle agréeth the saying of Christ Mat. 5. Let your light so shine before men that they seing your good works may glorifie your father which is in heauē 4 If it be possible as much as in you is haue peace wyth all men The desire of peace perteineth too the .v. cōmaundemēt 5 Auenge not your selues but giue place to the wrath that is to wit of God. Vntoo the fifth commaundement of the ten perteineth méeknesse which represseth anger desire of reuengemēt giuing place too the wrath of God who either by himselfe without meane or by the Magistrate punisheth wrongs For in the chapter folowing Paul establisheth the vengeance that is doone by the magistrate Thou shalt heape coles of fire vppon his head That is too say thou shalt heape punishment For the more vnthankfull he is towards thée for thy weldooing so muche the sorer shall he be punished Or thou shalt set him on fire with loue of thée when it shal greeue him too bée ouercome with thy kindnesse and curtesie Vppon the fourth Sunday after the Epiphanie ¶ The Epistle Rom. xiij OWe nothing to any man but that you loue one an other For he that loueth another hath fulfilled the law For these other commaundements Thou shalt not commit aduoutrie Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse Thou shalt not lust and so foorth if ther bee any other commaundement they are all comprehended in this saying loue thy neighbour as thy self loue hurteth not his neybor Therfore is loue the fulfilling of the lawe The disposement THe state of this Epistle is a general exhortation too loue or too good works enioyned in the .x. commaundementes The chéefe places of Doctrine are thrée 1 Of this saying Owe nothing too any man but that yée loue one another 2 Of louing a mannes neybor which comprehendeth all the vertues and good woorks of the second table of the ten commaundements 3 Of the fulfilling of the lawe The first place PAy all men their dues and oweno mā any thing saue mutuall loue It is an old and vsuall definition that rightuousnesse is a vertue which yéeldeth too euery body that which is his own or which yéeldeth too euery body that which is due And it cōprehendeth all the other vertues a mannes full obedience towards the whole law of God or the .x. commaundements which are the rule that sheweth what dueties wée owe too God what too other men and what too our selues All the dueties that are to be performed immediatly vnto God himself are comprised in the vertues and commaundements of the first table namely true knowledge and calling vppon God fear of God aboue all things faith loue glorifying acknowledgment c. Vntoo magistrates is due honor obedience loue reuerence toll of things growing vpon the ground custome of things brought in from forren landes and seruice bothe in matters of peace and warre Ageine too parentes schoolemaisters maisters of housholds and gardens there is too be yeelded reuerence honor obedience and thankfulnesse And vntoo the rest of men and cheefly too fréendes husbandes wiues chyldren kinsefolke straungers or fremfolke there must bée yeelded all the dues of good will of faithfulnesse and of wel dooing In bargaines in borowings in buying in hyring and letting and other things the mony and wares and all other things that are due are too bée performed too euery man For these things are due euen by bond of ciuill order and euen the Magistrate punisheth those that pay them not Therfore Paule in this place commaundeth these things to bée performed in suche wyse that afterward wée may bée vtterly frée from the bond of ciuill gouernment But the bond of nature and of God is of another sort binding all men too performe too their neybors mutuall loue in hart and also outward dueties which the ciuil magistrate cōpelleth no man too doo As for example the Samaritane doth good too the wounded wayfarer and the préest and the Leuite ouerpassing him are not punished by the magistrate although they wickedly neglect mercy due by the bond of nature Euen so by the bond of God and nature wée bée bound too ayde such as stand in néede of our helpe with counsel doctrine defence trauell mony and other almesse deedes although the ciuill magistrate punisheth not such as let slip these dueties This is the meening of the words Owe nothing too any man saue mutuall loue Of the second TO loue a mannes neybor is vpon the true knowledge of Christ foreshining in our harts and vppon faith assuring vs y God of his meere goodnesse loueth vs for his sōnes sake too submit our selues on the other side vnto God and too obey him for his sake to embrace other mē with harty good will and to impeche no mans life body name or goods but too the vttermost of our power to do thē good by al y meanes we cā The speciall kindes or dueties of loue towards a mannes neybor are al vertues or good woorks enioyned in the second table of the .x. commaundements which are cōprehended all toogither in this saying loue thy neibor as thy self Mat. xxij In the fourth commaundement we are willed to loue our parēts children brethren maisters magistrates subiects c. Vntoo the fifth which is thou shalt not kill
things and thy neibor as thy self .j. Tim. j. The summe of the commaundement is loue from a pure hart .j. Ioh. iij. He that loueth not abideth in death Héeruppon Paul reasoneth that the loue of a mannes neybor is too bée preferred beforethe gifts of tungs eloquence miracles learning c whiche are not needfull for all Christians Straunge and vnknowē languages are no more too the profit of the héerers than sounding brasse or a tingling cimball that lulleth the eares with a vayne sound Ageine the giftes of Tungs without charitie is not true godlynesse ne maketh a man a right Christian nor acceptable to god So like wise Prophesying which is able too opē euen the darkest places of al the scripture faith or y gift of working miracles al vnderstanding or the knowledge of all Arts without louingnesse is not the chéef and most excellent seruice of God. Much wrangling is there in the disputations of these dayes about this saying If I haue all fayth and yet haue not loue I am nothing and it séemeth that there is not any more notable saying y can bée set ageinst this proposition Onely fayth iustifyeth But I answer First by the rule of Logicke The truenesse of propositions Hypothetical that is to say of sentences grounded vppon if is not too bée measured by the vntwyning of the proposition intoo his partes but by the knitting togither of his members matching rightly or otherwise among themselues As for examples sake If an Asse flye he hath fethers This proposition or ground is true but the members of it being vnknit are most false An Asse flyeth An Asse hath fethers Also .j. Cor. xv If Chryst bée not risen in vayne is our preaching vayne is your fayth This proposition in the partes knit togyther is true but the partes being vnknit are most vntrue So also this proposition I● I haue fayth and yet haue no loue I am nothing is very true But if yée take asunder the proposition intoo his partes and say y fayth is nothing or he y is endued w true faith is nothing or is not a godly mā in déed that loue may bée pulled away from fayth all men perceyue that this dissolution or dismembering is false and too bée found fault with Other some answere that Paule in this place speaketh not of the iustifying Faith but of the gift of woorking miracles which may bée euen in the vngodly Mathew vij But were it so that Paule spake of the iustifying Fayth yet can it not bée concluded thereby that wée are not iustified by fayth only or for Chrystes sake only For certeine it is that the loue of God and a mannes neybor doo of necessitie go ioyntly toogither with fayth Like as with the rising of the sunne there goeth ioyntly of necessitie the spreading foorth of his beames or lyght Euen so of necessitie loue foloweth Fayth in those that are iustified in so much as he that loueth not abydeth in death Like as that body wherein there remayneth no féeling or mouing liueth not and yet it foloweth not therupon that feeling and mouing are the cause of lyfe but lyfe is the cause of mouing Euen so the efficient cause of our iustification is God for the obedience passion and death of Chryst only And fayth is the instrument wherby wée take hold of Chryst our ryghtuousnesse Now must the loue of God and a mannes neybor of necessitie folow Fayth in him that is iustified like as mouing and féeling doo of necessitie folow lyfe But loue can not procéede but of fayth like as there can grow no good frutes but of a good trée Of the second A register of the woorkes of charitie or of the vertues that flow out of the true loue of God and a mannes neybor as out of a fountaine LEt them bée conueyed intoo preceptes agréeing too the ten commaundements let them bée set out by adding their definitions and laying the vices too them Loue is long suffering j Long sufferance or patience is a vertue that represseth wrathfulnesse desire of reuenge And though it haue cause too hurt others yet for Gods sake the common peace it remitteth offences beareth with him that did the displeasure as Aristides bare with Themistocles Scipio with the Tribunes and Dauid with Saule It perteyneth too the fifth of the tenne commaundements The vyces that encounter it are desyre of reuenge as in Marius and Sylla also crueltie as in Tyberius Nero And ouermuch forbearing or silinesse Courteous or Gentle. ij Courteousnesse or Gentlenesse not only letteth offences slip and forgiueth them but also by all meanes it cā deuise as by counsell trauell and ayde dooth good to others as well fréends as foes For the Gréeke woord Chrestos which commeth of Chraomai to vse dooth properly signifie such a one as easly and willingly yéeldeth him self to other folk too vse as Aristides by his counsell and trauell benefiteth the common weale of Athens which had bannished him It perteyneth to the fifth and seuenth commaundements The vyces that encounter it are discourtesie or vngentlenesse frowardnesse or chorlishnesse also fond lauishnesse or wastfulnesse and counterfet courtesie or feyned gentlenesse Loue enuieth not iij Freendlynesse modestie or myldnesse which acknowledgeth and loueth Gods gifts in other men willing good too the good and reioycing in their prosperitie Ageinst this vertue fyghteth Enuyousnesse which is gréeued that an other man should excell vs or bée preferred afore vs and longeth too remoue him or take him away to the intent wée lose no part of our estimation as Saul enuyed the glorie of Dauid Pompey enuyed the power of Cesar Marius repyneth for spyght ageinst Sylla Loue dealeth not frowardly or is not giuen to lewdnesse or is not malapert and vngraciouse iiij Good meening modestie or myldnesse which lyeth not in wayte for other folks like the brothers called Perperanes who of a singular vngraciousnesse lewdnesse laying wayt for other mennes lyues were at length taken by Hercules and he hung them vp at his backe vppon his club It perteyneth to the fifth commaundement Thou shalt not kyll Loue swelleth not v Lowlynesse repressing pryde acknowledging a mānes infirmitie submitting himself vnto others and employing his gifts to the behoof of others without disdeyne It perteyneth to the first and .iiij. cōmaundements The vyces that beset it are pride puffed vp with ouer wéening of itself trusting in his own vertue wisdom welth other gifts and despysing othermen Euery mā may behold an example of pryde in his own hart Loue is not disdeynfull neyther is shee vncomly vj Grauitie whiche is too doo rightful necessarie things constantly so to rule al the outward gestures dooings that they may agrée with the order of nature of persones and of places The vyces that encounter it are lyghtnesse skornfulnesse which proudly disdeyning others doth with vncomlygestures expresse the pryde or the hatred or
and honour that is too maynteyne it chaste and holye and not to defyle it with lustes of concupiscence as the Heathen haue giuen themselues leaue without controllement In this place is to bée repeted the whole doctrine concerning chastitie wedlocke and in especially the eyght causes for which al the godly must with singular héede and diligence defend the honour of chast shamefastnesse Which causes are recited in the declaration of the vertues of the sixth commaundement in my rules of lyfe Now will I adde but only one saying of Tertulliā most woorthye to bée borne away Inasmuch as wée all are the temple of God by putting into vs the holy Ghoste who haloweth vs the Churchwarden and chéef Chaplein of that temple is chastitie which may suffer no vncleane or vnholy thing too bée brought in thither least GOD who dwelleth there taking displeasure too sée his abode defyled should vtterly forsake it The third part concerning interchaungeable ryghtfulnesse which shunneth deceyt in bargayning THis is the will of God that no man deceyue and beguyle his brother in chapmanship bycause the Lord is the punisher of all such things The proposition or ground is Let no man deceyue his brother in bargeyning or bée yée iust in your bargaynings The reasons are twoo THe first reason is for that it is honest This is the will of God that no man misuse or deceyue his brother The second is for that it is profitable Bycause God is the punisher of all such things Althoughe the sent of lukre by any meanes séeme swéete for a whyle and that they think it hygh pollicie that their craftinesse is not espyed yet will god fynd out the offender yet hath God a reuenging eye God the reuenger séeth all things And experience proueth the méening of Hesiodus verse too bée true By euill meanes seek not too gain such gain as rendreth losse and pain God hath by wonderfull forecast ordeyned and established lawfull bargayning among men and he hath so diuersly distributed among them the goods that perteyne too the mayntenance of this mortall lyfe that eche hath néede of others help too the intent that in exchaunging of things and in bargeyning they should put in vre ryghtfulnesse loue towardes their neyghbour and other vertues and that many being knit bound togither with these bondes should liue in companie and conuersation toogither and shewe the doctrine concerning God one too another and the examples of vertues one to another Therfore God alloweth lawfull bargenings will haue indifferencie and vpryghtnesse kept and vsed in them And in this place by expresse woords he forbiddeth defrauding which keepeth not equalitie in bargeynes but catcheth too himself a greater part than he ought of ryght too haue For the woord that Paule vseth signifyeth the same thing that it dooth in the fifth booke of Aristotles Ethicks that is too wit Pleonectein of pleon echein whiche is as much too say as too haue more thā ryght or too take of another mānes goods without recompensing as much for it or too encrease a mannes owne stock too another mannes losse The vertue that encounters it is interchaungeable vpryghtnesse which in marchandyze or bargening beguyleth not other men but maynteyneth proportionable indifferencie according too the Lawes of Nature Thou shalt not steale Loue thy neyghbour as thy selfe Doo not too another which thou wouldest not haue doone too thyself Vppon the Sunday called Oculi or the third Sunday in Lent. ¶ The Epistle Ephes v. BEe you the followers of God as deere chyldren and walke in loue euen as Chryste loued vs and gaue himself for vs an offeryng and a sacrifice of a sweet sauour too god As for fornication and all vnclennesse or couetousnesse let it not bee once mamed among you as it becommeth Sainctes or fylthynesse or foolish talkyng or iesting which are not comely but rather giuyng of thankes For this yee know that no whoremonger eyther vncleane persone or couetous persone which is a worshipper of ymages hath any inheritaunce in the kyngdome of Chryste and of god Let no man deceyue you with vayne wordes For bycause of such thyngs cōmeth the wrath of God vppon the chyldren of disobedience Be not yee therfore companions of them Yee were sometymes darknesse but nowe are yee lyght in the Lord walke as chyldren of lyght for the fruite of the spirite consisteth in all goodnesse and ryghtuousnesse and truthe Accept that whiche is pleasing vntoo the Lorde and haue no fellowship with the vnfruiteful workes of darknesse but rather rebuke them For it is a shame euen too name those things which are done of them in secrete but all things when they are brought foorth by the lyght are manifest ▪ For whatsoeuer is manifest the same is light wherfore he sayeth awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from death and Chryste shall gyue thee lyght The disposement THe state of this Epistle is an Exhortation too newe obedience or too good woorkes by name it giueth preceptes of these thrée vertues 1 Of the loue of God and a mannes neyghbour 2 Of chastitie which shunneth whordome filthynesse and all vnclennesse 3 Of frankhartednesse or liberalitie esche wing couetousnesse which is the seruice of Idols And in this exhortation ▪ Paule vseth six Argumentes of which the first is gathered 1 Of the example of God. 2 Of the dutie of children 3 Of the exāple of Chryste who hath loued vs in such wyse that he hath giuen himselfe too bée an offring and sacrifice for vs. 4 Of the comlynesse as it beséemeth the Saints 5 Of the punishements of wickednesse For these things commeth the wrath of God vppon all that bée disobedient 6 Of the finall cause Therefore are yée deliuered out of the darknesse of sinne and endued with a newe lyght and with the holy Ghost that yée should exercise gentlenesse vpryghtnesse and truthe This disposement of the principall members of this Epistle being considered there may a twoo or thrée of the notabler places bée the easlyer picked out and entreated of An exhortation too newnesse of lyfe or too good woorkes in generall MAny when they héere that a man deserueth not forgyuenesse of sinnes by his good woorkes what néede wée say they to employ any studie or care to doo well Therefore let vs giue our selues ouer to all entycements of pleasure and sinne The wicked and horrible talke of these men is playnly confuted by Paule in this Epistle Wée are not able by our vertues to deserue forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall lyfe but the only sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryste hathe obteyned these moste hygh benefites for vs by his obedience and death Neuerthelesse there are other foure ryght weightye causes for whiche wée ought too stryue ageynst the entycementes of sinne and to exercyse ryghtuousnesse truthe liberalitie chastitie and other vertues First necessitie of the commaundement and the det For this purpose were men created by God and afterward redeemed
by the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ that they should obey God and set foorth his glorie by liuing vertuously Ephe. ij Wée are his woorke created to doo good woorkes And an eyghtdayes ago wee haue herd this is y wil of God euen that you should bée holy Iohn .v. This is my cōmaundement that you loue one another And in this Epistle Bée yée the folowers of God walke in louingnesse as the sonnes of lyght walke yée Therfore are yee deliuered from the darknesse of not knowing God and from the darknesse of sinne and by the Gospell lyghtened with the lyght of knowyng God aryght and endued with the holy Ghoste that yee should liue in new knowledge of God in rightuousnesse in purenesse in dooing of good turnes in truthe and in all other vertues agréeing with the wil of god Nither may al precepts concerning good woorks bee referred Secondly necessitie of eschewing peynes present eternall which vnchaungeably accompanye such as are defiled with sinnes ageinst conscience as in this Epistle there bée moste gréeuous threates Knowe ye this that no whoremonger and vncleane persone or couetous persone whiche is an Idolater haue inheritaūce in the kingdome of Christ and of god Let no man deceyue yée with vayne talke that is too wit that simple fornication couetousnesse and vsurie are no sinnes for these things commeth Gods wrath that is too say horrible plages vppon the disobedient The horriblenesse of this threatning may bée amplified by expounding the weightynesse of the woords and putting too of like sayings and examples gathered out of the Historie of the whole world Thirdly the necessitie of holding fast fayth Gods grace the holy Ghoste and euerlasting lyfe For all these good things are shaken of by euill woorkes or simes ageinst conscience Fourthly the rewardes of good woorkes promised by God .j. Tim. iiij Godlynesse hath promises of the present lyfe and of the lyfe too come For although remission of sinnes eternall lyfe bée giuen fréely for Chrysts sake onely yet are good woorkes recompénsed with other most bountefull rewardes as well ghostly as bodyly both in this lyfe and in the euerlasting lyfe And Paule giueth commaundement by name concerning loue of our neyghboure which repressing bitternesse yrefulnesse backbyting and all malice honoreth wel dooing mercye and frankhartednesse towardes others For the beginning of the fifth Chapter too the Ephesians hangeth too this part of the fourth chapter Therfore all the whole summe of the doctrine concerning the loue towards a mannes neyghbour c may bée conueyed hither out of the exposition of the first fifth and seuenth commaundements Concerning Chastitie whiche escheweth whordome vnclennesse and filthynesse matter too entreate off may bée taken out of the methodicall exposition of Chastitie whiche I haue registred in the sixth commaundement Concerning Couetousnesse which fyghteth with the first and .vij. commaundements let doctrine bée sought out of the declaration of the vertues of the .vij. commaundement Concerning the sacrifice of Chryst who offered him selfe for vs too the father an oblation and sacrifyce of swéete sent wée will speake about a fortnight hence vppon the Sunday called Iudica Now will I bréefly expound the text Bee yee folowers of God therefore that is too say in loue benefiting .j. Iohn iiij Héerin is Loue not that wée haue loued God but that he hath loued vs and hath sent his sonne too bée a reconcylement for our sinnes Déerbeloued if God haue loued vs so wée also must loue one another GOD is loue and he that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him Walke in loue toward God and your neyghbour Too walke is too liue or to rule the will and outward dooings in suche wyse that wée may loue our neybor and doo him good And gaue himselfe for vs. That is also a witnesse of Christes feruent loue towards vs which is set out Rom. v. An offering and sacrifyce The sacrifyse intoo which was conueyed Gods wrath ageinst our sinnes whom it béehoued too bée slayne and put too death too the entent wée myght bée spared For a sent of sweete smell For a swéete sauor and acceptable It is a phrase taken out of Moyses Leuit. j. The Préest shall burne it vppon the Altare for a burnt Offering and a swéete smell vntoo the lord Genes viij The Lord smelled a swéete smell God is woonderfully delyghted in the obedyence of his sonne the sacrifyse And he sheweth that for his sake our prayers also and our thanks giuing and our almefdéedes are acceptable and swéete vntoo him in like wyse as wée are delyghted with the fresh sent of a Vyolet or a Rose And all the sacrifyses and good woorkes of the godly must bée smelles that is too say a farre spred and wel sented fame concerning God. As it becommeth Sainctes The saincts are clean Whore-hunting filthynesse ribaudry c. are vncleane Ergo they become not Sainctes A couetous man whoo is an Idolater He is an Idolater eyther which surmyseth that too bée a GOD which is not God or which yéeldeth to some other thing that is not God the honor peculyarly due vntoo God as fayth feare and loue aboue all things So is a couetous persone an Idolater bycause he bestoweth his loue aboue all things and his trust which are due only too God vppon his mony and setteth more by it than by God. Ye wer sometime darknesse that is too say without knowledge of God nouzeling your selues in all sinnes yée were without true acknowledgement of God without true ryghtuousnesse and without lyfe But now you are lyght in the Lord. Now yée are lightened with true knowledge of God yée know what woorks please God and what woorkes displease him yée are borne ageine by the holy Ghoste Vppon the Sunday called Laetare or the fourth Sunday in Lent. ¶ The Epistle Galath iiij FOr it is wryten that Abraham had two sonnes the one by a bondmaide the other by a free-woman Yea and he which was borne of the bondwoman was borne after the flesh but he which was borne of the freewoman was borne by promys which things are spoken by an allegorie For these are twoo Testamentes the one from the mount Sinai vvhich gendreth vntoo bondage vvhich is Agar For mount Sinai is Agar in Arabia and bordreth vppon the Citie vvhich is novv called Ierusalem and is in bondage vvith hir children But Ierusalem vvhich is aboue is free vvhich is the moother of vs all For it is vvrytten Reioyce thou barren that bearest no chyldren breake foorthe and crye thou that traueylest not For the desolate hath many mo children than shee vvhich hath an husbande Brethren vvee are after Isaac the children of promys But as then he that vvas borne after the flesh persecuted him that vvas born after the spirite Euen so is it nowe Neue●thelesse vvhat sayth the scripture put avvay the bondvvoman and hir sonne For the sonne of the bondvvoman shall
that are drunken and disordered whom wée fynde by experience not too bée méete too performe aryght the lesser purposes and dueties of mannes lyfe Besides this drunkēnesse expulseth the spirit of grace praiers out of mennes harts as Basil hath truely sayd Drunkennesse expelleth the holy Ghost And like as smoke driueth out Bées so Gluttony expulseth the gifts of the holy Ghost Therfore some define sobrietie or stayednesse too bée a vertue that ruleth the desires and the vse of meat and drinke so as wée nether hinder prayer by too much cramming nor hinder sléepe by too much for ●earing Watchfulnesse also is necessary vntoo praying which not only measureth the sléepe of the body in suche wise as it alloweth not more tyme too it than is requisite too maynteine health but also shaketh off the restinesse of mynd and drousie sluggishnesse which neglecteth the exercises of true godlynesse and performeth due heede earnestnesse businesse diligence in dayly prayer and in ruling the rest of the attemptes and purposes of a mannes lyfe It neglecteth not ●e consumeth the time in sléepe or idlenesse which is too bée employed in prayer and mynding of godlynesse It bableth not the woords of the prayer with the lips alone coldly and yauningly and with a wandring minde but it is settled and busie occupyed For how can he hope too bee herd of God which héereth not himself when he prayeth not considereth what he prayeth The times that are most fit for godly and earnest prayer are the morning and the tymes immediatly before dinner and supper as it is sayd in the Psalme Early in the morning will I cry vntoo thee early in the morning shalt thou heare mée Also Peter and Iohn go vp intoo the temple the nynthe houre too pray which answéereth too our thrée or foure of the clocke in the after noone The second place COncerning the louing of our neybor there is spoke more largely of it vpon the .iiij. Sunday after Epiphanie and the first and second dayes after Trinitie Therefore I giue but this lesson concerning the Phrase Loue hydeth the multitude of sinnes it is not too bée vnderstoode of hyding a mannes sinnes before God of which is spoken in Psal xxxj and Rom. iiij Blissed are they whose sinnes are couered that is too wit vnder the shadow of the Sonne of God our mediator but of other mennes or of our neybors sinnes infirmities and blemishes which are too bée forgiuen and couered with mutual louingnesse according to this saying Loue suffereth all things loue beareth all things loue woorketh his neybor no harme Also forgiue and yée shalbée forgiuen Also know thy fréends conditions but hate them not He that hateth vyces hatethmen c. One spice of louing a mannes neybor is of hospitalitie which hee will haue too bée vsed without grudging that is too say willingly and with a chéerfull mynd according too this saying God loueth the chéerful giuer And the Gréekes haue giuen the thrée graces their names of chéerfulnesse that is too wit Aglaia ▪ Euphrosyne Thalia méening thereby that good turnes are too bée doone vntoo others with a glad heart and chéerfull countenance The third place GOd framed man in such wyse and distinguished mannes lyfe intoo sundrie degrées dueties and giftes that euery one hath néede of others helpe and eche one too shewe his louingnesse and liberalitie towardes other by franke and free imparting his giftes among them And in déede the best of all laboures is too help a man by such meanes as he hath and can And therfore in this place Peter willeth all men too employ the giftes which they haue not too vainglory and pryde but too this end that they may serue our neybors turne and set foorth the glory of God Like as Paule j. Corinthians xij and xiiij willeth all giftes too bée employed too edefying ▪ and too the profit of the churche If any man speake let him speake as the answers of God. That is too say he that is a Preacher let him teache faithfully and let him handle the word of God aryght and not teach Philosophie nor the traditions of men If any man ministreth let him doo it according to the abilitie that God lendeth him That is too say let euery one that serueth in any other seruice or office abide within the boundes of his vocatiō which God furthereth let him acknowledge God to bée the efficient cause and end of al wholsom dooings Let him doo all things too the glory of God. Vppon Whitson Sunday ¶ The Epistle Actes ij ANd when the fiftie dayes wer come to an end they were all with one accord together in one place And sodenly there came a sound from heauen as it had bin the comming of a mighty winde and it filled al the house where they sate And there appeared vntoo them clouen tongues like as they had bin of fire and it sate vpon eche one of them and they were al filled with the holy ghost and began to speake with other tongues euen as the same spirit gaue thē vtterance Then were dwelling at Ierusalem Iewes deuout mē out of euery nation of them that are vnder heauen When this was noysed about the multitude came together and were astonied bicause that euery man heard them speake with his own language They wondred all and maruelled saying among thē selues Behold are not all these which speake of Galile And how heare wee euery man his owne tongue wherein wee were borne Parthians and Medes and Elamites and the inhabiters of Mesopotamia and of Iewrie and of Capadocia of Pontus and Asia Phrigia and Pamphilia of Egipt and of the parties of Libia which is beside Syren and straungers of Rome Iewes and Proselites Greekes and Arrabians wee haue heard them speake in our owne tongues the great woorkes of God. The Doctrine concerning the feast of Pentecost or Whitsuntide may be included in foure places 1 Of the woord Pentecost and the stories of Gods shewing of himselfe which were doone in the Church vpon Whitsun Sunday 2 The Doctrine concerning the person of the holy Ghost 3 Of the office and benefites of the holy Ghost 4 Too whom the holy Ghost is giuen and how he is receiued or forgone The first place PEntecost is a Gréeke woorde and signifieth the fiftith day that is too wit from Easter day For the fiftith day after the first passeouer and passage of the children of Israell out of Egipt the lawe of God was published vppon Mount Sinai And the same day a thousand fiue hundred fortie and twoo yéeres after béeing the fiftith day after that our passeouer Chryst was offered in sacrifise vppon the altar of the crosse the holy Ghost was poured out vppon the Apostles Now from the creation of the world vntoo the first Pentecost in which the ten commaundementes were delyuered vppon Mount Sinai there passed twoo thousand four hundred and thrée and fiftie yéeres From the first Pentecost or
the office and benefits of the holy ghost wherof there bée reckened three in the lesson of this Epistle Fyrst the holy Ghost leadeth and ruleth the mynds willes counsels endeuers dooings of the godly so as they may plese God become conformable to the wil and law of God as it is sayd ij Cor. iij. We are transformed into the same likenesse by the spirite of the lord Secondly he is the spirite of the children of adoption witnessing in our mynds that we are the children of God and that the euerlasting father adopting vs for his natural only begotten sonne our Lord Iesus Christes sake loueth vs with a true fatherly affection and that we are heires of al Gods good benefits Thirdly he kindleth in our mynds fayth prayer by means wherof we doo not any more shun God through slauish feare as though he were an angry iudge but approch vnto him as to a kyndeharted father and in all perils doo through stedfast fayth looke for succor and al good things at his hand These two benefites of the holy ghost dooth Zacharie comprehende in twoo woords in his xij chapter I will poure out the spirite of thanksgiuing and prayer vpon the house of Dauid The fourth place is a difference of slauishe fear wherethrough men that are slaues of sinne and death being dismayde at the beholding of Gods wrath and endlesse damnation doo dreadfully shunne God and specially in trouble freat at him and hate him as a cruell tormenter as it appéereth in Saule Iudas and innumerable others And of the chyldly feare wherethrough mens willes and hartes submit them selues to God with a childely awe loue preaching vnto God by faythe and obeying him and resting vpō his fatherly good wil promised for his sons sake The fift place cōcerneth the true calling vpon God. The sixth place is of the euerlasting lyfe Vpon the ix Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. x. THese are ensamples to vs that we should not lust after euill things as they lusted Neyther be ye worshippers of images as were some of them according as it is written The people sat down to eate and drink and rose vp agein too play Neither let vs cōmit fornication as some of them comitted fornication and wer destroyed in one day xxiij thousand Neither let vs tempt Christ as som of thē tempted and wer destroyed of serpents Nether murmur ye as some of thē murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer All these things happened vntoo them for ensamples and were written too put vs in remembrance whome the ends of the world are come vpon Wherefore let him that thinketh he stādeth take heed lest he fal Ther hath none other temptation taken you but suche as foloweth the nature of man But God is faithfull which shal not suffer you to be tempted aboue youre strength but shall in the mids of temptation make a way that yee may bee able too beare it The disposement THis Epistle is of those sort that are persuasiue For it is a dehortation The proposition of this Epistle and of the whole viij and .ix. and .x. chapters to the Corinthians is this Flée from idolatry and things dedicated too Idolls And there withall is set forth a generall exhortation to shun backeslydings ageinst conscience The argumentes of his dehortation are taken of foure places First of the examples of the Isralits in the wildernesse who by defi●ing themselues with worshipping the golden calfe Baal Peor and by tempting God with grudging ageinst him or with impacience in their troubles were horribly plucked from god ouerwhelmed with dredful punishments These punishments sayth Paul are set before vs as figures exāples to warne vs of Gods wrath to shun lyke sinnes for fear of eternall punishments The second is of the effects or punishments which light on those that defile them selues with idols such like fallings The third is of possiblenesse or of gods help who suffreth not those that are newly entred into true godlinesse the exercises of repētāce faith to be tēpted beyōd their strēgth but withholdeth from them the greater daungers that is to wit the temptations of the diuel aydeth them in their encounters that they may be able to withstād the allurements of fallyng and auoyde the snares of the diuell The .iiij. is of the honestnes of the matter or of Gods cōmādement who giueth most streight charge to eschue with all diligence the infections of worshipping idols and of other fallings ageinst conscience The cheef places of doctrine are these THe first and chéefest is a dehortation from the infection of woorshipping Idols and specially from eating meates offred vnto idols The occasion wherof is this It was a custome in sacrifises too burne part of the offering vpon the Altar and to set parte of it too eate before them that bestowed the offering Vnto these feasts resorted certein of the Corinthians that wer conuerted to the true knowledge of Chryst who vaunting of their lerning and wisdome reasoned that Idols were nothing and that it was laufull too vse indifferent things as men listed and that it is a thing indifferent to eate fleshe offered too idolles or not to eate it That this is the occasion of al this whole discourse and the mark wherat it shooteth it appéereth by the beginning of the .viij. chapter by the latter part of this tenth chapter For Paul answereth that the godly ought in no wise to be present at such feasts where flesh sacrifised to idols is set vppon the table bycause that by their example the worshipping of Idols myght bée confirmed and the consciences of the weak might be offēded and wounded For it is the most streyght cōmaundement of God which willeth men to eschue idolatrie all the infectiōs of idoll seruice But in this Epistle Paule reasoneth chéefly vppon the discōmoditie or the exāples of punishment which lighted vpon the Israelites for lusting to eate of Idoloffrings for eating drinking at the feast of the Idolatrous offerings to the golden Calf Exo. xxxij and when they wer bidden by the Moabits to the sacrifises of Baal Peor Num. xxv Idolatrie is not only the worshipping of images or of the heathen Gods but also of mans owne brayn wilfulnes without gods words either to imagin som thing to be a God which yet is no God or too yéelde to any creature which is not God the honor and seruites due too the only true God as Inuocation and other sacrifices or to worship God with the woorks of mens hands as Paule speaketh in Act. xvij that is to say with images and pictures and to bynde God too those images or to choose and set vp seruices and ceremonies at a mans owne plesure and to imagin that God is therby appeased and made fauorable too vs or to confirme other idolaters by his example and by obseruation of outward ceremonies A larger opening of this description may bée taken oute
although he excelled Loth his brothers sonne both in age wisdome vertue and authoritie yet giueth he place too him adding this most sage saying I pray thée lette there bée no quarell betwéene thée and mée for wée are brothers Behold the whole land is before thée If thou choose the right hand I will take the lefte or if thou go to the left hand I wil goo too the right So Iacob humbled himself too his brother Esau Gen. xxxiij So Chryst the welspring of vnitie and mutuall loue abased himselfe beneath all men Phil. ij Through humilitie or lowlynesse let eche man think an other better than himselfe And let the same mynd bée in you that was in Chryst Iesu c. Oftentymes also there ryse debats and quarels vpon casting foorth of reprochefull termes of witlessenesse foolishnesse beggerlinesse and rascalnesse But like as the obiecting of such woordes springeth of pryde so dooth the cléering of a mannes selfe of them also Therefore they must bée vtterly vnregarded set light ▪ by and quietly put vp for the common peace sake The second is Meeknesse which represseth yrefulnesse and desirousenesse of reuenge euen when wée are able too defend our selues and too maynteyne sute As for example If thy companion haue vppon spyght sought too diffame thée or too heaue thée out of thy place and gone about too hurte thée thou must passe it ouer like as Moyses for putting vp the wrong that Aaron and Marie did him Numer xij is reported too haue bin the méekest man that euer was And Chryst sayeth of himself Lerne of mée for I am méeke and lowly of hart Dauid is not inflamed with wrathfulnesse ageinst Saule least he should stirre vp greater troubles Ioseph is not desirous too bée auenged of his brothers But Arius burneth as whot as fire with anger and desire of reuenge ageinst Alexander who was preferred before him in sute for the Bishoprike so as he troubled the whole Churche with his noysome doctrine concerning the sonne of God. The third is Longsufferance or Patience whereby wée beare one with another through Charitie For there sticke many blemishes in all men As for Example Some man is more wayward and testye some is more desirous of vayn glorie some is more curiouse some hath lesse staye of himselfe an other is more giuen too ouerearnestnesse and an other is more yresome and hastie These common fraylties of men must wée hyde and beare with if wée will haue true concord too growe strong and continue Paule therefore like a most wyse Gouernour hath put toogither the chéefe sinewes and limbes of Concorde and the vertues that are néedfull too the knitting of mennes fellowshippes in the band of peace There myght bée made a larger discourse of euery of these vertues And the laying of their contraries too them and the Examples of things that maynteyne societie will make the matter both more pleasaunt and more large The second place THe causes or reasons whereby the héerers are too bée in flamed too the desire of cōcord Now all men are too bée inflamed too the maintenance of concord with their fellowe cōpanyons and with other men First by the most streight commaundements of God which enioyne mutuall loue Iohn xiij and .xv. My cōmaundement I giue vntoo you that you loue one another Philip ij Bée of like affection one too an other hauing one loue being of one mynde and of one opinion j. Corinthians j. Let there bée no diuisions among you Secondly by the most large rewardes which GOD hath promised too such as maynteyne concord Mathew v. Blissed bée the peace makers for they shall bée called the children of god Thirdly by the great commodities of concord and the vnmeasurable huge heape of miseries which discord bringeth bothe in the church in the common weale in householdes in vniuersities and in all the whole lyfe And fourthly before al things let the six reasons bée considered which Paule vseth in this Epistle First one bodye and one spirit Like as in mannes bodye there bee diuerse members differing in dignitie and offices and yet agréeing among them selues and too the common vse of the whole bodye which doutlesse are gouerned and moued all by one spirit or soule So in the Church there bée diuers members differing in giftes and yet but one holy Ghost the author of this doctrine set foorth by the Prophetes and Apostles Therefore let there be concord in your doctrine wils This comparison is handled at length in j. Cor. xij 2 Likewyse also as you bee called in one hope All are called too one hope of euerlasting lyfe Therefore let there bée vnitie of spirit and doctrine and consent of wils 3 There is one Lord. There is one Lord Chryst whom only and alonly the eternall Father hath commaunded vs too héere Therefore lette vs all embrace this one doctrine taught by Chryst and let vs bée one mynded like as the seruauntes of one Maister ought too agrée in willes and purposes 4 One Faith. There is but one faith of all the godly in all tymes Therefore let there bée vnitie and consent in the doctrine of the Gospell concerning Chryste whom faith embraceth Héere may the whole doctrine of faith bée set out and specially this warning that the faith and manner of iustification and saluation of all the Saints from the beginning of the world is euermore al one Act. xv Wée beléeue that wée are saued by the grace of our Lord Iesus Chryst like as our Fathers also were saued 5 One Baptim The strength and effectualnesse of the Sacraments in the Church of all ages is alwayes one and wée haue all bound our selues by one Baptim too yéeld faith and obedience too the one Chryst Therfore let vs all bée but as one among our selues let vs teache all one thing and let vs all professe one thing 6 One God and Father of all Therefore let vs all bée as children of one father of one mynd and louing one an other like brothers Who is aboue al. God who is aboue all things and whose being dooth infinitely differ from the creatures is present euery where loueth defendeth and gouerneth all godly folke and all such as are desirous of concord and dwelleth in them as in a temple or house that he liketh well off Vppon the .xviij. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. j. I Thanke my God alwayes on your behalfe for the grace of God which is giuen you by Iesus Chryst that in all things yee are made rich by him in all vtteraunce and in all knowledge by the which things the testimony of Iesus Christ was confirmed in you so that yee are behynd in no gift wayting for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ whiche shall also strength you too the end that you may bee blamelesse in the day of the comming of our Lord IESVS Chryst The disposement THis Epistle is of those cases that are
Gods iustice The duetie of a redeemer hygh preest Sinne damnation Mannes saluation The benefites of Chrystes birth How Christes benefites are applied too vs. How and why glory is giuen too God. Peace Gladnesse Chrysts apperings too the Fathers in old tyme. A description of the second persone in the Trinitie Proues of Christs Godhead Iohn 1. Iohn 5. Chryst onely purgeth sinne What Angels bee The definition of saluation rightuousnesse and life are the sum of Christs benefites The efficient cause of saluation Goodnesse Louing kyndnesse Mercifulnesse Grace Our mediator or spokesman Who they bee that dishonor Christ Our owne rightuousnesse is of no desert The gospell and baptim are instrumēts of saluation Faith the instrumēt vvhervvith vvee take holde of saluation Renevvment of nature The effects of iustification Good vvorkes must folovv iustification Good workes or new obedience Vngodlynesse Concupiscence or lustfulnesse Stayednesse Rightuousnes Godlynesse The causes that moue too good workes Gods commaundement Hope of glory Abolishment of sinne Thankfulnesse How woorks become good Chrystes working in vs by his spirir By his woord By mannes willingnes The points vvherof Steuē is accused Atteynment of gods promises Worshipping of God. The institutiō of a new law What martyrdoome is The parts of martyrdoome Confessors Martyrs The holy Ghost Gods woord Mannes mynd Chryst is alwayes with his Churche The matter that maketh a Martyr Gods glorie Maintenāce of true religion Strengthening of the weake Certeintie of doctrine Witnessing of the immortalitie Reteynement of saluation vertues that go with martyrdoome Vices that fight ageynst martyrdome Chryst is very God. Chryst is very man. Redemption Adoption The gift of the holy ghost Inheritance of endlesse lyfe A warning for Pauls mening The workyng of the lavve The dueties of the lawe too teach vs too knowe God and our selues To frame our maners aright Too correct offenders The law dryueth vs too Chryst In whom Chryst is effectuall The law a shadow of things doo come Things to bee noted concerning the Epiphanie or twelfth day Of the wyse men that came vntoo Chryst The tyme of their cōming The names of the wise men Earnestnesse in receyuing and keeping the truthe The sondry names and glory of Chryst Iehouah or Lord. The glory of the Lord. What it is too giue glory to God. Why Chryst is called our light Who are the true Churche Why God dyd put a difference betweene the lewes and the Gentils The prerogatiues of the lewes The wretched state of the Heathen Gods vnchaūgeable rule in calling men to saluation Saluation is of free gift and not of desert The true seruice or woorshipping of God. What is represented by gold What is represented by Frākincense The Altar of attonement is Chryst Sacrifyce Quicke or liuing Holy. Reasonable seruice Worldlynesse Renevvment of mynd Myldnesse Ouervveening misvveening forvveening Christen wisdome Worldly wisdome Mannes boūds The right vse of gods giftes Prophesie Heretical prophesying Papistical prophesying Ministers Teachers Exhortation How to giue How too rule God graunt there bee none such in England How to shew mercie Loue towards ones neibor or true frendship Brotherly loue ▪ Reuerence Diligence Zele Taking of time Hope Patience Prayer Liberalitie Hospitalitie or house keping Meeknesse Frindlinesse or gladsomnesse ▪ Pitie Concorde Lowlinesse mildnesse Mildenesse Meekenesse Shunning of stumbling blockes Reuengment Rightuousnes comprehendeth all vertues The lawe of God and of nature What it is too loue our neybor The seuerall sorts or degrees of loue towardes ones neybor Gods commaundement is the rule of vertues Antimonians The loue of God. Wee can do no vvoorks to iustify our selues Hovv loue engendreth in vs What is to bee done in all intents drifts and purposes of this lyfe The common ende and drift of al a mannes dooings The endes of authoritie or ciuil gouernement The ends of the ministerie The endes of learning Settlednesse The descriptiō of a good and skilfull minister Vnnecessary dealings The fiue naked Games or exercyses of Actiuitie Running Buffeting Leaping Coyting it vvas like our throvving of the hammer Wrestling The dyet demean or of those that contended in the sayd Games their revvards An excellent similitude A furlong The revvarde of victorie Interpretation of the Greeke vvoords Of the behoue fulnesse of doing vvell Of the discom moditie of doing yll Examples One church of God in al ages gathered by one meane fed vvith one foode Figures of Baptim Figure of the Lords supper The causes of the Lentō fast True glorie or boasting False Apostles Reprofe of vaynglorie Example of christen bosting Who are the children of Abraham Labours Strypes Death Strypes Whippings Stoning Shipwrecke Trauell Ieoperdy Loke for these names in the table in th end of this booke Austin Aretas How manye sortes of visions of reuelations there be Visions of three sortes Difference of heauens Heauen or Paradyse Languages Prophesying and fayth Mark wel this discourse and beare it away True faith and true loue are vnseparable Patience Gentlenesse Freendlynesse Modestie or myldnesse Good meening Lowlynesse Grauitie Iustdealing Equitie Meeknesse Freendlynesse Ryghtfulnesse and mercy Rightuousnesse truthe Patience Freendlynesse Hope Patience Prophesy Tungs Knowledge Differences of knowing God Duties or poynts of a true preacher Vertues that ought too bee in ministers Patience Painfulnesse The touchstone of Religion What patiēce is Look for these in the table at the end of this Booke Why lent was ordeined The first author of the Lenton fast Diuersitie in keeping the Lent. Austin a mainteyner of the Lenton fast Saturdays and Emberdayes Diuersitie of allegoricall fastes Papisticall fast reproued The iudgemēt of gods woord concerning fast How too obserue the outward fast aryght Scripture the rule of christianitie Christians must proceede continually not stay Chastitie a mark of Gods church Tertullians saying Buying and selling Honest Profitable Good counsell Bargaining merchandyse appoynted by God for singular good purposes Confutation of Meritmōgers Necessitie of cōmaundemēt Necessitie of eschewing paynes Necessitie of Gods graces and gifts Rewardes Chastitie Couetousnesse Followers of God. Too walke Sacrifyse Sweete smell Sainctes Whoo is an Idolater Darknesse A Testament or last will. A definition of the new Testament A definition of the old Testament The difference betweene the old ▪ Testamēt and the new Agar Sara Ismael and Isaa● A very good argument The heauenly Ierusalem What preesthod is in general A definition of the hyghest preest or of Chryst Gods iustice medled with mercy was the cause of christs sacrifyce Why the sacrifysing of beasts was ordeyned The sacrifises of the Hēathē Differences of Chrystes sacrifise and the Leuiticall sacrifises Eternall saluation Leuitical sacrifises are figures Chrystes sacrifice once for al Christ purgeth by his own blud Chryst is entered into heauē Marcion the Manichees Chrystes humilitie IESV Why Chryst was made a sacrifyce The first part of Chrystes Passion Testimonies of gods wrath ageinst sinne The seconde part of Chrystes passion The third part of his passion The loue of
Gods sonne Gods mercie tempered with iustyce The fall of Adam The feendes the Iewes The matter of Chrystes Passion The forme or maner The endes too which Chryst ▪ suffered Redemption Remission of sinnes Reconciliatiō Iustification The holy Ghost The destruction of the Deuils kingdom Abolishment of sinne and death Euerlasting lyfe and saluacion How Chrystes benefites may bee applyed too vs. Our hauen and comfort ▪ Pascha or Passeouer The true passeouer * March● The tyme. Chrysts person Chrysts sacrifyse The benefites of Chrystes sacrifyse The applyment New obediēce The benefites of Chrystes resurrection A descriptiō of a Triumph The Triumph of Chryst The true ioy and comfort The true keeping of Easter Leuen New dowe Sweete bred What it is too keepe holyday Old leuen The efficient cause of our resurrection which argument holdeth of consequence That Chryst is risen By testymonies of the prophets By record of such as sawe him Of the authoritie of the Apostles An argument by impossibilitie An argument of ryght and reason A repetition confirmation of the first argumēt which holdeth of cōsequence or of necessitie An Argument taken of our profession and order in baptim A repetition of the fourth argument which holdeth of ryght reasō An Argument taken of the like thing Tokens of the resurrection impressed in nature The Moone The Starres The seasons of the yeere Svvalovves Flyes The Phenix This is the surest ground Argumēt for a Christian Sufficiēt vvarrant for a true Christian Philosophie knovveth nothing of the resurrection Antiquitie Consent of all Nations The best natures Selfmouing Simplenesse vncōpounded Ryght and reason Gods almyghtynesse Diuersities of glorie in the resurrection Liuing soule The state of our bodyes in the resurrectiō Liuing soule The first man. The second man. Flesh blud The efficient cause of our resurrection Death and sin Gods lawe The cheef finewes of the Diuels kingdome Our victorie in Chryst Esays prophesie of the taking away of death by Christ Esays prophesie expounded by Paule Osees prophesie expounded Interpretation of the grammaticall sense of the vvordes The proper meening of Osce An exhortation to stedfastnesse The custome of baptizing in old tyme. The cōmendation of fayth A description of fayth Mannes lyfe a vvarfare Who are borne of God. Hovv folke are borne a nevve The cheef obiect or thing vvhereon fayth resteth The name of Sonne The name Chryst Water blud To come in vvater The spirit is a vvitnesse of Chryst and his doctrine The three persones of the Godhead The end vvhy the ministerie vvas ordeined What the vvoord spirit signifyeth in the foresayd text What vvater and blud signifye Mākind vvyth out Chryst Errour touching Gods beeing Touching Gods vvill Errours of the papistes in seruing God. Chryst is the only vvay too ▪ God and godlynesse Chryst is lyfe Repentance Pointes of a good shepherd Good Princes be shepherds Bishops and ministers are shepherds Hovv Chryst is a shepherd Fleshly lustes what they be Magistrates ordeyned by God. The definition of a Magistrate Magistrates must be obeyed as God. An excellent saying Obedience too Princes Lords and Maisters for conscience sake Christen libē●tie Not God but wee our selues are cause of euil too our selues Good things are all of God and none euill commeth of him Regeneration or newbirth A similitude Against rash speaking and hasty iudgement Against a●ge● and trea●nesle Rogation weeke Of Inuocatio● and prayer The partes of true prayer What diuinitie is Gods worde a looking glasse True blissednesse The Anker●old of christian welfare Chrystes conuersation with his disciples after his resurrection Chrystes tryumphant As●●nsion Deliuerance from sin death the Diuell Mediatorship Giuing of gifts vnto men Opening our way intoo heauen Putting away of worldlinesse ▪ Too rayse our myndes tovvards heauen The kingdom of God or of Chryst The right hād of God. Too sitte A commendation of prayer Ageinst d●on●●●●esse Sobrietie which is a spice of stay ▪ ednesse Watchfulnesse Of Lou● Hospitalitie * Pleasantnesse * Gladsomues * Merinesse Doing of good ●urnes Pentecost Why Easter Whitsontyde other feastes were ordeined of God. Why Whitson tide was ordeyned too be continually kept The holy Ghost Two sortes of giuing the holy Ghost A descriptiō of the holy ghost Proofes of the godhead of the holy Ghost Basill Eusebius Palestinus Proofes that the holy Ghost is a distinct persone from the father and the sonne The office and benefits of the holy Ghost The spirit of Truthe Paracletus The seuen gift● of the holy ●host The gift of ●isdome The spirit of Counsell The spirite of Strength or Manlynesse The spirit of Kno●ledge The spirit of Godlynesse The spirit of the Feare of God. Beneuolēce ▪ Proofes of Christes Godhead Proofes of the Godhead of the holy ghost Fleshe No accepting of persones vvith Chryst Prophesying in the old Testament Diuersities of appeerings Dreames Prophesying in the nevv testament The onely vvay too saluacion The cause of our eternall saluation Iustification Diuersitie of opinions concerning Iustification Ryghtuousnesse what it is The efficiēt forcing cause of iustificacation The meane or Instrument of our saluation what it is to beleeue What ought too bee the cheefe care of men How God wil haue his being knowne What God is The Gods of the Heathen The vnitie and trinitie of the Godhead The first person The second person The third person The marke of the Father The marke of the Sonne The marke of the holy ghost ▪ The offyce of the father The offyce of the sonne The offyce of the holy ghost God is loue Our only hauē and fortresse The phisike of our soules Examples who loueth God. Sparkes of knowledge in nature why they were giuē ▪ Loue towardes God. Causes of louing God and ▪ our neighbour ▪ Gods loue towardes vs. Commaundement Woorthinesse and profit What is comprehended in the loue of our neighbour The hatred of the world ageinst the godly This folowing is worth the beating away Necessitie Example of loue Hypocrysie to be eschued Sel●e loue and selfvveening Vyces accompaning pryde Carelesse Stately Lovvlynesse Vertues conteined in lovvlynesse Causes that should mo●e to Lowlynesse The profit of Lowlynesse God resisteth the proude The Diuell Sna●es wherwith the dyuel intangleth folkes Fortification ageynst the Diuelles traynes Watchfulnesse Remedyageynst the enterance of despayre Sobrietie and stayedensle Fayth Example Gods grace Gods order to be followed This argument holdeth of right and equitie A cōparison of vnequalitie Common harmes ought too greeue the lesse Example of the Apostles The maner of saluation How we be saued by hope Argument of possibilitie One myndednesse Like affectionednesse Brotherly loue Mercifulnesse Gentlenesse Meeknesse Gelons answer too a rayler Patience Faint hartednesse Wilfulnesse or stifnesse of opinion Stedfast profession of the true doctrine The finall cause of iustification The efficient cause of iustification A similitude of baptim Of Chrystes death and resurrection Of Chrystes buryall Ageinst Libertines carnall Gospellers Necessitie of weldooing Christen libertie Eternal lyfe
too faine these things of mine owne braine for a certeine desire of vainglory Or else for that it auaileth nothing ageinst the false Apostles too glory of my labors and infirmities I will therfore come too the visions and reuelations of the Lord. There are chéefly foure sortes of visions or Reuelations from god For eyther by his owne sonne clad with image of mannes nature Or by the Prophets and Apostles inspired with his spirit or by notable dreames or else by visions or shewes made too mē awake hath he discouered too his church what his will is Of visions also there bee cheefly three kindes FOr eyther it is so that Images and pictures of things too come are shewed too the eyes of mē awake as in the Apocalips of Iohn or that Angels appéering in visible shape forshew things too come as Daniel .vij. viij x. or that God offereth himselfe too men too bée séene as it is written of Moyses that he sawe God face too face And in this place the whole Godhead séemeth too haue shewed it selfe too Paul too bée discerned in the open lyght I haue knowne a man in Chryst that is too say a Christen man A fourtene yeeres ago This Epistle was written too the Corinthians the .xxij. yéere after Paules conuersion which was the .lxv. yéere after Christes birth Then was this vision shewed vntoo Paule not in his way too Damasco but about the .viij. or .ix. yéere after his conuersion That such a one was taken vp into the third heauen Some interprete this of the heauē of heauens in which God sheweth himself too bée séene of the blissed soules and Angels For the Hebrewes make a difference of thrée heauens The first or lowest heauen is this compasse or element of the air wher in the cloudes glide of which it is sayd looke vppon the birds of the heauen and also the way of an Egle in the heauen The second heauē is the skie in which the Mathematicals reckē vp .ix. seueral compasses namely of the Moone of Mercurie of Venus of the Sunne of Mars of Iupiter of Saturne of the stedy starres and of the first mouer The third or highest heauen is supposed too bée the heauen of heauens or the dwelling place of God the blissed Angels which alwayes behold the face of the father and of the blissed soules which enioy the sight of god Also they name the same place Paradise as Christ sayeth too the théefe This day shalt thou bée with mée in Paradise that is too say in heauē which is spoken by a Metaphor taken of the pleasantnesse and goodlinesse of the gardine intoo which our first parents were put For the Gréeke woord Paradise dooth signifie properly a gardine or a field cunningly planted and wel enclosed Least any man should esteeme of mee aboue that he seeth mee too bee or heareth of mee As the mē of Listra did Act. 14 who tooke Paule too bée a God clothed in the shape of man. There was giuen vntoo mee vnquietnesse of the flesh the messenger of Sathan to buffet me least I shuld be exalted out of mesure The Gréek woord Scolops signifieth a sharp stake wherupon cōmeth the verb Anascolopizein which signifieth to gore with a stake And héerupō Lucian termeth Chryst in mockage the visard of Palestine that was prickt on a post But in this place of S. Paul it séemeth too signifie Metaphorically al singular tormēts or sharp greefs both of body mind or all kind of aduersities slāders backbitings reproche necessities persecutiōs such wrestlings or encounters of fayth as are described in Psalm 69. 38. and elswhere and suche other like tormentes which among other things put vs in mind of the humilitie and obedience due vntoo God and of Gods power woorking saluacion too euery one that beléeueth by weake and miserable instruments and accomplishing his praise out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings Vpon the Sunday called Quinquagesima Sometime called Esto mihi and of vs commonly called Shroue sunday ¶ The Epistle .j. Cor. xiij THoughe I speake with tungs of men and of Angels and haue no loue I am euen as a soundyng brasse or as a tinkling Cimball And though I could prophecie and vnderstand all secretes and all knowledge yea if I haue all faith so that I could moue Mountaines out of their places and yet haue no loue I am nothing And though I bestow all my goodes too feede the poore and though I gaue my body euen that I burned and yet haue no loue it profiteth mee nothing Loue suffereth long and is courteous loue enuieth not loue dooth not frowardly swelleth not dealeth not dishonestly seketh not her owne is not prouoked too anger thinketh none euill reioyseth not in iniquity But reioyseth in the truthe suffereth al things Though that prophesying faile either tongues cease or knovvledge vanishe avvay yet loue falleth neuer avvay For our knovvledge is vnperfect and our prophesying is vnperfect But vvhen that vvhich is perfect is come then that vvhich is vnperfect shal bee done avvay When I was a chyld I spake as a child I vnderstode as a child I imagined as child But assoone as I was a man I put away childishnesse Now wee see in a glasse euen in a darke speaking but then shall wee see face too face Now I know vnperfectly but then shall I know euen as I am knowne Nowabydeth faith hope and loue euen these three but the cheefe of these is loue The disposement THe Sunday of Esto mihi tooke that name of the Introit which is taken out of the .xxx. Psalme which beginneth thus Bée thou too mée my God of defence and my place of refuge too saue mée For thou art my strong hold my refuge and thou for thy names sake shalt guide mée and norish mee In thée O Lord haue I trusted and I shal not bée confounded for euer Deliuer mée in thy rightuousnesse So also the Sunday folowing is called Inuocauit of the first woord of the Introit taken out of the xc Psalm He hath called vppon mée and I will heare him I will deliuer him and I will glorifie him And it is called the Sunday of Quinquagesima that is too say of fiftie bicause it is the fiftith day before Easter like as Pentecost or Whitsunday is the fiftith day after Easter The partes of this dayes Epistle are three 1 The loue of God and a mannes neibor is too bée preferred before all the giftes of tungs eloquence miracles lerning c. 2 A registre of the woorkes of loue conteyning .xv. special vertues or dueties of loue 3 The difference betwéene the knowledge of God in this life and in the life too come PRincipally in all deuises dooings those things only are too bée looked too and sought for which God most straightly enioyneth too al men But God enioyneth too all godly mē the dueties of charitie towardes theyr neybor Deut. vj. Mat. xxij The chéefest commaundement is loue God aboue all