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A04902 Lectures of John Knewstub, vpon the twentith chapter of Exodus, and certeine other places of Scripture Seene and allowed according to the Queenes maiesties iniunctions. Knewstubs, John, 1544-1624. 1577 (1577) STC 15042; ESTC S106684 202,339 374

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sinnes that bee alreadie ripe in oure selues and to turne it that way to be reuenged vpon them when it would be so gladly occupied in suspecting and surmising euill in others which either is not so at all or at the least not so cleare as in our selues So that alwayes this bee our rule from the sight of our owne sinnes to proceede to the reprouing of others In consideration of the end and vse of the toung which is to giue foorth the good things of the heart we are sent from speach either bitter or nipping or vainely or without profite delighting vnto the wholesome wordes of edifying and instructing one an other vnto good as it is written in the Prouerbes The heart of the wise maketh his mouth wise and addeth doctrine vnto his lippes His sweete words are as an honie combe sweetnesse to the soule and health to the bones The lippes of the iust man are reported to feede many and that they knowe what is acceptable to God and man and labour to get grace and fauour to that which they do speake It is sayd that the fruit of a righteous man is as a tree of life and that he bycause he winneth soules is wise and that he shal be filled with good things for the fruit of his mouth that it is that good vnderstanding and wisedome that getteth grace and fauour with men with other infinite testimonies out of that booke directing vs to the right vse of the toung Wee haue to learne so to examine our dealings with our neighbours credite and good name according to these dueties here prescribed vs that wee learne truely to humble vs vnder the free mercies of Iesus Christe and truely to honour him by shewing forth our loue towards our neighbour in all good dealing with his name and subduing those affections that rise vp against it that we may giue forth testimonie vnto others that we are in Christe by cause we are dying vnto sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse Nowe let vs pray vnto our heauenly father that wee may witnesse our loue vnto men by all faithfull and louing dealing with their name The xj Lecture vpon the seuenteenth verse Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours house neyther shalt thou couet thy neighbours wife nor his man seruant nor his mayde nor his oxe nor his asse neyther any thing that is thy neighbours THis last commaundement pearceth deeper then the former Before the deede was condemned that was hurtfull to our neighbours and the setled wil also and resolued determination these were forbidden in the other commandements but nowe the holy Ghoste reproueth the desire and lust towardes any thing of our neighbours notwithstanding there be no full resolution nor setled consent giuen therevnto I call it a setled consent when in our mynd we are fully resolued and haue set it downe that we will embrace and follow that as occasion shall be giuen wherevnto our desire lust and appetite doth leade vs Desire and longing after the thinges of our neighbours as house wife goods or lande which yet are cut off before we sit down with the deliberate persuasion to take our pleasure of them are here brought vnto iudgment and restrayned by this commaundement In deede the Lorde doth pardon and forgiue vnto his childrē the desires and longings of their minde that are repulsed and beaten backe before they obteine full consent But it is one thing to dispute what desire vnto euill is in the desart of it selfe and an other howe it is pardoned in the merites of Christe For in the merites of Christe not onely the desires but also the euill doings of his seruants lye hidden and couered We are then to consider what reckoning is to be made of the lusting coueting desires that solace themselues some good time with their neighbours benefite when yet they shal be scared frō that feast before their affectiō shal be filled wholy satisfied In the gospel after S. Luke we are charged to loue the Lord with all our hart with al our strēgth with al our thoghts While thē our thoughts are carried hither thither now after his goodes to desire this house or this parcell of land of his or the estate condition that now is his although we would not wishe it before his death being a long time holden in these thoughtes and vanishing in these desires although nothing be fully concluded to say deliberately in our heartes These pleasures will we followe are we not iustly blamed for not louing him with all our thoughts Were it not a plaine mockerie of GOD if a man should giue libertie to his thoughts to pursue pleasures whole dayes and weekes so that they take heede of setting it downe and concluding fully to wallowe in any Our thoughts should be wholy taken vp to the Lords vse and therefore may they not be let loose after goods or benefites of our brethren with the alone charge to take heede howe they fully settle them selues in them but so they be sure of that otherwise to take no great care this is not by loue to take vp our thoughts and direct them to his seruice but by carnall libertie to giue them the head And surely we may discerne a fault in this euen by the light almost of reason that our thoughts should rather delight to spend themselues vpon euill or vaine thinges then vpon those that haue the greatest pleasure and chiefest goodnesse in them Behold then it is a faultie thing that our thoughts run rouing after vaine things that they folow the delights of their neighbours pleasure or profites though not greatly setled in them but wantonly wandring by them Why should they not bee fastened with delight and whole consent vnto good things Hath not the Lord payde the price for body and soule and al that is in vs Why then should not all bee kept vnder his obedience without rouing after our owne desire Either else why should wee excuse any thought straying and wandring from him with this answere that it had returned before it was gone so farre as possible it might This is no reasonable excuse nor plaine dealing before our God this is not to loue him with all the thought It were a verie vngodly thing and would be cryed out against euen amongst mē if any should permit his sonne not to spare daliance and delight with young women so that hee made this alwayes sure that they should gette no holde of him by giuing full consent to ioyne in marriage with them This were an intollerable thing among men And can we thinke when we shall haue delighted oure selues a long time in the pleasure of vnlawfull thoughtes that this wil wipe out all bicause we are not fully purposed to dwell in them Our thoughts are married already vnto the Lorde they are not at libertie to matche them selues where it shall best like them neyther yet to acquaint them with any straunge loue She is no longer
obediēce vnder the shadowe of good intent deuotiō occupying it selfe in trifling outwarde thinges and neuer drawing neere vnto the Lord in the dueties laide vpon him by the word he must labour diligently to finde out the wil of God in his word for no other end but that hee may be a doer and follower of the same his profiting how greate so euer it bee is not without infirmitie and therefore hee is not without humilitie in his best doings his offending at any time cannot bee without griefe for hee seeth in it the dishonour of his merciful father whose free mercie is his stay Let vs learne brethren to take heed in seruing the Lord in a deuotiō that agreeth not with his word What will it auayle to say We do it of loue and good meaning towards him when the Lord hath said that all such are haters of him Shall our mening condemne the trueth of his saying Or shall that be good meaning when we come to true reckoning which the Lorde hath pronounced to be hateing Let man be afraid to beare hatred against the Lord and therefore let him feare to serue him with good intents besides his worde If man should bee so obstinate in euill that he feareth no punishment in respect of himselfe imagining his life to make an end of all his affliction yet let him fear the punishmente of this sinne that will not leaue him in the graue but set the marke of his iniquitie vppon his children and posteritie vnto many generations I neede not greatly to speake vnto the moste that be heere that they should leaue those foolish works of deuotion and good meaning as going on Pilgrimage setting vp of shrynes and such like things receiued amongst the Papistes His name be praysed that madnesse is descryed and a great number of them selues begin now to blush at it but the outwarde ceremonies of Religion as resorting to common prayer hearing of Sermons or suche other these haue obteyned now the title of the true seruice of GOD and shut out the obedience vnto the dueties commaunded by the word These hold men now from care of dueties appointed by the word as deuised deuotion kept them in Poperie from true religion These are the good intentes of Gospellers at this day and as the Lorde spake of his sacrifices commaunded in his worde when mē were holden in those without any care of good life He that killeth a Bullock is as if he slue a man they haue chosen out their owne wayes therefore wil I choose out their delusions and bring their feare vpon them So may it truely be said of a greate number that the Lorde hateth their resorting to prayer and sermons they are now become their owne wayes whiche they haue chosen because they are sundred from Christian conuersation and amendment of life for the which they were ordayned The meanes to auoid the dangers of our deuises in the seruice of GOD and to haue disclosed vnto vs the subtilties and snares thereof is to delight in the wisdome of the worde to be much exercised therein according as it is declared in the booke of Prouerbes That when wisdome entreth into the hearte and knowledge delighteth the soule then shall it deliuer vs from the euill way and from the straunge woman whiche forsaketh the guide of her youth Now let vs pray vnto our heauenly father that we may so see our vntowardnesse vnto his true worshippe that we may magnifie his mercies that hath pardoned our transgressions and that wee may receiue strength from the power of his death to shake off all those shadowes of seruing the Lorde beeing truely humbled to serue him in spirite and truethe according to the direction of his worde ¶ The thirde Lecture vpon the seuenthe verse 7 Thou shalt not take the name of the Lorde thy God in vaine for the Lord wil not holde him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine IT is manifeste in the Scriptures that by the name of GOD is ment the lawe and commaundement of god For the Lorde wil be honoured and get a name among his people by transforming their affections and deedes into the obedience of his lawe In Leuiticus it is thus written Yee shall keepe my commaundementes and doe them for I am the Lorde Neither shall ye pollute my holie name declaring that his name is prophaned taken in vaine and polluted when his commaundementes are not regarded It is also to bee seene in the Epistle to Timothie that the name of GOD is taken for the doctrine and woorde of god Let Seruants sayth the Apostle account their maisters worthy of all honour that the name of God and his doctrine be not euill spoken of ioyning the name and doctrine of God together as wordes that importe all one matter For the name of GOD cannot but be dishonoured and euil spoken of through vs when suche lawes as all men knowe he hath appointed for vs to walke in are without regarde neglected and contemned of vs. If it bee required why the Lorde speaking of his lawe giueth it the title of his name wee must vnderstand the reason of his so doeing to be very good forceable to procure obedience For what can be more deare vnto vs than the name and glorie of our GOD Or what can binde our obedience vnto more dutifulnesse than when we vnderstand he hath committed his owne name and honour into our handes beeing content to abide without all name and glorie heere in earth if hee may not haue it of his by their obedience to his lawe And therefore as the loue of GOD muste cause vs to begin all dueties so the end wee looke at in all of them must bee by the doeing thereof to get honour and glorie to our God. For it is written to the Corinthes Whether yee eate or drinke or what soeuer ye doe doe all to the glorie of GOD. Heerevppon it commeth that workes commaunded are reiected of the Lorde when they are done to be seene of men for the prayse of our selues and not with a carefull heart to glorifie the Lorde and procure his prayse thereby Take heede saith our Sauiour Christ that ye giue not your almes before men to be seene of them or else yee shall haue no rewarde of your father whiche is in heauen The Lorde him selfe often vseth the credite and glorie of his name not onely in commaunding but also in forbidding things to be done as in Leuiticus 19. almost through the whole chapter when he forbiddeth any thing he addeth these wordes immediatly I am the Lord thy God because the contempt and breach of his commaundement doth reach to the stayning polluting of his name For he hath entred couenant with vs to be our God in causing vs to walke in his wayes that he thereby may be magnified and aduanced as it is written in Deuteronomie Thou haste set vp the Lord this day to be thy God and to walke in
deale in the spirit of meekenesse and mildenesse according as wee are willed in the Epistle to the Galathians Brethren if any man be fallen by occasion into any fault ye which are spirituall restore suche one with the spirite of meekenesse considering thy selfe least thou also bee tempted As the faintnesse and want of loue which leaueth a man in his sinne is iustly reproued so that blustering heate that of a medicine in like manner maketh a poyson is no lesse to bee reproued of want of loue towarde the good name and estimation of our brother For there is no man that can easily growe into any good lykinge of those men in whom he perceiueth there is no affection towards him neither yet can well digest sharpe medicines though otherwise neuer so wholesōe if there shall be no suger to make it sweete withall We must therefore take heede lest the medicine become vnprofitable by our vnskilfull handling it and so we become no couerers of sinne but rather by dealing so rudely make him cast off all care of goodnes letting the raynes go to all libertie of life with the vngodlie while he seeth him selfe so hardly dealt with the godly to haue cast off all hope care of him This is the cause why the Apostle in the Epistle to the Thessalo willeth them to admonish those as brethren who for their euill conuersation did iustly stande excommunicate Haue no familiar companie with him sayth the Apostle that hee may be ashamed yet account him not as an enimie but admonish him as a brother The nature of man is easily carried to offend in this parte euen to seeme to come into some opinion of holinesse by counting all others as prophane and reprouing them in such a blustering māner as carrieth with it no signification at all of louing affection towards them We are therefore diligently to obserue that our heartes wittnesse vnto our selues the care we haue by our admonition to haue them reclaimed from those sinnes and then that we consider what manner of dealing they are moste like to profite by that notwithstanding wee may deale with some more roundly then with others yet euē those may see them selues not despised of vs nor yet altogether despaired of that they should be in a manner caused to fall into the acquaintance and fellowship of the vngodly and lest that they should onely see our affections eased vpon thē without further care of their good If there be good affection towarde thē in deed we shal easily auoyd both the extremes that neither we ceasse to admonish them at al neither yet in admonishing be ouer bitter towardes them It is sure that loue wil moderate both hauing no other end in reprouing opening the euill but to keepe him from persisting in it In the handling also of the matter this louing affection wil direct him to consult what manner of dealing is likely to doe most good for al men are not able to beare alike that after consultation had he may procede accordingly alwayes remēbring that what sharpnesse soeuer either the thing it selfe or the disposition of the man shall require yet it may appeare that we seeke not to haue the man defamed but the sinne cured If in this behalfe the matter shall be cleere bothe in our conscience and the iudgemēt of those who are accustomed to weigh things by the wisdome of the word it skilleth not though those men holde them not contented who would haue sinne touched in whose opinion the mildest proceeding against sinne that can be is too boysterous To conclude this parte let vs be well aduised that wee speake not of the infirmities of our brethren but with this affection and meaning that either they may be reclaymed or others feared from offending in the like while they shall learne the great daunger thereof and that there be no want of loue in vs towarde our brethren that shall sett our tonges a worke that way without meaning of any good either towarde him or them that heare vs. There is an other vice and mischiefe of the tongue reproued in this commaundement when the wordes or deedes of our neighbours are by the want of this loue wroūg either into a sense plaine diuerse from their meaning or else not so well interpreted as they might be taken if they had found any indifferent iudge It is an euil practise mischiefous notwithstanding it be common at this day to bring a mans owne wordes against him chaūged into an other sense purpose and meaning then euer the man had in vttering of them which is not onely vsuall in wordes taken from the mouth of the speaker but also in speeches penned as plainly as may be For what is more vsual with many then to stand so vppon some one or fewe bare wordes of a statute bond or obligation that the meaning of the same shall be cleane altered and the true intent and purpose of the lawe-maker no longer sought for But as it did not acquire the Iewes of false wittnesse-bearing against the Lord Iesus notwithstanding they vsed some of his wordes because they had altered his meaning wringing his wordes to the building vpp of the temple at Hierusalem within three dayes whiche he ment of the Temple of his bodie no more shall it be able before GOD to discharge any man that he hath stood vpon some words of a statute or obligation when his conscience shal accuse him that he hath swarued from the meaning and purpose thereof As for the dealings of those men who are accustomed to expounde those thinges into the worst parte which might haue a good meaning if they were indifferētly weighed or for some infirmitie ioyned with a good action doe disgrace and discredite the whole this commaundement must necessarily reproue them when it condemneth as we haue heard before the carelesse blazing abroade of thinges altogether euil in them selues charging vs with the couering of them by friendlie and priuate admonition If things altogether euil must be cured with a godly and friendly couert of priuate admonition had for that purpose those thē which if they were wel weighed might be well taken must finde more friendship at our hand then to haue open outcryes made against them Neither can it be lawfull for a Christian where some infirmitie or wante hath bene found with a good deed vnder pretēce of hatred had therevnto to worke the discredite of the whole and in so doeing to vndermine the workmanship of God plainely appearing therein It is wonderful to see our corrupte nature what poyson it vttereth in such matters as these be We shal see some men that are litle moued or touched with infirmities and faultes of their owne whiche are not in parte but wholy euil and yet for all that so boyling at these little and as I may tearme them halfe euils of others for so they are in respect of their owne that a man would iudge them to be great zealous men when as
this age hathe moste neede of it and is farthest from acquaintance with it This is also a note of loue to discerne it by that it is not Enuious Loue saith the Apostle enuieth not This tender affection of loue that knitteth the hart of one vnto another is so farre from enuying the graces or giftes of God whatsoeuer in any other whome he loueth that he wisheth from his heart that they were more and better then they are For tryall of the trueth herein let vs consider of the affection of parents towards their children where wee are sure that nature hathe planted loue and therefore this note of not enuying which alwayes accompanieth it cannot be wanting there What parentes were euer found except it were some one rare monster in nature that did enuie their children because there were suche plentie or store of giftes in them Nay we see the plaine contrarie that they are greatly delighted to heare them praised of others for their giftes and muche giuen to speake of their praise themselues sometime thinking and affirming those giftes which they haue to be more and greater then in deede they are nay sometime imagining that to be in them in great measure whereof in deede they neuer had any portion no not the least parte so farre are they from any enuying of them for by loue they are so as it were made one that the praises of their children they take to be a part of their owne commendation whiche willingly they would not loose This loue doeth so ioyne together and vnite them that there can nothing be taken from the one but the other taketh him selfe to be maymed thereby as if he had lost some limme or ioynt of his owne For this affection maketh them to growe both into one and who hathe euer enuied the good or benefite that he receiued by some member of his owne bodie The Scripture teacheth vs that we are all members of one bodie and that wee haue our parte of the profit that commeth by the giftes of others through the meruelous working of god What maddenesse therefore were it to enuie our owne commoditie There can be no greater token of an hatefull man then is enuie neither any playner profe that we are diuers from the bodie of Christ then to enuie the giftes of the members thereof There is great diuersitie betweene loue and enuie for he that loueth taketh himselfe to be benefited in the benefite of him whome he loueth him selfe to be praised in the praises of that man whome he liketh The enuious man on the contrarie parte thinketh that another man is not praised but in the self same he is dispraised that another cannot be profited but that in the same he is hindered therfore stormeth when any thing is attributed to another as if in that deede somthing had bene taken frō himself Thus in all thinges the enuious man dealeth as if he were a stranger from the other the louing man as if he were not diuerse but one with the other a verie part and member of the same Let vs therefore keepe our selues farre from this enuie the truest token that can be of the absence of charitie all true feare of God or fellowship with his members For the driuing away of enuie we haue first to deale with our heartes to persuade them as the trueth is in deede that we haue our benefite and profite in their giftes no lesse then the eye hathe benefite from the foote or the foote from the eye which is brought to passe by the secrete and wonderfull working of God. Secondarily that we are of one bodie and that therfore we are intituled after a maner to the prayses commodities or benefits that doe redound vnto them Thirdly that the Lorde is the authour of this diuersitie in giftes and that therefore the enuying of others for their giftes giuen vnto them is in deede to picke a quarell with the Lorde who hath giuen it them and to vtter our mislyking of his distribution and disposing of matters among men And howe daungerous a thing it is to controll the lord I leaue to them to consider of at their leysure Last of al to feede our affection herein is to bring a continuall torment vpon vs For when wil there ceasse to be diuersitie of giftes in men And if we be grieued when others haue that which we haue not when shal we ceasse to be vexed Shall there not be this diuersitie vnto the ende Shal there be any time when all the bodie shal be but one member Let vs not imagine that when we shal giue our harts leaue to enuie some one that this affection will die when he is taken away or when we shal haue preuailed against him nay it is made by that meanes so much the more stronger and as for the occasion it neuer dieth For there shal be alwayes some that shall deserue and iustly haue true prayse and estimation for some thing whiche we haue not and therefore cannot come to haue the praise of it for our selues In deede the nexte way to haue the glorie of it is by loue to be one as one with the true owner thereof To incourage vs to this loue that driueth away enuie let vs remember that in driuing it away we ioyne with the Lord who hathe thus appointed it We approue his doinges as good we acknowledge by thankefulnesse the commoditie that we haue of them we ridde our selues of an infinite and endelesse torment To conclude this propertie of loue it is requisite that we often consider howe vnworthie we are of those benefites that we doe inioy to learne bothe to be contented with them and to be thankfull to God for them and to keepe vs in suche thankefull remembraunce thereof as may make vs studious to walke worthie of them to so great goodnesse of God towardes vs therein as may keepe vs occupied in care how by dueties we may aunswere them alwayes taking heede least we should become vnthankfull euen for the good whiche God did meane towardes vs in those giftes the possession wherof he hath giuen vnto others As loue is voide of enuie so is it reported here by the holy Ghoste that it is voide of dealing insolently frowardly or stubbernely for so soundeth the worde and that it is not puffed vp with pride againste him whome he loueth Moreouer that it doeth no vncomely thing againste him without hauing due regarde of the dignitie of the man his degree estate or condition whatsoeuer These thinges are expressed in three wordes in the text and may be expressed in these three wordes thus that loue dealeth not frowardly proudly nor vncomely These thinges doe I ioyne together in speaking of them because they are of such affinitie one with another Where true loue is there the man who loueth is so persuaded of the excellencie of the other whome he loueth and so rauished with the admiration of some one or other thing in him that in his iudgemente
vppon vs to let goe the care of that and there to keepe watche and warde where there is no assault made against vs As if sathan should sore assault vs with couetousnesse and labour to enter there breakinge downe the walles of sobrietie and temperaunce in these earthly profites whiche we should vse so soberly and temperantly as if we vsed them not and wee doubting no harme from thence should conuert all our munition and defence to vpholde the walles of gentlenesse loue and meekenesse when as in deede we are not assaulted with wrathe or displeasure Were not this a wofull kinde of warre to lay open where we are assaulted and to bee fenced on those partes where we are not once attempted Were not that a slender victorie for that man to bragge that he hath not one wound vpon his legges whose heade and shoulders haue borne off all It cannot be denied but many that goe for Christians boast themselues greatly of such kinde of victorie that their legges are safe because some grosse euils as reuengement or plaine oppression hathe not preuailed against them when notwithstanding their head is yet bleeding with the strokes of ignorance in GODS worde or carelesnesse of his glorie and their shoulders full of the scarres of couetousnesse or suche other like grieuous woundes This mischiefe is redressed by the lawe by the light whereof we clearely perceiue where the force of the aduersarie lieth soarest vpon vs that we may turne our prayers and all spirituall armour to that part especially So shall our prayers not bee cast off without care at aduenture and by custome but beeing bothe warned of great daunger which without the alarme of the law we would not haue feared and also hauing warning to what place the aduersarie directeth his power our prayers may carefully and directly stande against it Nowe let vs praye vnto our Heauenlie Father that we may learne by the Lawe bothe to bee humbled vnder his mercies and also to be directed vnto his owne good pleasure will to the praise of his name and our owne euerlasting comfort c. The fourteenth Lecture vpon the thirde Chapter of S. Iohn verse 16. So God loued the worlde that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perishe but haue euerlasting life AFter the knowledge of the Lawe and the vse thereof it is necessarie to speake of Christe who is the ende of the lawe howe by faith he is receiued bothe to iustifie vs from the curse and rigour of the lawe and also to sanctifie our hearts to such a liking of those duties that there are appointed to be done as bringeth with it the careful attending vppon the doing thereof This doctrine hath bene somewhat touched in the lawe but a more plentifull discourse thereof is yet required where the mater may be laide open more at large then hitherto we haue heard of For the perfourmance wherof this portion of Scripture that now I haue read vnto you promiseth verie muche Wherein we may vnderstande that the firste spring and founteine of our saluation is the loue of god That is the first cause the principal ground and chiefe beginning of all our happinesse and therfore it is set down here as the cause why Christ was giuen for our sinnes So God loued the worlde sayth the texte that he gaue his onely beegotten sonne The tender affection and loue of God towards vs is placed before that great gift to commend the goodnesse of it For not so muche the gifte as the minde of the giuer is wont to be considered This is noted by the holy Ghost with a speciall note of cōmendation in these wordes Herein is that loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs and sent his sonne to bee a reconciliation for our sinnes Likewise in the Epistle to the Romanes There is set against the single transgression of Adam as an ouer matche the grace of God and the gifte in grace or by grace The benefite and medicine of Christe his obedience was sufficient for the wounde of Adam his transgression to make it whole withall then remaineth as an aduantage or ouerplus the grace and goodwill of the Father wherin this medicine was lapped and closed vp which is the cause why he maketh a special note of the grace of God and of the gifte in grace or by grace These thinges are diligently to be obserued for they are the groundes of muche good doctrine that is established strongly hereby When we consider what that was that first turned the fauour of God towards vs we may not begin at ourselues as if it had come of our works preparing ourselues for him addressing ourselues towards his obedience we may not beginne at our merites nay we may not beginne at the worke of our redemption and the merite of Christe to make that the first thing that euer turned his heart towardes vs For here it is affirmed by the holie Ghost that he loued vs and therefore gaue his onely begotten sonne for vs When we come to the meriting of Christe we must not looke vpon the vertue of it without the good will and fauour of God wherein it was founded and from whence it hathe the worthinesse and merite that it hath So farre off then are our owne works from bringing their deserte with them and opening by themselues the gates of his goodnesse that the good will of God the father prepareth the way euen for the merite of Christe his passion Our owne woorkes come shorte of beeing the first that hath commended vs vnto God when bothe the good will of God the Father and the merite also of Iesus Christe haue beene there before them in our behalfe Let men therefore ceasse to say or imagine that their owne woorkes were the firste that euer spake one good worde for them when it is so assured by the word of God that they haue had friendes in that courte that haue done for them when al the credit of their owne doeings was vtterly reiected and coulde not be heard Whensoeuer therefore we seeke out the chiefe cause and the first spring of our blessednesse let vs come to the loue of God. For it is saide that God so loued the worlde that he gaue his onely begotten sonne c. Let vs take heede of beginning at our selues and our owne doinges For as hath beene saide it was the loue of God that did begin all our blessednesse yea and that euen then when we were enimies vnto him and therefore farre from deseruing any good thing at his hands which thing cōmendeth his loue aboue all the loue and affection that is to be found in the worlde For who hath euer beene knowen the Sonne of God excepted to giue his life for his enimies Therefore doth the holy Ghoste vppon iust cause affirme that the loue of God towards vs is herein sette out and commended aboue all loue and affection that we haue heard of because
while we were yet sinners and enimies vnto him Christ died for vs. The scripture beareth recorde that Christe died for the vngodly but as it is there affirmed hee is scarce to bee founde that will die for a good man What good man hathe euer beene found that would haue suche compassion as to offer himselfe to die for a godlesse person The Sonne of God giueth his life for vngodly men Meruell not at these wordes neither thinke there is any thing too muche spoken in this matter For in that Chapter it is saide plainely that Christe died for the vngodly for sinners for his enimies and al to commend the greatnesse of his loue It will be graunted of all men that in deede before the death and passion of Christ we were godlesse vngodly enimies to God without any hope of a better life But all men are not persuaded that we doe nowe come suche men into the worlde and continue so vntil by the special grace of God working with his worde we be reclaymed and refourmed whiche for that chaunge is called regeneration or newe birthe All men are not persuaded that when Christe beginneth Christianitie in any he doeth beginne with his enimie Yet doeth the Apostle S. Paule affirme that he as others was by nature the childe of wrath that before his calling he as other men was dead in trespasses and sinnes walking after the course of this worlde after the spirite that woorketh in the children of disobedience but GOD sayth he whiche is riche in mercie throughe his great loue wherewith hee loued vs euen when we were dead by sinnes hathe quickened vs. There is no doubt of it but that he who liueth the moste blamelesse life of all men in the worlde is an enimie vnto God and without all hope of any better life before this especiall woorking and calling of god I doe call Christianitie a speciall woorke of God because it is not to bee founde in the nature of any man how great good thing soeuer it seeme to haue in it but is a peculiar worke of god This is a matter needefull to stande vppon because it giueth vnto God the commendation of that loue whiche is not to be matched in the worlde And in denying this greatest kinde of louing dealing we darken and diminishe the glorie of his mercie appearing so clearely and so aboundantly herein we deale vnthankefully with GOD not giuing vnto him all the praise that of duetie belongeth vnto him If two seruauntes had receiued equall commodities and benefites of one maister the one hauing beene a verie profitable seruaunt to his maister the other a verie vnthrifte and not onely not profitable but also a waster of his goods should the vnthrift sufficiently acknowledge the liberalitie of his maister if he should confesse that he had receiued as muche of him as his fellowe-seruaunt making no mention in the meane time of his vnworthinesse in respect of his fellowe Euerie man seeth the good will of the maister to appeare more in the one then in the other and therefore he should iustly bee accounted vnthankfull if hee woulde not bothe thinke and confesse that he were more beholding to his maister then the other For true thankefulnesse causeth the benefite receiued after a certeine manner to remaine still in the benefactour by thankefull remembraunce not onely of the gifte but also of the maner and qualitie of the gifte especially when it addeth any thing to the worthinesse and deserte of the giuer The cause therefore is great and a parte of our thankfulnesse vnto God is in it to withstand with the Churche of Rome herein that not onely wee haue had these benefites that we haue from God but also that wee haue had them contrarie to our deseruing which vtterly ouerthroweth those workes of preparation and setting our selues in a towardnesse for the Lorde and maketh the benefite to remaine in God by his iust praise not only for the deede dooing but also for tne mercifull maner of dealing with vnworthie men wherin his loue is tryed to haue more in it then any affectiō that hath beene hearde of amongest men that we may truly say with the holy Ghoste not only that God hath loued the worlde but as it is saide in this place So God loued the world noting in that word So no common affection but the highest and greatest degree of loue By this that hathe beene saide before wee doe learne that God did beare tender affection towards his not onely before any deseruing hadde gone before to procure the same but also when as yet they were enimies vnto him and therefore the Apostle in the Epistle to the Ephesians bringeth the benefites of GOD to be considered in his free good purpose and gratious good will towardes vs beeing the head and spring thereof whiche addeth greatly euen to the greatest of his benefites And if the consideration thereof be omitted the whole deseruing of the benefactour is not acknowledged nor deserued praise rendered therevnto When the Apostle had giuen praises vnto God the father of our Lorde Iesus Christe for that he had blessed vs with all spirituall blessinges in heauenly things in Christe immediatly in the verse following which is the 4. in number he hath these wordes As he hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the worlde c. As if his loue towards vs had not begonne then first when those benefites were bestowed vpon vs but that his good will whereof those were testimonies and fruites was bent towardes vs before the beginning of the worlde whiche is the cause why he letteth vs to see those fruites not barely in them selues alone but in that good will which so long before was inclined towards vs And good will the longer it hath continued the more it is to be esteemed and the benefites of an olde friend and welwiller of long time haue iust occasion in thē to be the more accounted of It is not to be merueyled then why with the gift he bringeth in also the good will of the giuer For the gifte is made thereby the greater bothe for that the good will hath beene of long time continued and also for that it is his goodwill onely and not any thinge either had allready or else hoped for from vs that hath brought all these benefites vnto vs as it followeth in the nexte verse in expresse wordes That he hath predestinate vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christe according to the good pleasure of his will by whome as it is there in like manner affirmed we haue redemption through his bloud euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his riche grace In all these places we are let to vnderstand that all our benefites euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes came from the good pleasure of his will and the riches of his grace and not as hath beene saide before from any thing of ours either had already or else hoped for Let vs learne therefore to set his loue before
in the seuerall braunches thereof is not only hurtful vnto vs but also iniurious vnto the due estimation of the death of Christe I cannot more fitlie compare those men who will most willingly confesse them selues in generall words to be sinners and yet are very loath to be troubled with any particular knowledge thereof then vnto some notorious offenders against the lawes and peace of their prince who can willingly heare these generall wordes that they bee offenders and haue not kept the seuerall statutes and lawes of their prince so that they will proceede no further with them but to be brought foorth and charged with their seuerall fellonies murthers or treasons that they haue committed and to haue their wickednesse particularly layd out in number of dedes manner of doing that may best set out the heynousnesse thereof that in no ease may be abidden and yet notwithstanding before that time neither is their owne estate greatly feared nor yet the lawe so much as thought vppon how to bee satisfied It is this particular sight of sinne that sendeth vs forthwith vnto Christ and maketh him appeare both glorious in the multitude of his so greate mercies and moste necessarie in the consideration of our so many daungerous infirmities If it please the Reader in the examining of him selfe in any commaundement foorthwith to ioyne to the same that which is written here of the properties of loue and that other nexte Lecture of the vse of the lawe he shall finde I hope some helpe in them the sooner to departe from him selfe and the more carefully to imbrace Christe And that he may be acquainted the better with my meaning and purpose in this matter I will giue him in fewe wordes the reason of the same I see in the lawe of God that we are not only forbidden the workes of our owne deuotion and intent bound to that choise of workes that God hath appointed in his word but also that we are strictly charged to doe the same all and euerie one of them in loue which is an affection that carrieth a man so in delight after the thinges which he loueth that he oftentimes forgetteth himselfe in respect thereof according as it is reported by the holy Ghost as a propertie to know it by that loue seketh not her owne thinges This is the cause why after the commandementes I haue set downe the notes and properties to discerne loue by that when we haue seene what workes they be that we are bound to doe we may also see with what affection we are charged to do thē that we may be as careful to bring the right manner of doing vnto the Lord as the verie deede that he approueth For we are as well to perfourme duetie in the manner of doing as in the deed it selfe It is one and the same God who hath inioyned both vnto vs and therefore may not be denyed in either of them The vse of the lawe which is in the Lecture following wil declare with what conditions we haue wages promised for our worke and whether the couenant be so fauourable as that we neede not to doubt but that we shall be able to perfourme it and therefore to liue in it or otherwise so harde as the trueth is in verie deede that he remayneth vnder the curse of God who continueth not in all thinges that are written in the booke of the lawe to do them Let vs then set these together First the number of deeds then the manner of doing whiche must haue in it those properties that be in loue and last of al the hard condition which is not to haue our good doeings to blotte out and put off our euil but to remaine vnder the curse if we shall not continue in euerie thing that is written in the booke of the lawe to doe it and then we shal be forced to giue ouer this strong holde euen this confidence in our selues and betake vs wholy to the mercie of our God and magnifie the same accordingly And least we should imagine the matter of letting go the opinion of our selues and our worthinesse to be nothing so hard as is supposed and therefore no such nede to haue so often before vs in meditation and earnest consideration thereof the multitude of deedes to be doone the louing manner of doing and the hard condition if they shall not be doone Let vs aduisedly consider how that singular instrument of God S. Paule confesseth that he himselfe was so subiect vnto this ouer great opinion of him self that the messenger of sathan was sent vnto him to buffet him leaste hee should be puffed vp with the measure of graces whiche were giuen vnto him The daunger is greater therefore then we are aware of when so rare an instrument and chosen seruaunt of GOD as was Paule so hardely and with so much a doe is brought to haue an humble opinion of him selfe and his worthinesse The Romish religion likewise fighting so stoutely for the deserte of man may teach vs that this doctrine of true humbling and submitting of our selues vnto our God wil not so easilie enter into fleash and bloud as at the first we would imagine but that we haue neede often to set before vs this lookeing glasse of the lawe in manner as hath beene declared to humble vs withall and all shall bee founde little inoughe to bring vs truely from our selues and to sende vs not in parte but wholy vnto the mercies of our GOD whiche are declared vnto vs at large in the next Lecture after the vse of the lawe When we shall haue profited in drawing nere vnto Christ and making much of his mercie by an often and true sight of our selues in the lawe there is yet remayning an other vse and fruite to be taken by it of no lesse profite then the former whiche is that when wee shall haue taken comforte in the mercies of Christ and decreed to walke in the obedience of his will to declare our thankefulnesse thereby the lawe will stand vs in good stead to quicken vs therevnto while wee learne by it bothe the number of things that are to be done and also the backwardnesse of our naturall disposition and inclination therevnto which we could not once without this admonition from the lawe haue suspected to haue beene so greate and therefore our care to suppresse it would haue bene so much the lesse But hauing determined once to walke in the wayes of his commaundements and then hauing warning from the lawe that there is bothe in our witt and will enimitie therevnto altogether bent to resist it it can not but increase our care and add vnto our paines and trauaile for the atteining vnto that end of obedience which we haue propounded vnto vs For the man who hath a desire vnto any thinge vnderstanding once of any let in the way is thereby more prouoked and stirred vp to bestowe cares and paines vppon the same knowing very well that the thing which he desireth
life to come And as it appeareth in Genesis all the mercies that Abraham receiued were conteined vnder these wordes which are the wordes of the couenaunt I will be God to thee and to thy seede after thee The benifite that here is set downe of bringing thē out of the land of Egypt from the house of bondage is an experience whiche they had of this goodnesse of God wherin he did apparauntly declare him selfe to be their God and so likewise it is in other places brought in as a confirmation of the couenaunt Because the Lorde loued you sayth the holy ghost and because he would keep the othe which he had sworn to your fathers the Lord hath brought you out by a mightie hand and deliuered you out of the house of bondage from the hand of Pharao king of Egypt that thou mayest knowe that the Lorde thy God hee is GOD the faithfull God whiche keepeth couenaunt and mercie vnto them that loue him and keepe his commaundements This experience of God his goodnesse towardes them and the triall that hee is become their GOD maketh much to bring an obedience and therefore is placed with the couenaunt For when we haue tryall in deed that the Lord hath speciall good wil towards vs it hath greate force in it to bring vs willingly vnder his obedience Therefore we are taught by this alwayes to haue in memorie those benefits of God that haue in them the note and marke of speciall good will and lyking such as he beareth vnto his Children For the remembraunce of those will draw dueties from vs that shall proceed from a frank and free hart Let vs therefore haue a register of his greatest benefites done vnto vs Let vs call to minde what a speciall benefite this is if we had none other that when we were as is the disposition of all Adams children following the lusts and affections of our owne hart in that brode way that leadeth vnto death which so many followe it hath pleased him to pick vs out of so many to giue vs mysliking of that course of life whiche by nature we are so addict and inclyned vnto the earnest hungring and thirsting after that righteousnes that is approued by his worde His benefites may not be ouer passed without consideration they cary with them strong persuasion vnto obedience the faithful doe vse this helpe to further obedience vnto god In the last chapter of Iosua there is mention made of the seuerall benefites of God bestowed vpon his people and all for this end to reclayme them from sinne and to stirre them to free and willing seruice of the lord And the people in the same Chapter alledge his benefites receiued as a reason why they neither may nor wil refuse obedience vnto him God forbid say the people that we should forsake the Lord to serue other Goddes For the Lorde brought vs and our fathers out of the land of Aegypt from the house of bondage and he did those greate myracles in our sight and preserued vs in all the way that we went and among all the people through whome we came and the Lord did cast out all the people euen the Amorites which dwelt in the land therfore will we serue the Lord for hee is our GOD. They gather by these benefites that he is their God and conclude therfore that they wil serue the Lord because he is their God and hath beene so singulerly good beneficiall vnto them And in very deede this persuasion that hee is our God and so tenderly affected towardes vs is the mother of all true obedience the founteine from whence floweth all true worship and seruice of God the note that discerneth betweene the workes of a true Christian and the deedes of an Infidel or heathen man The Christian worketh his obedience hauing this persuasion that God is already his GOD The Infidel and vnbeleeuer hath no suche persuasion and therefore his doinges come not franckly and freely from him to honour the Lorde but slauishly and seruilely to serue himselfe and after that manner as it were to get within the Lorde and to earne his saluation of him selfe It is this faith which made the difference betweene the sacryfice of Abell and the sacrifice of Cayne as the Scripture doeth declare It is this faith that maketh the difference betwene the continencie that we haue reade to haue beene in Infidelles and Paganes and that whiche is in Christians betweene the mercie and almes that procedeth oftentimes from ciuil men and that merciful reliefe that commeth from Christians It is this persuasion of his goodnesse that iustifieth the one whereas the other wanting this is odious hateful in his sight It is this persuasion that God is so rich in goodnesse as to accept of vs which sendeth vs to the true seruice of him The Lord is not only contented to say that he is their GOD but also to bring good euidence for the same in putting thē in mind of that singular benefite of their deliuerance from Egypt which he had bestowed vpon them Wee learne then in this Commaundemente which chargeth vs that we take the Lorde for our God that he hath taken vpon him selfe the prouision to stoare vs with graces and blessings bothe for this life and for the life to come and will haue the honour and glorie of it him self alone because he will declare the riches of his graces towards his faithfull people and by his dealing with them bee knowen to be their god Therefore he bindeth vs to seeke for all good things at his hands alone and in like manner when we haue receiued any thing by humble thanksgiuing to returne the whole praise therof vnto him again Now that we know the meaning of this cōmaundemēt it behoueth vs to apply it to our profit wherein we must first vnderstand that by the meanes of sin which is in euery man by nature man his wit vnderstanding hath receiued such a blindnesse as it cannot conceiue the trueth of this cōmaundement also his wil affection is so poysoned as it cannot take any ioy or lyking in it the tryall wherof may be had in this manner when the man that is not borne againe and receiued into mercie whome the scripture calleth the naturall man because all are such by nature whē he I say is in any streight or necessitie either because he wanteth necessary foode for this life or for that he is in dāger to loose welth credit or life seeth not the ordinarie meanes by which it is likely hee should escape the danger Let it thē be tolde him that God is his God hath a loue towards him and a care ouer him wil in his time by lawful meanes prouide for him yet notwithstanding his wit neither cōceueth this persuation nor his wil affection is any thing made ioyful or comforted therby as one that desirously enclyneth after the hope thereof which is declared by this that
subiect our selues in modestie vnto them euen he that hath more vnto him that hath lesse as it is written to the Philippians In meekenesse of minde let euerie man esteeme another better then himselfe And to the Romanes In giuing of honour let one go before another There is as great a cause why the aged shuld be honoured in his knowledge long time experienced in good thinges as the young man for the ripenesse of his witte and therefore men must mutually reuerence the gyfts of their fellow brethren if loue and liking shall be any longe time mutuallie vpholden That is the cause why in the same verse when the Apostle had persuaded vs to brotherly loue immediately hath these wordes In giuing of honour go one before another as if the one would not long continue where there were not the other There is no one thing that our nature can lesse like of then to be vnder contempt and that nothing should be espied in vs for the whiche men woulde regarde vs wherefore it standeth all vpon to trauell so in finding out the goodnesse of the gyftes and graces of GOD in other as their hartes may in vnfeignednesse yelde reuerence therevnto and also thereby to make a defence against infirmities whiche wil be in flesh and bloud that there may be bearing and forbearing one of another by loue reuerent regarde had to the gyftes of Gods grace in them Our nature is no better inclined in dueties towardes men then it is as before we haue learned in dueties towardes god For we are giuen to seeke to haue our selues honoured in our calling or gyft whatsoeuer but litle to regard nay euen to enuie the honour of others whiche we shall then discerne when any shal be compared with vs and made either superiours or else equals vnto vs And therefore when it pleaseth God to call any of his vnto the hope of his kingdome he letteth them see their corruption euen in this commandement so as they are forced by the sense and feeling thereof to giue ouer the claime of saluation in the title of their workes whiche haue no promise if they doe not perfourme the whole lawe and euerie worke thereof throughout the whole course of their life For it is written in Deuteronomie Cursed is hee that confirmeth not all the wordes of this lawe to do them And I would willingly learne what man there is that can truely say that he hath neither done nor yet left vndone any thing either to his superiour or inferiour to men of greater gyfts or lesse thē him selfe which did bewray want of honouring of them from his hart The lord also causeth those whom he calleth both carefully to stand in watch against their infirmitie lest it should burste forthe to the dishonour of God likewise more hartily to require a readie and willing affection to procure the honour of his name by walking duetifully in this commandement And if the outward work of this commaundemēt should be attended vpon of any neuer so diligently yet Gods glorie not sought therein it would profite vs nothing For if we giue men their due and in the meane time deny the Lorde his what auayleth it vs Therefore those former foure pointes wherein his glorie consisteth conteyned in the former commaundements must of necessitie be ioyned with all duties vnto men which are First that we acknowledging all our welfare to come from the Lorde alone doe depend wholy and only vpon him Secondly that in loue of him for his mercyes wee begin to obey him after his word Thirdly that his glorie beeing the marke we shoot at make vs carefull in all our works so to do them as he may haue honour by them Fourthly and last of all that in true acknowledging and trauaile in subduing of our owne corruptions whiche will not altogether bee sundred from our wayes and workes we humble our selues in our best obedience that the Lord may alwayes reteine the praise of the free and vndeserued working of his grace Now let vs pray vnto our heauenly father that we may truely see and bewaile the little reuerence and regarde that we haue had bothe to superiours and inferiours becomming thereby not onely vnthankfull vnto them but also vnto the Lord who hath placed such graces for our benefite in them and let vs craue of him that we may not onely obteine more power to suppresse the same but also may be inabled from him to send abroade suche fruites of true reuerence and honour as may come to the sight hearing of many to the great praise of his name The sixte Lecture vpon the thirteenth verse 13 Thou shal not kill THe former commandement hath giuen forth instruction for particular callinges from whiche by reason of more particular imploying of benefites mutualy one vpon another there ariseth more particular duetie of the one vnto the other then that which euerie common man may claime vnto himselfe Nowe we are to be instructed in those dueties that generally we doe owe vnto all men amongst whiche this cōmandement of not killing hath the first place wherein we are forbidden to do any violence iniurie or wrong to the bodie life of our neighbour and commanded to defend mainteine and cherish the same It is to be obserued that the Lorde bidding vs shewe foorth loue vnto our neighbours hath not left it vnto vs to deuise wherein to pleasure them but hath set downe what things are most deare vnto them that by our helpe giuen for the preseruation of those thinges safe vnto them and in benefiting them therin they may haue true triall of the loue and affection that we beare vnto them Our neighbour therefore in this consideration is not shut vp in the alone fleshe bloud of the man but the duties of neighbourhode reache vnto the life and bodie wife goodes and good name of the man Neither is loue the not hating or not hurting of a man but the helping and furthering of him to receiue more comfort in those thinges aboue recited ouer the whiche euerie man is so tender that beeing in any of those annoyed he can no longer account him selfe as a man loued or regarded of the authours therof For he himselfe is vpholden in life and liking by the comfort of them The Lorde in forbidding murder forbiddith also all violence crueltie and wrath towardes our neighbour labouring in the detestation of this greatest euill to worke in vs a hatred towardes all that be of any affinitie with it and therefore not letting vs see them but in that fourme which may most feare vs from them putting vpon them al that feareful fourme of murder The punishment of the offences against this commandement wil help vs to iudge the greatnes of the same Touching the murderer it is said in Leuiticus He that killeth any man he shal be put to death Violence bursting foorth into extremities of dealing in the olde lawe was punished with the like of that
taught otherwise Let them vnderstand that there is no vsurie that is nowe in vse with vs that can be vpholden by their doctrine For proofe whereof I referre my selfe vnto that whiche is written by that worthie instrument of God Maister Caluine vpon this matter in his Commentaries vpon Ezechiel Chapter eighteene a man that hathe sayde the most for the allowance of vsurie in some speciall cases his wordes are these Nunc videndum est quando a quibus accipere foenus liceat Hîc autem valere debet sententia illa neque passim neque omnia neque ab omnibus Hoc quidem dictum fuit de muneribus lex illa imposita fuit praesidibus prouinciarum sed optimè quadrat huic causae Non omnia igitur accipere conuenit quia si modum excedat quaestus quia id pugnat cū charitate etiā repudiandus est Diximus quoque morē vsum cōtinuū vitio nō carere Iā neque passim quia foenerator vt dixi locum habere non debet neque ferri in Ecclesia Dei. Deinde nō ab omnibus quia a paupere semper foenus accipere nefas erit Nowe wee must consider when and of whome we may take vsurie And here that common saying taketh place not euerie where not alwayes not al things not of all men This was spoken of giftes and this lawe was made for the rulers of prouinces but it agreeth verie fitly vnto this cause A man may not therefore take all gaine for if it exceede measure bycause that is againste charitie it is to be refused and we haue sayde already that often to vse it and to make a common and vsuall practise of it can not be without fault Neither is it to be allowed euerie where bycause the vsurer as I haue sayde ought to haue no place nor once to be suffered in the Church of God. Moreouer it is not to be taken of all men bycause it shall alwayes bee extreme wickednesse to take vsurie of a poore man This is the opinion of that man who of all other giueth moste libertie and is thought to bee moste fauourable in this cause As for him that liueth vpon vsurie as the husbandman doth vppon his husbandrie his iudgement is that he ought to be thrust out of the societie of men Thus muche for his iudgement whome some vsurers in this matter pretende to build vppon We see in this commaundement what hedges and fences the Lorde hath made for the safetie of our goods to reserue the proprietie and benefite thereof vnto our selues and to keepe vs also from witnessing any want of loue by breaking in vpon any other mens goods vnlawfully This want of loue witnessed by euill dealing with oure neighbours goodes was likewise prouided for by lawes made for their faithfull dealing that had any thing giuen them to keepe We reade in Exodus that if a man deliuer his neighbour monie or stuffe to keepe and it bee stolne out of his house if the theefe be found he shall pay the debt if the theefe be not founde then the maister of the house must be brought vnto the Iudges to sweare whether hee haue put his hand vnto his neighbors goods to defraud him of it or no not beeing acquitted of that suspicion before he had purged him selfe by an othe But if a man shall deliuer vnto his neighbour to keepe asse oxe or sheepe or any beast and it die or be hurt or taken away by enimies and no man see it the owner hearing him testifie by an othe that there was no deceit of his part in the matter must holde him selfe contented therewith If it were stolne from him to whom it was giuen to keepe hee must make restitution to the owner thereof bycause therein appeared his negligence If it were torne in peeces which might bee notwithstanding his diligence were neuer so good he must bring some part of it and shew that it was deuoured and in so doing hee is not bound to make it good as appeareth in Exodus These testimonies are here brought in to testifie how carefull the Lorde is of faythfull and louing dealing with our neighbours in their goods and to let vs see and vnderstand that wee are not so free from duties in that behalfe as commonly we are wont to esteeme our selues to bee but that wee stande bound before the Lord to leaue recordes behinde vs of our louing affection towards them when so euer by any occasion wee shall haue to deale with their goods What naturall man canne bee persuaded that there is any conscience binding to restore goodes that were put in trust vnto him if they should be stolne What naturall man would not fret and fume at this that when his neighbour maketh request vnto him to keepe it hee should notwithstanding bee bound to aunswere it if it were stolne or be troubled for his goodwill to purge him selfe before a magistrate by an othe that there was no vnfaithful dealing on his parte with those goodes Would not flesh and bloud storme at this as an vnlawfull and vniust thing But the iust Lorde by these lawes letteth vs see that wee stand more bound vnto louing dealing with our neighbours in their goodes than our corrupt nature woulde willingly yealde vnto And those lawes are good glasses for vs thus farre to looke into them that wee may learne that wee are bounde to shewe more fidelitie and loue towardes oure neighbours in their goodes then our corrupt nature can bee brought with any goodwill to acknowledge The negligence whereby an other man suffered losse or damage in his goodes was accounted as a kynde of deceite and iniurie before the Lord he was bound to make it good through whose negligence it did perish according as it is written in Exodus When a man shall open a well or dig a pit and couer it not and an oxe or an asse fal therin the owner of the pit shal make it good and giue monie to the owners thereof but the dead beast shal be his What shall we then think of thē that of deliberate purpose wittingly and willingly shal bring damage or losse to their neighbours when carelesse negligence not being ioyned with any purpose to hurt or impouerish is boūd to make good the hurte and damage of his negligence and yet nothing is so common nowe a dayes euen among christians and gospellers as vpon the least grefe or displeasure conceiued to force a man to spend his monie and goods in suite of lawe These men are farre from fearing the punishment of negligence while their deliberate purpose without any lawfull cause to impaire his wealth is accounted as no fault with them no not halfe the price of their displeasure be it neuer so vniustly or without cause conceiued We haue heard how carefull the Lorde is to make safe passage for our goodes whether they come within the coast of the borrower receyuer or carelesse passinger The same care hath he
reste vntill the nexte day Now let vs call vppon our heauenly father in the name of his sonne that wee may wittnesse the loue whiche wee beare vnto our brethren by all faithfull and louing dealing with their goods c. ¶ The ix Lecture continued vppon the 15. verse WE learned the laste day that a man might not take any commoditie from another vnlesse he gaue the worthe of it againe This rule saith sore to the vsuall buyings sellings of these daies when commonly all men regarde them selues alone to make the moste they can of their commodities without any regarde had what his commoditie is like to be that dealeth with them by that which he receiueth from them Yet it is no other rule but that cōmon one which we haue receiued by the light of nature that wee may not doe that vnto another we woulde not haue done vnto our selues And who I pray you would haue the worse at an other mans hand Who would haue willingly lesse giuen him then hee had deliuered vnto an other Or who could beare that another man should haue no regard how well or ill he had dealte with him Then may wee not doe so vnto others Wee must therefore thinck that when wee come to buying and selling we come to wittnesse our loue towardes our neighboure by our good dealing with him in his goods and to leaue some testimonie of the feare of God and a good conscience behinde vs we come to make tryall of our faith to God while we depend vppon his blessing for our prouision to liue well and happily in following the rule of loue and vpright dealing whiche he hath left vs and not the desire of our owne rauinous affection But in verye deede if a man should looke to the dealinges that now are common in the worlde in all buyinges sellinges and exchaūges he must be forced to confesse that men come to buying and selling as it were to the razing and spoiling of some enimies citie or holde where euery man catcheth snatcheth and carrieth away whatsoeuer he can come by he is thought the best that carrieth away the moste his botie is taken to be the warmest that hath made the moste naked in the streetes he commeth home the merriest that hath caused the moste weeping and wayling sighing and sobbing to vtter the heauinesse of the heart Yet in all this oppression euery such offender persuadeth him selfe that he is not out of charitie with his neighbour but that hee loueth him entirely and sheweth it well enough for he giueth him good wordes in buying and selling and hee intendeth no hurt vnto his person But the holie Ghoste will bringe vs to another tryall of our loue he will not be bound to that alone and therfore doeth send vs to see how louing wee are by our dealing with him in his goods Therefore doeth the Apostle say very well to the Romanes that this commandement Thou shalt not steale is as the rest fulfilled no otherwise then by loue These oppressions therefore these fraudes and deceiptes to pul another mans goods into our hands that are so rife euery where doe no lesse declare our want of loue by the testimonie of the Apostle then doe murthers slaughters and bloudshed Now to come to the matter more particularly by this rule is condemned all vttering of naughtie and conterfaite coyne or ware For how can there be equalitie of commodities where the one is not commodious or profitable at all Secondly here is condemned all that vttering of money or wares though good in thē selues whiche haue some thinges closely ioyned with them to vtter them with all and to increase the price aboue that which they are worth and without those additions doe vsually go for which thinges are no commodities nor merchandize at all of them selues neither will they alwayes abide with the vse of the thinges and departing they cannot but bring losse vnto him that must haue the vse of them and leaue him as we say in the lashe In this number are all those that sell their commodities what soeuer dearer then otherwise they are solde for in those times because they giue day with them and longer time before they bee payed taking money for time and making it to increase and add to the value of their commodities First vnderstand that time is no merchaundize for who dare bee so bolde as to say that hee hath brought time into the market to sel or who hath giuen thee leaue to sell dayes and monethes There must also bee equalitie of cōmodities the man hath giuen out for time but when he commeth to the vsing or wearing of that thinge hee findeth no benefite by reason of that time which he hath paide for In deede if a coate or cloake-cloathe solde dearer for time would bee longer time in wearing then another coate of the same or like peece solde for present money there were some reason in it because the buyer should haue the same commoditie of time in the vsing of it that the other had in the sale of it Or if the corne solde dearer for time woulde feede a mans familie longer then so muche bought for readie money there were something to be said for it And if it be answered that he who receiueth it of vs maketh a commoditie of time as we doe for he selleth it thereafter the matter is not yet answered vnlesse it be firste proued that thou maist lawfully take money for that whiche though peraduenture one do not lose by through his as vniust dealing as thine owne yet thou art sure another cannot but smart of it for it commeth so muche the dearer to him that must vse it who reapeth no cōmoditie for time but rather losse and hinderance notwithstanding it hath increased thy gaine And who hath giuen thee leaue to take some thing the more for thy commoditie in consideration of that whiche wil be gone when thy commodities shall come to be taken commoditie of and to be put to the vse for the which they were bought and solde that is to occupie spende or vse them as their nature doth require There is no equalitie in that exchange when a man must giue out something for that whiche he is neuer a whit the more but rather so much the lesse benefited by whensoeuer it shal be put vnto that vse for the whiche it was made in respect whereof we do take money for it but in respecte of that commoditie which it will yeelde when it shal be put to that vse and ende whiche the nature of the thing requireth Moreouer if there be any thing of good reporte we Christians must seeke after it and surely it can purchase no commendation of brotherly dealing and good speeche that way when our dealinges shal be harder then the vsuall dealing of those times are euen among those men that haue no other thing to gett their liuing by beside the commoditie and profit that cōmeth vnto them by that their
time to defraude the Lord of his glorie Let vs learne throughly to examine our thoughtes not onely blaming those that fully consent but euen warring with those that any whit delight them selues in coueting and desiring that whiche apperteyneth vnto others so shall wee see whether it bee an easie matter to loue our neighboure as our selfe or otherwise so shall we also clearely giue ouer the title of righteousnesse in regarde of our owne doinges and wholy depend vpon the free merites of God in Christ proceeding in the confidence thereof with good courage to purifie our thoughts that we may not only do good with the hand but euen with the longing desire of our thoughts For the accomplishment whereof let vs call vpon God in the name of his Sonne saying as hee hath taught vs. O our Father which art in Heauen c. ¶ The twelfth Lecture vppon the first to the Corinthians ¶ Chapter .xiii. 4 Loue suffereth long it is bountifull loue enuieth not loue doeth not boast it selfe it is not puffed vpp 5 It disdayneth not it seeketh not her owne things it is not prouoked to anger it thinketh not euill 6 It reioyceth not in iniquitie but reioyceth in the trueth 7 It suffereth all things it beleeueth all things it hopeth all things it endureth all things WE haue learned out of the lawe what seuerall dueties they bee that we owe vnto God and also vnto man but in the lawe we are not only charged to do those dueties there appointed to bee done and to forbeare the contrarie but also of loue to doe them and of loue to keepe vs from the other Therefore it shall bee expedient to examine what properties be in loue necessarily adioyning vnto the same whereby we must iudge of our selues how it fareth with vs whether that affection without the which all doing of good or ceassing to do euil is to no purpose ruleth in vs both in our doings and also when we shall absteine from doing The properties fruits of loue are in no place better set foorth then in the former Epistle to the Corinthes from whence I meane to giue you some light thereby the better to see into loue the nature of it and howe great thinges are conteyned in it Where the first note giuen to knowe it by is that it suffereth long or is patient a propertie that moderateth the heate and hastinesse of a mans minde that he followe it not in the boyling appetite and desire thereof This patience and moderation of our affections hathe great commendations in the scripture especially the booke of the Prouerbes painteth foorth the excellencie thereof in so many places and with so great titles as I can not but giue you a taste of some of them In the foureteenth Chapter of that booke it is thus written He that is stowe to wrath is of great wisedome but he that is of an hastie minde or to giue it you as it is there word for word he that is of a short spirite exalteth follie In this place we see this slowenesse vnto wrath is not barely ioyned with wisedome but with the excellencie of wisedome For so it is said He is of great wisedome that is slowe vnto wrathe It is a degree and profiting in wisdome whiche not all men no not all wisemen haue atteyned vnto to moderate the headie and hastie affection of an angrie and passionate minde Likewise in the same booke thus speaketh the holy Ghost The discretion of a man differreth his anger and his glorie is to passe by an offence A merueilous commendation that it should be the glorie of a man to put vppe offences that he should haue no manhode in him or matter to boast of any thing worthie of a man that hath not learned to passe by offences and to qualifie his affections euen towardes transgressions and iniuries Nature teacheth vs a cleane contrarie lesson that it is the glorie and zeale of a man to persue the infirmities of others and reuenge our affections the heate and displeasure of them therevpon and that he is a beast no man that wil let go wronges transgressions and iniuries vnreuenged especially if they shall haue touched himselfe But the spirite of God teacheth vs that it is loue that findeth a waye to cure a transgression yet notwithstanding to couer it and to reserue a place to couer it vntil it shal be cured as it is written in this booke Moreouer we reade in the Prouerbes that hee shal be taken for proude arrogant and scornefull that doeth his woorkes in the wrathe of pride A good testimonie to tell vs not onely what beginneth this wrath whiche is pride in deede therefore fitly ioyned with it in this place in calling it the wrath of pride but also what is ioyned with it alwayes that suche a one as he is so shall he beare the name and reproch of an arrogant hautie and scornefull man. In a nother place of this booke the holy Ghost compareth that man that can not restraine his affection vnto a citie broken downe and without walles but I must conteine my selfe within these fewe testimonies for that purpose for it were a verie great labour to seeke out all that is spoken hereof if I should goe no further then vnto this booke This patience and long suffering being as we haue heard so excellent euen the glorie of a man may iustly clame the first place among the properties of loue For what can be more fitte to vpholde loue then to be of a patient spirite when matter is offered occasion to breake loue and heartie good affection He doth iustly deserue wel of loue to haue his praise in all the fruits that followe it who shal by patience vnderprop it whē it shal be assaulted and shaken by hatred or euill dealing howsoeuer As for that man who then letteth loue fall downe whensoeuer any burthen of displeasure offence or vnkinde dealing shal be laide vppon him from the man whome he pretended to loue he declareth plainely that he neuer tasted of true loue and heartie affection the first and principall note whereof is to be patient and suffer long Let him ceasse therefore to make any account of his loue who hath not made reckoning to vpholde it in iniuries and displeasures And let him also ceasse to bragge of any loue that he hathe borne vnto any who neuer was tried to haue mainteined it throughe the vncourteous dealing of that man in one respect or other For who is he if he be not a monster of men that cannot liue peaceably with them who neuer shal displease him But then is it thankesworthie when our loue by patience shal ouercome the vnkindenesse of others This note of loue is clearely seene in that loue whiche mothers beare to their children howe muche frowardnesse and causelesse crying doe the mothers not onely patiently beare at the hande of the childe by loue but also appease not otherwise then by giuing of
them something to quiet them withall by loue rewarding rather then reuenging their frowardnesse There is loue and therefore the chiefe propertie thereof can not bee wanting whiche is to be patient and long suffering The litle bearing and forbearing one of an other bothe publiquely and priuately doeth plainely speake that loue is not to be found in the nature of man but is an especiall gift of god For so sicke are we of selfe-loue and so voide of the loue of others that not onely we cannot passe by the transgression of our brother and by a louing hyding of the same cure it but also we can hardly abide that any should in any thing thoughe not euill either in opinion or affection be diuided from vs Nay whiche more is oftentimes we woulde haue all our friendes beare an heauie countenaunce towards him whom we for priuate causes haue begone to mislike But true loue is patient and suffereth long forgiuing others euen as God for Christe his sake hathe forgiuen vs. Neither is there any thing in vs worthie of praise in this worke of loue if this patience and long suffering be absent For asmuche therefore as bothe there hath bene shal be also vnto the end of the world in the children of God weakenesse and wantes bothe in iudgment and in affection it is moste necessarie for him that shall haue dealing with any whatsoeuer to craue earnestly at the handes of God for this excellent stay of loue which is called patience or long suffering without the which it wil be impossible to liue Christianly in any societie howe small so euer especially is this gifte necessarie in these latter dayes where all places and persons almoste are full of offence It is to be obserued that this propertie of loue is not onely at variance with hastinesse that is so soone displeased and so easily offended but also with that other extremitie when a man is so ouerwhelmed with displeasure conceiued as that notwithstanding hee burst not out into heate yet he suffereth his affection towardes the man altogether to quenche in him ceassing any more to shewe forth the fruites of a louing heart Therfore in fewe wordes to comprehend the nature of this propertie of loue it is that good affection whiche passeth through vnkindenesse to vtter it selfe and breaketh through displeasures to make it self knowen by louing deeds being in verie deed the power and work of God and therfore able so strongly against suche strong lets to preuaile It is also said of this loue that it is Bountifull a second note or effecte to discerne it by The worde signifieth him that is courteous gentle and readie to pleasure an other whiche is rather the cause of bountifulnesse then bountifullnesse it selfe For when the heart standeth so sweetely affected it cannot easily be letted from plentifull witnessing of the same as occasion and abilitie will permitte That this is a propertie that cannot be sundered from loue it doeth appeare in the loue and affection whiche parentes beare vnto their children How gentle are they to them howe readie to seeke the pleasuring of them howe plentifull and liberall therein Which commeth wholy of a tender affection towards them This fruite of loue is fitly ioyned vnto the other for when a man can not onely beare the displeasures vnkindnesse of men but also is of a gentle franke dispositiō readie to deserue wel of men howe can there be any thing more required For his patient spirite wil not easily take offence at the euil dealinges of others and his mylde affection will as hardely vse euill dealing towardes another Therefore peace is soone purchased and long continued where there is plentie and store of suche affections Euerie man may see how hard a thing it is to finde either of these fruites of loue For where is that man almoste to bee found that will beare any vnkindenesse at the handes of another Or where is that gentle disposition that hath a grace and facilitie in readinesse to doe well vnto another If any shal haue obteined the one he thinketh it therefore almoste an vnlawfull thing to request the other at his handes For if he be a man that can beare somewhat with the vntowardnesse of others he taketh the desert thereof to be so great as that it were not lawfull to looke for any courteous dealing from him but to holde them selues well satisfied with that other so as euen that were to be vnthankfull for it if they did but seeme to require any thing to be added more vnto it Likewise if any be founde of a gentle and readie affection to pleasure others he thinketh his so doing to carrie with it a dispensation and priuilege for his not bearing of vnkindenesse at the handes of others so harde a thing is it to match these two together But how hard soeuer it be to find these two coupled together in any one yet this is an assured trueth that wheresoeuer loue is there are apparant tokens of them bothe There is bothe patience towardes infirmities and readinesse to deserue wel of those howe many soeuer we shal loue It is lamentable to consider howe farre the dealings of men swarue from these properties Euerie man saith he is in loue and charitie with al men yet if he shall neuer so litle be offended he cannot be kept either from plaine reuenging or at the least from letting go al good liking of the man And as he cānot be kept from reuenging no more can he be dragged and haled to well deseruing of any yet for al this persuadeth he himselfe that al the loue and charitie that is required in a man doeth dwel plentifully in him so vnskilfully vncharitably do we iudge of loue and charitie as if he loued a man who were not prouoked by any affection boiling in him to hate or at lest to mislike him whereas in verie deede loue is a tender liking conceiued of a man and so greatly delighting affecting of him that it maketh him bothe merueilous apt and easie to doe whatsoeuer may pleasure him and also verie harde by any griefe or displeasure to let goe the good liking that once he hathe conceiued of him The worlde knoweth not this affection for it is the speciall worke of Gods grace It needeth no long speeche to declare that the world is not acquainted with it for euerie man almoste is carelesse in offending other so farre is he from this affection that is so readie to pleasure and euerie man also is impatient of the lest displeasure that may be offered from any other This that hath ben spoken of the rarenesse of this affection which we cal loue may not beget in vs a despaire to come by it but a care earnestly to seeke it where it may bee had and wil be had of so many as in the carefull desire therof shal multiplie their petitions prayers to God for it which must be so much the more feruent and often as
pronounce him to be accurssed who shall holde that the lawe doth lay any impossible thing vpon vs. The Apostle doth take it to bee so plaine that no man can kepe the lawe that he will not bestow any paines in the proofe thereof The Churche of Rome taketh it to bee so playne that a man may keepe the lawe that they do accursse him whosoeuer shall holde the contrarie But it behoueth vs to rest in the doctrine of the holie Ghoste which therefore holdeth all men accurssed that sticke vnto the righteousnesse of woorkes bycause no man can do all those workes to the which righteousnes and life is promised And righteousnesse is promised not vnto him that shall doe some fewe works but vnto him that shal haue done all that are written in the booke of the law Neyther yet vnto him that for a great time shall haue done all but vnto him that shall haue continued from the beginning vnto the ende of his life in doing all the workes that are commaunded in the lawe Whereby it appeareth that that man who shall offend but in one thing forbidden in the lawe is in so doing shut out from all hold and hope of righteousnesse therby For he is holden accurssed by the lawe that cōtinueth not in all thinges that are written in the booke of the lawe to doe them For the lawe doth offer vs wages for our worke but so that it refuseth to pay any penie but vnto him that shall bring all his worke finished and done bycause the couenaunt was so and the lawe dealeth by Indenture and couenaunt and not otherwise Hee shall not want hyre for his labour that shall haue done his whole taske and all that was set appointed him for to do For the Lorde did couenant with vs for accomplishment of those works that were agreed vpon and set downe in the lawe that when wee should haue perfourmed that obedience it might be lawfull for vs to clayme our wages which is that he that doth them shall liue in them But if wee should come with our worke halfe done and halfe vndone or any euen the least part vndone the lawe sendeth vs away without wages letting vs see the condition of the obligation whiche is that he standeth accurssed without all hope of hire from the lawe that shall not continue to doe all things that are commaunded For the law wil not goe one iote from couenaunt In deede it will keepe couenaunt with vs if we keepe couenaunt with it and bring our whole worke accomplished according to the Indenture If a man shoulde for tenne twentie or fourtie yeare or if it were possible that from his infancie vnto his dying day hee should haue bene a painefull workman to the law doing all the workes thereof truely and without blame and yet slippe in one thing if but in one thought euen vpon his dying day he doth therein forfeit his obligation wherein he standeth bound for continuing in al the works of the law vnto the end Curssed is he sayth the lawe that continueth not And as was sayd before the lawe dealeth not but by Indenture and therefore looketh for and will haue the benefite of the obligation and the forfeiture of the bond at our hands If it shall bee sayde that the good workes that we haue done shall discharge vs of the euill that we haue done that aunswere will not bee taken there is no reason in it nor lawe for it For when we are bound to doe those woorkes which we say will discharge vs from the euill woorkes that wee haue done and more then they be for wee are bound to doe all and it is due debt of our part howe commeth it to passe by what right or reason that parte of payment of one summe whiche is due debt from vs shoulde not onely discharge that whole debt it beeing but a parte thereof but also shoulde discharge vs of an other bond wherein wee stande bounde for the payment of an other summe of monie Wee stande bound not onely to doe well but also to absteine from doing euill The discharge of one bonde if it were fully discharged coulde doe no more but free vs from the daunger of that it can not acquite vs of the other bond wherein wee stande other wayes charged To apply it to our purpose the bond wherein wee stand charged for doing well being in some part aunswered can not cancel the other obligation wherein we stand bound to absteine from euill There is no man that hath an other bound vnto him in two seuerall obligations for two seuerall summes of monie that will by and by after that one is discharged take the other by that payment to bee as good as cancelled there is in it neyther lawe right nor reason Much lesse will any man be so foolish as when but some parte of the one shall bee payde to imagine that then hee must giue ouer not onely the clayme of the other parte yet behinde but also the whole debt of the other bond which in no parte hath bene discharged These things being considered we shall be forced to say with the Apostle So many as sticke vnto the woorkes of the lawe are vnder the cursse For it is written Curssed is euerie man that continueth not in all thinges which are written in the booke of the lawe to doe them If any man shall thinke with him selfe that this reason is not sufficient to proue all accurssed bycause euerie one that dothe not continue is accurssed imagining that a man may continue in all thinges let him examine him selfe by euerie commaundement in euerie seuerall dutie thereof adding therevnto the properties of loue and considering whether his affection may be proued by those effectes to beare loue vnto the lawe and the dueties of the lawe or otherwise ioyning with all his continuaunce in euerie thing euen in the thoughtes of his heart and then no doubt it will bee manifest vnto him selfe that hee is farre from that righteousnesse whiche the lawe requireth and hee by it is bound to perfourme it Hee shall then see that hee him selfe is farre shorte of that number of workes which haue promise of life made vnto the workers therof when they shall haue accōplished those workes in that number of deeds that louing maner of doing which the lord requireth especially if that prouiso be remembred that there must be continuance without interruption both in the deedes and manner of doing euen vnto the end Moreouer the punishments in this world whiche the godlyest that euer liued haue not beene altogether free from declare that no man kepeth the lawe For the lawe doth not onely promise freedome from punishments but also plentie of al maner of blessings in the frut of our body in the fruit of our ground in the increase of our kyne cattle flockes of sheepe in our comming in in our going out in all that we take in hand in causing all that rise vp against vs to fal before