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

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this say wee vnto you in the worde of the Lord that wee whiche liue and are remayning in the comming of the Lord shall not come ere they which sleepe For the Lord him self shall descend from heauen with a shout and the voyce of the Archaungell and trompe of god And the dead in Christ shall arise firste then shall wee which lyue and remayne bee caught vp with them also in the cloude to meete the Lord in the ayre And so shall we euer be with the lord VVherfore comfort your selues one another with these woordes The disposementes IT is of that sort that is persuasiue For it is a comfort to bee set ageynst death or ageynst the moorning and heauinesse that wee take for the death of our selues or of some others that are deere vnto vs. And in the ende of the Epistle there is shewed this bound vse of this present discourse concerning the resurrection of the dead Comforte your selues one another with these wordes For the most effectual most stedy cōfort in al the tribulacions of this most shorte miserable lyfe which in very déede is nothing els but Dust shadow deaw but a Ghost but a steam but a puffe f●ther aire blast cinder a dreame froth a storme but a stadge but a span but a footstep Yea and in death it selfe is the assured hope of the resurrection of the blissed lyfe and euerlasting company whiche wée shall haue with God verely bycause wée are throughly perswaded that wée which embrace Christes doctrine by fatyh are not created to the miseries of this troublesome mortall lyfe onely ne that he meaneth the soul which was created of nothing the thing which was sometime nothing dooth vtterly perish and decay so as it should vtterly returne to nothing ageyn but y our soules do in déede remayne aliue after death the assoone as they are loosed from the bond of their bodies they are out of hand with the Lord enioy the sight of God in quiet peace ioy that our bodies also which sléepe in death shall assuredly reuiue become agein the dwelling places of their soules so as we hauing receiued the same bodies ageyn ▪ which shal be glorified haue a liuely beautie the same flesh which we now carie about vs and beyng vtterly free from all sinne labour and gréef shall liue for euermore with the Lord enioying the sight wisdome light rightuousnesse and blisfulnesse of the whole Godhead and glorifie God ageyne on our behalf for euer and euer Of this hope which is peculiar to the Christians and the very helmet of our saluation holy Iob sayeth this hope is layd vp in my bosome I know that my redéemer liueth and I shall rise out of the earth in the last day and shall bée compassed ageine with my skinne in my flesh shall I sée God whom I shall sée and none other for mée with these eyes shall I behold him and with none other Apoc. vj. xxj The soules of the saincts are before the throne of God and serue him day and night And God shall wipe all teares from their eyes and there shall bée no death nor moorning nor crying nor labour c. Apo. xiiij Blissed are the dead that dye in the Lord from henceforth The Philosophicall consolations that are to be set ageynst death and whiche burie a man with somewhat lesse sorow are gathered by Cicero in his first Tusculane question and by Plutarche in his booke to Apollonius And the summe therof is comprehended in this oration of Socrates in Plato I am in great hope O yée Iudges that it falleth well on my behalf that I am sente to death For one of these two things must néedes bée eyther that death taketh vtterly away all féeling or els that we fléete out of this place into some other Therefore whither all féeling perish and that death bee like that kinde of sléepe which oftentimes without sight of dreames yeldeth most quiet rest good God what a gayne is it to dye Or yf the things be true which are reported that death is a remouing into such coastes as they inhabit which are passed out of this lyfe that is now a farre greater blisse that when a man hath escaped from these that will néedes bée counted for Iudges he shall come to those that deserue the name of Iudges in déede I meane Minos Rhadamanthus Aeacus and Triptolemus and be conuersaunt with those that liued rightuously and faythfully Now to haue communication with Orpheus Musaeus Homer and Hesiodus what estéeme you it too bée woorth Truely I could finde in my harte to dye oft entimes yf it were possible so that the things whiche I speake of might befall mée what a pleasure would it bee too mée thinke you when I should talke with Palamedes with A●ax and with others that were entrapped by the iudgement of vnrightuous men neyther would I wish you yee Iudges to feare y death where by ye haue set mée at libertie For there can no manner of euill befall vnto a good man eyther aliue or dead neyther shall his case bée at any time neglected of the Gods immortall neyther is this thing happened to mée by chaunce Now forasmuch as according as Basilius right grauely counselleth it is for the behoof of Christian folke to reade the writings of Philosophers and Poetes bycause eyther they say the same that wée doo and so their consent is profitable or els they speake diuers things so it auayleth to conferre them wée will in this place recite in forme of logicke the chéef argumentes of Ciceros firste Tusculane question wherein he hath comprehended the comfortes and remedies too bee vsed ageynst death to the intent that the laying of them togither may enlighten both the kindes of doctrine and that wée considering the doutes and darknesse of the Philosophers about this article may be the more in loue with the doctrine of the Church deliuered by God warranted of God by raysing ageyn of dead men and other notable miracles The proposition of the firste Tusculane question is this Death is not euill or death is not to bee feared For eyther mens soules are not quenched by death but remaine aliue depart into those places which the blissed sort doo inhabite or els they perish vtterly with the bodyes so as there remayneth in them no féeling sense or perceyueraunce of any harme The firste parte of this Dilemna that mens soules are immortall Cicero proueth by six argumentes which wée haue recited héeretofore in the disposement of the .j. Cor. xv vppon the second holy day in Easter The latter part that though the soules dye with theyr bodyes yet there is no harme in death Cicero likewise goeth about to proue by six argumentes also The first Argument IF there bée any euill in death eyther it is to the soule or to the body But neyther in the body nor in the soule that are quite dead can
that is vvritten Death is swallovved vppe intoo victorie Deathe where is thy styng Hell where is thy victory The styng of Deathe is sinne and the strength of sinne is the lawe But thankes be vnto God which hath giuen vs victorie through our Lorde Iesus Chryste Therfore my deare brethren be yee stedfast and immoue able alvvayes rich in the woorks of the Lorde for as much as yee know how that your laboure is not in vayne in the Lorde The disposement of the .xv. Chapter of the first Epistle to the Corinthians which is the seat of the Doctrine concerning the Resurrection or rysing of the dead THe most ioyful end and hauen of the whole Christen lyfe and Faith and the souereine and most assured comfort in all the miseries and sorowes of this most flightful and wretched lyfe is the Resurrection from death and the blissed and euerlasting lyfe with God In which not only our soules remayning after death shall enioy the beholding of our Lord God in quiet peace ioyfulnesse but also our bodies which were rotted and consumed in the dust of the earth shall liue ageine and bée repaired and being ioyned with their soules ageine and set frée all sinne and death shall bée glorifyed and receyue immortall honor And where in death they heertofore were dround they shall heerafter weare the rayment bryght Of true renowne and euermore bee found before the Lord in endlesse lyfe and lyght This doctrine concerning the Resurrection of our bodyes which is the peculiar wisdom of the christen church is euidently confirmed and lyghtsomly set out by Paul in this xv chapter of his first Epistle too the Corinthians Therefore it is of that kynd of cases that instruct The cheefe partes of the whole disputation are three 1 Whither there bée any rysing of the dead 2 What manner a one it is or what manner of bodyes they shall ryse with 3 Of the cause of the rysing of our bodies which is Chrystes victorie in which he swalowed vp sin death and hell by his death and restored eternall lyfe and glorie too his Church by his Resurrection THe enterance intoo the matter putteth vs in mynde that the true and néedfull Doctrine concerning the chéefe articles of the Christen faith is often continually too bée repeated and beaten intoo the hearers eares Euen in this consideracion bicause the Gospell is the power of God effectuall in woorking saluacion too euery one that beléeueth I do you too vnderstand or I put you in mynd of the Gospel which I haue preached vntoo you which you haue embraced by fayth by which also you bee saued if you holde it fast by faythe onlesse peraduenture by this tyme hauing shaken off fayth you haue beleeued in vayne This selfsame gospell I say doo I put you in mynd of that you may bethinke you wirh what words I haue preached vntoo you For I haue deliuered c. The proposition state or ground of the first part is The dead shall vndoutedly ryse agein THis proposition doth he warrant by sixe Argumentes First of the efficient cause The totall or sufficient cause of a thing being set downe the effect foloweth of necessitie in such tyme and maner as the cause or the wil of God hathe appoynted Chryst who is the cause of our Resurrection and lyfe is verely risē in his very body from death and hath promysed of certeyntie that he wil rayse vntoo lyfe the bodyes of all men that bée dead Ergo without any dout euen our dead bodyes shall also ryse agein Paul concludeth this argument in the forme of an Ethuthymema Chryst who was dead is risen ageine in very déed Ergo wée also shall ryse agein when wée bée dead The consequent is of force holding from the efficient and sufficient cause too the effect which he will accomplish as he hath promysed This reason of the consequence Paule himselfe poynteth out a little after For séeing that by man came death by a man also must come the resurrection of the dead For like as in Adam all men die So also by Chryst shall all men bée called agein too lyfe The Antecedent which is the ground woorke of the Resurrection of our bodyes and of our whole Fayth and saluacion is confirmed at large by Paule First by witnesse of the Scripture which testifyeth that Chryste dyed for our sinnes Esay liij Daniel ix Zach. iij. and .xiij. Psalm .xxij. And that he rose agein the third day Osée vj. in the storie of Iones Psalm .xv. Zach. xiij Esay xj Actes .xiij. Secondly by the record of many that sawe Chryst after he was risen and were familiarly conuersant with him full fortie dayes Chryst the same day that he rose from death appéered not only too Cephas or Simon Peter and the twelue Apostles of whom Paule maketh mencion in this place but first of all too Marie Maudlin Iohn .xx. Marke .xviij. next too the rest of the women Math. xxviij Thirdly too a cupple walking intoo the féeldes whom the Apostles beléeued not Mark .xvj. Fourthly too Cephas or Simon Peter Fifthly too Cleophas and Nathanael as they were going toowards Emaus too whome at their returne all the Apostles giue credit Luke the two and twentith Sixthly too all the Apostles as they were assembled toogither sauing Thomas Luke the foure and twentith Iohn the twentith j. Corinthians xv And all these appéerings were made the very day of his Resurrection vppon which day also S. Hierom is of opinion that Chryst shewed himselfe too Iames the lesse of whom Paule maketh mention in this place Afterward he shewed him selfe sundrye tymes too the Apostles when Thomas was with them and at the sea of Tyberias Iohn xx xxj Also in Galilie too mo than fyue hundred brethren at once And also too his Apostles or too the thrée score and tenne and too all the rest of his Disciples Finally after his Ascention Chryste shewed himselfe too Paule also that hée was risen ageyne Paules second argument WE sée the Apostles doo preache that Chryste is risen from death Ergo there is in very deede a rysing ageine of the deade The consequens holdeth of the authoritie of the Apostles who are sent from God and are assured that they cannot erre The third argument is a bringing back by impossibilitie It is impossible that twoo ful contraries should both at once be true or false This Exposition The deade ryse not ageine or no deade folkes ryse ageine is false Ergo the contradictorie or full contrarie proposition The deade shall ryse ageine is true and certeine The minor or Second parte of the Argument is proued thus of truthe there can come nothing but truthe But of this proposition No deade folks rise ageine folow things manifestly false and irkesome too heere namely that not euen Chryste is risen ageyne and that the preaching of the Apostles is vayne whych are false witnesses of GOD and so GOD himselfe who hath auouched that he raysed Chryst
vj. This is the will of my eternal Father that euery one which séeth the sonne beléeueth in him should haue lyfe euerlasting I will rayse him vp at the last day Iohn v. The houre shall come that al that are in their graues shal héere his voyce and come foorth those that haue doone good too the resurrection of lyfe and those that haue doone euil too the resurrectiō of iudgement Io. xix I knowe that my Redéemer liueth and I shall ryse out of the earth in the last day and shall bée compassed ageine with my skin and in my fleshe shall I sée my god I shall sée him my self myne owne eyes shall behold him and none other this hope is layed vp in my bosom This restitution of dead bodyes and commencement of new and euerlasting lyfe is not only warranted by euident textes verye openly and cléerly in the sermons of Christ and his Apostles but also was manifested too the eyes of the Apostles and the rest of Gods church that was at those dayes in Iewrie when by the space of full forty dayes Chryste being risen agein and many of the Patriarkes and Prophetes that were risen with Chryste were openly and familiarly conuersant with the Apostles and Marie his moother and a great companie that was ioyned with them for Paule in this Chapter witnesseth that he was séene of mo than fyue hundred brethren at once and talked with them of the kingdome of god Act. j. of the wonderfull state and redemption of the Church of heauenly reuelatious of the promise of the séede that should crush the Serpents head or of the persone office and benefites of Chryst of the abolishemēt of sinne too the restorement of our bodyes of the lyfe euerlasting Vppon these heauenly reuelements warranted by sure and euident recordes let vs set our eyes when wée thinke vppon the resurrection of our bodyes and the lyfe too come Philosophie knoweth vtterly nothing of the restoremēt of the dead bodyes but holdeth opinion that they perish and are resolued intoo the stuffe whereof they were first made vtterly come too nothing after the same sort that the bodyes of brute beasts doo Neyther hath it any sure and stable beléef at all concerning the immortalitie of the soule and the euerlasting conuersation with God and the blissed wyghts But as in a dubble and doutfull matter it disputeth too and fro of it and reasoneth that whither mennes soules remayne after death or whither they dye and perish with their bodyes yet there is none euill at all in death And the chéef reasons whereby mennes soules are auouched too bée immortal are gathered toogither by Cicero in his first booke of Tusculane questions which it is good too consider too the intent the cōferring of them may bring some lyght too both the kyndes of doctrine The first reason is of Authoritie ANtiquitie the néerer it was from the creation and from the offpring of GOD so much the better did it sée what things were true All Antiquitie was of opinion that mennes soules are immortall and that man by departing out of this lyfe is not so cleane swept away that he should vtterly perish Ergo it is true that mennes soules are immortall He proueth the minor or second part 1 By naturall instincts 2 By the Lawe of their préests 3 By the ceremonies of buryall 4 By Canonization The second reason IN all matters the consent of all Nations is too bée accoūted the Lawe of Nature All men whersoeuer they bée doo agrée in this that there is somwhat which perteyneth too those that are departed out of this lyfe Ergo wée also ought too bée of the same opinion The third reason THe proof of Nature must bée taken of euery such nature as is best The best of all sortes of men as Princes Poets woorkmē others doo hold most stedfastly the hope of immortalitie Ergo men find by nature that mennes soules are immortal The fourth reason EVery thing that moueth it selfe is euer moued and is euerlasting The soule of man moueth it selfe Ergo it moueth euer and is euerlasting The fifth reason THat which is not cōpounded of the Elements is not corruptible mānes soule is not cōpounded of the elements Ergo mannes soule is not corruptible or mortall He proueth the minor thus NO nature compounded of the Elements hath ingraffed in it instincts of knowledge power too searche secretes memorie able too conceyue and beare away things most diuerse foresyght of things too come so many Artes. c. Mannes mynd hath ingraffed in it instincts of knowledge ablenesse too inuent new things too call too mynd things past c. Ergo mannes mynd is not compounded of the elements The sixth reason IT is an vnmoueable maximée of Gods prouidence iustice that good should befall the good and euill should befall the euill But in this lyfe the good fare woorst as Socrates c. Ergo there must néedes remayne another lyfe in which the good may receyue good and those that in their humane bodyes haue ledde their lyfe like Gods may returne too the Gods frō whom they came These foresayd six Arguments are the Arguments of Cicero The second part of the Chapter IN what sort shall the dead ryse and with what maner a body come they Paule answereth that the woord of the Almighty GOD ought simply too bée beléeued though wée know not the māner how God will bring too passe the things he promyseth For as sainct Iustine sayeth It is an euident token of vnbeléef too demaund as too Godward or in Gods matters how any thing is or may bée doone For fayth alone ought too dispatch all doutes in vs Paule therfore in this place rebuketh such as bée inquisitiue of the maner how dead mennes bodyes rotten in their graues and cōsumed too nothing shall come too lyfe ageine commaunding them too settle their mynds by fayth simply in the promise and woord of the almighty god And ageinst our distrustfulnesse he setteth an Example most ordinarie in nature concerning the growing of corne which springeth vp of the seede cast intoo the ground and dead and consumed intoo fyne cinder Therfore can God easly rayse our buryed corses out of the dust intoo which they bée turned and buyld vp the whole bodye ageine making it much more beautifull and glorious than it was before like as thou sowest not the same bodye that shall growe vp but bare corne which rotteth in the ground and yet there springeth vp other corne of the same kynd and substance much better and more full of sap clad garnished and sensed with spindle eare husk ayles c. Al flesh is not a like but there is one flesh of men an other of beasts c. That is too say All the dead shall not ryse with like honor but there shall bée a difference howbéeit not in the substance but in the glorie of them that ryse
promis Luke xj How much more shal the heuenly father giue the holy ghost to those the ask him Therfore let this most large promise stir vs vp to sue daily vnto God with most harty and ernest entreatance that this gouerner the holy ghost may be sent into our harts his gifts be incresed in vs And let vs with so much the more héed circumspectnesse modestie rule our behauior least through our offences cōmitted ageinst cōscience the holy ghoste be gréeued and so taking displeasure depart out of the tēple of our hart vtterly forsake vs Finally let vs cōtinually recite this prayer of Dauids A clean hart create in me O God renue a stedfast spirit in my bowels Cast mée not away from thy face and take not thy holy spirit from mee Restore to mée the gladnesse of thy saluatino and strengthen mée with thy free spirite Vppon Whitson Monday ¶ The Epistle Act. ij BVt Peter stepped forth with the eleuen and lift vp his voyce and sayd vnto them Yee men of lewry all yee that inhabite Hierusalem be this known vntoo you and with your eares heare my wordes These are not drunkē as ye suppose for it is yet but the third houre of the day But this is that which was spoken by the prophete Ioell It shal be in the last days sayeth God of my spirit I will poure out vppon all fleshe And your sonnes and your doughters shal prophesy and your yong men shal see visions and your old men shal dreame dreames And on my seruāts and on my handmaydens I will poure out my spirit in those days and they shal prophesie And I will shewe woonders in heauen aboue and tokens in the earth beneath bloude and fyre and the vapour of smoke The Sunne shal be turned into darknesse and the Moon into bloud before that great and notable day of the Lord come And it shal be that whosoeuer shall call on the name of the Lorde shal be saued Yee men of Israel heare these woordes Iesus of Nazareth a man approued of God among you with miracles woonders and signes which God did by him in the mids of you as yee your selues know him haue ye taken by the hands of vnryghtuous persons after he was deliuered by the determinate counsell and fore knowledge of God and haue crucified and slayne whom God hath raysed vp and loused the sorowes of death by cause it was vnpossible that he shoulde bee holden of it For Dauid speaketh of him A fore hand I saw God alwayes before me for hee is on my right hande that I shoulde not bee moued Therfore did my hart reioyce my tongue was glad More ouer also my flesh shall rest in hope bicause thou wilte not leaue my soule in Hell neyther wilte suffer thyne holy too see corruption Thou haste shewed mee the wayes of lyfe and shalt make mee full of ioy with thy countenaunce Men and brethren let me freely speak vnto you of the patriark Dauid For hee is bothe dead and buried and his sepulchre remaineth with vs vnto this day Therfore seing he was a Prophete and knew that God had sworne with an othe to him that Chryst as concerning the flesh should come of the frute of his loynes and sit on his seat he knowing this before spake of the resurrection of Chryst that his soule should not be left in hel neither his flesh shoulde see corruption This Iesus hath God raised vp wherof we al are witnesses Since now that he by the ryght hand of God is exalted and hath receiued of the father the promise of the holy ghost he hath shed foorth that which ye now see and heare For Dauid is not ascended into heauen but he sayd The lord sayd to my Lord syt on my right hand vntill I make thy foes thy footestoole So therfore let all the house of Israell knowe for a suretie that God hath made that same Iesus whom ye haue crucified Lord and Chryst When they heard this they were pricked in their heartes and sayde vntoo Peter and vntoo the other Apostles Yee men and brethrē what shall we do Peter said vnto them repēt and be baptized euery one of you in the name of Iesus Christ for the remissiō of sins and ye shal receiue the gift of the holy ghost The disposement of Peters Sermon taken out of the redings vpon the second chapter of the Acts of the Apostles THe state of Peters first Sermon which he made vpon Whitson Sunday is a doctrine concerning the holy ghost of the maner how to obtein euerlasting saluation The parts of this Sermon are chiefly three FIrst of the principall efficient cause of oure conuersion and saluation that is to wit of the holy ghost by whom the eternal father kindleth in mens harts the true knowledge of himselfe and true fayth and Inuocation Secondly of the forcing cause or the deseruing of our saluation that is too wit of the death and Resurrection of our lord Iesus Chryst by whom and for whom only forgiuenesse of sinnes the holy ghost rightnousnesse and saluation euerlasting are giuen to them that bel●eue Thirdly of the means by which the holy ghost worketh and by which he offreth and applyeth vnto vs Chrysts benefites or euerlasting saluation Which are the Woorde Of the law Repentance Of the Gospell Faith. Sacraments Of Baptim Of the Lords supper THe enterance of his oracion though it b●e shorte hath neuerthelesse the two places of Beneuolence and attentiuenesse He seeketh beneuolence or the fauour and good will of his héerers by a most honorable title such a one as was wel liked of amōg thē Yee men of Iury and ye that dwel at Ierusalem For like as Demosthenes doth oftētimes speak to his coūtrimē by these words Ye men of Athens bicause they thought thēselues farre to excell the inhabiters of all other cities of Grece for many giftes so it liked well the people of Ierusalē too bée termed by the name of Iewes as wherby was mente that they were the professers of the true God and of the true doctrine woorshipping of God and that they were better than all other nations And he procureth attentiuenesse in these wordes Let this bee knowen vnto you and geue eare vnto my woordes This doone like as Cicero in his oration for Milo before ●e entreate of the matter dooth dispatch certeine doutes out of the Iudges mindes and preuenteth certeine foredéemings So Peter first of all displaceth out of the minds of his hearers that brute which wandred farre abroade that opinion y the Apostles were dronke with wine Afterward be steppeth too the case it selfe and that it may bée of the more authoritie hée vseth the saying and witnesse of the Prophete Ioel whiche in singular lightesomnesse of woordes comprehendeth the doctrine concerning the persone and benefites of the holy Ghoste Of which doctrine for asmuch as the chéef pointes are touched in the story of Whitsun Sunday I will now breefly
remayne any sense of euill Ergo in death whiche vtterly quencheth a man bringeth him to nothing there is no euill at all The second THat whiche riddeth men from the troubles and miseries that hang ouer them and is the ende of all mischéeues and harmes is not to bée counted among euill things Death riddeth men from the troubles that hang ouer them and is the end and vttermost refuge from all miseries Ergo death is not euill The third THat which many excellent men haue of their owne accord or certeinly with a stout and quiet minde vndertaken is not to bée feared Many valiaunt and good men haue with stout courage vndertaken to dye for their countrey and for other causes as the Decians the Scipios Theramenes Socrates Leonides c. Ergo death is not to be feared as the chéef euill The fourth In sléepe there is none euill Death is like to sléepe Ergo there is none euill in death The fifth No naturall things are euill Death is due vnto nature who hath lent vs the occupying of lyfe as it were of money without setting any day of payment Ergo death is not euill The sixth No commendable thing is euill The deathes of such as excelled in vertue and specially of those that vndertooke them for their coūtry sake purchase euerlasting commendation Ergo they bée not euill These argumentes haue I bréefly set downe not onely to the intent the reading of the first Tusculane question may bee the playner to the yonger sort by shewing too them the framing and order of the argumentes but also to thintent the difference betwene the Christian doctrine and the doctrine of the Philosophers might bée séene the more euidently For Philosophie knoweth vtterly nothing at all of the restitution of our dead bodies and the resurrection of our flesh but déemeth that the same are resolued into their first matter whereof they were made and there vtterly perish for euer euen as the bodyes of beastes doo Neyther hath it any certeyn stable and stedy beleef of the immortalitie of the soule and of the euerlasting felowship with God and the blissed sort but floting ●o●●ing gazing about sticking and making many backe-turnings like a ship y is wether driuen on the huge sea like images the wauer in a troubled water w eout bringing any certeins and sound comfort too the mindes that are encountring and wrestling with death Therfore let vs with most thankfull mindes embrace Gods voyce auouched with the resurrection of his owne sonne whiche alonly sheweth both the causes of death and all miseries and the true and effectuall remedies of the same that is to wit the most ioyfull resurrection and lyfe and glorie euerlasting with God. Vppon the first Sunday in Aduent ¶ The Epistle Rom. xiij THis also we know I meane the season how that it is time that we should now awake out of sleepe For now is our saluation neerer than when we beleeued The night is passed and the day is come nye Let vs therfore cast away the deedes of darknesse and let vs put on the armour of light Let vs wake honestly as it were in the day light not in eating and drinking neyther in chambering and wantonnesse neyther in strife and enuying but put yee on the Lorde Iesus Christe And make not prouision for the flesh to fulfill the lustes of it The disposement THis Epistle is of that kind that is persuasiue For it is an exhortacion to watchfulnesse or diligence in learning the doctrine of the Gospel and in framing the whole lyfe after the rule of Gods word The state or summe of it is this I exhort you to embrace earnestly the Gospel wherin is offe●●d you euerlasting saluation by Iesus Christ and to worshi 〈…〉 with true fayth dutyfulnesse of all vertues The cheef places are three THe doctrine of the Gospell concerning Christes delight of the world by whom lyfe and euerlasting saluacion are offered giuen to vs must earnestly and with singular heedfulnesse and diligence bee of all the godly sort learned kept and spred abrode ij Of the faith of the Fathers and that all holy men of all ages obteyned eternall saluation by one selfe same way that is to wit by the voyce of the gospel for the only mediator Christes sake through faith iij An exhortation too new obedience or a lyfe agreeable with the Gospell or too good woorkes of which he reckeneth fiue kindes in order 1 Diligence and watchfulnesse in learning the Doctrine and folowing true godlynesse according too the lyght shewed in the Gospell 2 Sobrietie which eschueth drunkennesse and gluttonie 3 Chastitie or stayednesse which eschueth forbidden lusts and wantonnesse 4 Méeknesse and desire of concord which represseth wilfulnesse and enuiousnesse 5 Gouernement or brideling of all the affections Concerning these vertues sobrietie chastitie méeknesse and desire of concorde and concerning the vices that encounter them there bée orderly expositions set foorth in the declaration of the ten commaundements and in my rules of lyfe Which I would wish too bee matched with this booke conteining the disposements of the Epistles in the end thereof for this cause that there should not néed too tedious turning and returning too the morall preceptes or places of vertues and vices in euery seueral Epistle Now therfore wil I adde certeine aduertisements to the first two places of this dayes Epistle which are propre too the gospell and will expound certeine of the darker termes and spéeches ¶ THE ENTERANCE FIrst formost in this place the preacher may make some short preface concerning the tyme For our aunceters of old tyme termed the four Sundayes next before Christmas the Sundayes in Aduent And their méening was that their héerers should bée put in remembrance and prepared too discharge their mindes from all other cares desires and with greater care watchfulnesse sobretie reuerence and héedfulnesse too settle them selues too consider this woonderfull purpose of God concerning the redemption of mankynde by the comming of his sonne in the flesh And our forefathers made foure commings of Christ First in the flesh Secondly in the ministerie Thirdly too his Passion whereof is spoken in the gospel of this day And fourthly too the last iudgement wherof wée shall héere more this day seuennight Therefore too the intent that men might bée stirred vp too the more héedfull consideration of so great matters at this time which goeth next before the comming or birthe of our Sauior Iesu Christ the Epistle that is red this day was appoynted very fit for the time For in it Paul making mention of the tyme also exhorteth all the godly too wake out of their sléepe and darknesse of sinnes ignorance of God and carelessenesse which neglecteth GOD and letteth loose the reynes too all misdéedes and lustes and not too let slip the occasion of atteyning eternall saluation by the Gospell but too lerne the doctrine of it with singuler endeuer watchfulnesse and héede
bée afrayde bycause thou Lord art with mée Esay and Ezechias although the Citie was beséeged by Sennacherib yet faint they not for pensiuenesse but flée vnto God by earnest prayer and wayt for deliueraunce Hereafter ensue the disposements of of certeyne Epistles which are vsually read to the people vppon the feast dayes of Sainctes Vpon the feast of the Annunciation of our blyssed Lady Sainct Marie or vppon the feast of the conception of Christ The Epistle Esay vij GOd spake once ageyn vnto Ahaz saying require a token of the Lorde thy God whether it bee towarde the depth beneath or towarde the hevghte aboue Then sayde Ahaz I will requyre none neyther will I tempte the Lorde And he sayde hearken to ye of the house of Dauid is it not ynough for you that ye be greuous vntoo men but yee must greeue my God also And therefore the Lorde shall giue you a token Beholde a virgine shall conceyue and beare a sonne and thou his mother shall call his name Emanuell Butter and hony shall he eate that hee may knowe to refuse euill and chose the good Therfore before the childe may know good or euill malice shall dissuade from choosing the good THe first feast of the new Testament and the beginning welspring of our redemption and euerlasting welfare is the wonderful cōception or cuppling of the two natures of the Godhead and manhood of our Lorde Iesus Christe the Sonne of God the memoriall whereof the Churche celebrateth as this day And of singular purpose was it Gods wil that the times of his wonderfull works and of his reuelementes should agrée For vppon this day beyng the .xxv. day of Marche was the Sonne of God conceyued in the wombe of the Uirgin Marie or as this day he cuppled too himselfe mans nature by eternall alyaunce a thousand fyue hundred thréescore and ten yéeres ago The yeere after the first promis making of the womans séede in Paradise 3962. After the renewing of the same promis vntoo Abraham that all nacions should bée blissed in the same séede 1938. After the prophesiyng of Iacob concerning Syloh or the Uirgins issue a thousand seuen hundred and six yéeres and the same day beyng the xxv of March now ful a thousand fiue hūdred xxxvij was our Lord Iesus Christ the sonne of God made a sacrifise for vs vppon the Altar of the Cr●sse The same day also is Adam the first man reported to haue bin created 5532. yéeres ago And afterward about the same time it is thought that Abell was slayne and Isaac layd vppon the Altar to haue bin sacrifised Therefore inasmuch as the day it selfe putteth vs in mind of most weyghty matters as of the sonne of God the founder and redéemer of the Church of the creation of our selues of the wonderfull alyaunce of the Godhead and manhoode made in the Uirgins wombe and of the causes and benefites of this wonderfull vnion let vs with all godlinesse and reuerēce cast our selues downe before God and yéeld him thankes for his so excellent woorkes and benefites and by deuout and earnest musing vpon so great things kindle and confirme in vs fayth prayer and most assured hope of euerlasting saluation And to the intent our hartes may bée the more fitte and earnest to the reuerent minding of them and to thankesgiuing for the same Let vs also celebrate this feast with greater modestie and sobernesse of behauiour The doctrine of this holy day concerning the causes and benefites of the wonderfull Incarnacion of Gods sonne is all one with the doctrine that is set forth vppon the byrthday of the same sonne of god And therfore the disposement of that matter may bee borowed out of that place into this day Now will I bréefly entreate of the prophesie of this dayes Epistle Behold a virgin shall cōceyue and bring forth a child and thou shalt call him Emmanuell which was vttered by the Prophet Esay seuen hundred and lvij yéeres before that the Angell Gabriell brought woord of the fulfilling of it too the virgine Marie and conteyneth the doctrine of the conception of the sonne of God whiche is the foundacion of our redemption and saluation I will therefore in few woordes set out the chéef pointes of this doctrine comprised in accustomed questions or orderly instruction The conception or incarnation of the Sonne of God is the wonderfull cuppling or personall vnion of the two natures that is to say of the Godhead begotten of the substance of the euerlasting Father and of the manhood taken in the wombe and of the substaunce of the virgin Marie wrought in Christ our Mediator that he may bée Emmanuell y is to say God with vs of one substaunce both with God the eternall Father and with vs reconciling God vnto vs and by paying the full raunsome for vs appease Gods most iust wrath ageynst sinne and restore to vs men rightuousnesse and eternall lyfe The partes of the Emmanuell conceyued in the virgin Marie may bée sayde to bee two the Godhead or the sonne of God the woorde the manhood taken of Maries substaunce and of the ofspring of Dauid Hither may all the whole doctrine concerning the person of Gods sonne the differences of the persones of the Godhead and of the two natures in Christe c. bée referred The causes THe efficient cause of the conception or incarnacion of the sonne of God is the whole Godhead For although that the persone of the sonne cuppled to it selfe mannes flesh by personall vnion yet is it the worke of all the thrée persones togither which also go ioyntly togither in this saying the holy Ghost shall come vppon thee and the power of the hyghest shall ouershadowe thee The hyghest is God the Father The power of the hyghest is the sonne of God who ouershadoweth the virgine Marie and the whole Churche making intercession for vs too the euerlasting Father cuppling our nature to him selfe and couering vs as a shadow ageynst the heate of Gods wrath The holy Ghost halloweth the flesh taken of the virgine Maries substāce therof shapeth in the virgins wombe the body of the Messias redye too bée borne which body togither with a reasonable soule the woord the sonne of God by taking vnited by vniting tooke vnto him And therefore it is sayd in our Créede whiche was conceyued by the holy Ghost The inward forcing cause of the conception byrth passion and death of Christ is al one that is to wit the infinite goodnesse and mercy of God toward manhood tempered with his heauenly Iustice for the full satisfiyng whereof with sufficient amendes the very sonne of God taking our nature vppon him became both man and a sacrifise for vs. The outward forcing cause was the fall of our firste parentes and the sinne that soked from thence into all men with death and moste sorowfull damnacion of all mankind which the sonne of God was Loth should perish vtterly Now the
which as God punished in the fathers wādering in the wildernesse so will he also punish horribly in vs if wée commit the like faultes 3 That the church of the fathers and of the Christians is all one which is gathered by the woorde and the sacraments and is fed and mainteined all with one spirituall meat and drinke The first place THe rule which Paul in this place putteth forth garnished with the twoo similitudes taken of running wrestling is a most profitable necessary rule not only of the duety of teachers or ministers of the church but also of our studies of all the deuises and dooings of our whole life In all vocations and in ordering all the deuises endeuers and deedes of our life aright wee must needes haue a certeine end and bound set before vs to which as it were to a marke wee may leuel all our businesse that we take in hand Agein it behoueth vs skilfully to chose the meanes that lead directly to the same ende and to vse necessary heedfulnesse exercise earnestnesse and stedfastnesse in necessary heedfulnesse exercise earnestnesse stedfastnesse in getting and keping those meanes Like as the rūners in a race haue their eye alwais vppon the marke set vp before them with all earnestnesse and pains taking doo enforce endeuer themselues the streightest way too it And as the wrestlers bend thēselues wholy ageinst their copemates that they may giue the foile obtaine the wished rewarde of victorie For as Plato sayth A man must not wanderingly gaze at many things but stedfastly ame one thing at the same leuell all his doings as it were at a marke This is the common and vttermost end of all vocations of the whole lyfe of man which Paul himself hath a whyle after appoynted doo yee all things too the glory of God and bee not a stumbling blocke too Gods church That is too say let the end of al your dooings bée of God or the true acknowledgment inuocatiō and glorifying of God and the welfare and quietnesse of Gods church Besides this euery seueral vocation hath peculiar boūds and endes by it self as the ciuill magistrates boundes and ends are too bridle the misbehauiors of his countrymen with honest lawes too decide controuersies by rightfull iustice too mainteine peace too defend the good and too punishe the vnthriftes and offenders The ends of the ministerie of the gospell are too teach the true doctrine of the gospel aright too minister the sacramēts and too performe the other partes of their office faithfully for the glory of God and that many men may bée saued The ends of scholers life or of our studies are wisdom power of vtterāce or wyse eloquēt godlinesse or too haue good skil to iudge aright of things that is too say wel liue wel Too the entent wée may attein and retein these ends wée must chuse the meanes that lead the right way too them like the runner which taketh his next way too the marke stragleth not with vncertein mouing and blind starting this way that way in his race For he that mindeth too attein too the place that he ameth at must folow but one way not wander many wayes For that I may vse the woords of Seneca that wer not too go but too gad So the champion Eutellus settles himself ageinst his aduersary only He beateth not the aire in vaine but standeth stiffe stout in sight with eyther hand he thumpes a maine on Dare as thicke as he can smite Therefore like as the runners looke euer too their marke and the champions employ all their shiftes and practises too smite their aduersarie and start not aside with blind braids ne beat the air with rash strokes so let euery man in his vocation and specially the teachers ministers of the church chuse out wisely the meanes that lead streight too the ryght end and in exercising the same let them vse diligence cōtinuance that they may in the eternal life attein the promised reward of their diligence Let thē teach the pure doctrin of the gospel faithfully Let them continually beat vpon the places of doctrine that are necessary and most auailable too the norishment of true godlinesse as the places of repentance of faith of the person office and benefites of Chryst of true inuocation of the crosse of good woorkes c. Let them attemper them selues too the capacitie of their hearers Let them examine instruct and strengthen the rawer sort Let them stedfastly and stoutlye stand wyth the truthe against Heretikes Let them fight against their owne nature and their sinfull lusts Let them beare with some infirmities and offences for common quietnesse sake Let them allure their héerers with examples of all vertues Let them brydle ambition wrathe desire of reuengement couetousnesse and other affections that they deface not the doctrine of the gospel with stūbling blockes and themselues become castawayes or lose the inheritance of eternall life Like as Paule saith that he looked narowly too himselfe or chastised his body subdewing it taming it bringing it in subiection that is too say with great héede and streightnesse he restreyned and kept vnder foote the sinfull inclinations and lusts of his hart and compelled both the inward powers of his soule the outward members of his body as his tung his eyes his handes and his féete too bée seruiceable and obedient too the iudgement of his mind or to Gods will. Most men in the world are in bondage to their affections and are ruled by thē so as they béeing enflamed with loues hatreds couetings fond hopes c. doo take in hand vnrightuous and vnnecessary dooings in which they perish as for example Paris was brought in bōdage too his own loue Pompey gaue himself ouer to ambition malice and spitefulnesse Xerxes being pricked with pryde desirousnesse of reuengement made warre ageinst the Gréekes Many heritikes being set a gog with vaine glory sprede abrode and mainteine false opinions Othersome doo brable about néedlesse questions rather curious than profitable Other teachers giue thēselues too sluggishnesse other too medling with many matters and othersome too other affections Paule therefore euen by his owne example exhorteth all ministers and doctors of the church with singular care héedfulnesse and diligence too hold in and too bridle their mindes willes harts outward members that they serue not their owne sinfull inclinations or the Diuell spurring them foreward but the will and woord of God. But the text of this presēt Epistle shal become more cléer to the eye if the auncient maner of the Gréekish gaming 's be considered and the termes of them well vnderstood Among the Greekes in their gaming places there were fyue kynds of exercises most auncient Running Buffeting Leaping Coyting and Wrestling And these were called the naked Games bycause the Gamers exercised thēselues naked in those games The Runners that ran
commaundement in my Rules of lyfe and applyed too this place Vppon the Sunday called Reminiscere or the second Sunday in Lent. ¶ The Epistle ● thess. iiij VVE beeseeche you brethren and exhort you by the Lord Iesus that yee encrease more and more euen as yee haue receyued of vs howe ye ought too walke and too please god For ye know what commaundementes wee gaue you by our Lord Iesus Chryste For this is the wyll of God euen your holynesse that yee should absteine from fornication and that euery one of you shuld know how too keepe his vessell in holynesse and honoure and not in the lust of concupiscence as doo the Heathen which knowe not God that no man oppresse and defraud his brother in bargaining bicause that the Lord is the auenger of all suche things as wee tolde you beefore and testified For God hath not called vs vntoo vnclennesse but vntoo holynesse He therefore that despiseth despiseth not man but God which hath sent his holy spirit among you The disposement IT pertayneth too that kynd which is perswasiue For it is an exhortation too new obedience or too good woorkes The cheefe places are three 1 A generall precept that wée should directe our intents and dooings according too the rule of the doctrine receiued of the false Apostles yea and too abound that is too say too profit in true godlynesse and too endeuer too surmount ourselues or too bée euery day better than other 2 Of chastitie 3 Of vpright dealing which kéepeth an euen hande in all bargaines Of the first IExhort you by our Lord Iesus Chryst y yée encrease more and more euen as yee haue receyued of vs how yee ought too wakle and too please God. The rule of faith and Christen lyfe is the doctrine deliuered by Chryst and his Apostles which only God wil haue vs folowe bothe in the true knowledge of his beeing and will and in the ordering of our behauyour and lyfe He will not haue vs too wander and folowe our owne opinions as the Heathen men which deuysed sundry Gods and sundry woorshippings neyther will he haue our deuyses and dooings too bée gouerned by oure owne policie as the Heathen mennes were who in whoredome and other lustes in deceytfulnesse of bargayning in ydlenesse and in medling with many matters gaue themselues scope too runne at randon without cōtrolment Therfore Paule by expresse woordes in this place sayeth wée exhort you that according as yée haue receiued of vs so yée walke as yée ought too walke and encreace more and more As if he should say let the Doctrine which yée haue receiued of vs Apostles and not mennes Traditions or wil woorshippings bée the vnmoueable rule and kéeplyne of the true knowledge and seruice of God as is sayd in Ezechiel the .xx. Chapter Walke not in the commaundementes of your fathers I am the Lord god Walke in my commaundements and kéepe my iudgements and doo them Also looke what I commaund thée that only doo thou vntoo the lord Neyther ad nor diminish any thing And Paul commaundeth vs not only too walke that is too say too liue or too frame all the deuyses dooings of our lyfe according too the doctrine of the Apostles but also too profit more and more and too surmount and ouercome our selues in true godlynesse which is in déede a victorie of all others most goodly and most beséeming a man according as is sayd Too ouercome a mannes selfe is of al victories the cheefe and the best For a christen man can neuer long continue abide in one selfe same state of godlynesse But eyther fayth inuocation hope and the rest of vertues encrease and augment in him or els by slaking of their earnestnesse they become more faint and by little and little wex cold specially in prosperitie when the hart is open and not for closed with any sorow thē the diuell créepeth in and casteth occasiōs of falling from without too the entēt he may shake of fayth as he ouerthrew Dauid Wherefore let euery of vs with singular care earnestnesse héede and diligence endeuer to profit let vs with harty request pray dayly vntoo God to rule vs with his holy spirit let vs shun the dangers and occasions of back slydings let vs flée leud company let vs loue stayednesse let vs take vppon vs certein profitable labors exercises of godly discipline and let vs beare in mynd this saying In the way of the Lord not too go foreward is too go backeward The second part THis is the wil of God euen your holynesse that yee should absteyne from fornication Among the testimonies that are the markes of the true church of God and that put a difference betwéene it and Heathenish and vngodly routes a notable and manifest signe is the true doctrine concerning chastitie and the vndefiled bond of wedlocke which is reteyned only in the church of god All nations else haue openly set looce not only whoredom or fornication but all other more horrible and vnspeakable lusts In Asia and Affrike euen at this day the sect of Mahomet practyseth incestuous confusions without punishment In Europe the Popishe faction vnder the false pretence of Religion hathe forbidden a great number of men too marrye whereas Paule notwithstanding hath sayde before in expresse woordes that it is the Doctrine of Diuels too forbid mariage Forasmuch then as in our Churches the lawes of Chastitie and wedlocke are by the benefite of God reteyned and maynteyned truely and soundly wée may assure our selues euen by this signe that wée may the more certeinly warrant our selues to bée the Citizens of the true Churche of God. The cause also why Paule in this place vrgeth so sore this commaundement concerning Chastitie and eschewing the lustes and vices encountering it is for that at Thessalonica like as at Ephesus and Corinth and other Heathen cities and famous mart townes to which great multitudes of men were woont to flocke togither from all Nations there was chéefly great confusion of lustes and vnbrydled libertie of all vyces which ryotousnesse and welth bréedeth Paule therfore both in this place and .j. Cor. vj. Ephes v. teacheth that wandering lustes are not things indifferent neyther that there is any libertie graunted in the Gospell eyther of lustfull likings or of craftynesse in bargeyning but that they are prohibited most straightly by the commaundemēt of God and are most sharply punished by God the iust iudge and reuenger For this is the euerlasting vnchaungeable will of God sayeth Paule euen your holynesse which is in the true acknowledgemēt of God that yée should kéepe your selues cleane both in body and soule according to Gods wil and absteyne from al fornication and all concupiscences forbidden by god and whither it bée in single lyfe or in the lawfull bond of wedlocke euery man to possesse his vessell that is too say his bodye which is the dwelling place of the chaste and holy spirit of God in holynesse
dayes but in all our whole lyfe and in our dayly prayers Yea and at all tymes there hath bin sacrifysing in the world euen among the Heathen not only of beasts but also of men as Calchas Alexander lulian the Frenchemen at their passing ouer Po and others slew men and offered them in sacrifise These customes were borowed out of the church of the Fathers which had spred abrode the doctrine concerning the sacrifysing of the man Chryst that was too come and of euill zeale in coūterfetting the example of Abraham And here vntoo were added superstitious opinions that God was pacifyed and made at tone with vs for the preciousnesse and woorthynesse of the sacrifyses But in deed there is but one only sacrifyse of Chryste that reconcyleth too God the merit and recompence whereof pacifyeth Gods displeasure of whiche the other sacrifyses of the Fathers and of the Leuits were but shadowes The second place PAule therfore in this Epistle compareth the figuratiue préesthod of the Leuits with the préesthod of Chryste And before in the vij chapter he rehersed eyght differences which I haue expounded in another place In this dayes lesson are reckened vp foure differēces betwéene the sacrifyse of Christ and the Leuiticall sacrifyses of which the chéefest is First Chryst being a hygh préest of good things too come or of eternall good things that is too wit of blissing and deliuerance from sinne which the Fathers by their sacrifyses witnessed themselues too looke for found euerlasting redemption that is too say deliuerance from sinne frō gods wrath and from euerlasting death and attonement with God and clenzing of the conscience from dead woorkes that is to say from sinnes for which wée are subiect too death and also the frée giuing of the heritage that was promised But the Leuiticall préests by their sacrifysing of Cattel of Calues and of Gotes deserue not eternal redēption but only are figures of the true préest Chryst and make men holy only concerning the outward clennesse of the flesh Secondly Chryst offered but once only and but one sacrifyse by which he purged all sinnes of the whole world But the Leuiticall préests offer sacrifyses dayly and enter intoo the holy of holyes euery yéere and can not deliuer those from sinne for whom they offer as is sayd more at large in the beginning of the .x. chapter Thirdly Chryste is entered in by his owne bludshed or hath purged the sinnes of all men by his owne bludshed as is sayd .j. Iohn .j. The blud of Chryste clenzeth vs quite from all sinfulnesse But the Leuitical préestes sprinkle the altar with the bloud of Calues and Gotes whiche purgeth not sinnes but all the bludsheds of beasts in the Leuiticall sacrifises were only figures of Christs bludshed by which only the church is redéemed as in Act. xx Ephe. j. Col. j. j. Iohn j. Rom. v. and elswhere is written Fourthly the Leuiticall préests when they should make sacrifise entered yéerly intoo the holy place or temple made with mannes hand But Chryste is entered euen intoo heauen that is too say intoo the syght of GOD and is priuie too Gods secret purpose concerning mannes redemption Vppon Palmes Sunday ¶ The Epistle Philip. ij LET the same mynd bee in you that was also in Chryste Iesu whiche when he was in the shape of God thought it no robbery too bee equall with God neuerthelesse he made him self of no reputation taking on him the shape of a seruaunt and became lyke vntoo man and was found in his apparell as a man He humbled himself and became obedient too the death euen the death of the crosse Wherefore God hath also exalted him on hygh and gyuen him a name whiche is aboue all names that in the name of IESVS euery knee should bowe both of things in heauen and things in earth and things vnder the earthe and that all tongues should confesse that Iesus Chryste is the Lorde vntoo the prayse of God the Father The disposement THis Epistle is of that kynd that is persuasiue For it is an Exhortation too lowlynesse or humilitie taken of the examples and rewardes of Chrystes humilitie The places of doctrine are these 1 A notable witnesse of the twoo natures in Chryst very God and very man to bée ioyned too the rest which are gathered toogither in the place concerning the sonne of God. 2 Of Chrysts passion and death 3 Of the aduauncement or glorie of Christ reigning 4 Of humilitie or lowlynesse The text of the Epistle THe ground of the exhortation whiche Paule purposeth is set downe next before the woordes of this dayes Epistle Let euery one of you through lowlynesse think another man better than himself Bée lowly Too this proposition he addeth a reason grounded vppon the example of Chryst Let the same mynde bée in you that was in Iesu Chryst that is too say Let there bée true lowlynesse of mynd in you as was in Chryste who being in the shape of God that is too say being God in verye déed and by nature did notwithstanding abace himselfe before the eternall Father beneath all Angels and men Who being in the shape of God that is too say in the nature and substance of god For the Gréeke woord Morphe signifieth a substātiall shape or expresse and personal image and not a proportion figure or counterfet wauing before ones eyes This therfore is the méening Chryste when as he was in the shape of God that is when as he was in déed and by nature God or whereas he was the shape and lyuely ymage of God the father begotten of the substance of the father and equall too God the father in power maiestie and glorie Thought it no robberie too bee equall with God. The Gréeke phrase is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is too cōmit robberie Like as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too make a passage or too passe So like wise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too count it robberie that is too say too robbe So is there a very like phrase Heb. x. Treading the sonne of God vnder foote and accounting the blud of his Testament vnholy that is too say dishonouring it The méening therfore is He thought it no robberie too bée equall with God that is too say He vsurped not equalitie with god In this his calling when it was decréed that the sonne should béecōme a sacrifyse and obey God in suffering death he vsed not his power ageinst his calling nor was proud or haultye for this his equalitie of the Godhead whiche he vsurped not ne possessed too the wrong and dishonour of the other but obteyned it by birth as a good thing of nature But humbled him self that is too say he exercysed not his godly power but humbled and abased himself in such wyse as he tooke vppon him ▪ the shape of a seruaunt that is too say the substantiall shape of man or the verye nature of man bodye and soule He is termed a seruaunt
a more sore and heynous name of singular and prepensed malice and of desyre too doo harme which euen delyghteth in wickednesse too whom it is euen meate and drink too doo another man displeasure and to hurt him wickedly as in Nero Diocletian and Iulian c. But with the sweete breade of purenesse and truthe that is too say with the pure doctrine concerning God and with pure acknowledgement and confession of the doctrine and with true faith true feare of God true inuocation true and vnfeyned loue of God and ones neyghbour thankesgiuing and continuall obedience which is not counterfet nor hypocritish but voyd of craft guyle and leude lustes pure and true And so dooth Paule in these twoo woordes purenesse and truthe comprehend the whole lyfe of a Christen man and all the duties of godlynesse or all vertues Vppon the second and third holydayes in Easter weeke ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. xv BRethren as parteyning too the Gospell which I preached vntoo you which yee haue also accepted and in the which yee continue by the which also yee are saued I doo you too wyt after what maner I preached vntoo you if ye kepe it except yee haue beleeued in vaine For first of all I haue deliuered vnto you that which I receyued how that Chryst died for our sinnes agreeing too the scriptures and that he was buried and that he rose ageine the third day according too the scriptures and that he was seene of Cephas then of the twelue After that he was seen of mo than fiue hundred brethrē at once of which many remaine vntoo this day and many are fallen a sleepe After that appeared hee too Iames then too all the Apostles And last of all he was seen of mee as one that was born out of due time For I am the least of the Apostles which am not worthy too bee called an Apostle bicause I persecuted the cōgregation of god But by the grace of God I am that I am And his grace which is in mee was not in vaine but I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the grace of God which is with mee Therfore whether it were I or they so wee preach and so haue yee beleeued If Chryst bee preached how that hee rose from the deade how say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead If there be no rising agein of the dead then is Chryst not risen If Chryst bee not risen then is our preaching vaine and your faith is also in vain yea and wee are found also false witnesses of god For wee haue testified of God how that he raysed vp Chryst whom hee raised not vp if it bee so that the dead rise not ageine For if the dead rise not agein then is Chryst not risen agein If it bee so that Chryst rose not then is your faith in vain and yet are yee in your sinnes Therfore they which are fallē a sleep in Christ are perished If in this lyfe onely wee beleeue on Chryst then are wee of all men the myserablest But now is Chryst rysen from the dead and is become the first fruites of thē that sleep For by a man came death and by a man came the Resurrection of the deade For as by Adam all die euen so by Chryst shal all bee made alyue and euery man in his owne order The first is Chryst then they that are Chrystes at his comming Then cometh the ende when he hath deliuered vp the kingdome too God the father when hee hath put downe all rule authoritie and power For he must raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feete The last enemie that shall be destroyed is death For he hath put all thinges vnder his feete But when he saith all things are put vnder him it is manifest that he is excepted which did put all things vnder him When all things are subdued vnto him then shall the sōne also him selfe be subiect vntoo him that did put all things vnder him that God may be all in all things Els what do they whiche are baptised ouer the dead if the dead rise not at all Why are they then baptised ouer the dead Yea and why stand we in in ieoperdy euery houre Be my reioysyng which I haue in Chryst Iesu our Lord I die dayly That I haue fought with beastes at Ephesus after the maner of men what auantageth it me if the deade ryse not ageine Let vs eate and drinke For to morow we shall dye Be not deceiued euyll speakings corrupt good manners Awake truly out of sleepe and sinne not For some haue not the knowledge of God I speake this too youre rebuke But some man will say howe aryse the deade with what body come they Thou foole that whiche thou sowest is not quickned excepte it dye And what sowest thou Thou sowest not that body that shall bee but bare corne I meane eyther of wheate or of some other and GOD giueth it a body at his pleasure to euery seede his owne body All flesh is not one manner of fleshe but there is one manner flesh of men another manner fleshe of Beastes another manner flesh of fyshes another of byrdes There are also celestiall bodyes and there are bodies terrestrial But the glory of the celestiall is one and the glorye of the terrestriall is an other there is one maner glory of the Sunne and an other of the Moone and an other glory of the Starres For one Starre differeth from another in glory So is the resurrection of the dead It is sowen in corruption and ryseth in incorruption It is sown in dishonor and ryseth in glory It is sowen in weakenesse riseth in power It is sown in a natural body riseth a spirituall body There is a naturall body and there is a spyrituall bodye as it is also wrytten the first man Adam was made alyuing soule and the last Adam was made a quickenynge spiryte Howbeit that is not first which is spirituall but that vvhiche is naturall and then that vvhiche is spirituall The first man is of the earthe earthy the seconde man is the LORDE from heauen As is the earthy suche are they that are earthy And as is the heauenly suche are they that are heauenly And as wee haue borne the Image of the earthy so shall wee beare the image of the heauenly This say I brethren that flesh and bloud can not enherit the kingdome of god Neither doothe corruption inherite vncorruption Beholde I shewe you a mysterie Wee shall not all sleepe But wee shall all bee changed and that in a mooment in the twinckelyng of an eye at the sounde of the laste trumpe For the trumpe shall blow and the deade shall ryse incorruptible and wee shall bee chaunged For thys corruptible muste put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortalitie When this corruptible hath put on incorruption and this mortall hath put on immortalitie then shall bee brought too passe the saying
Also there bee heauenly bodyes and there bee earthly bodyes that is too say there shall bée a difference betwéene the bodyes of the godly and the bodyes of the vngodly There is one glorie of the Sunne and another glorie of the Moone and another glorie of the starres y is to say euē amōg the godly and the Saincts in heauen there shall bée a differente of glorie For like as one Starre excelleth another in bryghtnesse so shall Chryst the Prophetes Apostles and other constant Martyrs and acknowledgers of the sonne of God shyne bryghter than the other common sort of the godly as is sayd Dan. xij Then shall the lerned shyne like the bryghtnesse of heauen and those that haue instructed many in ryghtuousnesse shall shyne like the Starres for euer and euer Then declareth he by foure Iscolies set one ageinst another what maner of bodyes the bodyes of them that ryse agein shalbée verely euen the selfsame that they bée at their buriall as touching their substāce but immortal made bright and glorified Wherein the phrase of Paules wryting is too bée considered how the nowne adiectiue in forme of a substantiue is ioyned too the subiect by the preposition In. It is sowen in corruption that is too say it is buried in the ground a mortall or corruptible bodye ▪ It ryseth in incorruption that is too say it ryseth an incorruptible or immortall bodye It is sowen in dishonour that is too say a foule or ylfauoured bodye stinking and crawling full of wormes It ryseth in glorie that is too say glorious shyning cléered and pure from all blemish It is sowen in weaknesse that is too say weake frayle transitorie of a dayes continaunce a shadowe a froth a Ghoste a steme a blast a fether a breth a puffe a dreame a bubble a flud a temple a strydey a wynd a dust It ryseth in power that is too say myghtie strong florisshing and frée from all infirmitie It is sowen a natural body that is too say liuing the naturall lyfe by reason sense and nourishing power which is susteyned with meat and drink and is encreased and begetteth and may dye It ryseth a spirituall body that is too say liuing the spirituall lyfe kindled by the holy Ghoste which is not maynteyned with meate drink ne begetteth ne dyeth but is like the lyfe of the Angels Math. xxij and like the lyfe of God. The first man was made a liuing soule Gen. ij That is too wit not simply as the beastes liue but such a one as Chryst should also with his spirit quicken without meat and drink too the spirituall and euerlasting lyfe The first man is of the earth earthly Hée alludeth too the originall of the woord Adam which signifyeth earth or clay whereof he was made like as also among the Latines man is called Homo of Humus which signifyeth the earth as if he had sayd made of the earth clay and earthly The second man is the Lord from heauen Chryste being risen from Death hath now a heauenly immortall and glorious body too which our bodies shall in all respectes bée like and conformable when they are raised ageine from Death Phil. ij Like as before Death they were altoogither like Adams body which was subiect too Death and other miseries Flesh and blud cannot inherite the kingdom of God that is too say this corruptible body defiled with sinfull inclinations and fleshly affections and subiect too death cannot possesse the kingdome of God vnlesse it bée altered of a body mortall defyled and stained with sinne bée made a body pure and cleane and fined from all filthinesse immortal The same flesh that is buryed shal rise agein and the same substance of flesh and blud shall remaine still as Iob sayth I shal sée God in my self whom I my self shall sée and none other for mée For as Tertullian reasoneth plainly in his bóoke concerning the resurrection of the flesh God forbid that God should for euermore abandon too destruction mannes flesh which is the woorke of his handes the care of hart the case of his breth the Quéene of his woorkes the heire of his liberalitie the préest of his religion the souldyer of his warfare and the sister of his Chryst ▪ c. Behold I shew you a mysterie that is too say I will more plainly expoūd and declare that which I told you more darkly in my former woords when I sayd that flesh bloud shuld not possesse the kingdome of god For that saying is too hée vnderstood not of the substance of fleshe and bloud but of the exchaunge of their properties For it behoueth this corruptible body which wée now beare about vs too put on incorruption and this selfsame mortal body too put on immortalitie before it can obtein possession of Gods kingdom Some also shall not die at all whom the sonne of God shal find aliue at his comming too iudgement but they shalbée sodeinly changed endued with new lyght glory power immortalitie The third part of the Chapter THen shal the saying be fulfilled which is written Esay xxv Osee xiij Death is swallowed vp intoo victorie O Death where is thy sting O Hell where is thy victorie The sting of Death is sin and the strength of sin is the law But thanks bee to God who hath giuen vs victorie by our Lord Iesus Chryst The efficient cause of the raysing of our bodyes and of restoremēt of ryghtuousnesse and euerlasting lyfe is the sonne of God our Lord Iesus Chryst who in his Death hath swalowed vp our Death and by his ryghtuousnesse obedience hath purged our sinnes and pacifying Gods wrath taking away the curse of the law hath gottē vs victorie ageinst sin death and the curse of Gods law For these thrée are the cruellest enemies of mankynd and the chéef mischeues plages which moost cruelly and féersly make hauock of all mankind without difference killing them and deuouring them euerychone Therfore Paul in this place by feining a person peinteth out death like a most mischeuous outlaw or cruell souldier armed with a pike or a darte that is too wit with sinne wherwith he assaileth all mankind without gainsaying and pusheth all men through and killeth them For by reason of sin all men are subiect too death and are slaine by death as is sayd Rom. v. By one man sinne entered intoo the world and by sinne death And so death ran ouer al men bicause al men haue sinne Also sinne reigned by death slaying all men The very same is the méening of the woords in this text the sting of Death is sinne that is too say all men are slaine by Death bycause of sinne Now when this sting or speare of Death wexeth dul and blunt so as sin cannot execute his ful force vppon vs and bée felt Gods law like a whetstone sharpneth sin and both sheweth the greatnesse and horriblenesse of sin and also maketh it more
read He shall ouerthrow death for euermore But wée may most safely folow Paules translation The other place is in Osee xiij I Will redeeme them from the hand of hel I wil deliuer them from Death where are thy plages O Death wher is thy destruction O hell Oseas also preacheth of this most souerein benefite of the sonne of God that although his Church in this world bée oppressed with manyfold persecution and miseries as well as the rest of men that are vngodly yet will he vndoutedly deliuer it from Death and out of the very iawes of hell and wil endue it with new lyfe and euerlasting ioyfulnesse For the Hebrue woord Scheol ▪ which vsually they translate hel dooth properly signifie the graue wherin the bodyes of deade folkes are bestowed also the place in which mennes soules departing from their bodyes are reserued till the last iudgement day The Prophet therfore promiseth deliuerance too the godly members of the church not that they shalbée priuiledged in this lyfe from all miseries and from death it selfe but that when they are dispatched out of this lyfe and buryed in their graues euen then he willeth them too looke for assured deliuerance or resurrection a much better life which shall continue for euer bicause Death which héertoofore was the plage and destruction of all mankynd and deuoured al men is now ageine deuoured and swalowed by Chryst our redéemer who paying the full pryce or raunsome for vs hathe borowed vs out for so doo the Hebrew woordes Pada and Gaal signifie which the Prophet vseth in this place And as touching the woordes that ensue which Hierom hathe translated thus Ero mors tua ô Mors Ero morsus tuus ô Inferne That is too say O Death I will bée thy Death O hell I will bée thy sting and which Paule hath expressed by an Interrogation O Death where is thy sting O Hell where is thy victorie It is euident that the diuersitie of the interpretations ryseth of the Hebrew woordes which haue many significations For the woord Ehe and the future tence Cal is of the verb Haiah by Apocape which is a figure that taketh away a letter or a sillable from the end of a woord for the whole woord is Ehieh I will bée And so is the aduerbe where which also by transposition of letters is red Aieh It appéereth therfore why Paule and the .lxx. Interpreters and Aquila of Sinope and the fifth edition all which Ierom citeth haue translated the woord Ehe where and not I will bee Where is thy inditement or accusation The woorde following Deuareca which S. Ierome translateth Mors tua thy Death the thrée score and ten Interpreters translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy accusation or inditement and Aquila sermones tui thy sayings is likewyse of many significations For the woord Dibber signifyeth too speake and also too kill or destroy ij Reg. xxij Athalia Dedabber slew all the kings stocke Héeruppon Deber is as muche too say as a plage a murreine or a destruction Exod. ix ij Reg. vlt. iij. Reg. viij And the other word Keleb in the part folowing is almost of the same signification for it signifieth a wasting plage or destruction and rooting out As in the Psalme xcj. Thou shalt not bee afrayd of Deber the plage that rageth in the darke nor of Keleb the destruction that wasteth at the noone day Where wée in our Latin translation haue A negocio perambulante in tenebris ab incursu a Daemonio Meridiano Which is of the businesse walking in the darke of the sodein rushing in and of the Diuel of the noone day Therfore the proper méening of Osée is out of all dout this Where are thy plages O death where is thy rooting out O hell Death and Hell did héeretoofore bring plage and vtter destruction vppon all men through sinne wherewith all mankynd is horribly atteinted and appaired And then cheefly is this plage felt then dooth it shewe it self then dooth it strike a man intoo horrible fearfulnesse and sorowes which are the enterances intoo euerlasting Death when sinne is stirred vp and rowzed by the lawe of God as Paule sayeth Rom. vij But Chryste by his death and gooing downe intoo hell hath brought a plage and destruction vppon deathe and hell So that from hence foorth not only Chryst himselfe but also all the godly that beléeue in Chryst may vaunt themselues ouer vanquished Death and destroyed Hel with these woordes Death vvhere is thy plage or sting wherwith thou haste heretofore murdered all mankynd Hell where is thy victorie whereby thou hast vanquished all men Thankes bée vntoo God who hath giuen vs victorie by our Lord Iesus Chryst for God so loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne too the entēt that all that beleeue in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting For like as Moyses lifted vp the serpent in the wildernesse so behoued it the sonne of man too bee exalted too the intent that all that beléeue in him should not perish but haue lyfe euerlasting Therfore my deerbeloued brethren bee stedfast vnmouable and alwayes abounding in the woork of the Lord knowing that your labour is not in vayne in the Lord. He concludeth his disputation with a short Exhortation that they should stedfastly hold them too the true doctrine cōcerning the Resurrection of the dead and the other Articles of the Christen fayth which they had receyued of Paule and not suffer themselues too bée drawen away from it by any likely persuasions of the false Apostles but endeuer too profit in true godlynesse and full assurednesse of fayth and the spreading abrode of the true doctrine and in executing the residue of the labours of their vocation vpon trust of Gods helpe and hope of luckye successe and such as may bée too the welfare of the Churche according too this most swéete promise Your labour shall not bee in vayne in the Lord. Vppon the Sunday called Quasi modo geniti or the first Sunday after Easter IT tooke this name of the Introit taken out of j. Pet. ij As newborne babes desyre the reasonable and pure milke that you may growe in it if so bée you haue tasted that the Lord is swéete For in the auncient Churche when in manner men growen were baptized it was a custome too baptize on the Easter holydayes and too giue milke to taste too those that were baptized and a whyte garment too put on whiche was a token of freedome and innocencie Whereuppon the wéeke is called yet still in Albis and the Sunday is called the Sunday in Albis or whyte Sunday and it is that which foloweth next after Easter And the verses out of the hymne Salue festa dies are knowen Behold o holy King great part of thy renowne is seene When sacred baptim doth aduāce the soules by thee made cleene Thy souldiers from the siluer streame come pure and whyte of hew Cleane washed from
neither was there guile founde in hys mouth which when he was reuiled reuiled not ageine when he suffered he threatned not but committed the vengeance too him that iudgeth ryghteously which his owne selfe bare our sinnes in his bodye on the tree that wee beeing deliuered from sinne should liue vntoo ryghteousnesse By whose stripes yee were healed For ye were as sheepe going astray but are now turned vnto the shepheard and Bishop of your soules The disposement THe state of it is an exhortacion to patience and méeknesse taken of the example of Christ who was patient méek And therwithall is annexed a doctrine concerning the merit and benefites of Chrystes passion The ch●ef places are four 1 Of patience in troubles which are not procured by a mannes owne fault but happen too him vndeserued It belongeth too the first commaundement 2 Of méekenesse repressing desire of reuenge forgiuing euen open wrongs for Gods sake the common quietnesse Which perteyneth too the fifth commandemēt 3 Of the causes and effects of Christes passion or of remission of sinnes and of the health of our soules restored by Chrystes passion 4 Of true turning vntoo God. The first place COncerning patience and méeknesse and putting vp of reproches quietly let the Methodicall or orderly expositiōs bée rehersed out of the declaration of the vertues of the first fifth and eigth commaundements Concerning the passion of our Lord Iesus Christ and the causes and effectes of his passion which is the chéefe place of this Epistle I haue intreated already the last Sunday after Easter Now therefore wée wil vnfold the last sentence of the Epistle of this day which conteineth the Doctrine concerning true conuersion and the right applyment of the benefites of Chrystes passion Yee were as stray sheep but now ye are turned to the shepherd and bishop of your soules These woords are taken out of the .liij. of Esay and out of the parable of Christ concerning the lost shéep Lu. xv and out of this dayes Gospell Iohn x. and out of Ezech. xxxiiij and out of Psalm xxiij and therfore by conferring these places toogither there may bée gathered a cléere proposition All man kynd without Christ wandreth in the thick mist of ignorance of God and in sorowfull darknesse of sinne and death And the wyser and more religious that men bee and with how much the more earnestnesse and endeuer they goe about too know God and too woorship him aryght so muche the more doo they stray aside from the true God and true godlynesse and from the ryghtuousnesse which pleaseth God. The heathen wysemen Philosophers Poets and the folowers of Mahomet doo openly erre first about the béeing of god For either they alow and woorship a monstrous multitude of Gods surmised powers or at leastwise they deny him y is the father of our Lord Iesus Chryst too bee the only true God creator of heauen earth Yea they vtterly abhor this sonne of God who is all one substance with the father Secondly they erre about the will of god For although they vnderstād after a sort that the wil of God reueled in his law is this that wée should liue honestly and vprightly eschue the outward offences of slaughter whordom c. yet are they able too determine nothing of certeintie cōcerning gods loue towards vs cōcerning remission of sinnes concerning life without the gospel of Christ After al this not only they but also euen those that boast themselues to be the chéef mēbers of the true church doo erre manifoldly in dooing seruice to God and specially in praying while some chuse the monkish seruices woorks some pilgrimages to Sainctes some masses some pardōs some other sacrifices some one woork and some another euery man according too his owne fansie trusting therby too pacifie God too earne life and saluation euerlasting The heathen also offred mē in sacrifise burned their own children in the fire to the intent by so hard bitter a woork to open to thēselues a néerer accesse vnto god But al these run very far a stray from the true way that leadeth too the true God to eternal saluation Neither cā they by their own power deuises or endeuer return agein into the way onlesse Chryst the shepherd and Bishop of soules séeke them out and laying them vpon his shoulders cary them home too his flocke and shéepfold that is too say onlesse they bée turned too Christ who only is the way that leadeth bringeth conueyeth vs vntoo God and by which alonly wée may come too the true acknowledgement and woorshipping of God and too the blissed and eternal company with god He is the truth or the welspring founder of the true doctrine concerning God and our own soulhealth he bendeth our minds to giue assēt too the true doctrine and kindleth true faith and true euerlasting good things in the hartes of the godly He is Lyfe that is too say the author and giuer of lyfe and saluacion euerlasting who by his Death hath pacified Gods wrathe and restored ryghtuousnesse and eternall lyfe vntoo vs Neyther commeth any man too the father that is too say No man acknowledgeth calleth vppon woorshippeth God aryght ne becommeth heire of saluation and eternall lyfe onlesse he bée turned by him and too him who is the shepherd and Bishop of our soules Therfore the Hebrewes terme repentance or the amēdment and chaunging of a wicked lyfe intoo a lyfe that is vertuous and acceptable too God by the notable pithy woord T●s●ubah which signifieth turning backe or retyring of the original woord Shub which is as much too say as he is returned he is come backe he hath called himselfe home For all men being turned from God haue strayed like shéepe euery man away by himselfe as Peter sayeth in this place But by the infinite mercye of God they are called too repentaunce that they should returne vntoo God and by comming home too their shepherd Chryst bée coupled too God ageine through Faith and obey him in new lyght ryghtuousnesse and conuersation In generall there bée twoo chéefe poyntes belonging too a good shepherd The one is to féed his shéep or too lead them too wholsome féeding and the other is to defend them from the wolues For vntoo these twoo poyntes may the other things be referred which are spoken of in Ezech. xxxiiij Psal xxiij So good Princes which maintein their subiects in honest awe peace and foyzon the cheefest benefites in this ciuil societie of men and which defend them ageinst outlawes and forrein enemies are shepherds of the people Good and faithfull Bishops or ministers of Churches are shepherdes which lead their hearers intoo wholsom pastures of the Euangelicall doctrine and of the Sacraments wherby God imparteth remissiō of sinnes ryghtuousnesse euerlasting saluation to the shéep that embrace their voyce by faith and driue away the Woolues that
firste place THere haue bene greate disputacions and controuersies at all times both in the Churche and among the Heathen concerning this question which of al others is of greatest weyght how men may be iustified afore God or by what meanes men may atteyne forgiuenesse of sinnes and euerlasting saluation Diuers haue dreamed that they might pacifie Gods displeasure and obteyne his fauour and endlesse blisse by certeine Ceremonies and sacrifises Many haue beléeued that they should be rightuouse and blissed before God by their honest behauiour in outward conuersation or by shunning outward offences and by dooing good workes Some againe haue imagined that they should become righteouse by vertues poured intoo them and some by rauishements and inspirations and other some by other meanes But Peter in short sentēce compriseth a moste learned discussemēt of this controuersie and a summe of all the whole doctrine concerning iustification in this place when he sayeth All the Prophetes beare witnesse vntoo Christe that euery one which beleeueth in him receyueth remission of sinnes by his name Now that the largenesse of the doctrine conteyned in this short sentence may in some sorte bée considered and vnderstood I will expound the woordes in order First of all therfore least any man might doute of the certeintie of this doctrine Peter alledged the authoritie of the Synode or generall determination of all the Prophetes and Apostles and the consente of the vniuersall Church which now also may bée set against our aduersaries when they yell out that they are the church of God and that they follow the consent of the Churche And we may know that one self same doctrine concerning rightuousnesse or remission of sinnes too bée giuen fréely for Christ our mediatours sake was alwayes preached in the church of the Fathers and the Prophetes and that for the same cause chéefly God raysed vp Prophetes that they should bée witnesses interpreters of the promise according as the testimonies of Moyses the rest of the Prophetes did shew Iohn v. If ye beléeued Moyses yée would beleue me for he hath written of me Ge. iiij xxij Heb. xj By fayth Abel offered a better sacrifice than Cain by whiche he was pronounced rightuouse by the witnesse of god Gen. xij xxij Gal. iij. In thy seede shall all nations bée blissed not in séedes as in many but in thy séede as in one whiche is Christe Genesis xv Abraham beleéeued God he was accoūted rightuous Deut. xviij The Lord shal raise you vp a prophet hear him Psa xxxij Blissed ar they whose sins are forgiuē Esa. xliij I am he that wipeth out thine iniquities for mine own sake I wil not remēber thy sins any more Ier. xxxij xxxiij The Lord is our rightuousnesse Dan. ix Hear vs for the lords sake Also euerlasting rightuousnesse shal bée brought in c. Rom. j. The Gospel which the Lord promised by his Prophets c. Secondly he defineth mans rightuousnesse before God to be forgiuenesse of sinnes giuen fréely for Christs sake and that too bee iustified is the same thing that to receyue remissiō of sinnes or too be acquit and set frée from sin as Paul sayth Act. xiij Through Christ is remission of sinnes preched vnto vs by him is euery one that beléeueth iustified from al things frō which ye could not bée iustified by the law of Moyses Also Ps. xxxj Blissed are they whose iniquities are released whose sins are couered Blissed is the mā to whom y Lord imputeth not sin Then is not the rightuousnes wherby the sinfull mā is reputed iust before god a qualitie or vertue in our selues nor the essētial rightuousnes of god but a relatiō or imputaciō wherthrough we ar acquit reputed rightuous for Christs sake Now let vs consider how great a benefit is the remission of sins which Christ bringeth For what should it profite a man though he wan the whole world if he lost his own soule Thirdly he expresseth the efficient forcing cause of Iustification when he sayeth that wée receyue forgiuenesse of sinnes by his name that is to say not for our own sorowfulnesse for our owne vertues for moonkish merites for Masses or other woorkes This Antithesis or matching of contraries this exclusiue or disbarring is to bée fastned in mens mindes with great héede to the intent the honorable title of redéemer Iustifier which is due only to the sonne of God our Lord Iesu Christe may be giuen vnto him and that the consciences which are throwen downe may haue assured and stedy comfort too hold by Fourthly let the vniuersall part of spéeche which teacheth that God in is very déede vpright to all men be set ageinst the tēptacion of particularitie And let such like sayings be ioyned with it as shew y al which repēt not ar reiected of God togither that on y cōtrary side all that resort vnto Christ do assuredly obtein remissiō of sins j. Ti. ij God wil haue al mē saued Io. 3. So god loued the world that he gaue his only begottē son to the intēt that euery one which beleueth in him shuld not perish but haue life euerlasting He that beleueth not in the son the wrath of God shal abide vpon him Fifthly the instrument or meane wherby we may acknowledge Christes person benefites both receyue apply to our selues the forgiuenesse of sinnes offred to vs by him is only faith according as Peter saith here that euery one which beleeueth in him Now to beleue on the sonne of God is first to acknowledge aright the person benefits of Christ crucified raysed agein for vs that he is verely by nature God the sauiour promised by the Prophetes pacifying God giuing peace rightuousnesse saluacion euerlasting to those that beleue Secondly to assent to al the whole doctrine deliuered vs by Christ or with a stedy assent to embrace al the articles of the Christen faith among the rest this also I beleue remission of sins to be giuē me freely for Christs sake Thirdly it is to rest vpon Christ the Mediator with stedfast trust to assure a mās self for a certeintie that his sins are forgiuen him for Christes sake that he is in Gods fauor that God accepteth him heereth him receyueth him to euerlasting life for Christs sake who hath suffered and is risen ageine for vs and not for our owne vertues or good workes Sixthly let the obiect of faith y sum of y who le Gospel which is lernedly bréefly cōprehended in this sermon of Peters be cōsidered For he saith that God by his word hath brought tidings of peace through Christ who is lord of al. First therefore he comprehendeth the doctrine concerning the person of Christ in the word Lord namely that he is Iehoua in very déede and by nature God the maker and Lord of Heauen and earth of all thinges that are in them as
it is sayd I am the Lord and this is my name I will not giue my glorie too an other Now the name of Iehoua is attributed too Christ in Iere. xxiij xxxiij Dan. ix Num. xxj Therfore Christ is verely by nature God. Againe he cōprehendeth a summe of the doctrine concerning these twoo woordes Remission of sinnes and peace purchased by Christ Wherin hée méeneth not bodyly and worldly peace but the appeasement of Gods wrath against our sinnes attonement with God quietnesse and ioy of conscience in all aduersities and in death and lastly desire too mainteyne outward concord and peace Thirdly that faith is not only a bare knowledge of the persone and benefites of Christ but also a trust settled in Christ it appeareth openly be this phrase All that beleeue in him For it is well doone in the schooles that they make this distinction in the maner of spéeches folowing that too beléeue of God is to beléeue him too bée to beléeue God is to giue credit too him and to beléeue his woorde and to beléeue in God is to trust in him too stay vppon him and too repose the whole hope of our saluation in him These six places conteyned in this notable sentence of Peter To him doo all the Prophetes beare witnesse c. Let the studiouse sorte consider and ioyne thereuntoo a summe of the doctrine concerning the Iustifying of man before God out of the writinges that comprehended the substaunce of the Christen doctrine Vppon Trinity Sunday The Epistle Rom. xj O The deepenesse of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God how vnsercheable are his iudgementes and his wayes past finding out for who hath knowen the minde of the Lorde or who hath bin of counsell with him Eyther who hathe giuen vntoo him first and he shall bee recompenced ageine For of him and through him and in him are all things Too him bee glory for euer Amen The disposement of this Sermon concerning the Trinitie THe first and chéefe care of all men ought too bée too knowe God aryght too call vpon him and too set foorth his praise For too that end chéefly wer they created and redéemed by the sonne Neither is there any other higher or greater wisdom than the true knowledge and woorshipping of God which bringeth most assured cōfort in all tribulations and gouernment of lyfe in greatest affaires and saluation glory euerlasting both of body and soule Now forasmuch as vpon this day the Doctrine concerning the vnitie of the béeing of the Godhead and the Trinitie of the persons is woont too bée set foorth in the Churches we wil distribute this dayes doctrine intoo three places 1 What God is 2 That there is but one God only 3 That there are thrée persons in the one being or in the one substance of the Godhead the father the sonne the holy ghost and of either of their properties and differences First what God is GOd wil haue his béeing and wil knowne too mē this only one way according as he hath manifested himselfe in his church by the certen woord that is to wit by the law and the gospel the notable records deliuered by Chryst the prophets Apostles And there is very great ods in the difference béetwéen the heathenish knowing of God the christen For although the heathen by the natural lyght shed into their minds and by this most beautiful Theatre of natural things doo after a sort know God too bée a mynd euerlasting wyse well dooing iust the beholder of things and the iudger of mennes dooings too whom according too that lyght ingraffed in mens minds which discerneth honest dishonest things a sunder obedience is too bée performed yet haue they not knowne eyther the difference of the thrée persons or the will of God reueled in his gospel Yea and contrarie too this knowledge ingraffed in them by nature they allow the Idolatrous woorshipping of the monstrous multitude of Gods and bicause in the confusion of this present lyfe they sée the good ofte tymes in ill case the ill in good case they are ouerwhelmed eyther with Epicurish or with Academish doutfulnesse wherthrough al that religion of theirs is appalled and falleth too the ground But the summe of the Doctrine concerning the béeing of the Godhead which the vsuall description of God compriseth is this God is a béeing or substance spirituall vnderstanding euerlasting soothfast good ryghtuous mercifull chast most frée of infinite power and wisdome and another from the bodyes of the world The euerlasting Father who begate the Sonne his image from before all worlds and the Sonne the coeternall image of the Father and the holy Ghost procéeding from the Father and the Sonne According as the Godhead hath disclosed it selfe which toogither hath created and mainteyneth heauen and earth and all creatures and in mankynd gathereth too it selfe a Churche too the intent that by the same this one and true Godhed which is manifested by assured testimonies and by the woorde deliuered too the Prophets and Apostles may bée acknowledged and called vppon and glorifyed in the eternall lyfe This definition is compacted out of many recordes of Gods woord which may bée plenteously enlarged And it consisteth of foure members First it reckeneth vp in order the twelue properties peculiar too the béeing of god Secondly it reciteth the thrée persons the differences of them Thirdly it declareth the operations of God and his creation preseruation of all things And fourthly it sheweth the chusing of his eternal church by which he wil be knowne magnified The second place THat there is but one God euen the soūder sort of the heathen being conuicted by demonstrations taken of the orderlynesse of causes in nature haue taught And woorthy of remembraunce are these sentences There is one God onely and there is none other God. Also there is but one God wyse mightie and there withall blissefull And ageine there must needes bee some one thing and that immortall whoo was the first mouer of all things and which preserueth them nowe in good gouernance The rule of many is not good let there bee but one gouernour Notwithstanding contrary too this opinion knowne too nature the Heathen men admitted an abhominable sorte of Gods which as Paul sayth truely an idoll is nothing in the world are not euerlasting Gods but eyther surmysed and vaine names or very féendes or else other things created by god Agein in the very church also the Manichées imagined twoo Gods bothe of them myghtie and eternall the one good and the cause of good in nature the other the cause of euil Ageinst these madnesses let this doctrine bée most firmly held that there is but one God almightie euerlasting good ryghtuous the iudge the maker and the preseruer of all things manifested in the Church by the sōne our Lord Iesus Christ sent among vs and by his Gospel deliuered too vs according too the sayings of
possiblenesse For whereas in troubles miseries mēs harts tremble through thoughtfulnesse for their deliuerance getting out agein for other things y may befal them afterward are tormented with fearfulnes sorow It is a very hard thing to be humbled vnder the mighty hand of God with a peaceable quiet mynd to obey gods wil without grudging or repining Peter therfore willeth vs to cast out of our mynds this thoughtfulnesse trēbling of hart distrusting in God with stedfast assurāce of hart to settle our selues vpon gods mercifulnesse fauor without trembling or fearfulnes in perils to lean vnto the sound rock Christ with a quiet gladsom hart not to step aside frō gods cōmādemēt the néedful duties of our calling for vncerten hope or fear of the falling out of things like as Moises stāding at the red sea Daniel when he shold be cast to the lions the Apostles preaching the gospel Luther in the time of the assembly at Auspurge and in the whole course of his cause did cast their care vppon the Lord and went manfully through with the works of their vocatiō Thesame thing doth Christ cōmand Math. vj. First seke y kingdom of God and be not thoughtful for to morow sufficiēt for the day is the trauel therof Of present things haue thou regarde Let God alone with afterward The second parte of the Epistle YOur aduersary the diuel goth about like a roring lion seeking whō he may deuour whom resist you sound in faith The diuel kepeth cōtinual vnproclaimed vnrecōcilable war ageinst the church euery godly persō whose destructiō he practiseth both of body soul by most traytrous crafts and vnmeasurable crueltie lyke a hungerstaruen Lyon. Therfore euery godly mā must like a good souldier stand continually in battell ray armed with the complet harnesse of God the descriptiō wherof must be borowed out of the sixth chapter of the Ephesians to set out this place of Peter There are fiue special kindes of policie wherwith Satan goeth about to assault men vnwares and too driue them intoo sinne and fallyngs and intoo eternall destruction and so too deuoure them First he puts intoo their mynds vngodly thoughts as Epicurish or Academicall doutes concerning the prouidence the certeintie of the doctrine and the soothfastnesse of the promises or threatnings of God or else he stirreth false opinions and errors in conceit wherby men are driuen to medle with vnnecessary or vnryghtuous matters in which they perysh Like as into the head of Iulian the renegate and of many other worldly wise men he dropped in Epicurishe doutes and contempt of religion And he prompted Samosetanns Arius and Fotinus with colourable and false opinions concerning the Sonne of God. Secondly in mens willes and harts he nourisheth and confirmeth the sinfull inclinations and affections of corrupted nature as carelesnesse and neglecting of Gods wrath and iudgement distrust in God pryde enuyousnesse lewd loue hatred slouthfulnesse c. Like as in Cain and Saule he encreased spytefulnesse and malice In Iudas couetousnesse In Paris the heats of lecherie In Tyberius dissimulation and cruelnesse In a scholer loytering and lazynesse c. Thirdly he trumpeth in theyr ways with enticementes occasions of fallings that is too wit agréeablenesse of persons and fitnesse of tymes and places which stirre vp the sinfull inclinations of Nature and minister easy and speedy way too offende as vnto scholers he offereth lewde company whereby they are often led away from applying continuing theyr studies into vitteling houses too feastes games gaddings too froo a nightes and other foule disorders When Dauid was ydle he set before him Bethsabée washing hirselfe And he egged ambitious Absolon foreward with hope of obteyning his Fathers kingdome Fourthly he endéeuereth to quench the fayth of most men by aduersities as by pouertie contempt diffamacions diseases banishmentes tormentes of body and all the persecutions that Tyrauntes and the worlde can deuise Of these kindes of policies chéefly doth Peter make mencion in this place he comforteth the godly both by the example of all the brotherhood in the world or of all the Church and the godly and also with the shorte continuaunce of theyr troubles specially with the helpe of God who vndershoreth hartneth strengthneth mens minds that they should not faint as it is sayd j. Cor. x. God is faithfull who suffereth vs not too bée tempted aboue our power but with the temptacion maketh a way out that wée may endure it Fifthly the Diuell weakeneth and ouerthroweth many mo with prosperitie fauour of Noble men wealthynesse proinotion ydlenesse pleasures c. For in prosperitie by little and little the regard of Gods displeasure and the feare of his iudgement ware faint and are quenched Wherefore when the feare of God whiche is as it were the kéeper of all the other vertues is remoued mennes mindes doo easly giue bridle too their sinful lustes and yeld to the Diuell who plyeth them with occasions of fallings as Dauid Salomon others without nūber haue falne in ydlenesse and prosperitie And these sayinges are well knowen prosperitie weakeneth the mindes euen of the wise Also ydlenesse bréedeth sinne Moreouer The sinne of sloth hath many a snare to snarle in those that carelesse are And ageyne When men bee voyd of greef and set vppon the mery pin Theyr harts opē the feend with plesant crafts creepesin Hitherto wée haue spoken of the maners of the temptacions or policies of Satan as shortly as might be Now let the godly thinke vppon the fortifications and armour wherewith too furnish our selues that wee may bée able to beware of the force craftes of Satan to disapoint thē The first of these is watchfulnesie which must ridde a mans minde of carefulnesse dulnesse and drouzynesse in neglecting the pollicies and power of Sathan persuade it selfe that the name of Diuell or feende is not a vayne scarbug or a painted viser but must aduisedly earnestly looke too the sleyghtes of him as of a most suttle and cruell enimy endeuer to withstād cut of the beginnings of his temptacions like as Ioseph with singular watchfulnesse had an eye to the diuel when he layd the bayt for his chastitie so withstoode the beginnings of his allurementes So in the first kinde of temptacions when the Diuell putteth into mens heads heauy blasphemons thoughts which tend eyther to the confirmation of Epicurish carelenesse or to the stablishmét of despaire the safest way is by and by at the beginning eyther by reading the woorde of God or by some maner of communication or play with a mans fréends whatsoeuer it bée to driue those troublesome thoughts out of his mind as much as may bée possible before they bée strengthened and take roote The second Many slyghtes of that Diuell many sinnes and backeslidings specially in the third kinde of temptacions may bée eschued by sobrietie
although he excelled Loth his brothers sonne both in age wisdome vertue and authoritie yet giueth he place too him adding this most sage saying I pray thée lette there bée no quarell betwéene thée and mée for wée are brothers Behold the whole land is before thée If thou choose the right hand I will take the lefte or if thou go to the left hand I wil goo too the right So Iacob humbled himself too his brother Esau Gen. xxxiij So Chryst the welspring of vnitie and mutuall loue abased himselfe beneath all men Phil. ij Through humilitie or lowlynesse let eche man think an other better than himselfe And let the same mynd bée in you that was in Chryst Iesu c. Oftentymes also there ryse debats and quarels vpon casting foorth of reprochefull termes of witlessenesse foolishnesse beggerlinesse and rascalnesse But like as the obiecting of such woordes springeth of pryde so dooth the cléering of a mannes selfe of them also Therefore they must bée vtterly vnregarded set light ▪ by and quietly put vp for the common peace sake The second is Meeknesse which represseth yrefulnesse and desirousenesse of reuenge euen when wée are able too defend our selues and too maynteyne sute As for example If thy companion haue vppon spyght sought too diffame thée or too heaue thée out of thy place and gone about too hurte thée thou must passe it ouer like as Moyses for putting vp the wrong that Aaron and Marie did him Numer xij is reported too haue bin the méekest man that euer was And Chryst sayeth of himself Lerne of mée for I am méeke and lowly of hart Dauid is not inflamed with wrathfulnesse ageinst Saule least he should stirre vp greater troubles Ioseph is not desirous too bée auenged of his brothers But Arius burneth as whot as fire with anger and desire of reuenge ageinst Alexander who was preferred before him in sute for the Bishoprike so as he troubled the whole Churche with his noysome doctrine concerning the sonne of God. The third is Longsufferance or Patience whereby wée beare one with another through Charitie For there sticke many blemishes in all men As for Example Some man is more wayward and testye some is more desirous of vayn glorie some is more curiouse some hath lesse staye of himselfe an other is more giuen too ouerearnestnesse and an other is more yresome and hastie These common fraylties of men must wée hyde and beare with if wée will haue true concord too growe strong and continue Paule therefore like a most wyse Gouernour hath put toogither the chéefe sinewes and limbes of Concorde and the vertues that are néedfull too the knitting of mennes fellowshippes in the band of peace There myght bée made a larger discourse of euery of these vertues And the laying of their contraries too them and the Examples of things that maynteyne societie will make the matter both more pleasaunt and more large The second place THe causes or reasons whereby the héerers are too bée in flamed too the desire of cōcord Now all men are too bée inflamed too the maintenance of concord with their fellowe cōpanyons and with other men First by the most streight commaundements of God which enioyne mutuall loue Iohn xiij and .xv. My cōmaundement I giue vntoo you that you loue one another Philip ij Bée of like affection one too an other hauing one loue being of one mynde and of one opinion j. Corinthians j. Let there bée no diuisions among you Secondly by the most large rewardes which GOD hath promised too such as maynteyne concord Mathew v. Blissed bée the peace makers for they shall bée called the children of god Thirdly by the great commodities of concord and the vnmeasurable huge heape of miseries which discord bringeth bothe in the church in the common weale in householdes in vniuersities and in all the whole lyfe And fourthly before al things let the six reasons bée considered which Paule vseth in this Epistle First one bodye and one spirit Like as in mannes bodye there bee diuerse members differing in dignitie and offices and yet agréeing among them selues and too the common vse of the whole bodye which doutlesse are gouerned and moued all by one spirit or soule So in the Church there bée diuers members differing in giftes and yet but one holy Ghost the author of this doctrine set foorth by the Prophetes and Apostles Therefore let there be concord in your doctrine wils This comparison is handled at length in j. Cor. xij 2 Likewyse also as you bee called in one hope All are called too one hope of euerlasting lyfe Therefore let there bée vnitie of spirit and doctrine and consent of wils 3 There is one Lord. There is one Lord Chryst whom only and alonly the eternall Father hath commaunded vs too héere Therefore lette vs all embrace this one doctrine taught by Chryst and let vs bée one mynded like as the seruauntes of one Maister ought too agrée in willes and purposes 4 One Faith. There is but one faith of all the godly in all tymes Therefore let there bée vnitie and consent in the doctrine of the Gospell concerning Chryste whom faith embraceth Héere may the whole doctrine of faith bée set out and specially this warning that the faith and manner of iustification and saluation of all the Saints from the beginning of the world is euermore al one Act. xv Wée beléeue that wée are saued by the grace of our Lord Iesus Chryst like as our Fathers also were saued 5 One Baptim The strength and effectualnesse of the Sacraments in the Church of all ages is alwayes one and wée haue all bound our selues by one Baptim too yéeld faith and obedience too the one Chryst Therfore let vs all bée but as one among our selues let vs teache all one thing and let vs all professe one thing 6 One God and Father of all Therefore let vs all bée as children of one father of one mynd and louing one an other like brothers Who is aboue al. God who is aboue all things and whose being dooth infinitely differ from the creatures is present euery where loueth defendeth and gouerneth all godly folke and all such as are desirous of concord and dwelleth in them as in a temple or house that he liketh well off Vppon the .xviij. Sunday after Trinitie ¶ The Epistle j. Cor. j. I Thanke my God alwayes on your behalfe for the grace of God which is giuen you by Iesus Chryst that in all things yee are made rich by him in all vtteraunce and in all knowledge by the which things the testimony of Iesus Christ was confirmed in you so that yee are behynd in no gift wayting for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ whiche shall also strength you too the end that you may bee blamelesse in the day of the comming of our Lord IESVS Chryst The disposement THis Epistle is of those cases that are
causes why it behooueth our redéemer too bée both God man are twelue which I haue gathered out of the booke of Athanasius concerning the incarnation recited them in another place First it behooued him too be man For like as the impe that is graffed into a trée is borne by the trée and taketh sap and life of it euen so our humane nature shuld haue vtterly perished bin brought to nothing like as the body perisheth that is forsaken of the soule yf the masse of our nature were not vphild and mainteyned by the sonne of God the woorde Secondly forasmuch as man had sinned the order of Iustice required that man should aby the penaltie On the other side it behooued him to bée God that he might be able to pay the full pryce and to vanquish sinne and death and to restore rightuousnesse and lyfe euerlasting The matter wherof the sonne of God our Immanuell tooke mans nature is the virgine Marie according as Esay interpreting the first promis of the séede and the prophesie of Iacob concerning Siloh that is to say the Virgins issue sayeth in this place behold a Virgin shall conceyue and bring forth a Sonne For in asmuch as of the mixture of the séede of man and woman is engendred a nature defiled with sinne according as it is sayde In sinne hath my Mother conceyued mee it was the will of Christ our Immanuell whom it behooued to be vndefiled and faultlesse to bée borne not of the séede of man but onely of the Virgins séede halowed and clenzed by the holy Ghost The manner of this wonderfull cuppling or vnion of the twoo natures is expressed with lightsome and most weyghtie wordes in the Créede of Athanasius The righte fayth therefore is that wée beléeue and confesse that our Lord Iesus Christ is very God and very man God of the substance of the Father begotten before all worldes and man of the substance of his mother borne in the world c. The endes and effectes of Christes conception are described in the two names of Immanuell and Iesus For Christ is called Immanuell that is to say God with vs not only for the taking vppon him of our nature but also bycause he is our patrone and aduocate not accusing and condēning vs any more but stāding on our side couering excusing and defending vs embracing vs with brotherly good will and receyuing vs to the felowship of al heauenly good things according as is sayd in these verses Christ is aright our Immanuell not only because he is bloud of our bloud now and flesh of our flesh alike But for that to the Father in heauen for vs al he becōming our Preest and patrone offreth a sweete sacrifise And for that with an earnest zeale of loue he receyueth all that long for his help or couet health at his hand The other name which the Angell Gabriell interpreting this place of Esay attributeth too Christe is Iesus which is as much to say as a sauiour or deliuerer And in déede the highest benefite of all that redound to vs by Christes incarnacion or conception is deliueraunce from sinne from Gods wrath and from curse of the law and the giuing of rightuousnesse saluacion life euerlasting Too the setting foorth of this benefite may all the sayings of the Gospell bée referred out of the whole scripture Of kin to this wonderfulll vnion of the twoo natures in Christ may these things bée named namely the similitudes and shadowes of that wonderfull alyance which are settled in nature That is to wit the vnion of the reasonable soule and of the body in man The coniunction of the Christall humor and the spirite of sight whiche is as it were a little fire in the apple of ones eye And also a péece of iron or stéele red whot The things that fight ageynst it are the chéef errours wherewith the doctrine concerning the conception or incarnacion of the sonne of God is corrupted by the heretikes Valentine Apelles Marcion Nestorius Eutyches Apollinarius and other The Antheme vppon the day of the Annunciation of our Lady sainct Marie THis is the day whiche the Lorde hath made This day hath the Lord looked vppon the affliction of his people and sent redemption This day hath the séede of a woman chased away the death whiche a woman first brought in This day is God become man continuing still the same thing that he was and taking vppon him that which he was not Therfore let vs deuoutly hallow the beginning of our redemption and let vs leape for ioy saying Glory bée to thée O lord This day is God become man This day is God become man c. Vppon the feastday of Iohn Baptist The song of Zacharie ¶ The Epistle Luc. j. BLessed be the Lord God of Israel for he hath visited and redeemed his people And hath raysed vp an horne of saluation vnto vs in the house of his seruaunt Dauid Euen as he promised by the mouth of his holy Prophetes which were since the world began That wee should be saued from our enemies and from the handes of all that hate vs. To fulfill the mercy promised to our Fathers and to remēber his holy couenaunt And to performe the othe whiche he sware to our Father Abraham for to geue vs. That we deliuered out of the handes of our enemies might serue him without feare all the dayes of our lyfe in holynesse and rightuousnesse before him And thou childe shalt be called the Prophete of the hyest for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord too prepare his wayes And too geue knowledge of saluation vnto his people for the remission of sinnes Through the tender mercy of our God whereby the day spring from an hie hath visited vs. To giue light to them that sate in darknesse and in the shadow of death and to guide our fete into the way of peace The disposement THis song of Zacharie perteyneth too the demonstratiue kind For it is a thanks giuing wherby Zacharie setteth out this excéeding great benefite of God for that according too his promises made too Dauid and Abraham he sendeth Chryst the redéemer too deliuer men from sinne from death and from the Diuels tyrannie and too giue them lyght lyfe and soule health euerlasting The partes of this song are two In the first viij verses be setteth out the benefite of the sending of Chryst And in the last foure verses he entreateth of the office of Iohn Baptist and therwithall of Chrystes benefites also Blissed bee the Lord God of Israell who hath visited and redeemed his people The proposition I thanke the Lord the only true GOD who hath discouered himselfe among the people of Israell by his woorde and by assured witnesse of miracles that he hath exhibited Chryst the redéemer according too the promises made too the fathers The woord blisse signifieth ere whiles too wish good too one and ere whiles too praise or glorifie As in the
Gods sonne Gods mercie tempered with iustyce The fall of Adam The feendes the Iewes The matter of Chrystes Passion The forme or maner The endes too which Chryst ▪ suffered Redemption Remission of sinnes Reconciliatiō Iustification The holy Ghost The destruction of the Deuils kingdom Abolishment of sinne and death Euerlasting lyfe and saluacion How Chrystes benefites may bee applyed too vs. Our hauen and comfort ▪ Pascha or Passeouer The true passeouer * March● The tyme. Chrysts person Chrysts sacrifyse The benefites of Chrystes sacrifyse The applyment New obediēce The benefites of Chrystes resurrection A descriptiō of a Triumph The Triumph of Chryst The true ioy and comfort The true keeping of Easter Leuen New dowe Sweete bred What it is too keepe holyday Old leuen The efficient cause of our resurrection which argument holdeth of consequence That Chryst is risen By testymonies of the prophets By record of such as sawe him Of the authoritie of the Apostles An argument by impossibilitie An argument of ryght and reason A repetition confirmation of the first argumēt which holdeth of cōsequence or of necessitie An Argument taken of our profession and order in baptim A repetition of the fourth argument which holdeth of ryght reasō An Argument taken of the like thing Tokens of the resurrection impressed in nature The Moone The Starres The seasons of the yeere Svvalovves Flyes The Phenix This is the surest ground Argumēt for a Christian Sufficiēt vvarrant for a true Christian Philosophie knovveth nothing of the resurrection Antiquitie Consent of all Nations The best natures Selfmouing Simplenesse vncōpounded Ryght and reason Gods almyghtynesse Diuersities of glorie in the resurrection Liuing soule The state of our bodyes in the resurrectiō Liuing soule The first man. The second man. Flesh blud The efficient cause of our resurrection Death and sin Gods lawe The cheef finewes of the Diuels kingdome Our victorie in Chryst Esays prophesie of the taking away of death by Christ Esays prophesie expounded by Paule Osees prophesie expounded Interpretation of the grammaticall sense of the vvordes The proper meening of Osce An exhortation to stedfastnesse The custome of baptizing in old tyme. The cōmendation of fayth A description of fayth Mannes lyfe a vvarfare Who are borne of God. Hovv folke are borne a nevve The cheef obiect or thing vvhereon fayth resteth The name of Sonne The name Chryst Water blud To come in vvater The spirit is a vvitnesse of Chryst and his doctrine The three persones of the Godhead The end vvhy the ministerie vvas ordeined What the vvoord spirit signifyeth in the foresayd text What vvater and blud signifye Mākind vvyth out Chryst Errour touching Gods beeing Touching Gods vvill Errours of the papistes in seruing God. Chryst is the only vvay too ▪ God and godlynesse Chryst is lyfe Repentance Pointes of a good shepherd Good Princes be shepherds Bishops and ministers are shepherds Hovv Chryst is a shepherd Fleshly lustes what they be Magistrates ordeyned by God. The definition of a Magistrate Magistrates must be obeyed as God. An excellent saying Obedience too Princes Lords and Maisters for conscience sake Christen libē●tie Not God but wee our selues are cause of euil too our selues Good things are all of God and none euill commeth of him Regeneration or newbirth A similitude Against rash speaking and hasty iudgement Against a●ge● and trea●nesle Rogation weeke Of Inuocatio● and prayer The partes of true prayer What diuinitie is Gods worde a looking glasse True blissednesse The Anker●old of christian welfare Chrystes conuersation with his disciples after his resurrection Chrystes tryumphant As●●nsion Deliuerance from sin death the Diuell Mediatorship Giuing of gifts vnto men Opening our way intoo heauen Putting away of worldlinesse ▪ Too rayse our myndes tovvards heauen The kingdom of God or of Chryst The right hād of God. Too sitte A commendation of prayer Ageinst d●on●●●●esse Sobrietie which is a spice of stay ▪ ednesse Watchfulnesse Of Lou● Hospitalitie * Pleasantnesse * Gladsomues * Merinesse Doing of good ●urnes Pentecost Why Easter Whitsontyde other feastes were ordeined of God. Why Whitson tide was ordeyned too be continually kept The holy Ghost Two sortes of giuing the holy Ghost A descriptiō of the holy ghost Proofes of the godhead of the holy Ghost Basill Eusebius Palestinus Proofes that the holy Ghost is a distinct persone from the father and the sonne The office and benefits of the holy Ghost The spirit of Truthe Paracletus The seuen gift● of the holy ●host The gift of ●isdome The spirit of Counsell The spirite of Strength or Manlynesse The spirit of Kno●ledge The spirit of Godlynesse The spirit of the Feare of God. Beneuolēce ▪ Proofes of Christes Godhead Proofes of the Godhead of the holy ghost Fleshe No accepting of persones vvith Chryst Prophesying in the old Testament Diuersities of appeerings Dreames Prophesying in the nevv testament The onely vvay too saluacion The cause of our eternall saluation Iustification Diuersitie of opinions concerning Iustification Ryghtuousnesse what it is The efficiēt forcing cause of iustificacation The meane or Instrument of our saluation what it is to beleeue What ought too bee the cheefe care of men How God wil haue his being knowne What God is The Gods of the Heathen The vnitie and trinitie of the Godhead The first person The second person The third person The marke of the Father The marke of the Sonne The marke of the holy ghost ▪ The offyce of the father The offyce of the sonne The offyce of the holy ghost God is loue Our only hauē and fortresse The phisike of our soules Examples who loueth God. Sparkes of knowledge in nature why they were giuē ▪ Loue towardes God. Causes of louing God and ▪ our neighbour ▪ Gods loue towardes vs. Commaundement Woorthinesse and profit What is comprehended in the loue of our neighbour The hatred of the world ageinst the godly This folowing is worth the beating away Necessitie Example of loue Hypocrysie to be eschued Sel●e loue and selfvveening Vyces accompaning pryde Carelesse Stately Lovvlynesse Vertues conteined in lovvlynesse Causes that should mo●e to Lowlynesse The profit of Lowlynesse God resisteth the proude The Diuell Sna●es wherwith the dyuel intangleth folkes Fortification ageynst the Diuelles traynes Watchfulnesse Remedyageynst the enterance of despayre Sobrietie and stayedensle Fayth Example Gods grace Gods order to be followed This argument holdeth of right and equitie A cōparison of vnequalitie Common harmes ought too greeue the lesse Example of the Apostles The maner of saluation How we be saued by hope Argument of possibilitie One myndednesse Like affectionednesse Brotherly loue Mercifulnesse Gentlenesse Meeknesse Gelons answer too a rayler Patience Faint hartednesse Wilfulnesse or stifnesse of opinion Stedfast profession of the true doctrine The finall cause of iustification The efficient cause of iustification A similitude of baptim Of Chrystes death and resurrection Of Chrystes buryall Ageinst Libertines carnall Gospellers Necessitie of weldooing Christen libertie Eternal lyfe