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A06863 A booke of notes and common places, with their expositions, collected and gathered out of the workes of diuers singular writers, and brought alphabetically into order. A worke both profitable and also necessarie, to those that desire the true vnderstanding & meaning of holy Scripture By Iohn Marbeck Merbecke, John, ca. 1510-ca. 1585. 1581 (1581) STC 17299; ESTC S112020 964,085 1,258

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the Hebrues Whie it is thought not to be Saint Paules THe Epistle which beareth the title to the Hebrues is not thought to be his for the difference if the stile and phrase but either iudge it to be written of Timothie as Tertulian supposeth or of Saint Luke as other doe thinke or else of Clement afterwarde Bishoppe of Rome who as they saye was adioined with Paule and coupling together his songes and sentences did phrase them in his stile and manner Or else as some doe iudge because S. Paule wrote to the Hebrues for the odiousnesse of his name among that people therefore he dissembled and suppressed his name in the first entrie of his salutation contrarie to his accustomed condition And as hée wrote to the Hebrues he béeing an Hebrue so he wrote in Hebrue the is in his owne tongue more eloquentlye and that is thought to be the cause whie it differeth from his other Epistles is after a more eloquent manner translated into the Gréeke then his other Epistles bée Some also reade the Epistle written to Laodicia but that is explosed of all men Thus farre Saint Hierome In the booke of Mar. fol. 55. EQVALITIE OF BISHOPS ¶ Looke Bishops EQVINOCTIALL What it is THE Equinoctiall is when the daie and night is both of one length and commeth twice in a yeare to wit the. viii of Aprill and the viii of October The Iewes beganne to reckon from one to twelue as wée beganne to recken from seauen in the morning till sixe at night and so it was that our thrée a clocke was nine a clocke to them and our fiue eleuen to them Bullinger fol. 363. EARES To what end the vse of Eares serue IT is not saide onelie that the eare shall heare that is to saie that it is created onelye to heare but it is also said that it shall iudge of woordes and matters As if Elim should saie that the LORD hath not giuen vs the opening of our eares to receiue the Doctrine that is tolde vs as a poison but to the ende to receiue the doctrine that serueth to the spirituall féeding of our soules Like as when we receiue Bread and Wine wée are not afraid to eate and drinke as though we wist not whether it were poyson or no. True it is that wée must beware of poison and praie to GOD to preserue vs from it But are men so foolish to sterue themselues and to forbeare eating and drinking for feare least their foode be poisoned No for they can skill of meates to discerne whether it be poisoned or no. So then let vs vnderstande that our Lorde hath not giuen vs the vse of our eares to the ende we should be afraide to receiue the doctrine because wée thinke it too high and too darke for vs but it behooueth vs to praie GOD to giue vs the spirite of discreation and iudgement to the ende we maie applie that thing to our profite which shall bée declared to vs out of his woord and therewithall so to gouerne vs by his holie spirit as wée maie be skilfull to discerne the thing that is good and profitable c. Caluine vpon Iob. fol. 105. How and by whome our eares must be opened Hée put his finger into his eares c. and straight wayes they wer opened ¶ By the which we maie learne that his word can neither be heard nor vnderstoode vnlesse our eares bée opened by Christs finger that is to saie vnlesse the holie Ghost do open the eares of our hearts Hemmyng How God is said to haue eares God is sayd to haue eares because he heareth all thinges Sap. 1. 10. The eare of the iealous heareth all things and the noise of the grudgings shall not be hid EARTH How it is founded vpon the Seas IT is the propertie of all wise men as it maie plainlie appeare by the wordes of our Sauiour in the Gospell of Saint Mathewe that when they shall goe about to builde anie stronge house they will bée sure that the foundation shall bée laide not vpon sande or muddie myre but vppon a rocke or some other sure or stedfast grounde knowing that otherwise all their labour and cost commeth shortlie to naught whilest either the violence of the winde or the waues of the hudge floude doe rush against that house and breake it downe Séeing then that this is the right propertie of all substantial wise and politike builders What a wonderfutl paradoxe and inopinable sentence is this to saye Qui ipse fundauit c. The Lorde himselfe the fountaine of all hath founded the whole earth that is so hudge and heauie a thing vppon the wauering waters and flowing floudes These bée the wordes of the Prophet Super maria fundauit eam super flumina preperauit eam Or as Saint Hierome readeth Super flumina stabiliuit eam Upon the Seas he hath founded the whole earth and vpon the floudes he hath stablished it This sentence cannot but séeme to the iudgement of all men a meruailous straunge and wonderfull saieng the earth to be founded vpon the water Naturall reason will lead a man to say that God hath founded the sea vppon the earth and not the earth vpon the water Nam terra aquae stabilimentum est non aqua terrae For of the foure Elements the Fire the Aire the water and the earth the Orbe of the fire is the highest couereth the earth round about the Aire likewise ought by natural cōsent to couer the water round about the water the earth Wherefore then it followeth by good reason that earth beeing the heauiest and lowest of all the foure Elements and next vnder the water it ought therefore to be called the foundation of the waters because the waters doe lie vpon the earth and not the waters the foundation of the earth This reason is so strong that no naturall wit can be able to impugne it Againe in the 104. Psalme the Prophet saith That the Lorde hath founded the earth vpon his owne weight and stablenesse Fundasti terram super stabilitatem tuam non inclinabitur in seculum seculi Ouid the Poet saith in like manner Tellus pōderatū librata suis. The earth is staied paised by meanes of his owne weight he saith not that the earth is founded and yet the Prophet saith Dominus super maria fundauit orbem terrae super flumina stabiliuit eam The Lord hath founded the whole earth vpon the Seas and vppon the floudes hée stablished it Yée shall vnderstand therefore by the order of naturall reason the earth like as it is the lowest of all the foure Elements and next vnder the water so it ought to be altogether couered with water and vnderneath the water But the almightie and most mightie creatour of all things by his myraculous and his diuine power hath altered the order generall and hath made a lawe and a statute peculiar which is this That the waters shall not ouerflow the whole earth
but to be contented with a portion of the earth to dwell vpon to get them into a corner in no wise so hardie their heads to passe their bounds limits appointed This statute was made vppon the third daie after the creation of the world as we reade in Gen. 1. Chapter on this wise Congregantur aquae sub coelo sunt in locum vnum appareat arida Let the waters that be vnder Heauen be gathered together into one place that the drie lande maie appeare And by this peculiar commaundement of God in the which the Philosopher béeing ignoraunt and séeing such a miraculous worke aboue Nature be called it Natura particularis Now ye must note that forasmuch as this peculiar order that God hath established betweene the waters and the drie lande the Earth is exalted aboue the waters euen as farre as the walles of an house are aboue the foundation In consideration of this miraculous worke of God the earth is héere said by the Prophet to be builded partlie vpon the salt Seas partlie vpon the fresh floudes because the earth is so wonderfullie exalted in euerie place aboue the waters euen as far as the walls of an house is aboue the foundation and not that the water is absolutelie the foundation or the piller of the Earth Ric. Turnar EARTHQVAKE How Earthquakes doe come AN Earthquake is a shaking of the earth which is caused by meanes of winde and exhalations that be inclosed within the caues of the earth and can finde no passage to breake foorth or els so narrow a waie that it cannot be soone enough deliuered Wherefore with great force and violence it breaketh foorth and one while shaketh the earth and another while rendeth and cleaueth the same sometime it casteth vp the earth a great height into the aire and sometime it causeth the same to sinke a great depth down swallowing both Cities and Townes yea and also mightie great Mountaines leauing in the place where they stoode nothing but great holes of an vnknown depth or els great lakes of water W. F. Aristotle the great and the learned Philosopher disputeth of Earthquakes in the 5. booke of his Mute And holdeth opinion that y● cause efficient of Earthquakes be winde inclosed within the caues hollow places of the earth And the materiall cause he iudgeth to be Exhalations hot and drie Other of the most auncient and great Philosophers be of a cleane contrarie opinion which is this That Earthquakes doe come with the vehement pushes and beatings of great waters that be crept in at the caues of the earth afterward doe séeke a waie out which when they cannot finde the waters violently enclosed beating and rolling vp and downe within the earth doth cause earthquakes but it is to be thought that the thirde opinion which A. G. li. 2. cap. 10● seemeth to allowe is better and a more wiser opinion no dispraise nor displeasure to Aristotle then either of both these and that is this that no man can certainlie tell the cause of Earthquakes but onelie God and these be his words Quaenam esse causam quamobrem terra motus fiant non cordibus hominum sensibus opinionibusque comitatum est Sed ne iuter phisicas quidem phinas satis constiti● And indeede though that Earthquakes be workes and aboue our discusse of reason yet by the Scripture we be taught that Earthquakes Thunderings and Lightenings be tokens and tastes of Gods most tremed and dreadfull power And sometimes also they bée plagues inflicted to impenitent sinners in the time of Gods wrath teaching all men to stande in awe of God and to beware how they displease him with breaking of his law and holie commaundements Ric. Turnar ESAV AND ISMAEL What is to be thought of their saluation I Thinke of Esau and Ismael so much onelie as the holie Scripture hath sette foorth vnto vs. And I thinke that there are no places extant by which we maie define anie thing touching their saluation The Scripture thus speaketh of Esau that he so vehementlie hated his brother that he sought to kill him that he solde his birth-right that he prouoked his parents to anger when he had taken straunge women to wiues that he was a violent man and despised the lande of Canaan promised vnto the fathers and in the Epistle to the Hebrewes it is written that although he poured out teares yet found hée no place of repentaunce Of Ismael also we read that he was reiected not onelie by the will of Sara but also by the will of God But touching both their posterities I denie not but some of them might be saued no lesse then some of the stock of Iacob might become runnagates and obstinate For it is sufficient to the election and reiection of God that some parte of either Stocke bee either elected or reiected Peter Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 251. Ye knowe how that afterward when he would haue inherited the blessing he was put by and he founde no meanes to come thereby againe no though he desired it with teares ¶ This text maketh not against repentaunce that is done in season for Esau repented too late therefore profited not When sentence of iudgement is giuen then hath repentance no place The dampned in Hell shall wéepe and repent but in vaine for then is the time of repenting past The blessing which Isaac gaue was vndoubted done by the inspiration of the Holie ghost and giuen in stéed of a determinate sentence and therfore must néedes be ratified and might not be called againe But and if Esau before the blessing giuen had chaunged his manners and had heartelie earnestlie repented him he had surelie not bene reproued of God This should séeme to be the verie meaning of this place Tindale ¶ He was full of despite and disdaine but was not touched with true repentaunce to be displeased for his sinnes and so seeke amendement Genena ESSENCE OF GOD. What the Essence or substaunce of God is BY Essence is meant the nature that is common to those thrée persons the Father the Sonne and the Holie ghost Theo. de Beza ESSES What manner of people the Esses were THe Esses when they perceiued that both the Pharisies and Saduces followed their appetites vnder the colour of honest Titles neither did ought in a manner that were worthie their profession therfore séemed it them good to declare the straitnes seueritie of life with the déed would be called Essei that is workers or doers For Assa whence the name Essei commeth signifieth to worke as in these times the Anabaptists doe reprooue both the Lutherians and Papists and endeauour to séeme more holier then either of them For the Essei liued in a manner in all things as the Anabaptists liue they maried not and would haue all things common among them They delighted in cleane apparell and praied before the Sunne rising c. Lanquet The Esseās celebrate festiual daies not after the Iews but
we thus cleaue to God with strong faith beléeue his words Then as sayth Paule God is faithfull that he will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that we are able or aboue our strength that is to say● if we cleaue to his promises and not to our owne fantasies and imaginations he wil put might and power into vs that shall be stronger then all temptations which he shall suffer to be against vs. Tindale fo 81. What is vnderstood by watchmen For his watchmen are all blinde c. ¶ By those blinde watchmen vnderstand the chiefe Priests y● Scribes Pharesies c. which were the peruerters and deprauers of the law of God These for filthy lucre sake abolished the true seruice of God and were the chiefe causers of the forsaking of Israel They were sluggish and sought not that which was for the edification of the people and for the glory of God but that which was for their owne priuate profit and pleasure They were slothfull to roote out vice and to plant vertue and driuen into the profound déepe sléepe of ignorance of idlenesse of lecherousnesse of pride As oft as the Prelates of the people Bishops Abbots and they that auaunt themselues for religious be such there hangeth a great scourge ouer the whole flocke of Christ. T. M. ¶ He sheweth that the affliction shal come through the fault of the gouernours Prophets and pastours whose ignorance negligence auarice obstinacy prouoketh Gods wrath against them Geneua I haue made thée a watchman to the house of Israel ¶ By this watchman are figured Bishops Priests a●d Preachers which must take the occasion of their speaking and exhorting at the mouth of God and speake not in their owne but in his name T. M. He sheweth that the people ought to haue continually gouernours teach●rs which may haue a care oner them and ●o warne thē euer of the daungers which are at hand Eze. 33. 2. Ge. The meaning of this place following The voice of thy watchmen shall be heard ¶ The Prophets which are thy watchmen shall publish this thy deliueraunce This was begun vnder Zorobabel Ezra Nehemiah but was accomplished vnder Christ. Geneua Of the watchman that Daniel speaketh of And behold a watchman and an holy one came downe from heauen Meaning the Angell o● God which neither eateth nor sleepeth but is euer ready to doe Gods will and is not infect with mans corruption but is euer holy and in that that he commaundeth to cut downe this tree ●e knew that it shoulde not be cut downe by man but by God Geneua What the fourth watch meaneth And in the fourth watch of the night The Hebrewes diuided the night in●o ●oure parts which they called the foure watches wherefore the fourth watch was next to the morning and was called the morning watch As in the. 1. Reg. 11. 11. Tindale VVATER How it is not water that doth wash away our sinnes ARise and be baptised and wash away thy sinnes We ought not to thinke that water washeth away our sinnes but the mercy and grace of God which is signified and represented vnto vs by the water Ye shall note that by a figure named Allocosis the same is ascribed vnto the outward signe which doth onely perteine vnto the grace election of God Sir I. Cheeke He sheweth that sins cannot be washed away but by Christ who is the substance of Baptime in whom also is comprehended the father and the holy Gost. Geneua The meaning of this place following Whosoe●er drinketh of this water c. To drinke this water is to beléeue credit the word of God and to receiue the testimony of Christ which thing onely can quench the thirst of the soule Sir I. Cheeke What is signified by water and spirit Except a man be borne of water and spirit ¶ Héere by the water he vnderstandeth the worde and grace of God and also the illumination of the holy Ghost which is that heauenly water that Esay the Prophet doth speake of saieng All that be a thirst come vnto the waters Iohn 4. 14. and. 7. 38. Iere. 2. 13. By the spirit he vnderstandeth the inspiration of the holy Ghost and the heauenly working of the spirit of God So that this place helpeth them nothing that doe affirme that the children of the faithfull are damned and that they shall neuer enter into the kingdome of heauen if they dye before they canne be baptised Sir I. Cheeke ¶ This place of Iohn is not to be vnderstood of the outwarde signe of holy Baptime but simply of the inward and most spirituall regeneration of the holye spirit which when Nichodemus vnderstoode not perfectly the Lorde figured and made the same manifest by Parables of water and of the spirit that is to saye of the winde or the aire by Elements very base and familyar for by an by hée addeth That which is borne of flesh is flesh c. Againe The winde bloweth where it lysteth c. Which must néedes bée meant of the ayre For the other part of the comparison followeth So is euery one that is borne of the spirit Bullinger fol. 1048. ¶ By this is signified the Baptime which is the mortification of the flesh preached by Iohn Baptyst and the renuing of the spirit which is remission of sinnes obteined by Christ. Tindale What the water of Siloh doth signifie Forsomuch as the people refuse the still running water of Siloh c. ¶ Hee calleth the kingdome of Dauid which figureth the kingdome of Christ the still running water of Siloh which thing agréeth verie well vnto Christ that was meeke and lowlye of heart Math. 11. 29. Zach. 9. 9. Beholde thy king commeth vnto thée poore and lowly c. He raigneth in still and peaceable consciences Siloh was a spring at the foote of the hill of Syon which hath not continally water but spring●th certeine houres and dayes and commeth with a great sound by the bottome of the ground and rifts and holes of an hard rocke The manner of speaking is borrowed of the despised littlenesse of the water which signifieth the small estimation and pouertie of the christen T. M. ¶ Looke Siloh What is meant by the water of the Sea The water of the sea shall bée drawne out Nilus shall sinke away and be dronke vp ¶ The water of the sea c. Aegipt as stories shew receiueth no raine forth of the aire but is ouerflowed with y● water Nilus at certein times 14. 15. or 16. cubits high frō the ground for if it increse to any lesse height the Countrey scapeth not a dearth sayth Plinie And therefore by the scarcenesse and want of water is the desolation of the land described Nilus is heere called by diuerse names Sometime the Sea sometime riuers sometime wells sometime pondes c. For that fludde runneth seuen sundry wayes and it is called the Sea not onelye because the Hebrewes call
is eod How God is to be worshipped eod How God is a consuming fire 446. How his Ordinaunces may not be broken eod How God was seene eod Of Gods consolation in trouble eod What Gods cursse is eod What God appointeth and no more 447 How things come to passe by Gods wil. eod Of two wills in God eod How God ordeined sinne and yet is not the Author eod Of the God of this world eod What is ment by the God of Iacob eod What the seate of God is eod Godhead in Christ. How it is vnderstood eod How Christ in his Godhead is euerye where 448. Gods mercie Of such as presume to much thereof eod How y● Magistrates are called gods eo What the nature of Gods word is eod Godly sorrow What it bringeth to a man eod Godlinesse What godlinesse is 449. Gog Magog What they were eod How they shall be destroyed 450. Golde What is ment by golde siluer and precious stones 451. Of Golde frankencense Mirrhe eod Golgotha What the word signifieth eod Good What good or goodnesse is 451. How there is none good but God eod Of good and euill doing eod What a good age is eod How y● good life of a christē smelleth 453 Of the good purpose of a man eod Good intent How it must agree with Gods word eod Of y● good intent of Nadab Abihu 454 Examples of good intents eod Goods Wher they ought to be laid vp 455. How the Church goods ought to bee bestowed eod Gortheans What they were eod Gospell What the Gospell signifieth 456. Of the Gospel preached to the dead 457. How it is likened to a bowe 458. Why the gospell is said to be euerlasting eod How it is no lesse to bee regarded then the bodie of Christ. 459. Whether the Booke or leaues bee the Gospell eod An exposition of the place 460. Goate How it signifieth Christ. eod Grace What grace is 461. The true definition of grace eod What it is to reiect grace eod The difference betweene grace and gift eod The difference betweene grace and the lawe 462. What is vnderstoode by grace and peace 464. How grace and truth are expounded eo The meaning of the place 465. Graffing How we are graffed in Christ. 466. Griefe What it is and how it is defined 467. Greekes Of whom they came eod The meaning of the places eod Great The meaning of the place 468. Groue The meaning of the places 469. Guyle The definition thereof 470. Of good and euill guyle eod H. HAlcion What Halcion was 470. What the Halcion daies be eod Hand What the hande of God signifieth 471. Of the hand that Balthasar saw eod What is ment by the place eod Hand writing what it was eod Happy The meaning of the place 472. Harden How God is said to harden 473. Heart Where the heart of man is placed eod How some mans heart is hairie eod How mās hart poisoned will not burn eo Of the heart and wombe of God eod Hart or Stag. As the Hart coueteth the water 474. Haruest What is vnderstood by har 475. Hate The meaning of the place eod When a man may hate his neighbor eod Hath The vnderstanding of the place eod Hazael How he came to his kingdome 476. Hebron What Hebron was eod Head What is ment by head of God 477 What y● head of the serpent signifieth eod Haires of God What they doe signifie eod H●lchesaites What their opinions wer eo Helias Of the strange vision seene at his birth eod Heliseus What befell at his birth 478. Hell How it is taken in Scripture eod The meaning of the place 479. What hell meaneth heere eod Helpers of faith How men be helpers of faith eod Helindius What his heresie was 480. Hem. How we touch the hem of Christs vesture eod Hemerobapti What heretiks they wer eo Henoch What his taking vp signifieth eo Her and Anan How they wer slaine 481. Heare him How Christ is to be c. eod Heresie The definition of heresie eod The proofe of heresie 482. How it is to be auoided eod Heretikes What is to be done with thē 483. How they ought not to be compelled eo Herode Of his great crueltie 484. Why he burned the Scriptures eod Of his death 485. Of the second Herode eod How he ledde away his brother Philips wife eod Of Herode Agrippa 487. What the Herodians were 488. Heauen Of the opening of heauen eod Hide What the hiding of Gods face is eo Hien● Of the propertie of this beast eod Hime ●eus Of his opinion 489. High Priest How y● office was diuided eo How ●uery Bishop is called c. eod Hill W●at is ment by this hill eod Hin W●at manner of mesure it was eod Hi●d●rpart What is ment thereby eod Hipo● rite What an hipocrite is eod Hipocrisie described eod Hipo●iposis What the word signifieth 491. Hire What is ment by hire eod Why eternall life is called hire eod Historie What an historie in 492. Hobab What this Hobab was eod Holy Who is holy eod How Christ is called holy 493. What is ment by the Angels crieng Holy Holy eod The meaning of the Prophet eod Holy ghost How whē he was c. 494. How the holy Ghost is God 495. Proued by auncient Doctors 497. Holy water How it was called of old eod Of the Popes holy water 598. Homilies Bucers iudgment thereof eod Honour What honour signifieth eod What honor is to be giuen to the wife 499 What it is to honour parents eod Of 3. manner of honours eod Hope A definition of hope 500. How hope is of things absent eod How hope hangeth vpon faith 501. Of Augustines hope eod Hormis What people they were 502. Horne What it signifieth eod Hornet What an Hornet is 503. Horseleach What hir 2. daughters be eod Hosanna What the word betokeneth eod Hot. What it is to be neither hot c. 504. Houres The distribution of y● houres eod What is ment by halfe an houre eod House of God What y● house of God is eo How the place is vnderstood 505. Humilitie A definition thereof eod Who they be that be humble 506. Hundred fold What it is to receiue c. eo Hunger and thirst eod Hu● Of the land of Hus. 507. Husband What the husbands office is eo What is ment by the husband of one c. eo I. IAcinct The description thereof 508 What Iacinct signifieth heere 509. Iacob how he is a figure of the church eo What is ment by this word Iacob c. eo Of Iacobs Iye to his father 510. Of his wrastling with the Angell 511. What the seede of Iacob is eod How God beholdeth no sin in Iacob eod Of the finding of Iacob in Bethel eod The vnderstanding of the place eod ●am The meaning of the place 512. Iames. why he was called y● Lords brother eod Of the death of this Iames. eod Of the deth of Iames the brother of Iohn eod Iannes
doubt not thereof eod L. Labans Gods how they were stolne 596. Labours The meaning of the place eod Ladder what is signified thereby eod Lay men how they ought to read the scriptures 597. The doctours affirmations 598. Of laye mens bookes 600. How saye men may baptise eod The opinion of Iohn Caluine eod How they haue ministred the sacrament 601. Laieng on of hands whoo the custreof me arose eod The meaning of the place 603. Lampes what they without oyle doe signifie eod Land what is ment by the crieng of the lande 604. Laodieia what the word signifieth eod Of the stri●e y● was ther for Easter eod Last Of the last day eod Who be last and who be first 605 Of the last farthing eod Latria what the word signifieth eod Lawe what the lawe is 606. Platoes definition of the lawe 607. What the office the vse of the law is 608. What the lawe of nature is eod What the lawe written is eod How the lawe is our scho lem●●ster 609. How the lawe first entred 610. How the lawe was giuen in thunder eo Wherefore the lawe was giuen eod How the lawe was giuen by Moses 611. How we are dead through the lawe eod How the lawe increaseth sinne 612. Why it is called y● messenger of death eod What the lawe of God requireth eod What it is to be vnder the lawe eod What it is not to be vnder the lawe 613. Why Paule calleth the booke of Genesis the lawe eo How the law is impossible to fulfill eod How the lawe is called a yoke 614. The difference between Gods lawe and mans eod Who hath fulfilled the lawe eod How the Gentiles wer not wtout law eod How the law maketh all men sinners eo How it maketh vs to hate God 615. How the law is spirituall eod How we dye to the lawe eod To die in the defence of the law eod The meaning of these places eod The argument of the lawe 616. The nature and office of the lawe and Gospell 617. Lazarus how the poore rich are matched together eod Of the loosing of Lazarus eod Left hand what Gods left hand sig 618. Legion what a Legion is eod League what a league is eo Of three kinde of seagues 619. Lend Net lend vpon vsury eo Len● wherevpon the lenten fast is gro●ided eod Why the father 's instituted Lent 620 Leper what the Leper signifieth 621 How a Leper was knowen eod Of the leprosie that Christ healed eod Lesse The meaning of the place eod Letanies what the Letanies were 622. Letter● what the letter signifieth eod How the letter killeth 623 How the letter and circumcision is taken heere 624 Leuen how it is diuersly taken in scrip eo Leuy Of Leuy otherwise called Mathew 625. Leuites what their office was eod How the place is to be vnderstood 626 Leu●athan what Lemathā signifieth 627 Libanus Charmel what they signi eod Libertie of Christ. To stand therein 628. Lye The definition of a lye eod Whether wee may lye to preserue or no. eod Of the Midwiues lye of Rahabs lye 629. How Paules Iye is excused eod Of one that would not lye 630 Of Abrahams Iye eo Of Dauids Iye eo Life how the places are expounded eod Whether a man may lengthen or shorten his life 631. Light who is the true light eod The meaning of the places 632. What is ment by the shining light 633. Wherfore these lights were ordeined eod Lilies what it is to gather vp Lilies eod Lion The meaning of the place 634 How they bee compared to the persecuters of Christ. eod How Tirants are likened to Lions 635 How they are fed by Gods prouidence 636. Locusts what manner of beasts they wer eod Loynes gird what is ment thereby eod The meaning of the place eod Long life how a good man may desire it eod Lord. how he is our shepheard feedeth vs. 638. Of the Lords helpe in trouble eod How the Lord suffereth long 639 Lordship The meaning of the place eod Lots how they may be vsed lawfully 640 Loue. Of the order of loue eod How it is the fulfilling of the lawe 641. How we ought to loue God 642. Why loue hath the chiefe place eod Of Mary Magdelens loue 643 How perfect loue casteth out all feare 644 The meaning of the place eod The difference betweene loue and charitie 645. Of 5● manner of loues eod Lowlinesse wherefore lowlinesse come to worship 646 Loosing and binding eod Of the loosing of Lazarus eod Lucifer what is ment by Lucifer eod Luke The life of Saint Luke eod Luke warme what it meaneth 648. Lunatike Of the man y● was lunatike eo Luther what he was eod The cause why he first wrote against the Pope eo How he wrote to Pope Leo. 649. How he was troubled with the lusts of the flesh eod Of his question a little before his death 650. His praier before his death eod What sects is said to rise out of him eod M. MAcedonius Of his crueltie and tumult 650 Magi. What the Magies were 651. Magistrate what a magistrate is eod How they are y● ministers of gods in 652 How the Ecclesiasticall person is subiect vnto him eod How magistrates the do not perswade the people to Gods worde are not to bee obeyed in cause of conscience eod Magnifie what it is to magnifie 653. Mahomet of y● rising vp of this false pr. eo Of his faire shew of holinesse 654 Mayzim what this word signifieth 656. Maker against the word maker in y● sacr eo Malachy of y● sacrifice he speketh off 657 Mammon what Mammon signifieth 658 Man how he was made after the image of God eod How god made mā to be vndestroied eo How the death of man and beast is alike 659 How mans life is but sorrow care eod Of mans good purpose before grace eod How mans ordinance may be altred 660 Of the disposition of man eod Of mans will and running 661. Of 2. Hebrue words y● signifie man eod Of the first man Adam and the seconde man Christ. 662. Of the man that gathered stickes on the Sabboth day eod Of the man wounded 663. How the birth of man is 4. manner of wayes eo Mandragoras What Mandragoras is eod Manes how the sect of the Maniches rose of this man 664. Wherein y● Papists agree with them eo The ●aniches con●uted 665. Many of many that be called 666 Manna What Manna signifieth eod How it is not the true bread that came downe from heauen eo Of those that eat Manna are dead eo What Manna and the white stone signifieth 667. How Manna the water brought out of the Rocke is c. eod Maranatha What this word signifieth 668. Marcion Of his damnable heresie eo A comparison betweene Marcions doctrine and the Popes 669. An example of Ma●cions chast life 670. Marcus The detestable heresie of this man eod Mary how she ought not to bee worshipped 671. Of the painting of hir
the Minister to the Archbishop aboue the Bishop so we sée no cause of inequalitie why one Minister should be aboue another Minister one Bishop in his degrée aboue another Bishop to deale in his diocesse or an Archbishop aboue another Archbishop And this is to kéepe an order dulie and truelie in the Church according to the true nature and definition of order by the authoritie of Augustine lib. de ciui Ordo est parium dispariumque rerum sua cuique loca tribuens dispositio M. Fox ARCHONTICI THese were heretikes in Palestina which referred the creation of all things to mans powers They said that the Sabaoth was the God of the Iewes and that the Diuell was the sonne of the Sabaoth Epiphan haeres 40. August li. de haeres They denied the resurrectin of the bodie Eliote ARCHDEACON When the Archdeacons beganne THe Archdeacons began then to be created when the plentie of the goods required a new and more exact manner of disposing them albeit Hierom doth saie that it was euen in hi● age In their charge was the summe of their reuenewes possessions and store and the collection of the dailie offerings Whervpon Gregorie declareth to the Archdeacon of Salon that hée should be holden guiltie if anie of the goods of the Church perished either by his fraud or negligence But where as it was giuen to them to read the Gospell to the people to exhort them to praier whereas the power admitted to deliuer the Cup in the holie Supper that was rather done to garnish their office that they should execute it with more reuerence when by such signes they were admonished that it was no prophane Bailiwicke that they exercised but a spirituall function and dedicate to God Caluine 4. li. cha 4. Sect. 6. Damasus calleth Stephen an Archdeacon Hierom in his Epistle Ad Euagrium hath this name Archdeacon Sextus in his decrées saith that Laurence the Martir was an Archdeacon Sozomenus lib. 7. cap. 19. maketh mention of an Archdeacon reading the Scriptures and these be his words And this also is a strange thing in the Church of Alexandria whiles the Gospell are a reading the Bishop doth not rise vp which I heard of others This holie booke a Monke that is an Archdeacon readeth there in other places Deacons in manie places the Priests onelie but in principall Feasts Bishops Socrates in the seuenth booke of his Ecclesiasticall historie speaketh of one Timothie an Archdeacon I. W. Fol. 344. 345. ARKE What the Arke of couenaunt was THis was a Cofer or Chest made by Moses in the Desart fiue cubites in length and thrée in breadth wherein were put the Table of the olde Lawe and Rod of Moses and part of Manna It was made of strong wood and soote and couered as well within as without with fine golde And on the top were two Images of Angels Cherubins Cooper ¶ Tindale saith it was a Cofer or Chest as our Shrines saue it was flat And the example of ours was taken thereof Tindale fol. 11. What is meant by the Arke of the Testament And the Arke of his Testament was séene ¶ That is to saie Christ is now disclosed in the doctrine of his Gospell and in all the new Testament in whom all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge are bestowed Col. 2. 3. Who hath fulfilled the olde Testament and filled the new For Christ being man is the true Arke of the couenaunt because the whole fulnesse of the Godhead lieng inclosed in him as in an Arke or Chest dwelleth in him bodelie Col. 2. 9. At the beholding of whom God is become at one with vs. For God the Father hath set him foorth to be the attonement maker through faith by the meanes of his bloud Rom. 3. 25. In respect whereof he is also called the Attonement for our sinnes 1. Iohn 2. 2. Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 166. Of the Arke of Noe. The Arke of Noe was a great Uessell which God commaunded Noe to make that he his wife his thrée sonnes and their wiues might be preferued from the vniuersall floud the yeare of the world 1652. And before the Incarnation 2310. yeares The Uessell contained in length 300. Cubites Geometricall euerie Cubite containing as Saint Augustine saith sixe common cubites which is 9. foote And so it was in length two thousand seuen hundred foote And in déepenesse from the vpper decke to the bottome 30. Cubites which was 270. foote And the roofe ouer it was one Cubite which was 9. foote This Arke was not by mans power brought into the Sea but by the course of the waters rising vp it was borne away and rather by diuine prouidence then by mans policie it was gouerned from running to wracke And Noe began to build this Arke in the 533. yeare of his age and before the floud as Berosus saith 78. yeares Lanquet Grafton ARMAGEDDON The interpretation of this word WHich in Hebrue is called Armageddon ¶ In the Scriptures places take their names either of some notable aduenture or by some notable mischaunce As for example the Graues of lust in Nu. 11. 34. Meriboth or the waters of strife Nu. 20. 24. And other like in the Scriptures So also doth Armageddon by preuention in this place which maie be interpreted the Armie of wasting or slaughter representing euen by the vnluckie name of it what shall be●all at length to the armie of Antichrist Hierom whom Aurigallus followeth in his Hebrue places interpreteth Armageddon to be a certaine Mountaine where the Israelites wer wont to pitch their tents Other thinke rather that Armageddon should be called Gospell hill or the Hill of glad tidings or Apple hill or the Hill of choice fruits And trulie the Kings and Princes of the Earth haue none other quarrell to fight against the godlie but onelie for Christes Gospell wherevnto all power ought to bée subiect M●lorate vpon the Apocalips fol. 233. ¶ Armageddon As if he would saie the craftinesse of destruction when as Kings and Princes shall warre against GOD but by the craft of Satan are brought to that place where they shall be destroied Geneua ARME What is to be vnderstood by the Arme of God THe Arme of God signifieth Christ of whome Ieremie 32. 21 writeth thus Thou hast brought the people of Israel out of the lande of Aegypt with a mightie hand and stretched out Arme. ¶ By the Arme we vnderstand the mightie power of GOD to saue for so Paule defineth the Gospell that it is the power and might of GOD to saluation Neither is there anie cause but that also by the Arme of GOD wée maie well vnderstande Christ for as euerie man by the Arme doeth all things that hée doeth So GOD by his woorde createth gouerneth and iustifieth and therefore his word which is Iesus Christ is called his Arme. Neither is this word Arme applied onelie to a man but also the long snout of an Elephant is called an hand or an arme for
voice should bée hearde neither yet so softlie that hée should onelie thinke in minde the things which he● desired but in such sort as wée reade that Hanna praied in the first booke of Samuel where it is sayde that shée moued hir lippes onelie neither spake shée anie thing that could be heard Then was the Oracle giuen on this manner vnto the Priest By the power of the holie Ghost certeine letters appeared aboue the other in the brest plate and that either in place or in brightnesse wherein the Priest read the Oracle and will of God And these things are those Vrim and Thumim which the Priest bare in his breast lappe This is Kimhies opinion vnto whom what faith is to be giuen I cannot tell for it might be that the spirit of God did without letters giue Oracles by the voice of the high Priest whose heart he inspired with prophesie c. Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. 272 Of whom we ought to aske our petition Uerily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye aske y● father in my name he wil giue it vnto you ¶ He saith not whatsoeuer ye aske the Father in the name of Saint Peter Saint Paule or other Saints but in my name Let vs aske therefore helpe in the name of him which is able to obteine for vs of his Father whatsoeuer we aske least peraduenture héereafter in the end of the world at the straight iudgement we shall heare Hitherto in my name yée haue asked nothing Bilney in the booke of Mar. fol. 1139. How Christ asked what men did saie of him He asked of his Disciples saieng whom do men saie that I the sonne of man am ¶ If anie man saith Origen be a Bishop or a Magistrate let him hardlie aske this question what doe men saie of mee but this they must aske of them that will tell the truth without flatterie Cheeke ASSVR How the people of Assiria tooke their name of him THe Assirians which is a part of Asia came of Assur the second sonne of Sem which Assur as Lyra saith would not rebell against God with Nemroth in the building of the towre of Babilon but fled out of the land of Senhar into a nother farre countrie where he first inhabited by reason wherof the countrie tooke his name and was called Assiria In the which countrie he builded a citie that in processe was called Niniue which citie was so great that it was thrée daies iourney to goe through it Lyra. What is meant by Assur in this place following Assur also shall be slaine with the sword not with a mans sword ¶ The Prophet should héere séeme to prophesie of the great destruction that happened vnto Sennacherib 2. Par. 32. 21. And Esaie 37. 36. which was done by the sword of the Angell not by the sword of man as ye maie there sée Sennacherib was the king of Assiria and therefore is the destruction of the Assirians which happened vnder him signified by this word Assur Some because the Prophet a little before in the Text● moueth the people to forsake Idols expound it thus not by our Idols not by our strength not by mannes helpe which all maie be called the sword of man shall our spirituall enimie which is signified by Assur perish but by the power of God and the inuisible sword that cannot bée séene with which the Angell slewe an hundred foure score and fiue thousand in one night T. M. ASTHAROTH What manner of Idoll it was THis Idoll Astharoth was so called because it stoode to be worshipped in the forme of a Shéepe For a shéepe in Hebrue is called Aschtor And as it appeareth by the fourth booke of kings Cap. 23. 13. it was an Idoll of the Sidonians wherevnto Salomon by the instigation of his wiues builded sometime a Cappell c. Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 68. ● ASTROLOGIE What Astrologie is AStrologie is the knowledge of the naturall order and disposition that God hath set in the starres and planets to iudge of the office propertie and vertue and to bring all to their end and vse Caluine The Astrologer is he that knoweth the course and motions of the heauens and teacheth the same which is a vertue if it passe not his bondes and he become of an Astrologer an Astronomer Who taketh vpon him to giue iudgement and censure of those motions and course of the heauens what they prognosticate and destinie vnto the creatures of the earth man beast and other what shall be the temperature of the aire the condition of the earth the state successe of such fruite as it bringeth foorth By this knowledge they forespeake of pestilence and other discases and séeth the death of great men to come such commotions and warres as shall followe betwéene the Princes of the world And thus they saie they knowe by the course of the heauens Whereas they sée the coniunctions of manie planets of figures and fatall disposition and qualitie concurre by reason of whose influence into these inferiour partes all those calamities must happen Heere they abuse not onelie the name of God and the naturall discourse of reason which hath comprehended the motions and course of heauens but also heauen it selfe and attribute vnto the heauens the thing that onelie apperteineth to God To saie the health of man the sickenesse of man the plentie of the earth and scarcitie of the same the regument of common and the life death of gouernours thereof Their knowledge and practise in those things is nothing at all For almightie God hath not made the heauens to that end and purpose that man shold learne of them good fortune or ill as it is plaine Gen. 1. In the second daie God made the Firmament and superiour Starres which the text calleth Rakiah to this end that it should seperate the waters that be vnder the Firmament from those that be aboue the Firmament and God called the Firmament heauen In the fourth daye GOD made the Sunne the Moone and the Star●es And sheweth to what purpose and ende he made them the one to haue dominion in the daie the other in the night and God put them in the Firmament of heauen to giue light vnto the earth These rule in the daie and night and put difference betwéene light and darknesse to diuide the yeare into his portes the Spring Sommer Autume and Winter They are in signes likewise saith the Text. The which the Husbandman that tilleth and soweth the ground obserueth without superstition to sowe and reape his corne Hée casteth it into the ground in the Winter and receiueth it againe in the Summer So doth the Marriner make the reuolution of the Moone his decrease and increase whereby he knoweth the tides the ebbes and flowe of the same And the latter Phisitions Auicene and Auerrois hath likewise assigned their vse in mans bodie therefore they appoint diuersitie of daies in the practise of Phisicke one to bée more apt for letting of bloude then other
gréene colour betokening those faithfull persons which of Christian compassion hath dolorouslie lamented the fall of their bretheren Of this godlie nature was Steuen which praied for them that stoned him to death So was afore his time Samuel which mourned for Saule when he saw him cast out of the Lords fauour Bale vpon the Apoc. fol. 100. Berillus the Bishop of a Towne in Arabia named Bustra taught that Christ neither was before his carnall natiuitie nor had anie proper diuinitie but onelie the Deitie of God the father dwelling in him whom Origen confounded and brought againe to the vnitie of the Church Eusebius li. 6. Chap. 32. BEAST Of the beast that came out of the bottomlesse pitte THe Beast that came out of y● bottomlesse pit shal make war ¶ This Beast that is to saie Antichrist is said to come out of the bottomlesse pit because that being ingendred of the Diuell and starting out of the innermost dungeon of hell hee is mounted vp so hie in pride that like as the Giaunts went about in old time to driue their Iupiter out of heauen as the Fables report euen so séemeth he to be desirous to thrust Christ the King of all Kings from his Kingdome following the footesteps of his father Satan who hath bene a murtherer from the beginning and abode not in the truth Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 154. Of the beast that rose out of the Sea I sawe a Beast rise out of the Sea hauing 7. heads c. ¶ By the 7. heads he meaneth Rome because it was first gouerned by seauen Kings or Emperours after Nero and also is compassed about with seauen Mountaines Geneua ¶ This Beast is the Kingdome of Rome The Cat of the mountaine is the errours and blasphemous vices of the whole world gotten in battell The Beares feete Tyrannie The mouth of the Lion is spoilefull and gréedie to deuoure wounded by insurrections and ciuill warre vntill Dominion and gouernaunce came in one mans hande This other Beast that commeth out of the earth is the pompe of the Romish Bishop He pretendeth to be a Lambe This is the second Kingdome of Rome S. I. Cheeke How the number of the beast noteth the Popes comming Count the number of the Beast for it is the number of a man ¶ Number of a man that is such as maie be vnderstood by mans reason For about 666. yeares after this Reuelation the Pope or Antichrist beganne to bée manifest in the world for these Char●cters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signfie 666. and this number is gathered of the small number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the whole make 666. and signifieth Latinus or Latin which noteth the Pope or Antichrist who vseth in all things the Latin tongue and in respect thereof he contemneth the Hebrue and Greeke wherein the word of God was first and best written and because Italy in olde time was called Latinum the Italians are called Latini so that héereby he noteth of what Countrey chieflie he should come● Geneua Of the beast the woman sate on I sawe a woman sit vpon a Scarlet coloured Beast c. ¶ The Beast signifieth the auncient Rome The Woman that sitteth thereon newe Rome which is the Papistrie whose crueltie and bloudshedding is declared by Scarlet Geneua ¶ Looke Woman Of the miraculous comming of the beasts into the Arke of Noe. When Noe with his wife and thrée sonnes with their wiues entred into the Arke sodeinlie there came together to him beasts of all kinds not brought thether by man but euen by the miracle of God Neither did Noe take them but suffered them as they came to enter neither came anie moe of vncleane beasts then two a male and a female And of cleane beastes 7. foure Males and thrée females of which one male was reserued for Sacrifice after the floud the residue were kept for generation Lanquet ¶ God compelled them to present themselues to Noe as they did before to Adam Gen. 2. 19. when he gaue them names Geneua Of the beast called Booz The propertie of this Beast is when he is pursued with hunters and hounds not to defend himselfe with his hornes but hauing a long bagge hanging downe vnder his chinne wherein is gathered much water he defendeth himselfe therewith For in his running and chasing the water in the bag then wareth so scalding hot that when he casteth it vpon the houndes that followe him it scaldeth and burneth them so sore that they are forced to giue ouer their suite Policro li. ● fol. 26. Of foure sorts of beasts Whatsoeuer parteth the hoofe c. He noteth foure sorts of Beasts Some chewe the Cud onelie and some onelie haue the foote clouen Other neither chewe the Cud nor haue the foote clouen The fourth both chewe the Cud haue the hoofe clouen The last maie be eaten Geneua BETHEL Of the scituation of Bethel BEthel is a place famous both for praise and dispraise vii● miles from Hierusalem on the right hand as one iourneith from Hierusalem to Sichar or Naples because of the golden Calfe which king leroboam set vp 3. Reg. 12. 29. The Iewes of contempt called it Bethauen that is the house of an Idoll whereas Iacob gaue it the name of the house of God Gen. 28. 17. How Bethel is both the name of a citie and of a mount That goeth out from Bethel to Luz ¶ Luz is thought to bée a citie at the end of mount Bethel which is also named Bethel Gen. 28. 19. And so Bethel is both the name of a Citie and of a mount The Bible note How Bethel and Bethauen are not both one Which is beside Bethauen on the East side of Bethel ¶ Héere it appeareth that Bethel and Bethauen were two places not both one Although Bethel were after turned into Bethauen when the right seruice of God was turned into luore and to Idolatrie 1. Reg. 13. 6. Ose. 5. 8. Bethel that before was called the house of God after that Ieroboams calues were set vp in it was called Bethauen that is to saie a house vnprofitable and the house of an Idoll Hierom. in Ose. li. 1. Cap. 4 How Bethel is taken in this place following And came vp to Bethel ¶ Bethel in● this place is not the name of a citie but is taken for the house of God and signifieth a place where the Arke of the couenant remained Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 269. Of two Bethels The same is Bethel ¶ Which was in the Tribe of Ephra i● an other Bethel was in the Tribe of Beniamin Geneua Of the finding of Iacob in Bethel He found him in Bethel and there he spake with vs. ¶ He found Iacob as he laie sléeping in Bethel Gen. 28. 12. and spake with him there that the fruit of that speach apperteined to the whole bodie of the people whereof we are Geneua Of the peoples worshipping at Bethel and other places Come
spoken of in the same that in the flame they felt no heate and in the fire they felt no consumption And I constantlie beléeue that howsoeuer the stubble of this my bodie shall be wasted by it yet my soule spirit shall be purged thereby A paine for a time whereon nowithstanding followeth ioie vnspeakable And he much intreated of this place of Scripture Noli timere c. Feare not for I haue redéemed thée and called thée by name Thou art mine owne when thou goest through the water I will bée with thée and the strong floud shall not ouerthrow thée when thou walkest in the fire it shall not burne thée and the flame shall not kindle vpon thée for I am the Lord thy God the holie one of Israel Which he did most comfortablie intreat off as well in respect of himselfe as appling it to the perticular vse of his friendes there present Of whom some tooke such swéet fruit therein that they caused the whole sayd sentence to be faire written in tables and some in their bookes the comfort whereof in diuerse of them was neuer taken from them to their dieng daie In the booke of Mar. fol 1131. His aunswere to a proude Papist BIlney béeing demaunded in dirision by a proud Papist when hée went to his death whie hée wrought no Myra●les béeing so holy a man as he was accompted aunswered with milde voice and countenance God onely sayd he worketh myracles wonders he it is that hath wrought this one wonder in your eies that I being wrōgfullie accused falslie belied opprobriouslie and spitefullie handled imprisonned buffeted and condmned to the fire yet hitherto haue I not once opened my mouth with one ill word against anie of you This passeth the worke of nature and is therefore the manifest miracle of God who will by my suffering and death be glorified and haue his truth enhaunced Of the Bill of diuorcement ¶ Looke Diuorcement BINDING AND LOOSING What is meant heereby TO binde and loose is to preach the lawe of God and the Gospel or promises as thou maist sée in the third chapter of the second epistle to the Corinthians wher Paule calleth the preaching of the lawe the ministration of death and damnation and the preaching of the promises the ministring of the spirit and of righteousnesse For when the lawe is preached al men are found sinners and therefore dampned And when the Gospell of glad tidings are preached then are all that repent and beléeue found righteous in Christ c. Tindale fol. 150. Whatsoeuer ye binde on earth c. ¶ That is whatsoeuer ye condemne by my word in earth the same is condempned in heauen And that ye allow by my word in earth is allowed in heauen Tindale In the. 16. Chapter verse 19. he meant this of doctrine and héere of Ecclesiasticall discipline which dependeth of the doctrine Geneua ¶ To binde is to banish the stifnecked and vnrepentant sinner from the congregation of the Saints to loose is when he repenteth and submitteth himselfe to receiue him againe into the fellowship of the elect and chosen people of God Sir I. Chee ¶ God in promising men the forgiuenesse of their sinnes giueth charge and commission to the ministers of his worde to drawe them from death according as it is expreslie saide that the keies of the kingdome of heauen are cōmitted so those which preach the gospell to what end To forgiue sinnes not of their owne authoritie but to the intent that the wretched man bée the better assured of their saluation and not doubt but God receiueth them to mercie Cal. ●pon Iob. fol. 592. BISHOP What a Bishop and his office is IF a man couet the office of a Bishoppe he desireth a good worke c. ¶ Bishop is as much to say as séer to or an ouer séer Which when he desireth to féede Christs flocke with the foode of health that is with his holie word as the Bishops did in Paules time desireth a good work and the verie office of a Bishop But he that desireth honour gapeth for lucre thirsteth great rentes séeketh preheminence pompe dominion coueteth abundance of al things without want rest and hearts ease castles parkes Lordships Earledomes c. desireth not a worke much lesse a good worke and is nothing lesse then a Bishop as Saint Paule héere vnderstandeth a Bishop Tind How Bishops were chosen In choosing of Bishops the people had their libertie long preserued that none should be thrust in that were not accepted of all This therfore was forbidden in the counsell at Antioch that none should be thrust in to them against their wil Which thing also Leo the first doth diligentlie confirme Héerevpon came these saiengs Let him be chosen whom the Clergie and the people or the greater number shal require Againe let him that shall beare the rule ouer all be chosen of all For it must needs be the he that is made a ruler being vnknowne and not examined is thrust in by violence Againe let him be chosen by the Clarks and desired by the people and let him be consecrate by them of that prouince with the iudgemēt of the Metropolitane The holy Fathers tooke so great héed that the libertie of the people should by no meanes be diminished that when the generall Synode gathered together at Constantinople did ordeine Nectarius they would not doe it without the allowance of the whole Clergy and people As they testified by thrée Epistles to the Synode at Rome Therfore when anie Bishop did appoint a successor to himselfe● it was none otherwise stablished vnlesse y● who le people did confirme it Whereof you haue not onely an example but also y● verie forme in Augustine in the naming of Gradius And Theodor●te when he reheraseth that Peter was named by Athanasius to bée his successor by by addeth y● the elders of Priests confirmed it the magistrate nobility the people approued it with their allowing shoute Caluine in his insti 4. ● Chap. 4. Sect. 11. Of the ordination of Bishops and Ministers The ordination of Bishops hath nothing proper or peculiar besides fruits commodities that necessarilie depend therof for it is the decrée of the Lord that of them to whome they minister the secrets and mysteries of the heauenlie life they receiue the things that belong to the necessarie vses and maintenaunce of this lyfe As Saint Paule plainlie proueth to the Corinthians 1. Chapter 9. from the. 4. verse to the. 15. And the 1. to Timothie 5. 17. 18. And to the Gal. 6. 6. which thing also Christ teacheth Mat. 10. 10. Luke 10. 17. So the this is the iust right lawe of God that the Bishoppes or ministers are to bée mainteined of the Churches and such a measure is to be kept the they be neither pressed with ouer great néed nor runne riot with too much excesse for in either of them a regard is to bée had to the calling of a
the Iewes did weare borders on their garments ANd make large borders on their garments ¶ Read N● 15. chapter and verse 38. and there thou shalt learne why the Iewes did weare such borders on their garments Sir I. Cheeke ¶ Looke Gardes Philacteries BORNE ¶ Looke Water and Spirit BOSOME How it is diuer●lie taken For I haue giuen my maide into thy ' Bosome ¶ Bosome after the manner of the Hebrues is taken for companieng with a woman And it is also taken for faith as in Luke 16. 23. of Lazarus T. M. In the Bosome of the father ¶ This is a speach borrowed out of the custome of 〈…〉 For when we will signifie that we will commit our secret to anie we saie we will admit him to our Bosome So the meaning is that he meaning Christ is priuie to all Gods secrettes and therefore can shew vs such heauenlie mysterie as no man can declare And this exposition Saint Austen followeth Cyrill thinketh that in the Bosome is as much to saie as in the Father and of the Father and as you vsing manie wordes in the inward part of the Father for he is not a péece cut off and deuided from the substaunce of the Father as it fareth in mans begetting but hee so begotten as he is still in the Father Traheron● Of the bosome of Abraham Looke Abraham BRAMBLE The propertie of a bramble compared to Abimelech Plinie in his 24. book● and 14. Chapter writeth of this kind of Thorne And as ●ou●hing this matter these are the properties thereof ●t is a 〈…〉 it was Abimelech who was a bastard and borne of an handmaide so that he was not to be compared with his bretheren And as he without any vtilitie gouerned the Israelites so is the bramble wont to bring foorth no fruit The Bramble also pri●keth euen as Abimelech verie much huried the Israelites Moreouer some write that the boughes of Brambles are 〈…〉 〈…〉 so vehementlie shaken and moued with the winde that out of the●● is fire kindeled where with not onelie they themselues brent but the whole woode wherein they growe is burnt which thing Iothan now foretelleth to come to passe of Abimelech wherefore the properties doe wonderfullie well agrée Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 160. ¶ Sée more in Abimelech BOOVV DOVVNE What it is to Boow downe TO bowe downe is to cap and● to knée to ducke with the head and bend the bodie to fall downe to honour to worship and to reuerence Bullinger fol. ●22 Bowe downe their backes c. ¶ To bowe downe their backes doth not onelie signifie that they should be brought vnder of the Gentiles and oppressed● with all kinde of euill but that● they should not once● looke vp to call on the Lord with sure beliefe of heart Tind●le BOVVE How the Gospell is likened to a Bowe ¶ Looke Gospell BRAVNCHES Who are the braunches cut off Though some of the braunches be broken of The braunches that are broken off are the Iewes which are forsaken and cast off The wilde Oliue trée are the Gentiles The right Oliue trée is the Couenaunt or faith and vocation of the Sainte The fatnesse thereof is the grace of God and the glorie of the elect The Iewes then being come of the fathers were as a man might say naturallie grafted in the couenaunt but the Heathen being come of Idolaters were as wilde Oliue trees grafted therein Sir I. Cheeke ¶ These broken braunches were the vnbeléeuing Iewes which for their vnbeliefe were cut off from the promise of God in whose stéede was the wilde Oliue that is the Gentiles grafted through faith The Bible note BREAD What Bread is in Scripture BRead in scripture is taken for all that is necessarie to this present life And I will fet a morsell of Bread to comfort your hearts withall And as we saie in our Lords praier Giue vs this daie our dailie Bread Tindale How Bread is called Christs bodie Ireneus writing against the Valentinians in his fourth booke saith that Christ confessed bread which is a creature to be his bodie and the Cup to be his bloud and in the same booke hée writeth thus also The Bread wherein the thankes be giuen is the bodie of the Lord. And yet againe in the same booke hée saith that Christ taking bread of the same sort that our bread is off confessed that it was his bodie and that the thing which was tempered in the Chalice was his bloud And in the fift booke he writeth further that of the Chalice● which is his bloud a man is nourished and doth growe by the bread which is his bodie ¶ These words of Ireneus be most plaine that Christ taking verie material bread a creature of God and of such sort as other bread is which we doe vse called that his bodie when hée said This is my bodie and the wine also which doth féede and nourish vs he calleth his bloud ¶ T●ertulian in his booke written against the Iewes saith that Christ called bread his bodie And in his booke against Marcion he oftentimes repeateth the selfe same words ¶ Saint Cipriane in the first booke of his Epistles saith that Christ called such bread as is made of manie cornes ioined together his bodie and such wine he named his bloud as is pressed out of manie Grapes and made into wine And in his second booke he saith these words Water is not the bloud of Christ but wine And againe in the same Epistle he saith that it was wine which Christ called his bloud and that if wine be not in the Chalice then we drinke not of the fruite of the Uine And in the same Epistle he saith that meale alone or water alone is not the bodie of Christ except they be both ioined together to make thereof bread ¶ Epiphanius saith that Christ speaking of a loafe which is round in fashion and cannot see nor féele said of it This is my bodie ¶ Saint Hierom writing ad Hedibiam saith these words Let vs marke that the bread which the Lord brake and gaue to his Disciples was the bodie of our Sauiour Christ he said vnto them Take and eate this is my bodie ¶ Saint Augustine saith that although we maie set foorth Christ by mouth by writing and by the Sacrament of his bodie and bloud yet we call neither our tongue nor words nor inke letters nor paper the bodie and bloud of Christ but that we call the bodie and bloud of Christ which is taken of the fruite of the earth and consecrated by mysticall praier Also he saith Iesus called meate his bodie and drinke his bloud ¶ Cyrill vpon Saint Iohn saith that Christ gaue to his disciples péeces of bread saieng Take eate this is my bodie Cyrill in Iohn li. 4. ca. 14. ¶ Theodoretus saith When Christ gaue the holie mysteries he called bread his bodie and the cup mixt with wine and water he called his
for she doubted not but as the Angell had tolde hir she should conceiue and that straight waie but because she sawe that she was not as yet coupled in Matrimonie although she were betrouthed she demaunded how that should come to passe Therefore the Angell in his aunswere comprehended two principall points The one is whereby he remooued awaie doubting if peraduenture there stucke anie thing in the minde of the Uirgin For he said No word is impossible with God The second is of the maner of conceiuing The Holie ghost saith he shall come vpon thée and the power of the most highest shall shaddowe thée But whereas some faine that she asked this because she had vowed virginitie to God it néedeth no long confutation especiallie seeing wée are by the Historie it selfe taught that shee was betrothed to a man neither was there at that time anie such custome to vowe Uirginitie Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 96. DRAGMA What Dragma is A Dragma is the fourth part of a Sickle which is to saie fiue halfe pence for a Sickle is twentie halfe pence DRAGON Wherefore the King of Aegypt is called a Dragon I Will vpon thée thou Dragon ¶ The propertie of Dragons is to haunt where abundance of waters are Therefore is the King of Aegypt héere called a Dragon because of the abundaunce of water that are in Aegypt where he raigned So is Hierusalem called a Stewes because of hir haunting of Idolatrie As in the 16. T. M. ¶ He compareth Pharao to a Dragon which hideth himselfe in the riuer Nilus As Esay 51. 9. Geneua The meaning of this place following Thou hast couered vs in the place of Dragons and couered vs with the shaddowe of death That is thou hast condemned vs to the place of Dragons or Serpents or thou hast driuen vs into the place of Dragons or Serpents By the place of Serpents is vnderstood their bondage among the Heathen which in crueltie are like to Dragons or Serpents The same calleth he the shadow of death for it is worse then death more to be feared to be put in all thing to the arbitriment and pleasure of the vngodlie to heare continuallie the name of God blasphemed and all godlinesse despised and all manner of iniuries wrongs done to the fauourers thereof Therefore saith he thou hast couered vs with the shaddowe of death that is with the verie darknesse of death T. M. Who be the Dragons Angells And the Dragon and his Angells fought c. ¶ The Angells whose force the Dragon vseth against Michael are the great men wise men and wealthie men of the world whose puissaunce pollicie riches are the weapons that he fighteth with for the maintenaunce of his kingdome and honour which he hath vsurped wrongfullie with him we must also incounter howbeit with spiritual armour from God according as the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 10. 4. Ephe. 6. 13. Marl. vpon the Apo. fol. 174. Who be the Dragon beast and the false Prophet Out of the mouth of the Dragon beast and false Prophet ¶ There be that thinke the Dragon the Beast the false Prophet to be all one But we maie fitly vnderstand by the Dragon Satan himselfe the Father of lies By the Beast Antichrist all his bodie and by the false Prophet all manner of false teachers of Antichrists kingdome Marl. DRAVVING The meaning of these places following NO man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him ¶ To be drawen of the father is to be endued with faith with the Holie ghost by which our harts are sealed cōfirmed toward Christ. For the father giueth faith to whō he will on whom he wil he hath mercie whom he will also he maketh hard hearted It is no violent manner of drawing which draweth a man with externall haling and pulling of the which our Sauiour speaketh héere and yet notwithstanding the motion of the Holie ghost is so effectuall that it maketh men willing in despite of flesh and bloud Wherefore that is false and prophane which some saie that no man is drawen against his will as though a man were obedient to God by his owne motion will For in that men willinglie obaie God it commeth of him who frameth their hearts to his obedience Therefore mans free will is nothing Marl. vpon Iohn fol. 218. I will drawe all men to mée ¶ In that our Sauiour speaketh héere so generallie that by his death he will draw all men vnto him it is to be referred to the Sonnes of God which are of the flocke Also he vsed this generall speach because the Church of God was to be gathered out of the Gentiles and also out of the Iewes according to this place There shall be one Shepheard and one Shéepefold Mar. fol. 441. ¶ Looke Father DREAMES How it is hard to discerne Dreames SAint Austen demaundeth by what meanes the reuealations of euill and good spirits maie be discerned one from another he aunswereth that that cannot be done except a man haue the gifte of discerning of spirits but he add●th that an euil spirite doth alwaies at the last lead men to wicked opinions peruerse manners although at the beginning the difference cannot be knowen without the gifte of the Holie Ghost In his Epistle to E●odius which is the hundred Epistle inquiring of the same matter he saith I would to God I could discerne betweene Dreames which are giuen to errour and those which are to saluation neuerthelesse we ought to be of good chéere because God suffereth his Children to be tempted but not to perish Pet. M 〈…〉 vpon Iudic. ●ol 137. Of Dreames naturall and supernaturall Supernaturall sleepes or Dreames doe come of God from aboue by good Angells by the which God 〈…〉 his will to whom it pleaseth him And w● vnderstand th 〈…〉 ●hose 〈…〉 de 〈…〉 Dreames doe much differ from those that be naturall because they are of more certaintie and sealed confirmed from aboue so that the veritie of the same cannot be ambiguous or doubtfull The Dreames which commonlie happen vnto men are woont to come of continnuall cogitations and thoughts of the minde or of the course of Nature or of the distemperaunce of the bodie or of such like causes But to the diuine Dreames commeth the testimonie of the spirite which witnesseth for a suretie that it is God that speaketh As of the Ladder of Iacob which we reade that he sawe in a vision or Dreame Marl. fol. 13. DRONKENNESSE What Dronkennesse is after the minde of Seneca SEneca saith in his 84. Epistle Dronkennesse is nothing els but a voluntarie madnesse And straight waies after The qualitie of Dronkennesse continuing manie daies is furiousnesse Plato in his 7. booke De legibus toward the ende writeth that Minos in his Lawes prohibited the Cretenses that they should not drinke togethers to Dronkennesse Againe in his 16. Dialogue De iusto at the beginning A dronken
all hearbes and leaues in so much as it maketh euen the verie aire about it greene Heereof are manie kindes but the preciousest in the Countreie of Sychamit which is desert and vninhabitable by reason of extreame colde And these stones are kept by Griffons not for themselues but for men For armed men fight against them and take them from them The Diuell is the Griffon who laboureth to take from vs the iewell of our redemption bestowed vppon vs by Christ in the coldenesse of his exceeding sore passion that is to wit of his infirmitie tooke vppon him for vs through the freshnesse of his inuincible courage Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 299. The fourth was a Smaragde or an Emeralde which is not onelie greene of his owne nature but hée maketh all the aire about him to seeme gréene also Of this condition was Ieremie and Paule which hauing the doctrine of lyfe spared not to minister it vnto others for their eternall refreshing these with such other throwne into the foundation of the church were verie comfortable vnto other With the holie saith Dauid thou shalt bée holie and with the pure innocent thou shalt be both innocent and pure Bale EMIMS What kinde of people they were A Kinde of Gyaunts so called because they were terrible and cruell for Emim signifieth terriblenesse Tindale fol. 15. ENACH What the Enachs were A Kinde of Gyaunts so called happelie because they ware cheines about their neckes Tindale fol. 15. Enach or Enak in Hebrue is to girde or to compasse and is chieflie referred to cheines which are worne about the necke for comelynesse sake And thereof is this name Enak deriued and in the plurall number hath both the masculine and the feminine forme and it signifieth a cheine and is transferred to noble and worthie men whome thou maist call cheined Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 15. ENIMIE How an Enemie is not to be despised The Philistines despising the Hebrues were ouercome of Ionathas and his harnesse-bearer Golias disdained Dauid who notwithstanding ouercame him and slue him Benhadad king of Siria making light of the power of Israel was ouercome of Achab and saine to craue of him his pardon Amasiahu king of Iuda not estéeming Iehoas king of Israel was of him taken captiue and carried to Hierusalem to his great dishonour How an enimie reconciled is not sodeinlie to be trusted Saule acknowledging his fault with teares was not therefore to be trusted Ioab béeing reconciled to Abner by deceite notwithstanding slue him Triphon as a reconciled enimie kept Ionathas in holde and at the last put him to death 1. Mac. 12. 48. and 13. 23. ENON AND SALIM Whie Iohn baptised there more then else where AND Iohn baptised in Enon beside Salim The Geographers affirme that these two Townes Enon and Salim are not farre from the riuer of Iordane and Iaboc néere vnto the which two Townes they make a Citie called Scythopolis Hierome saith it maketh no matter whether you reade Salem or Salim The cause whie Iohn baptised in Enon is added for that there was much water there Marl. fol. 80. ENTER An exposition of these places following ENter not into iudgement with thy seruaunt ¶ Saint Austen vppon this place sayth O LORD enter not into iudgement with thy seruaunt What meaneth that enter not into iudgement with thy seruaunt Thus much it meaneth Stande not with me in iudgement requiring of me all that thou hast commaunded for if thou enter into iudgement with mée thou shalt finde mee guiltie I had néede therefore not of thy vpright iudgement but of thy mercie August de tempo ser. 46. Enter into thy maisters ioye ¶ The maister receiueth him into his house to giue him parte of his goods and commodities Geneua ¶ Enter into thy maisters ioye is as much to saye as possesse the kingdome prepared for all such as are faithfull Tindale ENVIE How Enuie came first into the world ENuie came first of Satan for enuieng the felicitie of man whome GOD had created and set in Paradise a place replenished with all pleasure chaunged himselfe into an Angell of light abusing the wisedome of the Serpent to deceiue man Lanquet Examples of Enuie Of enuie Caine slue his brother Abel Of enuie the Philistines stopped the Well from Abrahams seruaunts Of enuie Ioseph was solde of his brethren The Aegyptians enuied the multiplication of the Israelites Miriam enuieng hir brother was plagued with leprosie Through enuie Saule persecuted Dauid 1. Re. 18. 8. Enuie stirreth vp all contention Pro. 10. 12. Through enuie Daniel was accused as a transgressour of the kings lawes Dan. 6. 13. The elder brother enuied the younger brother which had prodigallie spent his goods receiued into fauour Luke 15. 27. EPHA What an Epha is THe tenth part of an Epha of barleie meale ¶ An Epha conteineth thrée bushels The tenth deale of an Epha cōteineth onelie so much as fortie Eegge-shells can comprise An Hin is a measure of things Liquid conteining as much as xij Logges each Logge holdeth as much as vi Egge-shells can holde But Omer or Gomer which is called Corus in Latine conteineth the measure of thrée Ephaes that is as much as a thousand two hundred fourescore and ten Egge-shels can conteine The Bible note EPHESVS Of whome this Citie tooke his name Ephesus was the Mother Citie of the lesser Asia and a famous marte Towne builded by the Amazons the noblest of all the Cities of Ionia taking that name of a woman of Amazonia and before that time turned by manie other names as Vrichia Ortigia Ptelea and Arsinoe after the name of Arsinoe the wife of king Lisimachus Marl. vpon the Apoc. fol. 19 EPHOD What an Ephod is An Ephod is a garment somewhat like an Amice saue the armes came through and it was girded too Tindale fol. 11. The Hebrue word Aphad is to binde or so gird whereof this nowne is deriued signifieng a Garment which compassed the shoulders and then it was bound together and after a sorte girded together the inward coate Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 151. Girded with a linen Ephod ¶ An Ephod is a short and narrowe linnen coate without sléeues put vppermost vpon his garments to kéepe them close vnto him The Bible note Of two kindes of Ephods There was an Ephod which onelie the high Priests vsed it was made of Purple Uiolet coulour Silke and Scarlet it had gold wrought in it sundrie kinds of most precious stones There was also an other which was called Ephod bad that is a linnen Ephod which the Leuites vsed in holie seruice Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 151. EPHRAIM Whie the Tribe of Ephraim is not reckoned NEither is the Tribe of Ephraim reckoned because Ieroboam the first king of Israel after the diuision of the kingdome béeing of that Tribe made Israel to sinne in the golden calues according as the holie historie reporteth Marl. fol. 108. EPISTLE to
Geneua He brought the Groue from the Temple of the Lorde He remoued the Groue which Idolaters for deuotion had planted néere vnto the Temple contrarie to the commaundement of the Lorde Deut. 16. 21. Or as some reade the similitude of the Groue which was hanged in the Temple Geneua They worshipped Trées and Groues ¶ This worde Aschrea with the Hebrewes is a Trée and being in the plurall number Ascheroth as it is in this place it signifieth Trées an● of some it is translated Groues For it is a most common manner amonge the Idolaters to worshippe their Gods in Groues In Oken Groues they sacrificed to Iupiter And the Oke of D●dome was in the olde time most famous by reason of the aunsweres which it gaue In woodes of Baye●●es was Appollo worshipped Dap●●e also is notable where the Temple of Appollo was 〈…〉 was won● to haue a temple among Oliue trées And lastlie we may mark both in Poets also in histories y● shadowie woods most large riuers and mountaines of exceeding great height were counted in the men of the olde time places most apt for Sacrifices to bée done vnto Idolls because such places drewe● vnto men no small admiration Wherefore they thought that such notable places had the power of God present Yea and Abraham also Isaac and Iacob and the olde Fathers offered Sacrifices vnto the true God vppon the high mountaines which custome was till such time vsed as God by a lawe ordeyned that they shoulde not doe sacrifice euerie where but in that place onelie which he hims●lfe had chosen Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 77. GVILE The definition of Guile ●Eruetus an interpreter of the Lawe hath thus defined euill guile namelie to be a subtile inuention or deuice for to deceiue an other by when as one thing is done an other thing dissembled Wheresoeuer therefore is guile there is deceite by some dissimulation c. Of good and euill Gule Some guile is good and other some is euill Wée call that good which is not hurtfull when as it hurteth none but sometimes profiteth but euill guile is hurtfull and euer hurteth some bodie c. Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. Halcion What Halcion is HAlcion was the daughter of Neptunus and wife to Cey● whome shée beholding to bée drowned for sorrow prowned her self Wherfore the Poets write that they were both translated into birdes and called Hal●io●es Elio●o What the Halcions 〈…〉 bee Halcion is a kings fishe● It is said that in the most sharpe coldest time of the yeare these Halcions making their n●ast ● in the sea rocks or sand wil 〈…〉 their Egges hatch forth their Chickens● And therefore the same sea that ha●bou●eth these ●oules thus sitting vpon their Egs wil be so calme stil to her guests for 〈…〉 daies y● men maie surelie saile without perill vpon her not shaken or moiested with anie storme or tempest nor yet the neasts of these birds so nigh the water not once shaken nor hurt with anie sou●ges For the sea will not for y● time of these birds ●●tting hatching disease her guests And therfore is this tranquilitie of the sea for that little time as a t●ewes taking in the Winter called the Halcions daies Melancthon vpon Dan● HAND What the hand of God signifieth CHrist is called the hande of God for he is both his arme and his hande Moreouer Gods hand is taken sometime for his power Iere. 18. 6. Beholde the house of Israel ye are in my hand euen as the claie in the Potters Sometime for his scourge Soph. 1. 4. I will stretch out my hande ouer Iuda and Hierusalem and I will roote out the remnaunt of Siria Of the which scourge Iob. 19. 21. saith The hand of the Lorde hath touched mée Augustine Of the band that Balthas●r sawe The king himselfe alone sawe the hand● w●iting● and not his guests as did Balaams● Asse see the Angell which Balaam sawe not The hande came glittering foorth against● the light and Candlesticke Rabbie Saadias saith That it was the hand of Gabriel But it was the hand of God and man to ●ée euen of Christ which is the mightie Angell of Gods counsell and hand of the Father c. Melancthon vpon Dan. What is meant by this place following Put thy hand vnder my thigh ¶ To put the hand vnder the ●high was an oath which the● Hebrewes vsed in such things as perteined to the Testament and promise of God As in G●n● 47. 29. ¶ Which ceremonie declared the seruaunts obedience towards his maister and the maisters power ouer the seruaunt Geneua Hand writing what it was And hath put out the hand writing y● was against vs conteined in the lawe written ¶ The lawe is our hande writing in that the conscience setteth to her seale subse 〈…〉 and ●on●enteth that the lawe is iust and we sinners which lawe co●cerning dampnation is taken awaie through faith in Christ. Tindale The Apostle héere vseth a Metaphor of a writing or of an Obligation made where men are bound to ful●●ll the writing or obligation made This writing is the lawe of God it requireth that all men shoulde fulfill the lawe no man fulfilled the lawe Christ onelie excepted wherefore all men were founde by the lawe guiltie and worthie of death because they haue not fulfilled the law that they were bound to kéepe This Lawe Christ not onelie for himselfe but for all that beléeue in him to the worlds ende did fulfill that it shall not bée imputed to them that beléeue in Christ anie transgression of the lawe and we by him and in him Christ is the perfection of the lawe to all them that beléeue in him L. Ridley vpon the ●oll HAPPIE The meaning of this place following HAppie or blessed are they which haue not séene and yet haue beléeued ¶ These wordes were spoken in reproch of the hard beliefe of Didimus that would not beléeue the resurrection of his Maister Christ by the report of them that sawe him risen notwithstanding he knew that Christ had promised before his death that he would rise againe the third daie but said he would first sée the fa●●eming of the nailes in his hands and put his finger into the holes and his hand into his side or he woulde beléeue But when he had seene and confessed saieng My Lord and my God Then said Christ to him Because thou hast sée●e me Thomas thou hast beléeued happie or blessed are they which haue not séene and yet haue beléeued meaning therby the Fathers Prophets of the old law which saw him not with the bodilie eies and yet beléeued all that they writ of him concerning his comming in the flesh which Thomas wo●ld not beléeue till he sawe it This is the meaning of this place and not to applie it as the Papists haue done to the Sacrament counting them to be blessed that beléeue Christs bodie to be there and sée it not Crowley HARDEN How God is said
to harden GOd is said to harden when he calleth he resisteth making himselfe vnworthie of the kingdome of heauen he doth then permit him vnto himselfe that is he leaueth man vnto his owne corrupt nature according vnto the which the hart of man is stonie which is onlie mollified and made tractable by the onelie grace of God therefore the withdrawing of Gods grace is the hardening of mans hart and when we are left to our selues then are we hardened Bullinger fol. 490. ¶ God is said to harden mans heart when he doth iustly punish his obstinacie and wickednesse by withdrawing his spirite and grace The Bible note ¶ Harden his heart ¶ By returning my spirite and deliu●ring him to Satan to increase his 〈…〉 Geneua HEART Where the heart of man is placed THe heart of man is placed on the left side all other beasts in the middle of the ●reast The opinion of all naturall Philosophers is that the first that is formed in man is the heart and the last member that dieth in man How some mens hearts be hairie Plinie saith that some mans heart is hairie which betokeneth hardie couragious and actiue as it was pro●ed by one Aristodamus which fought against the Lacedemonians and slew thrée hun●red with his owne handes and he being dead and opened his heart was found hairie How the heart of man that is poysoned will not burne Sweton and Plinie saith both that if a man die of poyson the heart of that man can not be burned though it be cast into the fire which was proued of Germanicus father to Caligula Of the heart and wombe of God The heart of God the Father signifieth the secret of his wisdome of which he begate his word that is his Sonne without beginning without anie passion Psal. 45. 1. My heart is inditing of a good matter His wombe is vsed in the same signification Psal. 110. 4. Of my womde before the morning starre I begate thée Augustine HART OR STAGGE A● the H●rt being poysoned doth couet the wat●r so we being poysoned with sinne ought to flie vnto Christ for succour THose that doe write of the nature of beasts doe saie that an Hart among other his peculiar properties hath a great desire aboue all other beasts to the waters and that for thrée causes One is for the quenching of his thirst and that desire is common to him with all other beasts he hath also a naturall desire to the water when he is hot and chafed with the chasing of dogs and that for two causes One the colde water cooleth his heat and refresheth his strength Secondlie the water by the meanes of his readinesse and aptnesse to swimme doth not onelie sette him forward and giueth him a vauntage before the dogs but also doth sometime thereby deceiue the Hounds and sometime defendeth him against the ●ray-hounds So that the Hart being chased and in daunger of his 〈…〉 hearesorteth by and by for his● comfort and defence Ad 〈…〉 aquarum vnto the water springs vnto the Brookes or Riuers Our Hunters I trowe tearme it not to call it the water Springs but they call it the Sound The Stagge saie they got him to the Sound and there the Hounds made a fault and had l●st him clearelie had not one olde Hound haue bene which ius●●lie leaped into the water and on the other side tried which waie he was gone and so followed the chase afresh Beside these two great causes why the Hart desireth the water there is yet another as great as anie of the other two but not so well knowen to the most part of men as the other be In Affrike and other hot Countries where many Serpents be there is a naturall enmitie betwéene the Harte and them and as soone as the Hart hath deuoured the Serpent the poyson of the Serpent doth cast the Hart into such a feruent heate that it causeth him to haue a meruailous desire to the water without which the Hart must néede die Such a loue ought all men haue to godlinesse and to runne to God for succour when they be poysoned with the venime of sinne or oppressed with anie kinde of trouble as the Hart hath 〈…〉 runne to the water Springs when he is chased with Dogges or poysoned with Serpents So that they maie saie with the Prophet Dauid As the Hart desireth the water Springs so my soule desireth thée O Lord. Ric. Turnar HARVEST What is vnderstood by this word Haruest THe Haruest is great but the labourers are fewe ¶ The Haruest are the hearts of men prepared to heare the worde as it appeareth by the Samaritanes Iohn 4. 39. Tindale Because the haruest of the earth is ripe ¶ This Haruest is the verie same that Christ willeth to be taried for when he teacheth of the s●oling out of the good from the bad Suffer ye them saith he to growe together till Haruest and when Haruest commeth I will saie to the Haruest folke First gather together the Darnell and binde it vp in bundells to be burnt but gather ye the Wheate together in my Barne Mat. 13. 30. Marl. fol. 216. HATE The meaning of this place following HE that hateth his life in this world shall keepe it vnto life eternall ¶ He that can be content to loose his temporall life in this world for Christs sake and his word shall liue for eue● As in Ma●h 〈…〉 Tindale When a man maie hate his neighbour WHen thy neighbour hath shewed thée more vnkindnesse t●en God hath loue then ma●● thou hate him and not before but must loue him for Gods sake till he fight against God to 〈…〉 the name and glorie of God Tindale fol. 204. HATH 〈…〉 following For 〈…〉 But whosoeuer hath not c. ¶ That is to 〈…〉 He that hath a good heart toward the word of God and a set purpose to fashion his déedes thereafter and to garnish it with godlie liuing and to testifie it to other the same shall increase more more d●ilie 〈…〉 the gra●e of God and Christ. But he that loueth it not to liue thereafter and to edifie other the same shall loose the grace of true knowledge and be blinded againe and euerie daie worse and worse blinder and blinder till he be an vtter enimie vnto the word of God and his heart so hardened that it shal be impossible to conuert it Tindale ¶ He that hath anie thing as he should haue it righ●lie and vseth it well as he should do the same shal abound and increase more and more in goodnesse and godlinesse But he that hath not euen that he hath shall be taken from him that is he that liueth not according to the knowledge he hath in Gods open word of his commaundements but knoweth the Lords will doth it not shall be depriued of that he hath and turned ouer into blindnesse and darknesse ¶ They that haue a desire of righteousnesse and of the truth shall be more and
chosen But y● holie Ghost also appointeth ministers to preach for it is written that the holie Ghost sayde Seperate me Barnabas Saule vnto the worke wherevnto I haue called them And againe sayth Paule Take héede vnto your selues and to all the flocke amongest whome y● holy Ghost hath made you ouerseers to rule the congregation of God which he hath purchased with his bloud wherefore it cannot be denied but y● the holye Ghost is God The selfe same reason vseth Athanasius against Arrius the chiefe Author of this sect ¶ None hath power to adopt vs to be the children of God but God onelie but by the holie Ghost we are adopted to be the children of God for Paule calleth the holie Ghost the spirit of Adoption and all because we are thereby made the children of God Ergo the holie Ghost is God How the Holy ghost is God proued by the auncient Doctors S. Augustine saith thus Spiritus sanctus est D●us c. The Holie ghost is God Therefore Peter when he saide vnto Ananias thou hast enterprised to lye vnto the Holie ghost he followed readely and tolde him what was the Holie ghost and said Thou hast not lied vnto men but vnto God August cont literas petilia li. 3. cap. 28. This place of Saint Austen is against those that will quarrell and saie that the Godhead of the Holy ghost cannot be proued by expresse words of the Scripture Iewel fol. 91. Nazianzenus saith Dicit aliquis c. Some man will saie it is not written that the Holy ghost is God but I will bring thée forth a whole swarme of authorities whereby it shall appeare that the Godhead of the holie Ghost is plainlie witnessed in the Scripture Unlesse a man will be verie dull and vtterlie voide of the holie Ghost Nazianzenus de spiritu sancto● Didimus in his booke De spiritu far cto which Saint Hierome did translate proueth that the holie Ghost is verie God because he is in manie places at one time which no creature can be For saith he all creatures visible and inuisible be circumscribed inuironed either within one place as corporable and visible things be or with the propertie of their substa●nce as Angels and inuisible creatures so that an Angell sayth he cannot be at one time in two places And for as much as the holie Ghost is in manie places at one time therefore saith he the holie Ghost must néeds be God Did●mus de spiritu sancto li. 1. The Angell saith Basil which was with Cornelius was not at the same time with Philip. Nor the Angell which spake to Zacharie in the Altar was not the same time in his proper place in heauen but the holie Ghost was at one time in Abacuck and in Daniel in Babilon and with Ieremie in prison and with Ezechiel in Chober whereby he proueth that the ho●●e Ghost is God Basil de spiritu sancto cap. 22. HOLIE VVATER How it was called in the olde time THen the Priest shall take the holie Water c. ¶ Which also is called the water of purification or sprinkling Nu. 19 9. because they that were separated for their vncleannesse wer sprinkled therewith and made cleane In Hebrue it is called the water of sinne because it is made to purge sinne Nu. 8. 7. It is also called holie water because it was ordeined to an holie vse Geneua Of the Popish holie water and vse thereof Pope Alexander ordeined and commaunded all his Priests to make holie water not to be a remembraunce of Christes bloud of our Baptime but to purge men from sinne as his wordes doe testifie in the booke of the Popes decrées Aquam sale conspersam populi benedicemus c. We blesse water sprinkled with salt for y● people that they sprinkled therwith may be hallowed and cleansed The which thing we command all Sacrificers or Priests likewise to doe For if the Ashes of a Calfe sprinkled with bloud hallowed and cleansed the people much more water sprinkled with salt and sanctified with good praiers halloweth and cleanseth the people These bée the words of Pope Alexander both vaine and superstitious HOMILIES Bucers iudgement concerning Homilies read in the Church IT is better saith he that where there lackes to expounde the Scriptures vnto the people there should be godlie and learned homilies read vnto them rather then they should haue no exhortation at all in the administration of the Supper And a little after he sayth There be too few homilies and too few pointes of religion taught in them when therefore the Lorde shall blesse this kingdome with some excellent preachers let them be commaunded to make mo homilies of the principall partes of Religion which maie be read to the people by those Pastors that cannot make better themselues Bucer HONOVR What Honour signifieth IN giuing honour goe one before an other ¶ Honour is héere taken not onelye for a certeine outward reuerence whereby we reuerence the dignitie of our neighbour but also for an outward helpe succour and aide whereby we helpe those that stand in néede Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 419. What honour is to be giuen to the wife Giuing honour vnto the wife ¶ Erasmus in his Annotations noteth out of Saint Hierome that to giue honour héere is not to bow the knée neither to decke them with golde and pretious stones neither to set them in the vpper seates and highest places which manner we sée most foolishlie vsed in diuerse regions but to absteine from fleshlie lusts for so saith Hierome is honour giuen vnto women if they be not defiled with ouer much wantonnesse and lust The signification of this worde honour doth also extend it selfe to amiable kinde and louing speach to the ministring vnto the wife such things as she needeth as farre foorth as thine abilitie stretcheth Tindale What it is to honour parents Honour thy Father and thy Mother ¶ To honour Father Mother is not onlie to shew obedience vnto them but also to helpe them in their age if they be poore néedie As Ephe. 6. 2. Mar. 7. 10. Math. 15. 4. Rom. 13. 7. T. M. ¶ By the which is meant all that haue authoritie ouer vs. Geneua Of three manner of honours a diuine honour a ciuill honour and an Idoll honour There be manie wordes indifferent to diuerse and contrarie significations as are Adoro Colo Seruio to bowe downe worship to serue and to knéele which when the word following is added as to saie Adoro Deum vel Imaginem vel hom●em It is soone seene what worship is meant for the Scriptures put neuer any such worde alone but expresse what thing is worshipped or honoured In the former chapter it is writtē y● the king fell downe before Daniel honoured him with a ciuile honour And we are commanded so to honour our parents princes and ministers of y● word c. but no wher cōmandeth god but vtterly
the holy Communion euery Sunday King William Conquerour at a counsell at Winchester where the Popes Legate was put downe many Bishops Abbots Priors He gaue to Lanfranck y● Archbishoprick of Canterburie the Archbishopricke of Yorke vnto Thomas a Cauot of Beyon King Henrie the first toke an oath as well of the Clergie as of the Laitie sware them vnto him vnto William his sonne and made Bishops and Abbots c. King Henrie the second made Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterburie who thereat was sworne to the king and to his lawes and to his sonne Edward the first made a statute at North-hampton that after that time no man shall giue neither sell nor bequeath neither chaunge neither by Title assigne landes tenements neyther rents to anie man of religion without the kings leaue In the daies of king Richard the second it was enacted against the Pope that it should be lawfull for no man to try anie cause before him vpon paine to forfait all their goods and to suffer perpetuall prison Elentherius the Pope writing to Lucius king of England said thus vnto him Petijstis a nobis c. Ye haue required of vs to sende the Romane and Imperiall lawes vnto you to vse the same in your Realme of England We may alwaies reiect the lawes of Rome and the lawes of the Emperour but so can we not the lawes of God for ye haue receiued through the mercie of God the lawe and fayth of Christ into your kingdome you haue both the Testaments in your Realme Take out of them by the grace of God and aduice of your subiects a lawe and by that lawe through Gods assuraunce rule your Realme but be you Gods Uicar in that Kingdome A. G. How kings doe reigne by the prouidence of God By me kings reigne c. ¶ Whereby he declareth that honours dignitie or riches come not of mans wisedome or industry but by the prouidence of God Geneua How the kings hearts are in the hands of God The kings heart is in the hands of the Lord c. ¶ Though kings séeme to haue all things at commandement yet are they not able to bring their owne purposes to passe any other wise then God hath appointed much lesse are the inferiours able Geneua How kings were called Nurses The king is called of the Prophet the nursing Father and the Quéenes are named Nurses that although the ministrie of féeding perteine to the Ministers yet the prouision for the foode the ouersight that the children of God be duelye fedde with the right milke with the true bread and water of lyfe belongeth to the Princes therefore haue they the name of Nurses not to nourish children in ciuill matters and corporall f●ode onelye but as in ciuill so in Lacte verbi In the milke of the worde of God also Is this onelye the cherishing of the good childe by giuing lands reuenews maintenance and liuing to the Church Is this onely the displing of the froward childe or as ye call it the punishing of the heretike No Maister Stapleton Lyra his exposition and yours doe not agrée He sayth they are Nurses what to doe To féede whom The faithfull ones wherewith With the milke of the word what word Euen the word and Sacraments of God Whereof sith the ministrie and execution belongeth not vnto them but vnto the Ministers it followeth necessarye therevppon that the prouision direction appointing care and ouersight which is the supreame gouernement belongeth to them And this is that which Lyra confesseth and thereby vrgeth of Constantine that he was such another Nurse as did kéepe defend mainteine vpholde and féede the poore faithfull ones of Christ yea carried them in his bosome as it were and procured them to be fedde did set forth Proclamations not onelye against false religion but also to sette forth to exhort and allure vnto the christen fayth caused not the Idolatrous religion to be suppressed but caused also on the other part the true knowledge religion of Christ to be brought in and planted among the people and did not onelye make lawes for punishing of heretikes and Idolaters but also reformed all manner abuses about Gods seruice Thus sayth the Bishoppe out of Eusebius did Constantine playe the Nurses parte I. Bridges fol. 622. Of the kings that serued Iosua And put your feete vpon the neckes of those kinges ¶ This was not done of cruelnesse but to confirme and strengthen the Princes and the whole hoast of Israel which had not killed all but suffered some to flye into Cities that they shoulde heereafter spare no kinges of the Cananites whose possessions the Lord gaue vnto them in as much as they were commanded to slaye all Deut. 20. 17. T. M. ¶ By this Iosua woulde encourage his Captaines and signifie vnto them what victorie they shoulde looke for of the rest of their enimies séeing kings are thus by them serued The Bible note How wicked kings are of God and not of God They haue reigned and not by me They were Princes I knew them not ¶ These wordes are Gods complaint against the wickednesse of those kings of Israel that directed not theyr gouernement by Gods lawe not that they were not kings but that they were wicked kings not that they wer by no meanes ordeined of God for Omnis potestas est a Deo All power is of God And God saith in generall Per me reges regnant Kings rule by me so wel heathen as faithful kings Pilates power was from aboue These kings of Israel Ieroboam Achab Iehu c. were of Gods ordeining Yea Iehu whose house héere GOD complained vpon and sayd He and his ofspring raigned not by him were yet notwithstanding made kings reigned by him In respect of their ambition and priuate affections their reigne was not of him In respect of Gods ordinaunce of his iustice of his prouidence it was not onely permitted but also especially appointed of him as both the Text is euident and your own Glose meaning the Papists cōfesseth for Ieroboam the elder y● it was done by Gods will although it were done also by the peoples sinne that regarded not the will of God but followed their owne selfe will And so in some respect it was not the work of God and yet in other respects it was the worke of God And so héere he expoundes himselfe and sayth I know them not not that he was ignoraunt of them but he acknowledged not their doinges Secondly neither the Prophet Ose nor anie other Prophet tooke vpon them to depose any of those wicked kings but to declare the wrath and vengeance of God to come vpon them after which declarations they did not subtract from them their ciuill obedience or counted them from that day forward no longer to be their kings or exhorted the Church of God to forsake their politike gouernement but hauing declared their message from God they let them
his wife and therefore béeing thought to haue bene gelous ouer her he brought her forth before the people and sayd This is my wife and that ye might vnderstand that I am not gelous ouer her I am content for my part that any of you take her to wife which thing also hee meant as farre as the lawes of God would suffer But they which were afterwarde called Nicholaites vnderstandinge his wordes peruersly supposed that the wiues amonge Christians ought to be common Pet. Mart. vpon Iudic. fo 230. NIGHT. How night is taken in this place THe night commeth when no man can work ¶ The night is when the true knowledge of Christ how he onely iustifieth is lost then can no man worke a good work in the sight of God how glorious so euer his workes appeare Tindale How the night was diuided into foure parts Augustine in his sermon De verbis Domini the. 14 Oration● saith that the elders diuided the night into foure parts of which euerie one conteined 3. houres which he confirmeth also by the testimonies of the holy Scriptures For it is sayd that the Lord came vnto the Apostles in the. 4. watch of the night when they laboured so vehemently in the sea that their Ship was verie néere sunke The same Father writeth the like thing vpon the. 79. Psalme The glose also in the Decrées 1. question The one Super veniente pascha maketh mention of the names of those partes of the night Conticinium Intempestem Gallicinium Antelucanum That is the bed time the dead part of y● night the cocke crowing and the dawning of the day Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. fol. 139. For a thousand years in thy sight c. as a watch in the night ¶ As touching this word watch we know how mē in old time were wont to diuide the night into foure watches of which each one consisteth in thrée houres a péece Now this similitude is added to make the matter séeme lesse as who wold say a thousand yeares in Gods sight differed nothing from 3. houres of the night in which men scarcely know whether they be a wake or a sléepe Caluine NILVS ¶ Looke Water of the Sea for the description heereof NIMROTH By this man was Idolatrie first inuented ¶ Looke Idolatry Why he was called an hunter IN that he was called an hunter is signified that he was a deceiuer of soules an oppressour of men And for that he withdrew men from the true religion of God he was so called NINE Of the nine that returned not againe vnto Christ. BUt where are those nine ¶ The Priestes had so abused the nine and made them beleeue that they were healed and cleansed of their leprosie by their workes other obseruaunces that they returned not to Christ to giue him praise which had only healed them as he had done the other I. Veron ¶ He noteth héere their ingratitude and that the greatest part neglect the benefites of God Geneua Of the ninth houre ¶ Looke Houre NOETVS What his heresie was NOetus denied that there were thrée persons saieng all thrée were on He called himselfe Moses and said that Aaron was his brother he said the Father the Sonne and the Holy ghost suffered in the flesh Epiph. haeres 57. NOMBER The nomber of the beast ¶ Looke Beast NOSE OF GOD. What the Nose of God signifieth THe Nose of God saith Augustine doth signifie his inspirations in the hearts of the faithfull Smoke went out at his nostrells 2. Reg. 22. 9. NOT. The meaning of these places following THou art not far from the kingdome of God ¶ When Christ had heard the discréete aunswere of the Scribe concerning the loue of God and the loue of his neighbour he said vnto him Thou art not farre from the kingdome of God that is thou hast the true knowledge of the lawe and lacketh nothing but faith and trust in me by which onely commeth euerlasting life To sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to giue ¶ Though Christ had receiued all power of his Father yet had he not receiued it to this ende that he should giue the glory of his kingdome vnto other then his father had appointed Beside that Christ doth héere speake as a man For touching his Godhead he was and is equall with the Father Sir I. Cheeke ¶ God my Father hath not giuen me charge to bestow Offices but to be an example of humilitie vnto all Geneua Thou shalt not kill ¶ God saith to the priuate man Thou shalt not kill but to the Magistrate he saith Thine eye shall not spare Thou shalt not suffer the wicked Sorcerer to lyue Not possible ¶ Looke Impossibilitie Not seene c. ¶ Looke Happy Not chosen many ¶ Looke Chosen NOTHING The meaning of this place following ANd hath nothing in me ¶ Satan hath power ouer those that are subiect to sin for he worketh in the children of disobedience Therefore séeing the Lord was pure from all sinne Satan had no power at all in him c. But if Satan had no power of Christ why then did he preuaile so much that he brought him to the death of the Crosse For shortly after Christ died and that the most shamefull death of all other euen y● death of the Crosse. Heare now the cause thereof in these wordes of our Sauiour following But that the world may know I loue the Father that is to say therfore I will giue place to the power of Satan and deliuer my selfe into the hands of sinners that the world may know I loue the father Marl. fol. 498. ¶ Satan shall assaile me with all his force but he shall not finde that in me which he looketh for for I am that innocent Lambe without spot Geneua NOVACIAN What the opinions were which this man held NOuacian a Priest of Rome fell from his order and called his sect Catharous that is Puritans He would not admit vnto the Church such as fell after repentaunce He was condemned by sundry notable men and in sundrye Councells Euseb. li. 6. ca. 42. He abhorred second marriage Epip haere 59. By what occasion the heresie of this Nouacian sprong About the yeare of Christ. 251. in Alexandria Dionisius ther Bishop was cruelly tormented and many other martired put to death all kindes of paines wer inuented 〈…〉 constraine them to forsake their Religion● by which meanes diuers for feare denied Christ some before theyr paines and some in the time of their torments of which many repenting wer after by y● Councell of Cipriate receiued into y● Church Of this occasion sprang the heresie of Nouacian a Priest who was the first Anabaptist in Rome allowed not Priests marriage and taught that they which had once forsaken their faith should not be receiued againe to penaunce Cooper When the heresie of Nouacian was condemned About the yeare of Christ. 254. Cornelius the. 20. Bishop of Rome which succéeded Fabian condemned the
diuell and therefore yéelded all those parts vnto all beastly life Some called those men Venustianos August PATHMOS What Pathmos is WAs in the I le of Pathmos ¶ Pathmos is one of the Iles of Sporas whether Iohn was banished as some write PATRICIANI What manner of heretikes these were PAtriciani said that mans flesh was not made of God but of the diuell so that some dispatched themselues to cast off the flesh August PAVLE How Paules afflictions is prophesied of Agabus SO shall the Iewes at Hierusalem binde the man that oweth this girdle ¶ God for the most part is wont to warne his elect before what afflictions and troubles shall happen vnto thē for his sake not to fray them therby but rather to prepare and arme their mindes against the boisterous tempests of persecution Therefore doth he now send Agabus vnto Paule to prophesie vnto him of his imprisonment and bonds that he should suffer at Hierusalem where we haue also a good example of constancie stedfastnesse in Paule which regarding nothing the teares of his familiar friends nor yet perill of his owne lyfe did through fire and water goe on still to set forth the glorie of God Sir I. Cheeke ¶ God would ●haue his seruaunts bands knowne to the intent that no man should thinke that he cast himself into wilful daunger This was not to make Paule afraid but to encourage him against the brunt Geneua How Paule persecuted Christ in his members I am Iesus whom thou persecutest ¶ Iesus was now in heauen and could not be persecuted of Paule But the persecution which Paule exercised against the faithfull being his members Christ counted it as done vnto himselfe The Bible note Of the comfort that God gaue to paule in his iourney to Rome And he entered into a ship to Adr●mitium ¶ The lyfe of man is a perpetuall warfare vpon the earth Paule being deliuered out of the hands of the vngodly and that so many times is now faine to commit himselfe to the rough waters of the sea where he was a long season in great perill and ieopardy of his owne life God being alwayes to the great comfort of all them that heard of it most ready to helpe succour him First he did send him a most friendly company I meane Aristarcus and Lucas so ruling the heart also of the vndercaptaine that he was beneficiall vnto him alwayes In lyke manner God did in the olde time appoint men for Ioseph and the Prophet Ieremy when they were in their most troubles Of Paules purifieng We haue foure men which haue a vowe on them them take and purifie thy selfe with them ¶ Paule yéelding to this ceremonie offended as sore as Peter did when he was reproued of Paule for absteining from meate s in presence of the Gentiles notwithstanding through feruencie of his zeale he did ieopard much to winne thousandes of the Iewes for the saluation of whom he wished himselfe to be seperated from Christ. The Bible note ¶ The end of this ceremonie was thanks-giuing was instituted by God and partly of ignoraunce and infirmitie receiued Therefore S. Paule supported therein the weaknesse of others and made himselfe all to all men not bindring his conscience Geneua Of Paules appealing I appeale to Caesar. ¶ The iniquitie of the Iudge who contrarie to equitie willing to pleasure the Iewes deuised how to betray Paule draue Paule to appeale which is the vttermost remedie for such as by wrong iudgement are oppressed And this appellation by Gods prouidence was a meane that Paule shoulde testifie of Christ at Rome also The Bible note How Paule had his authoritie from God and not from Peter Paule an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Iesus Christ and by God the Father c. ¶ Paule though he came long after the Apostles yet had he not his authoritie of Peter or of any that went before him Neither brought he with him letters of recommendation or Bulls of confirmation but the confirmation of his Apostleship was the word of God conscience of men and the power of the spirit that testified with him by miracles and manifolde gifts of grace Tindale How Paule and Iames are made to agree The saiengs of the two Apostles Paule and Iames are not contrary wheras Paule saith a man is iustified without works and Iames sayth faith without workes is in vaine For Paule speaketh of the works that goe before faith Iames speaketh of the works that follow after August lt 8. quae qua 76. Iames. 5. The ordinarie glose out of Saint Austen sayth that Paule and Iames doe agrée in this sort That whereas Abraham was iustified by fayth without good workes it is vnderstoode of the workes that went before for he was not made iust for the workes he did but for faith onely And héere it is meant of the works which doe follow fayth by which he was iustified the more wheras he was iust before by faith Wherfore Paul sayth Abraham offered vp Isaac when he was proued This oblation was the worke and testimonie of his faith and iustice This hée writeth vpon the Epistle of Saint Iames. So that if the offering of Isaac was the testimonie of the faith and iustice of Abraham than he was not iustified by it but declared thereby to be iust Musculus fol. 230. ¶ Ioyne the liuely faith of S. Paule with the good works of S. Iames and bring both these into one lyfe And then hast thou reconciled them both so shalt thou be sure to be iustified both afore God by Paules faith and before man by S. Iames works M. Foxe How Paule denieth to be crucified for vs. Was Paule crucified for you ¶ It is euident by Saint Paules saieng that Christ only who was crucified for vs ought to be our Lord that in matters of religion we ought only to haue our name of him and not to be called after this Doctor or that Doctors name for that is to deny Christ and so to bring againe the hypocriticall sectes of Friers and Monkes Sir I. Cheeke Of Paules beating and mortifieng his body I beate my body saith S. Paule and bring it into subiection least by any meanes after that I haue preached to other I my selfe should be reproued ¶ Whereas some doe gather of this place that Paule did mortifie in himself the fire of inconstancy by long fasting and by beating and scourging of his body it is nothing so For what néede had hée to ●ame his body with fasting when he was shut vp in prison and had nothing to eate either yet to beat and scourge his body when he suffred stripes inough of his enimies S. Paule had the gift of continencie as it appeareth 1. Cor. 7. I would sayth he that all men were as I my selfe am but euery man hath his proper gift of God c. Then by these words Saint Paule doth meane that he did subdue and
saith S. Austen that the manners of euill men hinder not the sacraments of God that either they vtterly be not or be lesse holy but they hinder the euill men themselues so y● they haue the sacraments to witnesse of their damnation not to helpe of their saluation And all processe spoken there by S. Austen is spoken chiefely of Baptime against the Donatists which said y● Baptime was naught if either the Minister or receiuer were naught Against whom S. Austen concludeth that the sacraments themselues be holy and be all one whether the Minister or receiuer bée good or bad Cranmer fol. 63. What the olde fathers doe teach of the sacrament Ireneus S. Agustine and other auncient Doctors yea and the Canon law doth teach there must be both the outward Element which in Baptime is water and in the Lords supper bread and wine and the outward grace as the two principalls thereof Take away the bread and wine and then it is no sacrament How the sacrament is our body Because Christ hath suffered for vs he hath betaken vnto vs in this sacrament his body and bloud which he hath made also euen our selues for we also are made his body by his mercie we are euen the same thing that we receiue And after hée saith Now in the name of Christ ye are come as a man wold say to the Chalice of the Lord there are ye vpon the Table and there are ye in the Chalice ¶ Héere ye may sée that the Sacrament is our body and yet it is not our naturall body but in a mysterie I. Frith If you wil vnderstand the body of Christ heare the Apostle which saith Ye are the body of Christ members 1. Cor. 12. 27. Therefore if ye be the body of Christ members your misterie is put vpon the Lords Table ye receiue the mysterie of the Lord vnto that you are you aunswere Amen and in aunswering subscribe vnto it ¶ Héere we may sée the Sacrament is also our body and yet is not our naturall body but onely our body in a mysterie that is to say a figure signe memorial or representation of our body For as the bread is made of many graines or cornes so we though we be many are bread one body for this propertie and similitude it is called our body beareth the name of the very thing which it doth represent and signifie I. Frith As the sacrament of the Altar is our body euen so it is Christs First vnderstand ye that in y● wine which is called Christs bloud is admixed water which doth signifie the people y● are redéemed with his bloud so that y● head which is Christ is not without his body which is the faithful people nor the body without the head Now if the wine when it is consecrate be turned bodely into Christs bloud then it is also necessary that the water which is admixed be bodely turned into the bloud of the faithfull people for wheras is one consecration must folow one operation whereas is like reson ther must follow like mysterie But whatsouer is signified by the water as concerning the faithfull people is taken spiritually therefore whatsoeuer is spoken of the bloud in the wine must also néedes be taken spiritually This is Bartrams reason vpon a. 700. yeares since How in the sacrament there can be no accident without his substance In the sacrament of the Altar saith I. Puruay after y● consecration ther is not neither can be any accident with y● substance but ther verely remaineth the same substance the very visible incorruptible bread likewise the very same wine y● which before y● consecratiō wer set vpon the Altar to be consecrate by y● Priest likewise as whē a Pagā or Infidel is baptised he is spiritually cōuerted into a mēber of Christ yet remaineth y● very same mā which he before was in proper nature substāce B. of M. 649. Of a new article inuented in the sacrament Innocentius the third Pope was the head of Antichrist who after the letting loose of Satan inuented a new Article of our faith a certaine fained veritie touching the sacrament of t●e Altar that is to say that the Sacrament of the Altar is an ●●cident without a substance But Christ his Apostles do teach manifestly y● the sacrament of the Altar is bread the body of Christ together after y● manner y● he spake And in y● he calleth it bread he wold haue the people to vnderstand as they ought with reason that it is very and substanciall bread no false nor fained bread In the b. of Mar. fol. 649. Of the sacramentall chaunge Of the sacramentall chaunge S. Bede which was about 900. yeres agoe saith thus The creature of the bread wine by the ineffable sanctification of the spirit is turned into the sacrament of Christs flesh and bloud In sacraments saith S. Augustine we must consider not what they be of themselues but what they doe signifie S. Ambrose saith What sawest thou in thy Baptime water no doubt but not onely water Againe he saith Before the blessing of the heauenly words it is called another kinde but after the consecration the body of Christ is signified Of the sacramentall word Let the word saith S. Austen be added to the element and there shall be made a Sacrament For whence commeth this so great strength to the water to touch the body wash the soule but by the word making it not because it is spoken but because it is beléeued For in the very word it selfe the sound which passeth is one thing the power which abideth is another This is the word of faith which we preach saith the Apostle whervpon in the Actes of the Apostles it is said By faith cleansing their hearts c. Cal. in his Inst. 4. b. chap. 14. sect 4. How in the sacrament remaineth bread wine That which you sée saith S. Austen in the altar is the bread the cup which also your eyes doe shew you but faith the weth you further the bread is the body of Christ the cup his bloud ¶ Heere he declareth two thing● y● in the sacrament remaineth bread wine which we may discerne with our eyes that the bread and wine be called the body and bloud of Christ. He that called his naturall body saith Theodoretus wheate and bread and also called himselfe a Uine the selfe same called bread and wine his body and bloud and yet chaunged not their nature And in his Dialogue he saith more plainely for saith he as the bread and wine after the consecration lost not theyr proper nature but kept their former substaunce forme figure which th●y had before euen so the body of Christ after his Ascention was chaunged into the godly substaunce Of the sacramentall eating ¶ Looke Eating What is to be wondred at in the sacraments The wonder is not
gathering of waters by the name of Sea according to this saieng and the gathering togethers of waters he called Seas Ge. 1. 10. And the vessell wherein the Priests washed thēselues whē they went about the holy ministrations was called the brasē sea 3. Re. 7. 23. In this place the word sea is taken for a cōpany of much people whom the spirit of God enlighteneth therfore they be cléere as glasse like vnto Christall that is to saye they be deliuered from darknesse and rustinesse and soule spottes by Christ Iesus reigning in the Church c. In the. 7. chapter the word sea of some is taken for rich merchant men which traficke vpon the Seas And in the. 16. chapter verse 3. the restlesse Sea séemeth to betoken the chiefe estates of the world or the confusion or chaungeablenesse of the world or els those people that dwell farre of in out Iles. Marl. to 73. ¶ The world is compared to a Sea because of the chaunge and vnstablenesse Geneua And I saw as it were a glassie sea mingled with fire ¶ The Sea of glasse mixed with fire signifieth the wickednesse of the world and all wicked enimies and aduersaries of the truth and doctrine of the Gospell Sir I. Cheeke ¶ The glassie Sea signifieth this brittle and inconstant world mixt with fire that is troubles and afflictions but the Saints of God ouercommeth them all and sing diuine songs to God by whose power they get the victory Geneua What Iob meaneth by these two words Sea and Whale Am I a Sea or a Whale fish that thou kéepest me so in prison ¶ Am I a Sea or a Whale saith Iob that thou shouldest set as it were such barres against me and that I should be faine to haue so great lets to stop me Iob protesteth héere before God that there was no néede why he should be stopped with so great violence And why so I am not lyke a Sea saith he which hath néede of rampires and lets If a Sea haue broken ouer his bankes a thousand or two thousand men must be sent against it there must be bringing of timber of earth and of stones to make vp so great a breach Also a Whale will not suffer himselfe to be caught without great adoe but great force must be vsed to holde so strong and mightie a beast But Iob saith I am no Sea nor Whale how is it then that GOD procéedeth with so great violence against me Héereby he meaneth that the miserie which he endureth is ouer great and that God hath no néed to punish him so And héerein he sheweth that he had no such stay in himselfe as he ought to haue had Cal. vpon Iob. fol. 99. SEBELLIVS Of his hereticall opinions THis man denied Christ to be the sonne of God and sayde that he was not the first begotten before all creatures Hée denied also the vnderstanding of the holy ghost He leaned much to the opinion of Noetus as touching the thrée persons And denied that there was a Trinitie Epiph. heraes 62. August li. de heraes SECOND Of the second time of punishing that Nahum speaketh of WHat doe ye think against the Lord He will make an end neither shal tribulation rise vp the second time ¶ Which words some of the Hebrues as Hierome telleth interpret of the Assirians who when they had the first time gotten the victory against the kingdome of y● ten tribes thought in like manner to preuaile against the kingdome of Iuda but y● it should so come to passe the Prophet denieth saith That after the first tribulation the second should not follow This exposition may indéed be borne withall But there is an other which is more plaine namely to say that these things are spokē against Sennacherib which besieged Hierusalem vnto whom God threatened a full and through ouerthrow I will saith he so blot thee out that I shal not néed to rise vp the second time against thee one plague shal be sufficient thou shalt be so vehemently afflicted with it Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. ¶ Hee sheweth that the enterprises of the Assirians against Iuda and the Church were against God and therfore he wold so destroy them at once that he should not néede to returne the second time Geneua What is meant by the second death He that ouercommeth shall not be hurt of the second death ¶ He that so constantly perseuereth in the truth of God y● neither flattering perswasiō worldly promotion nor cruel tormēt can plucke his minde from it shall neuer take harme of the second death For the death of them which truly beleeueth is precious in the sight of the Lord their God neither shall sinne be imputed to him that hath fayth nor yet dampnation to them that are in Christ. Bale ¶ The first death is the naturall death of the bodye the second death is the eternall death from the which are all free that beléeue in Iesus Christ. Iohn 5. 24. Geneua SECRETNESSE How secrets ought not to be disclosed ALexander the conquerour reading a letter that came from his mother conteining matter of weight tooke Exhestion his friend to him to read the same with him And after he had read it pulled out his signet and set it to Exhestions mouth giuing to vnderstand thereby that he which knoweth a seceret ought to keepe his mouth close The Romane Fuluius opened a greate secret that Augustus had told him vnto his wife who béeing rebuked of the Emperour sell in dispaire And first rebuked his wife who made him this aunswere You blame me quoth she without a cause for sithens ye haue liued with me so long ye ought perdie to haue knowne my lightnesse long or this time and knowing of it ye should not haue credited me therwith therefore the fault how great so euer it be is your own but yet will I take the punishment vpon me first therewithall slew her selfe incontinent her husband did the like after When one asked Metellus a Romane Captaine what hée would doe touching such an enterprise in warre he aunswered him on this wise If I knew that this shirt which I haue vppon my backe were wi●ting what I will doe I would burne it incontinent When one asked Aristotle what thing he thought hardest he aunswered Secrets SECT What is meant by this word Sect. WHich was the sect of the Saduces ¶ The word which is vsed héere is heresie which signifieth a choise and so is taken for a right forme of learning or faction or studye and course of lyfe which the Latines call a Sect. At the first this word was indifferently vsed but at length it came to be taken onely in euil part wher vpon came the name of heretik which is takē for one that goeth astray from sound wholsome doctrine after such sort y● hée setteth light by the iudgement of God and his Church and continueth in his opinion and breaketh the peace of the Church Beza
in the sixt yeare of the same Darius So that from the second yeare of Cyrus vnto the. 6. yeare of Darius were 46. yeares wherein they were a building The meaning of this place following I will worship towards the holy Temple c. ¶ Both the temple and ceremoniall seruice at Christs comming wer abolished so that now God will be worshipped onely in spirit and truth Geneua Of them that trusted in the outward seruice of the Temple Trust not in lyeng words saieng The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord c. ¶ Beleeue not the false Prophets which say that for the temples sake the sacrifice there the Lord will preserue you and so nourish you in your sinne and vaine confidence for in the next verse after God sheweth on what condition he made his promise to this temple y● they should be an holy people vnto him as he would be a faithfull God vnto them Geneua How Churches or Temples are not to be builded to Saints Saint Austen in his booke De imitat Dei sayth plainely we build no Temple vnto our Martirs And againe in his first booke against Maximinus a Bishop of the Arrians if we shuld saith he build a Church of timber stones vnto some excellent holy Angell shoulde we not be accursed by the truth of Christ and the Church of God Therefore if we should commit sacriledge in making a temple to euery creature whatsoeuer how may it be that God is not true vnto whome wée make no Temple but wée our selues are a Temple for him Bullinger fol. 1127. How the Pope doth sit in the temple of God as God Compare the commaundements of God with the constitutions of men and you shall easily vnderstand y● the Bishop of Rome whom they call the Pope to sit in the temple of God as God and to bée extolled aboue all that is named God It is written The Temple of the Lorde is holy which is you Therfore the conscience of man is the temple of the holy Ghost in which Temple I will proue the Pope to sit as God and to be exalted aboue all that is called God For who so contemneth the Decalogue or the Table of the ten commandements of God there is but a smal punishment for him neither is that punishment to death but contrariwise he that shall contemne or violate speaking to Frier Brusiard the constitutions which you call the sanctions of men is counted by all mens iudgements guiltie of death what is this but the Bishop of Rome to sit and to reigne in the Temple of God that is in mans conscience as God Bilney in the booke of Mar. fol. 1140. TEMPTATION What Temptation is TEmptation is nothing else but to take proofe or triall of any thing wherefore the end of temptation is rightly called knowledge And they which will passe ouer a water doe trie out the shallowe places to know the depth of the water wounds also are tried of Surgions to féele the déepenesse of them In tempting therefore knowledge is sought But God néedeth not that new and fresh knowledge for such is his nature that he knoweth all things most perfectly But when he tempteth he onely doth it to leade men to the knowledge of those things which they ought to knowe Wherefore when he sometime tempteth good and holymen hée bringeth into lyght and maketh open the fayth obedience● strength and godlynesse which before laye hidde in their heartes that they which sée the same things might glorifie God the authour of them And that they which are so tempted when they haue gotten the victorye may giue thankes and desire of him that euen as he hath done now so he woulde vouchsafe to helpe them continually in temptations Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic fol. 33. How temptation generally is not euill All temptations or tryall is not euill For God tempted his seruauntes One friende is tempted of an other The childe is tried by the Father the wife by her husband the seruaunt by his Maister not that they might bée hurt by tryall but rather that they might thereby bée profited The Diuell also tempteth wherevpon also hee is called a temptor in the Scripture Also enimies vse to tempt not to profite thereby but to hurt and destroye This kinde of temptation is wicked Therefore the Lorde hath exhorted vs to beware of those which tempt with an euill minde when hée willeth vs not onely to bee innocent as Doues but also wise as Serpents Marlo vpon Iohn fol. 283. The Israelites are rebuked of Moses for tempting the Lord. Wherefore do ye tempt the Lord. ¶ Why distrust you God Why looke ye not for succour of him without murmuring against God Geneua How God tempteth no man to euill God tempteth not vnto euill ¶ Almightye GOD hath euer tempted and proued his elect by trouble and persecution and by nur●uring them with outwarde plagues neuerthelesse he doth it not vnto euill but for good namelye because he loueth them and will haue their fayth exercised Thus tempted hée Abraham Genesis 22. ● and the Israelites Deut. 8. 2. As for temptation that we praye in our Pater noster to bee deliuered from it is the 〈…〉 and concupiscence of our flesh whereby we are entised vnto euill Tindale ¶ This worde to Tempt is taken two manner of wayes first it ●etokeneth to entice a man to euill after this sayeng we saye that God tempted no man For as GOD is of his owne nature good and can●e in no wise be entised to euill so doth hée moue or entice no man to sinne which he himselfe doth detest and abhorre Héere we learne that if we sinne we ought not to putte the fault in God but in our owne selues Secondly this worde to Tempt is taken for to proue As when wée saye God tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. And that hée did tempt the Israelites Deut. 8. 2. that is to saye did proue Abraham and tryed the Israelites whether they loued him or not Sir I. Cheeke Of the Pharesies and Saduces tempting of Christ. Then came the Pharesies and Saduces to tempt him ¶ To trye whether hée coulde doe that which they desired but their purpose was naught for they thought to finde some thing in him by that meanes wherevpon they might haue iust occasion to reprehende him Or distrust and curiositye moued them so to doe for by such meanes also is God sayde to bée tempted that is to saye prouoked to anger as though men would striue with him Beza ¶ Men tempt God either by their incrudelitie or curiositie Geneua How Christ is tempted of the Diuell To bée tempted of the Diuell ¶ To the ende hée ouercomming these temptations might gette the victorye for vs. Geneua Christ is by and by after Baptime tempted which thing we must looke for Yea the more wée shall encrease in fayth and vertuous liuing the more strongly will Satan assault vs. Sir I. Cheeke When the diuell had ended his temptations
the reproch of mē contempt of the people at length suffered y● accursed death of the crosse Ge. How Thamar is thought to be Dauids naturall daughter and was not When Thamar had dressed meat for Adon●a her brother and brought it vnto him he tooke her would haue lien with her to whom she said Oh nay my brother do not force me but rather speak vnto the king he will not deny me vnto thée ¶ This séemeth to be against the law of Moses where it is forbidden the brother to marry y● sister whether she be y● daughter of his father or y● daughter of his mother to this it is answered thus Dauid toke y● mother of Thamar in battel had hir home to his house shaued her head let her nailes grow which thing being dōe according to y● law he toke her to his wife who neuerthelesse was then great with childe by the husband which she had afo●e hauing in her wombe this Thamar so that she was not the naturall daughter of Dauid and therefore Ammon his sonne might take her to his wife by the lawe Lyra. THAMMVZ What this Thammuz was AND beholde there sat women mourning 〈…〉 Thammuz ¶ The Iewes say this was a Prophet of the Idolls who after his death was once a yeare mourned for in y● night onely of women Saint Hierome taketh it for Adonis Venus louer Other thinke it was Osiris an Idol of the Aegyptians The Bible note ¶ Thammuz that is after S. Hierome Adonides Amasius which was Venus fairest sonne which is fained to haue risen from death to lyfe which fable the women of Iewrie did celebrate and holde solempne both with mirth teares Some say that it was an Image which was made to wéepe by craft Before this Image did women also bewaile their separation from their louers and reioysed when they obteined them againe T. M. THANKE OFFERING What Thanke offering is WHen ye will offer a thanke offering vnto the Lorde ¶ Thanke offering that is an offering of thanks giuing Thankes giuing is when the benefites of God are recited whereby the fayth to Godward is strengthened the more fastly to looke for the thing that we desire of God Ephe. ●5 4. 1. Tim. 4. ● T. M. True thanks giuing is an acknowledging and confessing of the benefits receiued together with a thankfulnesse of minde and a publishing of Gods goodnesse Tindale THARSIS What Tharsis is thought to be IOnas made himself ready to flye to Tharsis c. ¶ Under y● name of Tharsis as some think is signified some sea y● was farre of and whose voiage was very long so that the sailers therein could sée nothing but the sea and the ayre Ioppa is an hauen of Iewry where was sometime a goodly citie of which there remaineth now but a portion T. M. For the king had on the sea the nauy of Tharsis ¶ By Tharsis is meant Cilicia which was abundant in varietie of precious things 2. Par. 9. 21. Psal. 48. 7. Geneua The kings of Tharsis and of the Iles. ¶ Of Cilicia of al other countries beyond the seas which he meaneth by the Iles. Ge. THEBVLIS What his Heresie was THebulis Anno Domini 110. was the first heretike in the Church of Hierusalem He fell from the faith because they would not choose him Bishoppe after Simeon Euse. li. 4. chap. 21. THEFT What Theft is THeft is when we withhold that which is an other mans against y● owners wil or when we by iniurie draw vnto vs other mens goods or whē we distribute not that which is ours when néede requireth Pet. Mar. vpon the Rom. fol. 45. THEMA What Thema was THey y● went to Thema ¶ Thema was one of y● twelue princes of Israel and inhabited the South part of Arabia of whom the region was called Thema By the which men passe into the whole country of Arabia thinking to finde water ther to quench their thirst but they are deceiued The Bible note THEODOTVS What his heresie was THeodotus a Montanist through sorcerie tooke his flight towards heauen but downe he fell and died miserably Euse li. 5. chap. 14. THERAPHIM What this Theraphim was THey made also Theraphim ¶ Touching the signification of this word Theraphim there is great ambiguitie among the expositours But I vnderstand it to be that Idoll which they had grauen and molten when all the other thinges were ready which serued for Idolatry they at the length brought that Image vnto the Temple And of these Theraphims or Images they were wont in the olde time to aske Oracles In Genesis we read that Rachel the wife of Iacob stale awaye the Theraphim of her Father And in the first of Samuel the. 19. chapter when Dauid escaped Michol put in his bed Theraphim Pet. Mar. vpon Iudic. ¶ Theraphim is thought to be an Image made to the shape and figure of a man and also to signifie all other instruments belonging to their false religion The Bible note THEVDAS Of his rebellion THeudas in the time y● Caspius was president of Iewry perswaded the people to take their goods to followe him to Iordane for there he bare them in hand he would with a becke diuide y● waters y● they might be dry shod so recouer their lybertie set them free from bondage of the Romanes to whom the foolish people ob●ieng when they looked in vaine for the miracle were all slaine Hemmyng ¶ This was one of the false deceiuers y● Christ prophesied shuld come in his name Mat. 24. Of this Theudas Iosephus maketh mention in his 20. booke and. 4. chapter of the Antiquities This Theudas was about thirtie years before him of whō Iosephus mentioneth in his 20. booke De antiqui cap. 4. that was after the death of Herode the great when Archelaus his son was at Rome at what time Iudea was ful of insurrectiōs so that it is not sure so giue credit to Eusebius in this point Gen. THIATRIA What Thiatria was THiatria is a citie of Lidia which is a shire in Asia the lesse the inhabitation of the Macedones called of some the last city of the Misians This word Thiatria betokeneth y● strong fume or sacrifice of labour or painfulnes● Looke Act. 16. 14. Ma. fo 19 THINKE How of our s●lues we cannot thinke well NOr y● we are sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as of our selues ¶ If any mā doth affirme or holdeth opinion that a man can by the strength of his own nature think a good thought perteining to his saluation or y● he can without the inspiration of the holy Ghost consent or agree to the wholsome preaching of the Gospell he is deceiued by an hereticall spirit ● vnderstādeth not the words of Christ 〈…〉 Without me ye can 〈…〉 nothing nor that saieng of Paule We are not sufficient c. The Councell of Mil. ¶ Looke S. Barnards exposition of this place in Freewill
all congregations of waters the Sea generallye but also because it was of olde time a constant opinion after the storyes that it hath his originall beginning from the Occean Sea Ye may also vnderstand by the drinesse of Nilus that it ouerflowed not the lande contrary to the olde accustomed manner thereof Some had leauer haue this to be figuratiuely applyed As there be certeine waters of the Gospell which the holy Ghost giueth so are there also the troubel●us waters of Aegypt that is of worldly doctrine Therefore when the word of God is ouerheard those waters drye vs. For the holy Ghost reprehendeth the world of sinne and openeth and declareth the works of darknesse In these waters doe Réede and Rush grow that is vaine trifling works such as are the works of hipocrits which after the outward shew and appearance séeme fresh but are within vaine and naught worth ¶ Hee sheweth that the Sea and Nilus their greate riuer whereby they thought themselues most sure shoulde not bée able to defend them from his anger but that he woulde ●●nd the Assirians among them that they should kéepe them vnder as slaues Geneua The meaning of this place following Iesus Christ that came by water and bloud ¶ The water and bloud that came out of his side declare that we hau● our sinnes washed by him he hath made full satisfaction for the same Geneua How water in the Sacrament signifieth the people The people is anexed in the Sacrament through the mixture of water therefore I meru 〈…〉 le much that they are so contentions and will not see that as the water is the people so the wine is Christs body that is to say in a mystery because it representeth Christs bloud as the water doth the people Cipriane ad 〈…〉 Whiles in the Sacrament water is anne●ed with the wine the faythfull people is incorporate ioyned with Christ and is made one with him with a certeine knot of per●●ct charitie ¶ Now whereas he sayth that we are ioyned and incorporate with Christ what fondnesse were it to contend sith we are there onely in a mysterie and not naturallye I. Frith VVAVE OFFERING What it signified ANd waue them for a waue offering ¶ This sort of offering● after the Priest had lif 〈…〉 d vp was moued into euery side of all coasts to signifie that God was Lord of all the earth T●e Bible note This sacrifice the Priest did moue toward the East West North and South Geneua ¶ Waue offering because it was wauen in the Priestes hands to diuerse quarters Tindale VVEDDING GARMENT What the wedding garment is and who be clothed therewith WHich had not on a wedding garment ¶ Many doe in vaine héere contend about the wedding garment whether it be fay ● or an holy and godly lyfe Séeing that fayth can neither be separated from good workes● neither canne good works procéede but from fayth But the onely meaning of our Sauiour Christ was this that we are called of the Lords vpon this condition that we should by the spirit be made lyke vnto him And therefore that wee might continuallye abide in his house wée must put off the olde man with all his pollutions and defiling spottes of sinne and must frame and giue our selues to a newe lyfe that our apparell maye aunswere so honourable a calling They therefore are clothed with this wedding garment which haue put on the Lord Iesus Christ and the new man which after God is shaped in righteousnesse and holynesse and as the wedding garment doth declare the minde to bee ioyfull affected towarde the wedding dinner and to reuerence the same euen so also by this wedding garment there is required that the guest● be such which with ioy with reuerence of the diuine maiestie and with giuing of thankes should obteine and enioy the heauenly benefits Marl. fol 499. ¶ The wedding garment is Christ himselfe whom in Baptime we put on through ●aith where from procéedeth loue and charitie which is the common badge of all true faithfull christians Sir I. Cheeke ¶ They that with their mouthes doe professe the Gospell and the true christian religion and so doe associate and a fellowship them●elues with the church and congregation and bee not inwardly sanctified with the spirit of God be without the bridegromes liu●rie ¶ Faith in Christs bloud maketh the marriage betwéene our soules and Christ and is properly called the marriage garment or the signe Tindale VVEDLOCKE ¶ Looke Marriage VVEAKE AND SICKE The meaning of Saint Paule in this place FOr this cause many are weake and sicke among you ¶ For this cause that is ●or lacke of good examining of our selues many are weake sicke in the faith many asleepe haue lost their faith in Christs bloud for lacke of remembrance of his body breaking bloudshedding not y● only but many are weak and sick euen striken with bodily diseases for abusing the Sacramēt of his body eating the bread with their téeth not his body with their heart minde peraduenture some slaine for it by the stroke of God which if they had truely iudged and examined themselues for what intent they came thether why it was instituted should not haue ben so iudged chastened of the Lord. For the Lord doth chasten to bring vs to repentance and to mortifie our rebellious members that we may remēber him Héere ye may shortly perceiue the minde of Paule Tindale fol. 164. ¶ Looke Examine VVEEKES How the weekes in Daniels prophesie be taken A Wéeke in Daniels prophesie is not taken for a wéeke of dayes but for a wéeke of years so that euery wéeke is counted for seuen yeares And the halfe yeare that he speaketh of is taken for the thrée years an halfe wherin Christ héere in earth stablished his Testament A wéeke is taken for seauen yeares As in Leuit. 25. 8. where the 70. wéekes that Daniel speaketh of are 190 yeares T. M. Then number 7. weeks of yeares ¶ A wéeke is sometimes taken for the number of 7. daies as before 23. 15. sometime for y● number of 7. yeares as heere and in Dan. 9. ver 24. 25. 26. T. M. VVELLES What the welles of the Sauiour are WIth ioy shall ye drawe water out of the welles of the Sauiour ¶ The wells of the Sauiour are the word of God the doctrine of the Gospell and promises of Christ wherewith trembling soules and afflicted consciences are refreshed Out of these saith he that they shal drawe water not out of mens traditions which are but puddles T. M. ¶ The graces of God shall be so abundant that ye may receiue them in as great plentie as waters out of a fountain● that is full Geneua VVENT OVT FROM VS What is meant by this place of Iohn Looke Vs. VVEEPE Causes why we should weepe AVgustine in his 4. Sermon of the first Sundaye in Lent writeth that there bée two
Godhead S. Iohn sayth not Caro verbum facta est as the Arrians expound it and say the flesh receiued the worde but hée sayth Verbum caro factum est The word was made flesh I. Proctour ¶ In that he sayth the word became flesh and not man hée sheweth how farre Gods sonne humbled and abased himselfe For the Scripture calleth man flesh when he will signifie the pouertie vilenesse and miserie of man As when it is said All flesh is grasse and he remembred that we were but flesh my spirit shall not euer striue in man for he is flesh But when y● Euangelist sayth The word became flesh we may not imagin that Gods sonne ioyned to his diuine nature flesh only and not mans soule as Appolinaris thought in his traunce that flesh and the Godhead made one person without mans soule For he imagined that the diuinitie was in steede of a soule But so it should follow that the Lord Iesus was not a very man For flesh is not a man For the soule is the formall part of a man namely that wherby a man is a man without which a man cannot be And that the Lord had a mans soule beside his diuinitie he himselfe testifieth where he saith My soule is heauy vnto y● death Neither can Appol 〈…〉 is aide himselfe with this place For when the Scripture calleth men flesh it meaneth not that they are without soule for then they were no men indeede Trahe●on What the Euangelist meaneth by the word in this place of Iohn In the beginning was the worde c. ¶ By the word the Euangelist meaneth the second person in the holy Trinitie namely our Lord Iesus Christ touching his diuine nature as it appeareth afterward when he saith And the worde became flesh Héere we must consider why Gods son is called a word Auncient writers consider a worde two wayes For they teach that there is an outward word and an inward word The outward word is that foundeth and passeth awaye The inwarde worde is the conceite of the heart which remaineth still in the heart when the sound is past So they saye that God hath an outward worde which is sounded pronounced and written in bookes And that hée hath an inwarde worde which remaineth within himselfe whereof the outwarde worde is an Image effect and fruite This inwarde worde euer remaining in him is called his sonne as the conceite of the heart maye bée called the ingendered fruite of the heart and the heartes childe They thinke also that he is called the worde of God because that as a worde is the Image of mans minde and representeth it vnto vs so the Lorde Iesus is Gods Image and most liuely representeth vnto vs his power his Godhead and his wisedome For whatsoeeuer is in the Father shineth in the Sonne Some other thinke that the worde héere is taken for a thing after the Hebrew manner of speaking For the Hebrewes vse Dabar which signifieth a worde for a thing When Esay the Prophet asked king Ezechias what the Babylonians had seene in his house he aunswereth thus They sawe all that was in my house Iohaial dabar there was not a word that is to say any one thing that I shewed not vnto them in my treasures The Prophet replyeth Behold the daies come that whatsoeuer is in thine house shall be taken away and whatsoeuer thy father haue laid vp in store vnto this day shal be carried to Babylon Ioij vather dabar ther shall not a word remain saith the Lord that is to say there shall not one thing be left behinde The Angel also in S. Luke when the virgin Mary meruailed how she shuld coceiue a childe without mans helpe sayd vnto her No word shall be impossible vnto God y● is nothing shal be impossible for him to do So that after this vnderstanding S. Iohns mening is that in the beginning ther was a diuine and heauenly thing with God Traheron How the word of God is called the light Thy word saith Dauid is a lanterne vnto my féet Psa. 119. 105 Againe the commaundements of the Lord is lightsome giuing light to the eyes Psal. 19. 7. Theophilact saith Verbum Dei est lucerna c. The word of God is the candle whereby the théefe or false preacher is espied How the word of God endureth for euer S. Hierome sayth Quomodo eternae erunt Scripturae diuin● c. How shall the holy Scriptures be euerlasting séeing the world shall haue an ende True it is that the parchment or leaues of the books with the letters and all shall bée abolished but forsomuch as the Lord addeth My words shal neuer passe doubtlesse though the papers and letters perish yet the thing that is promised by the same letters shall last for euer Of the nature and strength of the word of God For the word of God is liuely and mighty in operation and sharper then anye two edged swoorde and entereth through euen to the diuiding asunder of the soule and the spirit of the ioyntes and of the marrowe and is a discouerer of the thoughts and the intent of the heart neither is there any creature which is not manifest in his sight but all thinges are naked and open vnto his eyes with whome wée haue to doe Surely as the raine commeth down and the Snow from heauen and returneth not thether but watereth the earth and maketh it to bring forth bud that it may giue séed to the sower and bread to him that eateth so shall my word be that goeth out of my mouth it shall not returne vnto me in vaine but it shall accomplish that which I will and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it How the word of God hath sundrie names The word of God according to the sundry effectes and propertyes thereof hath sundry names as thus It is called seed for that it encreaseth and multiplyeth It is called a sword for that it cutteth the heart and diuideth the flesh from the spirit It is called a net for that it taketh vs and encloseth vs together It is called water for that it washeth vs cleane it is called fire for that it inflameth vs It is called bread for that it féedeth vs. Euen so it is called a key for that it giueth vs an entrye into the house The house is the kingdome of heauen Christ is the doore the word of God is the keye Iewel fo 144. How the word of God is the key ¶ Looke Key How the word of God is plaine They are all plaine vnto him that will vnderstand ¶ Meaning that the word of God is easie to al that haue a desire vnto it and which are not blinded by the Prince of this worlde Geneua The more that Gods word is troden downe the more it groweth The Pharesies sayd thus of Christ Videtis nos nihil proficere c. Ye sée we can doe no good lo the whole world
reason with reason August contra Maxi. li. 3. chap. 14. More weightie is the doctrine of the Scripture and the Prophets then of such as be raised from the dead doe report any thing or if an Angell descend from heauen As for the things they talke they be but seruants that speake them but whatsoeuer the Scripture vttereth the Lord hath spoken it The Lord therfore doth teach vs that we should thinke credit shuld be rather giuen vnto the Scriptures then to all other things Chrisost. de Lazaro concione 4. No man will giue héede to the Scriptures for if we did consider them we shuld not onely not fall into ●rrours our selues but also thereof deliuer other that are deceiued and put them from perill Chrisost. in Epist. ad Heb. Homil. 8. Let vs not bring deceitfull ballances wherein we may weigh whatsoeuer we lust at our owne discretion saieng this is heauie this is light but let vs bring the heauenly ballance of the holy Scripture as from the treasure of the Lord therin let vs weigh what is of more weight Hierome causa 24. quest chap. 1. non adfera How Christ ouercommeth Satan with Scriptures Iesus sayd vnto him it is written againe ¶ Christ woulde not ouercome Satan by his diuine and almightie power but with the Scriptures and word of God to teach vs by his own example to fight against Satan with the holy sacred Scripture which are our heauenly armour the word of the spirit Beza How this place following is to be vnderstood Among the which some things are hard to be vnderstoode c. ¶ That is to say among the which things for he disputeth not héere whether Paules Epistles be plaine or darke but saith that amongest those things which Paule hath written off in his Epistles and Peter himselfe in these two of his owne there are some things which cannot be so easily vnderstood and therfore are of some drawne to their owne destruction that hée saith to make vs more attentiue and dilligent and not to remoue vs from reading of holy things For to what end should they haue written vaine speculations Beza ¶ As no man condempneth the brightnesse of the Sunne because his eyes is not able to susteine the cleerenesse thereof so the hardnesse which we cannot somtime compasse or perfectly vnderstand in the Scriptures ought not to take away from vs the vse of the Scriptures Geneua Of them which say that Scripture hangeth vpon the iudgement of the Church I know saith Caluine that they haue commonly the saieng of Augustine where he sayth he would not beléeue the Gospel saue that the ●uthoritie of the Church moued him therevnto But ●ow vntrue and cauillously it is alleaged for such a meaning by the whole tenour of his writing it is easie to perceiue He had to doe with the Maniches which desired to be beleeued without gaine saieng when they vaunted that they had y● truth on their side but proued it not Now Augustine asketh them what they would doe if they did light vpon a man that would not beleeue the Gospell it selfe with what manner of perswasion they wold drawe him to their opinion Afterward he saith I myselfe would not beleeue the Gospel c. saue y● the authoritie of the church moued me therto meaning y● he himselfe when hée was a straunger from the faith could none otherwise be brought to embrace the gospell for the assured truth of God but by this the he was ouercome by the authoritie of the Church And what meruaile is it if a man not yet knowing Christ haue regard to men Augustine therfore doth not there teach y● the faith of the godly is grounded vpon the authoritie of the Church nor meaneth that the certeintie of the gospel hangeth theron but simply onely that there should be no assurednesse of the gospell to the Infidels wherby they might be won to Christ vnles y● consent of the church did driue them vnto it And the same meaning a little before he doth plainly confirme in this saieng When I shal praise y● which I beléeue scorne the which thou beléeuest what thinkest thou méet for vs to iudge or do but the we forsake such men as first call vs to come know certeine truths after commaunded vs to beléeue things vncerteine And that we follow them that require vs first to beléeue that which we are not yet able to sée that being made strong by beléeuing we may attain● to vnderstand the thing that we beléeue not men now but God himselfe inwardly strengthening giuing light to our minds These are the very words of Saint Austen Caluin 1. booke chap. 7. Sect. 3. The Papists say it must be vnderstood after the interpretation of the Church of Rome which is false When the Apostles bad vs trie the spirits whether they be of God or no meant he trow ye we shuld trie them according to the testimony of the Church of Rome When the men of Thessalonica tried the Apostles doctrine whether it wer true or no Asked they y● iudgement of the Church of Rome c. Deering Obiection How is the word of God and the Scriptures knowne but by the Church Aunswere The Church was and is a meane to bring a man more spéedely to know the scriptures and the word of God as was the woman of Samaria a meane that the Samaritanes knew Christ but as when they had heard him speake they sayde Now we know that he is Christ not because of thy words but because we our selues haue heard him So after we came to the hearing and reading the Scriptures shewed vnto vs and discerned by the Church we doe beleeue them and know them as Christs shéepe not because the Church sayth they are the Scriptures but because they be so being assured therof by the same spirit which wrote and spake them Bradford in the booke of Mar. fol. 1794. When the Scriptures was in English ¶ Looke Bible Of the burning of Scriptures ¶ Looke Herode SEA Of the diuerse names giuen to this Sea OUer the sea of Galile ¶ This is a lake which is called in the Scripture the sea or lake of Ginnereth which some interpret the sweete sea is called of the Gréeks Genezar or Genazareth Of this Iosephus maketh mention in his third booke of the war of the Iewes 18. chapter S. Iohn calleth it the sea of Tiberias because the citie of Tiberias so called of Herode the Tetrach for the honour of Tiberius Caesar bounded vpon the East part of the same Wherefore by this portion the Euangelist doth more plainly describe the place whither Christ went For the whole lake was not called the sea of Tiberias but onely that part which lay more to the shore vpon the which Tiberias was scituate Marl. fo 188. What the Sea of Glasse signifieth As it were a Sea of Glasse ¶ The Hebrues betoken all manner of