A godlye and learned treatise wherein is proued the true iustificacion of a Christian manne to come frely of the mercy of god in Christ, without the deseruyng of man by his merites: and also how good workes oughte to bee done [and] what be true good works in dede. Whereunto is ioyned a co[n]ference betwene the law and the gospel, very profitable for al men to exercise themselues therin.
About this Item
Title
A godlye and learned treatise wherein is proued the true iustificacion of a Christian manne to come frely of the mercy of god in Christ, without the deseruyng of man by his merites: and also how good workes oughte to bee done [and] what be true good works in dede. Whereunto is ioyned a co[n]ference betwene the law and the gospel, very profitable for al men to exercise themselues therin.
Author
Werdmüller, O.
Publication
[Wesel? :: H. Singleton?,
1555?]
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Subject terms
Justification -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A13920.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A godlye and learned treatise wherein is proued the true iustificacion of a Christian manne to come frely of the mercy of god in Christ, without the deseruyng of man by his merites: and also how good workes oughte to bee done [and] what be true good works in dede. Whereunto is ioyned a co[n]ference betwene the law and the gospel, very profitable for al men to exercise themselues therin." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A13920.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2025.
Pages
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
¶ He, that loueth god, loueth his neyghbour.
If a man say, I loue God, and yet hateth his brother, he is a liar. * 1.1 He yt loueth not his brother whō he hath sene, how can he loue god * 1.2 whom he hath not sene.
He yt loueth his neighbour as him selfe kepeth al ye cōmaundementes of god, what so euer ye wold that men should do to you, euen so do you to thē. For this is the lawe * 1.3 and ye Prophets. He that loueth his neyghbour, fulfylleth yt lawe.
All the lawe is fullfylled in * 1.4 one worde, that is, loue thy neygh¦boure as thy selfe.