The vvhole workes of W. Tyndall, Iohn Frith, and Doct. Barnes, three worthy martyrs, and principall teachers of this Churche of England collected and compiled in one tome togither, beyng before scattered, [and] now in print here exhibited to the Church. To the prayse of God, and profite of all good Christian readers.

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The vvhole workes of W. Tyndall, Iohn Frith, and Doct. Barnes, three worthy martyrs, and principall teachers of this Churche of England collected and compiled in one tome togither, beyng before scattered, [and] now in print here exhibited to the Church. To the prayse of God, and profite of all good Christian readers.
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Tyndale, William, d. 1536.
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At London :: Printed by Iohn Daye, and are to be sold at his shop vnder Aldersgate,
An. 1573.
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"The vvhole workes of W. Tyndall, Iohn Frith, and Doct. Barnes, three worthy martyrs, and principall teachers of this Churche of England collected and compiled in one tome togither, beyng before scattered, [and] now in print here exhibited to the Church. To the prayse of God, and profite of all good Christian readers." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68831.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 21, 2025.

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¶ The Preface of master William Tyndall, that he made before the fiue bookes of Moses, called Genesis. An. 1530. Ianua. 17.

WHen I had translated the newe Testamēt, I added an Epistle vn∣to the latter ende, In which I de¦sired them that were learned, to amend if ought were found amisse. But our malicious and wylie hypocrites, whiche are so stubburne, and hard harted in their wicked abho∣minations, that it is not possible for thē * 1.1 to amend any thing at all (as we see by daylye experience, when both their ly∣uynges, and doyngs are rebuked with the trouthe) saye, some of them that it is impossible to translate the Scrip∣ture into Englishe, some that it is not lawfull for the lay people to haue it in their mother toūg, some that it would * 1.2 make them all heretickes, as it would no-doubt from many thynges whiche they of long tyme haue falsely taught, and that is the whole cause wherefore they forbid it, though they other clokes pretende. And some or rather euery one, say that it would make them rise agaynst the king, whom they them sel∣ues (vnto their damnation) neuer yet obeyed. And lest the temporall rulers should see their falsehode, if the Scrip∣ture came to lyght, causeth thē so to lie.

And as for my translation in which they affirme vnto the lay people (as I haue heard say to be I wotte not how many thousand heresies, so that it can * 1.3 not be mended or correct, they haue yet taken so great payne to examine it, and to compare it vnto that they would fayne haue it, and to their owne imagi∣nations and iugglyng termes, and to haue somewhat to rayle at, and vnder that cloke to blaspheme the truth, that they might with as litle labour (as I suppose) haue translated the most part of the Bible. For they which in tymes past were wont to looke on no more scripture thē they foūd in theyr Duns, * 1.4 or suche like deuilishe doctrine, haue yet now so narowly loked on my trā∣slation, yt there is not so much as one I therin if it lack a title ouer his hed, but they haue noted it, & nomber it vnto ye ignoraunt people for an heresy. Final∣ly in this they be all agreed, to driue you from the knowledge of the Scrip∣ture, and that ye shall not haue the text therof in the mother toūg, and to kepe the world still in darkenesse, to the en∣tent they might sit in the consciences of the people, thorow vayne superstition and false doctrine, to satisfie their fil∣thy lustes, their proude ambition, and vnsatiable couetousnes, and to exalte their owne honour aboue Kyng and Emperour, yea, and aboue God hym selfe. * 1.5

A thousand bookes had they leuer to be put foorth agaynst their abhomi∣nable doynges and doctrine, then that the Scripture should come to light. For as long as they may keepe that down, they wil so darken ye right way with the mist of their sophistry, & so tā∣gle thē yt either rebuke or despise their abhominations, with Argumentes of Philosophie, and with worldly simili∣tudes, and apparent reasons of natu∣rall wisedome: and with wrestyng the Scripture vnto their owne purpose cleane contrary vnto the processe, or∣der and meanyng of the text, and so delude them in descantyng vpō it with allegories, and amase them, expoun∣dyng * 1.6 it in many senses before the vn∣learned lay people (when it hath but one simple litterall sense whose light the owles can not abide) that thoughe thou feele in thine harte, and arte sure how that all is false that they say, yet couldest yu not solue their subtle rydles.

Whiche thyng onely moued me to translate the new Testament. Because I had perceaued by experience, howe that it was impossible to stablishe the * 1.7 laye people in any truth, excepte the Scripture were playnely layd before their eyes in their mother toung, that they might see the processe, order and meanyng of the text: for els what soe∣uer truth is taught them, these ene∣mies of all truth, quench it agayn, part¦ly with the smoke of their bottomlesse pitte, wherof thou readest Apocalipsis, ix. that is, with apparāt reasons of so∣phistry, and traditions of their owne makyng, founded without grounde of Scripture, and partely in iugglyng with the texte, expoundyng it in such a sense, as is impossible to gather of the text, if thou see the processe, order and meanyng therof.

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And euē in the Byshops of Londons house, I entented to haue done it. For * 1.8 when I was so turmoyled in the coū∣trey where I was, that I could no lē∣ger there dwell (the processe whereof were to long here to rehearse) I this wise thought in my selfe, this I suffer because the Priestes of the countrey be vnlearned, as God it knoweth, there are a full ignoraunt sorte whiche haue sene no more Latin, then that they read in their Portesses and Missales, which yet many of them can scarcely read (ex∣cept it be Albertus de secretis mulierū, in which yet, though they be neuer so so∣rily learned, they poore day and night, and make notes therein, & all to teach the mydwiues as they say, and Lin∣wode a booke of constitutions to ga∣ther tithes, mortuaries, offeringes, cu∣stomes, and other pillage, whiche they call not theirs, but Gods part, and the duety of holy church, to discharge their consciences with all: for they are boūd that they shall not diminishe, but en∣crease all thyng vnto the vttermost of * 1.9 their powers) & therfore (because they are thus vnlearned thought I) when they come together to the Alehouse, whiche is their preachyng place, they affirme that my sayinges are heresie. And besides that they adde to of their own heades, which I neuer spake, as the maner is to prolōg the tale to short the time with all, and accused me secret¦ly to the Chauncellour, and other the * 1.10 Byshops officers. And in dede when I came before the Chauncellour, hee threatned me greuously, and reuiled me, and rated me as though I had ben a dogge, and layd to my charge, wher∣of there could be none accuser brought forth (as their maner is not to bryng forth the accuser) and yet all yt Priestes of the coūtrey were the same day there.

As I this thought, the Byshop of London came to my remembraunce * 1.11 whom Erasmus (whose toung maketh of litles gnattes great Elephants, and lifteth vp aboue the Starres whosoe∣uer geueth him a litle exhibition) pray∣seth excedyngly amōg other in his an∣notations on the new Testament for hys great learnyng. Then thought I, if I might come to this mans seruice, I were happy. And so I gatte me to London, and thorow the acquaintance of my master, came to Syr Harry Gil∣ford the Kynges graces Controller, and brought hym an Oration of Iso∣crates, whiche I had translated out of greeke into English, & desired hym to speake vnto my Lorde of London for me, whiche hee also dyd as he shewed me, and willed me to write an Epistle to my Lord, and to go to hym my selfe whiche I also dyd, and deliuered my Epistle to a seruaunt of his own, one William Hebilthwayte', a man of myne old acquaintaunce. But God (which * 1.12 knoweth what is within hypocrites) saw that I was begyled, and that that counsayle was not the next way vnto my purpose. And therfore he gatte me no fauour in my Lordes sight.

Whereupon my Lord aunswered me, his house was full, he had mo then he could well finde, and aduised me to seeke in Londō, where he sayd I could not lacke a seruice, And so in London I abode almost a yeare, and marked the course of the world, and heard our praters, I would say our Preachers, how they boasted thēselues and theyr hye authoritie, and beheld the pompe of our Prelates, and how busie they were (as they yet are) to set peace and vnite in the world (thoughe it be not possible for them, that walke in darke∣nesse, to continue long in peace, for they cā not but either stomble or dash them¦selues at one thyng, or an other yt shall * 1.13 cleane vnquiet all together) and sawe thynges wherof I deferre to speake at this tyme, & vnderstode at the last not onely that there was no rowme in my Lord of Londons Palace to translate the new Testamēt, but also that there was no place to do it in all Englād, as experience doth now openly declare.

Vnder what maner therfore should I now submit this booke to be correc∣ted and amended of them, whiche can * 1.14 suffer nothyng to bee well? Or what protestation should I make in such a maner vnto our Prelates those stub∣burne Nimrothes whiche so mightely fight against God, and resiste hys holy spirite, enforcyng with all crafte and sutletie to quench yt lyght of the euerla∣styng Testament, promises, and ap∣pointement made betwene God and vs? and heapyng the fierce wrath of God vpō all Princes and rulers, moc∣kyng them with false fayned names of hypocrisie, and seruyng their lustes at all pointes, and dispensyng with them euē of the very lawes of God, of which Christe hym selfe testifieth Mathew 5. That not so much as one title therof may perish or be broken. And of whiche the Prophet sayth Psalme. cxviij. Thou hast commaunded thy lawes to bee kept meod, that is in Hebrew excedyngly,

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with all diligence, might and power, and haue made thē so mad with their iugglyng charmes, and craftie persua∣siōs, that they thinke it a ful satisfactiō for all their wicked lyuing, to torment such as tell them trouth, and to burne yt word of their soules health, and slea who soeuer beleue thereon.

Notwithstandyng yet I submitte this booke, and all other that I haue * 1.15 either made or translated, or shall in tyme to come (if it bee Gods will that I shall further labour in his haruest) vnto all them that submit them selues vnto the word of God, to be corrected of them, yea and moreouer to be disa∣lowed and also burnt, if it seme wor∣thy, when they haue examined it with the Hebrue, so that they first put forth of their owne trāslatyng, an other that is more correct.

A prologue by Williā Tyn∣dall, shewyng the vse of the Scrip∣ture, which he wrote before the fiue bookes of Moses.

THough a man had a precious iuell & a rich, yet if hee wiste not the value therof, nor wher¦fore it serued, he were neither the better nor richer of a straw. Euē so though we read the Scripture, and bable of it neuer so much, yet if we know not the vse of it, and wherfore it was geuen, and what is therein to be sought, it profiteth vs nothyng at all. It is not enough therfore to read and talke of it onely, but we must also de∣sire * 1.16 God day and night instantly to o∣pen our eyes, and to make vs vnder∣stand and feele, wherefore the Scrip∣ture was geuen, that we may applye the medicine of the Scripture, euery man to his own sores, vnlesse then we entend to be idle disputers, and brau∣lers about vaine wordes, euer gnaw∣yng vppon the bitter barcke without, and neuer attaynyng vnto the sweete pith within, and persecuting one an o∣ther in defendyng of lewde imagina∣tions, and phantasies of our owne in∣uentions.

Paule in thyrd of the second Epistle * 1.17 to Timothe sayth, That the Scripture is good to teache (for that ought men to teach, and not dreames of their owne makyng, as the Pope doth) and also to improue, for the Scripture is the touch stone that tryeth all doctrines, and by that we know the false from the true. And in the vj. to the Ephesians he cal∣leth it the sword of the spirite, by cause it killeth hypocrites, and vttereth and and improueth their false inuentions. And in the xv. to yt Romains he saith. All that are written, are written for our learnyng, that we thorow patience and * 1.18 comforte of the Scripture, might haue hope. That is, the examples that are in the Scripture, comfort vs in all our tribulations, and make vs to put our trust in GOD, and patiently to abide hys leysure. And in the x. of the firste to the Corinthians, hee bringeth in ex∣amples of the Scripture, to feare vs, and to bridle the fleshe, that wee cast not the yoke of the lawe of God from of our neckes, and fall to lustyng and doyng of euill.

So nowe the Scripture is a lyght, & sheweth as the true way, both what to do, & what to hope for. And a defēce from all errour, and a comforte in ad∣uersitie that we dispaire not, and fea∣reth vs in prosperitie, that we synne not. Séeke therefore in the Scripture as thou readest it, first the law, what God commaundeth vs to do. And se∣condarely the promises, whiche God promiseth vs agayn, namely in Christ Iesu our Lord. Then seeke examples, first of comfort, how God purgeth all * 1.19 them that submit themselues to walke in his wayes, in the Purgatory of tri∣bulation, deliueryng them yet at the latter end, and neuer sufferyng any of them to perishe, that cleaue fast to hys promises. And finally, note the exam∣ples which are writtē to feare the flesh that we sinne not. That is, how God suffereth the vngodly and wicked sin∣ners * 1.20 that resist God, and refuse to fo∣low him, to continue in their wicked∣nesse, euer waxyng worse and worse, vntill their sinne be so sore encreased, and so abhominable, that if they shuld lōger endure, they would corrupt the very elect. But for ye electes sake God sendeth them preachers. Neuerthelesse they harden their hartes agaynste the truth, and God destroyeth them vtter∣ly, and beginneth the world a new.

This comfort shalt thou euermore finde in the playne texte, and litterall sense. Neither is there any storye so homely, so rude, yea or so vyle (as it semeth outward) wherein is not exce∣dyng great comforte. And when some which seme to thē selues great clarkes say: they wott not what more profite is in many gestes of the Scripture, if

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they be read without an allegory, then in a tale of Robenhode: say thou, that * 1.21 they were written for our consolation and comforte, that we dispayre not, if such like happen vnto vs. We be not holyer then Noe, though he were once dronke. Neither better beloued then Iacob, though his owne sonne defyled his bead. We be not holyer then Lot, thoughe his daughters thorow igno∣raunce deceaued hym, nor peraduen∣ture holier then those daughters. Nei∣ther are we holyer then Dauid, though he brake wedlocke, and vpon the same committed abhominable murther. All those men haue witnesse of the Scrip∣ture that they pleased God, and were good mē, both before that those things chaunced, and also after. Neuer∣lesse such thynges happened them for our example: not that we should coun∣terfeite their euill, but if whyle wee fight with our selues, enforsyng to walke in the law of God (as they dyd) we yet fall likewise, that we despayre not, but come agayne to the lawes of God, and take better hold.

We read sence the tyme of Christes * 1.22 death, of virgins yt haue bene brought vnto the common stues, and there de∣filed, and of Martyrs that haue bene bound, and whores haue abused theyr bodyes. Why? The iudgementes of God are bottomlesse. Such thynges chaunced partly for examples, partely God thorow sinne healeth sinne. Pride can neither be healed, nor yet appeare, but thorow such horrible deades. Per∣aduenture they were of the popes sect, and reioysed fleshly, thinking that hea∣uen came by dedes, and not by Christ, and that the outward dede iustifyed them, and made thē holy, and not the inward spirite receaued by fayth, & the consent of hart vnto the law of God.

As thou readest therfore thinke that * 1.23 euery sillable pertayneth to thine own selfe, & sucke out the pithe of the Scrip∣ture, and arme thy selfe agaynst all as∣saultes. First note with strong fayth the power of God, in creatyng all of nought. Then marke the greuous fall of Adam, and of vs all in him, thorow the light regardyng of the cōmaunde∣mēt of God. In the iiij. Chapter God turneth hym vnto Abell, and thē to his offeryng, but not to Cain and hys of∣feryng. Where thou seest that thoughe the dedes of the euil, appeare outward¦ly as glorious, as the dedes of yt good: yet in the sight of God, which looketh on the hart, the deede is good because of the man, and not the man good be∣cause of his deede. In the vj. God sen∣deth Noe to preach to the wicked, and geueth them space to repent: they wax hard harted, God bringeth them to nought. And yet saueth Noe: euen by yt same water by whiche he destroyed them. Marke also what folowed the pride of the buildyng of the Tower of Babell.

Consider how God sendeth foorth Abraham out of his owne countey in∣to a straunge land, full of wicked peo∣ple, * 1.24 and gaue him but a bare promisse with him that would blesse, him & de∣fende him. Abraham beleued: and that worde saued, and deliuered him in all perilles: so that we see, how that mās life is not maintayned y bread onely, (as Christe sayth) but much rather by beleuyng the promises of God. Be∣hold how soberly, & how circumspect∣ly both Abrahā, and also Isaac behaued them selues among the infidels. Abra∣ham byeth that which might haue ben geuen him for nought, to cut of occasi∣ons. Isaac when his welles whiche he had digged were taken from him, ge∣ueth rowme and resisteth not. Moreo∣uer they eare, and sowe, and fede their cattell, and make confederations, and and take perpetuall truce, and doe all outward thinges: Euen as they doe whiche haue no fayth, for God hath not made vs to be idle in this world. Euery man must worke godly & truly * 1.25 to yt vttermost of the power, that God hath geuen him: and yet not trust ther¦in: but in Gods word or promise: and God will worke with vs, and bryng that we do to good effect. And thē whē our power will extende no further, Gods promises will worke all alone.

How many thynges also resisted the promises of God to Iacob? And yet * 1.26 Iacob coniureth God, with hys owne promises saying: O GOD of my fa∣ther Abraham: and GOD of my father Isaac, O Lord which saydest vnto me, re∣turne vnto thine owne countrey, and vnto the place were thou waste borne, and I wil do thee good: I am not worthy of the lest of those mercyes, nor of that trouth, whiche thou hast done to thy ser∣uaunt, I went out with a staffe, and come home with two droues, deliuer me out of the handes of my brother Esau, for I feare him greatly. &c. And God deliue∣red him, and will likewise all that call vnto his promises, with a repentyng hart, were they neuer so great sin∣nes. Marke also the weake infirmi∣ties

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of the man. He loueth one wife more then an other, one sonne more then an other. And see how God pur∣geth hym. Esau threateneth hym: La∣ban begyleth him. The beloued wife is long baren: his daughter is raui∣shed: his wife is defiled, and that of his owne sonne. Rahell dyeth, Ioseph is taken away, yea & (as he supposed) rent of wild beastes. And yet how glo∣rious was his ende? Note the weake∣nesse of his children, yea and the sinne of them, and how God thorow their owne wickednes saued them. These examples teache vs, that a man is not at once perfect the first day he begyn∣neth to liue well. They that be strong, therefore must suffer with the weake, & * 1.27 helpe thē in vnity, and peace, one with an other vntill they be stronger.

Note what the brethren sayd when they were tached in Egypt, we haue verely sinned (sayd they) agaynst our brother, in that we saw the anguish of his soule when hee besought vs, and would not heare him: and therfore is this tribulation come vppon vs. By * 1.28 which example thou seest, how that cō∣science of euill doynges findeth men out at last. But namely in tribulation and aduersitie: there temptatiō and al∣so desperatiō, yea and the very paynes of hell finde vs out: there there yt soule feeleth the fierce wrath of GOD, and wisheth moūtaines to fall on her, and to hyde her (if it were possible) from the angry face of God.

Marke also how great euils folow of howe litle an occasion Dina goeth but forth alone to see the daughters of the countrey, and how great mischief and trouble foloweth? Iacob loued but one sonne more then an other, and howe greuous murther folowed in their hartes? These are examples for * 1.29 our learnyng, to teache vs to walke warely, and circumspectly in yt world of weake people, that we geue no man occasions of euill.

Finally, see what GOD promised Ioseph in his dreames. These promi∣ses accompanyed him, alwayes, and went downe with hym euen into the depe dongeon. And brought hym vp agayne. And neuer forsoke hym till all yt was promised was fulfilled. These * 1.30 are examples writtē for our learnyng (as Paule saith) to teach vs to trust in God in the strōg fire of tribulation, & purgatory of our fleshe. And that they whiche submitte them selues to folow GOD, should note and marke such thynges, for learnyng and comfort, is the frute of the scripture, & cause why it was written: And with such a pur∣pose to read it, is the way to euerla∣sting life, and to those ioysul blessings that are promised vnto all nations in the seede of Abraham, whiche seede is Iesus Christ our Lord, to whom be honour and prayse for euer, and vnto God our father thorow him. Amen.

A Table expoundyng cer∣tayne wordes in the first booke of Moses called Genesis.

ABrech, tender father, or (as some will) how the knee.

Arke, a shyppe made flat, as it were a chest, or cofer.

Bisse, fine white, whe∣ther it be silke or lynen.

Blesse, Gods blessings are his gifts: as in the first Chapter he blessed them, saying, grow and multiply, and haue do∣minion. &c. And in the ix. Chapter, he blessed Noe, and his sonnes, and gaue them dominion ouer all beastes, and authoritie to eat them. And God bles∣sed Abraham with cattell, and other riches. And Iacob desired Esau to re∣ceaue the blessing, whiche he brought hym, that is the present and gift.

God blessed yt vij. day, that is, gaue it a preheminēce that men should rest therin, from bodily labour, and learne to know the wil of God, & his lawes, and how to worke their workes god∣ly all the weeke after. God also bles∣seth all nations in Abrahams sede, that is, he turneth hys loue, & fauour vnto them, and geueth them his spirite, and knowledge of the true way, and lust and power to walke therin, and all for Christes sake Abrahams sonne.

Cain, so is it writtē in Hebrue. Not∣withstandyng whether we call hym Cain or Caim, it maketh no matter, so we vnderstand the meanyng: Euery land hath his maner, that we cal Iohn, the Welshmen call Euan, the Dutch Haunce. Such difference is betwene yt Ebrue, Greke, and Latine: and that ma∣keth them that translate out of the E∣brue varie in names from them, that translate out of Latine, or Greke.

Curse, Gods curse is the takyng a∣way of his benefites: as God cursed yt earth, and made it barren: So now hunger, dearth, warre, pestilence, and such like, are yet right curses, & signes

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of the wrath of God vnto the vnbele∣uers: but vnto thē that know Christ, they are very blessings, and that whol∣some crosse, and true purgatory of our flesh, through which, all must goe that will liue godly, and be saued: as thou readest Math. 5. Blessed are they that suf∣fer persecution for righteousnes sake, &c And Hebr. 11. The lord chastiseth whom he loueth, and scourgeth all the children that he receaueth.

Eden, pleasure.

Firmament, the sky.

Fayth, is the beleuyng of Gods pro∣mises, and a sure trust in the goodnes and truth of God, which fayth iustified Abrah. Gen. 15. and was the mother of all his good workes whiche he after∣afterward did, for faith is the goodnes of all works in the sight of god. Good workes are things of gods commaun¦dement wrought in fayth. And to sow a shoe at the commaundemēt of God, to doe thy neighboure seruice withall, with fayth to be saued by Christe (as God promiseth vs) is much better thē to build an abbey of thine owne ima∣gination, trusting to bee saued by the fained workes of hipocrites. Iacob rob¦bed Laban hys vncle: Moses robbed the Egiptians. And Abraham is aboute to slay and burne his own sonne: and all are holye workes, because they are wrought in fayth at Gods commaun∣dement. To steale, robbe, and murder, are no holye workes before worldly people, but vnto them that haue their trust in God, they are holy when God commaundeth them. What God com∣maundeth not, getteth no rewarde with god. Holy workes of mens ima∣ginations receaue their rewarde here, as Christ testisieth: Math. 6. Howbeit of fayth and workes I haue spoken a∣boundantly in Mammon. Let him that desireth more, seeke there.

Grace, fauour, as Noe founde grace, that is to say, found fauour and loue. Ham and Cam all one.

Iehouah, is gods name, neither is a∣ny creature so called, and it is as much to say, as one that is of himselfe, and dependeth of nothing: Moreouer as ofte as thou seest LORDE in greate letters (except there be any error in the printing) it is in Hebrue Iehouah, thou that art, or he that is.

Marshall in Hebrue, he is called Sar∣tabaim, as thou wouldest say, Lorde of the slaughter men. And thoughe that Tabaim, be taken for cookes in manye places, (for the cookes did slaye the beastes themselues in those days,) yet it may be taken for them that put men to execution also: and that I thought it should here best signify, in as muche as he had the ouersight of the kynges prison, and the kyngs prisoners: were they neuer so greate men, were vnder his custodie: & therfore I cal him chief Marshal, an officer as it were, yt Lieue∣tenaunt of the tower, or maister of the Marshalsey.

Slyme was their morter, chap. 11. and slyme pittes chap. 4. that slyme was a fatnesse that issued out of the earth, like vnto carre: and thou mayst call it ce∣ment, if thou wilte.

Siloh after some, is as muche to say as sent, and after some happy: and af∣ter some it signifieth Messias, that is to say, annoynted, & that we call Christ after the Greke worde: and it is a pro∣phesie of Christ: for after all the other tribes were in captiuitie, & their king∣dome destroyed, yet the tribe of Iuda had a ruler of the same bloud, euen vn∣to the commyng of Christ: and about the commyng of Christ, the Romaines conquered them, & the emperour gaue the kyngdome of the tribe Iuda, vnto Herode, which was a straunger, euen an Edomite, of the generation of Esau.

Testament, that is an appoymente made betwene God and man, & gods promises: And sacramēt is a signe re∣presentyng such appointment, and pro¦mises: as the raynebowe representeth the promise made to Noe, that God wyll no more drowne the world: And circumcision representeth the promises of God to Abraham, on the one side, & that Abraham and his seede should cir∣cumcise, and cutte of the lustes of their flesh, on the other side, to walke in the wayes of the lord. As baptisme which is come in the roome therof, now sig∣nifieth on the one side, howe that all that repent and beleue, are washed in Christes bloud: and on the other syde, how that the same muste quenche, and drown the lustes of the flesh, to follow the steppes of Christ.

There were tirantes in the earth in those dayes, for the sonnes of god saw the daughters of men &c. The sonnes of God were the Prophetes children, which (though they succeded their fa∣ther) fell yet from the right way, and through falshode of hipocrisie, subdu∣ed the world vnder them, and became tirantes, as the successors of the Apo∣stles haue played with vs.

Vapour, a dewie miste, as the smoke

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of a seething pot.

To walke with God, is to liue god∣ly, and to walke in hys commaunde∣dementes.

Enos walked with God, and was no more sene, he lyued godly and died: God toke him away, that is, God hid hys body, as he did Moses and Aarons, lest happly they should haue made an Idole of hym, for he was a great prea∣cher, and an holy man.

Zaphnath Paenea wordes of Egipt are they (as I suppose) and as muche to say, as a man to whome secret thinges be opened, or an expounder of secrete thinges, as some interprete it.

That Ioseph broughte the Egiptians into such a subiection, would seme vn∣to some a very cruell deede: howe be it, it was a very equall way: for they payd but yt fifth part of that, that grew on the grounde, and therewith were they quit of all dueties, both of rente, custome, tribute, and tolle: & the kyng therwith found them Lordes, and all ministers, and defended them, we now pay half so much vnto the priests only: beside their other craftye exactions. Then pay we rente yearely, thoughe there grow neuer so litle on yt ground, and yet when the kyng calleth, pay we neuer the lesse. So that if we looke in∣differently, their condition was easier then oures, and but euen a very indif∣ferent way, both for the common peo∣ple, and the kyng also.

See therfore that thou looke not on the ensamples of the Scripture wyth worldly eyes, least thou preferre Cain before Abell: Ismaell before Isaac: Esau before Iacob: Ruben before Iuda: Sarah before Phares: Manasses before Ephraim, and euen the worst before the best, as the maner of the world is.

The Prologue to the se∣cond booke of Moses called Exodus.

BY the Preface vppon Genesis, mayest thou vnderstand howe to behaue thy selfe in this booke also, and in all other bookes of the Scripture. Cleaue vnto ye texte and playne storie, and endeuour thy selfe to searche out the meanyng of all * 1.31 that is described therein, and the true sence of all maner of speakinges of the Scripture, of prouerbes, similitudes, & borowed speach, whereof I entrea∣ted in the ende of the obedience, and beware of subtile allegories.

And note euery thyng earnestly, as thynges pertainyng vnto thyne own hart and soule.

For as God vsed him selfe vnto thē of the old Testament: euen so shall he vnto the worldes end vse him self vn∣to vs, whiche haue receiued hys holy Scripture, and the testimonie of hys sonne Iesus. As God doth all things here for thē that beleue his promises, & herken vnto his commaūdements, and with patiēce cleaue vnto him, and walke with him: euen so shall he do for vs, if we receiue the witnes of Christ with a strong fayth, and endure pati∣ently folowyng his steppes. And on the other side, as they that fel from the promise of God thorow vnbelief, and * 1.32 from his lawe and ordinaunces, tho∣rowe impatiēcie of their owne lustes, were forsakē of God, and so perished: euen so shall we as many as doe lyke∣wise, and as many as mocke with the doctrine of Christ, and make a cloke of it to liue fleshly, & to folow our lustes.

Note thereto howe God is founde true at the last, and howe when all is past remedy, and brought into despe∣ration: he then fulfilleth his promises, and that by an abiect and a cast away, a despised, and a refused persō, yea, and by a way impossible to beleue.

The cause of all the captiuitie of Gods people is this. The world uer hateth them for their fayth, and trust whiche they haue in GOD: but in vayne, till they fall from the fayth of yt promises, and loue of the lawe, and ordinaunces of God, & put their trust in holy dedes * 1.33 of their owne finding, and liue altoge∣ther at their owne lust & pleasure, with out regarde of God, or respect of their neighbour. Then God forsaketh vs, & sendeth vs into captiuitie, for our dis∣honoryng of his name, and despisyng of our neighbour. But the world per∣secuteth vs for our fayth in Christ one∣ly (as the people nowe doth) and not for our wicked liuyng. For in his king¦dom thou mayest quietly, and with li∣cence, and vnder aprotection, do what * 1.34 soeuer abhominatiō thine hart lusteth: but God persecuteth vs, bycause we a∣buse his holy Testament, and bycause when we knowe the truth, we folowe it not.

Note also the mightie hande of the Lord, how he playeth with his aduer∣saries, and prouoketh them, and styr∣reth

Page 8

them vp a litle and a litle, and de∣liuereth not hys people in an houre that both the patience of his elect, and also the worldly wit and wyly policie of the wicked, wherwith they do fight agaynst God, might appeare.

Marke yt long sufferyng, and soft pa∣tience of Moyses, and howe he loueth the people, and is euer betwene the * 1.35 wrath of God and them, and is ready to liue and dye with them, & to be put out of the booke that God had written for their sakes (as Paule for his bre∣thren. Romaines ix.) and how he ta∣keth his own wronges patiently, and neuer auengeth him selfe. And make not Moyses a figure of Christe with Rochester: but an ensample vnto all Princes, and to all that are in authori∣tie, how to rule vnto Gods pleasure, & vnto their owne profite. For there is not a perfecter life in this world, both to the honor of God, and profite of his neighbour, nor yet a greater crosse, thē to rule christianly. And of Aaron also, see that thou make no figure of Christ, vntill hee come vnto hys sacrifisyng: but an example vnto all Preachers, that they adde nothyng vnto Gods word, or take ought therefro.

Note also, how GOD sendeth his promise to the people, and Moyses cō∣firmeth it with miracles, and the peo∣ple * 1.36 beleue. But when temptatiō com∣meth, they fall into vnbelief, and fewe byde standyng. When thou seest that all be not Christen that will be so cal∣led, and that the crosse tryeth the true from the fayned: for if the crosse were not, Christ should haue Disciples e∣nough. * 1.37 Whereof also thou seest, what an excellent gift of God true fayth is, and impossible to be had, without the spirite of God. For it is aboue all na∣tural power, that a mā in time of tem∣tation, when GOD scourgeth hym, should beleue then stedfastly, how that God loueth him, and careth for hym, * 1.38 and hath prepared all good thyngs for hym, and that, that scourgyng is an earnest that GOD hath elect and cho∣sen hym.

Note how oft Moyses styred them vp to beleue, and trust in God, putting them in remembraunce alway in tyme * 1.39 of temptation, of the miracles & won∣ders that GGD hath wrought before tyme in their eye sight. How diligent∣ly also forbiddeth hee all that might withdraw their hartes from God? to put ought to GODS word, to take ought from it, cōmaundyng to do that onely, that is ryght in the sight of the Lord, that they should make no ma∣ner * 1.40 Image, to kneele downe before it: yea, that they should make none aul∣tare of hewed stone, for feare of Ima∣ges, to fle the heathen Idolatries vt∣terly, and to destroy their Idols, and cut downe theyr groues where they worshypped, and that they should not take the daughters of them vnto their sonnes, nor geue their daughters to yt sonnes of them, and that who soeuer moued any of them to worshyp false Gods, how soeuer nighe of kynne he were, they must accuse him, and bryng him to death: yea, & wheresoeuer they * 1.41 heard of man, woman, or Citie, that worshypped false Gods, they should slea them, & destroy the Citie for euer, and not builde it agayne, and all by∣cause they should worship nothing but God, nor put confidence in any thing, saue in his word.

Yea, and howe warneth he to be∣ware * 1.42 of witchcraft, sorcerie, enchaunt∣ment, nicromancie, and all craftes of the Deuill, and of dreamers, othsay∣ers, and of miracle doers to destroy the word, and that they should suffer none such to lyue.

Thou wilt hapely say, they tell a man the truth. What then? GOD will that we care not to knowe what shall come. He will haue vs to care onely to kepe his commaundementes, and to committe all chaunces vnto hym: He hath promised to care for vs, & to kepe vs from all ill. All thynges are in hys hand, he can remedy all thynges, and will for his truth sake, if we pray hym. In his promises onely will hee haue vs trust, and there rest, and to seke no farther.

How also doth he prouoke them to loue, euer rehearsing the benefites of God done to them already, & the god∣ly promises that were to come? And * 1.43 how goodly lawes of loue geueth hee, to helpe one an other, and that a man should not hate his neighbour in hys hart, but loue him as himself. Leuit. 19 And what a charge geueth he in euery place, ouer the poore and nedie? ouer the straūger, frendlesse and widowes? And when he desireth to shew mercy, he rehearseth with all, the benefites of God done to them at their neede, that they might see a cause, at the least waye in GOD to shew mercy of very loue vnto their neighbours at their nede.

Also there is no lawe so simple in

Page 9

apparaunce thoroughout the v. bokes of Moses, but that there is a great rea∣son of yt makyng therof, if a man search diligently. As that a man is forbyd to sethe a Kydde in hys mothers milke, moueth vs vnto compassion, and to be pitiful. As doth also that a man should not offer the syre or damme & the yoūg both in one day. Leuiticus .xxij. For it might seme a cruell thyng, in as much as his mothers milke is as it were his bloud, wherfore god wil not haue him * 1.44 sodde therin: but will haue a man shew curtesie, vppon the very beastes. As in an other place hee commaundeth that we mosell not the Oxe that treadeth out the corne (whiche maner of thre∣shyng is vsed in hoate countreys) and that bycause we should much rather to be liberall and kynd vnto men that do vs seruice. Or happely GOD would haue none such wanton meate vsed a∣mong his people. For the Kydde of it selfe is nourishyng, and the Goates milke is restauratiue, and both toge∣ther might be to rancke, and therefore forbydden, or some other lyke cause there was.

Of the ceremonies, sacrifices, and tabernacle, with all hys glory and pompe, vnderstand that they were not permitted onely, but also commaun∣ded of GOD, to lead the people in the shadowe of Moyses and night of the * 1.45 olde Testament, vntill the lyght of Christ, and day of the new Testament were come. As children are lead in the phantasies of youth vntill the discre∣tion of mans age be come vpon them. And all was done to keepe them from Idolatrie.

The tabernacle was ordeined to the entent they might haue a place appoin¦ted them, to do their sacrifices openly in the sight of the people, and namely the Priestes whiche wayted thereon: that it might bee sene that they dyd all thynges accordyng to Gods worde, & not after the Idolatry of their owne i∣magination. And the costlinesse of the * 1.46 Tabernacle and the beauty also, per∣tayning therunto, that they should see nothyng among the heathen, but that they should see thinges more beautiful at home, because they shoulde not bee moued to follow them.

And in lyke maner the diuers fashi∣ons of sacrifices and ceremonies, was to occupy their minds, that they shold haue no lust to follow the Heathen: & the multitude of them was, that they should haue so much to do in keepyng them, that they should haue no leysure to imagine other of their owne: yea, & that Gods worde might be there by in all that they did, that they might haue their fayth and trust in God, which he cannot haue that followeth either hys own inuentions, or traditions of mēs makyng without Gods worde.

Finally, God hath two testaments, the olde and the new. The olde testa∣ment is those tēporall promises which God made the children of Israell of a * 1.47 good lande, and that he would defend them, and of wealth and prosperitie, & of temporall blessinges, of which thou readest ouer all the law of Moses, but namely, Leuiticus. 26. and Deut. 28. & the auoyding of all threatenynges and curses of which thou readest likewyse euery where, but specially in the two bookes aboue rehearsed, and the auoi∣ding of all punishment ordeyned for the transgressours of the law.

And the olde Testament was builte * 1.48 altogether vpō the kepyng of the lawe and ceremonies, and was the rewarde of kepyng them in this lyfe onely, and reached no farther then this lyfe & this world. As thou readest Leuit. 18. A mā that doth them shall lyue therin, which text Paule reherseth, Rom. 10. & Gal. 3. That is, he that keepeth them shall haue his lyfe glorious, according to all the promises and blessings of the law, and shal auoyde both all temporal pu∣nishments of the law, & all the threat∣nynges and cursinges also. For ney∣ther the lawe of the tenne commaun∣dementes, nor yet the ceremonies, iu∣stified in the hart before God, or puri∣fied vnto the lyfe to come. In so much that Moses at his death, euen fourtye yeares after the lawe, and ceremonies were geuen, complaineth saying, God hath not geuen, you an hart to vnder∣stande, nor eyes to see, nor eares to heare vnto this day. As who shoulde * 1.49 haue sayd. God hath geuen you cere∣monies, but ye knowe not the vse of them, and hath geuen you a lawe, but god hath not writen it in your hartes.

Wherfore serueth the law then, if it geue vs no power to do the law? Paul answereth them, that it was geuen to vtter sinne onely, and to make it ap∣peare. As a corosie is layd vnto an old * 1.50 sore, not to heale it, but to stirre it vp, and make the disease alyue, that a man myght feele in what eopardie he is, & how nye death and not aware, and to make a way vnto the healing playster.

Euen so sayth Paul Gal. 3. The law

Page 10

was geuen bycause of transgression (that is to make the sinne alyue, that it might be felt and sene) vntill the seede came vnto whome it was promised, that is to saye, vntill the children of fayth came, or vntill Christ that sede in whom God promised Abraham, that all natiōs of the world should be bles∣sed, came.

That is, the law was geuen to vt∣ter sinne, death, damnation, and cursse, * 1.51 and to driue vs vnto Christ, in whom forgeuenes, lyfe, iustifiyng, and bles∣synges were promised, that we might see so great loue of God to vs ward in Christ, that we hence forth ouercome with kindnes, might loue agayne, and of loue kepe the commaundementes.

Now he that goeth about to quiet his consciēce, and to iustifie him selfe with the law: doth but heale hys woundes with freatyng coroseis. And hee that goeth aboute to purchase grace with * 1.52 ceremonies: doth but sucke the ale pole to quench his thyrst, in as much as the ceremonies were not geuen to iustifie the hart, but to signifie the iustifiyng, and forgeuenesse that is in Christes bloud.

Of the ceremonies that they iustifie not thou readest. Hebr. x. It is impossi∣ble that sinne should be done away with the bloud of Oxen, and Goates. And of * 1.53 the law thou readest. Galla. iij. If there had bene a lawe geuen that could haue quickened or geuen lyfe: then had righ∣teousnes, or iustifiyng come by the lawe in deede. Now the law not onely quicke∣neth not the hart, but also woundeth it with conscience of sinne, and ministreth death, and damnation vnto her. ij. Cor. iij. So that she must nedes dye and be damned, except she find other remedy. So farre it is of, that she is iustified, or holpen by the law.

The new Testament is those euer∣lastyng promises, whiche are made vs * 1.54 in Christ the Lorde throughout all the the Scriptures. And that Testament is built on fayth, and not in workes.

For it is not said of that Testament. He that worketh shall lyue: but he that beleueth shall lyue. As thou readest. Iohn. iij. God so loued the world, that * 1.55 he gaue his onely begotten sonne, that none that beleue in hym should perishe, but haue lyfe euerlastyng.

And when this Testament is preached and beleued, the spirit entreth the hart, and quickeneth it, & geueth it life, & iu∣stifieth her. The spirite also maketh the law, a liuely thyng in the hart, so that a man bringeth foorth good workes of his owne accord, without compulsion of the lawe, without feare of threate∣nynges, * 1.56 or cursings: yea, and without all maner respect, or loue vnto any tē∣porall pleasure, but of the very power of the spirite, receiued thorough fayth, as thou readest. Iohn. i. He gaue them power to be the sonnes of God, in that they beleued on his name.

And of that power they worke, so that he which hath the spirit of Christ, is now no more a child: he neither lear¦neth, nor worketh any lōger for payne of yt rod, or for feare of bugges or plea∣sure of apples, but doth all thynges of his owne courage. As Christe sayeth. Iohn. vij. He that beleueth on me, shall haue riuers of liuyng waters flowyng out of hys belly. That is all good workes, and all giftes of grace sprynge out of * 1.57 hym naturally, and by their owne ac∣cord. Thou nedest not to wrest good woorkes out of hym, as a man would wryng veriuce out of crabbes. Nay they flowe naturally out of hym, as sprynges out of rockes.

The new Testamēt was euer euen from the begynnyng of the world. For there were alwaies promises of Christ * 1.58 to come by fayth, in which promises, the elect were then iustified inwardly before God, as outwardly before the world, by kepyng of the law, and cere∣monies.

And in conclusion, as thou seest bles∣synges, or cursynges folowe the brea∣king, or keping of the law of Moyses: euen so naturally do the blessynges, or cursynges folowe the breakyng of ke∣ping of the law of nature, out of which * 1.59 spryng all our temporall lawes. So that when the people kepe the tempo∣rall lawes of their land, temporal pro∣speritie, and all maner of such tempo∣rall blessynges (as thou readest of in Moyses) do accompany them, and fall vpon them. And contrarywise, when they sinne vnpunished, and when the rulers haue no respect vnto equitie or honestie, then God sendeth his cursse among them, as hunger, dearth, mo∣rein, bannyng, pestilence, warre, op∣pression, with straunge and wonderful diseases, and new kyndes of misfor∣tune and euill lucke.

If any man aske me, seing that faith iustifieth me, why I worke? I aun∣swere. Loue cōpelleth me. For as lōg * 1.60 as my soule feeleth what loue GOD hath shewed me in Christ: I can not but loue God agayne, and his wil and

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commaundements, and of loue worke them, hor can they seme hard vnto me. I thinke not my selfe, better for my woorkyng, nor seeke heauen nor an higher place in heauē bycause of it. For a Christiā worketh to make his weake brother perfecter, and not to seeke an higher place in heauen. I compare not my selfe vnto hym, that woorketh not. No, hee that worketh not to day, shall haue grace to turne, and to woorke to morow, and in the meane tyme, I pi∣tie * 1.61 hym and pray for hym, If I had wrought the will of God those thou∣sād yeares, and an other had wrought the will of the deuill as long, and this day turne, and bee as well willyng to suffer with Christ as I: hee hath this day ouer taken me, and is as far come as I, and shall haue as much reward as I, & I enuie hym not, but reioyce most of all, as of lost treasure found.

For if I be of GOD, I haue these thousād yeares suffered to winne him, for to come & prayse the name of God with me. These thousand yeares, I haue prayed, sorowed, longed, sighed, and sought for that which I haue this day found, and therefore reioyce with all my might, and prayse God for his grace and mercy.

A Table expounding cer∣tayne wordes of the second booke of Genesis.

ALbe, a long garment of white linnen.

Arke, a cofer or chest, as our shrines, saue it was flatte, and the sam∣ple of ours was taken therof.

Booth, an house made of bowes.

Brestlap, or brestflappe is such a flap, as thou seest in the brest of a cope.

Consecrate, to appoynte a thyng to holy vses.

Dedicate, purifie or sanctifie.

Ephod, is a garment somewhat lyke an amice, saue ye armes came thorow, and it was girded to.

Geeras, in weight as it were an En∣glish halfepeny, or somwhat more.

Heaue offringes, because they were houen vp before the Lord.

House, he made them houses, that is, he made a kynrede, or a multitude of people to spring out of them, as we say the house of Dauid, for the kinred of Dauid.

Peace offering, offering of thankes geuing of deuotion, and not for consci∣ence of sinne and trespasse.

Pollute, defile.

Reconcile, to make at one, & to bring in grace or fauour.

Sanctifie, to cleanse and purify, to ap∣poynt a thing to holy vses, and to se∣perate from vncleane & vnholy vses.

Sanctuary, a place hallowed and de∣dicate vnto God.

Tabernacle, a house made tentwise, or as a pauilion.

Tunicle, much lyke the vppermoste garment of the Deacon.

Waueoffring, because they were wa∣uen in the priestes handes to diuers quarters.

Worship, by worshippyng, whether it was in the olde testament, or newe, vnderstand the bowing of a mans self vpon the ground: as we ofte tymes, as we kneele in our prayers how our selues, and lie on our armes, & hands with our face to the ground.

Of this word I will be, commeth the name of God Iehouah, which we in∣terprete Lord, and is as much to saye, as I am that I am. 3. Chap.

That I here call a shepe in Hebrue is a worde indifferent to a shepe, and a goate both. 12. Chap.

The Lambe was called passeouer, that the very name it selfe, should put them in remembraunce, what it signi∣fied, for the signes that God ordained, either signified the benefites done, or promsses to come, and were not done, as the signes of our domme God the Pope.

Iehouah Nissi, the Lord is he that ex∣alteth me. chap. 17.

Ephod, is a garment lyke an amice. Chap. 25.

Shewbread, because it was alway in the sighte and presence of the Lorde. Chap. 25.

A Prologue into the thirde booke of Moses called Le∣uiticus.

THe ceremonies whiche are described in yt booke following, were chiefly ordeined of God, (as I sayd in the ende of the * 1.62 prologue vpon Exod.) to occupye the myndes of that people the Israelites, and to kepe them from seruing of God, after the imagination of their blynde zeale, and good entent: that their consciences might be stabli∣shed,

Page 12

and they sure that they pleased God therin, which were impossible, if a man did of his own head that which was not commaunded of god, nor de∣pended of any appointment made be∣twene hym and God. Such ceremo∣nies * 1.63 were vnto them as an A, B, C, to learne to spell and read, and as a nurse to feede them with mylke and pappe, & to speake vnto them after their own capacitie, and to lispe the wordes vnto them accordyng as the babes and chil∣dren of that age might sound them a∣gayne. For all that were before Christ, were in the infancy and childhoode of the world, and saw that sonne whiche we see openly, but thorow a cloud, and had but feble, and weake imaginatiōs of Christ, as children haue of mennes deedes (a few prophets except) which * 1.64 yet described him vnto other in sacrifi∣ces and ceremonies, likenesses, riddles prouerbes, and darke and strange spea¦king, vntil the full age were come, that god would shew him openly vnto the whole worlde, and deliuer them from their shadowes and cloudelight, & the hethen out of their dead slepe, of starck blinde ignorancy. And as the shadowe vanisheth away at the comming of the light, euē so do the ceremonies and sa∣crifices at the comming of Christ, and are henceforth no more necessary, then a token left in remembraunce of a bar∣gayn, is necessary whē the bargayne is fulfilled. And though they seme plaine childishe, yet they bee not altogether fruitelesse: as the puppets & xx. maner of trifles, which mothers permit vnto their yong children, be not all in vaine. For albeit that suche fantasies be per∣mitted * 1.65 to satisfie the childerns lustes, yet in that they are the mothers gift, & be done in place and tyme at her com∣maundement, they keepe the children in awe, and make them know the mo∣ther, and also make them more apte a∣gainst a more stronger age to obey in thinges of greater earnest.

And moreouer, though sacrifices and * 1.66 ceremonies can be no groūd, or foun∣dation to build vpon: that is, thoughe we can proue nought with them: yet when we haue once found out Christe and his mysteries, thē we may borow * 1.67 figures, that is to say allegories, simi∣litudes, or examples to opē Christ, and the secretes of God hid in Christ, euen vnto the quicke, and to declare them more liuely and sēsibly with them, thē with all the wordes of the world. For similitudes haue more vertue & pow∣er with them then bare wordes, and leade a mans wittes further into the pithe and marye, and spirituall vnder∣standyng of the thyng, thē all the wor∣des that can be imagined. And though also that al the ceremonies, & sacrifices haue as it were a starrelight of Christ, yet some there be that haue as it were the lyght of the broad day, a litle before the sonne rising, and expresse hym, and * 1.68 the circumstaunces and vertue of hys death so plainly, as if we shoulde play his passion on a scaffold; or in a stage play, openly before the eyes of the peo∣ple. As the scape gote, the brasen Ser∣pent, the Oxe burnt without the hoste, the passeouer Lambe, &c. In so muche that I am fully persuaded, and cannot * 1.69 but beleue that God had shewed Mo∣ses the secretes of Christ, and the very maner of hys death before hande, and commaunded hym to ordaine them for the confirmation of our faythe, which are now in the cleare day light, and I beleue also that ye prophets, which fo∣lowed Moses to confirme his prophe∣sies, and to maintayn his doctrine vn∣til Christes comming, were moued by such thinges to search further of Chri∣stes secretes. And though God would * 1.70 not haue the secrets of Christ general∣ly known, saue vnto a fewe familiare frendes, which in that infācy he made of mans wit to helpe the other babes: yet as they had a generall promise that one of the seede of Abraham shoulde come and blesse them, euen so they had a generall fayth, that God woulde by the same man saue them, thoughe they wist not by what meanes, as the very apostles when it was oft tolde them, yee they could neuer comprehende it, till it was fulfilled in dede.

And beyond all this, their sacrifices, and ceremonies as far forth as the pro¦mises * 1.71 annexed vnto them extend, so far forth they saued thē, and iustified thē, and stoode them in the same steade as our Sacramentes doe vs: not by the power of the sacrifice or deede it selfe, but by the vertue of the fayth in ye pro∣mise, which the sacrifice or Ceremonye preached, and whereof it was a token or signe. For the ceremonies and sacri∣fices were left with them, & commaū∣ded them to keepe the promise in re∣membraunce, and to wake vp theyr fayth. As it is not enough to send ma∣ny on errandes, and to tell them what they shall do: but they must haue a re∣membraunce with them, and it be but a ringe of a rushe aboute one of their

Page 13

fingers. And as it is not inoughe to make a bargayne with wordes onely, but we must put therto an othe, & geue earnest to confirme the fayth of ye per∣son with whom it is made. And in like * 1.72 manner if a man promise, whatsoeuer trifle it be, it is not beleued excepte he hold vp hys finger also, suche is the weakenesse of the world. And therfore Christe himselfe vsed ofttymes diuers ceremonies in curyng ye sicke to stirre vp their fayth with al. As for example: it was not ye bloud of ye Lambe that sa∣ued thē in Egipt, when ye angell smote the Egiptians: but the mercy of God and hys truth, wherof that bloud was a token and remembrance, to stirre vp their faythes withall. For though god * 1.73 make a promise, yet it saueth none fi∣nally but them, that long for it, & pray God with a strong fayth to fulfil it, for hys mercy and truth only, and know∣ledge their vnworthinesse. And euen so our sacramentes (if they be truly mi¦nistred) preach Christ vnto vs, & lead * 1.74 our faithe vnto Christe, by which faith our sinnes are done away, and not by the deede or worke of the Sacrament. For as it was impossible that yt bloud of calues should put away sinne: euen so is it impossible that the water of the riuer should wash our hartes. Neuer∣thelesse, * 1.75 the sacramentes clense vs and absolue vs of our sinnes as the priests do, in preaching of repentance & fayth, for whiche cause either other of them were ordayned, but if they preach not, whether it be the priest, or the Sacra∣ment, so profite they not.

And if a man alledge Christ, Iohn in the, iij. Chapter saying: Except a man be borne agayne of water, and the holy Ghost hee can not see the kyngdome of GOD, and will therfore that the holy ghost be present in the water, and ther¦fore the very deede, or worke doth put * 1.76 away sinne: then I will send hym vn∣to Paul which asketh his Galathiās, whether they receaued the holy ghost by the dede of the law, or by preachyng of fayth, and there concludeth that the holy ghost accōpanyeth the preachyng of faith, and with the word of faith, en∣treth the hart and purgeth it, whiche thou mayest also vnderstand by Saint Pauls saying: Ye are borne a new out of the water through the worde. So now if Baptisme preach me the washyng in Christes bloud, so doth the holy ghost accompany it, and that deede of prea∣chyng throughe fayth doth put away my sinnes. For the holy Ghost is no dome God, nor no God that goeth a mummynge. If a man say of the Sa∣crament of Christes body and bloud, that it is a sacrifice as well for the dead as for the quicke, and therfore the very dede it self iustifieth and putteth away sinne: I aunswere that a sacrifice is the sleyng of the body of a beast, or a * 1.77 man: wherefore if it be a sacrifice, then is Christes body there slayne and his bloud there shed: but that is not so. And therfore it is properly no sacrifice but a Sacrament, and a memoriall of that euerlastyng sacrifice once for all, which he offered vpon crosse now vp∣pon a xv. hundred yeares ago, & prea∣cheth onely vnto them that are alye. And as for them that be dead, it is as profitable vnto them as is a cādle in a Lāterne without light vnto them that * 1.78 walke by the way in darke night, and as the Gospell song in Latine is vnto them that vnderstand none at all, and as a Sermon preached to him that is dead, and heareth it not. It preacheth vnto them that are a lyue onely, for they that bee dead, if they dyed in the fayth whiche that Sacrament prea∣cheth, they bee safe, and are past all ieopardy. For when they were alyue their hartes loued the law of GOD, and therfore sinned not, and were sory that their members synned, and euer * 1.79 moued to sinne, and therfore thorough fayth it was forgeuen them. And now their synnefull members be dead, so that they can now sinne no more, wher¦fore it is vnto them that bee dead nei∣ther Sacrament nor sacrifice: But vn∣der the pretence of their soule health it is a seruaūt vnto our spiritualties ho∣ly * 1.80 coueteousnesse, and an extorcioner, and a builder of Abbayes, Colledges, Chauntryes and Cathedral Churches with false gotten good, a pickepurse, a polar, and a bottomlesse bagge. * 1.81

Some man would happely say, that the prayers of the Masse helpe much: not the liuing onely, but also the dead. Of the hoate fire of their feruent pray∣er whiche consumeth faster then all the world is able to bring sacrifice, I haue * 1.82 sayd sufficiently in other places. How beit it is not possible to bryng me in belief, that the prayer whiche helpeth her own master vnto no vertue, shuld purchase me the forgeuenes of sinnes. If I saw that their prayers had obtai∣ned them grace to lyue suche a lyfe, as Gods word dyd not rebuke, the could I soone be borne in hand that what so euer they asked GOD, their prayers

Page 14

shuld not be in vayne. But now what good cā he wish me in his prayers that * 1.83 enuieth Christe the fode, and the lyfe of my soule? What good can hee wishe me, whose hart cleaueth a sonder for payne, when I am taught to repent of my euill?

Furthermore, because that fewe know the vse of the old Testamēt, and the most part thinke it nothyng neces∣sarie but to make allegories, whiche they fayne euery man after hys owne brayne at all wyld aduenture without any certaine rule: therefore (though I haue spoken of them in an other place) yet lest the boke come not to all mens handes that shall read this, I will speake of them here also a woorde or twayne.

We had neede to take hede euery * 1.84 where that wee bee not begyled with false allegories, whether they be drawē out of the new Testament, or the old, either out of any other story, or of the creatures of the world, but namely in * 1.85 this booke. Here a man had neede to put on all his spectacles, and to arme him selfe agaynst inuisibles spirites.

First allegories proue nothyng (and by allegories vnderstand examples or similitudes borowed of straunge mat∣ters, and of an other thyng then that thou entreatest of.) And though circū∣sion be a figure of Baptisme, yet thou canst not proue Baptisme by Circum∣cision. For this argument were very * 1.86 feble, the Israelites were Circumcised therfore, we must be Baptised. And in like maner though ye offering of Isaac were a figure or example of the resur∣rction, yet is this argument nought, Abraham would haue offered Isaac, but GOD deliuered him from death, therefore we shall rise agayne, and so forth in all other.

But the very vse of allegories is to declare and open a text that it may bee * 1.87 the better perceaued and vnderstand. As when I haue a cleare text of Christ and of the Apostles, that I must be ba∣ptised, then I may borow an example of Circumcisiō, to expresse the nature, power, and frute or effect of baptisme. For as Circumcision was vnto them a common badge signifiyng that they were all souldiers of god, to warre his warre, and separating them from al o∣ther nations, disobedient vnto God: * 1.88 euen so baptisme is our cōmon badge, and sure earnest and perpetual memo∣riall that we pertaine vnto Christ, and are separated frome all that are not Christes. And as Circumcision was a token certifyeng them, that they were receaued vnto the fauour of God, and their sinnes forgeuē them: euen so Ba∣ptisme certifieth vs that we are wa∣shed in the bloud of Christ, and recea∣ued to fauour for his sake, and as Cir∣cumcisiō signified vnto them, the cut∣tyng awaye of their owne lustes, and * 1.89 sleayng of their free will, (as they call it) to folow the will of GOD, euen so Baptisme signifieth vnto vs repen∣taunce, and the mortifying of our vn∣ruly members, and bodyes of sinne, to walke in a new life, and so forth.

And likewise, thoughe that the sa∣uing of Noe, & of them that were with him in the shyp, thorough water, is a figure, that is to say an example and likenesse of Baptisme, as Peter ma∣keth it. 1. Peter. 3. yet I can not proue * 1.90 Baptisme therewith, saue describe it onely: for as the shyp saued them in the water thorough fayth, in that they be∣leued God, and as y other that would not beleue Noe perished: euen so Ba∣ptisme saueth vs through the worde of fayth whiche it preacheth, when all the world of the vnbeleuyng perish. And Paule. 1. Corin. 10. maketh the sea and the cloude a figure of Baptisme, by which, and a thousād mo I might de∣clare, it but not proue it. Paule also in the sayd place maketh the rock, out of which Moses brought water vnto the children of Israell, a figure or example of Christ, not to proue Christe (for that were impossible) but to describe Christ onely: euen as Christ him selfe Iohn. 3 boroweth a similitude or figure of the braien serpēt to lead Nichodemus frō * 1.91 his earthy imagination, into the spiri∣tual vnderstādyng of Christes saying: As Moses lifted vp a Serpent in the wil∣dernesse, so must the sonne of man be lif∣ted vp, that none that beleue in hym pe∣rish, but haue euerlasting lyfe. By which similitude the vertue of Christes death is better described then thou couldest declare it with a thousād wordes. For as those murmurers agaynst God, as soone as they repented were healed of their deadly woundes, thorough loo∣kynge on the brasen Serpent onely, without medicine or any other helpe, yea and without any other reason, but that God hath sayd it should be so, and not to murmure agayne, but to leaue their murmuryng: euen so all that re∣pent and beleue in Christ, are saued frō euerlastyng death, of pure grace with∣out, and before their good works, and

Page 15

not to synne agayne, but to fight a∣gaynst sinne, and henceforth to synne no more.

Euen so with the ceremonies of this booke thou canst proue nothyng, saue describe, and declare onelye the put∣ting away of oure sinnes thorowe the deathe of Christe. For Christe is Aa∣ron, and Aarons sonnes, and all that offer the sacrifice to purge sinne. And Christ is all maner offering that is of∣fered: he is the oxe, the shepe, the gote, the kyd and lambe: he is the oxe that is burnt without the host, and yt scape∣gote that caried all the sinne of the peo¦ple away into the wildernesse: for as they purged the people from their worldly vncleanesses thorow bloud of ye sacrifices, euen so doth Christ purge vs frō the vncleannesses of euerlasting death with hys owne bloude, and as their worldly sinnes coulde no other∣wise be purged, then by bloud of sacri∣fice: euen so can our sinnes bee no o∣therwise * 1.92 forgeuen, then thorowe the bloud of Christ. All the deedes in the worlde, saue the bloude of Christ, can purchase no forgeuenesse of sinnes: for our dedes do but help our neighbour, and mortify the flesh, and help that we sinne no more, but and if we haue sin∣ned, it must be freely forgeuen thorow the bloud of Christ, or remayne euer.

And in lyke manner of the Leapers * 1.93 thou canst proue nothing: thou canst neuer coniure out confession thence, howbeit thou hast an handsome exam∣ple there, to open the binding & losyng of our priests, with the key of Gods worde, for as they made no man a Le∣per, euen so oures haue no power to commaund any man to be in sinne, or to go to purgatory or hell. And there∣fore (in as much as binding and loo∣sing is one power) as those Priestes healed no man, euen so oures can not of their innisible, and domme power, driue any mans sinnes away, or deli∣uer * 1.94 hym from hel, or fayned purgato∣ry, how be it, if they preached Gods worde purely, which is the authoritie that Christ gaue them, then they shold binde and lose, kill and make alyue a∣gayne, make vncleane and cleane a∣gayne, and send to hel and fetch thence agayne, so mighty is gods worde. For if they preached the lawe of God, they shold bynd the consciences of sinners, with the bondes of the paynes of hell, and bring them vnto repentance. And then if they preached vnto thē ye mercy that is in Christ, they shold loose them and quiete their ragyng consciences, & certifie them of the fauour of God, and * 1.95 that their sinnes be forgeuen.

Finally, beware of allegories, for there is not a more handsome or apte thyng to beguile withall, then an alle∣gory, nor a more subtle and pestilente thyng in the world to perswade a false matter then an allegory. And contrari∣wise, there is not a better, vehementer or mightier thyng to make a man vn∣derstand with all, thē an allegory. For allegories make a man quicke witted, and printe wisdome in hym, and ma∣keth it to abide, where bare wordes go but in at the one eare, and out at the other. As this with such lyke sayings: put salt to all your sacrifices, in steade of this sentēce, do all your dedes wyth discretion, greeteth and biteth (if it bee vnderstand) more then plain wordes. And when I say in stede of these wor∣des, boast not your selfe of your good dedes, eate not the bloud, nor the fat of your sacrifice, there is as greate diffe∣rence betwene them, as there is di∣stance betwene heauen and earth. For * 1.96 the lyfe and beauty of all good dedes is of God, and we are but the caren lean, we are onely the instrument whereby God worketh onely, but the power is his. As God created Paul a new, pou∣red hys wisdome into hym, gaue hym might, & promised hym that his grace should neuer fayle him, &c. and al with out deseruinges, except that nurtering the sayntes, and making them curse & rayle on Christ bee meritorious. Now as it is death to eate the bloud or fatte of any sacrifice, is it not (thinke ye) dā∣nable to robbe God of hys honour, & to glorify my selfe with hys honour?

An exposition of certayne wordes of the fourth booke of Moses, called Numeri.

AVims, a kynde of Gi∣auntes, and the worde signifieth crooked, vn∣right, or weaked.

Beliall, weaked, or weakeuesse, hee that hath cast the yoke of God of his necke, and will not obey God.

Bruterer, prophesies or southsayers.

Emims, a kynde of gyantes so called, because they were terrible and cruell, for Emim signifieth terriblenes.

Enacke, a kinde of Giauntes so cal∣led happly, because they ware chaynes about their neckes.

Page 16

Horims, a kynde of Giauntes, and signifieth noble, because that of pride they called themselues nobles, or gen∣tles.

Rocke, God is called a rocke, because both he and hys word lasteth for euer.

Whet them on thy children, that is, exercise thy children in them, and put them in vre.

Zamzumims, a kynde of Gyauntes, and signifieth mischeuous, or that be alway imagining.

The Prologue into the fourth boke of Moses called Numeri.

IN the second and thirde booke they receaued the law. And in this fourth, they beginne to worke, & to practise. Of whiche practising ye see manye good examples of vnbeliefe, and what * 1.97 freewill doth, when she taketh in hand to kepe yt law of her own power, with out helpe of faith in yt promises of god: how she leaueth her maisters carkas∣ses by the way in the wildernesse, and bringeth them not into the lande of rest. Why could they not enter in? Be∣cause of their vnbeliefe, Hebrue. 3. For had they beleued, so had they bene vn∣der grace, and their old sinnes had ben forgeuē them, and power should haue bene geuen them to haue fulfilled the law thenceforth, and they should haue bene kepte from all temptations that had bene to strong for them. For it is writen, Iohn. 1. He gaue them power to be the sonnes of God, thorow bele∣uyng * 1.98 in hys name. Now to be yt sonne of God, is to loue God and hys com∣maundementes, and to walke in hys way after the ensample of hys sonne Christ. But these people tooke vppon them to worke without fayth, as thou seest in the 14. of this boke, where they would fight and also did, without the woorde of promise: euen when they were warned that they shoulde not. And in the 16. agayne, they woulde please God with their holye faythlesse workes (for where Gods woorde is not, there can be no fayth) but the fire of God consumed their holy workes, as it did Nadab and Abihu Leuit. 10. And from these vnbeleuers turn thine eyes vnto the Pharises whiche before the commyng of Christ in hys fleshe, had layde the foundation of freewyll, after the same ensample. Wheron they built holy workes after their owne i∣magination without fayth of yt word, * 1.99 so feruently, that for the great zeale of them, they slewe the king of all holye workes, and the lord of freewil, which onely thorowe hys grace maketh the will free, and looseth her from bōdage of sinne, and geueth her loue, and luste vnto the lawes of God, and power to fulfill them. And so through their holy workes done by the power of freewil, they excluded themselues out of the ho¦ly * 1.100 rest of forgeuenes of sinnes by fayth in the bloud of Christ.

And then looke on our hipocrites, which in lyke manner followyng the doctrine of Aristotle, and other hethen Paganes, haue agaynst all the Scrip∣ture set vp freewill again, vnto whose power they ascribe the kepyng of the commaundementes of God. For they haue set vp wilfull pouerty of another maner then any is cōmaunded of god. And yt chastitie of matrimony vtterly defied, they haue set vp another wilful chastitie not required of God, whiche they swere, vowe and professe to geue God, whether he wyll geue it them or no, and compel all their disciples ther∣vnto, saying that it is in the power of euery mans freewill to obserue it, con∣trary * 1.101 to Christ and his apostle Paul.

And the obedience of God and man excluded, they haue vowed an other wilfull obedience condemned of all the scripture, which they wil yet geue god whether he wyll or will not.

And what is become of their wilfull * 1.102 pouerty? hath it not robbed the whole worlde, and brought and vnder them? Can there be either kyng or emperor, or of whatsoeuer degree it be, except he will hold of them, and be sworne vnto them to be their seruaunte, to goe and come at their lust, and to defende▪ their quarels bee they false or true? Their wilful pouertie hath alredy eaten vp y whole world, & is yet stil gredier then euer it was, in so muche that teune worldes mo were not inough to satis∣fie the honger thereof.

Moreouer besides daily corruptyng of other mens wiues, and open whore dome, vnto what abhominacions (to filthy to be spoken of) hath their volū∣tary chastitie brought them? * 1.103

And as for their wilfull obedience, what is it but the disobedience and the diffiaunce both of al the lawes of God and man? in so much that if any Prince begyn to execute any law of man vpon them, they curse him vnto the bottome

Page 17

of hl, & proclayme him no right kyng, and that hys Lordes ought no longer * 1.104 to obey hym, and interdite his commō people as they were heathen Turkes or Saracenes. And if any man preach them gods law, him they make an he∣reticke and burne him to ashes. And in sieade of Gods lawe and mans, they haue set vp one of their owne imagi∣nation, whiche they obserue with dis∣pensations.

And yet in these workes they haue so great confidence that they not onely * 1.105 trust to be saued therby, and to be hyer in heauen then they yt be saued through Christ: but also promise to all other for geuenu of their sinnes, thorough the merites of the same. Wherin they rest, and teach other to rest also, excludyng the whole world from the rest of for∣geuenesse of synnes through fayth in Christes bloud.

And now seing that fayth onely let∣teth * 1.106 a man in vnto rest, and vnbelief excludeth him, what is the cause of this vnbeliefe? verely no sinne yt the world seeth, but a Pope holinesse, and a righ∣teousnes of their own imagination as Paule sayth. Roma. x. They bee igno∣raunt of the righteousnes wherewith God iustifieth, and haue set vp a righ∣teousnes, of their owne makyng tho∣rough which they be disobedient vnto the righteousnes of God. And Christ rebuketh not the Phariseys for grosse sinnes whiche the world sawe, but for * 1.107 those holy deedes whiche so blered the eies of the world, that they were taken as Gods: euen for long prayers, for fastyng, for tythyng so diligently that they lefte not so much as their herbes vntithed, for their clennesse in wa∣shyng before meate, and for washyng of cups, dishes, and all maner vessels, for buildyng ye Prophetes sepulchers, and for kepyng the holy day, and for turnyng yt heathē vnto the fayth, & for geuyng of almes. For vnto such holy dedes they ascribed righteousnes, and * 1.108 therefore when the righteousnesse of GOD was preached vnto them they could not but persecute it, the deuill was so strong in them. Whiche thyng Christ well describeth. Luke. xj. say∣ing, That after the deuill is cast out, he commeth agayne, and findeth hys house swept, and made gay, and then taketh se∣uen woorse then hym selfe and dwelleth therein, and so is the ende of that man worse then the beginnyng. That is, whē they be a litle clēsed from grosse sinnes which the world seyth, and then made gaye in their own sight, with the righ∣teousnes of traditions, then commeth * 1.109 seuen, that is to say the whole power of the deuill: for vij. with the Hebrues signifieth a multitude without num∣ber, and the extremitie of a thyng, and is a speach borowed (I suppose) out of Leuiticus, where is so ofte mention made of seuen. Where I would say: I wil punish thee, that all the world shal take an example of thee, there the Iew would saye, I will Circumcise thee or * 1.110 Baptise thee seuen tymes. And so here by seuen is ment all the deuils of hel, and all the might and power of the de∣uill. For vnto what further blindnesse could all the deuils in hell bring them, then to make thē beleue that they were iustified thoroughe their owne good workes? For when they once beleued that they were purged frō their sinnes, and made righteous thoroughe theyr owne holy workes, what rowme was there left for the righteousnes that is * 1.111 in Christes bloudshedyng? And ther∣fore whē they be fallen into this blind∣nesse, they can not but hate and perse∣cute the light. And the more cleare and euidently their deedes be rebuked, the furiousser and maliciousser blinde are they, vntill they breake out into open blasphemy, and synnyng agaynste the holy ghost, which is the malicious per¦secutyng of the cleare trouth so mani∣festly proued, that they can not once hish agaynst it: as the Phariseis per∣secuted Christ, because hee rebuked their holy dedes. And when he proued hys doctrine with the Scripture and miracles, yet thoughe they could not * 1.112 improue hym, nor reason agaynst him, they taught y the scripture must haue some other meanyng, because his inter pretation vndermined their foundatiō and plucked vp by the rootes the sects which they had plāted, and they ascri∣bed also his miracles to the deuill. And in lyke maner thoughe our hypocrites can not deny but this is the scripture, yet because there can be no other sense gathered therof, but that ouerthoweth their buildynges, therefore they euer thinke that it hath some other mea∣nyng then as the wordes sounde, and that no man vnderstandeth it, or vn∣derstode it since the tyme of the Apo∣stles. Or if they thinke that some that wrote vpon it since the Apostles vn∣derstode it: they yet thinke that w•…•… like maner as we vnderstand not the text it selfe, so we vnderstand not the meanyng of the wordes of that Doc∣tour.

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For when thou layest the iustify∣ing of holy workes and deniest the iu∣stifying of fayth, how canst thou vn∣derstand S. Paule, Peter, Iohn and * 1.113 the Actes of ye Apostles or any Scrip∣ture at all, seyng the iustifying of fayth is almost all that they entēde to proue?

Finally, concernyng vowes wher∣of thou readest in the xxx. Chapter, there may be many questions, where∣unto * 1.114 I aūswere shortly, that we ought to put salt to all our offerynges: that is, we ought to minister knowledge in all our workes, and to doe nothyng whereof we could not geue a reason out of Gods wordes. We be now in the day light, and all the secretes of God, and all hys counsell and wil, is opened vnto vs, and he that was pro∣mised should come and blesse vs, is come alredy, and hath shed hys bloud for vs and hath blessed vs with al ma∣ner blessinges, and hathe obtayned all grace for vs, and in hym we haue all. Wherfore God henceforth wil receiue * 1.115 no more sacrifices of beastes of vs as thou readest. Hebr. 10. If thou burne vnto god the bloud or fatte of beastes, to obtaine forgeuenesse of sinnes ther∣by, or that God should the better heare thy request, then thou doest wrong vn∣to the bloud of Christ, and Christ vnto thee is dead in vayne. For in him God hath promised not forgeuenesse of sins onely, but also what soeuer we aske to keepe vs from sinne and temptation with all. And what if thou burne fran∣kencens vnto him, what if thou burne * 1.116 a candle, what if thou burne thy chasti∣tie, or virginitie vnto him for the same purpose, doest thou not lyke rebuke vnto Christs bloud? Moreouer, if thou offer gold, siluer, or any other good for the same entēt, is there any difference? And euen so if thou go in pilgrimage, or fastest, or goest wolward, or spryne∣lest thy selfe with holy water, or elles what soeuer dede it is, or obseruest what soeuer ceremonie it be, for lyke meanyng, then it is lyke abhominatiō. We must therfore bryng the salt of the knowledge of Gods word, with al our sacrifices, or elles we shall make no swete sauour vnto God therof. Thou wilt aske me, shall I vow nothyng at all? yes, Gods commaundemēt, which thou hast vowed in thy Baptisme. For what entent? verelye for the loue of Christe, which hath bought thee with his bloud, and made the sonne & heyre of God with him, that thou shouldest wayte on hys will and commaunde∣mentes, and purifie thy members ac∣cordyng to the same doctrine that hath purified thyne harte, for if the know∣ledge of Gods word hath not purified thine hart, so yt thou consentest vnto the law of god yt it is righteous and good, & sorowest, yt thy members moue thee vnto the contrary, so hast thou no part with Christ. For if thou repent not of thy sinne, so it is impossible that thou * 1.117 shouldest beleue that Christe had deli∣uered thee from the daunger therof. If thou beleue not that Christ hath deli∣uered thee, so is it impossible that thou shouldest loue Gods commaunde∣mentes. If thou loue not the com∣maundementes, so is Christes spirite not in thee, which is the earnest of for∣geuenesse of sinne, and of saluation.

For Scripture teacheth, first repen∣taunce, * 1.118 then fayth in Christ, that for his sake sinne is forgeuen to them that re∣pent: then good workes, whiche are nothyng saue the comaundement of God onely. And the commaūdements are nothyng elles, saue the helpyng of our neighbours at their nede, and the tamyng of our members, that they might be pure also, as the hart is pure thorough hate of vice and loue of ver∣tue, as Gods word teacheth vs, which workes must procede out of the fayth: that is, I must doe them for the loue * 1.119 which I haue God, for that great mer∣cy which he hath shewed me in Christ, or elles I do them not in the sight of God. And that I fainte not in yt payne of the slaying of the sinne that is in my flesh, myne helpe is the promise of the assistance of the power of God, and the comforte of the reward to come, which reward I ascribe vnto the goodnesse, mercy, and truth, of the promiser, that hath chosē me, called me, taught me, & * 1.120 geuen me the ernest therof, & not vnto the merites of my doynges, or suffe∣rynges. For all that I do and suffer, is but the way to the reward, and not the deseruyng thereof. As if the kynges grace shoulde promise to defende mee at home in myne owne realme, yet the way thether is thoroughe the Sea wherin I might happely suffer no litle trouble. And yet for all that, if I might lyue in rest when I come thether, I would thinke, and so would other say, that my paynes were well rewarded: which reward & benefit, I would not proudly ascribe vnto the merites of * 1.121 my paynes takyng by the waye: but vnto the goodnesse, mercyfulnesse and constant truth of the kynges grace

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whose gifte it is, and to whō the prayse and thanke thereof belongeth of duety and right. So now a reward is a gift geuen freely of the goodnesse of the ge∣uer, and not of the deseruynges of the receauer. Thus it appeareth, that if I vowe what soeuer it be, for any other * 1.122 purpose thē to tame my members, and to be an ensample of vertue and edify∣ing vnto my neighbour, my sacrifice is vnsauery, and cleane without salt & my lampe without oyle, and I one of the foolishe virgines, and shalbe shut from yt feast of the bridegrome whē I thinke my selfe most sure to enter in.

If I vow voluntary pouertie, this must be my purpose, that I will be cō∣tent with a competent liuyng, whiche commeth vnto me either by succession * 1.123 of myne elders, or whiche I get truly with my labour in ministryng, & do∣yng seruice vnto the common wealth, in one office or in an other, or in one occupatiō or other, because that riches and honor shall not corrupt my mind, and draw myne hart from God, and to geue an example of vertue and edi∣fying vnto other, and that my neigh∣bour may haue a liuyng by me as wel as I, if I make a cloke of dissimula∣tion of my vow, laying a net of fayned beggery to catch superfluous aboun∣daunce * 1.124 of riches, and hye degree and authoritie, and thorough the estimatiō of false holynesse, to feede & maintaine my slouthful idlenes with the sweate, labour, landes, and rentes of other mē (after the example of our spiritualtie) robbyng them of their faythes, & God of his honour turnyng vnto myne hy∣pocrisie that confidence, which should be geuen vnto the promises of GOD onely, am I not a wily foxe, and a ra∣uenyng wolfe in a lambes skinne, and a paynted sepulchre fayre without and filthy with in? In like maner thoughe I seeke no worldly promotion there∣by, yet if I doe it to be iustified there∣with, and to get an hyer place in hea∣uen, thinkyng that I doe it of myne owne naturall strength, and of the na∣turall power of my freewill, and that euery man hath might euen so to do, & that they doe it not is their faulte, and negligence, & so with the proude Pha∣risie in comparison of my selfe despise the sinnefull Publicanes: what other thyng do I then eate the bloud and fat of my sacrifice, deuouring that my self, which should be offered vnto God a∣lone, and his Christ. And shortly what soeuer a man doth of his naturall giftes, of his naturall witte, wisedom, vnderstandyng, reason, will, and good * 1.125 entēt before he be otherwise and cleane contrary taught of Gods spirite, and haue receaued other witte, vnderstan∣dyng, reason and will, is fleshe, world∣ly and wrought in abhominable blind¦nesse, with whiche a man can but seeke him selfe, his owne profite, glory and honour, euen in very spirituall mat∣ters. As if I were alone in a wilder∣nesse, where no man were to seke pro∣fite or prayse of, yet if I would seeke heauen of God there, I could of myne owne naturall giftes seke it no other wayes then for the merites and deser∣uyngs of my good workes, and to en∣ter therin by an other way then by the dore Christe, whiche were very theft, for Christe is Lord ouer all, and what soeuer any man will haue of God, he muste haue it geuen hym freely for Christes sake. Now to haue heauē for myne owne deseruyng, is myne owne praise and not Christes. For I can not haue it by fauour, and grace in Christe and by myne owne merites also: For * 1.126 free geuing, & deseruyng can not stand together.

If thou wilt vow of thy goods vn∣to God, thou must put salt vnto thys sacrifice: that is, thou muste minister knowledge in this dede as Peter tea∣cheth. 2. Pet. 1. Thou must put oyle of Gods worde in thy Lampe, and do it accordyng to knowledge, if thou wait for the comming of the bridegrome to enter in with hym into his rest. But thou peraduenture wilt hang it about the image to moue men to deuotion. Deuotion is a feruent loue vnto gods commaundementes, and a desire to be with God, and with hys euerlastyng promises. Now shall the sight of such riches as are shewed at S. Thomas shryne, or at Walsingham, moue a mā * 1.127 to loue the commaundements of god better, and to desire to bee loosed from his flesh, and to be with God, or shall it not rather make his poore hart sigh, because he hath no such at home, and to wishe part of it in another place? The priest shall haue it in Gods stead. Shall the priest haue it? If the Priest be bought with Christes bloude, then he is Christes seruaūt & not his owne, and ought therefore to feede Christes flocke with Christes doctrine, and to minister Christes Sacramentes vnto them purely for very loue, and not for filthy lucres sake, or to be Lorde ouer them as Peter teatheth. 1. Pet. v. and

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Paul, Acts. xx. Beside this, Christ is oures, and is a gift geuen vs, and we be heyres of Christ, and of all that, is Christes. Wherefore the Priestes doc∣trine is oures, and we heyres of it, it is the foode of our soules. Therfore if * 1.128 he minister it not truly, and freely vn∣to vs wythout sellyng, he is a theef, & a soule murtherer: and euen so is he if he take vpon hym to feede vs, & haue not wherwith. And for a like conclusi∣on, because we also with all that we haue, be Christes, therfore is the priest heyre with vs also of all that we haue receiued of God, wherfore in as much as yt priest wayteth on yt word of God, and is our seruaunt therin, therfore of right we are his detters, and owe him a sufficient liuyng of our goodes, and euen thereto a wyfe of our daughters owe we vnto hym, if hee require her. And nowe when we haue appoynted * 1.129 him a sufficiente liuyng, whether in tythes, rentes, or in yearely wages, he ought to be content and to require no more, nor yet to receaue any more, but to be an ensample of sobernesse and of despising worldly things vnto the en∣sample of hys parishioners.

Wilte thou vowe to offer vnto the poore people? that is pleasaunt in the * 1.130 sight of God, for they be left here to do our almes vpon in Christes stead, and they be the right heyres of all our a∣boundaunce and ouerplus. Moreouer we must haue a schole to teache Gods worde in (though it needed not to bee so costly) and therfore it is lawfull to vow vnto the building or maintenāce therof, & vnto the helping of all good workes. And we ought to vow to pay custome, tolle, rent, and all maner du∣ties, and whatsoeuer we owe: for that is Gods commaundement. * 1.131

If thou wilt vowe pilgrimage, thou must put salt therto, in like manner, if it shall be accepted, if thou vowe to go and visite the poore, or to heare gods word, or whatsoeuer edifieth thy soule vnto loue & good worke after know∣ledge, or whatsoeuer God commaun∣deth, it is wel done, and a sacrifice that sauoureth well, ye wil happly say, that ye will go to this or that place, because God hath chosen one place more then another, and wyll heare your petition more in one place then another? As for your prayer it must be according to to gods worde. Ye may not desire god to take vengeaunce on hym, whome Gods worde teacheth you to pity and to pray for. And as for the other glose, that God will here you more in one * 1.132 place then in another, I suppose it sal infatuatum, salt vnsauery, for if it were wisdome, how could we excuse yt deth of Steuen Acts 7. which died for that article that God dwelleth not in tem∣ples made with handes, we yt beleue in God, are the temple of God (sayeth Paul.) If a man loue God, and keepe hys worde, he is the temple of God, & hath God presently dwellyng in him, as witnesseth Christ, Iohn. 14. saying: If a man loue me, he wyll keepe my worde, and then my father wyll loue hym, and we wyll come vnto hym and dwel with hym. And in the 15. he saith: if ye abyde in me, and my wordes also abyde in you, then aske what ye wyll * 1.133 and ye shall haue it. If thou beleue in Christe and hast the promises whiche God hath made thee in thine hart, then go on pilgrimage vnto thyne owne hart and there pray and God wil heare thee, for hys mercy and truthes sake and for his sonnes Christes sake, and not for a few stones sakes. What ca∣reth GOD for the temple? The very beastes in that they haue life in them, be much better then an heape of stones couched together.

To speake of chastity, it is a gift not * 1.134 geuen vnto all persones, as testifieth both Christ and also his Apostle Paul, wherfore all persons may not vow it. Moreouer there bee causes wherefore many persons may better lyue chast at one tyme then at an other. Many may lyue chast at twenty and thirtie for cer∣tayne cold diseases folowyng them, which at xl. when their health is come can not do so. Many be occupyed with wilde phantasies in their youth that they care not for mariage, which some when they be waxen sad shalbe greatly desirous, it is a daungerous thyng to make sinne where none is, and to for∣sweare the benefite of God & to bynde thy self vnder payne of dānation of thy soule, that yu wouldest not vse remedy that god hath created, if nede required.

An other thyng is this, beware that thou get thee not a false fayned chasti∣tie * 1.135 made with the vngodly persuasiōs of S. Hierome, of Ouide in his filthy booke of the remedy agaynst loue, lst when throughe such imaginatiōs thou hast vtterly despised, defied and abhor∣red all womankynde, thou come into such case thoroughe the fierce wrath of God, that thou canst neither lyue chast nor finde in thy hart to mary and so be compelled to fall into the abhomi∣nation

Page 21

of the Pope against nature and kynde.

Moreouer, god is a wise father and, * 1.136 knoweth all the infirmities of his chil∣dren, and also mercyfull, and therefore hath created a remedy without sinne, and geuen therto his fauour and bles∣syng. Let vs not be wyser then GOD with our imaginatiōs, nor tempt him, for as godly chastitie is not euery mās gift: euen so he that hath it to day hath not power to continue it, at his owne pleasure, neither hath God promised to geue it him stil, and to cure his infir¦mities without hys naturall remedy, no more then he hath promised to slake hys hunger without meate or thyrst without drinke. Wherfore either let all * 1.137 thynges byde free as God hath crea∣ted them, and neither vowe that which God permitteth thee with his fauour and blessing also: or els if thou wilte nedes vowe, then vow godly and vn∣der a condition, that thou wilt conti∣nue chast, so long as God geueth thee that gift, and as long as neither thyne own necessitie, neither charitie toward thy neighbour, nor the authoritie of thē vnder whose power thou art, driue thee vnto the contrary.

The purpose of thy vowe must bee salted also with the wisedome of God. Thou mayest not vowe to be iustified * 1.138 thereby, or to make satisfaction for thy sinnes, or to wynne heauē, nor an hyer place: for then diddest thou wrong vn∣to the bloud of Christ, and thy vowe were playne Idolatry and abhomina∣ble in the sight of GOD. Thy vow * 1.139 must be onely vnto the furtheraunce of the commaundementes of GOD, which are (as I haue said) nothing but the tamyng of thy members, and the seruice of thy neighbour: that is if thou thincke thy backe to weake for the bur∣then of wedlocke, and that thou canst not rule thy wife, children, seruauntes and make prouision for them godly, & without ouermuch busying and vn∣quietyng thy selfe, and drownyng thy selfe in worldly busynesse vnchristen∣ly, or that thou canst serue thy neigh∣bour in some office better beyng chast then maryed. And then thy vowe is * 1.140 good and lawfull. And euen so must thou vowe abstinence of meates, and drinkes so farre forth as it is profitable vnto thy neighbours, and vnto the ta∣myng of thy fleshe: But thou mayst vowe neither of them vnto the slaying of thy body. As Paule commaundeth Tymothe to drincke wyne, & no more water because of his diseases. Thou wilt say that Timothy had not happe∣ly forsworne wyne. I thinke the same, and that the Apostles forsware not wedlocke thoughe many of them lyued chast, neither yet any meate or drincke, though they absteined from them, and that it were good for vs to folow their example. Howbeit though I vowe and sweare and thinke on none excep∣tion, * 1.141 yet is the breakyng of Gods cō∣maundemēts except, and all chaunces that hange of God. As if I sweare to be in a certain place at a certain houre, to make a loueday without exception, yet if the king in the meane tyme com∣maunde me an other way, I must goe by Gods commaundement, and yet breake not myne othe. And in like case if my father & mother be sicke & require my presence, or if my wife, children or houshold be visited that ny assistance be required, or if my neighbours house be a fire, at the same houre and a thou∣sand such chaunces: in whiche all I breake myne othe, & am not forsworne and so forth. Read Gods word dili∣gently & with a good hart, and it shall teach thee all thynges.

A Prologue into the fifte booke of Moses called Deu∣teronomy.

THis is a booke worthy to be read in, daye and night, & neuer to be out of handes. For it is the most excellent of all the bokes of Moses. It is * 1.142 easy also & lyght, and a very pure Go∣spell, yt is to wit, a preachyng of fayth & loue: deducyng the loue to God out of fayth, and the loue of a mans neigh∣bour out of yt loue of God. Herein also thou mayst learne right meditation or * 1.143 contemplation, which is nothyng els saue yt calling to minde, & a repeatyng in the harte of the glorious and won∣derfull dedes of God, and of his terri∣ble handling of his enemies, and mer∣cyfull entreatyng of them that come when hee calleth them whiche thyng this booke doth, and almost nothyng elles.

In the foure first Chapters he re∣hearseth the benefites of GOD done vnto them, to prouoke them to loue, & * 1.144 his mightie dedes done aboue all na∣tural capacitie of faith, that they might beleue GOD, and trust in him, and in

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his strength. And thirdly he rehearceth the fierce plagues of God vppon his enemyes, and on them which through impatiencie & vnbeliefe fell from hym: partly to tame and abate the appetites of the flesh which alway fight agaynst the spirite, and partely to bridle the wilde ragyng lustes of them in whom was no spirite: that though they had * 1.145 no power to do good of loue, yet at the lest way, they should abstaine from outward euill for feare of wrath, and cruell vengeaunce whiche should fall vpō them and shortly finde them out, if they cast vp gods nurter, and runne at riotte beyond his lawes and ordi∣naunces. * 1.146

Moreouer he chargeth them to put nought to, nor take ought away from Gods wordes, but to be diligēt onely to keepe them in reēmbraunce, & in the hart and to teach their childrē, for feare of forgettyng. And to beware either of * 1.147 makyng imagery, or of bowyng them selues vnto Images, saying: Ye saw no image when God spake vnto you, but heard a voyce onely, & that voyce keepe, and thereunto cleaue, for it is your lyfe, and it shall saue you. And fi∣nally if (as the frailtie of all fleshe is) they shal haue fallen from God, and he haue brought them into trouble, ad∣uersitie, and combraunce and all neces∣sitie: yet if they repent and turne, hee * 1.148 promiseth, them that God shall remē∣ber his mercy, and receaue them to grace agayne.

In the fifte he repeateth the x. Com∣maūdementes, and that they might see a cause to do them of loue, he biddeth them remember that they were bound in Egypt, and how God deliuered thē with a mighty hande, and a stretched out arme, to serue him and to kepe his maundementes: as Paule sayth that * 1.149 wee are bought with Christes bloud, and therefore are his seruauntes and not our owne, and ought to seeke his wil and honour onely, and to loue and serue one an other for his sake.

In the sixte he setteth out the foun∣taine of all commaundementes: that is, that they beleue how that there is but one God that doth all, and therfore ought onely to bee loued with all the hart, all the soule, and all the might. For loue onely is the fulfillyng of the * 1.150 cōmaundementes, as Paule also sayth vnto the Romaines, and Galathians likewise. He warneth them also that they forget not the cōmaundementes, but teache them their children, and to shew their children also how God de∣liuered them out of the bondage of the Egiptians, to serue him and his com∣maundements, that the children might see a cause to worke of loue likewise.

The seuenth is all together of faith: * 1.151 hee remoueth all occasions that might withdrawe them from the faith, and pulleth them also from all confidence in them selues, and sturreth them vp to trust in God boldly and onely.

Of the eight Chapter thou seest how that the cause of temptation is, that a man might see his own hart. For whē I am brought into that extremity, that I must either suffer or forsake GOD, then I shall feele how much I beleue and trust in him, and how much I loue him. In like maner, if my brother * 1.152 do me euill for my good, then if I loue him when there is no cause in him, I see that my loue was of God, and euen so if I then hate him, I feele and per∣ceaue that my loue was but wordly, and finally hee sturreth thē to the fayth and loue of God, and driueth them frō all confidence of their owne selues.

In the ninth also hee moueth them * 1.153 vnto fayth, and to put their trust in God, and draweth them from confi∣dēce of them selues, by rehearsing all ye wickednesse whiche they had wrought from the first day, he knew them vnto that same day. And in the end he repe∣teth * 1.154 howe he coniured God in Horeb, and ouercame him with prayer, where thou mayest learne the right maner to pray.

In the tenth he reckeneth vppe the pith of all lawes, and the keping of the * 1.155 law in hart: which is to feare GOD, loue him and serue hym with all their hart soule and might, and kepe his cō∣maundementes of loue. And he shew∣eth a reason why they should that do: euen because God is Lord of heauen and earth, & hath also done all for them of his owne goodnesse without their deseruyng. And then out of the loue vnto God, he bringeth the loue vnto a * 1.156 mans neighbour saying: God is Lord aboue all Lordes and loueth al his ser∣uauntes indifferētly, as well the poore and feble, and the straūger, as the rich and mighty, and therfore will that we loue the poore and the straunger. And he addeth a cause, for ye were straun∣gers, and God deliuered you and hath brought you vnto a land, where ye bee at home. Loue the straunger therefore for his sake.

In the xj. he exhorteth them to loue

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and feare God, and rehearceth the ter∣rible dedes of God vpō his enemyes, * 1.157 & on them that rebelled agaynst hym. And he testifieth vnto them both what wil folow, if they loue and feare God, and what also if they despise hym, and breake his commaundement.

In the xij. hee commaundeth to put * 1.158 out of the way all that might be an oc∣casion to hurt the fayth, and forbiddeth to do ought after their owne myndes, or to alter the word of God.

In the xiij. he forbiddeth to herken vnto ought saue vnto Gods word: no * 1.159 though he whiche counseleth contrary should come with miracles, as Paule doth vnto the Galathians.

In the xiiij. the beasts are forbidden, partly for vncleannesse of them, and partly to cause hate betwene the hea∣then and them, that they haue no con∣uersation together, in that one abhor∣reth what the other eateth. Ʋnto this xv. chapter all pertaine vnto faith and * 1.160 loue chiefly. And in this xv. hee be∣gynneth to entreate more specially of thinges pertainyng vnto the common welth, and equitie, and exhorteth vnto the loue of a mans neighbour. And in the xvj. among other he forgetteth not the same. And in the xvij. he entreateth of right and equitie chiefly, in so much that when hee looketh vnto faith, and vnto the punishment of Idolaters, hee yet endeth in a law of loue and equitie: forbiddyng to condemne any man vn∣der lesse then two witnesses at the lest, * 1.161 and commaundeth to bryng the tres∣passers vnto the open gate of the citie, where all men go in and out, that all men might heare the cause and see that he had but right. But the Pope hath founde a better way, euen to oppose him with out any accuser, and that se∣cretly, that no man know whether hee haue right or no, either heare his Arti∣cles or aunswere: for feare lest the peo∣ple should searche whether it were so or no.

In the xviij. hee forbiddeth all false and deuilish crafts that hurt true faith. Moreouer because the people could not heare the voyce of the law spoken * 1.162 to them in fire, he promiseth them an other Prophet to bring them better ty∣dynges whiche was spoken of Christ our Sauiour.

The xix. and so forth vnto the end of the xxvij. is almost altogether of loue vnto our neighbours, and of lawes, of equitie, and honesty, with now and thē a respect vnto faith.

The xxviij. is a terrible Chapter and to be trembled at: A Chrisren mās hart * 1.163 might well bleed for sorrow at the rea∣dyng of it, for feare of the wrath that is like to come vpon vs, accordyng vnto all the curses which thou there readest. For accordyng vnto these curse hath God delt with with all nations, after they were fallen into the abhominati∣ons of blindnesse.

The xxix. is like terrible with a god∣ly lesson in the end that we shold leaue * 1.164 searchyng of Gods secrets, & geue dili∣gence to walke accordyng to that hee hath opened vnto vs. For the keepyng of the commaundementes of God, tea∣cheth wisedome as thou maiest see in the same Chapter, where Moses saith, keepe the commaundementes, that ye may vnderstand what ye ought to doe. But to search Gods secretes, blindeth a mā, as it wel proued by the swarmes of our sophisters, whose wise bookes are now when we looke in the Scrip∣ture, founde but full of foolishnesse.

The Prologue of the Pro∣phete Ionas made by Wil∣liam Tyndall.

AS the enuious Phili∣slines stopped ye welles of Abraham, and filled them vp with earth, to * 1.165 put the memoriall out of mynde, to the entent that they might chalenge the grounde: euen so the fleshly minded hipocrites, stoppe vp the vaynes of life, which are in the scripture, with the earth of their traditions, false similitudes, and lying allegories, & that of lyke zeale, to make the Scripture their owne possession, and merchaundice, and so shut vp the kyngdome of heauen, which is Gods worde, neither entring in themselues, nor suffering them that would.

The Scripture hath a body with∣out, * 1.166 and within a soule, spirite & lyfe. It hath without a barke, a shel, and as it were an harde bone, for the fleshlye mynded to gnaw vpon. And within it hath pith, cornell, mary, and all swete∣nes for Gods elect, which he hath cho∣sen to geue them hys spirite, & to write hys law, and the fayth of hys sonne in their hartes.

The scripture conteineth iij. thinges in it: First, the lawe to condemne all * 1.167 flesh: Secondarily, the Gospel, that is to say, promises of mercy for al that re∣pente and knowledge theyr sinnes, at

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the preachyng of the lawe, and consent in their hartes that the lawe is good, and submit themselues to bee scholers to learne to kepe the law, and to learn to beleue the mercye that is promised them: and thirdly, the stories & lyues of those scholers, both what chaunces fortuned them, & also by what meanes their scholemaister taughte them, and made them perfect, and how he tried ye true from the false.

When the hipocrites come to the * 1.168 law, they put gloses to, and make no more of it, thē of a worldly law which is satisfied with the outwarde worke, and whiche a Turke may also fulfill. When yet Gods law neuer ceaseth to condemne a man, vntil it be written in hys harte, and vntill he keepe it natu∣rally without compulsion, and all o∣ther respect, saue onely of pure loue to God, and his neighbour, as he natu∣rally eateth when he is an hungred, without compulsion, and all other re∣spect, saue to slake hys hunger onely. And when they come to the Gospell, * 1.169 there they mingle their leuen and say. GOD now receiueth vs no more to mercy, but of mercy receueth vs to pe∣naunce, that is to witte, holy deedes y make them fatte bellies, and vs their captiues, both in soule and body. And yet they fayne their Idole the Pope so mercifull, that if that thou make a litle money glister in hys Balaams eyes, there is neither penance, nor purgato∣ry, nor any fastyng at all, but to flye to heauen as swift as a thought, & at the twincklyng of an eye.

And the liues, stories, and giftes of men, whith are contayned in the bible, * 1.170 they reade as thinges no more pertai∣ning vnto them, then a tale of Robin hood, & as things they wot not wher∣to they serue, saue to faine false discant, and iuglyng allegories, to stablishe their kyngdome with all. And one of the chiefest and fleshliest studies they haue, is to magnifie the aintes aboue measure, and aboue the truth: & with their Poetry to make them greter thē euer God made them. And if they find any infirmitie, or sinne ascribed vnto the sayntes, that they excuse with all diligence, diminishyng the glory of the mercy of god, and robbyng wretched sinners of all theyr comforte: & thinke therby to flatter the saintes, and to ob∣tayne their fauour, and to make speci∣all aduocates of them, euen as a man would obtayne the fauour of worldly tyrauntes: as they also fayne ye saintes more cruell then euer was any heathē man, and more wreakeful, and venge∣able, then the Potes fayne their god∣des or furies, that torment the soules in bell, if their euens be not fasted, and their images visited, and saluted wyth a pater noster, which prayer onely our lippes be acquainted with: our hartes vnderstandyng none at all, and wor∣shipped wyth a candle, and the offring of our deuotiō, in the place which they haue chosen to heare supplicatiōs, and make petitions of their clientes therin

But thou reader, thynke of the law of god, how that it is altogether spiri∣tuall, and so spirituall, that it is neuer fulfilled wyth dedes or works, vntill they flowe out of thyne harte, wyth as great loue towarde thyne neighbour, for no deseruyng of his (yea thoughe he bee thyne ennemy) as Christ loued thee, and dyed for thee, for no deser∣uyng of thyne, but euen when thou wast hys ennemy. And in the meane tyme, through out all our infantie, and childhoode in Christ, till we be grown vp into perfect men, in the full know∣ledge of Chrst, and full loue of Christ agayne, and of our neighbours for hys sake, after the ensample of hys loue to vs, remēbring that the fulfillyng of the law, is a fast fayth in Christes bloude coupled with our profession, & submit ous selues to do better.

And of the gospell or promises which thou meetest in the scripture, beleue fast that god wyll fulfill them vnto thee, & that vnto the vttermost iot, at the re∣pentance of thyne hart, when thou tur¦nest to hym and forsakest euill, euen of hys goodnes, and fatherly mercy vnto thee, and not for thy flatteryng hym with hipocritishe woorkes of thyne owne fayning. So that a fast fayth on∣ly, without respect of all works, is the forgeuenesse both of the sinne, which we did in tyme of ignorance, with lust and consent to sinne: and also of that synne which we do by chaunce, and of frailtie: after yt we are come to know∣ledge, and haue professed the law out of our hartes. And all dedes serue on∣ly for to helpe our neighbours, and to tame our flesh that we fall not to sinne agayne, and to exercise our soules in vertue, and not to make satisfaction to Godwarde for the synne that is once paste.

And all other stories of the Bible, with out exception, are y practising of ye law, & of the gospel, & are true and faythfull ensamples, and sure earnest that God

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will euen so deale with vs, as he did with them, in all infirmities, in all tem¦tations, and in all lyke cases & chaun∣ces. Wherin ye see on the one side, how fatherly and tenderly, and with all cō∣passion GOD entreateth hys elect, which submit themselues as scholers, to learne to walke in the wayes of hys lawes, and to kepe them of loue. If they forgate themselues at a tyme, he would stirre them vp agayne with all mercy, if they fell and hurt themselues, he healed them agayne with all com∣passion and tendernes of hart. He hath oft brought great tribulation and ad∣uersitie vpon hys elect: but all of fa∣therly * 1.171 loue onely, to teach them, and to make them see their owne hartes, and the synne that there lay hid, that they might afterward feele hys mercy. For his mercy wayted vpon them, to ridde them out agayne as soone as they wer learned, and come to the knowledge of * 1.172 their own hartes: so that he neuer cast man away, how deepe so euer he had sinned, saue them onely which had first cast the yoke of hys lawes from their neckes, with vtter deiaunce, and ma∣lice of harte.

Which ensamples how comfortable are they for vs, when we be fallen into sinne, and God is come vpon vs with ascourge, that we dispayre not, but re∣pent with full hope of mercy, after the ensamples of mercy that are gone be∣fore? And therfore they were written for our learnyng, as testifieth Paule, Rom. 15. to comfort vs, that we might the better put our hope & trust in god, when we see, how mercifull he hathe bene in tymes past vnto our weake brethrē, that are gone before in al their aduersities, nede, temptations, ye and horrible sinnes into which they nowe and then fell.

And on the other side, ye see how they that hardened their hartes & sin∣ned of malice, and refused mercy that * 1.173 was offered them, and had no power to repent, perished at the latter ende with all confusion and shame merci∣lessely. Which ensāples are very good and necessary, to keepe vs in awe, and dread in tyme of prosperitie, as thou mayest see by Paul. 1. Cor. 10. that we abide in the feare of God, and waxe not wylde and fall to vanities, and so sinne and prouoke God, and bryng wrath vpon vs.

And thirdly, ye see in the practise, how as God is merciful and long suf∣fering, euen so were all hys true Pro∣phetes and preachers, bearing the in∣firmities of their weake brethren, and * 1.174 their own wrongs, and iniuries with all patience, and long suffering, neuer casting any of them of their backs, vn∣till they sinned against the holy ghost, maliciously persecutyng the open and manifest trouth: contrary vnto the en∣sample of the Pope, which in sinnyng agaynst God, and to quench the truth of his holy spirite, is euer chiefe Capi∣taine and trompet blower, to set other a worke, and seketh only his own fre∣dome, libertie, priuiledge, wealth, pro∣speritie, * 1.175 profite, pleasure, pastime, ho∣nour and glory, with the bondage, thraldom, captiuitie, misery, wretched∣nes, and vile subiection of his brethrē: and in hys owne cause is so feruent, so stiffe and cruell, that he will not suffer one worde spoken agaynst hys false maiestie, wily inuentions, and iugling hipocrisie to be vnauenged, though all christendome should be set together by the eares, and should cost he cared not how many hundred thousande their lyues.

Now that thou mayest read Ionas frutefully, and not as a Poetes fable, but as an obligation betwene god and thy soule, as an earnest penny geuen thee of God, that he wyll helpe thee in tyme of nede, if thou turne to him, and as the worde of God the only foode, & lyfe of thy soule, this marke, and note. First count Ionas the frend of God, & a man chosen of GOD, to testify his name vnto the world: But yet a yong scholer, weake and rude, after the fa∣shiō of the apostles, whyle Christ was with them yet bodily, which thoughe Christ taught them euer to be meeke, and to humble thēselues, yet oft stroue among thēselues who should be grea∣test. The sonnes of ebede would sitte the one on the right hand of Christ, the other on the lefte. They would praye that fire might descend from heauen & consume the Samaritanes. When Christ asked who say men that I am? Peter aunswered, thou art the sonne of the liuyng God, as though Peter had bene as perfecte as an angel. But immediatly after whē Christ preached vnto them of hys death and passion: Peter was angry and rebuked Christ, and thought earnestly that he had ra∣ued, and not wist what he sayde, as at another time, when Christ was so fer∣uently * 1.176 busied in healyng the people, that he had no leisure to eat, they went out to hold him, supposing that he had

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bene beside hymselfe. And one that cast out diuels in Christes name they for∣bade, because he wayted not on them, so glorious were they yet.

And though Christ taught alway to * 1.177 forgeue, yet Peter after long goyng to schole, asked whether men should for∣geue seuen tymes, thinkyng that viij. tymes had bene to much. And at the last supper Peter would haue dyed with christ, but yet within few houres after, he denyed him, both cowardly and shamefully. And after the same ma¦ner, though he had so long heard that no man might auenge him self, but ra∣ther turne the other cheeke to, then to smite agayne, yet when Christ was in takyng, Peter asked whether it were lawful to smite with the sword, and taried none aunswere, but layed on rashly. So that though when we come first vnto knowledge of the truth, and the peace is made betwene God and vs, and we loue his lawes, and beleue and trust in him, as in our father and haue good hartes vnto him, and be borne a new in the spirite, yet we are but childrē and young scholers, weake and feble, and must haue leysure to grow in the spirite: in knowledge, loue and in the ded•…•… therof, as young chil∣dren must haue tyme to grow in their bodies.

And God our father and scholema∣ster feedeth vs, and teacheth vs accor∣cordyng vnto the capacitie of our sto∣mackes, and maketh vs to grow and waxe perfect, and fineth and trieth vs, as gold, in the fire of temptations and tribulations. As Moyses witnesseth Deutero. viij. saying. Remember all the way by whiche the Lord thy God caried thee this xl. yeares in the wil∣dernesse, * 1.178 to humble thee, and to tempte or prouoke thee, yt it might be knowen what were in thine hart. He brought thee into aduersitie, and made thee an hungred, & then fed thee with Manna, which neither thou nor yet thy fathers euer knew of, to teach that man lyueth not by bread onely, but by all that pro∣cedeth out of the mouth of GOD. For the promises of God are lyfe vnto all that cleaue vnto them, muche more then breade and bodyly sustenaunce, as the iourney of the children of Isra∣ell out of Egipt into the land promised them, ministreth thee notable ensam∣ples, and that aboundantly, as doth all the rest of the Bible also. Howbeit it is impossible for flesh to beleue, and to trust in the truth of Gods promises, vntil he haue learned it in much tribu∣lation, after that God hath deliuered him out therof agayne.

God therefore to teach Ionas, and to shew him his owne hart, & to make him perfect, and to instruct vs also by his ensample, sent him out of the lande of Israell where he was a Prophet to go among the heathen people, and to the greatest and mightiest Citie of the world then, called Niniue: to preache that within xl. dayes they should all perish for their sinnes, and that the Ci∣tie * 1.179 should be ouerthrowen. Whiche message the free will of Ionas had as much power to doe, as the weakest harted womā in the world▪ hath pow∣er, if•…•… were commaunde•…•… to leape int•…•…e of lyuyng snakes and ad∣ders: as happely if God had cōmaun∣ded Sara to haue sacrificed her sonne Isaa•…•… as he did Abraham, she would haue disputed with him, yer shee had done it, or though she were strong e∣nough: yet many an holy Saint could not haue founde in their hartes, but would haue runne away from the pre∣sence of the commaundement of God, with Ionas, if they had bene so strong¦ly tempted.

For Ionas thought of this maner: loe, I am here a Prophet vnto Gods * 1.180 people the Israelites: Whiche though they haue Gods worde testified vnto them dayly, yet despise it, and worshyp God vnder the likenesse of calues, and after all maner fashions saue after hys owne word, and therfore are of all na∣tions the worst, and most worthy of punishment. And yet God for loue of fewe that are among them, and for his names sake spareth and defendeth them. How then should GOD take so cruel vengeaunce on so great a mul∣titude of them to whō hys name was neuer preached to, and therfore are not the tenth part so euill as these? If I shall therfore go preach, so shal I laye and shame my selfe and God thereto, & make them the more to dispise God, and set the lesse by him, and to bee the more cruell vnto his people.

And vpon that imagination he fled from the face or presence of God: that * 1.181 is, out of the coūtrey where God was worshipped in, and from the prosecu∣tyng of Gods commaundement, and thought, I will get me an other way among the heathen people, and be no more a prophet, but liue at rest and out of all combraunce. Neuerthelesse the God of all mercy which careth fo his

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elect children, & turneth all vnto good to them, and smiteth them, to heale thē againe, and killeth them to make them aliue agayne, and playeth with them (as a father doth some tyme with his young ignoraunt children) and temp∣teth them, and proueth them to make them see their owne hartes, prouided for Ionas, how all thinges should be.

When Ionas entred into the shyp, he layd him down to slepe, and to take his rest: that is, his conscience was tos∣sed * 1.182 betwene the commaundement of God which sent him to Ninine, and his fleshly wisedome that dissnaded, & counselled him the contrary, and at the last preuailed against the commaunde∣ment, and caryed him an other way, as a shyp caught betwene two streames, & as Poetes faine the mother of Me∣liager to be betwen diuers affections: while to aduenge her brothers death, shee sought to slea her owne sonne. Whereupon for very paine and tedi∣ousnes he lay down to slepe, for to put the commaundement which so gnewe and fret his conscience, out of mynde, as the nature of all wicked is, when they haue sinned a good, to seke all * 1.183 meanes with riot, reuell and pastime, to driue the remembraūce of sinne out of their thoughtes, or as Adam did, to couer their nakednes with apornes of Pope holy workes. But God awoke him out of his dreame, & set his sinnes before his face.

For when yt lot had caught Ionas, then bee sure that his sinnes came to * 1.184 remembraunce agayne, and that his cōscience raged no lesse then the waues of the Sea. And then he thought that he onely was a sinner, and the heathen that were in the shyp, none in respect of him, and thought also, as veryly as he was fled from God, that as veryly God had cast him away: for the sight of the rodde maketh the naturall child not onely to see, and to knowledge his faulte, but also to forget all his fathers old mercy and kindnesse. And then he * 1.185 confessed his sinne openly, and had yet leuer perishe alone, then that the other should haue perished with him for his sake: and so of very desperatiō to haue lyued any longer, he bad cast him into the Sea betimes, except they would be lost also.

To speake of lottes, how farre forth they are lawfull, is a light question. First to vse them for the breakyng of * 1.186 strife, as when parteners, their goods as equally diuided as they can, take e∣uery man his part by lot, to auoyde all suspition of disceitfulnesse: and as the Apostles in the first of the Actes, when they sought an other to succede Iudas the traitour, and two persōs were pre∣sented then to breake strife, and to satis∣fie all parties, did cast lottes whether should be admitted, desiryng God to temper them, and to take whom he knew most mete, seyng they wyste not whether to preferre, or happely could not all agree on: either is lawfull, and in all like cases. But to abuse them vn∣to the temptyng of God, and to com∣pell hym therewith to vtter thinges wherof we stand in doubt, when we haue no commaundement of him so to do, as these heathen here dyd, though God turned it vnto his glorie, can not be but euill.

The heathen shypmen astonyed at * 1.187 the sight of the miracle, feared GOD, prayed to him, offered sacrifice and vowed vowes. And I doubte not, but that some of them, or happely all came thereby vnto the true knowledge, and true worshipping of GOD, and were wonne to GOD in their soules. And thus God which is infinite mercifull in all his wayes, wrought their soules health out of the infirmitie of Ionas, euen of his good wil and purpose, and loue wherewith he loued them, before the world was made & not of chaunce, as it appeareth vnto the eyes of the i∣gnoraunt.

And that Ionas was three dayes and three nightes in the belye of hys * 1.188 fishe: we can not therby proue vnto the Iewes, and infideles or vnto any mā, that Christ must therefore dye, and bee buried and rise againe. But we vse the ensample and likenesse to strength the fayth of the weake. For he that bele∣ueth the one, cā not dout in the other: in as much as the hand of GOD was no lesse mightie in preseruyng Ionas alyue agaynst all naturall possibilitie, and in deliueryng him safe out of this fish, then in raising vp Christ agayne, out of his sepulchre. And we may de∣scribe the power and vertue of the re∣surrection thereby, as Christ him selfe boroweth the similitude therto. Math. xij. saying vnto the Iewes that came * 1.189 about him, and desired a signe or a wō∣der from heauen, to certifie them that he was Christ: this euill and wedlocke breakyng nation (whiche breake the wedlocke of faith, wherwith they bee maried vnto God, and beleue in their false woorkes) seke a signe, but there

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shall no signe bee geuen them saue the signe of the Prophet Ionas. For as Ionas, was three dayes and three nightes in the bely of the Whale, euen so shall the sonne of mā be three dayes, & three nightes in the hart of the earth. Which was a watch word (as we say) and a sharpe threatenynge vnto the Iewes, and as much to say as thus, ye hard harted Iewes seke a signe: loe this shal be your signe, as Ionas was raised out of the sepulchre of his fishe, and then sent vnto the Niniuites to preach that they should perish, euen so shall I rise againe out of my sepulchre, and come and preach repentaunce vn∣to you. See therfore, when ye see the signe that ye repent, or els ye shal sure∣ly perishe and not escape. For though the infirmities whiche ye now see in my flesh, be a let vnto your fathers, ye shall then be without excuse, when ye see so great a miracle and so great pow¦er of God shed out vpon you. And so * 1.190 Christ came agayne after the resurrec∣tion in his spirite, and preached repen∣taunce vnto them, by the mouth of his Apostles and Disciples, and with mi∣racles of the holy Ghost. And all that repented not, perished shortly after, & the rest caried awaye captiue into all quarters of the world for an example, as ye see vnto this day.

And in like maner since the worlde began, where soeuer repentaunce was offered, and not receaued, their GOD tooke cruell vengeaunce immediatly: * 1.191 as ye see in the floude of Noe, in the o∣uerthrowynge of Sodome and Go∣morra, and all the countrey about, and as ye see of Egypt, of the Amorites, Cananites and afterward of the very Israelites, and then at the last of the Iewes to, and of the Assirians, & Ba∣bilonians, and so throughout all the impeires of the world.

Gildas preached repentaunce vnto the old Britaines, that inhabited En∣gland: * 1.192 they repented not, and therfore God sent in their enemies vpon them on euery side, and destroyed them vp, and gaue the land vnto other nations. And greate vengeaunce hath bene ta∣ken in that lande for synne, since that tyme.

Wicleffe preached repentaunce vnto our fathers not long since: they repen∣ted, * 1.193 not for their harts were indurate, and their eyes blinded with their own Pope holy righteousnesse, wherewith they had made their soules gay against the receiuing agayne of the wicked spi∣rite, that bringeth seuen worse thē him selfe with him, and maketh the later ende worse then the begynnyng: for in open synnes there is hope of re∣pentaunce, but in holye, hypocrisie none at all. But what folowed? they slew their true and right kyng, and set * 1.194 vp three wrong kynges arowe, vnder which all the noble bloud was slayne vp, and halfe the commons thereto, * 1.195 what in Fraunce, and what with their owne sword, in fightyng among them selues for the crowne, and the Cities * 1.196 and Townes decayed, and the lande brought halfe into a wildernesse, in re∣spect * 1.197 of that it was before.

And now Christe to preache repen∣taūce, * 1.198 is risē yet once agayn, out of his sepulchre in which yt Pope had buried him, & kept him downe, with his pil∣lars & polars & all disguisinges of hi∣pocrisy, with gyle, wiles & falshode & with the sword of all Princes, whiche he had blinded with his false marchaū∣dise. And as I doubt not of the ensam∣ples that are past, so am I sure that great wrath will follow, except repen∣taunce turne it backe againe, & cease it.

When Ionas had bene in the fishes * 1.199 bely a space, and the rage of his con∣science was somewhat quieted, and swaged, & he come to him selfe againe, and had receaued a litle hope, the qual∣mes and panges of desperation which went ouer his hart, halfe ouercome, he prayed, as he maketh mention in the text saying: Ionas prayed vnto the Lord his GOD out of the bely of the fish. But the wordes of that prayer are not here set. The prayer that here stan∣deth in the text, is the prayer of prayse, and thankesgeuyng, which he prayed, and wrote when hee was escaped, and past all ieopardie.

In the end of which prayer he saith, I will sacrifice with the voyce of thankes∣geuyng, * 1.200 and pay that I haue vowed, that sauyng commeth of the Lord. For vere∣ly to confesse out of the hart, that all be∣nefites come of GOD, euen out of the goodnesse of his mercie, and not deser∣uing of our dedes, is the onely sacrifice that pleaseth God. And to beleue that all the Iewes vowed in their Circum¦cision, as we in our Baptisme. Whiche vowe Ionas now beyng taught with experience, promiseth to pay. For those outward sacrifices of beastes, vnto which Ionas had happely ascribed to much before, were but feble, and chil∣dish thinges, and not ordeined, that the workes of them selues should be a ser∣uice

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vnto the people, but to put them * 1.201 in remembraunce of this inward sacri∣fice of thankes and of faith, to trust and beleue in GOD the onely Sauiour: whiche signification when it was a∣way, they were abhominable and de∣uilishe Idolatrie, and Image seruice: as our ceremonies and Sacramentes are become now to all that trust and be¦leue in the worke of them, and are not taught the significations, to edify their soules with knowledge, and the doc∣trine of God.

When Ionas was cast vpon lande * 1.202 agayn, then his will was free, and had power to go whether God sent hym, and to do what GOD bade, his owne Imaginations layd a part. For he had bene at a new schole, yea and in a for∣nace where hee was purged of much refuse and drosse of fleshely wisedome, whiche resisted the wisedome of God, and led Ionasses will contrary vnto the will of God. For as farre as we be blinde in Adam, we can not but seke, and will our owne profite, pleasure & glory. And as farre as we be taught in the spirite, we can not but seke and wil the pleasure, and glory of God onely.

And as the iij. dayes iorney of Ni∣niue, * 1.203 whether it were in length, or to go round about it, or thorough all the stretes, I commit vnto yt discretion of other men. But I thinke that it was then the greatest Citie of the world.

And that Ionas went a dayes iour∣ney in the Citie. I suppose hee did it not in one day: but went faire and ea∣syly preachyng here a Sermon, and there another, and rebuked the sinne of the people, for which they must perish.

And when thou art come vnto the repentaūce of the Niniuites, there hast thou sure earnest, that how soeuer an∣gry God be, yet he remembreth mer∣cy, vnto all that truly repent and be∣leue in mercy. Whiche ensample our Sauiour Christe also casteth in the * 1.204 teeth of the indurate Iewes saying: The Niniuites shall rise in iudgemēt with this nation, and condemne them, for they repented at the preachyng of Ionas, and behold a greater then Ionas, here meanyng of him selfe. At whose prea∣chyng yet, thoughe it were neuer so mightie to pearce the hart, and for all his miracles thereto, the hard harted Iewes could not repent: when the heathen Niniuites repēted at the bare preachyng of Ionas, rebukyng their sinnes without any miracle at all.

Why? For the Iewes had leuened the spirituall law of God, & with their gloses had made it altogether earthly * 1.205 and fleshly, and so had set a vaile or co∣ueryng on Moses face, to shadow and darken the glorious brightnes of hys countenaunce. It was sinne to steale: but to robbe widowes houses vnder a colour of long praying, and to polle in the name of offerynges, and to snare yt people with intollerable constitutions agaynst all loue, to catche theyr money out of theyr purses, was no synne at all.

To smite father and mother was * 1.206 sinne: But to withdraw helpe from them at theyr nede, for blynde zeale of offring, vnto the profite of ye holy pha∣rises, was then as meritorious as it is now, to let all thy kinne chuse whe∣ther they wil sincke or swimme, while thou buildest and makest goodly foun∣dations for holy people, whiche thou hast chosen to be thy Christ, for to sup∣ple thy soule with yt oyle of their swete blessinges, and to be thy Iesus for to * 1.207 saue thy soule from the purgatory of the bloud, that onely purgeth sinne, with their watching, fasting, wolward goyng, & rising at midnight, &c. wher∣with yet they purge not themselues, from their couetousnes, pride, lechery, or any vice that thou seest among the lay people.

It was great sinne for Christ to heale * 1.208 the people on the sabaoth day vnto the glory of God hys father, but none at all for them to helpe their cattell vnto their owne profite.

It was sinne to eate with vnwashed handes, or on an vnwashed table, or out of an vnwashed dishe: but to eate out of that purified dishe: that whiche came of bribery, thefte and extortion, was no sinne at all.

It was exceeding meritorious to make many disciples: but to teach thē to feare God in hys ordinaunces, had they no care at all.

The hye Prelates so defended the * 1.209 right of holy church, and so feared the people with the curse of God, and ter∣rible paynes of hell, that no man durst leaue the vilest herbe in his garden vn¦tithed. And the offeringes and thinges dedicate vnto GOD, for the profite of his holy vicars, were in such estimatiō and reuerence, that it was a much gre∣te sinne to sweare truly by them, then to forsweare thy selfe by God. What * 1.210 vengeaunce then of God, and how ter¦rible and cruell damnation thynke ye preached they to fall on them that had

Page 30

stolen so the holy thinges? And yet sayth Christ, that righteousnes & fayth in kepyng promise, mercy, and indiffe∣rent iudgement, were vtterly troden vnder foote, and clean despised of those blessed fathers, whiche so mightelye maintained Aarons patrimony, and had made it so prosperous, and enui∣roned it, and walled it about on euery side with the feare of God, that no mā durst touche it.

It was great holines to garnish the * 1.211 Sepulchers of the prophetes, and to condemne their owne fathers for slay∣ing of them, and yet were they them∣selues for blynde zeale of their owne constitutions, as redy as their fathers to slea whosoeuer testified vnto them, the same truth which, the prophets te∣stified vnto their fathers. So yt Christ compareth al the righteousnes of those holy patriarckes, vnto the outwarde beauy of a painted Sepulcher full of stenche, and all vncleannes within.

And finally to beguile a mās neigh∣bors in subtle bargaining, & to wrap and compasse hym in with cautels of the law, was then as it is now in the kyngdome of the Pope. By the reason wherof, they excluded the law of loue out of their hartes, and consequently all true repentaunce: for how coulde they repent of that they could not see to be sinne?

And on the other side they had set vp * 1.212 a righteousnes of holy workes, to clēse their soules with all: as the Pope san∣ctifieth vs with holy oyle, holy bread, holy salte, holy candels, holy dome, ce∣remonies, and holy dome blessinges, & with whatsoeuer holines thou wilt, aue with the holines of Gods worde, which onely speaketh vnto the harte, and sheweth the soule hys filthinesse, and vncleannes of synne, and leadeth her by the way of repentance vnto the fountayne of Christes bloud, to washe it away thorow faith. By the reason of * 1.213 which false righteousnes, they wer dis∣obediēt vnto the righteousnes of god, whiche is the forgeuenesse of sinne in Christes bloud, and could not beleue it. And so thorow fleshly interpretyne the law, and false imagined righteous∣nes, their hartes were hardened, and made as stony as clay, in an whot fur∣nace of fire, that they could receiue nei∣ther repentance nor fayth, or any moy∣sture of grace at all.

But the heathen Niniuites, though they were blinded with lustes, yet wer¦in those two poyntes vncorrupte, and vnhardened, and therfore with the on∣ly * 1.214 preachyng of Ionas, came vnto the knowledge of their sinnes and confes∣sed them, and repented truly, and tur∣ned euery man from hys euil dedes, & declared their sorrow of hart and true repentaunce, with theyr deedes which they did out of fayth and hope of for∣geuenesse, chastieing their bodies with prayer and fastyng, and with takyng all pleasures from the flesh: trustyng, as God was angry for their wicked∣nesse, euen so should he forgeue them of his mercy if they repented, and forsoke their misseliuing.

And in the last ende of all, thou hast * 1.215 yet a goodly ensample of learnyng, to see how earthy Ionas is still for all his trying in yt whales belly. He was so sore displesed because the Niniuites perished not, that he was wery of hys life, and wished after death for very so∣row, that he had lost the glory of hys prophesiyng, in yt hys prophecie came not to passe. But GOD rebuked hym with a likenes, saying: it greueth thine hart for the losse of a vile shrub or spray wheron thou bestowedst no labour or cost, neither was it thine handy work. How much more then should it greue myne hart the losse of so great a multi∣tude of innocentes as are in Niniue, which are all mine hādes worke. Nay * 1.216 Ionas, I am God ouer all, and father as well vnto the heathen as vnto the Iewes, and merciful to all, and warne¦ere I smite, neither threate I so cruel∣ly by any prophet, but that I will for∣geue, if they repent and aske mercy: nei¦ther on the other side, whatsoeuer I promise, will I fulfill it, saue for their sakes onely, which trust in me, & sub∣mit themselues to keepe my lawes of very loue, as naturall children.

ON this maner to read the Scrip∣ture * 1.217 is the right vse therof, & why the holy ghost caused it to be written. That is, that thou first seke out yt law, that God wyll haue thee to do, inter∣preting it spiritually, without glose or couering the brightnes of Moses face, so that that thou feele in thyne harte, how that it is damnable sinne before God, not to loue thy neighbour that is thine enemy, as purely as Christ lo∣ued thee, & that not to loue thy neigh∣bour in thyne hart, is to haue commit∣ted already all sinne against him. And therfore vntill that loue be come, thou must knowledge vnfainedly that there is sinne in the best deede thou

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doest. And it must ernestly greue thine hart, and thou must wash all thy good dedes in Christes bloud, ere they can be pure, and an acceptable sacrifice vn¦to god, and must desire God the father for his sake to take thy dedes a worth, * 1.218 and to pardon the imperfectnesse of them, & to geue thee power to do thē better, and with more feruent loue.

And on the other side, thou must serch diligently for the promises of mercye, which God hath promised thee again. Which two poynces, that is to witte, the law spiritually interpreted, howe that all is damnable synne, that is not vnfayned loue out of the ground, and bottome of the harte, after the ensam∣ple of Christes loue to vs, because we be all equally created and formed of one God our father, and indifferently bought, and redemed with one bloude of our sauiour Iesus Christ: and that the promises be geuen vnto a repen∣tyng soule, that thursteth and longeth * 1.219 after thē, of the pure and fatherly mer∣cy of God, thorow our fayth only with out all deseruyng of our dedes, or me∣rites of our workes, but for Christes sake a lone, and for the merites and de∣seruynges of hys workes, death and passions that he suffered all together for vs, and not for hymself: which two * 1.220 poyntes I say, if they bee written in thyne hart, are the keyes which so o∣pen all the Scripture vnto thee, that no creature can locke thee out, & with which thou shalt go in and out, & find pasture, and foode euery where. And if these lessons be not written in thyne hart, then is all the scripture shut vp, as a cornel in the shale, so that thou mayest read it, and commen of it, and reherse all the stories of it, and dispute wittily, and be a profounde sophister, and yet vnderstand not one iot there∣of.

And thirdly that thou take the sto∣ries and lyues which are contained in the bible, for sure and vndoubted en∣samples, that god so wil deale with vs vnto the worldes ende.

¶ Herewith Reader farewell, and be commended vnto God, and vnto the grace of hys spirit. And first see yt thou stoppe not thyne eares vnto the cal∣lyng of GOD, and harden not thine hart beguiled with fleshly interpreting of the law, and false imagined and hi∣pocritish righteousnes, least then the Niniuites rise with thee at the day of iudgement, and condemne thee.

And secondarily, if thou fynde ought amisse, when thou seest thy selfe in the glasse of Gods worde, thinke it neces∣sary wisdome, to amend the same be∣tymes, monished and warned by the ensample of other men, rather then to tary vntill thou be beaten also.

And thirdly, if it shall so chaunce, that the wylde lustes of thy flesh shall blynde thee, & cary thee cleane away wt * 1.221 the for a tyme: yet at yt latter end, when the God of all mercy shall haue com∣passed thee in on euery syde with tem∣tations, tribulation, aduersities and combrance, to bryng thee home againe vnto thine owne harte, and to set thy sinnes which thou wouldest so fayne couer, and put out of mynde with de∣lectation of voluptuous pastunes, be∣fore the eyes of thy conscience: then cal the faythfull ensample of Ionas, and all like stories vnto thy remembrance, and with Ionas turne vnto thy father * 1.222 that smote thee, not to cast thee away, but to lay a corosie, and a fretting plai¦ster vnto the pocke, that lay hidde and fret inward, to draw the disease out, & to make it appeare, that thou mightest feele thy sicknes, and the danger ther∣of, and come and receiue the healyng plaister of mercy.

And forget not that whatsoeuer en∣sample of mercy, God hath shewed since the beginnyng of the world, the * 1.223 same is promised thee, if thou wylt in like maner turne agayne, and receiue it as they did, and with Ionas bee a knowen of thy sinne and confesse it, & knowledge it vnto thy father.

And as the law which fretteth thy conscience is in thine hart, and is none outward thing, euen so seeke within thy hart the plaister of mercy, the pro∣mises of forgeuenes in our Sauiour Iesus Christ, accordyng vnto all the ensamples of mercy yt are gone before.

And with Ionas let them that wait on vanities, and seke God here and there, and in euery temple saue in their hartes, go: and seke thou the testament of God in thyne harte. For in thyne hart is the word of the law, & in thine * 1.224 hart is the word of faith, in the promi∣ses of mercy in Iesus Christ. So that if thou confesse with a repentyng hart and knowledge, and surely beleue that Iesus is Lord ouer all sinne, thou art safe.

And finally, when the rage of thy conscience is ceased, and quieted with fast faith in the promises of mercy, thē offer with Ionas the offring of prayse

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and thankesgeuyng, and pay the vowe of thy Baptisme, that God onely sa∣ueth, * 1.225 of his onely mercy and goodnes: that is, beleue stedsastly and preach cō∣stātly, that it is God onely that smi∣teth, and GOD onely that healeth: ascribyng the cause of thy tribulation vnto thyne owne sinne, and the cause of thy deliuerance vnto yt mercy of god.

And beware of the leuen that sayth we haue power in our free will before the preaching of the Gospel, to deserue grace, to kepe the law of congruite, or god to bee vnrighteous. And say with Iohn in the first, that as the law was geuen by Moses, euen so grace to ful∣fill it, is geuen by Christ. And when they say our deedes with grace deserue heauen, say thou with Paule. Rom. vj that euerlastyng lyfe is the gift of GOD thorough Iesus Christe, our Lorde, and that we be made sonnes by fayth. Iohn. i. And therefore heires of GOD with Christ. Rom. viij. And say that we re∣ceaue all of God through faith, that fo∣loweth repentaunce, and that we doe not our workes vnto God, but either vnto our selues, to slay the sinne that * 1.226 remaineth in the fleshe, and to waxe perfect, either vnto our neighbours, which do as much for vs agayne in o∣ther thynges. And when a man exce∣deth in giftes of grace, let him vnder∣stand that they be geuen him, as well for his weake brethren, as for him self: as though all the bread be committed vnto the panter, yet for his felowes with him, whiche geue thee thankes vnto their Lord, and recompence the panter agayn, with other kynde of ser∣uice in their offices. And when they say that Christ hath made no satisfac∣tion for the sinne we do after our Ba∣ptisme: * 1.227 say thou with the doctrine of Paule, that in our Baptisme we re∣ceaue the merites of Christes death through repentaunce, & faith, of which two, Baptisme is yt signe. And though when we sinne of frailtie after our Ba∣ptisme, we receaue the signe no more, yet we be renewed agayne through re∣pentance, and fayth in Christes bloud, of which twaine, yt signe of Baptisme euen continued among vs in Bapti∣sing our young childrē, doth euer kepe vs in mind, & call vs backe again vn∣to our profession if we begon astray, & promiseth vs forgeuenesse. Neither cā * 1.228 actual sinne be washed away with our workes, but with Christes bloud: nei∣ther can there be any other sacrifice, or satisfaction to Godward for them, saue christes bloud. For as much as we can do no workes vnto God, but receiue only of his mercy, with our repenting faith, through Iesus Christ our lord, and only sauiour: vnto whom and vn¦to God our father thorowe hym, and vnto his holy spirite, yt onely purgeth, sanctifieth, and washeth vs in the in∣nocent bloude of our redemption, be prayse for euer.

Amen.

Notes

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