A cōpa­rison betwene the Olde lear­nynge & the Newe,

¶ Translated out of latin in Englysh by Wyl­iam Turner.

Prynted in Sowthwarke by me Iames Nicolsō. Anno. 1537.

The contentes of this boke.

  • Of the sacramentes.
  • Of penaunce.
  • Of confession.
  • Of satisfaccyon.
  • Of frewyll.
  • Of fayth and workes.
  • Of merites.
  • Of synne.
  • Of y e worshippynge of sayntes.
  • Of the supper of y e Lorde.
  • Of the choyse of mea­tes.
  • Of fastynge.
  • Of the difference of dayes.
  • Of prayer.
  • Of vowes.
  • Of counselles.
  • Of matrimony.
  • Of bisshoppes.
  • Of ceremonies.
  • Of mans traditions.
  • Of councels & lawes made by a multitude of bisshoppes gathe­red together.

¶ To the reader.

Some ther be that do defye
All that is newe, and euer do crye
The olde is better, awaye with y e new
Because it is false, and the olde is true:
Let them this boke reade and beholde
For it preferreth y e learnyng most olde.

¶ Vrbanus Regius to a certayne frende of his, wysheth CHRIST oure ryghteousnesse.

WHan our saueour in the fyrst of Marke had caste out of a man an vncleane sprete, the Iewes were astōnyed, say­enge: what new learnynge is this? It was thought new to those wretches for lacke of knowlege of scripture: which of all thynges was oldest, that is to saye the Gospell, the which was longe tofore promysed by the prophetes in the scripture, of y e sōne of God Iesu Christ. The same thynge was sayd to Paul, whan he preached Christ at Athene: they toke him & led hym to Marcis strete, sayenge: May we not knowe what new learnyng this is, that ye teach? for ye brynge in to our eares new thynges. Was the teachynge of the A­postles (I praye you) strayght waye new, because it was thought new to the proude gentyles swellynge and bounde with theyr carnall and fleshly wysedome? Euen suche lyke thinges in these later dayes, do they al suffer: which teach purely the Gospel of the [Page] gracyous fauour and glory of God. Which do not abuse y e worde of euerlastynge truth for auaūtage: but as it were of syncernesse, but as it were of god, so speak we by Christ in the syght of God. This is the new doc­trine (saye our aduersaries) lately deuysed & f [...]rnyshed in the shoppes or workhouses of heretikes. Let vs abyde styl in our old fayth Let the holynesse of our fathers, the autho­rite of the coūcels, the consent of the longe tyme & so many ages, holde vs in y e wayes of our fathers. Let the heretikes go & shake theyr eares, w t theyr new learnynge, which spronge and rose vp of late. Those thynges which we teach came not all from Christe and the Apostles by wrytynge, neuerthe­lesse they came by a faythfull reuelacyon, & shewynge vnto vs. To whom I wyll an­swere none otherwyse then Christ answe­red the Saduces: Ye erre (sayeth he) and ar ignoraunt in the scripture. And wolde to God that I myghte purchace and obtayne so much equyte of a braynlesse kynde of mē as one heythen man sheweth to another: that is, yf they wolde fyrst heare the cause or matter, and then afterwarde (yf it please them) condemne hym that is accused. Now they condemne innocentes without ony [Page] hearynge of theyr cause. And they crye vn­to vs which defēde y e worde of God w t no­thynge but galowes, ropes, and fyre, not witesafyng vs the leest corner of the catho­lyke church. In so much that I wonder of what sprete they be of. For that gentle and pleasaunt sprete of Christ, the which fedeth the mysticall body, seketh for the health and not for the destruccyon of them that erre. Charite the frute of the holy goost (as the apostell sayeth) doth thynke none euell, but is glad and reioyceth with the trueth, bele­ueth all thynges, trusteth all thynges. Su­rely they that set asyde the blynde iudge­ment of the affeccyon, and loke earnest­ly vpon the matter, iudge otherwyse of vs. For the olde aūcient fathers dyd neuer knowe or heare tell, of the moost parte of those thynges, whiche oure condemners do teache: then ye maye be sure that theyr learnynge ought not to be rekened for olde learnynge and apostolicall. Furthermore not euery thynge that the olde fathers wrote sauoureth of the syncernesse and purenesse of the sprete of the Apostles. Certayne thynges which were deuised with in these foure hundreth yeares, yee rather euen of late haue bene receaued by and by of them, as [Page] soone as they were made, namely this is theyr learnynge and so olde that they desyre for this, that the Gospell almoost shulde be cast awaye, and coūted as a new teachynge and learnynge. Therfore I wolde that they shulde knowe and vnderstande that we do teache and preache the olde and the trewe heauenly doctryne of the sprete: that is the gospell of god. The greate mystery of holy­nesse and godlynesse that god was declared in the fleshe, was iustified in sprete, sene of the angelles, preached to the gentyles, that cōfidence was geuē to him in the worlde, & was receaued in to glory. What saye you be these newes: God dyd predestinate vs y t he myght chose and purches vs to be his sō ­nes, by Christe Iesus in his owne selfe, ac­cordynge to the pleasure of his wyl, that the glory of the grace of God myght be praysed, whereby he made vs welbeloued, thorowe his welbeloud, by whome we haue redēpciō thorowe his bloude, forgeuenesse of synnes accordyng to the ryches of his grace: This was the fathers counsell vpon vs, before the begynnyng of the worlde, that he shuld saue vs, and calle vs with an holy vocacion, not accordyng to our workes, but accordyng to his purpose and grace, whiche is geuen vn­to [Page] vs thorowe Iesus Christ before the euer­lasting times, but it is opened and declared nowe, by y e appearing of our saueour Christ which put deathe away and hathe thorowe the gospel brought forthe the lyfe into lyght and mortalite. The which thyng seyng that it was promysed so longe ago by the prophetes at the cōmaundement of the holy gooste and nowe published thorowe al the coastes of the worlde, howe dare they for shame call it newe learnyng? Ceasse you wycked men and staunche your blasphemyes geue glory and prayse with vs vnto god: and enbrace & loue (as ye ought to do) the mysteries of the truthe with deuoute myndes, lefte ye be indurate and made harde harted of god, with the reprobate and castawayes: the which beleue not the truth, but alowe vnryghtuousnesse. The are is layed at the roote of the trees. Wherfore I doynge the offyce of a christen brother, haue made a comparyson betwene the newe learnynge and the olde, whereby deare brother thou maye easely knowe whether we are called worthely or vnworthely the preachers of new learnyng. For so dyd they call vs of late, scornynge and of a contempte, and you desyred of [Page] me to know what I thought best to answer to these braynles and madde fellowes. The which thynge seynge that it can not be ex­pressed in an epystell: I thought it beste to bestow a few houres in thys matter, in these dayes called fastyngam, in latyn carnis priuium, whiche hath the name of y e takyng awaye of fleshe. In the which dayes after y e maner of the gentyles and heythen men, they vse vncomly playes and games. Take in good worth the labour of your frende. Fare ye well, and to God for me a synner.

¶ Of the sacramētes. The new learyng.

It is ynough and suffycient to receaue y e sacramentes effectually and with frute to haue no stoppe nor let of deadly synne: And ther is not requyred in a man a good mo­tion within hym whiche receaueth them, whereby of a congruence or of worthynes he maye deserue grace: for the sacramentes brynge grace with them of the worke that is wrought by them, or by the worke it self: that is to saye bycause the worke is shewed & mynistred as a sygne or a sacramēt. Thys sayeth y e master of sentēce, in the .iiii. boke in the fyrst distinction. By the doctores.

¶ The olde learnynge.

The gospel witnesseth y t we be saued not by an holy sygne, but thorow fayth. Gene. xv. Abraham gaue credence & beleued God and that was rekened to hym for ryghteousnesse. Rom. iiii. Rom. x. Yf a man beleue frō the harte he shalbe made ryghteous. He sayeth not: that with the body an holy sygne is taken vnto ryghteousnesse. Also Abacuc. ii. and Roma. the fyrst. The iuste shal lyue by his fayth. He sayeth not: He shal lyue by the sacramentes. It foloweth therfore after y e olde learnynge, that fayth is necessary to be had in hym that receaueth the sacramentes with frute.

¶ Of penaunce the new learnynge.

A mans wyll onely naturally (doynge y t lyeth in hym) maye dispose it selfe to the re­ceauynge of grace, by an acte confirmable vnto ryght reason, y e which is morally good Also a mans wyll in puttynge awaye a stop or let, that is the purpose of deadly sinne, of a good motion drawen out of frewyll, may deserue the fyrst grace of a congruence. In the seconde boke of y e master of sentence y e xxv. distinction. What meaneth this lear­nyng [Page] els, but that (as Pelagius sayeth) the begynnyng of our iustificatiō cōmeth of our selues, and the ende of makyng perfect commeth of God? Then myght a man by hys owne strēgth begynne penaūce, which they call cōtrycion: as though y e begynnyng of it were in vs. Thys learnyng maketh ypocrytes, & maynteyneth y e pryde of the olde mā.

¶ The olde learninge.

In the tenth chap. of zachary it is wryttē. I wyll conuerte them because I wyll haue mercy vpon them Trenorū. v. Conuerte vs Lorde to the, and we shalbe conuerted. Ihon xv. Without me ye can do nothyng. Philip­pens. ii. God worketh the wyll .ii. Corinth. y e .iii. Chapter. Euery good thought is of God. Roma. xi. Yf it be of workes, then is it not of grace .ii. Timothe the .iii. Chapt. Yf God at ony tyme wyll geue them repentaunce. &c. Therfore after y e olde learnyng repentaūce is the gyfte of God, the which grace that iu­stifyeth, worketh, and not the power which draweth oute frewyll. Before y e tyme that a man haue grace, nother his thought nor his wyl is good: nother hath he ony good work, but al is syn: for as y e tre is, such is his frute. The persone is a synner, & also fleshe: then, [Page] what other thynge can it sauour, wyn, and worke but fleshly thynges. Thys doctryne maketh men lowly and beateth downe the pryde and arrogancye of the olde Adam.

¶ Of confession, the new learnynge.

Who so euer cōmeth to the yeares of discrecyon, at the least once in the yeare, he is bounde to confesse all his synnes, both open and secrete: with all theyr circumstaunces to his curate, or els he is not a christen mā. And the bishop hath authoryte, to reserue, & kepe onely to hym self y e forgeuenesse of cer­tayne synnes: by the reason af theyr greate enormyte y e which a simple prest cannot as­soyle, but in the poynt of death, so do y e new fellowes saye. As in the canon lawe, Cap. Omnis vtrius (que) sexus. &c. and y e Mayster of sentence aboute the .xvii. distinction.

¶ The olde learnynge.

In the .xxxi. Psalme: I haue sayde I wyll cōfesse agaynst me myne vnryghteousnesse to y e Lorde, & thou haste forgeuē me y e vngodlynesse of my synne. Beholde, y e Prophete doth confesse hym to y e Lord: & he getteth for­geuenesse of al his sinnes. Luc. xviii. y e publycan sayeth: be mercyful to me a sinner, & he goeth home iustified into his house. Where is here ony rehearsyng, of circūstaūces, & of [Page] hydde synnes, in the prestes eare. Luce. vii. the synful woman speaketh nothynge, but wepeth and falleth lowly downe at the fete of Iesus, and she had by & by forgeuenesse of hir synnes, & herd sayd vnto her: Departe in peace. Mathew the .iii. Ierusalem and al Iewry and all the contry nexte to the flode Iordane, goeth forth to Ihon, and they con­fesse theyr synnes: namely in a general confession. For they graunted themselues to be synners: in as muche as they axed bap­tyme, a sygne of repentaūce, yet for al that ye heare of no rehearsall of synnes. We reade in the actes that y e same thynge was done at Ephesus at the preachynge of the Apostell: yet for all that we se in no place these wordes, a peculiar or proper preste: al hyd synnes, all circumstaunces, and such o­ther. In the fyrst of Ihon the .i. chapter we haue a confession which is of goddes lawe, by the which we confesse our fautes lowly to God the knower of mens hartes: and he is faythful & ryghteous to forgeue vs them For he geueth grace to lowly persones, and resysteth proude men .i. Pet. v. Where as true penaūce is, truly there is also cōfessiō, as the true frute of penaūce. We do not vtterly forsake auricular or eare cōfessiō, but [Page] y e addycions of mans tradyciōs are parted and sondered from holsom doctryne, as chaffe is from y e corne. It is an holsom doctryne and accordynge to goddes lawe, to requyre the lawe of the mouthe of a preste, and to learne of the bysshop the waye of the Lorde. Malachi. ii. Agge. ii. .i. Timot. iii. Titū. i. Therfore I wolde not that the order of the church shuld be broken, which is .i. Corin. xii where the Apostell after that he had made mencyon of the mystical body, sheweth that Christ set in y e church or congregacion, fyrst Apostels, thē Prophetes or preachers thyrdly teachers, why shulde teachers be in the churche? Namely for thys entent, that they hauyng the fashion and the form of holsome wordes shuld teache the churche those thyn­ges which be necessary for mans saluation: and resiste with the swearde of the spryte, the enemyes of y e fayth & all vngodlynesse: and that they might preache y e worde bothe openly and preuely, that they be feruent in season and out of season, that they rebuke, reproue, and exorte with all gentelnesse and learnyng .ii. Timoth. iiii. Let them knowe y e face and countenance of theyr floke, and to be shorte, let thē be full of those wertues, the which god requireth. Ezechiel. xxxiiii. of the [Page] watchemē or ouerseers of y e house of Israel: Yf we perceaue not and be ignoraūt in ony thynge that pertayneth vnto a christē mās lyuyng, and it is not playnely taught in y e open sermon, we must go to the curate, to-heare of hys mouth the iudgementes and testimonyes of the Lorde. Yf ony doute aryse in oure consciences, whome ought we rather to go to, and axe counsell, then of the hyrdman of our soules? Farthermore whē we be faynte harted or haue no corage and are vexed with tētacions: we maye not despyse the remedye that god ordened. Thou hast Gods worde. Math. xviii. Where as .ii. or .iii. &c. And Ihon. xx. Whose synnes ye shal remyt. &c. Whome wold not these fatherly promyses prouoke and alure to confession? where as the conscience is lyfted vp and stablisshed not by mans worde, but by god­des worde, spoken by mans mouth. But these be mans addicions to bynde a mans conscience with a law, and to cōpell hym to confesse all hys synnes with all theyr circū ­staūces at a certayne tyme, to hys owne preste or curate whatsoeuer he be: whereby mens consciēces be marked with an whote yron. For he that is not confessed after the maner that is prescrybed in the confessio­nalles, [Page] ether by the reason of ignoraunce, or of a frayle memory or shamefastnesse (yee though he be ashamed and repent hym of hys euell lyfe with all hys harte) yet for all that as longe as he lyueth he beareth about wyth hym an vnquyet conscience, and full of dispayre. And yf a man take a lyttell diligence, or haue a good memory, or wryte hys synnes in a pece of paper, and poureth oute into a frears eare, that can not well heare all the fylthynesse of hys vncleane lyuynge. good Lorde how glad is he? that not onely he hath satisfised the law: but because also that he hath taken of hys shulders a burthen heuyer then Ethna the hyl that always burneth. Then as who say, he hath deserued forgeuenesse of hys syn with thys troublesome worke, he standeth in his owne conceate, which wold haue dyspayred, yf he had not rehearsed hys synnes, af­ter thys maner. Let the bysshoppes appoint learned men to heare confessyons, and not blockheades: & then y e people shall come to y e prestes by heapes and swarmes. The whiche thynge whyle they do it not, lette them blame them selues, and not vs, yf the people set lytle by theyr curates. Far­ther more as concernyng the reseruyng, [Page] and kepyng behynde of certayn causes and chaunces, let the head rulers in the church tel a cause why they do differ and abhorre so greatly the Apostles rytes and teachynges. A preste or an elder & a bishop with Paull, be all one. The scripture maketh no such difference, of ministers, in the laboure of y e gospell. Whan the Lord sent forth hys disci­ples into y e world, he gaue them lyke power, sayng: Go into all the world and preach the gospel to euery creature: he that shal beleue and be baptysed shalbe saued. Marke. xvi. Iohn. xx. he sayth vnto them: Take ye the holy goost, & whosoeuer synnes ye forgeue, they shalbe forgeuē. Where is here ony differēce, betwene a bisshop & a symple preste? Is it harde to knowe what thys be to saye: Whose synnes ye remyt they shalbe remyt­ted? Thys ys the doctrine of Christe and hys Aostels.

¶ Of satisfaction. The new learnyng.

A certayn satisfacciō is to be enioyned to hym that is confessed for hys synnes that be past, accordyng to the quantite or qualite of the synnes, that he may content and satis­fye the ryghteousnesse of God. Thys hath the .xvii. and .xviii. distinction of the fourth [Page] boke. By this doctrine the grace of Chri­stes redemptiō is darkened, ouershadowed, and defaced, and mans workes enhaunced to the moost hye iniury of Christes passiō.

The olde learnynge.

Esay the .liii. Chapter. He is broken for oure wyckednesses. The father hath layed on his necke all our iniquityes and wyckednesses. I haue smyttē hym for the myschefe of my people. Here thou mayest se y t Christe dyd satisfaccyō for the synnes of al y e world. Also .i. Pet. ii. He bare our synnes in his bo­dy, on the crosse, that we shuld be delyuered from synne, & shuld lyue in ryghteousnesse, by whose strypes we are healed. Also in the fyrst epistle to the Corinthians the .i. chap. Christ is our ryghteousnesse and redemp­cion. Ioh in the .x. Chapter. Christ spent hys lyfe for hys shepe. Rom. the .v. Chap. We be brought in fauoure with the father, by the death of Christ, and not by our satisfaccyon The same we haue also Ephe. the .i. And Collossenses .i. & .ii. Christ toke away the obligacyon or handwrytynge, whiche was a­gaynst vs by y t decrees, & he fastened it to y e crosse .i. Ioh. i. The bloud of Christ clenseth & pourgeth vs frō all synne. He sayeth not [Page] our satisfaccion doth pourge vs. Now haue we proued by these places y t onyly the death of Christ is our full satisfaccyon for the synnes of al the world, and not our fylthy ryghteousnesse. Let vs than cal those scourges or punishmentes which our louynge father sē ­deth vs, or we take our selues (preuentyng the hande of God) correccyon, strokes and such other names as y e scripture vseth. This worde satisfaccyō is a proude worde and hated to al christen eares, that heare somtime the sounde of this sayenge of S. Luke in the xv. Chap. Whan we haue done all thynges which be commaūded vnto vs, yet we maye saye that we be vnprofytable seruauntes.

Let claye & asshes be ashamed of this proud worde satisfaccyon for synne. Shame be vnto vs and ryghteousnesse vnto God. Yf we with our workes and correccyons do make amendes or satiffaccyon for our synnes, thē Christ dyed in vayne. And by this doctrine the grace that bryngeth vs in the fauour w t God, is magnifyed by the bloude of Iesus, and mans worke is lytell set by, to the most worthy prayse of Christes passyon.

¶ Of fre wyll. The new learnynge.

A man hath fre wyll & choyse not only [Page] in the state of innocency, but also of his fall and synne: And it is of so great vertue, that he doynge that lyeth in hym, may remoue y e stoppe and hynderaunce of grace, & dispose hymselfe to grace that iustifyeth. And lest a carnall mā, proud ynough of hymselfe, shuld wante noryshynge for hys arrogancy, they go aboute to strengthen and confirme this doctrine with scriptures falsely vnderstāde Ecclesiasticus in the .xv. (saye theye) sayeth and proueth fre wyll, where as God is sayd to haue left a man in the power of his own counsell, and to haue geuen hym commaundementes y e which (yf he do kepe) they shuld kepe and saue him. And to this purpose they swepe & gather together, what so euer lawe or monition is ony where in al y e scripture. As who say we myght gather wel after this maner: God hath commaunded that we shuld do this, he hath apoynted the condycyons of lyfe, he threatneth payne to thē that breake them: ergo it is in oure power to do that same? wote ye wel here is a sure argu­ment? much lyke vnto this, the mayster byddeth y e seruaūt go an hūdreth myles on one day: ergo he may go an hūdreth myles on a daye. Although I se many mē of great reputacyō almost promysyng thēselues y e victory [Page] in the defendyng of frewyl, with this shorte argument. Whan in the meane season they cōsyder not how lytle this doctrine maketh for the glory of Christ which before al thyn­ges oughte to be soughte. Is it not a great sklaunder of the true learnynge, to teach after this wyse: Grace geuen frely, or the ge­nerall influence with the vnderstandynge, that vnderstandeth or directeth aryght, and the wyll confirmably wyllyng, are ynough to deserue the fyrst grace, whiche maketh a man fyrst to come in fauour? Who wolde haue loked for so muche lyfe and health in y e man that was left halfe dead of the theues, Luce. x. that although he could not heal him selfe, yet he myght go in to the potycaryes shoppe, nedynge no horse, myght shewe hys grefe, bye salues & pay for them whē he had done? Go to I am content let them teach y e iustificacyon can not be by our strength, w t out grace y t iustifieth: yet they teach that y e begynnynge of penaunce is in vs, whē they geue vnto vs the preparynge vnto grace, doynge as muche as lyeth in vs, y t we maye deserue of a symlynesse the fyrst grace by a good mocyon drawen out of the fredome of the wyll. Is not this to geue the fyrste good motion to nature? Moreouer, they saye: [Page] That a man by his naturall strength, may fulfyll goddes commaundementes, as con­cernyng the substaūce of the acte, although not accordynge to the intent of the cōmaū ­der that is god. Yf that be true, it is in a synners power to amende or to continue in synne. Yf nature maye do so muche, what nede haue we of grace? Whan symple men heare those thynges whan shall they at ony tyme learne Christ truely? whan wyl they geue thankes for the vnspeakeable benefyte of theyr redēption? A lytell thynge holdeth me, but I laye on these teachers the sayeng of saynt Peter: They denye the Lorde that bought them, and they make marchaūdyse, of the people of God, with theyr fained wordes. Whan dyd Christ or the Apostles euer speake after this maner: The merite of cō ­gruence, the meryte of worthynesse, to do that lyeth in hym, fre wyll, the productiue vertue of fre wyl? Thou christen man flye these sayenges as the pestilent blast of the crafty serpent, where with he maketh oure nature (whiche is proude already) to swell agaynst God. Thou haste (good reader) a tayste of the scoolemens learnynge of frewyll, the whiche hangeth nothynge toge­ther. For whan they be charged wyth scrip­ture, [Page] in the despite of the Pelagians they wyll be thought fauourers of grace, somty­me with a maruaylous euasyon preferryng a specyall helpe of God, before mans wyll both in wyllynge and in workynge. And a lytell after they leape backe agayne to the excellent gyftes of theyr nature, lest they shulde be thought to fauoure y e Manichees.

¶ The olde learnynge.

Romano. the .xiiii. Chapter. What so euer is not of fayth, that is synne. Then that good motion of fre wyll before grace that iustifyeth is synne. Thē what madnes is it to wyll, to deserue grace by synne? Or what lyberte is it, whan a man can not do well of hymselfe but only euel? what health is that, to haue power to fal and not to ryse or stande without the helpe of an other? the seconde to the Corinthians the thyrde chapter. Our sufficiency or ablenesse to do good is of God. Roma. the thyrde Chap. Fayth iustifyeth. Before fayth a man is a synner and euell, then how can he haue a good mo­cyon of hymselfe, whom fayth hath not steared vp? how can a thorne tre brynge forth a grape. Ioh. viii. Euery man that doth synne is the seruaunt of synne .ii. Petri. ii. A man is brought in bondage vnto hym, of whome [Page] he is ouercome. Ephe. ii. By nature we be y e chyldrē of wrath Ge. vi. We be flesh, Io. iii. Excepte that we be borne agayne .i. Corin. ii. A carnall man perceaueth not those thynges which be of the sprete of God. Then how can the seruaunt of synne, the sonne of wrath, fleshe, a carnall man: before he be regenerate, haue mexe naturall power & good motions of hymselfe? Can an euell tre brynge forth good frute? Excepte y t we be regenerate with the grace of Christ? (accordynge to the ymage of the earthy Adam) we beare no goodnesse. Seynge that y e holy goost doth expressely and vehemently pro­noūce, that we be not only prone and ready to euell: but also euel in dede. Farthermore the Lord maketh lawes, but (before y t thou bryng in this cōclusiō: Therfore we may: or els wherfore haue we so many preceptes & threatenynges?) learne of Paul Roma. y e iii. Chap. that the lawe is the knowledge of synne and not the auctor of ryghteousnesse The lawe is spirituall & we be carnal solde vnder synne, Rom. vii. Therfore thou must be spirituall that thou maye kepe the lawe, which is not in thy power, but it is y e grace of God: Wherfore thou maye learne of the lawe, to knowe thy mysery, y t which after y u [Page] haste knowen, thou arte compelled to go to Christe the perfeccyon and the fulfyl­lynge of the lawe. The lawe iustifyeth the not, but it declareth to thy shame, howe farre thou arte from the dew clennesse of lyfe by thyne owne faute. Therfore thou mayest not thynke thus with thy selfe: I haue a good lawe, what nedeth more, but my laboure and dylygence? I knowe good, reason wyll tell me what is ryghte, I wyll laye to my handes, and I wyll be iustifyed by my dedes, drawen out and commaun­ded. Not so ye wycked personnes, not so, heare and take hede of the holy wordes of scripture, and the proude pharisaicall sprete shall haue hys combe cut. The Israhe­lites dyd caste in theyr myndes whan the lawe was sette forth that they coulde do all thynges, lokynge on Moses face whiche was couered: But it was sayde vnto them Deuteronomi. the .v. Chapter: Who can geue them such a minde to feare me, and to kepe my commaundementes? Surely iustifyenge begynneth at feare and loue. But ye se that they haue not the feare of the Lorde, nor suche a mynde as can do ony good of it selfe. Therfore in Deutero. xxx. sayeth Moses. The Lorde shal circumcise thyne harte. [Page] and Ezechiel. xi. I wyll take away the stony hartes. And Ihō the .vi. Ther cōmeth no mā to me, excepte my father draw hym. Wher­fore ye ypocrytes learne of the lawe youre dewty, feblenesse and paynes, and when ye fele Moses handes heuy, flye to hym for succurre with all your harte, the which Roma­nor. viii. is descrybed to be the fulfiller of y e lawe. Math. xi. Christ promysed rest of the soule to all them that be laden. For when we do the beste that lyeth in vs, we beyng euell trees, brynge fyrth euell frutes, that is to saye we synne. For such as euery man is, suche thynges dothe he thynke, speake and worke. But we be fleshe therfor we sauour of fleshly thynges. Why do we not graunte with saynt Austin in the boke of true inno­cency, y t whan a man lyueth after his owne way and not after God, he is lyke the deuel: for an angel shulde not haue lyued after an angell, but after God, that he myght stonde in the trueth. A mā hath nought of hym self, but lyeng and synne: but yf a man haue ony trueth or ryghteousnesse, he hath it of the welle, which is Christe: And that which we haue by goddes lyberalite, hangeth of gods power, and not of oure myght. Fyrst cōsider me well the wordes of the holy goost. Ro. ix [Page] where he calleth his owne y e vessels of mer­cy, and Roma. viii. The children of God, be led with the sprite of god. Esaie. xxvi. Lorde thou hast wrought all our workes in vs.

Therfore knowlege thyself y e handy worke of y e almyghty maker, ordened in Chiste Iesu to brynge forth good workes, that he hath ordeyned (marke which he hath ordeyned) y t we shuld worke in them Ephes. ii. Therfore that thou consentest to the inspiracion of God, hast a good wyll, and workest wel: the grace of god worketh all these thynges in y e. Thou in dede cōsentest, wylleste, and wor­kest: but god maketh the to consente, wyll, and worke, so that thys sayng also may be alwayes iustly layd before thyne eyes: what hast thou, that thou hast not receaued? Yf thou hast receaued it of other, why doest thou reioyce & boaste, as though thou haddest not receaued it? i. Corinth. iiii. Not to vs Lorde, not vnto vs, but to thy name geue prayse. Behold nowe not thy frewyll but bounde. But yf the sonne delyuer the, then salte thou be truly fre. Iohā. viii. For we be delyuered from syn by Christ, that we may serue ryghteousnesse. Roma. vi.

¶ Of fayth & workes, the newe learnynge.

Not onely faythe iustifyeth, for workes iustifye also, and fayth may stande and be without, good fruts & grace that iustifieth in hym that is a breaker of y e cōmaundemēt of god. Therfore ther are two kyndes of rygh­teousnesses necessary to saluatiō, that is to wyte of fayth & workes. The one without y e other (excepte a mā haue no tyme or leasur) doth not saue a man.

¶ The olde learninge.

We suppose that a man is iustifyed by fayth without the dedes of the lawe. Ro. iii. Here the Apostell doth not doute or gesse (as som do vnderstonde hym a mysse) for y e truthe of the greke hath we reken or gather by reason: For Theophilactus doth expoūde thys word & sayth sillogizometha, as though by reasonynge he gathered thys foresayde sayenge. Wherfore workes do not iustifye, but fayth. And this is not my dreame, but y e moost pure doctrine of y e holy goost, in y e .iii. & .iiii. to the Roma. Where as the Apostell reasonyng by y e scripture of Abrahā beyng iustifyed, most euidently proueth y t fayth is rekened to vs for righteousnes. Yf Abrahā (sayth he) was iustified by his works, he hath where vpō he may boast, but not before god [Page] For what sayeth the scripture? Genest. xv. Abraham gaue credence to God, and that was rekened vnto hym for righteousnesse. And in the ende of y e fourth chapt he sayeth: That it was not wrytten for hym onely, y t it was rekened to hym for ryghteousnesse, but also for vs, to whome it shal be rekened. Nother vnderstandeth he here onely the ceremonyall workes of the lawe, but also of the .x. cōmandementes, the which is playne. Roma. iii. when he sayde that no man was iustifyed by the workes of the lawe, shortly after he sayeth: For the knowlege of syn is thorow the lawe. The which clause doth sufficiētly shewe, of what workes, of y e lawe he speaketh. Yf it be so that oure workes also do iustifye, than Christ geueth but the halfe of oure saluacion, and then how many sa­ueours shal ther be? Ther is onely but one iustifyer and saueoure, that is Christe: by whome we be iustifyed frely, thorow hys grace. Roma. iii. Thefore workes do not iu­stifye, but fayth in Christe: not that fayth y e scoolmen cal informis (that is a dead fayth) but that true and lyuyng faythe, workynge by charite. Gala. v. chapt. lykewyse as we be iustifyed before god by fayth, the which is y e true iustifycacion: so before men (that se vs [Page] in the face) we be iustifyed by workes: that is to saye we be knowen to be ryghteous by the frute of good workes, of y e which thynge the wordes of saynt Iames ought to be vn­derstonde: so he y t wyll loke well on Paules disputacion of fayth and workes, shall easely perceaue, why y t we saye that faythe alone iustifyeth. For we fayne not with this word alone, a fayth that is wthout charite, but we shew that workes be not the begynnyng of oure iustifycacion. Also we be not saued by workes. Titum. iii. but accordynge to the mercy of god, thorow the lauour of regene­racion, and by renewynge of the holy goost lest ony man shulde boaste of man. Good workes are not forbydden by this doctrine, but faythe y e welle of good workes is taught and vnto grace is geuen that is hyr dewty. Parte of the prayse is geuen vnto vs, by the newe learnyng of scoolmen, y e which thynge how blasphemous a thyng it is, the faythful Christē men can tell. And so y e old learnyng taketh not away workes, but setteth them in theyr place, that they maye be witnesses of our fayth, subdue the fleshe, & serue our neyghbour, but not that they shuld iustifye: seynge y t onely fayth of y e mere mercy of god thorow his worde doth iustifye a man. The [Page] person that is iustified, worketh iustly, yet for al that, it doth not boaste of the righte­ousnesse of workes as necessary to saluatiō, leste when it seketh his owne righteousnes­se, it lese the ryghteousnesse of God, that is faythe. Roma. x. And it graunteth the very truth with Esay .lxiiii. That the ryghteousnesse of his workes, is lyke a fylthy clothe, defyled with the flours of a woman. And he an vnprofitable seruaunt. The which is onely y e way to come to true ryghteousnesse of oure workes. That is when thou wor­kyng besely, yet in al thy workes knowlegest thy self a synner: & flyēge onely to y e grace of the mediatour, settest muche by the pryce of oure redempciōn For yf the ryghteousnesse of our workes, be of ony value, the death of Christe hath not wholy and fully wrought oure saluacion, the whiche is blasphemous. The short argument of Paule stondeth and is sure and vnmoueable: Yf the righ­teousnesse come of the lawe, then is Christe dead in vayne: But Christ dyed not in vayne, therfore ye boaste in vayne of the ryghteousnesse of workes and of the lawe.

¶ Of meryte or deseruynge, the newe learnynge

Whan we do that lyeth in vs ī drawynge out of a good mocion towarde god by y e frenesse of y e wyll, we deserue the fyrste grace of congruite & semlynesse, although not of worthynes. Also the soule endued w t grace by an acte drawē out of y e frewyll & of grace deserueth worthely euerlastynge lyfe. Be­holde christen reader, whan as carnall wys­dome shall heare that she hath such power, and can drawe forth by naturall power a good mocion towarde God, & may deserue therby, wyll she not fall to the pharisaycall pryde? and wyll she not attribute to her selfe it that pertayneth to god? The whiche is nothynge elles, but to treade vnder fete y e sonne of god, and to reken the bloud of the testamente but as an vnholy and a ꝓphane thynge, by y e which we be fanctifyed. More­ouer oure nature which leaneth and setteth to muche by her selfe, swellynge wyth thys learnynge, is brought into cōfidence of workes. For nature hearyng that we partly can deserue euerlastynge lyfe with oure dedes: wyll enforce herselfe to heape together me­rytes: the whiche beyng many and plente­ous, she wyl truste and haue a good hope in them: and when they fayle an decay, she wyll fall in to despayre: by the whiche [Page] errour the worthynesse and deseruyng of Chrystes death is defaced and hyd wyth darcknes, and mans conscience is buylded vpon the sonde of workes, and surely at euery tempeste of tribulacion it wyll fall.

¶ The olde learnynge.

In the seconde Epistle vnto Timothe y e i. Chapter. God saued vs not accordyng to oure workes, but accordyng to his purpose and grace, which was geuen vnto vs before y e euerlastyng tymes. Such lyke is ther also Tit. iii. Itē. Ephe. ii. Ye be saued by grace thorow fayth, and not of youre selues: it is y e gyft of God, & not of workes, leste ony man shulde boaste. The scripture here taketh a­way the cause of deseruynge or merite frō oure workes, and geueth to grace that we be saued. For that he sayth: not accordyng to our workes, and also: not of yow, suerly he doth not admitte or receaue that acte or dede that is drawen out of wyll, to y e prayse of saluacion or merite. Christe deserued all thinges vnto vs with his bloud. And we are iustifyed frely Roma. iii. The heretage was not gottē by oure laboure, but by Christes. The fayth in Christe maketh vs sonnes, therefor heyres: ergo, workes do it not. Ro. [Page] iiii. To hym that worketh is the rewarde not rekened of fauoure, but of deutye. To hym that worketh not, but beleueth in hym that iustifyeth the vngodly, is fayth coūted for ryghteousnesse. Ro. viii. For I suppose y t the affliccyons of this lyfe, are not worthy the glory which shalbe shewed vpon vs. Lu. vii. Whan ye haue done all thynges that be cōmaunded you, yet saye that ye be vnpro­fyble seruauntes. Esay. lxiiii. All our ryghteousnesses are as a defyled cloth. &c. i. Corin. iiii. What haste thou y t thou hast not recea­ued? Rom. xi. Who hath geuen hym oughte afore hande, that he myght be recompenced agayn? Philip. ii. It is God which worketh in you, both the wyll & also the dede, euē of good wyll. Yf so be that God worketh in vs goodnesse, what shal we arrogaūtly clayme and ascrybe there vpon to oure power and strength? And yf we deserue the blysse, why doth scripture cal it grace? Therfore be not we saued by oures, but onely by the workes & merytes of Christ. But where as y e scrip­ture somtyme maketh mencyon of rewarde ther can no man there vpon take iuste oc­casyon to swell and be proude: for fayth workynge by charite is the gyfte of God, good workes are the gyfte of God, so that, yf [Page] God do rewarde vs, we muste vnderstande that he doth not rewarde oure workes, but his owne workes in vs. But thou yf thou clayme ony thynge there vpon to thy selfe, then shalte thou receaue no reward of glorye wyth the wycked pharyses, but thou shalte fele the punyshment of the fyre of hell. And seynge that it is so, it maye be easely iudged, who teacheth more truely. I wyth the Apostle do alwayes exorte mē, to the true good workes, whiche be done in fayth, alwayes takynge hede that a mā by reason of them, trust not in hymselfe, and be reproued with the pharyse. They do so pricke and moue vnto good workes, that they reste and put in them the hope of sal­uacyon, and the cause of merites: wherby at chaūseth that euery where men do them wyth this false opinion, to be iustifyed and saued by them. We not despysynge y e grace of God, do teach, both y t we be saued only by the grace of God, and we buylde mens conscyences not vpon workes, but vpon y e stone that is Christ, agaynst the whiche the gates of hell can not preuayle, and do al­wayes beate in this moost confortable gos­pell, or glad tydynges. That heretage is geuen by fayth, that the promyses may be sure [Page] after grace. As sayeth Paul Ro. iiii. and .v. We iustifyed by fayth, haue peace wyth God thorowe Christe.

¶ Of synne. The new learnynge.

The lust or concupiscence that remayneth in a man after baptyme, the lawe of the membres, infirmitie, or sycknesse, is no synne nother veniall nor mortall, and after baptyme it is not original, but is the payne of synne. Neuerthelesse it bryngeth forth synne. This opinion maketh a man that is baptysed slowe and dull to fyght agaynst y e fleshe, for he beleueth that he is all whole & in sauegarde.

¶ The olde learnynge.

Concupiscence which sheweth her selfe by hir euell frutes, euen in a man that is baptysed, is synne of her selfe. Ro. vii. Here the Apostle sayeth: Now I myne owne selfe do not this, but y e synne which dwelleth & remayneth in me. The Apostel doth not here speake ī y e person of wycked mē, for wycked mē do not cōsent to y e law, they serue & obey not y e law of god w t theyr mynde. S. Austē was sōtyme of this opiniō, y t the apostle had spokē these wordes in y e person of euel men, but ī his retractiōs, & against Iuliā he doth reuoke this opiniō, and he sayd that at that [Page] tyme he vnderstode not Apostell aryght. Now he that speaketh so, and was baptysed, and was the electe instrument of God, and yet complayneth of concupiscence and cal­leth it synne, then let the scoolemē tell, whether the Apostell doth well call that concu­piscence, which bryngeth forth euell frutes (excepte it be stopped) synne or no? Yee let them tell whether the holy goost dyd erre in that worde. Verely .i. Corin. xiiii. the Apos­tell thanketh God that he spake more wyth tunges, then all the Corinthians dyd. Therfore so great an Apostell knewe with what wordes he shuld name concupiscence. Whē we folowe that maner of speakyng, we are chaced out, mocked, and cast out as herety­kes of them that are lytell moued, with the cause of so great matters, so that they may triumphe in the worlde and lyue in peace. Then the trueth is, that concupiscence (the which bryngeth forth the same frutes after baptyme that it dyd before) is called synne: as the Apostel doth exhorte thē that be baptysed, Ro. vi. Let not synne reygne in your mortall bodyes. He doth not saye concupis­cence, but synne, for so the trueth of y e greke hath. Moreouer ther is no man but he knoweth that synne is knowen by the lawe, but [Page] this concupiscence is forboden of the lawe, for it is synne. Infirmityes surely & also paynes do not fall vnder the precepte. And it is knowen that the Apostell sayeth Ro. vii. I dyd not knowe synne, but by the lawe, for I had not knowen that cōcupiscence had ben a synne, yf the lawe had not sayd thou shalt not lust, and by and by he calleth it synne. But this is the difference, namely before y e baptyme of the sprete and water, that con­cupiscence or lust was a synne raygnynge, but after the wasshynge of regeneration, it is synne ouercōme and subdued: of his own nature in dede it is euell, but a man truely regenerate, and not walkynge after y e flesh, doth represse and holde downe synne with the spret of grace, y t it raygne not, nor haue the ouerhande, that ther be no damnacyon vnto them that be grafted in Christ. Roma. viii. For it is not rekened hym to damnaci­on, for the sprete that resysteth the fleshe. The whiche thynge saynt Austen in these wordes doth conclude: All synne is forgeuē in baptyme, not that it shulde not be at all, but that it shulde not be rekened for synne. Now iudge good reader, which of vs speake more truly: they that make so lyght a thyng of this olde leuen of malyce, callynge it a [Page] lytel infirmite onely, whiche neuerthelesse is no veniall synne, do not know y e grace of god, & do blaspheme vs y t make a great thing of it: as it is a great thynge in very dede, & y t we shulde haue nede of y e great grace of God. We do exalte & magnifye w t kynde deuocion & godlynes y e bloud of Christ: where w t al synne is pourged & redemed y t we low­ly cōfessours & graūters of our synnes, may fynde grace in y e eyes of god y e iuste iudge.

¶ Of worshippynge of sayntes. The new

Not only Christ is our mediatour, but al­so the sayntes which raygne in heauē with Christ: wherfor they ought to be called vpō as mediatours of intercessiō, y e which pur­chase vnto vs many good thinges. Our Lorde diuidyng his kyngdom hath cōmitted the one halfe of his kyngdom, (y t is mercy) to y e sayntes, to be geuē and distributed vnto the worlde: y e other part (y t is iudgement) he ke­peth behynde for himselfe. For he y t wyll ob­tayne ony thynge of a prynce he seketh out some mā of authorite, at whose request he may obtayne y t he wyl haue, y e which shulde not spede yf he came to y e prince alone. Ma­ry y e mother of God yf she brake y e heade of the old serpēt, why shuld she not be a meane for mankinde? Therfore our lady & y e saītes do worke partly our saluation. The blessed [Page] virgin is y e neck, Christ is y e head, & we be y e mēbres: no good gyftes come downe into y e mēbres, but thorow Mary as y e necke. Also the saintes worke miracles. For how many beyng syck w t diuerse sicknesses, haue bē holpen at y e monumētes & tōbes of the saintes.

¶ The olde learnynge.

A synner alone maye not appeare in the syght of God, (for our god is a cōsumynge fyre. Heb. xiii.) except he be brought to hym by a mediatour, for whose merites sake he doth forgeue y e synners trespasses. Christ is y e mediatour .i. Timo. ii. Heb. ix. Ro. viii. our satisfacciō .i. Io. ii. our ryghteousnesse .i. Cor i. our prest for euer, Psal. cix. Heb. iiii.v.vii.viii.ix.x. Christ is not a fearfull iudge to faythful mē, but an aduocate, callyng vnto him those y t be ladē. Mat. xi. He is of so great mercy y t he gaue his lyfe for his shepe. Io. x. Mat. xx. Then we ought not to be afrayed of Christe, as yf he were a iudge, but we ought to come to y e trone of grace, because we be synners, y t so we myght be delyuered of synne: for he is the lambe. &c. Mat. ix. Lu. v. He came not in to this world to cal rygh­teous men. &c. A syck man feareth not a phisicyan, but the sycker that he is the more desyrous he is of y e phisicyan. Shall that phisicyan [Page] which dyed for vs, when we were yet synners. Ro. v. be now vnconstāt and do no thinge but threaten & kyl, so y t we haue nede of some mā to playe y e mediatour & meane betwene hym & vs, to swage his wrath? O vnsemynge thought of a christē mā. What a carnall and a fleshly dreame is this? How fonde a kinde of fellowes are these? how vnlearned in the scripture? Who dyed for vs? dyd Steuen or Peter? Dyd not Christ dye for vs? & that of suche a charite, as is not a­ble to be expressed. Io. xv. Greater loue thē this can no man haue, euen that a man bestowe his lyfe for his frendes. And yet for al that great charite we dreame y t Christ is a fearfull tyraunt & that he wyll put awaye a wretched synner nedynge a phisicyan, with a cruel coūtenaūce & cōmytte hym to y e tourmentours, excepte he brynge some saynt w t hym. So worship we now the sōne of God which humbled hymselfe to the death of the crosse, that we not beleuynge his wordes, whā he sayeth: Come to me & I shall refresh you, I am y e waye, I bestowe my lyfe for my shepe, but dare be so bolde as to accuse hym of lyeng, & say these be voyde wordes which y u doest say. Thou hast cōmitted mercy to y e saintes, y u canst do nothing els but threatē & [Page] vndo synners. I wyll turne me to some of y e sayntes which shalbe me patrone and aduo­cate by the. Are not these saynges wicked & vngodly? yet they y t wolde be rekened moost holy of all, be of thys mynde and opinion, & they condemne vs of heresye before y e mat­ter be knowen. The scripture byddeth vs axe in the name of Christe, such thynge as we haue nede of, Iohā. xvi. and not in the name of sayntes. Recōciliacion & saluation is in none other name. Actu. iiii. The prest­hode of Christe is for euermore. And y e Apostell sayeth. Ro. viii. that Christ remayneth & abydeth at the ryght hande of the father & maketh intercession for vs. He is onely the way to the father. Iohā. xiiii. By hym we haue an entraūce to come to y e father Ephe ii. By hym we haue boldnesse and intraūce to god in all confidence thorow the fayth in hym. Ephe. iii. He is oure hope .i. Timoth. i. He came that he myght saue synners. i. Ti­moth. i. He gaue hym self an oblacion to god for vs Ephesiās. v. And we amonge so many prayses of burnyng charite & fre mercy haue not learned yet to truste in hym, whiche is our reconcyler, and brynger in fauour so gē tell and lyberall, that he dyd not dysdayne to be an oblacion for syn for vs, y t we myght [Page] be made the ryghteousnesse of god thorow hym: so myghty, that they y t beleue in hym, cā not be ashamed. Roma. ix. Farther more the mother that is a virgyne vsurpeth or ta­keth vnto her none of those thynges, y t they synge to hyr prayse. I pray yow for shame darre the corrupters of scripture geue that vnto the mother, which the holy goost dyd prophecy of the sonne of God. Genesis iii? For he and not she dyd breake the serpē ­tes head. In somuch that I can not tel whe­ther I shuld maruayl more vpon the grosse & rustical ignoraunce of these greate masters or that I shulde crye out vpon the wycked & vngodly opinion that they haue of Chryste. They haue so lytell regarde what they say, y t al the thought that they take is, y t alwayes they shulde be sayenge somthynge. And euē as in tymes paste the philosophers of Epi­cures secte and y e Stoykes affyrmed y t God dyd none other wayes, and had no other subsistence, then they thought he had: and subscrybed the nature of God with vayne dreames & deuyces of theyr opinions, lyke­wyse oure false diuynes do ymagen Christe to geue from hym his mercy to sayntes, and to be a fearfull iudge, and that he dam­neth all synners, excepte that he be pleased [Page] [...] swaged by the intercession of some saynte. And this ymaginacion pleaseth them well, and they cōmaunde the church so to beleue. Also these fellowes make Mary the necke of the mysticall body. Who can abstayne from laughyng (yee rather wepynge.) They make artycles of the fayth besyde the scrip­ture of theyr owne brayne, and where they shuld onely stycke to y e scripture, they bryng forth old wyues fables for sounde and true thynges, mesurynge al godly thynges wyth the plummet or lyne of our reason, and by y e similytudes of thys world. And whā as they tryfle bothe vnlearnedly and vngodly, yet they be not afrayed to dryue to the fyre as many as wyll not play the fooles with thē. And that in all poyntes they may play the false doctors they wrafte the scriptures to confirme theyr errours, of the which thyng I haue spoken very largely in oure cōmmu­ne places. But left ony man shuld thynke that I saye thys in the reproche of sayntes, so I thynke: that sayntes shuld be worship­ped, but after the rule of scripture. Seynge that they be the glorious membres of y e mysticall body, y e houshold meny of God, and ioyned vnto vs w t the moost surest bonde of charite. For charite perysheth not, but is [Page] made perfect in heauen: wherfore they loue vs, and couet with a brotherly loue oure amendment. Therfore let vs reuerently & holyly kepe the memory and remembraunce of them, in the which we may se y e wysdom of God, his goodnesse, power and the vnspeakeable ryches of mercy, to the exercyse of our fayth hope and charyte. For as ofte as we remembre theyr manly fyghtyng a­gaynst the gates of hell, and the manyfold grace of god, the which the father of all con­fort poured forth vpō these vessels of mercy we are lyfted vp in hope and truste of so great goodnesse. And we be prouoked to the folowynge of so greate perseueraunce by theyr vertues, set out as whement intyse­mentes. What good and deuout mā is ther but he wyll desyre with all his hart, that he myght ouercōme y e enemye of owre salua­tion, with suche strength of fayth as y e sayn­tes were endued and harnessed with all, y t at the laste hys enemyes ouercome, he myght be associate and accōpanyed for euer more, with y e electe and chosen of god? And whan he doth se so excellent vessels of glory made of the chyldren of wrathe, and of the lompe of perdicion, not by mans merites, but by the power of the grace of god: that [Page] he wyll conceaue a trusty hope of so mercy­full a father, y e which made vs worthy when he founde vs vnworthy. Then yf we pray to God for fayth, hope, and charite. And seke the kyngdome of heauē before al other thynges, we maye folow the footesteppes of the ryght sayntes, then haue we worshipped the sayntes very well, and euē as we shulde do. For the wyl of God and the sayntes is one, wherfore what other thynge wyll they axe, then the amendement of a synner, and the contynuall recordyng and remembraunce of the lawes of God. But that we shulde flye for succurre to them, in oure aduersite & nede, that they may be meanes betwene vs and God, they nother do require it: for they seke nothynge but the glory of God, nother can we desyre them to be mediatours for vs excepte we do iniury to the moost perfyte & moost sufficiēt mediatour of all. Now seyng that the scripture is our candell, in y e moost darke nyght of thys world, we be more sure that call vpon God by Christe (the whiche thynge the scripture doth commaunde) then they which imagen new kyndes of worship­pyng and inuocacions, of the which y e scrip­ture maketh no mencion at all. Call vpon me (sayeth the Lord) in y e tyme of tribulaciō [Page] & I shall delyuer y e and thou shalt honor me. Psalmo. xlvi. And Ioel. ii. Whosoeuer wyll call on the name of God for helpe shalbe sa­ued. And in thys matter we force not vpon long tyme or longe costume: for christen­dome or a christen mans lyuyng, standeth, not in the passyng ouer of longe tyme, or in the oldnesse or antiquite of costume, but in the scriptures of euerlastyng truth.

Now good reader iudge what kynne of christen men they be, that fasten theyr hope not in Christe, but in creatures, knowyng no­thynge at all how muche helpe we haue in Christe. They differ very lyttell from ido­latrers, & whyle they go aboute moost ear­nestly to honoure sayntes, they dyshonour them farre out of rule and fashion that can be: euen when they geue away from god to the creature hope and confidence, the which is dew onely to god. As touchyng the myra­cles reade the .xxiiii. chapter of Math. and the seconde of the .ii. Epistell to the Tessa­lonyans, & youre mynde shalbe at reste and certifyed.

¶ Of the supper of the Lorde, The newe learnynge.

The sacrament of the aultare muste be [Page] geuen onely vnto prestes vnder both y e kyn­des, and to lay men onely vnder the kynde of bread, because that Christe by a naturall accompaninge or folowyng is whole vnder bothe the kyndes, accordyng vnto that say­enge of the sequence: The flesh is meate, & bloud is dryncke, Christe abydeth for al that whole vnder both the kyndes. A lay man must take his ryghtes euery yeare once at the leaste accordyng to the chapter Omnis vtriusque. &c. The masse of a prest is a sacrifyce both for quyck and dead, and the syn & the vnclenesse of the person of the minister stoppeth not the frute, seyng y t the wrought worke of the masse hath strength, and y e o­blacion is made in the person of the whole church: wherefore it is a great merite, for by it we deserue muche to oure selues, and also to other. Wherfore the ordinaunces of masses be good, and yearly obytes be profitable. For in other good workes the wyckednesse of the person of the minister taketh awaye the cause of the merite: here it letteth nothynge, where as the faythe of the churche is consydered, and not the worthynesse of y e person. Thys is the sūme: A wycked man and an vngodly, hauyng on­ly a dewe intent, although he be an abo­mynable [Page] in the syght of God, yet for al that in thys cause, because he beareth y e persōne or is in the rowme of y e church, he abydyng a synner and a dānable person, he purchas­seth and deserueth vnto other men, remis­syon of syn and euerlastyng lyfe. This they saye.

The olde learnynge.

The Apostell in the fyrst epistell to the Corinthians the .xi. chapter, preparyng the supper of the Lorde, dyd wryte that he toke of the Lorde that he taught and gaue to the Corinthians. And whan he expounded the busynesse and matter cōcernyng the supper he geueth both the kyndes indifferently to all the bretheren, euē as Christ dyd ordeyne. Mathe. xxvi. Marke. xiiii. Luke. xxii. Here we haue the worde and the facte of the Lor­de, and of hys minister Paule and also of y e primitiue church, in the which as thē fayth was more lyuely, charite was more feruent hope was more sure, and holy christendom was more purer, for it was nearer y e quycke sprynge. Yf it be so that it is not leful for vs to kepe the worde and the dede of Christ, & specially in a great mater, as is y e sacramēt for what intent shall the churche of God [Page] haue the scripture expoūded and declared? Dyd not euen the new wryters (as Gersō) saye: That nother the byshop of Rome nor generall councell, nor yet the church oughte to chaūge the learnynge y t was geuen vs by the euangelistes, & by Paul? Yf it be law­full to euery man y t lyst, to chaunge in y e sa­cramētes of y e church, those thynges which Christ taught to be kept, & the apostles both taught and kept: I pray you what case shall the church be in then, which shalbe cōpelled to beleue y t Christ y e wysedome of y e father, & the Apostels dyd teach christendom such vnperfecte geare & so negligently y t theyr suc­cessours had nede to supplye, amēde & make perfecte those thynges y t Christ & his Apo­stels lefte behynde them raw & vnperfect? Wyll the Saracens, y e Arabiās, & the Aga­rens (whome we call Turkes) suffer y t ony mā at his pleasure after this fashion shulde chaūge theyr Alcoram, & wolde sōtyme take somthyng away, somtyme vtterly abrogate & disanul it, y t theyr lawmaker had wrytten, somthynge vnwarely, or w tout diligent hede & delyberacyon? And we christen mē except we suffer y e church to be turned out of fra­me & peruerted, to be darkened & to be pul­led in sunder & minished, Yee to be vtterly [Page] cast awaye, we be banyshed & destroyed as the enemyes of the church. Put the case y t these be tollerable: who can abyde that ydel felowes shall make marchaundyse of it that was lefte to be the memoriall and remem­braunce of the death whiche brought lyfe, wherby they make a sacrifyce of the masse, & crucifye Christ agayne, as much as lyeth in them? For yf it be so that they worke with theyr dayly sacrifyce (as they call it) remis­syon of synne, I praye you thē what synnes dyd the bloude of the new & euerlastyng testament take awaye? This is therfore our catholyke belefe of the supper of the Lorde.

Fyrst: The supper of the Lord ought for to be done after the ordinaunce of Christe i. Cor. xi. that our fayth maye be increaced, our charite may be kyndled, our hope maye be made sure, by y e cōtinual remēbraunce of the death of the Lorde: & that we knowyng the cause of the moost precyous death of y e Lorde, maye be dayly more and more stea­red vp, to geue thankes for the vnspeakea­ble loue, to destroye the body of synne and to walke in newnesse of lyfe.

Secondarly, Therfore the supper of the Lorde is a memoriall of the death of Christe, whiche brought saluacyon and not [Page] a sacrifyce, but a remembraūce of the sacri­fyce y t was once offred vp vpon the crosse.

Thyrdly, Ther is a promes. Psal. c.ix. that Christ shalbe our byshop for euermore ordened of the father: and this promes is perfourmed, for Christ hath entred once in to the holy place, by an oblacyon makynge perfect for euermore. Hebr. ix. and .x. so that we nede not to haue hym offred vp for vs agayne, the which dyeth nomore.

Fourthly, We knowe of the boke Leuiticus, that the oblacyō of Moses was made for synnes, whan the oblacyon dyd satisfye and the bloude dyd washe. Thē yf this one sacrifyce, (in the which Christ dyd offer vp hymselfe) dyd satisfye for the synnes of the whole worlde, accordynge to the prophecye of Esay. the .liii. Chapter. He dyd beare our synnes, and he was torne for oure wycked­nesses, and .i. Ioh. the .ii. Chapter. He is oure satisfaccyon and so forth: it foloweth and is a good argument, y t all the oblacyons which are besyde this, be vayne and voyd y e which they pretende?

Fyftly, To rayse vp a new oblacyon is to set lytel by the fyrst, to proue God a lyar and to deny Christe whiche bought vs, af­ter the wordes of saynt Peter .ii. Pet. ii.

For whan they saye y t synnes be releassed & forgeuen in the sacrifice of y e masse, whan y e sonne of God is offered vp both for quycke & dead, it foloweth after theyr opinion, that that onely sacrifice of y e crosse dyd not satisfye for all synnes. And I praye you is not y t euen to forsweare & denye y e Lorde which dyd redeme vs, not w t corruptible thynges, as with golde & syluer but w t his owne precious bloud, whā we say y t it is done by y e vertue of y t masse, y e which al scripture doth say cōmeth to vs by the death of our Lorde Ie­sus Christ?

Syxtly. Yet for al that we do not affirme y e synnes be remytted only by y e partakynge of the supper of the Lorde, but whan we do remēbre w t a true & a kynde fayth the bene­fyte of our redemption, in the which y e sōne of god dyd geue his body a sacrifyce for synnes, & shed his bloud to washe away synne: by this fayth we be iustifyed & made rygh­teous, & we obtayne remissyon of our syn­nes, gotten by the death of Christ. And this is a dilicyous feast of soules, of the whiche they that are not partakers shall peryshe.

Christ in the .vi. Chap. of Ihon sayeth. My fleshe is meate in dede, and my bloude is drynke in dede. The bread that I shal geue, [Page] is my flesh the which I wyll geue for y e lyfe of the worlde. Excepte we eate this fleshe of the sonne of man and drynke his bloud, we shall not haue lyfe in vs, but we shal pe­ryshe. For it is the breade of lyfe, geuynge lyfe to the worlde. The whiche breade to eate, is to beleue in Christ as he sayeth: I am the bread of lyfe, he that cōmeth to me shall not be an hūgred, and he that beleueth in me shall neuer be thyrsty. Verely verely I saye vnto you, he that trusteth in me hath euerlastynge lyfe. For as the body is fed w t naturall bread, so the soule is refreshed & ly­ueth with this heauenly bread. For whā the soule beleueth that Christ is y e pryce of oure redemption, our satisfaccyon, and our rygh­teousnesse, with this fayth it eateth y e flesh, and drynketh the bloude, and accordynge to the wordes of Christ Ioh. vi. by so wholsome an eatyng shal we lyue for euer. These be so great thynges which be rehearsed aboute y e table of the Lorde. God graunt that this ceremony of Christe, maye be restored to hys olde strength and integrite agayne, that we which be the body of Christ oure heade, ad­monished of the loue of God in the supper towarde vs, maye growe together with vn­lowsable glew of loue, as it becommeth [Page] membres, purgynge the flocke with y e boult of excommunicacyon, and eatynge truely the fleshe of the Lorde, that is to beleue in Christe crucifyed, and that we may be grafted in hym by the lykenesse of his death, and that we maye be partakers wyth hym, of the moost gloryous resurreccyon.

Amen.

¶ Of the choyse of meates. The new learnynge.

It is not lawfull to eate euery daye all sortes of meate, for it is necessary that we abstayne from fleshe euery frydaye and sa­terdaye, and on the embrynge dayes and in lent: for he that doth otherwyse without the Bisshop of Romes bulles or the pardons of the legates of the sye of Rome, doth syn, and shalbe rekened an euell christen man, yee a wycked and an vngodly heretyke.

¶ The olde learnynge.

In the .xi. Chapter of Leuiticus, and y e xiiii. of Deuteronomion, the choyse of meates is prescribed vnto y e Iewes, which were vnder Moses, so that it was not lawfull to eate what so euer meate they lyste. But let vs which are commaunded of Paul to the [Page] Gal. the .v. Chapter. to stande fast in the ly­berte, in to the which Christe hath brought vs, and that we shulde not put our neckes vnder the yocke of bondage agayne, geue hede and attendaunce what oure mayster Christ and Lorde doth saye: Math. xv. Hear and vnderstād: It that goeth in to y e mouth defyleth not the man, but it that goeth out of the mouth that defyleth a man. These wordes of Christ take awaye the choyse of meates so that it is lawful in the tyme of y e new testamēt to eate flesh or fyshe whether ye wyll without ony synne. In the fyrste e­pistel to Timo. the .iiii. Chap, the holy goost doth call the forbyddynge of meate & of mariage, the doctrine of the deuell: For God hath created meate to be receaued with ge­uynge of thankes of them which beleue, & haue knowen the trueth: for the creatures of God are good, and nothynge to be refu­sed, yf it be receaued with thankes geuyng: for it is sanctifyed by the worde of God & prayer. By this one texte of the Apostle is plucked vp by y e rootes, what so euer hether to mē haue taught or cōmaūded of y e choyse of meates. For the holy goost calleth it dy­uelysh doctrine the whiche no man cā kepe & obey w tout the losse of his saluacyō. Let it [Page] moue no mā that saynt Ierome doth wrast these sayenges agaynste the Tacyans and the Marcionites, doutlesse our consciences be delyuered from the choyse of meates by these wordes of the holy goost. Therfore who so euer he be, Marcyon or ony of this tyme that byndeth wyth a commaundemēt that thynge which Christ wolde haue to be fre, he is reproued wyth this texte as vn­kynde to God, and a despyser of a good creature. Collossenses the .ii. Chapter sayeth Paule: Let no man iudge you in meat and drynke. Yf you be dead wyth Christe from the elementes of the worlde, why be you holden wyth decrees, as yf ye were lyuyng in the worlde? This texte also is playne agaynste all the praysers and preachers of mans tradicyons, the whiche do trouble mens conscyences wyth mans preceptes, of the choyse of meates. Although thys maketh agaynste the obseruacyons of the Iewes, yet it plucketh vp by the rootes all the tradicyons of men in thys matter.

For yf Moses lawe in that poynt be abro­gate and put downe, the which was once ordened of God: how muche more iustly the constitucyōs of mē ought to be disanulled & put awaye? by y e which these cruel tyraū ­tes [Page] coueth a kyngdome in mens consciences. Gala. i. Yf ony man preach ony other gospell or glad tydynges vnto you, than ye haue receaued, holde hym acursed. Therefore what soeuer other thynge is thrust into oure handes agaynst and besyde the worde of God, to bynde mēs cōsciences, by the sentence of the holy goost it is acursed, wherfor we must refuse it both with hand and foote. Titum. i. Rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in the fayth, and not takynge hyde to Iewes fables and commaūdemētes of men, the which turne from the trueth.

Vnto the cleane are all thynges cleane, but to them that are defyled and vnbeleuyng is nothyng cleane, but euen the very myndes and consciences of them are defyled. Who wolde not abhorre those preceptes whyche turne from the trueth? Euen so the holy gooste decketh mans tradicions w t hys tytle with the which tradicion the deceauers of mens myndes go aboute to bynde mens cō sciences, where as God byddeth not. Here I do not regarde thoshe great praysers of ab­stinence, the which wyll name me the Epi­cure of Christē men as saynt Ierome called Iouiniane, as though I wēte about to louse the brydell of gluttony. Tese felowes wyll [Page] dispute with a full belly of fastyng, and yet they eate fesans, partriches, and al y e pycked dayntyes that can be found in a contry.

Now tel me I pray yow what haue I sayde besyde the sentences of the holy goost? I do not teache the abuse, but the ryghte vse of the creatures of God, with geuynge than­kes. I take not thought onely for the belly. but also for the conscience. Fo with these mans tradycions, mens consciences be marked with an whote yron, and God is worshypped wyth commaundementes of men: the whych thynge in the .xxix. of E­saye, he hateth and abhorreth. It is a very ieoperdous matter to laye snares for mens consciences and to offende agaynst the christen lyberte which cost so much. Yf ony mā laye agaynste vs saynt Ierome, or ony o­ther of the fathers: I answere that the fa­thers were neuer in that blyndnesse, that they wolde be beleued more then the scrip­ture. He despiseth not the fathers whiche enforceth hym selfe and laboureth to glo­rify the father of all which is in heauen.

He that in the matter of conscience doth thynke, that God shulde rather be obeyed, thē man, doth not contemne men, but mag­nifyeth [Page] God, the Lorde of men and angels. And the condicion and state of christen mē is not so, that they ought to take example or rule of lyuynge of y e prophetes of Iupiter, that absteyne from fleshe and soden meate, or of the temple of Eleusis or Ceres or of Orpheus, yet that holy man is not ashamed of hys monkery of so voyde wordes in the seconde boke agaynste Iouinian. As tou­chynge offendynge, I haue taught always accordynge to the Apostles doctrine Roma xiiii. that we shulde haue a respecte and re­garde of weake personnes, that he that ea­teth, despise not hym that eateth not: He that eateth not, let hym not iudge hym that eateth. And albeit he sayeth ther is nothyng vncleane of it self, but vnto hym which re­keneth that it is vncleane: yet for all that he wyll not that oure brother shulde be gre­ued with the abuse of oure lyberte, and to be lost with meate, for whom Christe suf­fered death. Ther be other farre greater thynges than meate and drynke that a chri­sten man shulde regarde, namely, peace and edifyenge. For the kyngdome of God is not meate and drynke, but ryghteousnes­se and peace and ioye in the holy goost.

Therfore let vs folow those thynges that [Page] longe vnto peace and to the edifyeng of our brother one towarde another. Hast thou fayth? kepe it to they selfe before God. And i. Corint. viii. Knowlege maketh mā to swel charyte edyfieth, take hede leste youre lyberte offend those that be weake. All these be y e wholsome doctrines of y e holy goost, & geue none occasion of gluttony, as the defenders of tradiciōs do dreame.

¶ Of fastynge, The newe learnynge.

We must fast certayne dayes vnder y e cō maundement, as the Apostels euen the .iiii. ymbrynge dayes, and the lent.

¶ The olde learnynge.

Our lyfe is a warfare or souldyers lyfe Ioh. vii. We must fyght cōtinually with an enemye that we haue at home with in vs, namely the flesh: lest he beynge made to fat & wantō with excesse of meate and drynke, preuayle agaynst the sprite. Take hede to youreselfs (sayth Christ Luc. xxi.) lest youre hartes be ouercomme with surfettynge and dronkēnesse, that the daye of the Lord come not vnto you as a snare. Rom. xiii. doth the holy go [...]st cōmaūde to cast awaye y e workes [Page] of darknesse, & to put on y e armour of lyght, & he reherseth vnreasonable eatynge, & ban­kettynge & drōknesse amōge thē. He doth ap­poynte no certayne day, but onely he sayeth make not prouysion for the flesh to fulfyll y e lustes of it: wyllyng y t we shuld abstayne frō vnreasonable eatyng and drōkēnesse, to put awaye the workes of darknesse: not for one or two dayes, but at all tymes: Let no man thynke that thys fast is a christen mans fast which now raygneth, is commaunded, and hygly praysed, whā we fast certaine houres, and other dayes make lusty chere, worshyp­pyng our belly for our God. In the which thynge we be worse then the heythen men, which dyd order theyr lyuelode not to plea­sur, but to the health and strength of theyr bodyes. For they consyderynge what excel­lency and worthynesse ther is in the nature of man, dyd perceaue how fowle a thyng it were to flow in excesse, to lyue deliciously & pleasaūtly, and how honest it were to lyue skarsly, mesurably, sadly and soberly The A­postle monyssheth vs .i. Tessalo. v. of oure state and condition. We (sayeth he) are the childrē of lyghte and the chyldrē of the daye, let vs be sober: he byddeth vs not do so for .ii or .iii. dayes, but all the tyme that we beare [Page] about thys body of synne. Who can here in so grat diuersityes of complexiones prescribe measures and dayes? Euery man kno­weth hym self how longe he hath nede to fast, & what punishment he nedeth to tame hys fleshe wythal. Therfor we do not pre­scribe dayly fastes as y e Esseyes dyd, nor yet with the makers of tradicions fastes appo­ynted to a certen tyme: but we exhorte to contynuall sobernesse, and to se that the fleshe be brought vnder, lest whan the Lorde cōmeth we be found carelesse without ony thought. And after thys maner alwayes we do exhorte, moue, and dryue, in season and out of season the church and congregacion of Christe, to a temperate lyfe, and to a faste semynge a christen man, alwayes sa­uynge the lyberte of a christen man. But we do refuse and cast away, that fulbelly & dronken fast, as stynkynge hipocrysy the which we cast in Gods teth, euen as a me­rite, and yet it maketh nothynge for the subdwenge of the fleshe, seynge that it beynge proude by the bodely exercise onelye regardeth not true holynesse. I wyll sende these hypocrites vnto Esay the prophete to the .lviii. chap. were as they may learne sufficy­ently what maner of fast God wold haue. [Page] Thynk you (sayeth he) that I loue thys ma­ner of fastynge wherby men at prescripte & certayne dayes chasten thē selues, goynge with theyr heades wrythen downe lyke an hoke, strewed with asses, and clothed with sackcloth? Wylt thou say that thys maner of fast, and that vpon thys or y t appoynted day is more accepte to the Lord: but rather euen contrarywyse, this maner of fastynge do I alow & loue: Forgeue thy dettres wrapped in shrewed barganes, and lowse theyr violēt oblygations, set thē at lyberte whom thou dyddest cast in pryson for det, & break from them all maner of bondes and yockes, diuyde out thy meat and drinke to the hun­gry and thyrsty, and the port wayfarynge straunger lede thou home to thy house, whē thou seyest the necked, clothe hym, & turne not thy face from thyne owne flesh. Here thou seyest that the body in dede must be chastysed, but that outwarde punishement doth lytell auayle, excepte thou orden it to the fastynge of the mynde, that is, to abstayne from euell desyres and affecti­ons, and frome couetousnesse and vn­mercyfulnesse. And that ye may fast after thys wyse, ye nede no choyce of meates excepte the manner or cause of tamynge [Page] of the flesh require it. For thou dost absteyn and vsest very skarscely all maner of meat to the sustenaunce of thy nature: therfore thou mayst vse fyshe or fleshe, whether thou wylt: how be it fyfshesde a maner of flesh as witnesseth the Apostle .i. Corinth. xv. and Plini, in hys hystorye of nature: lest ony playenge the Iew, shuld wrench hys nose at thys.

¶ Of the difference of dayes, The newe learnynge.

The dayes be not equall and alyke, som be holy and so be not al, wherfore the sonday is holy day to all christē men, to be halowed in ydelnesse, lykewyse oure ladyes dayes, & the Apostelles dayes, & other chosen of the church to kepe holy daye and to abstayn frō laboure so that yf ony mā do ony seruyle or handy laboure, and worke in the afore sayde dayes, he synneth. Wherfore yf ony man cō strayned by necessite do ony worke, ether at home, or abrode on y e holy daye, he shalbe more cruelly handled of the byshoppes, offi­ciales, and curates, than yf he had cōmytted aduowtry, or had pylled his negboure with vsury.

¶ The olde learninge.

Certayne dayes must be appoynted wher vpon men must forbeare frō handylaboure not that the daye shulde be holyer and wor­thyer in the which we mete together, but y t the inordinate commynge together shulde not mynish y e fayth in Christ. And that we maye heare the better and more commodi­ously, the worde of euerlastynge health, & maye receaue the supper of the Lorde, and shewe to God with commune peticyon the necessite and nede of the church, and y t we maye praye together. Ther must nedes be certayne dayes appoynted in the whiche (whyle as the busynesse of the soule is in hande) we must absteyne from prophane & housholde labours. Yet for all that we must take hede lest we lese and destroye mēs soules with snares of commaundemētes: and take hede that we playe not the Iewes and obserue dayes, as they obserued the sabbath day, & the feastes of y e new Moone, against the doctrine of y e holy goost, (Gala. iiii.) as thoughe they were necessarye to be kepte for ryghteousnesse. For that were to cast a­waye the lyberte of fayth, & to turne agayn to the weake and beggerly elementes and ceremonyes, and to denye Christe. The Hebrues were commaunded to kepe y e sab­bath [Page] daye, but whan the lyght came, y e sha­dow vanyshed awaye, so that it is not law­full now to ony man, to orden ony lawe, or make synne, where scripture maketh none, and leaueth the liberte. Collos. ii. Let no mā iudge you in the parte of the Sabbath day &c. Saynt Austen speaketh thus of y e Sab­bath day in his boke of true innocency: Seyenge y t the kepynge of y e sabbath daye is taken away, the which is shadowed by the vacacyon & rest of one daye, he kepeth a perpetuall sabbath daye y t hauynge hope of y e rest to come, geueth hymselfe to holy workes, & doth not boast ī his own workes, as though he had receaued them of none other, & knowlegeth y t he worketh in hym, the which euen in workynge is quyet & at reste. Therfore saynt Ierome sayeth very well, y t in y e newe testament all dayes be equall, & lyke holy, & that euery day is the holy daye of the resurreccyon, & that it is lawfull to fast alwayes and to eate the body of the Lord, & alwayes to praye. And the Apostell Roma. xiiii. wyll not that he shulde be rashly iudged, y t which iudgeth the same of euery day. Those thinges that were cōmaunded or forbydden in the law, as concernynge dayes, meates, clothynges, places and persones, or outwarde [Page] thynges, they were ordened & layd on mens neckes, for y e tyme of correccyon: But now whan y e grace of the gospell doth shyne, they vanysh awaye, and lyberte raigneth, where by we worship God nomore with certayne dayes prefixed, and with outwarde workes, as the Iewes dyd, but in sprete and trueth. For these ceremonyes of the lawe dyd be­longe to the Iewes, and not to the gentyles Actu. xv. Ye maye se playnly. Mat. xii. Mar ii. Luce. xiiii. Ioh. v. and .ix. how that Christe the auctour of our lyberte, dyd intreate the Sabbath day. Therfore it were the byshoppes dewty to put downe some of those holy daies, y e which christen people haue no nede of, the whiche geue occasyon to the people, both to lese theyr monye and theyr soules.

¶ Of prayer. The new learnynge.

We must praye at certayne houres, as at matynes, syxt houre, the thyrde, the fyrst, at euensonge and at suche other. And it is made more conueniently in churches halo­wed vnto God accordyng to this sayenge: Blesse y e Lord in the churches. &c. My house shalbe called y e house of prayer. Ther be many thinges ī y e tēples, which stire vp deuotiō as y e maieste of y e place, y e christned bels, or­ganes, [Page] sacrynge belles, syngynge, waxe, candels, y e reliques of sayntes, pictures, ymages, ha­lowed vestimentes, the sacrament of the altare, hallowed altares, in y e worship of sayntes, banners, supplications, the anoyntynge of the church, and y e hallowynge of y e same, the holy water, which euen the deuels be a­frayed of, the presence of angels, for it is wrytten Genesis. xxviii. This place is ter­rible, and ther is a sure promys of hearyng as it is in the thyrde boke of the kynges the viii. Chapter. The Lorde answered to the prayer of Salomon: I haue herde thy pray­er, which thou prayed before me, I haue hallowed this place which thou haste buylded, that I may set my name there for euermore and myne eyes and my harte shalbe there for euermore. &c. Also ther be certayne hal­lowed beedes, and they be honge vp on the churche dores, a certayne nombre of pater nosters and aues muste be kepte, also ther be some prayers whiche haue pardon lon­gynge therto. Also we muste saye a pater noster euery daye to oure owne Apostles, & to the sayntes whiche we haue chosen vnto our selues, for deuotion.

¶ The olde learnynge.

The blessed Trinite is to be worship­ped in euery place. Psalm .c.iii. O thou my soule geue thankes and blesse the Lorde in euery place of his lordshippe. Christe also sayeth Ioh. iiii. The houre commeth & now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the father in sprete and in trueth: for verely suche the father requyreth to worshippe hym. God is a sprete, and they that worship hym, muste worship hym in sprete and ve­rite. Where as Christ doth answer the Sa­maritane, axynge hym of the place of prayer, and sayeth: Womā beleue me, the houre commeth (yee, & he sayd that the houre was euen then) when ye shal nother in this moū tayne, nor yet in Ierusalem worship the fa­ther .i. Timo. ii. sayeth Paul: I wyl that mē praye in euery place lyftynge pure & cleane hādes, without wrath, arguynge or altercacyon. Lykewyse in the .vii. chapter of the Actes where saynt Steuen checkynge y e blyndnesse of the Iewes, auaūcynge the temple of Salomon, sayeth: But he y t is hyest of al dwelleth not in tēples made with handes.

As sayeth also the prophete Esay .lxvi. Hea­uen is my seate & earth is my foote stoole, what house wyll ye buylde for me sayeth the Lorde? or what is my restynge place? hath [Page] not my hande made all these thynges? and all these thynges be made sayeth the Lorde. On whom than shall I loke? euen hym that is of an humble & a lowly sprete, standeth in awe of my wordes. We haue the wordes of the father, & of the sōne, & of the place of prayer, the which the holy goost spake, shall we not beleue the sōne whom the father cō ­maūded to be herde? Mat. xvii. And he dyd saye with an earnest affirmacyon: Woman beleue me. &c. I knowe that ther was in the olde law the arke of the conuenaūt, and the sumptuous temple of the Lorde, where as the Iewes had the promyse of God .ii. Para. vii. Myne eares shalbe lyfted vp vnto y e eares of him which shal praye in this place for I haue chosen this place. But what shal we do now? seynge y t Moses is gone, which was the seruaunt of the whole house of the Lorde, & the sonne commeth Iesus Christ whiche is the Apostle and the byshop of our fayth & cōfessiō. Heb. iii. & y t he is com to pre­pare y e quyck tēples of God, as a byshop of good thynges for to come, entrynge by a greater & more ꝑfect tabernacle, not made w t hādes (y t is to say) not as mās buyldynge, nother by y e bloud of goates & calues, but by his own bloud he entred once for al ī to y e holy [Page] place, & foūde euerlastyng redēption. Heb ix. He is gone y t gaue the lawe, & an other is come in his rowme, by whom grace is geuē Ioh. i. Aarō is gone, for the true prest for e­uer after y e order of Melchisedech is come. To conclude, y e fygure is vanyshed, because the lyght hath shyned. Then what nede we so costly & gloryous pompe of ceremonies in the new testamēt? we disprayse not those buyldinges, to the which y e people cōmeth to hear y e worde of god more cōmodiously: but we disprayse the abuse & the erroure, name­ly, that they kepe no measure, & can neuer make an ende of buyldynge & deckynge of such royal churches. Exo. xxxvi. at y e cōmaū ­dement of Moses, y e cryer forbyddeth, y t no­ther mā nor womā shuld offer vp ony more to y e buyldyng of y e tabernacle: for y e people offred vp a great deale more, thē nede was. Now our cryers w tout ende & measure re­quyre gyftes of y e people to y e buyldinges of tēples. Wher doth Christ requyre in y e new testament such ornamētes of churches? and where doth he appoynt such buyldyng to be made? Cōmaūded not he vs to worship y e father ī spret & in verite? The which two wordes cōdēne y e whole tragedy of ceremonies, which we thīke profitable & good for praier. [Page] For what helpeth to the sprete and trueth of worshippyng of God, such infinite diuersite of vestimentes, belles, organes, and sō ­ges of dyuerse kyndes? Yf those thynges kyndle deuotion, & steare vp a mans mynde to God, it were best that not only churches but also houses, townes, hye waies & stretes shuld be ful of yanglyng of belles, & be replenyshed with ymages. The Lorde requyreth the sprete and trueth, and we cōtrarye wyse shewe and set forth a carnal pompe, & solemnite of ceremonyes, the which is not only as great as all the Iewes fashions and ry­tes, but passeth them farre, both in nombre and greatnesse, hauyng in steade of y e sprete the flesh: for the trueth, moost coloured and paynted ypocrysye: for we spende the whole daye with syngynge, sacrifysyng and mum­blynge. We speake with tunges, but no mā preacheth, which shulde speake vnto men, to edifye, exorte, and to comforte .i. Cor. xiiii. The Apostle wyl leuer speake .v. wordes w t his vnderstādyng, y t he may iustruc & teach other also, rather thē ten thousand w t tūges. We thōdre out psalmes w tout vnderstādyng for auaūtage & lucre, makyng a sound w tout deuotiō, & alas y e word of God is cōpelled to geue place to this blind seruice, & y e ordināce [Page] of the apostle also. We crye now a dayes as the Iewes cryed in tymes paste: Ieremie. vii. The temple of the Lorde, the temple of the Lorde, the temple of the Lorde, Goddes seruice, Goddes seruice, Goddes seruice, trustyng in wordes of lyenge: where as all thys busynesse of ceremonyes, is playne hy­red geare for mony, that it may be fulfilled, that the Lorde sayde. Malachie. i. Who is ther amonge you that wyll shut the dores, & wyl kyndle myn aultare frely for nought? wherfore it foloweth, I haue no pleasure in you sayth the Lorde of hoostes, I wyll take no reward of your handes. Yf y t the tragedy and spectakle of ceremonyes lyketh you so well, go to, let vs brynge home agayne the whole Iewysnesh, and the whole maner of worshyppynge of the Iewes, let vs deck vp Aaron, let vs orden leuytes, let vs kyll and offer vp shepe, oxen, and calues: and euen let vs be circumcysed wyth the madde Ie­wes, and let vs loke for an other Messy­as, that may bryng vs in to the lande of Ca­naan: not by the power of the Lorde, but of the world. Surely yf that moost costly and sumptuous worshyppyng of God is christes religion, in the which holynesse consisteth, I graunt that I can not tell what is oure [Page] religion. But yf Christ be oure Lorde and master, and hys doctryne be the doctryne of the father, y e truthe and the waye, then is y e whole heape of ceremonyes nothynge lesse, than the worshyppyng of God. Where do we reade in y e gospel of hyred prayers which ye wyll let a man haue for mony, and yf he geue no penny, he shall haue no pater nos­ter? where doth the Lorde alowe byenge & sellyng, choppynge and chaūgynge in holy thynges? As for those places which they brynge for the appoyntynge and assignynge of a certayne place of prayer, euery mā may se that they handle them without ony ma­ner of iudgement, and with playne ygno­raunce of scriptur. It is euē of the same sorte that they fayne, that the deuyl is afrayed of holy water, as thoughe he were not more a­frayed at the syght of a christē man, whome the oyntement of the holy goost, hath made holy, and is the temple of the holy goost?

And as for that, thay they brynge for the ha­lowynge of beedes, and the nombre of pater nosters, and the Psalter of our lady & suche other, it is more vayne, then ony tryfles be in the worlde, and more foolysher then the tales which olde wyues tell in wynter nyghtes by the fyre syde. Therfore we must [Page] praye to the father of heauē thorowe oure Lorde Iesus Christe in spirit and truthe in euery place, that our prayers be not bound to places. For ether we go in to oure preuy chambre and shut the dore after vs, & pray vnto the father, which is in secrete: or we praye in euery place after the learnynge of saynt Paule, in the fyrst epistel the .ii. chap­ter to Timoth. For the whole worlde is the temple & churche of God. The heauen & y e heauen of al heauens ar not able to receaue y e Lord, how much lesse then thys church? Yf I ascende vp to heauē, (sayeth the royal prophete) thou arte ther: yf I descende and go downe to hel, thou art present. And God his owne self sayeth by Ieremy the prophete in y e xxiii. chapt. I fyl both heauē and earth. And the Apostell in his preachyng to the men of Athens, sayeth: God is not far from vs, for we lyue in hym, are moued, and be in hym. Actu. xvii.

¶ Of vowes, The newe learnynge,

Vowe to the Lorde & perfourme it that y e ye vowe Psal. lxxv. Therfor we may vowe & we ought to geue it that we vowe: for ther a is lawe made of geuynge to them whiche vowed. In the .iiii. boke of the sentence it is wrytten. A vowe is made when a mā of his [Page] owne wyl promyseth that he wyl do or kepe some good thynge, to y e which otherwyse he is not bound, although he be bound after y e vowe be made. There be .iii. principalle & substancial vowes, that is: of pouerte cha­stite & obedience. He that is once made a religious man or a preste, is bound to lyue so for euer, by hys vowe.

¶ The olde learnynge.

A vowe is a law (say y e scoole mē) made to perfourme such thynges as mē haue vowed It is playne what the holy scripture doth affyrme and iudge of the lawe, and of y e wor­kes of it. Now is mā not iustifyed, or made righteous by y e lawe and workes of Moses lawe: how muche lesse by the worke of vo­wes, whan as scripture vtterly refuseth and defyeth all mans traditions, and God wyll not be worshypped with lawes of mans tradicions, Esay. xxix. Math. xv. Marc. vii. For onely fayth in Christe doth iustifye and not workes what so euer they be, and syncere fayth wyll not suffer men to put confidence in theyr workes. In dede fayth brīgeth forth workes because she worketh by charite, but she suffereth no man to trust vnto them w t thys vngodly opinion, that he shuld be iustifyed [Page] by them, because that were to deny the Lord y t bought vs with hys precious bloud. Vowes are wont to be taken with none o­ther opinion, thē that by them synnes shuld be done away, and to deserue grace and re­mission of synnes: therefore they spring of the ignoraūce of Christes religion, & they be playnely wicked & therfor they be nought and of no pryce. For euen the scoole mē say, that those thynges be no vowes, which do turne to y e dāmage or hynderaūce of a mās saluation: seyng that a vowe hathe y e same thynges folowynge, which an oth hathe, y t is: iustice, iudgement & truthe. To wyll & desyre to be iustifyed by workes, is to cast away the grace of Christ: and that is to lese the true healthe and saluacion. Therfore these vowes that be so greatly boasted of, be no vowes, and of no value, for thys short argument of Paule fearfull to all vowers shall stande: yf ryghteousnesse be of the law, then Chryst dyed in vayne. Galat. v. Ye are gone quyte from Christ as many as are iustifyed by the lawe, and are fallē from grace Gala. ii. We know that a man is not iu­stifyed by the workes of the law, but by the fayth of Iesu Christe. Yf these thynges be sayde vnto the Iewes, the which presumed [Page] to be iustifyed by y e works of moses law, who can abyde our vngodlynesse, which loke for those thynges by the workes of our lawes, y e which onely Christ geueth in fayth? Ther­fore it repenteth vs of oure rechlesse vowe, & we desyre forgeuenesse of God, for our syn done by oure folysh vowe, & we turne agayn to y e lyberte, which Christes bloude gat vn­to vs with a sure belefe, and defyenge the masters & teachers of workes, the opē ene­myes of Christe, & we rather heare y e saynge of y e holy goost: Gala. v. Stande in y e lyberte where with Christ hath made vs fre, & wrap not your selues agayn in y e yock of bondage. As touching y e places, which they bring owt of y e old testament for y e mayntaynyng and stablyssynge of vowes, they make nothynge for the purpose: for y e maner of vowyng per­tayned vnto y e Iewes, & now be put away as be sacrifices. Actu. xv. Fayth in Christe ma­keth all outwarde thynges fre: nother doth the bondage of vowes, and our lyberte agre. What nede many wordes? Oure vowes be without faythe, & therfore they be syn. Now who wold be afrayed to leaue & forsake syn?

¶ Of counsels, the newe learnynge.

The gospell is diuyded into counsels and cōmaūdementes, we be bound to kepe y e cō ­maundementes [Page] & not to despyse y e counsels. The counselles be in & .v. of Math. to loue our enemyes, not to resist euell, not to stry­ue in the court or law, to lende euery one y t nedeth, & such other lyke. The wich yf they were cōmaundementes, they were to heuy burthens for y e new lawe. Thus saye y e Pa­risiās.

¶ The olde learnynge.

We haue a counsel in y e gospel of lyuyng syngle Math. xix. & .i. Corint. vii. But they y t be in y e fyfte of Math. they be no counselles but preceptes: y e which thynge is manyfest by y e circūstaūce of y e text. For Christ dothe threatē, y e which he wolde not haue done, yf he had onely coūselled. He y t doth threaten a payn, doth propound & set forth, a law, & coū selleth not. Moreouer it is cōmaūded: Loue thy neyghboure as thy selfe. That loue conteyneth in it those thinges, which we haue spokē of. And also lust is forbyddē, & therfore be y e aforesayd forbyddē. Whā mat. he had rehearsed those thynges which y e scoolmē rekē amōg coūsels, sayeth by & by after: That ye may be the chyldren of youre father whiche is in heauen. Math. v. Lykewyse also saynt Luke (after that he had rekened vp these lawes) sayeth: And ye shal be y e sonnes of the mooste hyest. Therfore they that do them not, shall not be the chyldren. Surely a [Page] counsell her wolde not haue spokē after this maner yee thus dyd Chrisostom. Austen, Hilary vnderstand y e wordes of Christe. Then yf the Lord cōmaūded all those thynges, why do we that be seruaūtes, louse and & breake the lawes of the Lord for oure pleasure?

¶ Of matrymony. The newe learnynge.

The fourthe degre of kynred stoppeth matrimony. There be .xii. impedimentes of matrymony, which hinder maryage to be made, and lose it yf it be contract, namely, errour, condition, vowe, kynred, faute or cryme, the diuersite of worshippyng, power bond, honesty, yf thou be of affynite, yf thou be impotent in rendrynge dutye. These hynder mariage to be made, & yf it be made breake it agayne. Certayne thynges ther be which hyndre mariage to be made, but they lose it not yf it be contract: that is the tyme of not spousynge, and the forbyddyng of the churche. Also a spirituall kynred is gottē by the sacrament of baptyme & cōfirmation or byshoppynge the which letteth matrymony to be, and putteth a sunder it, y t is made. Itē the order of subdeacō, deacon, and presthod stop matrymony to be taken, and putte it [Page] awaye yf it is taken, bycause that the vowe of chastite is ioyned to those orders. Also yf ther be a deuorcement, both the man and y e woman must abyde vnmaryed.

¶ The olde learnynge.

Ther be degrees of kynne or consan­guinite and affinite red to be forbydden in the .xviii. of Leuiticus, namely: father, mo­ther, stepmother, a natural syster, lawful syster both of father and mother, cosyn, aūte of y e fathers syde & of the mothers syde, the wyfe of myne vncle, the doughter in lawe, the wyfe of my brother, stepdoughter, y e son of y e stepson or stepdoughter, y e syster of my wyfe my wyfe beynge alyue. Here is forbyddē y e fyrst degre of affinite, & y e secōd of kyne or consanguinite: thoughe the doughter or nefe of my brother or syster is not rekened to be forbydden. Seyng y t these be prouyded & taken hede of, by y e law of God, they must nedes be honest, so that it were folysh hardynesse for a man put his decrees, to y e worde of God. Those thynges that be spoken of y e tymes that be voyde of spousels, & of y e for­byddynge of the churche, they be mans in­uencyons. And the spirituall kynred hath no testimony in the scripture. Therfore yf [Page] it shyne and glyster wyth neuer so fare and goodly a lykenesse, we maye as easely des­pise it, as receaue it. Why doth not holy fraternite let mariage, by the which we are all knyt together in Christe? They be my bre­thrē and my systers as manye as confesse Christ. That the order is a let vnto matri­mony, it is nothynge els but fals speakynge throughe hypocrysye: for yf matrimony be a sacrament, (as they say) I can not se, why holy order can not suffer y e holynesse of ma­trimony. Mariage is honourable, as y e holy goost wytnesseth Heb. xiii. And they thynke y t the holynesse of matrimony is cōtrary to the holynesse of order, the which thynge the Apostle neuer knewe .i. Timo. iii. Tit. i. Where he wyll that a byshoppe shulde be y e husbande of one wyfe: and .ii. Timo. iiii. He calleth it the learnyng of deuels yf ony man forbyddeth matrimony .i. Corin. vii. He sayeth not onely it is better to mary thē to burne: but he commaundeth openly in this maner: For the auoydyng of fornicacyon, let euery man haue his wyfe. Who is that euery mā? is it not manyfest that mariage is fre to all men which haue not the gyft of chastite? Saynt Ierome sheweth a cause, why in the .ix. of the Actes. Christ called S. [Page] Paule a chosen vessell: namely, because he was the storehouse of the lawe and of the holy scripture. And against Iouinian he sayeth: I wyll brynge forth Paule the Apostle, whom as ofte as I reade, I thynke that I heare not wordes, but thōderyng. But they which defende the fylthy syngle lyuynge, despyse this thonderynge of this chosen vessel, as the barkyng of a dogge, & they thynke y t he y t is within orders, synneth deadly yf he mary a wyfe. God the father dyd orden mariage, the sonne dyd cōmende and honoure it with his presence and with his fyrst myracle, the holy goost pronounced it honoura­ble, Paule the seruaunt of Iesu Christ forbyddeth not bisshoppes and deacons to be maryed: And they which boast them of the Gospell, nombre the mariage of prestes a­monge deadly sinnes, as a prophane and vnholy thynge, the which the holynesse of or­der can not suffer. Why beleue they not at the leaste the sentence of holy fathers? for Theophilactus vpon the .viii. Chapter of Mathew sayeth: Learne here that mariage hyndereth not a man from vertue, for the prynce of the Apostles hadde a mother in lawe. Farthermore we do alowe no deuorcement, but in case of fornicacion, [Page] as Christe sayeth Math. xix. where as it is lawful for the vngylty after the deuorcemēt to mary agayn: the which thynge myght be easely done yf the man aduouterer or y e woman shulde be kylled, after the law of God Deute. xxxii. Now they tary both vnmaried the which is a deuorcement rather in name and in worde then in dede. The texte of Math. xix. is manyfest: (Whosoeuer forsa­keth his wyfe, but only for fornication and maryeth an other, he cōmitteth aduoutry.

For this clause that is put betwene: (except it be for fornicacyon) declareth & ruleth the whole sentence, that yf ony fornicacyon do chaunce in the meane season, he that forsa­keth the woman aduouterer and maryeth an other, he beynge vngylty, that he cōmyt­ted none aduoutry. And why do not we in such cases, go rather to the scripture, that is inspyred of God, then to those wryters of sūmes? seynge that the Apostle .ii. to Tim. y e iii. Chapter pronoūceth and sayeth that the scripture is profytable for correccyon and teachynge.

¶ Of Bysshoppes. The new learyng.

A Byshop is of hyer authorite then a symple prest, and hath the reseruacyon and kepynge behynde to hym of certayne cau­ses: [Page] for the hyer that y e degre is, the greater and more is the power. And this new lear­nynge wynketh at and ouerseeth the pōpe & pryde more then worldly, of them which cal themselues the successours of the Apostles and preach not the word of God, the which is the moost worthy hye office in y e church.

¶ The olde learnynge.

When ther rose a contention amonge y e disciples, which of them shuld be thought greatest amonge them, Christ sayd: The lordes of the gentyles haue domination o­uer them, but it shal not be so amonge you. Where as Christ wolde haue taken cleane out of the disciples myndes the desyre of honoure. For yf oure Lorde and mayster dyd not come to be mynistred to, but to myni­ster and serue other (as it is Math. xx.) how muche lesse shall it become seruauntes, to swell and be proude with worldly desyre of honoure? The which thynge y e Apostle tea­cheth playnly. i. Cor. iiii. So (sayeth he) let a man reken vs, as mynisters and seruaūtes and disposers of the secretes of God: he sayeth mynisters and seruauntes, and not lor­des and prynces of the worlde. So in many places of his epystles, he calleth hymselfe [Page] This place (sayeth he) maketh agaynst thē, which do geue themselues to sloggysnesse, ydelnesse, and to slepe, & thinke that it is an offence, yf they reade scripture: and despyse them as bablers and vnprofitable, which ar occupyed in the lawe of the Lorde both day and nyght, not takynge hede, that y e Apostle cōmaunded euen learnyng also after the rehearsynge of y e cōuersacyon of a byshoppe.

¶ Of Ceremonyes.

Men reken that ceremonyes haue the name of a towne in Tuscia called Cerete, and by ceremonyes we meane the worshippynge of God, but outwardly.

¶ The new learnynge.

The ceremonyes which our fathers ordened, must be kepte, and not chaunged, the which are worshippynge of god. For the religious men, and rude prestes do defende the ceremonyes (what so euer they be) so styfly, as thoughe holynesse consysted and stode in thē only. For we haue sene in these tymes, the holy orders contende and stryue wyth vnstaūcheable hatred amonge them selues for ceremonyes.

¶ The olde learnynge.

We may not swarue nother to the ryght hand, nor to y e lefte hand, but we must walk in the kynges hye way. Our lyfe is in that case, thal we can not be without ceremonyes. For we be not angelical spirites, but mē: & as long as we lyue in thys vysyble world, in the preson of thys body, we must nedes haue difference of workes, of places, of of­fices, of tymes, of persones, & of other thyn­ges. For we be (as the Apostell sayeth. Ro­mano. xii.) many membres, and one body, & not hauynge all one acte or office. But after that the lyght of the gospell came, and folowed the shadow of the law we shuld vse very few ceremonyes, as we haue baptyme and the supper of the Lorde, after the ordinaunce of Christ in the newe testament. For we vse (as we be alwayes redy to y e worste) to set muche by ceremonyes, and to concea­ue a vayne opinion and confidence to be iustifyed by them, yf they be perfectly done: & yf we leaue them vndone, we conceaue a folysh feare, (y t is) of euery hande a noughty conscience. Therfore lest we shuld swarue away from the pryke of trew holynesse, let vs take fayth and charite vnto vs, as the [Page] rulers and gyders of ceremonyes, in the whiche yf they were done, they myght be done godly. Before all thynges we muste take great hyde and diligent prouision, lest ceremonyes hurte and destroye the head & the roote of oure religion, which is fayth in Christ. Fayth and belefe in Christ is onely our ryghteousnesse, which worketh after­ward by charite, the which yf it continue in safegarde in the liberte of the sprite, ye may lyue and be occupyed in the ceremonyes of the churche without ony blame. For he that is iustifyed, by faythe, kepeth ceremonyes, lest he shuld offende those that be yet weake in y e fayth, not as necessary to ryghteousnes­se, but as a teachyng and a bryngyng vp for weaklynges: beleuyng stedfastly, y t all those outward thynges be fre vnto vs thorow fayth, and that we owe nothyng to ony body but onely loue. Roma. xiii. By thys rule the Apostle beynge conuersant amonge hys brethrē, without the yeoperde and the losse of conscience and faythe, was so fre by the sprite of faythe, that for al that he made hym selfe an vnderlynge and a seruaunt of all mē, and was of all fashion, to saue some at the leest. He had knowlege, but he knowe y t knowlege dyd swell, and charite dyd edyfye. [Page] i. Corinth. viii. and .ix. He graunted that all thynges be lawfull vnto hym, but that all thynges be nor profitable, that al thynges be lawfull, but all thynges do not edifye. And he dyd folowe those thynges which belōged vnto peace, and to edifyenge. We wyll folow thys Apostle not geuynge oure lyberte to the occasion of the fleshe, but in ser­uynge one an other by charite. Galat. v.

Here must the ouerseers and ministers of the churche be monyshed, that they vnlade the congregacion, holden downe with so many ceremonyes and lawes, that almoost the condicion and state of the Iewes were more tollerable, then the state of Christen men. Now, it is not onely folyshenesse, but also wyckednesse, y t Christē mē shuld stryue amonge them selfes for ceremonyes (I can not tel what) whose bage is, charite, and not ceremonyes. Ihon. xiii.

¶ Of mans tradicions. The newe learnynge.

Ther is a canon or a rule, the whiche maketh equall the constitucions of popes and bysshoppes wyth the gospell, and it affirmeth that the gospell can not be well [Page] vpholdē excepte the statutes and ordinaū ­ces of the fathers be kepte, as Leo the .iiii. sayeth in the .xx. distinction in the chapter. De libellis. All thynges that be necessary to be knowen to our saluation, be not expres­sed in the canonicall scripture, but the holy goost afterwarde y t the scripture was wryt­tē, dyd shew many wholsome thynges vnto oure forefathers. Iohan. xvi. I haue many thynges to say vnto you, which ye can not beare at thys tyme. And those thynges that were in practyse than, are not now all written, but euen geuē from one to an other as by hande, and are come euen to oure tyme, as Damascen in a sermon of the dead wry­teth, that the memory of faythfull deadmen came vnto vs from the Apostels tymes.

Moreouer Paule taught the people, that he purchassed vnto Christe, whan he was with them many thynges the which were neuer wrytten. Also he that heareth not y e church let hym be counted as an heythen & a publi­cane therfor she may make lawes and con­stitucions necessary for mans saluatiō. Also that is necessary to saluation, whose trans­gressyon is deadly synne, but the ordinaun­ces of the church be such, the fyrst is proued by Abbas in the proemy or preface of the [Page] decretales. And in the fyrst chapter of con­stitucions, he allegeth Calderine, Iohā An­drea and Thomas. And for thys purpose maketh the text in the chapter. Quo iure y e viii. distinction. where as it is wrytten y t the breaker of the tradicions of the churche synneth deadly, because y t also the positiue lawe byndeth in matters of conscience, ergo they bynd. Herevpon Iohan Mayre with great pryde & disdayne sayeth in the .iiii. distinctiō the .iii. q. To thynke that he that breaketh y e commaundementes of the church synneth not deadly, is an erroure.

¶ The olde learnynge.

Mathew the .xvii. Chapter the heauēly father maketh his onely begotten sonne doctor and teacher of y e church, sayenge: Heare hym. And he put his wordes in his mouthe. Deuteronomy .xviii. he sayeth: And I wyll be a reuenger and a punyssher of thē which refuse the learnynge of thys doctoure. He which sayeth Iohan. vii. My doctryne is not myne, but his, which sent me, that doctor is the euerlastynge wysdome of the father, the way, the lyght, the truthe, whom we beleue stedstly that he bothe wolde and dyd geue [Page] vnto his church, not botched, clowted, or vn­perfecte and vnstable learnynge, but soūde, perfecte, and vnchaungeable, to the whiche nedeth nothyng to be put to, as an addition: for those thynges that are necessary for to be knowen for mans saluation, be contay­ned plenteously in the canonical scripture. Somtymes the Apostles spake and trea­ted vpon the kyngdome of God, more plen­teously in speakynge, than it is wrytten in bokes, yet for all that, as for the sūme of the sentence and doctrine, they preached none other thynge, than the gospell, whiche we haue wrytten: so that those thynges which perteyne vnto a christen mans lyfe, muste be learned of no where els, but of the byble, that is of the newe testement and of y e olde. For all scripture, geuē by the inspiration of God (sayth y e Apostle .ii. tim .iii.) is profita­ble to teachynge, to improue, to informe, & to instruc in righteousnesse, y t the man of God may be perfecte and prepared to all good workes. Then why do we thrust in y e chur­ches handes y e lawes of men, as necessary to Christes regilion? I do not speake here of y e ciuyll lawe, I know that y e lawes of secular power are to be kepte for y e conscience sake: for they haue theyr strēgth of Goddes lawe. [Page] Rom. xiii. I speake of y e decrees of mē, with the which they wolde bynde mens consciences. Farthermore the Apostle in the .ii. Tim iii. chap. prayseth y e holy scripture w t a great verdit & prayse sayenge:, The holy scripture may make y e wyse vnto health thorow fayth which is in Christ Iesu. Who dar set thys tytle before his constitucions, y t they maye make you learned to saluaciō? thys honour is onely dew vnto the holy scriptur of God. Farther more, yf ther were ony thynges shewed oure fathers a. M. year ago by the holy goost, the which were not knowen (in tyme of the flourynge of the churche, that newly dyd springe vp) to the Apostles and to the church, they be ether necessary to salua­cion, or not necessary. Yf they be not neces­sary, but ordened for y e tyme, why is a mans conscience boūde with them? Yf they be necessary, ether ther is an other waye to saluacion nowe, than was in the primitiue churche, or els they were all damned that departed before that reuelation: for they knewe not the thynge that was neces­sary to theyr saluacion. The whyche thynges, seynge that they be y e moost vayne that can be and foolysh, and that the same maner of iustifyenge and saluation is now, [Page] that was than, and was than, that is now: why make we those thynges necessary, that be not necessary? And why set we so lytell by the lyberte of the gospell that we had as leue our dreames, as the moost holy gospel? we do not reiect and refuse the constituciōs and ordinaunces of bysshoppes, which vexe not the conscience, but pertayne and be profytable for the cōmune peace and tranquil­lite of mens conuersacion: onely we defy & reiecte those lawes, in the which ether they commaūde or forbidde vnder payn of deadly synne, without the lawe of God. Onely god ought to raygne in the conscience, in whose hande peculyarly be menes soules. The A­postle calleth hym the aduersary of God, which goeth aboute to syt in the temple of God, and boaste hym self as a God .ii. Tes­salo. ii. And .ii. Cori. iii. We be the ministers of the new testament, ministers of the sprit and not of the letter. What auayle mans constitutions to iustificacion yf ye say that they prepare to obey God the easyer? I an­swere: There is nothyng that can prepare y e mynde to kepe y e law of God or fashion it but onely the grace of God. The Apostle Galat. i. pronoūceth acursed, not onely mā, but also an angell of heauen, y t durst preach [Page] an other gospell then Paule preached. Yf it be the power of God to saluacyon, of all that beleue, why do we myngle and ioyne our chaffe with so great a power? And in y e fyrst to the Corinthians the thyrde chapter: Other fundacyon can no mā lay, then that which is layed, which is Iesus Christ. Yf no man ought to put ony thyng to Moses law Deute. xii. why shulde we adde & put vnto the gospell ony thyng? seynge euen Came­racensis a scooleman, calleth it the moost perfect lawe and ryghtest, and the straygh­test in preceptes. Why do we not leaue our lawes, and follow the busynesse that Christ appoynted, Math. the last: Teache all peo­ple to kepe all thynges what so euer I haue commaunded you? We be mynisters & ser­uauntes of Christe, and disposers of the se­cretes of God. Now is it requyred of the stewardes or disposers that they be foūde faythfull. These priuities and mysteries be the artycles of oure fayth of the Gospell, the wysedome of the crosse, the knowlege of grace gotten by Christe: Let vs preache these thynges for the health of the people of God, and let vs not abuse oure power the which the Lorde gaue vs to edifye with, and not to destroye .ii. Corinth. the .xiii. cha, [Page] The Canon or rule that maketh the ordy­naūces of fathers equale with the Gospel, is openly vngodly and wycked, the whiche euen oure aduersaryes can not receaue, yf they knewe the canon of the scripture. To be shorte, fayth where with a ryghteous mā lyueth is conceaued, taken, and drawen out of the canonicall scripture, and not of the decrees of y e fathers, as saynt Austyne wytnesseth, in the .ix. boke of the cytie of God the .xviii. Chapter. Then wherefore shulde I receaue it as an artycle of my fayth, that whiche the scripture inspired of God hath not? I am commaunded to proue and trye spretes whether they be of God or no: the which lyberte of iudgynge of all doctrines by the scriptures, no man wyll take frō vs. The wordes of saint Ihon in the .xvi. Chapter stablysh nothynge mans tradityons: for God dyd fulfyl his promesse at Wytsonday when he sent the holy goost, and led his dis­cyples in to all trueth: the whiche before that tyme they coulde not beare. Who wyl denye that the memorye and remēbraunce of those that be departed dyd come from y e Apostles vnto vs, seynge that saynt Paule the fyrste to the Tessalonians the fourth chapter commaunded the Tessalonians, [Page] that one shulde comforte another, with the worde of the resurreccyon of the dead in Christe? But now that we maye answer to theyr rethoricall argumēt, where in they reason, that by the breakynge of the ordy­naunce of the church, a man synneth dead­ly, we answere: that the knowlege of synne is by the the lawe. Roma. the .iii. Chapter. The Apostle speaketh of Goddes lawe, and not of mans. Alwayes vnderstande I of mans lawe that is clere or whole mās law, the which assayeth to binde mās cōscyence [...] & I moued by y e scripture, thinke y t a mās cō science nother ought, nor can be boūde with mans constitucyon: for we are indued with lyberte which we wyll vse, the which lyber­te is the lyberte of the conscyence .i. Corin. the .iii. Chapter. All thynges be yours, whether it be Paul, ether Apollo, ether Cephas wherby we vnderstande that nother Paul, nor Cephas hath authorite to bynde mens cōscience, where God doth not bynde. The fyrst to the Corinthians the twelft Chapter Be ye not made seruauntes of men. Col­lossenses the seconde Chapter. You beynge dead wyth Christe, why be ye holden styl wyth decrees? And for the moost parte suche constitucyons be contrarye to the worde & dede of y e Apostles. But as Gerson [Page] beareth wytnesse in the seconde lection of the spirituall lyfe the .vii. corollary: It is not in the popes power, nother in the councels power, nor in the churches power to chaūge the learnynge geuen and taught of y e euangelistes and of Paule: Master Gasper Satzger dyd se this in the defension of the constitucyons of the churche, the which o­penly and playnly graunteth: that the lear­nynge that is without the scripture, though it be good, yet byndeth not by goddes lawe. And it is no maruayl, for only Christ ought to raygne in mans cōscience by his worde, which onely maye saue and condempne.

Math. the .x. Chapter. Feare not thē which can kyll the body and not the soule, but fear hym which can cast both body and soule in euerlastyng fyre. Truely yf they can make a constitucyon and commaunde it vnder payne of deadly synne, they maye kyll the soule, but the trueth of the gospell is other­wyse. The sentence of Ezechiell is pro­nounced agaynst them in the .xiii. Chapter: Wo be to them that make bolsters vnder y e y e heade of euery age, to catch soules y t they might kyl soules which dye not. How doth y e scoolemēs learnyng of y e power of byndyng of mens constitucyons agre with it selfe? [Page] seynge Thomas graunteth playnly, that the commaundementes of the positiue law bynde more with the intent of the lawma­ker, then with the wordes of it: so that he is more to be rekened a breaker of the cōmaū dement that doth agaynst the intent of the lawmaker, thē he y t swarueth frō the letter of the ordinaūce of y e law. But y e intent of y e maker of the positiue lawe is not, that hys precepte shulde be alwayes kepte, because that many impedimentes may chaunce in the which it is not expedient to kepe y e law, yee somtyme the kepynge of the precepte were damnable. Wherfore in euery precept of the positiue lawe, the excepcyon of a reasonable cause is admitted. Now put y e case y t ther is a law y t a mā shal not eat flesh on the fryday, & that a preste shal not haue a wyfe. Here the intent of y e lawmaker is to brynge to goodnesse. But it chaunceth yf we kepe those lawes, that ether the lyberte of a christen man be in ieopardy, or we offende a­gaynst Goddes lawe. In this case the positiue lawe byndeth not, for the intent of the lawmaker is not to kyll ony man, or to geue an occasyon to breake Goddes lawe. But seynge that it can not be satisfyed and fulfylled, doutlesse it remitteth and lowseth [Page] those thynges that it dyd decre. And yf ther chaunce ony reasonable cause of breakynge such a tradicyon, it wyl pronounce y e trans­gressour assoyled and cleare and not rashe: but what more reasonable cause is ther, thē auoydynge of deadly synne, or the ieopar­dy of conscience? Paule was content so to chastise his flesh (to auoyde offēdyng of his brother), that he wolde neuer eate flesh ra­ther then to offende hym.

¶ Of Coūcels and lawes made by a great multytude of byshoppes gathered together. The new learnyng.

Yf y e authorite of councels be despised, all thynges in the churche shalbe doutfull & vncertayne, for y e heresyes that were once condemned in the coūcels shal come agayn. Therfore it is not lawfull vnto a priuate man to affyrme or teache ony thynge a­gaynst the councels. For the councell is gathered together in the name of Christ, it is ruled of the holy gooste, and therfore it erreth not, so that y e cōstitucyons of the councels be the constitucyons of the catholyke church, whom the councell doth repre­sent. But those thynges that the church or­deneth, are as well to be obserued and kepte as the canonicall scripture. Nother is it ne­defull [Page] that the councell adde or put testimonyes of scripture to his determinacyons, seyenge that the Apostles and the elders dyd not stablysh the fyrst councell holden at Ie­rusalem with scriptures. Actu. xv.

The olde learnynge.

Ihon in the .iiii. Chapter of his fyrst e­pistell byddeth proue spretes whether they be of God or no, therfore it is lawfull for christen men to iudge the sprete of coūcels: for they saye that the holy goost is author of the coūcell. What rule shal we haue I pray you to proue and trye spretes besyde the worde of God? This, seynge that is sure, true, seuen tymes purged, and a candel in a darke place, shalbe a touch stone to proue & to trye all learnynge of men by. Yf the holy goost doth rule the councelles, and the same spret of truth taught the Apostles euery trueth, and yf the Apostles dyd preache that and geue it vnto vs, it foloweth that y e constitucyons and the councels must agre wyth the learnynge of Christ and the Apostles, that is, wyth the holy scripture: for the sprete of God differeth not from hymselfe, he is symple & his learnyng is symple. But seynge it is openly knowen that the coūcels [Page] haue decrees contrarye to holy scripture, and also to the holy goost? Who wyll for­byd vs to doute vpon suche constitucyons of councels? The Apostles learnynge wyll that a byshoppe shulde be an husbande of one wyfe. Ther is a councell that forbyddeth byshoppes the vse of holy matrimony: what authorite is here? The doctrine of Paule is the Gospell and the lawe of God, the which ought not to be chaūged, se­ynge y t it doth threaten death and cursynge euen to the angelicall sprites, yf they durst brynge ony other Gospell. But now yf they orden and determine those thynges whiche be contrary to the scripture, who wyll deny but they maye erre? I haue not sayd this to despyse the coūcels, that be coūcels in dede, but we set God aboue the councell. For we graunt accordynge to the promyse of our saueour, that Christ is present in the congre­gacyon that is gathered in the name of Christ, but we graunte no man power and authorite to decre & orden ony thynge in y e church of God agaynst the scriptures. We receaue no man that commeth in his owne name. Ihon the .v. chapter and that speaketh not of y e father, but of his own selfe. Besyde this, the scripture geueth no greater power [Page] to a generall councel, than to .ii. or .iii. gathered in the name of the Lorde: the which congregacion hath authorite to excōmunicate hym that rebelleth and is stubburne and an open synner, but it hath not authorite to make preceptes and to thruste thē in to mēs cōsciences that be fre. Farthermore y e scrip­ture hath prophecyed, that false doctores shuld come in the latter dayes, in the name of Christe, the whiche shall deceaue many men, saynge: I am Christe. The whyche moost earneste warnynge of oure saueour not without a cause maketh vs more ware and circumspecte, that we shulde not beleue euery sprete. In dede these be goodly and glorious names, The church, The councel to be gathered in the name of Christe: but Christe and the Apostles haue warned vs, that those thynges alone shuld not moue vs the whych dyd describe these latter dayes, with so horryble colours, that it is wonder men can not perceaue these thynges. Ci­prian in a certayne coūcel, where as were .lxxxvi. byshoppes syttynge, taught wronge of the baptysynge of heretikes, and for the moost part all the bysshoppes of Aphrica, Numidia and Mauritania erred with hym. Yf it be so that the councels erre about the [Page] sacramentes of the church, who can safely wythout yeoperdy from hence forth beleue the councels, makyng lawes wythout scrip­ture? Moeroeuer, the same thynges maye chaunce (we do not doute) to great and ge­nerall councels, that haue chaūced vnto the particular and prouinciall councels. And suerly I thynke and hold that then all thyn­ges shalbe more doutfull & vncertayne, whā the authorite of the worde doth fayle the which ought to be sounde and vndefyled.

For the churche gaue not authorite to the word, but the worde gaue authorite to the church. And whan y e congregacion beleueth the gospell, it is safe, and the heresyes which in tymes paste were bannyshed away and quenched, they were quenched with y e swe­arde of the sprete which is the word of God Truely heresye is plucked vp by the roote none other waye, thā with the word of God & wholsome learnynge. Therfore y e Apostle wyll that a bisshop shuld be fenced and har­nessed with wholsom learnyng, that he may ouercōme them that resiste and fyght a­gaynst hym. Put the case that the councell dyd orden ony thynge without scripture, by & by wyll Gerson, and learned and honest men with hym saye: We must beleue more [Page] the sayenge of one man fensed with the au­thorite of canonicall scripture, than to y e de­claration of the pope or the generall coūcel. I passe ouer here the manyfest sayenge of Innocētius in. chap. Cum venerab. De ex­cep. that is to wyte: That no profe is to be admitted agaynste y e scripture, but al thyng shuld be holden without dout. Here vpon it foloweth, that it is not lawfull for the coū ­cell to charge the congregacion with ony thynge without y e cōsent of the scriptur. And the councell of Ierusalem decreed nothyng wythout scripture, boastynge & auauncyng the holy goost only. For besyde y e word of A­mos the .ix. Chapter. all other thynges had strength of y e scripture, & not only of y e wyll of many. For the Apostles & seniors cōma­unded that the people shulde absteyne from those thynges, that were offred vp to ydols, from bloud, from strangled, and frō fornicaciō. The chefe and the sum of y e matter was: That a man shuld be iustifyed not by the workes of the lawe, but by grace, the whiche ryghteousnesse of fayth, longe tyme ago was approued wyth the wytnes­se of the lawe and the prophetes. Romano. iii. Farthermore, yf the Apostles dyd sufficientlye teache by the authoryte [Page] of the holy goost, y e maner of iustifyenge an vnrighteous man, why dyd they that came after deuyse & ymagen other wayes of iustifyenge? For those thynges y t they called ne­cessary, were not necessary for rygteousnes­se, but for charite. For y e occasyōs of fallyng of the weaklynges were to be auoyded. To be shorte, it that the Apostles determyned, they myght vphold and proue by scripture. As concernynge it that was offred vnto ydoles, it is playne ynough: for they had it in Deutronomy that the brother shulde not be hurt or despysed. Oure brother is despysed, yf we geue hym an occasion of fal­lynge. They dyd know that it was law­full to eate all meates that were to be solde in the shambles, and that to the cleane all thynges are cleane, that all thynges are lawfull, but all thynges are not expedient or necessary, and that ther was nothynge of it self commune or vncleane, but they wold not that theyr brother shuld be offended, for whome Christ dyed. Farthermor. Exod. xxxiiii. it is clearly commaunded the Iewes that they shuld not eate of the thynges that are offered vp, the which obseruacion and kepynge (seynge that the lawe stocke so styfly as yet in y e Iewes hartes) w tout offending [Page] coulde not haystely be taken awaye and be contemned. Genesis. ix. the eatynge of bloude is forbydden, the same also is forbyd­den: Leuitici. vii.xvii. and .xix. The Lorde commaunded to abstayne from strangled. Exodi. xxii. and Leuit. xxii. Whordom forni­tion are forbydden. Deutero. v. and .xxiii. The councell had at Ierusalem might haue ben strenghtened and stabilyshed with these places of scripture, the which made y e Iewes that they coulde not enioye the lyberte of Christ with an whole and a sounde consci­ence. Wherfore the lawe of charite cōmaū ­ded, that the offendyng of oure bretheren shuld be auoyded. Let our councels defende theyr constitucions with scriptures, or let them commaunde those thynges that be grounded vpon the scripture: let them haue a respecte to the auoydynge of offences.

Let them lay nothyng on mens neckes, but those that are necessary, after the same way that they were necessary which were orde­ned of the Apostles at that season, and no man shall withstande them. Therefore bretheren I beseke yow for the mercy of God (for here we do not intreat of landemar­kes, or of frayle thynges, but of soule health) take hede and loke vpon the thynge that is [Page] in all poyntes greatest of all other, set all affections and troublynge of your myndes asyde, & weye y e matter truly and syncerly. Let no man seke those thynges that be hys, but those that be Iesus Christes. Let no mā rate, snatche, & speake agaynste hys brother. I haue a conscience also, I thynke worshyp­fully by y e fathers and the councels. I do not despise y e prophecyes or the interpretatiōs of scripture, but before al other thynges I loue and regarde holy scripture as y e only trea­sure of the congregaciō. The scripture is of greater authorite (sayeth saynte Augustyn) than all y e capacite of mans witte. Yf it had ben sufficient vnto vs, to haue holy mē, ex­cellyng both in witte & in learninge to rule y e church or congregacion: what nede it to orden the canon of scripture? Yf they only make decrees of outwarde thynges, in the which we haue lyberte, why do some charge mens cōsciences with these thynges, and so lade thē that they cōmaund & beate in as di­lygently, yee a great deale more diligently mās lawes, then y e moost holy lawe of God? As for me self wittyngly & with my wyll I deceaue no man, nor I wyll affyrme or hold nothyng, which is disagreyng to the worde [Page] of God, and the tatholike congregacion. So earnestly moue I to the worde of God that yet I wold not y e occasion of fallyng shuld be geuen, the which specially doth springe (as thys tyme is) of the tradycions of men. And I do not study for al that, I y t myght vtterly destroy ceremonyes, and the statutes of the fathers: but I dyd geue warnyng as it was my deuty. For ther was great difference betwene the kepyng of ceremonyes and mās tradicions, and y e ryghteousnesse of God, & y t ther was a certayne righteousnesse which must be earnestly loked vpon, that we may know after what fashyon mens consciences shuld be stablyshed & made stronge agaynst the gates of hell: and in what thynges trew penaūce and amendyng of our lyuyng doth stād. In the meane season for the kepyng of peace and charite I moue & exhorte to kepe the ceremonyes & tradiciōs of the church & the fathers, where as they hynder not the study of true holynesse, or haue no blame or faute. Onely I moued y t we shuld not thynke, that all the strength of holynesse dyd stande in despisyng or kepynge of cere­monyes. Yf ony man wyll confute it that we haue wrytten, wythout the byt­ternesse of enuy: let hym handle the matter [Page] as it were w t his brother, & not with hys enemye, for we be redy to confute without stubbournesse, & to be confuted w tout ony angre or stomack at al. Yf that I be thought to ony man, more haysty and styrred than the mi­stery & seruyce of y e word can beare, let hym not be angry with me, but with them which ouercōme me w t theyr dyuelyshe & vngodly ouerseynge & wynkyng at abuses & errours They graunt playnly that ther be maruay­lous greate abuses in the churche: but a­mēde thē not, wher as they be so oft warned of them, both in season & out of season: the which they know wel ynough to be the sede of discord, pestelēce & destructiō of true holynes But let vs leaue alone thys kynd of mē which be not seruēt in y e spret, & wold to god that they sayd not w t the vnwyse mā, in theyr hart: Ther is no god. Welbeloued brother I haue drawen out thys geare after a rude fashion not gatheryng together all thynges which myght haue ben spokē (as it doth ap­pere) for this matter, but out of a great heap I toke a few thynges here & there, but I wyl treate vpō these matters in our cōmun pla­ces more at large. The grace of Christ be with the. Amen.

¶ The ende of the olde learnynge and new.

¶ To the Christen reader.

THat thou mayest the better vn­derstande (good reader) the artycles of Fre wyll, Fayth, Good workes, and of Merytes, which in this present boke be treated vpon I shall here brefely shew what God doth and hath done for vs, and what we agayne oughte to do for his sake as they that be thankfull of the benefites receaued of hym. And fyrste wyll I declare the maner of iustificacyon, remission of synnes, and saluacyon, whiche in scripture are all one thynge, of whom it doth come, and to how many thynges it is applyed.

Fyrst it is applyed vnto God, for Paul sayeth Rom. viii. It is God that iustifyeth or maketh ryghteous. &c. And Ro. iii. That he onely myght be ryghteous and the rygh­teous maker of hym which is of the fayth on Iesus.

Secondarely it is referred vnto Christ Actu. iiii. sayeth Peter: Ther is none other name geuen vnto men vnder heauen, in the which we shulde be saued. Roma. iii. sayeth Paul: Without deseruynge are they made ryghteous or iustifyed, euen by his grace thorow the redempcyon y t is done by Christ Iesu, whom God hath set forth for a mercy [Page] seate thorow fayth in his bloude, to shewe y e ryghteousnesse y t auayleth before hym. &c.

Thyrdly it is applyed vnto mercy. Tit. iii. Not of workes or dedes of ryghteousnes which we wrought, but after his mercy he saued vs. Roma. viii. Therfore whan God wolde shewe wrath, and to make his power knowen, he brought forth with great pacy­ence the vessels of wrath, which are ordey­ned to damnacyon, that he myght declare y e ryches of his glory on the vessels of mercy, which he hath prepared vnto glory, whome he hath called. &c. Item. i. Pet. i. Blessed be God and the father of oure Lorde Iesus Christ, which accordynge to his great mer­cy hath begottē vs agayn to a lyuely hope.

Fourthly it is attributed vnto his eleccyon, Ephe. i. Accordynge as he hath chosen vs by hym, or euer y e fundacyon of y e worlde was layed, that we shulde be holy and with out blame before him in loue. Ioh. xv. I haue chosen you, and ordyned you, that ye go and brynge forth frute .ii. Timo. i. God hath sa­ued vs, and called vs wyth an holy callynge not accordynge to oure dedes, but accor­dynge to his owne purpose and grace.

Fyfthly it is attributed vnto grace. E­phe. ii. By grace are ye saued thorow fayth, [Page] and that not of youre selues. Gala. i. I maruayle that ye are so soone turned from hym that hath called you in the grace of Christ. Tit. ii. The grace of God that bryngeth saluacyon vnto all men, hath appeared.

Syxtly it is assygned vnto the worde. Ioh. xv. Now are ye clene because of the word, which I haue spokē vnto you. Esa. lv. Lyke as the rayne and snow cōmeth downe from heauen, and returneth not thyther a­gayne but watereth y e earth, maketh it frutfull and grene that it maye geue corne and breade vnto the sower: So the worde also y t commeth out of my mouth, shall not turne agayne voyde vnto me but shall accomplysh my wyll, and prosper in the thynge whervnto I shall sende it.

Seuēthly it is asscrybed vnto fayth, as Rom. iii. I speake of the ryghteousnesse be­fore God, whiche cōmeth by fayth on Iesus Christ. And Roma. iiii. Vnto hym that be­leueth on hym that iustifyeth the vngodly, is fayth counted for ryghteousnesse. Ro. v. Because that we are iustifyed by fayth, we haue peace with God thorow our Lorde Iesus Christ.

Eyghtly it is attribute vnto good workes as Iac. i. Ye se thē, how y t of dedes a mā is iustifyed [Page] & not of fayth. The places are so manifest (notwithstanding y e cōmune opiniō) y e faith only iustifieth, y t I am sure it troubleth no small nōbre of people: and peraduenture it may astōny euen them, which counte thē selues well learned. For it is a great thynge to bringe the olde and wylye foxe to a lease. Yee it is euen a new thynge vnto the proud Pharyses to saye, that good workes are not meritorious to obtayne heauen by: for he­therto haue they founded and vnderpropped theyr church with nothynge so greatly, as w t thys opinion. What hath abused fastynge more than thereby to obtayne heauen? For fastynge after theyr owne chosynge, they left the true fast, that God requyreth and cō maūdeth. Esa. lviii. & zach. vii. What caused more abuse of y e supper of the Lorde, thē to vse it that is the remembraunce of the be­nefyt and sacrifyce for our synnes, for a net & hooke to gather & catch mony w t? sayeng y t it is a worke meritorious, & a sacrifyce for redemyng of synnes. Somtyme were none chosen prestes but such as were endued w t such gyftes as Paul requyreth in a byshop: now y t the B. of Ro. kyngdom requyreth many fauterers & adherētes & y t purgatory may be swepte and kepte clene, the which is no [Page] office for such Lordes as byshops be, therfore syr Ihon lacklatyne shal suffise for that of­fice wel ynough, and masse shalbe made a sacrifice to pourge and clense pylgatory, pur­gatory shuld I haue sayd: Lord Lord opē once oure eyen, y t we maye se y e blasphemy done to thy holy bloude. Now wyll I go to youre cōsciences ye that boast so greatly of good & meritorious workes: I require you by y e answer, that we all shall geue at y e great daye: Dyd Peter that was prince of the apostles (as ye saye) euer say nasse for the dead ether hym selfe or by other? shew here vpō ony autenticall cronicle or hys owne wrytynge. Yf ye can not, than graunt that it is an inuen­cion of youre owne, ergo a lye and a thynge that shall perysh with your dayes. Yf Gods mercy shudle be bounde to sende soules to youre purgatory, and at youre massynge a­gayne to release them, than were Christ no Iesus, and God no father but a seruaunt of yours, and contrary to hys owne wordes & doctryne. Leaue therfore youre new erronious doctryne, and wyth the olde teachers geue God humbly glory. What caused more the abuse of honourynge of sayntes: whyche dyenge in charite, are ioyned with vs is charyte, and therfore as true membres of one [Page] body, ceasse not to praye with vs, so that worshyppyng theyr pictures & ymages, we rather blaspheme God, which hath forbiddē such maner of worshyppynge, than worshyp them. But leste I be to tedious vnto the (good reader) therfore wyll I do my dily­gence to expresse the pyth of all thys matter in fewe wordes.

God the father thorow the loue that he had to hys sonne Christ Iesu, dyd caste hys mercy vnto vs, which were sonken into the depth of synne and pytied vs, & of his mercy and pitye he chose vs that we shulde be holy and wythout spotte in hys syghte. And to them that he chose, he instilled the grace of hys sprite, and sent them the word of health which they receaued thorow beleuynge it: & than come they to the felynge of the good­nesse of God, and of very loue are ready to fulfyll what soeuer God commaundeth thē: and loke how muche they beleue, euen so much they worke. And though it be true y t we be iustifyed in Christ before the fundaci­ons of the worlde were layed, yet is y t only knowe to God, and we haue no felynge of it vntyll fayth come. And euen as God com­meth downwarde, (for he thorow Christ had mercy on vs, and of mercy dyd chose vs be­fore [Page] we were, and than after we come into this world instilleth grace thorow his sprete and than sendeth vs hys worde, whiche the sprete causeth vs to beleue, & worketh fayth in vs, from whence all good workes flowe) euē so do we go vpward, and by my fayth do know surely y t God hath sent me hys word & grace thorow his sprete to cause me beleue it & therfore cōclud y t he hath chosen me, & hath mercy vnto me thorow Christ hys only son which is y e mage of the inuisible God, fyrst begottē before all creatures. Now is my dewtye agayne whā I haue & perceaue this goodnesse of God the father and hys sonne Iesus Christ to me warde, that I stonde not styll and let hys grace be vacant and ydle in me: but (accordynge to the sprete y e he hath poured in me, and y e grace that is geuē me, to vse hys gyftes accordynge to hys wyll & cōmaundement) to procede from vertue to vertue, as from steppe to steppe alwaye ap­prochynge oure louynge fathers kyngdome nearer and nearer, where he sytteth & ray­neth worlde without ende. To the which brynge vs he that wyll all mankynde to be saued.

AMEN.

¶ Fautes escaped in the pryntynge.

The iiii. leafe the ii. page the xii. lyne reade. Fare ye well, and praye for. &c.

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