DOCTRINAL TREATISES INTRODUCTIONS TO DIFFERENT PORTIONS OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES. ginatituUti a.©. ».»«««•*¦• JFot t%e i^uolicatton of tljc fflSHorfes of tf)f dFattim ana <£arlp JMUrittre of tjje l&eformrD (B?ngli0f) ©fjurrlj, DOCTRINAL TREATISES AND INTRODUCTIONS TO DIFFERENT PORTIONS THE HOLY SCRIPTURES. WILLIAM TYNDALE, MARTYR, 1536. EDITED FOR &tje $ New Testament. Indeed, the Eev. CTAndersonhas not hesitated to say1, that we have, in that Pro logue, 'the very first language addressed by him to the Christians of England :' and if so, that first language is to be found in the 'Pathway into the Holy Scripture.' For the 'Pathway' is, in fact, a reprint of that Prologue ; with such alterations as Tyndale either thought requisite to adapt it for sep^SfEe'^uElication, or expedient to prevent its identity with the reprobated Prologue from being de tected at first sight. The precise date of the first publication of the Pathway, as a separate treatise, has_not , bjjgj^jj^extained It is however mentioned by Dibdin2, as having been printed by Thomas Godfray, London. Now the Prologue itself was undeniably printed in 1525, and Th. Godfray printed nothing after 1532; so that we have thus certain limits, between which the Pathway must have passed through the press. But farther, in Sir Thos. More's preface to his ' Confutation of Tyndale's Answer ' to his Dialogue, which Confutation bears on its- title-page that it was printed in 1532, we nnd~"him mentioning theJPathway,. and apparently ignorant then that Tyndale was its author. More had been recapitulating the titles of such works as had then come out in Tyndale's name, accompanying the recapitulation with brief but coarsely abusive comments, to prove him a ' sctter-forth of heresies as evil as the Alchorane ; ' and then he proceeds to assail ' friar Barns, sometime doctor in Cambridge,' charging him with hold ing the heresy of Zuinglius ' concerning the sacrament of the altar,' (though Barnes's creed was in reality Lutheran,) for which, and for his demeanour, More says 'he might lawfully be burned,' as 'having clearly broken and forfeited the king's safe-conduct.' 'Then,' says he, 'have we farther yet, beside Barnes' book, the A. B. C. for chil dren3. And because there is no grace therein, 1Str*we~iE)uld lack prayers, we have the Prymer, and the Ploughman's Prayer, and a book of other small devotions, and then the whole Psalter too 4. After [i Annals of the English Bible. B. i. sec. 2. p. 65. of first ed.] P Dibdin, Typographical Antiquities, Vol. m. p. 71.] [3 Styled in the prohibitory lists, * A. B. C. against the clergy.'] [" A proclamation forbidding the king's subjects ' to bring into this realm, to sell, receive;Tak"e7"or detain,' any of a list of books comprehending all the above, and also 'The Sum of Scripture' mentioned in the next sentence, but not the Pathway, had been issued by Henry VIII. in 1529, under More's influence. Anderson's Annals, 1—2 4 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. the Psalter, children were wont to go to their Donat and their Accy- dence ; but now they go straight to scripture. And thereto have wo, as a Donate the book of The Pathway to Scripture; and for an Accy- dence, because we should be good scholars shortly and be soon sped, we have the whole Sum of Scripture in a little book : so that after these books well learned, wo be meet for Tyndale's Pentateukes, and Tyndale's Testament, and all the other high heresies that he and Jaye, and Fryth, and friar Barns, teach in all their books beside ; of all which heresies the seed is sown, and prettily sprung up in these little books before1.' The proclamations and episcopal mandates against the circulation of Tyndale's Testaments particularly notice the appended glosses; which belonged, exclusively, to the edition prefaced by that Prologue which was the prototype of the Pathway. And whilst that edition was well nigh stifled in its birth by the anti-reforming zeal of Cochlseus, as noticed in the life of Tyndale, its prologue and pointed notes seem to have provoked the ruling powers at home to hunt it out for de struction with such successful zeal, that the fact of its ever having existed had begun to be overlooked, till a fragment of the portion printed at Cologne, probably lost by Tyndale in his hasty flight with the few finished sheets, was recently discovered in London, bound up with a contemporary production; and being purchased by the lato Rt. Hon. Thomas Grenville, has just been added, by his considerate bequest, to the literary treasures of the British Museum. The ac count of this discovery, and the evidence for the genuineness of this fragment, which commences with the prologue, are stated by Mr An derson as follows : — " Mr Thomas Rodd, of Great Newport-street, a respectable book seller in London, having exchanged with a friend, who did not recollect how he came by it, a quarto tract by CEcolampadius, without any cover, there was attached to it, by binding, a portion in the English language, black letter ; and though it was evidently the gospel of Matthew, with tlie prologge of 14 pages preceding, neither Mr Rodd nor his friend understood, at the time, what it actually was. ' The accidental discovery,' says Mr R., ' of the remarkable initial letter Y, with which this page, the first of the prologue, is decorated, in another book printed at Cologne in 1534, first led me to search other books printed at the same place ; and I succeeded in finding every cut and letter, with the exception of one, in other books from the same printing-office, that of Peter Quentel. I have found the type in which B. i. sect. 6. pp. 234—5. Foxe's Acts and Monuments, Vol. iv. pp. 676—9. Lond. 1837. There was again, ajrqyal proclamation, issued May 24, 1530, with an appended list of prohibited books, which takes no notice of the Pathway." Anderson's Annals, pp. 257—9.] [' The Confutacyon of Tyndale's answere, made by Syr Thomas More, Knyght, lord chancellor of Englonde. Prentyd at London, By Wyllyam ltastell, 1532, Cum privilegio. Preface to the Christian Reader, Sign. Bb. ii.] INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. 5 this portion of the New Testament is printed, and the cuts with which it is decorated, used in other books printed at Cologne from the year 1521 to 1540.' The fact is," proceeds Mr Anderson, "that though the tract entitled, A Pathway into the Holy Scripture, contains the most of it, the prologue was never printed entire in any subsequent edition, nor, above all, its important and beautiful introduction. Independently however of these proofs, there is incontrovertible evidence presented to the eye. The first page of the sacred text is preceded by a large, spirited cut of the evangelist Matthew at his work, dipping his pen into the inkstand, held out to him by an angel; and by this specimen, though the title-page be wanting, we are able to prove, not only that the printer was Peter Quentel, but that the year of printing was 1525. Rupert's commentary on Matthew, sent from Liege to Cologne, a closely-printed folio volume, was finished at Quentel's press so early as the 12th of June, 1526. Now as far back as the beginning of this folio, or page second, we have the identical large wood- cut of Matthew, which had been used to adorn the preceding New Testament; but, before being employed in the work of Rupert, better to fit the page, the block had been pared down, so as to deprive it of the pillar on the left side, the angel of the points of his pinions, and both pillars of their bases at the bottom. Thus also it was placed on the title-page, and again, next year, before Matthew, in a beautiful folio Latin Bible. In the New Testament of Tyndale, on the contrary, the block will be seen entire; consequently it must have been the prior publication, and must have been used accordingly in 1525 2." By the kind indulgence of the late Mr Grenvillc, the editor was permitted to collate his unique copy of the Prologue. Such a colla tion was particularly desirable, because he has, not been able to ascertain the existence of any copy of the Pathway, as separately printed ; so that the only ancient edition of it, accessible to him, has been the copy inserted in Day's folio black-letter reprint of the works of Frith, Barnes, and Tyndale, published in 1573. Those portions of the Prologue which are omitted in the Pathway will be given to the reader in the notes appended to their proper places ; and, on the other hand, such portions of the Pathway as were not parts of the Prologue will be distinguished, by including them within brackets. The marginal notes also, which appeared in the Prologue, and therefore passed under Tyndale's eye, will have the initials, W. T., affixed to them; whilst those that are only found [» Anderson's Annals of E. Bib. B. i. sect. 2. p. 63. In the appendix to his second volume, Mr Anderson has given the public facsimiles of this wood-cut, as also of the first pages of the Prologue and translations ; the Prologue being the first specimen extant of Tyndale's composition, and the Translation the first extant of his efforts as a translator. For though the 4to Testament, with marginal glosses, was preceded in its issue from the press by the small 8vo edition, once forming part of the Harleian Library, and now in the Baptists' Museum at Bristol, Mr A. has decisively proved that so much of the 4to as was printed at Cologne, was the first part of an entire English New Testament put into the press.] 6 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. in Day's edition will be marked Ant. ed., to express that they are not modern, and that yet it would not be just to hold Tyndale responsible for them, since they may have been no more than an editor's remarks, as it is obvious that some of the marginal notes in Day's volume must have been.] A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. [I do marvel greatly, dearly beloved in Christ, that ever any man should repugn or speak against the scripture to be ^"^gj? had in every language, and that of every man. For I -Xtvery thought that no man had been] 1 so blind to ask why hght Anf^Y" should be shewed to them that walk in darkness, where they cannot but stumble, and where to stumble is the danger of eternal damnation; other2 so despiteful that he would envy any man (I speak not his brother) so necessary a thing ; or so Bedlam mad to affirm that good is the natural cause of evil, and darkness to proceed out of light, and that lying should be grounded in truth and verity ; and not rather clean contrary, that hght destroyeth darkness, and verity reproyeth all manner lying. [Nevertheless, seeing that it hath pleased God to send unto our Englishmen, even to as many as unfeignedly desire [i The Prologue began as follows : — ' I have here translated, brethren and sisters, most dear and ten derly beloved in Christ, the New Testament, for your spiritual edifying, consolation, and solace ; exhorting instantly and beseeching those that are better seen in the tongues than I, and that have better gifts of grace, to interpret the sense of the Scripture, and meaning of the Spirit, than I, to consider and ponder my labour, and that with the spirit of meekness; and if they perceive in any places that I have not attained the very sense of the tongue, or meaning of the scripture, or have not given the right English word, that they put to their hands to amend it, remembering that so is their duty to do. For we have not received the gifts of God for ourselves only, or for to hide them ; but for to bestow them unto the honouring of GOD and Christ, and edifying of the congregation, which is the body of Christ. ' The causes that moved me to translate, I thought better that other should imagine, than that I should rehearse them. Moreover I supposed it superfluous ; for who is so blind, &c.'] £2 Other, i.e. or.] 8 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. it, the scripture in their mother tongue, considering that there be in every place false teachers and blind leaders; that ye should be deceived of no man, I supposed it very The cause necessary to prepare this Pathway into the scripture for you1, Son oVthls that ve might walk surely, and ever know the true from the Pathway. JO T- such like uncleanness ! With what pleasure and delectation, inwardly, serveth a glutton his belly ! With what diligence deceive we ! How busily seek we the things of this world ! Whatsoever we do, think, or imagine, is abominable in the Sight of God. [For we can refer nothing unto the honour of [4 Poison,!, e., poisonous; as the word is again used in the next page.] [5 Adultery.] r 1 2 [tyndale.] 18 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. God ; neither is his law, or will, written in our members or in our hearts: neither is there any more power in us to follow the will of God, than in a stone to ascend upward of his own self.] And [beside that,] we are as it were asleep in so deep blindness, that we can neither see nor feel what misery, thraldom, and wretchedness we are in, till Moses rjome and wake us, and publish the law. When we hear the law truly preached, how that we ought to love and honour God with all our strength and might, from the low bottom of the heart, [because he hath created us, and both heaven and earth for our sakes, and made us lord thereof;] and our neighbours (yea, our enemies) as ourselves, inwardly, from the ground of the heart, [because God hath made them after the likeness of his own image, and they are his sons as well as we, and Christ hath bought them with his blood, and made them heirs of everlasting life as well as us ; and how we ought to] do1 whatsoever God biddeth, and abstain from whatsoever God forbiddeth, with all love and meekness, with a fervent and a burning lust from the center of the heart; then beginneth the conscience to rage against the law, and against God. No sea, be it ever so great a tempest, is so unquiet. For it is not possible for a natural man to consent to the law, that it should be good, or that God should be righteous which maketh the law ; [inasmuch as it is con trary unto his nature, and damneth him and all that he can do, and neither sheweth him where to fetch help, nor preacheth any mercy ; but only setteth man at variance with God, (as Rom.iv. witnesseth Paul, Rom. iv.) and provoketh him and stirreth him to rail on God, and to blaspheme him as a cruel tyrant, Man before For it is not possible for a man, till he be born again, to his regenera- . , , _ , . , ii« /» • thiSkawenof *nm'£ *na* "°d 1S righteous to make him of so poison a nature, God. Anted, either for his own pleasure or for the sin of another man, and to give him a law that is impossible for him to do, or to consent to2;] his wit, reason, and will being so fast glued, yea, nailed and chained unto the will of the devil. Neither can any creature loose the bonds, save the blood of Christ [only]. Sshauibertey* This is the captivity and bondage, whence Christ delivered W,T- us, redeemed and loosed us. His blood, his death, his [} Prol. has, heart ; and do whatsoever.] [2 Prol. maketh the law; man's wit, reason, and will, are so, tfe.] A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. 19 patience in suffering rebukes and wrongs, his prayers and fastings, his meekness and fulfilling of the uttermost point of the law, appeased the wrath of God ; brought the favour of God to us again ; obtained that God should love us first, and be our Father, and that a merciful Father, that will con sider our infirmities and weakness, and will give us his Spirit again (which was taken away in the fall of Adam) to rule, govern, and strength us, and to break the bonds of Satan, wherein we were so strait bound. When Christ is thuswise preached, and the promises rehearsed, which are contained in the prophets, in the psalms, and in divers places of the five books of Moses, [which preaching is called the Gospel or glad The hearts of tidings ;] then the hearts of them which are elect and chosen, even meit at , ° J 7 the preaching begin to wax soft and melt at the bounteous mercy of God, ^°^\nd and kindness shewed of Christ. For when the evangelion is ne1/si,st\1nitnd' preached, the Spirit of God entereth into them which God ed' hath ordained and appointed unto eternal life; and openeth ineevange- ,1 . . , , ,. „ . ttti lionbringeth their inward eyes, and worketh such behet m them. When faith, faith «/ ' brmgethlove, the woful consciences feel and taste how sweet a thing the j°™ *™)tT_ bitter death of Christ is, and how merciful and loving God is, through Christ's purchasing and merits ; they begin to love again, and to consent to the law of God, how that it is good and ought so to be, and that God is righteous which made it; and desire to fulfil the law, even as a sick man desireth to be whole, and are an hungred and thirst after more righteousness, and after more strength, to fulfil the law more perfectly. And in all that they do, or omit and leave undone, they seek God's honour and his will with meekness, ever condemning the unperfectness of their deeds by the law. Now Christ standeth us in double stead ; and us serveth, two manner wise. First, he is our Redeemer, Deliverer, Reconciler, Mediator, Intercessor, Advocate, Attorney, "Soli- christ left citor, our Hope, Comfort, Shield, Protection, Defender, ^|tth^t0 Strength, Health, Satisfaction and Salvation. His blood, Aunrt^ation- his death, all that he ever did, is ours. And Christ himself, ctmst bring- with all that he is or can do, is ours. His blood-shedding, nessfreeiy, , ° and giveth an and all that he did, doth me as good service as though I ^"j^ myself had done it. And God (as great as he is) is mine, ffi* s°d'y- with all that he hath, [as an husband is his wife's,] through Christ and his purchasing. Secondarily, after that we be overcome with love and 2—2 20 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. kindness, and now seek to do the will of God (which is a Christian man's nature), then have we Christ an example to counterfeit ; as saith Christ himself in John, " I have given you an example." And in another evangelist he saith, " He that will be great among you, shall be your servant and minister ; as the Son of man came to minister, and not to be Faith receiv- ministered unto." And Paul saith, " Counterfeit Christ1." and tove°d' And Peter saith, " Christ died for you, anJTeTt you an example the same on to follow his steps." Whatsoever therefore faith hath received his neigh- A . hour. w. t. 0f Q.0(i through Christ's blood and deserving, that same must love shed out, every whit, and bestow it on our neighbours unto their profit, yea, and that though they be our enemies. [What faith receiveth of God through Christ's blood, that we must bestow on our neighbours, though they be our enemies.] By faith we receive of God, and by love we shed_gui again. And that must we do freely, after the example of Christ, • without any other respect, save our neighbour's wealth2 only; and -neither look for reward in the earth, nor yet in heaven, for [the deserving and merits of] our deeds, [as friars preach ; though we know that jjood _deeds_are rewjrdgdLJiGth in this life~a"ntT In the life to come.] But of pure love must we bestow ourselves, all that we have, and all that we are able to do, even on our enemies, to bring them to God, consider- christdidnot ing nothing but their wealth, as Christ did ours. Christ did meritheaven, not his deeds to obtain heaven thereby, (that had been a mad- for that was . 1 i i • , • butafreeeaidy' ness 0 heaven was his already, he was heir thereof, it was Ant"ed!akes' his by inheritance ; but did them freely for our sakes, consi dering nothing but our wealth, and to bring the favour of God to us again, and us to God. And no natural3 son, that is his father's heir, doth his father's will because he would bo heir : that he is already by birth ; his father gave him that ore 'he was born, and is loather that he should go without it, than he himself hath wit to be ; but of pure love doth he that he doth. And ask him, Why he doth any thing that he [' The text meant is probably Ephes. v. i, Tlpeade ovv p/*nrai rou 6eo5 ; which Tyndale has rendered, ' Be ye counterfeiters of God,' and. where he might think, that by God is meant Christ, from the intro duction of the name of Christ in a similar relation in the next clause.] [2 Wealth: welfare.] [3 Natural : ordinary, as being a partaker of the father's nature.] A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. 21 doth? he answereth, My father bade; it is my father's will; it pleaseth my father. Bond-servants work for hire, children for love : for their father, with all he hath, is a true cims- theirs already. So doth a Christian man freely all that he believeth ii ¦ -i i i« i i /-. i i i • • i that heaven doth; 'considereth nothing but the will of God, and his neigh- is ws already, o > o and therefore hour's wealth only. If I live chaste, I do it not to obtain ^^han^ heaven thereby; for then" should I do wrong to the blood SnTyTandto of^Christ ; Christ's blood hath obtained me that ; Christ's dnfngsato meritThave made me heir thereof ; he is both door and way thitherwards : neither that I look for an higher room4 in heaven, than they shall have which live in wedlock, other than a whore of the stews (if she repent) ; for that were the pride of Lucifer : but freely to wait on the evangelion ; [and to avoid the trouble of the world, and occasions that might pluck me therefrom,] and to serve my brother withal ; even as one hand helpeth anotheTvor one member another, because one feeleth another's grief, and the pain of the one is the pain of the other. Whatsoever is done to the least of us (whether it be good or bad), it is done to Christ ; and whatso ever is done to my brother (if I be a Christian man), that same is done to me. Neither doth my brother's pain grieve me less than mine own : neither rejoice I less at his wealth than at mine own, [if I love him as well and as much as myself, as the law commandeth me. J If it were not so, how saith Paul ? " Let him that rejoiceth, rejoice in the Lord," that is to say, Christ, which is Lord over all creatures. If my merits obtained me heaven, or a higher place5 there, then had I wherein I might rejoice besides the Lord. Here see ye the nature of the law, and the nature of the The law evangelion ; how the law is the key that bindeth and the gospei n ii r- l iii loosethall damneth all men, and the evangelion [is the key that] looseth men. w. t. them again. The law goeth before, and the evangelion followeth. When a preacher preacheth the law, he bindeth all consciences ; and when he preacheth the gospel, he looseth them again. These two salves (I mean the law and the gospel) useth God and his preacher, to heal and cure sinners withal. The law driveth out the disease and maketh it ap- The foroe ot pear, and is a sharp salve, and a fretting corosy 6, and killeth we iaw' [4 Room : place.] [5 In the Prol. the word is room.] [s Corrosive, or caustic.] 22 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. the dead flesh, and looseth and draweth the sores out by the roots, and all corruption. It pulleth from a man the trust and confidence that he hath in himself, and in his own works* merits, deservings and ceremonies, [and robbeth him of all his righteousness, and maketh him poor.] It killeth him, send- eth him down to hell, and bringeth him to utter desperation, and prepareth the way of the Lord, as it is written of John the Baptist. For it is not possible that Christ should come to a man, as longTS"he trusteth in himself, ofliT^y^wrldly thing, [or hath any righteousness of his own, or richespf holy works.] 'Then cometh the evangelion, a more gentle pastor, which suppleth and suageth the wounds of the conscience, and bringeth health. It bringeth the Spirit of God ; which looseth the bonds of Satan, and coupleth us to God and his will, through strong, faith and fervent love, with bonds too strong for the devil, the world, or any creature to loose them. The uprising And the poor and wretched sinner feeleth so great mercy, sinner feeleth , \ . • i ¦ i» i i such joy in love, and kindness in God, that he is sure in himself how that efh uhn'o*" ^ *s no* Possible that God should forsake him, or withdraw should tm-od his mercy and love from him ; and boldly crieth out with Ant e™' Paul, saying, " Who shall separate us from the loye that God loveth us withal ? " That is to say, What shall make me be lieve that God loveth me not ? Shall tribulation ? anguish ? persecution? Shall hunger? nakedness? Shall sword? a christian Nay, " I am sure that neither death, nor life, neither angel, man feeleth . J ' ° ' the working neither rule nor power, neither present things nor things to soui"andhin come> neither high nor low, neither any creature, is able to tion7anaaad- separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesu our ethood?61' Lord." In all such tribulations a Christian man perceiveth father and a that God is his Father, and loveth him even as he loved w. t?' Christ when he shed his blood on the cross. Finally, as be fore, when I was bond to the devil and his will, I wrought all manner evil and wickedness, not for hell's sake, which is the reward of sin, but because I was heir of hell by birth and bondage to the devil, did I evil, (for I could none otherwise do ; to do sin was my nature :) even so now, since I am coupled to God by Christ's blood, do I well, not for heaven's sake, [which is yet the reward of well doing ;] but because I am heir of heaven by grace and Christ's purchasing, and have the Spirit of God, I do good freely, for so is my nature : as a good tree bringeth forth good fruit, and an evil tree evil A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. 23 fruit. By the fruits shall ye know what the tree is. A man's deeds declare what he is within, but make him neither good nor bad ; [though, after we be created anew by the Spirit anrTdoctrine of Christ, we wax perfecter alway, with work ing according to the doctrine, and not with blind works of our own imagining.] We must be first evil ere we do evil, as a serpent is first poisoned ere he poison. We must be also good ere we do good, as the fire must be first hot, ere it [heat another] l thing. Take an example : As those blind and deaf, which are cured in the gospel, could not see nor hear, till Christ had given them sight and hearing2; and those sick could not do the deeds of an whole man, till Christ had given them health ; so can no man do good in his soul, till Christ have loosed him out of the bonds of Satan, and have given him wherewith to do good, yea, and first have poured into him that self good thing which he sheddeth forth after ward on other. Whatsoever is our own, is sin. Whatsoever ah sin in us is above that, is Christ's gift, purchase, doing and working. seives,"and ° x ° ° all goodness He bought it of his Father dearly, with his blood, yea, with of Christ. his most bitter death, and gave his life for it. Whatsoever good thing is in us, that is given us freely, without our de serving or merits, for Christ's blood's sake. That we desire to follow the will of God, it is the gift of Christ's blood. That we now hate the devil's will (whereunto we were so fast locked, and could not but love it), is also the gift of Christ's blood ; unto whom belongeth the praise and honour of our good deeds, and not unto us3. [Our deeds do us three manner of service. First, _they works cer- certify^us that we are heirs of everlasting life, and that the everlasting Spirit of God. which is the earnest thereof, is in us ; in that kiiisininu's, _r_ — -'-- -._ - -- — -. andreheve our hearts consent unto the law of God, and we have power $e0™cneesf',J in our members to do it, though imperfectly. And secondaT bour- rily, we tame the flesh therewith, and kill the sin that re- maineth yet in us ; and wax daily perfecter and perfecter in I1 Prol. warm any.] [2 Prol. As those blind, which are cured in the evangelion, could not see till Christ had given them sight ; and deaf could not hear, till Christ had given them hearing.] [3 With these words the Prologue ends : the remaining marginal notes are consequently all of them from Day's edition.] 24 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. the Spirit therewith ; and keep1 that the lusts choke not the word of God that is sown in us, nor quench the gifts and working of the Spirit, and that we lose not the Spirit again. And thirdly, we do our duty unto our neighbour therewith, and help their necessity unto our own comfort also, and draw all men unto the honouring and praising of God. Gifts of grace And whosoever excelleth in the gifts of grace, let the brother as same think that they be given him, as much to do his brother much as to «/ o ? ourselves, service as for his own self, and as much for the love which God hath to the weak, as unto him unto whom God giveth such gifts. And he that withdraweth aught that he hath from his neighbour's need, robbeth his neighbour, and is a thief. And he that is proud of the gifts of God, and thinketh himself by the reason of them better than his feeble neigh bour, and not rather (as the truth is) knowledgeth himself a servant unto his poor neighbour, by the reason of them ; the same hath Lucifer's spirit in him, and not Christ's. These things to know : first, the law ; how that it is na tural right, and equity ; that we have but one God to put our hope and trust in, and him to love with all the heart, all the soul, and all our might and power, and neither to, move heart nor hand but at his commandment, because he hath first created us of nought, and heaven and earth for our sakes ; and afterwards when we had marred ourself through sin, he forgave us, and created us again, in the blood of his beloved Son: And that we have the name of our one God in fear and reverence ; and that we dishonour it not, in swearing thereby about light trifles or vanity, or call it to record for the con firming of wickedness or falsehood, or aught that is to the dishonour of God, which is the breaking of his laws, or unto the hurt of our neighbour : And inasmuch as he is our Lord and God, and we his double possession, by creation and redemption, and therefore ought (as I said) neither to move heart or hand without his Ssl4ato ne" commandment ; it is right that we have needful holy days to thSein°lnd come together, and learn his will, both the law which he leam Christ's will. [J Keep : take care. 'Wymmen ne kepte of,' i.e. Women took no care of, or, Women had no regard for. Hearne's Glossary to Robt. of Gloucester's Chronicle. And Wickliffe, Luke x. 40. ' Lord, takisfc thou no kepe.'] A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. 25 will have us ruled by, and also the promises of mercy which he will have us trust unto ; and to give God thanks together for his mercy, and to commit our infirmities to him through our Saviour Jesus, and to reconcile ourselves unto him, and each to other, if aught be between brother and brother that requireth it. And for this purpose and such like, as to visit the sick and needy, and redress peace and unity, were the holy days ordained only ; and so far forth are they to be kept holy from all manner works that may be conveniently spared for the time, till this be done, and no further, but then lawfully to work : And that it is right that we obey father and mother, master, lord, prince and king, and all the ordinances of the world, bodily and ghostly, by which God ruleth us, and min- isfereth freely his benefits unto us all: and that we love them -for the benefits that we receive by them, and fear them for the power they have over us to punish us, if we trespass the law and good order. So far yet are the worldly powers worldly or rulers to be obeyed only, as their commandments repugn obeyed°o far i i p /-i i i i i o forth as their not against the commandment ot Orod ; and then, no l. laws impugn f /~t i • not God's Wherefore we must have God's commandment ever in our laws- hearts, and by the higher law interpret the inferior : that we obey nothing against the belief of one God, or against the faith, hope and trust that is in him only, or against the love of God, whereby we do or leave undone all things for his sake; and that we do nothing, for any man's commandment, against the reverence of the name of God, to make it des pised, and the less feared and set by ; and that we obey nothing to the hinderance of the knowledge of the blessed doctrine of God, whose servant the holy day is. Notwith- Though standing, thquglxihe. rulers which God hath set over us com- Stated o'f mand" us against God, or do us open wrong, and oppress us° yet we us with cruel tyranny; yet because they are in Jood's bgfnlg^they room, we may not avenge ourselves, but by thejprocess andGod'sroom- order of God's law, and laws of man made,,by_thejiu.thority of God's law, which is also God's law, ever by an higher power, and remitting the vengeance unto God, and in the mean season suffer until the hour be come : And on the" other side,~*1o know that a man ought to wemustiove our neigh- tcu tio iimiBtui, ue- ' [2 Ho : halt ; come to a stop.] love his neighbour equally and fully as well as himself, be- hour Sgour. 26, A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. cause his neighbour (be he never so simple) is equally created of God, and as full redeemed by the blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ. Out of which commandment of love spring these : Kill not thy neighbour : defile not his wife : bear no false witness against him ; and finally, not only do not these things in deed, but covet not in thine heart his house, his wife, his man-servant, maid-servant, ox, ass, or whatsoever is his: so that these laws, pertaining unto our neighbour, are not fulfilled in the sight of God, save with love. He that loveth not his neighbour keepeth not this commandment, ' Defile not thy neighbour's wife,' though he never touch her, or never see her, or think upon her. For the commandment is, Though thy neighbour's wife be never so fair, and thou have never so great opportunity given thee, and she consent, or haply provoke thee (as Potiphar's wife did Joseph), yet see thou love thy neighbour so well, that for very love thou can not find in thine heart to do that wickedness. And even so he that trusteth in any thing, save in God only and in his Son Jesus Christ, keepeth no commandment at all, in the sight of God. For he that hath trust in any creature, whether in hea ven or in earth, save in God and his Son Jesus, can see no cause to love God with all his heart, &c. neither to abstain from dishonouring his name, nor to keep the holy day for the love of his doctrine, nor to obey lovingly the rulers of this world ; nor any cause to love his neighbour as himself, and to abstain from hurting him, where he may get profit by him, and save himself harmless. And in like wise, against this law, 'Love thy neighbour as thyself,' I may obey no worldly power, to do aught at any man's commandment unto the hurt of my neighbour that hath not deserved it, though he be a Turk : And to know how contrary this law is unto our nature, and how it is damnation not to have this law written in our hearts, though we never commit the deeds ; and how there is no other means to be saved from this damnation, than through repentance toward the law, and faith in Christ's blood ; which are the very inward baptism of our souls, and the washing and the dipping of our bodies in the water is the outward our baptism sign. The plunging of the body under the water signifieth signifieth ,,°, , i „ „ , . . •,, i that we that we repent and profess to fight against sin and lusts, and repent and l *ii i i EewMe! to * em eYei7 day more and more, with the help of God, A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. 27 and our diligence in following the doctrine of Christ and the leading of his Spirit ; and that we believe to be washed from our natural damnation in which we are born, and from all the wrath of the law, and from all the infirmities and weaknesses that remain in us after we have given our consent unto the law, and yielded ourself to be scholars thereof; and from all the imperfectness of all our deeds done with cold love, and from all actual sin which shall chance"on" us," while we* enforce the contrary and ever fight there against, and hope to sin no more. And thus repentance and faith begin at our baptism, and first professing the laws of God ; and continue unto our hves' end, and grow as we grow in the Spirit : for the per- The perfecter ° . ° r x we are, the fecter we be, the greater is our repentance, and the stronger greater is our ' o i. ' o repentance our faith. And thus, as the Spirit and doctrine on God's ^^ is part, and repentance and faith on our part, beget us anew in our fauh- Christ, even so they make us grow, and wax perfect, and save us unto the end ; and never leave us until all sin be put off, and we clean purified, and full formed, and fashioned after the similitude and likeness of the perfectness of our Saviour Jesus, whose gift all is : And finally, to know that whatsoever good thing is in us, that same is the gift of grace, and therefore not of deserving, though many things be given of God through our dihgence in working his laws, and chastising our bodies, and in pray ing for them, and believing his promises, which else should not be given us ; yet our working deserveth not the gifts, no our works ,° . ' ¦?-_„. „„»».- --&-— --,-- r: — ~" & , . . deserve not more than the diligence ol a merchant in seeking .a. good ship the pfts °f o o- o ± grace. bringeth the" goods safe to land, though such diligence doth now and then help thereto : but when we believe in God, and then do all that is in our might, and not tempt him, then is God true to abide by his promise, and to help us, and perform alone when our strength is past : These things, I say, to know, is to have all the scripture unlocked and opened before thee ; so that if thou wilt go in, and read, thou canst not but understand. And in these things to be ignorant, is to have all the scripture locked up ; so that the more thou readest it, the blinder thou art, and the more contrariety thou findest in it, and the more tangled art thou therein, and canst nowhere through : for if thou had a ThepHnei- .„ »!, plesofscrip- gloss in one place, in another it will not serve. And there- fSJJjJg*^1* fore, because we be never taught the profession of our bap- £orree^ 28 A PATHWAY INTO THE HOLY SCRIPTURE. tism, we remain always unlearned, as well the spiritualty, for all their great clergy and high schools (as we say), as the lay people. And now, because the lay and unlearned people are taught these first principles of our profession, therefore they read the scripture, and understand and delight therein. And our great pillars of holy church, which have nailed_a_yeil of false glosses on Moses's T£ce7 IcTcorrupl the true understand ing" of his law, cannot come in. And therefore .they bark, and-say -the scripture maketh heretics, and it is not possible for them to understand it in the English, because they them selves do not in Latin. And of pure malice, that they can not have their will, they slay their brethren for their faith they have in our Saviour, and therewith utter their bloody wolfish tyranny, and what they be within, and whose disci ples. Herewith, reader, be committed unto the grace of our Saviour Jesus ; unto whom, and God our Father through him, be praise for ever and for ever. Amen. THE WICKED MAMMON. THE PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. Published In the year 1527, the 8th of May, By William Tyndale. Romans III. Chap. We hold that a man is justified by faith, without the works of the law. INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. [As the ' Pathway into the Holy Scripture' was, in its original form, the first of Tyndale's compositions, which we can ascertain him to have put into the press, so ' The Parable of the Wicked Mammon' was the first printed with his name. It was written at Worms ; and there seems to be no reason for doubting the correctness of the date of its publication as given in the title page, which is a transcript of its heading in Day's folio volume of the works of Frith, Barnes, and Tyndale1. If however it be thought desirable that this date should receive some confirmation from older authority, such may be col lected from the language used by Tyndale in the last sentence of his 'Practice of Prelates :' for whereas that treatise was undeniably published in 1530, Tyndale there says, 'Well towards three years agone, I sent forth The True Obedience of a Christian Man;' and we know that ' The Obedience' prgcedea" ' The Wicked Mammon' (as / •'•¦ each is briefly styled) by an- interval of a few months ; so that the publication of The Wicked Mammon could not be consistently assigned to any date which should differ much from that found in Day's folio. Mr Anderson says, that a second edition was finished by Hans Luft, printer at Marburg in Hesse, on the same day in the following year; and that its title was changed, in an edition by J. Nycholson, Southwark, 1536, to that of 'A Treatise of Justification by Faith only ; otherwise called, The Parable of the Wicked Mammon2.' This addition would give additional disgust to many ; but was well fitted to make known what was its chief topic. Abundant evidence of its circulation and influence, in the mean while, may be gathered from various contemporary documents of hostile origin. It is well known that Foxe has frequently entered events, in his Acts and Mo numents, rather as they fell under his notice than in the chrono logical order in which they occurred ; and ' The Wicked Mammon' thus appears.Jn.-a„list_J5f prolnbj.ted books immediately following a mandate dated Oct. 23, 1526, issued by Cuthbert Tonstal then bishop P The title only differs from that heading in not spelling the author's name Tyn dall, but Tyndale; as Day himself does, a few lines lower, in the same page. The text from Romans is not appended as a motto in Day, hut is so placed in the title- page of Coplande's ancient black-letter edition ; which must be confessed however, to contain one palpable misprint, as 1536, the year of Tyndale's death, is there made the date of his compiling this Treatise ; a date contradictory to so many public docu ments, then recent and weU known, that no editor could have meant to say it was then compiled by Tyndale.] P Annals of the English Bible. B. i. sec. 4. pp. 139 and 518.] 32 PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. of_Lojidon, and insisting on the surrender of all English New Tes taments to his officials1. This has misled Strype into saying, after a brief mention of the same mandate, ' Other books of this nature were then forbid;' and transcribing Foxe's list, inclusive of The Wicked Mammon, as an enumeration of their titles2. But whilst the date of the inhibition of Tyndale's Wicked Mammon, thus apparently given by Foxe, and mistakenly by Strype, is earlier than its publication, Foxe has copied the date of April 21, 1529, from the register of Tonstal, as that in which John Tewkesbur^a Lon- don tradesman, was brought before that pTelate7"(HenryStandish, EliEop of St Asaph, and the abbot of Westminster being his asses sors,) and was examined by them, as to whether he would stand to the contents of the book named The Wicked Mammon; to which he replied that he would. Twice more, within a few days, he was again obliged to appear before bishop Tonstal, Nicholas West, bishop of Ely, and John Longland, bishop of Lincoln, and was questioned upon articles extracted from The Wicked Mammon ; and, being driven from his firmness, he recanted and abjured his alleged heresies, on May 8th. He was then sentenced to carry a fagot publicly to two churches, and to three of the city markets, on different days, and to wear the sign of a fagot worked on each of his sleeves all his lifetime, as a confession to the beholders that he deserved the fire ; to submit to be shut up in a monastery, till the bishop should give him leave to come out ; and then to confine himself to residing within his diocese of London. Two years after this he was appre- hended again, and brought before Sir Thomas More and the bishop of London; in which office Stokesley had succeeded Tonstal, who had been promoted to Durham. He was then charged with having 'had The Wicked Mammon in his custody, and read it since his abjuration, which the said Tewkesbury confessed3.' This account is confirmed by Sir Thomas More, in the Preface to his 'Confuta- cion of Tyndale's answer', (Lond. 1532) folio x, where he says, ' In Tewkesbury's house was found Tyndale's book of Obedience, which he well allowed', and his wicked book also of The Wicked Mammon, saying at his examination, that all the heresies therein were good and Christian faith, being indeed as full of false heresies, and as frantic as ever heretic made any, since Christ was born.' More adds his belief that Tewkesbury owed his heretical opinions to ' Tyn dale's ungracious books: for which the poor wretch lieth now in hell, and crieth out on him ; and Tyndale, if he do not amend in time, he is like to find him, when they come together, an hot fire brand burning at his back.' So wrote Sir. Thomas uMoreia_few months after poor Tewkesbury ..hadjaeenjburnt at SmithfMd,_in_fixecution 6F"a sentence _of which JFoxe tells, , us jthat it was, passed jmonjiim [' Foxe's Acts and Mon. Vol. iv. p. 667. Lond. ed. 1837.] P Eccles. Memorials, ch. xxiii. p. 254. Oxf. 1822.] P Foxe, ibid, pp. 689—93.] INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. 33 in Sir Thomas's house, at Chelsea, and sentence pronounced against Kmi^y-HslltJp'Slokesley*. "" An entry in bishop Stokesley's register, though necessarily of a later date than the entry of Tewkesbury's appearance before Tonstal, affords a still earlier proof of the beneficial influence of ' The Wicked Mammon.' For first, Foxe relates how Richard Bayfield, a Benedictine monk, being chamberlain in the abbey 'ST TBury St Iii dmonffs "was thus brought into intercourse with ' Dr Barnes, and two godly men of London, brickmakers, Master Maxwell and Master Stacy, wardens of their company, who were grafted in the doctrine of Jesus Christ ;' and that ' Dr Barnes gave him a New Testament in Latin, and the other two gave him Tyndale's Testament in English, with a book called The Wicked Mammon and The Obedience of a Christian Man ;' that from these books he learned such things as occasioned his being ' cast into the prison of his house6,' where he suffered for three quarters of a year, till Dr Barnes' influence with one of the superiors of the abbey procured his enlargement. After this, Maxwell and Stacy sent him abroad 'with substance,' and he became a large purchaser of Tyndale's publications and other works favourable to the reforma tion0. It was while thus employed that he fell into the hands of bishop Tonstal; who terrified him also into abjuring: but he too repented of having thus denied his faith, and returned to his work, till he was again apprehended, and shut up in the famous Lollards' tower. From Stokesley's register he is afterwards found to have been brought before that bishop, sitting with Gardiner and other prelates for his assessors, Nov. 10, 1531 ; when certain charges were laid against him, of which the fourth was as follows : ' That in the year of our Lord 1528, he was detected and accused to Cuthbert, then bishop of London, for affirming and holding certain articles contrary to the holy church, and especially that all laud and praise should be given to God alone, and not to saints or creatures.' It may be gleaned from others of these charges, that by 1528 was meant that portion of the year, legally so styled, which fell between Januarylst and ^ MarchJjS, of what would now be called 1529. But if it be supposed that Bayfield's appearance before Tonstal was as late as March 1529, the events already mentioned, as having inter vened between his conversion by the perusal of the books given him'' and that appearance, must lead to the conclusion that he was reading the Mammon and Obedience very early in 1528. In reply to the charges brought against him, Bayfield confessed to the bishops that ' he had read a book called The Parable of the Wicked Mam- [i Id. ibid. p. 694.] P Meaning the dungeon of his monastery.] [6 The list of books brought into England by Bayfield, in the last two years of his lite}-. is given in the sentence which condemned him to the flames, and seems to comprehend J nearly every book that had then been published either in Latin or English, on the side of [ the reformation. See the sentence in Foxe, Vol. iv. p. 685.] -j [7 More is here again a witness to the influence of Tyndale's pen ; for he says, * Tyn dale's books brought Bayfelde to burning.' Preface to Conf. of Tyndale's Ans. sign. Cc] r l 3 [tyndale.] 34 parable of the WICKED MaMMON. mon, in the presence and hearing of others whom he knew not; as also The Obedience of a Christian Man.' 'And being demanded whether he believed the aforenamed books' (including others with these) ' to be good and of the true faith ? he answered that he judged they were good, and of the true faith.' A few days after this confession, Bayfield was delivered over to the lord mayor and sheriff's of London, as a relapsed heretic, to be burned in the fire. The pointed inquiries made, at this time, respecting the having and reading of Tyndale's books, were for the purpose of bringing the accused persons under sentences which had received additional au thority from steps which the king had been induced to take, by his chancellor More and the prelates, in 1530. Some short time before the 25th of March in that year, he had, for theHtrsTtime,' placed the d ¦ »im i n nm i. imir n ii I'm i in \t t ¦ »¦' civil power by a royal proclamation at the disposal oi the bishops. to aid' IheTnjn detecting and punishing, even witli death Dy fire, the authors, importers, or retainers of any book or work, printed or written, against the faith catholic and ordinances of holy church ; and the bishops had published a list of such books, including by name The Mammon, and Obedience, and whatever else Tyndale was then known to have written, as well as his versions of different parts of the scriptures1- The next step was probably thought necessary to justify, as well as confirm, this rigorous proclamation. Some time must have been occupied in its preparation, and yet it came forth before the end of May in the same year. Archbishop Warham, and the bishops Tonstal and Gardiner, aided by Sir Thomas More, to whom Tonstal had given permission in 1527 to read heretical works for such purposes2, had all been at work by the king's command: and the fruit o? 'their labours was a list of two hundred heretical propositions, the larger half of which they charged upon ' Tyndale and Frith, distin guishing particularly which were extracted for condemnation from the Mammon and Obedience ; and at the head of those was, ' Faith only justifieth.' Of this list the king permitted the M^iibiali2p_to an nounce his royal will, in the following terms : ' All which great errors and pestilent heresies being contagious and damnable, with all the books containing the same, with the translation also of scripture cor rupted by William Tyndale, as well in the Old Testament as in the New, and all other books in Enghsh containing such errors, the king's highness present in person, by one whole advice and assent of the pre lates and clerks, as well of the universities as of all other assembled together, determined utterly to be repelled and rejected, and put away out of the hands of his people, and not to be suffered to get abroad among his subjects.' There was also a ' bill in English, to be published by the preachers,' who were required by it to say to their congregations: 'Wherefore you that have the books called the Obe li1 Foxe's Acts and Mon. Vol. iv. pp. 667—70, and the Proclamation itself, pp. 676—9. Also Anderson's Annals of Eng. Bib., B. i. sec. 6, Vol. r. pp. 233—5.] P This letter of permission may be seen in Foxe, Vol. "'. p. 697.] INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. 35 dience of a Christian Man, Mammon, the Matrimony of Tyndale, the New Testament in English of the translation that is now printed detest them, abhor them, keep them not in your hands, deliver them to the superiors, such as call for them : and if by reading of them heretofore any thing remains in your breast of that teaching, either forget it, or by information of the truth expel it. This you ought to do. The prelates of the church ought to compel you, and your prince to punish and correct you, not doing the same. Having of the whole scripture in English is not necessary to christian men; and hke as the having of the scripture in the vulgar tongue, and in the common people's hands, hath been, by the holy fathers of the church, heretofore in some times thought meet and convenient, so at another time it hath been thought not expedient to be communicated among them. Wherein forasmuch as the king's highness, by the ad vice and deliberation of his council, and the agreement of the great learned men, thinketh in his conscience that the divulging of this scripture at this time, in the English tongue, to be committed to the people, should rather be to their farther confusion and destruction, than the edification of their souls ; it was thought there, in that as sembly, to all and singular in that congregation, that the king's high ness, and the prelates, in so doing, and not suffering the scripture to be divulged and communicate to the people in the Enghsh tongue, at this time, do well. And I also think and judge the same.' At the close of this document, it is said, ' His Grace's highness being in person in the chapel called the Old Chapel, within his Grace's palace at Westminster, upon the 24th day of May, the year of our Lord 1530, then and there, in the presence of all the personages there assembled, required the three notaries to make pubhc and authentic instruments, and us (i.e. the archbishop) to set thereunto our seal3.' It was after this that Mr. James Bainham, son of a Gloucestershire . ... -i 1 1 1 i . i i knight^ arid himself a member of the Middle Temple, was carried off from his chambers to Sir Thomas More's house at Chelsea ; and, after being flogged there, was sent to the Tower, and racked in More's pre sence, for the purpose of extorting from him the names of other Tem plars, friendly to the reformation. He had the courage to bear the torment without betraying them ; but he afterwards confessed before [3 Foxe's Acts and Mon., B. xi. Vol. vii. pp. 503—5. Also Anderson's Annals of Eng. Bib., B. i. sec. 7, Vol. i. pp. 257—8 ; and Wilkins' Concilia, Vol. in. 737^2. Mr. Anderson says that 'The original document, closely written on eight skins of parchment, may still he seen in the library of Lambeth Palace.' In the list of names appended to it by the notaries, as ' then and there present,' is found that of ' Master Hugh Latimer,' in consequence of which, Henry Wharton, the compiler of the Anglia sacra, charges Latimer with having ' solemnly subscribed ' Archbishop 'Warham's declaration, 'that the publication of the scriptures in the vulgar tongue is not ne cessary to Christians.' On this Mr. Anderson has observed, that no one subscribed this declaration but the notaries ; and that Latimer gave undeniable evidence of his not as senting to the decision of the majority in that assembly, in a letter which he had the courage to address to the king, when circumstances had given him some reason to hope that Henry would bear with his faithfully, condemning their resolutions.] 3—2 36 PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. Bishop Stokesley, that he had lately ' had in his keeping, The wicked Mammon, The Obedience of a Christian Man, The Practice of Pre lates, and the Answer of Tyndale to Thomas More's Dialogue V The rigour of Stokesley, in inquiring after possessors of Tyndale's works, must have exposed him at this time to frequent mortifications of the same kind. For in the extracts made by Foxe from his episcopal register, for the years 1530-2, more than a third of the persons sum moned before him, from the county of Essex, were such as he had discovered to have Tyndale's Testaments, and generally some of his other works ; and when there is a list of them, the Mammon is usually one2. It is not to be wondered, therefore, that Sir Thomas More, having such evidence continually breaking out around him, of the Mammon's being greedily sought after, notwithstanding such royal and episcopal prohibitions, and notwithstanding also his own pre vious controversial attacks upon its doctrine, should give a final tes timony of his consciousness of its great influence, by writing of it as follows, in 1532, in the preface to his Confutacion of Tyndale's answer to his Dialogue: 'Then have we, by Tyndale, the wicked Mammona, by which many a man hath been beguiled, and brought into many wicked heresies : which thing (saving that the devil is ready to put out men's eyes, that are content willingly to wax blind) were else, in good faith, to me no little wonder ; for never was there made a more foolish frantic book.' The copies collated throughout with the Rev. Th. Russell's recent edition, are that contained in Day's folio of the works of Frith, Barnes, and Tyndale, London, 1573 ; and a 12mo edition of the Parable of the Wicked Mammon, ' Imprinted at London in the Vyntre, upon the thre Krayned Wharfe, by Wyllyam Coplande,' in Edward the Sixth's reign. Besides these, the editor has been kindly allowed by Geo. Offor, Esq., of Hackney, to examine his copies of the small 8vo, printed at Malborow (Marburg in Hesse) by Hans Luft, May 8th, 1528 (sup posed by Mr. Anderson to be the second edition) ; of a small 4to, printed at the same time at the same press, as though one edition was intended for the poorer reader, and the other for such as might like a more sightly book ; and of another small 4to by William Hill, Sept. 15th, without date of year, but probably of 1548, or 1549.] [> Foxe, Vol. iv. pp. 698— 9, andAnderson, pp. 331—3. Bainham, like Tewkesbury and Bayfield, was wearied and terrified into denying his religion and recanting; but, like them, he found mercy from the Lord, being ' never quiet in mind and conscience, until the time he had uttered his fall to all his acquaintance, and asked God and all the world forgiveness.' ' He came the next Sunday to St Austin's, with the New Testament in his hand, in English, and The Obedience of a Christian Man in his bosom ; and stood up there before the people in his pew, declaring openly, with weeping tears, that he had denied God ; and prayed all the people to forgive him, and to beware of his weak ness, and not to do as he had done.' After this he was strengthened, and bore the cruel death by fire with remarkable courage.— Foxe, pp. 702—5.] P Foxe, Vol. v. pp. 29—40.] WILLIAM TYNDALE, OTHERWISE CALLED HITCHINS, TO THE READER. Grace and peace, with all manner spiritual feeling and living, worthy of the kindness of Christ, be with the reader, and with all that thirst1 the will of God. Amen. The cause why I set my name before this little treatise, The cause y « . . ' why W. Tyn- and have not rather clone it in the New Testament, is, that dale put his ' name to some then I followed the counsel of Christ, which exhorteth men fe°*'™*n (Matt, vi.) to do their good deeds secretly, and to be content |5me2- Ant- with the conscience of well-doing, and that God seeth us ; and patiently to abide the reward of the last day, which Christ hath purchased for us : and now would I fain have done likewise, but am3 compelled otherwise to do. While I abode4 a faithful companion, which now hath > taken another voyage upon him, to preach Christ where, I suppose, he was never yet preached, (God, which put in his heart thither to go, send his Spirit with him, comfort him, and bring his purpose to good effect !) one William Roye, a wimam man somewhat crafty, when he cometh unto new acquaint- disciple. [! So Copland's ed. : but in Day's folio the word is trust. We shall find Tyndale again using the verb thirst, without subjoining either for, or after.] [2 It has been thought desirable again to distinguish the margins found in the oldest editions from those not known to occur earlier than in Day's folio, by fixing the initials W. T. to the former, as px-o- bably the author's own, and Ant. ed. to the latter, to mark that they also are not modern.] [3 Day reads, am I compelled.] [4 Abode : waited for. — The faithful companion has been supposed to mean John Frith ; but Mr. Anderson observes, that he was at Cam bridge, at the date implied, not having taken his degree there till December, 1525 ; and that he did not escape from Oxford to the continent till August or September, 1526. The person meant may more probably have been George Joy, whom More calls ' Jaye the priest that is wedded now.'— Pref. to Conf ".] 38 PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. ance, and before he be thorough known, and namely when all is spent, came unto me and offered his help. As long as he had no money, somewhat I could rule him ; but as soon as he had gotten him money, he became like himself again. Nevertheless, I suffered all things till that was ended, which I could not do alone without one, both to write, and to help me to compare the texts together. When that was ended, I took my leave, and bade him farewell for our two lives, and (as men say) a day longer. After we were departed, he went and gat him new friends; which thing to do he passeth all that ever I yet knew. And there when he had stored him of money, he gat him to Argentine1, where he professeth wonderful faculties, and maketh boast of no small things. A year after that, and now twelve months before the printing brother of °^ *^ls work, came one Jerome, a brother of Greenwich also2, Ant!ned!ch" through Worms to Argentine, saying that he intended to be Christ's disciple another while, and to keep (as nigh as God would give him grace) the profession of his baptism, and to get his living with his hands, and to live no longer idly, and of the sweat and labour of those captives, which they had taught not to believe in Christ, but in cut shoes and russet coats. Which Jerome with all diligence I warned of Roye's boldness, and exhorted him to beware of him, and to walk f1 Strasburgh.] [2 Jerome and Roye were Franciscan friars of the reformed order which took the name of Observants, of whose monastery at Greenwich they were both of them members. Several of the monks of that mo nastery took a prominent part in the great questions brought under debate in Henry's reign. When he was on the eve of having his mar riage with Catharine of Arragon dissolved, and was attending divine service in the chapel attached to the royal residence at Greenwich, friar Peto, the same who was confessor to Queen Mary, and made a cardinal, denounced heavy judgments against the king from the pul pit; and was justified aloud for so doing by Elstow, 'a brother of Greenwich also.' It may be supposed that this did not retard the dis solution of their monastery ; and though Henry let them escape, at the time, with no heavier penalty than a reprimand from the privy coun cil, they and all other Observants were shortly after banished the king dom. Previous to the dissolution of the monasteries, such monks as could not conscientiously continue their required round of superstitious and idolatrous observances had no alternative but that of suffering, or else renouncing their source of maintenance, and making their escape to foreign lands, as Roye and Jerome had done.] PREFACE TO THE HEADER. 39 quietly, and with all patience and long-suffering, according as we have Christ and his apostles for an ensample ; which thing- he also promised me. Nevertheless, when he was come to Argentine, William Roye (whose tongue is able not only to make fools stark mad, but also to deceive the wisest, that is, at the first sight and acquaintance,) gat him to him, and set him a-work to make rhymes, while he himself translated a dialogue out of Latin into English, in whose prologue he promiseth more a great deal than I fear me he will ever pay3. Paul saith, [3 Mr. Anderson says : ' After leaving Tyndale's service, Roye had proceeded to Strasburgh, where he published his Dialogue between thel Father and the Son, about the end of 1526. Soon after this came out] his Rede me, and be not wroi7ie\~a, satire on Wolsoy and the monastic orders, frequently denounced under the name of The Burying of the Mass. It was first published in small 8vo, black letter, with a wood cut of the cardinal's coat of arms. Wolsey was so annoyed by it, that he spared neither pains nor expense to procure the copies, employing more than one emissary for the purpose. Hence its extreme rarity ; a copy of it having been sold for as high a sum as sixteen or twenty guineas. It is reprinted, however, in the supplement to the Harleian Miscellany, by Park.' — Annals of Eng. Bib., B. i. sec. 4, Vol. i. p. 136. The Dialogue between the Father and the Son is mentioned in two short lists of prohibited books given by Foxe, between the dates of 1526 and 1529. The first of those lists is also copied by Strype, ; Eccles. Mem. ch. xxiii. p. 165. In Park's first supplementary volume, p. 3, the piece is described as ' a dialogue, translated out of Latin into English, by friar Roye, against the mass ; whose original author is un known, but whose original and proper title was, Inter patrem Christia- num et Jilium contumacem Dialogus Christianus.' The rhymes made by Roye, on the burying of the mass, are like wise in the form of a dialogue, introduced by the following motto, — 'Rede me, and be not wrothej For I saye no thinge but trothc.' Then commences a dialogue between the author and his ' Little trea- tous ' (treatise), of which the first four stanzas may serve to shew how he connects his two subjects, the cardinal and the mass, though they do not fully exhibit that railing which Tyndale thought it right to condemn. The Author : Go forth, little treatise, nothing afraid, To the cardinal of York dedicate ; And tho' he threaten thee, be not dismayd, To publish his abominable estate : For tho' his power he doth elevate, Yet the season is now verily come, Ut inveniatur iniquitas ejus ad odium. 40 PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. 2Tim.ii. (2 Tim. ii.) "The servant of the Lord must not strive, but be With God's * ' - - r™n°toht Peaceable unto all men, and ready to teach, and one that can SSs? rndk" suffer tne eyil Wltl1 meekness, and that can inform them that SS rhymS11" resist ; if God at any time will give them repentance for to W.T. The Treatise : O my author 1 how shall I be so hold Afore the Cardinal to show my face? Seeing all the clergy with him doth hold, Also in favour of the king's grace : With furious sentence they will me chase, Forbidding any person to read me ; Wherefore, my dear author, it cannot be. The Author: Thou knowest very well what his life is. Unto all people greatly detestable; He causeth many to do amiss, Thro' his example abominable : Wherefore it is no thing reprobable, To declare his mischief and whoredom, Ut inveniatur iniquitas ejus ad odium. The Treatise : Though his life of all people is hated, Yet in the Mass they put much confidence, Which throughout all the world is dilated, As a work of singular magnificence. Priests also they have in reverence, With all other persons of the spiritualte. Wherefore, my dear author, it cannot be. The last stanza of this dialogue is — Blessed be they which are cursed of the Pope, And cursed are they whom he doth bless j Accursed are all they that have any hope, Either in his person, or else in his : For of Almighty God accursed he is Per omnia ssecula sasculorum, Ut inveniatur iniquitas ejus ad odium. Then immediately follows ' The Lamentation,' which is succeeded by another dialogue, between two priests' servants, Watkin and Jeffrey, in which Roye took care to introduce the praises of the city which then afforded him a temporary asylum, and of its ministers, as fol lows : — Jeffrey : Watkin: I would hear, marvellously fayne, In what place the Mass deceased? In Strasburgh, that noble town, A city of most famous renown, Where the gospel is freely preached. &c. &c. — From Park's reprint, in first supplementary volume to Har- leian Miscell. 4to, London, 1812.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 41 know the truth." It becometh not then the Lord's servant to use railing rhymes, but God's word; which is the right weapon to slay sin, vice, and all iniquity1. The scripture of God is good to teach and to improve2. Paul speaking of 2 Tim. hi. r ° 1 2 Thess. ii. Antichrist saith, "Whom the Lord shall destroy with the spirit or breath of his mouth ;" that is, with the word of God. And, "The weapons of our war are not carnal things (saith 2 cor. x. he), but mighty in God to cast down strong holds," and so forth ; that is, to destroy high buildings of false doctrine. The word of God is that day whereof Paul speaketh, which icor.iii. shall declare all things, and that fire which shall try every man's work, and consume false doctrine : with that sword ought men sharply to fight, and not to rail with foolish rhymes. Let it not offend thee, that some walk inordinately ; let not the wickedness of Judas cause thee to despise the doctrine of his fellows. No man ought to think that Stephen [x It was not without good reason that Tyndale endeavoured to mark thus distinctly, that he had no share in the composition of Roye's satire ; for the perils to which he was exposed had been increased by the prevalence of an opinion, that he was the real author of this cut ting attack on Wolsey. Even what he now said was insufficient, for a while, to induce his enemies to acquit him of this charge. In the y Dialogue of SjrJTJiomas_More, which was written in 1528, and left ffie press~in"June, 1529, having alluded first to the New Testament, and then to the satire, this question is put: 'But who made that second \ , bo'ok ? Forsooth, quoth I, it appeareth not in the book ; for the book is ' f ' , c put forth nameless, and was in the beginning reckoned to be made by Tyn- '°" . ¦ dale ; and whether it be so or not, we be not yet very sure. Howbeit since v 1 that time Tyndale hath put out, in his own name, another book, entitled s * ' " , Mammona ; and yet hath he, since then, put forth a worse also, named, """' The Obedience of a Christian Man. In the preface of his first book, called Mammona, he saith that one friar Hierome made the other book that we talk of, and that afterward he left him, and went unto Roye, who is, as I think ye know, another apostate.' Such was More's language then ; but by the time that he came to publish his Supplication fot Souls in Purgatory, his tone is altered respecting tho authorship. Enumerating the books in order, he then says : Sending forth Tyn dale's translation of the New Testament — the well-spring of all their heresies. Then came, soon after, out in print the dialogue of friar Roye- — and friar Hierome, between the father and tlie son, against the sacrament of the altar, and the blasphemous book entitled The Burying of the Mass. — Then came forth Tyndale's wicked book of Mammona, and after that his — more wicked book of Obedience.'] [2 To improve : to reprove, to rebuke.] 42 PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. Acts vi. was a false preacher, because that Nicholas, which was chosen fellow with him to minister unto the widows, fell after into great heresies, as histories make mention. Good and evil go always together ; one cannot be known without the other1. Antichrist, Mark this also above all things, that Antichrist is not Ant. ed. 'an outward thing, that is to say, a man that should suddenly as much to appear with wonders, as our fathers talked of him. No, say as, against t\. r 3 3 Fs'nothingd verily ; for Antichrist is a spiritual thing2 ; and is as much preacher of to say as> against Christ ; that is, one that preacheth false trine.d°w. t. doctrine, contrary to Christ. Antichrist was in the Old testament, and fought with the prophets ; he was also in the Antichrist time of Christ and the apostles, as thou readest in the epistles w. t. of John, and of Paul to the Corinthians and Galatians, and other epistles. Antichrist is now, and shall (I doubt not) endure till the world's end. But his nature is (when he is uttered, and overcome with the word of God) to go out of the play for a season, and to disguise himself, and then to come in again with a new name and new raiment. As thou scribes and seest how Christ rebuketh the scribes and Pharisees in the were very gospel, (which were very Antichrists,) saying: "Woe be to ihe' ro er- you' Pharisees ! for ye rob widows' houses ; ye pray long tiesofAnti- pravers rmder a colour; ye shut up the kingdom of heaven, and suffer not them that would to enter in ; ye have taken away the key of knowledge ; ye make men break God's commandments with your traditions :" ye beguile the people f1 If these latter sentences were dictated by Tyndale's disappro bation of Roye's manner of writing, the poor man met with still harder j udgment from the parties he had unsparingly lashed. ' In this year also (1531),' says Foxe, 'as we do understand by divers notes of old regis ters and otherwise, friar Roy was burned in Portugal; but what his exa mination, or articles, or cause of his death was, we can have no under standing ; but what his doctrine was, it may be easily judged, from the testimonies which he left here in England.' — Vol. iv. p. 696. Sir Thomas More has confirmed this, in the preface to his Confutation of Tyndale's answer, published in 1532, where he says: *As Bayfield, another heretic, and late burned in Smithfield, told unto me, friar Roy made a meet end at last, and was burned in Portyngale.'] [2 When Tewkesbury was examined in 1529, before Tonstal, bishop of London, Nicholas West bishop of Ely, Longland bishop of Lincoln, and Clark bishop of Bath and Wells, they asked him what he thought of what Tyndale has hero said. ' Whereunto he answered and said, That he findcth no fault in it.' — Foxe, Vol. iv. p. 690.] christ. Ant. ed. PREFACE TO THE READER. 43 with hypocrisy and such like ; which things all our prelates do, but have yet gotten them new names, and other garments and weeds3, and are otherwise disguised. There is difference \ in the names between a pope, a cardinal, a bishop, and so j forth, and to say a scribe, a Pharisee, a senior, and so forth ; ! but the thing is all one. Even so now, when we have uttered/ him, he will change himself once more, and turn himself into an angel of light. Read the place, I exhort thee, whatsoever 2 cor. xi. thou art that readest this, and note it well. The Jews look Antichrist for Christ, and he is come fifteen hundred years ago, and amons us they not aware : we also have looked for Antichrist, and he Ant- ed- hath reigned as long, and we not aware : and that because either of us looked carnally for him, and not in the places where we ought to have sought. The Jews had found Christ verily, if they had sought him in the law and the prophets, whither Christ sendeth them to seek. We also had spied out John v. Antichrist long ago, if we had looked in the doctrine of Christ Antichrist u 00 .a spiritual and his apostles ; where because the beast seeth himself now thins> and 1 ' t cannot be to be sought for, he roareth, and seeketh new holes to hide ^"^'0? himself in, and changeth himself into a thousand fashions, ^°d£word' with all manner wiliness, falsehood, subtilty, and craft. Because that his excommunications are come to light, ho maketh it treason unto the king to be acquainted with Christ. Antichrist o u accounteth it If Christ and they may not reign together, one hope we have, Samied'6 that Christ shall live ever. The old Antichrists brought l§. edhrist' Christ unto Pilate, saying, " By our law he ought to die ;" and when Pilate bade them judge him after their law, they answered, " It is not lawful for us to kill any man :" which they did to the intent that they which regarded not the shame of their false excommunications, should yet fear to confess Christ, because that the temporal sword had con demned him. They do all things of a good zeal, they say ; p* prelates « o o > j j ' have a burn- they love you so well, that they had rather burn you, than thli?echn- that you should have fellowship with Christ. They are jealous dren- w' T' over you amiss, as saith St Paul. They would divide you GaliT- from Christ and his holy testament; and join you to the pope, to believe in his testament and promises. Some man will ask, peradventure, Why I take the labour to make this work, inasmuch as they will burn it, seeing they burnt the gospel ? I answer, In burning the new [3 Day omits and weeds.] 44 PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. Testament they did none other thing than that I looked for: no more shall they do, if they burn me also, if it be God's will it shall so be. Nevertheless, in translating the New Testament I did my duty, and so do I now, and will do as much more as God hath ordained me to do. And as I offered that to all men, to correct it, whosoever could, even so I do this. Whosoever, therefore, readeth this, compare it unto the scripture. If God's word bear record unto it, and thou also feelest in thine heart that it is so, be of good comfort, and give God thanks. If God's word condemn it, then hold it accursed, and so do all other doctrines : as Paul counselleth his Galatians. Believe not every spirit suddenly, but judge them by the word of God, which is the trial of all doctrine, and lasteth for ever. Amen. THE PARABLE THE WICKED MAMMON. " There was a certain rich man which had a steward, that was ac- Luke xvi. cused unto him, that he had wasted his goods : and he called him, and said unto him, How is it that I hear this of thee ? Give account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest be no longer my steward. The steward said within himself, What shall I do, for my master will take away from me my stewardship? I cannot dig, and to beg I am ashamed. I wot what to do, that when I am put out of my steward ship, they may receive me into their houses. Then called he all his master's debtors, and said unto the first, How much owest thou unto my master? And he said, An hundred tons of oil. And he said to him, Take thy bill 1, and sit down quickly, and write fifty. Then said he to another, What owest thou ? And he said, An hundred quarters of wheat. He said to him, Take thy bill, and write fourscore. And the lord commended the unjust steward, because he had done wisely. For the children of this world are in their kind wiser than the chil dren of light. And I say also unto you, Make you friends of the wicked mammon, that when ye shall have need, they may receive you into everlasting habitations." Forasmuch as with this, and divers such other texts, many have enforced to draw the people from the true faith, and from putting their trust in the truth of God's promises, and in the merits and deserving of his Christ, our Lord ; and have also brought it to pass, (for "many false prophets shall arise and deceive many, and much wickedness must also be," Matt, xxiv saith Christ ; and Paul saith, " Evil men and deceivers shall 2 Tim. Hi. prevail in evil, while they deceive, and are deceived them selves ;") and have taught them to put their trust in their own [! Bill. For ypappa in v. 6, the Vulgate has cautionem, and in v. 7, litteras; and Wicliffe accordingly has caucion and lettris. Tyndale introduced the word bill, which remains in our authorised version, though now confined in its ordinary acceptance to a statement of monies due.] 46 THE FARABLE OF merits, and brought them in belief that they shall be justi fied in the sight of God by the goodness of their own works, and have corrupted the pure word of God, to confirm their Aristotle withal; (for though that the philosophers and worldly wise men were enemies above all enemies to the gospel of God ; and though the worldly wisdom cannot com- Eom' ^ & i>- prehend the wisdom of God, as thou may est see 1 Cor. i. and ii. ; and though worldly righteousness cannot be obe dient unto the righteousness of God, yet whatsoever they They give read in Aristotle, that must be first true ; and to maintain more faith . ........ thanrtoctle ' ^ ren<* a *ear ^ scnptRres with their distinctions1, christ. w.t. an(j expound them violently, contrary to the meaning of the text, and to the circumstances that go before and after, and to a thousand clear and evident texts :) wherefore I have taken in hand to expound this gospel, and certain other places of the new Testament ; and (as far forth as God shall lend me grace) to bring the scripture unto the right sense, and to dig again the wells of Abraham, and to purge and cleanse them of the earth of worldly wisdom, wherewith these Philistines have stopped them. Which grace grant me God, for the love that he hath unto his Son, Jesus our Lord, unto the glory of his name. Amen. Faith only That faith only before all works and without all merits, justifieth. « ' Anted. ]QUt Christ's only, justifieth and setteth us at peace with God2, , t1 As the first part of the authoritative epitome of the papal law, the Corpus Juris Canonici, was arranged by Gratian under 101 heads, which he entitled distinctions, and each distinction was subdivided into sections, sometimes styled canons, and sometimes capitula ; the school- \ men made a similar arrangement in their systems of theology, giving to their affirmations of various doctrines, more or less disputable, the ^ title of distinctions.] [2 The list of 'great errors and pestilent heresies' collected from this treatise by archbishop Warham, and his brother commissioners, as mentioned in the introductory notice, begins with this, as its Art. I. 'Faith only Justifieth.' To which Foxe appends the following re mark : ' This article being a principle of the scripture, and the ground of our salvation, is plain enough by St Paul, and the whole body of scripture ; neither can any make this a heresy, but they must make St Paul a heretic, and shew themselves enemies unto the promises of grace, and to the cross of Christ.' When Tewkesbury was examined by Tonstal and three other bishops in April 1529, as mentioned before, they demanded of him, What he thought of this article ? To which he replied, 'That if he THE WICKED MAMMON. 47 is proved by Paul in the first chapter to the Romans. "I am Rom. i. not ashamed (saith he) of the gospel," that is to say, of the glad tidings and promises which God hath made and sworn to us in Christ: "for it (that is to say the gospel) is the power of God unto salvation to all that believe." And it followeth in the foresaid chapter, "the just or righteous must live by faith." For in the faith which we have in Christ and in God's Faith bring- promiseTBnd" we mercy, life, favour, and peace. In the law Anted'. we find 'death, damnation, and wrath; moreover, the curse The law .... — ... ? ? ' bringeth and vengeance of God upon us. And it (that is to say, the a*itD. Ant. lawjis called of Paul the ministration of death and damnation. 2Cor. in. In the law we are proved to be the enemies of God, and that The law, x i death; and we hate him. For how can we be at peace with God and }[j| Pr°™'£s love him, seeing we are conceived and born under the power of the devil, and are his possession and kingdom, his captives and bondmen, and led at his will, and he holdeth our hearts, so that it is impossible for us to consent to the will of God, much more is it impossible for a man to fulfil the law of his own strength and power, seeing that we are by birth and of nature the heirs of eternal damnation, as saith Paul, Eph. ii. ? We (saith he) "are by nature the children of wrath ;" which EPh. n. thing the law doth but utter only, and helpeth us not, yea, requireth impossible things of us3- The law when it com- iheiaw, x x ° when it is preached, should look to deserve heaven by works, he should do wickedly ; for works follow faith ; and Christ redeemed us all, with the merits of his passion.' Foxe, Vol. iv. p. 690.] [3 Art. II. of alleged heresies and errors, was, ' The law maketh us to hate God, because we be born under the power of the devil.' Art. III. ' It is impossible for us to consent to the will of God.' Art. IV. ' The law requireth impossible things of us.' On these articles Foxe only remarks: 'I beseech thee indifferently to read the places, and then to judge.' Vol. v. p. 570 — 1. Tewkesbury's exami ners had questioned him as to what he held respecting this same paragraph in Tyndale. To the first question, whether the author wa3 right in saying, 'The devil holdeth our hearts so hard that it is impos sible for us to consent unto God's law?' he answered, 'That he found no fault in it.' To the next question, which turned on Art. IV. he answered, ' That the law of God doth command that thou shalt love God above all things, and thy neighbour as thyself, which never man could do: and in that he doth find no fault in his conscience.' Id. Vol. iv. p. 690.] 48 THE PARABLE OF \ giveth no mandeth that thou shalt not lust, giveth thee not power so to power to c-' same-'w. t. do> but damneth thee, because thou canst not so do. If thou wilt therefore be at peace with God, and love him, thou must turn to the promises of God, and to the gospel, The gospei is which is called of Paul, in the place before rehearsed to the the mmistra- L el™nJsrs!ght" Corinthians, the ministration of righteousness, and of the Anted. Spirit. For faith bringeth pardon and forgiveness freely purchased by Christ's blood, and bringeth also the " Spirit ; the Spirit looseth the bonds of the devil, and setteth us at 2 cor. i». liberty. For "where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty," saith Paul in the same place to the Corinthians : that is to say, there the heart is free, and hath power to love the will of God; and there the heart mourneth that he cannot love The consent- enough. Now is that consent of the heart unto the law of ing unto the ° . • * heMt1shthe "0(* e*ernal life ; yea, though there be no power yet in the etemai Me. members to fulfil it. Let every man therefore (according to Paul's counsel in the sixth chapter to the Ephesians) arm EPh. vi. himself with the armour of God ; that is to understand, with God's promises. And "above all things (saith he) take unto you the shield of faith, wherewith ye may be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked, that ye may be able to Resist the resist in the evil day of temptation," and namely at the hour the shield of of death. faith. Ant. ed- See therefore thou have God's promises in thine heart, and that thou believe them without wavering : and when temptation ariseth, and the devil layeth the law and thy deeds against thee, answer him with the promises ; and turn to God, and confess thyself to him, and say it is even so, or else how could he be merciful ? But remember that he is the God of mercy and of truth, and cannot but fulfil his promises. Also remember, that his Son's blood is stronger than all the sins and wickedness of the whole world ; and therewith quiet thyself, and thereunto commit thyself, and bless thyself in all Faith is the temptation (namely at the hour of death) with that holy wherewith candle. Or else perishest thou, though thou hast a thousand holy candles about thee, a hundred ton of holy water, a ship- full of pardons, a cloth-sack full of friars' coats, and all the ceremonies in the world, and all the good works, deservings, and merits of all the men in the world, be they, or were they, \never so holy. God's word only lasteth for ever ; and that bless our selves at the last hour. Ant.ed. THE WICKED MAMMON. 49 which he hath sworn doth abide, when all other things perish. So long as thou findest any consent in thine heart unto the law of God, that it is righteous and good, and also displeasure that thou canst not fulfil it, despair not ; neither doubt but that God's Spirit is in thee, and that thou art chosen for Christ's sake to the inheritance of eternal life. And again, "We suppose that a man is justified through Bom. m. faith, without the deeds of the law." And likewise, "We say that faith- was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness." Also, Rom. iv. " Seeing that we are justified through faith, we are at peace ^u*jd ^ with God." Also, "With the heart doth a man believe- to be ^uf"ers^ht' made righteous." Also, "Eeceived ye the Spirit by the deeds Eoni'v! of the law, or by hearing of the faith ? Doth he which eaTm.' ministereth the Spirit unto you, and worketh miracles among you, do it of the deeds of the law, or by hearing of faith ? Even as Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned to The children him for righteousness. Understand^ therefore (saith he) ^J^^™ that the children of faith are the children of Abraham. Ant- ed- For the" scripture saw before that God would justify the heathen or gentiles by faith, and shewed before glad tidings unto Abraham, In thy seed shall all nations be blessed. Wherefore they which are of faith are blessed, that is to wit made righteous, with the1 righteous Abraham. For as many as are of the deeds of the law, are under curse: for it is written (saith he), Cursed is every man that con tinueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law, to fulfil them." Item, Gala. ii. where he resisted Peter in the face, he Gai- u. saith : " We which are Jews by nation, and not sinners of the Gentiles, know that a man is not justified by the deeds of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ ; and have there fore believed on Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by Pftige°|Jly the faith of Christ, and not by the deeds of the law ; for by w- T- the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified." Item, in the same place he saith : " Touching that I now live, I live in the faith of the Son of God, which loved me, and gave himself for me : I despise not the grace of God ; for if right eousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain." And of such like ensamples are all the epistles of Paul f1 So C.'s ed. In D. tlie is omitted.] r i 4 j_TYNDALE.J 50 THE PARABLE OF full. Mark how Paul laboureth with himself to express the exceeding mysteries of faith in the epistle to the Ephesians and in the epistle to the Colossians. Of these and many such like texts are we sure, that the forgiveness "of sins and justifying is appropriate unto faith only, without the adding to of works. Matt vii. Take forth also the similitude that Christ maketh : " A good tree bringeth forth good fruit, and a bad tree bringeth forth bad fruit." There seest thou, that the fruit maketh not the tree good, but the tree the fruit ; and that the tree must aforehand be good, or be made good, ere it can bring forth Matt. xii. good fruit. As he also saith, "Either make the tree good and his fruit good also, either make the tree bad and his fruit bad also. How can ye speak well while ye yourselves are evil?" So likewise is this true, and nothing more true, that a man before all good works must first be good ; and that it is impossible that works should, make hiaj. good^ifjhe jter^ not a principle goodnjefore, ere he did good works. For this is Christ's taughtby °_ ---1- — i /•"— "" ""*; '"¦,' '"";""' -r-r , christ Ant. principle, and (as we say) a general rule. "How can ye speak well, while ye are evil ?" so likewise how can ye do good, while ye are evil ? a man must This is therefore plain, and a sure conclusion, not to be goodness m doubted of, that there must be first in the heart of a man, his heart, - — .- --* brinreforth before he do any good work, a greater and a preciouser j^ofworks. thmg than all the good works in the world, to reconcile him to God, to bring the love and favour of God to him, to make him love God again, to make him righteous and good in the sight of God, to do away his sin, to deliver him and loose him out of that captivity wherein he was conceived_and_born, in which he could neither love God nor the will of.God. Or else, how can he work any good work that should please God, if there were not some supernatural goodness in him, given of God freely, whereof the good work must spring ? even as a sick man must first be healed or made whole, ere he can do the deeds of an whole man ; and as the blind man must first have sight given him, ere he can see ; and he that hath his feet in fetters, gives, or stocks, must first be loosed, ere he can go, walk or run ; and even as they which thou readest of in the gospel, that they were possessed of the devils, could not laud God till the devils were cast out. THE WICKED MAMMON. 51 That precious thing which must be in .the heart, ere1 a Faith being .-.« _ _ .Sr., , . , .... joinedwith man, can worJT ah-f~good work, is the word of God, which in «« word °fu J ° . - ' God bringeth the gospel preacheth, proffereth, and bringeth unto all that g^e^ repent and belieje, the favour of God in Christ. Whosoever ed- heareth the word and believeth it, the same is thereby righte ous ; and thereby is given him the Spirit of God, which leadeth him unto all that is the will of God; and is loosed from the captivity and bondage of the devil ; and his heart is free to love God, and hath lust to do the will of God. Therefore it is called the word of life, the word of grace, the word of health, the word of redemption, the word of forgiveness, and the word of peace : he that heareth it not, or believeth it not, can by no means be made righteous before God. This confirmeth Peter in the fifteenth of the Acts, saying that God through faith doth purify the hearts. Actsxv. For of what nature soever the word of God is, of the same nature must the hearts be which believe thereon, and cleave thereunto. Now is the word living, pure, righteous, and true ; and even so maketh it the hearts of them that believe thereon. If it be said that Paul (when he saith in the third to the Romans, "No flesh shall be, or can be justified by the deeds of the law") meaneth it of the ceremonies or sacrifices, it is an untrue saying2. For it followeth immediately, "By the lawTheiawut- */ o ti ' u tereth sin cometh the knowledge of sin." Now are they not the cere- and !<*teu> t o «/ us at debate. monies that utter sin, but the law of commandments. In the w- T- fourth he saith, " The law causeth wrath ;" which cannot be understand of the ceremonies; for they were given to reconcile the people to God again after they had sinned. If, as they The law can- say, the ceremonies, which were given to purge sin and to Ant- ed- reconcile, justify not, neither bless but temporally only, much more the law of commandments justifieth not. For that which proveth a man sick, healeth him not; neither doth the cause of wrath bring to favour; neither can that which damneth save a man. When the mother commandeth her child but even to rock the cradle, it grudgeth : this3 commandment doth but utter the poison that lay hid, and setteth him at [1 Or, C. Yer, i.e. ere, D.] [2 So D. It is a lie, verily. C] p So C, but D. has the.] 52 THE PARABLE OF « debate1 with his mother, and maketh him believe she loveth him not. These commandments also, Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not lust, desire, or wish after thy neighbour's wife, servant, maid, ox, or ass, or whatsoever pertaineth unto thy neighbour, give me not power so to do ; but utter the poison that is in me, and damn me2, because I cannot so do ; and prove that God is wroth with me, seeing that his will and mine are so contrary. Therefore saith Paul : Gai. m. "If there had been given such a law that could have given life, then, no doubt, righteousness had come by the law : but the scripture concludeth all under sin (saith he), that the promise might be given unto them that believe through the faith that is in Jesus Christ." Faith in The promises, when they are believed, are they that Christ s pro- .. l . « . » •ustifduSth Jus^fy> f°r *nev bring the Spirit, which looseth the heart, Theraomises giveth lust to the law, and certifieth us of the good-will of justify, w.t. q.0(j unt0 uswar(J, If we submit ourselves unto God, and desire him to heal us, he will do it, and will in the mean time (because of the consent of the heart unto the law) count us for full whole, and will no more hate us, but pity us, cherish us, be tender-hearted to us, and love us as he doth Christ himself. Christ is our Redeemer, Saviour, peace, atonement, and satisfaction ; and hath made amends or satis faction to Godward for all the sin which they that repent (consenting to the law and believing the promises) do, have christ is the done, or shall do. So that if through fragility we fall a storehouse . . ° ° . usmAnyfoa ™lousan(l times in a day, yet if we do repent again, we have alway mercy laid up for us in store in Jesus Christ our Lord. What shall we say then to those scriptures which go so Matt. xxv. sore upon good works ? As we read Matt, xxv., " I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat," &c. and such like. Which all sound as though we should be justified, and accepted unto the favour of God in Christ, through good works. Thiswise answer I : Many there are, which when they hear or read of faith,Aat once they consent thereunto, and have a certain imagination or opinion of faith : as when a man telleth a story [l So C, but D. has at bate.] [2 In modern language, Detect the poison that is in me, and con demn me.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 53 or a thing done in a strange land, that pertaineth not to them ,at all; which yet they believe, and tell as a true thing: /and this imagination, or opinion, they call faith. They think Thedesni- a i i i n • i • ¦ i • -\ i , ¦ , ¦ tion of true jio farther than that iaith is a thing which standeth in their f^itn- Ant. own power to have, as do other naturai works which men work ; but they feel no manner working of the Spirit, neither the terrible sentence of the law, the fearful judgments of God, the horrible damnation and captivity under Satan. Therefore, as soon as they have this opinion or imagination in their hearts, that saith, Verily this doctrine seemeth true, I believe it is even so ; then they think that the right faith is there. But afterward when the^"ieelJH themselves, and also see in other, that there is none alteration, and that the works follow not, but that they are altogether even as before, and abide in their old estate ; then think they that faith is not sufficient, but that it must be some greater thing than faith that should justify a man. So fall they away from faith again, and cry, saying, Faith only justifieth not a man, and maketh him acceptable to God. If thou ask them, Wherefore? they answer, See how many there are that believe, and yet do no more than they did before. These are they which Judas in his epistle Qjude, a: calleth dreamers, which deceive themselves with their own fantasies. For what other thing is their imagination, which Faith that they call faith, than a dreaming of the faith, and an opinion forth tru™ is but a dream. of their own imagination wrought without the grace of God ? Ant. ed. These must needs be worse at the latter end than at the beginning. These are the old vessels that rend when new Matt. ix. wine is poured ThTSjEim ; that is, they hear God's word, but thatnelw s — r-t- — '" t t t. i i it* wine is put hold it not, and therefore wax worse than they were before. >n. w. t. But therigjrtjaithspringeth not of man's fantasy, neither is it in any man's power" to obtain it ; but it is altogether the [pure gift of God poured into us freely, without all manner Faith is the loing of us, without deserving and merits, yea, and without Anted.0 ' keeking for of us ; and is (as saith Paul in the second to the Eph. a. Sphesians) even God's gift and grace, purchased through Christ. Therefore is it mighty in operation, full of virtue, and ever working ; which also reneweth a man, and begetteth him afresh, alfcereth him, changeth him, and turneth him altogether into a new nature and conversation ; so that a man feeleth 54 THE PARABLE OF his_heaxt-altegether altered and changed, and far otherwise disposed than before; and hath power to love that which before he could not but hate ; and delighteth in that which before he abhorred; and hateth that which before he could not but love. And it setteth the soul at liberty, and maketh her free to follow the will of God, and doth to the soul even as health doth unto the body, after that a man is pined i and wasted away with a long soking1 disease: the legs cannot bear him, he cannot lift up his hands to help himself, his taste is corrupt, sugar is bitter in his mouth, his stomach abhorreth2, longing after slibbersauce and swash3 at which a whole stomach is ready to cast his gorge. When health cometh, she changeth and altereth him clean; giveth him strength in all his members, and lust to do of his own accord that which before he could not do, neither could suffer that any man exhorted him to do ; and hath now lust in wholesome things, and his members are free and at liberty, and have power to do, of their own accord, all things which belong to an whole man to do, which afore they had no power to do, but were in captivity and bondage. So likewise in all things doth right faith to the soul. The spirit of The Spirit of God accompanieth faith, and bringeth with God accom- ° panieth faith. her hght, wherewith a man beholdeth himself in the law of Ant. ed. ° 7 God, and seeth his miserable bondage and captivity, and humbleth himself, and abhorreth himself: she4 bringeth God's promises of all good things in Christ. God worketh with his word, and in his word : and when5 his word is preached, faith rooteth herself in the hearts of the elect ; and as faith entereth, and the word of God is believed, the power of God looseth the heart from the captivity and bondage under sin, and knitteth and coupleth him to God and to the will of God; altereth him, changeth him clean, fashioneth, and for- geth him anew; giveth him power to love, and to do that I1 Soking: absorbing and consuming the strength.] [2 Abhorreth: loatheth; but here used in a neuter sense.] [3 So D. ; but C. has, slibbersause only. Mr Russell cites an old satire amongst papers printed abroad, he says, without name, place, or date, but which he thinks may be ascribed to Bale, and in which the same words occur, but are spelt swyber, swashe.] I* That is, faith.] n ^u-k , V. (>:l,J. •/] -I"1- "*¦ [5 So C, but Day has as instead of when.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 55 which before was impossible for him either to love or do ; and turneth him unto a new nature, so that he loveth that which he before hated, and hateth that which he before loved ; and is clean altered, and changed, and contrary disposed; and is knit and coupled fast to God's will, and naturally bringeth forth good works, that is to say, that which God commandeth to do, and not things of his own imagination. And that doth he of his own accord, as a tree bringeth forth fruit of her own accord. And as thou needest not to bid a tree to bring forth fruit, so is there no law put unto him that believeth, and is justified through faith, as saith Paul in the first epistle to Timothy, the first chapter. Neither is it need- Faith of her ful; for the law of God is written and graved in his heart, forth good ° ' fruits, that and his pleasure is therein. And as without commandment, w'0f£°d Ant but even of his own nature, he eateth, drinketh, seeth, heareth, ed- talketh, and goeth; even so of his own nature, without co- action or compulsion of the law, bringeth he forth good works. And as a whole man, when he is athirst, tarrieth but for drink, and when he hungreth, abideth but for meat, and then drinketh and eateth naturally; even so is the faithful ever athirst and an hungred after the will of God, and tarrieth but for occasion. And whensoever an occasion is given, he worketh naturally the will of God : for this blessing is given to all them that trust in Christ's blood, that they thirst and hunger to do God's will6. He that hath not this faith, is but an unprofitable babbler of faith and works ; and wotteth neither what he babbleth, nor what he meaneth, / or whereunto his words pertain : for he feeleth not the power True faith u . ft r* • ¦ * i ¦ i t . not without of faith, nor the working ot the Spirit in his heart ; but in- good works. terpreteth the scriptures, which speak of faith and works, after his own blind reason and foolish fantasies, and not of any feeling that he hath in his heart ; as a man rehearseth [6 Art. V. of alleged errors and heresies, charged Tyndale with affirming that ' The Spirit of God turneth us and our nature, that we do good as naturally as a tree doth bring forth fruit : ' on which Foxe only remarks, 'The place is this.' Tewkesbury's examiners demanded what he thought of Tyndale's saying, 'That as the good tree bringeth forth fruit, so there is no law put to him that believeth and is jus tified through faith?' And the record of his reply is, 'To that he answered, and said, He flndeth no ill in it.'] 56 THE PARABLE OF a tale of another man's mouth, and wotteth not whether it be so or no as he saith, nor hath any experience of the thing itself. True faith Now doth the scripture ascribe both faith and works; wraiS'Se not to us, but to God only, to whom they belong only, and God, and to whom they are appropriate, whose gift they are, and the AnTea!5- proper work of his Spirit. Is it not a froward and perverse blindness, to teach how a man can do nothing of his own self; and yet presumptuously take upon them the greatest and highest work of God, even to make faith in themselves of their own power, and of their own false imagination and thoughts? Therefore, I say, we must despair of ourselves, and pray God (as Christ's apostles did) to give us faith, and to increase our faith. When we have that, we need no other thing more : for she bringeth the Spirit with her ; and he not only teacheth us all things, but worketh them also mightily in us, and carrieth us through adversity, persecution, death, and hell, unto heaven and everlasting life. Mark diligently, therefore, seeing we are come to answer. The scripture (because of such dreams and feigned faith's sake) useth such manner of speakings of works, not that a man should thereby be made good to God-ward, or justified ; but to declare unto other, and to take of other, the difference between false feigned faith and right faith. For where right faith is, there bringeth she forth good works : if there follow not good works, it is (no doubt) but a dream and an opinion, ' or feigned faith. As the tree Wherefore look, as the fruit maketh not the tree good, ws fruit, so but declareth and testifieth outwardly that the tree is good, right faith is .-,,.., " a ' he°fruiby (as Christ saith, "Every tree is known by his fruit,") even The differ ence betweer false faith, and right faith. Ant ed. her fruit. Ant. ed. \ so shall ye know the right faith by her fruit. /fSarb|ie. Take for an ensample Mary, that anointed Christ's feet. \Luke vii. When Simon, which bade Christ to his house, had condemned her, Christ defended her, and justified her, saying, "Simon, I have a certain thing to say unto thee ; and he said, Master, say on. There was a certain lender which had two debtors; the one owed five hundred pence, and the other fifty. When they had nothing to pay, he forgave them both. Which of them, tell me, will love him most? Simon answered and THE WICKED MAMMON. 57 said, I suppose that he to whom he forgave most. And he said to him, Thou hast truly judged. And he turned him to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou this woman? I entered into thine house, and thou gavest me no water to my feet ; but she hath washed my feet with tears, and wiped them with the hairs of her head. Thou gavest me no kiss ; but she, since the time I came in, hath not ceased to kiss my feet. My head with oil thou hast not anointed ; and she The fruits of hath anointed my feet with costly and precious ointment, ed. Wherefore I say unto thee, many sins are forgiven her, for she loveth much. To whom less is forgiven, the same doth love less," &c. Hereby see we, that deeds and works are but outward signs of the inward grace of the bounteous and plenteous mercy of God, freely received without all merits of deeds, yea, and before all deeds. Christ teacheth to know the inward faith and love by the outward deeds. Deeds are the fruits of love ; and love is the fruit of faith. LoveTand also™tEe~3ee3s, are great or small according to the proportion of faith. Where faith is mighty and strong, there is love fervent, and deeds plenteous, and done with exceeding meek ness : where faith is weak, there is love cold, and the deeds few and seldom, as1 flowers and blossoms in winter. Simon believed, and had faith, yet but weakly ; and, ac cording to the proportion of his faith, loved coldly, and had deeds thereafter : he bade Christ unto a simple and bare feast only, and received him not with any great humanity. But Mary had a strong faith, and therefore burning love and notable deeds, done with exceeding profound and deep meek ness. On the one side she saw herself clearly in the law, a difference both in what danger she was in, and her cruel bondage under faith and . , feigned faith. sin, her horrible damnation, and also the fearful sentence and Ant- ed- judgment of God upon sinners. On the other side, she heard the gospel of Christ preached ; and in the promises she saw with eagles' eyes the exceeding abundant mercy of God, that passeth all utterance of speech; which is set forth in Christ for all meek sinners, which knowledge2 their sins; and she ' f1 C. fadeth as ; Day has seldom bear flowers; but Hans Luffs 4to ed. of May 8, 1528, and a later edition by Wm. Hill, both in posses sion of G. Offor, Esq., contain the evidently more correct reading given in the text.] [2 Knowledge : acknowledge.] 11 58 THE PARABLE OF believed the word of God mightily, and glorified God over his mercy and truth ; and being overcome and overwhelmed with the unspeakable, yea, and incomprehensible abundant riches of the kindness of God, did inflame and burn in love ; yea, was so swollen in love, that she could not abide, nor- hold, but must break out ; and was so drunk in love, that she regarded nothing, but even to utter the fervent and burning love of her heart only : she had no respect to herself, though she was never so great and notable a sinner ; neither to the curious1 hypocrisy of the Pharisees, which ever disdain weak sinners; neither the costliness of her ointment; but with all humbleness did run unto his feet, washed them with the tears of her eyes, and wiped them with the hairs of her head, and anointed them with her precious ointment; yea, and would no doubt have run into the ground under his feet, to have uttered her love toward him ; yea, would have descended down into hell, if it had been possible. Even as Paul, in the ninth chapter of his Epistle to the Romans, was drunk in love, and overwhelmed with the plenteousness of the infinite mercy of God, which he had received in Christ unsought for, wished Bom. ix. himself banished from Christ and damned, to save the Jews, if it might have been. For as a man feeleth God in himself, so is he to his neighbour. Mark another thing also. We, for the most part, because of our grossness in all our knowledge, proceed from that which is last and hindmost unto that which is first ; beginning at the latter end, disputing and making our arguments back ward. We begin at the effect and work, and proceed unto the natural cause. As for an ensample : we first see the moon dark, and then search the cause ; and find that the putting of the earth between the sun and the moon is the natural cause Backward of the darkness, and that the earth stoppeth the light. Then disputations. # - t x x ° Ant. ed. dispute we backward, saying, The moon is darkened, there fore is the earth directly between the sun and moon. Now yet is not the darkness of the moon the natural cause that the earth is between the sun and the moon, but the effect thereof, and cause declarative, declaring and leading us unto the knowledge, how that the earth is between the sun and the moon directly, and causeth the darkness, stopping the light of the sun from the moon. And contrariwise, the being [} Curious, i.e. fastidious.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 59 of the earth directly between the sun and the moon is the natural cause of the darkness. Likewise, He hath a son, therefore is he a father ; and yet the son is not cause of the father, but contrariwise. Notwithstanding, the son is the cause declarative, whereby we know that the other is a father. After the same manner here, "Many sins are forgiven her, for she loveth much ;" thou mayest not understand by the word for, that love is the natural cause of the forgiving of sins, but declareth it only ; and contrariwise, the forgiveness of sins is the natural cause of love. The works declare love : and love declareth that there is some benefit and kindness shewed, or else would there be no love. Why worketh one and another not ? or one more than another ? Because that one loveth and the other not ; or that the one loveth more than the other. Why loveth one, and another not ; or one more than another ? Because that one feeleth the exceeding love of God in his heart, and another The kindness not ; or that one feeleth it more than another. Scripture moveth us .... to love God. speaketh after the most grossest manner. Be diligent there- Ant ed. fore that thou be not deceived with curiousness ; for men of no small reputation have been deceived with their own sophistry. Hereby now seest thou, that there is great difference The office of . . faith. W. X. between being righteous and good in a man's self, and declaring and uttering righteousness and goodness. The faith Faith omy only maketh a man safe, good, righteous, and the friend of the sons and *t ' o > o^ heirs of God. God, yea, and the son and the heir of God, and of all his Ant. ed. goodness ; and possesseth us with the Spirit of God. The The office of work declareth the same2 faith and goodness. Now useth Fauin the scripture the common manner of speaking, and the very spirit of God. same that is among the people. As when a father saith to his child, Go, and be loving, merciful, and good to such or such a poor man ; he biddeth him not therewith to be made merciful, kind, and good; but to testify and declare the works de- goodness that is in him already, with the outward deed, that and God's o *t ? goodness. it may break out to the profit of other, and that other may Ant ed- feel it which have need thereof3. [2 So C. ; Day has self instead of same.] [s Heresies and errors charged against Tyndale, Art. VI. 'Works do only declare to thee that thou art justified.' Foxe's remark thereon is : ' If Tyndale says that works do only declare our justification, ha 60 THE PARABLE OF After the same manner shalt thou interpret the scriptures which make mention of works : that God thereby will that we shew forth that goodness which we have received by faith, and let it break forth and come to the profit of other ; that the false faith may be known and weeded out by the God-s grace roots. For God giveth no man his grace, that he should let cise°d ineusT it lie still and do no good withal ; but that he should increase Ant. ed. ° The talent, it, and multiply it, with lending it to other, and with open Matt xxv. ^glaring 0f ^ with the outward works provoke and draw other to God. As Christ saith in Matthew the fifth chap- Matt, v. ter, "Let your light so shine in the sight of men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven." Or else were it as a treasure digged in the ground, and hid wisdom, in the which there is no profit1. Moreover therewith the goodness, favour, and gifts of God which are in thee, not only shall be known unto other, but also unto thine own self; and thou shalt be sure that thy faith is right, and that the true Spirit of God is in thee, and that thou art called and chosen of God unto eternal life, and loosed from the bonds of Satan, whose captive thou wast ; as Peter exhorteth, in the first of his second epistle, through z pet. i. good works to make our calling and election (wherewith we are called and chosen of God) sure. For how dare a man presume to think that his faith is right, and that God's favour is on him, and that God's Spirit is in him, when he feeleth not the working of the Spirit, neither himself disposed wrheretrue to any godly thing? Thou canst never know or be sure of works follow, thy faith, but by the works : if works follow not, yea, and that of love, without looking after any reward2, thou mayest be sure that thy faith is but a dream, and not right, and even the same that James calleth in his epistle, the second chapter, dead faith, and not justifying. Abraham through works was sure of his faith to be doth not thereby destroy good works; but only sheweth the right use and office of good works to be nothing to merit our justification, but rather to testify a hvely faith, which only justifieth us. The article is plain by the scripture and St Paul.' Vol. v. p. 571.] [! So C.'s edition, but Day in which what profit is there ?] [2 In C. but by works, which works must also come of pure love, without looking, tyc.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 61 right, and that the true fear of God was in him, when he had offered his son : as the scripture saith, "Now know I that thou fearest God ;" that is to say, Now is it open and manifest oen. xxii. that thou fearest God, inasmuch as thou hast not spared thy only son for my sake. So now by this abide, sure and fast, that a man inwardly in the h^eart, and before God, is righteous and good through faith only, before all works : notwithstanding, yet outwardly and openly before the people, yea, and before himself, is he righteous through the work ; that is, he knoweth and is sure through the outward work, that he is a true believer, and in the favour of God, and righteous and good thorough the mercy of God: that thou mayest call the one an open and an outward righteousness, and the other, an inward right eousness of the heart; so yet, that thou understand by the The outward outward righteousness no other thing save the fruit that and the . . /, . . . . r. . . inward foUoweth, and a declaring of the inward justifying and right- 'f^teou^ eousness of the heart ; and not that it maketh a man righteous JJg *J- before God, but that he must be first righteous before him, in the heart ; even as thou mayest call the fruit of the tree the outward goodness of the tree, which foUoweth and uttereth the inward natural goodness of the tree. This meaneth James in his epistle, where he saith, "Faith without works is dead :" that is, if works follow not, it is a sure and an evident sign, that there is no faith in the heart ; but a dead imagination and dream, which they falsely call faith. Of the same wise is this saying of Christ to be under stand: "Make you friends of the unrighteous mammon;" that outward * ° .... worksdeclare is, shew your faith openly, and what ye are within in the ^i^strue heart, with outward giving and bestowing your goods on the Ant etL poor, that ye may obtain friends : that is, that the poor, on whom thou hast shewed mercy, may at the day of judgment testify and witness of thy good works ; that thy faith and what thou wast within in thy heart before God, may there appear by thy fruits openly to all men. For unto the right believing shall all things be comfortable, and unto consolation, at that terrible day. And contrariwise, unto the unbelieving all things shall be unto desperation and confusion ; and every man shall be judged openly and outwardly, in the presence 62 THE PARABLE OF WW1! of all men, according to their deeds and works. So that not called tnera ' o , , Mends-WT' without a cause thou mayest call them thy friends, which testify at that day of thee, that thou livedst as a true and a right Christian man, and followedst the steps of Christ in shewing mercy ; as no doubt he doth which feeleth God Good works merciful in his heart. And by the works is the faith known, for^s'SIf that it was right and perfect. For the outward works can "never please God, nor make friend, except they spring of Matt. vi. & faith : forasmuch as Christ himself disalloweth and casteth away the works of the Pharisees, yea, prophesying, and working of miracles, and casting out of devils ; which we count and esteem for very excellent virtues ; yet make they no friends with their works, while their hearts are false and impure, and their eye double. Now without faith is no heart true, or eye single : so that we are compelled to confess that the works make not a man righteous or good, but that the heart must first be righteous and good, ere any good work proceed thence. Secondarily, all good works must be done free with a single eye, without respect of any thing, and that no profit be sought thereby1. Matt. x. That commandeth Christ, where he saith, " Freely have ye Good works received ; freely give again." For look, as Christ with all freely- ew°T. his works did not deserve heaven2, (for that was his already,) but did us service therewith ; and neither looked nor sought his own profit, but our profit, and the honour of God the we must of Father only : even so we, with all our works, may not seek worL, with- our own profit, neither in this world nor in heaven ; but out hope of x reward. Ant must, and ought, freely to work, to honour God withal, and without all manner respect seek our neighbour's profit, and rhii. ii. do him service. That meaneth Paul, saying : "Be minded as [i "When Tewkesbury was asked what he thought of this, he re plied, 'It is truth.' Foxe, iv. p. 691.] [2 Heresies and errors : Art. VII. ' Christ with all his works did not deserve heaven.' Foxe, ' Read the place.' It is indeed obvious, when the place is read, that the artifice of the charge consisted in stopping short with the word 'heaven.' The same clause was cited by Tewkesbury's examiners, and the minute of his reply is, 'To that he answered, that the text is true as it lietb, and he findeth no fault in it.' Foxe, ibid.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 63 Christ was, which being in the shape of God, equal unto God, and even very God, laid that apart," that is to say, hid it ; "and took on him the form and fashion of a servant." That is, as concerning himself he had enough, that he was full and had all plenteousness of the Godhead, and in all his works sought our profit, and became our servant. The cause is : forasmuch as faith justifieth and putteth away sin in the sight of God ; bringeth life, health, and the favour of God ; maketh us the heirs of God ; poureth the Spirit of God into our souls; and filleth us with all godly fulness in Christ; it were too great a shame, rebuke and wrong unto the faith, yea, to Christ's blood, if a man would work any thing to purchase that, wherewith faith hath endued him already, and God hath given him freely : even as Christ had done rebuke and shame unto himself, if he would have done good works, and wrought, to have been made thereby God's Son and heir over all, which thing he was already. Now doth faith make us the sons, or children of Faith maketh « 3 us the sons God. " He gave them might or power to be the sons of God, »p ^udren in that they believed on his name." " If we be sons, so are R0m.evin. we also heirs" (Rom. viii. and Gal. iv.). How can or ought we duty ; yea, it is a sign of strong faith and fervent love, if we to do good to sucn as do well to the evil, and study to draw them to Christ, in all j^^J that lieth in us. But the poor give us an occasion to exercise able- Anted' our faith ; and the deeds make us feel our faith, and certify us, and make us sure that we are safe, and are escaped and translated from death unto life, and that we are delivered and redeemed from the captivity and bondage of Satan, and brought into the liberty of the sons of God, in that we feel lust and strength in our heart to work the will of God. And at that day shall our deeds appear and comfort our hearts, witness of4 our faith and trust, which we now have in Christ ; which faith shall then, keep us from shame, as it is written, "None that believeth in him shall be ashamed." So Bom.ix. that good works help5 our faith, and make us sure in our consciences, and make us feel the mercy of God. Notwith- AU our risht- ' */ eousness standing, heaven, everlasting life, joy eternal, faith, the favour Hyfrom of God, the Spirit of God, lust and strength unto the will of 2n™ed. God, are given us freely of the bounteous and plenteous riches of God, purchased by Christ, without our deservings, that no man should rejoice but in the Lord only. For a farther understanding of this gospel, here may be made three questions, What mammon is? Why it is called unrighteous ? and after what manner Christ biddeth us coun terfeit and follow the unjust and wicked steward, which with his lord's damage provided for his own profit and advantage6? which thing no doubt is unrighteous and sin. [3 Mattereth.] [* SoC; but D. omits of.] [s 0. heape.] [8 So 0.; but D. vantage.] 68 THE PARABLE OF Mammon, First, mammon is an Hebrew word, and signifieth riches Ant. ed. 0r temporal goods ; and namely, all superfluity, and all that is above necessity, and that which is required unto our ne cessary uses; wherewith a man may help another, without undoing or hurting himself; for hamon, in the Hebrew speech, signifies a multitude or abundance, or many ; and therehence cometh mahamon, or mammon, abundance, or plenteousness of goods, or riches1. f1 A supposition carelessly formed and penned by Fuller, that Tyndale could only translate the scriptures from the Latin, eventually led others to believe that he was unacquainted with Hebrew; whereas the sentence above contains, in itself, sufficient evidence that Tyndale was not barely acquainted with Hebrew, but felt himself sufficiently master of that language to form an independent opinion, as to tho proper solution of a question which has perplexed very eminent Hebrew scholars. The word mammon occurs in scripture but four times, viz. in Matt. vi. 24, and in Luke xvi. 9, 11, and 13. It stands there as a word foreign to the Greek language, and yet incorporated into the Greek text. When we add that it does not occur in the old testament ; the assertion is equivalent to saying, that it is no where extant in the genuine, pure, Hebrew tongue. And yet we see that Tyndale has ventured to declare that it is a Hebrew word ; because he could perceive that from hamon, )inn> the analogy of Hebrew grammar would authorize the formation of mahamon, Jl'DiTD ; and that by dageshing the second jj, to make up for the omitted ,-j» we should arrive at fl'fip mammon. Augustine had said that mammon was reported to be the Hebrew name for riches. ' Mammona,' says he, ' apud Hebraeos divitise appellari dicuntur. Convenit et Punicum nomen : nam lucrum Punice Mammon dicitur.' De Serm. Dom. Lib. n. On the other hand, Jerome is said by Leigh, Critica Sacra, in v. Mapava, to have declared it to be derived from JJ3J3 to hide; from which indeed comes JlDftD a treasure. But Q is no servile, and could not therefore disappear. It is not till we come to modern lexicographers, who have examined such questions with more sources of information than earlier writers possessed, that we find Schleusner, after citing various treatises and authorities, venturing to say what he does not seem to have known that Tyndale had said before : ' Rectius fortasse derivatur a voce pan, quas multitudinem, abundantiam et copiam significat.' Lex. Gr. Lat. in Nov. Test. But though Tyndale's venturing upon this affirmation respecting the origin of the word Mapava or Uappava, shews him to have felt at home in Hebrew, it may possibly still be thought to belong to one of those languages which became vernacular with the Jews after the cap- THE WICKED MAMMON. 69 Secondarily, it is called " unrighteous mammon," not be cause it is got unrighteously, or with usury; for of unrighteous gotten goods can no man do good works, but ought to restore them home again : as it is said, Esay lxi. " I am a God that isai. ixi. hateth offering that cometh of robbery ;" and Pro. iii. saith, Prov. in. " Honour the Lord of thine own good." But therefore it is called unrighteous, because it is in unrighteous use. As Paul speaketh unto the Ephesians, v. how that "The days are evil," EPh. ,. though that God hath made them, and they are a good work of God's making : howbeit they are yet called evil, because The days are ° . J J . called evil, that evil men use them amiss; and much sin, occasions 01 because evil 7 ' men use evil, peril of souls are wrought in them. Even so are riches A1^tmjd- called evil, because that evil men bestow them amiss, and misuse them. For where riches is, there goeth it after the common proverb, He that hath money, hath what him listeth. And they cause fighting, stealing, laying await, lying, flatter- / ing, and all unhappiness against a man's neighbour. For all men hold on riches' part. But singularly, before God, it is called unrighteous mam mon, because it is not bestowed and ministered unto our neighbour's need. For if my neighbour need and I give him not, neither depart2 liberally with him of that which I have, then withhold I from him unrighteously that which is his own ; forasmuch as I am bounden to help him by the law wearebound . __., , , * by the law ot of nature, which is, " Whatsoever thou wouldest that another naturetoheip ' ' our needy did to thee, that do thou also to him ;" and Christ, Matt. v. Aenf b^r- "Give to every man that desireth thee;" and John, in his tivity, rather than to the Hebrew. It is certain that in Chaldee, which may not improperly be termed the intermediate tongue between the Hebrew and the Syriac, the intermediate form of mammon, p J2D oc curs as the equivalent to riches in the Targum of Onkelos on Exod. xviii. 21, and xxi. 30 ; and in that of Jonathan on Judges v. 19, as well as elsewhere : whilst in the Syriac Bible we not only find the word p»VrrVi» identical in its form with 'Mapava, in those places where, as in our English Bibles, it might have been inserted as a mere literal copy of the word in the original, but we find it also used by the Syriac translator as the fittest word, in his own tongue, to represent "1Sb> the price of satisfaction, in Exod. xxi. 30, where the English version has ' a sum of money.'] [2 Depart; divide.] 70 THE PARABLE OF first epistle, "If a man have this world's good, and see his brother need, how is the love of God in him?" And this unrighteousness in our mammon see very few men, because it is spiritual; and in those goods which are gotten most truly and justly are men much beguiled1. For they suppose they do no man wrong in keeping them ; in that they got them not with stealing, robbing, oppression, and usury, neither hurt any man now with them. who is the Thirdly, many have busied themselves in studying what, w.wt. ' or who, this unrighteous steward is, because that Christ so praiseth him. But shortly and plainly this is the answer, Theunright- That Christ praiseth not the unrighteous steward, neither eous steward, . . x v . , n i • • i , who it is. setteth him forth to us to counterfeit because of his unnght- Ant. ed. . i ¦ i ¦ 1 eousness, but because of his wisdom only ; in that he, with * v unright, so wisely provided for himself. As if I would provoke another to pray or study, saying2, The thieves watch all night to rob and steal ; why canst not thou watch to pray and to study ? here praise not I the thief and murderer for their evil doing, but for their wisdom, that they so wisely and diligently wait on their unrighteousness. Likewise when I say, Miss women3 tire themselves with gold and silk to please their lovers : what, wilt not thou garnish thy soul with faith to please Christ ? here praise I not whoredom, but the diligence which the whore misuseth. On this wise Paul also likeneth Adam and Christ together, saying that Adam was a figure of Christ. And yet of Adam have we but pure sin, and of Christ grace only ; which are out of measure contrary. But the similitude, or likeness, standeth in the original birth, and not in the virtue and vice of the birth : so that, as Adam is father of all sin, so is christ is the Christ father of all righteousness ; and as all sinners spring righteous- of Adam, even so all righteous men and women spring of ness Ant sd ^^ Christ. After the same manner is here the unrighteous steward an ensample unto us in his wisdom and diligence only, in that he provided so wisely for himself ; that we with righteousness should be as diligent to provide for our souls, as he with unrighteousness provided for his body. [} So 0., hut D. has, which beguile men.] [2 So 0. i D. has, do say.] [3 A phrase equivalent to mistresses, as that word has been used.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 71 Likewise mayest thou soyl4 all other texts, which sound as though it were between us and God as it is in the world, where the reward is more looked upon than the labour ; yea, where men hate the labour, and work falsely, with the body and not with the heart, and no longer than they are looked upon, that the labour may appear outward only. When Christ saith, Matt. v. " Blessed are ye when they rail Matt. v. on you, and persecute you, and say all manner evil sayings against you, and yet lie, and that for my sake ; rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven ;" thou mayest not imagine that our deeds deserve the joy and glory that shall be given unto us; for then, Paul saith, Kom. xi. "Favour were not favour." I cannot receive it of favour and of the bounties of God, freely, and by deserving of deeds also. But believe as the gospel, glad tidings and promises of God say unto thee ; that for Christ's blood's sake only, through faith, God is at For Christ's . • i bIood sake- one with thee, and thou received to mercy, and art become g"'^ h the son of God, and heir annexed with Christ of all the £ajJ,hm£,0iJIth goodness of God ; the earnest whereof is the Spirit of God us- Ant' ed- poured into our hearts. Of which things the deeds are\ ^ witnesses; and certify our consciences that our faith is un-J feigned, and that the right Spirit of God is in us. For if I patiently suffer adversity and tribulation, for conscience of God only, that is to say, because I know God and testify tbe truth ; then am I sure that God hath chosen me in Christ, and for Christ's sake, and hath put in me his Spirit, as an earnest of his promises, whose working I feel in my heart, the deeds bearing witness unto the same. Now is it Christ's blood only that deserveth all the promises of God; and that which I suffer and do is partly the curing, healing, and mortifying of my members, and killing of that original poison wherewith I was conceived and born, that I might be altogether like Christ ; and partly the doing of my duty to my neighbour, whose debtor I am of all that I have [4 Soyl: solve. Sir Thomas More, having quoted Tyndale as saying, ' I would solve this argument after an Oxford fashion, with Concedo consequentiam et consequens', replies, 'I will myself soyle it, with Nego consequentiam et consequens.' Confutation of Tyndale's An swer.] 72 THE PARABLE OF received of God, to draw him to Christ with all suffering, with all patience, and even with shedding my blood for him, not as an offering or merit for his sins, but as an ensample chrisfsbiood to provoke him. Christ's blood only putteth away all the only putteth r * r " away aii sin. sin that ever was, is, or shall be, from them that are elect Ant. ed. ' ' and repent, believing the gospel, that is to say, God's pro mises in Christ. TMatt. v. 44, Again in the same fifth chapter : " Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do well to them that hate you and persecute you, that ye may be the sons of your Father which is in heaven : for he maketh his sun shine upon evil and on good, and sendeth his rain upon just and unjust." Not that our works make us the sons of God, but testify only, and certify our consciences, that we are the sons of God; and that God hath chosen us, and washed us in Christ's blood; and hath put his Spirit in us. And it followeth: " If ye love them that love you, what reward have ye? do not the publicans even the same ? And if ye shall have favour to your friends only, what singular thing do ye? do not the publicans even the same? Ye shall be perfect therefore, as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." That is to say, if that ye do nothing but that the world doth, and they which have the spirit of the world, whereby shall ye know that ye are the sons of, God, and beloved of God, more than the world? we must . But and if ye counterfeit and follow God in well-doing, in weii-doing then no doubt it is a sign that the Spirit of God is in you, and also the favour of God, which is not in the world ; and that ye are inheritors of all the promises of God, and elect unto the fellowship of the blood of Christ. Matt. vi. Also, Matt. vi. " Take heed to your alms, that ye do it not in the sight of men, to the intent that ye would be seen of them ; or else have ye no reward with your Father which is in heaven. Neither cause a trumpet to be blown afore thee, when thou doest thine alms, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, to be glorified of the world.. we may not But when thou doest thine alms, let not thy left hand know do good * " ^eVof* what thy right hand doth ; that thy alms may be in secret, Antwe0d!d" and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward thee THE WICKED MAMMON. 73 openly." This putteth us in remembrance of our duty, and sheweth what followeth good works ; not that works deserve it, but that the reward is laid up for us in store, and we thereunto elect through Christ's blood, which the works testify1. For, if we be worldly-minded, and do our works -^ as the world doth, how shall we know that God hath chosen us out of the world ? But and if we work freely, without all manner worldly respect, to shew mercy, and to do our we must be duty to our neighbour, and to be unto him as God is to us ; bour asnGod then are we sure that the favour and mercy of God is upon am. ed. us, and that we shall enjoy all the good promises of God through Christ, which hath made us heirs thereof. J Also2, in the same chapter it followeth: "When thou Hypocrites prayest, be not as the hypocrites, which love to stand and praised of v J . ' i-i i»i t. men- Anted. pray in the synagogues, and in the corners ot the streets, for to be seen of men. But when thou prayest, enter into thy chamber, and shut thy door to, and pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly." And likewise, when we fast, teacheth Christ in the same place, that we should behave ourselves " that it appear not unto men how that we fast, but unto our Father which is in secret ; and our Father which seeth in secret, shall reward us openly." These two texts do but declare what followeth good works ; for eternal life cometh not by the deserving of works, but is, (saith Paul, in the sixth to the Bom. vi. Romans) " the gift of God through Jesus Christ." Neither do our works justify us: for except we were justified by faith, Faith 0my which is our righteousness, and had the Spirit of God in us, and no good © 7 * works can be to teach us, we could do no good work" freely, without respect $,X Anted' of some profit, either in this world, or in the world to come ; te^S6 neither could we have spiritual joy in our hearts in time of work ""eeiy- affliction, and mortifying of the flesh. Good works are called the fruits of the Spirit, Gal. v. for Good works the Spirit worketh them in us ; and sometime fruits of right- Ant. ed. -i i-i i ^i • i • l ? i Good wo** eousness, as m the second epistle to the Corinthians and ninth gjjf*'}etj*e chapter. Before all works, therefore, we must have a righte- §ghteouid ness. WvT. [! Tewkesbury's examiners asked what he thought of this. He answered, 'That the text of the book is true.'] [2 In C. Item.] 74 THE PARABLE OF ousness within the heart, the mother of all works, and from what is the whence they spring. The righteousness of the scribes and righteous- J r o a . . . . . Sefand Pharisees, and of them that have the spirit of this world, is Pharisees. £ne glorious shew and outward shining of works. But Christ saith to us, Matt. v. " Except your righteousness' exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven." It is righteousness in the world, if True right- a man kill not. But a Christian perceiveth righteousness if he eousness, i o Ant.'ed.is' l°ve his enemy, even when he suffereth persecution and tor ment of him, and the pains of death, and mourneth more for his adversary's blindness than for his own pain, and prayeth God to open his eyes, and to forgive him his sins ; as did Acts va Stephen in the Acts of the Apostles, the seventh chapter ; Luke xxiii. and Christ, Luke xxiii. A Christian considereth himself in the law of God, and Thejawmust there putteth off him all manner righteousness. For the andwith'such ^aw suffereth no merits, no deservings, no righteousness, nei- ctafathaih* t^ier any man *° ^e justified in the sight of God. The law done. w. t. jg gpij-^ual, and requireth the heart, and commandments to be fulfilled with such love and obedience as was in Christ. If any fulfil all that is the will of God, with such love and obedience, the same may be bold to sell pardons of his merits1, and else not. [! In Tyndale's time, when the council of Trent had not yet been assembled, the alleged power of the church to grant pardons or in dulgences, out of a supposed treasure of merits at its disposal, ' had no other foundation,' says Father Sarpi, in his celebrated History of the Council of Trent, 'than the bull of Clement VI. made for the jubilee of 1350.' Hist, del Cone. Tridentino, p. 6. Edit, by Ant. de Dominis, Abp. of Spalatro. Lond. mdcxix. This bull is incorporated into the papal law ; and the portion of it relating to the alleged treasure, out of which pardons were sold, is as follows: Non enim corruptibilibus auro et argento, sed sui ipsius, agni incontaminati et immaculati, precioso sanguine nos redemit; quem in ara crucis innocens immolatus, non guttam sanguinis modi- cam, quae tamen propter unionem ad verbum pro redemptione totius humani generis suffecisset, sed copiose velut quoddam profluvium noscitur effudisse, ita ut a planta pedis usque ad verticem capitis nulla sanitas inveniretur in ipso. Quantum ergo exinde, ut nee supervacua, inanis, aut superflua tantae effusionis miseratio redderetur, thesaurum militanti ecclesise acquisivit, volens suis thesaurizare filiis Pater, ut sic sit infinitus thesaurus hominibus, quo qui usi sint, Dei THE WICKED MAMMON, 75 A Christian therefore, when he beholdeth himself in the law, putteth off all manner righteousness, deservings and merits, and meekly and unfeignedly knowledgeth his sin and misery, his captivity and bondage in the flesh, his trespass and guilt ; and is thereby blessed, with the poor in spirit. Matt. v. chap. Then he mourneth in his heart, because he is in such bond age that he cannot do the will of God ; and is an hungred and athirst after righteousness; for righteousness (I mean) True right- 0 ° eousness which springeth out of Christ's blood, for strength to do the g^!}*?* out will of God ; and turneth himself to the promises of God, A1°°ded. and desireth him for his great mercy and truth, and for the blood of his Son Christ, to fulfil his promises, and to give him ^h^rjf^ian' strength. And thus his spirit ever prayeth within him. He £b?J|{h,,and fasteth also not one day for a week, or a Lent for an whole t01CGo*sfast year ; but professeth in his heart a perpetual soberness, to ^f°^es' tame the flesh, and to subdue the body to the spirit, until he ^aetff£n& wax strong in the Spirit, and grow ripe into a full righteous- Ant ed- ness after the fulness of Christ. And because this fulness happeneth not till the body be slain by death, a Christian is amicitisa participes sunt effecti. Quern quidem thesaurum non in sudario repositum, non in agro absconditum, sed per beatum Petrum coeli clavigerum ejusque successores, suos in terris vicarios, commisit fidelibus salubriter dispensandum ; et propriis et rationalibus causis, nunc pro totali, nunc pro partiali remissione poense temporalis pro peccatis debitse, tarn generaliter quam specialiter (prout cum Deo ex- pedire cognoscerent) vere poenitentibus et confessis misericorditer apphcandum. Ad cujus quidem thesauri cumulum beatse Dei genitri- cis, omniumque electorum a primo justo usque ad ultimum merita ad- miniculum prastare noscuntur: de cujus consumptione seu minutione non est aliquatenus somniandum, tarn propter infinita Christi (ut prsedictum est) merita, quam pro eo, quod quanto plures ex ejus ap- plicatione trabuntur ad justitiam, tanto magis accessit ipsorum cu mulus meritorum. Quod felicis recordationis Bonifacius papa VIII,, prsedecessor noster, pie (sicut indubie credimus) considerans — incon- sumptibilem thesaurum hujusmodi pro excitanda et remuneranda devotione fidelium voluit aperire ; decernens de fratrum suorum concilio, ut omnes qui in anno a nat. Dom. mccc, et quolibet cente- simo anno ex tunc secuturo ad dictorum apostolorum basilicas de urbe accederent reverenter, ipsasque si Romani ad minus xxx., si vero pere- grini aut forenses fuerint xv. diebus, continuis vel interpolate, saltern semel in die, dum tamen vere pcenitentes, et confessi existerent, perso- naliter visitarent, suorum omnium obtinerent plenissimam veniam peccatorum. Corpus Juris Canonici. Extrav. Commun. Lib. v. Titul. ix. cap. ii. Unigenitus. Ed. Lugduni mdcxxii. cum licentia.] 76 THE PARABLE OF ever a sinner in the law ; and therefore fasteth, and prayeth to God in the spirit, the world seeing it not. Yet in the promises he is ever righteous through faith in Christ; and is sure that he is heir of all God's promises ; the Spirit, i which he hath received in earnest1, bearing him witness ; his heart also, and his deeds testifying the same. fumitteSw Mark this then : To see inwardly that the law of God is Ant- ed. so spiritual, that no flesh can fulfil it2 ; and then for to mourn and sorrow, and to desire, yea, to hunger and thirst after strength to do the will of God from the ground of the heart, and (notwithstanding all the subtilty of the devil, weakness and feebleness of the flesh, and wondering of the world,) to cleave yet to the promises of God, and to believe that for Christ's blood sake thou art received to the inheritance of eternal life, is a wonderful thing, and a thing that the world knoweth not of; but whosoever feeleth that, though he fall a thousand times in a day, doth yet rise again a thousand times, and is sure that the mercy of God is upon him. "If ye forgive other men their trespasses, your heavenly we cannot Father shall forgive you yours." Matt, in the vi. chap. If I Godnbuthe f°rgiye> ^*0& sna^ f°rgive me ; not for my deeds' sake, but pardoS'u's. f°r his promises' sake, for his mercy and truth, and for the Ant. ed. blood of his Son, Christ our Lord. And my forgiving certi- fieth my spirit that God shall forgive me, yea, that he By consent- hath forgiven me already. For if I consent to the will o wfiofGodf God in my heart, though through infirmity and weakness wging our cannot do the will of God at all times ; moreover, thougl/ 1 ofethe!pMt [2 From this clause is formed Art. XI. of alleged heresies. 'All flesh is in bondage of sin, and cannot but sin.' Foxe's reply is, 'This article is evident enough of itself, confirmed by the scripture, and needeth no allegations.' v. p. 572.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 77 cannot forgive without amends making, or a greater vantage. If I forgive now, how cometh it ? Verily, because I feel the mercy of God in me. For as a man feeleth God to himself, wherefore .,,,..,, T i i . . the believing so is he to his neighbour. I know by mine own experience, *>re'veth- that all fleshisin bondage under sin, and cannot but sin; therefore am I merciful, and desire God to loose the bonds of sin even in mine enemy. " Gather not treasure- together in earth, &c. but gather Matt. vi. you treasure in heaven," &c. Let not your hearts be glued a true be- to worldly things ; study not to heap treasure upon treasure, aims. and riches upon riches ; but study to bestow well that which is gotten already, and let your abundance succour the lack and with that need of the poor which have not. Have an eye to good abounded works, to which if ye have lust and also power to do them, °aryUfoodces~ llrt...,,~i.. . . ought we to then are ye sure that the Spirit of (jod is in you, and ye m sustain the Christ elect to the reward of eternal life, which followeth good works. But look that thine eye be single, and rob not Christ of his honour ; ascribe not that to the deserving of thy works, which is given thee freely by the merits of his blood. In Christ we are sons. In Christ we are heirs. In Christ m cimst God chose us, and elected us before the beginning of the Ant. ed. world, created us3 anew by the word of the gospel, and put his Spirit in us, for because that4 we should do good works. A Christian man worketh, because it is the will of his Father only. If we do no good work, nor be merciful, how is our lust therein ? If we have no lust to do good works, how is God's Spirit in us ? If the Spirit of God be not in us, how are we his sons ? How are we his heirs, and heirs annexed with Christ of the eternal life, which is promised to all them that beheve in him ? Now do our works testify and witness we must what we are, and what treasure is laid up for us in heaven, w°Kbe- so that our eye be single, and look upon the commandment God's win tl o i that we without respect of any thing, save because it is God's will, stj™1" d° and that God desireth it of us, and Christ hath deserved that we do it. Matt. vii. " Not all they that say unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven." Though thou canst ' • P So Day: in C. us is omitted.] [* So C. : in D. that it omitted.] we are all in all. 78 THE PARABLE OF Not only to laud God with thy lips, and call Christ Lord, and canst babble speak of the ,,,„,. gospei is ac- an(j talk of the scripture, and knowest all the stories of the eepted before >- ' ... ifve 'aftSr the bible, yet shalt thou thereby never know thine election, or gospei. w.t. Aether thy faith be right. But and if thou feel lust in thine heart to the will of God, and bringest forth the fruits thereof, then hast thou confidence and hope ; and thy deeds, and also the Spirit whence thy deeds spring, certify thine heart that thou shalt enter, yea, art already entered, into the kingdom we must of heaven. For it followeth, "He that heareth the word, and heartheword t do ft"1 and "°"1 1*' buildeth his house upon a rock," and no tempest of Ant. ed. temptations can overthrow it. For the Spirit of God is in his heart, and comforteth him, and holdeth him fast to the rock of the merits of Christ's blood, in whom he is elect. Nothing is able to pluck him out of the hands of God : God is stronger than all things. And contrariwise, " he that heareth the word, and doth it not, buildeth on the sand" of his own imagination, and every tempest overthroweth his building. The cause is, he hath not God's Spirit in him, and therefore understandeth it not aright, neither worketh aright. " For i cor. ii. no man knoweth the things of God (saith Paul in the first epistle to the Corinthians, in the second chapter) save the Spirit of God, as no man knoweth what is in a man, but a where the man's spirit which is in him." So then, if the Spirit be not in isPnot, "here a man, he worketh not the will of God, neither understandeth cannot a man , , , _ , , T , ii»i • t.t work accord- it though he babble never so much ot the scriptures. Never- lng to God s ° i .. • wm. w. t. theless such a man may work after his own imagination, but God's will can he not work ; he may offer sacrifice, but to do mercy knoweth he not. It is easy to say unto Christ, Lord, Lord ; but thereby shalt thou never feel or be sure of the kingdom of heaven. But and if thou do the will of God, then art thou sure that Christ is thy Lord indeed, and that thou in him art also a lord ; in that thou feelest thyself loosed and freed from the bondage of sin, and lusty and of power to do the will of God. Where the Spirit is, there is feeling ; for the Spirit maketh us feel all things. Where the Spirit is not, there is Christ is our no feeling ; but a vain opinion or imagination. A physician dan, toLai serveth but for sick men ; and that for such sick men as feel and deliver , i« *i i ns of our their sicknesses, and mourn therefore, and long for health. sins. Ant. ed. ' ' o Christ likewise serveth but for such1 sinners only as feel their f1 So C. ; in D. such is omitted here.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 79 sin, and that for such sinners that sorrow and mourn in their hearts for health. Health is power or strength to fulfil the what health A ° is to say. law, or to keep the commandments. Now he that longeth for w- T- that health, that is to say, for to do the law of God, is blessed in Christ, and hath a promise that his lust shall be fulfilled, and that he shall be made whole. Matt. v. " Blessed are they which hunger and thirst for righteousness' sake, (that is, to fulfil the law,) for their lust shall be fulfilled." This longing and consent of the heart unto the law of God is the working of the Spirit, which God hath poured into thine heart, in earnest that thou mightest be sure that God will fulfil all his promises that he hath made thee. It is also the seal and mark, which God putteth on all men that he chooseth unto everlasting life. So long as thou seest thy sin and mournest, and consentest to the law, and longest (though thou be never so weak), yet the Spirit shall keep thee in all temptations from desperation, and certify thine heart that God for his truth shall deliver thee and save thee ; yea, and by thy good deeds shalt thou be saved, not which thou hast done, but which Christ has done for thee ; for Christ is thine, and all his Christ's t t merits are deeds are thy deeds. Christ is in thee, and thou in him, °urs- w- T- knit together inseparably. Neither canst thou be damned, christis ° . , i l-ii -i „. . . ouranchor- except Christ be damned with thee : neither can Christ be hold to saiva- r t t tion. Anted. saved, except thou be saved with him2. Moreover thy heart is good, right, holy, and just ; for thy heart is no enemy to the law, but a friend and a lover. The law and thy heart are agreed and at one ; and therefore is God at one with thee. The consent of the heart unto the law is unity and peace between God and man. For he is not mine enemy, which would fain do me pleasure, and mourneth because he hath not wherewith. Now he that opened thy disease unto thee, and made thee long for health shall (as he hath pro- [2 Art. XII. of the heresies and errors charged against Tyndale is composed of this sentence. Foxe says in reply, 'Read the place.' He then quotes Tyndale from the words 'A physician,' to the close of the condemned sentence, attaching to it this note: 'The believing man, standing upon the certainty of God's promise, may assure him self of his salvation, as truly as Christ himself is saved ; and he can no more than Christ himself be damned: and although the scripture doth not use this phrase of speaking, yet it importeth no less in effect, by reason of the verity of God's promise, which impossible it is to fail.'] 80 THE PARABLE OF mised) heal thee ; and he that hath loosed thy heart shall at his godly leisure loose thy members. He that hath not the Spirit hath no feeling, neither lusteth or longeth after power to fulfil the law, neither abhorreth the pleasures of sin, nei ther hath any more certainty of the promises of God, than I • have of a tale of Robin Hood, or of some jest1 that a man telleth me was done at Rome. Another man may lightly make me doubt, or believe the contrary, seeing I have no experience thereof myself: so is it of them that feel not the working of the Spirit, and therefore in time of temptation the buildings of their imaginations fall. Matt. x. " He that receiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet," that is, because he is a prophet, " shall receive the reward of a prophet;" and "He that giveth one of these little ones a cup of cold water to drink in the name of a disciple, Apronhet, shall not lose his reward." Note this, that a prophet signifieth Ant. ed. as wen jjim that interpreteth the hard places of scripture, as him that prophesieth things to come. Now he that receiveth a prophet, a just man, or a disciple, shall have the same or like reward; that is to say, shall have the same eternal life which is appointed for them in Christ's blood and merits. For No man can except thou were elect to the same eternal life, and hadst the consent to the i» . <-* i n • ¦ deeds of the same faith and trust in God, and the same Spirit, thou couldst law, except * ' he be chosen. never consent to their deeds and help them. But thy deeds testify what thou art ; and certify thy conscience that thou art received to mercy, and sanctified in Christ's passions and sufferings, and shalt hereafter, with all them that follow God, receive the reward of eternal life. Matt. xii. Matt. xii. " Of thy words thou shalt be justified, and of thy words thou shalt be condemned :" That is, thy words as well as other deeds shall testify with thee, or against thee, at The abstain- the day of judgment. Many there are which abstain from the ing from sin i i i /. /. • • outwardly is outward deeds of fornication and adultery, nevertheless rejoice crisy. Anted, to talk thereof and laugh : their words and laughter testify against them, that their heart is impure, and they adulterers and fornicators in the sight of God. The tongue, and other signs, ofttimes utter the malice of the heart, though a man \} Jest, or gest : not meaning a tale to be laughed at, but some fact or exploit. A volume of superstitious narratives entitled, 'Ex Gestis Eomanorum,' was a very popular book in Tyndale's day,] THE WICKED MAMMON. 81 for many causes abstain his hand from the outward deed or act. "If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments." Matt. xix. Matt. xix. First, remember that when God commandeth us to do any thing, he doth it not therefore, because that we of our selves are able to do that he commandeth; but that by the law we might see and know our horrible damnation and captivity under sin, and therefore2 should repent and come to Christ, and receive mercy, and the Spirit of God to loose us, strength us, and to make us able to do God's will, which is the law3. Now when he saith, " If thou wilt enter into life, keep the Tobeiieveun- commandments," is as much to say as, he that keepeth the Christ, is to ..*' x keepthecom- commandments is entered into hfe. For except a man have mandments. r Ant. ed. first the Spirit of life in him by Christ's purchasing, it is im- h*vc|^man possible for him to keep the commandments, or that his heart ^mposs?' should be loose or at liberty to lust after them ; for of nature tokSp uS • iii i n sy i command- we are enemies to the law of Grod. ments. w.t. As touching that Christ saith afterward, " If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell thy substance and give it to the poor ; " he saith it not as who should say that there were any greater The greatest perfection than to keep the law of God, (for that is all perfec- W.t. °" tion,) but to shew the other his blindness ; which saw not that the law is spiritual, and requireth the heart ; but, because he The law is i - iiiii -ii i spiritual and was not knowmg that he had hurt any man with the outward requireth the ° » . heart. Ant. deed, he supposed that he loved his neighbour as himself. ed- But when he was bid to shew the deeds of love, and give of his abundance to them that needed, he departed mourning : which is an evident token that he loved not his neighbour as well as himself; for if he had need himself, it would not have grieved him to have received succour of another man. Moreover, he saw not that it was murder and theft, that a man if the rich . helpnotthe should have abundance of riches tying by him, and not to l™y^hf£e shew mercy therewith, and kindly to succour his neighbour's before'cod, Ant. ed. [2 So D. : in C. therefore is wanting.] [3 To form their thirteenth charge of heresy or error, the exa mining commissioners represented Tyndale as here saying, ' The com mandments be given us, not to do them, but to know our damnation, and to call for mercy of God.' Foxe only replies, 'Read the place ; ' and having quoted it, he attaches to it this note : ' This article is falsely wrested out of these words ; which do not say that we should not do the commandments, but that we cannot do them.'] r i 6 [tyndale.] 82 THE PARABLE OF need. God hath given one man riches, to help another at need. If thy neighbour need, and thou help him not, being : able, thou withholdest his duty l from him, and art a thief be fore God. He that with- That also that Christ saith, how that "it is harder for a drawethfrom ... -, j. .c j ¦ 1 • hisneighbour nch man" (who loveth his riches so that he cannot find in his that which is v- cometo'he'a- heart liberally and freely to help the poor and needy) " to ven. w. t. enter jnto tne kingdom 0f heaven, than a camel to go through the eye of a needle," declareth that he was not entered into the kingdom of heaven, that is to say, eternal life. But he that keepeth the commandments, is entered into life; he2 hath hfe and the Spirit of life in him. Matt. xvii. « This kind of devils goeth not out but by prayer and fasting." Not that the devil is cast out by merits of fasting or praying3 : for he saith before, that for their unbelief's OTtdevUs*"1 sa^e *bey could not cast him out. It is faith, no doubt, that suchdi°ke casteth out the devils ; and faith it is that fasteth and prayeth. mirades. Faith hath the promises of God, whereunto she cleaveth, and Faith fasteth. in all things thirsteth4 the honour of God. She fasteth to Ant. ed. & subdue the body unto the spirit, that the prayer be not let, eth'hAntyed. &n& tna* the spirit may quietly talk with God : she also, whensoever opportunity is given, prayeth God to fulfil his promises unto his praise and glory. And God, which is merciful in promising, and true to fulfil them, casteth out the devils, and doth all that faith desireth, and satisfieth her thirst. rfhravfnis111 " Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom SFfSthfuT; prepared for you from the beginning of the world ; for I was wfrks'donot athirst, and ye gave me drink," &c. Matt. xxv. Not that a man w?t7 ' with works deserveth eternal hfe, as a workman or labourer his hire or wages. Thou readest in the text, that the kingdom f1 Duty, i. e. due. Give to every man his duty. Rom. xiii. 1. Tyndale's version.] p So D. : in C. it is yea.] p Tewkesbury was examined as to what he thought of this clause; and the record of his examination says : ' To that he answered, thinking it good enough.'] [* Compare this word as it stands here, and in the first sentence of Tyndale's Address to the Reader.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 83 was "prepared for us from the beginning of the world." And we are blessed and sanctified. In Christ's blood are we ln cast's blood we are blessed from that bitter curse and damnable captivity under sin, a^g^? wherein we were born and conceived. And Christ's Spirit is Anted'. poured into us, to bring forth good works, and our works are the fruits of the Spirit ; and the kingdom is the deserving of Christ's blood ; and so is faith, and the Spirit, and good works also. Notwithstanding the kingdom followeth good works ; and good works testify that we are heirs thereof ; and at the day of judgment shall they testify for the elect unto their comfort and glory, and to the confusion of the ungodly, unbelieving, and faithless sinners, which had not trust in the word of God's promises, nor lust to the will of God ; but were carried of the spirit of their father, the devil, unto all abomi nation, to work wickedness with all lust, delectation, and greed iness. " Many sins are forgiven her, for she loveth much." Luke Luke vii. • • -vr i i • ¦ • Aslongaswe vn. Not that love was cause of forgiveness of sins, but contran- see the law, o 3 we cannot wise the forgiveness of sins caused love ; as it followeth, " To- b0uvte^hhenstwe whom less was forgiven, that same loveth less." And afore he peei*hen0re- commended the judgment of Simon, which answered that he Jw.CT7e' loveth most to whom most was forgiven : and also said, at the last, " Thy faith hath saved thee" (or made thee safe), " go in peace." We cannot love, except we see some benefit and kind ness. .As long as we look on the law of God only, where we me law con- see but sin and damnation and the wrath of God upon us, yea, Anted.' where we were damned afore we were born, we cannot love God: no, we cannot but hate him as a tyrant, unrighteous, unjust, and flee from him as did Cain5. But when the gospel, that glad jj^gggjj tidings, and joyful promises are preached, how that in Christ "t^Ari. God loveth us first, forgiveth us, and hath mercy on us ; then ed' love we again, and the deeds of our love declare our faith. This is the manner of speaking : as we say, Summer is nigh, f^^^f' for the trees blossom. Now is the blossoming of the trees not warddeSs. the cause that summer draweth nigh ; but the drawing nigh of summer is the cause of the blossoms, and the blossoms put us in remembrance that summer is at hand. So Christ here [s The passage beginning, 'We cannot love,' and ending with ' Cain/ was urged upon Tewkesbury ; and the record says, ' To that he answered, and thinketh it good and plain enough.'] 6 — 2 84 THE PARABLE OF teacheth Simon by the ferventness of love in the outward deeds to see a strong faith within, whence so great love certain phra- springeth. As the manner is to say, Do your charity ; shew Ant"Xded' your charity ; do a deed of charity ; shew your mercy ; do a deed of mercy ; meaning thereby that our deeds declare how we love our neighbours, and how much we have compassion on them at their need. Moreover it is not possible to love, except we see a cause. Except we see in our hearts the love and kindness of God to us-ward in Christ our Lord, it is not possible to love God aright. Anexampie "We say also, He that loveth not my dog, loveth not me. neighbours. -^0* tnat a man should love my dog first ; but if a man loved WT- me, the love wherewith he loved me would compel him to love my dog, though the dog deserved it not ; yea, though the dog had done him a displeasure, yet if he loved me, the same love would refrain him from revenging himself, and cause him to refer the vengeance unto me. Such speakings find we in 1 John iv. scripture. John in the ivth of his first epistle saith : " He that saith, I love God, and yet hateth his brother, is a liar ; for how can he that loveth not his brother, whom he seeth, love God whom he seeth not?" This is not spoken that a man should first love his brother and then God, but as it followeth : " For this commandment have we of him, that he which loveth God should love his brother also." To love my neighbour is the com mandment; which commandment he that loveth not, loveth not God. The keeping of the commandment declareth what where per- love I have to God. If I loved God purely, nothing that my God is,v there neighbour could do were able to make me either to hate him, are all good . ° i « . Infed either to take vengeance on him myself ; seeing that God hath commanded me to love him, and to remit all vengeance unto The keeping him. Mark now, how much I love the commandment, so mandement" much I love God : how much I love God, so much believe I iov£toward that he is merciful, kind and good, yea, and a father unto me for Christ's sake. How much I believe that God is merciful unto me, and that he will for Christ's sake fulfil all his pro mises unto me ; so much I see my sins, so much do my sins grieve me, so much do I repent and sorrow that I sin, so much displeaseth me that poison that moveth me to sin, and a godiy order so greatly desire I to be healed. So now, by the natural w?T.fect'un' order, first I see my sin : then I repent, and sorrow : then believe I God's promises ; that he is merciful unto me, and THE WICKED MAMMON. 85 forgiveth me, and will heal me at the last : then love I ; and then I prepare myself to the commandment. " This do, and thou shalt live." Luke x. That is to say, Luke x. "Love thy Lord God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, what u is to i • i 11 i i i • i n \ • i ii love God with and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind ; and thy »u °'A^ear> neighbour as thyself." As who should say, If thou do this, or though thou canst not do it, yet if thou feelest lust there- if wed? but unto, and thy spirit sigheth, mourneth, and longeth after «SgW that the , • i • i -i ii Spiritisinus. strength to do it, take a sign and evident token thereby, that w.t. the Spirit of life is in thee, and that thou art elect to life ever lasting by Christ's blood, whose gift and purchase is thy faith, and that Spirit that worketh the will of God in thee ; whose gift also are thy deeds, or rather the deeds of the Spirit of Christ, and not thine ; and whose gift is the reward of eternal life, which followeth good works. It followeth also in the same place of Luke, " When he should depart he plucked out two pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him, Take the charge or cure of him, and whatsoever thou spendest more, I will recompense it thee at my coming .again." Remember, this is a parable, and a para- The true un- ble may not be expounded word by word; but the intent of of a parable. the similitude must be sought out only, in the whole parable, a parable The intent of the similitude is to shew to whom a man is a pounded m aU. W. T. neighbour, or who is a man's neighbour, which is both one, and what it is to love a man's neighbour as himself. The Samaritan holp him, and shewed mercy as long as he was present ; and when he could be no longer present, he left his money behind him, and if that were not sufficient, he left his credence x to make good the rest ; and forsook him not, as long as the other had need. Then said Christ, " Go whatneigh- thou and do likewise ;" that is, without difference or respection «etn. w.t. of persons : whosoever needeth thy help, him count thy neigh bour, and his neighbpur be thou, and shew mercy on him as long as he needeth thy succour ; and that is to love a man's neighbour as himself. Neighbour is a word of love ; and wemustever signifieth that a man should be ever nigh, and at hand, and neipour t0 j x I. 1 • S e J neighbour. ready to help in time ot need. Ant ed. They that will interpret parables word by word, fall [! Promise, or pledge to be credited. The phrase, letters of cre dence, is an instance of a similar use of the word.] 86 THE PARABLE OF into straits ofttimes, whence they cannot rid themselves ; and preach lies instead of the truth. As do they which interpret by the two pence the old Testament and the new, and by that which is bestowed opera supererogationis (howbeit superarrogantia1 were a meeter term), that is to say, deeds which are more than the law requireth ; deeds of perfection and of liberality, which a man is not bound to do, but of his free will, and for them he shall have an higher place in hea ven, and may give to other of his merits ; or of which the pope, after his death, may give pardons from the pains of purgatory. Against which exposition I answer : first, a greater per fection than the law is there not. A greater perfection than to love God and his will, which is the commandments, with all thine heart, with all thy soul, with all thy strength, with all thy mind, is there none : and to love a man's neighbour as himself, is like the same. It is a wonderful love wherewith a man loveth himself. As glad as I would be to receive pardon of mine own life, (if I had deserved death,) so glad ought I to be to defend my neighbour's life, without respect of my life or of my good. A man ought neither to spare his goods, nor yet himself, for his brother's sake, after the ensample of 1 John i». Christ. " Herein," saith he, " perceive we love, in that he," that is to say Christ, " gave his life for us ; we ought, there fore, to bestow our lives for the brethren." Now saith Christ, John xv. j0hn xv. " There is no greater love than that a man bestow his life for his friend." no man fui- Moreover no man can fulfil the law: for John saith (first filleththe v law. w. t. chapter of the said epistle,) " If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and truth is not in us ; if we knowledge our sins, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins, and to purge us from all iniquity." And in the Paternoster also we say, " Father, forgive us our sins." Now if we be all sinners, none fulfilleth the law : for he that fulfilleth the law is no sinner. In the law may neither Peter nor Paul nor any other creature, save Christ only, rejoice. ' In the blood of Christ, which fulfilled the law for us, may every person that repenteth, believeth, loveth the law, and mourneth for whatjhe^ strength to fulfil it, rejoice, be he never so weak a sinner. token, w.t. The two pence therefore, and the credence that he left behind [! Superarrogancy, exceeding arrogancy.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 87 him to bestow more, if need were, signifieth that he was everywhere merciful, both present and absent, without feign ing, cloaking, complaining, or excusing, and forsook not his neighbour as long as he had need. Which example I pray ^j?™^' God men may follow, and let opera supererogationis alone, morethan1" the law re quireth. " Mary hath chosen a good part which shall not be taken Luke x. from her." Luke x. She was first chosen of God, and called by grace, both to know her sin, and also to hear the word of faith, health, and glad tidings of mercy in Christ ; and faith was given her to believe, and the Spirit of God loosed her heart from the bondage of sin : then consented she to the will S'wlis'that of God again, and above all things had delectation to hear Sn/w.r. that2 word wherein she had obtained everlasting health, and namely, of his own mouth, which had purchased so great mercy for her. God chooseth us first and loveth us first, and openeth our eyes to see his exceeding abundant love to us in Christ; and then love we again, and accept his will above all things, and serve him in that office whereunto he hath chosen. us. "Sell that ye have, and give alms, and make you bags i^xii. which wax not old, and treasure which faileth not in heaven." Luke xii. This and such hke are not spoken that we should work as hirelings, in respect of reward, and as though we should obtain heaven with merit. For he saith a" httle afore, " Fear not, httle flock, for it is your Father's pleasure to give you a kingdom." The kingdom cometh then of the good will whatsoever J o © o we have, we of Almighty God, through Christ ; and such things are spoken theemlrcyof partly to put us in remembrance of our duty, to be kind o? GoTdness again : as is that saying, " Let your light so shine before Ant' ed' men that they, seeing your good works, may glorify your Father which is in heaven :" as who should say, if God hath given you so great gifts, see ye be not unthankful, but bestow them unto his praise. Some things are spoken to The great di- 1 o A versity and move us to put our trust in God, as are these : " Behold the gfj^jjf lilies of the field :" " Behold the birds of the air :" " If your &'*?K" children ask you bread, will ye proffer them a stone?" anded- many such like. Some are spoken to put us in remembrance scripture «/ r r speaketh to to be sober, to watch and pray, and to prepare ourselves ™^v^. T. against temptations ; and that we should understand and [2 So C. : in D. it is the.] 00 THE PARABLE OF know how that temptations, and occasion of evil, come then most, when they are least looked for ; lest we should be careless, and sure of ourselves, negligent and unprepared. Some things are spoken that we should fear the wonderful and incomprehensible judgments of God, lest we should presume : some to comfort us, that we despair not. And for like causes are all the ensamples of the old Testament. In conclusion, the scripture speaketh many things as the world speaketh; but they may not be worldly understood, but I'iriHs'not ghostly ana" spiritually : yea, the Spirit of God only un- undCTstind-' derstandeth them ; and where he is not, there is not the un- tu?e°fw"£* derstanding of the scripture, but unfruitful disputing and brawling about words. Thesayings The scripture saith, God seeth, God heareth, God smell- of the scnp- x * ' nortebemgross- etn' Gocl wal]£eth, God is with them, God is not with them, stood.deAnt. God 1S angry> God is pleased, God sendeth his Spirit, God ed- taketh his Spirit away, and a thousand such like : and yet is none of them true after the worldly manner, and as the words sound. Read the second chapter of Paul to the Corinthians : The0nalurai " The natural man understandeth not the things of God, but sSeui not the Spirit of God only. And we," saith he, "have received Goed. Anted, the Spirit which is of God, to understand the things which Itisimpossi- . t* rt t „ -n >i . r. . . . . sta3ntd°theder" are given us of God." For without the Spirit it is impossible withouuhe to understand them. Read also the viiith to the Romans : snmtof God. « They that are led with the Spirit of God, are the sons of Rom. viii. q0(j .» now. the gon knoweth his father's will, and the servant not. "He1 that hath not the Spirit of Christ, (saith Paul) is none of his :" likewise, he that hath not the Spirit of God, is none of God's ; for it is both one Spirit, as thou mayest see in the same place. John vm. Now " he that is of God heareth the word of God." John viii. And who is of God, but he that hath the Spirit of God ? Furthermore, saith he, " Ye hear it not, because ye are not of God;" that is, ye have no lust in the word of God, for ye understand it not ; and that because his Spirit is not in you. ™notMnf re Forasmuch then as the scripture is nothing else but that wsh1chuthe which the Spirit of God hath spoken by the prophets and ha'th'spoken4. apostles, and cannot be understand but of the same Spirit ; ply the let every man Pray to God to send him hl3 SPlrlt> t0 l00Se youfrom0086 ^™ ^rom ^s natural blindness and ignorance, and to give. [! So C. ; D. omits, not. He.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 89 him understanding and feeling of the things of God, and of Jf^jJ^™1 the speaking of the Spirit of God. And mark this process : y°* uJSe* first, we are damned of nature; so conceived, and born; aSsptrjdUaiof a serpent is a serpent, and a toad a toad, and a snake a MarfthT'1' snake by nature2. And as thou seest a young child, which Gol's works. hath pleasure in many things wherein is present death, as in fire, water, and so forth, would slay himself with a thousand deaths, if he were not waited upon and kept therefrom ; even so we, if we should live these thousand years, could in all that time delight in no other thing, nor yet seek any other thing, but that wherein is death of the soul. Secondarily, of the whole multitude of the nature of man, whom God hath elect and chosen, and to whom he hath appointed mercy and grace in Christ, to them sendeth he his Spirit ; which openeth their eyes, sheweth them their misery, and bringeth them unto the knowledge of themselves ; so that they hate and abhor themselves, are astonied and amazed, and at their wit's ends, neither wot what to do, or where to seek health. Then, lest they should flee from God by despe- By faith in ration, he comforteth them again with his sweet promises in brought to ° r the state of Christ ; and certifieth their hearts that, for Christ's sake, salvation. 77 Ant ed. they are received to mercy, and their sins forgiven, and they elect and made the sons of God, and heirs with Christ of eternal life : and thus through faith are they set at peace with God. Now may not we ask why God chooseth one and not pod worketh . , . d his own will another ; either think that God is unjust to damn us afore ^u"^'3 we do any actual deed ; seeing that God hath power over all Anti ed- his creatures of right, to do with them what he list, or to make of every one of them as he listeth. Our darkness cannot perceive his light. God will be feared, and not have his secret judgments known. Moreover we by the light of faith see a thousand things which are impossible to an in fidel to see : so likewise, no doubt, in the light of the clear vision of God we shall see things which now God will not have known. For pride ever accompanieth high knowledge, but grace accompanieth meekness. Let us therefore give diligence rather to do the will of God, than to search his secrets, which are not profitable for us to know. [2 Tewkesbury's examiners asked him if this were right. ' To that he answered, It is true, as it is in the book.' Foxe, iv. 691.] 90 THE PARABLE OF ifwebeiieve When we are thus reconciled to God, made the friends in vioci, we IheoiSmarf of God and neirs of eternal life, the Spirit, that God hath workV.SAnt poured into us, testifieth that we may not live after our old deeds of ignorance. For how is it possible that we should He that is repent and abhor them, and yet have lust to live in them? uncto gU We are sure therefore that God hath created and made us must not live . ...... . 1111. fusforf nld new in Christ, and put his Spirit m us, that we should hve a ranee, w. t. new life, which is the life of good works. That thou mayest know what are good works, and the intent of good works, or wherefore good works serve, mark this that followeth. whattheyks ^ne ^e °f a Christian man is inward between him and whataend° G°d> and properly is the consent of the Spirit to the will of AntS?6' God and to the honour of God. And God's honour is the final end of all good works. Good works are all things- that are done within the laws of God, in which God is honoured, and for which thanks are given to God. fme' mge the Fasting is to abstain from surfeiting, or overmuch eating, Anteed. from drunkenness, and care of the world (as thou mayest read Luke xxi.) ; and the end of fasting is to tame the body, that the spirit may have a free course to God, and may quietly talk with God. For overmuch eating and drinking, and care of worldly business, press down the spirit, choke her £sfinguseof and tangle her that she cannot lift up herself to God. Now W- T- he that fatsteth for any other intent than to subdue the body, that the spirit may wait on God, and freely exercise herself in the things of God, the same is blind, and wotteth not what he doth, erreth and shooteth at a wrong mark, and his intent and imagination is abominable in the sight of God1. When thou fastest from meat and drinkest all day, is that a Christian fast ? either to eat at one meal that were sufficient fasting!1 Ant ^or f°ur ^ -^ man a* ^our times may Dear that ne cannot at ed- once. Some fast from meat and drink, and yet so tangle themselves in worldly business that they cannot once think on God. Some abstain from butter, some from eggs, some [} The above clause supplied Art. XIV. of the list of alleged heresies and errors, and was one of the subjects on which Tewkesbury was examined, to afford matter of condemnation against him. The allegation of error has only induced Foxe to give his reader the pas sage: and Tewkesbury owned it for a truth.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 91 from all manner white meat, some this day, some that day, some in the honour of this saint, some of that, and every man for a sundry purpose : some for the tooth ache, some for the head ache, for fevers, pestilence, for sudden death, for hang ing, drowning, and to be delivered from the pains of hell. Some are so mad, that they fast one of the Thursdays be tween the two St Mary days2, in the worship of that saint whose day is hallowed between Christmas and Candlemas3 ; [2 By " the two St Mary days" are meant the festival of the Virgin Mary's conception, observed by the church of Rome on the 5th Dec, and that of her purification, observed Feb. 2. The observance of the first arose out of a legend which assumed to tell when she was born, and consequently to fix the time when she was conceived. From ac cepting this legend, an advance was made in the 12th century to setting apart a day of rejoicing for her conception. And when the reputa tion of the famous schoolmen, Duns Scotus and Thomas Aquinas, had divided nearly the whole ecclesiastical body of western Christendom into disputants about their respective merits ; the Scotists counted it their master's chief honour, that he had taught that the virgin, like her divine Son, was conceived without spot of sin, whilst the Thomists, or disciples of Aquinas, were fain to oppose this notion, as evidently irreconcileable with his language. The former accordingly called it the Feast of the Immaculate Conception ; and its observance was henceforward kept with the more zeal, as serving to call out mani festations of attachment to one or other of the two great parties into which the church of Rome is still divided on this subject. The other St Mary's day, as Tyndale here calls it, has its appro priate collect, substitute for an epistle, and gospel, in the liturgy of the church of England; where it is headed, 'The Presentation of Christ in the Temple, commonly called, the Purification of Saint Mary the Virgin.' Its day of observance is obviously determined by the interval fixed upon in the divine law between the birth of a man- child and the purification of its mother, (Levit. xii. 2 — 4) ; and its title refers to the oldest origin of its observance. ' That which is com monly called the Purification of the Virgin Mary, or Candlemas Day,' went at first among the Greeks by the name of 'Ynairavr!), which de notes the meeting of the Lord by Simeon in the temple, in com memoration of which occurrence it was first made a festival in the church ; some say in the time of Justin the emperor ; others in the time of his successor Justinian, A. d. 542. Bingham's Orig. Eccles. B. xx. ch. 8, §. 5. Vol. vn. p. 169. London, 1840.] [3 By halving the interval between Christmas and Candlemas, we are brought to a festival long allowed by the church of Rome, as a part of the licensed saturnalia with which it accommodated its adhe rents in the winter season. 'On the 14th of January,' says Mr Fos- ing. Ant ed. 92 THE PARABLE OF and that to be delivered from the pestilence. All those men fast without conscience of God, and without knowledge of the true intent of fasting, and do no other than honour saints, as the Gentiles and heathen worshipped their idols, and are drowned in blindness, and know not of the testament that God hath made to man-ward in Christ's blood. In God have they neither hope nor confidence, neither believe his promises, neither know his will, but are yet in captivity under the prince of darkness. what watch Watch, is not only to abstain from sleep, but also to be w.t. ' circumspect and to cast1 all perils; as a man should watch a tower or a castle. We must remember that the snares of the devil are infinite and innumerable, and that every moment arise new temptations, and that in all places meet us fresh occasions ; against which we must prepare ourselves and turn to God and complain to him, and make our moan, and desire him of his mercy to be our shield, our tower, our castle, and defence from all evil, to put his strength in us, for without him we can do nought ; and above all things we must call to mind what promises God hath made, and what he hath sworn that he will do to us for Christ's sake, and with strong faith cleave unto him and desire him of his mercy and for the love that he hath to Christ, and for his truths sake, to fulfil his promises. If we thus cleave to God with strong faith and believe his words, then, as saith Paul, " God is faithful that broke, 'was the Feast of Asses, intended to represent the flight of the Virgin Mary into Egypt. A girl, seated upon an ass, elegantly trap ped, and holding a child, was led in procession to the church, and placed upon the ass at the gospel side of the altar. Kyrie, the Gloria, Creed, &c, were then chaunted, and concluded with Hinham,' (in imi tation of the creature's bray). 'At the end of the service, the priest, turning to the people, instead of dismissing them, (with the usual words) said three times, Hinham; to which they replied, Hinham, Hinham, Hinham.' British Monachism, ch. v. p. 48. ed. 3, 1843. Fosbroke further refers to Ducange, v. Festum Asinorum. The people at this festival apostrophised the ass as Sire Ane. This there fore was the saint of Tyndale's sarcastic allusion ; and it would seem as if they who were 'so mad' must needs have a Thursday for their fast, that every thing connected with this strange superstition might be at variance with the more solemn usages of their church, whose chosen days for fasting are "Wednesday and Friday.] [i Cast: calculate.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 93 he will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able," or above our might ; that is to say, if we cleave to his promises and not to our own fantasies and imaginations, he will put might and power into us, that shall be stronger than all the temptation which he shall suffer to be against us. Prayer is a mourning, a longing, and a desire of the spirit Prayer, what to God-ward, for that which she lacketh ; as a sick man mourneth and sorroweth in his heart, longing for health. Faith ever prayeth. For after that by faith we are reconciled to God, and have received mercy and forgiveness of God, the spirit longeth and thirsteth for strength to do the will of God, and that God may be honoured, his name hallowed, and his pleasure and will fulfilled. The spirit waiteth and watch- eth on the will of God, and ever hath her own fragility and weakness before her eyes ; and when she seeth temptation and peril draw nigh, she turneth to God, and to the testa ment2 that God hath made to all that believe and trust in Christ's blood ; and desireth God for his mercy and truth, Thecondition v ' and proper- and for the love he hath to Christ, that he will fulfil his tiesofprayer. promise, and that he will succour, and help, and give us strength, and that he will sanctify his name in us, and fulfil his godly will in us, and that he will not look on our sin and iniquity, but on his mercy, on his truth, and on the love that he oweth to his Son Christ ; and for his sake to keep us from temptation, that we be not overcome ; and that he deliver us from evil, and whatsoever moveth us contrary to his godly will. Moreover, of his own experience he feeleth other men's True prayer. need, and no less commendeth to God the infirmities of other than his own, knowing that there is no strength, no help, no succour, but of God only. And as merciful as he feeleth God Let the same in his heart to himself-ward, so merciful is he to other ; and you, which . was in Jesus as greatly as he feeleth his own misery, so great compassion Christ- w. t. hath he on other. His neighbour is no less care to him than himself : he feeleth his neighbour's grief no less than his own. And whensoever he seeth occasion, he cannot but pray for his neighbour as well as for himself : his nature is to seek the [2 Tyndale has defined testament to mean, 'an appointment made between God and man, and God's promises.' Table expounding cer tain words in Genesis.] 94 THE PARABLE OF honour of God in all men, and to draw (as much as in him is) all men unto God. This is the law of love, which spring eth out of Christ's blood into the hearts of all them that have their trust in him. No man needeth to bid a Christian man to pray, if he see his neighbour's need : if he see it not, put him in remembrance only, and then he cannot but do his duty. ^without Now, as touching we desire one another to pray for us, charitaynd tna*; do we to put our neighbour in remembrance of his duty, Ant- ed- and not that we trust in his holiness \ Our trust is in God, in Christ, and in the truth of God's promises : we have also a promise, that when two or three, or more, agree together in any thing, according to the will of God, God heareth us. ftSanoE Notwithstanding, as God heareth many, so heareth he few, " l and so heareth he one, if he pray after the will of God, and desire the honour of God. He that desireth mercy, the same feeleth his own misery and sin, and mourneth in his heart for to be delivered, that he might honour God ; and God for his truth must hear him, which saith by the Matt. v. mouth of Christ, " Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled." God, for his truth's sake, must put the righteousness of Christ in him, and wash his unrighteousness away in the blood of Christ. the™hnnerur And be the sinner never so weak, never so feeble and hlarerdm.shaI1 frail, sin he never so oft and so grievous ; yet so long as this lust, desire, and mourning to be delivered, remaineth in him, God seeth not his sins, reckoneth them not, for his He that re- truth's sake, and love to Christ. He is not a sinner in the sin is no sight of God, that would be no sinner. He that would be de- sinner before ° God. Anted, livered, hath his heart loose already. His heart sinneth not, but mourneth, repenteth, and consenteth unto the law and will of God, and justifieth God ; that is, beareth record that God which made the law is righteous and just. And such an heart, trusting in Christ's blood, is accepted for full righteous. And his weakness, infirmity, and frailty is pardoned, and his sins not looked upon, until God put more strength in him, and fulfil his lust. [} The former part of this paragraph was counted amongst Tyn dale's heresies or errors, (Art. XV.) by the royal commissioners. On this Foxe observes, 'The place biddeth us put our trust in Christ only, and not in poor men's prayers ; and so doth the scripture like wise, and yet no heresy therein.'] THE WICKED MAMMON. 95 When the weak in the faith, and unexpert in the mys- How we , '-»¦ whom, alms every parish care for their poor. If thy neighbours which ™$£ * °^T thou knowest be served, and thou yet have superfluity, and hearest necessity to be among the brethren a thousand miles off, to them art thou debtor. Yea, to the very infidels we be debtors, if they need, as far forth as we maintain them not against Christ, or to blaspheme Christ. Thus is every man, that needeth thy help, thy father, mother, sister, and brother i in Christ ; even as every man, that doth the will of the Father, is father, mother, sister, and brother unto Christ. ^"- Moreover, if any be an infidel and a false Christian, and forsake his household, his wife, children, and such as cannot help themselves, then art thou bound, and thou have where with4, even as much as to thine own household. And they have as good right in thy goods as thou thyself5 ?ana if thou withdraw mercy from them, and hast wherewith to help J^1^ T them, then art thou a thief. If thou shew mercy, so doest thou thy duty, and art a faithful minister in the household of Christ; and of Christ shalt thou have thy reward and thanks. If the whole world were thine, yet hath every w,^^ brother his right in thy goods ; and is heir with thee, as we J^^i,,,, are all heirs with Christ. Moreover the rich, and they that foaiimenfso have wisdom with them, must see the poor set a-work, that awiitymli as many as are able may feed themselves with the labour of Anted. their own hands, according to the scripture and command ment of God. [4 So C, but D. has, bound to them and have wherewith. And, like the an of some old writers, is here equivalent to if.] [5 The commissioners for the examination of Tyndale's works gathered from the above passage Art. XX. of the heresies or errors with which they charged him, and expressed it thus: 'The worst Turk living hath as much right to my goods, at his needs, as my household or mine own self.' Foxe says in reply, 'Bead and mark well the place;' which he then copies, and adds in a note, 'Lo! reader, how peevishly this place is wrested ! First, here is no mention made of any Turk. Secondly, this place, speaking of an infidel, meaneth of such Christians as forsake their own households. Thirdly, by his right in thy goods, he meaneth no propriety that he hath to claim ; but only to put thee in remembrance of thy Christian duty, what to give.' Foxe, v. p. 574.] 7—2 100 THE PARABLE OF !Now seest^thou what alms-deeds meaneth. and wherefore it serveth. He that seeketh with his alms more than to be merciful to a neighbour, to succour his brother's need, to do his duty to his brother, to give his brother that he oweth him, the same is blind, and seeth not what it is to be a Christian man, and to have fellowship in Christ's blood1. Good works, As pertaining to good works, understand that all works are. Anted, are good which are done within the law of God, in faith, and AH works ^ inafaithda°ree Wltn thanksgiving to God ; and understand that thou in doing good. w.t. tnem pieaSest God, whatsoever thou doest within the law of God, as when thou makest water. And trust me, if either wind or water were stopped, thou shouldest feel what a precious thing it were to do either of both, and what thanks ought to be given God therefore. Moreover, put no difference between works ; but whatsoever cometh into thy hands that Ido, as time, place, and occasion giveth, and as God hath put thee in degree, high or low. For as touching to please God, there is no work better than another. God looketh not first on thy work as the world doth, as though the beautifulness of the work pleased him as it doth the world, or as though he had need of them. But God looketh first on thy heart, what faith thou hast to his words, how thou believest him, trustest him, and how thou lovest him for his mercy that he hath shewed thee : he looketh with what heart thou workest, and not what thou workest; how thou acceptest the degree that he hath put thee in, and not of what degree thou art, whether An ensample thou be an, apostle or a shoemaker. Set this ensample before of diversity v A . x ofestates. thine eyes. Thou art a kitchen-page, and washest thy master's dishes; another is an apostle, and preacheth the word of God. Of this apostle hark what Paul saith, in the i cor. ix. 1st corj ix# « if j preach," saith he, " I have nought to re joice in, for necessity is put unto me ;" as who should say, God hath made me so. " Woe is unto me if I preach not. If I do it willingly," saith he, " then have I my reward ;" that is, then am I sure that God's Spirit is in ine, and that I am elect to eternal life. " If I do it against my will, an office f1 Tewkesbury was examined as to what he thought of this para graph ; and the minute of proceeding says : ' Here he answereth that he findeth no fault throughout all the book ; but that all the book is good, and it hath given him great comfort and light to his conscience.' Id. iv. p. 692.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 101 is committed unto me ;" that is, if I do it not of love to God, but to get a living thereby, and for a worldly purpose, and had rather otherwise live, then do I that office which God hath put me in, and yet please not God myself. Note now, if this apostle preach not, as many do not, which not only make themselves apostles, but also compel men to take them for greater than apostles, yea, for greater than Christ him self; then woe is unto him, that is, his damnation is just. If he preach and his heart not right, yet ministereth he the office that God hath put him in, and they that have the Spirit of God hear the voice of God, yea, though he speak in an ass. Moreover, howsoever he preacheth, he hath not to we must do ...i i ii -r. i •/¦ i i mt i good works, rejoice in that he preacheth. But and if he preach willingly, B^AJet\^ with a true heart, and of conscience to God, then hath he his A1^ed- reward ; that is, then feeleth he the earnest of eternal life, and the working of the Spirit of God in him. And as he feeleth God's goodness and mercy, so be thou sure he feeleth his own infirmity, weakness, and unworthiness, and mourneth and knowledgeth his sin, in that the heart will not arise to work with that full lust and love that is in Christ our Lord : and nevertheless is yet at peace with God, through faith and trust in Christ Jesu. For the earnest of the Spirit, that The earnest ,,.i. -n , ii i • i-i of the Spirit. worketh in him, testmeth and beareth witness unto his heart w. t. that God hath chosen him, and that his grace shall suffice him, which grace is now not idle in him. In his works put teth he no trust. Now thou that ministerest in the kitchen, and art but a God is no ac- kitchen-page, receivest all things of the hand of God ; know- sons, but re- , ., „ i-i ceivethall est that God hath put thee in that office ; submittest thyself JU^SeJJSi' to his will ; and servest thy master not as a man, but as 3S£ {£"¦ Christ himself, with a pure heart, according as Paul teacheth us; puttest thy trust in God, and with him seekest thy reward. Moreover, there is not a good deed done, but thy heart rejoiceth therein ; yea, when thou hearest that the word of God is preached by this apostle, and seest the people turn to God, thou consentest unto the deed ; thine heart breaketh out in joy, springeth and leapeth in thy breast, that God is honoured : and in thine heart doest the same that that apostle doth, and haply with greater delecta tion and a more fervent spirit. Now " he that receiveth a Matt prophet in the name of a prophet, shall receive the reward W. T. 102 THE PARABLE OF of a prophet ; " that is, he that consenteth to the deed of a prophet, and maintaineth it, the same hath the same Spirit and earnest of everlasting life, which the prophet hath, and is elect as the prophet is. as an deeds Now if thou compare deed to deed, there is difference able to God, betwixt washing of dishes, and preaching of the word of that are done <-> 7 x ° nodeedis" ^°^ > Du* as touching to please God, none at all : for neither fnGoddgood that nor this pleaseth, but as far forth as God hath chosen a Sorious0to man, hath put his Spirit in him, and purified his heart by solveTit an- faith and trust in Christ1. withoutfaith. Let every man therefore wait on the office wherein Christ Ant ed Let every hath put him, and therein serve his brethren. If he be of man wait ,,. • i i • i'i *n /-i i "ppn the low degree, let him patiently therein abide, till God promote pm himta! mm> an<* exal* nim higher. Let kings and head officers seek Christ in their offices, and minister peace and quietness unto the brethren ; punish sin, and that with mercy, even with the same sorrow and grief of mind as they would cut off a finger or joint, a leg or arm, of their own body, if there were such disease in them, that either they must be cut off, or else all the body must perish. Everyman Let every man, of whatsoever craft or occupation he be inhisvoca- of, whether brewer, baker, tailor, victualler, merchant, or tion, is the . - o?Godeivice husbandman, refer his craft and occupation unto the common Ant ed. wealth, and serve his brethren as he would do Christ himself. How the oughtmtoniive ^et him buy and sell truly, and not set dice2 on his bre- [! Art. XXLT. 'There is no work better than another to please i God : to pour water, to wash dishes, to be a souter [cobbler], or an apostle, all is one ; to wash dishes and to preach is all one, as touching the deed, to please God.' In reply to the charge thus stated, Foxe says, ' The words of Tyndale be these : ' and then follows a quotation, extending from 'as pertaining,' to 'trust in Christ;' to which he sub joins the following remark in a note : ' The words of Tyndale suffici ently discharge the article of all heresy, if they be well weighed. The meaning whereof is this, that all our acceptation with God standeth only upon our faith in Christ, and upon no work nor office. Cornelius, the soldier, believing in Christ, is as well justified before God as the apostle or preacher ; so that there is no rejoicing now either in work or office, but only in our faith in Christ, which only justifieth us before God.' Tewkesbury was examined on the same point ; and 'To that he answered, saying, It is a plain text, and as for pleasing God it is all one.' Foxe, v. 575, and iv. 691.] [2 The phrase evidently means deceive.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 103 thren ; and so sheweth he mercy, and his occupation pleaseth e°d'y antl ac- i . „ cordingtothe God. And when thou receivest money for thy labour or sMPeL w- T- ware, thou receivest thy duty3. For wherein soever thou minister to thy brethren, thy brethren are debtors, to give thee wherewith to maintain thyself and household. And let your superfluities succour the poor, of which sort shall ever \be some in all towns, and cities, and villages, and that I sup pose the greatest number. Remember that we are members we must be ,« .j i i .. i . p merciful one ^ot one body, and ought to minister one to another mercifully : A"£1£|her- and remember that whatsoever we have, it is given us of God, to bestow it on our brethren. Let him that eateth, eat and give God thanks, only let not thy meat pull thine heart from God ; and let him that drinketh do likewise. Let him that hath a wife, give God thanks for his liberty ; only let not thy wife withdraw thine heart from God, and then pleasest thou God, and hast the word of God for thee. And in all things look on the word of God, and therein put thy trust, and not in a visor, in a disguised garment, and a cut shoe4. Seek the word of God in all things ; and without the word of God do nothing, though it appear never so glorious. Whatsoever is done without the word of God, that count idolatry. The kingdom of heaven is within us. Wonder Luke x-,h. therefore at no monstrous shape, nor at any outward thing f without the word : for the world was never drawn from God The world t was never de- but with an outward shew, and glorious appearance and ^omward shining of hypocrisy, and of feigned and visored fasting, $i' • 1 1 • i tnis worla ao of God ; neither the spirit of the wise of this world, neither J^**}"^ the spirit of philosophers, neither the spirit of Socrates, of g^^f Plato, or of Aristotle's ethics, as thou mayest see in the first AntS.**' and second chapter of the first to the Corinthians. Though ' Cor' '" "" that many are not ashamed to rail and blaspheme, saying, How should he understand the scripture, seeing he is no philosopher, neither hath seen his metaphysic ? moreover ^'"i^^07 they blaspheme, saying, How can he be a divine, and wotteth ^1^,^™- not what is subjectum in theologia* ? nevertheless as a oftSa'med man, without the spirit of Aristotle or philosophy, may by ^rPerish- the Spirit of God understand scripture; even so, by the Spirit of God, understandeth he that God is to be sought in all the scripture, and in all things ; and yet wotteth not what meaneth subjectum in theologia, because it is a term of their The Papists- " arguments. own making. If thou shouldest say to him that hath the Ant- eu- Spirit of God, the love of God is the keeping of the com- ^™ of God' mandments, and to love a man's neighbour is to shew mercy ; he would, without arguing or disputing, understand how that [* After discussing the question in some sentences, Aquinas comes to the conclusion, that as theology is the science which treats of God, ho can allow that its subject is God. Summ. Theolog. Qusest. I. Art. vii.] 108 THE PARABLE OF of the love of God springeth the keeping of his command- Loveofmy ments, and of the love to thy neighbour springeth mercy. neighbour. ¦/ , Q l o d w- T- Wow would Aristotle deny such speaking ; and a Duns' man would make twenty distinctions1. If thou shouldest say (as saith John, the ivth of his epistle), " How can he that loveth not his neighbour whom he seeth, love God whom he seeth not?" Aristotle would say, Lo, a man must first love his neighbour and then God ; and out of the love to thy neigh bour springeth the love to God. But he that feeleth the working of the Spirit of God, and also from what vengeance the blood of Christ hath delivered him, understandeth how that it is impossible to love either father or mother, sister, brother, neighbour, or his own self aright, except it spring The love of a out of the love to God; and perceiveth that the love to man's neigh- .., . ¦ « . . ** oftheisioveign a mans neighbour is a sign of the love to God, as good fruit of God. w.t. declareth a good tree ; and that the love to a man's neigh bour accompanieth and followeth the love of God, as heat accompanieth and followeth fire. Likewise when the scripture saith, Christ shall reward every man at the resurrection, or uprising again, according Aristotle's to his deeds, the scripture2 of Aristotle's Ethics would say, and Papists . . . „ Anttrede' ko, with the multitude of good works mayest thou, and must thou, obtain everlasting life ; and also a place in heaven high or low, according as thou hast many or few good works. And yet he wotteth not what a good work meaneth, as Christ speaketh of good works ; as he that seeth not the heart, but outward things only. But he that hath God's Spirit under- Good works standeth it. He feeleth that good works are nothing: but are the fruits . F7 ° AntTd fruits of love, compassion, mercifulness, and, of a tenderness of heart, which a Christian hath to his neighbour ; and that love springeth of that love which he hath to God, to his will and commandments : and he understandeth also, that the love whence which man hath to God springeth of that3 infinite love and spi-ingeth the . _ *¦ y , hive to God. bottomless mercy, which God in Christ shewed first to us, as u'ohniv. ga^h j0hn in the epistle and chapter above rehearsed. "In this (saith he,) appeareth the love of God to us-ward, because that God sent his only-begotten Son into the world, that we might live through him. Herein is love ; not that we loved f1 Duns' man : a follower of Duns Scotus.] [2 So C, in D. it is, the spirit of Aristotle's Ethics.] , [3 So C, in D. it is the.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 109 God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to make agree- God first ment for our sins." In conclusion, a Christian man feeleth not we him. Ant ed. that that unspeakable love and mercy which God hath to us, and that Spirit which worketh all things that are wrought ac cording to the will of God, and that love wherewith we love God, and that love which we have to our neighbour, and that mercy and compassion which we shew on him, and also that eternal life which is laid up in store for us in Christ, are altogether the gift of God through Christ's purchasing. If the scripture 'said always, Christ shall reward thee ac cording to thy faith, or according to thy hope and trust thou hast in God, or according to the love thou hast to God and thy neighbour ; so were it true also, as thou seest, 1 Pet. i. " Receiving the end," or reward, " of your faith, the health," 1 Pet i. or salvation, " of your souls." But the spiritual things could Faith and , , , r , Jove be not be known, save by their works; as a tree cannot be known known by . " . works. W.T. but by her fruit. How could I know that I loved my neigh bour, if never occasion were given. me to shew mercy unto him ? How should I know that I loved God, if I never suffered how we for his sake? How should I know that God loved me, iftheioveof .«. . ., .« God to be m. there were no infirmity, temptation, peril and jeopardy us- Ant- ed- whence God should deliver me? " There is no man that forsaketh house, either father or Luke xviii. mother, either brethren or sisters, wife or children, for the king dom of heaven's sake, which shall not receive much more in this world, and in the world to come everlasting life." Luke xviii. Here seest thou, that a Christian man in all his works a christian hath respect to nothing but unto the glory of God only, and to nothing to the maintaining of the truth of God ; and doth and ^I^,°c God- leaveth undone all things of love, to the glory and honour of God only, as Christ teacheth in the Paternoster. Moreover when he saith, he shall receive much more in this world, of a truth, yea, he hath received much more already. For except he had felt the infinite mercy, good ness, love, and kindness of God, and the fellowship of the blood of Christ, and the comfort of the Spirit of Christ in his heart, he could never have forsaken any thing for God's sake. Notwithstanding (as saith Mark x.), whosoever for Christ's Mark x. sake and the gospel's " forsaketh house, brethren or sisters, for S™ sake loseth. &c, he shall receive an hundred-fold, houses, brethren," &c„ anything, ' * * > *> shall receive 110 THE PARABLE OF an hundred- that is, spiritually. For Christ shall be all things unto thee. how it is to' The angels, all Christians, and whosoever doth the will of the stood, He Father, shall be father, mother, sister and brother unto thee ; sh&ll receive an hundred- and aU theirs shall be thine. And God shall take the care of fold. W. T. thee, and minister all things unto thee, as long as thou seekest but his honour only. Moreover, if thou wert lord over all the world, yea, of ten worlds, before thou knewest God, yet was if we once not thine appetite quenched ; thou thirstedst for more. But possess . fauh'then ^ thou seek ^is nonour onty> then shall he slake thy thirst ; tali^and1 and thou shalt have all that thou desirest, and shall be con- wfth°that"we tent : yea, if thou dwell among infidels, and amongst the most go^s spirit cruel nations of the world, yet shall he be a Father unto thee, woridr/de- and shall defend thee, as he did Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and all saints whose lives thou readest in the scripture. For aii that is all that are past and gone before are but ensamples, to written'to strength our faith and trust in the word of God. It is the our mstruc- ° tion. w. t. Same God, and hath sworn to us all that he sware unto them ; and is as true as ever he was ; and therefore cannot but fulfil his promises to us, as well as he did to them, if we believe as they did. beTnder-'0 "The hour shall come when all they that are in the de'ad'inthe graves shall hear his voice," that is to say, Christ's voice, f4rcthea11 " and shall come forth ; they that have done good into the voice, w. t. resurrect;iori 0f nfe> an(j tney that have done evil into the re- joh. v. surrection of damnation." John v. This, and all hke texts, Here note declare what followeth good works, and that our deeds shall what follow- . , . ° works e°Ant testoty Wltn us or against us at that day ; and putteth us in Ed- remembrance to be diligent and fervent in doing good. Here by mayest thou not understand that we obtain the favour of God, and the inheritance of life, through the merits of good works, as hirelings do their wages : for then shouldest thou johni. rob Christ, of whose "fulness we have received favour for favour1," John i.; that is, God's favour was so full in Christ, that for his sake he giveth us his favour, as affirmeth also Paul, Eph. i., " He loved us in his beloved, by whom we have," saith Paul, "redemption through his blood, and for giveness of sins." The forgiveness of sins, then, is our re demption in Christ, and not the reward of works. " In whom," saith he in the same place, " he chose us before the making of I1 ' Of his fulness have all we received, even favour for favour.' Tynd. vers.] THE WICKED MAMMON. Ill the world," that is, long before we did good works. Through John i. faith in Christ are we also the sons of God, as thou readest cnrfet we'aro i • ti i • i made the John i. " In that they believed on his name, he gave them ^Jts °f God- power to be the sons of God." God, with all his fulness and riches, dwelleth in Christ ; and out of Christ must we fetch all things. Thou readest also, John iii. " He that believeth John m. on the Son hath eternal life : and he that believeth not shall see no life, but the wrath of God abideth upon him." Here seest thou that the wrath and vengeance of God possesseth every man, till faith come. Faith and trust in Christ ex- Faith doth expel the pelleth the wrath of God ; and bringeth favour, the Spirit, wrathof God. power to do good, and everlasting life. Moreover, until Christ Faith and hath given thee light, thou knowest not wherein standeth christexpei- ° a ' ... leth wrath, the goodness of thy works ; and until his Spirit hath loosed |^ ur"w t thine heart, thou canst not consent unto good works. All that is good in us, both will and works, cometh of the favour of God, through Christ, to whom be all the laud. Amen. " K any man will do his will," he meaneth the will of the John vii. Father, " he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself." John vii. This text meaneth not that any man of his own strength, power, and free will, (as they call it,) can do the will of God, before he hath re ceived the Spirit and strength of Christ through faith. But here is meant that which is spoken in the third of John, when Nicodemus marvelled how it were possible that a man should be born again : Christ answered, " That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit ;" as who should say, He that hath the Spirit through faith, and is born again, and made anew in Christ, understandeth the things of the Spirit, and what he that is spiritual meaneth. But he that is flesh, and as Paul saith, 1 Cor. ii., a natural i cor. a. man, and led of his blind reason only, can never ascend to Th<= natural ' . man, which the capacity of the Spirit And he giveth an ensample, saying, j^ ««« - " The wind bloweth where he hsteth, and thou nearest his ?Mngs°that voice, and wottest not whence he cometh, nor whither he lpir°t.the will : so is every man that is born of the Spirit2." He that nt' e ' speaketh of the Spirit can never be understand of the natural [2 ' The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest his sound ; but thou canst not tell whence he cometh, and whither he goeth.' Tynd. vers.] 112 THE PARABLE OF man, which is but flesh, and savoureth no more than things of the flesh. So here meaneth Christ, If any man have the spirit, and consenteth unto the will of God, the same at once wotteth what I mean. "If ye understand these things, happy are ye if ye do John xiu. them." John xiii. A Christian man's heart is with the will of God, with the law and commandments of God ; and hun- gereth and thirsteth after strength to fulfil them ; and mourn eth day and night, desiring God, according to his promises, for to give him power to fulfil the will of God with love and lust: then testifieth his deed that he is blessed, and that the Spirit, which blesseth us in Christ, is in him, and ministereth such strength. The outward deed testifieth what is within us, as Johnv. thou readest, John v., " The deeds which I do testify of me," John xiii. saith Christ. And, John xiii., " Hereby shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye love one another." And, John xiv. John xiv., "He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, the same it is that loveth me.1' And again : " He that loveth me, keepeth my commandments; and he that loveth The works me not, keepeth not my commandments1 :" the outward deed John xv. testifieth of the inward heart. And, John xv., " If ye shall keep my commandments, ye shall continue in my love ; as I keep my Father's commandment, and continue in his love." That is, As ye see the love that I have to my Father, in that I keep his commandments ; so shall ye see the love that ye have to me, in that ye keep my commandments. we are wess- Thou mayest not think that our deeds bless us first, and only in christ that we prevent God and his grace in Christ; as though we, our Saviour, , 1 •«. i i • and not by In our natural gifts, and being as we were born in Adam, our works. © * o Anted. looked on the law of God, and of our own strength fulfilled Our deeds . ._ , ,° God'sntace **' a s0 Decame righteous, and then with that righteousness juS^wIt! obtained the favour of God : as philosophers write of righte ousness ; and as the righteousness of temporal law is, where the law is satisfied with the hypocrisy of the outward deed. John xv. por, contrary to that, readest thou John xv. "Ye have not chosen me," saith Christ, " but I have chosen you, that ye go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit remain." And in the same chapter : "lama vine, and ye the branches ; and without me can ye do nothing." With us, therefore, so goeth it. [' So Tynd. vers. ; but Auth. vers, sayings.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 113 In Adam are we all, as it were, wild crab-trees, of which weareaii 7 7 7 crab-trees in God chooseth whom he will, and plucketh them out of Adam, Adara- w • T- and planteth them in the garden of his mercy ; and stocketh them, and grafteth the Spirit of Christ in them, which bring eth forth the fruit of the will of God ; which fruit testifieth that God hath blessed us in Christ. Note this also ; that, as During our long as we live, we are yet partly carnal and fleshly, not- yet'paruy8 withstanding that we are in Christ, and though it be not imputed unto us for Christ's sake ; for there abideth and remaineth in us yet of the old Adam, as it were of the stock of the crab-tree; and ever among, when occasion is given him, shooteth forth his branches and leaves, bud, blossom, and fruit : against whom we must ¦ fight and subdue him, and we must . wrestle with change all his nature by little and little, with prayer, fasting, ouroidman, and watching, with virtuous meditation and holy works, until P^™^hrist- we be altogether spirit. " The kingdom of heaven," saith Matt *m. Christ, " is like leaven, which a woman taketh and hideth in three pecks of meal, till all be leavened." The leaven is the whatieaven " Spirit, and we the meal, which must be seasoned with the m'eai. w. t. Spirit "by a little and a little, till we be throughout spiritual. " Which shall reward every man according to his deeds," Rom. u. Rom. ii. ; that is, according as the deeds are, so shall every man's reward be : the deeds declare what we are, as the fruit the tree ; according to the fruit shall the tree be praised. The reward is given of the mercy and truth of God, and by the deserving and merits of Christ. Whosoever repenteth, be lieveth the gospel, and putteth his trust in Christ's merits, the same is heir with Christ of eternal life ; for assurance whereof, the Spirit of God is poured into his heart as an earnest, which looseth him from the bonds of Satan, and giveth him lust and strength, every day more and more, ac cording as he is diligent to ask of God for Christ's sake : and eternal life followeth good living. " I suppose," saith St Paul Rom.vm. in the same epistle, the eighth chapter, "that the afflictions of this world are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed on us;" that is to say, that which we here suffer can never deserve that reward, which there shall be given us. Moreover, if the reward should depend and hang of the0urbest works, no man should be saved: forasmuch as our best deeds, damnawe'in compared to the law, are damnable sin. " By the deeds of oo^mthout the law is no flesh justified," as it is written in the third An"!eo. r "1 8 [TYNDALE.] 114 THE PARABLE OF chapter to the Romans. The law justifieth not, but uttereth the sin only; and compelleth and driveth the penitent, or repenting sinner, to flee unto the sanctuary of mercy in the blood of Christ. Also, repent we never so much, be we never so well willing unto the law of God, yet are we so weak, and the snares and occasions so innumerable, that we fall daily and hourly : so that we could not but despair, if the reward He that hanged of the work. Whosoever ascribeth eternal life unto etemai life the deserving and merit of works, must fall in one of two unto merits . ° ' is either a inconveniences : either must he be a blind Pharisee, not seeing Pharisee, or . despair.""18' that the law is spiritual and he carnal, and look and rejoice WT- in the outward shining of his deeds, despising the weak, and, in respect of them, justify himself; or else (if he see how that the law is spiritual, and he never able to ascend unto that which the law requireth,) he must needs despair. Let christ is our every Christian man, therefore, rejoice in Christ our hope, hope and J , ' , ' •> * > righteous- trust, and righteousness ; in whom we are loved, chosen, and ness. Ant. ed. ' o ' 7 accepted unto the inheritance of eternal life ; neither presum ing in our perfectness, neither despairing in our weakness. The perfecter a man is, the clearer is his sight ; and seeth a thousand things which displease him, and also perfectness that cannot be obtained in this hfe ; and therefore desireth to Let no man be with Christ, where is no more sin. Let him that is weak, puthBhope and cannot do that he would fain do, not despair; but turn he shaii te to him that is strong, and hath promised to give strength to safe. Ant. ed o o ' all that ask of him in Christ's name ; and complain to God, and desire him to fulfil his promises, and to God commit himself ; and he shall of his mercy and truth strengthen him, and make him feel with what love he is beloved for Christ's sake, though he be never so weak. Rom. ii. " They are not righteous before God which hear the law; but they which do the law shall be justified." Rom. ii. This text The law is plainer than that it needeth to be expounded. In this chapter natural was , A written to paul proveth that the law natural holp not the Gentiles. For the Gentiles. r r w- T- the law of God was written in the hearts of the Gentries, as it1 appeareth by the laws, statutes, and ordinances which they made in their cities, yet kept they them not. The great keep the small under, for their own profit, with the violence of the law. Every man praiseth the law, as far forth as it [l So C. ; Day omits it.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 115 is profitable and pleasant unto himself : but when his own appetites should be refrained, then grudgeth he against the law. Moreover, he proveth that no knowledge holp the Gentiles. For though the learned men (as the philosophers) came to the knowledge of God by the creatures of the world, yet had they no power to worship God. In this second chapter proveth he that the Jews, though they had the law written, yet it holp them not : they could not keep it, but were idolaters, and were also murderers, adulterers, and whatsoever the law forbad. He concludeth therefore, that Not hearing, 7 but doing the the Jew is as well damned as the Gentile. If hearing of J?"™^* the law only might have justified, then had the Jews been "• T' righteous. But it requireth that a man do the law, if he will be righteous ; which because the Jew did not, he is no less damned than the Gentile. The publishing and declaring of the law doth but utter a man's sin ; and giveth neither strength, nor help, to fulfil the law. The law killeth thy conscience, and giveth thee no lust to fulfil the law. Faith in Christ giveth lust and power to do the law. Now is it true, that he which no man can x fulfil the doth the law is righteous ; but that doth no man, save he that {^^ievlth believeth and putteth his trust in Christ. Anthed.'" "If any man's work, that he hath built upon, abide, he icor.iii. shall receive a reward." 1 Cor. iii. The circumstance of the same chapter, that is to wit, that which goeth before and that which followeth, declareth plainly what is meant. Paul talketh of Christ is the . -, . ii- i/»i sure fonnda- learning, doctrine, or preaching : he saith that he himself hath tion- Anted. laid the foundation, which is Jesus Christ, and that no man can lay any other. He exhorteth, therefore, every man to take heed what he buildeth upon ; and borroweth a similitude of the goldsmith, which trieth his metals with fire ; saying The are is that the fire, that is, the judgment of the scripture, shall try mentor . .... scripture. every man's work, that is, every man's preaching and doctrine. w- T' If any build upon the foundation laid of Paul, I mean Jesus Christ, "gold, silver, or precious stone," (which are all one Gold, silver, thing, and signify true doctrine, which, when it is examined, stones?fstme the scripture alloweth,) then shall he have his reward ; that w. t. is, he shall be sure that his learning is of God, and that God's Spirit is in him, and that he shall have the reward that Christ hath purchased for him. On the other side, if any man build J^bf*; are7' thereon "timber, hay, or stubble," (which are all one, and Sf %' T. 8—2 116 THE PARABLE OF signify doctrine of man's imagination, traditions, and fantasies, Man's foun- which stand not with Christ when they are judged and ex- feewe. Ant amined by the scripture,) he shall suffer damage, but shall be He shaii be saved himself, yet as it were through fire : that is, it shall be saved, never- m " ~ through fire, painful unto him that he hath lost his labour, and to see his W,T- building perish; notwithstanding, if he repent, and embrace the truth in Christ, he shall obtain mercy and be saved. But if Paul were now alive, and would defend his own learning, he should be tried through fire ; not through fire of the judgment of scripture, (for that light men now utterly refuse,) but by the pope's law, and with fire of fagots. 2Cor.v. " We must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ, for to receive every man according to the deeds of his body," 2 Cor. v. : as thy deeds testify of thee, so shall thy reward be. Thy deeds be evil, then is the wrath of God upon thee, and thine heart is evil ; and so shall thy reward be, if thou repent not. Fear therefore ; and cry to God for grace, that thou mayest love his laws. And when thou lovest them, cease not, till thou have obtained power of God to fulfil them ; so shalt Christ re- thou be sure that a good reward shall foUow. Which reward o™ works' not thy deeds, but Christ's, have purchased for thee ; whose ' purchasing also is that lust which thou hast to God's law, and what reward that might wherewith thou fulfillest them. Remember also, hire? w. t. that a reward is rather called that which is given freely, than that which is deserved. That which is deserved is called (if thou wilt give him his right name) hire or wages. A reward is given freely, to provoke unto love, and to make friends. The Lord " Remember, that whatsoever good thing any man doth, every man, that shall he receive of the Lord." Eph. vi. " Remembering according to ..... ° Ma deeds, that ye shall receive of the Lord the reward of inheritance." cS'm.' C°h U1, These two texts are exceeding plain. Paul meaneth, as Peter doth, that servants should obey their masters with all their hearts, and with good will, though they were never so i Pet. ii. evil. Yea, he will that all who are under power obey, even of obey the heart, and of conscience to God ; because God will have it so, be'cause God be the rulers never so wicked. The children must obey father will have it « so. Ant ed. and mother, be they never so cruel or unkind ; likewise the obey our wife her husband, the servant his master, the subjects and superiors, be i . t l i . -m-. rt . t they never so commons their lord or king. Why ? " For ye serve the Lord," Bom. xiv. saith he, in the Coloss. iii. We are Christ's, and Christ hath THE WICKED MAMMON. 3.17 bought us, as thou readest, Rom. xiv. 1 Cor. vi. 1 Pet. i. icor.vi. Christ is our Lord, and we his possession ; and his also is the commandment. Now ought not the cruelness and churlishness of father and mother, of husband, master, lord, or king, cause us to hate the commandment of our so kind a Lord, Christ ; which spared not his blood for our sakes ; which also hath purchased for us with his blood the1 reward of eternal life ; which life shall follow the patience of good living, and whereunto our good deeds testify that we are chosen. Furthermore, we are so carnal, that if the rulers be good, we cannot know whether we keep the commandment for the love that we have to Christ, and to God through him, or no. But and if thou canst find in thine heart to do good A e°°d o lesson, to unto him that rewardeth thee evil again, then art thou sure {SJ^ "JJ,^ that the same Spirit is in thee that is in Christ. And it spirit ofGo'd. foUoweth, in the same chapter to the Colossians, " He that Ant' ed' doth wrong shall receive for the wrong that he hath done." That is, God shaU avenge thee abundantly ; which seeth what wrong is done unto thee, and yet suffereth it for a time, that thou mightest feel thy patience, and the working of his Spirit in thee, and be made perfect. Therefore, see that thou notBemita11 . ' .r ' vengeance to once desire vengeance; but remit all vengeance unto God, asGodAnted- Christ did, which, saith Peter, 1 Pet. ii., "when he was re-1Pet-ii- viled, reviled not again, neither threatened when he suffered." Unto such obedience, unto such patience, unto such a poor heart, and unto such feeling, is Paul's meaning to bring all men, and not unto the vain disputing of them that ascribe so high a place in heaven unto their piled2 merits; which, as they feel not the working of God's Spirit, so obey they no man. If the king do unto them but right, they will interdict The fury of ° ..... the popish the whole realm, curse, exeommumcate, and send them down c'ergy- Ant 7 ed. far beneath the bottom of hell; as they have brought the our spiritual „,.. , ,,'', ... will not obey people out of their wits, and made them mad, to believe. men, but x x ' ' curse tnem for doing [1 So C; inD. that.] rieht- w.t. [2 C. h&s pttde; D.peelde; which are respectively pi led and peeled. The former word would signify piled up or heaped up : the latter, under a slightly different form of spelling, pilled, has been shewn by Mr Russell to mean bald; so that Tyndale would use here nearly the same metaphor as when he speaks, a httle farther on, of ' a bald ceremony.' In Levit. xiii. 40, where king James's translators have put into the text, ' whose hair is fallen off his head,' they have said in the margin, that the Hebrew has 'head is pilled;' and the same Hebrew verb Q1Q is rendered by them in Isaiah xviii. 2, 7. peeled.] 118 THE PARABLE OF Acts x. " Thy prayers and alms are come up into remembrance in the presence of God," (in the tenth chapter of the Acts) : that is, God forgetteth thee not ; though he come not at the first calling, he looketh on, and beholdeth thy prayers and God looketh alms. Prayer cometh from the heart. God looketh first on first on the • ... . ~ . . heart w. t. the heart, and then on the deed ; as thou readest Genesis iv. Gen. iv. 7 7 God beheld or looked first on Abel, and then on his offer ing. If the heart be unpure, the deed verily pleaseth not, as thou seest in Cain. Mark the order : in the beginning of the chapter thou readest, " There was a certain man named Cornelius which feared God, gave much alms, and prayed God alway." He feared God ; that is, he trembled and quaked to break the commandments of God. Then prayed he alway. ftutt'oflauh Prayer is the fruit, effect, deed or act of faith, and is nothing Ant. ed. t>ixt the longing of the heart for those things which a man lacketh, and which God hath promised to give him. He doth Aims. w. t. also alms : alms is the fruit, effect, or deed, of compassion and is'not'wfth- pity j which we have to our neighbour. 0 what a glorious Ant.we0dr.ks' faith, and a right, is that1 which so trusteth God, and be lieveth his promises, that she feareth to break his command ments, and is also merciful unto her neighbour ! This is that faith whereof thou readest, (namely in Peter, Paul, and John,) that we are thereby both justified and saved ; and whosoever imagineth any other faith, deceiveth himself, and is a vain disputer, and a brawler about words, and hath no feeling in his heart. Though thou consent to the law, that it is " good, right eous, and holy," sorrowest and repentest, because thou hast broken it, mournest because thou hast no strength to fulfil it, yet art not thou thereby at one with God. Tea, thou should- est shortly despair, and blaspheme God, if the promises of forgiveness and of help were not thereby, and faith in thine Paithmaketh heart to believe them. Faith therefore setteth thee at one us at one Ant %?.*' Wltn God. Faith pray- Faith prayeth alway. For she hath always her infirm- *?aces Ant ^ies an<^ weaknesses before her eyes, and also God's promises, The manner f°r which she always longeth, and in all places. But blind mSeveref unbelief prayeth not alway, nor in all places, but in the church only; and that in such a church, where it is not lawful to preach God's promises, neither to teach men to [' So C. ; in D. what and is that are wanting.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 119 trust therein. Faith, when she prayeth, setteth not her good deeds before her, saying, ' Lord, for my good deeds do this or that ; ' nor bargaineth with God, saying, ' Lord, grant me this, or do this or that, and I will do this or that for thee ;' as, mumble so much daily, go so far, or fast this or that fast, enter this religion2 or that, with such other points of infidelity, yea, rather idolatry. But she setteth her infirmities and her The prayer lack before her face, and God's promises, saying, ' Lord, for w- T- thy mercy and truth, which thou hast sworn, be merciful unto me, and pluck me out of this prison and out of this hell, and loose the bonds of Satan, and give me power to glorify thy name.' Faith therefore justifieth in the heart, and foj.01^11^" before God ; and the deeds justify outwardly before the world, that is, testify only before men, what we are inwardly before God. " Whosoever looketh in the perfect law of liberty, and James i. continueth therein, (if he be not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work,) he shah be happy in his deed." James i. The l^rt^w.T. law of liberty, that is, which requireth a free heart, or (if thou fulfil it) declareth a free heart, loosed from the bonds of Satan. The preaching of the law maketh no man free, but ^^/the* bindeth; for it is the key that bindeth all consciences unto buTthedeth' eternal damnation, when it is preached ; as the promises or thegospfio£ gospel is the key that looseth all consciences that repent, -$?t. when they are bound through preaching of the law. "He shall be happy in his deed :" that is, by his deed shall he know that he is happy and blessed of God, which hath given him a good heart, and power to fulfil the law. By hearing the law Not the hear. thou shalt not know that thou art blessed ; but if thou do it, *>mgofthe 7 law declareth it declareth that thou art happy and blessed. w™£dness- " Was not Abraham justified of his deeds, when he offered James a. his son Isaac upon the altar ?" James ii. His deed justified him before the world ; that is, it declared and uttered the faith which both justified him before God, and wrought that wonderful work, as James also affirmeth. " Was not Rahab the harlot justified when she received James a. the messengers, and sent them out another way ?" James ii. That is likewise, outwardly; but before God she was justified by faith, which wrought that outward deed, as thou mayest see, [2 Religion, i. e. monastic order.] - 120 THE PARABLE OF Josh. ii. She had heard what God had done in Egypt, in the Red Sea, in the desert, and unto the two kings of the Amor- reans, Seon and Og : and she confessed, saying, " Your Lord God, he is God in heaven above and in earth beneath.'" She also believed that God, as he had promised the children of Israel, would give them the land wherein she dwelt ; and she consented thereunto, submitted herself unto the will of God, and holp God, (as much as in her was,) and saved his spies and messengers. The other feared that which she believed ; but resisted God with all their might, and had no power to submit themselves unto the will of God. And therefore perished they, and she was saved, and that through faith, as neb. xi. we read Heb. xi. ; where thou mayest see how the holy fathers were saved through faith, and how faith wrought in Faith is the them. Faith is the goodness of all the deeds that are done InVe'deeds within the law of God, and maketh them good and glorious, within the seem they never so vile ; and unbelief maketh them damnable, law of God. 11' Anted. seem they never so glorious. James ». As pertaining to that which James in this iind chapter saith, " What availeth though a man say that he hath faith, if he have no deeds? can faith save him?" and again, James h. "Faith without deeds is dead in itself;" and, "The devils believe and tremble ;" and, "As the body without the spirit is dead, even so faith without deeds is dead ;" it is manifest and clear, that he meaneth not of that1 faith whereof Peter and Paul speak in their epistles, John in his gospel and first epistle, and Christ in the gospel, when he saith, " Thy faith hath made thee safe," " Be it to thee according to thy faith," or " Great is thy faith," and so forth ; and of which James James i. _ himself speaketh in the first chapter, saying, " Of his own weemaddthe W1^ begat he us with the word of life," that is, in believing sonsofGod. the promises, wherein is life, are we made the sons of God. Which thing I also thiswise prove. Paul saith " How shall, or can they believe without a preacher ? How should they preach except they were sent?" Now I pray you, when was it heard that God sent any man to preach unto the devils, or that he made them any good promise ? He threateneth them oft ; but never sent any ambassadors to preach any An example, atonement between him and them. Take an ensample that Ant ed. 1 [l So 0. ; D. has the instead of that.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 121 thou mayest understand : let there be two poor men both destitute of raiment in a cold winter ; the one strong that he feeleth no grief, the other grievously mourning for pain of the cold. I then come by, and, moved with pity and com passion, say unto him that feeleth his disease, " Come to such a place, and I will give thee raiment sufficient." He believeth, cometh, and obtaineth that which I have promised. That other seeth all this, and knoweth it, but is partaker of nought, for he hath no faith, and that is because there is no promise made him. So is it of the devils : the devils have no faith; for faith is but earnest believing of God's promises. Now are there no promises made unto the devils, but sore threatenings. The old philosophers knew that there was one God, but yet had no faith ; for they had no power to seek his will, neither to worship him. The Turks and the Saracens know that Turks have there is one God, but yet have no faith; for they have no yet know .' ... . there is a power to worship God in spirit, to seek his pleasure, and to God. Anted. submit them unto his will. They made an idol of God, (as we do for the most part,) and worshipped him every man after his own imagination, and for a sundry purpose. What we will have done, that must God do ; and to do our will, worship we him and pray unto him : but what God will have done, that will neither Turk nor Saracen, nor the most part of us do. Whatsoever we imagine righteous, that must God admit ; but God's righteousness will not our hearts admit. Take another ensample : let there be two such as I spake of Another before, and I promise both ; and the one, because he feeleth w. r. not his disease, cometh not. So is it of God's promises : no man is holpen by them, but sinners that feel their sins, mourn and sorrow for them, and repent with all their hearts. For John Baptist went before Christ, and preached repent- John Baptist ance ; that is, he preached the law of God right, and brought people their the people into knowledge of themselves, and unto the fear 'henlaw- and of God, and then sent them unto Christ to be healed. For $£%£%, be in Christ, and for his sake only, hath God promised to receive healed' WTl us unto mercy, to forgive us, and to give us power to resist sin. How shall God save thee, when thou knowest not thy damnation ? , How shall Christ deliver thee from sin, when thou wilt not knowledge thy sin ? Now I pray thee how many thousands are there of them that say, ' I believe that Christ was born of a virgin, that he died, that he rose again,' 122 THE PARABLE OF and so forth, and thou canst not bring them in behef that they have any sin at all ! How many are there of the same sort, which thou canst not make believe that a thousand things are sin, which God damneth for sin all the scripture sins that are throughout ! as to buy as good cheap1 as he can, and to sell accounted no ° .. . - i ¦ * l ^ns. as dear as he can ; to raise the market ot corn and victuals, for his own vantage, without respect of his neighbour, or of the poor, or of the common wealth, and such like. Moreover, how many hundred thousand are there, which when they have sinned, and knowledge their sins, yet trust in a bald Faithless ceremony, or in a lousy friar's coat and merits ; or in the ed. prayers of them that devour widows' houses, and eat the poor out of house and harbour ; in a thing of his own ima gination ; in a foolish dream, and a false vision ; and not in How these Christ's blood, and in the truth that God hath sworn2! All are disobe- . . . dientunto these are faithless; for they follow their own righteousness, thenghteous- « ° £w!a>ndaunto and are disobedient unto all manner righteousness of God ; God'are* ot b°th unto the righteousness of God's law, wherewith he w.thTfss' damneth all our deeds, (for though some of them see their [! Cheap was anciently used for to bargain, and good-cheap signi fied well bargained. It occurs in our authorised version of the Apo crypha, 2 Esdras xvi. 21, ' Victuals shall be so good cheap upon earth,' &c] [2 In confirmation of what is here stated, the reader is referred to devotional treatises still printed and circulated amongst them. The Funiculus Triplex: or 'The Indulgences of the Cord of St Francis.' By the R. F. Francis Walsh, L. J. &c. Dublin, printed by R. Grace, 3, Mary Street, (without date, but evidently very recent,) is a little book of 106 pages, describing various easy ways of obtaining re mission of sins, if the person desirous of obtaining it will but wear about his person ' a cord, whether of hemp, flax, or wool,' ' white, hght, gray, or dark,' ' on their undermost garment,' procured from a friar, duly authorized to keep such cords, and to enrol the wearer's name in the confraternity of the Cord of St Francis, pp. 19 — 21. Whilst to those who thus become ' brethren or sisters of the cord,' assurance is given in the name of pope John XXII. that they may have, 'for kissing devoutly the habit of the Friars Minors, five years and so many qua- rantins of indulgence.' And, (on the authority of popes Clement IV,, Nicholas IV., Urban V., and Leo X.) 'For being buried in the habit of St Francis, plenary indulgence,' p. 77 ; or by grant from pope Paul V., ' For hearing the first mass of a new-made priest, if they confess and receive, plenary indulgence,' p. 75. A similar little book of 108 pages, entitled, 'A Short Treatise of the Antiquity, Institution, Ex cellency, Indulgences, Privileges, &c. of the most famous and ancient THE WICKED MAMMON. 123 sins for fear of pain, yet had they rather3 that such deeds were no sin,) and also unto the righteousness of the truth of God in his promises, whereby he saveth all that repent and believe them. For though they beheve that Christ died, yet believe they not that he died for their sins, and that his death is a sufficient satisfaction for their sins; and that God, for his sake, will be a father unto them, and give them power to resist sin. Paul saith to the Romans, in the xth chapter, " If thou Rom. *. confess with thy mouth that Jesus is the Lord, and believe with thine heart that God raised him up from death, thou He raised . ... Christ for shalt be safe :" that is, if thou believe he raised him up °ur »':'*¦ „ tion. W. T. again for thy salvation. Many believe that God is rich and almighty ; but not unto themselves, and that he will be good unto them, and defend them, and be their God. Pharaoh, for pain of the plague, was compelled to confess Pharaoh his sins, but had yet no power to submit himself unto the his sins. will of God, and to let the children of Israel go, and to lose so great profit for God's pleasure ; as our prelates confess their sins, saying, Though we be never so evil, yet have we the power4. And again, The scribes and the Pharisees (say they) sat in Moses' seat ; do as they teach, but not as they do : thus confess they that they are abominable. But to the second I answer, If they sat on Christ's seat, they would preach Christ's doctrine : now preach they their own tradi tions, and therefore not to be heard. If they preached The preach- Christ, we ought to hear them, though they were never so true°gospei abominable, as they of themselves confess, and have yet no heard.though power to amend, neither to let loose Christ's flock to serve "au^htily- God in the spirit ; which they hold captive compelling them Confraternity of our Blessed Lady of Mount Carmel, commonly called the Scapular, &c. Dublin, printed for the Confraternity, 1831 ;' pro mises to those who will wear a scapular (or small shawl), 'which must be made of cloth, serge, or other stuff, and not of silk, though it may be lined with silk, or embroidered with gold or silver,' (p. 56) that ' he that dieth invested with this habit shall not suffer eternal fire,' p. 44.] [8 So D. ; C. has lever, the comparative of the old word lief.] [} Art. XXVIII. ' Pharaoh had no power to let the people de part at God's pleasure.' Art. XXIX. ' Our prelates, in sin, say they have power.' List of heresies and errors. Foxe's reply, ' Read the place out of the which these two articles are gathered.'] 124 THE PARABLE OF The devils to serve their false lies. The devils felt the power of Christ, confessed 1 , * _ therilon°ofe a were comPeued against their wills to confess that he was God. Anted, the Son of God ; but had no power to be content therewith, neither to consent unto the ordinance and eternal counsel of the everlasting God : as our prelates feel the power of God- against them, but yet have no grace to give room unto Christ, because that they (as the devil's nature is) will themselves sit in his holy temple, that is to wit, the consciences of men. Acts vm. Simon MaguS believed, Acts viii., with such a faith as the Magus's faith, devils confessed Christ ; but had no right faith, as thou seest Ant. ed. . o ' _ in the said chapter. For he repented not, consenting unto the law of God. Neither believed he the promises, or longed for them ; but wondered only at the miracles which Philip wrought. And because that he himself in Philip's presence had no power to use his witchcraft, sorcery, and art magic, wherewith he mocked and deluded the wits of the people, our spiritu- he would have bought the gift of God, to have sold it much altyarethe ° i i , successors of dearer; as his successors now do, and not the successors of Simon, not Peter, w. t. Simon Peter. For were they Simon Peter's successors, they would preach Christ, as he did ; but they are Simon Magus's 2Petii. successors, of which Simon Peter well prophesied1 in the second chapter of his second epistle, saying, "There were false prophets among the people (meaning of the Jews), even as there shall be false teachers or doctors among you, which privily shall bring in sects damnable," (sects is part-taking, as one holdeth of Francis, another of Dominic, which thing also icor. i. m. Paul rebuketh2, 1 Cor. i. iii.) "even denying the Lord that bought them ; " (for they will not be saved by Christ, neither suffer any man to preach him to other.) " And many shall follow their damnable ways." (Thou wilt say, Shall God suffer so many to go out of the right way so long ? I an swer, Many must follow their damnable ways, or else must Peter be a false prophet.) " By which the way of truth shall be evil spoken of ;" (as it is now at this present time, for it is heresy to preach the truth ;) " and through covetousness shall they with feigned words make merchandise of you." Of [} So C. ; in D. proved.] [2 Tewkesbury's examiners said to him : ' Tyndale saith, The sects of St Francis and St Dominic, and others, be damnable. To that he answered and said, St Paul repugneth against them.' Foxe, iv. p. 691.] THE WICKED MAMMON. 125 their merchandise and covetousness it needeth not to make rehearsal ; for they that be blind see it evidently. Thus seest thou that James, when he saith, " Faith with- An epitome, or brief re- out deeds is dead," and " as the body without the spirit is ^h0,'"™' dead, so is faith without deeds," and "the devils believe ;" before4 of that he meaneth not of the faith and trust, that we have in the truth of God's promises, and his holy testament made unto us in Christ's blood; which faith followeth repentance, and the consent of the heart unto the law of God, and maketh a man safe, and setteth him at peace with God. But he speaketh of that false opinion and imagination, wherewith some say, I believe that Christ was born of a virgin, and that he died, and so forth. That believe they verily, and so strongly, that they are ready to slay whosoever would say the contrary. But they believe not that Christ died for their sins ; and that his death hath appeased the wrath of God, and hath obtained for them all that God hath promised in the scripture. For how can they believe that Christ died for their sins, and that he is their only and sufficient Saviour, seeing that they seek other saviours of their own imagina tion ; and seeing that they feel not their sins, neither repent, except that some repent (as I above said) for fear of pain, but for no love, nor consent unto the law of God, nor longing that they have for those good promises which he hath made them in Christ's blood? If they repented and loved the law of God, and longed for that help which God hath promised to give to all that call on him for Christ's sake ; then verily must God's truth give them power and strength to do good works, whensoever occasion were given, either must God be a false God. But " let God be true, and every man a liar," as scripture saith. For the truth of God lasteth ever: to whom only be all honour and glory for ever. Amen. A short rehearsal or sum of this present treatise of Justification by Faith3. Faith, the mother of all good works, justifieth us, before we can bring forth any good work : as the husband marrieth [3 This summary, but without the heading, is prefixed to the trea tise in Day's folio, but stands as here in C.'s edition.] 126 THE PARABLE OF THE WICKED MAMMON. his wife, before he can have any lawful children by her. Fur thermore, as the husband marrieth not his wife that she should continue unfruitful as before, and as she was in the state of virginity, (wherein it was impossible for her to bear fruit,) but contrariwise to make her fruitful ; even so faith justifieth us not, that is to say, marrieth us not to God, that we should continue unfruitful as before, but that he should put the seed of his holy Spirit in us, (as St John in his first epistle calleth it,) and to make us fruitful. For, saith Paul, (Eph. ii.) : " By grace are ye made safe through faith, and that not of yourselves : for it is the gift of God, and cometh not of the works, lest any man should boast himself. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath ordained that we should walk in them." Amen. Be not offended, most dear reader, that divers things are overseen through negligence in this little treatise. For verily the chance was such, that I marvel that it is so well as it is. Moreover it becometh the book even so to come as a mourner, and in vile apparel to wait on his master, which sheweth himself now again, not in honour and glory, as between Moses and Elias; but in rebuke and shame, as between two murderers, to try his true friends, and to prove whe ther there be any faith on the earth 1. t1 This seeming apology for the printer's negligence is left out by Day, but was reasonably attached to Coplande's edition, in which the errors of the press are countless. The words as between Moses and Elias, but in rebuke and shame, are not however in C.'s edition, but are found in the corresponding apology attached to the 8vo. ed. by Hans Luft, Malborowe, of May 8, 1528.] THE OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. n The Obedience of a Christen man, and how Cfcrfeten rulers: oug&t to jyoberne, foJjmut also (if tijou tnarfee Wlfgentlg) ifiou gjjalt finti rges to jieroaue the traftte r0mtrsauwe of all faggtati. Set forth by William Tyndall. 1528. Octob. 2. [INTKODUCTOKY NOTICE. In the last paragraph of his Practice of Prelates, dated 1530, and published some time before "tne~enoTof that yearj Tyndale says: 'Let them remember, that I well toward three years agone sent forth the True Obedience of a Christian Man1.' This gives probability to what Ames mentions in an irregular way, namely, that there is an edition of the Obedience of the date of Dec. 11, 1527. It was about that time that Tyndale removed from Worms to Marburg2 in Hesse, a city on the Lahn, where the landgrave Philip, the bold and uncompromising friend of the Reformation, had just founded an university, and Hans Luft had just estabhshed a printing press. On the 8th of May, 1528, this Hans Luft sent forth an edition of the Obedience in 4to, of which Mr Offor has a copy; and on the 2nd of October in the same year, there came out another edition from his press in small 12mo, of which the Parker Society possesses a copy, which the editor has used for collation with the reprint in Day's folio of 1573, prepared by Foxe the martyrologist. In the introductory notice to the treatise on the parable of the Wicked Mammon, the reader has had evidence that the Obedience shared in its circulation and influence, and in the consequent hostility of the ruling church. There are, however, two instances of its sepa rate distribution and influence, which should not pass unnoticed. One of the meekest and holiest of the martyrs of Henry VIII.'s reign was Thomas Bilney, a fellow of Trinity hall, Cambridge. In 1529, he had be^n_terrified_and_tempted by Jbishop Tonstal into abjuring the faith he really held : but his friend, bishop Latimer, tells us that this brought him ' into such anguish and agony, that nothing did him good, not even the communication of God's word, because he thought that all the whole scriptures sounded his condemnation, till God en dued him with such strength,' that he took leave of his Cambridge friends, and said that he would go to Jerusalem ; and departing into Norfolk, he there preached publicly the doctrine which he had abjured. Having done this, he entered Norwich, and 'gave to an anchoress, whom he had converted to Christ, a New Testament of Tyndale's trans lation, and the Obedience of a Christian Man ; whereupon he was apprehended and carried to prison, there to remain till the blind bishop Nix sent up for a writ to burn him 3.' [' By an error in writing, which the editor did not perceive till the sheet was struck off, he has said in p. 31, 1. 14 : ' The Obedience preceded the Wicked Mammon,' where he intended to affirm tlie reverse.] [2 Marburg is spelt Marborch, but more frequently Marlborow in books printed by Hans Luft for the English market, and sometimes Marlborough, as if the person who dictated this spelling meant to translate burg or berg for English readers.] [3 Latimer's Sermons, Vol. ii. p. 52, Park. Soc. ed., and Foxe's Acts and Mon. under date of 1531, Vol. iv. p. 642.] r i 9 [tyndale.] 130 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. It seems to have been about the time of Bilney's abjuration, that Anne Boleyn had well nigh been brought into difficulty, by lending the Obedience to one of her attendants. As Strype tells the story from a MS. left by Foxe, and now in the British Museum, she had 'lent it for perusal to a fair young gentlewoman in her service, named Mrs Gainsford ; from whose hands it was playfully carried off by the young lady's suitor, a Mr George Zouch.' Cardinal Wolsey had about the same time 'given commandment to the prelates, and especially to Dr Sampson, dean of the king's chapel, that they should have a vigilant eye over all people for such books ; that so, as much as might be, they might not come to the king's reading.' But Mr Zouch was so delighted with what he read, that he could not refrain from reading it, not even in the king's chapel. His close attention to his book caught Dr Sampson's eye ; and at length the dean called him up, took the book from him, and required to know what was his name, and ' whose man he was.' The book was presently delivered over by the dean to the cardinal : but, in the mean while, ' the lady Anno asketh her woman for tho book. She on her knees told all the circumstances. The lady Anne shewed herself not sorry, nor angry with either of the two: but, Well, said she, it shall be the dearest book that ever the dean or cardinal took away. So she goes to the king, and upon her knees she desireth the king's help for her book. Upon the king's token, the book was restored. And now, bringing the book to him, she besought his grace, most tenderly, to read it. The king did so, and delighted in the book: for, saith he, this book is for me, and all kings to read.' Strype's Eccles. Mem. ch. xv. Vol. i. p. 173. Oxf. Ed. 1822. This story has received confirmation from Wyatt's Memoir, printed from a MS. in Cavendish's Life of Wolsey, by Singer, Vol. n. pp. 202 — 5. Wyatt indeed represents the cardinal as bringing the book to the king, to point out what he thought Henry would dislike, and to com plain of those who countenanced such books. But this is obviously not irreconcilable with the account given in Foxe's MS. Nor is the king's continued hostility to Tyndale incompatible with his being ¦ pleased for a time with a powerfully written book, pressed upon his notice by the lady Anne ; nor yet with his clearly perceiving that the , author had justly rebuked the inroads made upon the authority of \ princes by an usurping priesthood.] WILLIAM TYNDALE, OTHERWISE CALLED HITCHINS, TO THE READER. V Grace, peace, and increase of knowledge in our Lord Jesus Christ, be with thee1, reader, and with all that call on the name of the Lord unfeignedly and with a pure conscience. Amen. Let it not make thee despair, neither yet discourage thee, 0 reader, that it is forbidden thee in pain of life and goods, or that it is made breaking of the king's peace, or treason unto his highness, to read the word of thy soul's health2. But The nature of much rather be bold in the Lord, and comfort thy soul : for- is to be per- secuted.W.T. asmuch as thou art sure, and hast an evident token through such persecution, that it is the true word of God ; which word is ever hated of the world, neither was ever without persecu tion, (as' thou seest in all the stories of the Bible, both of tbe new Testament and also of the old,) neither can be, no more than the sun can be without his light ; and forasmuch as con- The pope is trariwise thou art sure that the pope's doctrine is not of God, receivetA.ana which (as thou seest) is so agreeable unto the world, and is so w. T- [! Hans Luft prints it the; but Day thee.] [2 As this treatise was written before the close of 1527, this sen tence cannot refer to the royal proclamation of the 21st Hen. VIII. given in Foxe, under the date of 1531, but reah^jJuhligheiLhefbre the end of Marchj_1530. (See Anderson's Annals, B. I. § 6, p. 234 — 5.) But Though the issuing of that proclamation was the first measure which subjected the possessors of the word of God to punishment by the civil magistrate, under such charges as Tyndale has here described, he had sufficient reason for charging the Christian reader not to be discouraged by the peril of being thus punished. For in 1527 Tyndale could not but have read the king's reply to Luther ; in the preface to which Henry told 'his dearly beloved people,' that 'with the deliberate advice of his chancellor, Cardinal Wolsey, he had determined that [Tyndale's] untrue translations [of the scriptures] should be burned, with farther sharp correction and punishment against the keepers and readers of the same.'] 9—2 132 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. received of the world ; or which rather so receiveth the world and the pleasures of the world, and seeketh nothing but the possessions of the world, and authority in the world, and to bear a rule in the world ; and persecuteth the word of God, and with all wiliness driveth people from it, and with false and sophistical reasons maketh them afraid of it; yea, curscth them, and excommunicateth them, and bringeth them in be lief that they be damned if they look on it, and that it is but doctrine to deceive men ; and moveth the blind powers Love of the 0f the world to slay with fire, water, and sword, all that world is d ' ' t S'^Sh- cleave unto it1 : for the world loveth that which is his, and Oou and his holy gospel. P In saying this, Tyndale was quite borne out by various public documents, which had issued at different times from those different authorities to which persons living under the jurisdiction of the church of Bome were amenable. The earliest canon prohibiting the laity from possessing the word of God in their native tongue is believed to be that enacted by a council held at Toulouse, in 1229, a little more than 150 years before Wicliffe translated the scriptures for our fathers. Its words are these : — Prohibemus etiam, ne libros Veteris Testamenti aut Novi laici permittantur habere ; nisi forte psalterium vol brevia- rium pro divinis officiis, aut horas Beatse Marice, aliquis ex devotione habere vclit. Sed ne pramissos libros habeant in vulgari translates arctissime inhibemus. Cone. Tolos. An0, mccxxix. de inquirendis hssreticis, deque aliis Ecclesiastics? disciplinse capitibus eclebratum. Cap. xiv. Tom. xxni. p. 197. Labb. Cone. Venetiis, 1779; and also Harduini Acta Cone. Parisiis, 1714. Tom. vii. p. 178. In our own country, the hke prohibition was enforced with especial threats in a constitution issued by archbishop Arundel, which said: ' We decree and ordain that no man hereafter by his own. autho rity translate any text of the scripture into English, by way of a book, libel, or treatise ; and that no man read any such book, libel, or treatise, now lately sot forth in the time of John Wicliffe, or since, or hereafter to be set forth, in part or in whole, privily or apertly, upon pain of greater excommunication, until the said translation be allowed by the ordinary of the place, or, if the case so require, by the council provin cial. He that shall do contrary to this shall likewise be punished as a favourer of error and heresy.' Foxe's Acts and Mon. under date of 1409. It need scarcely be added, that no English translation had been so allowed. Lastly, Cuthbert Tonstal had issued an injunction in October 1526, as bishop of London, in which, without naming Tyndale, he had described his translation of the New Testament ' imprinted some with glosses, and some without, [as] containing in the English tongue pestiferous and most pernicious poison, which truly, without it be speedily foreseen, will contaminate and infect the flock committed unto us with most deadly poison and heresy, to the PREFACE TO THE READER. 133 hateth that which is chosen out of the world to serve God in the Spirit, as Christ saith to his disciples, John xv. " If ye Joh. xv. were of the world, the world would love his own ; but I have chosen you out of the world, and therefore the world hateth you." Another comfort hast thou, that, as the weak powers of the world defend the doctrine of the world, so the mighty God defend- ° . u eth his doc- pOWer of God defendeth the doctrine of God : which thing tnne^imseif. thou shalt evidently perceive, if thou call to mind the wonderful deeds which God hath ever wrought for his word in extreme necessity, since the world began, beyond all man's reason, which are written, (as Paul saith, Rom. xv.) "for our learning, R0m.xv (and not for our deceiving,) that we through patience and comfort of the scripture might have hope." The nature of God's word God's word is to fight against hypocrites. It began at Abel, fj^vnstbvpo- and hath ever since continued, and shall, I doubt not, until the last day. And the hypocrites have alway the world on their sides; as thou seest in the time of Christ. They had the How our elders, that is to wit, the rulers of the Jews on their side ; wasentreat- they had Pilate and the emperor's power on their side ; they had Herod also on their side : moreover they brought all their worldly wisdom to pass, and all that they could think, or imagine, to serve for their purpose. First, to fear2 the The craft of people withal, they excommunicated all that believed in him, critcs. w. t. and put them out of the temple ; as thou seest, John ix. Se- j0hn ix. condly, they found the means to have him condemned by the emperor's power, and made it treason to Csesar to believe in him. Thirdly, they obtained to have him hanged as a thief or a murderer, which, after their belly-wisdom, was a cause above all causes that no man should believe in him : for the Jews take it for a sure token of everlasting damnation, if a man be hanged ; for it is written in their law, Deut. xxi. Deut. xxi. " Cursed is whosoever hangeth on tree." Moses also in the grievous peril and danger of the souls committed to our charge and the offence of God's divine majesty.' Having given this description of the versions without glosses, or the plain word of God, as well as of that with glosses, he proceeds to enjoin his officers to require all persons to surrender their copies of any translation of the New Testa ment into the English tongue under pain of excommunication Tonstal's injunction is given in Foxe, among details belonging to 1531 ; and in Anderson, B. I. § 3. Vol. I. p. 118, first edition.] p Fear: terrify.] 134 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. same place commandeth, if any man be hanged, to take him down the same day and bury him, for fear of polluting or de filing the country ; that is, lest they should bring the wrath and curse of God upon them. And therefore the wicked Jews themselves, which with so venomous hate persecuted the doctrine of Christ, and did all the shame that they could do unto him, though they would fain have had Christ to hang still on the cross, and there to rot, (as he should have done by the emperor's law,) yet for fear of defiling their sabbath, and of bringing the wrath and curse of God upon them, John xix. begged of Pilate to take him down, John xix. which was against themselves. Finally, when they had done all they could, and that they thought sufficient, and when Christ was in the heart of the earth, and so many bills and pole-axes about him to keep him down, and when it was past man's help, then holp God. When man could not bring him again, God's truth fetched God's truth him again. The oath that God had sworn to Abraham, to wonden, and David, and to other holy fathers and prophets, raised him up thedhmo-f agam> *° hless and save all that believe in him. Thus became nesf w!'t! tne wisdom of the hypocrites foolishness. Lo, this was written for thy learning and comfort. The captivity How wonderfully were the children of Israel locked in of the Israel- ._ (T1 .... . ... rh-umhr Egypt! *n what tribulation, cumbrance, and adversity were w- T- they in ! The land also that was promised them was far off, and full of great cities, walled with high walls up to the sky, and inhabited with great giants ; yet God's truth brought them out of Egypt, and planted them in the land of the if God be giants. This was1 also written for our learning;: for there is with us, who ° o ag"inSetus? no Power against God's, neither any wisdom against God's Ant. ed. wisdom : he is stronger and wiser than all his enemies. Xyethtne What holp it Pharaoh, to drown the men children? So menchildren. ];tt]e (J fear nQQ &ha]l ;t &i tl]e ]agt he]p tfle pope an(J n;g bishops, to burn our men children; which manfully confess that Jesus Christ is the Lord, and that there is no other name Acts iv. given unto men to be saved by, as Peter testifieth, Acts, in the fourth chapter. Who dried up the Red sea ? Who slew Goliath ? Who did all those wonderful deeds which thou readest in the bible? Who delivered the Israelites evermore from thraldom and P SoH. Luft; D. has is.] r-REFACE TO THE READER. 135 bondage, as soon as they repented and turned to God ? Faith verily, and God's truth, and the trust in the promises which he had made. Read the xith to the Hebrews for thy con solation. When the children of Israel were ready to despair, for the greatness and the multitude of the giants, Moses comforted them ever, saying, Remember what your Lord God hath done How Moses for you in Egypt, his wonderful plagues, his miracles, his ^J? {^elites. " wonders, his mighty hand, his stretched out arm, and what he hath done for you hitherto. He shall destroy them; he God's truth shall take their hearts from them, and make them fear and us. w. t. flee before you. He shall storm them, and stir up a tempest among them, and scatter them, and bring them to nought. He hath sworn ; he is true ; he will fulfil the promises that he hath made unto Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. This is written for our learning : for verily he is a true God ; and is our God as well as theirs; and his promises are with us, as well as with them ; and he present with us, as well as he was with them. If we ask, we shall obtain ; if we knock, he will open ; if we seek, we shall find ; if we thirst, his truth shall fulfil our lust. Christ is with us until the world's Matt, xxviii. end. Let his little flock be bold therefore. For if God be on our side, what matter maketh it who be against us, be they bishops, cardinals, popes, or whatsoever names they will? Mark this also, if God send thee to the sea, and God Mem promise to go with thee, and to bring thee safe to land, he hi6 children. will' raise up a tempest against thee, to prove whether thou wilt abide by his word, and that thou mayest feel thy faith, and perceive his goodness. For if it were always fair wea ther, and thou never brought into such jeopardy, whence his mercy only delivered thee, thy faith should be but a pre sumption, and thou shouldest be ever unthankful to God and merciless unto thy neighbour. If God promise riches, the way thereto is poverty. Whom God work- he loveth, him he chasteneth : whom he exalteth, he casteth ™«i. w. t. down : whom he saveth, he damneth first. He bringeth no man to heaven, except he send him to hell first. If he pro mise life, he slayeth first : when he buildeth, he casteth all down first. He is no patcher ; he cannot build on another man's foundation. He will not work until all be past remedy, 136 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. and brought unto such a case, that men may see, how that his hand, his power, his mercy, his goodness and truth, hath wrought altogether. He will let no man be partaker with him of his praise and glory. His works are wonderful, and contrary unto man's works. Who ever, saving1 he, delivered his own Son, his only Son, his dear Son, unto the death, and that for his enemies' sake, to win his enemy, to overcome him with love, that he might see love, and love again, and of love to do likewise to other men, and to overcome them with well doing ? Joseph. Joseph saw the sun and the moon and the eleven stars worshipping him. Nevertheless, ere that came to pass, God laid him where he could neither see sun nor moon, neither any star of the sky, and that many years; and also unde served; to nurture him, to humble, to meek2, and to teach him God's ways, and to make him apt and meet for the room and honour against he came to it ; that he might perceive and feel that it came of God, and that he might be strong in the spirit to minister it godly. Israelites. jje promised the children of Israel a land with rivers of milk and honey ; but brought them for the space of forty years into a land, where not only rivers of milk and honey were not, but where so much as a drop of water was not ; to nurture them, and to teach them, as a father doth his son, and to do them good at the latter end ; and that they might be strong in their spirit and souls, to use his gifts and benefits godly and after his will. David. jje promised David a kingdom, and immediately stirred up king Saul against him to persecute him ; to hunt him, as men do hares with greyhounds, and to ferret him out of every hole, and that for the space of many years ; to tame him, to meek him, to kill his lusts ; to make him feel other men's diseases; to make him merciful; to make him understand that he was made king to minister and to serve his brethren, and that he should not think that his subjects were made to minister unto his lusts, and that it were lawful for him to take away from them life and goods at his pleasure. Suctshops Oh that our kings were so nurtured now-a-days ! which kmgs. w. t. our k0]y bigbopg teach. 0f a far other manner, saying, Your P So D. Luft has save.] [2 Meek ; make meek.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 137 grace shall take your pleasure ; yea, take what pleasure you list, spare nothing ; we shall dispense with you ; we have power, we are God's vicars : and let us alone with the realm, we shall take pain for you, and see that nothing be weU : your grace shall but defend the faith only. Let us, therefore, look diligently whereunto we are called, wc1}^l"to that we deceive not ourselves. We are called, not to dispute, !^aT^d- as the pope's disciples do ; but to die with Christ, that we may hve with him ; and to suffer with him, that we may reign with him. We be called unto a kingdom that must be won with suffering only, as a sick man winneth health. God our fighting; is he that doth all things for us, and fig-hteth for us ; and we wwieGod' ° ' & flghtethfnr do but suffer only. Christ saith, John. xx. "As mv Father v\ WT- « » John xx. sent me, so send I you;" and, John xv. "If they persecute John xv. me, then shall they persecute you." And Christ saith, Matt. Matt. x. x. "I send you forth as sheep among wolves." The sheep fight not; but the shepherd fighteth for them, and careth for them. " Be harmless as doves, therefore," saith Christ, "and wise as serpents." The doves imagine no defence, nor seek to avenge themselves. The serpent's wisdom is, The wisdom to keep his head, and those parts wherein his life resteth. pent. w.t. Christ is our head ; and God's word is that wherein our life resteth. To cleave, therefore, fast unto Christ, and unto those promises which God hath made us for his sake, is our wisdom. "Beware of men," saith he; "for they shall deliver you up unto their councils, and shall scourge you; and ye shall be brought before rulers and kings for my sake. The brother shall betray, or deliver, the brother to death, and the father the son ; and the children shall rise against father and mother, and put them to death." Hear what Christ saith more : " The disciple is not greater than his master ; neither the servant greater, or better, than his lord. If they have called the good man of the house Beelzebub, how much rather shall they call his household servants so ! " And, Luke xiv. saith Christ: "Which of you, disposed to Luke xiv. build a tower, sitteth not down first and counteth the cost, whether he have sufficient to perform it ? Lest when he hath laid the foundation, and then not able to perform it, all that behold it begin to mock him, saying, This man began to build, and was not able to make an end : so likewise none of you, that forsaketh not all that he hath, can be my disciple." 138 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. He maketh Whosoever, therefore, casteth not this aforehand, 'I must eastern' that JeoPar(i life, goods, honour, worship, and all that there is, for heebegfDere Christ's sake,' deceiveth himself, and maketh a mock of him- Mat^Vi. self unto the godless hypocrites and infidels. " JSTo man can h°w ^the serve two masters, God and mammon ;" that is to say, wicked wtiid^takkh r;ches also. Matt. vi. Thou must love Christ above all things: buttoslketh but that doest thou not, if thou be not ready to forsake all w"t!'' for his sake: if thou have forsaken all for his sake, then Tribulation art thou sure that thou lovest him. Tribulation is our right tism. w.t. baptism; and is signified by plunging into the water. "We Rom. vi. that are baptized in the name of Christ," saith Paul, " are baptized to die with him." The Spirit through tribulation purgeth us, and killeth our fleshly wit, our worldly understanding, and belly-wisdom, Tribulation and filleth us full of the wisdom of God. Tribulation is a w.t. ' blessing that cometh of God, as witnesseth Christ: "Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousness' sake ; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Is not this a comfortable word? Who ought not rather to choose, and desire to be blessed with Christ, in a little tribulation, than to be cursed perpetually with the world for a little pleasure ? Prosperity Prosperity is a right curse, and a thing that God giveth is a curse. x */ o ' o o Lu'keVi. *° nis enemies. "Woe be to you rich," saith Christ, Luke vi. " lo, ye have your consolation : woe be to you that are full, for ye shall hunger : woe be to you that laugh, for ye shall weep : woe be to you when men praise you, for so did their fathers unto the false prophets :" yea, and so have our fathers done unto the false hypocrites. The hypocrites, with worldly preaching, have not gotten the praise only, but even the possessions also, and the dominion and rule of the whole world. uthbeUl?ft°of Tribulation for righteousness is not a blessing only, but uod. w. t. also a gift that God giveth unto none save his special friends. Actsv. The apostles rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christ's sake. And Paul, in the second epistle 2 Tim. iii. an(i third chapter to Timothy, saith, " Ah that will live godly piui. i. jn Christ Jesus must suffer persecution :" and, Phil. i. he saith, "Unto you it is given, not only to believe in Christ, but also to suffer for his sake." Here seest thou that it is God's gift, to suffer for Christ's sake. And Peter in the fourth chapter 1 Pet iv. 0f his first epistle saith : " Happy are ye if ye suffer for the PREFACE TO THE READER. 139 name of Christ ; for the glorious Spirit of God resteth in you." Is it not an happy thing, to be sure that thou art sealed with God's Spirit to everlasting life ? And, verily, thou art sure thereof, if thou suffer patiently for his sake. By suffering art thou sure ; but by persecuting canst thou never be sure: for Paul, Rom. v. saith, "Tribulation maketh feeling;" Rom. v. that is, it maketh us feel the goodness of God, and his help, and the working of his Spirit. And, the twelfth chapter of whereby, ° i x then, are the second epistle to the Corinthians, the Lord said unto Paul, the pope and x 7 7 bishops sure ? " My grace is sufficient for thee ; for my strength is made wm.xu. perfect through weakness." Lo, Christ is never strong in us till we be weak. As our strength abateth, so groweth the The weaker . ° ° . to the world, strength of Christ in us : when we are clean emptied ot our the stronger ,. to Christ. own strength, then are we full of Christ's strength : and look, Ant- ed- how much of our own strength remaineth in us, so much lacketh there of the strength of Christ. " Therefore," saith Paul, in the said place in the second epistle to the Corin thians, " very gladly will I rejoice in my weakness, that the strength of Christ may dwell in me. Therefore have I delectation," saith Paul, "in infirmities, in rebukes, in need, in persecutions, and in anguish for Christ's sake ; for when weakness of t it T . , , , i the flesh is 1 am weak, then am I strong. Meaning, that the weakness "le£'r|nf ft of the flesh is the strength of the Spirit. And by flesh w^sT- w T understand wit, wisdom, and all that is in a man before the Spirit of God come; and whatsoever springeth not of the Spirit of God, and of God's word. And of like testimonies is all the scripture full. Behold, God setteth before us a blessing and also a curse : m two things a blessing, verily, and that a glorious and an everlasting, if our choice. we suffer tribulation and adversity with our Lord and Saviour Christ ; and an everlasting curse, if, for a little pleasure sake, we withdraw ourselves from the chastising and nurture of God, wherewith he teacheth all his sons, and fashioneth them after his godly will, and maketh them perfect (as he did Christ), and maketh them apt and meet vessels to receive his grace and his Spirit, that they might perceive and feel the exceeding mercy which we have in Christ, and the innumer able blessings and the unspeakable inheritance, whereto we are called and chosen, and sealed in our Saviour Jesus Christ, unto whom be praise for ever. Amen. Finally : whom God chooseth to reign everlastingly with 140 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. The differ- Christ, him sealeth he with his mighty Spirit, and poureth ofeGCohdandnof strength into his heart, to suffer afflictions also with Christ the devii. for bearing witness unto the truth. And this is the difference between the children of God and of salvation, and between the children of the devil and of damnation : that the children of God have power in their hearts to suffer for God's word ; which is their hfe and salvation, their hope and trust, and whereby they live in the soul and spirit before God. And the children of the devil in time of adversity fly from Christ, whom they followed feignedly, their hearts not sealed with his holy and mighty Spirit ; and get them to the standard The devils of their right father the devil, and take his wages, the ' pleasures of this world, which are the earnest of everlasting damnation : which conclusion the twelfth chapter to the He- Heb. xii. brews well confirmeth, saying, " My son, despise not thou the chastising of the Lord, neither faint when thou art rebuked ah God's of him : for whom the Lord loveth, him he chastiseth ; yea, children are T feinercwT an(* ^e scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. Lo, perse cution and adversity for the truth's sake is God's scourge, and God's rod, and pertaineth unto all his children indiffer ently : for when he said, he scourgeth every son, he maketh none exception. Moreover saith the text : " If ye shall en dure chastising, God offereth himself unto you as unto sons. What son is it that the Father chastiseth not ? If ye be not under correction, whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and not sons." Forasmuch, then, as we must needs be baptized in tribu lations, and through the Red sea, and a great and a fearful wilderness, and a land of cruel giants, into our natural coun- which way try ; yea, and inasmuch as it is a plain earnest that there is healXthen? n° other way into the kingdom of life than through persecu- w- T- tion, and suffering of pain, and of very death, after the en sample of Christ ; therefore let us arm our souls with the comfort of the scriptures : how that God is ever ready at hand, in time of need, to help us ; and how that such tyrants and persecutors are but God's scourge, and his rod to chastise us. And as the father hath alway, in time of correction, the rod fast in his hand, so that the rod doth nothing but as the The tyrants father moveth it ; even so hath God all tyrants in his hand, power'to do and letteth them not do whatsoever they would, but as much what thev t ,„-,.. would, w.t. only as he appomteth them to do, and as far forth as it is PREFACE TO THE READER. 141 necessary for us. And as, when the child submitteth himself unto his father's correction and nurture, and humbleth him self altogether unto the will of his father, then the rod is taken away ; even so, when we are come unto the knowledge of the right way, and have forsaken our own will, and offer ourselves clean unto the will of God, to walk which way soever he will have us, then turneth he the tyrants ; or else, if they enforce to persecute us any further, he putteth them out of the way, according unto the comfortable ensamples of the scripture. Moreover, let us arm our souls with the promises both TfhJPJ°™eises of help and assistance, and also of the glorious reward that y°™th"yare followeth. " Great is your reward in heaven," saith Christ, $.7" Matt. v. ; and, " He that knowledgeth me before men, him Matt. v. & x. will I knowledge before my Father that is in heaven ;" and, " Call on me in time of tribulation, and I will deliver thee," p*- '• Psal. 1. ; and, " Behold the eyes of the Lord are over them ps. xxxiii. that fear him, and over them that trust in his mercy, to deliver their souls from death, and to feed them in time of hunger." Psal. xxxiii. And in Psalm xxxiv. saith David : "The Lord is nigh them that are troubled in their hearts, Ps. xxxiv. and the meek in spirit will he save. The tribulations of the righteous are many, and out of them all will the Lord deliver them. The Lord keepeth all the bones of them, so that not one of them shall be bruised. The Lord shall re deem the souls of his servants." And of such like consolation are all the psalms full. Would to God when ye read them ye understood them ! And, Matt. x. " When they deliver Matt. x. you, take no thought what ye shall say ; it shall be given you the same hour what ye shall say : for it is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you." " The very hairs of your head are numbered," saith Christ also, Matt. x. If God care for our hairs, he much more careth Matt. x. for our souls, which he hath sealed with his holy Spirit. Therefore saith Peter, 1 Pet. v. " Cast all your care upon him ; for he careth for you." And Paul, 1 Cor. x. saith : i Pet. v. "God is true, he will not suffer you to be tempted above icor. x your might." And Psalm lv. " Cast thy care upon the ps. iv. Lord." Let thy care be to prepare thyself with all thy strength, A chris«an for to-walk which way he will have thee ; and to believe that w> T- 142 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. he will go with thee, and assist thee, and strengthen thee against all tyrants, and deliver thee out of all tribulation. But what way, or by what means he will do it, that commit unto him and his godly pleasure and wisdom, and cast that care upon him. And though it seem never so unlikely, or never so impossible unto natural reason, yet believe stedfastly that he will do it : and then shall he (according to his old use) change the course of the world, even in the twinkling of an eye, and come suddenly upon our giants, as a thief in the night, and compass them in their wiles and worldly wisdom. " When they cry, Peace and all is safe, then shall their sorrows begin, as the pangs of a woman that travaileth with child :" and then shall he destroy them, and deliver thee, unto the glorious praise of his mercy and truth. Amen. Thede- And as pertaining unto them that despise God's word, spisers, per- X o J. they'tSua'ii counting it as a fantasy or a dream ; and to them also that word.'afe ior fear of a little persecution fall from it, set this before »reatened. xfcQe eyes ; how God, since the beginning of the world, be fore a general plague, ever sent his true prophets and preachers of his word, to warn the people, and gave them time1 to repent. But they, for the greatest part of them, hardened their hearts, and persecuted the word that was sent to save them. And then God destroyed them utterly, and took them clean from the earth. As thou seest what followed Noah, Lot, the preaching of Noe in the old world ; what followed Moses, and A ... ini- Aaron, w.t. the preaching of Lot among the Sodomites ; and the preach ing of Moses and Aaron among the Egyptians ; and that suddenly, against all possibility of man's wit. Moreover, as oft as the children of Israel fell from God to the worshipping Thetsprw t °^ images, he sent his prophets unto them ; and they perse cuted and waxed hard-hearted : and then he sent them into all places of the world captive. Last of all, he sent his own christ. w.t. Son to them, and they waxed more hard-hearted than ever before : and see what a fearful example of his wrath and cruel vengeance he hath made of them to all the world, now almost fifteen hundred years. Unto the old Britons also (which dwelled where our na- Giidas. w.t. tion doth now) preached Gildas ; and rebuked them of their P So Day. H. L. has space.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 143 wickedness, and prophesied both to the spiritual (as they T!>ey he will be called) and unto the lay-men also, what vengeance &* ^"j- would follow, except they repented2. But they waxed hard- spMt.isw. T. hearted ; and God sent his plagues and pestilences among them, and sent their enemies in upon them on every side, and destroyed them utterly. Mark also, how Christ threateneth them that forsake him, for whatsoever cause it be ; whether for fear, either for shame, either for loss of honour, friends, life, or goods. " He that denieth me before men, him will I deny before my Father that is in heaven. He that loveth father or mother more than me, is not worthy of me." All this he saith Matt. x. Matt. x. And in Mark viii. he saith: "Whosoever is ashamed we must in no case deny of me, or my words, among this adulterous and sinful gene- ^rUt- Ant- ration, of him shall the Son of Man be ashamed when he Mark v"1- cometh in the glory of his Father with his holy angels." And Luke ix. also: "None that layeth his hand to the Luke ix. plough, and looketh back, is meet for the kingdom of heaven." Nevertheless yet, if any man have resisted ignorantly, as God receiveth Paul did, let him look on the truth which Paul wrote after he come again. w. i. came to knowledge. Also, if any man clean against his heart (but overcome with the weakness of the flesh), for fear of persecution, have denied, as Peter did, or have delivered his [2 One of the oldest monuments of our national history which has come down to us, exclusive of what is contained in the literature of our Roman conquerors, is the epistle of Gildas the Briton, who lived in the latter part of the fifth century. In this epistle, after a hrief description of Britain and summary of its history from the Roman invasion to the forty-fourth year after the admission of the Saxons, he proceeds to address the ruling chiefs, charging them with bringing the wrath of God upon the Britons by their crimes. He then turns to the inferior rulers, and lastly to the clergy, of whom he says : Sacerdotes habet Britannia, sed insipientes ; quam plurimos ministros, sed impudentes ; clericos, sed raptores sub dolos ; pastores, ut dicun- tur, sed occisioni animarum lupos paratos, quippe non commoda plebi providentes, sed proprii plenitudinem ventris quserentes ; ecclesia) do- mus habentes, sed turpis lucri gratia eas adeuntes; populos docentes, sed prsebendo pessima exempla, vitia, malosque mores. — Gildaj, cui cognomentum est Sapientis, de excidio et conquestu Britannise, ac flebili castigatione, in reges, principes, et sacerdotes epistola. Ed. Joh. Josselinus, Londini. J. Daius excudit. 1568.] 144 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Why God letteth his elect fall. W.T. book1, or put it away secretly; let him (if he repent,) come again, and take better hold, and not despair, or take it for a sign that God hath forsaken him. For God ofttimes taketh his strength even from his very elect, when they either trust in their own strength, or are negligent to call to him for his strength. And that doth he to teach them, and to make them feel, that in that fire of tribulation, for his word's sake, nothing can endure and abide save his work2, and that strength only which he hath promised. For the which strength he will have us to pray unto him night and day, with all instance. That the scriptureought to he in the Eng lish tongue. W.T. That thou mayest perceive how that the scripture ought to be in the_rnother_tongue, and that the reasons which our spirits make for the contrary, are but sophistry and false wiles to fear thee from the light, that thou mightest follow them blindfold, and be their captive to honour their cere monies, and to offer to their belly : First, God gave the children of Israel a law by the hand of Moses in their mother tongue ; and all the prophets wrote in their mother tongue, and all the psalms were in the mother tongue. And there was Christ but figured, and de scribed in ceremonies, in riddles, and parables, and in dark prophecies. What is the cause that we may not have the old Testament, with the new also, which is the light of the old, and wherein is openly declared, before the eyes, that which there was darkly prophesied ? I can imagine no cause [! 'Another sort of men, who were anciently accused and con demned as sacrilegious persons, were those whom they commonly called Traditors, for delivering up their bibles and other sacred utensils of the church to the heathen to be burnt, in the time of the Diocletian persecution. The Donatists frequently, but falsely, objected this name to Ceecilian, bishop of Carthage, and those that ordained him, that they were Traditors : upon which St Austin tells them, that if they could evidently make good the charge, the catho lics would not scruple to anathematize them after death.' Bingham Origines Eccles. B. xvi. ch. vi. § 25. As the persecutors in Tyn dale's days copied the example of the heathen in requiring the surrender of English scriptures, and of any book inculcating the doctrines of the reformation; so the weakness of the ancient Traditors was again found in some of the persecuted.] [2 So H. L. : Day has word.] Ant. ed. Deut. vi. PREFACE TO THE READER. jio verily, except it be that we should not see the work of anti christ and juggling of hypocrites. What should be the cause that we, which walk in the broad day, should not see as well as they that walked in the night ; or that we should not see as weU at noon, as they did in the twilight ? Came Christ to make the world more blind ? By this means Christ is the darkness of the world, and not the light, as he saith himself. John vm. Moreover Moses saith, Deut vi. "Hear, Israel; let these whet them words which I command thee this day stick fast in thine heart, dren; that is, " exercise thy and whet3 them on thy children, and talk of them as thou $£mr™ J sittest in thine house, and as thou walkest by the way, andu!£themin when thou hest down, and when thou risest up ; and bind them for a token to thine hand, and let them be a remembrance be tween thine eyes, and write them on the posts and gates of thine house." This was commanded generally unto all men. How cometh it that God's word pertaineth less unto us, than unto them ? Yea, how cometh it, that our Moseses forbid us, and command us the contrary ; and threaten us if we do, and will not that we once speak of God's word ? How can we whet God's word (that is, to put it in practice, use and exercise) upon our children and household, when we are violently kept from it and know it not? How can we (as Peter commandeth) give a reason of our hope; when we wot not what it is that God hath promised, or what to hope ? Moses also commandeth in the said chapter, if the son ask what the testimonies, laws, and observances of the Lord mean, that the father teach him. If our children ask what our [3 Whet : such is the primary meaning of the corresponding Hebrew word |3!f. So Simon's Hebr. Lex. pty acuit, exacuit, meta- phorice instigavit, inculcavit. Deut. vi. 7. So also says Professor Robertson in his Clavis Pentateuchi, on this text : and the margin of our authorised version has, ' Heb. whet or sharpen.' This close translation of the Hebrew verb had neither appeared in the Latin Vulgate, nor in the Greek translation called the Septuagint, nor in Sebastian Munster's recent Latin version; but had been employed by Luther. Hence Tyndale's adoption of it becomes one of the proofs of his intimacy with the Hebrew tongue; for if we were to allow that he knew German, and saw the equivalent to whet in Luther's version, it would be still unlikely that he should have adopted so harsh a metaphor in preference to the word used by older translators, if he had not known that it was the most proper representative of the Hebrew word.] r i 10 [tyndale.] 146 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. No, nor sir ceremonies (which are more than the Jews' were) mean ; no gho-tiy chii- father can tell his son. And in the eleventh chapter he re- dren. W. 1. Deut. xi. peateth all again, for fear of forgetting. They will say haply, the scripture requireth a pure mind and a quiet mind : and therefore the lay-man, because he is altogether cumbered with worldly business, cannot under stand them. If that be the cause, then it is a plain case that our prelates understand not the scriptures themselves : for no lay-man is so tangled with worldly business as they are. The great things of the world are ministered by them ; neither do the lay-people any great thing, but at their assignment. ' If the scripture were in the mother tongue,' they will say, 'then would the lay-people understand it, every man after his own ways.' Wherefore serveth the curate, but to Hoiy days, teach him the right way ? Wherefore were the holy days made, but that the people should come and learn ? Are ye our school- not abominable schoolmasters, in that ye take so great great wages, wages, if ye will not teach? If ye would teach, how could butteachnot. ..,,,. w.t. ye do it so well, and with so great profit, as when the lay- people have the scripture before them in their mother tongue ? For then should they see, by the order of the text, whether thou jugglest or not: and then would they believe it, be cause it is the scripture of God, though thy living be never why the so abominable. Where now, because your living and your nofbeiievedf preaching are so contrary, and because they grope out in when they l & J' vr . r J 11 say truth, every sermon your open and manliest lies, and smell your unsatiable covetousness, they, believe you not when you preach The cu-ates truth. But, alas ! the curates themselves (for the most part) abiweniean- wot no more what the new or old Testament meaneth, than elh W T. do the Turks : neither know they of any more than that they read at mass, matins, and evensong, which yet they under stand not : neither care they, but even to mumble up so much every day, as the pie and popinjay speak, they wot not what, to fill their bellies withal. If they will not let the lay-man have the word of God in his mother tongue, yet let The priests the priests have it ; which for a great part of them do under- no Latin, stand no Latin at all, but sing, and say, and patter all day, with the lips only, that which the heart understandeth not. Sptef. Christ commandeth to search the scriptures. John v. JJinv. Though that miracles bare record unto his doctrine, yet de- PREFACE TO THE READER, 147 sired he no faith to be given either to his doctrine, or to his miracles, without record of the scripture.. When Paul preached, Acts xvii. Acts xvii. the other searched the scriptures daily, whether they were as he alleged them. Why shall not I likewise see, whe ther it be the scripture that thou allegest ? Yea, why shall I not see the scripture, and the circumstances, and what goeth before and after; that I may know whether thine interpretation be the right sense, or whether thou jugglest, and drawest the scripture violently unto thy carnal and fleshly purpose ; or whether thou be about to teach me, or to deceive me ? Christ saith, that there shall come false prophets in his name, and say that they themselves are Christ ; that is, they shall so preach Christ that men must believe in them, in their holiness, and things of their imagination, without God's word : yea, and that Against-Christ, or Antichrist, that shall come, is nothing but such false prophets, that shall juggle with the scripture, and beguile the people with false interpretations, as all the false prophets, scribes, and Pharisees did in the old testament. How shall I know whether ye are that Against- Christ, or false prophets, or no, seeing ye will not let me see how ye allege the scriptures ? Christ saith, " By their deeds Agaimt- i 11 i i „ tvt , ii i i Christis ye shall know them. Now when we look on your deeds, we known by i -it i i , i his deeds. see that ye are all sworn together, and have separated your- w. t. selves from the lay -people, and have a several kingdom a several among yourselves, and several laws of your own making ; w.t. ' wherewith ye violently bind the lay-people, that never con- w. t. sented unto the making of them. A thousand things forbid what christ ™ • in t ¦ i -i • looseth free- ye, which Christ made free ; and dispense with them again {J'n^5J"ge for money : neither is there any exception at all, but lack of J?f ^j^1" money. Ye have a secret council by yourselves. All other Wseeret men's secrets and counsels know ye ; and no man yours, w't!1' Ye seek but honour, riches, promotion, authority, and to feign over all, and will obey no man. If the father give you ought of courtesy, ye will compel the son to give it violently, whether he will or not, by craft of your own laws. These deeds are against Christ. When a whole parish of us hire a schoolmaster to teach bur children, what reason is it that we should be compelled to pay this schoolmaster his wages, and he should have licence to go where he will, and to dwell in another country, and to leave our children untaught ? Doth not the pope so ? 10—2 148 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Have we not given our tithes of courtesy unto one, for to teach us God's word; and cometh not the pope, and com- pelleth us to pay it violently, to them that never teach? Parson. Maketh he not one parson, which never cometh at us? Yea, one shall have five or six, or as many as he can get, and wotteth oftentimes where never one of them standeth. vicar. Another is made vicar, to whom he giveth a dispensation to parish Priest, go where he will, and to set in a parish priest, which can but minister a sort of dumb ceremonies. And he, because he hath most labour and least profit, polleth on his part ; and setteth here a mass-penny, there a trental, yonder dirige-money, and for his bead-roll, with a confession-penny and such like1. And thus are we never taught, and are yet nevertheless compelled; yea, compelled2 to hire many costly schoolmasters. These deeds are verily against Christ. Shall we therefore judge you by your deeds, as Christ com mandeth ? So are ye false prophets, and the disciples of Antichrist, or Against-Christ. The sermons which thou readest in the Acts of the apostles, and all that the apostles preached, were no doubt preached in the mother tongue. Why then might they not be written in the mother tongue ? As, if one of us preach a good sermon, why may it not be written ? Saint Jerom also translated the bible into his mother tongue : why may not we also ? They will say it cannot be translated into our tongue, it is so rude. It is not so rude as they are false liars. For the Greek tongue agreeth more with the Eng- The proper- lish than with the Latin. And the properties of the Hebrew Hebrew e tongue agreeth a thousand times more with the English [] A trental was a service of thirty masses, rehearsed for thirty days successively after the death of the party. The wiU of Elizabeth, lady Scrope, widow, dated Mar. 7, 9th Hen. VIII., i. e. 1518, says, ' I will that five trentals of masses be sung and said for my soul at tho place of my burial, and for the soul of my said lord and husband, and of Alice his daughter and mine,' &c. Nicolas, Test. Vet. pp. 587, 8. Dirige, was another part of the Romish service for the dead, and so called from a hymn beginning, Dirige gressus meos. Bead- roll was so called from the Saxon bede a prayer, and roll. Thomas Trethwiffe Esq. in his will, dated Sept. 20, 1528, bequeaths 10s. to the intent that his name may be put in the bead-roll, and prayed for every Sunday in the pulpit by name. Nic. T. V. p. 644.] [2 H. L. has compolde. D, compelde.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 149 than with the Latin. The manner of speaking is both one ; '""jpiS^glf so that in a thousand places thou needest not but to trans- &'sh- w.t. late it into the English, word for word; when thou must seek a compass in the Latin, and yet shall have much work to translate it well-favouredly, so that it have the same grace and sweetness, sense and pure understanding with it in the Latin, and as it hath in the Hebrew. A thou sand parts better may it be translated into the English, than into the Latin. Yea, and except my memory fail me, and that I have forgotten what I read when I was a child, thou shalt find in the English chronicle, how that king King Adei- Adelstone caused the holy scripture to be translated into the tongue that then was in England, and how the prelates exhorted him thereto3. Moreover, seeing that one of you ever preacheth con- contrary . . , p . preaching. trary to another ; and when two ot you meet, the one w. t. disputeth and brawleth with the^, other, as it were two scolds; and forasmuch as one holdeth this doctor, and an other that; one followeth Duns4, another St Thomas5, g^^, T [3 So Foxe says, ' King Athelstan caused the book of God's word to be translated from Hebrew into English, a. d. 930.' Acts and Mon. B. m. vol. n. p. 94. Farther researches do not however seem to confirm this assertion ; but, on the other hand, the laborious Spel- man gives his assent to an ancient MS. quoted by Abp. Parker, so far as it entitles us to affirm that king Alfred translated the New testa ment and some portion of the Old from Latin into Saxon. Spelmanni Vita Alfredi, M. B. in. p. 167. fol. Oxf. 1678.] f> See p. 108.] [5 Thomas Aquinas, so called from Aquino, the place of his birth, but styled ' The angelic Doctor" by his admirers. He was born in 1 224 ; and became a Dominican friar, whilst yet but a boy, against the will of his widowed mother. A native of Italy, he was allured, like Duns Scotus, to Paris, where he wrote and lectured ; as also at Cologne, and at Naples. He died, and was buried, near Terracina, in 1274, when on his way from Naples to the general council assembling at Lyons ; but, in 1368, his bones were brought to Toulouse, and were there adored as the relics of a saint, in consequence of his having been canonized in 1318, by pope John XXII., as a person who had wrought miracles. The collection of his works, as printed at Paris in 1660, fills nineteen volumes in folio. He was the first writer who laid down the doctrine of transubstantiation in that form in which it was afterwards fastened upon the creed of the Romish church by the council of Trent.] 150 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. another Bonaventure 1, Alexander de Hales2, Raymond5; [! There were at least four popish authors of the name of Bona venture. The most noted of them, and doubtless the one intended by Tyndale, was a contemporary of Thomas Aquinas, and distin guished by the title of 'The seraphic doctor.' He composed what has been styled ' Our Lady's psalter ;' a kind of paraphrase of the psalms, in which the word 'Lady' is generally substituted for Jehovah; as thus, 'Domina mea, in te speravi: de inimicis libera me, Domina: O my Lady, in thee have I put- my trust ; deliver me from mine enemies, 0 Lady.' To such a person the college of cardinals is said to have delegated the nomination of a pope, in 1272, when they were wearied with disputing among themselves, for three years, as to whom they should elect. He named the archdeacon of Liege, who took the title of Gregory X. and made Bonaventure bishop of Albano, and a car dinal, in return. About 200 years later, he was canonized by pope1 Sixtus IV. in 1482 ; and thenceforward styled St Bonaventura. The Roman edition of his works, published in 1588, is in 8 vols. fol. Cave," Script. Eccles. Hist. Lit. Ssec. x, date 1255. For an account of Bona- ventura's Psalter, and extracts from it, see Foxe's Acts and Monu ments, under date of 1555.] [2 Alexander de Hales, so called from his English birth-place, entered a Franciscan monastery before he was eight years old, but finished his studies in Paris ; where he gained the title of ' The irre fragable doctor,' amongst the schoolmen. He is said to have been such an admirer of Bonaventura, who was his pupil, as to have been wont to affirm, that in him Adam did not seem to have sinned. ' In fratre Bonaventura Adam peccasse non videtur.' It is stated, however, that he died at Paris, in 1245, when Bonaventura was but a young man. His ' Summa universse theologise' was published at Nuremberg in 1482; at Basle in 1502 ; at Venice in 1576 ; and at Cologne in 1622. See Cave, Scriptor. Eccles. Hist. Lit. Ssec. xiii. date 1230; and L'Advocat, Diet. Histor. art. Bonaventura. See also Roman breviary for July 14, Lectio iv.] p There were two school divines of the name of Raymond, in the thirteenth century. The one probably meant here was a Spaniard, born near Barcelona in 1175, and called from his birth-place, Raymond de Pennaforti. In 1238, he became general of the order of Domini cans, and died in his hundredth year. He had studied the canon law at Bologna ; and compiled five books of those decretals of the popes which are styled Extravagantes. The popish clergy were also wont to consult his ' Summa de poenitentia et matrimonio ;' which was after wards printed with notes at Rome, in 1603. He was canonized by Clement VIII. in 1601. Cave, Script. Eccles. Hist. Lit. Ssec. xm., date 1228. L'Advocat, Diet. Histor. art. St Raimond de Pegnafortt or De Rochefort. And Roman Breviary, Pars hiemalis.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 151 Lyre4, Brygot6, Dorbel6, Holcot7, Gorram8, Trumbett9, [4 Lyre, or Nicolas de Lyra, or Lyranus, so called from his native place, in the diocese of Evreux, was a Jew by birth and religion ; and is said to have made considerable progress in rabbinical learning before he became a convert to Christianity, and took the habit of a Franciscan in a convent at Verneuil, in 1291. He composed what were then styled postills, or a running commentary on the whole bible. This work he begun in 1293, and completed in 1330. It was printed at Basle, 1508 ; also at Lyons in 6 vols. fol. in 1529; and again in 1590 ; and was reprinted three times in the following century. He- also composed controversial treatises, intended to convince the Jews of their error. Cave, Ssec. xrv. date 1320 ; and L'Advocat, Diet. Hist.] [5 There is a shorter but similar list of writers popular with the Romish clergy in Latimer's letter to Hubbardine (Park. Soc. Remains of Latimer, p 319), which enumerates ' Duns, and St Tho mas, Halcot, Briget, &c.' The name thus differently spelt, and in each case inaccurately, probably expresses the ordinary manner of citing Brigitta; a nun whose eight books of pretended revelations were held in much respect by the Romanists, not only in Tyndale's day, but long after. She is said to have been a Swedish princess, who instituted a new monastic order, and went on pilgrimages to Naples, Jerusalem, and Rome; in which last city she died, in 1373. Pope Boniface IX. declared her a saint in 1391 ; and the 8th of October has consequently been dedicated to her worship by the church of Rome. Her works were printed at Lubeck in 1492 ; at Nuremberg in 1521 ; at Rome in 1557 ; at Antwerp in 1611, with the cardinal de Turrecremata for their editor; again at Rome, and at Cologne in 1628, in 2 vols, folio ; and at Munich in 1680. The titles of some of these works sufficiently indicate their character. One is, ' Regula S. Salvatoris, data divinitus ab ore Jesu Christi devotee sponsse suae B. Brigittse;' another, 'Sermo angelicus de excellentia B. Mariee Vir- ginis, quern angelus Brigitta coram adstans dictavit.' L'Advocat, Diet. Hist. Cave, Script. Eccles. Tom. n. A. date 1363. Breviarium Romanum.] [6 Dorbel, Dorbellus, or more properly Nicholas de Orbellis, a native of Angers, was a Franciscan friar, and professor of theology at Poitiers, about the middle of the fifteenth century. He wrote an 'Abridgement of Theology according to the doctrine of Scotus,' and other works. See Cave, Script. Eccles. Hist. App. under date 1456. Also L'Advocat, art. Orbellis.] \y Robert Holcot, born at Northampton, was a Dominican friar, and a teacher of theology in Oxford. Like all, or nearly all the doctors in this list, he wrote commentaries on the great text-book of the schoolmen, the ' Libri sententiarum,' composed or compiled by Peter the Lombard, bishop of Paris and head of its university in the middle of the I2th century. There i3 a long list of Holcot's writings" 152 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Hugo de Sancto Victore1, De Monte Regio2, De Nova in Cave ; from which it appears that whilst some of them have never been printed, single volumes, of different productions of his pen, have been printed at Lyons, at Paris, at Reutlinger, at Spires, and at Venice; and continued to come forth from the press so late as 1586: For a specimen of his theology the reader may refer to bishop Jewel's works, (Park. Soc.) vol. I. p. 13, with the editor's note.] [8 Gorram, or Nicholas de Gorham, so called from his native village, near St Alban's in Hertfordshire, was educated at Merton college, Oxford; and subsequently studied at Paris. The Domini cans and Franciscans have alike claimed him as a member of their order, and the time at which he lived cannot be fixed upon with certainty. The titles of his works encourage a hope that his studies were of a more profitable character than those of any other theolo gian in this list ; for they are all of them commentaries on the scriptures, with the exception of a series of discourses ' On the saints for the whole circle of the year.' The different portions of his works previously printed at Hagenau, Cologne, and Paris, were eventually collected and edited in two volumes folio, by John Keerberg, and printed at Antwerp in 1617 — 20. Wharton, in Appendix to Cave, under date 1400.] [9 Antonius Trombeta, or, as his name is sometimes Latinized, An- tonius Tubeta, was born in the Paduan territory in 1436. He became a Franciscan friar, acquired the reputation of being a great Scotist, and was eventually bishop of Urbino, and titular archbishop of Athens. The only results of his studies which have ever been committed to the press, are his ' Expositiones in isagogicas formalitates ad Scoti theolo- giam ;' and, ' Tractatus contra Averroistas de animarum humanarum purificatione ;' both printed at Venice. He died at Padua in 1518.] I1 Hugo de Sancto Victore, so called from his having been abbot of the monastery of St Victor in Paris, was a native of Ypres, though some affirm him to have been a Saxon. Though but forty-four years old when he died, in 1140, the list of treatises ascribed to his pen fills two columns and a half of Cave's folios. The printed editions of his works came out however in but three volumes ; as published at Paris in 1526; at Venice in 1588; and at Cologne in 1617. The latest, or Rouen, edition is in two volumes folio.] [2 John Muller, a celebrated mathematician and astronomer, who formed for himself the appellation of De Monte Regio, or Regiomon- tanus, from the name of his native town Koningshoven, or Konigs- berg, in Franconia, was born in 1436, and died at Rome in 1476; whither he had been summoned by Pope Sixtus IV, who had given him the archbishopric of Ratisbon, to labour at the reformation of the calendar. The astronomical almanacs of Regiomontanus were much sought after by the superstitious, and by the fraudulent, for astrological uses. See L'Advocat, art. Muller.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 15^ Villa3, De Media Villa4, and such like out of number; so that if thou hadst but of every author one book, thou couldst not pile them up in any warehouse in London, and every author is one contrary unto another. In so great diversity of spirits, how shall I know who lieth, and who sayeth truth ? Whereby shall I try and judge them ? Verily by God's word, which only is true. But how shall I that do, when thou wilt ,not let me see scripture ? Nay, say they, the scripture is so hard, that thou couldst never understand it but by the doctors. That is, I must measure the meteyard by the cloth. Here be twenty cloths [3 De Nova Villa. The only discoverable writer of any note, bearing this name, is Arnoldus de Nova Villa, whom Giannone de scribes as a native of Catalonia : Foxe, in like manner, calls him a Spaniard; but Mosheim says that some have fixed upon France for his native country. L'Advocat informs us that he was by profession a physician, and studied the Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic languages. He was a reformer to such an extent as to obtain a place in the ' Catalogus testium veritatis,' p. 1732, but he was also a writer on astrology, and was still more celebrated for what he wrote on che mistry; which last science was popular, under the name of alchymy, with all who desired to be rich without industry. Giannone, Istoria civile del regno di Napoli. Lib. xxii. Cap. viii. Cave, Hist. Lit. Appendix, accessiones anonymi, p. 10, Vol. n. Oxford, 1743. Foxe's Acts and Monuments, Vol. i. p. 517, and Vol. n. p. 510. Cattley's edition. L'Advocat's Diet. Hist. art. Arnaud de Villeneuve. Mosheim, Centur. xiii. part 2. ch. 1. who refers in his notes to several autho rities. According to L'Advocat, an edition of the works of Arnoldus de Nova Villa had been printed at Lyons in 1520, or about eight years before Tyndale's penning this notice of him; and they were again printed at Basle in 1585, in folio.] [* De Media Villa is the Latinized form of the name of Richard Middleton, a Franciscan, and a lecturer at Oxford in the latter part of the thirteenth century; who died in, or near, the year 1300. He had left Oxford for a while, to complete his studies at Paris, where he got into difficulties, being charged with heresy, ' nulla alia de causa,' says Cave, ' quam quod molles et collapsos suorum (to wit, the [friars) mores publico corripuisset.' After his death the charge of heresy was renewed against him, and Bale adds that his body was dug up and burnt by order of pope Clement. His works, printed at Venice in 1509, and at Brixen in 1591, are but discussions on the 'Magister Sententiarum,' as Peter Lombard was commonly styled. Cave refers, however, to Bale, Cent. rv. p. 359 ; and to Pits de Script. Angl. p. 386, as also to Du Pin, Hist. Eccles Vol. II. p. 78, for notices of other writings of this Middleton.] 154 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Antichrist turneth the roots of the tree upward. W.T. The scrip ture is the trial of all doctrine, and the right touchstone. W.T. Philosophy.W. T. Aristotle. W.T. of divers lengths and of divers breadths : how shall I be sure of the length of the meteyard by them? I suppose, rather, I must be first sure of the length of the mete yard, and thereby measure and judge of the cloths. If I must first believe the doctor, then is the doctor first true, and the truth of the scripture dependeth of his truth ; and so the truth of God springeth of the truth of man. Thus antichrist turneth the roots of the trees upward. What is the cause that we damn some of Origen's works, and allow some ? How know we that some is heresy and some not? By the scripture, I trow. How know we that St Augustine (which is the best, or one of the best, that ever wrote upon the scripture) wrote many things amiss at the beginning, as many other doctors do ? Verily, by the scrip tures; as he himself well perceived afterward, when he looked more diligently upon them, and revoked many things again. He wrote of many things which he understood not when he was newly converted, ere he had thoroughly seen the scriptures ; and followed the opinions of Plato, and the common persuasions of man's wisdom that were then famous. They will say yet more shamefully, that no man can understand the scriptures without philautia, that is to say, philosophy r." A man must be first well seen in Aristotle, ere he can understand the scripture, say they. Aristotle's doctrine is, that the world was without beginning, and shall be without end ; and that the first man never was, and the last shall never be2; and that God doth all of necessity, neither careth what we do, neither will ask any S^1 Philautia, self-love. He means that what they call philosophy, or the love of wisdom, would be more properly described if it were called self-love.] [2 In Enfield's Hist, of Philosophy, Vol. I. p. 280, there is a refer ence to Aristotle's Treatise de Ccelo, 1. iii. c. 7, 8, 12, as teaching that ' The world is eternal, without beginning or end.' And perhaps what Tyndale here affirms that he taught respecting man, might be a gene rally received gloss on his teaching that ' In consequence of the perpetual agency of the First Mover and the celestial sphere upon matter, bodies suffer a perpetual succession of dissolution and repro duction.' Enf. p. 281, citing Arist. De Generatione et Corruptioner i. c. 5.] PREFACE TO THE READER. 155 accounts of that we do3. Without this doctrine, how could we understand the scripture, that saith, God created the scripture. . . W. T. world of nought; and God worketh all things of his free will, and for a secret purpose; and that we shall all rise again, and that God will have accounts of all that we have done in this life ! Aristotle saith, Give a man a law, and Aristotie. W. T. he hath power of himself to do or fulfil the law, and be- cometh righteous with working righteously4. But Paul, and Pam. w.t. all the scripture saith, That the law doth but utter sin only, and helpeth not : neither hath any man power to do the law, till the Spirit of God be given him through faith in Christ. Is it not a madness then to say, that we could not understand the scripture without Aristotle ? Aristotle's right- ^isT1tle- eousness, and all his virtues, spring of man's free will. And a Turk, and every infidel and idolater, may be righteous and virtuous with that righteousness and those virtues. More over, Aristotle's felicity and blessedness standeth in avoiding of all tribulations ; and in riches, health, honour, worship, friends, and authority5; which felicity pleaseth our spiritualty well. Now, without these, and a thousand such like points, couldst thou not understand scripture, which saith, That sc.rip,ture- righteousness cometh by Christ, and not of man's will ; and how that virtues are the fruits and the gift of God's Spirit ; and that Christ blesseth us in tribulations, persecution, and adversity! How, I say, couldst thou understand the scrip ture without philosophy, inasmuch as Paul, in the second Philosophy. to the Colossians, warned them to ' beware lest any man c°h «• should spoil them' (that is to say, rob them of their. faith in Christ) ' through philosophy and deceitful vanities, and [3 Aristotle's doctrine is, that ' In producing motion, the Deity acts not voluntarily, but necessarily ;' and that being ' eternally employed in the contemplation of his own nature, he observes nothing, he cares for nothing beyond himself.' Enfield, p. 285.] [4 Tas 8' operas \apf3dvopev evepyrjo-avres nporepov — ourto be - to read Robin Hood, and Bevis of Hampton, Hercules, Hector ?&*& what and Troilus, with a thousand histories and fables of love and ^"aTd'say wantonness, and of ribaldry, as filthy as heart can think, wiit, saveW to corrupt the minds of youth withal, clean contrary to the doctrine of Christ and of his apostles : for Paul saith, " See EPh. v. that fornication, and all uncleanness, or covetousness, be not once named among you, as it becometh saints; neither filthiness, neither foolish talking nor jesting, which are not comely : for this ye know, that no whoremonger, either unclean person, or covetous person, which is the worshipper of images, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God." And after saith he, "Through such things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of unbelief." Now seeing they permit you freely to read those things J^^"™ which corrupt your minds and rob you of the kingdom of ™^*™d God and Christ, and bring the wrath of God upon you, how S*£ is this forbidding for love of your souls ? doth- Ant-ed> A thousand reasons more might be made, as thou mayest see in Paraclesis Erasmi2, and in his preface to the Para- [2 Erasmi Paraclesis, id est Adhortatio ad Christianae Philosophiaj studium, was one of those works by which that learned man promoted the reformation, which he afterwards shrunk from being thought to favour. He had said in his Paraclesis, Vehementer ab istis dis- sentio, qui nolint ab idiotis legi divinas literas in vulgi linguam trans- fusas, sive quasi Christus tarn involuta docuerit ut vix a pauculis theologis possint intelligi, sive quasi religionis Christianse presidium in hoc situm sit, si nesciatur. Regum mysteria celare fortasse satius est ; at Christus sua mysteria quam maxime cupit evulgari. Optarem ut omnes mulierculse legant evangelium, legant Paulinas epistolas. Atque utinam hsec in omnes omnium linguas essent transfusa, ut non solum a Scotis et Hybernis, sed a Turcis quoque et Saracenis, legi cognoscique possent. Primus certe gradus est, utcumque cog- noscere. Esto, riderent multi ; at caperentur aliquot. Utinam hinc r i n [tyndale.] 162 obedience of a christian man. phrase of Matthew-, unto which they should be compelled to hold their peace, or to give shameful answers. But I hope that these are sufficient unto them that thirst the truth. God for his mercy and truth shall well open them more, yea, and other secrets of his godly wisdom, if they be diligent to cry unto him ; which grace grant God. Amen. ad stivam aliquid decantet agricola, hinc nonnihil ad radios suos moduletur textor, hujusmodi fabulis itineris tsedium levet viator. Ex his sint omnia Christianorum omnium colloquia. Tales enim ferme sumus, quales sunt quotidianse nostrse confabulationes. . . .Neque enim ob id, opinor, quisquam sibi Christianus esse videatur, si spinosa molestaque verborum perplexitate de instantibus, de relationibus, de quidditatibus ac formalitatibus disputet ; sed si quod Christus docuit et exhibuit, id teneat exprimatque. Desid. Erasmi, Op. Tom. v. fol. 140—1.] [! In Erasmus' preface to the third edition of his version of Mat thew, published three years before Tyndale wrote this, there is a re markable passage to our reformer's purpose, which begins as follows : Si nemo non gaudet vocari Christianus, nemo debet ignorare principis sui dogmata. Nullus audet se profiteri Augustinensem qui regulam Augustini non legerit. . . . Et tu tibi Christianus videris, qui nusquam scire curaris Christi regulam ? This remark of Erasmus will be understood to have the more force, when it is added, that if any monk was ignorant of Latin, the monastic regulations insisted that he should have the rules of his order in the vulgar tongue. So observed Jacobus Faber Stapulensis, a contempo rary whom Erasmus has highly lauded.] the prologue. 163 The Prologue unto the Book. Forasmuch as our holy prelates and our ghostly religious2, Prelates not which ought to defend God's word, speak evil of it, and do but profaiiers ° ' r ' ofGod's all the shame they can to it, and rail on it ; and bear their word. Anted. captives in hand, that it causeth insurrection and teacheth the people to disobey their heads and governors, and moveth them to rise against their princes, and to make all common, and to make havock of other men's goods : therefore have I made this little treatise that followeth, containing all obe- Theobedi-encf ¦ of dience that is of God ; in which, whosoever readeth it, shall monks and , friars is not easily perceive, not the contrary only, and that they lie, but £,"e-arf°rot also the very cause of such blasphemy, and what stirreth „? thrown them so furiously to rage and to belie the truth. wfT?g' Howbeit it is no new thing unto the word of God to be The hypo- railed upon, neither is this the first time that hypocrites have thattoc-od's word which ascribed to God's word the vengeance whereof they themselves they them es tl selves are were ever cause. For the hypocrites with their false doctrine ^ S|°L and idolatry have evermore led the wrath and vengeance of God upon the people, so sore that God could no longer for bear, nor defer his punishment. Yet God, which is always God warneth ere he strike* merciful, before he would take vengeance, hath ever sent his w. t. true prophets and true preachers, to warn the people that they might repent. But the people for the most part, and namely the heads and rulers, through comfort and persuading of the hypocrites, have ever waxed more hard-hearted than before, and have persecuted the word of God and his pro phets. Then God, which is also righteous, hath always poured his plagues upon them without delay ; which plagues the hypocrites ascribe unto God's word, saying, ' See what when God mischief is come upon us since this new learning came up, $°1jfry00f and this new sect, and this new doctrine.' This seest thou, Jere- £y ^eyf that miah xliv. where the people cried to go to their old idolatry Ke'oause111' again, saying, " Since we left it, we have been in all neces- werT°f'Jer. xliv [2 Here and elsewhere religious is used as a substantive, just as in French 'un religieux' is a friar or a monk.] 11—2 164 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. sity and have been consumed with war and hunger." But the prophet answered them that their idolatry went unto the heart of God, so that he could no longer suffer the malicious ness of their own imaginations or inventions; and that the cause of all such mischiefs was, because they would not hear the voice of the Lord and walk in his law, ordinances, and chnst was testimonies. The scribes and the Pharisees laid also to Christ's iSSuTOtion. charge, Luke xxiii. that he moved the people to sedition ; and Luklxxiii. sa,id to Pilate, "We have found this fellow perverting the people, and forbidding to pay tribute to Cassar, and saith that he is Christ a king." And again in the same chapter, " He moveth the people," said they, "teaching throughout Jewry, and began at Galilee even to this place." So likewise laid they to the apostles' charge, as thou mayest see in the Acts. St Cyprian also, and St Augustine, and many other more, made works in defence of the word of God against such blas phemies1. So that thou mayest see how that it, is no new thing, but an old and accustomed thing with the hypocrites, 1 to wite2 God's word and the true preachers of all the mischief which their lying doctrine is the very cause of. whytrouhie Neverthelater in very deed, after the preaching of God's iireacwngof6 word, because it is not truly received, God sendeth great w. t. trouble into the world ; partly to avenge himself of the tyrants and persecutors of his word, and partly to destroy those worldly people which make of God's word nothing but a cloak of their fleshly liberty. They are not all good that Matt. xiii. follow the gospel. Christ (Matt, xiii.) likeneth the kingdom of \} Such is the chief topic of Cyprian's Address to Demetrianus. 'Dixisti,' says he, 'per nos fieri, et quod nobis debeant imputari, omnia ista quibus nunc mundus quatitur et urgetur, quod dii vestri a nobis non colantur. . . Non enim, sicut tua falsa querimonia, et im- peritia veritatis ignara, jactat et clamitat, ista accidunt quod dii vestri a nobis non colantur ; sed quod a vobis non colatur Deus.' Such also was the declared object of Augustine in composing his treatise De civitate Dei ; as he himself tell us in his second book of his Retractationes, ch. xliii. 'Interea Roma Gothorum irruptione impetu magnse cladis eversa est : cujus eversionem deorum falsorum multorumque cultores in Christiauam religionem referre conantes, solito acerbius et amarius Deum verum blasphemare coeperunt. Unde ego, exardescens zelo domus Dei, adversus eorum blasphemias, vel errores, libros De civitate Dei scribere institui.' Tom. I. col. 56.] [2 From Saxon Vitan, to blame.] THE PROLOGUE. 165 heaven unto a net cast into the sea, that catcheth fishes both good and bad. The kingdom of heaven is the preaching of the gospel, unto which come both good and bad. But the good are few. Christ calleth them therefore a " little flock," Luke xii. Luke xil Christ s flock For they are ever few that come to the gospel of a true intent, *>•«*» flock- seeking therein nothing but the glory and praise of God, and as our pre- offering themselves freely and willingly to take adversity with take3 their0 „, . °. , ., , , c i ¦ ii vocation to Christ tor the gospel s sake, and tor bearing record unto the seek God's ° r . ° glory and truth, that all men may hear it. The greatest number come, honour, but ' <* & > to live easily, and ever came, and followed even Christ himself, for a worldly fheSv^to purpose : as thou mayest well see (John vi.), how that almost i'nTea'. five thousand followed Christ, and would also have made him a king, because he had well fed them : whom he rebuked, saying, "Ye seek me not because ye saw the miracles, butj0h. tl because ye ate of the bread and were filled" ; and drove them away from him with hard preaching. Even so now, as ever, the most part seek liberty. They Liberty. be glad when they hear the unsatiable covetousness of the spirituality rebuked ; when they hear their falsehood and wiles uttered; when tyranny and oppression is preached against ; when they hear how kings and all officers should rule christianly and brotherly, and seek no other thing save the wealth of their subjects ; and when they hear that they have no such authority of God so to pill and poll as they do, and to raise up taxes and gatherings to maintain their phan tasies, and to make war they wot not for what cause. And therefore, because the heads will not so rule, will they also no longer obey ; but resist and rise against their evil heads ; and God destroy- one wicked destroy eth another. Yet is God's word not the wicked with cause of this, neither yet the preachers. For though that w. t. ' Christ himself taught all obedience, how that it is not lawful God's word to resist wrong, but for the officer that is appointed there- cause of evii. unto ; and how a man must love his very enemy, and pray for them that persecute him, and bless them that curse him ; and how that all vengeance must be remitted to God; and that a man must forgive if he will be forgiven of God ; yet the people for the most part received it not : they were ever ready to rise, and to fight. For ever when the scribes and Pharisees went about to take Christ, they were afraid of the people. " Not on the holy day," said they, Matt. xxvi. "lest Matt. xxvi. any rumour arise among the people": and, Matt. xxi. "They Matt. xx.. 166 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. would have taken him but they feared the people": and Luke Luke xx. xx. Christ asked the Pharisees a question unto which they durst not answer, lest the people should have stoned them. Christ's dis- Last of all : forasmuch as the very disciples and apostles of ionlew"ak Christ, after so long hearing of Christ's doctrine, were yet ready minde4ldly to fight for Christ, clean against Christ's teaching, (as Peter, Matt. xxvi. Matt. xxvi. drew his sword, but was rebuked ; and, Luke ix. Luke ix. James and John would have had fire to come from heaven to consume the Samaritans, and to avenge the injury of Christ, but were likewise rebuked ;) if Christ's disciples were so long carnal, The pope's what wonder is it if we be not all perfect the first day ? Yea, doctrine , i» i 1 1 *n m 1 causeth, yea, inasmuch as we be taught, even of very babes, to kill a lurk, commandeth o ' d * Antr.ded. to S^ay a Jew> to Durn an heretic, to fight for the liberties and right of the church, as they call it ; yea, and inasmuch as we are brought in behef, if we shed the blood of our even1 christian, or if the son shed the blood of his father that begat him, for the defence, not of the pope's godhead only, but also for whatsoever cause it be, yea, though it be for no cause, but that his holiness commandeth it only, that we deserve as much as Christ deserved for us, when he died on the cross ; or, if we be slain in the quarrel, that our souls go, nay, fly to heaven, and be there ere our blood be cold : inasmuch, I say, as we have sucked in such bloody imaginations into the bottom of our hearts, even with our mother's milk, and have been so long hardened therein ; what wonder were it, if, while we be yet young in Christ, we thought that it were lawful to fight for the true word of God? Yea, and though a man were thoroughly persuaded that it were not lawful to resist his king, though he would wrongfully take away life and goods ; yet might he think that it were lawful to resist the hypocrites, and to rise, not against his king but with his king, to deliver his king out of bondage and captivity, wherein the hypocrites hold him with wiles and falsehood, so that no man may be suffered to come at him, to tell him the truth. The pope's This seest thou, that it is the bloody doctrine of the pope bloody. w.t. which causeth disobedience, rebellion and insurrection: for he teacheth to fight and to defend his traditions, and whatsoever he dreameth, with fire, water, and sword ; and to disobey father, mother, master, lord, king, and emperor ; yea, and to invade whatsoever land or nation, that will not receive and t1 Even, i. e. equal.] THE PROLOGUE. 167 admit his godhead : where the peaceable doctrine of Christ Christ's teacheth to obey, and to suffer for the word of God, and to peaceable? remit the vengeance and the defence of the word to God, which is mighty and able to defend it: which also as soon as the word is once openly preached, and testified, or witnessed unto the world, and when he hath given them a season to repent, is ready at once to take vengeance of his enemies, and shooteth God avenge* arrows with heads dipt in deadly poison at them ; and poureth himself. his plagues from heaven down upon them ; and sendeth the murrain and pestilence among them ; and sinketh the cities of them ; and maketh the earth swallow them ; and compasseth them in their wiles ; and taketh them in their own traps and snares, and casteth them into the pits which they digged for other men; and sendeth them a dazing2 in the head; and / utterly destroyeth them with their own subtle counsel. Prepare thy mind therefore unto this little treatise ; and how a man x d 7 ought to read it discreetly ; and judge it indifferently. And when I g?^ff in allege any scripture, look thou on the text whether I interpret 3^Jf ana it right : which thou shalt easily perceive by the circumstance scripture!6 and process of them, if thou make Christ the foundation and w' T- the ground, and build all on him, and refer rest all to him ; and findest also that the exposition agreeth unto the common articles of the faith and open scriptures. And God the Father of mercy, which for his truth's sake raised our Saviour Christ up again to justify us, give thee his Spirit, to judge what is righteous in his eyes ; and give thee strength to abide by it, and to maintain it with all patience and long- suffering, unto the example and edifying of his congregation, and glory of his name. Amen. [2 Confusion; stupefaction.] 168 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. The Obedience of all Degrees proved by God's Word: and first of Children unto their Elders. God, which worketh all in all things, for a secret judg ment and purpose, and for his godly pleasure, provided an hour that thy father and mother should come together, to make thee through them. He was present with thee in thy mother's womb, and fashioned thee and breathed life into thee ; and, for the great love he had unto thee, provided milk in thy mother's breasts for thee against thou were born ; moved also thy father and mother, and all other, to lovo thee, to pity thee, and to care for thee. And as he made thee through them, so hath he cast thee our fathers under the power and authority of them, to obey and serve them l"e tousins in his stead ; saying, " Honour thy father and mother." Exod. God's stead. . . d ° ¦ ... . , , . wr. t. xx. Which is not to be understood in bowing the knee, and Exod. xx. . . putting off the cap only, but that thou love them with all thine heart; and fear and dread them, and wait on their com mandments ; and seek their worship, pleasure, will and profit in all things ; and give thy life for them, counting them worthy of all honour ; remembering that thou art their good and possession, and that thou owest unto them thine own self, and all thou art able, yea, and more than thou art able to do. what we Understand also, that whatsoever thou doest unto them, Sohtnrersanthat ^G *fc §ooc* or Dad> ^ou ^-oest unto God. When thou pleasest Sod.0 w. t. them, thou pleasest God ; when thou displeasest them, thou displeasest God ; when they are angry with thee, God is angry with thee : neither is it possible for thee to come to the favour of God again, no, though all the angels of heaven pray for thee, until thou have submitted thyself unto thy father and mother again. The ieward If thou obey, though it be but carnally, either for fear, of obedience. „ " w. t. for vain glory, or profit, thy blessing shall be long life upon Exod. xx. the earth. For he saith, " Honour thy father and mother, The reward that thou mayest live long upon the earth." Exod. xx. Con- ofdisobedi- ... O 1 ence. w. t. tranwise, if thou disobey them, thy life shall be shortened Exod. xxi. upon the earth. For it followeth, Exod. xxi. " He that smiteth his father or mother shall bo put to death for it. And OF CHILDREN TO THEIR ELDERS. 169 he that curseth," that is to say, raileth or dishonoureth his father or mother with opprobrious words, " shall be slain for it." And, Deut. xxi. "If any man have a son stubborn and Deut. xxi. disobedient, which heareth not the voice of his father and the voice of his mother, so that they have taught him nurture, and he regardeth them not ; then let his father and mother take him, and bring him forth unto the seniors or elders of the city, and unto the gate of the same place: and let them say unto the seniors of that city, This our son is stubborn and disobedient : he wiU not hearken unto our voice : he is a rioter and a drunkard. Then let all the men of the city stone him with stones unto death : so shall ye put away wickedness from among you, and all Israel shall hear and shall fear." And though that the temporal officers (to their own dam nation) be negligent in punishing such disobedience, (as the spiritual officers are to teach it,) and wink at it, or look on it through the fingers, yet shall they not escape unpunished. For the vengeance of God shall accompany them (as thou Godavengeth mayest see Deut. xxviii.) with all misfortune and evil luck ; wmseif, J . .. though the and shall not depart from them until they be murdered, °®cerwmT. drowned, or hanged; either until, by one mischance or another, they be utterly brought to nought. Yea, and the world oftentimes hangeth many a man for that they never deserved : but God hangeth them because they would not obey, and hearken unto their elders; as the consciences of many well find, when they come unto the gallows. There can they preach, and teach other, that which they themselves would not learn in season. The marriage also of the children pertaineth unto their Marriage. elders ; as thou mayest see 1 Cor. vii. and throughout all the i cor.'vii. scripture, by the authority of the said commandment, Child, obey father and mother. Which thing the heathen and gen- covetousness tiles have ever kept, and to this day keep, to the great spfrie*ity,r shame and rebuke of us Christians: inasmuch as the weddings cannotesee _ .. .. .... i • , \ ' ti . that which of our virgins (shame it is to speak it) are more like to the a Turk is „ , . , , , . J. , , ashamed of. saute1 of a bitch than the marrying ot a reasonable creature. W-T- See not we daily three or four challenging one woman before the commissary or official, of which not one hath the consent of her father and mother? And yet he that hath most [! Saute or salt: leap.] 170 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. God's com mandments break they throughtheir own traditions. W.T. money hath best right, and shall have her in the despite of all her friends and in defiance of God's ordinances1. Moreover, when she is given by the judge unto the one party, and also married, even then ofttimes shall the con trary party sue before a higher judge, or another that succeedeth the same, and for money divorce her again. So shamefully doth the covetousness and ambition of our prelates mock with the laws of God. I pass over with silence, how many years they will prolong the sentence with cavillations and subtlety, if they be well monied on both parties; and if a damsel promise two, how shameful counsel they will give the second, and also how the religious of Satan do separate unseparable matrimony. For after thou art lawfully married at the commandment of father and mother, and with the consent of all thy friends ; yet if thou wilt be disguised like unto one of them, and swear obedience unto their traditions, thou mayest disobey father and mother, break the oath which thou hast sworn to God before his holy congregation, and withdraw love and charity, the highest of God's command ments, and that duty and service which thou owest unto thy wife ; whereof Christ cannot dispense with thee : for Christ is not against God, but with God ; and came not to break God's ordinances, but to fulfil them. That is, he came to overcome thee with kindness ; and to make thee to do, of very f1 Art. II. of ' Other heresies and errors collected by the Bishops out of Tyndale's book, named The Obedience of a Christian man,' is, as given in Foxe, ' He saith, that children ought not to marry without the consent of their parents.' The document, in which these articles were enrolled, is still preserved among the archives in the Lambeth collection. Its language is sometimes English, and sometimes Latin. The words in this second article are : Dicit quod filii nee debent neo possunt contrahere matrimonium absque consensu parentum. Foxe has neglected the word possunt, and has said that the charge is founded on what Tyndale has said in fol. 120 of Day's edition. It is, however, more probable that it was suggested by the paragraph to which this note is attached ; and that the paragraph was deemed heretical, be cause it gave so much weight to the authority of parents, and declared that the decisions of the ecclesiastical courts were not unfrequently 'in defiance of God's ordinances.' Foxe offers no other defence for \ Tyndale than supplying his readers with Tyndale's own words, from the latter part of the section on ' The office of a father, and how he should rule ;' being the passage which he considered as having given occasion for the charge.] OF WIVES TO HUSBANDS. 171 love, the thing which the law compelleth thee to do. For love only, and to do service unto thy neighbour, is the fulfil ling of the law in the sight of God. To be a monk or a friar, thou mayest thus forsake thy wife before thou hast lain with her, but not to be a secular priest2. And yet, after M^|yhmer. thou art professed, the pope for money will dispense with *™dise- thee, both for thy coat and all thy obedience, and make a secular priest of thee : likewise as it is simony to sell a benefice, as they call it, but to resign upon a pension, and then to redeem the same, is no simony at all. 0 crafty jugglers and mockers with the word of God ! Jugglers. The Obedience of Wives unto their Husbands. After that Eve was deceived of the serpent, God said unto her, Gen. iii. " Thy lust or appetite shall pertain unto thy Gen. in. husband; and he shaU rule thee, or reign over thee." God, which created the woman, knoweth what is in that weak vessel, (as Peter calleth her,) and hath therefore put her under the obedience of her husband, to rule her lusts and wanton appe tites. 1 Peter iii. exhorteth wives to " be in subjection to their, i ret. Hi. husbands, after the ensample of the holy women which in old time trusted in God, and as Sara obeyed Abraham and called him lord." Which Sara, before she was married, was Marriage ' . ' altereth the Abraham's sister, and equal with him; but, as soon as she J*fJJ| *w.t. was married, was in subjection, and became without comparison inferior: for so is the nature of wedlock, by the ordinance of God. It were much better that our wives followed the ensample of the holy women of old time in obeying their husbands, than to worship them3 with & Paternoster, an Ave and a Credo, or to stick up candles before their images. Paul, Eph.v. saith," Women, submit yourselves to your own husbands, EPh. v. as to the Lord. For the husband is the wife's head, even as Christ is the head of the congregation. Therefore, as the congregation is in subjection to Christ, likewise let wives be [2 Decret. Greg. Lib. iv. Tit. i. cap. 16. ' Commissum,' gives this permission to a person who shall enter a monastery ; and by not ex tending this licence to the other case, must be understood to forbid it.] [3 That is, Mary and other canonized females.] 172 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. in subjection unto their husbands in all things." " Let the woman, therefore, fear her husband," as Paul saith in the said place. For her husband is unto her in the stead of God, that she obey him, and wait on his commandments ; and his The husband commandments are God's commandments. If she therefore !nGod'esWie grudge against him, or resist him, she grudgeth against God, and resisteth God. The Obedience of Servants unto their Masters. Eph. vi. " Servants, obey your carnal masters with fear and trembling, in singleness of your hearts, as unto Christ ; not with service in the eye-sight as men-pleasers, but as the servants of Christ, doing the will of God from the heart, with good will, even as though ye served the Lord, and not men." Eph. vi. i Pet. ii. And, 1 Pet. ii. " Servants, obey your masters with all fear, not only if they be good and courteous, but also though they be froward. For it cometh of grace, if a man for conscience m suffering toward God endure grief, suffering wrongfully. For what patiently, we praise is it, if when ye be buffetted for your faults, ye take christo£ i* patiently ? But and if when ye do well, ye suffer wrong Ant. ed. an(j take jt patiently, then is there thanks with God. Here unto, verily, were ye called. For Christ also suffered for our sakes, leaving us an ensample to follow his steps." In whatsoever kind, therefore, thou art a servant, during the time The master of thy covenants thy master is unto thee in the stead and room seruv°ntine of God ; and God through him feedeth thee, clotheth thee, w. r. ' ruleth thee, and learneth thee. His commandments are God's commandments ; and thou oughtest to obey him as God, and in all things to seek his pleasure and profit. For thou art his good and possession, as his ox or his horse ; insomuch that whosoever doth but desire thee in his heart from him, without his love and licence, is condemned of God, which Exod. xx. saith, Exod. xx., " See thou once covet not thy neighbour's servants." ourspiri-. Paul the apostle sent home Onesimus unto his master, metfLarv-11 as thou readest in the epistle of Paul to Philemon : insomuch honour God, that, though the said Philemon, with his servant also, was but their ? o ' traditions converted by Paul, and owed to Paul, and to the word that and ceremo- d ' ' rues only. paui preached, not his servant only but also himself; yea, OF SERVANTS TO MASTERS. 173 and though that Paul was in necessity, and lacked ministers to minister unto him in the bonds which he suffered for the gospel's sake ; yet would he not retain the servant necessary unto the furtherance of the gospel without the consent of the master. ' 0 how sore differeth the doctrine of Christ and his Christ's doc- i^» ii- pi • i? ^hie ana lhe apostles from the doctrine of the pope and of his apostles! pop^s differ. For if any man will obey neither father nor mother, neither if thy master lord nor master, neither king nor prince, the same needeth notfsnave6 but only to take the mark of the beast, that is, to shave monk, a . -i ,. . . . ... fnar, or a himself a monk, a friar, or a priest, and is then immediately Priest- w. t. free and exempted from all service and obedience due unto man. He that will obey no man (as they will not) is most to obey no \ «/ / man is a acceptable unto them. The more disobedient that thou art f"]"1"^ T unto God's ordinances, the more apt and meet art thou for theirs. Neither is the professing, vowing, and swearing obedience unto their ordinances, any other thing than the defying, denying, and foreswearing obedience unto the ordi nances of God1. The Obedience of Subjects unto Kings, Princes, and Rulers. " Let every soul submit himself unto the authority of Rom. xiii. the higher powers. There is no power but of God : the powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God. They that resist shall receive to themselves damnation. For rulers Kings are are not to be feared for good works, but for evil. Wilt thou suppress°the [i In the list of heresies and errors, Art. III. is, ' He saith that vows are against the obedience of God.' To this charge Foxe replies : 'They that say that this article is a heresy, let them shew when these vows, in all the new Testament, be ordained of God; especially such vows of single life and wilful poverty, as by the canon law be obtruded on young priests and novices. St Paul evidently fore- fendeth any widows to be admitted under the age of threescore years. Is not here, trow you, a perilous heresy?" Foxe, Acts and Mon. B. vra.] 174 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. wieked and support the good. Ant. ed. be without fear of the power ? Do well then, and so shalt thou be praised of the same ; for he is the minister of God for thy wealth. But and if thou do evil, then fear : for he beareth not a sword for nought ; for he is the minister of God, to take vengeance on them that do evil. Where fore ye must needs obey; not for fear of vengeance only, but also because of conscience. Even for this cause pay ye tribute : for they are God's ministers serving for the same purpose. Give to every man therefore his duty : tribute to whom tribute belongeth ; custom to whom custom is due ; fear to whom fear belongeth ; honour to whom honour pertaineth. Owe nothing to any man ; but to love one another : for he that loveth another fulfilleth the law. For these com mandments, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not desire, and so forth, if there be any other commandment, are all comprehended in this saying, Love thine neighbour as thyself. Love hurteth not his neighbour : therefore is love the fulfilling of the law." An apt similitude. Ant. ed. Exod. xxii. As a father over his children is both lord and judge, forbidding one brother to avenge himself on another, but, if any cause of strife be between them, will have it brought unto himself or his assigns, to be judged and correct; so God forbiddeth all men to avenge themselves, and taketh the authority and office of avenging unto himself ; saying, " Ven geance is mine, and I will reward." Deut. xxxii. Which text Paul allegeth, Rom. xii.; for it is impossible that a man should be a righteous, an egal1 or an indifferent judge in his own cause, lusts and appetites so blind us. Moreover, when thou avengest thyself, thou makest not peace, but stirrest up more debate. God therefore hath given laws unto all nations, and in all lands hath put kings, governors, and rulers in his own stead, to rule the world through them; and hath com manded all causes to be brought before them, as thou readest Exod. xxii. " In all causes (saith he) of injury or wrong, whether it be ox, ass, sheep, or vesture, or any lost thing which another challengeth, let the cause of both parties be brought unto the gods ; whom the gods condemn, the same [l Egal: equal.] OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 175 shall pay double unto his neighbour2." Mark, the judges are judges are , , , . , . , , ./it. called gods. called gods in the scriptures, because they are in (jod s room, w. t. and execute the commandments of God. And in another place of the said chapter Moses chargeth, saying : " See that thou rail not on the gods, neither speak evil of the ruler of thy people." Whosoever therefore resisteth them, re sisteth God, for they are in the room of God ; and they that resist shah receive the damnation. Such obedience unto father and mother, master, husband, emperor, king, lords and rulers, requireth God of all nations, yea, of the very Turks and infidels. The blessing and reward Biessjng. of them that keep them is the life of this world, as thou readest, Lev. xviii. " Keep my ordinances and laws ; which if Lev. xviii. a man keep, he shaU hve therein." Which text Paul re- Rom. x. hearseth Rom. x., proving thereby that the righteousness of the law is but worldly, and the reward thereof is the life of this world: and the curse of them that breaketh them curse, w.t. is the loss of this life ; as thou seest by the punishment ap pointed for them. And whosoever keepeth the law (whether it be for fear, Gthdl,fwar<1- for vain glory, or profit), though no man reward him, yet £*™i shall God bless him abundantly, and send him worldly pros- wTi!1Si! d0- perity; as thou readest, Deut. xxviii., what good blessings accompany the keeping of the law ; and as we see the Turks far exceed us Christian men in worldly prosperity, for their just keeping of their temporal laws. Likewise, though no man a10db?„™etfh punish the breakers of the law, yet shall God send his curses noCra^„heius|h upon them till they be utterly brought to nought, as thou do- w' T" readest most terribly even in the same place. Neither may the inferior person avenge himself upon the superior, or violently resist him, for whatsoever wrong it be. If he do, he is condemned in the deed-doing ; inasmuch as [2 Our Lord's application of Ps. Ixxxii. 6, as recorded in John x. 34, in which he seems to have sanctioned such an interpretation of DThH> when that name is given to judges, as the evangelist has rendered it 8eol, was probably deemed by Tyndale, as it had been by the Vulgate translator, sufficient to justify rendering the same word gods in this text and the foUowing. In our authorised version of Exod. xxii. DTT^N bas been rendered judges, in v. 8 and 9 ; and though the word gods is retained in v. 28, the margin shews that some of the translators would have prefered rendering judges there also.] 176 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Vengeanceis God's. W. T. Deut. xxxii. Matt. xxvi. David. W. T. God destroy- eth one wicked by another. W. T. God pro- videtn a means to take the evil out of the way, when they have fulfilled their wickedness.W.T. he taketh upon him that which belongeth to God only, which saith, " Vengeance is mine, and I will reward." Deut. xxxii. And Christ saith, Matt. xxvi. " All they that take the sword shall perish with the sword." Takest thou a sword to avenge thyself? So givest thou not room unto God to avenge thee, but robbest him of his most high honour, in that thou wilt not let him be judge over thee. If any man might have avenged himself upon his superior, that might David most righteously have done upon king Saul, which so wrongfully persecuted David, even for no other cause, than that God had anointed him king, and promised him the kingdom. Yet when God had delivered Saul into the hands of David, that he might have done what he would with him ; as thou seest in the first book of Kings, the xxivth chapter, how Saul came into the camp where David was; and David came to him secretly, and cut off a piece of his gar ment ; and as soon as he had done it, his heart smote him, because he had done so much unto his lord : and when his men encouraged him to slay him, he answered, " The Lord forbid it me that I should lay mine hand on him ;" neither suffered he his men to hurt him. When Saul was gone out, David followed him, and shewed him the piece of his garment, and said, " Why believest thou the words of men that say, David goeth about to do thee harm? Perceive and see that there is neither evil nor wickedness in my hand, and that I have not trespassed against thee, and yet thou layest await for my life : God judge between thee and me, and avenge me of thee; but mine hand be not upon thee. As the old proverb saith (saith David), Out of the wicked shall wicked ness proceed, but mine hand be not upon thee," meaning that God ever punisheth one wicked by another. And again said David, " God be judge, and judge between thee and me, and behold and plead my cause, and give me judgment or right of thee." And in the xxvith chapter of the same book, when Saul persecuted David again, David came to Saul by night, as he slept and all his men, and took away his spear and a cup of water from his head. Then said Abishai, David's servant, " God hath delivered thee thine enemy into thine hand this day : let me now therefore nail him to the ground with my spear, and give him but even one stripe and no more." David OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 177 forbad him, saying, " Kill him not ; for who (said he) shall lay hands on the Lord's anointed, and be not guilty? The Lord liveth," or by the Lord's Hfe (said he), "he dieth not, except the Lord smite him, or that his day be come to die, or else go to battle, and there perish." Why did not David slay Saul, seeing he was so wicked, why David not in persecuting David only, but in disobeying God's com- saui. V. t. mandments, and in that he had slain eighty-five of God's priests [i sam. xxu. wrongfully? Verily, for it was not lawful. For if he had The king is done it, he must have sinned against God ; for God hath made 0" GodTn1" the king in every realm judge over all, and over him is there w?™r no judge. He that judgeth the king judgeth God ; and he that layeth hands on the king layeth hand on God ; and he that resisteth the king resisteth God, and damneth God's law and ordinance. If the subjects sin, they must be brought to the king's judgment. If the king sin, he must be reserved The king unto the judgment, wrath, and vengeance of God. And as it served unto is to resist the king, so is it to resist his officer, which is set, ance of God. or sent, to execute the king's commandment. And in the first chapter of the second book of Kings, 2 sam. i. iv. David commanded the young man to be slain, which brought unto him the crown and bracelet of Saul, and said, to please David withal, that he himself had slain Saul. And in the fourth chapter of the same book, David commanded those two to be slain which brought unto him the head of Ishbosheth, Saul's son ; by whose means yet the whole kingdom returned unto David, according unto the promise of God. And, Luke xiiith, when they shewed Christ of the Gah-mkexiu. leans, whose blood Pilate mingled with their own sacrifice, he answered, " Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above ah other Galileans, because they suffered such punish ment ? I tell you, nay; but except ye repent, ye shall likewise perish." This was told Christ, no doubt, of such an intent as they asked him, Matt. xxii. "Whether it were lawful to give Mattxxu. tribute unto Csesar ?" For they thought that it was no sin lawfuTtbr t- p 11 ,i ¦ i •/. a Christian to resist a heathen prmce : as tew ot us would think, it we ^9^'° were under the Turk, that it were sin to rise against him, and gjj;1* he to rid ourselves from under his dominion, so sore have our ro3a™.hewt!1™ bishops robbed us of the true doctrine of Christ1. But Christ , [} Art. IV. of alleged heresies and errors ; ' He saith that a christian man may not resist a prince, being an infidel and an ethnic. r 1 12 [tyndale.J 178 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. condemned their deeds, and also the secret thoughts of all other, that consented thereunto, saying : " Except ye repent, ye shall likewise perish." As who should say, I know that ye are within, in your hearts, such as they were outward in their deeds, and are under the same damnation : except, therefore, ye repent betimes, ye shall break out at the last into like deeds, and likewise perish ; as it came afterward to pass. Kmgs must Hereby seest thou that the king is, in this world, without make ae- d o SS? doings law > an(^ may at ^1S ^us'i ^0 right or wrong, and shall give rnt!ed.God" accounts but to God only. Another conclusion is this, that no person, neither any degree, may be exempt from this ordinance of God : neither can the profession of monks and friars, or any thing that the pope or bishops can lay for themselves, except them from the sword of the emperor or kings, if they break the laws. For it is written, "Let every soul submit himself unto the authority of the higher powers." Here is no man except ; but all souls must obey. The higher powers are the temporal kings and princes ; unto whom God hath given the sword, to punish The king whosoever sinneth. God hath not given them swords to power, but to punish one, and to let another go free, and sin unpunished. Ins damna- A , ° tL nfe'the^'i-'" Moreover, with what face durst the spiritualty, which ought s1nuunpyunish- *° be ^e Hglit and an ensample of good living unto all other, ed. w.t. desire to sin unpunished1, or to be excepted from tribute, toll, or custom, that they would not bear pain with their brethren This taketh away freewill,' Foxe's reply is : 'St Peter willeth us to be subject to our princes. St Paul also doth the like ; who was also himself subject to the power of Nero ; and although every command ment of Nero against God he did not follow, yet he never made re sistance against the authority and state of Nero ; as the pope useth to do against the state not only of infidels, but also of Christian princes.'] [J The canon law incorporates a rescript of pope Nicholas, who filled the papal chair between 858 and 867, in which he says: De presbyteris, vobis, qui laici estis, nee judicandum est, nee de eorum vita quidpiam investigandum. Decreti pars lma. Dist. xxvm. ca. xvii., or Consulendum. Another part Of the law says : Nullus judicum neque presbyterum, neque diaconum, aut clericum ullum, aut juniores ecclesise, sine licentia pohtificis per se distringat, aut condemnare prsesumat : quod si fecerit, ab ecclesia, cui injuriam irrogare dignos- citur, tamdiu sit sequestratus quousque reatum suum agnoscat et emendet. Decret. pars 2da. Oaus. xi. Qu. I. ca. 2. Palea. Corp. Jur. Canon. Lugduni, mdcxxii..] ' OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 179 to the maintenance of kings and officers, ordained of God to punish sin?2 " There is no power but of God." By power understand the authority of kings and princes. " The powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resist eth power, resisteth God :" yea, though he be pope, bishop, monk, or friar. " They that resist shall receive unto them selves damnation." Why ? For God's word is against them, which will have all men under the power of the temporal sword : for " rulers are not to be feared for good works, but for evil." Hereby seest thou that they that resist the powers, or seek to be exempt from their authority, have evil con sciences ; and seek liberty to sin unpunished, and to be free from bearing pain with their brethren. " Wilt thou be with out fear of the power ? So do well, and thou shalt have laud of the same," that is to say, of the ruler. With good living ought the spiritualty to rid themselves from fear of the tem poral sword ; and not with craft, and with blinding the kings, and bringing the vengeance of God upon them, and in pur chasing licence to sin unpunished. "For he is the minister of God for thy wealth3:" to defend thee from a thousand inconveniences, from thieves, murderers, and them that would defile thy wife, thy daughter, and take from thee all that thou hast, yea, life and all, if thou didst resist. Furthermore, though he be the greatest a king is a tyrant in the world, yet is he unto thee a great benefit of though he be n6V6r so evil* God, and a thing wherefore thou oughtest to thank Godw-T- highly. For it is better to have somewhat, than to be clean [2 The canon law requires all Christian rulers, and all who are in authority under them, to abstain from imposing any manner of tax on ecclesiastics, or their property, without the pope's permission; and declares that whosoever shall dare to tax them, or to demand from them any payment, 'sub adjutorii, mutui, subventionis, subsidii vel doni nomine,' without such permission, shall thereby incur the sentence of excommunication, along with every collector and abettor. It also forbids the prelates and clergy to pay any manner of tax, without the pope's express permission, under the like penalty; and further declares that no priest, or prelate, can absolve any person thus excommuni cated, unless he shall receive a special licence and authority from the pope so to do. Bull of Boniface VIII. of date 1296, inserted in the Corp. Jur. Canon. Sexti Decretal. Lib. in. Titul. xxm. ca. 3. Clericis laicos.] [3 Wealth, i. e. welfare.] 12—2 180 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Princes are ordained to punish evil doers. W.T. The damna tion of princes. W. T. Sanctuaries. W.T. Neck- verse. W.T. stript out of all together. It is better to pay the tenth than to lose all. It is better to suffer one tyrant than many, and to suffer wrong of one than of every man. Yea, and it is better to have a tyrant unto thy king than a shadow ; a pas sive king that doth nought himself, but suffereth others to do with him what they will, and to lead him whither they list. For a tyrant, though he do wrong unto the good, yet he punisheth the evil, and maketh all men obey, neither suffereth any man to poll but himself only. A king that is soft as silk, and effeminate, that is to say, turned into the nature of a woman, — what with his own lusts, which are as the longing of a woman with child, so that he cannot resist them, and what with the wily tyranny of them that ever rule him, — shall be much more grievous unto the realm than a right tyrant* Read the chronicles, and thou shalt find it ever so. " But and if thou do evil, then fear ; for he beareth not a sword for nought : for he is the minister of God, to take vengeance on them that do evil." If the office of princes, given them of God, be to take vengeance of evil doers ; then, by this text and God's word, are all princes damned, even as many as give liberty or licence unto the spiritualty to sin unpunished ; and not only to sin unpunished themselves, but also to open sanctuaries, privileged places, churchyards, St. John's hold ; yea, and if they come too short unto all these, yet to set forth a neck-verse to save all manner trespassers from the fear of the sword of the vengeance of God, put in the hands of princes to take vengeance on all such '. [! The church of Rome succeeded more or less, according to the notion which the laity might entertain of the power of the patron- saint, in converting the precincts of churches or monasteries into secure asylums for criminals ; and judge Blackstone has described the extent of the exemptions from punishment, which the lay courts conceded to a criminal who had got into sanctuary. Comm. B. iv. ch. 26. Vol. iv. p. 332 — 3. But if an offender did not reach any such place, before he was laid hold of by the king's officer, he might still elude the judg ment of the law of the land, by declaring that he meant to take holy orders, and was consequently only amenable to the ecclesiastical courts, whose sentence against clerks for real crimes was generally but some penance. To prevent therefore the transfer of all offenders to a rival juris diction, the lay courts ruled that no person should be allowed tho privileges of a candidate for holy orders, unless he could either read or OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 181 God requireth the law to be kept of all men, let them keep it for whatsoever purpose they will. Will they not keep the law ? So vouchsafeth he not that they enjoy this temporal life. Now are there three natures of men: one ™efnw T altogether beastly ; which in no wise receive the law in their hearts, but rise against princes and rulers, whensoever they are able to make their party good. These are signified by them that worshipped the golden calf: for Moses brake the tables of the law, ere he came at them. The second are not so beastly, but receive the law; and what it is to 1 11 it. 11 -mr '1 lO0k Moses unto them the law cometh; but they look not Moses m the intheface. d m Ant. ed. face : for his countenance is too bright for them ; that is, they understand not that the law is spiritual, and requireth the heart. They look on the pleasure, profit, and promotion that followeth the keeping of the law, and in respect of the reward keep they the law outwardly with works, but not in the heart. For if they might obtain like honour, glory, pro motion and dignity, and also avoid all inconveniences, if they broke the law, so would thev also break the law, and follow their lusts. The third are spiritual, and look Moses in the open face ; and are, as Paul saith, the second to the Romans, " a law unto Rom. a. themselves ;" and have the law written in their hearts by the Spirit of God. These need neither of king nor officers to drive them, neither that any man proffer them any reward for to keep the law ; for they do it naturally. The first work for fear of the sword only : the second repeat the first verso of the penitential psalm li. in the Latin of the Vulgate, beginning Miserere mei, Deus : whilst, farther to diminish tho inclination of culprits to get their case transferred to the ecclesiastical courts, the lay judges thought fit to allow any accused person, first to take his chance of an acquittal before them, and then, if convicted, still to claim what became styled benefit of clergy, in mitigation of punishment ; so as to suffer nothing more than having a mark burnt into his thumb, when, by the letter of the law, his sentence would have been death. Hence it was that the above mentioned verse came to be known, in coarse jocularity, by the name of the neck- verse ; the repetition of it being, not very unfrequently, the means of saving a criminal's neck from the hangman's halter. On the perjury connected with the transfer of criminals to the ecclesiastical courts, and on the distinction of clergyable felonies which sprung from the same source, the reader may consult Black- stone, B. iv. ch. 28. Vol. iv. p. 368.] 182 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. for reward : the third work for love freely. They look on the exceeding mercy, love, and kindness, which God hath shewed them in Christ ; and therefore love again, and work Heaven freely. Heaven they take of the free gift of God, through cometh by d d o o christ. w.t. Christ's deservings ; and hope, without all manner doubting, that God, according to his promise, will in this world also defend them, and do all things for them, of his goodness, and for Christ's sake, and not for any goodness that is in them. They consent unto the law, that it is holy and just ; and that all men ought to do whatsoever God commandeth, for no a christian other cause but because God commandeth it. And their no more, but great sorrow is, because that there is no strength in their God's will. ° ° w.t. members to do that which their heart lusteth to do, and is athirst to do. These of the last sort keep the law of their own accord, and that in the heart; and have professed perpetual war against the lusts and appetites of the flesh, till they be utterly subdued : yet not through their own strength, but, knowing and knowledging their weakness, cry ever for strength to God, which hath promised assistance unto all that call upon him. These follow God, and are led of his Spirit. The other two are led of lusts and appetites. Lusts, w. t. Lusts and appetites are divers and many, and that in one man ; yea, and one lust contrary to another, and the greatest lust carrieth a man altogether away with him. We are also changed from one lust to another : otherwise are we dis posed, when we are children; otherwise when we are young men ; and otherwise when we are old ; otherwise over even, and otherwise in the morning : yea, sometimes altered six Free^wiii. times in an hour. How fortuneth all this? Because that the will of man followeth the wit, and is subject unto the wit ; and as the wit erreth, so does the will ; and as the wit is in captivity, so is the will; neither is it possible that the will should be free, where the wit is in bondage. That thou mayest perceive and feel the thing in thine heart, and not be a vain sophister, disputing about words without perceiving; mark this. The root of all evil, the greatest damnation and most terrible wrath and vengeance of God that we are in, is natural blindness. We are all out of the right way, every man his ways: one judgeth this worwiywit. best, and another that to be best. Now is worldly wit no- OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 183 thing else but craft and subtlety, to obtain that which we judge falsely to be best. As I err in my wit, so err I in the win is my will. When I judge that to be evil which indeed is good, wTt!1 then hate I that which is good. And when I suppose that good which is evil indeed, then love I evil. As, if I be per suaded, and borne in hand, that my most friend is mine enemy, then hate I my best friend : and if I be brought in behef that my most enemy is my friend, then love I my most enemy. Now when we say, every man hath his free will, to do what him lusteth, I say, verily, that men do what they lust. Notwithstanding, to follow lusts is not freedom, but Freedom. captivity and bondage. If God open any man's wits, to make him feel in his heart that lusts and appetites are damn able, and give him power to hate and resist them ; then is he free, even with the freedom wherewith Christ maketh free, and hath power to do the will of God. Thou mayest hereby perceive, that all that is done in the Aiiissmthat iiii. i n-.^i-ii i • i t • springeth not world before the Spirit ot God come, and giveth us light, is of the spirit ... ,. ,. 6 i of God, and damnable sin1; and the more glorious, the more damnable ; aiithatisnot 7 o ' ' done in the so that that which the world counteth most glorious is more w^d°fw.°T* damnable, in the sight of God, than that which the whore, the thief, and the murderer do. With blind reasons of worldly wisdom mayest thou change the minds of youth, and make them give themselves to what thou wilt, either for fear, for praise, or for profit ; and yet dost but change them from one vice to another : as the persuasions of her friends made sodoour Lucrece chaste. Lucrece believed if she were a good house- ™ an iheir . works. wife and chaste, that she should be most glorious ; and that w- T- all the world would give her honour, and praise her. She sought her own glory in her chastity, and not God's. When she had lost her chastity, then counted she herself most abominable in the sight of all men ; and for very pain and thought which she had, not that she had displeased God, but that she had lost her honour, slew herself. Look how great her pain and sorrow was for the loss of her chastity, so p Art. V. of alleged heresies and errors : ' Whatsoever is done before the Spirit of God cometh, and giveth us light, is damnable sin. This is against moral virtues.' Foxe replies : ' What heresy Aristotle, in his Ethics, can find by this article, I cannot tell. Sure I am, that the word and Spirit of God, well considered, can find none; but rather will pronounce the contrary to be a damnable heresy.'] 184 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. great was her glory and rejoicing therein, and so much de spised she them that were otherwise, and pitied them not : which pride God more abhorreth than the whoredom of any whore. Of like pride are all the moral virtues of Aristotle, Plato, and Socrates, and all the doctrine of the philosophers, the very gods of our school-men. In like manner is it for the most part of our most holy religions. For they of like imagination do things which they of Bedlam may see that they are but madness. They Truemiracies look on the miracles which God did by the saints, to move to confirm the unbelieving unto the faith, and to confirm the truth of the preach- , . . . thl' odbead ^1S Promises in Christ, whereby all that believe are made pr*ceher. saints ; as thou seest in the last chapter of Mark. " They Mark'xvi. preached," saith he, " every where, the Lord working with them, and confirming their preaching with miracles that fol- Actsiv. lowed." And in the fourth of the Acts the disciples prayed that God would stretch forth his hands, to do miracles and 1 cor. xiv. wonders in the name of Jesus. And Paul 1 Cor. xiv. saith, that the miracle of speaking with divers tongues is but a sign our hypo- for unbelievers, and not for them that believe. These miracles crites are blind, w. t. turn they to another purpose, saying in their bhnd hearts, See what miracles God hath shewed for this saint ; he must be verily great with God ! — and at once turn themselves from God's word, and put their trust and confidence in the saint and his merits ; and make an advocate, or rather a god of the saint ; and of their blind imagination make a testament, or bond, between the saint and them, the testament of Christ's blood clean forgotten. They look on the saints' Thereii- garments and lives, or rather lies which men lie on the gious look ° , oiKdehoniy. samts> &n& this-wiso imagine in their hearts, saying: The W,T- saint for wearing such a garment, and for such deeds, is become so glorious in heaven1. If I do likewise, so shall I be also. They see not the faith and trust which the saints had in Christ, neither the word of God which the saints preached; neither the intent of the saints, how that the saints did such things to tame their bodies, and to.be an en- [} Art. VI. of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale : 'He reproveth men that make holy saints their advocates to God; and there he saith, that saints were not rewarded in heaven for their holy works.' To this Foxe only replies, ' The words of Tyndale be these ;' and transcribes as much of this paragraph as he thought necessary.] OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 185 sample to the world, and to teach that such things are to be despised which the world most wondereth at and magnifieth. They see not also that some lands are so hot that a man can neither drink wine nor eat flesh therein ; neither consider they the complexion of the saints ; and a thousand like things see they not. So when they have killed their bodies, and brought them in that case that scarce with any restorative they can recover their health again, yet had they lever2 die than to eat flesh. Why ? for they think, I have now this twenty, thirty, or forty years eaten no flesh ; and have ob tained, I doubt not, by this time as high a room as the best of them: should I now lose that? nay, I had lever2 die. And as Lucretia had lever have been slain, if he had not been too strong for her, than to have lost her glory, even so had these. They ascribe heaven unto their imaginations and mad inventions ; and receive it not of the liberality of God, by the merits and deservings of Christ. He now that is renewed in Christ, keepeth the law with out any law written, or compulsion of any ruler or officer, The spiritual save by the leading of the Spirit only. But the natural man is enticed and moved to keep the law carnally, with The natural carnal reasons and worldly persuasions, as for glory, honour, riches,- and dignity. But the last remedy of all, when all other fail, is fear. Beat one, and the rest will abstain for Fear is the fear: as Moses ever putteth in remembrance, saying, Kill, w. t!"16' stone, burn ; so shall thou put evil from thee, and all Israel shall hear and fear, and shall no more do so. If fear help not, then will God that they be taken out of this life. Kings were ordained then, as I before said, and the sword put in their hands, to take vengeance of evil-doers, Kings defend i • i i • the ™lse au" that other might tear : and were not ordained to fight one thority of the , ° . . ° pope; their against another, or to rise against the emperor to defend the p*^- p™^ false authority of the pope, that very antichrist. Bishops, !$*|!part- they only can minister the temporal sword ; their office, the Bishops mi- preaching of God's word, laid apart, which they will neither ^"f,?'ow'J1ty' do, nor suffer any man to do, but slay with the temporal 'yaif E^,.. sword, which they have gotten out of the hand of all princes, ™'5a™ them that would. The preaching of God's word is hateful w' T' and contrary unto them. Why ? For it is impossible to preach Christ, except thou preach against antichrist ; that is [2 Lever, rather.] 186 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. to say, them which with their false doctrine and violence of sword enforce to quench the true doctrine of Christ. And as thou canst heal no disease, except thou begin at the root ; even so canst thou preach against no mischief, except thou Kings do but begin at the bishops. Kings, they are but shadows; vain pope's piea- names and things idle, having nothing to do in the world, but when our holy father needeth their help. The juggling The pope, contrary unto all conscience and against all the w. t. ' doctrine of Christ, which saith, " My kingdom is not of this John xviii. ,' i i ¦ i p i Bishops of world," (John xviii.) hath usurped the right of the emperor ; ¦wT™v' and by pohcy of the bishops of Almany, and with corrupting the electors, or choosers of the emperor with money, bringeth to pass that such a one is ever chosen emperor that is not able to make his party good with the pope. To stop the emperor that he come not at Rome, he bringeth the French king up Milan, w.t. to Milan ; and on the other side bringeth he the Venetians. Bishops of if the Venetians come too nigh, the bishops of France must w- T- bring in the French king. And the Socheners are called and sent for to come and succour1. And for their labour he a cap of giveth to some a rose; to another a cap of maintenance2. ance. w. t. One is called Most Christian King ; another, Defender of the tanking!8" faith ; another, The eldest son of the most holy seat3. He w.t. u \} In the above brief sketch Tyndale has given an outline of the history of recent wars in Italy, and of their connection with papal intrigues, which the reader may see confirmed at length in Sismondi Hist, des Republiques Italiennes, from the accession of Julius II. to the pontificate, in 1503, to the date of Tyndale's compiling this treatise. The word Socheners occurs again in the 'Practice of Prelates;' but Scoloker's and Seres ed. of 1548 has Zwitzers in one place, where Day's fol. has Sochenars ; and Souchenars in another. In Sir Thos. Eliot's Librarie, or Latin-Engl. Diet. (Ed. 1542) he observes, under the word Caria : ' The people thereof were called Cares, which were good men of war ; and therefore they were everywhere retained for soudiours, as Suyzars, or Suychynars be now.'] [2 A golden rose which the pope blesses at mass on the first Sunday in Lent, whilst 'Lsetare, Jerusalem' is chaunted. Henry VIII. had re ceived such a rose from Julius II. in 1510, to induce him to attack France. Rymer's Foedera, Vol. xni. p. 275. The pope's letter to abp. Warham, directing him to present it at high mass, may also be seen in Wilkins' Concil. Vol. in. p. 652. A cap of maintenance is made of crimson velvet, faced with ermine, with two points at the back, and is amongst the regalia carried at a coronation.] [3 In 1521, pope Leo X. conferred the title of 'Defender of the OF SUBJECTS TO RULERS. 187 blaseth also the arms of other ; and putteth in the holy cross, Defender of the crown of thorn, or the nails, and so forth. If the French fafti?.opw! t king go too high, and creep up either to Bononia4 or Na- s^fonhe pies ; then must our English bishops bring in our king. The w.yif at' craft of the bishops is to entitle one king with another's Sms.ngw. t. realm. He is called king of Denmark and of England ; he, bisnopsflish king of England and of France. Then, to blind the lords and ^hVaise- the commons, the king must challenge his right. Then must ££h~sf.the the land be taxed and every man pay, and the treasure borne w' out of the realm, and the land beggared. How many a thou sand men's lives hath it cost ! And how many a hundred thousand pounds hath it carried out of the realm in our re membrance! Besides, how abominable an example of gather- o a cruei and ing was there! such verily as never tyrant since the world abitexTmpie iti ir-ii of tyrants. began did, yea, such as was never beiore heard or thought Jud|e. them on, neither among Jews, Saracens, Turks, or heathen, since chrisVwT God created the sun to shine ; that a beast should break up into the temple of God, that is to say, into the heart and consciences of men, and compel them to swear every man what he was worth, to lend that should never be paid again. How many thousands for sware themselves ! How many thou sands set themselves above their ability, partly for fear lest they should be forsworn, and partly to save their credence 5 ! Faith' on Henry VIII. in a bull, in which he says : Nos qui Petri, quem Christus in coelum ascensurus vicarium suum in terris reliquit, et cui curam gregis sui commisit, veri successores sumus, et in hac sancta sede, qua omnes dignitates ac tituli emanant, sedemus — ma- jestati tuso titulum hunc, viz. Fidei Defensorem, donare decrevimus, prout te tali titulo per prsesentes insignimus ; mandantes omnibus Christi fidelibus, ut majestatem tuam hoc titulo nominent, et, cum ad earn scribent, post dictionem Regi adjungant, Fidei Defensori. Lord Herbert's Henry VIII. p. 97, Lond. 1672. The title of ' Most Christian king' had been given to the kings of France in 1469 ; but pope Julius had offered, in 1511, to transfer it to Henry, as he had also given that of 'Defender of the Faith' to James IV. of Scotland. The title of 'Eldest son of -the holy see' was also given to the kings of France, because Clovis, the first founder of the French monarchy, was also the first independent monarch in western Europe who publicly adopted the Christian faith with an orthodox creed.] [* Bologna.] [5 In 1524 Henry VIII. was tempted to claim his alleged right to be king of France, and cardinal Wolsey undertook to raise the necessary funds. To effect this he went into the house of commons, W. T. 188 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. When the pope hath his purpose, then is peace made, no man wotteth how ; and our most enemy is our most friend. Now because the emperor is able to obtain his right, French, English, Venetians and all must upon him. O great The whore of whore of Babylon, how abuseth she the princes of the world ! w. T. ' how drunk hath she made them with her wine ! How shame ful licences doth she give them, to use necromancy, to hold whores, to divorce themselves, to break the faith and pro- conf?ssion. mises that one maketh with another ; that the confessors shall deliver unto the king the confession of whom he will, and dispenseth with them even of the very law of God ; which Christ himself cannot do ! Against the Pope's False Power. Matt. xxvi. Matt. xxvi. Christ saith unto Peter, "Put up thy sword into his sheath; for all that lay hand upon the sword shall perish with the sword :" that is, whosoever without the com mandment of the temporal officer, to whom God hath given the sword, layeth hand on the sword to take vengeance, the same Not Peter deserveth death in the deed-doing. God did not put Peter cnnst also only under the temporal sword, but also Christ himself; as it the t™po™' appeareth in the fourth chapter to the Galatians. And Christ Matt. in. saith, Matt. iii. " Thus becometh it us to fulfil all righteousness," that is to say, all ordinances of God. If the head be then under the temporal sword, how can the members be excepted? If Peter sinned in defending Christ against the temporal sword, (whose authority and ministers the bishops then abused against Christ, as ours do now,) who can excuse our prelates of sin, which will obey no man, neither king nor emperor ? The kings sin Yea, who can excuse from sin either the kings that give, in giving ex- ., i i • i i • i • ., ceptions, and either the bishops that receive such exemptions, contrary to themCeiwngT God's ordinances and Christ's doctrine? and urged upon it the duty of granting the king the sum of £800,000 ; a sum about equivalent to twelve millions now, but far more difficult to raise. The commons refused to grant so much, but Wolsey used his legatine authority and his influence to oblige the clergy to give a fourth of their goods ; and abp. Warham speaks in a private letter of the trouble occasioned, by compelling persons to swear to the value of their goods. Lord Herbert, pp. 134—6, 162—3. Hallam's Constit. Hist. ofEng. ch. i. pp. 20—2. 4to. ed. of 1827.] AGAINST THE TOPE S FALSE POWER. 189 And, Matt, xviith, both Christ and also Peter pay tribute ; Matt. xvti. where the meaning of Christ's question unto Peter is, if princes take tribute of strangers only and not of their children, then verily ought I to be free, which am the Son of God, whose servants and ministers they are, and of whom they have their authority. Yet because they neither knew that, neither Christ came to use that authority, but to be our servant, and to bear our burden, and to obey all ordinances, both in right and wrong, for our sakes, and to teach us; there fore said he to St Peter, " Pay for thee and me, lest we offend them." Moreover, though that Christ and Peter, because they were poor, might have escaped, yet would he not, for fear of offending other and hurting their consciences. For he might well have given occasion unto the tribute-gatherers to have judged amiss both of him and his doctrine ; yea, and the Jews might happily have been offended thereby, and have thought that it had not been lawful for them to have paid tribute unto heathen princes and idolaters, seeing that he, so great a prophet, paid not. Yea, and what other thing causeth the lay so httle to regard their princes, as that they see them both despised and disobeyed of the spiritualty ? But our prelates, which care for none offending of consciences, and less for God's ordinances, will pay nought. But when princes when the /> i i c 1 ¦ spiritualty must tight in our most holy tathers quarrel, and against payethtri- Christ, then are they the first. There also is none so poor, that then hath not somewhat to give. Mark here, how past all shame our school-doctors are, (as Kochester is in his sermon against Martin Luther *,) which I1 This sermon was preached by Fisher, bishop of Rochester, upon the occasion of publicly burning some of Luther's works. Two editions of it were soon printed by W. de Worde ; and a Latin translation of it by Pace, the king's secretary, has a letter prefixed to it by Nicholas Wilson, bearing date Cantabrigise, Kal. Januar. 1521. There is a copy of this translation in the Nuremberg edition of the bishop's works ; where it is entitled 'Joh. Roffensis concio, habita in celeberrimo nobi- lium conventu Londini, eo die quo Martini Lutheri scripta publico apparatu in ignem conjecta sunt.' The earliest edition of this sermon in the Bodleian is entitled 'A sermon very notable, fruitful, and godly, made at Paul's cross in London, a.d. 1521, within the octaves of the ascension, by that famous and great clerk, John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, concerning the heresies of Martyn Luther, which he had raised up against the church. Wherein it may appear how men sithons 190 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. shameless 0f this text of Matthew dispute that Peter, because he paid ™-T- tribute, is greater than the other apostles, and hath more authority and power than they, and was head unto them all1 : contrary unto so many clear texts, where Christ rebuketh them, saying, That is a heathenish thing that one should climb above another, or desire to be greater. To be great in the kingdom of heaven is to be a servant ; and he that most humbleth himself, and becometh a servant to other, (after the ensample of Christ, I mean, and his apostles, and not of the pope and his apostles, our cardinals and bishops,) the same is greatest in that kingdom. If Peter in paying tribute became greatest, how cometh it that they will pay none at. all ? But to pay tribute is a sign of subjection verily ; and the cause, why Christ paid, was because he had a household, and for the] same cause paid Peter also : for he had a house, a ship and nets, as thou readest in the gospel. But let us go to Paul again. " Wherefore ye must needs obey, not for fear of vengeance only, but also because of They make conscience." That is, though thou be so naughty, as now noconscience ° ° d don?/ w' t many years our pope and prelates every where are, that thou needest not to obey the temporal sword for fear of vengeance ; yet must thou obey because of conscience. First, because of thine own conscience. For though thou be able to resist, yet shalt thou never have a good conscience, as long as God's They care for word, law, and ordinance are against thee. Secondarily, for hour as tL thy neighbour's conscience. For though through craft and the sheep, violence thou mightest escape, and obtain liberty or privilege The evii en- to be free from all manner duties; yet oughtest thou neither sampleof the . n i ,i ¦ • i i spiritualty to sue or to seek tor any such thing, neither yet admit or causeth the «. i 5 thauhc^are6 accept) « Jt were proffered, lest thy freedom make thy weak not bound to obey. W^ T ' that time have gone astray. Which sermon was written and put in print by the author aforesaid ; and now newly imprinted again accord ing to the original copy. Excusum Londini, in sedibus Roberti Caly, Typography mense Novembris, anno 1554, Cum privilegio.'] [x 'Mark here that this tribute was head-money, paid for them that were heads and governors of households. And Christ commanded this to be paid for no more, but only for him and St Peter, and thereby quitted all the residue. Join this fact of the gospel unto that figure before, and what can be more evident to shew that Peter, under Christ, was the head of all the household of Christ?' Bp Fisher's Sermon, Verso of sign. B. ii. ' Thereby quitted all the residue,' is rendered by Richard Pace : Hoc modo liberabantur et reliqui.] AGAINST THE POPE'S FALSE POWER. 191 brother to grudge and rebel, in that he seeth thee go empty, and he himself more laden, thy part also laid on his shoulders. Seest thou not, if a man favour one son more than another, or one servant more than another, how all the rest grudge ; and how love, peace, and unity is broken? What christianly love is in thee to thy neighbour-ward, when thou canst find in thy heart to go up and down empty by him all day long, and see him over-charged, yea, to fall under his burden, and yet will not once set to thine hand to help him ? What good There is no conscience can there be among our spiritualty, to gather so loveinthem. great treasure together, and with hypocrisy of their false learning to rob almost every man of house and lands ; and yet not therewith content, but with all craft and wiliness to pur chase so great hberties, and exemptions from all manner bearing with their brethren, seeking in Christ nothing but lucre ? I pass over with silence how they teach princes in whatpur- every land to lade new exactions and tyranny on their sub- Foflatterthe . .., . , n i ii princes that jects, more and more daily; neither tor what purpose they do they may. it, say I. God, I trust, shall shortly disclose their juggling, ^th^j*0V and bring their falsehood to light ; and lay a medicine to fl ^™th them, to make their scabs break out. Nevertheless this I Sn tne™pe". say, that they have robbed all realms, not of God's word w' T- only, but also of all wealth and prosperity ; and have driven peace out of all lands, and withdrawn themselves from all obedience to princes, and have separated themselves from the lay-men, counting them viler than dogs ; and have set up that great idol, the whore of Babylon, antichrist of Rome, whom they call pope ; and have conspired against all common wealths, and have made them a several kingdom, wherein it is lawful, unpunished, to work all abomination. In every parish have they spies, and in every great man's house, and in every tavern and alehouse. And through confessions know confession. they all secrets, so that no man may open his mouth to rebuke Prelates whatsoever they do, but that he shall be shortly made a nS secrets, heretic. In all councils is one of them ; yea, the most part theirs' w- T- and chief rulers of the councils are of them : but of their council is no man. " Even for this cause pay ye tribute," that is to wit, for conscience' sake to thy neighbour, and for the cause that fol loweth : " For they are God's ministers, serving for the same purpose." Because God will so have it, we must obey. We 192 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. do not look (if we have Christ's Spirit in us) what is good, profitable, glorious and honourable for us ; neither on our own will, but on God's will only. " Give to every man therefore his duty ; tribute to whom tribute belongeth ; custom to whom custom is due ; fear to whom fear belongeth ; honour to whom honour pertaineth." That thou mightest feel the working of the Spirit of God in thee, and lest the beauty of the deed should deceive thee, and make thee think that the law of God, which is spiritual, were content and fulfilled with the outward and bodily deed, Love fuim- it followeth: "Owe nothing to any man, but to love one before God, another : for he that loveth another fulfilleth the law. For and not the dee'd^w.i. these commandments, Thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not bear false witness, thou shalt not desire, and so forth, if there be any other commandment, are all comprehended or contained in this saying, Love thy neighbour : therefore is love the fulfil- Agamst ling of the law." Here hast thou sufficient against all the w. t. sophisters, work-holy, and justifiers, in the world ; which so magnify their deeds. The law is spiritual, and requireth the heart ; and is never fulfilled with the deed, in the sight of The deed fui- God. With the deed thou fulfillest the law before the world, fiileththelaw ... . . ,.. worid 'wt and hvest thereby; that is, thou enjoy est this present life, and avoidest the wrath and vengeance, the death and punish ment, which the law threateneth to them that break it. But before God thou keepest the law if thou love only. Now Faiihmaketh what shall make us love ? Verily, that shall faith do. If love! w. t. thou behold how much God loveth thee in Christ, and from what vengeance he hath delivered thee for his sake, and of what kingdom he hath made thee heir ; then shalt thou see cause enough to love thy very enemy without respect of reward, either in this life or in the life to come, but because that God will so have it, and Christ hath deserved it : yet thou shouldest feel in thine heart that all thy deeds to come are abundantly recompensed already in Christ. Thou wilt say haply, If love fulfil the law, then it justi fieth. I say that that wherewith a man fulfilleth the law declareth him justified ; but that which giveth him wherewith • jurying. to fu]£j tne jaWj justifieth him. By justifying, understand the forgiveness of sins and the favour of God. Now saith the text, Rom. x. Rom. x. " The end of the law," or the cause wherefore the law AGAINST THE POPE'S FALSE POWER. 193 was made, "is Christ, to justify all that believe:" that is, The office or , i • • • i-ii i • i duty of the the law is given to utter sm, to kill the consciences, to damn law' w. t. our deeds, to bring to repentance, and to drive unto Christ ; in whom God hath promised his favour, and forgiveness of sin, unto all that repent and consent to the law that it is good. If The believing iii- i • /-i -f of God's pro- thou believe the promises, then doth God's truth justify thee, JJJjgjf JX5.U"T that is, forgiveth thee, and receiveth thee to favour, for Christ's sake. In a surety whereof, and to certify thine heart, he Eph. i. iv. sealeth thee with the Spirit. Eph. i. and iv. And (2 Cor. v.) 2 cor. v. saith Paul, " Which gave us his Spirit in earnest." Now the Spirit is given us through Christ. Read the viiith chapter of Rom. ™. the epistle to the Romans, and Galat. iii. and 2 Cor. hi. Never- <%'• »>.. ,ii . . . . . 2 Cor. 111. theless the Spirit, and his fruits, wherewith the heart is The spirit purified, as faith, hope, love, patience, long-suffering, and ward virtues ,.. , A x ° ° . are known obedience, could never be seen without outward experience, by the out- . . ward deed. For if thou were not brought sometime into cumbrance, w- T- whence God only could deliver thee, thou shouldest never see thy faith ; yea, except thou foughtest sometime against des peration, hell, death, sin, and powers of this world, for thy faith's sake, thou shouldest never know true faith from a dream. Except thy brother now and then offended thee, thou couldest not know whether thy love were godly. For a Turk is not angry, till he be hurt and offended. But if thou love him that doth thee evil, then is thy love of1 God. Likewise if thy rulers were alway kind, thou shouldest not know whether thine obedience were pure or no ; but and if thou canst patiently obey evil rulers in all thing that is not to the dishonour of God, and when thou hurtest not thy neighbours, then art thou sure that God's Spirit worketh in thee, and that thy faith is no dream, nor any false imagination. Therefore counselleth Paul, Rom. xii. " Recompense to no Rom. xii. man evil. And on your part have peace with all men. Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but give room unto the wrath of God : for it is written, Vengeance is mine, and I will re ward, saith the Lord. Therefore, if thy enemy hunger, feed overcome him ; if he thirst, give him drink : for in so doing, thou shalt wi'mweu™7 . . . doing. W. T. heap coals of fire on his head," that is, thou shalt kindle love in him. "Be not overcome of evil;" that is, let not another man's wickedness make thee wicked also. "But overcome evil f1 Of, i. e. proceeding from.] r 1 13 [tyndale.J 194 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. with good ;" that is, with softness, kindness, and all patience win him ; even as God with kindness won thee. The law. W. T. Exod. xx. The king W. T. 1 Sam. xii. Rulers are God's gift. W.T. Why the rulers are evil. W. T. The law was given in thunder, lightning, fire, smoke, and the noise of a trumpet and terrible sight ; so that the people quaked for fear,*and stood afar off, saying to Moses, " Speak thou to us, and we will hear : let not the Lord speak unto us, lest we die." No ear, if it be awaked and understandeth the meaning, is able to abide the voice of the law, except the promises of mercy be by. That thunder, except the rain of mercy be joined with it, destroyeth all, and buildeth not. The law is a witness against us, and testifieth that God abhorreth the sins that are in us, and us for our sins' sake. In like manner, when God gave the people of Israel a king, it thundered and rained, that the people feared so sore, that they cried to Samuel for to pray for them that they should not die. As the law is a terrible thing, even so is the king : for he is ordained to take vengeance, and hath a sword in his hand, and not peacocks' feathers. Fear him, therefore, and look on him as thou wouldest look on a sharp sword that hanged over thy head by a hair. Heads and governors are ordained of God, and are even the gift of God, whether they be good or bad. And whatso ever is done to us by them, that doth God, be it good or bad. If they be evil, why are they evil ? Verily, for our wicked ness' sake are they evil ; because that when they were good, we would not receive that goodness of the hand of God, and be thankful, submitting ourselves unto his laws and ordinances ; but abused the goodness of God unto our sensual and beastly lusts. Therefore doth God make his scourge of them, and turn them to wild beasts, contrary to the nature of their names and offices, even into lions, bears, foxes, and unclean swine, to avenge himself of our unnatural and blind unkind- ness, and of our rebellious disobedience. In the cviith psalm thou readest, " He destroyed the rivers, and dried up the springs of water, and turned the fruitful land into barrenness, for the wickedness of the inha- biters therein." When the children of Israel had forgotten God in Egypt, God moved the hearts of the Egyptians to hate them, and to subdue them with craft and wiliness. Psal. AGAINST THE POPE'S FALSE POWER, 195 civ. And Deuteronomium iii. Moses rehearseth, saying, " God Psai. cv. was angry with me for your sakes." So that the wrath of God fell on Moses for the wickedness of the people. And 2 sam. xxiv. in the second chapter of the ' second book of Kings, God was angry with the people, and moved David to number them ; when Joab and the other lords wondered why he would have them numbered; and, because they feared lest some evil should follow, dissuaded the king ; yet it holp not. God so hardened his heart in his purpose, to have an occasion to slay the wicked people1. Evil rulers then are a sign that God is angry and wroth Eviiruiersare ~ ° ^ a sion that with us. Is it not a great wrath and vengeance, that the ood is angry o o ' with us. father and mother should hate their children, even their flesh w- T- and their blood ? or that an husband should be unkind unto his wife, or a master unto the servant that waiteth on his profit ? or that lords and kings should be tyrants unto their subjects and tenants, which pay them tribute, toll, custom, and rent, labouring and toiling to find them in honour, and to maintain them in their estate ? Is not this a fearful judg ment of God, and a cruel wrath, that the very prelates and shepherds of our souls, which were wont to feed Christ's flock with Christ's doctrine, and to walk before them in living thereafter, and to give their lives for them, to their ensample and edifying, and to strengthen their weak faiths, are now so sore changed, that if they smell that one of their flock (as they now call them, and no longer Christ's) do but once long or desire for the true knowledge of Christ, they will slay him, burning him with fire most cruelly ? What is the why the f ii i i /¦ 1 i ¦ prelates are cause ot this ; and that they also teach false doctrine, con- 10 wicked. firming it with lies ? Verily, it is the hand of God, to avenge the wickedness of them that have no love nor lust unto the truth of God, when it is preached, but rejoice in unrighteous ness. As thou mayest see in the second epistle of Paul to the Thessalonians, where he speaketh of the coming of anti christ : " Whose coming shall be," saith he, " by the working 2 Thess. ». of Satan, with all miracles, signs and wonders, which are but lies, and in all deceivable unrighteousness among them that [! Art. VII. Of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale : ' God moved the hearts of the Egyptians to hate the people ; likewise he moved kings.' Foxe makes no reply to this charge ; but gives his reader Tyndale's words.] 13—2 196 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. perish, because they received not any love to the truth to The cause of have been saved. Therefore shall God send them strong de- deSseisTthat lusion, to believe lies." Mark how God, to avenge his truth, we huvs no lust unto the sendeth to the unthankful false doctrine and false miracles, truth. W. T. to confirm them, and to harden their hearts in the false way, that afterward it shall not be possible for them to admit the Exod. vii. truth : as thou seest in Exod. vii. and viii., how God suffered false miracles to be shewed in the sight of Pharaoh, to harden his heart, that he should not believe the truth ; inasmuch as his sorcerers turned their rods into serpents, and turned water into blood, and made frogs by their enchantment : so thought he that Moses did all his miracles by the same craft, and not by the power of God, and abode therefore in unbelief, and perished in resisting God. Therightway Let us receive all things of God, whether it be good or bondage. bad : let us humble ourselves under his mighty hand, and vv. submit ourselves unto his nurture and chastising, and not withdraw ourselves from his correction. Read Hebr. xii. for thy comfort ; and let us not take the staff by the end, or seek to avenge ourselves on his rod, which is the evil rulers. The child, as long as he seeketh to avenge himself upon the rod, hath an evil heart; for he thinketh not that the correction is right, or that he hath deserved it, neither repenteth, but rejoiceth in his wickedness : and so long shall he never be without a rod : yea, so long shall the rod be made sharper and sharper. If he knowledge his fault and take the cor rection meekly, and even kiss the rod, and amend himself with the learning and nurture of his father and mother, then is the rod taken away and burnt. Evii rulers So, if we resist evil rulers, seeking to set ourselves at oughtnotto ... 11, i Anteeded' nDerty> we shall, no doubt, bring ourselves into more evil bondage, and wrap ourselves in much more misery and wretchedness. For if the heads overcome, then lay they more weight on their backs, and make their yoke sorer, and tie them shorter. If they overcome their evil rulers, then make they way for a more cruel nation, or for some tyrant of their own nation, which hath no right unto the crown. If we submit ourselves unto the chastising of God, and meekly knowledge our sins for which we are scourged, and kiss the rod, and amend our living ; then will God take the rod away, that is, he will give the rulers a better heart. Or if they AGAINST THE POPE'S FALSE POWER. 197 continue their malice and persecute you for well-doing, and because ye put your trust in God, then will God deliver you out of their tyranny for his truth's sake. It is the same God is always one nlw3,vs God now that was in the old time, and delivered the fathers true, always . merciful, and and the prophets, the apostles, and other holy saints. And ™acnu^no whatsoever he sware to them he hath sworn to us. And as J™!™™**. he delivered them out of all temptation, cumbrance, and adversity, because they consented and submitted themselves unto his will, and trusted in his goodness and truth ; even so will he do to us, if we do likewise. Whensoever the children of Israel fell from the way which God commanded them to walk in, he gave them up under one tyrant or another. As soon as they came to the knowledge of themselves, and repented, crying for mercy, and leaning unto the truth of his promises, he sent one to deliver them, as the histories of the bible make mention. A christian man, in respect of God, is but a passive thing ; a christian ,. . Pl, . . iii i i • i • lnan u°lh a thing that suftereth only, and doth nought; as the sick, in but suffer ° J o ' > oniy, \y. T. respect of the surgeon or physician, doth but suffer only. The surgeon lanceth and cutteth out tbe dead flesh, searcheth the wounds, thrusteth in tents, seareth, burnetii, seweth or stitcheth, and layeth to caustics, to draw out the corruption ; and, last of all, layeth to healing plaisters, and maketh it whole. The physician likewise giveth purgations and drinks to drive out the disease, and then with restoratives bringeth health. Now if the sick resist the razor, the searching iron, and so forth, doth he- not resist his own health, and is cause of his own death? So likewise is it of us, if we resist evil Eviiruien rulers, which arc the rod and scourge wherewith God chas- somlmedi- tiseth us ; the instruments wherewith God searcheth our wounds ; and bitter drinks to drive out the sin and to make it appear, and caustics to draw out by the roots the core of the pocks of tho soul that fretteth inward. A christian man, a christian therefore, receiveth all things of the hand of God, both good «th- w. t. and bad, both sweet and sour, both wealth and woe. If any person do me good, whether it be father, mother, and so forth, that receive I of God, and to God give thanks : for he gave wherewith, and gave a commandment, and moved his heart so to do. Adversity also receive I of the hand of God, as a wholesome medicine, though it be somewhat bitter. Tempta- How pront- tion and adversity do both kill sin, and also utter it. For sityeis.d w. t. 198 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. though a christian man knoweth every thing how to live, yet is the flesh so weak, that he can never take up his cross him self, to kill and mortify the flesh: he must have another to lay it on his back. In many also sin lieth hid within, and festereth and rotteth inward, and is not seen ; so that they think how they are good and perfect, and keep the law : as the young Matt. x«. maUj Matt. xix. said, he had observed all of a child ; and yet lied falsely in his heart, as the text following well declareth. When all is at peace, and no man troubleth us, we think that we are patient and love our neighbours as ourselves ; but let our neighbour hurt us in word or deed, and then find we it otherwise. Then fume we, and rage, and set up the bristles, and bend ourselves to take vengeance. If we loved with godly love, for Christ's kindness' sake, we should desire no vengeance ; but pity him, and desire God to forgive and amend him, knowing well that no flesh can do otherwise than sin, except that God preserve him. Thou wilt say, What good doth such persecution and tyranny unto the righteous ? First, it maketh them feel the working of God's Spirit in The greatest them, and that their faith is unfeigned. Secondarily, I say that sinner is ¦ . . ° i , t i , cfruoundin no man 1S so great a sinner, it he repent and believe, but that An^thrpS- ^e 1S righteous in Christ and in tho promises : yet if thou hoci'estisna l°°k on tne flesh, and unto the law, there is no man so per- iawnandnthee feet that is not found a sinner; nor any man so pure that ' ' hath not somewhat to be yet purged. This shall suffice at this time as concerning obedience. Because that God excludeth no degree from his mercy ; but whosoever repenteth, and believeth his promises, (of what soever degree he be of,) the same shall be partaker of his grace ; therefore, as I have described the obedience of them that are under power and rule, even so will I, with God's help, (as my duty is,) declare how the rulers, which God shall vouchsafe to call unto the knowledge of the truth, ought to rule. OFFICE OF A FATHER. 199 The Office of a Father, and how he should rule. " Fathers, move not your children unto wrath, but bring Rigour in them up in the nurture and information of the Lord." Eph.vi. wardstheir t-t i •¦¦ -n i >i i i ii . children is to and Coloss. m. " Fathers, rate not your children, lest they be of be eschewed. desperate mind ;" that is, lest you discourage them. For where *$¦£• the fathers and mothers are wayward, hasty and churlish, ever brawling and chiding, there are the children anon discouraged and heartless, and apt for nothing ; neither can they do any thing aright. " Bring them up in the nurture and informa tion of the Lord." Teach them to know Christ, and set The right God's ordinance before them, saying, 'Son, or daughter, God of children. hath created thee and made thee, through us thy father and mother; and at his commandment have we so long thus kindly brought thee up, and kept thee from all perils : he hath com manded thee also to obey us, saying, Child, obey thy father and mother. If thou meekly obey, so shalt thou grow both in the favour of God and man, and knowledge of our Lord Christ. If thou wilt not obey us at his commandment, then are we charged to correct thee ; yea, and if thou repent not, and amend thyself, God shall slay thee by his officers, or punish thee everlastingly.' Nurture them not worldly, and Thedestmc- with worldly wisdom, saying, 'Thou shalt come to honour, marring of ... . i • i i ii children. dignity, promotion, and riches ; thou shalt be better than w' T- such and such ; thou shalt have three or four benefices, and be a great doctor or a bishop, and have so many men waiting on thee, and do nothing but hawk and hunt, and live at pleasure ; thou shalt not need to sweat, to labour, or to take any pain for thy living,' and so forth ; filling them full of pride, disdain, and ambition, and corrupting their minds with worldly persuasions. Let the fathers and mothers mark how they themselves were disposed at all ages ; and by experience of their own infirmities help their children, and keep them from occasions. Let them teach their children to ask mar- The marriage riages of their fathers and mothers. And let their elders wfitchSudtr™n- provide marriages for them in season ; teaching them also to rarer^'isun- know, that she is not his wife whom the son taketh, nor he AntUed. her husband which the daughter taketh, without the consent and good- will of their elders, or them that have authority 200 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. over them1. If their friends will not marry them, then are they not to blame if they marry themselves. Let not the fathers and mothers always take the utmost of their authority of their children ; but at a time suffer with them, and bear their weaknesses, as Christ doth ours. Seek Christ in your in Christ we children, in your wives, servants, and subjects. Father, tire £lii ser\ ~ t _ m - that'hatdhe m°ther, son, daughter, master, servant, king, and subject, be names in the worldly regiment. In Christ we are all one thing ; none better than another, all brethren ; and all must seek Christ, and our brother's profit in Christ. And he that hath the knowledge, whether he be the lord or king, is bound to submit himself, and serve his brethren, and to give himself for them, to win them to Christ. knowledgeis bound. W. T. The Office of a Husband, and how he ought to rule. Eph. v. "Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the congre gation, and gave himself for it, to sanctify it and cleanse it. Men ought to love their wives as their own bodies. For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall continue with his wife, and shall be made both one flesh. See that every one of you love his wife even as his own body." All this saith Paul, Eph. v. And Col. iii. he saith, " Husbands, love your wives, and be not bitter unto them." And Peter, in the iiird chapter of his first epistle, saith, "Men, dwell toruielheh- with your wives according to knowledge," (that is, according G«rs word. ^0 t]je doctrine of Christ,) " giving reverence unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel," (that is, help her to bear her infirmities;) "and as unto them that are heirs also of the whytheman grace of hfe, that your prayers be not let." In many things is stronger ~ . , , , / l J , , J ° than the wo- q.oci natn made the men stronger than the women ; not to man. W. T. ° ' rage upon them, and to be tyrants unto them, but to help them, but2 to bear their weakness. Be courteous therefore Col. iii. 1 Pet. Iii Men ought [! It is to the above passage that Foxe attributes Art. II. of the list of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale. But see n. p. 170.] [2 So Day's ed. In H. L.'s ed. it is, to help them to bear.] OFFICE OF HUSBANDS AND MASTERS. 201 unto them, and win them unto Christ, and overcome them with kindness, that of love they may obey the ordinance that God hath made between man and wife. The Office of a Master, and how he ought to rule. Paul (Eph. vith) saith : " Ye masters, do even the same Eph. vi. things to them," (that is, be masters after the ensample and doctrine of Christ, as he before taught the servants to obey to their masters as to Christ,) " putting away threatenings," that is, give them fair words, and exhort them kindly to do their duty ; yea, nurture them as thy own sons with the Lord's nurture, that they may see in Christ a cause why they ought lovingly to obey : and " remember (saith he) that your master also is in heaven ; neither is there any respect of persons with him ;" that is, he is indifferent and not partial : as great in his sight is a servant as a master. And in the ivth chapter to the Colossians saith he : " Ye masters, coi. iv. do unto your servants that which is just and equal, remem bering that ye also have a master in heaven." Give your servants kind words, food, raiment, and learning. Be not Tech ti,y bitter unto them, rail not on them, give them no cruel coun- know Christ and after tenance : but according to the ensample and doctrine of Chrises doc- /-*!• ii*ii i trine deal Christ, deal with them. And when they labour sore, cherish ^"Ij,"™' them again. When ye correct them, let God's word be by ; Doaiithmgs and do it with such good manner, that they may see how word? w!t. that ye do it to amend them only, and to bring them to the way which God biddeth us walk in, and not to avenge your selves, or to wreak your malice on them. If at a time through hastiness ye exceed measure in punishing, recompense it another way, and pardon them another time. The Duty of Landlords. Let Christian landlords be content with their rent and Landlords old customs; not raising the rent or fines, and bringing up nho°rin"nor new customs to oppress their tenants; neither letting two or c™oml!new "¦ o Ant. ed. 202 obedience of a christian man. three tenantries unto one man. Let them not take in their commons, neither make parks nor pastures of whole parishes : God gave the for God gave the earth to man to inhabit; and not unto w.T.°mn' sheep and wild deer. Be as fathers unto your tenants : yea, be unto them as Christ was unto us, and shew unto them all love and kindness. Whatsoever business is among them, be not partial, favouring one more than another. The complaints, quarrels, and strife that are among them, count diseases of sick people ; and, as a merciful physician, heal them with wisdom and good counsel. Be pitiful and tender-hearted unto them, and let not one of thy tenants tear out another's throat ; but judge their causes indifferently, and compel them to make their ditches, hedges, gates, and ways. For even for such causes were ye made landlords ; and for such causes paid men rent at the beginning. For if such an order were not, one should slay another, and all should go to Landlords waste. If thy tenant shah labour and toil all the year, to MaTd'the1'11" pay thee thy rent, and when he hath bestowed all his labour, teSarits? e his neighbours' cattle shall devour his fruits ; how tedious and bitter should his life be ! See therefore that ye do your duties again ; and suffer no man to do them wrong, save the king only. If he do wrong, then must they abide God's judgment. The Duty of Kings, and of the Judges and Officers. Aflt. ed. -l?1) n "i Let kings, if they had lever be Christian in deed than so to be called, give themselves altogether to thef wealth] of their realms after the ensample of Christ ; remembering that the people are God's, and not theirs ; yea, are Christ's in- Thereisno heritance and possession, bought with his blood. The most person afore despised person in his realm is the king's brother, and fellow- Ant, ed. member with him, and equal with him in the kingdom of God and of Christ. Let him therefore not think himself too good to do them service ; neither seek any other thing in them, than a father seeketh in his children, yea, than Christ sought in us. Though that the king, in the temporal regiment, be in the room of God, and representeth God himself, and is DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 203 without all comparison better1 than his subjects; yet let him put off that, and become a brother, doing and leaving undone all things in respect of the commonwealth, that all men may see that he seeketh nothing but the profit of his subjects. When a cause that requireth execution is brought before him, then only let him take the person of God on him. Then let him know no creature, but hear all indifferently ; whether it be a stranger or one of his own realm, and the small as well as the great; and judge righteously, "for the judgment is Deut. i. the Lord's." In time of judgment he is no minister in the kingdom of Christ; he preacheth no gospel, but the sharp law of vengeance. Let him take the holy judges of the old Testament for an ensample, and namely Moses, which in Moses- w- T- executing the law was merciless ; otherwise more than a mother unto them, never avenging his own wrongs, but suffering all things ; bearing every man's weakness, teaching, warning, exhorting, and ever caring for them, and so ten derly loved them, that he desired God either to forgive them, or to damn him with them. Let the judges also privately, when they have put off the Judges, w.t. person of a judge, exhort with good counsel, and warn the people, and help that they come not at God's judgment : but the causes that are brought to them, when they sit in God's stead, let them judge, and condemn the trespasser under lawful witnesses ; and not break up into the consciences of men, after the example of antichrist's disciples, and compel them either to forswear themselves by the almighty God and a tyranny to by the holy gospel of his merciful promises, or to testify to accuse against themselves : which abomination our prelates learned w. t. ' of Caiphas, Matt, xxvi, saying to Christ, " I adjure or charge Matt. xxvi. thee in the name of the living God, that thou tell us whether learned of ° . Caiphas. thou be Christ, the Son of God." Let that which is secret to w- T- God only, whereof no proof can be made, nor lawful witness pertain unto brought, abide unto the coming of the Lord, which shall open ish, and open „ . sins unto the all secrets. If any malice break forth, that let them judge kinS' w.t. only. For further authority hath God not given them. Moses (Deut. xvir.) warneth judges to keep them upright, Deut. xvii. and to look on no man's person ; that is, that they prefer not judges isy in the high before the low, the great before the small, the rich Anted. [} Better is used here for superior, as in the Catechism.] 204 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. before poor ; his acquaintance, friend, kinsman, countryman, or one of his own nation, before a stranger, a friend or an alien, yea, or one of their own faith before an infidel ; but that they look on the cause .only, to judge indifferently. For the room that they are in, and the law that they execute, are God's ; which, as he hath made all, and is God of all, and all are his sons, even so is he judge over all, and will have all judged by his law indifferently, and to have the right of his law, and will avenge the wrong done unto the Turk or Saracen. For though they be not under the everlasting testament of God in Christ, as few of us which are called Christian be, and even no more than to whom God hath sent his promises, and poured his Spirit into their hearts to believe them, and through faith graven lust in their hearts to fulfil the law of love ; yet are they under the testament of the law natural, which is the law of every land made for the common wealth there, and for peace and unity, that one may live by another : in which laws the infidels, if they keep them, have promises of worldly things. Whosoever, therefore, hindereth a very infidel from the right of that law, sinneth against God, and of him will God be avenged. Moreover, Moses warneth them Partiality that they receive no gifts, rewards or bribes. For those two and bribe- "L . » taking is the points, favouring ot one person more than another, and pestilence of L ' o x * AnPed receiving rewards, pervert all right and equity ; and is the only pestilence of all judges. And the kings warneth he, that they have not too many wives, lest their hearts turn away ; and that they read alway in the law of God, to learn to fear him, lest their hearts be women, lift up above their brethren. Which two points, women and contempt of pride, the despising of their subjects, which are in very deed ofe n?neilenoe tneir own brethren, are the common pestilence of all princes. Ant. ed. Read the stories, and see. The sheriffs, baily-errants, constables, and such like officers, may let no man that hurteth his neighbour scape, but that they bring them before the judges ; except they in the mean time agree with their neighbours, and make them amends. Let kings defend their subjects from the wrongs of other nations, but pick no quarrels for every trifle : no, let not our vam names, most holy father make them no more so drunk with vain W. T. , names, with caps of maintenance, and like baubles, as it were DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 205 puppetry for children, to beggar their realms, and to murder their people, for defending of our holy father's tyranny. If a lawful peace, that standeth with God's word, be made between prince and prince, and the name of God taken to record, and the body of our Saviour broken between them, The hoiy fa- ' d ther looseth upon the bond which they have made ; that peace, or bond, jgj^J^ can our holy father not dispense with, neither loose it with ^j}^*. all the keys he hath : no, verily, Christ cannot break it : for u^,\. he came not to break the law, but to fulfil it. If any man have broken the law, or a good ordinance, and repent and come to the right way again, then hath Christ power to forgive him : but licence to break the law can he not give; much more his disciples and vicars, as they call themselves, cannot do it. The keys, whereof they so greatly what the ' d ' . . , . keys are, and boast themselves, are no carnal things, but spiritual ; and why they are nothing else save knowledge of the law, and of the promises w- T- or gospel. If any man, for lack of spiritual feeling, desire authority of men, let him read the old doctors. If any man desire authority of scripture, Christ saith, Luke xi. " Woe be to Luke xi. you lawyers, for ye have taken away the key of knowledge : ye enter not in yourselves, and them that come in ye forbid :" that is, they had blinded the scripture (whose knowledge, as it were a key, letteth into God) with glosses and traditions. Likewise findest thou Matt, xxiii. As Peter answered in the Matt, xxiii. name of all, so Christ promised him the keys in the person of The keys are x . promised. all. (Matt, xvi.) And in the xxth of John he paid them, gay- ^tT- j ing, "Receive the Holy Ghost : whosoever's sins ye remit, they The keys are are remitted" or forgiven; "and whosoever's sins ye retain, .lohiixx.' , . . To bind and they are retained " or holden. With preaching the promises loose- w. t. loose they as many as repent and believe. And for that John saith, "Receive the Holy Ghost.'' Luke, in his last Luke xxiv. chapter, saith, " Then opened he their wits, that they might understand the scriptures, and said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise again the third day ; and that repentance and remission of Repentance . d ' X an(j foTgjve. sins should be preached in his name among all nations." At ness c°me by , x ° preaching. preaching of the law repent men ; and at the preaching of w- T- the promises do they believe, and are saved. Peter in the Pe-terprae- second of the Acts practised his keys ; and by preaching the keys. w. t. law brought the people into the knowledge of themselves, and bound their consciences, so that "they were pricked in 206 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. their hearts, and said unto Peter and to the other apostles, What shall we do ?" Then brought they forth the key of the sweet promises, saying, " Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the promise was made to you, and to your children, and to all that are afar, even as many as the Lord shall call." Of like ensamples is the Acts full, and Peter's epistles, and Paul's The pope's epistles, and all the scripture ; neither hath our holy father to preach any other authority of Christ, or by the reason of his prede- oniy. w. t. cessor, Peter, than to preach God's word. As Christ com- pareth the understanding of scripture to a key, so compareth he it to a net, and unto leaven, and unto many other things for certain properties. I marvel, therefore, that they boast not themselves of their net and leaven, as well as of their keys ; for they are all one thing. But as Christ biddeth us Beware of the beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, so beware of their the'ieaven, counterfeited keys, and of their false net ; which are their counterfeit traditions and ceremonies, their hypocrisy and false doctrine, keys of our ' did holy^father. therewith they catch, not souls unto Christ, but authority and riches unto themselves. Let Christian kings therefore keep their faith and truth, Not with an and all lawful promises and bonds, not one with another only, heretic, saith l . . " the pope. but even with the Turk or whatsoever infidel it be. For so it is right before God ; as the scriptures and ensamples of unlawful the bible testify. Whosoever voweth an unlawful vow, pro- vows or oaths', men miseth an unlawful promise, swear eth an unlawful oath, sinneth are com- , *- ' breakedw t. against God, and ought therefore to break it. He needeth not sue to Rome for a licence ; for he hath God's word, and not a licence only, but also a commandment to break it. They therefore that are sworn to be true to cardinals and bishops, that is to say, false unto God, the king, and the realm, may break their oaths lawfully, without grudge of conscience, by the authority of God's word. In making them they sinned ; but in repenting and breaking them they please God highly, and receive forgiveness in Christ. Let kings take their duty of their subjects, and that that is necessary to the defence of the realm. Let them rule their realms themselves, with the help of lay-men that are sage, wise, learned, and expert. Is it not a shame above all shames, and a monstrous thing, that no man should be found able to DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 207 govern a worldly kingdom, save bishops and prelates ; that Bishops. . have forsaken the world, and are taken out of the world, and appointed to preach the kingdom of God ? Christ saith that John xviii. his "kingdom is not of this world." John xviii. And, Luke Luke xii. xii. unto the young man, that desired him to bid his brother Jehoid the " ° . . faceofthe to give him part of the inheritance, he answered, " Who made [j^Sho °sf me a judge or a divider among you ?" " No man that layeth i^8 slass- his hand to tbe plough, and looketh back, is apt for the king- Luke Ix- dom of heaven." Luke ix. " No man can serve two masters, Matt. vi. but he must despise the one." Matt. vi. To preach God's word is too much for half a man : and to minister a temporal kingdom is too much for half a man also. Either other requireth an whole man. One therefore cannot well do both. He that avengeth himself on every trifle is not meet to preach the patience of Christ, how that a man ought to forgive and to suffer all things. He that is overwhelmed with all manner riches, and doth but seek more daily, is not meet to preach poverty. He that will obey no man is not meet to preach how we ought to obey all men. Peter saith, Acts vi. "It is not meet that we should leave Actsvi. the word of God, and serve at the tables." Paul saith in the ixth chapter of the first Corinth. " Woe is me if I preach J Cor- «¦ not." A terrible saying, verily, for popes, cardinals, and bishops! If he had said, 'Woe be unto me if I fight not and move princes unto war, or if I increase not St Peter's Peter's patri- patrimony,' as they call it, it had been a more easy saying for them. Christ forbiddeth his disciples and that oft, (as thou The pope's mayest see Matt, xviii. and also xx. Mark ix. and also x. ™p™veo- Luke ix. and also xxii. even at his last supper) not only to Matt. xviii- climb above lords, kings, and emperors in worldly rule, but LukeixX'xxii. also to exalt themselves one above another in the kingdom of God : but in vain ; for the pope would not hear it, though he had commanded it ten thousand times. God's word should Bishops have captived rule only ; and not bishops' decrees, or the pope's pleasure. Si^'uS? That ought they to preach purely and spiritually, and to fashion their lives after, and with all ensample of godly living and long suffering to draw all to Christ ; and not to expound the scriptures carnally and worldly, saying, ' God spake this to Peter, and I am his successor, therefore this authority is mine only ;' and then bring in the tyranny of own decrees. W.T. 208 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. their fleshly wisdom, In prozsentia majoris cessat potestas minoris ; that is, in the presence of the greater the less hath no power. There is no brotherhood where such philosophy is taught. Such philosophy, and so to abuse the scriptures, and to mock with God's word, is after the manner of the bishop of Rochester. Rochester's divinity. For he, in his ' Sermon of the condem nation of Martin Luther,' proveth by a shadow of the old Testament, that is, by Moses and Aaron, that Satan and anti christ, our most holy father the pope, is Christ's vicar and head of Christ's congregation1. Moses, saith he, signifieth Christ; and Aaron the pope. And yet the epistle unto the Hebrews proveth, that the high priest of the old law signifieth Christ ; and his offering and his going in once in the year into the inner temple signify the offering wherewith Christ offered himself, and Christ's going in unto the Father, to be an everlasting mediator or . intercessor for us. Nevertheless, Rochester proveth the con trary by a shadow ; by a shadow, verily : for in shadows They walk in they walk without all shame, and the light will they not come Sh.11IOWS. d O d w- T- at, but enforce to stop and quench it with all craft and false hood, lest their abominable juggling should be seen. If any man look in the light of the new Testament, he shall clearly j see that that shadow may not be so understood. Understand therefore, that one thing in the scripture representeth divers things. A serpent figureth Christ in one place, and the devil in another; and a lion doth likewise. Christ by leaven signifieth God's word in one place ; and in another signifieth thereby the traditions of the Pharisees, which soured and altered God's word for their advantage. [} ' In their governance was two heads appointed, one under an other, Moyses and Aaron, to conduct the people through the desert unto the country that was promised unto them. "We wot that the people of the Jews was a shadow of the Christian people, and that their journey by the desert toward the country promised unto them was a shadow of our journey through this wretched world unto the country of heaven. But Moyses and Aaron which were the heads of that people, whereof then be they shadow ? Without doubt they must be the shadow of Christ and of his vicar, St Peter, which under Christ was also the head of christian people.' Fisher's Sermon, verso of sign. A. 7.] DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 209 Now Moses verily in the said place representeth Christ ; Aaron is d xx » every true and Aaron, which was not yet high priest, represented not w^a*er- Peter only or his successor, as my lord of Rochester would have it, (for Peter was too little to bear Christ's message unto ah the world,) but signifieth every disciple of Christ, and every true preacher of God's word. For Moses put in Aaron's Exod. iv. vii. mouth what he should say ; and Aaron was Moses's prophet, and spake not his own message, as the pope and bishops do, but that which Moses had received of God and delivered unto him. Exod. iv. and also vii. So ought every preacher to preach God's word purely, and neither to add nor minish. A true messenger must do his message truly; and say neither more nor less than he is commanded. Aaron, when he is Aaron repre- high priest, and offereth and purgeth the people of their oust. w. t. worldly sin which they had fallen in, in touching uncleanly things, and in eating meats forbidden, (as we sin in handling the chalice and the altar stone, and are purged with the bishop's blessing,) representeth Christ, which purgeth us from all sin in the sight of God : as the epistle unto the Hebrews maketh mention. When Moses was gone up into the mount, and Aaron left behind, and made the golden calf, there Aaron representeth all false preachers, and namely our most holy father the pope ; which in like manner maketh .us believe in a bull, as the bishop of Rochester full well allegeth the place in his sermon2. If the pope be signified by Aaron, and Christ by Moses, why is not the pope as well content with Christ's law and doctrine, as Aaron was with Moses' ? What is the cause Aaron add- . . ~i, . . eth nothing that our bishops preach the pope, and not Christ ; seeing the {° Mos«'sT apostles preached not Peter, but Christ ? Paul saith of himself [2 ' The third likeness is this : Moyses ascended unto the mount to speak with Almighty God, and Aaron remained behind to instruct the people. Did not Christ likewise ascend unto his Father, unto the great mount of heaven ? and to what intent, I pray you ? St Paul telleth : Ut appareat vultui Dei pro nobis : To appear before the face of Almighty God for us, and there to be our advocate, as saith St John And did not Peter remain behind to teach the people, the which our Saviour committed unto his charge, like as Aaron was left for to do the people of the Jews, when Moses was alone in the mount with God ? Thus every man may see how that shadow, and this thing, agreeth and answereth one to another, fully and clearly.' Fisher's Sermon, Verso of sign. B. I.] r i I* [tyndale.J 210 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. 2 cor. iv. and his fellow apostles, 2 Cor. iv. " We preach not ourselves, The apostles , ,_ , , - ^ached not but Christ Jesus the Lord, and preach ourselves your servants christ w.t. for jeSus' sake:" and, "Let no man rejoice in men, for all i cor. Hi. things are yours, whether it be Paul, or Apollos, or Peter ; whether it be the world, or life, or death ; whether they be present things, or things to come ; all are yours, and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's." He leaveth out, Ye are Peter's, or ye are the pope's. And in the chapter following he saith, iccr. iv. "Let men thus wise esteem us, even the ministers of Christ," &c. And (2 Cor. xi.) Paul was jealous over his Corinthians, be cause they fell from Christ, to whom he had married them, and did cleave unto the authority of men; for even then false prophets sought authority in the name of the high apostles : 2 cor. xi. " I am (saith he) jealous over you with godly jealousy : for I coupled you to one man, to make you a chaste virgin to Christ ; but I fear lest, as the serpent deceived Eve through his subtlety, even so your wits should be corrupt from the singleness that is in Christ." And it followeth : " If he that cometh to you preached another Jesus, or if ye receive another Spirit or another gospel, then might ye well have been content :" that is, ye might have well suffered him to have authority above me : " but I suppose," saith he, " that I was not behind the high apostles ;" meaning in preaching Jesus and his gospel, and in ministering the Spirit. And in the said xith chapter he proveth, by the doctrine of Christ, Paul is great- that he is greater than the high apostles : for Christ saith, er than the °. . ° r ' highaposties. to be great in the kingdom of God is to do service and to take pain for other : upon which rule Paul disputeth, say ing, " If they be the ministers of Christ, I am more ; in labours more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prison Paul is ai-eat- more plenteously, in death oft," and so forth. If Paul w.t. preached Christ more than Peter, and suffered more for his congregation, then is he greater than Peter, by the testimony Paul proveth of Christ1. And in the xiith he saith, "In nothing was I his apostle- . - . ° shreachinh mieri(>r unto the high apostles : though I be nothmg, yet the the bishopsB: to^ens °f an aPostle were wrought among you with all Ipolttehip patience, with signs, and wonders, and mighty deeds." So an'S'shadows. proved he his authority, and not with a bull from Peter, I1 Art. VIII. of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale: ' Paul was of higher authority than Peter.' On which Foxe makes no remark ; but merely gives his readers Tyndale's words.] DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 211 sealed with cold lead, either with shadows of the old Testa ment falsely expounded. Moreover the apostles were sent immediately of Christ ; The aposties Wei6 SBt) I of and of Christ received they their authority, as Paul boasteth Jurist with himself every where. "Christ," saith- he, "sent me to preach"* WT- the gospel." 1 Cor. i. And, "I received of the Lord that which i cor. .. I delivered unto you." 1 Cor. xi. And Gal. i., " I certify you, icor. xi. brethren, that the gospel which was preached of me was not after the manner of men, (that is to wit, carnal or fleshly,) nei ther received I it of man, neither was it taught me, but I received it by the revelation of Jesus Christ." And Gal. ii. Gai. ii. "He that was mighty in Peter in the apostleship over the circumcision, was mighty in me among the gentiles." And 1 1 t™. '• Tim. i. readest thou likewise. And (John xx.) Christ sent them forth indifferently, and gave them like power : "As my Father sent me," saith he, " so send I you ;" that is, to preach ancL. tb~suffer, asX^y^J^oneJ_and hot to conquer empires and king doms, and to subdue all temporal power under you with dis- gmsed~hypomsyrTIe~ga^e them the TfbTy Ghost, to bind and loose mdilferently, as thou seest ; and afterward he sent forth Paul with like authority, as thou seest in the Acts. And in the last of Matthew saith he : " All power is given me in heaven Matt, xxviii. and in earth; go therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost ; teaching them to observe whatsoever I commanded you." The authority that Christ gave them was to preach; yet Theautho- not what they would imagine, but what he had commanded, christgave d o ' was t0 preach " Lo," saith he, " I am with you always, even unto the end of cMst'sword. the world." He said not, I go my way, and lo, here is Peter in my stead ; but sent them every man to a sundry country, whithersoever the Spirit carried them, and went with them himself. And as he wrought with Peter where he went, so wrought he with the other where they went; as Paul boasteth of himself unto the Galatians. Seeing now that we have 4i$ Christ's doctrine, and Christ's holy promises, and seeing that Christ is ever present with us his own self; how cometh it that Christ may not reign immediately over us, as well as the pope which cometh never at us ? Seeing also that the office of an apostle is to preach only, how can the pope challenge with right any authority, where he preacheth not ? How cometh it also that Rochester will not let us be called one 14—2 212 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. congregation by the reason of one God, one Christ, one Spirit, one gospel, one faith, one hope, and one baptism, as well as because of one pope?1 D^- If any natural beast with his worldly wisdom strive, that one is greater than another, because that in congregations one is sent of another, as we see in the Acts ; I answer that Peter sent no man, but was sent himself; and John was sent, and Paul, Silas, and Barnabas were sent. Howbeit such manner sendings are not worldly, as princes send ambassadors ; no, / nor as friars send their limiters to gather their brotherhoods2 ; which must obey, whether they will or will not. Here all thing is free and willingly. And the Holy Ghost bringeth them together ; which maketh their wills free, and ready to bestow themselves upon their neighbour's profit. And they that come offer themselves, and all that they have, or can do, to serve the Lord and their brethren. And every man, as he is found apt and meet to serve his neighbour, so is he sent or put in office. And of the Holy Ghost are they sent, with the consent of their brethren, and with their own consent also : and God's word ruleth in that congregation ; unto which word every man conformeth his will : and Christ, which is why bishops always present, is the head. But as our bishops hear not make them 3, Godon earth. Christ's voice, so see they him not present, and therefore make them a God on the earth, of the kind, I suppose, Aaron made of Aaron's calf : for he bringeth forth no other fruit but a calf ; and ... thepope bulls. maketh bulls. w- T- Forasmuch also as Christ is as great as Peter, why is not his seat as great as Peter's ? Had the head of the empire been at Jerusalem, there had been no mention made of Peter. It [} 'Nevertheless the Church of Christ is but one, Una, sancta, catholica et apostolica. This church is one, having one head, the pope, which is the vicar of Christ, of whom it is called una.' Bishop Fisher's Sermon, Verso of sign. F. m.] [2 Limiters were friars sent out of their convent to collect alms, each within his assigned bound ; and to induce persons to purchase a partnership, or brotherhood, in the merits of the conventual services. A grant of such a brotherhood, under the seal of the prior of a Do minican monastery, was expressed as follows : Fratres prsedicatores Warwice admittunt Thomam Cannings, et uxorem ejus Agnetem, ad participationem omnium bonorum operum conventus ejusdem. 4 Non. Oct. a.d. 1347. Stevens, Suppl. to Dugdale, Vol. n. App. p. 370. Russell.] per mi nisters. DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 213 is verily, as Paul saith in the xith chapter of the second epistle 2 cor. xi. to the Corinthians, " The false apostles are deceitful workers, nation hath and fashion themselves like unto the apostles of Christ :" that out of his x room, and all is, the shaven nation preach Christ falsely ; yea, under the {JiJIf^™;^ name of Christ preach themselves, and reign in Christ's w' T- stead : have also taken away the key of knowledge, and wrapped the people in ignorance, and have taught them to believe in themselves, in their traditions and false ceremonies; so that Christ is but a vain name. And after they had put cimstisbut Christ out of his room, they gat themselves to the emperor wt! nam<" and kings, and so long ministered their business till they propei have also put them out of their rooms, and have got their w. t! authorities from them, and reign also in their stead ; so that the emperor and kings are but vain names and shadows, as Christ is, having nothing to do in the world. Thus reign they, in the stead of God and man, and have all power under them, and do what they list. Let us see another point of our great clerk : a little after Rochester is the beginning of his sermon, intending to prove that which is ignorant and clearer than the sun, and serveth no more for his purpose w. t. than Ite missa est serveth to prove that our lady was born without original sin ; he allegeth a saying that Martin Luther saith, which is this : " If we affirm that any one epistle of Paul or any one place of his epistles pertaineth not unto the universal church, (that is, to all the congregation of them that believe in Christ,) we take away all St Paul's authority." Whereupon saith Rochester : " If it be thus of the words of St Paul, much rather it is true of the gospels of Christ and of every place of them3." 0 malicious blindness ! First, note his blindness. He understandeth by this word gospel no more but the four evangelists, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; and thinketh not that the Acts of apostles, and the Theepisties epistles of Peter, of Paul, and of John, and of other like, are "j? goUsPei.e also the gospel. Paul calleth his preaching the gospel : Rom. Rom. a. ii. and 1 Cor. iv. and Gal. i. and 1 Tim. i. The gospel is i cor. iv. every where one, though it be preached of divers, and signi- 1 rim. i. fieth glad tidings : that is to wit, an open preaching of Christ, what gospei and the holy testament and gracious promises that God hath w.nT.eth' made in Christ's blood to all that repent and believe. Now [3 Pace's translation of Fisher's Sermon, col. 2. In the Vol. col. 1576.] 214 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. One gospel, one Spirit, one truth. W. T. The autho rity of Paul and of his gospel. W. T. Rochester playeth bo- peep. W. T. Never man forbad to marry, save the pope. W.T. is there more gospel in one epistle of Paul, that is to say, Christ is more clearly preached and more promises rehearsed in one epistle of Paul, than in the three first evangelists, Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Consider also his maliciousness; how wickedly and how craftily he taketh away the authority of Paul ! ' It is much rather true of the gospels, and of every place in them, than of Paul.' If that which the four evangelists wrote be truer than that which Paul wrote, then is it not one gospel that they preached, neither one Spirit that taught them. If it be one gospel and one Spirit, how is one truer than the other? Paul proveth his authority to the Galatians and to the Corinthians, because that he received his gospel by revelation of Christ, and not of man ; and because that when he communed with Peter and the high apostles of his gospel and preaching, they could improve nothing, neither teach him any thing ; and because also that as many were converted, and as great miracles shewed by his preaching as at the preaching of the high apostles; and therefore will be of no less authority than Peter and other high apostles, nor have his gospel of less reputation than theirs. Finally : that thou mayest know Rochester for ever, and all the remnant by him, what they are within the skin, mark how he playeth bo-peep with the scripture. He allegeth the beginning of the tenth chapter to the Hebrews, Umbram habens lex futurorum bonorum, " the law hath but a shadow of things to come ;" and immediately expoundeth the figure clean contrary unto the chapter following, and to ah the whole epistle ; making Aaron a figure of the pope, whom the epistle maketh a figure of Christ. He allegeth half a text of Paul, 1 Tim. iv. " In the latter days some shall depart from the faith, giving heed unto spirits of error and devilish doctrine." But it followeth in the text : " Giving attendance, or heed, unto the devilish doctrine of them which speak false through hypocrisy, and have their con sciences marked with a hot iron, forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with giving thanks." Which two things who ever did, save the pope, Rochester's god ? making sin in the creatures, which God hath created for man's use, to be re ceived with thanks. "The kingdom of heaven is not meat DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 215 and drink," saith Paul, " but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. For whosoever in these things serveth Christ, pleaseth God, and is allowed of men." Had Roches ter, therefore, not a conscience marked with the hot iron of malice, so that he cannot consent unto the will of God and glory of Christ, he would not so have alleged the text; which is contrary to none save themselves. He allegeth another text of Paul, in the second chapter of his second epistle to the Thessalonians, Erit discessio pri- 2 Thess. u. mum : that is, saith Rochester, before the coming of antichrist there shall be a notable departing from the faith1. And Paul saith, " The Lord cometh not, except there come a departing first." Paul's meaning is, that the last day cometh not so shortly, but that antichrist shall come first and destroy the faith, and sit in the temple of God, and make all men worship him, and believe in him (as the pope doth); and then shall God's word come to light again, (as it doth at this time,) and destroy him, and utter his juggling, and then cometh Christ unto judgment. What say ye of this crafty conveyer ? Would he spare, suppose ye, to allege and to wrest other doctors pestilently, which feareth not for to juggle with the holy scripture of God, expounding that unto antichrist which Paul speaketh of Christ? No, be ye sure. But even after this manner-wise pervert they the whole scripture and all doctors ; wresting them unto their abominable purpose, clean contrary to the meaning of the text, and to the circumstances that go before and after. Which devilish falsehood, lest the The cause 0 , why they laymen should perceive, is the very cause why that they will J™ "^ not suffer the scripture to be had in the English tongue ; ^jjlggf in neither any work to be made that should bring the people to w- T' knowledge of the truth. He allegeth, for the pope's authority, St Cyprian2, St t1 Pace's Fisher, col. 12.] [2 ' In the remarks prefixed to the opinions delivered by the bishops at the council of Carthage, on the subject of heretical baptism, Cyprian asserts the perfect equality of all bishops, and uses the following remarkable expressions : Neque enim quisquam nostrum episcopum se episcoporum constituit, aut tyrannico terrore ad obsequendi ne- cessitatem collegas suos adigit. That this remark is aimed at some bishop, who had called himself Episcopus episcoporum, cannot, we think, be doubted.' Eccles. Hist, of the 2nd and 3rd centuries illus trated from Tertullian, by Bishop Kaye, 2nd ed. ch. iv. p. 239. The 218 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Augustine1, Ambrose2, Jerome3, and Origen4; of which never one knew of any authority that one bishop should have above another. And St Gregory allegeth he, which would receive no such authority above his brethren, when it was proffered oforatorsf nim5- -^s the manner 1S to call TuUy chief of orators for W.T. words which immediately follow this quotation are, ' Quando habeat omnis episcopus pro licentia hbertatis et potestatis suae arbitrium proprium; tamque judicari ab alio non possit, quam nee ipse potest judicare.' Cyprian, Op. ed. Fell. Tr. p. 229. He also writes concern ing Stephen the contemporary pope of Rome: 'Quia desiderasti in notitiam tuam perferri quse mihi ad literas nostras Stephanus frater noster rescripserit, misi tibi rescripti ejus exemplum ; quo lecto magis ac magis ejus errorem denotabis, qui hsereticorum causam contra Christianos et contra ecclesiam Dei asserere conatur. Nam inter cetera vel superba, vel ad rem non pertinentia, vel sibi ipsi contraria, quse imperite atque improvide scripsit, etiam illud adjunxit quod diceret, &c." Ep. 74.] [! In his treatise against Julian, Augustine tells that Pelagian that he ought to have paid more respect to the opinion of Innocent I. : but even when wishing to press this upon him, he does not claim for that pope supreme authority, nor any infallibility of judgment ; but asks, ' Quid enim potuit ille vir sanctus Africanis respondere conciliis, nisi quod antiquitus apostolica sedes et Romana cum ceteris tenet per- severanter ecclesia? — Sancto Innocentio vide quid respondeas, qui nihil aliud de hac re sapit, quam quod isti in quorum te conventum, si tamen prodest aliquid, introduxi : cum his etiam ipse considet, etsi posterior tempore, prior loco.' August. Op. Benedict, ed. Paris. 1679, &c. Tom. x. col. 503-4, G. A.] [2 ' Inter Petrum et Paulum quis cui prseponatur incertum est.' Ambros. Op. Paris. Tom. v. col. 142. De Fest. Petri et Paul. But this sermon is now reckoned amongst the works falsely ascribed to that Latin father. It is however indisputable that, like Cyprian, Ambrose addresses pope Syricius, his contemporary, as a brother. Ad Syria Ep. xiii. 2. Op. Ambr. Par. 1684—90. Tom. n. col. 966.] [3 Jerome says, in his epistle to Evagrius : ' Si auctoritas quaeritur, orbis major est urbe. Ubicunque fuerit episcopus, sive Komse, sive Eugubii, sive Constantinopoli, sive Bhegii, etc. ejusdem meriti est, ejusdem est et sacerdotii. Ceterum omnes apostolorum successores sunt.'] [4 It will be seen in the note on the next reference to Origen, that his interpretation of the text, ' Thou art Peter, &c.' would entirely cut away the foundation of the papal claim to supremacy.] [5 In an epistle to Eulogius, patriarch of Alexandria, this pope Gregory has said, Vcstra beatitudo mihi sic loquitur. . . Sicut jussistis : quod verbum jussionis, peto, a meo auditu removete ; quia scio qui sum et qui estis : loco — mihi fratres estis, moribus patres. — Ecce in DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 217 his singular eloquence, and Aristotle chief of philosophers, and Virgil chief of poets, for their singular learning, and not for any authority that they had over other ; so was it the man ner to call Peter chief of the apostles for his singular activity and boldness, and not. that he should be lord over his bre thren, contrary to his own doctrine. Yet compare that chief apostle unto Paul, and he is found a great way inferior. This I say not that I would that any man should make a god of Paul, contrary unto his own learning. Notwithstanding yet this manner of speaking is left unto us of our elders; that when we say the apostle saith so, we understand Paul, for his excellency above other apostles. I would he would tell you how Jerome6, Augustine*, Bede8, Origen9, and other prsefatione epistolse, quam ad me ipsum, qui prohibui, direxistis, su- perbse appeUationis verbum, universalem me papam dicentes, impri- mere curastis. Quod peto dulcissima mihi sanctitas vestra ultra non faciat ; quia vobis subtrahitur, quod alteri plusquam ratio exigit praj- botur. Gregorii Papaj I. Op. Paris. 1705. Lib. vm. Indict. 1. ad Eulog. Episc. Ep. xxx. col. 919.] [6 Quia tu es Petrus, et super hanc petram sedificabo ecclesiam meam. Sicut ipse lumen apostolis donavit, ut lumen mundi appel- larentur, cetera ex Domino sortiti sunt vocabula ; ita et Simoni, qui credebat in petram Christum, Petri largitus est nomen. Ac secundum metaphoram petree recte dicitur ei, iEdificabo ecclesiam meam super te ; et dabo tibi claves regni coelorum, etc. Istum locum episcopi et presbyteri non intelligentes aliquid sibi de PharisEeorum assumunt supercilio, ut vel damnent innocentes, vel solvere se noxios arbitren- tur ; quum apud Deum non sententia sacerdotum, sed reorum vita quseratur. Legimus in Levitico de leprosis, ubi jubentur ut ostendant so sacerdotibus, et si lepram habuerint, tunc a sacerdote immundi fiant; non quo sacerdotes leprosos faciant et immundos, sed quo habeant notitiam leprosi et non leprosi, et possint discernere qui mundus quive immundus sit. Quomodo ergo ibi leprosum sacerdos mundum vel immundum facit ; sic et hie alligat vel solvit episcopus et presbyter, non eos qui insontes sunt vel noxh; sed pro officio suo, quum peccatorum audierit varietates, scit qui ligandus sit, quive solvendus. S. Hieron. Comment. Lib. ill. in Matt. cap. xvi. Bene dict. Edit. 1706. Tom. iv. Par. i. p. 74.] p Augustine in germ, eclxx. in die Pentecostes, expounds the text as follows : Ego dico tibi, Tu es Petrus : Quia ego petra, tu Petrus ; neque enim a Petro petra, sed a petra Petrus ; quia non a Christiano Christus, sed a Christo Christianus. Et super hanc petram asdlficabo ecclesiam meam ; non super petram quod tu es, sed supra petram quam confessus es. Tom. v. col. 1097, C. And of the keys, 218 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. doctors, expound this text, " Upon this rock I will build my congregation :" and how they interpret the keys also. There to, Pasce, pasce, pasce, which Rochester leaveth without any English, signifieth not poll, sheer, and shave. Upon which text behold the faithful exposition of Bede. Si°eCgeethtePaui ^ote also how craftily he would enfeoff the apostles of cereraoSSf Christ with10 their wicked traditions and false ceremonies, Paufs7o'° which they themselves have feigned ; alleging Paul, 2 Thess. trine. W. T. " 2 Thess. ii. in his treatise on St John's gospel, ch. xix. he says : Solus Petrus respondit, Tu es Christus Filius Dei vivi : et ei dicitur, Tibi dabo claves regni coelorum, tanquam ligandi et solvendi solus acceperit potestatem ; cum et illud unus pro omnibus dixerit, et hoc cum omnibus tanquam personam gerens ipsius unitatis acceperit ; ideo unus pro omnibus, quia unitas est in omnibus. Tom. in. pars 2. col. 800, G. And upon Pasce, when he comes to ch. xxi. v. 15 — 17, he says : Redditur negationi trinse trina confessio, ne minus amori lingua serviat quam timori. Quid est aliud, 'Diligis me?' 'Pasce oves meas,' quam si diceretur, 'Si me diligis, non te pascere cogita; sed oves meas sicut meas pasce, non sicut tuas ; gloriam meam in eis qusere, non tuam.' col. 817, § 5.] [8 The following is Bede's exposition of the text : Metaphorice ei dicitur, super hanc petram, id est, Salvatorem quem confessus es, sedificatur ecclesia, qui fideli confessori sui nominis participium do- navit. And of the keys he says: Id est, discernendi scientiam poten- tiamque, qua dignos debeas in regnum recipere, et indignos secludere. And on, Et quodeunque ligaveris, etc. he says : Hsec potestas sine du- bio cunctis datur Apostolis, quibus ab eo post resurrectionem dicitur generaliter, Accipite Spiritum sanctum. Nee non episcopis et pres- byteris, et omni ecclesise idem officium committitur. Beda, in Matt. Evang. c. xvi. On Pasce oves meas, Bede has transcribed Augustine's words, as given in the previous note.] [9 Et be rprpravTes Kal -qpeis (is 6 Herpes, 2u el 6 Xpitrrbs 6 vibs tov Beov £o>vtos (oi>X cos o-apKos Kal alparos ripiv dwoKa\v\jfaPTO>v, aXKd (pcoros npStv ttj Kapbiq eWap^ravros dirb tov ev ovpavois TLarpbs'), yiv6- peda Tlerpos, Kal fjpiv av \eyoiro (jtto roO \6yov to Sv ei lxerpos, k. r. e£f)s. IJerpa yap nas 6 XptcrTOV paQrjTqs, a£opevots, iva e'£ axirr/s ntvcocri rb nvevpariKov irapa. He afterwards explains the keys, &c, after his own peculiar way, to be the virtues opening heaven to themselves, when not overcome by the gates of hell. ibid. p. 518.] • [10 Enfeoff with, is equivalent to ' make them owners of.'] DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 219 ii. I answer, that Paul taught by mouth such things as he wrote in his epistles. And his traditions were the gospel of Christ, and honest manners and living, and such a good order as becometh the doctrine of Christ : as that a woman obey her husband, have her head covered, keep silence, and go womanly and christianly apparelled; that children and serv ants be in subjection : and that the young obey their elders ; that no man eat but he that laboureth and worketh ; and that men make an earnest thing of God's word and of his holy sacraments ; and to watch, fast, and pray, and such like as the scripture commandeth : which things he that would break were no christian man. But we may well complain , I'm Lnot law- d x ' ful for us to and cry to God for help, that it is not lawful, for the pope's £" *&*' tyranny, to teach the people what prayer is, what fasting is, Sfor where? and wherefore it serveth. There were also certain customs eth? "wt alway, which were not commanded in pain of hell, or ever lasting damnation; as to watch all night, and to kiss one another : which as soon as the people abused, then they brake them. For which cause the bishops might break many things now in like manner. Paul also, in many things which God had made free, gave pure and faithful counsel ; without tangling of any man's conscience, and without all manner commanding under pain of cursing, pain of excom- Pain of munication, pain of heresy, pain of burning, pain of deadly damnat'ion, sin, pain of hell, and pain of damnation. As thou mayest see, w. t. 1 Cor. vii., where he counselleth the unmarried, the widows, ' Cor- ™- and virgins, that it is good so to abide, if they have the gift of chastity : not to win heaven thereby ; (for neither circum cision neither uncircumcision is any thing at all, but the keeping of the commandments is altogether ;) but that they might be without trouble, and might also the better wait on God's word, and freelier serve their brethren : and saith, as a faithful servant, that he had none authority of the if Paul had -r 1 ¦ 1 r T-..-1 none autho- Lord to give them any commandment. But, that the apostles jte^enhad gave us any blind ceremonies, whereof we should not know ^entinf1 the reason, that I deny, and also defy, as a thing clean E^ ? contrary unto the learning of Paul everywhere. w' T' For Paul commandeth that no man once speak in the church, that is, in the congregation, but in a tongue that all men understand, except that there be an interpreter by11. He Rochester is improved. [n This sentence and the preceding are quoted by Sir T. More to w- T- 220 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. commandeth to labour for knowledge, understanding, and feeling ; and to beware of superstition, and persuasions of worldly wisdom, philosophy, and of hypocrisy and ceremo nies, and of all manner disguising, and to walk in the plain EPh-v- and open truth. "Ye were once darkness," saith he, "but now are ye light in the Lord ; walk therefore as the children of light." Eph. v. How doth Paul also wish them increase of grace in every epistle! How crieth he to God to augment their knowledge ; that they should be no more children, wavering with every wind of doctrine ; but would vouchsafe to make them full men in Christ, and in the understanding of the mysteries or secrets of Christ, so that it should not be possible for any man to deceive them with any enticing reasons of worldly wisdom, or to beguile them with blind ceremonies, or to lead them out of the way with superstitious- wnerefore ness of disguised hypocrisy ! Unto which full knowledge are the spiritual " . . . . . Srdafnedre the spiritual officers ordained to bring them. Eph. iv. So Wi'hT"iv. far 1S ^ away that Christ's apostles should give them tra ditions of blind ceremonies, without signification, or of which no man should know the reason ; as Rochester, which loveth shadows and darkeness, lieth on them : God stop his blas phemous mouth ! Rochester Consider also, how studiously Rochester allegeth Orijren, allegeth here- , i. ,,.,,. , tics for ins both tor his pope, and also to stablish his blind ceremonies purpose, for r r 7 'eripture. withal1 : which Origen of all heretics is condemned to be the greatest. 'He is an ancient doctor,' saith he ; yea, 'and to whom in this point great faith is to be given.' Yea, verily, ^inHood Aristotle and Plato, and even very Robin Hood, is to be be- toprovTti'e heved in such a point, that so greatly maintaineth our holy pope^withaL fatner's authority, and all his disguisings. Last of all : as once a crafty thief, when he was espied and followed, cried unto the people, Stop the thief! Stop refute them, in p. 272 of his Confutation of Tyndale's Answer ; but he only answers the remark, upon Paul's requiring the use of a lan guage understood by the people, with, ' And what then ?'] [l 'Here ye may see by express scripture of S. Paul, that we be bound to believe many more things' than be written and put in the bible. "We shall confirm this by Origen, which is an ancient doctor, and to whom in this point great faith is to be given. He in the book of Numbers, Homilia V. saith, Sed in ecclesiasticis observationibus, &c. Bishop Fisher's Sermon, Sign. D. 6.] w. T. DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 221 the thief ! and as many, to begin withal, cast first in another man's teeth that which he fear eth should be laid to his own charge ; even so Rochester layeth to Martin Luther's charge the slaying and murdering of Christian men, because they will not beheve in his doctrine : which thing Rochester and his brethren have not ceased to do now these certain hundred years, with such malice, that, when they be dead, they rage, burning their bodies ; of which some they themselves, of like lihood, killed before secretly. And because that all the world knoweth that Martin Luther slayeth no man, but killeth only with the spiritual sword, the word of God, such cankered consciences as Rochester hath ; neither persecuteth, but suffer eth persecution; yet Rochester, with a goodly argument, proveth that he would do it if he could ! And mark, I pray Rochester is you, what an orator he is, and how vehemently he persuadeth w. t. it ! Martin Luther hath burned the pope's decretals ; a ma nifest sign, saith he, that he would have burned the pope's holiness also, if he had had him2 ! A like argument, which I suppose to be rather true, I make : Rochester and his holy brethren have burnt Christ's testament ; an evident sign, verily, that they would have burnt Christ himself also, if they had had him ! I had almost, verily, left out the chiefest point of all. Rochester is Rochester, both abominable and shameless, yea, and stark himself. mad with pure malice, and so adased3 in the brains with spite, that he cannot overcome the truth that he seeth not, or rather careth not what he saith ; in the end of his first de struction, I would say instruction, as he calleth it, intending to prove that we are justified through holy works, allegeth half a text of Paul, of the fifth to the Galatians, (as his Gai. v. manner is to juggle and convey craftily,) Fides per dilectio- nem operans. Which text he thiswise Englisheth : " Faith, J£2£!h ater which is wrought by love;" and maketh a verb passive of a^™j™h*| [2 ' And what, suppose ye, Martin Luther and his adherents would do, if they had the pope's holiness and his favourers, whom he calleth so often in derision papistas, papastros, and papenses, in his danger ? I fear me, that he would use no more courtesy with them than he hath done with their books, that is to say with the Decretals, which he hath burnt. And so likewise, I fear me, that he would burn them, or any other christian man, that he thought might let his opinions to go forward.' Bp. Fisher's Sermon, Sign. F. 6.] [3 Adase, dase, or daze: to dazzle, confound.] 222 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. the rest? Let Rochester be an example, therefore, to judge them all. W. T. Faith is the root ;' and love spring eth ot faith. W. T. 1 Joh. iii. John i. 1 John iv. Rom. viii. ThoughRochester have not the Spirittojudge spiritualthings, yet ought reason to have kept him from so shameful verb deponent1- Rochester will have love to go before, and faith to spring out of love. Thus antichrist turneth the roots of the tree upward. I must first love a bitter medicine, (after Rochester's doctrine,) and then beheve that it is whole some : when, by natural reason, I first hate a bitter medicine, until I be brought in belief of the physician that it is wholesome, and that the bitterness shall heal me; and then afterward love it, of that belief. Doth the child love the father first, and then believe that he is his son or heir ? or rather, because he knoweth that he is his son or heir and beloved, therefore loveth again ? John saith, in the third of his first epistle, " See what love the Father hath shewed upon us, that we should be called his sons." Because we are sons, therefore love we. Now, by faith we are sons, as John saith in the first chapter of his gospel : " He gave them power to be the sons of God, in that they believed on his name." And Paul saith, in the third chapter of his epistle to the Galatians, " We are all the sons of God by the faith which is in Jesus Christ." And John, in the said chapter of his epistle, saith, " Hereby perceive we love, that he gave his life for us." We could see no love, nor cause to love again, except that we believed that he died for us, and that we were saved through his death. And in the chapter fol lowing saith John, " Herein is love ; not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to make agreement for our sins." So2 God sent not his Son for any love that we had to him ; but of the love that he had to us sent he his Son, that we might so2 love, and love again. Paul hkewise, in the viiith chapter to the Romans, after that he hath declared the infinite love of God to us-ward, in that he spared not his own Son, but gave him for us, crieth out, saying, " Who shall separate us from the love of God ? Shall per secution, shall a sword ? &c." No, saith he ; "I am sure that no creature shall separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord : " as who should say, We see so great love in God to us-ward, in Christ's death, that though all misfortune should fall on us, we cannot but love again. [} ' St Paul sayeth, resolving his own sentence, Fides per dilectio- nem operatur : that is to say, Faith which is wrought by love.' Ib. Verso of sign. D. 3.] [2 The first ed. has See in both these places.] DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 223 Now how know we that God loveth us ? Verilv, by faith. Jy™g. But v ' d God hath So therefore, though Rochester be a beast faithless, yet ought ^Sri"™' natural reason to have taught him, that love springeth out of hood toifght. faith and knowledge; and not faith and knowledge out of WT' love. But let us see the text. Paul saith thus : " In Christ Gai. v. Jesus neither circumcision is any thing worth, nor uncircum- cision, but faith which worketh through love ; " or which through love is strong or mighty in working ; and not which is wrought by love, as the juggler saith. Faith, that loveth God's commandments, justifieth a man. If thou believe God's promises in Christ, and love his commandments, then art thou safe. If thou love the commandment, then art thou sure that thy faith is unfeigned, and that God's Spirit is in thee. How faith justifieth before God in the heart; and how love springeth of faith, and compeheth us to work ; and how the works justify before the world, and testify what we are, and certify us that our faith is unfeigned, and that the right Spirit of God is in us ; see in my book of the Justifying of Faith3; and there shalt thou see all thing abundantly. Also mecontro- of the controversy between Paul and James, see there. Jarnesand"" . . Paul. W. T. Neverthelater, when Rochester saith, if faith only justified, then both the devils and also sinners that lie still in sin should be saved4, his argument is not worth a straw. For why devils neither the devils, nor yet sinners, that continue in sin of Paursfalth" purpose and delectation, have any such faith as Paul speaketh that repent of. For Paul's faith is to beheve God's promises. " Faith," Rom.x. saith he, Rom. x., " cometh by hearing, and hearing cometh by the word of God." "And how shall they hear without a preacher, and how shall they preach except they be sent ? As it is written," saith he, " How beautiful are the feet that bring glad tidings of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things !" Now when sent God any messengers unto the devils, to preach [3 He means his treatise on the Parable of Mammon.] \f- 'Which thing S. James doth not only say, but also proveth it by divers ways. One is this : Dsemones credunt et contremiscunt. The devils, he saith, hath faith; and yet no man may say that the devils be justified by their faith. How many that live in horrible sin, that yet have the faith of Christ Jesu, and would rather die or they should renie their faith, but for aU that they be not justified ! But if only faith did justify, both they and the devils also should be justified.' Bp Fisher's Sermon, Verso of sign. C. 7.] 224 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. them peace, or any good thing ? The devil hath no promise ; a man may he is therefore excluded from Paul's faith. The devil be- believe that . christ died, heveth that Christ died, but not that he died for his sins. and many ' and"ot'ngs' Neither doth any, that consenteth in the heart to continue in chrfst.6 w.t. sm> believe that Christ died for him. For to believe that Christ died for us is to see our horrible damnation, and how we were appointed unto eternal pains, and to feel, and to be what it is to sure, that we are delivered therefrom through Christ: in that lis I ic vg in christ. w.t. we have power to hate our sins, and to love God's command ments. All such repent and have their hearts loosed out of captivity and bondage of sin, and are therefore justified through faith in Christ. Wicked sinners have no faith, but imaginations and opinions about Christ; as our schoolmen have in their principles, about which they brawl so fast one with another. It is another thing to believe that the king is rich, and that he is rich unto me, and that my part is therein ; and that he will not spare a penny of his riches at my need. When I beheve that the king is rich, I am not moved : but when I believe that he is rich for me, and that he will never fail me at my need, then love I ; and of love am ready to work unto the uttermost of my power. But let us return at the last unto our purpose again. why laymen What is the cause that laymen cannot now rule, as well as cannot rule. d w.t. in times past, and as the Turks yet do? Verily, because that antichrist with the mist of his juggling hath beguiled our eyes, and hath cast a superstitious fear upon the world of christian men, and hath taught them to dread not God and his word, but himself and his word ; not God's law and ordi nances, princes and officers which God hath set to rule the world, but his own law and ordinances, traditions and cere monies, and disguised disciples, which he hath set every where to deceive the world, and to expel the light of God's Men fear the word, that his darkness may have room. For we see by more than daily experience, of certain hundred years long, that he which Ant"eTnt' feareth neither God nor his word, neither regardeth father, mother, master, or Christ himself; which rebelleth against God's ordinances, riseth against the king's, and resisteth his officers, dare not once lay hands on one of the pope's anointed : no, though he slay his father before his face, or do violence unto his brother, or defile his sister, wife, or mother. Like honour give we unto his traditions and ceremonies. What DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 225 devotion have we when we are blessed (as they call it) with the chalice, or when the bishop lifteth up his holy hand over us ? Who dare handle the chahce, touch the altar-stone, or put his hand in the font, or his finger into the holy oil? What reverence give we unto holy water, holy fire, holy bread, holy salt, hallowed bells1, holy wax, holy boughs, holy candles, and holy ashes ! And last of all, unto the holy candle commit we our souls at our last departing2. Yea, and of the very clout which the bishop, or his chaplain that standeth by, knitteth about children's necks at confirmation, what lay-person dare be so bold as to unloose the knot3? Thou wilt say, Do not such things bring the Holy Ghost and put away sin and drive away spirits ? I say that a stedfast faith, or belief in Christ and in the promises that God hath sworn to give us for his sake, bringeth the Holy Ghost, as all the scriptures make mention, and as Paul saith, " Have ye Acts xix. received the Holy Ghost through faith, or believing?" Faith Faith driveth J . P ? the devils is the rock whereon Christ buildeth his congregation; against |f?y- W,T- which, saith Christ, Matt. xvi. hell-gates shall not prevail. As soon as thou believest in Christ, the Holy Ghost cometh, sin \} The chasing away of evil spirits was believed to be effected by the ringing of hallowed bells. Brand, Obs. on popular antiquities, n. 130 ; and Durand. Rationale Div. Offic. i. 4. § 15.] [2 Bishop Latimer has given a curious account of what he was bidden to do with a holy candle, when yet a Romanist. Latimer's Sermons, Serm. xxvn. on Ep. for 21st S. aft. Trin. p. 499. Park. Soc. ed. In the preceding pages he has mentioned also some of the super stitions connected with holy water, holy bread, holy bells, &c] [3 'The papists say to such as are witnesses of the child's baptism, Ye are bound by the order of our mother, the holy church, to see that this child be confirmed so soon as is possible, or as soon as ye hear that the bishop cometh within 7 mile of this town, without any farther delay. And what is the confirmation of the children that is used at this present, but plain sorcery, legerdemain, and all that naught is ? The bishop mumbleth a few Latin words over the child, charmeth him, crosseth him, smeareth him with stinking popish oil, and tieth a linen band about the child's neck, and sendeth him home.' Becon's Prayers, &c. Park. Soc. ed. p. 234. This linen cloth was called the Chrisom ; and its use, though apparently changed into a white vesture, was retained in the baptismal service of K. Edward's first book (1549), but not in his second book of 1552. See Liturgies of Edw. VI. Park. Soc. ed. p. 112 — 3, where the minister is bidden to 'command that the chrisoms bo brought to the church and delivered to the priests after the accustomed manner, at the purification of the mother of every child.'] r i 15 [tyndale.] 226 obedience of a christian man. why do not falleth away, and devils fly. When we cast holy water at the bishops , ,.,¦'. ,,,.,„, i e fleakfrohmm devil, or ring the bells, he fleeth as men do from young gun°s?nyfT children, and mocketh with us, to bring us from the true faith, that is in God's word, unto a superstitious and a false belief of our own imagination. If thou hadst faith and threwest an unhallowed stone at his head, he would earnestly flee, and without mocking ; yea, though thou threwest nothing at all, he would not yet abide. ceremonies Though that at the beginning: miracles were shewed didnotthe ,. . ° . . ° ° . „ . , ... ,. miracle, but through such ceremonies, to move the infidels to beheve the faith. W. T. ° word of God, as thou readest how the apostles anointed the ' sick with oil, and healed them ; and Paul sent his pertelet or jerkin1 to the sick, and healed them also ; yet was it not the ceremony that did the miracle, but faith of the preacher and the truth of God, which had promised to confirm and stablish his gospel with such miracles. Therefore, as soon as the gift of miracles ceased, ought the ceremony to have ceased also ; or else if they needs will have a ceremony to signify some promise or benefit of God (which I praise not, but would have God's word preached every Sunday, for wh'aufie3 tel1 wnicn intent Sundays and holy days were ordained), then let meane°thy them tell the people what it meaneth ; and not set up a bald W,T- and a naked ceremony without signification, to make the people believe therein, and to quench the faith that ought to be given unto the word of God. The priest What helpeth it also that the priest, when he goeth to discuiseth himself with mass, disguiseth himself with a great part of the passion of of christ. Christ, and playeth out the rest under silence, with signs and proffers, with nodding, becking and mowing2, as it were jackanapes, when neither he himself, neither any man else wotteth what he meaneth3? Not at all, verily ; but hurteth, Dumb cere- and that exceedingly ; forasmuch as it not only destroyeth monies to v 3 o •/ quench faith the faith, and quencheth the love that should be given unto and love, and 7 x o ta8deishto tne commandments, and maketh the people unthankful, in mock us. tna£ jj. bringeth them into such superstition, that they think P In his translation of the new Testament, Tyndale renders the corresponding words in Acts xix. 12, napkyns or partlettes.] [3 Making gestures with the mouth.] [3 In p. 64 of his Confutation of Tyndale's answer to him, where his professed subject is the preface of that answer, Sir Thomas More has quoted this paragraph thus far.] DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 227 that they have done abundantly enough for God, yea, and deserved above measure, if they be present once in a day at such mumming4; but also maketh the infidels to mock us and abhor us, in that they see nothing but such apes' play among us, whereof no man can give a reason. All this cometh to pass to fulfil the prophecy which Theprophecy — , . . , ... ...... ofChristis Christ prophesied ; that there shall come in his name, which ^.lfi"etL shall say that they themselves are Christ. That do verily JJ^J™- the pope and our holy orders of religion. For they, under the name of Christ, preach themselves, their own word and their own traditions, and teach the people to believe in them. The pope giveth pardons of his full power, of the treasure of the church, and of the merits of saints. The friars likewise make their benefactors (which only they call their brethren and sisters) partakers of their masses, fasting, watchings, prayings, and wool ward goings5. Yea, and when a novice The testa- lt/0 Oo ' _ ment of the of the Observants is professed, the father asketh him, Will Absterv(jmts- ye keep the rules of holy St Francis? and he saith, Yea. Will ye so in deed ? saith he. The other answereth, Yea, forsooth, father. Then saith the father, And I promise you again everlasting life. 0 blasphemy ! If eternal life be due unto the pilled6 traditions of lousy friars, where is the testament become that God made unto us in Christ's blood ? Christ saith, ' That there shall come pseudo-Christi ;' which Matt. xxiv. though I, for a consideration, have translated false Christs, False anoint- keeping the Greek word, yet signifieth it in the English edp ' false anointed,' and ought so to be translated. " There shall come," saith Christ, "false anointed, and false prophets, and shall do miracles and wonders so greatly, that, if it were possible, the very elect, or chosen, should be brought out of the way." Compare the pope's doctrine unto the word of God, and thou shalt find that there hath been, and yet is, a great going out of the way ; and that evil men .and deceivers [4 This is also quoted by More in the same place, but for 'they' he writes ' Christian men think;' and it provoked him to say, 'Surely there needeth no man to doubt, but he that can find in his heart to make such mocks upon the devout observances, used so many hundred years about the mass, hath a lewd beastly mind against the very sacra ment itself.'] [5 Woolward going : wearing woollen, instead of linen, next the skin, as a meritorious penance. See also p. 212, note 2.] [6 Bald, bare. See n. p. 117.] 15—2 228 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. s Tim. iii. (as Paul prophesied 2 Tim. iii.) have prevailed, and waxed worse and worse, beguiling other as they are beguiled them selves. Thou tremblest and quakest, saying, Shall God let Christ's pro- us go so sore out of the right way ? I answer, It is Christ never so ter- that warneth us; which, as he knew all that should follow, rible, must . mild' w" t so prophesied he before, and is a true prophet, and his pro phecies must needs be fulfilled. nritherwas ^0D anointed his son Jesus with the Holy Ghost, and shorn?nno°rr therefore called him Christ; which is as much to say as vJJtTofh anointed. Outwardly he disguised him not ; but made him like other men, and sent him into the world to bless us, and to offer himself for us a sacrifice of a sweet savour, to kill the stench of our sins, that God henceforth should smell them no more, nor think on them any more; and to make full and sufficient satisfaction, or amends, for all them that repent, believing the truth of God, and submitting themselves unto his ordinances, both for their sins that they do, have done, and shall do. For sin we through fragility never so oft, yet as soon as we repent and come into the right way again, and unto the testament which God hath made in Christ's blood, our sins vanish away as smoke in the wind, and as darkness at the coming of light ; or as thou castest a He that doth little blood, or milk, into the main sea : insomuch that who- aught to . « . n . . make satis- soever goeth about to make satisfaction for his sins to God- faction, or to o hathiMthis ward, saying in his heart, This much have I sinned, this £hr'i»°8 much will I do again; or this-wise will I live to make wood. w. t. amen(js withal ; or this will I do, to get heaven withal ; the same is an infidel, faithless, and damned in his deed-doing, and hath lost his part in Christ's blood ; because he is diso bedient unto God's testament, and setteth up another of his own imagination, unto which he will compel God to obey. If we love God, we have a commandment to love our neigh- 1 Joh. iv. bour also, as saith John in his epistle ; and if we have to our offended him, to make him amends ; or if we have not where- make we with, to ask him forgiveness, and to do and suffer all things amends. \ . . - . W-T- for his sake, to win him to God, and to nourish peace and unity. But to God-ward Christ is an everlasting satisfaction, and ever sufficient1. P It was to the above passage that Foxe considered the papal commissioners for the examination of Tyndale's works as alluding, DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 229 Christ, when he had fulfilled his course, anointed his The aposties wui tj neither apostles and disciples with the same Spirit, and sent them shaven nor L x x shorn, nor forth, without all manner disguising, like other men also, to ^i'{nn0'?1d preach the atonement and peace which Christ had made be- w- T- tween God and man. The apostles likewise disguised no man, but chose men anointed with the same Spirit : one to preach the word of God, whom we call, after the Greek tongue, a bishop or a priest : that is, in English, an overseer and an Bishop, an overseer. elder. How he was anointed, thou readest, 1 Tim. iii. "A bishop w. t. 7 7 -1 The true or an overseer must be faultless, the husband of one wife." ^°™*£st Many Jews, and also Gentiles, that were converted unto the w- T- faith, had at that time divers wives, yet were not compelled to put any of them away ; which Paul, because of ensample, would not have preachers, forasmuch as in Christ we return again unto the first ordinance of God, that one man and one woman should go together. " He must be sober, of honest behaviour, honestly apparelled, harborous," that is, ready to lodge strangers ; " apt to teach, no drunkard, no fighter, not This on is given to filthy lucre ; but gentle, abhorring fighting, abhor- our bishops. ring covetousness, and one that ruleth his own household honestly, having children under obedience with all honesty. For if a man cannot rule his own house, how can he care for the congregation of God? He may not be young in the faith," or, as a man would say, a novice, " lest he swell and when they made it the first article in their list of heresies and errors, that he said, ' We are bound to make satisfaction to our neighbour, but not to God.' And it is certain that Sir T. More, who was one of those commissioners, and probably a leading one, has strongly con demned this paragraph, which he has quoted from the words, 'For sin we,' to the end, in p. 46 of his answer to the preface of Tyndale's confutation. More speaks of the passage as an encouragement to sin, inasmuch as in his opinion it makes the obtaining of forgiveness an easy matter. ' But because,' says he, ' Tyndale will that men repent the doing of their sin, and then no more but faith ; I would wit of Tyndale what calleth he repenting, a little short sorrow, or a great sorrow and a long ? If a little pretty sorrow, and very shortly done ; I would as fain he said true, as I fear he lieth. If a great fervent sorrow, with grief and trouble of mind, not shortly, shot over, but kept and continued long, then force I little of his heresy. For no doubt is it, but that Tyndale's tale to such a man shall seem, God wote, full fond. For he that hath such repentance will to shrift, I warrant you, and take penance of the priest, and do much more thereto, whatsoever Tyndale tell him.'] 230 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. fall into the judgment of the evil speaker ;" that is, he may not be unlearned in the secrets of the faith : for such are at once stubborn and headstrong, and set not a little by themselves. But, alas ! we have above twenty thousand that ' know no more scripture than is written in their portesses ; and among them is he exceedingly well learned that, can turn to his service1. "He must be well reported of them that are without, lest he fall into rebuke, and into the snare of the evil speaker ;" that is, lest the infidels, which yet believe not, should be hurt by him, and driven from the faith, if a man that were defamed were made head or overseer of the congregation. Priests ought He inust have a wife for two causes2: one, that it may to have . . whves:wndT thereby be known who is meet for the room. He is unapt for so chargeable an office, which had never household to rule. Another cause is, that chastity is an exceeding seldom gift, and unchastity exceeding perilous for that degree ; inas much as the people look as well unto the living as unto the preaching, and are hurt at once if the living disagree, and fall from the faith, and believe not the word. what the This overseer, because he was taken from his own business "IE tohane anc* laDour> *° preach God's word unto the parish, hath right, w- T- by the authority of his office, to challenge an honest living of the parish, as thou mayest see in the evangehsts, and also in Paul. For who will have a servant, and will not give him Men are not meat, drink, and raiment, and all things necessary? How bound to pay ,, , ° . . . the priest m they would pay him, whether in money, or assign him so GpoViaw. much rent, or in tithes, as the guise is now in many countries, was at their liberty. Deacon, what Likewise in every congregation chose they another after itsigniheth, , . , . . . ws'om'ce' is * e same ensample, and even so anointed, as it is to see in the Ac'tsTvi. saia" chapter of Paul, and Acts vi. ; whom, after the Greek word, we call deacon ; that is to say in English, a servant or a minister ; whose office was to help and assist the priest, and [l Portess, spelt also porteux and portass, is a name for the Breviary, or Roman service-book. Hence, 'to turn to his service,' is equivalent to ' finding the place' in our books of Common prayer.] [2 Art. IX. of the heresies and errors charged against Tyndale is, 'A priest ought to have a wife for two causes.' ' The words of Tyndale be these/ is Foxe's only remark upon the charge ; and he then gives the passage.] DUTY OF KINGS AND JUDGES. 231 to gather up his duty, and to gather for the poor of the parish, which were destitute of friends, and could not work. Common no beggars. W. T. beggars to run from door to door were not then suffered. On the saints' days, namely such as had suffered death for how hoiy the word sake, came men together into the church ; and the offerings 0 earne up, priest preached unto them, and exhorted them to cleave fast w. t. unto the word, and to be strong in the faith, and to fight against the powers of the world, with suffering for their faith's sake, after the ensample of the saints : and taught them not to believe in the saints, and to trust in their merits, and to saints were make gods of them ; but took the saints for an ensample only, w. t. and prayed God to give them like faith and trust in his word, and like strength and power to suffer therefore, and to give them so sure hope of the life to come ; as thou mayest see in the collects of St Lawrence and of St Stephen in our lady matins3. And in such days, as we now offer, so gave they every man his portion according to his ability, and as God put in his heart, to the maintenance of the priest, deacon, and other common ministers, and of the poor, and to find learned men to teach, and so forth. And all was put in the hands of the deacon ; as thou mayest see in the life of St Lawrence, and in the histories. And for such purposes gave men lands why lands afterwards, to ease the parishes ; and made hospitals, and also unto the l •¦ i • i spiritual .. places to teach their children, and to bring them up, and to omcersbefore 1 7 o x7 we fell from nurture them in God's word ; which lands our monks now S^J? f 'th- devour. [s Collect of St Laurence, in the Roman breviary, for Aug. 10. O Almighty God, who didst give the blessed Laurence victory over the fires of his torments, grant to us, we beseech thee, that we may extinguish the flames of our vices. Through our Lord. Collect of St Stephen's day, Dec. 26, in the same. Grant us, O Lord, we beseech thee, that we may imitate what we reverence, and may learn to love even our enemies ; since we are celebrating the birth of him, who learnt to implore mercy for. his persecutors from our Lord Jesus Christ, thy Son, who Hveth and reigneth with thee.] 232 OBEDIENCE OF A CHKISTIAN MAN. Antichrist. False anoint- Antichrist of another manner hath sent forth his disci- ed. W. T. pies, those "false anointed," of which Christ warneth us before, that they should come and shew miracles and wonders, even to bring the very elect out of the way, if it were pos- shaving is sible. He ariointeth them after the manner of the Jews ; and the heathen shaveth them and sheareth them after the manner of the andoilmgof , Hwjews. heathen priests, which serve the idols. He sendeth them forth not with false oil only, but with false names also : for False names, compare their names unto their deeds, and thou shalt find 2 ihess ii. them false. He sendeth them forth, as Paul prophesied of Lvinii sitiris. w.t. ' them, with lying signs and wonders. What sign is the anointing ? That they be full of the Holy Ghost. Compare them to the signs of the Holy Ghost, which Paul reckoneth, and thou shalt find it a false sign. "A bishop must be faultless, the husband of one wife." Nay, saith the pope, the No wife but husband of no wife, but the holder of as many whores as he wWT°re' listeth. God commandeth all degrees, if they burn, and cannot Takeadis- live chaste, to marry. The pope saith, If thou burn, take pensatiou. . - w. t. a dispensation for a concubine, and put her away when thou Knaveate. art old ; or else, as our lawyers say, Si non caste, tamen caute ; that is, If ye live not chaste, see ye carry clean, and play the knave secretly. " Harborous :" yea, to whores and bawds ; for a poor man shall as soon break his neck as his fast with them, but of the scraps and with the dogs, when 1 Pet iii. dinner is done. " Apt to teach," and, as Peter saith, " ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that ye have, and that with meekness." Boots, w.t. Which thing is signified by the boots1 which doctors of [i Boots. In a Tract entitled, 'A light shining out of darkness, or Occasional Queries,' &c. 4to. 1659, p. 30, it is asked, 'Whether it be not a pretty foundation for the Oxford doctors, to stand booted and spurred in the act, because there is mention in the scripture of being shod with the preparation of the gospel?' Boots were intro duced by the Benedictines, and were worn by masters of arts at their inception, till the doctors appropriated them, and the masters wore pantables, or sandals. Russell — The boot was buttoned up the side of the leg, like gaiters now. Fosbroke's Brit. Monachism, p. 283, ed. 3.] v antichrist. 233 divinity are created in, because they should be ready always to go through thick and thin, to preach God's word ; and by the bishop's two-horned mitre, which betokeneth the absolute Mitres, w.t. and perfect knowledge that they ought to have in the new Testament and the old. Be not these false signs ? For they beat only, and teach not. 'Yea,' saith the pope, 'If they will cite them. not be ruled, cite them to appear ; and pose them sharply, pOSe them. what they hold of the pope's power, of his pardons, of his bulls, of purgatory, of ceremonies, of confession, and such like creatures of our most holy father's. If they miss in any Make them point, make heretics of them, and burn them. If they be of wV*' mine anointed, and bear my mark, disgrace them, (I would w. t. say, disgraduate them,) and after the ensample of noble Antio- chus (2 Mace, vii.) pare the crowns and the fingers of them2, and torment them craftily, and for very pain make them deny the truth.1 ('But now,' say our bishops, 'because the truth is come too far abroad, and the lay-people begin to smell our wiles, it is best to oppress them with craft secretly, and to tame them in prison. Yea, let us find the means to have them in the king's prison, and to make treason of such doctrine : yea, wo must stir up some war, one where or another, to bring the people into another imagination.') ' If they be gentlemen, abjure them secretly. Curse them four curse them. times in the year3- Make them afraid of every thing ; and namely, to touch mine anointed ; and make them to fear the Fear them. [2 ' Moreover the bishop scraped the nails of both his [John Cas- tellane's] hands with a piece of glass, saying, By this scraping wo take away from thee all power to sacrifice, to consecrate, and to bless, which thou hadst received by the anointing of thy hands.' Foxe's Acts and Mon. under date of 1525 ; where may be seen the other forms used in degrading a clerk of the church of Rome, Vol. iv. pp. 363—5, 1837.] [3 ' In the year 1534, when orders came forth for the regulating of preaching and bidding of the beads, the general curse, as it was called, was also forbidden to be used any more.' Strype's Eccles. Mem. ch. xxii. In his Appendix, No. xlvi, Strype gives this curse at length, as taken from the Festival, printed by Wynkyn de Worde, in 1532. It begins as follows : ' Good men and women, I do you to understand, that we that have the cure of your souls be commanded of our ordinaries, and by the constitutions and the law of holy church, to shew to you four times in the year, in each quarter of the year once, when the people is most plenary in holy church, the articles of the sentence of cursing.'] 234 obedience of a christian man. sentence of the church, suspensions, excommunications and curses. Be they right or wrong, bear them in hand that they are to be feared yet. Preach me and mine authority, and how terrible a thing my curse is, and how black it maketh their souls. On the holidays, which were ordained to preach God's word, set up long ceremonies, long matins, ah in Latin, long masses, and long evensongs, and all in Latin, that they Ron them, understand not ; and roll them in darkness, that ye may lead sing. w.t. them whither ye will. And lest such things should be too Saftnem" T' te(l10US> sing some, say some, pipe some, ring the behs, and Bock'them ^uU them and rock them asleep.' And yet Paul (1 Cor. f coT'xw.' T' xiy0 forbiddeth to speak in the church or congregation, save in the tongue that all understand. For the layman thereby is not edified or taught. How shall the layman say Amen (saith Paul) to thy blessing or thanksgiving, when he wotteth not what thou sayest ? He wotteth not whether thou bless or curse. What then saith the pope ? ' What care I for Paul ? I command by the virtue of obedience, to read the gospel in Frayin„. „ Latin. Let them not pray but in Latin, no, not their Pater Latin. W. T. . * say them a noster. If any be sick, go also and say them a gospel, and all in Latin : yea, to the very corn and fruits of the field, in the procession week, preach the gospel in Latin : make the people believe, that it shall grow the better.' It is verily as good to preach it to swine as to men, if thou preach it in a tongue they understand not. How shall I prepare myself to God's commandments? How shall 1 be thankful to Christ for his kindness ? How shall I believe the truth and promises which God hath sworn, while thou tellest them unto me in a tongue which I understand not? what^quoth What then saith my lord of Canterbury to a priest that cant«bury? WOuld have had the new testament gone forth in English? " What," saith he, " wouldest thou that the lay-people should wete1 what we do ?" cross, w.t. "No fighter:" which I suppose is signified by the cross that is borne before the high prelates, and borne before them in procession. Is that also not a false sign? What realm T^rmoiiers. can be in peace for such turmoilers ? What so little a parish is it, but they will pick one quarrel or another with them, f1 Wete: know.] antichrist. 235 either for some surplice, chrisom2, or mortuary3, either for one trifle or other, and cite them to the Arches ? Traitors they are to all creatures, and have a secret conspiration be tween themselves. One craft they have, to make many king- The craft of d do the prelates. doms, and small ; and to nourish old titles or quarrels ; that w- T- they may ever move them to war at their pleasure ; and if much lands by any chance fall to one man, ever to cast a bone in the way, that he shall never be able to obtain it, as we now see in the emperor. Why ? For as long as the kings be small, if God would open the eyes of any to set a reformation in his realm, then should the pope interdict his interdict. land, and send in other princes to conquer it. " Not given to filthy lucre, but abhorring covetousness4;" and, as Peter saith, " Taking the oversight of them, not as 1 pet. ». though ye were compelled thereunto, but willingly; not for desire of filthy lucre, but of a good mind ; not as though ye were 1'ords over the parishes5." Over the parishes, quoth he ! 0 Peter, Peter, thou wast too long a fisher ; thou wast never Peter went ncv6r to brought up at the Arches, neither wast master of the Rolls, school at the nor yet chancellor of England. They are not content to reign w- T- over king and emperor, and the whole earth ; but challenge authority also in heaven and in hell. It is not enough for them to reign over all that_are quick, but have created them a purgatory, to reign also over the dead, and to have one The pope kingdom more than God himself hath. " But that ye be an kingdom . . n more than ensample to the flock," saith Peter; "and when the chief ^°d^imself- Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive an incorruptible crown of glory." This "abhorring of covetousness" is signified, as I suppose, by shaving and shearing of the hair, that they shearing, have no superfluity. But is not this also a false sign ? Yea, nineth. W.t. [2 H. L. Day, Cresome. See note 3 to p. 225.] [3 Mortuary, says Linwood, is so called, Quia relinquitur ecclesia) pro anima defuncti. But whether left by will, or not, it was de manded ; and the amount of the claim became a source of contention between the clergy and the heirs of the defunct. See Spelman's Concilia, p. 517, Lond. 1639. The first effectual restraint upon the exaction of mortuaries was by an act passed within two years after Tyndale's writing this, and when Henry VIII. had read what he here wrote. Foxe's Acts and Mon. iv. 611. Strype's Eccles. Mem. ch. xv.] [4 1 Tim. iv. 3. Tyndale's translation.] [6 Such is the rendering in Tyndale's new Testament.] 236 obedience of a christian man. verily, it is to them a remembrance to shear and shave, to heap benefice upon benefice, promotion upon promotion, dig nity upon dignity, bishoprick upon bishoprick, with pluralities, .Totquot. unions and tot quots1. First, by the authority of the gospel, they that preach the word of God in every parish, and other necessary minis ters, have right to challenge an honest living like unto one of Bishops that the brethren, and therewith ought to be content. Bishops p-each not i • 1 ¦, i , /~, , w. t. and priests that preach not, or that preach aught save God's word, are none of Christ's, nor of his anointing ; but servants of the beast, whose mark they bear, whose word they preach, whose law they maintain clean against God's law, and with their false sophistry give him greater power than God ever gave to his Son Christ. But they, as unsatiable beasts, not unmindful why they were shaven and shorn, because they will stand at no man's grace, or be in any man's danger, have gotten into their Tithes, w.t. own hands, first the tithe or tenth of all the realm ; and then, I suppose within a little, or altogether, the third foot of all Temporal the temporal lands. lands. W.T. r Mark well how many parsonages or vicarages are there in the realm, which at the least have a plow-land2 a-piece. Then note the lands of bishops, abbots, priors, nuns, knights of St John's, cathedral churches, colleges, chauntries, and Free chapei. free-chapels. For though the house fall in decay, and the ordinance of the founder be lost, yet will not they lose the lands. What cometh once in, may never more out. They make a free-chapel of it ; so that he which enjoy eth it shall do nought therefore. Besides all this, how many chaplains f1 In a scheme propounded to the council by a lawyer, for the amendment of certain grievances without casting off the pope's au thority, A. d. 1532, one clause is, ' Whereas all such acts made for reformation and abusion, to have plurality, triality, unions, pensions, totquot portions, &c. be smally regarded — let an act be made, &c.' Strype's Eccles. Mem. ch. xvii.] [2 A plow-land, called in Norman surveys a carucate, from caruca, a plough, was as much arable land as could be managed by a person having but one plough and team of horses, or oxen, with pasture and houses for the cattle and labourers. This quantity would therefore properly vary, according to the supposed productiveness of the ground ; and docs in fact appear to have varied from 60 to 240 acres. Hutchins' Dissert, on Doomsday-book.] W.T. ANTICHRIST. 237 do gentlemen find at their own cost, in their houses ? How many sing for souls, by testaments ? Then the proving of Testaments. testaments, the prizing of goods, the bishop of Canterbury's on-eri'ngdays prerogative; is that not much through the realm in a year? Privy tithes. Four offering days, and privy tithes. There is no servant, but that he shall pay somewhat of his wages3. None shall receive the body of Christ at Easter, be he never so poor a beggar, or never so young a lad or maid, but they must pay somewhat for it. Then mortuaries for forgotten tithes, as Mortuaries. . . W. T. they say. And yet what parson or vicar is there that will forget to have a pigeon-house, to peck up somewhat both at sowing-time and harvest, when corn is ripe ? They will for get nothing. No man shall die in their debt ; or if any man do, he shall pay it when he is dead. They will lose nothing. Why ? It is God's ; it is not theirs. It is St Hubert's rents, St Alban's lands, St Edmond's right, St Peter's patrimony, say they, and none of ours. Item, if a man die in another if ye die man's parish, besides that he must pay at home a mortuary w't.'0™ for forgotten tithes, he must there pay also the best that he there hath ; whether it be an horse of twenty pound, or how good soever he be ; either a chain of gold of an hundred uiou must marks, or five hundred pounds, if it so chance4. It is much, pass." \v\°t. verily, for so little pains-taking in confession, and in minis tering the sacraments. Then bead-rolls. Item chrysome, Petty piiiage. churchings, banns, weddings, offering at weddings, offering at w' 1' buryings, offering to images, offering of wax and lights, which come to their vantage ; besides the superstitious waste of wax in torches and tapers throughout the land. Then brotherhoods and pardoners. What get they also by con- confession. fessions? Yea, and many enjoin penance, to give a certain [sum] for to have so many masses said, and desire to pro vide a chaplain themselves ; soul-masses, dirges, month-minds, [3 In Simon Fish's ' Supplication of Beggars,' against their rivals the popish ecclesiastics, which Henry VIII. had read, it is said : ' This idle ravenous sort, setting all labour aside, have begged so importu nately that they have gotten into their hands more than the third part of all your realm — over and beside the tenth part of every servant's wages, &c.' Foxe's Acts and Mon. Vol. iv. p. 659.] [4 The same ancient Saxon council, which ordered the payment of mortuaries, had declared that if a man died out of his parish, the mortuary should be paid to that church which he frequented whilst living. Spelman's Concilia, p. 517, under date 1009.] 238 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. year-minds1, All-souls-day, and trentals. The mother church, and the high altar, must have somewhat in every testament. ProfeSfngs Offerings at priests' first masses. Item, no man is professed, W-T- of whatsoever religion it be, but he must bring somewhat. conjurations. The hallowing, or rather conjuring of churches, chapels, altars, super-altars, chalice, vestments, and bells. Then book, bell, candlestick, organs, chalice, vestments, copes, altar-cloths, i surplices, towels, basins, ewers, ship2, censer, and all manner ornament, must be found them freely ; they will not give a mite thereunto. Last of all, what swarms of begging friars Parson. are there ! The parson sheareth, the vicar shaveth, the parish Panj priest, priest polleth, the friar scrapeth, and the pardoner pareth ; w. t. we lack but a butcher to pull off the skin. spiritual law. What get they in their spiritual law, as they call it, in a year, at the Arches and in every diocese ? What get the commissaries, and officials with their somners and apparitors, a proper by bawdery in a year ? Shall ye not find curates enough ofconfession. which, to flatter the commissaries and officials withal, that W. T. they may go quit themselves, shall open unto them the con fessions of the richest of their parishes ; whom they cite privily, and lay to their charges secretly ? If they desire to know their accusers, ' Nay,' say they, ' the matter is known lay your well enough, and to more than ye are ware of. Come, lay book.0 w. t. your hand on the book ; if ye forswear yourself, we shall bring proofs, we will handle you, we will make an ensample of [! ' The days which our ancestors called their month's mind, their year's mind, and the like, were days whereon their souls were to be had in special remembrance, and obits, diriges, &c. said for them.' T. Blount, Fragra. Antiq.] [2 In modem editions this word has been printed sheep. In Day's folio, it is shepe; but in the original 4to. dated May 8, 1528, by Hans Luft, at Malborowe in the land of Hesse, it stands ship, The utensil meant was that employed for holding incense ; which was usually formed of metal, more or less enriched with ornaments, and fashioned like a boat ; from which last circumstance it was called the ship for incense, and in low Latin navicula, or naveta. In the Continuatio Historise Dunelmensis ab ann. 1333 ad ann. 1559, it is stated in the account of Richard de Burg, bishop of Durham, that the sacristan of the cathedral obtained from the bishop's executors, Vestimentum de alba camica, cum tribus capis ejusdem sectaa, nobiliter broudatum — duas cistulas, unum baculum pastoralem, unam mitram, annulum, et sandalia, duo candelabra argentea, unum turibulum argenteum et deauratum, cum una, naviculd, item, &c] ANTICHRIST. 239 you.' Oh, how terrible are they ! ' Come, and swear,' say they, ' that you will be obedient unto our injunctions.' And by that craft wring they their purses, and make them drop, as long as there is a penny in them. In three or four years shall they in those offices get enough to pay for a bishop's bull. What other thing are these in a realm save horse-leeches, and even very maggots, cankers, and caterpillars, which devour no more but all that is green ; and those wolves which Paul Acts xx. prophesied should come, and should not spare the flock ; and which Christ said should come in lamb's skins ; and bade us beware of them, and judge them by their works ? Though, as I have before sufficiently proved, a christian no man may o ' ^ _ . avenge save man must suffer all things, be it never so great unright, as ri1J,ej^bn0^mJd long as it is not against God's commandment ; neither is it ^ h^ office' lawful for him to cast any burden off his back by his own authority, till God pull it off, which laid it on for our deserv ings ; yet ought the kings everywhere to defend their realms from such oppression, if they were Christians ; which is seldom seen, and is a hard thing verily, though not impossible. For, alas ! they be captives or ever they be kings, yea, almost Kings are m ere they be born. No man may be suffered about them but «. t. flatterers, and such as are first sworn true unto our most holy fathers the bishops ; that is to say, false to God and man. If any of the nobles of the realm be true to the king, and so bold that he dare counsel him that which should be to his honour and for the wealth of the realm ; they will wait a season for him, as men say ; they will provide a ghostly father for him. God bring their wickedness to light ! There is no mischief whereof they are not the root ; nor bloodshed but through their cause, either by their counsel, or in that they preach not true obedience, and teach not the people to fear God. If any faithful servant be in all the court, he shall have twenty spies waiting upon him ; he shall be cast out of the court, or, as the saying is, conveyed to Calais, and made a captain or an ambassador; he shall be kept far enough from the king's presence. The kings ought, I say, to remember that they are in The duly of God's stead, and ordained of God, not for themselves, but for mgs' the wealth of their subjects. Let them remember that their subjects are their brethren, their flesh and blood, members of \ \ 240 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. their own body, and even their ownselves in Christ. There fore ought they to pity them, and to rid them from such wily tyranny, which increaseth more and more daily. And though that the kings, by the falsehood of the bishops and abbots, unlawful be sworn to defend such liberties ; yet ought they not to keep oaths ought ' •> , . tobe broken; their oaths, but to break them ; forasmuch as they are unright and may, 7 do pensatlon.is" ana< clean against God's ordinance, and even but cruel oppres- mi kin* s*on' con*rary un*° brotherly love and charity. Moreover topunVsh" tue sPiritual officer ought to punish, no sin ; but and if any that is hSi sin break out, the king is ordained to punish it, and they heart"muste not ; but to preach and exhort them to fear God, and that remain t-i ,T . , God. w. t. they sin not. And let the kings put down some of their tyranny, and turn some unto a common wealth. If the tenth part of such tyranny were given the king yearly, and laid up in the shire- towns, against the realm had need, what would it grow to in certain years? Moreover one king, one law, is God's ordi nance in every realm. Therefore ought not the king to suffer them to have a several law by themselves, and to draw his The spirit subjects thither. It is not meet, will they say, that a spiritual Sntothe man should be judged of a worldly or temporal man. 0 shaven only. ... 11 t ¦ 1 i 1 w. t. abommation I see how they divide and separate themselves : if the lay-man be of the world, so is he not of God ! If he believe in Christ, then is he a member of Christ, Christ's brother, Christ's flesh, Christ's blood, Christ's spouse, coheir with Christ, and hath his Spirit in earnest, and is also spiritual. If they would rob us of the Spirit of God, why should they fear to rob us of worldly goods ? Because thou art put in office to preach God's word, art thou therefore no more one of the brethren ? Is the mayor of London no more one of the city, because he is the chief officer ? Is the king no more of the realm, because he is head thereof? The king is in the Theking^ room of God ; and his law is God's law, and nothing but the law. w. t, law of nature and natural equity, which God graved in the hearts of men. Yet antichrist is too good to be judged by the law of God ; he must have a new, of his own making. It were meet verily that they went to no law at all. No more needed they, if they would study to preach God's word truly, and be contented with sufficient, and to be like one of their brethren. Sightt™ -^ anv question arose about the faith of the scripture, ANTICHRIST. 241 that let them judge by the manifest and open scriptures, not {?*£$*!£ excluding the lay-men : for there are many found among ffi£ie- the lay-men, which are as wise as the officers. Or else, when the officer dieth, how could we put another in his room ? Wilt thou so teach twenty, thirty, forty, or fifty years, that no man shall have knowledge or judgment in God's word save thou only ? Is it not a shame that we Christians come so Were™ oft oft to church in vain, when he of fourscore years old knoweth gj^« ™™r_ no more than he that was born yesterday? Moreover, when the spiritual officers have excommunicate any man, or have condemned any opinion for heresy ; let not King ought the king nor temporal officers punish and slay by and by J no7to ben"™ at their commandment : but let them look on God's word, nambeiy °ps' and compare their judgment unto the scripture, and seeiwnfisso' whether it be right or no, and not believe them at the first w.eT.uspec chop2 whatsoever they say, namely in things that pertain unto their own authorities and power : for no man is a right judge in his own cause. Why doth Christ command the scrip- JJ^Sitoau ture to be preached unto all creatures, but that it pertaineth tSfsS£now unto all men to know them ? Christ referreth himself unto the tures' T' scriptures, John v. And in the xith chapter of Matthew, John v._ unto the question of John Baptist's disciples, he answered, " The blind see, the lepers are cleansed, the dead arise again," &c. meaning that if I do the works which are prophesied that Christ should do when he cometh, why doubt ye whether I be he or no? As who should say, Ask the scripture, whether I be Christ or no, and not myself. How happeneth it then that our prelates will not come to the light also, that we may see whether their works be wrought in God, or no ? Why fear they to let the lay-men see what they do ? Why make they all their examinations in darkness ? Why examine .g$ they not their causes of heresy openly, as the lay-men do their felons and murderers ? Wherefore did Christ, and his apostles also, warn us so diligently of Antichrist, and of false prophets that should come ? Because that we should slumber or sleep careless ? or rather that we should look in the light of the scripture with ah diligence, to spy them when they «ame, and not to suffer ourselves to be deceived and led out t1 By and by, like immediately, presently, &c, caeant, when first used, without delay. Compare Matt. xiii. 21.] [2 In haste.] [tyndale.] j 242 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. of the way ? John biddeth judge the spirits. Whereby shall we judge them, but by the scriptures ? How shalt thou know whether the prophet be true or false, or whether he speak God's word, or of his own head, if thou wilt not see yeethat judge tne scriptures? Why said David, in the second psalm, "Be w* If1, learned ye that judge the earth, lest the Lord be angry with Ps- "• you, and ye perish from the right way ?" A terrible warning, verily : yea, and look on the stories well, and thou shalt find very few kings, since the beginning of the world, that have not perished from the right way, and that because they would not be learned. The wngs The emperor and kings are nothing now-a-days, but even are become x o o d han'^erf'3 hangmen unto the pope and bishops, to kill whosoever they w- T- condemn without any more ado ; as Pilate was unto the scribes and Pharisees and the high bishops, to hang Christ. For as those prelates answered Pilate, when he asked what he had done, " If he were not an evil doer, we would not have brought him unto thee;" as who should say, We are too holy to do any thing amiss, thou mayest believe us well enough : yea, and " his blood on our heads," said they ; kill him hardly, we will bear the charge, our souls for thine : " We have also a law by which he ought to die, for he calleth himself God's son :" — even so say our prelates, ' He ought to die by our laws, he speaketh against the church.' And, ' Your grace is sworn to defend the liberties and ordinances of the church, and to maintain our most holy father's authority ; our souls for yours, ye shall do a meritorious deed therein.' Never theless, as Pilate escaped not the judgment of God, even so is Beieamedyeit to be feared lest our temporal powers shall not. "Where- eartn. w. t. fore be learned, ye that judge the earth, lest the Lord be angry with you, and ye perish from the right way." who slew Who slew the prophets ? Who slew Christ ? Who slew t^eprop ets. ^ ap0Stles ? Who the martyrs, and all the righteous that ever were slain ? The kings and the temporal sword at the request of the false prophets. They deserved such murder to do, and to have their part with the hypocrites, because they why were would not be learned, and see the truth themselves. Where- siain? w. t. fore suffered the prophets ? Because they rebuked the hypo- what deeds crites which beguiled the world, and namely princes and teaSToie rulers, and taught them to put their trust in things of vanity, hypocntes? an(j not jn Q.ocps wor(j) an(j taught them to do such deeds of ANTICHRIST. 243 mercy as were profitable unto no man, but unto the false prophets themselves only ; making merchandise of God's word. Wherefore slew they Christ ? Even for rebuking the whysiew hypocrites ; because he said, " Woe be to you scribes and w. t. Matt, xxiii. Pharisees, hypocrites, for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven before men," Matt, xxiii. : that is, as it is written, Luke xi. "Ye Luke xi. have taken away the key of knowledge." The law of God, which is the key wherewith men bind, and the promises, which The keys. are the keys wherewith men loose, have our hypocrites also taken away. They will suffer no man to know God's word, but burn it, and make heresy of it: yea, and because the people begin to smell their falsehood, they make it treason to christ is a the king, and breaking of the king's peace, to have so much a breaker of as their Pater noster in Enghsh. And instead of God's law, peace. V t. they bind with their own law : and instead of God's promises, How the they loose and justify with pardons and ceremonies, which wndand . , loose. W.T, they themselves have imagined for their own profit. They preach, ' It were better for thee to eat flesh on Good Friday, ^§ than to hate thy neighbour :' but let any man eat flesh but on a Saturday, or break any other tradition of theirs, and he shall be bound, and not loosed, till he have paid the uttermost farthing, either with shame most vile, or death most cruel. But hate thy neighbour as much as thou wilt, and thou shalt have no rebuke of them ; yea, rob him, murder him, and then come to them and welcome. They have a sanctuary for thee, to save thee; yea, and a neck-verse, if thou canst but read a little Latinly, though it be never so sorrily, so that thou be ready to receive the beast's mark. They care for no under standing : it is enough if thou canst roll up1 a pair of matins, or an even-song, and mumble a few ceremonies. And because they be rebuked thus, they rage. " Be learned, therefore, ye Beieamedye that judge the world, lest God be angry with you, and ye the" irtff perish from the right way." " Woe be to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites !" saith For rebuking Christ, Matt.xxiii. "for ye devour widows' houses under a colour christsiain. _ , And for the of long prayer." Our hypocrites rob not the widows only, but same cause knight, squire, lord, duke, king, and emperor, and even the whole MaM.'xxkT' world, under the same colour; teaching the people to trust in their prayers, and not in Christ, for whose sake God hath \} To roll up : to chaunt; so called by a metaphor which somewhat resembles that used when we say, To run up the notes of the gamut.] 16—2 244 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. forgiven all the sin of the whole world unto as many as repent They be'not and believe. They fear them with purgator v, and promise to a little afraid ,,,..111111 x tT of purgatory pray perpetually, lest the lands should ever return home again perpetuities. unt0 the right heirs. What hast thou bought with robbing thy heirs, or with giving the hypocrites that which thou robbest of other men ? Perpetual prayer ? Yea, perpetual pain : for they appoint thee no time of deliverance, their prayers are so mighty. The pope for money can empty why u is purgatory when he will. It is, verily, purgatory; for it tory. w. t. purgeth and maketh clean riddance : yea, it is hell ; for it devoureth all things. His fatherhood sendeth them to heaven sraiacceii. with Scala cceli1 ; that is, with a ladder to scale the walls: W. T. . . ¦ Tiie door is for by the door, Christ, will they not let them come m. stopped up : ^ * IndTcaiethe' ^hat door have they stopped up ; and that because ye should waiis. w. t. buy ladders of them. For some they pray daily, which gave prayedfor, them perpetuities, and yet make saints of them, receiving andpravedto _ . r t , . J , , . . . ° also. w.t. offerings in their names, and teaching other to pray to them. The craft. None of them, also, which taketh upon them to save other with thathelpeth ' ' , , , 1 i , eth nothrus" their prayers, trusteth to be saved thereby themselves ; but ownmaster. hire other to pray for them. Numb. xvi. Moses taketh record of God, that he took not of any of Numerixvi. the people so much as an ass, neither vexed any of them. 1 sam. xii. Samuel, in the first book of Kings, the xiith chapter, asked all prayer was Israel, Whether he had taken any man's ox or ass ; or had not sold in , " the old time, vexed any man, or had taken any gift or reward of any man? and all the people testified, ' Nay :' yet these two both taught the people, and also prayed for them, as much as our prelates 1 Pet. v. do. Peter, 1 Peter v. exhorteth the elders to take the over sight of Christ's flock, not for filthy lucre, but of a good will, Acts xx. even for love. Paul, Acts xx. taketh the priests, or elders, [l In 1526, the year before Tyndale's writing this, Henry VIII. had requested and obtained from pope Clement VII. a confirmation of the pardons, as they were styled, which his predecessors had granted to ' the brethren and sisters of the guild of our lady in St Botolph's church at Boston.' One article of this indulgence was, "that if they, for any impediment, could not be present at the chapel of our lady in the said church, yet if they came unto their own parish church and there said one Paternoster and Ave-Maria, they should enjoy full remis sion of all their sins ; or whosoever came every Friday to the same chapel should have as much remission as if he went to the chapel of our Lady called Scala Cceli." Foxe's Acts and Mon. Vol. v. pp. 364—5 — The chapel of Scala Cceli was at Rome.] ANTICHRIST. 245 to record, that he had taught repentance and faith, and all the counsel of God ; and yet had desired no man's gold, silver, or vesture, but fed himself with the labour of his hands. And yet these two taught and prayed for the people as much as our prelates do, with whom it goeth after the common saying, 'No penny, no Paternoster :' which prelates yet, as they teach not but beat only, so wot they not what prayer meaneth. Moreover, the law of love, which Christ left among us, is to give, and not to receive. What prayer is it then, that Their prayer thus robbeth all the world, contrary to that great command- great com- ' « ° mandmentof ment, which is the end of ah commandments, and m which all ^^j^, others are contained ? If men should continue to buy prayer Sf0re.up four or five hundred years more, as they have done, there W,T" would not be a foot of ground in Christendom, neither any worldly thing, which they, that will be called spiritual only, should not possess. And thus all should be called spiritual. " Woe be to you lawyers ! for ye lade men with burdens Luke xi. which they are not able to bear, and ye yourselves touch not the packs with one of your fingers," saith Christ, Luke xi. Our lawyers, verily, have laden us a thousand times more. What The burdens spiritual kindred have they made in baptism to let matrimony ! 2 tuai lawyers. besides that they have added certain degrees unto the law natural for the same purpose. What an unbearable burden of chastity do they violently thrust on other men's backs, and how easily bear they it themselves ! How sore a burden, confession ,,.",. tormenteth how cruel a hangman, how grievous a torment, yea, and *££°n-rol) how painful an hell, is this ear-confession unto men's con- ^iseoc sciences ! For the people are brought in behef, that without theloui onfd that they cannot be saved; insomuch that some fast certain faith- W-T' days in the year, and pray certain superstitious prayers all their hves long, that they may not die without confession. In peril of death, if the priest be not by, the shipmen shrive themselves unto the mast. If any be present, they run then every man into his ear : but to God's promises fly they not, [2 By the papal law, the father of a child might not marry the wife of his son's godfather if he became a widower and she a widow. Decret. Greg. Lib. rv. Tit. xi. cap. iv. A fortiori he might not marry his son's godmother. Id. cap. vi. And if children of those who had stood for the same child should be found to have intermarried, the law said, Hujusmodi personae non possunt matrimonium contrahere ; et si contraxerint, possunt ab invicem separari; et qui contractum sciverint, debent ecclesias illud nunciare.' Id. cap. vii.] 246 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. for they know them not. If any man have a death's wound, he crieth immediately for a priest. If a man die without shrift, many take it for a sign of damnation. Many, by reason of that false belief, die in desperation. Many, for shame, keep back of their confession twenty, thirty years, and think all the while that they be damned. I knew a poor woman with child, which longed, and, being overcome of her passion, ate flesh on a Friday ; which thing she durst not confess in the space of eighteen years, and thought all that while that she had been damned, and yet sinned she not at all. Is not this a sore burden, that so weigheth down the soul unto the bottom of hell ? What should I say ? A great book were not sufficient to rehearse the snares which they have laid to rob men both of their goods, and also of the trust which they should have in God's word1. "The scribes and Pharisees do all their works to be seen of men. They set abroad their phylacteries, and make long borders on their garments, and love to sit uppermost at feasts, and to have the chief seats in the synagogues ;" that Matt. xxm. is, in the congregations or councils, "and to be called Babbi;" that is to say, masters, saith Christ, Matt, xxiii. Behold the deeds of our spiritualty, and how many thousand fashions are among them to be known by : which, as none is like another, so loveth none another : for every one of them supposeth that all other poll too fast, and make too many captives. Yet to resist Christ are they all agreed, lest they should be all Badges or compelled to deliver up their prisoners to him. Behold the known by. monsters, how they are disguised with mitres, crosiers, and hats, with crosses, pillars, and poleaxes, and with three namesUvv t cr0WIls • What names have they ? My lord prior, my lord abbot, my lord bishop, my lord archbishop, cardinal, and legate ; if it please your fatherhood ; if it please your lord ship ; if it please your grace ; if it please your holiness ; and eltelme'dt?hey innumerable such iifce> Behold how they are esteemed, and w- T- how high they be crept up above all ; not into worldly seats only, but into the seat of God, the hearts of men, where they sit above God himself. For both they, and whatsoever they make of their own heads, is more feared and dread than God and his commandments. In them and their deservings put [l Art. X. of heresies and errors fixes on the above paragraph, and says, ' He condemneth auricular confession.'] ANTICHRIST. 247 we more trust than in Christ and his merits. To their pro mises give we more faith than to the promises which God hath sworn in Christ's blood. The hypocrites say unto the kings and lords, ' These heretics would have us down first, and then you, to make of ah common.' Nay, ye hypocrites and right heretics, approved by open scripture, the kings and lords are down Kings are already; and that so low, that they cannot go lower. Yeg™"1^^ tread them under your feet, and lead them captive, and have made them your bond-servants to wait on your filthy lusts, and to avenge your malice on every man, contrary unto the right of God's word. Ye have not only robbed them of their land, authority, honour, and due obedience which ye owe unto them ; but also of their wits, so that they are not without understanding in God's word only, but even in worldly mat ters, that pertain unto their offices, they are more than chil dren. Ye bear them in hand what ye will, and have brought them even in case like unto them which, when they dance naked in nets, believe they are invisible. We would have them up again, and restored unto the room and authority which God hath given them, and whereof ye have robbed them. And your inward falsehood we do but utter only with the light of God's word, that your hypocrisy might be seen. " Be learned, therefore, ye that judge the world, lest God be angry with you, and ye perish from the right way." "Woe be to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For Matt xxiii. ye make clean the utterside of the cup and of the platter, but within they are full of bribery and excess," saith Christ, Matt. c^hveV xxiii. Is that which our hypocrites eat and drink, and all thEft- w' *¦ their riotous excess, any other thing save robbery, and that which they have falsely gotten with their lying doctrine ? " Be learned, therefore, ye that judge the world," and compel them to make restitution again. " Ye blind guides," saith Christ, " ye strain out a gnat Matt xxiii- and swallow a camel." Matt, xxiii. Do not our blind guides also stumble at a straw, and leap over a block ; making narrow consciences at trifles, and at matters of weight none at all ? If consciences i* . i . that are so any of them happen to swallow his spittle, or any of the tra™tions°ut water wherewith he washeth his mouth, ere he go to mass ; mo^tSSLt or touch the sacrament with his nose; or if the ass2 forget SandrSs. Wt T« [2 An old black-letter edition reads here, oste.] 248 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. John viii. As the Jews are the chil dren of Abra ham, so are the bishops the succes sors ofthe apostles. W.T. The spiri tualty have taught to fear their traditions. W.T. to breathe on him1, or happen to handle it with any of his fingers which are not anointed ; or say 'Alleluia' instead of ' Laus tibi, Domine ;' or ' Ite, missa est' instead of ' Benedica- mus Domino ;' or pour too much wine in the chalice ; or read the gospel without light ; or make not his crosses aright, how trembleth he ! How feareth he ! What an horrible sin is committed ! I cry God mercy, saith he, and you, my ghostly father. But to hold an whore, or another man's wife, to buy a benefice, to set one realm at variance with another, and to cause twenty thousand men to die on a day, is but a trifle and a pastime with them ! The Jews boasted themselves of Abraham; and Christ said unto them, John viii. " If ye were Abraham's children, ye would do the deeds of Abraham." Our hypocrites boast themselves of the authority of Peter, and of Paul, and the other apostles clean contrary unto the deeds and doctrine of Peter, Paul, and of all the other apostles ; which both obeyed all worldly authority and power, usurping none to themselves, and taught all other to fear the kings and rulers, and to obey them in all things not contrary to the commandment of God; and not to resist them, though they took away life and goods wrongfully; but patiently to abide God's vengeance. This did our spiritualty never yet, nor taught it. They taught not to fear God in his commandments ; but to fear them in their traditions : insomueh that the evil people, which fear not to resist a good king and to rise against him, dare not P In a list of 'Articles to be followed and observed, according to the king's majesty's injunctions and proceedings,' set forth under the authority of Edward VI, in 1549, the second article enjoins, ' That no minister do counterfeit the popish mass, as to kiss the Lord's table ; washing his fingers at every time in the communion ; blessing his eyes with the paten or sudary, or crossing his head with tho paten ; shifting ofthe book from one place to another; laying down and licking the chalice of the communion ; holding up his fingers, hands, or thumbs, joined towards his temples ; breathing upon the bread, &c. Burnet's Hist, of Reform. Vol. ii. Coll. of Records, p. 165. Part n. B. I. No. 33. Tyndale calls ' breathing upon the bread,' breathing on him ; because the bread after consecration was called GOD by the church of Rome. Thus in the canon of the mass, ' Here let the priest bow himself to the host, saying, I beseech Thee, that thou fail not us thy servants, but forgive our sins.' See translation of canon of the mass, in Foxe's Acts and Mon. B. x. Vol. vi. p. 366.] ANTICHRIST. 249 lay hands on one of them, neither for defiling of wife, daugh ter, or very mother. When all men lose life and lands, they They win ** , ~ . . . somewhat remain always sure and in safety, and ever win somewhat, always. For whosoever conquereth other men's lands unrightfully, ever giveth them part with them. To them is all thing lawful. In ah councils and parliaments are they the chief. Without them may no king be crowned, neither until he be 428, sworn to their liberties. All secrets know they, even the very thoughts of men's hearts. By them ah things are ministered. No king nor realm may, through their falsehood, live in peace. To believe they teach not in Christ, but in them and their disguised hypocrisy. And of them compel they all men to buy redemption and forgiveness of sins. The people's sin they eat, and thereof wax fat. The more wicked the people are, the more prosperous is their commonwealth. If kings and great men do amiss, they must build abbeys and colleges ; mean men build chantreys ; poor find trentals, and brotherhoods, and begging friars. Their own heirs do men disherit, to endote2 them. All kings are compelled to sub mit themselves to them. Read the story of king John, and of other kings. They will have their causes avenged, though whole realms should therefore perish. Take from them their disguising; so are they not spiritual. Compare that they have taught us unto the scripture ; so are we without faith. Christ saith, John v. " How can ye believe, which receive John v. . They that glory one of another ?" If they that seek to be glorious can he*enoIfaiUth have no faith, then are our prelates faithless, verily. And, °heyhao God's John vii. he saith : " He that speaketh of himself, seeketh his wfrf2- own glory." If to seek glory and honour be a sure token John ™' that a man speaketh of his ownself, and doth his own mes sage, and not his master's ; then is the doctrine of our pre lates of themselves, and not of God. " Be learned, therefore, ye that judge the earth, lest God be angry with you, and ye perish from the right way." Be learned, lest the hypocrites bring the wrath of GodBeieamed. upon your heads, and compel you to shed innocent blood ; as they have compelled your predecessors to slay the prophets, to kill Christ and his apostles, and all the righteous that since were slain. God's word pertaineth unto all men ; as it God-sword . ., . . ought allmen pertaineth unto ah servants to know their master s will and t?.%°*' W. T. P Endow.] 250 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. pleasure, and to all subjects to know the laws of their prince. ™cy.,y?aU Let not the hypocrites do all things secretly. What reason is u ' it that mine enemy should put me in prison at his pleasure, |^- and there diet me, and handle me as he lusteth ; and judge me himself, and that secretly ; and condemn me by a law of his own making, and then deliver me to Pilate to murder me ? ought to rd ^et -God's word try every man's doctrine, and whomsoever judge, w.t. G.0(J'S Word proveth unclean, let him be taken for a leper. waetouhnder- ®Qe scripture will help to declare another. And the cir- scriPdture. cumstances, that is to say, the places that go before and W-T- after, will give light unto the middle text. And the open and manifest scriptures will ever improve the false and wrong exposition of the darker sentences. Let the temporal power, to whom God hath given the sword to take vengeance, look or ever that they leap, and see what they do. Let the causes be disputed before them, and let him that is accused have room to answer for himself. The powers, to whom God hath committed the sword, shall give accounts for every drop of hahvee??uage ^hod tnat 1S s^e(i on *ne earth. Then shall their ignorance ^myrseouihfo? not excuse them, nor the saying of the hypocrites help them, ethSltdp" 'My soul for yours, your grace shall do a meritorious deed;' 'your grace ought not to hear them;' 'it is an old heresy condemned by the church.' The king ought to look in the scripture, and see whether it were truly condemned or no, if he will punish it. If the king, or his officer for him, will slay me ; so ought the king, or his officer, to judge me. The king cannot, but unto his damnation, lend his sword to kill whom he judgeth not by his own laws. Let him that is accused stand on the one side, and the accuser on the other side ; and let the king's judge sit and judge the cause, if the king will kill, and not be a murderer before God. throu"wiuhbaut Hereof may ye see, not only that our persecution is for "ypOTrisy.1 tne same cause that Christ's was, and that we say nothing "• T' that Christ said not ; but also that all persecution is only for rebuking of hypocrisy ; that is to say, of man's righteousness, and of holy deeds, which man hath imagined to please God and to be saved by without God's word, and beside the testa ment that God hath made in Christ. If Christ had not rebuked the Pharisees because they taught the people to beheve in their traditions and holiness, and in offerings that came to their advantage, and that they taught the widows, ANTICHRIST. 251 and them that had their friends dead, to believe in their prayers, and that through their prayers the dead should be saved ; and through that means robbed them both of their goods, and also of the testament and promises that God had made to ah that repented in Christ to come ; he might have been uncrucified unto this day. If St Paul also had not preached against circumcision, that it justified not ; and that vows, offerings, and ceremonies justified not ; and that righteousness, and forgiveness of sins, came not by any deserving of our deeds,, but by faith, or believing the promises of God, and by the deserving and merits of Christ only ; he might have hved unto this hour. Likewise, if we preached not against pride, covetousness, lechery, extortion, usury, simony, and against the evil living both of the spiritualty as well as of the temporalty, and against inclosings of parks, raising of rents and fines, and of the carrying out of wool out of the realm ; we might endure long enough. But touch the scab of hypocrisy, or pope- holiness, and go about to utter their false doctrine, wherewith they reign as gods in the heart and consciences of men, and rob them not of lands, goods, and authority only, but also of the testament of God, and salvation that is in Christ ; then helpeth thee neither God's word, nor yet if thou didst miracles ; but that thou art not an heretic only, and hast the devil within thee, but also a breaker of the king's peace, and a traitor. But let us return unto our lying signs again. What signifieth that the prelates are so bloody, and The prelates clothed in red? That they be ready every hour to suffer inVe&w.'T. martyrdom for the testimony of God s word. Is that also not a false sign ? When no man dare, for them, once open his mouth to ask a question of God's word, because they are ready to burn him. What signifieth the poleaxes that are borne before high Meaxes. legates a latere ? Whatsoever false sign they make of them, I care not ; but of this I am sure, that as the old hypocrites, when they had slain Christ, set poleaxes to keep him in his sepulchre, that he should not rise again, even so have our hypocrites buried the testament that God made unto us in Christ's blood ; and to keep it down, that it rise not again, is all their study ; whereof these poleaxes are the very sign. 252 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Is not that shepherd's hook, the bishop's crose1, a false sign ? Is not that white rochet, that the bishops and canons wear, so like a nun, and so effeminately, a false sign ? What other things are their sandals, gloves, mitres, and all the whole pomp of their disguising, than false signs, in which Paul byhfs fruitT Pr°phesied that they should come ? And as Christ warned h"sdeavesy us to heware of wolves in lamb's skins, and bade us look W-T- rather unto their fruits and deeds than to wonder at their disguisings, run throughout all our holy religions, and thou shalt find them hkewise all clothed in falsehood. Of the Sacraments. Forasmuch as we be come to signs, we will speak a word or two of the signs which God hath ordained ; that is to say, of the sacraments which Christ left among us for our comfort, that we may walk in light and in truth, and in feeling of the John xi. power of God. For " he that walketh in the day stumbleth not;" when contrariwise he that walketh in the night stumbleth, John xii. John xi. And " they that walk in darkness wot not whither they go." sacraments This word, sacrament, is as much to say as an holy sign, are signs of ' « do' rn?sdes.pw." t. an(^ representeth alway some promise of God : as in the old Testament God ordained that the rainbow should represent and signify unto all men an oath, that God sware to Noe and to ah men after him, that he would no more drown the world through water. The Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ. So the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ hath a promise annexed, which the priest should declare in the Luke xxii. English tongue. " This is my body, that is broken for you." " This is my blood, that is shed for many, unto the forgive- 1 cor. xi. ness of sins." " This do in remembrance of me," saith Christ, The promise, Luke xxii. and 1 Cor. xi. If when thou seest the sacrament, which the sa- ... . p'eStri or eatest his body, or drinkest his blood, thou have this pro- onfy^w.T. mise fast in thine heart, that his body was slain and his blood {i Qrose: i. e. crosier.] SACRAMENT OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 253 shed for thy sins, and behevest it, so art thou saved and justified thereby. If not, so helpeth it thee not, though thou hearest a thousand masses in a day, or though thou doest nothing else all thy life long than eat his body or drink his blood : no more than it should help thee, in a dead thirst, to behold a bush at a tavern door, if thou knewest not thereby that there were wine within to be sold. Baptism- Baptism hath also his word and promise, which the priest ought to teach the people, and christen them in the Enghsh tongue; and not to play the popinjay with 'Credo say ye,' 'Volo say ye,' and ' Baptismum say ye;' for there ought _to be no mumming in such a matter. The priest, before he baptizeth, asketh, saying : ' Behevest thou in God the Father Almighty, and in his Son Jesus Christ, and in the Holy Ghost, and that the congregation of Christ is holy ?' And they say, ' Yea.' Then the priest upon this faith baptizeth the child in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, for the forgiveness of sins, as Peter saith, Acts ii. Actsii. The washing without the word helpeth not : but through the word it purifieth and cleanseth us ; as thou readest, Eph. v. how Christ cleanseth the congregation in the foun- Eph.v. tain of water through the word. The word is the promise that God hath made. Now as a preacher, in preaching the How the word of God, saveth the hearers that believe ; so doth the isrst|fi'- washing, in that it preacheth and representeth unto us the promise that God hath made unto us in Christ. The washing preacheth unto us, that we are cleansed with Christ's blood- shedding ; which was an offering, and a satisfaction, for the sin of all that repent and believe, consenting and submitting themselves unto the will of God. The plunging into the water signifieth that we die, and are buried with Christ, as concerning the old life of sin, which is Adam. And the pulling out again signifieth that we rise again with Christ in a new life, full of the Holy Ghost, which shall teach us and guide us, and work the will of God in us, as thou seest, Rom. vi. 254 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Of "Wedlock. Matrimonywas not or dained to signify any promise. W.T. If wedlock be holy, why had they lever have ¦whores than wives? W.T. Matrimony, or wedlock, is a state or a degree ordained of God, and an office wherein the husband serveth the wife, and the wife the husband. It was ordained for a remedy, and to increase the world; and for the man to help the woman, and the woman the man, with all love and kindness ; and not to signify any promise, that ever I heard or read of in the scripture. Therefore ought it not to be called a sacrament. It hath a promise, that we sin not in that state, if a man receive his wife as a gift given to him of God, and the wife her husband hkewise : as all manner meats and drinks have a promise that we sin not, if we use them 'measurably with thanksgiving. If they call matrimony a sacrament, because the scripture useth the similitude of matri mony to express the marriage, or wedlock, that is between us and Christ; (for as a woman, though she be never so poor, ret when she is married, is as rich as her husband ; even so we, when we repent and beheve the promises of God in Christ, though we be never so poor sinners, yet are as rich as Christ ; all his merits are ours, with all that he hath;) if for that ahseNihey call it a sacrament, so will I mustard -seed, leavers a, nay keys, bread, water, and a thousand other things^) which Christ and the prophets and all the scripture use, to express the kingdom of heaven and God's word withal. They praise wedlock with their mouth, and say, ' It is an holy thing,' as it is verily ; but had lever be sanctified with a whore, than to come within the sanctuary. Of Order. Subdeacon, deacon, priest, bishop, cardinal, patriarch, and pope, be names of offices and service, or should be, and not [x Sir T. More, quoting the above to confute it, and to disparage Tyndale, in p. 43 of his Answer to Tyndale's ' Preface to the Confuta tion' introduces the word make before mustard-seed; and then, pre sently, speaks as follows : ' Where St Paul for those holy significations sayth that matrimony is a great sacrament' (he means, in Eph. v. 32), ' Tyndale dare say nay to his teeth; and saith he can make as good a sacrament of leaven, of keys, of mustard-seed, or else of a net. He should rather yet, lest the grace get out, perde, make it of a sack.'] OF ORDER. 255 sacraments. There is no promise coupled therewith. If they minister their offices truly, it is a sign that Christ's Spirit is in them ; if not, that the devil is in them. Are these all sacraments, or which one of them ? Or what thing in them is that holy sign or sacrament ? The shaving, or the anoint ing ? What also is the promise that is signified thereby ? But what word printeth in them that character, that spiritual ^a"°ter- seal ? 0 dreamers and natural beasts, without the seal of the Spirit of God ; but sealed with the mark of the beast and with cankered consciences ! There is a word called in Latin sacerdos, in Greek ^f-J?0S- hiereus, in Hebrew cohan, that is, a minister, an officer2, a sacrificer or a priest ; as Aaron was a priest, and sacrificed for the people, and was a mediator between God and them. And in the English should it have had some other name than priest3. But Antichrist hath deceived us with unknown and strange terms, to bring us into confusion and superstitious blindness. Of that manner is Christ a priest for ever ; and all we priests through him, and need no more of any such priest on earth, to be a mean for us unto God4- For Christ P Tyndale has here given evidence of his being aware that the primary meaning of ]plb is minister, or officer; so that, like our minister, it is sometimes used to signify an officer or attendant of the sovereign, though more frequently for one who attends on God's service. In 2 Sam. viii. 18, David's sons are styled D'OHb , and in the parallel passage, 1 Chron. xviii. 17, ' the chief men at the king's hand.'] [3 In Day's folio there is here a mark of interrogation ; but not so in H. Luft's edition, nor in More's Confutation of Tyndale's Answer, where this passage is quoted. Tyndale doubtless meant that the English word priest ig_but an abbreviation of presbyter.] j [4 Art. ttXpof heresies and errors charged against Tyndale, is, ' Every man is a priest, and we need no other priest to be a mean for us unto God.' Poxe replies to this by giving Tyndale's own words, with a note quoting Eev. i. 6, ' Hath made us kings and priests unto GOD and his Father.' But the feeling of the commissioners, who condemned this sentence, may be gathered from the remarks of Sir Thos. More, who in p. 66 of his Confutation of Tyndale's Answer to him says : ' Tyndale teacheth plainly that the blessed sacrament is, in the mass, no sacrifice, none hoste, nor none oblation ; by which abomi nable heresy he taketh quite away the very special profit and fruit of all the mass. These be his very words.' And then More copies the above paragraph, from ' There is a word,' to this place, and proceeds as 256 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. hath brought us all into the inner temple, within the veil or forehanging, and unto the mercy-stool of God, and hath coupled us unto God; where we offer, every man for himself, the desires and petitions of his heart, and sacrifice and kill the lusts and appetites of his flesh, with prayer, fasting, and all manner godly living1. Presbyter. Another word is there in Greek, called presbyter, in Latin senior, in English an elder, and is nothing but an officer to teach, and not to be a mediator between God and us. This needeth no anointing of man. They of the old Testament were anointed with oil, to signify the anointing of Christ, priests now and of us through Christ, with the Holy Ghost. Thiswise oughtnotto . . , , , . " be. anointed is no man priest, but he that is chosen ; save as in time of W-T- necessity every person christeneth, so may every man teach his wife and household, and the wife her children. So in time of need, if I see my brother sin, I may between him and me rebuke him, and damn his deed by the law of God; and may also comfort them that are in despair, with the promises of God ; and save them if they believe. The office of By a priest then, in the new Testament, understand w.t. ' nothing but an elder to teach the younger, and to bring them unto the full knowledge and understanding of Christ, and to minister the sacraments which Christ ordained2, which is also follows : — 'By these words ye see, that whereas the priests in the old law offered sacrifices for the people, and that of diverse kinds, as ap peareth in Levitici and Numeri and other places of holy scripture, instead of all which sacrifices Christ hath in his new law instituted ono only sacrifice, his own blessed body and blood to be offered up to his Father for his people by the hands of the priest, in form of bread and wine, of which holy offering in the mass now the offering of Melchise- dech, that . offered bread and wine, was a solemn figure ; Tyndale telleth us here that because Christ is a priest for ever, and that all we be priests through him, man and woman ye must understand, we need therefore, he saith, no more of any such priest on earth, that should be a mean between God and the people, to offer up any sacrifice to God for the people.'] P The last two sentences of this paragraph are next quoted by More, in the same place, and commented upon by him in hke manner.] [2 Sir T. More has quoted this sentence thus far, in p. 48 of his Confutation, where he is professing to combat the preface of Tyndale's answer to him; and in his remarks, on the words he has quoted, More says : ' What would it avail to dispute with him (Tyndale), since he mockcth and scoffeth out the words of St Paul, written unto OF ORDER. 257 nothing but to preach Christ's promises. And by them that give all their study to quench the light of truth, and to hold the people in darkness, understand the disciples of Satan and messengers of antichrist, whatsoever names they have, or whatsoever they call themselves. And as concerning that our They wm be spiritualty (as they will be called) make themselves holier Dheej1r0jhend]s than the lay-people, and take so great lands and goods to at alL w- T- pray for them, and promise them pardons and forgiveness of sins, or absolution, without preaching of Christ's promises, [it] is falsehood, and tbe working of antichrist; and (as I have said) the ravening of those wolves which Paul (Acts xx.) pro- Aetsxx. phesied should come after his departing, not sparing the flock. Their doctrine is that merchandise whereof Peter speaketh, saying: " Through covetousness shall they with feigned words 2Pet. h. v o Compare make merchandise of you." 2 Pet. ii. And their reasons, where- their deeds to d the doctrine with they prove their doctrine, are (as saith Paul 1 Tim. vi.) \f£^*fot " Superfluous disputings, arguings or brawlings of men with ^af^^' corrupt minds, and destitute of truth, which think that lucre w^'^ruits' is godliness." But Christ saith, Matt. vii. " By their fruits Mm-'va. shalt thou know them ;" that is, by their filthy covetousness, and shameless ambition, and drunken desire of honour, con trary unto the ensample and doctrine of Christ and of his apostles. Christ said to Peter, the last chapter of John : " Feed my sheep :" and not, ' Shear thy flock.' And Peter John xxi. saith, (1 Pet. v.) " Not being lords over the parishens3." But i Pet. v. these shear, and are become lords. Paul saith, 2 Cor. ii. "Not that we be lords over your faith:" but these will be2Cor.i. lords ; and compel us to believe whatsoever they lust, without any witness of scripture, yea, clean contrary to the scripture ; when the open text rebuketh it. Paul saith, " It is better to Acts xx. give, than to receive," Acts xx. ; but these do nothing in the world but lay snares to catch and receive whatsoever cometh, as it were the gaping mouth of hell. And 2 Cor. xii., " I seek not yours, but you :" but these seek not you to Christ, but yours to themselves ; and therefore, lest their deeds should be rebuked, will not come at the light. Timothy, in which the sacrament of orders is so plainly proved that all the world cannot deny it, but if they make a mock at St Paul as Tyndale doth.'] P Parishens, i. e. parishioners. So in Chaucer: 'Why covet ye shrifte and burying of other mens parishens?' But Day's folio has parishes.] [tyndale.] ' 258 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. What bless ing meaneth. W. T. Gen. xxiv. Gen. xxviii. Nevertheless the truth is, that we are all equally beloved in Christ, and God hath sworn to all indifferently. According, therefore, as every man believeth God's promises, longeth for them, and is diligent to pray unto God to fulfil them, so is his prayer heard ; and as good is the prayer of a cobbler as of a cardinal, and of a butcher as of a bishop; and the blessing of a baker that knoweth the truth is as good as the blessing of our most holy father the pope. And by blessing understand not the wagging of the pope's or bishop's hand over thine head, but prayer ; as when we say, ' God make thee a good man,' ' Christ put his Spirit in thee,' or ' Give thee grace and power to walk in the truth, and to follow his commandments,' &c. : as Bebecca's friends blessed her when she departed, (Gen. xxiv.) saying, " Thou art our sister : grow unto thousand thousands, and thy seed possess the gates of their enemies :" and as Isaac blessed Jacob, (Gen. xxvii.) saying, " God give thee of the dew of heaven, and of the fat ness of the earth, abundance of corn, wine and oil," &c. : and, (Gen. xxviii.) "Almighty God bless thee, and make thee grow, and multiply thee, that thou mayest be a great multitude of people, and give to thee and to thy seed after thee the blessings of Abraham ; that thou mayest possess the land wherein thou art a stranger, which he promised to thy grandfather :" and such like. Last of all, one singular doubt they have : what maketh the priest ; the anointing, or putting on of the han.ds»-Cir-Jwhat ojher ceremony, or what words? About which they brawl and scold, one ready to tear out another's throat. One saith this, and another that ; but they cannot agree. Neither can any of them make so strong a reason which another cannot improve1: for they are all out of the way, and without the Spirit of God, to judge spiritual things. Howbeit to this I answer, that when Christ called twelve up into the mountain, and chose them, then immediately, without any anointing or ceremony, were they his apostles ; that is to wit, ministers chosen to be sent to preach his testament unto all the whole world. And after the resurrection, when he had opened their wits, and given them knowledge, to understand the secrets of his testament, and how to bind and loose, and what he would have them to do in all things ; then he sent them forth with P Disprove, or find fault with.] OF ORDER. 259 a commandment to preach, and bind the unbelieving that continue in sin, and to loose the believing that repent. And The com- . , . . . - mandment that commandment, or charge, made them bishops, priests, maketh , popes, and all thing. If they say that Christ made them w. t. priests at his maundy, or last supper, when he said, "Do this in the remembrance of me;" I answer, Though the apostles wist not then what he meant, yet I will not strive nor say thereagainst. Neverthelater the commandment .and the charge, which he gave them, made them priests. And, Acts the first, when Matthias was chosen by lot, it Acts i. is not to be doubted but that the apostles, after their common manner, prayed for him, that God would give him grace to minister his office truly; and put their hands on him, and exhorted him, and gave him charge to be diligent and faith ful; and then was he as great as the best. And, Acts vi. when the disciples that believed had chosen six deacons to Actsvi. minister to the widows, the apostles prayed and put their hands on them, and admitted them without more ado. Their Putting on ..-iii of hands. putting on of hands was not after the manner ot the dumb w. t. blessing of our holy bishops, with two fingers ; but they spake unto them, and told them their duty, and gave them a charge, and warned them to be faithful in the Lord's business : as we choose . temporal officers, and rea'd their duty to them, and they promise to be faithful ministers, and then are admitted. Neither is there any other manner or ceremony at all re quired in making of our spiritual officers, than to choose an able person, and then to rehearse him his duty, and give him his charge, and so to put him in his room2. And as for that other solemn doubt, as they call it, Whether Judas was a priest or no? I care not what he then was ; but of this I whatJudasis now. W. T. am sure, that he is now not only priest, but also bishop, car dinal, and pope. P Art. XII. of heresies says, 'He destroyeth the sacraments of matrimony and orders,' and is founded on this paragraph. Foxe only replies : ' As truly as matrimony and orders be sacraments, so truly is this article a heresy.'] 17—2 260 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Of Penance. Penance is a word of their own forging, to deceive us withal1, as many others are. In the scripture we find poznitentia, "repentance:" agite paznitentiam, "do repent;" pceniteat vos, " let it repent you;" metanoyte, in Greek, "for- a point of think ye," or "let it forthink you2." Of repentance they practice. d 3 d r d w.t. have made penance, to blind the people, and to make them \- Jthink that they must take pains,' and do some holy deeds, to make satisfaction forHh«ir ¦- sins ; namely such as they enjoin them. As thou mayest see in the chronicles, when great kings and tyrants (which with violence of sword conquered other kings' lands, and slew all that came to hand) came to themselves, and had conscience of their wicked deeds ; then the bishops coupled them, not to Christ, but unto the pope, and preached the pope unto them ; and made them to submit themselves, and also their realms, unto the holy father the pope, and to take penance, as they call it ; that is to say, such injunctions as the pope and bishops would command them to do, to build abbeys, to endote them with livelihood, to be prayed for for ever ; and to give them exemptions and privilege and licence to do 'what they lust unpunished. P Sir T. More quotes the preceding words in p. 45 of his Confuta tion, where he professes to be answering Tyndale's answer to him, and says : ' Here ye see that the sacrament of penance he setteth at less than nought ; for he says, It is but a thing forged and contrived to deceive us with. But every good Christian knoweth that such folk as he is, that against the sacrament of penance contrive and forge Euch false heresies, sore deceive themself, and all them whom the devil blindeth to believe them.'] P The word forthink as equivalent for Meravoeire, or Repent ye, occurs repeatedly in Wicliffe's translation of the New Testament, though he always keeps close to the Vulgate in speaking of doing penance, where it has poenitentia united with the verb ago ; and some times renders poenitentia by penance, where ago is not found in tho Latin, as Acts v. 31. Thus in Luke xvii. 3, he read, Si pcenitentiam cgerit, and rendered it accordingly, 'if he do penance ;' but in the next vorse he found poenitet me, and his translation is, ' It forthinketh me.' It is only in rendering 2 Cor. vii. 8, that Wicliffe used rew for poenitet; and he has used the verb repented but once, viz. in Matt. xxvii. 3. Sir Thomas More says, 'God's high providence so forseeth what he promised, that he can never forthink it.' Confut. p. 61.] OF PENANCE. 261 Repentance goeth before faith, and prepareth the way to Repentance. Christ, and to the promises. For Christ cometh not but unto them that see their sins in the law, and repent. Re pentance, that is to say, this mourning and sorrow of the heart, lasteth all our lives long : for we find ourselves, all our lives long, too weak for God's law, and therefore sorrow and mourn, longing for strength. Repentance is no sacra ment: as faith, hope, love, and knowledge of a man's sins, are not to be called sacraments. For they are spiritual and invisible. Now must a sacrament be an outward sign that may be seen, to signify, to represent, and to put a man in remembrance of some spiritual promise, which cannot be seen but by faith only. Repentance, and all the good deeds which accompany repentance, to slay the lusts of the flesh, are sig nified by baptism. For Paul saith, Rom. vi. as it is above re hearsed : " Remember ye not (saith he), that all we which are Rom vi. baptized in the name of Christ Jesus are baptized to die with him ? We are buried with him in baptism for to die ;" that Repentance is, to kill the lusts and the rebellion which remaineth in the to*""- flesh. And after that he saith, " Ye are dead, as concerning sin, but live unto God through Christ Jesus our Lord." If thou look on the profession of our hearts, and on the Spirit and forgiveness which we have received through Christ's merits, we are full dead : but if thou look on the rebellion of the flesh, we do but begin to die, and to be baptized, that is, to drown and quench the lusts, and are full baptized at the last minute of death. And as concerning the working of the Spirit, we begin to live, and grow every day more and more, both in knowledge and also in godly living, according as the lusts abate : as a child receiveth the full soul at the first day, yet groweth daily in the operations and works thereof. Of Confession. Confession is diverse : one followeth true faith insepa- one confes- rably, and is the confessing, and knowledging with the knowledge mouth, wherein we put our trust and confidence. As when gjjfy^j we say our Credo, confessing that we trust in God the Father Almighty, and in his truth and promises; and in his Son Jesus, our Lord, and in his merits aud deservings ; and in 262 obedience of a christian man. the Holy Ghost, and in his power, assistance and guiding. This confession is necessary unto all men that will be saved. Matt. x. Eor Christ saith, Matt. x. " He that denieth me before men, him will I deny before my Father that is in heaven." And of this confession, saith the holy apostle Paul, in the xth chapter : Rom.x. "The belief of the heart justifieth; and to knowledge with the mouth maketh a man safe." This is a wonderful text for our philosophers, or rather sophisters, our worldly-wise enemies to the wisdom of God, our deep and profound wells without water, our clouds without moisture of rain; that is to say, natural souls without the Spirit of God and feeling of godly things. To justify, and to make safe, are both one thing. And to confess with the mouth is a good work, and the fruit of a true faith, as ah other works are. If thou repent and believe the promises, then God's truth justifieth thee ; that is, forgiveth thee thy sins, and sealeth thee with his holy Spirit, and maketh thee heir of everlasting life, through Christ's deservings. Now if thou have true faith, so seest thou the exceeding and infinite love and mercy which God hath shewed thee freely in Christ : then must thou needs love again : and love cannot but compel thee to work, and boldly to confess and knowledge thy Lord Christ, if when and the trust which thou hast in his word. And this know- tyrants op- thouhave le(lge maketh thee safe ; that is, declareth that thou art safe fS"ethenCart already, certifieth thine heart, and maketh thee feel that thy thauhouart faith is right, and that God's Spirit is in thee, as all other safe. w. t. g00(j -works (j0_ Yov if, when it cometh unto the point, thou hadst no lust to work, nor power to confess, how couldest thou presume to think that God's Spirit were in thee ? Another con- Another confession is there, which goeth before faith, and fession is to ' o 7 thyTinffn accompanieth repentance. For whosoever repenteth, doth un'SfGoa!' knowledge his sins in his heart. And whosoever doth know ledge his sins, receiveth forgiveness, as saith John, in the first 1 John i. of his first epistle : " If we knowledge our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness ;'' that is, because he hath promised, he must for his truth's sake do it. This confession is necessary all our lives long, as is repentance. And as thou understandest of repentance, so understand of this confession ; for it is likewise included in the sacrament of baptism. For we always re pent, and always knowledge or confess our sins unto God, of confession. 263 and yet despair not ; but remember that we are washed in Christ's blood : which thing our baptism doth represent and ^signify unto us. Shrift in the ear is verily a work of Satan ; and that the simft. w. t. I falsest that ever was wrought, and that most hath devoured the faith1. It began among the Greeks, and was not as it is "how, to reckon all a man's sins in the priest's ear; but to ask counsel of such doubts as men had, as thou mayest see in St Hierome, and in other authors. Neither went they to priests only, which were very few at that time, no more than preached the word of God; for this so great vantage in so many masses saying was not yet found ; but went indiffer ently, where they saw a good and a learned man. And for simst was 1 e v i i i • i t-t • put down because of a little knavery, which a deacon at Constantinople »°r knavery d 7 t t x among the played through confession with one of the chief wives of the ?™yished city, it was laid down again3. But we, antichrist's possession, amongyuS. the more knavery we see grow thereby daily, the more we w' T' stablish it. A christian man is a spiritual thing ; and hath God's word in his heart, and God's Spirit to certify him of all thing. He is not bound to come to any ear. And as for the reasons which they make, [they] are all but persuasions ; of man's wisdom. First, as pertaining unto the keys and manner of binding and loosing, is enough above rehearsed, and in other places. Thou mayest also see how the apostles used them in the Acts ; and, in Paul's epistles, how at the preaching of faith the Spirit came, and certified their hearts that they were justified through believing the promises. When a man feeleth that his heart consenteth unto the how a man law of God, and feeleth himself meek, patient, courteous, and that ins sins 1 are forgiven. merciful to his neighbour, altered and fashioned like unto w. T- • P This sentence is quoted by Sir T. More in p. 45 of his Confuta tion, where he professes to be answering the preface of Tyndale's answer to him ; and he says, ' Luther, that was Tyndale's master, as lewd as he is, played never the blasphemous fool against confession so far yet as Tyndale doth. For Luther, albeit he would make every man, and every woman too, sufficient and meetly to serve for a con fessor, yet confesseth he that shrift is very necessary, and doth much good, and would in no wise have it left.'] P The office of penitentiary was abolished by Nectarius, bishop of Constantinople, near the close of the fourth century, on the occasion alluded to by Tyndale. See Sozom. B. vn. c. 16, and Socrat. B. v. c 19.] 264 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Christ ; why should he doubt but that God hath forgiven him, and chosen him, and put his Spirit in him, though he never crome1 his sin into the priest's ear? Blind reason One blind reason have they, saying, How shall the priest lp1rit°tw?T! unbind, loose, and forgive the sin which he knoweth not ? How did the apostles ? The scripture forsake they, and run • unto their blind reasons ; and draw the scripture unto a car nal purpose. When I have told thee in thine ear ah that I have done my life long, in order and with all circumstances after the shamefuhest manner, what canst thou do more than preach me the promises, saying, 'K thou repent and believe, God's truth shall save thee for Christ's sake?' Thou seest not mine heart ; thou knowest not whether I repent or no ; neither whether I consent to the law, that it is holy, righteous, and good. Moreover, whether I beheve the promises or no, is also unknown to thee. If thou preach the law and the promises (as the apostles did), so should they that God hath chosen repent, and believe, and be saved, even now as well as then. Howbeit antichrist must know all secrets, to stablish his kingdom, and to work his mysteries withal. kSowthem- They bring also for them the story of the ten lepers, verii^ipere' which is written in the xviith chapter of Luke. Here mark heartTw-T. their falsehood, and learn to know them for ever. The four- Luke xvn. teentj1 gun(jay after tne feast ofthe Trinity, the beginning of the seventh lesson is the said gospel ; and the eighth and the ninth lessons, with the rest of the seventh, is the exposition of Bede upon the said gospel : where saith Bede, " Of all that Christ healed, of whatsoever disease it were, he sent none unto the priest but the lepers ;" and by the lepers hrterpreteth followers of false doctrine only, which the spiritual officers and the learned men of the congregation ought to examine, and rebuke their learning with God's word, and to warn the con gregation to beware of them. Which, if they were after ward healed by the grace of Christ, ought to come before the congregation, and there openly confess their true faith. But all other vices (saith he) doth God heal within, in the conscience2. P Crome : crammed.] P Et factum est etc. occurrerunt ei decern viri leprosi. Leprosi non absurde intelligi possunt, qui scientiam vera? fidei non habentes, varias doctrinas profitentur erroris. Non enim vel abscondunt impe- OF CONFESSION. 265 Though they thiswise read at matins, yet at high mass, if they have any sermon at all, they lie, clean contrary unto this open truth. Neither are they ashamed at all. For why ? they walk altogether in darkness. Of Contrition. Contrition and repentance are both one, and nothing else but a sorrowful and a mourning heart. And because that God hath promised mercy unto a contrite heart, that is, to a sorrowful and repenting heart, they, to beguile God's word and to stablish their wicked tradition, have feigned that new word attrition3, saying, 'Thou canst not know whether thy sorrow or repentance be contrition or attrition, except thou be shriven. When thou art shriven, then it is true con- Attrition is of th6 IcavGn. trition.' 0 foxy Pharisee ! that is thy leaven, of which Christ otfeS£a%- so dihgently bade us beware, Matt. xvi. ; and the very prophecy Matt. xvi. of Peter, " Through covetousness with feigned words shall they 2 Pet. n. make merchandise of you." 2 Pet. ii. With such glosses cor rupt they God's word, to sit in the consciences of the people, to lead them captive, and to make a prey of them ; buying and selling their sins, to satisfy their unsatiable covetousness. ritiam suam, sed pro summa peritia proferunt in lucem. Nullum Dominus eorum, quibus hsec corporalia beneficia prsestitit, invenitur misisse ad sacerdotes nisi leprosos ; quia videlicet sacerdotium Judssorum figura erat futuri sacerdotii regalis, quod est in ecclesia, quo consec- tantur omnes pertinentes ad corpus Christi, summi et veri principis sacerdotum. Et quisquis vel heretica pravitate, vel superstitione gen- tili, vel Judaica perfidia, vel etiam schismato fraterno, quasi vario colore, Domini gratia caruerit, necesse est ad ecclesiam veniat, colo- remque fidei verum quern acceperit ostendat. Cetera vero vitia, tam- quam valetudinis et quasi membrorum animae atque sensuum, per se ipsum interius in conscientia et intellectu Dominus sanat et cor- rigit. Bed. in Luc. Evang. cap. xvii. c. 69.] P The council of Trent has described Attrition as follows : — Illam vero contritionem imperfectam, qusa attritio dicitur, quoniam vel ex turpitudinis peccati consideratione vel ex gehenna; et poenarum metu communiter concipitur, si voluntatem peccandi excludat cum spe venias, declarat [synodus] donumDei esse, et Spiritus sancti impul- sum; non adhuc quidem inhabitantis, sed tantum moventis, quo poenitens adjutus viam sibi ad justitiam parat. Sessio xiv. De contri- tione, cap. iv. Cone. Trident. Venet. 1582.] 266 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Nevertheless the truth is, when any man hath trespassed against God, if he repent and knowledge his trespass, God promiseth him forgiveness without ear-shrift. If he that hath offended his neighbour repent and know ledge his fault, asking forgiveness if his neighbour forgive Matt, xviii. him, God forgiveth him also by his holy promise. Matt, xviii. Likewise, if he that sinneth openly, when he is openly re buked, repent and turn, then if the congregation forgive him, God forgiveth him : and so forth whosoever repenteth, and, when he is rebuked, knowledgeth his fault, is forgiven. He also that doubteth, or hath his conscience tangled, ought to open his mind unto some faithful brother that is learned, and he shall give him faithful counsel to help him withal. whom a man To whom a man trespasseth, unto him he ought to confess. oftendeth, to ,ei i him must he But to confess myself unto thee, 0 antichrist, whom I have confess. d ' ' w- T- not offended, am I not bound. They of the old law had no confession in the ear. Nei ther the apostles, nor they that followed many hundred years after, knew of any such whispering. Whereby then was their attrition turned into contrition ? Yea, why are we, which Christ came to loose, more bound than the Jews ? Yea, and why are we more bound without scripture ? For Christ came not to make us more bound; but to loose us, and to make a thousand things no sin which before were sin, and are now become sin again. He left none other law with us, but the law of love. He loosed us not from Moses to bind us unto antichrist's ear. God hath not tied Christ unto antichrist's it hath no ear, neither hath poured all his mercy in thither; for it hath scripture that no record in the old Testament, that antichrist's ear should God should ,_,... . • rt -i hidePhimse°f Propitiatorium, that is to wit, God s mercy-stool, and that ea™'wriT^ ^0<* should creep into so narrow a hole, so that he could no where else be found. Neither did God write his laws, neither yet his holy promises, in antichrist's ear; but hath graved them with his holy Spirit in the hearts of them that believe, that they might have them always ready at hand to be saved thereby. OF SATISFACTION. 267 Satisfaction. As pertaining unto satisfaction, thiswise understand, that he that loveth God hath a commandment (as St John saith in the fourth chapter of his first epistle) to " love his neighbour 1 John iv. also:" whom if thou have offended, thou must make him amends or satisfaction, or at the leastway, if thou be not able, ask him forgiveness ; and if he will have mercy of God, he is bound to forgive thee. If he will not, yet God forgiveth thee, if thou thus submit thyself. But unto God-ward Christ cimst is an is a perpetual and an everlasting satisfaction for evermore. satisfaction. . W. T. As oft as thou fallest through frailty, repent and come again, and thou art safe and welcome ; as thou mayest see by the similitude of the riotous son, Luke xv. If thou be lopen 1 Luke xv. out of sanctuary, come in again. If thou be fallen from the way of truth, come thereto again, and thou art safe : if thou be gone astray, come to the fold again, and the shepherd, Christ, shall save thee ; yea, and the angels of heaven shall rejoice at thy coming, so far it is off that any man shall beat thee or chide thee. If any Pharisee envy thee, grudge at thee, or rail upon thee, thy Father shall make answer for thee, as thou seest in the fore-rehearsed likeness or parable. Whosoever therefore is gone out of the way, by whatsoever chance it be, let him come to his baptism again, and unto the pro fession thereof, and he shall be safe. For though that the washing of baptism be past, yet Baptism last- the power thereof, that is to say, the word of God which w. T?r' baptism preacheth, lasteth ever and saveth for ever : as Paul is past and gone, nevertheless the word that Paul preached lasteth ever, and saveth ever as many as come thereto with a repenting heart and a stedfast faith. Hereby seest thou that, when they make penance of re pentance, and call it a sacrament, and divide it into contrition, confession, and satisfaction, they speak of their own heads, and lie falsely. Absolution. Their absolution also justifieth no man from sin. " For Rom. *.. with the heart do men believe to be justified withal," saith P Lopen: leaped.] 268 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Paul, Rom. x. ; that is, through faith and believing the pro mises are we justified, as I have sufficiently proved in other places with the scripture. " Faith" (saith Paul in the same place) " cometh by hearing," that is to say, by hearing the preacher that is sent from God, and preacheth God's promises. Now, when thou absolvest in Latin, the unlearned heareth not: cor xiv. for, "How," saith Paul, 1 Cor. xiv. " when thou blessest in an unknown tongue, shall the unlearned say Amen unto thy thanksgiving ? for he wotteth not what thou sayest." So like wise the lay wotteth not whether thou loose or bind, or whether thou bless or curse. In like manner is it if the lay understand Latin, or though the priest absolve in English : for in his absolution he rehearseth no promise of God ; but speaketh his own words, saying, ' I, by the authority of Peter and Paul, absolve or loose thee from ah thy sins.' Thou sayest so, which art but a lying man ; and never more than now, verily. Thou sayest, ' I forgive thee thy sins ;' and the scripture, johm. John the first, That Christ only forgiveth, and " taketh away the sins of the world." And Paul and Peter, and all the apostles, preach that all is forgiven in Christ, and for Christ's sake. God's word only looseth ; and thou in preaching that mightest loose also, and else not. Whosoever hath ears let him hear, and let him that hath eyes see. If any man love to be blind, his blindness on his own head, and not on mine. ofwnding They allege for themselves the saying of Christ to Peter, and loosing, . ° . , and of the Matt. xvi. " Whatsoever thou bindest on earth, it shah be pope s autho- ' rityorpower. bound; and whatsoever thou loosest," and so forth. 'Lo, say Matt xvi. they, whatsoever we bind, and whatsoever we loose, here is nothing excepted.' And another text say they of Christ, in Matt, xxviu. the last of Matthew : " All power is given to me," saith Christ, " in heaven and in earth : go therefore and preach," &c. Preaching leaveth the pope out ; and saith, ' Lo, all power is given me in heaven and in earth ;' and thereupon taketh upon him temporal power above king and emperor, and maketh laws and bindeth them. And like power taketh he over God's ctalffieth *aws> and dispenseth with them at his lust, making no sin of oveTma"0' tnat which God maketh sin, and maketh sin where God Gno1I'a*sIo.over maketh none : yea, and wipeth out God's laws clean, and maketh at his pleasure ; and with him is lawful what he lusteth. He bindeth where God looseth, and looseth where OF ABSOLUTION. 269 God bindeth. He blesseth where God curseth, and curseth where God blesseth. He taketh authority also to bind and Purgatory is • mi t i • n • *ne pope'3 loose in purgatory. That permit 1 unto him ; tor it is a creature: he x o d x ^ may there- creature of his own making1. He also bindeth the angels : ^Jebe^0'^. for we read of popes that have commanded the angels to fet2 The pope „ _ . . . , .-ei bindeth the divers out ot purgatory. Howbeit 1 am not yet certified angeis. w.t. whether they obeyed or no. Understand therefore that to bind and to loose is to ra^S^nd preach the law of God and the gospel or promises ; as thou wI't? mayest see in the hid chapter of the second epistle to the 2 Cor- '"• Corinthians, where Paul calleth the preaching of the law the ministration of death and damnation, and the preaching of the promises the ministering of the Spirit and of righteous ness. For when the law is preached, all men are found sin ners, and therefore damned : and when the gospel and glad tidings are preached, then are all, that repent and believe, found righteous in Christ, And so expound it all the old doctors. Saint Hierome saith upon this text, "Whatsoever thou st Jerome bindest," ' The bishops and priests, (saith he,) for lack of slops and understanding, take a little presumption of the Pharisees upon w. T- them ; and think that they have authority to bind innocents, and to loose the wicked :' which thing our pope and bishops do. For they say the curse is to be feared, be it right or The curse is mi i i i • e i to be feared- wrong. Though thou have not deserved, yet if the pope curse w. t. thee, thou art in peril of thy soul, as they lie : yea, and though he be never so wrongfully cursed, he must be fain to buy abso lution. But Saint Hierome saith, ' As the priest of the old Therein ... . . manner of law made the lepers clean or unclean, so bindeth and unbindeth ]°°s™z- the priest of the new law3.' 4^ P Art. XIII. of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale is, ' He saith that purgatory is the pope's invention, and therefore he may do there whatsoever he will.' Foxe's reply is : ' One of the pope's own writers saith thus : Souls being in purgatory are under the pope's juris diction, and the pope may, if he will, evacuate all purgatory. Further more, the old fathers make little mention of purgatory ; the Greek church never beheved the purgatory ; St Augustine doubteth of purga tory; and the scriptures plainly disprove purgatory. St John saith, The blood of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, purgeth us from all sin ; and the pope saith, Sin cannot be purged but by the fire of purgatory. Now, whose invention can purgatory be, but only the pope's ?] P Fet, i. e. fetch.] P Et dabo tibi claves regni ccelorum, Sec. Istum locum episcopi et 270 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. The priest there made no man a leper, neither cleansed any man, but God; and the priest judged only, by Moses' law, who was clean and who was unclean, when they were brought unto him. So here we have the law of God to judge what is sin and what is not, and who is bound and who is not. Moreover, if any man have sinned, yet if he repent and believe the promise, we are sure by God's word, that he is loosed and forgiven in Christ. Other authority than thiswise to preach, have the priests not. Christ's apostles had no other them selves, as it appeareth throughout all the new Testament : therefore it is manifest that they have not. chrui under- ^t Paul saith, 1 Cor. xv. "When we say all things are tStf'lu under Christ, he is to be excepted that put all under him." pTenme in God the Father is not under Christ, but above Christ, and heaven and ni • ±j i i inearth.'and (JilHSt S head. far otherwise Christ saith, John xii. " I have not spoken of mine own than the r Joim x^' T' ¦nead> DUt m7 Father, which sent me, gave a commandment what I should say and what I should speak. Whatsoever I f^- speak therefore, even as my Father bade me so I speak." If Christ bad a law what he should do, how happeneth it that the pope so runneth at large, lawless? Though that all power were given unto Christ in heaven and .in earth, yet had he no power over his Father, nor yet to reign temporally over tem poral princes, but a commandment to obey them. How hath the pope then such temporal authority over king and emperor ? How hath he authority above God's laws, and to command the angels, the saints, and God himself? TUyc'hris't"'0" Christ's authority, which he gave to his disciples, was to aposties preach the law, and to bring sinners to repentance, and W.T. presbyteri non intelligentes, aliquid sibi de Pharisreorum assumunt supercilio, ut vel damnent innocentes, vel solvere se noxios arbitrentur, cum apud Deum non sententia sacerdotum sed reorum vita quaeratur. Legimus in Levitico de leprosis, ubi jubentur ut ostendant se sacerdo- tibus, et si lepram habuerint, tunc a sacerdote immundi fiant ; non quo sacerdotes leprosos faciant et immundos, sed quo habeant notitiam leprosi et non leprosi, et possint discemere qui mundus quive immun- dus sit. Quomodo ergo ibi leprosum sacerdos mundum vel immundum facit, sic et hie alligat vel solvit episcopus et presbyter, non eos qui insontes sunt vel noxii, sed pro officio suo, cum peccatorum audierit varietates, scit qui ligandus sit quive solvendus. — Hieron. Comm. in Matt. cap. xvi. Lib. in. Tom. IX. p. 41, col. 1. Francofurt. 1684.] OF ABSOLUTION. 271 then to preach unto them the promises, which the Father had made unto all men for his sake. And the same to preach only, sent he his apostles. As a king sendeth forth his The right i- ii i- i • • titi binding and judges, and giveth them his authority, saying, 'What ye do, wos!{!s- that do I ; I give you my full power :' yet meaneth he not, by that full power, that they should destroy any town or city, or oppress any man, or do what they list, or should reign over the lords and dukes of his realm, and over his own self; but giveth them a law with them, and authority to bind and loose, as far forth as the law stretcheth and maketh mention : that is,! to punish the evil that do wrong, and to avenge the poor that suffer wrong. And so far as the law stretcheth, will the king defend his judge against all men. And as the temporal judges bind and loose temporally, so do the priests spiritually, and no other ways. Howbeit, by falsehood and how the x d ' d > d pope reign- Subtlety the pope reigneth under Christ, as cardinals and g^y^s; _ bishops do under kings, lawless. The pope (say they) absolveth or looseth a poena et a pana et culpa ; that is, from the fault or trespass, and from the pain proper , due unto the trespass. God, if a man repent, forgiveth the ) offence only, and not the pain also, say they, save turneth the everlasting pain unto a temporal pain ; and appointeth seven years in purgatory for every deadly sin. But the pope The pope is for money forgiveth both, and hath more power than God, ™ glve us somewhat to do good works for you.' And thatis.w.T. £nug js sjn become the profitablest merchandise in the world. 0 the cruel wrath of God upon us, because we love not the truth ! For this is the damnation and judgment of God, to send John v. a fa]ge prophet unto him that will not hear the truth. " I know you," saith Christ, John v. " that ye have not the love phesiefof' of God in you. I am come in my Father's name, and ye re adout why ceive me not ; if another shall come in his own name, him shall come?uw.T. ye receive." Thus doth God avenge himself on the malicious hearts which have no love to his truth. Se eFtheTput All the promises of God have they either wiped clean out, ™ned,rand or thus leavened them with open lies, to stablish their confes- w y' ' sion withal. And, to keep us from knowledge of the truth, Latin w t ^ey do all thing in Latin. They pray in Latin, they christen in Latin, they bless in Latin, they give absolution in Latin ; only curse they in the English tongue1. Wherein they take upon them greater authority than ever God gave them. For in their curses (as they call them) with book, bell, and candle, they command God and Christ, and the angels, and all saints, The pope to curse them : ' Curse them God (say they), Father, Son, and ood^to curse. Holy Ghost ; curse them Virgin Mary,' &c. 0 ye abominable! who gave you authority to command God to curse? God commandeth you to bless, and ye command him to curse! Rom. xii, " Bless them that persecute you : bless, but curse not," saith St Paul, Rom. xii. What tyranny will these not use over men, which presume and take upon them to be lords over God, and to command him ? If God shall curse any man, who shall bless and make him better? No man can amend himself, except God pour his Spirit unto him. Have we not a com mandment to love our neighbour as ourselves ? How can I love him, and curse him also ? James saith, " It is not pos sible that blessing and cursing should come both out of one P See n. 3 to p. 233 for an extract from the curse, which was both written and printed in English.] OF ABSOLUTION. 273 mouth." Christ commandeth, Matt. v. saying, "Love yourM»«-v. enemies. Bless them that curse you. Do good to them that hate you. Pray for them that do you wrong and persecute you ; that ye may be the children of your heavenly Father." In the marches of Wales it is the manner, if any man have a custom d that is used m an ox or a cow stolen, he cometh to the curate, and desireth $evn^aij™hes him to curse the stealer ; and he commandeth the parish to W- T- give him, every man, God's curse and his : ' God's curse and mine have he,' saith every man in the parish. 0 merciful God! what is blasphemy, if this be not blasphemy, and shaming of the doctrine of Christ? Understand therefore, the power of excommunication is -this : if any man sin openly, and amendeth not when he is warned, then ought he to be rebuked openly before all the parish. And the priest ought to prove by the scripture, that all such have no part with Christ. For Christ serveth not, but for them that love the law of God, and consent that it is good, holy, and righteous; and repent, sorrowing and mourn ing for power and strength to fulfil it. And all the parish ought to be warned to avoid the company of all such, and to take them as heathen people. This is not done that he should perish ; but to save him, to make him ashamed, and to kill the lusts of the flesh, that tho spirit might come unto the know ledge of truth. And we ought to pity him, and to have com passion on him, and with all diligence to pray unto God for him, to give him grace to repent and to come to the right way again ; and not to use such tyranny over God and man, commanding God to curse. And if he repent, we ought with all mercy to receive him in again. This mayest thou see Matt, xviii. and 1 Cor. v. and 2 Cor. ii. Matt.*™.1 Cor. v. 2 Cor. ii. Confirmation. If Confirmation have a promise, then it justifieth as far as the promise extendeth. If it have no promise, then is it not of God, as the bishops be not. The apostles and ministers of God's sacra- rt j i r* i . . ments preach God preach God's word; and God's signs or sacraments sig- JjJkJ£pwT nify God's word also, and put us in remembrance of the promises which God hath made unto us in Christ. Contrari- The pope's , ^ , sacraments wise, antichrist's bishops preach not; and their sacraments ^redTjmb- r i 18 [TYNDALE.] 274 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. speak not; but as the disguised bishop's mum, so are their superstitious sacraments dumb. After that the bishops had left preaching, then feigned they this dumb ceremony of con firmation, to have somewhat at the leastway, whereby they ofbeib.w.^'. might reign over their dioceses. They reserved unto them selves also the christening of bells, and conjuring or hallowing of churches and church-yards, and of altars and super-altars, and hallowing of chalices, and so forth; whatsoever is of honour or profit. Which confirmation, and the other conjura- smimeot- *10ns a^s0= they have now committed to their suffragans ; be- w|n|^ cause they themselves have no leisure to minister such things, for their lusts and pleasures, and abundance of all things, and for the cumbrance that they have in the king's matters and divfde'aiiops business of the realm. One keepeth the privy seal ; another among them, tne great seai . the third is confessor, (that is to say, a privy traitor and a secret Judas;) he is president of the prince's council ; he is an ambassador ; another sort, of the king's secret council. Woe is unto the realms where they are ofthe council. As profitable are they, verily, unto the realms with their counsel, as the wolves unto the sheep, or the foxes unto the geese. ceremonies They will say that the Holy Ghost is given through such hnng not the d d d o o Hoi^Ghost. ceremonies. If God had so promised, so should it be ; but ' Gai. iii. paui saith, (Gal. iii.) that the Spirit is received through Actsx. preaching of the faith. And (Acts x.) while Peter preached the faith, the Holy Ghost fell on Cornelius and on his house hold. How shall we say then to that which they will lay Acts viii. against us, in the eighth chapter of the Acts of the apostles, ofU"anIs?n where Peter and John put their hands on the Samaritans, and W- T' the Holy Ghost came ? I say, that by putting, or with put ting, or as they put their hands on them, the Holy Ghost came. Nevertheless, the putting on of the hands did neither help nor hinder : for the text saith, " They prayed for them that they might receive the Holy Ghost." God had made the apostles a promise, that he would with such miracles confirm their preaching, and move other to the Mark xvi. faith. (Mark, the last.) The apostles, therefore, believed and prayed God to fulfil his promise; and God, for his truth's feurldoth the sa^e> even so did. So was it the prayer of faith that brought m/^Ies- the Holy Ghost ; as thou mayest see also in the last of James. James v. "If any man be sick," saith James, "call the elders of the OF CONFIRMATION. 275 congregation, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord, and the prayer of faith shall heal the sick." Where a promise is, there is faith bold to pray, and God true to give her her petition. Putting on of the hands is an indifferent thing. For the Holy Ghost came by Thepuiting ° . « •'on of hands preaching of the faith, and miracles were done at the prayer heihnor'hfn- of faith, as well without putting on of the hands as with, as der- Ant- ecU thou seest in many places. Putting on of the hands was the manner of that nation, as it was to rend their clothes, and to put on sackcloth, and to sprinkle themselves with ashes and earth, when they heard of or saw any sorrowful thing, as it was Paul's manner to stretch out his hand when he preached ; and as it is our manner to hold up our hands when we pray, ./•and as some kiss their thumb-nail, and put it to their eyes, and as we put our hands on children's heads when we bless ^thgm, saying, 'Christ bless thee, my son, and God make thee ? a good man :' which gestures neither help nor hinder. This "-mayest thou well see by the xiiith of the Acts, where the Holy Acts xm\ Ghost commanded to separate Paul and Barnabas to go and preach. Then the other fasted and prayed, and put their hands on their heads, and sent them forth. They received not the Holy Ghost then by putting on of hands; but the other, as they put their hands on their heads, prayed for them, that God would go with them, and strength them ; and couraged them also, bidding them to be strong in God, and warned them to be faithful and diligent in the work of God, and so forth. Anoiling. Last of all cometh the anoiling1, without promise, and therefore without the Spirit, and without profit ; but alto gether unfruitful and superstitious2. The sacraments, which P Anoiling, i. e. anointing with oil. He means to speak of extreme unction.] P Sir Thomas More in his 'Confutacyon of Tyndale's Answer,' 1532, in p. 44 quotes this first sentence, and comments upon it as follows: 'Here is a short sentence and a false erroneous judgment given by Tyndale upon all Christian people that have been anoyled since Christendom first began. And he is led thereto by two special motives, the tone folly, the tother falshood. For of his folly he 18—2 276 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. they have imagined, are all without promise, and therefore wZtsoever kelp not. For " whatsoever is not of faith is sin." Rom. xiv. fartn'issm. Now without a promise can there be no faith. The sacra- Ant, ed. ments which Christ himself ordained, which have also promises, and would save us if we knew them and believed them, them The Latin minister they in the Latin tongue. So are they also become tongue de- d o d faritnftwhT. as ""fruitful as the other. Yea, they make us believe that work without the work itself, without the promise, saveth us ; which doc- save't^Ts'im- trine they learned of Aristotle. And thus are we become an w°t?" hundred times worse than the wicked Jews ; which beheved that the very work of their sacrifice justified them : against which Paul fighteth in every epistle, proving that nothing helpeth save the promises which God hath sworn in Christ. The people Ask the people what they understand by their baptism or believe in the r A « » r work without washing I And thou shalt see, that they believe how that the promise. . , w- T- the very plunging into the water saveth them : of the pro mises they know not, nor what is signified thereby. Baptism voiowing. jg cauefj volowing in many places of England ; because the priest saith, ' Volo l, say ye.' ' The child was well volowed"1 (say they) ; 'yea, and our vicar is as fair a volower as ever a priest within this twenty miles2.1 reckoneth himself sure every thing to be false that is not evidently written in holy scripture ; which one thing is the tone half of all the false foundation whereupon Luther and Tyndale have builded all their heresies. For upon this Tyndale saith there is not any pro. mise of this sacrament written in scripture ; ergo, there was no pro mise made by God : which argument is so good, that every boy in schools laugheth it to scorn; and well they may, for all the world can never make it good. His other motive is falsehood, which is the ante cedent of the same argument ; that is to wit, that this sacrament hath no promise in scripture. For it hath an express promise in the epistle of St James, where he biddeth that if any be sick, he shall induce the priests to come and pray for him and anoint him with oil, and the prayer of faith shall heal the sick man, and if he be in sins they shall be forgiven him. Nay, saith Tyndale, here we may see that the anoyl- ing doth nothing, for St James saith that the prayer of faith shall heal the man. This is a sure argument. Lo, because St James giveth the great effect to the faithful prayer, therefore the oil doth nothing at all. If it do nothing at all toward the remission of sins, why would St James have it there, that might, saving for the sacrament, as well be thence as there? — except that Tyndale wene that St James were so wise in natural things, that he thought oil a meet medicine for every sore.'] P I wish it.] P In pp. 48 — 50 of his Confutation, More has quoted nearly all OF ANOILING. 277 Behold how narrowly the people look on the ceremony. If aught be left out, or if the child be not altogether dipt in the water, or if, because the child is sick, the priest dare not plunge him into the water, but pour water on his head, how tremble they! how quake they! 'How say ye, sir John3, (say they,) is this child christened enough ? Hath it his full Christendom?' They believe verily that the child is not christened ; yea, I have known priests, that have gone unto 4$ the orders again, supposing that they were not priests, be cause that the bishop left one of his ceremonies undone. That they cah confirmation, the people caU bishoping. They think that if the bishop butter the child in the forehead, that, it is safe4. They think that the work maketh safe, and likewise The work . "¦— ~~ 1 o «v tvt >(.ii ¦ -i saveth not, suppose they of anoiling. Now is this false doctrine, verily. b1^t*etw°i|;d; For James saith, in the first chapter of his epistle : " Of his we p™1™*-* good will begat he us with the word of life;-" that is, withJamesI- the word of promise : in which we are made God's sons, and heirs of the goodness of God, before any good works. For we cannot work God's will, till we be his sons, and know his will, and have his Spirit to teach us. And St Paul saith, in the fifth chapter of his epistle to the Ephesians : " Christ Eph. v. cleansed the congregation in the . fountain of water through the word." And Peter saith, in the first of his first epistle : " Ye are born anew, not of mortal seed, but of immortal seed, i Pett by the word of God, which liveth and lasteth ever." Paul in every epistle warneth us, that we put no trust in works, and to beware of persuasions or arguments of man's wisdom, this paragraph, and combats its doctrine and assertions through sixteen folio pages.] p Havinap^assnmed the Latin style of Dominus, the priests were usually styladSirpand John being one of the commonest of names, Sir John was equivalent to saying 'a priest like his fellows.' When Walter Miller was brought before the archbishop of St Andrews, in 1558, to be condemned to the fire as an heretic, and a priest said to him, ' Sir Walter Miller, arise, and answer to the articles ; he replied, Call me Walter, and not Sir Walter : I have been overlong one of the pope's knights.' Foxe, A. & M. Scottish History, Vol. v. p. 645.] [* More has also seized on the last two sentences to take occasion to give Tyndale a severe rebuke, in p. 41 of the Confutation. He says, that 'at the first hearing of such shameful words spoken by the mouth of such a shameless heretic, the whole Christian company present should not be able to contain themselves from calling him knave, all with one voice at once.'] 278 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. of superstitiousness, of ceremonies, of pope-holiness, and of all manner disguising ; and exhorteth us to cleave fast unto ' the naked and pure word of God. The promise of God is the anchor that saveth us in all temptations. If all the world be against us, God's word is stronger than the world. If the world kill us, that shall make us alive again. If it be possible for the world to cast us into hell, from thence yet shall God's works, he word bring us again. Hereby seest thou that it is not the sogtafous, work, but the promise that justifieth us through faith. Now justify not. x. . 'J . ° Ant. ed. where no promise is, there can no faith -be, and therefore no justifying, though there be never so glorious works. The in an thing sacrament of Christ's body after thiswise preach they. Thou they leave . , out the pro- must believe that it is no more bread, but the very body of ' Christ, flesh, blood and bone, even as he went here on earth, save his coat : for that is here yet ; I wot not in how many places. I pray thee, what helpeth all this? Here is no promise. The devils know that Christ died on a Friday, and the Jews also. What are they holp thereby ? We have a promise that Christ, and his body, and his blood, and all that he did, and suffered, is a sacrifice, a ransom, and a full satis faction for our sins ; that God for his sake will think no more on them, if we have power to repent and believe. Holy-work men think that God rejoiceth in the deed self, without any farther respect. They think also that God, as a cruel tyrant, rejoiceth and hath delectation in our pain-taking, without any farther respect. And therefore many of them martyr themselves without cause, after the ensample of Baal's 1 Kings xviii. priests, which (3 Reg. xviii.) cut themselves to please their god withal, and as the old heathen pagans sacrificed their children in the fire unto their gods. The monks of the Charterhouse think that the very eating of fish in itself pleaseth God, and refer not the eating to the chastening of the body : for when they have slain their bodies with cold phlegm, of fish- eating, yet then will they eat no flesh, and slay themselves before their days. We also, when we offer our sons or daughters, and compel or persuade them to vow and profess chastity, think that the very pain, and that rage and burning which they suffer in abstaining from a make1, pleaseth God ; and so refer not our chastity to our neighbour's profit. For when we see thousands fall to innumerable diseases thereby, P Make : a match, partner.] OF ANOILING. 279 and to die before their days ; yea, though we see them break the commandments of God daily, and also of very impatiency work abominations against nature, too shameful to be spoken of; yet will we not let them marry, but compel them to con tinue still with violence. And thus teach our divines, as it appeareth by their arguments. He that taketh most pain, say they, is greatest ; and so forth. The people are throughly brought in belief, that the deed in itself, without any farther respect, saveth them ; if they be so long at church; or say so many paternosters; and read so much in a tongue which they understand not; or go so much a pilgrimage ; and take so much pain ; or fast such a superstitious fast ; or observe such a superstitious observance, neither profitable to himself nor to his neighbour, but done of a good intent only, say they, to please God with al. Tea, to kiss the pax2, they think it a meritorious deed ; when to love their neighbour, and to forgive him, (which thing is signified thereby,) they study not to do, nor have power to do, nor think that they are bound to do it, if they be offended by him. So sore have our false prophets brought the people out of their wits, and have wrapped them ia darkness, and have rocked them asleep in blindness and ignorance. Now is all such doctrine false doctrine, and all Howfarforth 0 the deed is such faith false faith. For the deed pleaseth not, but as far acceptable forth as it is applied to our neighbour's profit, or the taming Ant- ed- of our bodies to keep the commandment. Now must the body be tamed only, and that with the remedies that God hath ordained, and not killed. Thou must not forswear the natural remedy which God hath ordained, and bring thyself into such case that thou shouldest either break God's commandment, or kill thyself, or burn night and day without rest, so that thou canst not once think a godly thought. Neither is it lawful to forsake thy neighbour, and to withdraw thyself from serving him, and to get thee into a den, and live idly, profitable to no man, but robbing all men, first of faith, and then of goods and land, and of all he hath, with making him believe in the hypocrisy of thy superstitious prayers and pope-holy deeds. The prayer of faith, and the our prayers deeds thereof that spring of love, are accepted before God. according to r o 7 x our faith, our . p A small crucifix, handed round to be kissed, at appointed times, in the mass.] 280 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. deeds accord- The prayer is good, according to the proportion of faith ; and measure of the deed, according; to the measure of love. Now he that love. ™ Ant. ed. bideth in the world, as monks call it, hath more faith than the cloisterer; for he hangeth on God in all things. He must trust God to send him good speed, good luck, favour, help, a good master, a good neighbour, a good servant, a good wife, a good chapman-merchant, to^nd his merchan dise safe to land, and a thousand like. He loveth also more ; which appeareth in that he doth service always unto his neighbour. To pray one for another are we equally bound, and to pray is a thing that we may always do, whatsoever we have in hand ; and that to do may no man hire another. Christ's blood hath hired us already1- Thus in the deed de- lighteth God, as far forth as we do it, either to serve our neighbour withal (as I have said), or to tame the flesh, that we may fulfil the commandment from the bottom of the heart. And as for our pain-taking, God rejoiceth not therein as a tyrant ; but pitieth us, and as it were mourneth with us, and is alway ready and at hand to help us, if we call, as a merciful father and a kind mother. Neverthelater he suffereth us to fall into many temptations and much adversity : yea, himself layeth the cross of tribulation on our backs, not that he rejoiceth in our sorrow, but to drive sin out of the flesh, which can none .otherwise be cured : as the physician and surgeon do many^Ehings, which are painful to the sick, not that they rejoice in the pains of the poor wretches, but to persecute and to drive out the diseases which can no other wise be healed2- When the people beheve therefore, if they do so much work, or suffer so much pain, or go so much a pilgrimage, that they are safe, [it] is a false faith. For a Christian man P Art. XV. of charges against Tyndalo : ' He saith, No man may be hired to pray.' To this Foxe replies, ' The words in the Obedience be true, which are these ;' and then he gives the above passages.] P This paragraph is quoted by Sir Thomas More, but not without omissions. Ho concludes his objections to it as follows : ' It is ques tionless that God can otherwise drive the sin out of the flesh, and by other means cure it, if it so pleased him ; and so would he, saving for his godly delight in justice, which he loveth to see man follow by fasting and other penance, and which delight of following God's pleasure therein Tyndale in man, by withdrawing of penance, clean goeth about to destroy.' Confutation, p. xxx.] OF ANOILING. 281 is not saved by works, but by faith in the promises before all good works ; though that the works (when we work God's commandment with a good will, and not works of our own imagination) declare that we are safe, and that the Spirit of him that hath made us safe is in us : yea, and as God, through preaching of faith, doth purge and justify the heart, even so through working of deeds doth he purge and justify the members, making us perfect both in body and soul, after the likeness of Christ. Neither needeth a Christian man to run hither or thither, a christian to Rome, to Jerusalem, or St James3, or any other pilgrimage not to go a far or near, to be saved thereby, or to purchase forgiveness of be saved his sins. For a Christian man's health and salvation is within w. T- him, even in his mouth. Bom. x. " The word is nigh thee, salvation is even in thy mouth and in thine heart; that is, the word of w. t.us' faith which we preach," saith Paul. If we believe the pro mises with our hearts, and confess them with our mouths, we are safe. This is our health within us. " But how shall they Bom. x. beheve that they hear not ? And how shall they hear without a preacher ?" saith Paul, Rom. x. For look on the promises of God, and so are all our preachers dumb : or if they preach them, they so sauce them and leaven them, that no stomach can brook them, nor find any savour in them. For they confession. paint us such an ear-confession, as is impossible to be kept, and more impossible that it should stand with the promises and testament of God. And they join4 them penance, as they call it, to fast, to go pilgrimages, and give so much to make satisfaction withal. They preach their masses, their merits, their pardons, their ceremonies, and put the promise clean out of possession. The word of health and salvation "is nigh thee, in thy mouth and thine heart," saith Paul. Nay, say they, , thy salvation is in our faithful ear. This is their hold ; thereby know they all secrets ; thereby mock they all men, and all men's wives ; and beguile knight and squire, lord and king, and betray all realms. The bishops, with the pope, Bishops work have a certain conspiration and secret treason against the through con-, fession. whole world: and by confession know they what kings andw-1- emperors think. If aught be against them, do they never so P A pilgrimage to Compostella, in Spain, to a noted image of St James there, was held to be especially profitable.] P Join: enjoin.] 282 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. evil, then move they their captives to war and to fight, and give them pardons to slay whom they wiU have taken out of the way. They have with falsehood taken from all kings and emperors their right and duties, which now they call their freedoms, liberties, and privileges ; and have perverted the ordinances that God left in the world ; and have made every Kings be king swear to defend their falsehood against their ownselves : sworn to the ° l l 1 SoththPe'b!°cl so *na* now' ^ any man preach God's word truly, and shew the'Sngs.0 the freedom and liberty of the soul which we have in Christ, W'T" or intend to restore the kings again unto their duties and right, and to the room and authority which they have of God, and of shadows to make them kings in deed, and to put the world in his order again; then the kings deliver their swords and authority unto the hypocrites, to slay him. So drunken are they with the wine of the whore. How shaii The text that followeth in Paul will they happily lay to they preach d x x d d beCsentt,tlrsy my charge and others. " How shall they preach, except expounded. they foe gent 9" g^ paui m tjje g^ ^^ to the Romans. Bom.x. 'We,' will they say, 'are the pope, cardinals and bishops : all authority is ours. The scripture pertaineth unto us, and is our possession. And we have a law, that whosoever presume to preach without the authority of the bishops, is excommu nicate in the deed-doing. Whence, therefore, hast thou thine authority?' will they say. The old Pharisees had the scrip ture in captivity likewise, and asked Christ, "By what autho rity doest thou these things ? " As who should say, We are Pharisees, and thou art none of our order, nor hast authority of us. Christ asked them another question, and so will I do How to know our hypocrites. 'Who sent you? God? Nay, he that is whoissentof * r d d> whoisnot sen* °f ^0C* speaketh God's word. Now speak ye not God's Johniii. word, nor any thing save your own laws, made clean contrary unto God's word. Christ's apostles preached Christ, and not themselves. He that is of the truth preacheth the truth. Now ye preach nothing but lies, and therefore are of the devil, the father of all lies, and of him are ye sent. And as for mine au- John v. & x. thority, or who sent me, I report me unto my works, as Christ, John y. and x. If God's word bear record that I say truth, why should any man doubt, but that God, the Father of truth and of light, hath sent me ; as the father of lies and of dark ness hath sent you ; and that the Spirit of truth and of light is with me, as the spirit of lies and of darkness is with you ?' OF ANOILING. 283 'By this means thou wilt that every man be a preacher,' will no man may d d r > preach, hut they say. Nay, verily. For God will that not, and there- {jf,**^ fore will I it not; no more than I would that every man of wnt^God- London were mayor of London, or every man of the realm king thereof. God is not the author of dissension and strife, but of unity and peace, and of good order. I will therefore, that where a congregation is gathered together in Christ, one be chosen after the rule of Paul, and that he only preach, and else no man openly ; but that every man teach his house hold after the same doctrine. But if the preacher preach false ; then whosoever's heart God moveth, to the same it shah be lawful to rebuke and improve the false teacher with the clear and manifest scripture; and that same is no doubt a true prophet, sent of God. For the scripture is God's, and theirs that believe, and not the false prophet's. Sacrament is then as much to say as an holy sign. And the sacraments which Christ ordained preach God's word unto us, and therefore justify, and minister the Spirit to them that beheve; as Paul through preaching the gospel was a min ister of righteousness, and of the Spirit, unto all that believed his preaching. Dumb ceremonies are no sacraments, but superstitiousness. Christ's sacraments preach the faith of Christ, as his apostles did, and thereby justify. Antichrist's dumb ceremonies preach not the faith that is in Christ; as his apostles, our bishops and cardinals, do not. But as anti christ's bishops are ordained to kill whosoever preach the true faith of Christ ; so are his ceremonies ordained to quench the faith, which Christ's sacraments preach. And hereby The differ- mayest thou know the difference between Christ's signs or Sue sacra-een sacraments, aud antichrist's signs or ceremonies ; that Christ's false, w. t. signs speak, and antichrist's be dumb. Hereby seest thou what is to be thought of all other ceremonies; as hallowed water, bread, salt, boughs, bells, wax, ashes, and so forth ; and all other disguisings and apes'- play ; and of ah manner conjurations, as the conjuring of church and church-yards, and of altar-stones, and such like. Where no promise of God is, there can be no faith, nor jus tifying, nor forgiveness of sins : for it is more than madness to' look for any thing of God, save that he hath promised. How far he hath promised, so far is he bound to them that 284 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. miujod™'*" heheve ; and further not. To have a faith, therefore, or a JdoiTn-y.13 trust in any thing, where God hath not promised, is plain 1 * idolatry, and a worshipping of thine own imagination instead of God. Let us see the pith of a ceremony or two, to judge the rest by. In conjuring of holy water, they pray that whosoever be sprinkled therewith may receive health as well of body as of soul : and likewise in making holy bread, and so forth in the conjurations of other ceremonies. Now we see by daily experience, that half their prayer is unheard. , For no man receiveth health of body thereby. No more, of likelihood, do they of soul. Yea, we see also by experience, that no man receiveth health of soul thereby. For no man by sprinkling himself with holy water, and with eating holy bread, is more merciful than before, or forgiveth wrong, or becometh at one with his enemy, or is more patient, and less covetous, and so forth; which are the sure tokens of the soul-health. The bishop's They preach also, that the wagging of the bishop's hand w. t. " over us blesseth us, and putteth away our sins. Are these works not against Christ? How can they do more shame unto Christ's blood? For if the wagging of the bishop's hand over me be so precious a thing in the sight of God that I am thereby blessed, how then am I full " blessed with all EPh. i. spiritual blessing in Christ?" as Paul saith, Eph. i. Or if my sins be full done away in Christ, how remaineth there how the any to be done away by such fantasies ? The apostles knew apostles » d d r blessed us. no ways to put away sm, or to bless us, but by preachmg Gai. n. Christ. Paul saith, Gal. ii. " If righteousness come by the law, then Christ died in vain." So dispute I here : If bless ing come by the wagging of the bishop's hand, then died Christ in vain, and his death blesseth us not. And a little Gai. ii. afore saith Paul, " If while we seek to be justified by Christ, we be yet found sinners," (so that we must be justified by the law or ceremonies,) " is not Christ then a minister of sin ?" So dispute I here : If while we seek to be blessed in Christ we are yet unblessed, and must be blessed by the wagging of the bishop's hand, what have we then of Christ but curse? Thou wilt say : When we come first to the faith, then Christ forgiveth us and blesseth us; but the sins, which we after- Kepentanoe, ward commit, are forgiven us through such things. I answer, fn ciirMf lth if any man repent truly, and come to the faith, and put his OF ANOILING. 285 trust in Christ, then as oft as he sinneth of frailty, at the sigh purgeth our of the heart is his sin put away in Christ's blood. For Christ's Ant.ed. blood purgeth ever and blesseth ever. For John saith in the second of his first epistle, " This I write unto you that ye sin i John n. not. And though any man sin" (meaning of frailty, and so repent) " yet have we an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ which is righteous, and he it is that obtaineth grace for our sins." And, Heb. vii. it is written, "But this man" Heb. vis. (meaning Christ), " because he lasteth or abideth ever, hath an everlasting priesthood. Therefore is he able also ever to save them that come to God through him, seeing he ever hveth to make intercession for us." The bishops therefore ought to bless us in preaching Christ, and not to deceive us and to bring the curse of God upon us with wagging their hands over us. To preach is their duty only, and not to offer their feet to be kissed1. We feel also by experience that after the pope's, bishop's, or cardinal's blessing, we are no otherwise disposed in our souls than before. Let this be sufficient as concerning the sacraments and Theprotesta- ceremonies, with this protestation : that if any can say better, author. or improve this with God's word, no man shall be better con tent therewith than I. For I seek nothing but the truth, and to walk in the hght. I submit therefore this work and all other that I have made or shall make (if God will that I shall more make) unto the judgments, not of them that furi ously burn all truth, but of them which are ready with God's word to correct, if any thing be said amiss, and to further God's word. I will talk a word or two after the worldly wisdom with confession them, and make an end of this matter. If the sacraments S^ammls* justify, as they say, (I understand by justifying, forgiveness them fmit- of sins,) then do they wrong unto the sacraments, inasmuch as they rob the most part of them, through confession, of their effect, and of the cause wherefore they were ordained. For no man may receive the body of Christ, no man may marry, no man may be oiled or anoiled as they call it, no man may receive orders, except he be first shriven. Now when the sins be forgiven by shrift aforehand, there is nought left for the sacraments to do. They will answer that at tho P A coarse expression, originating with the once popularly credited story of. pope Joan, is here omitted.] 286 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. leastway they increase grace; and not the sacraments" only, but also hearing of mass, matins, and even-song, and receiv ing of holy water, holy bread, and of the bishop's blessing, .what grace and so forth by all ceremonies. By grace I understand the favour of God, and also the gifts and working of his Spirit in Howtoknow us ; as love, kindness, patience, obedience, mercifulness, not To'r what despising of worldly things, peace, concord, and such hke. gracffand If after thou hast heard so many masses, matins, and even- whatnot. songSj an(j after thou hast received holy bread, holy water, and the bishop's blessing, or a cardinal's or the pope's, if thou wilt be more kind to thy neighbour, and love him better than before ; if thou be more obedient unto thy superiors ; more merciful, more ready to forgive wrong done unto thee, more despisest the world, and more athirst after spiritual things ; if after that a priest hath taken orders he be less co vetous than before ; if a wife, after so many and oft pilgrim ages, be more chaste, more obedient unto her husband, more kind to her maids and other servants ; if gentlemen, knights, lords, and kings and emperors, after they have said so often with their daily service with their chaplains, know more of Christ than chaplains, d x God"1™' before, and can better skill to rule their tenants, subjects, and ctopi'ainshatr realms christianly than before, and be content with their thlm noTsaoe duties ; then do such things increase grace. If not, it is a s^iceaTone lie. Whether it be so or no, I report me to experience. If w.'t."165"' they have any other interpretations of justifying or grace, I pray them to teach it me ; for I would gladly learn it. Now let us go to our purpose again. Of Miracles and Worshipping of Saints. Truemiracies Antichrist shall not only come with lying signs, and christ-V t. disguised with falsehood, but also with lying miracles and p The words quoth he seem to indicate either that this marginal note is a quotation from Sir T. More's dialogue, or an allusion to it; for in that dialogue quoth he recurs with an absurd frequency, else where noticed by Tyndale. The final words while tftey are found in all the editions collated, and seem to imply some continued typographical error. If it may be supposed that whyle is a misprint for whyst or know, we might read the margin as follows : Their chaplains at the last make them not so mad. To say service alone whist they.] OF MIRACLES AND WORSHIPPING OF SAINTS. 287 wonders, saith Paul in the said place, 2 Thes. ii. All 2 Thess. a. the true miracles which are of God, are shewed (as I above rehearsed) to move us to hear God's word, and to stablish our faith therein, and to confirm the truth of God's promises, that we might without all doubting believe them. For God's word through faith bringeth the Spirit into our hearts and also hfe, as Christ saith, John vi. "The words which iJohnvi. speak are spirit and life." The word also purgeth us and cleanseth us, as Christ saith, John xv. "Ye are clean byJ°hnxv- the means ofthe word." Paul saith, 1 Tim. ii. "One God, nim. u. one Mediator" (that is to say, advocate, intercessor, or an at- one-maker) " between God and man, the man Christ Jesus, which gave himself a ransom for ah men." Peter saith of Christ, Actsiv. "Neither is there health in any other: neither Actsiv. yet also any other name given unto men wherein we must be saved." So now Christ is our peace, our redemption or ransom for our sins, our righteousness, satisfaction, and " all the pro- 2 cor. i. mises of God are yea and Amen in him," 2 Cor i. And we, for the great and infinite love which God hath to us in Christ, love him again, love also his laws, and love one another. And the The effect deeds which we henceforth do, do we not to make satisfaction, our good deeds. or to obtain heaven ; but to succour our neighbour, to tame the flesh, that we may wax perfect and strong men in Christ, and to be thankful to God again for his mercy, and to glorify his name. Contrariwise the miracles of antichrist are done to pull False mira- thee from the word of God, and from believing his promises, from christ, and from Christ, and to put thy trust in a man, or a cere mony wherein God's word is not. As soon as God's word is believed, the faith spread abroad, then cease the miracles of God. But the miracles of antichrist, because they are wrought by the devil, to quench the faith, grow daily more and more ; neither shall cease, until the world's end, among them that believe not God's word and promises. Seest thou not how God loosed and sent forth all the devils in the old world among the heathen or gentiles? and how the devils wrought miracles, and spake to them in every image ? Even so shall the devil work falsehood by one craft or another, until the world's end, among them that believe not God's word. For the judgment and damnation of him 288 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. that hath no lust to hear the truth, is to hear lies, and to be stablished and grounded therein through false miracles; and he that will not see is worthy to be blind ; and he that biddeth the Spirit of God go from him, is worthy to be with out him. Paul, Peter, and all true apostles preached Christ only. And the miracles did but confirm and stablish their preaching, and those everlasting promises and eternal testament that God had made between man and him in Christ's blood : and the miracles did testify also that they were true servants of Christ. Paul preached not himself; he taught not any man to trust in him or his holiness, or in Peter or in any ceremony, but in the promises which God hath sworn only : yea, he mightily resisteth all such false doctrine, both to the Co- teacheth to rinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, and every where. If this be saint i"a true (as it is true and nothing more true), that if Paul had faise^prophet, preached himself, or taught any man to believe in his holi ness or prayer, or in any thing save in the promises that God hath made and sworn to give us for Christ's sake, he had been a false prophet ; why am not I also a false pro phet, if I teach thee to trust in Paul, or in his holiness or prayer, or in any thing save in God's word, as Paul did? what he If Paul were here and loved me, (as he loved them of his tha"praVetn' time to whom he was sent, and to whom he was a servant for his neigh- hour. w. t. to preach Christ,) what good could he do for me or wish me, but preach Christ and pray to God for me, to open mine heart, to give me his Spirit, and to bring me unto the full knowledge of Christ ? unto which port or haven when I am once come, I am as safe as Paul, fellow with Paul, joint heir with Paul of all the promises of God, and God's truth heareth my prayer as well as Paul's1. I also now could not but love Paul, and wish him good, and pray for him, "that God would strengthen him in all his temptations and give him victory, as should^ ^e would do for me. Nevertheless there are many weak and IS'/de'celved voung consciences always in the congregation, which they w. T. P Art. XVI. Of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale: ' He saith, Why should I trust in Paul's prayer or holiness ? If St Paul were alive, he would compare himself to St Paul, and be as good as he.' In reply to this charge Foxe quotes Tyndale's words, from 'Why am not I' to 'the promises of God;' and observes in his margin, that * The words of Tyndale import no such meaning as in the article.'] OF MIRACLES AND WORSHIPPING OF SAINTS. 289 that have the office to preach ought to teach, and not to de ceive them. What prayers pray our clergy for us, which stop us and The spintu- exclude us from Christ, and seek all the means possible to ^^"JjfJ" keep us from knowledge of Christ ? They compel us to „? chiSt6 hire friars, monks, nuns, canons, and priests, and to buy their w" T" abominable merits, and to hire the saints that are dead to pray for us ; for the very saints have they made hirelings also, because that their offerings come to their profit. What pray all those? That we might come to the knowledge of Christ, as the apostles did? Nay, verily. For it is a plain case, that all they which enforce to keep us from Christ, pray not that we might come to the knowledge of Christ. And_as_for__the saints, (whose prayer was, when they were alive, that we might be grounded, established and strength ened in Christ only,) if it were of God that we should this wise worship them, contrary unto their own doctrine, I dare be bold to affirm, that by the means of- their prayers we should have been brought long ago unto the knowledge of God and Christ again, though that these beasts had done their worst to let it. Let us therefore set our hearts at rest in Christ and in God's promises, for so I think it best ; and let us take The saints are I the saints for an ensample only, and let us do as they both pie. w. t. -taught and did. Let us set God's promises before our eyes, and desire him for his mercy and for Christ's sake to fulfil them. And he is as true as ever he was, and will do it as well as ever he did ; for to us are the promises made as well as to them. Moreover, the end of God's miracles is good ; the end offeringsCiiuse the to these miracles are evil. For the offerings, which are the ^"^'^ cause of the miracles, do but minister and maintain vice, sin, and all abomination, and are given to them that have too much; so that for very abundance they foam out their own shame, and corrupt the whole world with the stench of their filthiness. Thereto " whatsoever is not of faith is sin." " Faith 5°m- *iv- Bom. x. cometh by hearing God's word." When now thou fastest or doest any thing in the worship of any saint, believing to come to the favour of God or to be saved thereby ; if thou have God's word, then is it true faith and shall save r n 19 [TYNDALE. J 290 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. thee. If thou have not God's word, then it is a false faith, superstitiousness, and idolatry, and damnable sin. Also in the collects of the saints, with which we pray God to save us through the merits or deservings of the saints, (which saints yet were not saved by their own deservings themselves) we say, per Christum Dominum nostrum; that is, for Christ our Lord's sake. We say, ' Save us, good Lord, through the saints' merits for Christ's sake.' How can he save us through the saints' merits for Christ's sake, and for his deserving merits and love? Take an example. A gentleman saith unto me, ' I wih do the uttermost of my power for thee, for the love which I owe unto thy father. Though thou hast never done me pleasure, yet I love thy father weU : thy father is my friend, and hath deserved that I do ah that I can for thee, &c.' Here is a testament and a promise made unto me in the love of my father only. If I come to the said gentleman in the name of one of his serv ants which I never saw, never spake with, neither have any acquaintance at all with, and say, ' Sir, I pray you be good master unto me in such a cause : I have not deserved that thou shouldest so do ; nevertheless I pray you do it for such a servant's sake : yea, I pray you for the love that you owe to my father, do that for me for such a servant's sake : ' if I this wise made my petition, would not men think that I came late out of St Patrick's purgatory1, and had left my wits behind me? This do we. For the testament and promises are all made unto us in Christ : and we desire P Cum Patricius per Hibemiam prsedicaret, et fructum ibi modi cum faceret, rogavit Deum ut ibi aliquod signum ostenderet, per quod territi poeniterent. Jussu igitur Domini in quodam loco circulum magnum cum baculo designavit, intra quod se terra statim aperuit, et puteus profundissimus ibidem apparuit. Revelatum quoque fuit sancto, quod ibi quidem purgatorii locus esset, in quern quisquis vellet descendere, aha sibi poenitentia non restaret, nee aliud pro peccatis purgatorium sustineret : plerique autem non redirent ; et qui rediret, die naturali integro ibidem moram faceret. Multi igitur ingredie- bantur, qui de cetero nonrevertebantur. — Petrus de Natalibus; Catalog. Sanctorum, Lib. in. cap. cciv. Argentina^, 1513. — This legendary tale goes on to relate how such horrible things as might well make a man leave his wits behind him, were seen by a nobleman named Nicholas, who descended and came up again the next morning. This Patrick's purgatory is still a popular resort with the superstitious. See Inglis Tom- in Ireland, 4th edition, p. 300.] OF MIRACLES AND WORSHIPPING OF SAINTS. 291 God to fulfil his promises for the saints' sake ; yea, that he God the Fa- x . " ther fulfilleth will for Christ's sake do it for the saints sake. ws promises to us tor They have also martyrs, which never preached God's %$fjtffce' word, neither died therefore ; but for privileges and liberties, 'afn™,eafthef which they falsely purchased, contrary unto God's ordinances, flight Yea, and such saints, though they be dead, yet rob now as A", jue,.n fast as ever they did, neither are less covetous now than thfpope?0 when they were alive. I doubt not but that they will make rfouJolr™ a saint of my lord cardinal after the death of us that be signifieth a d witness- alive, and know his jugghng and crafty conveyance ; and bsemfnj)tnow wih shrine him gloriously for his mightily defending of the f^eTuS right of the holy church, except we be diligent to leave a^T.sword' commemoration of that Nimrod behind us. The reasons wherewith they prove their doctrine are but The reasons which they fleshly, and, as Paul calleth them, " enticing words of man's make for the d 7 7 o worshipping wisdom ;" that is to wit, sophistry, and brawling arguments Jj^jj^l, of men with corrupt minds and destitute of the truth, whose God is their belly, unto which idol whosoever offereth not, the same is an heretic, and worthy to be burnt. ' The saint was great with God when he was alive, as it appeareth by the miracles which God shewed for him ; he must therefore be great now,' say they. This reason appear eth wisdom ; but it is very foolishness with God. For the jg$ miracle was not shewed that thou should put thy trust in the saint, but in the word which the saint preached ; which word, if thou behevest, would save thee, as God hath promised and sworn, and would make thee also great with God, as it did the saint. ' If a man have a matter with a great man, or a king, he must go first unto one of his" mean servants, and then higher and higher till he come at the king.' This enticing argument is but a blind reason of man's wit. It is not like in the king- it is not like dom of the world, and in the kingdom of God and Christ, and God. With kings, for the most part, we have none acquaintance, neither promise. They be also most commonly merciless. Moreover, if they promise, they are yet men, as unconstant as are other people, and as untrue. But with God, if we have belief, we are accounted, and have an open way in unto him by the door Christ, which is never shut, but through unbelief; neither is there any porter to keep any man out. " By him," saith Paul, Eph. ii. that is to say, by Christ, " we EPh-."- 19—2 292 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. have an open way in unto the Father. So are ye now no more strangers and foreigners (saith he), but citizens with the saints, and of the household of God." God hath also made us promises, and hath sworn ; yea, hath made a testament or a covenant, and hath bound himself, and hath sealed his obligation with Christ's blood, and confirmed it with miracles. He is also merciful and kind ; and complaineth that we will not come unto him. He is mighty and able to perform that he promiseth. He is true, and cannot be but true, as he cannot be but God. Therefore is it not like with the king and God. 'We be sinners,' say they, 'God will not hear us.' Behold how they flee from God, as from a tyrant merciless. Whom a man counteth most merciful, unto him he soonest fleeth. But these teachers dare not come at God. Why ? For they are the ohildren of Cain. If the saints love whom God hateth, then God and his saints are divided. When thou prayest to the saints, how do they know, except that God, whom thou countest merciless, tell them? If God be so cruel, and so hateth thee, it is not likely that he will tell the saints that thou prayest unto them. Christ is no When they say, ' We be sinners : ' I answer, that Christ is no sinner, save a satisfaction and an offering for sin. Take Christ from the saints, and what are they ? What is Paul without Christ ? Is he any thing save a blasphemer, a per secutor, a murderer, and a shedder of christian blood ? But as soon as he came to Christ, he was no more a sinner, but a minister of righteousness : he went not to Rome to take penance upon him, but went and preached unto his brethren the same mercy, which he had received free, without doing penance, or hiring of saints, or of monks or friars. Moreover, if it be God's word that thou should put thy trust in the saints' merits or prayers, then be bold ; for God's word shall defend thee, and save thee. If it be but thine own reason, then fear : for God commandeth by Moses, Deut. xii. saying, Deut xii. « what I command you, that observe and do, and put no thing to, nor take ought therefrom ;" yea, and Moses warneth straitly in an hundred places, that we do that only which bringeth a God commandeth, and which seemeth good and righteous in man sooner . o o tha™?toid£ lns S1§at> and not in our own S1gnt- For nothing bringeth oa™imag£ the wrath of God so soon and so sore on a man, as the Anted. idolatry of his own imagination. OF MIRACLES AND WORSHIPPING OF SAINTS. 293 Last of all, these arguments are contrary to the argu ments of Christ and of his apostles. Christ disputeth, Luke xi. Luke xi. saying : " If the son ask the father bread, will he give him a stone ? or if he ask him fish, will he give him a serpent ?" and so forth. " If ye then," saith he, " which are evil can give good gifts to your children, how much rather shall your heavenly Father give a good Spirit unto them that ask him!" And a little before, in the same chapter, he saith : " If a man came never so out of season to his neighbour to borrow bread, even when he is in his chamber, and the door shut, and all his servants with him ; nevertheless yet, if he con tinue knocking and praying, he will rise and give him as much as he needeth, though not for love, yet to be rid of him, that he may have rest." As who should say, What will God do, if a man pray him ; seeing that prayer overcometh an evil man ? " Ask," therefore, saith he, " and it shall be given Lukexi. you ; seek, and ye shall find ; knock, and it shah be opened unto you." And Luke xviii. he putteth forth the parable, or similitude, of the wicked judge, which was overcome with the importunate prayer of the widow ; and concludeth, say ing : " Hear what the wicked judge did. And shall not Luke xviii. God avenge his elect, which cry unto him night and day?" Whether, therefore, we complain of the intolerable oppression and persecution that we suffer, or of the flesh that cumbereth and resisteth the Spirit, God is merciful to hear us and to help us. Seest thou not also, how Christ cureth many, and casteth out devils out of many, unspoken to? how shall he not help, if he be desired and spoken to ? When the old Pharisees (whose nature is to drive sinners from Christ) asked Christ why he did eat with publicans and sinners ? Christ answered, " That the whole needed not the physician, but the sick ;" that is, he came to have con versation with sinners to heal them. He was a gift given ohristisa unto sinners, and a treasure to pay their debts. And Christ Snnfrl.en sent the complaining and disdaining Pharisees to the prophet Oseas, saying: "Go and learn what this meaneth, I desire God loveth (or require) mercy, and not sacrifice." As who should say, mercy' Ye Pharisees love sacrifice and offering for to feed that god Hypocrites your bellies withal ; but God commandeth to be merciful, ings. w. t. Sinners are ever captives, and a prey to the Pharisees and hypocrites, for to offer unto their bellies, and to buy merits, 294 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. pardons, and forgiveness of sins of them. And therefore fear they them away from Christ with arguments of their belly-wisdom. For he that receiveth forgiveness free of Christ, will buy no forgiveness of them. " I came," saith Christ, "to call, not the righteous, but the sinners unto re-; pentance." The Pharisees are righteous, and therefore have no part with Christ, neither need they ; for they are gods themselves, and saviours. But sinners, that repent, pertain to Christ. If we repent, Christ hath made satisfaction for us already. John iii. " Qod so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that none that believe on him should perish, but should have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved. He that believeth on him shall not be damned ; but he that believeth not is damned already." John iii. Rom. v. Paul, Bom. v. saith, " Because we are justified through faith, we are at peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ : " that is, because that God, which cannot lie, hath promised and sworn to be merciful unto us, and to forgive us for Christ's we are at sake, we believe, and are at peace in our consciences ; we run peace in our i«i i i • i n i i ¦ /. • consciences, not hither and thither for pardon ; we trust not in this friar when we x stanrtveoCurn" nor *na* monk> neither in any thing, save in the word of God mitstede re' enly : as a child, when his father threateneth him for his chhrr°st?hJesus fault, hath never rest till he hear the word of mercy and forgiveness of his father's mouth again ; but as soon as he heareth his father say, Go thy way, do me no more so, I forgive thee this fault, then is his heart at rest ; then is he at peace ; then runneth he to no man to make intercession for him; neither, though there come any false merchant1, say ing, 'What wilt thou give me, and I will obtain pardon of thy father for thee ?' will he suffer himself to be beguiled. No, he will not buy of a wily fox that which his father hath given him freely. Rom. v. it foUoweth, " God setteth out his love, that he hath to us;" (that is, he maketh it appear, that men may perceive love if they be not more than stock blind :) " inasmuch (saith Paul) as, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more now, (saith he,) seeing we are justified by his blood, shall we be preserved from wrath through him : for if when we were P Dealer in lies.] OF MIRACLES AND WORSHIPPING OF SAINTS. 295 enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son ; much more, seeing we are reconciled, we shall be preserved by his life." As who should say, If God loved us, when we knew him not, much more loveth he us now we know him. If he were merciful to us while we hated his law, how much more merciful will he be now, seeing we love it, and desire strength to fulfil it ! And in the viiith he argueth : " If Rom. * God spared not his own Son, but gave him for us all, how shah he not with him give us all things also ? " Christ prayed, John xvii. not for the apostles only, but John xvii. also for as many as should beheve through their preaching, and was heard. Whatsoever we ask in his name, the Father John xvi. giveth us. Christ is also as merciful as the saints. Why go we why we . . . . -. T7- .. . -i come not to not straightway unto him ! Verily, because we feel not the Christ. mercy of God, neither believe his truth. ' God will, at the leastway (say they), hear us the sooner for the saints' sake.' Then loveth he the saints better than Christ and his own truth. Heareth he us for the saints' sake? So heareth he us not for his mercy : for merits and mercy cannot stand together. Finahy : If thou put any trust in thine own deeds, or in the deeds of any other man, of any saint, then minishest thou the truth, mercy, and goodness of God. For if God look unto thy works, or unto the works of any other man, or goodness of the saint; then doth he not all things of pure mercy and of his goodness, and for the truth's sake, which he hath sworn in Christ. Now saith Paul, Tit. hi. " Not of the Tit. m. righteous deeds which we did, but of his mercy saved he us." Our blind disputers will say, ' If our good deeds justify us not ; if God look not on our good deeds, neither regard them, nor love us the better for them, what need we to do good deeds?' I answer, God looketh on our good deeds, and loveth Godiooketh them; yet loveth us not for their sakes. God loveth us first deed™ 1v°t. in Christ, of his goodness and mercy, and poureth his Spirit into us, and giveth us power to do good deeds. And because he loveth us, he forgiveth us our evil deeds, which we do of frailty, and not of purpose, or for the nonce. Our good deeds do but testify only that we are justified and beloved. For except we were beloved, and had God's Spirit, we could neither . . , j -i i Antichrist do, nor yet consent unto any good deed. Antichrist turneth JoSfofthl the roots of the trees upward. He maketh the goodness of wf "Ty™A- 296 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. God the branches, and our goodness the roots. We must be first good, after antichrist's doctrine, and move God, and com pel him to be good again for our goodness' sake : so must God's goodness spring out of our goodness. Nay, verily ; God's goodness is the root of all goodness ; and our good ness, if we have any, springeth out of his goodness. Of Prayer. Of prayer and good deeds, and of the order of love, or charity, I have abundantly written in my book of the Justi fying of Faith1. Neverthelater, that thou mayest see what the prayers and good works of our monks and friars, and of other ghostly people, are worth, I will speak a word or two, Gai. in. and make an end. Paul saith, Gal. iii. " All ye are the sons are one as of God through faith in Jesus Christ ; for all ye that are bap- good as ano- ... ^1 , , m • ther, dually tized have put Christ on you ; that is, ye are become Christ neard"^"? nimse^- " There is no Jew," (saith he,) "neither Greek, neither bond nor free, neither man nor wroman, but ye are all one thing in Christ Jesus." In Christ there is neither French nor English; but the Frenchman is the Englishman's own self, and the English the Frenchman's own self. In Christ there is neither father nor son, neither master nor servant, neither husband nor wife, neither king nor subject: but the father is the son's self, and the son the father's own self; and the king is the subject's own self, and the subject is the king's own self ; and so forth. I am thou thyself, and thou art I myself, and can be no nearer of kin. We are all the sons of God, all Christ's servants bought with his blood; and every coi. iu. man to other Christ his own self. And Col. iii. " Ye have put on the new man, which is renewed in the knowledge of God, after the image of him that made him (that is to say, Christ;) "where is" (saith he) "neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarous or Scythian, bond or free ; but christisaiito Christ is all in ah things." I love thee not now because thou a christian -ii-i 1 1 man. w. t. art my father, and hast done so much for me ; or my mother, and hast borne me, and given me suck of thy breasts, (for so do Jews and Saracens,) but because of the great love that Christ hath shewed me. I serve thee, not because thou art P So he calls his treatise on the parable of the Wicked Mammon.] of prayer. 297 my master, or my king, for hope of reward, or fear of pain, but for the love of Christ ; for the children of faith are under no law (as thou seest in the epistles to the Bomans, to the Galatians, in the first to Timothy), but are free. The Spirit Jj^gj1*^ of Christ hath written the lively law of love in their hearts ; °^™'0™* which driveth them to work of their own accord freely and thcST'w"1. t. willingly, for the great love's sake only which they see in Christ, and therefore need they no law to compel them2. Christ is all in all things to them that believe, and the cause of all love. Paul saith, Eph. vi. " Servants, obey unto ^'^rvei-al) your carnal or fleshly masters with fear and trembling, in antJSanderT" singleness of your hearts, as unto Christ : not with eye-service, wrvT.Christ" as men-pleasers, but as the servants of Christ, doing the will of God from the heart, even as though ye served the Lord, and not men. And remember, that whatsoever good thing any man doth, that shall he receive again of the Lord, whether he be bond or free." Christ thus is all in all things, and cause of all, to a christian man. And Christ saith, Matt. xxv. " Inasmuch as ye have done it to any the least of these Matt. xxv. my brethren, ye have done it to me. And inasmuch asThecon- d ' d tempt or love ye have not done it unto one of the least of these, ye have ^another"6 not done it to me." Here seest thou that we are Christ's 'hewTeto brethren, and even Christ himself; and whatsoever we do Anted. one to another, that do we to Christ3. If we be in Christ, we work for no worldly purpose, but of love : as Paul saith, 2 Cor. v. "The love of Christ compelleth us:" (as whoacor. v. should say, We work not of a fleshly purpose:) "for" (saith he) " we know henceforth no man fleshly ; no, though we once knew Christ fleshly, we do so now no more." We are otherwise minded than when Peter drew his sword to fight for Christ. We are now ready to suffer with Christ, and to lose life and all for our very enemies, to bring them unto Christ. If we be in Christ, we are minded like unto Christ ; christ know- which knew nothing fleshly, or after the will of the flesh, as worldly, no, ° d .... not his very thou seest Matt. xu. when one said to him, " Lo, thy mother m/°*er-Matt. xii. P Art. XVII. of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale: ' He saith that the children of faith be under no law.' Foxe replies, ' The article is true, being truly taken.'] P Art. XVIII. 'He saith, that all that be baptized become Christ.' Foxe's reply is, 'With this article confer the words of the Obedi ence.'] 298 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. and thy brethren stand without, desiring to speak with thee. He answered, Who is my mother, and who are my brethren? And stretched his hand over his disciples, saying, See, my mother and my brethren : for whosoever doth the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, my sister, and my mother." He knew not his mother in that she bare him, but in that she did the will of his Father in heaven. So now, as God the Father's will and commandment is all to Christ, even so Christ is all to a christian man. Christ is the cause why I love thee, why I am ready to do the uttermost of my power for thee, and why I pray for thee. as long as And as long as the cause abideth, so long; lasteth the effect: even Christ abid- , . ° ' & . eth so long as it 1S always day so long; as the sun shineth. Do therefore a christian d d o manioveth. tne worst thou canst unto me, take away my goods, take away my good name ; yet as long as Christ remaineth in my heart, so long I love thee not a whit the less, and so long art thou as dear unto me as mine own soul, and so long am I ready to do thee good for thine evil, and so long I pray for thee with all my heart : for Christ desireth it of me, and hath deserved it of me. Thine unkindness compared unto his kindness is nothing at all ; yea, it is swallowed up as a little smoke of a mighty wind, and is no more seen or thought upon. More over that evil which thou didst to me, I receive not of thy hand, but of the hand of God, and as God's scourge to teach me patience, and to nurture me : and therefore have no cause to be angry with thee, more than the child hath to be angry with his father's rod ; or a sick man with a sour or bitter medicine that healeth him, or a prisoner with his fetters, or he that is punished lawfully with the officer that punisheth him. Thus is Christ all, and the whole cause why Money bind- I love thee. And to all can nought be added. Therefore tians to pray, cannot a little money make me love thee better, or more bound to pray for thee, nor make God's commandment greater. Last of all, if I be in Christ, then " the love of Christ compelleth me." And therefore I am ready to give thee mine, and not to take thine from thee. If I be able, I will do thee service freely : if not, then if thou minister to me again, that receive I of the hand of God, which minis- God careth tereth it to me by thee. For God careth for his, and minis- ' tereth all things unto them, and moveth Turks, and Saracens, and all manner infidels to do them good : as thou seest in OF PRAYER. 299 Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and how God went with Joseph into Egypt, and gat him favour in the prison, and in every place ; which favour Joseph received of the hand of God, and to God gave the thanks. Thus is God and Christ all in all ; good and bad receive I of God. Them that are good I love, because they are in Christ; and the evil, to bring them to Christ. When any man doth well, I rejoice that God is honoured ; and when any man doth evil, I sorrow because that God is dishonoured. Finally, inasmuch as God hath created all, and Christ bought all with his blood, therefore ought all to seek God and Christ in all, and else nothing. But contrariwise unto monks, friars, and to the other of our Thebeiiyis holy spiritualty, the belly is all in all, and cause of all love. cau°se'oTaii Offer thereto ; so art thou father, mother, sister, and brother spiritualty. unto them. Offerest thou not ? so know they thee not ; thou art neither father, mother, sister, brother, nor any kin at all to them. ' She is a sister of ours, he is a brother of ours,' say they ; 'he is verily a good man, for he doth much for our religion : she is a mother to our convent; we be greatly bound to pray for them. And as for such and such, (say they,) we know not whether they be good or bad, or whether they be fish or flesh, for they do nought for us : we be more bound to pray for our benefactors (say they) and for them that give us, than for them that give us not.' For them that give little are they little bound, and them they love little : and for them that give much they are much bound, and them they love much : and for them that give nought are they nought bound, and them they love not at all. And as they love thee when thou givest, so hate they thee when thou takest away from them, and run all under a stool, and Au is of the curse thee as black as pitch. So is cloister-love belly-love ; nmiung"^ cloister-prayer, belly-prayer ; and cloister-brotherhood, belly- w."t!' brotherhood. Moreover, love that springeth of Christ seeketh i Cor. xiii. not her own self, 1 Cor. xiii., but forgetteth herself, and be- fegettethve stoweth her upon her neighbour's profit, as Christ sought our monks' love profit, and not his own. He sought not the favour of God for thmbeeiiy.on W. T. himself, but for us ; yea, he took the wrath and vengeance of God from us unto himself, and bare it on his own back, to bring us unto favour. Likewise doth a christian man give to his brethren, and robbeth them not, as friars and monks do ; but, as Paul commandeth, Eph. iv. laboureth with his hands Eph. iv. 300 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. some good work to have wherewith to help the needy. They give not, but receive only. They labour not, but live idly of the sweat of the poor. There is none so poor a widow, though she have not to find herself and her children, nor any money to give, yet shall the friar snatch a cheese, or somewhat. They preach, sayest thou, and labour in the Friars and word. First, I say, they are not called, and therefore ought not to preach, not : for it is the curate's1 office. The curate cannot, sayest thou. What doth the thief there then ? Secondarily, a true preacher preacheth Christ's testament only; and maketh Christ the cause and reward of all our deeds ; and teacheth every Phu. in. man to bear his cross willingly for Christ's sake. But these are enemies unto the cross of Christ, and preach their belly, which 1 Tim. vi. is their god, Eph. [Phil.] iii. and they think that lucre is the serving of God, 1 Tim. vi. : that is, they think them christian only, which offer unto their bellies, which when thou hast filled, then spue they out prayers for thee, to be thy reward, and yet wot not what prayer meaneth. Prayer is the long ing for God's promises; which promises, as they preach them not, so long they not for them, nor wish them unto Rom. xvi. any man. Their longing is to fill their paunch, whom they serve, and not Christ ; and through sweet preaching, and flattering words, deceive the hearts of the simple and un learned. christ is the Finally, as Christ is the whole cause why we do all why God thing for our neighbour, even so is he the cause why God loveth us. ,,,¦,•,. j. , , . , . , . , i w.t. doth all thing tor us, why he receiveth us into his holy testament, and maketh us heirs of all his promises, and poureth his Spirit into us, and maketh us his sons, and fashioneth us like unto Christ, and maketh us such as he would have us to be. The assurance that we are sons, be- How to know loved, and heirs with Christ, and have God's Spirit in us, God-s sons, is the consent of our hearts unto the law of God. Which The law is law is all perfection, and the mark whereat all we ought to trie ititirk * yea, and the shoot. And he that hitteth that mark, so that he fulfilleth touchstone ' weraghuo tae *aw Wltn au hls heart, soul, and might, and with full love and°seeshoVw' ana hist, without all let or resistance, is pure gold, and fM?mtfsed.e needeth not to be put any more in the fire : he is straight and right, and needeth to be no more shaven : he is full fashioned like Christ, and can have no more added unto him. P That is, the parochial minister.] areW, OF PRAYER. 301 Nevertheless there is none so perfect in this life, that findeth not let and resistance by the reason of original sin, or birth- poison, that remaineth in him, as thou mayest see in the ourbirth- ,. put . i i n • • poison that lives of all the saints throughout all the scripture, and m remaineth in — " x us resisteth Paul, Bom. vii. " The will is present (saith he), but I find no A,°tf^r.it means to perform that which is good. I do not that good Hom' ™- thing which I would : but that evil do I, which I would not. I find by the law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me. I delight in the law, as concerning the inner man ; but I find another law in my members, rebelling against the law of my mind, and subduing me unto the law of sin." Which law of sin is nothing but a corrupt and a poisoned 42® nature, which breaketh into evil lusts, and from evil lusts into wicked deeds, and must be purged with the true purga tory of the cross of Christ: that is, thou must hate it with The right cross of all thine heart, and desire God to take it from thee. And christ- w. T- then, whatsoever cross God putteth on thy baok, bear it patiently, whether it be poverty, sickness, or persecution, or whatsoever it be, and take it for the right purgatory, and think that God hath nailed thee fast to it, to purge thee thereby. For he that loveth not the law and hateth his He that ... ,. -i.-i'i /. . loveth not sin, and hath not professed in his heart to fight against it, J1,^elahws'innd and mourneth not to God to take it away and to purge him of ^uhchS' it, the same hath no part with Christ. If thou love the law, ^ T- 7 r ' How to try and findest that thou hast yet sin hanging on thee, whereof J^^iSf thou sorrowest to be delivered and purged ; as for an en- tualty' W- T- sample, thou hast a covetous mind, and mistrustest God, and therefore art moved to beguile thy neighbour, and art unto him merciless, not caring whether he sink or swim, so thou mayest win by him, or get from him that he hath ; then get thee to the Observant?, which is so purged from that sin, [2 About the beginning of the fifteenth century it was confessed that the Franciscans or Grey friars had widely departed from the rules laid down by their founder. Hence the more zealous of them separated from the rest, and assumed the name of Observants, as resolved to adhere rigidly to his rules. The others, who could say that the pope had sanctioned their laxer system, were called Conventuals, when it was wished to distinguish them from their Observant brethren. As followers of the stricter rules, the Observants were to be without property, and beg their bread, and when begging they were to accept necessaries only, and not money. Fosbroke's Brit. Mon. p. 79, ed. of 1843. See also note 1 to p. 287 of Latimer's Sermons, P. S. ed.] 302 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. that he will not once handle a penny, and with that wile doth the subtle fox make the goose come flying into his hole, ready prepared for his mouth, without his labour or sweat : and buy of his merits, which he hath in store ; and give thy money, not into his holy hands, but to offer him that he hath hired, either with part of his prayers or part of his prey, to take the sin upon him and to handle his money for him. In like manner, if any person that is under obedience unto God's ordinance (whether it be son, or daughter, servant, wife or subject) consent unto the ordinance, and yet find contrary motions, let him go also to them that have pro fessed an obedience of their own making, and buy part of andhmerftseol their merits. If thy wife give thee nine words for three, menrpu?geus go to the Charterhouse, and buy of their silence 1 : and so, if then are they the abstaining of the Observant from handling; money heal of value, and , ..,»,.. .T „ ekenot. thine heart from desiring money, and the obedience of them that will obey nothing but their own ordinance heal thy disobedience to God's ordinance, and the silence of the Charterhouse monk tame thy wife's tongue ; then believe that their prayers shall deliver thy soul from the pains of that terrible and fearful purgatory, which they have feigned to purge thy purse withal. $&" The spiritualty increaseth daily. More prelates, more priests, more monks, friars, canons, nuns, and more heretics, (I would say heremites,) with hke draff. Set before thee the increase of St Francis's disciples in so few years. Beckon how many thousands, yea, how many twenty thousands, not disciples only, but whole cloisters, are sprung out of hell of them in so little space. Pattering of prayers increaseth daily. Their service, as they call it, waxeth longer and longer, and the labour of their lips greater ; new saints, new service, new feasts, and new holidays. What take all these away ? Sin ? Nay ; for we see the contrary by experience, and that sin what the groweth as they grow. But they take away first God's tak"thaaway word, with faith, hope, peace, unity, love and concord ; then wilhtheir , ' , , , , , , i \ prayers. house and land, rent and fee, tower and town, goods and cat- [! The Carthusians were a branch of the Benedictines. In France they were called Chartreux, and their most famous monastery Chart reuse, a word which in England was changed into Charterhouse. They were forbidden all speech in the fratry, cloister, and church ; and were to ask for what they wanted after nones, on a talking day. Id. p. 71.] OF PRAYER. 303 tie, and the very meat out of men's mouths. All these live by purgatory. When other weep for their friends, they sing when other merrily ; when other lose their friends, they get friends, sing, and The pope, with all his pardons, is grounded on purgatory, ^e. they ^ Priefsts, monks, canons, friars, with ah other swarms of hypo crites, do but empty purgatory, and fill hell. Every mass, ah is of pur- say they, delivereth one soul out of purgatory. If that were physicians d d > x o d g!Ve none true, yea, if ten masses were enough for one soul, yet were jjjjjg ™f- the parish priests and curates of every parish sufficient to Snif^'wr. scour purgatory : all the other costly workmen might be well spared. The Four Senses of the Scripture. They divide the scripture into four senses, the literal, tropological, allegorical, and anagogical. The literal sense is become nothing at all : for the pope hath taken it clean away, and hath made it his possession2. He hath partly locked it up with the false and counterfeited keys of his traditions, ceremonies, and feigned hes ; and partly driveth men from it with violence of sword : for no man dare abide by the literal sense of the text, but under a protestation, ' If it shall please the pope.' The tropological sense pertaineth to good manners (say they), and "fecheth what we ought to do. The allegory is appropriate to faith ; and the anagogical to hope, and things above. Tropological and anagogical are terms of their own feigning, and altogether unnecessary. For they are but allegories, both two of them ; and this word allegory comprehendeth them both, and is enough. For tro ll2 In one of the glosses on the papal law the margin says, Scrip- tura divina quadrupliciter exponi potest. Joh. xvi. (25) ; and the gloss proceeds to say, Est enim quidam intellectus historicus ; allegoricus ; moralis sive tropologicus ; anagogicus. Sic hsec vox Hierusalem his- torice signat civitatem illam terrestrem; allegorice, ecclesiam; mo- raliter, animam fldelem ; anagogice, celestem Hierusalem. Moralis intellectus attendit qua? juxta nos sunt; allegoricus, quse intra nos; anagogicus, qua? supra nos. — Gloss on the word 'anagogen,'Dist. lxxvi. cap. 7, (or Jejunium) in the Decret. Gratian. It will be seen that, as Tyndale had observed, the gloss entirely passes over the literal, or, as it speaks, historical sense, when describing how this fourfold method of expounding the scriptures should be made profitable to us.] 304 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. pological1 is but an allegory of manners ; and anagogical, an Allegory, allegory of hope. And allegory is as much to say as strange nifleth. speaking, or borrowed speech : as when we say of a wanton child, 'This sheep hath magots in his tail, he must be anointed with birchen salve ;' which speech I borrow of the shepherds. The scripture Thou shalt understand, therefore, that the scripture hath hath but one . , sense, w. t. but one sense, which is the hteral sense. And that literal sense is the root and ground of all, and the anchor that never faileth, whereunto if thou cleave, thou canst never err or go out of the way. And if thou leave the literal sense, thou canst not but go out of the way. Neverthelater, the scripture useth proverbs, similitudes, riddles, or allegories, as all other speeches do ; but that which the proverb, similitude, riddle, or allegory signifieth, is ever the literal sense, which thou must seek out diligently : as in the English we borrow words and sentences of one thing, and apply them unto ano ther, and give them new significations. We say, ' Let the sea swell and rise as high as he will, yet hath God appointed how far he shall go :' meaning that the tyrants shall not do what they would, but that only which God hath appointed them to do. ' Look ere thou leap :' whose literal sense is, ' Do nothing suddenly, or without advisement.' ' Cut not the bough that thou standest upon :' whose literal sense is, ' Oppress not the commons ;' and is borrowed of hewers. Borrowed When a thing speedeth not well, we borrow speech, and say, ' ' The bishop hath blessed it;' because that nothing speedeth well that they meddle withal. If the porridge be burned too, or the meat over roasted, we say, ' The bishop hath put his foot in the pot,' or, ' The bishop hath played the cook ; ' because the bishops burn whom they lust, and whosoever displeaseth them. ' He is a pontifical fellow ;' that is, proud and stately. ' He is popish ;' that is, superstitious and faith less. ' It is a pastime for a prelate.' ' It is a pleasure for a pope.' ' He would be free, and yet will not have his head shaven.' ' He would that no man should smite him, and yet hath not the pope's mark.' And of him that is be trayed, and wotteth not how, we say, ' He hath been at [x For tropological the folio edition has here chopological ; and Coplande's edition has chopological for tropological, a few lines above, as though Tyndale had meant to jest at the pedantic terms used by the schoolmen.] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 305 shrift.1 ' She is master parson's sister's daughter ;' ' He is the bishop's sister's son ;' ' He hath a cardinal to his uncle ;' ' She is a spiritual whore ;' ' It is the gentlewoman of the par sonage ;' 'He gave me a Kyrie eleyson2.' And of her that answereth her husband six words for one, we say, ' She is a sister of the Charterhouse :' as who should say, ' She thinketh that she is not bound to keep silence ; their silence shall be a satisfaction for her.' And of him that will not be saved by Christ's merits, but by the works of his own imagination, we say, ' It is a holy-work-man.' Thus borrow we, and feign new speech in every tongue. All fables, prophecies, and riddles, are allegories ; as iEsop's fables, and Merlin's prophecies ; and the interpretation of them are the literal sense. So in like manner the scripture borroweth words and sentences of all manner things, and maketh proverbs and similitudes, or ahegories. As Christ saith, Luke iv. "Physician, Lukeiv. heal thyself:" whose interpretation is, 'Do that at home, which thou dost in strange places;' and that is the literal sense. So when I say, 'Christ is a lamb;' I mean not a lamb that beareth wool, but a meek and a patient lamb, which is beaten for other men's faults. ' Christ is a vine ;' not that beareth grapes ; but out of whose root the branches that believe suck the Spirit of life, and mercy, and grace, and power to be the sons of God, and to do his will. The similitudes of the g;os- The right use . . . .. ° of allegories. pel are allegories, borrowed ot worldly matters, to express w- T- spiritual things. The apocalypse, or revelations of John, are allegories whose literal sense is hard to find in many places. Beyond all this, when we have found out the literal sense of the scripture by the process of the text, or by a hke text of another place, then go we, and as the scripture borroweth similitudes of worldly things, even so we again borrow simi litudes or allegories of the scripture, and apply them to pur purposes ; which allegories are no sense of the scripture, (but Allegories are free things besides the scripture, and altogether in the hberty ffi^""7- of the Spirit.) Which allegories I may not make at all the wild adventures ; but must keep me within the compass of the faith, and ever apply mine allegory to Christ, and unto the faith. Take an ensample : thou hast the story of Peter, how . [2 ' Lord, have mercy.' The proverb seems to mean he gave nothing but good words. James ii. 16.] [tyndale.] 306 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. he smote off Malchus's ear, and how Christ healed it again. There hast thou in the plain text great learning, great fruit, and great edifying, which I pass over because of tediousness. Then come I, when I preach of the law and the gospel, and borrow this ensample, to express the nature of the law and of the gospel, and to paint it unto thee before thine eyes. And of Peter and his sword make I the law, and of Christ the gospel ; saying, 'As Peter's sword cutteth off the ear, so doth the law : the law damneth, the law killeth, and man- gleth the conscience : there is no ear so righteous that can abide the hearing of the law : there is no deed so good but that the law damneth it1. But Christ, that is to say, the gospel, the promises and testament that God hath made in Christ, healeth the ear and conscience, which the law hath hurt. The gospel is life, mercy, and forgiveness freely, and altogether an healing plaister. And as Peter doth but hurt and make a wound, where was none before, even so doth the law : for when we think that we are holy and righteous, and full of good deeds; if the law be preached aright, our righteousness and good deeds vanish away, as smoke in the wind, and we are left damnable sinners only. And as thou seest how that Christ healeth not, till Peter had wounded ; and as an healing plaister helpeth not, till the corrosive hath troubled the wound; even so the gospel helpeth not, but when the law hath wounded the conscience, and brought the Allegories sinner into the knowledge of his sin.' This allegory proveth thing.'w. t. nothing, neither can do. For it is not the scripture, but an ensample or a similitude borrowed of the scripture, to declare a text or a conclusion of the scripture more expressly, and to root it and grave it in the heart. For a similitude, or an ensample, doth print a thing much deeper in the wits of a man than doth a plain speaking, and leaveth behind him as it were a sting to prick him forward, and to awake him if thou can- withal. Moreover, if I could not prove with an open text\ not prove the . x L anTmtex? *^at whlcn the allegory doth express, then were the allegory doctrin"&lse %-thhig~to^be jested at, and of no greater value than a tale of w' T- /Bobin Hood) This allegory, as touching his first part, is~ Bom. iv. v^/i. proved byraul in the ivth chapter of his epistle to the Eo- t1 This sentence forms Art. XIX. of the heresies and errors charged against Tyndale. Foxe in reply quotes more of the context, and then / asks, 'What heresy is this ?'] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 307 mans, where he saith, " The law causeth wrath ;" and in the viith chapter to the Bomans, "When the law or commandment came, sin revived, and I became dead :" and in the iind 2 cor. m. epistle to the Corinthians, in the third chapter, the law is called " the minister of death and damnation," &c. And as concerning the second part, Paul saith to the Bomans in the Rom. ,-. vth chapter, " In that we are justified by faith we are at peace with God." And in the iind epistle to the Corinthians, 2Cor.m. in the third [chapter], the gospel is called " the ministration of justifying and of the Spirit." And, Gal. iii. " The Spirit Gai. m. cometh by preaching; of the faith," &c. Thus doth the literal The literal d x o _ t sense proveth sense prove the allegory, and bear it, as the foundation the aiiegory. beareth the house. And because that allegories prove nothing, therefore are they to be used soberly and seldom, and only where the text offereth thee an allegory. And of this manner (as I above have done) doth Paul They that borrow a similitude, a figure or allegory, of Genesis, to express s1^^ the nature of the law and of the gospel ; and by Agar and j^,*^ °"d" her son declareth the property of the law, and of her bond- ^nt! ed.' children which will be justified by deeds ; and by Sarah and her son declareth the property of the gospel, and of her free children which are justified by faith ; and how the children of the law, which believe in their works, persecute the chil dren of the gospel, which believe in the mercy and truth of God and in the testament of his Son Jesus our Lord. And likewise do we borrow likenesses or allegories of the scripture, as of Pharaoh and Herod, and of the scribes and Pharisees, to express our miserable captivity and persecution under antichrist the pope. The greatest cause of which cap- The faith was tivity and the decay of the faith, and this blindness wherein auegories.g we now are, sprang first of allegories. For Origen and the doctors of his time drew all the scripture unto allegories : whose ensample they that came after followed so long, till they at last forgot the order and process of the text, suppos ing that the scripture served but to feign allegories upon ; insomuch that twenty doctors expound one text twenty ways, as children make descant upon plain song. Then came our sophisters with their anagogical and chopological sense, and chopological with an antitheme of half an inch, out of which some of them w!i\tets draw a thread of nine days long. Yea, thou shalt find enough that will preach Christ, and prove whatsoever point 20—2 308 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Poetry is as good divinity as the scrip ture to our schoolmen. W.T. 2 Cor. iii. The literal sense killeth, say sophis ters. W.T. of the faith that thou wilt, as well out of a fable of Ovid or any other poet, as out of St John's gospel or Paul's epistles. Yea, they are come unto such blindness, that they not only say the literal sense profiteth not, but also that it is hurtful, and noisome, and killeth the soul. Which damnable doctrine they prove by a text of Paul, 2 Cor. iii. where he saith, " The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life." Lo, say they, the literal sense killeth, and the spiritual sense giveth life. We must therefore, say they, seek out some chopological sense. « The letter killeth,' is expounded. W.T. To love the law is right eousness.W. T. Here learn what sophistry is, and how blind they are, that thou mayest abhor them and spue them out of thy sto mach for ever. Paul by the letter meaneth Moses's law ; which the process of the text following declareth more bright than the sun. But it is not their guise to look on the order of any text ; but as they find it in their doctors, so allege they it, and so understand it. Paul maketh a comparison between the law and the gospel ; and calleth the law the let ter, because it was but letters graven in two tables of cold stone : for the law doth but kill, and damn the consciences, as long as there is no lust in the heart to do that which the law commandeth. Contrariwise, he calleth the gospel the ad ministration of the Spirit and of righteousness or justifying. For when Christ is preached, and the promises which God hath made in Christ are believed, the Spirit entereth the heart, and looseth the heart, and giveth lust to do the law, and maketh the law a lively thing in the heart. Now as soon as the heart lusteth to do the law, then are we righteous before God, and our sins forgiven. Nevertheless the law of the letter graved in stone, and not in their hearts, was so glorious, and Moses's face shone so bright, that the children of Israel could not behold his face for brightness. It was also given in thunder and lightning and terrible signs ; so that they for fear came to Moses, and desired him that he would speak to them, and let God speak no more ; " Lest we' die (said they) if we hear him any more :" as thou mayest see Exod. xx. Whereupon Paul maketh his comparison, say ing : " If the ministration of death through the letters figured in stones was glorious, so that the children of Israel could not behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance; why shall not the administration of the Spirit be glorious ?" FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 309 And again : "If the administration of damnation be glorious, much more shall the administration of righteousness exceed in glory :" that is, if the law that killeth sinners, and helpeth them not, be glorious ; then the gospel, which pardoneth sin ners, and giveth them power to be the sons of God and to overcome sin, is much more glorious. And the text that goeth before is as clear. For the holy apostle Paul saith : "Ye Corinthians are our epistle, which is understand and read of all men, in that ye are known how that ye are the epistle of Christ ministered by us, and written, not with ink," (as Moses's law,) " but with the Spirit of the living God ; not in tables of stone," (as the ten commandments,) " but in the fleshy tables of the heart :" as who should say, ' We write not a dead law with ink and in parchment, nor grave that which damned you in tables of stone ; but preach you that which bringeth the Spirit of life unto your breasts, which Spirit writeth and graveth the law of love in your hearts, and giveth you lust to do the will of God.' And furthermore, saith he, " Our ableness cometh of God, which hath made us able to minister the new Testa ment, not of the letter," (that is to say, not of the law,) " but ofthe. Spirit : for the letter" (that is to say, the law) " killeth ; but the Spirit giveth life ;" that is to say, the Spirit of God, which entereth your hearts when ye beheve the glad tidings that are preached you in Christ, quickeneth your hearts, and giveth you life and lust, and maketh you to do of love and of your own accord, without compulsion, that which the law compelled you to do, and damned you because ye could not do with love and lust, and naturally. Thus seest thou that the letter signifieth not the literal sense, and the spirit the spiritual sense. And, Bom. ii. Paul useth this term Litera Rom. a. vii. for the law ; and Bom. vii. where he setteth it so plain, that if tbe great wrath of God had not blinded them, they could never have stumbled at it. God is a Spirit, and all his words are spiritual. His The literal s(?nsc is sDiri1- literal sense is spiritual, and all his words are spiritual, tuai. w\ t. When thou readest (Matt, i.), " She shall bear a son, and Matt. i. thou shalt call his name Jesus ; for he shall save his peo ple from their sins :" this literal sense is spiritual, and ever lasting life unto as many as believe it. And the literal sense of these words, (Matt, v.) " Blessed are the merciful, for they Matt. v. 310 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. shall have mercy," are spiritual and life ; whereby they that are merciful may of right, by the truth and promise of God, challenge mercy. And like is it of these words, Matt. Matt. vi. vi. " If you forgive other men their sins, your heavenly Father shall forgive you yours." And so is it of all the promises of God. Finally, all God's words are spiritual, if thou have eyes of God to see the right meaning of the text, and whereunto the scripture pertaineth, and the final end and cause thereof. Kuisht°in -^ *he scripture is either the promises and testament of ands™there ®°d- m Christ, and stories pertaining thereunto, to strength w!rT.seme' thy faith; either the law, and stories pertaining thereto, to fear thee from evil doing. There is no story nor gest, seem it never so simple or so vile unto the world, but that thou shalt find therein spirit and life and edifying in the literal sense : for it is God's scripture, written for thy learning and comfort. There is no clout or rag there, that hath not pre cious relics wrapt therein of faith, hope, patience and long suffering, and of the truth of God, and also of his righteous- The story of ness. Set before thee the story of Beuben, which defiled his Beuben. » ' w. i. father's bed. Mark what a cross God suffered to fall on the neck of his elect Jacob. Consider first the shame among the heathen, when as yet there was no more of the whole world sweartheyby within the testament of God, but he and his household. I re- then honour r 7 g no?reaar!y,toy Port me *° our prelates, which swear by their honour, whe- fofchrut?6 ther it were a cross or no. Seest thou not how our wicked sake. w.t. j3Ui[fiers rage, because they see their buildings burn, now they are tried by the fire of God's word ; and how they stir up the whole world, to quench the word of God, for fear of ' losing their honour? Then what business1 had he to pacify his children ! Look what ado he had at the defiling of his daughter Dinah. And be thou sure that the brethren there were no more furious for the defiling of their sister, than the sons here for defiling of their mother. Mark what followed Beuben, to fear other, that they shame not their fathers and mothers. He was cursed, and lost the kingdom, and also the priestdom, and his tribe or generation was ever few in num ber, as it appeareth in the stories of the bible. rfDarid1.'617 Tne adultery of David with Bathsheba is an ensample, w- T- not to move us to evil ; but, if (while we follow the way of [! That is, toil, trouble.] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 311 righteousness) any chance drive us aside, that we despair not. For if we saw not such infirmities in God's elect, we, which are so weak and fall so oft, should utterly despair, and think that God had clean forsaken us. It is therefore a sure and an undoubted conclusion, whether we be holy or unholy, we are all sinners. But the difference is, that God's J^Hffer-^ sinners consent not to their sin. They consent unto the law ^'3£nners that is both holy and righteous, and mourn to have their devU's- W'T- sin taken away. But the devil's sinners consent unto their sin, and would have the law and hell taken away, and are enemies unto the righteousness of God. Likewise in the homely gest2 of Noe, when he was Noah. w.t. drunk, and lay in his tent with his privy members open, hast thou great edifying in the literal sense. Thou seest what became of the cursed children of wicked Ham, which saw his father's privy members, and jested thereof unto his brethren. Thou seest also what blessing fell on Shem and Japhet, which went backward and covered their father's members, and saw them not. And thirdly, thou seest what infirmity accompanieth God's elect, be they never so holy, which yet is not imputed unto them : for the faith and trust they have in God swalloweth up all their sins. Notwithstanding, this text offers us an apt and an hand- The pope is some allegory or similitude to describe our wicked Ham, Ham. w.t. antichrist the pope, which many hundred years hath done all the shame that heart can think unto the word of promise, or the word of faith, as Paul calleth it, Bom. x. ; and the gospel E<>m- *• and testament of Christ, wherewith we are begotten ; as thou seest, 1 Pet. i. and James i. And as the cursed children of i Pet. i. Ham grew into giants, so mighty and great that the chil dren of Israel seemed but grasshoppers in respect of them; so the cursed sons of our Ham, the pope, his cardinals, bishops, abbots, monks, and friars, are become mighty giants above all power and authority ; so that the children of faith, in respect of them, are much less than grasshoppers. They They win to heap mountain upon mountain, and will to heaven by their wayo? their own strength, by a way of their own making, and not by w. t. the way Christ. Neverthelater,- those giants, for the wick edness and abominations which they had wrought, did God utterly destroy, part of them by the children of Lot, and [2 Deed.] 312 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. part by the children of Esau, and seven nations of them by the children of Israel. So no doubt shall he destroy these for like abominations, and that shortly. For their kingdom is but the kingdom of lies and falsehood ; which must needs perish at the coming of the truth of God's word, as the night vanisheth away at the presence of day. The children of Israel slew not those giants, but the power of God ; God's truth and promises, as thou mayest see in Deuteronomy. So it is not we that shall destroy those giants, as thou mayest see by Paul, (2 Thess. ii.) speaking of our Ham, 2Thess.u. antichrist : "Whom the Lord shall destroy" (saith he) "with the spirit of his mouth," that is, by the words of truth, "and by the brightness of his coming," that is, by the preaching of his gospel. The use of And as , I have said of allegories, even so it is of w?t.u es" worldly similitudes, which we make either when we preach, either when we expound the scripture. The similitudes prove nothing, but are made to express more plainly that which is contained in the scripture, and to lead thee into the spiritual understanding of the text : as the similitude of matrimony ^ is taken to express the marriage that is between Christ and our souls, and what exceeding mercy we have there, whereof all the scriptures make mention ; and the similitude of the members, how every one of them careth for other, is taken to make thee feel what it is to love thy neighbour as thyself. Asimiiitude That preacher therefore, that bringeth a naked simihtude to scripture is prove that which is contained in no text of scripture, nor a sure token x * °ro hif followeth of a text, count a deceiver, a leader out ol the w- T- way, and a false prophet, and beware of his philosophy and i cor. a. persuasions of man's wisdom, as Paul saith : " My words and ed not worii my preaching; were not with enticing words and persuasions ly wisdom. « * ° ° . . * ,, w- t. 0f man's wisdom, but in shewing of the Spirit and power : (that is, he preached not dreams, confirming them with simi litudes; but God's word, confirming it with miracles and with working of the Spirit, the which made them feel every thing in their hearts :) " that your faith," said he, " should not stand in the wisdom of man ; but in the power of God." similitudes For the reasons and similitudes of man's wisdom make no of man's ' faith, but wavering and uncertain opinions only: one draweth make ni me this way with his argument, another that way, and of FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 313 what principle thou provest black, another proveth white : faith, but and so am I ever uncertain ; as, if thou tell me of a thing opinions ° only. W. T. done in a far land, and another tell me the contrary, I wot not what to believe. But faith is wrought by the power of God's word y~. , . ^ . .. ii i .--.. maketh sure God; that is, when God's word is preached, the Spirit ftjui^for entereth thine heart, and maketh thy soul feel it, and"6- w.t. maketh thee so sure of it, that neither adversity, nor perse cution, nor death, neither hell, nor the powers of hell, neither yet all the pains of hell could once prevail against thee, or move thee from the sure rock of God's word, that thou shouldst not believe that which God hath sworn. And Peter saith, "We followed not deceivable fables, Peter preaeh- . ed not fables when we opened unto you the power and coming of our ^J-}^ Lord Jesus Christ ; but with our eyes we saw his majesty." sCUripto?.lain And again, " We have" (saith he) " a more sure word of ^Pet-'i. prophecy, whereunto if ye take heed, as unto a light shining in a dark place, ye do well." The word of prophecy was the old Testament, which beareth record unto Christ in every place ; without which record the apostles made neither similitudes nor arguments of worldly wit. Hereof seest thou, that all the allegories, similitudes, persuasions and arguments, which they bring without scripture, to prove praying to saints, purgatory, ear- confession; and that God will hear thy prayer more in one place than in another ; and that it is more meritorious to eat fish than flesh ; and that to dis guise thyself, and put on this or that manner coat, is more acceptable than to go as God hath made thee ; and that widowhood is better than matrimony, and virginity than widowhood ; and to prove the assumption of our lady, and that she was born without original sin, yea, and with a kiss (say some), are but false doctrine. Take an ensample, how they prove that widowhood and school doc- . . . trine. W. T. virginity exceed matrimony. They bring this worldly simi litude : he that taketh most pain for a man deserveth most, and to him a man is most bound ; so likewise must it be with God, and so forth. Now the widow and virgin take more pain in resisting their lusts than the married wife ; therefore is their state holier. First, I say, that in their own sophistry similitudes a similitude is the worst and feeblest argument that can be, arguments i ii i -i mi i among the and proveth least, and soonest deceiveth. Though that one sophisters 1 o own selves. son do more service for his father than another, yet is the w' T- 314 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. father free, and may with right reward them all alike. For though I had a thousand brethren, and did more than they all, yet do I not my duty. The fathers and mothers also care most for the least and weakest, and them that can do least : yea, for the worst care they most, and would spend, not their goods only, but also their blood, to bring them to the right way. And even so is it ofthe kingdom Luke xv. of Christ, as thou mayest well see in the similitude of the 1 cor. vii. riotous son. Moreover Paul saith, (1 Cor. vii.) " It is better to marry than to burn." For the person that burneth cannot quietly serve God, inasmuch as his mind is drawn away, and the thoughts of his heart occupied with wonder ful and monstrous imaginations. He can neither see, nor hear, nor read, but that his wits are rapt, and he clean from himself. And again, saith he, " circumcision is nothing, uncircumcision is nothing ; but the keeping of the command ments" is all together. Look wherein thou canst best keep the commandments; thither get thyself and therein abide; whether thou be widow, wife, or maid ; and then hast thou we must all with God. If we have infirmities that draw us from the cure our wkhttie63 laws °f &°d> let us cure them with the remedies that God tiTteGodhath hath made. If thou burn, marry : for God hath promised nrodtat"mptand thee no chastity, as long as thou mayest use the remedy w. t. ^a^ ke hath ordained ; no more than he hath promised to slake thine hunger without meat. Now, to ask of God more than he hath promised, cometh of a false faith, and is plain idolatry1 : and to desire a miracle, where there is natural remedy, is tempting of God. And of pains-taking, this-wise understand. He that taketh pains to keep the command ments of God, is sure thereby that he loveth God, and that what tempt- he hath God's Spirit in him. And the more pain a man ing of God is. r . ... . . . , w.t. taketh (I mean patiently and without grudging), the more he loveth God, and the perfecter he is, and nearer unto that health which the souls of all christian men long for, and the more purged from the infirmity and sin that remaineth in the flesh. But to look for any other reward or promotion in heaven, or in the life to come, than that which God hath promised for Christ's sake, and which Christ hath deserved [i This clause is quoted to form Art. XX. against Tyndale. To this charge Foxe only replies by giving his readers the three preceding sentences along with it; and then asking, 'What heresy is this?'] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 315 for us with his pain-taking, is abominable in the sight of God2. For Christ only hath purchased the reward ; and our pain-taking to keep the commandments doth but purge the sin that remaineth in the flesh, and certify us that we are chosen and sealed with God's Spirit unto the reward that Christ hath purchased for us. I was once at the creating of doctors of divinity, where the opponent brought the same reason to prove that the widow had more merit than the virgin; because she had greater pain, forasmuch as she had once proved the plea sures of matrimony. Ego nego, domine doctor, said the re spondent : ' for though the virgin have not proved, yet she imagineth that the pleasure is greater than it is indeed, and therefore is more moved, and hath greater temptation and greater pain.' Are not these disputers they that Paul speaketh of in the sixth chapter of the first epistle to Timothy ? that " they are not content with the wholesome words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and doctrine of godliness ; and therefore know nothing, but waste their brains about questions and strife of words, whereof spring envy, strife and railing of men with corrupt minds, destitute of the truth." As pertaining to our lady's body, where it is, or where the body of Elias, of John the evangelist, and of many other be, pertaineth not to us to know. One thing are we sure of, that they are where God hath laid them. If they be in hea ven, we have never the more in Christ : if they be not there, we have never the less. Our duty is to prepare ourselves unto the commandments, and to be thankful for that which is opened unto us ; and not to search the unsearchable secrets of God. Of God's secrets can we know no more than he openeth unto us. If God shut, who shall open ? How then can natural reason come by the knowledge of that which God hath hid unto himself? Yet let us see one of their reasons wherewith they prove it. The chief reason is this : Every man doth more for his mother, say they, than for other ; in hke manner must Christ [2 Art. XXI. is, ' He saith, Our pains-taking in keeping the com mandments doth nothing but purge the sin that remaineth in the flesh; but to look for any other reward or promotion in heaven, than God hath promised for Christ's sake, is abominable in the sight of God.' Foxe replies, ' Consider the place.'] 316 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. do for his mother ; therefore hath she this pre-eminence, that Matt. xii. her body is in heaven1. And yet Christ, in the xiith chap, of Matthew knoweth her not for his mother, but as far forth as 2 cor. v. she kept his Father's commandments. And Paul, in the iind epistle to the Corinthians, chap. v. knoweth not Christ him self fleshly, or after a worldly purpose. Last of all, God is free, and no further bound than he bindeth himself: if he have made her any promise, he is bound ; if not, then is he not. Finally, if thou set this above rehearsed chapter of Matthew before thee, where Christ would not know his mo- joimii. ther, and the iind of John where he rebuked her, and the Lukeii. iind of Luke where she lost him, and how negligent she was to leave him behind her at Jerusalem unawares, and to go a day's journey ere she sought for him ; thou mightest resolve many of their reasons which they make of this matter, and that she was without original sin. Bead also Erasmus's Anno tations in the said places2- And as for me, I commit all such matters unto those idle bellies, which have nought else to do than to move such questions ; and give them free liberty to hold what they list, as long as it hurteth not the faith, whe ther it be so or no : exhorting yet, with Paul, all that will please God, and obtain that salvation that is in Christ, that [i See n. 4 to p. 159.] [2 Erasmus' note on Luke ii. 50, 'And they understood not the saying which he spake unto them,' contains the following observations: Quid facient huic loco quidam, qui sedulo magis quam circumspecte beatss virgini fere tantum tribuunt felicitatis jam inde ab initio quan tum nunc possidet ? Certe non obscure locutus est Christus ; et tamen subjicit Evangelista, ab illis non fuisse intellectum, quod dixerat Jesus. Turn inter docendum a matre et fratribus interpellatus parum blande respondet, Quss est mater mea? Similiter et in nuptiis, compellatus de vino deficiente. Hoc quod arguit interpellantis est ; quod non in tellectus obtemperat, obsequii est, quae res et illi conveniebat astati et parentum infirmitati obsecundabat. — And on the words, ' He was subject unto them,' Erasmus says : Durum est quod asseverant quidam, Chris tum etiam in evangelico negotio debuisse matri obedientiam, cum qui rempublicam administrat non teneatur auctoritate patris. Sed multo durius est quod iidem docent, beatam virginem etiam nunc ut homini posse imperare Christo, et hoc esse quod canit ecclesia, Monstra te esse matrem, Sumat per te preces, etc. id est, Praecipe filio tuo ut nos exaudiat. Hoc si verum est, mater imploranda est potius quam filius, nee omnis potestas tradita est Christo, etiam juxta naturam humanam, si teneatur matris imperio.] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 317 they give no heed unto unnecessary and brawling disputa tions, and that they labour for the knowledge of those things without which they cannot be saved. And remember that the sun was given us to guide us in our way and works bodily. Now if thou leave the natural use of tbe sun, and will look directly on him to see how bright he is, and such like curiosity, then will the sun blind thee. So was the scripture given us to guide us in our way and works ghostly. The way is Christ ; and the promises in him are our salva tion, if we long for them. Now if we shall leave that right use and turn ourselves unto vain questions, and to search the unsearchable secrets of God ; then no doubt shall the scrip ture blind us, as it hath done our schoolmen and our subtle disputers. And as they are false prophets, which prove with alle gories, similitudes, and worldly reasons, that which is no where made mention of in the scripture ; even so count them . for false prophets which expound the scriptures, drawing them unto a worldly purpose, clean contrary unto the ensam ple, living, and practising of Christ and of his apostles, and of all the holy prophets. For, saith Peter, (2 Pet. i.) "No apeti. prophecy in the scripture hath any private interpretation. i^oTthe1 " -n ,i • . , i ,i ... , , , , , scripture, we h or the scripture came not by the will of man ; but the holy must have a si -, , , " respect unto men ot God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." theiivingand No place of the scripture may have a private exposition ; that hil'apos^es0' is, it may not be expounded after the will of man, or after ™dP™Phets- the will of the -flesh, or drawn unto a worldly purpose con trary unto the open texts, and the general articles of the faith, and the whole course of the scripture, and contrary to the living and practising of Christ and the apostles and holy prophets. For as they came not by the will of man, so may they not be drawn or expounded after the will of man : but as they came by the Holy Ghost, so must they be ex pounded and understood by the Holy Ghost. The scripture is that wherewith God draweth us unto him, and not where with we should be led from him. The scriptures spring out The scripture of God, and flow unto Christ, and were given to lead us to SS'unto' Christ. Thou must therefore go along by the scripture as Christ' w' T- by a line, until thou come at Christ, which is the way's end and resting-place, If any man, therefore, use the scripture 318 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. 1 to draw thee from Christ, and to nosel1 thee in any thing save in Christ, the same is a false prophet. And that thou mayest perceive what Peter meaneth, it followeth in the text, 2 Pet. h. " There were false prophets among the people " (whose pro fit" phecies were belly -wisdom), " as there shall be false teachers sects, or among you, which shall privily bring in damnable sects," (as w. t. thou seest how we are divided into monstrous sects or orders of religion,) " even denying the Lord that hath bought them." For every one of them taketh on him to sell thee for money that which God in Christ promiseth thee freely. " And many shall follow their damnable ways, by whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of :" as thou seest how the way of truth is become heresy, seditious, or cause of insurrection, and breaking of the king's peace, and treason unto his highness. "And through covetousness with feigned words shall they covetousness make merchandise of you." Covetousness is the conclusion : of honour is for covetousness and ambition, that is to say, lucre and desire the end of all , J ' and^haf™6' °^ honour, is the final end of all false prophets and of all false prophetslse teachers. Look upon the pope's false doctrine : what is the seek. w. t. en(j thereof, and what seek they thereby ? Wherefore serveth purgatory, purgatory, but to purge thy purse, and to poll thee, and rob both thee and thy heirs of house and lands, and of all thou pardons. hast, that they may be in honour? Serve not pardons for prayingto the same purpose? Whereto pertaineth praying to saints, confession. ' but to offer unto their bellies ? Wherefore serveth confession, W. T. but to sit in thy conscience and to make thee fear and trem ble at whatsoever they dream, and that thou worship them as gods ? And so forth, in all their traditions, ceremonies, and conjurations, they serve not the Lord, but their behies. And of their false expounding the scripture, and drawing it contrary unto the ensample of Christ and the apostles and holy prophets, unto their damnable covetousness and filthy ambi- An example tion, take an ensample : When Peter saith to Christ, (Matt. pound?ngxthe xvi.) " Thou art the Son of the living God ;" and Christ an- w- T- ". swered, " Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Matt. xvi. ' 7 m r a J 1, congregation ;" by the rock interpret they Peter. And then cometh the pope, and will be Peter's successor, whether Peter will or will not ; yea, whether God will or will not; and though all the scripture say, ' Nay,' to any such succession ; and saith, ' Lo, I am the rock, the foundation, and head of [! Written also nowsle : to nursle, to nurse up.] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 319 Christ's church.' Now saith all the scripture, that the rock Christ, the is Christ, the faith, and God's word. As Christ saith, (Matt. God's word .. .. . , iii, /» • ti is the rock, vii.) " Ho that heareth my words, and doth thereafter, is like ™* not the a man that buildeth on a rock." For the house that is built on ^att- vii- God's word will stand, though heaven should fall. And, John xv. " Christ is the vine, and we the branches :" so is Christ joim xv. the rock, the stock, and foundation whereon we be built. And Paul (1 Cor. iii.) calleth Christ our foundation ; and all other, icor. m. whether it be Peter or Paul, he calleth them our2 servants, to preach Christ, and to build us on him. If therefore the Theauthority pope be Peter's successor, his duty is to preach Christ only ; successor is and other authority hath he none3- And (2 Cor. xi.) Paulacor.xi. marrieth us unto Christ, and driveth us from all trust and confidence in man. And, (Eph. ii.) saith Paul, " Ye are built EPh. a. on the foundation of the apostles and prophets ;" that is, on the word which they preached ; " Christ being, saith he, the head corner-stone, in whom every building coupled together groweth up into an holy temple in the Lord ; in whom also ye are built together and made an habitation for God in the Spirit." And Peter, in the iind of his first epistle, buildeth 1 Pet. \i. us on Christ ; contrary to the pope, which buildeth us on himself. Hell gates shall not prevail against it ; that is to say, against the congregation that is built upon Christ's faith, and upon God's word. Now were the pope the rock, hell gates could not prevail against him : for the house could not stand, if the rock and foundation whereon it is built did perish : but the contrary see we in our popes. For hell gates have prevailed against them many hundred years, and have swallowed them up, if God's word be true, and the stories that are written of them ; yea, or if it be true that we see with our eyes. " I will give thee the keys of heaven," saith Christ, and not, " I give ;" and, John xx. after the resur rection paid it, and gave the keys to them all indifferently. [2 Day omits our.] [3 Art. XXII. of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale is : 'He saith, The pope hath no other authority, but to preach only.' To this Foxe replies : ' Christ saith to Peter, Peed my sheep ; and, Thou being converted confirm thy brethren. And to his apostles he said, Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel. Again St Paul saith, that Christ sent him not to baptize, but to preach. To what other office or func tion he sent the pope, let them judge who consider the scriptures. This heresy is only to the pope; but none at all to God.'] 320 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. John xx. "Whatsoever thou bindest on earth, it shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou loosest on earth, it shall be Thatexposi- loosed in heaven." Of this text maketh the pope what he will ; tion is false n 1 • which ish and expoundeth it contrary to all the scripture, contrary to °ureorrip* Christ's practising, and the apostles', and all the prophets', p?acnsingeof Now the scripture giveth record to himself, and ever ex- huraposties?f poundeth itself by another open text. If the pope then can not bring for his exposition the practising of Christ, or of the apostles and prophets, or an open text, then is his exposition false doctrine. Christ expoundeth himself, (Matt, xviii.) say- Matt, xviii. ing: "If thy brother sin against thee, rebuke him betwixt him and thee alone. If he hear thee, thou hast won thy bro ther : but if he hear thee not, then take with thee one or two," and so forth, as it standeth in the text. He concludeth, saying to them all : " Whatsoever ye bind in earth, it shall be bound in heaven ; and whatsoever ye loose on earth, it shall be loosed in heaven." Where binding is but to rebuke them that sin; and loosing to forgive them that repent. And, John xx. "Whose sins ye forgive, they are forgiven; and whose sins 1 cor. v. ye hold, they are holden." And Paul (1 Cor. v.) bindeth ; 2Cor.ii. and (2 Cor. ii.) looseth, after the same manner. Binding and Also this binding and loosing is one power : and as he power, w.t. bindeth, so looseth he; yea, and bindeth first ere he can loose. For who can loose that is not bound? Now what soever Peter bindeth, or his successor, (as he will be called and is not, but indeed the very successor of Satan,) is not so to be understood, that Peter, or the pope, hath power to command a man to be in deadly sin, or to be damned, or to go into hell, saying, Be thou in deadly sin ; be thou damned; go thou to hell ; go thou to purgatory : for that exposition is contrary to the everlasting testament that God hath made unto us in Christ. He sent his Son Christ to loose us from sin, and damnation, and hell ; and that to testify unto the world, sent Acts i. he his disciples. (Acts i.) Paul also hath no power to destroy, 2 cor. x. xiu. but to edify. 2 Cor. x. xiii. How can Christ give his disciples power against himself, and against his everlasting testament? Can he send them to preach salvation, and give them power to damn whom they lust ? What mercy and profit have we in Christ's death, and in his gospel, if the pope, which passeth all men in wickedness, hath power to send whom he will to hell, and to damn whom he lusteth ? We had then no cause, FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 321 to call him Jesus, that is to say, Saviour ; but might of right ^fa^" call him destroyer. Wherefore, then, this binding is to be ^Jt'bind understood as Christ interpreteth it in the places above re- \$ ™*neth. hearsed, and as the apostles practised it, and is nothing but to rebuke men of their sins by preaching the law. A man must first sin against God's law, ere the pope can bind him : yea, and a man must first sin against God's law, ere he need to fear the pope's curse. For cursing and binding are both whatcursing ... . ° . meaneth. one; and nothing, saving to rebuke a man of his sins by God's law. It followeth also, then, that the loosing is of we^iteJ.«>sins like manner ; and is nothing but forgiving of sin to them w- T- that repent, through preaching of the promises which God hath made in Christ ; in whom only we have all forgiveness of sins, as Christ interpreteth it, and as the apostles and prophets practised it. So is it a false power that the pope taketh on him, to loose God's laws ; as to give a man hcence to put away his wife to whom God hath bound him, and to bind them to chastity, which God commandeth to marry ; that is to wit, them that burn and cannot live chaste. It is also a false power to bind that which God's word maketh free, making sin in the creatures which God hath made for man's use. The pope, which so fast looseth and purgeth in purga- 4?§ tory, cannot, with ah the loosings and purgations that he hath, either loose or purge our appetites, and lust, and re bellion that is in us against the law of God. And yet the purging of them is the right purgatory. If he cannot purge them that are alive, wherewith purgeth he them that are dead? The apostles knew no other ways to purge, but through preaching God's word, which word only is that that purgeth the heart, as thou mayest see, John xv. " Ye are John xv. pure," saith Christ, " through the word." Now the pope preacheth not to them whom they feign to lie in purgatory, no more than he doth to us that are alive. How then purg eth he them? The pope is kin to Bobin GoodfelLoamhich ihepopeis sweepeth the house, washeth the dishes, and purgeth all, by feU<™- w?f. night; but when day cometh, there is nothing found clean l. I1 Robin Goodfellow was the name given by popular superstition to an imaginary elfin sprite, concerning whom more may be seen, by those who wish it, in Todd's notes on verses 103 and 105 of Milton's L'Allegro.] [tyndale.] 322 obedience of a christian man. Of ourselves we can perr form nothing further than God will give us power. Ant. ed, Another example.W. T. Matt xxiii. To sit on Christ's^eat is to preach and confess Christ Ant. ed. Some man will say, the pope bindeth them not, they bind themselves. I answer, he that bindeth himself to the pope, and had lever have his life and soul ruled by the pope's will than by the will of God, and by the pope's word than by the word of God, is a fool. And he that had lever be bond than free, is not wise. And he that will not abide in the freedom wherein Christ hath set us, is also mad. And he that maketh deadly sin where none is, and seeketh causes of hatred between him and God, is not in. his right wits. Furthermore, no man can bind himself, further than he hath power over himself. He that is under the power of another man, cannot bind him self without licence, as son, daughter, wife, servant, and sub ject. Neither canst thou give God that which is not in thy power. Chastity canst thou not give, further than God lend- eth it thee : if thou cannot live chaste, thou art bound to marry or to be damned. Last of all, for what purpose thou bindest thyself must be seen. If thou do it to obtain thereby that which Christ hath purchased for thee freely, so art thou an infidel, and hast no part with Christ, and so forth1. If thou wilt see more of this matter, look in Deuteronomy, and there shalt thou find it more largely entreated. Take another ensample of their false expounding the scripture. Christ saith, " The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses' seat : whatsoever they bid you observe, that ob serve and do ; but after their works do not." Lo, say our sophisters or hypocrites, live we never so abominably, yet is our authority never the less. Do as we teach therefore, (say they,) and not as we do, And yet Christ saith, they sit on Moses' seat ; that is, as long they teach Moses, do as they teach. For the law of Moses is the law of God. But for their own traditions and false doctrine Christ rebuked them, and disobeyed them, and taught other to beware of their leaven. So if our Pharisees sit on Christ's seat and preach him, we ought to hear them ; but when they sit on their own seat, then ought we to beware as well of their pestilent doctrine as of their abominable living. Likewise where they find mention made of a sword, they [! Art. XXIII. of heresies and errors, charged against Tyndale : ' He saith, If thou bind thyself to chastity, to obtain that which Christ purchased for thee, so surely art thou an infidel.' Foxe replies, ' Bead and confer the place of Tyndale.'] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 323 turn it unto the pope's power. The disciples said unto Christ, Luke xxii. " Lo, here be two swords." And Christ answered, Lukexxu. " Two is enough." Lo, say they, the pope hath two swords, the spiritual sword and the temporal sword. And therefore is it lawful for him to fight and make war. Christ, a httle before he went to his passion, asked his disciples, saying, " When I sent you out without all provision, lacked ye any thing? and they said, Nay. And he an swered, But now let him that hath a wallet take it with him, and he that hath a scrip hkewise ; and let him that hath never a sword, sell his coat and buy one :" as who should say, ' It shall go otherwise now than then. Then ye went forth in faith of my word, and my Father's promises ; and it fed you and made provision for you, and was your sword, and shield, and defender ; but now it shall go as thou readest Zechariah xiii. " I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep of zech. xiu. the flock shall be scattered." Now shall my Father leave me in the hands of the wicked ; and ye also shall be forsaken and destitute of faith, and shall trust in yourselves, and in your own provision, and in your own defence.' Christ gave no commandment ; but prophesied what should happen : and they, because they understood him not, answered, " Here are two swords," And Christ (to make an end of such babbling) answered, "Two is enough." For if he had commanded every man to buy a sword, how had two been enough? Also, if two were enough, and pertained to the pope only, why are they all commanded to buy every man a sword ? By the sword, therefore, Christ prophesied, that they should be left unto their own defence. And two swords were enough; yea, never-a-one had been enough: for if every one of them had had ten swords, they would have fled ere mid night. In the same chapter of Luke, not twelve lines from the tuke xxii. „.. ..... ,. ,. Christ re- foresaid text, the disciples, even at the last supper, asked buketh desire who should be the greatest. And Christ rebuked them, and hm'd™iCeies said it was an heathenish thing, and there should be no such SengeX thing among them, but that the greatest should be as the men0asehii1 smallest, and that to be great was to do service as Christ S."lhait' did. But this text because it is brighter than the sun, that they can make no sophistry of it, therefore will they not hear it, nor let other know it. 21—2 321 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. Forasmuch now as thou partly seest the falsehood of our prelates, how all their study is to deceive us and to keep us in darkness, to sit as gods in our consciences, and handle us at their pleasure, and to lead us whither they lust ; therefore < I read1 thee, get thee to God's word, and thereby try all doctrine, and against that receive nothing ; neither any ex position contrary unto the open texts, neither contrary to the general articles of the faith, neither contrary to the living and practising of Christ and his apostles. And when they Fathers, fa- cry, 'Fathers, fathers,' remember that it were the fathers that blinded and robbed the whole world, and brought us into this captivity, wherein these enforce to keep us still. Further more, as they of the old time are fathers to us, so shall these foul monsters be fathers to them that come after us ; and the hypocrites that follow us will cry of these and of their doings, 'Fathers, fathers,' as these cry 'Fathers, fathers,' of them that are past. And as we feel our fathers, so did they that are past feel their fathers : neither were there in the world any other fathers than such as we both see and feel this many hundred years ; as their decrees bear record, and the stories and chronicles well testify. If God's word appeared any where, they agreed all against it. When they had brought that asleep, then strove they one with another about their own traditions, and one pope condemned another's decrees2, and were sometime two, yea, three popes at once3. And \} Bead: advise.] [2 The popish historian, Platina, after narrating how Stephen VI., who became pope in 897, ordered the body of his predecessor, Formo- sus, to be torn from its grave and otherwise treated with strange inde. cency, says: Magna fuit heec controversia et pessimi exempli; cum postea fere semper servata hsec consuetudo sit, ut acta priorum pon- tificum sequentes aut infringerent aut omnino tollerent. — His history of the next pope commences as follows: Eomanus, patria Ttomanus, ubi pontificatum iniit, Stephani pontificis decreta et acta statim im- probat abrogatque. — In the same year, 900, John IX. succeeded to the popedom ; and of him Platina says : Pontifex creatus, Pormosi causam in integrum restituit, adversante magna populi Eomani parte. Ravennam profectus, iv. et lxx. episcoporum habito conventu, et Ste phani res gestas improbavit, et Formosi acta restituit ; dijudicans per- peram a Stephano factum, qui censuit eos iterum ordinandos esse, quos Formosus ad sacros ordines asciverat. Plat, liber de Vita Christi ac Pontificum omnium. 1485.] [3 Besides other instances of this, both earlier and later, the papacy FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 325 one bishop went to law with another, and one cursed another for their own fantasies, and such things as they had falsely gotten. And the greatest saints are they that most defended the liberties of the church (as they call it), which they falsely got with blinding kings ; neither had the world any rest this many hundred years, for reforming of friars and monks, and ceasing of schisms that were among our clergy. And as for the holy doctors, as Augustine, Hierome, Cyprian, Chrysosto- mus, and Bede, will they not hear. If they wrote any thing negligently, (as they were men,) that draw they clean contrary to their meaning, and thereof triumph they. Those doctors knew of none authority that one bishop should have above another, neither thought or once dreamed that ever any such should be, or of any such whispering, or of pardons, or scouring of purgatory, as they have feigned. And when they cry, ' Miracles, miracles,' remember that Miracles, God hath made an everlasting testament with us in Christ's w- T- blood, against which we may receive no miracles4 ; no, nei ther the preaching; of Paul himself, if he came ag;ain, by his The woman i- !/-,!• -i i ,• .ofLemster own teaching to the Galatians, neither yet the preaching of ™ a solemn the angels of heaven. Wherefore either they are no miracles w- T- had been divided, throughout Europe, by a continual succession of rival popes, from Sept. 21, 1378, to July 26, 1429. Tho emperor Sigismund, and other temporal princes, being scandalized by the irre concileable claims of three co-existing popes, John XXIII., Gregory XII., and Benedict XIII., had induced John to sanction the convoking of a council, which met at Constance in 1414, for the avowed purpose of putting an end to this schism. By its decrees, supported by the imperial authority, John himself was deposed for notorious criminality of a very gross description, and Benedict was declared a schismatic ; whilst Gregory abdicated, to avoid a similar sentence. The papal chair being thus pronounced vacant, Martin V. was elected to fill it. But Benedict was still acknowledged as pope in Aragon, Sicily, and Scotland ; and, on his death, two cardinals gave him a successor who styled himself Clement VIII. ; but eventually closed this long schism by submitting to Martin, eleven years after the dissolution of the council.] [4 Art. XXTV. of alleged heresies : ' He denieth, rebuketh, and damneth miracles.' Foxe replies, ' The words in Tyndale's Obedience be these ; ' and then he gives the above sentence.] [s In B. I. ch. xiv. of More's Dialogue ' treating of the veneration and worship of images and reliques, praying to saints, and going on pil grimage; with many other things touching the pestilent sect of Luther 326 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. but they have feigned them, (as is the miracle that St Peter hallowed Westminster J ;) or else if there be miracles that confirm doctrine contrary to God's word, then are they done and Tyndale,' he has himself told the tale of the woman of Lemster : of whom he makes one of the speakers say, 'that the prior brought privily a strange wench into the church, and said that she was sent thither by God. — And after she was grated within iron grates above in the rood loft, where it was believed she lived without any meat or drink, only by angels' food. And divers times she was houseled in sight of the people with an host unconsecrate, and all the people looking upon, there was a device with a small hair that conveyed the host from the paten of the chalice out of the prior's hands into her mouth, as though it came alone ; so that all the people, not of the town only, but also of the country about, took her for a very quick saint, and daily sought so thick to see her, that many, that could not come near to her, cried out aloud, Holy maiden Elizabeth, help me, and were fain to throw their offering over their fellows' heads for press.' Theliarrator proceeds to say that the steps prudently taken by the mother of Henry VI. led to the detection of this device, and of other wickedness confessed by her two miserable partners in guilt. 'An faith, quod I,' (says More, as the other speaker,) ' it had been great almes the prior and she had been burned together at one stake. What came of the prior ? Quod he, that can I not tell, but I wene he was put to Such punishment as the poor nun was, that had given her in penance to say this verse, Miserere mei Deus, quoniam conculcavit me homo, with a great threat, that an she did so any more, she should say the whole psalm.' Sir Th. More's Works, as republished in Q. Mary's reign, fol. 134-5.] f1 In Sir Thomas More's unfinished history of the reign Richard of III., he gives an account of Richard's proposing to a council of nobles and prelates, that means should be taken to remove the second son of Edward IV. from the sanctuary in Westminster. ' Then,' says More, ' thought he,' that is, the archbishop of York, ' and such other as were of the spiritualty present, that it were not in any wise to be attempted to take him out against her' (the queen's) 'will. For it would be a thing that should turn to the great grudge of all men, and high displea sure of God, if the privilege of that holy place should now be broken ; which had so many years been kept, which both kings and popes so good had granted, so many had confirmed, and which holy ground was, more than five hundred years ago, by St Peter his own person, in spirit, accompanied with great multitude of angels, by night, so spe cially hallowed and dedicate to God (for the proof whereof they have yet in the abbey St Peter's cope to shew), that from that time hitherward was there never so undevout a king that durst that sacred place violate, or so holy a bishop that durst it presume to consecrate.' Ibid. fol. 49.] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 327 of the devil, (as the maid of Ipswich2 and of Kent3,) to prove us whether we will cleave fast to God's word, and to de ceive them that have no love to the truth of God's word, nor lust to walk in his laws. And forasmueh as they to deceive withal arm themselves The armour . . p n -i 1 ' ofthe spi- against them with arguments and persuasions ot fleshly wis- "t^ty. dom, with worldly similitudes, with shadows, with false alle gories, with false expositions of the scripture, contrary unto [2 Ch. 16 of the same first book of the same dialogue is headed, 'The author sheweth that whoso would inquire, should find that at pilgrimages been daily many great and undoubted miracles wrought and well known. And specially he speaketh of the great and open miracle shewed at our lady of Ipswich of late, upon the daughter of Sir Roger Wentworth, knight.' The dialogue accordingly proceeds to give an account of this ' fair young gentlewoman of xii. years of age, in marvellous manner vexed and tormented by our ghostly enemy the devil, &c. &c. ; who, being brought and laid before the image of our blessed lady, was there in the sight of many worshipful people so grievously tormented, and in face, eyes, look and countenance so grisly changed, with her mouth drawn aside, and her eyes laid out upon her cheeks, that it was a terrible sight to behold. And after many mar vellous things, at the same time shewed upon divers persons by the devil through God's sufferance, as well all the remnant as the maiden herself in the presence of all the company restored to their good state, perfectly cured.'] [3 The holy maid of Kent, as she was popularly styled when Tyndale wrote this treatise, was a nun named Elizabeth Barton, whom Richard Master, rector of Aldington, and a monk of Christ's- church Canterbury, had taught to feign epileptic convulsions and trances; after which she would relate pretended revelations and messages from heaven, as just delivered to her. Fisher, bishop of Rochester, and sir Thomas More for awhile, were amongst the numbers who gave credit to her inspiration. But when she had con tinued these impostures for about eight years, and books had been written of her pretended revelations and miracles, and More himself had said ' she was a foolish woman,' Cranmer and Cromwell having then the management of all ecclesiastical matters, the monks, whoso tool she had been, were brought before them, and subjected to a strict examination. Her iniquity and that of her suborners were then con fessed by herself and others, as stated in the preamble to the act for her attainder (Stat. 25 Hen. VIII. c. 12) ; and she and her partners in guilt were hanged at Tyburn, April 20, 1534.— See Cranmer's Works, Park. Soc. ed. Vol. II. Lett, lxxxi.— hi. ; Strype's Mem. Eccles. vol. I. ch. xxv. pp. 176—82. Burnet, Hist. Reform. B. n. date 1534, and appendix.] 328 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. the living and practising of Christ and the apostles, with lies and false miracles, with false names, dumb ceremonies, with disguising of hypocrisy, with the authorities of the fathers) and last of all with the violence of the temporal sword ; there fore do thou contrariwise arm thyself to defend thee withal, o?I christian as ^^ teacheth in the last chapter of the Ephesians : " Gird wordiaiidods on thee tne sw°rd of the Spirit, which is God's word, and lPh!'viW'T' take t0 thee the shield of faith:" which is, not to believe a tale of Bobin Hood, or Gesta Bomanorum1, or of the Chro nicles, but to beheve God's word that lasteth ever. And when the pope with his falsehead chahengeth tem poral authority above king and emperor, set before thee the Matt. xxvi. xxvith chapter of St Matthew, where Christ commandeth Peter acor.x. to put up his sword. And set before thee Paul, 2 Cor. xth, where he saith, " The weapons of our war are not carnal things, but mighty in God to bring all understanding in captivity under the obedience of Christ ;" that is, the weapons are God's word and doctrine, and not swords of iron and steel. And set before thee the doctrine of Christ and of his apostles, and their practice. And when the pope challengeth authority over his fellow bishops and over all the congregation of Christ by succession of Peter, set before thee the first of the Acts ; where Peter, for all his authority, put no man in the room of Judas ; but all the apostles chose two indifferently, and cast lots, desiring God to temper2 them, that the lot might fall on the most Acts viii. xi. ablest. And (Acts viii.) the apostles sent Peter ; and in the xith call him to reckoning, and to give accounts of that he 1ST hath done. And when the pope's law commandeth, saying, though that the pope live never so wickedly and draw with him through his evil ensample innumerable thousands into hell, yet see that no man presume to rebuke him, for he is head Gai. ii. oyer au} an(j no man oyer njm3 . set before thee Galatians iind, P The tale of Robin Hood and the Gesta Romanorum were well known books then in popular use.] [2 He uses the word in its Latin sense, for govern; as Spenser has done in Mother Hubbard's tale, 1. 1294.] [3 The canon law incorporated the following apophthegm, extracted, as the gloss says, ' ex dictis Bonifacii martyris : ' Si papa suae et fra- ternse salutis negligens, deprehenditur inutilis, et remissus in operi- FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 329 where Paul rebuketh Peter openly : and see how both to the Corinthians, and also to the Galatians, he will have no superior but God's word, and he that could teach better by g«£w°k» God's word. And because, wlien he rehearsed his preaching ™™£Juds- and his doings unto the high apostles, they could improve4 Ant-ed- ( nothing, therefore will he be equal with the best. JgH And when the friars say, they do more than their duty Friars be not d ' d " bound to when they preach, and more than they are bound to : (' lo say preach, w.t. our service are we bound, say they, and that is our duty ; and to preach is more than we are bound to :') set thou be fore thee how that Christ's blood-shedding hath bound us to love one another with all our might, and to do the uttermost of our power one to another. And Paul saith, 1 Cor. ix. 1 cor. ix. " Woe be unto me, if I preach not :" yea, woe is unto him that hath wherewith to help his neighbour, and to make him better, and do it not. If they think it more than their duty to preach Christ unto you, then they think it more than their duty to pray that ye should come to the knowledge of Christ. And therefore it is no marvel though they take so great labour, yea, and so great wages also, to keep you still in darkness. And when they cry furiously, ' Hold the heretics unto the wall, and if they will not revoke, burn them without any more ado ; reason not with them, it is an article condemned by the fathers;' set thou before thee the saying of Peter, 1 Pet. iii. " To all that ask you be ready to give an answer of i ret. m. the hope that is in you, and that with meekness." The fathers of the Jews and the bishops, which had as great authority over them as ours have over us, condemned Christ and his doctrine. If it be enough to say the fathers have condemned it, then are the Jews to be holden excused ; yea, they are yet in the right way, and we in the false. But and if the Jews be bound to look in the scripture, and to see whether their bus suis, et insuper a bono taciturnus, quod magis officit sibi et om nibus, nihilominus innumerabiles populos catervatim secum ducit, primo mancipio gehennaB, cum ipso plagis multis in seternum vapu- laturus; hujus culpas istic redarguere praesumit mortalium nullus: quia cunctos ipse judicatures a nemine est judicandus, nisi deprehen- datur a fide devius — Corpus Juris Canon. Decreti pars I™*, Distinct. xl. ca. vi. or Si Papa. Ed. Lugduni, mdcxxii.] [* That is, find fault with.] 330 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. fathers have done right or wrong ; then are we likewise bound to look in the scripture, whether our fathers have done right or wrong, and ought to believe nothing without a reason of the scripture and authority of God's word. And of this manner defend thyself against all manner wickedness of our sprites1, armed always with God's word, and with a strong and a stedfast faith thereunto. Without God's word do nothing. And to his word add nothing ; nei ther pull any thing therefrom, as Moses everywhere teacheth How God thee. Serve God in the spirit, and thy neighbour with all ought to be , . ~ „ , »ii i served. outward service. Serve God as he hath appointed thee ; and $t^- not with thy good intent and good zeal. Bemember Saul was cast away of God for ever for his good intent. God requireth obedience unto his word ; and abhorreth all good intents and good zeals which are without God's word : for they are nothing else than plain idolatry, and worshipping of false gods2. in Christ is And remember that Christ is the end of all things. He science only, only is our resting-place, and he is our peace. For as there Epkii. is no salvation in any other name, so is there no peace in any other name. Thou shalt never have rest in thy soul, neither shall the worm of conscience ever cease to gnaw thine heart, till thou come at Christ ; till thou hear the glad tidings, how that God for his sake hath forgiven thee ah freely. If thou trust in thy works, there is no rest. Thou shalt think, I have not done enough. Have I done it with so great love as I should do ? Was I so glad in doing, as I would be to receive help at my need ? I have left this or that undone ; and such like. If thou trust in confession, then shalt thou think, Have I told all ? Have I told all the circumstances ? Did I repent enough ? Had I as great sorrow in my re pentance for my sins, as I had pleasure in doing them? Likewise in our holy pardons and pilgrimages gettest thou Note. no rest. For thou seest that the very gods themselves, which f1 Sprites C : spirites D. He seems to mean to designate the spirituality, or popish clergy: a few pages further on he says, 'I have uttered the wickedness of the spirituality.'] [2 Art. XXV. of heresies and errors charged against Tyndale: 'He saith, that no man should serve God with good intent or zeal; for it is plain idolatry.' To this Foxe does but, reply, ' The place is this,' and therewith gives Tyndale's words.] FOUR SENSES OF THE SCRIPTURE. 331 sell their pardon so good cheap, or some whiles give them freely for glory sake, trust not therein themselves. They build colleges, and make perpetuities, to be prayed for for ever ; and lade the lips of their beadmen3, or chaplains, with so many masses, and diriges, and so long service, that I have known of4 some that have bid the devil take their founders' souls, for very impatiency and weariness of so painful labour. As pertaining to good deeds therefore, do the best thou Dogood canst, and desire God to give strength to do better daily ; trust in • ™ ¦ , i-, i i . Christ. W.T. but in Christ put thy trust, and in the pardon and promises that God hath made thee for his sake ; and on that rock build thine house, and there dwell. For there only shalt thou be sure from all storms and tempests, and from all wily assaults of our wicked spirits, which study with all falsehead to undermine us. And the God of all mercy give thee grace so to do, unto whom be glory for ever ! Amen. A Compendious Behearsal of that which goeth before. I have described unto you the obedience of children, ser vants, wives, and subjects^ These four orders are of God's making, and the rules thereof are God's word. He that God's word is keepeth them shall be blessed, yea, is blessed already ; and children," he that breaketh them shall be cursed. If any person of im- wives, and patiency, or of a stubborn and rebellious mind, withdraw him- Ant ei- self from any of these, and get him to any other order, let him not think thereby to avoid the vengeance of God in obeying rules and traditions of man's imagination. If thou pollest thine head in the worship of thy father, and breakest his commandments, shouldest thou so escape? Or if thou paintest thy master's image on a wall, and stickest up a candle before it, shouldest thou therewith make satisfac tion for the breaking of his commandments ? Or if thou wearest a blue coat in the worship of the king, and breakest his laws, shouldest thou so go quit ? Let a man's wife make herself a sister of the Charterhouse, and answer her husband, [3 Prayer-men. In Tyndale's day letters from ecclesiastics usually had this designation prefixed to their signature ; as, Your most humble beideman, Thomas Cantuar. ; Your humble bedeman, Cutb. Duresme.] [4 Day omits of.] 332 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. when he biddeth her hold her peace, 'My brethren keep silence for me ;' and see whether she shall so escape. And be thou sure God is more jealous over his commandments than man is over his, or than any man is over his wife. Topiease Because we be blind, God hath appointed in the scripture believe ws how we should serve him and please him. As pertaining and to love unto his own person, he is abundantly pleased when we be- Ante3.ents' lieve his promises and holy testament, which he hath made unto us in Christ ; and, for the mercy which he there shewed us, love his commandments. All bodily service must be done to man in God's stead. We must give obedience, honour, toll, tribute, custom, and rent unto whom they belong. Then if thou have ought more to bestow, give unto the poor, which are left here in Christ's stead, that we shew mercy on them. If we keep the commandments of love, then are we sure that we fulfil the law in the sight of God, and that our blessing shall be everlasting life. Now when we obey patiently, and without grudging, evil princes that oppress us and persecute us, and be kind and merciful to them that are merciless to us and do the worst they can to us, and so take all for tune patiently, and kiss whatsoever cross God layeth on our backs ; then are we sure that we keep the commandments of love. I declared that God hath taken all vengeance into his own hands, and will avenge all unright himself; either by the powers or officers which are appointed thereto, or else, He that win if they be negligent, he will send his curses upon the trans- bethGodof gressors, and destroy them with his secret judgments. I Anted, shewed also, that whosoever avengeth himself is damned in the deed-doing, and falleth into the hands of the temporal sword, because he taketh the office of God upon him, and robbeth God of his most high honour, in that he will not patiently abide his judgment. I shewed you of the authority of princes, how they are in God's stead, and how they may not be resisted : do they never so evil, they must be reserved unto the wrath of God. Neverthelater, if they command to do evil, we must then disobey, and say, ' We are otherwise commanded of God;' but not to rise against them. 'They will kih us then,' sayest thou. Therefore, I say, is a Christian called to suffer even the bitter death for his hope's sake, and because he will do no evil. I shewed also that the kings and A REHEARSAL OF THAT WHICH GOETH BEFORE. 333 rulers (be they never so evil) are yet a great gift of the how evii goodness of God, and defend us from a thousand things that *™g &, yet is o ' o he unto thee we see not. |j^™j «ift I proved also that all men without exception are under Ant ed- the temporal sword, whatsoever names they give themselves. Because the priest is chosen out of the laymen to teach this obedience, is that a lawful cause for him to disobey? Because he preacheth that the layman should not steal, is it therefore lawful for him to steal unpunished ? Because thou teachest me that I may not kill, or if I do, the king must kill me again, is it therefore lawful for thee to kill, and go free ? Either whether is it rather meet that thou, which art my guide to teach me the right way, shouldest walk therein be fore me ? The priests of the old law with their high bishop Aaron, and all his successors, though they were anointed by God's commandment, and appointed to serve God in his temple, and exempt from all offices and ministering of worldly matters, were yet nevertheless under the temporal sword, if they brake the laws. Christ saith to Peter, " Ah that take the sword shall perish by the sword." Here is none exception., Paul saith, " All souls must obey." Here is none exception. Paul himself is here not exempt. God saith, " Whosoever Gen. ix. sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed again." Here is none exception. Moreover, Christ became poor to make other men rich, and bound to make other free. He left also with his disci ples the law of love. Now love seeketh not her own profit, but her neighbour's : love seeketh not her own freedom, but becometh surety and bond to make her neighbour free. Damned, therefore, are the spiritualty by ah the laws of The pone God ; which through falsehead and disguised hypocrisy have *stsnr°[>es°f sought so great profit, so great riches, so great authority, "Urltyew t. and so great hberties, and have so beggared the lay, and so brought them in subjection and bondage, and so despised them, that they have set up franchises in all towns and vil lages for whosoever robbeth, murdereth or slayeth them, and even for traitors unto the king's person also. I proved also that no king hath power to grant them such liberty ; but are as well damned for their giving, as they for their false purchasing. For as God giveth the father power over his children, even so giveth he him a command- 334 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. ment to execute it, and not to suffer them to do wickedly unpunished, but unto his damnation, as thou mayest see by Eli, the high priest, &c. And as the master hath authority over his servants, even so hath he a commandment to govern them. And as the husband is head over his wife, even so hath he commandment to rule her appetites ; and is damned, if he suffer her to be an whore and a mis-liver, or submit The king is himself to her, and make her his head. And even in like but a servant theefawsof manner as God maketh the king head over his realm, even God. Ant. ed. so gjveth he him commandment to execute the laws upon all men indifferently. For the law is God's, and not the king's. The king is but a servant, to execute the law of God, and not to rule after his own imagination. I shewed also that the law and the king are to be feared, as things that were given in fire, and in thunder, and light ning, and terrible signs. I shewed the cause why rulers are evil, and by what means we might obtain better. I shewed also how wholesome those bitter medicines, evil princes, are to right christian men. I declared how they, which God hath made governors in the world, ought to rule, if they be Christians. They ought to remember that they are heads and arms, to defend the body, to minister peace, health, and wealth, and even to save the body ; and that they have received their offices of God, to minister and to do service unto their brethren. King, subject, master, servant, are names in the world, but not in Christ. In Christ we are all one, and even brethren. No man is his own ; but we are all Christ's servants, bought with Christ's blood. Therefore ought no man to seek himself, or his own profit, but Christ and his will. In Christ no man ruleth as a king his subjects, or a master his servants ; but serveth, as one hand doth to another, and as the hands do unto the feet, and the feet to the hands, as thou seest 1 Cor, 1 cor. xii. xii. We also serve, not as servants unto masters; but as they which are bought with Christ's blood serve Christ him self. We be here all servants unto Christ, For whatsoever we do one to another in Christ's name, that do we unto Christ, -and the reward of that shall we receive of Christ, how far a The king counteth his commons Christ himself; and therefore king ought to seek at his commons' hands. is sufficient to maintain peace and unity, and to defend the to seek at his doth them service willingly, seeking no more of them than commons' A REHEARSAL OF THAT WHICH GOETII BEFORE. 335 realm. And they obey again willingly and lovingly, as unto Christ. And of Christ every man seeketh his reward. I warned the judges that they take not an ensample, how to minister their offices, of our spiritualty, which are bought and sold to do the will of Satan ; but of the scripture, whence they have their authority, Let that which is secret abide secret till God open it, which is the judge of secrets. For ^%d it is more than a cruel thing to break up into a man's heart, and to compel him to put either soul or body in jeopardy, or to shame himself. If Peter, that great pillar, for fear of death forsook his master, ought we not to spare weak con sciences ? I declared how the king ought to rid his realm from the wily tyranny of the hypocrites, and to bring the hypocrites under his laws : yea, and how he ought to be learned, and to hear, and to look upon the causes himself, which he will punish ; and not to beheve the hypocrites, and to give them his sword to kill whom they will. The king ought to count what he hath spent in the pope's quarrel, since he was king. The first voyage cost upon fourteen hundred thousand pounds. Beckon since what hath been spent by sea and land between us and Frenchmen and Scots, and then in triumphs, and in embassies1, and what hath been sent out of the realm secretly, and all to maintain our holy father ; and I doubt not but that will sur mount the sum of forty or fifty hundred thousand pounds : for we had no cause to spend one penny, but for our holy father. The king therefore ought to make them pay this money every farthing, and fet2 it out of their mitres, crosses, shrines, and all manner treasure of the church, and pay it to • his commons again : not that only which the cardinal and his bishops compelled the commons to lend, and made them swear, with such an ensample of tyranny as was never before thought on ; but also all that he hath gathered of them : or else by the consent of the commons to keep it in store for the defence of the realm. Yea, the king ought to look in the chronicles, what the popes have done to kings in time past, and make them restore it also ; and ought to take away from them their lands which they have gotten with their false prayers, and restore it unto the right heirs again ; or [l Both C. and D. print the word ambastasies.] [2 Fet : fetch.] 336 OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. with consent and advisement turn them unto the maintaining of the poor, and bringing up of youth virtuously, and to maintain necessary officers and ministers for to defend the commonwealth. If he will not do it, then ought the commons to take patience, and to take it for God's scourge ; and to think that God hath blinded the king for their sins' sake, and commit their cause to God : and then shall God make a scourge for them, and drive them out of his temple, after his wonderful judgment. On the other side, I have also uttered the wickedness of the spiritualty, the falsehead of the bishops, and juggling of the pope, and how they have disguised themselves, bor rowing some of their pomp of the Jews, and some of the gentiles, and have with subtle wiles turned the obedience, that should be given to God's ordinance, unto themselves; and how they have put out God's testament and God's truth, and set up their own traditions and lies, in which they have taught the people to believe, and thereby sit in their consciences as God ; and have by that means robbed the world of lands and goods, of peace and unity, and of all temporal authority, and have brought the people into the ignorance of God, and have heaped the wrath of God upon all realms, and namely upon the kings : whom they have robbed (I speak not of worldly things only, but) even of their very natural wits. They make them believe that they are most christian, when they live most abominably, and will suffer no man in their realms that believeth on Christ ; and that they are " defenders of the faith," when they burn the gospel and promises of God, out of which all faith springeth. I shewed how they have ministered Christ, king and emperor out of their rooms ; and how they have made them a several kingdom, which they got at the first in deceiving of princes, and now pervert the whole scripture, to prove that they have such authority of God. And lest the lay men should see how falsely they allege the places of the scripture, is the greatest cause of this persecution. confession. They have feigned confession for the same purpose, to stablish their kingdom withal. All secrets know they thereby. W.T. A REHEARSAL OF THAT WHICH GOETII BEFORE. 337 The bishop knoweth the confession of whom he lusteth throughout all his diocese : yea, and his chancellor com mandeth the ghostly father to deliver it written. The pope, his cardinals and bishops, know the confession of the em peror, kings, and of all lords : and by confession they know all their captives. If any believe in Christ, by confession The manifold x d ii enormities they know him. Shrive thyself where thou wilt, whether ^^f^'' at Sion, Charterhouse, or at the Observants, thy confession ^J^™ is known well enough. And thou, if thou believe in Christ, Ant- e • r. m • i i i cision was to we be received into the rehgion of Christ, and made partakers of his passion, and members of his church ; and whereby we are bound to believe in Christ, and in the Father through him, for the remission of sins ; and to keep the law of Christ, and to love each other, as he loved us ; and whereby (if we thus believe and love) we calling God to be our Father, and to do his will, shall receive remission of our sins through the merits of Jesus Christ his Son, as he hath promised. So now by baptism we be bound to God, and God to us, and the bond and seal of the covenant is written in our flesh ; by which seal or writing God challengeth faith and love, under pain of just damnation : and we (if we believe and love) challenge (as it is above rehearsed) all mercy, and whatsoever we need ; or else God must be an untrue God. And God hath [! So R. S. ed. Day has, ' toll why the,' &c] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 351 bound us christian men to receive this sign for our infirmities' sake, to be a witness between him and us, and also to put this sign upon our children ; not binding us to any appointed time, but as it shah seem to us most convenient, to bring them to the knowledge of God the Father, and of Christ, and of their duty to God and his law. And as the circumcised in the flesh, and not in the heart, have no part in God's good promises ; even so they that be baptized in the flesh, and not in heart, have no part in Christ's blood. And as the circumcised in the heart, and not in the flesh, had part in God's good promises ; even so a Turk unbaptized (because he either knoweth not, that he ought to have it, or cannot for tyranny,) if he believe in Christ, and love as Christ did and taught, then hath he his part in Christ's blood. And though the outward circumcision, by the which God challengeth them to do him service, yea, whether they would or not, and by the which they were taught to believe in God, and in the seed of Abraham that should come and bless all the world, and to love the law ; and certified them also, on the other side, of the good-will of God, if they so did ; though (I say) it was the chief and most principal sign, (for so are such ceremonies called in the Hebrew2, because they yet signify other things than appeareth to the outward sense,) yet God gave them divers other signs, both to stir up faith in the promise made them, and also to keep the benefit of the mercy of God in mind. As in Exodus xiii. all the first-born, both of man and Exod. : beast, are sanctified and dedicated unto the Lord, for a remem brance that the Lord slew all the first-born of Egypt ; this did God command to be observed, that their children should ask why : and he commanded their fathers to teach their chil dren, when they should ask what was meant thereby. Also Exodus xx. the Sabbath is commanded to be observed, Exod. > to be a sign, and to testify that God had sanctified and dedi cated or chosen them, that they should be his people, to keep his laws, and that he would be their God, to keep them ; and p It will appear probable, from what follows, that, by the expres sion "in the Hebrew," Tyndale only meant in Hebrew usage; especially as the Hebrew name for a sign, viz. JiftH, is not equivalent to cere- many. In the Hebrew scriptures DBttfD is 'the word used in the only instance (Numb. ix. 3) where the English version has ceremonies.] 352 THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM, AND to testify also, that God hath created all things of nought in six days, and rested the seventh. Num.*. Also Numbers x., where Almighty God commanded the children of Israel to blow a trumpet, when they entered into battle against their enemies ; and promised that they should be thought upon before the Lord their God, and saved from their enemies. And likewise in their solemn feasts God commanded them to blow trumpets over the sacrifice ; to be a sign unto them, that God would think on them, according to the covenant made in the blood of the sacrifice. Lo, the trumpets were commanded to be blown ; not that God delighted in the noise of the trumpets, but in the faith of his people. Num. xv. Also Numbers xv. the Israelites are commanded to make yellow gards1 upon their garments, to put them in remembrance to keep his commandments, that they should do nothing after their own imagination, nor observe any fashion that pleased their own eyes. Whereby ye see that ceremonies are not a service to God, but a service to man ; to put him in mind of the covenant, and to stir up faith and love, which are God's spiritual sacrifices, in man's heart, &c. josh.iv. And Joshua iv., when the water of Jordan had given place to go over by dry ground, God commanded Joshua to take twelve stones out of the bottom of Jordan, and to pitch them on the land, to keep the deed in memory ; and com manded, when the children should ask what the stones meant, that their father should teach them. 1 Kings xi. In the 3 Kings xi. Ahijah the prophet tare the cloak of Jeroboam in twelve pieces, and bade him take ten ; in sigh that he should reign over ten of the tribes. 2 Kings xm. In 4 Kings xiii. Eliseus made Joash king of Israel open a window eastward toward the Syrians, and made him to shoot out an arrow, and said, "It is the arrow of victory through the Lord against the Syrians." And that did he to stablish the king's faith in God, that he should with God's help overcome the Syrians ; and then he bade the king smite the ground with an arrow, and the king smote it thrice; whereby he prophesied, and certified the king, that he should thrice overcome the Syrians. isai.xx. And Isaiah, in his xxth chapter, was commanded to go [l Gards : borders.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 353 naked and barefoot ; to be a sign that Egypt, in whom the children of Israel trusted, should be so carried away of Nabuchadnezzar. And Jeremiah, in his xxviith chapter, cometh among the Jer- xxvii- people with bonds and chains put about his neck, and sheweth them unto all the kings of those countries, in token that they must be all under the yoke of Nabuchadnezzar king of Baby lon. God so used to give them signs, that they would not believe without signs; as ye may see not only in the old Testament, but also in the new, how the Jews asked Christ, saying, " What sign dost thou shew us ?" &c. And Paul (1 Cor. i.), " The Jews asked signs." i cor. i. Also Zacharias, John Baptist's father, asked a sign ; and Luke i. the angel gave it him. Christ's mother also asked a sign, and the angel gave her Luke i. Elizabeth to a sign. And unto the shepherds gave the angel a sign ; as ye Luke n. read Luke ii. And (Exod. xii.) God gave the children of Israel the sign E»od. xii. of Pesah2, which we call the Easter lamb, for a sign that the time was come that the children of Israel should be delivered out of Egypt. And therefore God sent Moses and Aaron to them, which wrought many miracles among them, to stir up their faith to the promise of that deliverance, against the manifold and sore temptations to the contrary, through the most strait and grievous bondage and merciless oppression, and in that most specially, that Pharao was waxed ten times worse to them after the coming of Moses and Aaron than be fore. Yet in the last night, in which he had promised to Exod- xii- smite the first-born of Egypt both of man and of beast, and to deliver them, he commanded them to take for every house a lamb or a kid, and to slay them, and to strike the door posts with the blood, to be a sign to them, and a seal of the [2 TOB subst. from J1D3> he passed over, or leapt over. So the old lexicographers, as Buxtorff, and Legh in his Critica Sacra, explain the Hebrew verb. So also abp. Magee, On the Atonement, Notes to Yol. I. Xater critics, guiding themselves chiefly by the ac knowledged meaning of kindred Arabic roots, have taken the verb to mean primarily, relaxing, or loosening ; then giving liberty ; and pro tecting from one who would destroy that liberty. Thus Simon's Lexicon ; and Prof. J. Robertson in his Clavis Pentateuchi, 2274 — 5.] r i 23 [tyndale.] 354 the sacraments of baptism, and promise that God would deliver them that night both out of the hands of Pharao, and also from the smiting of the angel that went about all Egypt, and slew the first-born in every house. The institu- And this sign Pesah, beside that it was a seal of the pro- tion of the o ' ^ FanTb"1 mise to De delivered the same night, to stablish that faith, and commanded to be observed ever after yearly, to keep the benefit in memory ; it was also a very prophecy of the pas sion of Christ, describing the very manner and fashion of his death, and the effect and virtue thereof also. In whose stead is the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ come, as baptism in the room or stead of circumcision. To see how Christ was prophesied and described therein, consider and mark, how that the kid or lamb must be with out spot or blemish ; and so was Christ only of all mankind, in the sight of God and of his law. It must be taken up the tenth day of the first month, which is the tenth day of tbe first new moon in March; for so count they their months from the new moon, and begin there1 in the time of March with us. And the same day came Christ to Jerusalem, there to be offered and to suffer his passion. It must be offered the fourteenth day of the same month at night : and the same hour began Christ's passion ; he was the same hour betrayed, and persecuted all night, and taken in the morning early. The fear of death was the same hour upon him, neither slept he any more after, but went imme diately, as soon as he had comforted his disciples, into the place where he was taken, to abide his persecutors; where also he sweat water and blood of very agony conceived of his passion so nigh at hand. Christ's death The blood stricken on the posts saved them, that they the paschai were not plagued with the Egyptians, and delivered them out of the captivity of Pharao. And the blood of Christ, stricken on the posts -of our consciences wdth a sure faith2, delivereth us from the captivity of Pharao the devil, and smiting of his angels, &c. There might not a bone thereof be broken : no more were there of Christ's, though the two that were hanged with him had either of them his legs and his arms broken. t1 Day has there begin; but R. S., begin there.] [2 The words with a sure faith are wanting in D. but found in R. S.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 355 Moreover, that it was a very prophecy of the death of Christ, and of the virtue of his passion, it is made the more manifest by the words of Christ himself (Luke xxii.) : for the Luke xxh. night before his passion, when he had eaten Pesah with his disciples, he said, " I will no more eat of it henceforth, till it be fulfilled in the kingdom of God." As who should say, ' This memorial which we yearly have hitherto observed, was once fulfilled in the kingdom of this world, when your fathers were delivered out of bondage and servitude of the Egyptians. But it hath yet another signification, hitherto unknown unto you, which must be fulfilled spiritually in the kingdom of God Christ's expo- , • • ii liii, n sition ofthe by my passion that is at hand, and blood that now shall paschaiiamb. shortly be shed ; by the which ye shall be dehvered out of the power of Satan, sin, and heh, and made heirs of the king dom of heaven. Neither was it the lamb's blood that deli vered you then : (for what regard hath God in the blood of sheep and calves ?) but the blood of Christ {whom that lamb figured, and described his innocence, pureness, and obedience to his Father, and compassion to mankind-ward, whose feeble nature he had put on with all the infirmities of the same, save sin) did then deliver you, to bring you to the faith of this dehverance, and to make you through faith partakers thereof.' Many things there be in the scripture, which have a car- The scrip- nal fulfilling, even there where they be spoken or done ; and aree!uii of yet have another spiritual signification, to be fulfilled long tenes. after in Christ and his kingdom, and yet never known till the thing be done. As the serpent of brass which Moses Num. xxi. hanged up in the wilderness, though it took effect carnahy in the wilderness, yet it so describeth the lifting up of Christ upon the cross, and the virtue of his passion, that no tongue John m. could better declare it, to make the heart feel it. If ye ask : Why they may not be known till they be done, and what such3 prophecy may help? I answer, If men did understand them before they were done, they would endeavour to let the fulfilling of them ; and when the signifi cation is fulfilled, then to see how plainly it was described in the scripture doth exceedingly confirm the faith thereof, and make it better to be understood. And when this Pesah was fulfilled spiritually in the king- how the x d o paschaiiamb [3 So R. S. edition; in D. such is wanting.] 23—2 356 the sacraments of baptism, and was spiritu- dom of heaven by the death and bloodshedding of Christ, it ally fulfilled , , •> . , „ . ° . ,, , dom ofhet ended there : and in the room thereof (concerning that spi* ven- ritual signification) came the sign of the sacrament of the The institu- body and blood of our Saviour Christ, as baptism came instead sacrament of of circumcision ; things more easy, and less pamful and tedious die body and ' O d x savour our *° De observed, and more gentle, to provoke and entice the ChIist- heathen. For as the lamb described the death of Christ to Thepaschai come, and the manner of his passion, by which we should be lamb and x /> i 1 i i i_i j sacrirfo|hofnd delivered ; even so doth the ceremony of the body and blood and bioodody °f Christ testify unto us, that he hath given himself to death togethe^ for us, and redeemed us already, if we believe and cleave fast to the profession of our baptism, to walk therein, or will (if any tempest had driven us out of the right course) return to the right way again. 1 cor. xi. This to be so, the words of the institution declare, which are these (1 Cor. xi.) : " The Lord Jesus, the night that he was betrayed, took bread, and gave thanks, and brake it, and said, Take, eat ; this is my body that shall be given for you : this do in remembrance of me. And likewise he took the cup, when supper was done, saying, This cup is the new tes tament in my blood ; this do, as often as ye shall drink it, in the remembrance of me." Here ye see by these words, that it was ordained to keep the death of Christ in mind, and to testify that his body was given and his blood shed for us. Luke xxii. And, Luke xxii. "This is my body, that is given for you; this do in remembrance of me. And this cup is the new tes- rhe chief and tament in my blood, whioh shall be shed for you." Lo, here only cause of ... .. , , . tton'ofule Je see again that it was instituted to keep the death of Christ sacrament jn mind ; and to testify wherefore he died, even to save us from sin, death and hell, that we should seek none other means to be delivered with ; for there is none other name for Acts iv. us to be saved by, but only by the name of Jesus. Acts iv. For as the children of Israel, stung of the fiery serpents, could have none other remedy to save them from present death, than to go and behold the brasen serpent hanged up by Moses in the wilderness, which looking on only healed them ; even i cor. xv. go, if the sting of death, whieh is sin, have wounded the1 soul with the working of the law in the consciences, there is none other remedy than to run to Christ, which shed his blood, hanging upon the cross, and to his everlasting testament and C1 SoR. S.; D. has their.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 357 merciful promise, that it was shed for us for the remission of our sins. If thou be stung with conscience of sin, and the cockatrice of thy poisoned nature hath beheld herself in the glass of the righteous law of God, there is none other salve for remedy, than to run to Christ immediately, and to the Father through him ; and to say, ' Father I have sinned uon'swfmust against thee, and thy godly, holy, and righteous law, and cS.to against my brother, whom I ought of all right to love, for thy sake, as well as myself: forgive me, 0 Father, for thy dear son Jesus Christ's sake2, according to thy most merciful promises and testament3 ; and I will ask my brother forgive ness (if the peace, I mean, be not made already), and will make to my power such satisfaction to him as shall seem right in his eyes, if he be reasonable ; or as the congregation shall assign, or faithful men thereunto appointed by the congrega- we must be tion, or such as I and he shall agree upon ; and wih endea- the congre- . gation. your myself to do so no more, with the help of thy grace. And I will submit myself to the wholesome ordinance of the congregation, according to the doctrine of thy son Jesus and of his faithful apostles.' For there is none other name given only by the ,, * ,,, , , ,, nameofJesus under heaven whereby we shall be saved, but only the name ^™irc™f" Of JeSUS*. vation. Hereof ye see that the sacrament is an absolution of our The nature of „, ... ., . , , , thesacrament sms, as olten as we receive it, where it is truly taught and of the supper 1 , -i i . i . . " "This is my blood that shall be shed for pu?™aiva°ion you l" they confirm the faith : but much more when the sa- m his death. crament js seen ^fa tne eveS) anfi the bread broken, the wine poured out or looked on ; and yet more when I taste it and smell it. As ye see when a man maketh a promise to another with light words between themselves, and as they be departed, he to whom the promise is made beginneth to doubt whether the other spake earnestly or mocked, and doubteth whether he will remember his promise, to bide by it or not : but when any man speaketh with advisement and [l So R. S. ; D. omits yet.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 361 deliberation, the words are then more credible ; but yet if ho swear, it confirmeth the thing more ; and yet the more if he strike hands, if he give earnest, if he call record, if he give his hand-writing, and seal it ; so is the promise more and more beheved. For the heart gathereth, ' Lo, he spake with advisement and dehberation ; and with good sadness he sware2 ; he clapped hands, called records, and put to his hand and seal : the man cannot be so feigned without the fear of God, as to deny all this ; shame shall make him bide by his promise, though he were such a man that I could not compel him if he would deny it.' If a young man break a ring be tween him and a maid ; doth not the fact testify and make a presumption to all men, that his heart meant as his words spake ? Manoah, Samson's father, when he had seen an angel, Judg. xhi. he said to his wife, " We shall surely die, because Juds- xiii- we have seen the Lord." But his wife gathered other comfort of the circumstances, and said, " If the Lord would kill us, he would not have received such offerings of our hands, nor shewed us such things as he hath, nor told us of things to come." Even so our hearts gather of the circumstances, protestations, and other miracles and earnest ceremonies3 of God, good arguments and reasons, to stablish our weak faith withal, such as we could not gather at bare words only. And thus4 we dispute: God sent his Son in our nature, Abriefcoi- and made him feel all our infirmities that move us to sin ; and premises. named him Jesus, that is to say, Saviour, because he should Matt-i. save his people from their sins. Matt. i. And after his death he sent his apostles to preach the things or tidings, and to thrust it in at the ears of us, and set up a sacrament of it, to testify it, to be a seal of it, to thrust it in, not at the ears only by the rehearsing of the promises and testament over it, neither at our eyes only in beholding it, but beat it in through our feeling, tasting and smelling also ; and to be repeated daily, and to be ministered to us. He would not P So in R. S. edition. In Day only, and good sadness.] P R. S., Even our hearts gather of the circumstances protesta tions as other miracles and earnest ceremonies, &c. Day, Even so our hearts gather of the circumstances, protestations and other mira cles of God, &c] P SoR. S.; but Day, this.] 362 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND (think we) make half so much ado with us if he loved us not, or if he would not have us fain come, and be as merciful to us as he was to his friends in the old time, that fell and rose again. God so then used to1 the Jews (to whom ah cere monies were first given, and from whom they came to us) even such fashions as they used among themselves, in all his promises and covenants, not for his necessity, but for ours; that such things should be a witness and testimony between him and us, to confirm the faith of his promise, that we should not waver nor doubt in them, when we look on the seals of his obligations, wherewith he hath bound himself; and to keep the promises and covenants better in mind, and to make them the more deep sink into our hearts, and to be more earnestly regarded, and that we should ask what such things meant, and why God commanded them to be observed ; that ignorance should not excuse, if we know not what we ought to do and believe : for natural reason ought to teach us that the outward, corporal, and bodily thing cannot help the spiritual soul, and that God hath not delectation in such fantasy. Now if we were diligent to search for the good will of God, and would ask what such ceremonies meant, it were impossible but then God (which hath promised, Matt. vii. Matt. vii. "If we seek we shall find,") would send us true interpreters of his signs or sacraments. To an igno- And he that, being of a lawful age, observeth a ceremony un&ithfui and knoweth not the intent, to him is the ceremony not only filaments unprofitable, but also hurtful, and cause of sin ; in that he is niesaresin. not careful and diligent to search for it, and he there observ eth them with a false faith of his own imagination, thinking, as all idolaters do and ever have done, that the outward work is a sacrifice and service to God. The same therefore_ idolatry, sinneth yet more deeper and more damnable. Neither is idolatry any other thing than to believe that a visible ceremony The spiritual is a service to the invisible God; whose service is spiritual, serving of as he is a spirit, and is none other thing than to know that ¦s. ' all is of him, and to trust in him only for all things, and to love him for his great goodness and mercy above all, and our neighbours as ourselves for his sake : unto which spiritual serving of God, and to lead us to the same, the old cere monies were ordained. P So R. S. ; in Day, to is wanting.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 363 These be now sufficient concerning the intent and use of the ceremonies, and how they came up. Now let us consider the words of this testament and promises, as they be re hearsed of the three evangelists, Matthew, Mark and Luke, Matt. xxvi. o ' 7 ' Mark xiv. and of the apostle Paul : for John, which wrote last, touched Luke xxii. nothing that was sufficiently declared of other. Matthew, in the twenty-sixth, thus saith : " When they were eating, Jesus Theim«w- took bread, and gave thanks, and brake, and gave his disciples, Jjj^J^ and said, Take, eat ; this is my body : and he took the bi0d0ydand cup, and thanked, and gave it them, saying, Drink ye all of this ; for this is my blood, which is of the new testament, that is shed for many for the remission of sins." First, ye see by these words, that the body was given to death, and the blood shed, for the remission of sins, and that for many. But who are these many ? Verily, they that turn to God, who they to believe in him only, and to endeavour themselves to keep ceive benefit- J . . r of Christ's his law from henceforth. Which many yet, in respect of death- them that love not the law, are but very few, and even that little flock that gave themselves wholly to follow Christ. Wherefore if any man think he believe in Christ, and have not the law written in his heart, to consent that his duty is to love his brother for Christ's sake as Christ loved him, and to endeavour himself so to do, the faith of that same man is vain, and built upon sand of his own imagination, and not upon the rock of God's word; for his word, unto which he hath bound himself, is, that they only which turn to God, to keep his laws, shah have mercy for Christ's sake, " Drink of it all, for it is my blood of the new testament :" The cup of "for it is," that is to say, the drink that is in the cup, or, if christ°°what ye list, the cup is " my blood of the new testament," taking the cup for the drink, by a manner of speaking used in all tongues ; as when we say, ' I have drunk a cup of wine,' we take there the cup for the wine. " My blood of the new testament," that is to say, My blood, for whose shedding sake this new testament and covenant is made to you, for the forgiveness of sin. The old testament made between God and your fathers in mount Sinai, in which life was promised to them only that kept it, and to the breakers death, wrath and vengeance, and to be accursed, and no mention made of mercy, [which] was confirmed with blood, Exodus xxiy, Moses offered Exod. xxiv. 364 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND half the blood to God, and sprinkled the people with the other half, to confirm the covenant and to bind both parties: neither was there any covenant made that was not con- Heh. ix. firmed with blood, as it is rehearsed in Hebrews ix. ; and as we see in the books of Moses, whose custom of blood- shedding was not only to confirm those old covenants, but also to be a prophecy of the blood that should be shed to The great and confirm this testament. That old, cruel, and fearful testa- merciful dif- t 7 7 tweeTtheoid mentj which drew the people away, so that they durst not and'thlnew. abide the voice of thunder, nor the terrible sight of the fire, but went and stood afar off, was confirmed with the blood of calves : but this new and gentle testament, which calleth again, and promiseth mercy to all that will amend, as it is a better testament, so is it confirmed with a better blood, to make men see love, to love again, and to be a greater con- ihe great firination of the love promised. For if he gave us his Son, to mankind, what will he deny us ? If God so loved us, when we were sinners and knew him not, that he gave his Son for us ; how much more loveth he us now, when we love again, and would fain keep his commandments ! In the old covenants the people were sprinkled with blood of calves without, in their bodies, to bind them to keep the law ; else we were bound to just damnation, for the breaking of it. Here it is said, "Drink of it every one," that your souls within may be sprinkled, and washed through faith, with the blood of the Son of God for the forgiveness of sin, and to be partakers of a more easy and kind testament, under which, if you sin through fragility, you shall be warned lovingly, and received to mercy, if you will turn again and amend. Mark xiv. Mark, in the fourteenth: "And as they did eat, Jesus took bread ; and when he had given thanks, he brake it, and gave it to them, and said, Take, eat; this is my body : and he took the cup, and when he had given thanks, he took it to them, and they all drank of it : and he said to them, This is my blood of the new testament, which is shed for many." This is all one with Matthew, as is aforesaid. Luke xxii. Luke, in the twenty-second: "And he took bread, and when he had given thanks, he brake it and gave to them, saying, This is my body which is given for you: this do in remembrance of me. Likewise also, when he had supped, he OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 365 took the cup, saying, This cup is the new testament in my blood which is shed for you." Here is also to be noted, that the cause of" the institution The cause of „ . _ , . the institu- was to be a memorial, to testify that Christ's body was given, J^ramStof and his blood shed for us. And again, where Matthew and Christ'slJOdy- Mark said, " This is my blood in the new testament ;" Luke saith, " This cup is the new testament in my blood which shall be shed for you." This is a strange speaking, and far ^he sign of from the use of our tongue, to call the sign and confirmation ^bistt^era11" by the name of the thing that is signified and confirmed. cEvbody, The testament is, that Christ's blood is shed for our sins : 5gA?,ie'lthere and Christ saith, " This cup is that testament ;" signifying thereby, that the thing that is meant by this ceremony is, that we believe that his blood-shedding is the remission of our sins ; which is the very testament. Paul, 1 Cor. xi. saith on this manner: "That which Iicor.xt delivered unto you I received of the Lord. For the Lord Jesus, the same night in the which he was betrayed, took bread : and when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take ye, and eat ; this is my body, which is broken for you : this do in remembrance of me. After the same manner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, This cup is the new testament in my blood : this do, as often as ye drink it, in remembrance of me. For as often as ye shall eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye shall shew the Lord's death until he come." As Matthew and Mark agree in these words, so do Lucas and Paul. And as it is above declared upon the words of Luke, and so here by oft repeating one thing : (" This do in remembrance of me. This cup is the new testament in my -blood. This do as oft as ye drink it in the remembrance of me." Again, " As oft as ye shall eat of this bread and drink of this cup, so oft ye must declare the Lord's death :") by this often repeating, I say, ye may evidently perceive that the cause, intent, and whole purpose of the institution of this sacrament was to testify and confirm the faith of the testament made in the death of Christ ; how that, for his sake, our sins shall be forgiven. So, " Do this in the remembrance of me :" that is to say, ' Take bread and wine, and rehearse the covenant and testa ment over them, how that my body was broken, and my 366 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND blood shed for many : and then give them to the people to eat and drink, to be a sign and earnest, and the seal of the testament ; and cry upon them, without ceasing, to believe in me only for the remission of sins, and not to despair, how weak soever they be, only if they hang on me, and desire power to keep the law after my doctrine and example of my life, and do mourn and be sorry because they cannot do that good thing which they would.' ¦cor. xi. For, saith Paul, " Whosoever shall eat of this bread or drink of the cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord :" that is to say, whoso receiveth the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ with an un clean heart, not forsaking the old lusts of the flesh, nor pur posing to follow Christ, and to be to his neighbour as Christ was to him, only merciful ; the same sinneth against the body and blood of Christ ; in that he maketh a mock of the earnest Heb-*- death of Christ, and, as it is written Hebrews the tenth, " treadeth Christ under foot, and counteth the blood of the testament wherewith he was sanctified1 as an unholy thing, and doth dishonour to the Spirit of grace." what the Of this ye may perceive again what the sacrament mean- sacrament 11! • /.IT meaneth, and eth and what the intent of the ordinance was, and how such why the same ' ' tuted?*"" ceremonies came up, and whence they had their beginning, and what the fruit thereof is, and what is therein to be sought. And though this were enough, so that I might here weh cease ; yet, because the unquiet, scrupulous, and superstitious nature of man, wholly given to idolatry, hath stirred up such tradi tions about this one sacrament most specially, I cannot but speak thereof somewhat more, and declare what my conscience thinketh in this matter. There are Ye shall understand therefore that there is great dissen- mons about sion, and three opinions, about the words of Christ, where he the sacra- . * , m, . . boTyand16 sau,n> In pronouncing the testament over the bread, " lhis is chr'Ll'* mv hody ;" and in pronouncing it over the wine, " This is my blood." The tot One part2 say that these words, "This is my body," "This is my blood," compel us to beheve, under pain of damnation, that the bread and wine are changed into the very body and blood of Christ really: as the water at Cana Galilee was turned into very wine. P Washed, in R. S. ed.] P The Romanists.] opinion. OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 367 The second part3 saith, ' We be not bound to believe that The second . i-ii opinion. bread and wine are changed ; but only that his body and blood are there presently4.' The third say, ' We be bound by these words only to be- The third d 7 d to opinion. heve that Christ's body was broken, and his blood shed for the remission of our sins ; and that there is no other satisfac tion for sin than the death and passion of Christ.' The first say these words, " This is my body," " This is a declaration my blood," compel us to believe, that things there shewed are ^J^^, the very body and blood of Christ really. But bread and tioned.men" wine, say they, cannot be Christ's natural body ; therefore the bread and wine are changed, turned, altered, and transub stantiated into the very body and blood of Christ. And they of this opinion have busied themselves in seeking subtilties and similitudes to prove, how the very body and blood might be there under the simihtude of bread and wine only, the very bread and wine being thus transubstantiated. And these men have been so occupied in slaying all that will not captive their wits to believe them, that they never taught nor under stood that the sacrament is an absolution to all that thereby believe in the body and blood of Christ. The second part grant with the first, that the words com- A declaration pel us to beheve that the things shewed in the sacrament are the second the very body and blood of Christ. But where the first say X"'° men- ' bread and wine cannot be the very body and blood of Christ,' there they vary and dissent from them, affirming that bread and wine may, and also is, Christ's body really, and very blood of Christ ; and say, that ' it is as true to say that bread is Christ's body, and that wine is his blood, as it is true to say Christ being a very man is also very God.' And they say, ' As the Godhead and manhood in Christ are in such man ner coupled together, that man is very God, and God very man ; even so the very body and the bread are so coupled, that it is as true to say that bread is the body of Christ, and the~blood so annexed there with the wine, that it is even as true to say that the wine is Christ's blood.' The first, though they have slain so many in and for the defence of their opinion, yet they are ready to receive the second sort to fellowship, not greatly striving with them or P The Lutherans.] P Presently: after the manner of a thing present, before us.] 368 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND abhorring the presence of bread and wine with the very body and blood, so that they yet by that means may keep him there still, and hope to sell him as dear as before, and also some to buy him, and not to minish the price. a declaration The third sort affirm, that the words mean1 no more but of them of monabovepi" onty that we believe, by the things that are there shewed, mentioned, fa^ Christ's body was broken and his blood shed for our sins, if we will forsake our sins and turn to God to keep his law. And they say that these sayings, " This is my body," and, " This is my blood,'' shewing bread and wine, are true as Christ meant them, and as the people of that country, to whom Christ spake, were accustomed to understand such words, and as the scripture useth in a thousand places to speak. As when one of us saith, ' I have drunk a eup of good wine,' that saying is true as the man meant ; that he drank wine only, and not the cup ; which words haply, in some other nation's ears, would sound that he drank the cup too. And as when we say of a child, ' This is such a man's very face ;' the words are true, as the manner of our land is to understand them, that the face of the one is very like the other. And as when we say, ' He gave me his faith and his truth in my hand,' the words are true as we understand them ; that he struck hands with me, or gave earnest in sign or token that he would bide by his promise. For the faith of a man doth alway rest in his soul, and cannot be given out, though we give signs and tokens of them. Even so, say they, we have a thousand examples in the scripture, where signs are named with the names of things signified by them : as Jacob called the place, where he saw the Lord face to face, Gen. xxxii. Pheniel, that is, God's face, when he saw the Lord face to face. Now it is true to say of that field, that it is God's face, though it be not his very face. The same field was so called to signify that Jacob there saw God face to face. The chief hold and principal anchor that the two first have, is these words, " This is my body : This is my blood." Unto these the third answereth as is above said. Other texts they ahege for themselves, which not only do not strength johnvi. their cause, but rather make it worse : as the sixth of John; which they draw and wrest to the carnal and fleshly eating of Papists are the wresters j scrip- Christ's body in the mouth, when it only meaneth of this P So Day ; R. S. has will in the place otmean.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 369 eating by faith. For when Christ said, " Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye2 have no life in you," this cannot be understood of the sacrament. For Abraham had life, and all the old holy fathers ; Christ's mother, Elizabeth, Zacharias, John Baptist, Simeon, Anna, and all the apostles, had life already by faith in Christ ; of which not one had eaten his flesh, and drunken his blood, with their bodily mouths. But truth it is, that the righteous liveth by his faith ; ergo, to believe and trust in Christ's blood is the eating that there was meant, as the text well proveth. If they "say, We grant that life cometh by faith ; but we all that believe must be baptized to keep the law and to keep the covenant in mind ; even so all that liveth by faith must re ceive the sacrament: I answer, The sacrament is a confir- Thesacra- mation to weak consciences, and in no wise to be despised ; confirma- howbeit many have lived by faith in the wilderness, which in consciences. twenty, thirty, or forty years have not received the sacra ment. Notwithstanding, this oration is nothing to the pur pose. For Christ spake to the blind and unbelieving Jews ; testifying to them, that they could have no life except they should first eat his flesh, and drink his blood: ergo, this Faith mcreas- eating and drinking is meant only of that thing that first wortti/re- bringeth life into the soul, and that is faith, by your own sacraments. confession. And therefore must it be understood of faith only, and not of the sacrament. And Matthew, the last [chapter] : " I am with you always, Matt, xxviii. even unto the end of the world ;" which may well be under stood, and so was it of old doctors, by his spiritual being with us by faith, and in his Spirit. And so may that text of Matthew xviii. be understood : " Where two or three are Matt xviii. gathered together in mj name, there am I in the midst of them." There is many times two or three good men that meet together in Christ's name, where the sacrament is not. And Paul (Eph. iii.) boweth his knees for the Ephesians to EPh. m. God, " That he would give them his riches, to be strength ened with his Spirit, that Christ may dwell in their hearts through faith." Where the heart then believeth in Christ, there dwelleth Christ in the heart ; though there be no bread in the heart, neither yet in the maw. [tyndale. 1 P Ye shall, in R. S. ed.] 24 370 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND to^%°ardydirf The two first parties taking the old doctors to be on their oflheTacVa-11 side, I answer, Many of the old doctors spake so mystically ""'"' that they seem sometimes to affirm plainly that it is but bread and wine only concerning the substance, and that it is a figure of the body and blood of Christ only ; and sometimes, that it is his very body and blood : therefore it were needless to wade any further herein. themno7theto ^-n^ unto them of the second opinion, that the bread is opiSon. his very body, I answer, Ye must remember that the old doctors as earnestly call it a sacrifice, as they do Christ's body. But that ye deny : and say, with the epistle to the Hebrews, that he was but once sacrificed for altogether, when he offered and sacrificed himself to the Father for our sins, and can now no more be sacrificed. Christ dieth no more christ once now, and therefore is no more sacrificed. Neither do we sacriiicea is 3 ever?rificeforProPerty on?er him to God. But he in his mortal flesh offered himself for us to God the Father, and purchased therewith a general pardon for ever. And now doth God ofiheTa1-"116 *ne father proffer him, and giveth him to us. And the pistsi. priests, in God's stead, proffer him and give him unto the people, for a remission and absolution of their sins daily, if they by the moving and stirring of the sacrament believe in the body and blood of Christ. giaevedweitif Wherefore ye2 ought of no right to be angry with them scnt\iou0on~ °f the third opinion, though they deny the doctors, where opinion? they seem to say that the sacrament is the very body of P In Day's folio there is a break after the words pardon for ever ; but there is none in the older edition by Stoughton. Whatever led the editor of the folio, supposed to bo Foxe the martyrologist, to make a separate paragraph of the words which intervene between for ever and wherefore, seems also to have led him to suppose that Tyndale had changed his subject ; and consequently to attach this marginal note. When read, as in Stoughton's edition, it is easily seen that Tyndale is continuing his description of what he thought suitable for 'them ofthe second opinion,' that is, tho Lutherans, to say in ex planation of their belief.] P The Lutherans, or consubstantialists.] [3 The error of tho previous margin is continued here. Stough ton's edition is still without a break; and Tyndale is here speaking to the Lutherans, as he was speaking for them in the previous sentence. He is now reminding the Lutherans that they, as well as those of the third opinion, held in what have since been called the reformed churches, were alike obliged to deny what the old doctors seem some- OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 371 Christ; as they4 be not angry with you, when ye deny them5, where they as earnestly affirm that it is a sacrifice. Nevertheless they4 answer, that doctors call it a sacrifice only because it is the memorial, the earnest and seal of that ever lasting sacrifice offered once for ah. And even so say they that the doctors called the sacrament the body and blood of ^yc°™fed Christ after the same manner only ; because it is the memo- K6™™. rial, the earnest, and seal of his body and blood, as the use^4"1616" of the scriptures is to call signs by the names of things signified thereby. And unto them of the first opinion I answer, with the same reason, that it is impossible that the sacrament should be a very sacrifice. For neither the sacrifices of the old law which prophesied the sacrificing of Christ, neither yet our redemption, was fulfilled that night. For if the scriptures- and prophecies were then fulfilled, and we then redeemed, Christ died on the morrow in vain ; and false are the apostles ^hth|Jld and evangehsts, that preach his body-breaking and blood- %**r$; shedding under Pontius Pilate, by the persecution of Caiaphas lowing- and Annas, to be our redemption. Moreover, for all the breaking and dividing of the sacra ment of his body among his apostles, his body abode still alive ; and' for all the pouring out of the sacrament of his blood, of the pot into the cup, and out of the cup into the mouths and bellies of his disciples, he bled as fresh on the morrow as though he had bled then nothing at all. He was verily much more easily sacrificed that night, in the breaking and dividing of the bread and pouring out of wine, than he was on the morrow. The sacrament was that night, no doubt, but a description of his passion to come6 ; as it is now a memorial of his passion past. He instituted the manner of the sacrament then, and taught his disciples also that they after understood, when he was risen again, and not then, as they never had capacity to understand him when he spake of his death. For they then imagined carnally of times to affirm. It is not till the opening of the next paragraph that Tyndale reverts to his argument with 'them of the first opinion,' or the Romanists.] P The reformed, or holders of the third opinion.] p The old doctors.] P So R. S. : Day has, passion come. And.] 24—2 372 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND All the doc tors with one accord call the sacrament a sacrifice. Papists should he in different in judgments as protestants are5. Transuhstan- tiation was a word used among the old doctors. An effectual and good ar gument Christ (as the Jews yet do) that Christ should never die, (as he did not, concerning his Godhead,) but should live ever bodily, as he now doth concerning his resurrection. Wherefore, seeing that all the doctors with one accord call the sacrament so earnestly a sacrifice, they1 cannot other wise understand than2 that they3 so say after the use of the scripture only, because it is the memorial of the sacrifice of his death and blood-shedding. Why should they1 then of right be offended, if we4 understand the doctors after the same manner, when they call it his body and blood ; and that they so call it after the use of the scripture, because that it is only a memorial of his body and blood ? As concerning the transubstantiation : I think that such a speech was among the old doctors, though they that came after understood them amiss. Their hearts were gross, through busying themselves too much with worldly business. For the bread and wine are but only bread and wine, till the words of the testament be rehearsed over them ; and then they cease to be any s more bread and wine in the hearts of the true believers : for the heart, after these words once spoken, thinketh only upon the covenant made in the body and blood of Christ, and through faith eateth his body, and drinketh his blood ; though the eyes, and other senses, perceive nothing but bread and wine : as when a man sometime seeketh for a text in the bible, he seeth paper and ink and the figures of letters ; yet his heart not once thinketh of any other thing than on the words and sense of his text. And thereof, no doubt, came up this transubstantiation through false under standing. Another thing is this, none of those wicked heretics which denied Christ to be very God, or any of them that denied Christ to be man or to have a very body, save a fantastical P Tho Lutherans.] P So R. S. : Day has tliem instead of than, and inserts but, between only and because.] p The old doctors.] P The holders ofthe third opinion.] [5 The editor of Day's edition has again misunderstood his author; failing to perceive that in this paragraph Tyndale speaks again of consubstantiation, as he avowedly returns to transubstantiation in tho next.] [6 So Day: R. S. has begin to be no, instead of cease to be any.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 373 body, did cast the true believers in the teeth at any time, of the faith of Christ's body present in their sacrament every where ; which thing it is not like but they would have done, if that opinion had then been a general article of the faith. Neither was there any heresy, or diversity of opinion, or The pope disputing about the matter, till the pope had gathered a council u^™1^-™" to confirm this transubstantiation : wherefore it is most likely p™^j ^ that this opinion came up by them of latter days. throw of the Furthermore, all the law and prophets seek'', all that crS't^sa^ Christ did or can yet do, is to bring us to believe in him, crameu ' and in God the Father through him, for the remission of sins ; and to bring us unto that which immediately followeth out of that behef, to love our neighbours for his sake as he loved us. Wherefore if Christ did put his bodily presence in the sacrament, and would we should believe it ; it is done only to bring us to this faith. Now is this faith no where less had, than where that opinion is most strong ; neither so cruelly persecuted of Jew or Turk, as of them that most fervently defend that opinion. True faith maketh a man to love his brother : but that opinion maketh them to hate and slay their brethren, that better believe in Christ than they of that opinion do ; and that murder do they, for fear of losing that they have gotten through that opinion. Item, they of this opinion, instead of teaching us to believe The common ~. . . L, . ° persuasion of in Christ, teach us to serve Christ with bodily service, which raPists- thing is nought else but idolatry. For they preach, that all the ceremonies of the mass are a service to God by reason of the bodily works, to obtain forgiveness of sins thereby, and to deserve and merit therewith. And yet Christ is now a spiritual substance with his Father, having also a spiritual body8; and with the Father to be worshipped, in spirit only. And his service in the spirit is only to believe in him for the remission of sin, to call upon him, and give him thanks, and to love our neighbours for his sake. Now all works done to serve man, and to bring him to this point, to put his trust in Christ, are good and acceptable to God ; but, done for any other purpose, they be idolatry and image-service, and make God an idol or bodily image. P So R. S. ; Day's ed. omits seek.] P So Day: R. S. has, "is now a spirit with his Father, both in body and soul."] 374 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND Mark ix. Papists are cruel perse cutors. The faithful are in good state, though the wicked judge the contrary. Again, seeing the faith of the testament in Christ's blood is the hfe of the righteous, from the beginning of the world to the end ; and forasmuch as the sacrament was instituted only to bring to this life ; now when they which think not the body to be present in the sacrament1 have by the preach ing and confirmation of the sacrament obtained this life or stedfast faith in Christ's blood, and by the daily use of the sacrament are more and more hardened therein, and in the love that springeth thereof ; what reasonable cause have the contrary part (which believe the body present, and bread turned into the very body as flesh, bones, hair, sinews, nails, and all other, as he was put on the cross, of length and quantity, I cannot tell what) to rail on us as heretics, hate, persecute, and slay us most cruelly as enemies ? Christ saith, Qui contra me non est, mecum est, " He that is not against me is with me." Now they that believe in Christ for the remission of their sins, and for his sake love their foes, are not Christ's enemies ; ergo, they be on Christ's side. Why then should they, that boast themselves to be Christ's friends, slay them? Faith in Christ's blood, and in the Father through him, is God's service in the spirit2- And so have they, which believe not the bodily presence, served God a long time, and thereto been holpen by the sacrament. The other part fallen therefrom through preaching3 the body pre sent, serving4 God with bodily service, (which is idolatry, and to make God an idol or image,) in that they trust in the goodness of their works (as they which serve tyrants), and not in the goodness of God through trust in the blood of Christ : ergo, they that believe not the bodily presence (not a little thereto compelled through the wicked idolatry of the contrary belief) are not to be thought so evil as the other would have them seem to be. Paul teacheth, (1 Cor. xiii.) that if a man had ah other p In R. S.'s edition there is a parenthesis between the words sacrament and have, which Day probably omitted as unintelligible. As printed by R. S. the parenthesis is as follows : ' (a thousand ensamples in the scripture concerning their judgment).' Perhaps concerning is a misprint for confirming.] P So R. S. ; but Day, in spirit.] P So R. S. : but Day's text has believing instead of preaching.] P So both R. S. and D. ; but the sense seems to require serve.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 375 gifts that God can give man, and had not charity to love his neighbour, it helpeth not. For all other gifts, and the remis sion in Christ's blood also, are given him of God, to bring him to love his neighbour ; which thing had, a man hath all ; which not had, a man hath nothing. And, Phil. ii. how sweetly and how vehemently conjureth rhu- "• he them to draw all one way, to be of one accord and one mind or sentence; and to do nothing of strife or of vain glory, that is to say, of hate or disdain one of another, or of affection to himself for to seem glorious ; but each to prefer other through meekness, and to have his [own] opinion suspect, and to fear lest he hath not obtained the understand ing; rather than of presumption to his own wit to despise and hate the contrary party, and persecute as a tyrant ! And in the third of the same, Paul saith : " Let as many as be ph«- m. perfect," (that is to say, be truly taught, and know the law truly, and her office, and the office and effect of faith, and know which be good works before God, and what the intent of them is,) " let us," saith he, " so far5 as we be come, proceed in one rule, that we may be of one accord6." Now hitherto Faith only . justifieth, we be all come, and this general rule have we gotten, that what >' is "> faith only justifieth, that is to say, that the sin is forgiven only for Christ's sake ; and again, that our duty is to love our neighbours no less than Christ loved us : wherefore let us proceed forth in this rule, and exhort each other to trust in Christ, and to love each other as Christ did ; and in this, wherein we all agree, let us be wise only and fervent, and strive who shall be greatest and go foremost. And in that7 which is not opened to all parties, let us be meek, sober, and cold ; and keep our wisdom secret to our selves, and abide patiently, till God open it to other also. The cause why the third part say that this word {is) compeheth us not to believe the bodily presence of Christ to be there is this. The Jews (say they) are wont ever to name the memorial and signs of things with the very name P Such is R. S.'s reading; but Day has serve instead of far.] Is Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thuswise minded : and if ye be otherwise minded, I pray God open even this unto you. Nevertheless in that whereunto we are come, let us proceed by one rule, that we may be of one accord. Phil. iii. Tyndale's translation.] L7" So R. S. : but Day has this.] 376 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND Gen. xxxiii. Gen. xxxv. Gen. 1. of the thing signified ; that the very name might the better keep the thing in mind : as when Jacob, Gen. xxxii. turned home again out of Mesopotamia, saw the angels of God come against1 him, he called the place where he saw them Maha- naim2, an host ; because that his posterity in time to come, when they heard the field, which was none host, yet so called, should ask why it was so named, that their elders might thereby have an occasion to teach that Jacob saw there an host of angels. And again in the same chapter, when the angel that wrestled with him had blessed him, and was departed, Jacob called the name of the place Pheniel, God's face; that the people in time to come should ask why it was called God's face, and their elders should answer, because Jacob saw there God face to face, that the name should keep the thing in mind. And again, in the thirty-third, where he had made booths3, or houses of boughs for his beasts, he named the place Suc- coth, that is, booths. Item, Gen. xxxiii. he bought a parcel of land and built there an altar ; and called it, El Eloth Israel 4, The mighty God of Israel. Item, Gen. xxxv. he called the place El Bethel5, The God of Bethel. And Genesis, the last chapter, Joseph held a lamentation for his father seven days, and the people of the country called the name of the place Abel Masrain, Gen. 1. tlie lamentation of the Egyptians. Now the place was not the lamentation ; but so called to keep the lamenta tion in memory. P To come against is, in old English, to come with an opposite motion, whether with, or (as here) without an opposing purpose ; to come so as to face the party spoken of. The word against is used with a similar meaning in Joshua v. 13. " Joshua lifted up his eyes, and behold there stood a man over against him, and Joshua said, Art thou for us ? "J P D^TO- Two camps, or two hosts. For the noun is in the dual number.] P Day, boughtes. R. S. bowthes.] P Hebr. E?^~lt£>*' Vl'^N bii ; or El Elohe Israel ; printed as in the text in R. S. but omitted by Day.] P Hebr. b^FPIl bit- Day omits tho words: 'He called the place El Bethel.'] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 377 Item, Exodus xii. the lamb is called Pesah 6, a passing by; **od. x«. because the angel did pass by the houses and hurted not where it was slain, and the blood stricken on the posts : that the name should keep the thing in memory. Item, Exod. xxix. and Leviticus7, almost everywhere the Exod. xxix. beast offered for sin is called sin; which use of speaking Paul useth, Rom. viii. and 2 Cor. v. and calleth Christ sin; f^^l'- when Christ yet is neither sin nor sinful, but an acceptable offering for sin. And yet he is called our sin, because he bare our sins on his back ; and because our sins are consumed, and made no sin in him, if we will forsake our sins, and believe in Christ for the remission thereof. Christ is also called our righteousness, to certify us that when we have no righteous ness of our own, yet that his righteousness is given us, to make satisfaction for our unrighteousness, if we will believe it. Item, Exodus the xxx. the sin or sin-offering is called Exod. xxx. atonement ; and it was yet but a sign, certifying the con science that the atonement was made, and that God had for given the sin. Item, Judges i. they called the name of a certain city Judg.i. Horma6, as it were an utter destruction; because that they had utterly destroyed man, woman, and child, and all that bare life. Item, Judges xv. the place where Sampson killed men Judg. xv. with an ass's jaw was called Lehi, that is, jaw-bone, to keep the act in mind. Item, Judges xviii. there went a company out of the Judg. xviii. tribe of Dan, and pitched besides Kiriath Jearim, in Judah, and the place was called ever after Mahond Dane9, the host of Dan, only to keep the thing in mind. Item, 1 Kings vi. a great stone, where God slew fifty 1 sam. vi. P Hebr. nD2-] P So R. S.'s edition; but Day has 8, after Leviticus, thus confining the remark to that chapter, where it only occurs in verses 2 and 14. In our present authorised version the Hebr. J"}NJ2nn is translated T " - sin-offering, without distinguishing the word offering by italics.] P Hebr. HD")n 5 from Q-|)-[> to cut off, to extirpate, to lay under a curse.] P So printed in R. S.'s edition. Day omits the imitation of the Hebrew words p T\TO ; which are more closely copied in our au thorised version, Mahaneh-Dan.] 378 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND thousand, was called the great lamentation; insomuch that the text saith, they put the ark on the great lamentation1. 1 sam. vii. Item, 1 Kings vii. Samuel pitched a stone on an end, and called it the help-stone2 ; because God had there holpen them, and given them a great victory of the Phihstines. i Kings xxii. Item, the last of the 3rd of Kings, Sedechias came to Achab with a couple of horns on his head, saying, " With these horns shalt thou slay the Assyrians." He meant not that Achab should take these horns, and gore at the Assyrians ; but would that he should believe only that, as a beast scattereth a cock of hay with his horns, so should Achab scatter the host of the Assyrians with his host. Numb. vi. Item, Numbers the sixth, He that voweth abstinence must let his hair grow, to keep his abstinence in mind ; and when his abstinence is out, he is commanded to shave the head of his abstinence, and to offer such offerings as are there ap pointed, after that he hath shaven off his abstinence. Lo here, the hair is called his abstinence, and is yet but a memory of his abstinence3. Jer. vii. Item, Jerem. vii. the prophet was commanded to shear off his abstinence, and to cast it away : which abstinence is but his hair4. Ezek. xii. j^so, Ezekiel xii. God commanded the prophet to remove with all his goods, after such manner as conquerors carry the people captive from country to country; and when he had done, the Lord said unto him, "This prophecy is the cap tain, or prince, of Jerusalem5;" when yet it was but an ensam ple to him, how he should be served. [i In 1 Sam. vi. 18, the English reader may observe that the words stone o/are in Italics, implying that the Hebrew has only 'the great Abel,' r6l"FHn b2N > or, as Tyndale says, the great lamentation.] t : - ¦• t P Hebr. -ijyn pN , Eben haazer.] p The word in rendered by Tyndale abstinence, and in our autho rised version of Numb. vi. 18. separation, is acknowledged by lexico graphers to have each of those meanings.] p In Jerem. vii. 29, the word rendered hair by our translators is again -|J3 , and therefore, as Tyndale has observed, is strictly no more than abstinence, or separation.] P Ezek. xii. 10. D^ttNTa, WP1 Nttf 22H H"b 3H • Authorised " - T • V - T " " . T ~ version, 'This burden concerneth the prince in Jerusalem;' where the OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 379 Finally, where Matthew and Mark say, " This cup is my a short and blood of the new testament;" Paul and Luke say, " This lection ofthe i former argu- cup is the new testament in my blood." Now must the sense ments- of the words of the two first, Matthew and Mark, be all one with the senses of the words of the two last, Luke and Paul. The words of Luke and Paul are : " This cup is the new tes tament made in my blood," or for my blood's sake. Now the testament is, that his blood was shed for our sins ; but it is impossible that the cup or his blood should be that promise. Wherefore the sense must needs be, that it is thjsjnejnorialandsej^where Matthew and Mark say, " This cup is my blood of the new testament," the sense must needs be also, that it is the memorial and seal thereof; only calling, after the use of the Hebrews, the sign with the name of that which is signified ; that is to say, calling the wine, which only signifieth the blood, with the name of the blood. And then it followeth that the bread is called his body after the same manner, be cause it is the sign of his body. These and like examples move the third part to affirm, that we be not bound to beheve that the bread is the very body of Christ, though it be so called ; nor that the bread is transubstantiated into the body : no more than the things here rehearsed are that they be called, or transubstantiated into the very things which they be called. The other will answer, Though this memorial were not the An objection things whose names they bear, yet it will not follow that it papiste.y ""' should be so here in the sacrament. For they that gave such other names had no power to make the things so to be : but Christ is very God, and hath power to make his body to be every thing and every where. I answer, That God cannot make every of his crea- An answer to tures God too6; neither can it be proved less repugnant7 o^mX' that a creature should be every where, than that he should be God. Moreover, though God, where he appeared to Jacob, had removal of the word in Italics will shew the English reader, that the form of speech is as Tyndale stated; though he has substituted pro phecy for its metaphor, burden.] P So R. S. Too is wanting in Day.] P So R. S., but Day has repugnance.] V 380 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND pitched a stone on an end, and called it God's face ; yet had we not been any more bound to believe that it had been the very face of God, than if Jacob had done it. The almighti- ness of God standeth not in that he is able to do all that our foolish, lewd1 thoughts may imagine. But because all power is his and of him, and that he doth all he will, and hath made all of nought, and can bring all to nought again, and can do all that includeth not contrary to the truth and verity that God hath put in his creatures ; and because he can do things impossible for man, or any other creature to do, or to think how they should be done ; therefore he is called the Lord Almighty. But because to brawl about such possibility or impossibility is the lust of sophisters, and also the desire of the devil to quench the profession of our baptism, and to wipe out the image of Christ out of our hearts, and a thing end less; therefore I count it wickedness to wade forth in it, and to give them that seek it an occasion perpetually to scold. The negative may a man hold, till they can prove the affirmative. Moreover, if bread be the very body of Christ, whether abiding the very body still or transubstantiated, and enjoy the glory of the soul of Christ, and also of the Godhead, it seemeth impossible to be avoided but that Christ was made man and died : also bread, which seemeth to some a great inconvenience2- Howbeit that great promotion3 of bread, and also that high power of priests above ail angels4, I [i Lewd : misled, ignorant. So Frith also uses the word. ' Thou they are of corrupt minds, and lewd as concerning the faith.' Anti thesis of Christ and the pope. In its origin it was the Saxon par ticiple of the verb lsepan, to mislead, or betray.] p Inconvenience : unsuitableness. The text is very obscure. If there be no misprint, it would seem that there must be an ellipsis in the last clause ; and that Tyndale meant to say, ' and also made bread.' R. S.'s editition has a full stop before also; whilst Day has only the colon.] P Proclamation, Day.] P At the close of a council assembled at Rome, in 1099, at which Abp. Anselm and his friend the monk Eadmer were present, pope Urban II. anathematized all such clerks as should consent to do homage to any prince for any ecclesiastical preferment : " Dicens, Nimis execrabile videri manus quas in tantam eminentiam excreverint, ut, quod nemini angelorum concessum est, Deum cuncta creantem suo ministerio creent, et eundem ipsum pro redemptione et salute totius OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 381 amit5 also, to avoid all brawling. But one reason I have, unto which I cleave somewhat, and it is this. All that is between God and man in the scripture is for An excellent 1 argument. man's necessity, and not for any. need that God hath thereof. And other spiritual profit can none have by that faith in the sacrament, than to be taught thereby to believe in Christ our Saviour, and to do good to his neighbour. Now is that be hef and love had as well, and rather better, (as is above proved,) without such faith than with it : ergo, where the scripture compelleth to no such belief, it is wickedness to make it a necessary article of our faith, and to slay them that cannot think that it ought to be believed. Notwithstanding all these reasons, and the damnable idolatry which the papists have committed with the sacra ment, yet, whether they affirm the body and blood to be present with the bread and wine, or the bread and wine to be turned and transubstantiated into the body and blood, I am therewith content (for unity's sake) if they will there cease, and let him be there only to testify and confirm the testa ment or covenant made in Christ's blood and body ; for which cause only Christ instituted the sacrament. But and if they will rage further with their blind reasons of their subtle sophistry and devilish idolatry, and say, where Christ's blood is, there is his body, and where his body is, there is his soul, and where his soul is, there is the6 Godhead and the Trinity, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and there men ought to pray, and say, ' 0 Father, which art present with thy Son Christ, under bread and wine, or in form of bread and wine' — if (I say) they so rave, then as the old prophet for like idolatry denieth God to dwell in the temple, or to have pleasure in sacrifice of blood of goats, sheep and calves ; even so deny I the body of Christ to be any more in the sacra- mundi summi Dei Patris obtutubus offerant, in hanc ignominiam do- trudi ut ancilte fiant earum manuum quae die ac nocte obsccenis con- tagiis inquinantur." — Eadmeri Monachi Cantuar. Hist. Novorum. Edited by J. Selden, London, 1624, Lib. n. p. 53, where however angelorum is misprinted anglorum.] p So R. S.'s edition. Day has admit. As omit from omitto, and admit from admitto, so Tyndale may have employed amit from amitta in its sense of putting aside.] P So R. S.'s edition. Day his.] 382 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND ment, than God was in the golden calves, which Jeroboam set up to be prayed to, the one in Bethel, and the other in Dan : for though God be present everywhere, yet if heaven of heavens cannot compass him to make him a dwelling-place (as the scripture testifieth), and much less the temple that was at Jerusalem, how should he have a dwelling-place in a little wafer or crumb of bread ? God dwelleth not in the temple ; neither did our fathers, which were of the true faith in the old testament, pray to God as present in the temple : but the 1 Kings viii. name of God only was in the temple, 1 Kings viii. and his law and covenants and wonderful deeds were therein written in signs, and were there preached and testified continually of the true priests and prophets unto the people. The fathers of the true faith came thither furthermore, for the fervent love which they had towards the laws and covenants of God. For the which prophets Salomon prayed so earnestly unto the Lord God, saying : " Hear thou, 0 God, in heaven thy dwelling-place, and do all that the stranger calleth to thee for; that all nations of the earth may know thee, and fear thy i Kings vm. name, as do this people Israel, &c." Read the third book of of Kings, the eighth chapter. When God delighted only in the faith of the offerer, which believed in God only for all mercy, taking the sacrifice for a sure token and earnest of the mercy of God, certified by that sign, that God loved them, and was at one with them for Christ's sake to come : as we should be certified by the sacrament of God with us for Christ's death that is past1. And Christ taught us in our prayers to look up to heaven and say, Our Father, which art in heaven ; and he himself in all his prayers did lift up his eyes to heaven to his Father ; and so did he when he insti tuted the sacrament, and rehearsed the words of the covenant Matt. xxvi. over bread and wine, as it is written Matthew xxvi. ; Mark Luke xxii. xiv. ; Luke xxii. ; 1 Cor. xi. ; in these words, " Jesus took bread," &c. Christ, though he affirmed himself to be the Son of God, and his Father to be in him, yet he taught not his disciples to P The expression here seems to be intended for, certified of Ood being with us. R. Stoughton's edition reads, certified by the sacrament of God is with us. The antithesis would be more complete if it were read, As we should be certified, by the sacrament, that God is at one with us, for Christ's death that is past.] 1 Cor. xi. OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 383 direct the prayer to the Father in him, but up to the Father in heaven; neither lift he up his eyes, or prayer, to his Father in the sacrament, but to his Father in heaven. I know divers, and divers men know me, which love me as I do them : yet if I should pray them, when I meet them in the street openly, they would abhor me ; but if I pray them where they be appointed to meet me secretly, they will hear me and accept my request. Even so though God's presence be everywhere, yet will he be prayed to up to the place only where we shall see him, and where he would have us to long for to be. Moreover if I grant you that the blood of Christ is in the cup, it will [not] follow that his body is there also ; neither when I grant that his body is in the bread, or under the form of bread, will it follow that his soul is there too. Christ made the bread the sacrament of his body only : wherefore as the bread is no similitude of2 his blood, so am I not bound or ought to affirm, that his blood is there present. And he did institute the wine to be the sacrament of his blood only. And haply it was red wine, the more lovely3 to represent it. Now as the wine in no similitude doth re present the body, so am I not bound, nor ought to affirm, that his body is there present. Ye say that Christ is so mighty, that though he stood mortal before his disciples' eyes, yet he was able to make the same body that same time to be in the sacrament immortal, and to be under every little piece of bread or of the sacra ment, though it be no greater than a mote in the sun, and that as long, as great, and thick as he stood before them. If he were so mighty, why is he not as mighty to make his blood to be alone, and his body alone ? His blood, body and soul were each alone at his death, and while the body lay in the sepulchre. Finally, Christ said, "This is my4 blood that shall be shed:" ergo, it is true now, This is my blood that was shed. Now the blood of Hales5, and the blood that is in many other P R. S.'s edition, similitude ofthe sacrament of his blood.] P Perhaps, lively, i. e. livelily.] P R. S. his.] P ' There was also another famous imposture discovered at Hales, in Gloucestershire ; where the blood of Christ was pretended to be 384 THE SACRAMENTS OF BAPTISM, AND places, men say is the blood that was shed ; ergo, that blood is in the sacrament, if any be : but I am not bound to believe or ought to affirm, that the blood that is at Hales is animate with the soul of Christ, or that his body is there present. Wherefore, to avoid this endless brawling, which the devil no doubt hath stirred up, to turn the eyes of our souls from the everlasting covenant made us in Christ's blood and body, and to nosel us in idolatry, which is trust and con fidence in false worshipping of God ; and to quench first the faith to Christ-ward, and then the love due to our neighbour ; therefore methinketh that the party that hath professed the faith of Christ, and the love of his neighbour, ought of duty to bear each other, as long as the other opinion is not plain wicked through false idolatry, nor contrary to the salvation that is in Christ, nor against the open and manifest doctrine of Christ and his apostles, nor contrary to the general ar ticles of the faith of the general church of Christ, which are confirmed with open scripture ; in which articles never a true church in any land dissenteth. There be many texts of1 the scripture, and therefore diversely expounded of holy doctors, and taken in contrary senses, when no text hath contrary senses indeed, or more than one single sense : and yet that hurteth not ; neither are the holy doctors therefore heretics, as the exposition destroy- eth not the faith in Christ's blood, nor is contrary to the open scripture or general articles. No more doth it hurt to say shewn in a vial of crystal, which the people sometimes saw, but sometimes they could not see it ; so they were made believe that they were not capable of so signal a favour, as long as they were in mortal sin. And so they continued to make presents, till they bribed heaven to give them the sight of so blessed a relic. This was now discovered to have been the blood of a duck, which they renewed every week ; and the one side of the vial was so thick, that there was no seeing through it, but the other was clear and transparent. And it was so placed near the altar, that one in a secret place behind, could turn either side of it outward. So when they had drained the pilgrims that came thither of all they had brought with them, then they afforded them the favour of turning the clear side outward ; who upon that, went home very well satisfied with their journey, and the expense they had been at.' Bp. Burnet's Hist, of the Reform. B. in. vol. i. p. 242—3. 1st ed.] [i R. S. in.] OF THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST. 385 that the body and blood are not in the sacrament. Neither doth it help to say they be there, but hurt exceedingly, if ye infer that the soul is there too, and that God must be there prayed to ; when, as our kingdom is not on the earth, even so we ought not to direct our prayers to any God in earth, but up where our kingdom is, and whither our Ke- deemer and Saviour is gone, and there sitteth on the right hand of his Father, to pray for us, and to offer our prayers unto his Father, and to make them for his sake acceptable. Neither ought he, that is bound under pain of damnation to love his brother as Christ loved him, to hate, to persecute, and to slay his brother for blind zeal to any opinion, that neither letteth nor hindereth to salvation that is in Christ : as they which pray to God in the sacrament not only do, but also through that opinion, as they have lost love to their neighbours, even so have they lost the true faith in the covenant made in Christ's blood and body : which covenant only is that which saveth. And to testify this, was the sa crament instituted only. [tyndale. J 25 TYNDALE'S ADDRESSES TO THE READERS DIFFERENT PORTIONS OF THE HOLT. SCRIPTURES. 25—2 [INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. Tyndale's earliest Prologue, having been subsequently altered by him for publication as a separate treatise, has already been given to the subscribers to this volume in the text and notes of the Pathway. The next composition of the same class was an epistle 'To the Reader,' at the close of his first published version of the New Testa ment. It is not in Day's folio of his works, but was given to the public by Mr Offor, in his reprint of the New Testament of 1526, from the unique copy of that edition preserved in the Museum of the Baptists' College at Bristol, with which Mr Offor's reprint of the epistle to the Reader has again been collated for this edition by the Rev. T. S. Crisp, president of that college. The other Prologues and Prefaces being in Day's folio of 1573, his text of them has been collated by the editor, either with Tyndale's own editions of his New Testament and Pentateuch, or with the reprints of them in Matthews' Bible of 1536.] TYNDALE'S EPISTLE TO THE READER, SUBJOINED TO HIS FIRST PUBLISHED VERSION OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, 1526. TO THE READER. Give diligence, reader, I exhort thee, that thou come with a pure mind, and, as the scripture saith, with a single eye, unto the words of health and of eternal life; by the which, if we repent and believe them, we are born anew, created afresh, and enjoy the fruits of the blood of Christ : which blood crieth not for vengeance, as the blood of Abel, but hath purchased life, love, favour, grace, blessing, and whatsoever is promised in the scriptures to them that beheve and obey God; and standeth between us and wrath, ven geance, curse, and whatsoever the scripture threateneth against the unbelievers and disobedient, which resist and con sent not in their hearts to the law of God, that it is right, holy, just, and ought so to be. Mark the plain and manifest places of the scriptures, and in doubtful places see thou add no interpretations contrary to them; but (as Paul saith) let all be conformable and agreeing to the faith. Note the difference of the law and of the gospel. The one asketh and requireth, the other pardoneth and forgiveth. The one threateneth, the other promiseth all good things to them that set their trust in Christ only. The gospel signifieth glad tidings, and is nothing but the promises of good things. All is not gospel that is written in the gospel-book : for if the law were away, thou couldest not know what the gospel meant; even as thou couldest not see pardon and grace, except the law rebuked thee, and declared unto thee thy sin, misdeed, and trespass. Repent and believe the gospel, as 390 epistle to the reader saith Christ in the first of Mark. Apply alway the law to thy deeds, whether thou find lust in thine heart to the law- ward ; and so shalt thou no doubt repent, and feel in thyself a certain sorrow, pain, and grief to thine heart, because thou canst not with full lust do the deeds of the law. Apply the gospel, that is to say the promises, unto the deserving of Christ, and to the mercy of God and his truth, and so shalt thou not despair ; but shalt feel God as a kind and merciful father. And his Spirit shall dwell in thee, and shall be strong in thee, and the promises shall be given thee at the last, (though not by and by1, lest thou shouldest forget thy self and be negligent,) and all threatenings shall be forgiven thee for Christ's blood's sake, to whom commit thyself alto gether, without respect either of thy good deeds, or of thy bad. Them that are learned christianly I beseech, forasmuch as I am sure, and my conscience beareth me record, that of a pure intent, singly and faithfully, I have interpreted it, as far forth as God gave me the gift of knowledge and under standing, that the rudeness of the work now at the first time offend them not ; but that they consider how that I had no man to counterfeit, neither was helped with Enghsh of any that had interpreted the same or such like thing in the scripture beforetime. Moreover, even very necessity, and cumbrance (God is record) above strength, which I will not rehearse, lest we should seem to boast ourselves, caused that many things are lacking which necessarily are required. Count it as a thing not having his full shape, but as it were born before his time, even as a thing begun rather than finished. In time to come (if God have appointed us there unto) we will give it his full shape, and put out, if ought be added superfluously, and add to, if ought be overseen through negligence ; and will enforce to bring to compendiousness that which is now translated at the length, and to give light where it is required, and to seek in certain places more proper English, and with a table to expound the words which are not commonly used, and shew how the scripture useth many words which are otherwise understood of the common people, and to help with a declaration where one tongue taketh not another ; and will endeavour ourselves, as it P That is, immediately.] SUBJOINED TO THE NEW TESTAMENT. 391 were, to seethe it better, and to make it more apt for the weak stomachs ; desiring them that are learned, and able, to remember their duty, and to help them thereunto, and to bestow unto the edifying of Christ's body, which is the con gregation of them that believe, those gifts which they have received of God for the same purpose. The grace that cometh of Christ be with them that love him. Amen. THE PREFACE OF MASTER WILLIAM TYNDALE, THAT HE MADE BEFORE THE FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES, CALLED GENESIS. ANN. 1530. JANUA. 17.' When I had translated the New Testament, I added an epistle unto the latter end, in which I desired them that were learned to amend if ought were found amiss. But our malicious and wily hypocrites, which are so stubborn and The reason hard-hearted in their wicked abominations, that it is not pifumake" possible for them to amend any thing at all, (as we see by translation of daily experience, when both their livings and doings are re- into Er,gibh. buked with the truth,) say, some of them, that it is impossible to translate the scripture into English ; some, that it is not lawful for the lay -people to have it in their mother-tongue ; a subtle shift some, that it would make them all heretics ; as it would, no Sergy ,ptopes doubt, from many things which they of long time have falsely evil. taught ; and that is the whole cause wherefore they forbid it, though they other cloaks pretend : and some, or rather every one, say that it would make them rise against the king, P Such is the heading to this preface in Day's folio. Its wording seems to imply, that it was originally composed by Tyndale to go forth with his edition of Genesis, as separately published ; and this preface is, in fact, found prefixed to a Genesis, published without the other parts of the Pentateuch, which is now in the Bodleian, and has this colophon: 'Emprented at Marlboro w in the lande of Hesse, by me, Hans Luft, the yere of oure Lorde jt.cccco.xxx. the xvn dayes of Januarii.' The margins to this preface are all of more recent date than its publication, and were probably composed for Day by John Foxe.] PREFACE TO THE FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES. 393 whom they themselves (unto their damnation) never yet obeyed. And lest the temporal rulers should see their falsehood, if the scripture came to hght, causeth them so to lie. And as for my translation, in which they affirm unto the How the " d papists were lay-people (as I have heard say) to be I wot not how many Te*eddal™,;.th thousand heresies2, so that it cannot be mended or correct; ^enneawon o£ they have yet taken so great pain to examine it, and to com- Testament- pare it unto that they would fain have it, and to their own imaginations and jugghng terms, and to have somewhat to rail at, and under that cloak to blaspheme the truth ; that they might with as little labour (as I suppose) have translated the most part of the bible. For they which in times past The papists were wont to look on no more scripture than they found in to wrest the . ...... scriptures. their Duns3, or such like devilish doctrine, have yet now so narrowly looked on my translation, that there is not so much as one i therein, if it lack a tittle over his head, but they have noted it, and number it unto the ignorant people for an heresy. Finally, in this they be all agreed, to drive you from the knowledge of the scripture, and that ye shall not have the text thereof in the mother-tongue, and to keep the world still in darkness, to the intent they might sit in the consciences of the people, through vain superstition and false doctrine, to satisfy their filthy lusts, their proud ambition, and unsatiable covetousness, and to exalt their own honour above king and emperor, yea, and above God himself. A thousand books had they lever to be put forth against The papists their abominable doings and doctrine, than that the scripture wonderfully _ . . ° , A to have sup- should come to hght. For as long as they may keep that pffi tlie down, they wih so darken the right way with the mist of their sophistry, and so tangle them that either rebuke or despise their abominations, with arguments of philosophy, and with worldly simihtudes and apparent reasons of natural wisdom, and with wresting the scripture unto their own purpose, clean contrary unto the process, order, and meaning of the text; and so delude them in descanting upon it with Asowis abide allegories, and amaze them, expounding it in many senses brightness of before the unlearned lay-people, (when it hath but one simple, cannonS <>>¦*' ^ r > papists abide the light of [2 Bishop Tonstal had said in a sermon that he found 2000 cor- thee°sPel- ruptions or errors in Tyndale's New Test. See Fulke's Defence. Park. Soc. ed. p. 61.] P That is, the works of Duns Scotus.] 394 PREFACE TO THE literal sense, whose light the owls cannot abide,) that, though thou feel in thine heart, and art sure, how that all is false that they say, yet couldst thou not solve their subtle riddles. what first Which thing only moved me to translate the new Testa- Tyndaieto ment. Because I had perceived by experience, how '-that it scripture into was impossible to estabhsh the lay -people in any truth, except the scripture were plainly laid before their eyes in their mother- tongue, that they might see the process, order, and meaning of the text : for else, whatsoever truth is taught them, these enemies of all truth quench it again, partly with the smoke of their bottomless pit, whereof thou readest in Bev. ix. Apocalypse, chap. ix. (that is, with apparent reasons of sophis try, and traditions of their own making, founded without ground of scripture,) and partly in juggling with the text, expounding it in such a sense as is impossible to gather of the text, if thou see the process, order, and meaning thereof. This bishop And e^en in the bishop of London's house I intended to wLLthnenan have done it. For when I was so turmoiled in the country wwchaafter- where I was, that I could no longer dwell there, (the process wshop of whereof were too long here to rehearse,) I this-wise thought in myself : This I suffer because the priests of the country be unlearned ; as God it knoweth, there are a full ignorant sort, which have seen no more Latin than that they read in their portesses and missals, which yet many of them can scarcely read, (except it be Albertus de secretis mulierum, in which yet, though they be never so sorrily learned, they pore day and night, and make notes therein, and ah to teach the mid wives, as they say; andLinwode1, a book of constitutions, to gather tythes, mortuaries, offerings, customs, and other pillage, which they call not theirs, but God's part, and the duty of holy church, to discharge their consciences withal; for they are bound that they shah not diminish, but increase ah things unto the uttermost of their powers ;) and therefore, (because they are thus unlearned, thought I,) when they come The pope's together to the ale-house, which is their preaching-place, they putpitls the affirm that my sayings are heresy. And besides that, they ale-house. p William Lindwood, or Linwood, fellow of Pembroke Hah, Cambridge, and keeper of the privy seal to Henry V. collected and digested the Constitutions of the archbishops of Canterbury, from Stephen Langton to Henry Chicheley. This compilation was printed at Paris in 1605, and is still held in esteem by canonists.] FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES. 395 add to, of their own heads, which I never spake, as the manner is to prolong the tale to short the time withal, and accused me secretly to the chancehor and other the bishop's officers. And, indeed, when I came before the chanceUor, he christ-s threatened me grievously, and reviled me, and rated me as m«wy <£- though I had been a dog ; and laid to my charge whereof ««P9P«S there could be none accuser brought forth, (as their manner ^land is not to bring forth the accuser,) and yet all the priests of the country were the same day there. As I this thought, the bishop of London came to my re- partiality membrance, whom Erasmus (whose tongue maketh of little men of great , learning. gnats great elephants, and lifteth up above the stars whosoever giveth him a httle exhibition,) praiseth exceedingly, among other, in his Annotations on the New Testament, for his great learning2. Then thought I, if I might come to this man's service, I were happy. And so I gat me to London, and, through the acquaintance of my master, came to sir Harry Gilford, the king's grace's comptroller3, and brought him an Oration of Isocrates, which I had translated out of Greek into Enghsh, and desired him to speak unto my lord of Lon don for me ; which he also did, as he shewed me, and willed me to write an epistle to my lord, and to go to him myself; which I also did, and delivered my epistle to a servant of his own, one William Hebilthwayte, a man of mine old acquaint ance. But God (which knoweth what is within hypocrites) how Tyndale saw that I was beguiled, and that that counsel was not the w P This passage has given considerable trouble to former editors of Tyndale, and narrators of his life, because they do not find bishop Tonstal noticed in Erasmus' Annotations till 1527, when he published his fourth edition of them. But Tonstal had gained a reputation for learning and liberality to scholars as early as 1516, as appears from Erasmus' letters to Sir Thomas More, cited by Mr Anderson, p. 38, n. ; and Tyndale says 'praiseth? not had praised, 'in his annotations.' Our author's language does not necessarily mean, that when he sought Tonstal's patronage, in 1523, it was in consequence of Erasmus' pub hshed praise of that prelate.] P Sir Henry Guilford had returned to his native country, after serving with reputation in the wars with the Moors in Spain under Ferdinand and Isabella. He corresponded with Erasmus ; and in the seventh year of Henry VIII. 1519—20, he was made master of the horse for life. Granger's Biog. Hist, of Eng. Vol. I. p. 64. edit. 1769. Quoted by Mr Russell.] 396 PREFACE TO THE next way unto my purpose. And therefore he gat me no favour in my lord's sight. Tyndaie Whereupon my lord answered me, his house was full ; he place mthe0 had more than he could well find ; and advised me to seek in London°s London, where he said I could not lack a service. And so in house* London I abode almost a year, and marked the course of the world, and heard our praters, (I would say our preachers,) how they boasted themselves and their high authority ; and beheld the pomp of our prelates, and how busy they were, as they yet are, to set peace and unity in the world, (though it be not possible for them that walk in darkness to continue long in peace, for they cannot but either stumble or dash themselves at one thing or another that shall clean unquiet all together,) and saw things whereof I defer to speak at this time, and Room understood at the last not only that there was no room in my my'imrs1 lord of London's palace to translate the new Testament, but house for , x , . but nonfto ° * *nere was no place to do it m ah England, as expe- Jfew stae?ti.he rience doth now openly declare. ment. Under what manner, therefore, should I now submit this book to be corrected and amended of them, which can suffer nothing to be well ? Or what protestation should I make in such a matter unto our prelates, those stubborn Nimrods which so mightily fight against God, and resist his Holy Spirit, enforcing with all craft and subtlety to quench the light of the everlasting testament, promises, and appointment made between God and us, and heaping the fierce wrath of God upon all princes and rulers ; mocking them with false feigned names of hypocrisy, and serving their lusts at all points, and dispensing with them even of the very laws of God, of which Christ himself testifieth, Matt, v., that " not so much as one tittle thereof may perish, or be broken ; " and of which the prophet saith, Psalm cxviii., " Thou hast commanded thy laws to be kept" meod', that is, in Hebrew, exceedingly, with all diligence, might, and power ; and have made them so mad with their juggling charms and crafty persuasions, that they think it a full satisfaction for all their wicked lying to tor ment such as tell them truth, and to burn the word of their souls' health, and slay whosoever believe thereon ? SbmSonis Notwithstanding yet I submit this book, and all other P Ps. cxix. (numbered in Vulgate cxviii.) v. 4. l'jtf2 .] FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES. 397 that I have either made or translated, or shall in time to toaii such as come, (if it be God's will that I shall further labour in his selves to God. harvest,) unto all them that submit themselves unto the word of God, to be corrected of them ; yea, and moreover to be disallowed and also burnt, if it seem worthy, when they have examined it with the Hebrew, so that they first put forth of their own translating another that is more correct. PROLOGUES BY WILLIAM TYNDALE SHEWING THE USE OF THE SCRIPTURE, WHICH HE WROTE BEFORE THE FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES. Not the tongue, but thelife, proveth a true gospel ler. The truest touchstone of religion is Christ's gospel. The scripture of God is the sword ofthe Spirit Though a man had a precious jewel and a rich, yet if he wist not the value thereof, nor wherefore it served, he were neither the better nor richer of a straw. Even so, though we read the scripture, and babble of it never so much, yet if we know not the use of it, and wherefore it was given, and what is therein to be sought, it profiteth us nothing at all. It is not enough, therefore, to read and talk of it only, but we must also desire God, day and night in stantly, to open our eyes, and to make us understand and feel wherefore the scripture was given, that we may apply the medicine of the scripture, every man to his own sores ; unless that we intend to be idle disputers, and brawlers about vain words, ever gnawing upon the bitter bark without, and never attaining unto the sweet pith within, and persecuting one another in defending of lewd imaginations and fantasies of our own invention. Paul, in the third of the second epistle to Timothy, saith, " that the scripture is good to teach," (for that ought men to teach, and not dreams of their own making, as the pope doth,) "and also to improve;" for the1 scripture is the touch stone that trieth all doctrines, and by that we know the false from the true. And in the vith to the Ephesians he calleth it " the sword of the Spirit," because it killeth hypocrites, and uttereth and improveth their false inventions. And in the xvth to the Eomans he saith, " All that are written are written for our learning ; that we through patience and com fort of the scripture might have hope :" that is, the ensam- P In the 'Pentateuch corrected' of 1534, which is preserved in the Museum of the Baptists' college, it is, that scripture.] PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF GENESIS. 399 pies that are in the scripture comfort us in ah our tribula tions, and make us to put our trust in God, and patiently to abide his leisure. And in the xth of the first to the Corin thians he bringeth in examples of the scripture to fear us, and to bridle the flesh, that we cast not the yoke of the law of God from off our necks, and fah to lusting and doing of evil. So now the scripture is a light, and sheweth us the true way, both what to do and what to hope for ; and a defence from all error, and a comfort in adversity that we despair not, and feareth us in prosperity that we sin not. Seek therefore in the scripture as thou readest it, *first the law, what God commandeth us to do ; and secondarily, the pro mises, which God promiseth us again, namely in Christ Jesus our Lord. Then seek ensamples, first of comfort, how God Tribulation i-ii n • i • is the gift ot purgeth all them, that submit themselves to walk in his ways, God. in the purgatory of tribulation, delivering them yet at the latter end, and never suffering any of them to perish that cleave fast to his promises. And, finally, note the ensamples which are written to fear the flesh, that we sin not : that is, what we ought to seek how God suffereth the ungodly and wicked sinners that resist mthescrip- . .... tures. God, and refuse to follow him, to continue in their wicked ness; ever waxing worse and worse, until their sin be so sore increased, and so abominable, that if they should longer endure they would corrupt the very elect. But for the elect's sake God sendeth them preachers. Nevertheless they harden their hearts against the truth, and God destroyeth them utterly, and beginneth the world anew2.* This comfort shalt thou evermore find in the plain text and literal sense. Neither is there any story so homely, so rude, yea, or so vile (as it seemeth outward), wherein is P The passage between asterisks is a substitute, in Day's text, for a much longer passage in Tyndale's 'Pentateuch corrected:' but the use of the verb fear, for to cause fear, in the substituted passage, is so peculiarly Tyndale's, as to leave httle doubt that he himself intro duced this change into some later edition of this Prologue to Genesis; and it therefore would not be right to insert here what its author dehberately erased. As, however, the removed passage contains valu able instruction, and was probably only struck out of the Prologue, because it was, in fact, less applicable to Genesis than to most other parts of the narrative portion of the old Testament, the reader will find it at the end of this Prologue.] 400 PROLOGUE TO THE not exceeding great comfort. And when some, which seem to themselves great clerks, say, 'They wot not what more profit is in many gests of the scripture, if they be read with out an allegory, than in a tale of Eobin Hood : ' say thou, a goodly 'That they were written for our consolation and comfort ; that comfort V .P li-ii ttt against de- We despair not, it such hke happen unto us. We be not holier than Noe, though he were once drunk ; neither bet ter beloved than Jacob, though his own son defiled his bed. We be not holier than Lot, though his daughters through ignorance deceived him ; nor, peradventure, holier than those daughters. Neither are we holier than David, though he brake wedlock, and upon the same committed abominable murder. All those men have witness of the scripture that they pleased God, and were good men, both before that those things chanced them, and also after. Nevertheless such things happened them for our ensample, not that we should counterfeit their evil ; but if, while we fight with ourselves, enforcing to walk in the law of God as they did, we yet fall likewise, that we despair not, but come again to the laws of God, and take better hold.' Ensamples We read, since the time of Christ's death, of virgins that oftheirevus => not toboiden have been brought unto the common stews, and there defiled ; us, but to ° fufand'de-1" an^ °^ martyi"s that have been bound, and whores have speration. abused, their bodies. Why? The judgments of God are bottomless. Such things chanced partly for ensamples ; partly, God through sin healeth sin. Pride can neither be healed, nor yet appear, but through such horrible deeds. Peradven ture they were of the pope's sect, and rejoiced fleshly ; think ing that heaven came by deeds, and not by Christ, and that the outward deed justified them and made them holy, and not the inward spirit received by faith, and the consent of the heart unto the laws of God. How we As thou readest, therefore, think that every syllable per- ought to pre- d d i t i>eairves0to"the taineth to thine own self, and suck out the pith of the scnp- the^cr?^ *ure> and arm thyself against all assaults. First note with strong faith the power of God, in creating all of nought ; then mark the grievous fall of Adam, and of us all in him, through the light regarding of the commandment of God. In the ivth chapter, God turneth him unto Abel, and then to his offering, but not to Cain and his offering : where thou seest that though the deeds of the evil appear outwardly as tures, BOOK OF GENESIS. 401 glorious as the deeds of the good, yet in the sight of God, which looketh on the heart, the deed is good because of the man, and not the man good because of his deed. In the vith, God sendeth Noe to preach to the wicked, and giveth them space to repent : they wax hard-hearted, God bringeth them to nought, and yet saveth Noe, even by the same water by which he destroyed them. Mark also what followed the pride of the building of the tower of Babel. Consider how God sendeth forth Abraham out of his own Faith our surest shield country into a strange land, full of wicked people, and gave in aii assaults. him but a bare promise with him, that he would bless him and defend him. Abraham believed, and that word saved and delivered him in all perils : so that we see how that man's hfe is not maintained by bread only, as Christ saith, but much rather by beheving the promises of God. Behold how soberly, and how circumspectly, both Abraham and also Isaac behave themselves among the infidels. Abraham buyeth that which might have been given him for nought, to cut off . occasions. Isaac, when his wells which he had digged were taken from him, giveth room and resisteth not. Moreover, they ear1 and sow, and feed their cattle, and make confedera- ' tions, and take perpetual truce, and do all outward things even as they do which have no faith; for God hath not made us to be idle in this world. Every man must work godly we may not d o d trust in our and truly, to the uttermost of the power that God hath given J^"^^ him ; and yet not trust therein, but in God's word or pro- g^'86 of mise, and God will work with us, and bring that we do to good effect : and then, when our power will extend no fur ther, God's promises will work all alone. How many things also resisted the promises of God to God burthen- -ritii Ti • rt 1 • i i • eu w'tn I"8 Jacob ! And yet Jacob conjureth God with his own pro- promise. mises, saying, " 0 God of my father Abraham, and God of my father Isaac, 0 Lord, which saidest unto me, Return unto thine own country, and unto the place where thou wast born, and I will do thee good ; I am not worthy of the least of those mercies, nor of that truth which thou hast done to thy servant: I went out but with a staff, and come home with two droves : deliver me out of the hands of my brother Esau, for I fear him greatly," &c. And God delivered him, and will likewise all that call unto his promises with a repent- p That is, plough.] r i 26 [TYNDALE.] 402 PROLOGUE TO THE ing heart, were they never so great sinners. Mark also the weak infirmities of the man. He loveth one wife more than another, one son more than another. And see how God purgeth him. Esau threateneth him ; Laban beguileth him ; the beloved wife is long barren ; his daughter is ravished ; his wife is defiled, and that of his own son. Rachel dieth, Joseph is taken away, yea, and, as he supposed, rent of wild beasts. And yet how glorious was his end ! Note the weakness of his children, yea, and the sin of them, and how GnosHbrLth- ^°^ trough ^e^r own wickedness saved them. These en- trldwhS! it samples teach us, that a man is not at once perfect the first pleaseth wm. day he beginneth to live well. They that be strong, there fore, must suffer with the weak, and help to keep them in unity and peace one with another, until they be stronger. Note what the brethren said when they were attached1 in Egypt : " We have verily sinned (said they) against our brother, in that we saw the anguish of his soul when he be sought us, and would not hear him ; and therefore is this c™sdc«nce of tribulation come upon us." By which ensample thou seest CTifmen"' -how ^a* conscience of evil doings findeth men out at last, but namely in tribulation and adversity : there temptation, and also desperation, yea, and the very pains of hell, find us out : there the soul feeleth the fierce wrath of God, and wisheth mountains to fall on her, and to hide her (if it were possible) from the angry face of God. Sstanf aoC" Mark also, how great evils follow of how little an occa- risegreat gjQn> jjmah goeth but forth alone to see the daughters of the country, and how great mischief and trouble followed! Jacob loved but one son more than another, and how grievous murder followed in their hearts ! These are ensamples for our learning, to teach us to walk warily and circumspectly in the world of weak people, that we- give no man occasions of evil. Finally, see what God promised Joseph in his dreams. Those promises accompanied him always, and went down with him even into the deep dungeon, and brought him up again, and never forsook him, till all that was promised was fulfilled, Entries These are ensamples written for our learning (as Paul saith), learning. to teach us to trust in God in the strong fire of tribula tion and purgatory of our flesh ; and that they which sub? P Pent, of 1534, tached: i. e. arrested.] BOOK OF GENESIS. 403 mit themselves to follow God, should note and mark such things : • for their learning and comfort is the fruit of the scripture, and cause why it was written. And with such a purpose to read it, is the way to everlasting' hfe, and to those joyful blessings that are promised unto ah nations in the Seed of Abraham ; which Seed is Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom be honour and praise for ever, and unto God our Father through him. Amen. [The passage mentioned in note 2. p. 399, as forming part of this prologue in its earliest editions, and as having had a few sentences, more closely connected with the subject of Genesis, inserted in its place in Day, stands as follows in Tyndale's Pentateuch of 1534.] Seek therefore in the scripture, as thou readest it, chiefly and above all, the covenants made between God and us; that is to say, the law and commandments which God commandeth us to do ; and then the mercy promised unto all them that submit themselves unto the law. For all the promises throughout the whole scripture do include a cove nant : that is, God bindeth himself to fulfil that mercy unto thee only if thou wilt endeavour thyself to keep his laws ; so that no man hath his part in the mercy of God, save he only that loveth his law, and consenteth that it is righteous and good, and fain would do it, and ever mourneth because he now and then breaketh it through infirmity, or doth it not so perfectly as his heart would. And let love interpret the law, that thou understand this to be the final end of the law, and the whole cause why the law was given ; even to bring thee to the knowledge of God, how that he hath done all things for thee, that thou mightest love him again with ah thine heart, and thy neighbour for his sake as thyself, and as Christ loved thee : because thy neighbour is the son of God also, and created unto his like ness as thou art, and bought with as dear blood as art thou. Whosoever feeleth in his heart that every man ought to love his neighbour as Christ loved him, and consenteth thereto, and enforceth to come thereto, the same only understandeth the law aright, and can interpret it. And he that submitteth 26— 2 404 PROLOGUE TO THE not himself, in the degree he is in, to seek his neighbour's profit as Christ did his, can never understand the law, though it be interpreted to him ; for that love is the light of the law, to understand it by. And behold how righteous, how honest, and how due a thing it is by nature, that every man love his neighbour un- feignedly even as himself, for his Father's sake. For it is the father's great shame and his high displeasure, if one brother hurt another. If one brother be hurt of another, he may not avenge himself, but must complain to his father, or to them that have authority of his father, to rule in his absence. Even so if any of God's children be hurt by any of his brethren, he may not avenge himself with hand or heart. God must avenge. And the governors and ministers of the law that God hath ordained to rule us by, concerning our outward conversation of one with another, they must avenge. If they will not avenge, but rather maintain wrong and be oppressors themselves, then must we tarry patiently till God come, which is ever ready to reap tyrants off the face of the earth, as soon as their sins are ripo. Consider also what wrath, vengeance, and plagues God threateneth to them that are rebellious and disobedient. Then go to and read the stories of the bible for thy learning and comfort, and see every thing practised before thine eyes ; for according to those ensamples shall it go with thee and all men until the world's end: so that into what soever case or state a man may be brought, according to whatsoever ensample of the bible it be, his end shall be ac cording as he there seeth and readeth. As God there warn eth ere he smite, and suffereth long ere he take extreme vengeance, so shall he do with us. As they that turn arc there received to mercy, and they that maliciously resist perish utterly, so shall it be with us. As they that resist the counsel of God perish through their own counsel, so shall it be with us until the world's end. As it went with their kings and rulers, so shall it go with ours. As it was with their common people, so shall it be with ours. As it was with their spiritual officers, so shall it be with ours. As it was with their true prophets, so shall it be with ours until the world's end. As they had ever among them false pro phets and true, and as their false persecuted the true, and BOOK OF GENESIS. 405 moved the princes to slay them, so shall it be with us until the end of the world. As there was among them but a few true-hearted to God, so shall it be among us ; and as their idolatry was, so shall ours be, until the end of the world. All mercy that is shewed there is a promise unto thee, if thou turn to God. And all vengeance and wrath shewed there is threatened to thee, if thou be stubborn and resist. And this learning and comfort shalt thou evermore find in the plain text and literal sense, &c. A TABLE, EXPOUNDING CERTAIN WORDS IN THE FIRST BOOK OF MOSES, CALLED GENESIS. Abrech. Tender father ; or, as some will, Bow the knee1- Ark. A ship made flat, as it were a chest or a coffer. P These two explanations of "ijl^h} , the word proclaimed before Joseph, Gen. xii. 43, are retained in the margin and text of our authorised version. The first is the proper one, if we are to suppose that the four letters are two words, ^") ^^ ; whilst the second might be a correct interpretation, if we are to consider the word as the hiphil imperative of "112 > with the formative servile n changed into X, as occurs in some other instances. The interpretation, 'tender father,' Tyndale could neither have learnt from the Greek Septuagint, nor from Luther's German version, nor from the Latin Vulgate ; which last two have been rashly said to have been the only sources from whence he could translate. The Greek translator has either left the word ^"I^N unnoticed, or has supposed it to be the Egyptian term for a herald. Luther has para phrased it, $er (st JBes EanBes "r/ater, which he may have taken from the Chaldee paraphrast, whose words are H^bl^b K2N Y^- The Vul gate has, Ut omnes coram eo genu flecterent. Modern lexicographers have generally assumed that the word is Egyptian, and have gathered from the Coptic a meaning not remote from 'Bow the knee:' whilst Prof. James Robertson, in his Clavis Pentateuchi, makes Ti^ its root, and supposes the servile ^ to make - T its effect superlative, rendering it, 'most blessed.'] 406 TABLE EXPOUNDING Bisse1- Fine white, whether it be silk or linen. Bless. God's blessings are his gifts : as in the first chap ter he blessed them, saying, " Grow and multiply, and have dominion," &c. And in the ninth chapter he blessed Noah and his sons, and gave them dominion over all beasts, and authority to eat them. And God blessed Abraham with cat tle and other riches. And Jacob desired Esau to receive the blessing which he brought him, that is, the present and gift. God blessed the seventh day ; that is, gave it a pre eminence, that men should rest therein from bodily labour, and learn to know the will of God and his laws, and how to work their works godly all the week after. God also blesseth all nations in Abraham's Seed ; that is, he turneth his love and favour unto them, and giveth them his Spirit and know ledge of the true way, and lust and power to walk therein, and all for Christ's sake, Abraham's son. Cain. So is it written in Hebrew. Notwithstanding, whether we call him Cain, or Cairn, it maketh' no matter, so we understand the meaning. Every land hath his man ner : that we call John, the Welshmen call Evan, the Dutch Haunce. Such difference is between the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin ; and that maketh them that translate out of the Hebrew vary in names from them that translate out of Latin or Greek2. Curse. God's curse is the taking away of his benefits ; as God cursed the earth, and made it barren. So now hun ger, dearth, war, pestilence, and such like, are yet right curses, and signs of the wrath of God unto the unbelievers ; but unto them that know Christ they are very blessings, and that wholesome cross and true purgatory of our flesh, through which all must go that will live godly and be saved: as P The word used by Tyndale in Genesis xii. 42, where the autho rised version has fine linen, and in its margin silk. Tyndale has evidently formed the word from Bvcro-os, which occurs in Luke xvi. 19.] [2 It is thus that, having to follow the Greek in the New Testament, Tyndale wrote, and our authorised version continues, Osee. Gr. 'flenje, in Rom. ix. 25. instead of Hosea, or more correctly Hoshea, for J^li"!. But in Heb. iv. 8, Tyndale writes Josue, not suffering a defect in the Greek alphabet to restrain him from copying the Hebrew name with sufficient closeness to avoid a confusion between the son of Nun and Jesus Christ.] CERTAIN WORDS IN GENESIS. 407 thou readest, Matt. v. " Blessed are they that suffer perse- Ma«- •• cution for righteousness' sake," &c. And Heb. xii. " The Heb. xa. Lord chastiseth whom he loveth ; and scourgeth all the chil dren that he receiveth." Eden. Pleasure. Firmament. The sky3. Faith, is the believing of God's promises, and a sure trust in the goodness and truth of God : which faith justified Abraham, and was the mother of all his good works which he oen. xv. afterwards did. For faith is the goodness of all works in the sight of God. Good works are things of God's command ment, wrought in faith ; and to sew a shoe at the command ment of God, to do thy neighbour service withal, with faith to be saved by Christ, as God promiseth us, is much better than to build an abbey of thine own imagination, trusting to be saved by the feigned works of hypocrites. Jacob robbed Laban his uncle ; Moses robbed the Egyptians ; and Abraham is about to slay and burn his own son : and all are holy works, because they are wrought in faith at God's command ment. To steal, rob, and murder, are no holy works before worldly people ; but unto them that have their trust in God they are holy, when God commandeth them. What God commandeth not, getteth no reward with God. Holy works of men's imaginations receive their reward here, as Christ tes tifieth, Matt. vi. Howbeit, of faith and works I have spoken Matt. vi. abundantly in Mammon. Let him that desireth more seek there. Grace. Favour : as Noah found grace ; that is to say, found favour and love. Ham and Cam all one4. p The rendering of WT1 firmamentum is traceable to the LXX. who have used the equivalent word o-repempa. But the adoption of the word o-repeatpa seems to have sprung from a system of philosophy to which the Pharisees were inclined. It receives no countenance from the Hebrew original, which would be most closely copied by rendering it expanse. Tyndale, adopting the word firmament, which he found in general use, has explained it by sky ; that his readers might understand that strength was not to be taken as any part of the idea attached to his use of the word.] P He means that the Cam, or Cham, of the Vulgate, and the Ham of the English translation, are alike intended for copies of the Hebrew DTI; only differing because the Hebrew letter n has no exact equiva lent in the Roman alphabet.] 408 TABLE EXPOUNDING Jehovah, is God's name ; neither is any creature so called ; and it is as much to say as, One that is of him self, and dependeth of nothing. Moreover, as oft as thou seest LORD in great letters (except there be any error in tbe printing), it is in Hebrew Jehovah, Thou that art; or, He that is1. Marshal. In Hebrew he is called Sartabaim : as thou wouldest say, Lord of the slaughtermen. And though that Tabaim be taken for cooks in many places, (for the cooks did slay the beasts themselves in those days,) yet it may be taken for them that put men to execution also2. And that I thought it should here best signify, inasmuch as he had the oversight of the king's prison, and the king's prisoners, were they never so great men, were under his custody : and there fore I call him chief marshal ; an officer, as it were the lieu tenant of the Tower, or master of the Marshalsea. Gen. xi. xiv. Slime was their mortar, xith chapter; and slime-pits, xivth chapter. That slime was a fatness that oosed out of the earth, hke unto tar; and thou mayest call it cement, if thou wilt. Siloh, after some, is as much to say as sent ; and after some, happy ; and after some, it signifieth Messias3, that is to say, anointed, and that we call Christ after the Greek word. And it is a prophecy of Christ ; for after all the other tribes were in captivity, and their kingdom destroyed, yet the tribe P When Tyndale thus explains Jehovah, he must be understood to mean that if God be addressed by that name, it is like saying, 0 thou Self-existent one ; and when he is spoken of by that name, it is hke saying, The self-existent one.] [2 D^nHEn 1W occurs Gen. xxxvii. 34, and is rendered in our • T - - authorised version, Captain of the guard; whilst the margin gives both of Tyndale's explanations of the word. What he has said of OTQJ2 is in exact agreement with the best lexicographers.] [3 rfw • Gen. xlix. 10. Tyndale's first remark, on Shiloh, is doubtless allusive to the Latin Vulgate ; in which it is rendered Qui mittendus est. But this rendering is indefensible except on the suppo sition that Jerome read Jl, where the ordinary reading is j"j- When he says, ' after some it is equivalent to happy,' he alludes to those who consider the word as a derivative from nbttf • And when TT he alters his expression and says, ' after some it signifieth Messias', ho alludes to the Rabbinical interpreters, who derive it from T'W > secun- dina, and say it means ' his son,' ' the Messiah.'] CERTAIN WORDS IN GENESIS. 409 of Judah had a ruler of the same blood, even unto the coming of Christ : and about the coming of Christ the Ro mans conquered them, and the emperor gave the kingdom of the tribe Judah unto Herod, which was a stranger, even an Edomite, of the generation of Esau. Testament ; that is, an appointment made between God and man, and God's promises. And sacrament is a sign representing such appointment and promises ; as the rainbow representeth the promise made to Noe, that God will no more drown the world. And circumcision representeth the promises of God to Abraham, on the one side ; and that Abraham and his seed should circumcise, and cut off the lusts of their flesh, on the other side, to walk in the ways of the Lord : as baptism, which is come in the room thereof, now signifieth on the one side, how that all that repent and believe are washed in Christ's blood ; and on the other side, how that the same must quench and drown the lusts of the flesh, to follow the steps of Christ. Tyrants. " There were tyrants in the earth in those days, for the sons of God saw the daughters of men," &c. The sons of God were the prophets' children, which, though they succeeded their fathers, fell yet from the right way ; and through falsehood of hypocrisy subdued the world under them, and became tyrants ; as the successors of the apostles have played with us. Vapour. A dewy mist, as the smoke of a seething pot. Walk. To walk with God is to live godly, and to walk in his commandments. Enos walked with God, and was no more seen ; he lived godly, and died. God took him away ; that is, God hid his body as he did Moses and Aaron's, lest haply they should have made an idol of him ; for he was a great preacher and a holy man. Zaphnath Paenea. Words of Egypt are they (as I suppose); and as much to say as, 'a man to whom secret things be opened ;' or 'an expounder of secret things,' as some interpret it4- P irOyS TWH • Gen. xii. 45. The Greek translator in the Sep tuagint has not given an interpretation of these words, but writes them avrix, according to some copies ; VoTopcpavrix, according to others; and these, according to Simons, reconcile the text with 410 TABLE EXPOUNDING CERTAIN WORDS IN GENESIS. That Joseph brought the Egyptians into such a subjec tion, would seem unto some a very cruel deed : howbeit, it was a very equal way ; for they paid but the fifth part of that that grew on the ground, and therewith were they quit of all duties, both of rent, custom, tribute, and toll; and the king therewith found them lords, and all ministers, and defended them. We now pay half so much unto the priests only, beside their other crafty exactions. Then pay we rent yearly, though there grow never so little on the ground ; and yet, when the king calleth, pay we never the less. So that if we look indifferently, their condition was easier than ours ; and but even, a very indifferent way both for the common people, and the king also. See, therefore, that thou look not on the ensamples of the scripture with worldly eyes, lest thou prefer Cain before Abel, Ismael before Isaac, Esau before Jacob, Reuben before Judah, Zarah before Phares, Manasses before Ephraim, and even the worst before the best, as the manner of the world is. two different Coptic dialects. Joh. Simons. Lex. corrected by J. Godf. Eichorn. Halse, 1793. The Latin Vulgate has: Vocavit eum lingua iEgyptiaca, salvatorem mundi; which nearly agrees with Si mon's explanation of the Coptic words. Luther has, flcnncte tfjn ttert jelmlicjen wtlj. So that Tyndale was not guided by any of these translations, in forming his opinion respecting the meaning of these words : and his interpretation has not only been continued in the margin of our authorised version; but has also been adopted and defended by Professor Robertson, who says, on these words, Dictus est (Josephus) iEgyptiace, Occultorum revelator, vel Abditorum index et doctor. Clavis Pentat. No. 1891.] PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF EXODUS. 411 A PROLOGUE INTO THE SECOND BOOK OP MOSES, CALLED EXODUS. Of the preface upon Genesis mayest thou understand Leamhere r A d , how to read how to behave thyself in this book also, and in all other ™* J^f ' books of the scripture. Cleave unto the text and plain story, scripture. and endeavour thyself to search out the meaning of all that is described therein, and the true sense of all manner of speakings of the scripture ; of proverbs, similitudes, and bor rowed speech, whereof I entreated in the end of The Obe dience ; and beware of subtle allegories. And note every thing earnestly, as things pertaining unto thine own heart and soul. For as God used himself unto them of the old Testament, even so shall he unto the world's end use himself unto us which have received his holy scripture, and the testimony of his Son Jesus. As God doth all things here for them that believe his promises, and hearken unto his commandments, ifwehearken and with patience cleave unto him, and walk with him ; even voice of God, . and bend our- so shall he do for us, if we receive the witness of Christ with selves todo 7 his will, he a strong faith, and endure patiently, following his steps. God andhein And on the other side, as they that fell from the promise of otnerwL, he God through unbelief, and from his law and ordinances us^ne8™5 through impatiency of their own lusts, were forsaken of God, unXnttu? , > 1 i i n i im and faithless and so perished ; even so shall we, as many as do likewise, Jews. and as many as mock with the doctrine of Christ, and make a cloak of it to live fleshly, and to follow our lusts. Note thereto, how God is found true at the last; and how, when all is past remedy, and brought into desperation, he then fulfilleth his promises, and that by an abject and a cast away, a despised and a refused person ; yea, and by a way impossible to believe. The cause of all captivity of God's people is this : the world ever hated them for their faith and trust which they have in God ; but in vain, until they fall from the faith of the promises, and love of the law and ordinances of God, and 412 PROLOGUE TO THE The world liketh well all wicked livers and ungodly people. Here is set forth the office of every good person. l^irToodT Put tne*r trust *n h°ty deeds °f t^ieir own nnding, and live whiuhe"0' altogether at their own lust and pleasure, without regard of world say. qq^ Qr reSpect 0f ^gjj. neighbour. Then God forsaketh us, and sendeth us into captivity for our dishonouring of his name and despising of our neighbour. But the world per secuted us for our faith in Christ only, (as the pope now doth,) and not for our wicked living. For in his kingdom thou mayest quietly, and with licence, and under a protection, do whatsoever abomination thy heart lusteth ; but God per secuted us because we abuse his holy testament, and because that, when we know the truth, we follow it not. Note, also, the mighty hand of the Lord, how he playeth with his adversaries, and provoketh them, and stirreth them up a little and a little, and delivereth not his people in an hour ; that both the patience of his elect, and also the worldly wit and wily policy of the wicked, wherewith they do fight against God, might appear. Mark the long-suffering and soft patience of Moses, and how he loveth the people, and is ever between the wrath of God and them, and is ready to live and die with them, and to be put out of the book that God had written for their sakes, (as Paul for his brethren, Rom. ix.) and how he taketh his own wrongs patiently, and never avengeth himself. And make not Moses a figure of Christ, with Rochester1; but an ensample unto all princes, and to all that are in authority, how to rule unto God's pleasure and unto their neighbour's profit. For there is not a perfecter life in this world, both to the honour of God and profit of his neighbour, nor yet a greater cross, than to rule christianly. And of Aaron also see that thou make no figure of Christ, until he come unto his sacrificing ; but an ensample unto all preachers of God's word, that they add nothing unto God's word, or take ought therefrom. Note also, how God sendeth his promise to the people, and Moses confirmeth it with miracles, and the people believe : but when temptation cometh, they fall into unbelief, and few bide standing. Where thou seest that all be not Christians, that will be so cahed, and that the cross trieth the true from the feigned; for if the cross were not, Christ should have E1 That is, after the example of Fisher, bishop of Rochester. See p. 208—9.] Temptationis the trial of true Chris tians. BOOK OF EXODUS. 413 disciples enough. Whereof also thou seest, what an excellent The excci- • ¦ -ii iii-i lencyoffailh gift of God true faith is, and impossible to be had without ^*f^c the Spirit of God. For it is above all natural power, that a man, in time of temptation, when God scourgeth him, should Thore^*om believe then stedfastly how that God loveth him, and careth ^^ dK>"y for him, and hath prepared all good things for him, and that that scourging is an earnest that God hath elect and chosen him. Note how oft Moses stirreth them up to believe and to ^fgf y trust in God, putting them in remembrance alway in time 0f §°odJ'reach- temptation of the miracles and wonders which God had wrought before-time in their eye-sight. How diligently also forbiddeth he all that might withdraw their hearts from God ! To put nought to God's word, to take nought therefrom.; to do only that which is right in the sight of the Lord ; that they should make no manner image, to kneel down before it; SmrteS'th yea, that they should make none altar of hewed stone, for fear £12 ^Jj4 of images ; to flee the heathen idolatries utterly, and to de- imnges- stroy their idols, and cut down their groves where they worshipped ; and that they should not take the daughters of them unto their sons, nor give their daughters to the sons of them : and that whosoever moved any of them to worship The worship. false gods, howsoever nigh of kin he were, they must accuse Srlmage^wL him, and bring him to death ; yea, and wheresoever they Gohd°rredof heard of man, woman, or city that worshipped false gods, they must2 slay them, and destroy the city for ever, and not build it again ; and all because they should Worship nothing but God, nor put confidence in any thing, save in his word. Tea, and how warneth he to beware of witchcraft, sorcery witchcraft, i i sorcery, &e. enchantment, necromancy, and all crafts of the devil, and of G„1dorre'1 of dreamers, soothsayers, and of miracle-doers to destroy his word, and that they should suffer none such to live. Thou wilt haply say, ' They tell a man the truth.' What then ? God will that we care not to know what shall come. He will have us care only to keep his commandments, and to commit all chances unto him. He hath promised to care for us, and to keep us from all evil. All things are in his hand ; he can remedy all things ; and will, for his truth's sake, if we pray him. In his promises only will he have us trust, and there rest, and to seek no farther. [2 So Pent, of 1534. Day has should.] 414 PROLOGUE TO THE rehlars°ethn 'B.oyr a^so doth ^e Prov°lce them to love; ever rehearsing S atadlhty *he benefits of God done to them already, and the godly pro- S'tofea?ovemises that were to come! And how goodly laws of love ioTe'oiud t0 giveth he, to help one another ; and that a man should not neighbour, j^^ yg jjgjg^Qyj. jQ jjjg heart, but love him as himself, Lev. xix. And what a charge giveth he in every place over the poor and needy, over the stranger, friendless and widow! And when he desireth to shew mercy, he rehearseth withal the benefits of God done to them at their need, that they might see a cause, at the least way in God, to shew mercy of very love unto their neighbours at their need. Also there is no law so simple in appearance throughout all the five books of Moses, but that there is a great reason of the making thereof, if a man search diligently. As that a man is forbid to seeth a kid in his mother's milk, moveth us unto compassion, and to be pitiful. As doth also that a man should not offer the sire, or dam, and the young both in God win have one day. (Lev. xxii.) For it might seem a cruel thing, in- cifuitoour asmuch as his mother's milk is, as it were, his blood: where fore God will not have him sod therein; but will have a man shew courtesy upon the very beasts : as in another place he commandeth that we muzzle not the mouth of1 the ox that treadeth out the corn, (which manner of threshing is used in hot countries,) and that because we should much rather not grudge2 to be liberal and kind unto men that do us service. Or haply, God would have no such wanton meat used among his people : for the kid of itself is nourishing, and the goat's milk is restorative ; and both together might be too rank, and therefore forbidden ; or some other like cause there was. ah the cere- Of the ceremonies, sacrifices, and tabernacle, with all his owStament glory an(* pomp, understand that they were not permitted rreTchersof only, but also commanded of God; to lead the people in the wa"to come, shadows of Moses and night of the old testament, until the light of Christ and day of the new testament were come: as children are led in the fantasies of youth, until the dis cretion of man's age be come upon them. And all was done to keep them from idolatry. The tabernacle was ordained to the intent they might [} So Pent, of 1534. D. wants, the mouth of.] [2 Pent, of 1534, has not grudge, which D. wants.] BOOK OF EXODUS. 415 have a place appointed them to do their sacrifices openly in the sight of the people, and namely, of the priests which waited thereon ; that it might be seen that they did all things according to God's word, and not after the idolatry of their own imagination. And the costhness of the tabernacle, and The beauty of 1 • i i ii ill ^e taberna- the beauty also pertained thereunto, that they should see j^™ to nothing so beautiful among the heathen, but that they should J^kf™£J see more beautiful and wonderful at home ; because they J^*6 hea" should not be moved to follow them. And in like manner, the divers fashions of sacrifices and ceremonies was to occupy their minds, that they should have no lust to follow the heathen ; and the multitude of them was, that they should have so much to do in keeping them, that they should have no leisure to imagine other of their own : yea, and that God's word might be thereby in all that they did, that they might have their faith and trust in God, which he cannot have that followeth either his own inven tions, or traditions of men's making, without God's word. Finally : God hath two testaments, the old and the new. God had two The old testament is those temporal promises which God thausfthe made the children of Israel, of a good land, and that he new- would defend them, and of wealth and prosperity, and of temporal blessings, of which thou readest over all the law of Moses, but namely Lev. xxvi. and Deut. xxviii., and the avoiding of all threatenings and curses, of which thou readest likewise every where, but specially in the two books above rehearsed, and the avoiding of all punishment ordained for the transgressors of the law. And the old testament was built altogether upon the keep- Theoiates- ing of the law and ceremonies ; and was the reward of keep- buiituPons . . ,, ...-.„- , ,, x theobserva- mg of them in this life only, and reached no farther than£™ofthe this life and this world : as thou readest, Lev. xviii. " A man that doth them shall live therein ;" which text Paul re- hearseth, Rom. x. and Gal. hi. : that is, he that keepeth them shall have this life glorious, according to all the promises and blessings of the law, and shah avoid both all temporal punish ment of the law, with all the threatenings and cursings also. For neither the law, even of the ten commandments, nor yet iheiawcouid the ceremonies, justified in the heart before God, or purified ""' give "*' unto the life to come : insomuch that Moses at his death, even forty years after the law and ceremonies were given, 416 PROLOGUE TO THE complaineth, saying, " God hath not given you an heart to understand, nor eyes to see, nor ears to hear unto this day." As who should say, God hath given you ceremonies, but ye know not the use of them ; and hath given you a law, but hath not written it in your hearts. Wherefore serveth the law then, if it giveth us no power to do the law ? Paul answereth them, that it was given to utter«of^n! utter sin only' and t0 make ifc aPPear = as a corrosive is laid unto an old sore, not to heal it, but to stir it up, and make the disease alive ; that a man might feel in what jeopardy he is, and how nigh death, and not aware ; and to make a way unto the healing plaister. Even so saith Paul, Gal. iii. " The law was given because of transgression," (that is, to make the sin alive, that it might be felt and seen,) "until the seed came unto whom it was promised :" that is to say, until the children of faith came, or until Christ, that Seed in whom God promised Abraham that all nations of the world should be blessed, came, The law was That is, the law was given to utter sin, death, damnation, given by God t ° ' 7 to shew what an(J curse, and to drive us J unto Christ, in whom forgiveness, 5111 W&S- O ' life, justifying, and blessings were promised ; that we might see so great love of God to us-ward in Christ, that we, hence forth overcome with kindness, might love again, and of love keep the commandments. Now2 he that goeth about to quiet his conscience and to justify himself with the law, doth but heal his wounds with ceremonies fretting corrosives. And he that goeth about to purchase tojustifythe grace with r ceremonies, doth but suck the ale-pole to quench heart, but to °, . *¦ . ^ . signify our his thirst ; inasmuch as the ceremonies were not given to ius- justification ' . by Christ, tify the heart, but to signify the justifying and forgiveness that is in Christ's blood. ceremonies Of the ceremonies, that they justify not, thou readest cannotjus- jje^ ^ ti ^ jg jmp0SsiDie ^hat sull should be done away with the blood of oxen and goats." And of the law thou readest, Gal. iii. "If there had been a law given that could have quickened," or given life, "then had righteousness," or justify ing, " come by the law indeed." Now the law not only quicken- eth not the heart, but also woundeth it with conscience of sin, and ministereth death and damnation unto her, 2 Cor. iii.: [' So Day. Tho Pent, of 1534, wants us.] E2 Pent, of 1534, has so now.] BOOK OF EXODUS. 417 so that she must needs die and be damned, except she find other remedy. So fijir it is off that she is justified, or holpen by the law. The new testament is those everlasting promises which ™enewtes- are made us in Christ the Lord throughout all the scripture. ?^™m^; And that testament is built on faith, and not in works. For {?££ J0 m ln it is not said of that testament, He that worketh shall live ; but, " he that believeth shall live :" as thou readest, John iii. ft God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son, Faith only that none which believe in him should perish, but have life everlasting." And when this testament is preached and believed, the Spirit entereth the heart, and quickeneth it, and giveth her life, and justifieth her. The Spirit also maketh the law a Good works v 1 1 < . 1 1 i i« i/»i i spring out of lively thing in the heart; so that a man bringeth forth good 'h<> love we works of his own accord, without compulsion of the law, with out fear of threatenings or cursings, yea, and without all manner respect or love unto, any temporal pleasure, but of the very power of the Spirit, received through faith, as thou readest, John i. " He gave them power to be the sons of God, in that they believed on his name." And of that power they work ; so that he which hath the Spirit of Christ is now no more a child : he neither learneth nor worketh now any longer for pain of the rod, or for fear of bugs3 or pleasure of apples, but doth ah things of his own corage4; as Christ saith, John vii. "He that believeth where true i n i . t • . faith i-*, there on me shall have rivers of living waters flowing out of his f°£ work* belly:" that is, all good works and all gifts of grace spring abound- out of him naturally, and by their own accord. Thou needest not to wrest good works out of him, as a man would wring Verjuice out of crabs : nay, they flow naturally out of him, as springs out of rocks. The new testament was ever, even from the beginning The new tes- , , , , . ° . ° lament was ot the world. Jb or there were always promises of Christ to ?°m *e . d r beginning. come, by faith in which promises the elect were then justified inwardly before God, as outwardly before the world by keeping of the law and ceremonies. And in conclusion, as thou seest blessings or cursings fol- [3 Bugs are objects of childish or superstitious terror.] [4 In Day, courage. Corage is from the low Latin coragium, the heart and its affections.] [tyndale.] 27 418 PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF EXODUS. low the keeping or breaking of the law of Moses; even so, naturally, do the blessings or cursings follow the keeping or breaking of the law of nature, out of which spring all our our temporal temporal laws. So that, when the people keep the temporal ou^oftneiaw laws of their land, temporal prosperity, and all manner of such temporal blessings as thou readest of in Moses, do accompany them, and fall upon them. And, contrariwise, when they sin unpunished, and when the rulers have no re spect unto natural1 equity or honesty ; then God sendeth his ' curses among them, as hunger, dearth, murrain, baning2, pes tilence, war, oppression, with strange and wonderful diseases, and new kinds of misfortune and evil luck. If any man ask me, seeing that faith justifieth me, 'Why Love coun- I work ? ' Ianswer, 'Love compeheth me.' For as long as selleth the faithful to my soul feeleth what love God hath shewed me in Christ, I work. d cannot but love God again, and his will and commandments, we must not and of love work them, nor can they seem hard unto me. I presume in,, „ _, our weii- think not myself better for my working, nor seek heaven, nor doing, nor d do' > o™erTthat an higher place in heaven, because of it. For a Christian SJ"j^tay: worketh to make his weak brother perfecter, and not to seek ethtoGoTis an higher place in heaven. I compare not myself unto him wardasflie that worketh not. No, he that worketh not to-day, shall have grace to turn and to work to-morrow ; and in the mean season I pity him, and pray for him. If I had wrought the will of God these thousand years, and another had wrought the will of the devil as long, and this day turn and be as well willing to suffer with Christ as I, he hath this day overtaken me, and is as far come as I, and shah have as much reward as I : and I envy him not, but rejoice most of ah, as of lost treasure found. For if I be of God, I have these thousand years suffered to win him, for to come and praise the name of God with me. These thousand years I have prayed, sorrowed, longed, sighed, and sought for that which I have this day found ; and therefore rejoice with ah my might, and praise God for his grace and merey. [J So Pent, of 1534. D. wants natural.] [2 Pent, of 1534, banynge. Day, bannyng. The word is closely connected with bane.] 419 A TABLE, EXPOUNDING CERTAIN WORDS OF THE SECOND BOOK OF MOSES. Albe. A long garment of white linen. Ark. A coffer, or chest, as our shrines, save it was flat; and the sample of our shrines was taken thereof. Booth. An house made of boughs. Brestlap, or brestflap, is such a flap as thou seest in the breast of a cope. Consecrate. To appoint a thing to holy uses. Dedicate. Purify or sanctify. Ephod, is a garment somewhat like an amice ; save the arms came through and it was girded to. (Chap, xxv.) Geeras3. In weight as it were an Enghsh halfpenny, or somewhat more. Heave-offerings. Because they were hoven up before the Lord. House. He made them houses; that is, he made a kindred, or a multitude of people to spring out of them ; as we say the house of David, for the kindred of David. Peace-offering. Offering of thanksgiving of devotion, and not for conscience of sin and trespass. Pollute. Defile. Reconcile. To make at one, and to bring in grace or favour. Sanctify. To cleanse and purify ; to appoint a thing unto holy use3, and to separate from unclean and unholy uses. Sanctuary. A place hallowed and dedicate unto God. Shewbread. Because it was always in the sight and presence of the Lord. (chap, xxv.) Exod, XXVi Tabernacle. A house made tentwise, or as a pavilion. [3 Geeras. j"pj| . According to bishop Cumberland, it would T" weigh very nearly eleven grains, Troy weight. Arbuthnot's Tables of Ancient Coins, ch. v. p. 37, Lond. ed. 1727. It was a small silver piece of money, of the value of three-halfpence. Robertson's Clavis Pentat. No. 2710.] 27—2 420 table expounding words in exodus. Tunicle. Much like the uppermost garment of the deacon. Waive- offering. Because they were waiven in the priest's hands to divers quarters. Worship. By worshipping, whether it be in the old Testament or new, understand the bowing of a man's self upon the ground : as we ofttimes, as we kneel in our prayers, bow ourselves, and lie on our arms and hands, with our face to the ground. *'Of this word, I will be, cometh the name of God, Jehovah, which we interpret Lord; and is as much to say as, I am that I am. (chap, iii.) That I here call a sheep, in Hebrew is a word indifferent to a sheep and a goat both2, (chap, xii.) The Lamb was called passover, that the very name itself should put them in remembrance what it signified ; for the signs that God ordained either signified the benefits done, or promises to come, and were not dumb, as the signs of our dumb god the pope. Jehovah Nissi3. The Lord is he that exalteth me. Exod. xvii. (chap, xvii.) * P The passage between asterisks is not in the Pentateuchs of either 1530 or in 1534, but is in Day's folio.] [2 The word rendered sheep by Tyndale, and lamb in our autho rised version of Exod. xii. is TW > which first occurs in the question of Isaac to his father, Gen. xxii. 7, and is acknowledged by lexicogra phers to be a common term for either sheep or goat.] [3 Jehovah Nissi. 'D3 HliT ¦ Tyndale's interpretation of 103 ¦ • t : differs from the ordinary one, which is my banner, and which supposes it to be the substantive EO , with the pronominal affix, i my. Tyndale has gone back to the root DD3> to be, or make, conspicuous; to glitter, to raise on high.] prologue to the book OF LEVITICUS. 421 A PROLOGUE INTO THE THIRD BOOK OP MOSES CALLED LEVITICUS. The ceremonies which are described in the book follow- Man's wis ing were chiefly ordained of God (as I said in the end of idolatry, u ° d N scattereth, the prologue upon Exodus,) to occupy the minds of that peo- ^j^Jj1^ pie the Israelites, and to keep them from serving of God after the imagination of their own blind zeal and good intent ; that their consciences might be stabhshed, and they sure that they pleased God therein ; which were impossible, if a man did of his own head that which was not commanded of God, nor depended of any appointment made between him and God. Such ceremonies were unto them as an ABC, to ceremonies learn to spell and read; and as a nurse, to feed them with iles andsrae " milk and pap, and to speak unto them after their own capa- goodschooi- i t i i i t iii masters are city, and to lisp the words unto them, according as the babes ^J"^ and children of that age might sound them again. For all that were before Christ were in the infancy and childhood of the world, and saw that sun, which we see openly, but through a cloud, and had but feeble and weak imaginations of Christ, as children have of men's deeds, a few prophets ah things except, which yet described him unto others in sacrifices reveled in cprtjnioni6S and ceremonies, likenesses, riddles, proverbs, and dark andandshadows> • -i n until it strange speaking, until the full age were come, that God Pjfa£etdA.j)-(1 would shew him openly unto the whole world, and deliver s°onejesuShia them from their shadows and cloud-light, and the heathen Christ- out of their dead sleep of stark blind ignorance. And as the shadow vanisheth away at the coming of the light, even so do the ceremonies and sacrifices at the coming of Christ ; and are henceforth no more necessary than a token left in remembrance of a bargain is necessary when the bargain is fulfilled. And though they seem plain childish, yet they be not altogether fruitless ; as the puppets and twenty manner of trifles, which mothers permit unto their young children, be not all in vain. For albeit that such fantasies be permitted small ann to satisfy the children's lusts, yet in that they are the £™0«. 422 prologue to the the?rnchiu mother's gift, and be done in place and time at her com- fove'and1186 mandment, they keep the children in awe, and make them obedience. know ^ne mother, and also make them more apt against a more stronger age to obey in things of greater earnest. cS?Snd ^n^ moreoYer> though sacrifices and ceremonies can be flgoriS to1' no ground or foundation to build upon ; that is, though we chris?!" can prove nought with them, yet when we have once found out Christ and his mysteries, then we may borrow figures, prm"'™-65 that *s to sa7 allegories, similitudes, or examples, to open mSI'pwnfy Christ, and the secrets of God hid in Christ, even unto understand the quick, and to declare them more lively and sensibly with them than with all the words in the world. For similitudes have more virtue and power with them than bare words, and lead a man's wits farther into the pith and marrow and spi ritual understanding of the thing, than all the words that can be imagined. And though also that all the ceremonies and sacrifices have, as it were, a star-light of Christ, yet some some cere- there be that have, as it were, the light of the broad day, a monies con- ( 7 o d ; s^meandpro- ^*^e before the sun-rising ; and express him, and the cir- trine!6 doo~ cumstances and virtue of his death so plainly, as if we should play his passion on a scaffold, or in a stage-play, openly be fore the eyes of the people ; as the scape-goat, the brasen serpent, the ox burnt without the host, the passover lamb, &c. : oSeJ to insomuca tnat I am ^Hy persuaded, and cannot but believe, faith.™ our that God had shewed Moses the secrets of Christ, and the very manner of his death beforehand, and commanded him to ordain them for the confirmation of our faith, which are now in the clear day-light. And I believe also that the pro phets, which followed Moses to confirm his prophecies, and to maintain his doctrine unto Christ's coming, were moved by wera'openfd such things to search farther of Christ's secrets. And though but to a few. qoci wouid not have the secrets of Christ generally known, save unto a few familiar friends, which in that infancy he made of man's wit to help the other babes ; yet as they had a general promise that one of the seed of Abraham should come and bless them, even so they had a general faith that God would by the same man save them, though they wist not by what means : as the very apostles, when it was oft told them, yet they could never comprehend it, till it was fulfilled in deed. nils of them- ¦^n<* beyond all this, their sacrifices and ceremonies, as book or Leviticus. 423 far forth as the promises annexed unto them extend, so far selves saved forth they saved them and justified them, and stood them in in God's d ^ promise. the same stead as our sacraments do us ; not by the power j of the sacrifice or deed itself, but by the virtue of the faith in the promise, which the sacrifice or ceremony preached, and whereof it was a token or sign. For the ceremonies and sacrifices were left with them, and commanded them, to keep the promise in remembrance, and to wake up their faith : as it is not enough to send many on errands, and to tell them what they shall do ; but they must have a remembrance with them, and it be but a ring of a rush about one of their fingers; and as it is not enough to make a bargain with words only, but we must put thereto an oath, and give earnest to confirm the faith of the person with whom it is made ; and in hke manner if a man promise, whatsoever trifle our nature is it be, it is not believed except he hold up his finger also; ^e must be such is the weakness of the world : and therefore Christ him- outwardsigns and self used oftentimes divers ceremonies in curing the sick, to t°feens- stir up their faith withal. As for example : it was not the blood of the lamb that saved them in Egypt, when the angel smote the Egyptians, but the mercy of God and his truth, whereof that blood was a token and remembrance, to stir up their faiths withal. For though God make a promise, yet it No man is saveth none finally but them that long for it, and pray God GorPfprl with a strong faith to fulfil it, for his mercy and truth only, 1™"^^, and knowledge their unworthiness. And even so our sacra- sacraments ments (if they be truly ministered) preach Christ unto us, '««! Srpro- and lead our faiths unto Christ ; by which faith our sins are done away, and not by the deed or work of the sacrament. For as it was impossible that the blood of calves should put away sin ; even so is it impossible that the water of the river should wash our hearts. Nevertheless the sacraments cleanse sacraments us, and absolve us of our sins, as the priests do in preaching toed preach .. . . „ . r a unto us re- ot repentance and faith, for which cause either other1 0f I,cnt£!nceaf ¦*¦ our sins. them were ordained; but if they preach not, whether it be the priest or the sacrament, so profit they not. And if a man allege Christ, John in the iiird chapter, say ing, " Except a man be born again of water and of the Holy Ghost, he cannot see the kingdom of God," and will there fore that the Holy Ghost be present in the water, and there- P Either other; i. e. both the one and" the other.] 424 prologue to the fore the very deed or work doth put away sin; then I will send him unto Paul, which asketh his Galatians, whether they received the Holy Ghost by the deed of the law, or by Not naked or preaching of faith ; and there concludeth that tbe Holy Ghost dumb cere- x o ' ^ pp. . \ p p - theHoi but accompanieth the preaching of faith, and with the word of faith thrShfaith entereth the heart and purgeth it : which thou mayest also amy'slns. understand by St Paul saying, " Ye are born anew out of the water through the word." So now if baptism preach me the washing in Christ's blood, so doth the Holy Ghost accompany it ; and that deed of preaching through faith doth put away my sins. For the Holy Ghost is no dumb God, nor no God that goeth a mumming. If a man say of the sacrament of Christ's body and blood, that it is a sacrifice as well for the dead as for the quick, and therefore the very deed itself jus- The differ- tifieth and putteth away sin ; I answer, that a sacrifice is the enee between x d > > andTicra- slaying of the body of a beast, or a man : wherefore, if it be ment- a sacrifice, then is Christ's body there slain, and his blood there shed ; but that is not so. And therefore it is properly no sacrifice, but a sacrament, and a memorial of that ever lasting sacrifice once for all, which he offered upon the cross now upon a fifteen hundred years ago ; and preacheth only in what state unto them that are alive. And as for them that be dead, we die, m the g m # same we shaii jt is as profitable unto them as is a candle in a lanthern with- rise again, x vationorsal" out Hght unto them that walk by the way in dark night ; and damnation. ag ^e gospel song in Latin is unto them that understand none at all, and as a sermon preached to him that is dead, and heareth it not. It preacheth unto them that are alive only : for they that be dead, if they died in the faith which that sacrament preacheth, they be safe, and are past all jeopardy. For when they were alive, their hearts loved the law of God, and therefore sinned not, and were sorry that their members sinned, and ever moved to sin ; and therefore The sacra- through faith it was forgiven them. And now their sinful ments are ° ° unto the dead members be dead, so that they can now sin no more; where- )io sacra- 7 d ' ments at aii. fore jt is unto them that be dead neither sacrament nor sacraments sacrifice. But under the pretence of their soul-health, it is abused by the -1 fte'ey- a servant unto our spiritualty's holy covetousness ; and an extortioner ; and a builder of abbeys, colleges, chauntries and cathedral churches, with false-gotten goods; a pickpurse, a poller1, and a bottomless bag. P Poller; spelt in Day, polar ; a plunderer.] BOOK OF LEVITICUS. 425 Some man would haply say, that the prayers of the The papists r * . • i, havehadno mass help much, not the living only, but also the dead. ™dall0f^dend Of the hot fire of their fervent prayer, which consumeth^perofthe faster than all the world is able to bring sacrifice, I have said sufficiently in other places. Howbeit it is not possible Hypocrites- to bring me in belief that the prayer, which helpeth her "«£« p™fit own master unto no virtue, should purchase me the forgive- X.any man ness of sins. If I saw that their prayers had obtained them grace to live such a life as God's word did not rebuke, then could I soon be borne in hand that, whatsoever they asked of God, their prayers should not be in vain. But now Those that x d _ are enemies what good can he wish me in his prayers, that envieth me to?j£jdwj^e Christ, the food and the hfe of my soul? What good can™*«God he wish me, whose heart cleaveth asunder for pain, when people- I am taught to repent of my evil? Furthermore, because that few know the use of the old Testament, and the most part think it nothing necessary but to make allegories, which they feign every man after his own brain at all wild adventure, without any certain rule ; there fore (though I have spoken of them in another place2,) yet, lest the book come not to all men's hands that shall read this, I wih speak of them here also a word or twain. We had need to take heed every where that we be not Allegories are d to be well beguiled with false allegories, whether they be drawn out of ™|^eadnd the new Testament or the old, either out of any other story, or of the creatures of the world, but namely in this book. Here a man had need to put on ah his spectacles, and to arm The greatest ,. ,p . ..... .. cause of the himself against invisible spirits. decay ?f faith o x ^ and blindness First, allegories prove nothing ; and by allegories under- in"™e were stand examples or similitudes borrowed of strange matters, t^J-f^ aI" and of another thing than that thou entreatest of. As though circumcision be a figure of baptism, yet thou canst not prove baptism by circumcision. For this argument were very feeble : How aiiego- 1 t i- • ? 1 1 • 1 riesaret°be the Israelites were circumcised, therefore we must be baptized, understood. And in hke manner, though the offering of Isaac were a figure or ensample of the resurrection, yet is this argument naught: Abraham would have offered Isaac, but God de livered him from death; therefore we shall rise again; and so forth in all other. But the very use of allegories is to declare and open aTnerishtu" do jr of allegories. , [2 In his treatise, On the Obedience of a Christian Man, p. 303 — 7.] • 426 PROLOGUE TO THE text, that it may be the better perceived and understood. As when I have a clear text of Christ and the apostles, that I must be baptized, then I may borrow an example of circumcision to express the nature, power, and fruit, or effect of baptism. For as circumcision was unto them a common badge, signifying that they were all soldiers of God, to war his war, and separating them from all other nations, disobe- Baptismis dient unto God : even so baptism is our common badge, and the common x . . badge of an sure earnest and perpetual memorial, that we pertain unto true profes- x x ¦ ' x sors of ciirist. Christ, and are separated from all that are not Christ's. And as circumcision was a token certifying them that they were received unto the favour of God, and their sins forgiven them ; even so baptism certifieth us that we are washed in the blood of Christ, and received to favour for his sake : and as circum cision signified unto them the cutting away of their own lusts, and slaying of their free-will, as they cah it, to follow the will Baptism of God ; even so baptism signifieth unto us repentance, and the oef*sintance mortifying of our unruly members and body of sin, to walk in a new life, and so forth. w^wrThei - -^n(^ likewise, though that the saving of Noe, and of though the them that were with him in the ship, through water, is a h p'urifieth1"1 figure, that is to say an example and likeness, of baptism, as Peter maketh it, (1 Pet. iii.) yet I cannot prove baptism therewith, save describe it only. For as the ship saved them in the water through faith, in that they believed God, and as the other that would not believe Noe perished; even so baptism saveth us through the word of faith which it preacheth, when all the world of the unbelieving perish. And Paul (1 Cor. x.) maketh the sea and the cloud a figure of baptism ; by which, and a thousand more, I might declare it, but not prove it. Paul also in the said place maketh the rock, out of which Moses brought water unto the children of Israel, a figure or ensample of Christ ; not to prove Christ How^christ (for that were impossible,) but to describe Christ only ; even oiTTcsti"10 as Christ himself (John iii.) borroweth a similitude or figure Se plain 0I" the brasen serpent, to lead Nicodemus from his earthly thlnexw of imagination into the spiritual understanding of Christ, say- ing : "As Moses lifted up a serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up, that none that believe in him perish, but have everlasting life." By which similitude the virtue of Christ's death is better described than thou couldest Testament. BOOK OF LEVITICUS. 427 declare it with a thousand words. For as those murmurers against God, as soon as they repented, were healed of their deadly wounds, through looking on the brasen serpent only, without medicine or any other help, yea, and without any other reason but that God hath said it should be so ; and not to murmur again, but to leave their murmuring : even so all that repent, and believe in Christ, are saved from everlasting death, of pure grace, without, and before, their good works ; and not to sin again, but to fight against sin, and henceforth to sin no more. Even so with the ceremonies of this book thou canst prove nothing, save describe and declare only the putting away of our sins through the death of Christ. For Christ is Aaron and Aaron's sons, and all that offer the sacrifice to purge sin. And Christ is all manner offering that is offered : he is the ox, the sheep, the goat, the kid, and lamb ; he is the ox that is burnt without the host, and the scape-goat that carried ah the sin of the people away into the wilderness : for as they purged the people from their worldly uncleannesses through blood of the sacrifices, even so doth Christ purge us from the uncleannesses of everlasting death with his own blood; and as their worldly sins could no otherwise be purged, than by blood of sacrifices, even so can our sins be no otherwise forgiven than through the blood of Christ. Ah the deeds in ourduty is ° ° , . to do good the world, save the blood of Christ, can purchase no forgive- ^^J' ness of sins ; for our deeds do but help our neighbour, and whea{j^1^t mortify the flesh, and help that we sin no more : but and if aaal^- we have sinned, it must be freely forgiven through the blood of Christ, or remain for ever. And in like manner of the lepers thou canst prove nothing : a good ex- p . -, ii«i ample taken thou canst never conjure out confession thence, howbeit thou0'"161^618- hast an handsome example there to open the binding and loosing of our priests with the key of God's word ; for as they made no man a leper, even so ours have no power to command any man to be in sin, or to go to purgatory or hell. And therefore (inasmuch as binding and loosing is one power) as those priests healed no man ; even so ours cannot of their invisible and dumb power drive any man's sins away, or de liver him from hell or feigned purgatory. Howbeit if they The true . P preaching of preached God's word purely, which is the authority that Christ J*™rf gave them, then they should bind and loose, kill and make eSnscSs. 428 PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF LEVITICUS. alive again, make unclean and clean again, and send to hell and fetch thence again; so mighty is God's word. For if they preached the law of God, they should bind the consciences of sinners with the bonds of the pains of hell, and bring them unto repentance : and then if they preached unto them the mercy that is in Christ, they should loose them and quiet their raging consciences, and certify them of the favour of God, and that their sins be forgiven. in allegories Finally, beware of allegories ; for there is not a more is both noney ,, ,. , andgaii, that handsome or apt thing to beguile withal than an allegory; anfelif11 nor a more subtle and pestilent thing in the world to per suade a false matter, than an allegory. And contrariwise; there is not a better, vebementer, or mightier thing to make a man understand withal, than an allegory. For allegories make a man quick-witted, and print wisdom in him, and make it to abide, where bare words go but in at the one ear, and out at the other. As this, with such like sayings : ' Put salt to all your sacrifices,' instead of this sentence, ' Do all your deeds with discretion,' greeteth ' and biteth (if it be understood) more than plain words. And when I say, instead of these words, 'Boast not yourself of your good deeds,' ' Eat not the blood nor the fat of your sacrifice ;' there is as great difference between them as there is distance ah good between heaven and earth. For the life and beauty of all good God's work- deeds is of God, and we are but the carrion-lean ; we are only manship, and ' d menijwtee-" the instrument whereby God worketh only, but the power is thern.dottl his : as God created Paul anew, poured his wisdom into him, gave him might, and promised him that his grace should never fail him, &c, and all without deservings, except that murdering the saints, and malting them curse and rail on Christ, be meritorious. Now, as it is death to eat the blood or fat of any sacrifice, is it not (think ye) damnable to rob God of his honour, and to glorify myself with his honour ? P So Day. The word intended by Tyndale was probably grideth; used by Spenser for pkrceth.] PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF NUMBERS. 429 THE PROLOGUE INTO THE FOURTH BOOK OF MOSES CALLED NUMERI, In the second and third book they received the law ; and Free-wiii and , . /-vp i ¦ i unbelief were in this fourth they begin to work and to practise. Of which J};^0^ our practising ye see many good ensamples of unbelief, and what forefathers. free-will doth, when she taketh in hand to keep the law of her own power, without help of faith in the promises of God; bow she leaveth her masters' carcases by the way in the wilderness, and bringeth them not into the land of rest. " Why could they not enter in ? Because of their unbelief." (Heb. iii.) For had they believed, so had they been under grace, and their old sins had been forgiven them ; and power should have been given them to have fulfilled the law thence forth, and they should have been kept from all temptations that had been too strong for them. For it is written, (John i.) " He gave them power to be the sons of God, through believ- Then cannot ing in his name." Now to be the son of God is to love God children of i • • p God> wnich and his commandments, and to walk in his way, after the en- put more d 7 trust m their sample of his Son Christ. But these people took upon them J^^l to work without faith, as thou seest in the xivth of this book, Christ?fJesus where they would fight, and also did, without the word of promise ; even when they were warned that they should not. And in the xvith again, they would please God with their holy, faithless works, (for where God's word is not, there can be no faith ;) but the fire of God consumed their holy works, as it did Nadab and Abihu. (Levit. x.) And from these un believers turn thine eyes unto the Pharisees, which, before the coming of Christ in his flesh, had laid the foundation of free-will after the same ensample : whereon they built holy Faithless works after their own imagination, without faith of the word, w° so fervently that for the great zeal of them they slew the king of ah holy works, and the lord of free-will ; which only through his grace maketh the will free, and looseth her from bondage of sin, - and giveth her love and lust unto the laws of God, and power to fulfil them. And so through their holy The Phari- *' sees by their 430 PROLOGUE TO THE free-will ex cluded them selves from the salvation in Christ Blasphemy to Christ's death. O subtle foxes! through poverty made themselves lords of all. Wilful chas tity is wilful wickedness. The papists wilful obe dience is common dis obedience to all princes. works done by the power of free-will, they excluded them selves out of the holy rest of forgiveness of sins by faith in the blood of Christ. And then look on our hypocrites, which in like manner, following the doctrine of Aristotle, and other heathen pagans, have against all the scripture set up free-will again; unto whose power they ascribe the keeping of the commandments of God. For they have set up wilful poverty of another manner than any is commanded of God : and, the chastity of matrimony utterly defied, they have set up another wilful chastity not required of God, which they swear, vow, and profess to give God, whether he will give it them or no ; and compel all their disciples thereunto, saying that it is in the power of every man's free-will to observe it, contrary to Christ and his apostle Paul. And, the obedience of God and man excluded, they have vowed another wilful obedience1, condemned of all the scrip ture ; which they wih yet give God, whether he will or will not. And what is become of their wilful poverty ? hath it not robbed the whole world, and brought all under them? Can there be either king, or emperor, or of whatsoever de gree it be, except he will hold of them, and be sworn unto them to be their servant, to go and come at their lust, and to defend their quarrels, be they false or true ? Their wilful poverty hath already eaten up the whole world, and is yet still greedier than ever it was, insomuch that ten worlds more were not enough to satisfy the hunger thereof. Moreover, besides daily corrupting of other men's wives and open whoredom, unto what abominations, too filthy to be spoken of, hath their voluntary chastity brought them ! And as for their wilful obedience, what is it but the dis obedience and the defiance both of ah the laws of God and man ; insomuch that if any prince begin to execute any law of man upon them, they curse him unto the bottom of hell, and proclaim him no right king, and that his lords ought no longer to obey him ; and interdict his common people, as they were heathen Turks or Saracens ? And if any man preach I1 He means the vow of obedience to their monastic superior, made by those who joined any monastic order; and the oath of obedience to the pope, taken by the ecclesiastics.] BOOK OF NUMBERS. 431 them God's law, him they make an heretic and burn him to ashes. And instead of God's law and man's, they have set up one of their own imagination, which they observe with dispensations. And yet in these works they have so great confidence, 0o'urs£i!ht- that they not only trust to be saved thereby, and to be J^™* not higher in heaven than they that be saved through Christ, through1"1' but also promise to all other forgiveness of their sins through wood llom the merits of the same ; wherein they rest, and teach other to cimst. rest also, excluding the whole world from the rest of forgive ness of sins through faith in Christ's blood. And now, seeing that faith only letteth a man in unto rest, Faith only and unbelief excludeth him, what is the cause of this unbehef? *° °%is'. and unbelief Verily, no sin that the world seeth, but a pope-holiness, and a f^nf ciuS righteousness of their own imagination. As Paul saith, Rom. x. they be ignorant of the righteousness wherewith God j'us- tifieth, and have set up a righteousness of their own making, through which they be disobedient unto the righteousness of God, And Christ rebuketh not the Pharisees for gross sins chnstre- which the world saw, but for those holy deeds which so i*™?*8 for d their holy bleared the eyes of the world, that they were taken as gods; ^"S"' even for long prayers, for fasting, for tithing so diligently that they left not so much as their herbs untithed, for their cleanness in washing before meat, and for washing of cups, dishes, and all manner vessels, for building the prophets' sepulchres, and for keeping the holy day, and for turning the heathen unto the faith, and for giving of alms. For unto The Pharisees such holy deeds they ascribed righteousness, and therefore s"" '" when the righteousness of God was preached unto them they ^iftn could not but persecute it, the devil was so strong in them: Christ31 of which thing Christ well describeth, (Luke xi.) saying, " That after the devil is cast out, he cometh again,- and findeth his house swept, and made gay, and then taketh seven worse than himself and dweheth therein ; and so is the end of that man worse than the beginning." That is, when they be a little cleansed from gross sins which the world seeth, and then made gay in their own sight with the righteousness of tra ditions, then cometh seven, that is to say, the whole power Thejustifyin. of the devil: for seven with the Hebrews signifieth a mul- fSS? the ' titude without number, and the extremity of a thing, and is a ouTy'SSita speech borrowed (I suppose) out of Leviticus, where is so oft 432 PROLOGUE, TO THE mention made of seven. Where I would say, I will punish. thee, that all the world shall take an ensample of thee ; there the Jew would say, " I will circumcise thee or baptize thee what is seven times." And so here by seven is meant all the devils meant in the t * tniSPworrdby °^ ne^' an(^ a^ the might and power of the devil. For unto seven times. wnat further blindness could all the devils in hell bring them, than to make them believe that they were j'ustified through their own good works ? For when they once believed that they were purged from their sins, and made righteous through their own holy works, what room was there left for the ^Sthlmore righteousness that is in Christ's blood-shedding ? And there- nheessrisbrSd" fore when they be fallen into this blindness, they cannot but more they hate and persecute the light. And the more clear and evi- christ'and dently their deeds be rebuked, the furiouser and maliciouser his gospel. , " , blind are they, until they break out into open blasphemy and sinning against the Holy Ghost, which is the malicious perse cuting of the clear truth, so manifestly proved that they can not once hish1 against it : as the Pharisees persecuted Christ, trfth^phart because he rebuked their holy deeds ; and when he proved Srhfe^o*6 his doctrine with the scripture and miracles, yet though they aorwPeuPagree. could not improve him, nor reason against him, they taught that the scripture must have some other meaning, because his interpretation undermined their foundation, and plucked up by the roots the sects which they had planted ; and they ascribed also his miracles to the devil. And in like manner, though our hypocrites cannot deny but this is the scripture, yet be cause there can be no other sense gathered thereof, but that overthroweth their buildings, therefore they ever think that it hath some other meaning than as the words sound; and that no man understandeth it, or understood it since the time Df the apostles. Or if they think that some that wrote upon it, since the apostles, understood it, they yet think that we, in hke manner as we understand not the text itself, so we understand not the meaning of the words of that doctor. The papists For when thou layest the justifying of holy works, and cannot away . , . . „ / „ „ . . , , i^j with justia- deniest the mstifying of faith, how canst thou understand cation by d d o ' faith. gt p^ peter, John, and the Acts of the apostles, or any scripture at all, seeing the justifying of faith is almost all that they intend to prove ? Of vows. Finally, concerning vows, whereof thou readest in the I1 To hish, is to make an insulting objection.] BOOK OF NUMBERS. 433 xxxth chapter, there may be many questions, whereunto I answer shortly, that we ought to put salt to ah our offer ings ; that is, we ought to minister knowledge in all our works, and to do nothing whereof we could not give a reason out of God's words. We be now in the day-light, and all the secrets of God, and all his counsel and will is opened unto us ; and he that was promised should come and bless us, is come already, and hath shed his blood for us, and hath blessed lis with all manner blessings, and hath obtained all grace for us, and in him we have all. Wherefore God henceforth will Godaccept- receive no more sacrifices of beasts of us, as thou readest, Heb. none other 7 sacrifice but x. If thou burn unto God the blood or fat of beasts, to ob- ggj*^8 tain forgiveness of sins thereby, or that God should the better Son- hear thy request, then thou dost wrong unto the blood of Christ, and Christ unto thee is dead in vain. For in him God hath promised not forgiveness of sins only, but also what soever we ask to keep us from sin and temptation withal. And what if thou burn frankincense unto him, what if thou ah holiness , ii i •/. i i , ... in our own burn a candle, what it thou burn thy chastity or virginity imagination _ d d d d is a robbing unto him for the same purpose, dost thou not like rebuke $£am!'i unto Christ's blood? Moreover, if thou offer gold, silver, or any other good for the same intent, is there any difference? And even so, if thou go in pilgrimage, or fastest, or goest woolward, or sprinklest thyself with holy water, or else whatso ever deed it is, or observest whatsoever ceremony it be, for like meaning, then it is like abomination. We must therefore bring the salt of the knowledge of God's word with all our sacrifices, or else we shall make no sweet savour unto God thereof. Thou wilt ask me, Shall I vow nothing at all? Yes, God's commandment, which thou hast vowed in thy baptism. For what intent ? Verily, for the love of Christ which hath bought thee with his blood, and made thee son and heir of God with him, that thou shouldest wait on his will and com mandments, and purify thy members according to the same doctrine that hath purified thine heart : for if the knowledge of God's word hath not purified thine heart, so that thou consentest Unto the law of God that it is righteous and good, and sorrowest that thy members move thee unto the contrary, so hast thou no part with Christ. For if thou repent not of thy sin, so it Faith foiiow- is impossible that thou shouldest beheve that Christ had an<* S delivered thee from the danger thereof. If thou believe 'hot [tyndale.] 434 PROLOGUE TO THE How our works are good in the sight of God. that Christ hath delivered thee, so is it impossible that thou shouldest love God's commandments. If thou love not the commandments, so is Christ's Spirit not in thee, which is the earnest of forgiveness of sin and of salvation. Repentance For scripture teacheth, first repentance, then faith in faith, and0 Christ, that for his sake sin is forgiven to them that repent ; prepareth the ' . ° ' ' l wgyunto then good works, which are nothing save the commandment of God only. And the commandments are nothing else save the helping of our neighbours at their need, and the taming of our members, that they might be pure also, as the heart is pure through hate of vice and love of virtue, as God's wor4 teacheth us : which works must proceed out of the faith ; that is, I must do them for the love which I have to God for that great mercy which he hath shewed me in Christ, or else I do them not in the sight of God. And that I faint not in the pain of the slaying of the sin that is in my flesh, mine help is the promise* of the assistance of the power of God, and thej The work comfort of the reward to come ; which reward I aseribe unto but the word, the goodness, mercy, and truth, of the promiser that hath that is to say, => , . the promise, chosen me, called me, taught me, and given me the earnest thereof; and not unto the merits of my doings or sufferings; for all that I do and suffer is but the way to the reward, and not the deserving thereof. As if the king's grace should pro mise me to defend me at home in mine own realm1, yet the way thither is through the sea, wherein I might haply suffer no little trouble. And yet for all that, if I might live in rest when I come thither, I would think, and so would others say, Anaptsimi- that my pains were weh rewarded; which reward and be-- reward of nefit I would not proudly ascribe unto the merits of my good works. . , , , 1 • /. 1 pains taken by the way, but unto the goodness, merciful-? ness, and constant truth of the king's grace whose gift it is, and to whom the praise and thanks thereof belongeth of duty and right. So now a reward is a gift, given freely of the mustbemade g°°dness °f the giver, and not of the deservings of the receiver. tifytago?01" T^us ifc appeareth, that if I vow, whatsoever it be, for any m?mbe?s! "m other purpose than to tame my members, and to be an ensam- of our'neS^. pie of virtue and edifying unto my neighbour, my sacrifice is they are1 e e unsavoury, and clean without salt, and my lamp without oil, and [} He means the kingdom of England, in which he was born, and to which he could not return because of the men who sought his life!] BOOK OF NUMBERS. 435 I one ofthe foolish virgins, and shall be shut out from the feast of the bridegroom, when I think myself most sure to enter in. If I vow voluntary poverty, this must be my purpose, that *j°w we I will be content with a competent living, which cometh w«^| p°- unto me either by succession of mine elders, or which I get truly with my labour in ministering, and doing service unto the commonwealth, in one office or in another, or in one occupation or other, because that riches and honour shall not corrupt my mind, and draw mine heart from God; and to give an example of virtue and edifying unto other ; and that my neighbour may have a living by me as well as I. If I w^ttfe make a cloak of dissimulation of my vow, laying a net of gJg'Mgf- feigned beggary to catch superfluous abundance of riches, and nols?netor high degree and authority, and through the estimation of false holiness to feed and maintain my slothful idleness with the sweat, labour, lands, and rents of other men, after the example of our spiritualty, robbing them of their faiths, and God of his honour ; turning unto mine hypocrisy that confidence which should be given unto the promises of God only; am I not a wily fox, and a ravening wolf in a lamb's skin, and a painted sepul chre fair without and filthy within ? In like manner, though I seek no worldly promotion thereby, yet if I do it to be justi fied therewith, and to get an higher place in' heaven; thinking that I do it of my own natural strength, and of the natural power of my free-will, and that every man hath might even so to do, and that they do it not is their fault and negligence, and so, with the proud Pharisee, in comparison of myself despise the sinful publicans ; what other thing do I than eat the blood and fat of my sacrifice, devouring that myself which should be offered unto God alone and his Christ? And our works do , , . not stand in shortly, whatsoever a man doth of his natural gifts, of his „fe,^;do,m|. natural wit, wisdom, understanding, reason, will, and good in- „" (i0'dpower tent, before he be otherwise and clean contrary taught of God's Spirit, and have received other wit, understanding, reason and will, is flesh, worldly, and wrought in abominable blindness ; with which a man can but seek himself, his own profit, glory and honour, even in very spiritual matters. As if I were alone in a wilderness, where no man were to seek profit or praise of, yet, if I would seek heaven of God there, I could, of mine own natural gifts, seek it no other ways than for the merits and deservings of my good works, and to enter 28—2 436 PROLOGUE TO THE therein by another way than by the door Christ, which were very theft ; for Christ is Lord over all, and whatsoever any man will have of God, he must have it given him freely for Christ's sake. Now to have heaven for mine own deserving, is mine own praise, and not Christ's. For I cannot have it by Desert and favour and grace in Christ, and by mine own merits also ; for free gift are . . contraries, free giving and deserving cannot stand together. If thou wilt vow of thy goods unto God, thou must put salt unto this sacrifice ; that is, thou must minister knowledge s Pet. i. in this deed, as Peter teacheth, 2 Pet. i. Thou must put oil of God's word in thy lamp, and do it according to knowledge, if thou wait for the coming of the bridegroom to enter in wjth him into his rest. But thou perad venture1 wilt hang it about the image, to move men to devotion. Devotion is a fervent love unto God's commandments, and a desire to be with God rkhesgis"of an(^ wl*"n nis everlasting promises. Now shall the sight of of covetous-80 su°h riches as are shewed at St Thomas's shrine, or at Wal- mran'to'no- singham2, move a man to love the commandments of God nourGoo. better*, and to desire to be loosed from his flesh and to be with God ; or shall it not rather make his poor heart sigh, because he hath no such at home, and to wish part of it in another place? The priest shall have it in God's stead. Shall the priest have it ? If the priest be bought with .Christ's blood, then he is Christ's servant, and not his own ; and ought therefore to feed Christ's flock with Christ's doctrine, and to minister Christ's sacraments unto them purely, for very love, and not for filthy lucre's sake, or to be lord over them, as iPet.v. Peter teacheth, 1 Pet. v., and Paul, Acts xx. Beside this, Actsxx. . ' ... p Christ is ours, and is a gift given us ; and we be heirs of P But and peradventure, are wanting in Pent, of 1534; but are found in Day.] [2 By St Thomas he means Thomas a Becket, and by his shrine, that in Christ's Church, Canterbury; in which cathedral the three chief altars were those of Christ, of the Virgin, and of Becket. At the last of these, according to bishop Burnet, there was offered in one year £954. 6s. 5d. when but £i. Is. 8d. was offered at the Virgin's altar, and nothing at Christ's. Hist, of Reform. B. in. Vol. I. p. 244, 1st edit. The shrine at Walsingham was that of the Virgin Mary, called Our Lady of Walsingham. Tyndale's contemporary, Erasmus, has given an imaginary narrative of a pilgrim's visit to both these shrines. See Desid. Erasmi Colloquia. Peregrinatio religionis ergo. Lugduni Batav. 1655. pp. 368, and 387.] BOOK OF NUMBERS. 437 Christ, and of all that is Christ's. Wherefore the priest's doctrine is ours, and we heirs of it ; it is the food of our souls. Therefore if he minister it not truly and freely unto wJ,etahei^id us, without selling, he is a thief and a soul-murderer: ands°>orno? even so is he, if he take upon him to feed us, and have not wherewith. And for a like conclusion, because we also with all that we have be Christ's, therefore is the priest heir with us also of ah that we have received of God ; whereof inas much as the priest waiteth on the word of God, and is our servant therein, therefore of right we are his debtors, and owe him a sufficient living of our goods, and even thereto a wife of our daughters owe we unto him, if he require her. And JUau6.^- now when we have appointed him a sufficient living, whether ^"Ifthln iu tithes, rents, or in yearly wages, he ought to be content 5upencLmding and to require no more, nor yet to receive any more ; but to be an ensample of soberness and of despising worldly things, unto the ensample of his parishioners. Wilt thou vow to offer unto the poor people ? That is At^evow pleasant in the sight of God, for they be left here to do our J^'l^ti. alms upon, in Christ's stead ; and they be the right heirs of all our abundance and overplus. Moreover we must have a school to teach God's word in (though it needeth not to be so costly); and therefore it is lawful to vow unto the building or maintenance thereof, and unto the helping of all good works. And we ought to vow to pay custom, toll, rent, and ah manner duties, and whatsoever we owe; for that is God's commandment. If thou wilt vow pilgrimage, thou must put salt thereto how thou x o o > r mayest law- in like manner, if it shall be accepted : if thou vow to go {u^\l° °™ and visit the poor, or to hear God's word, or whatsoever edi- fleth thy soul unto love, and good works after knowledge, or whatsoever God commandeth, it is well done, and a sacrifice that savoureth well. Ye will haply say, that ye will go to this or that place, because God hath chosen one place more than another, and will hear your petition more in one place than another. As for your prayer, it must be according to God's word : ye may not desire God to take vengeance on him whom God's word teacheth you to pity and to pray for. And a3 for the other gloss, that God will hear you more in God heareth , ,, . , T i • /. -, all that call pne place than m another, 1 suppose it sal infatuatum, salt uP°nhimin unsavoury ; for if it were wisdom, how could we excuse the f^lf^^ 438 PROLOGUE TO THE ActsviL death of Stephen, Acts vii. which died for that article, that1 God dweiieth God dweiieth not in temples made with hands ? We that be- piesmade iieve -m Q0& are the temple of God, saith Paul. If a man witn mans *• sands. iove q0^ an(j jj-ggp fcs Word, he is the temple of God, and hath God presently dwelhng in him : as witnesseth Christ John xiv. xv. John xivth, saying, "If a man love me, he will keep my word, and then my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and dwell with him." And in the xvth he saith, God regard- "If ye abide in me, and my words also abide in you, then ask and not the ' what ye will, and ye shall have it." If thou believe in Christ, place where i , i • • we pray. and hast the promises which God hath made thee in thine heart, then go on pilgrimage unto thine own heart, and there pray, and God will hear thee for his mercy and truth's sake, and for his Son Christ's sake, and not for a few stones' sake. What careth God for the temple ? The very beasts, in that they have life in them, be much better than an heap of stones couched together. ¦wilful chas. To speak of chastity : it is a gift not given unto all tity is not x d o o ™^tforaii persons, as testifieth both Christ and also his apostle Paul; wherefore all persons may not vow it. Moreover there be causes wherefore many persons may better live chaste at one time than at another. Many may live chaste at twenty and thirty, for certain cold diseases fohowing them, which at forty, when their health is come, cannot do so. Many be occupied with wild fantasies in their youth, that they care not for marriage, which same, when they be waxen sad, shall be greatly desirous. It is a dangerous thing to make sin where none is; and to forswear the benefit of God and to bind thyself under pain of damnation of thy soul, that thou wouldest not use the remedy that God hath created, if need required. False feigned Another thing is this : beware that thou get thee not a false feigned chastity, made with the ungodly persuasions of St Jerome1, or of Ovid in his filthy book ofthe remedy against [l Even Erasmus himself, too palpably addicted to the use of indecent jests, has said of Jerome's disquisitions on this topic, ' In his depingendis paulo liberius lusit, quam dehcatse quorundam aures ferre possent : ' and this remark of Erasmus is prefixed to his edition of an epistle of Jerome, which fully justifies Tyndale's graver rebuke. See also Cave, Script. Eccles. Hist, liter, art. Hieronymus Strido- nensis.J vow. BOOK OF NUMBERS. 439 love ; lest, when through such imaginations thou hast utterly despised, defied and abhorred all womankind, thou come into Such case through the fierce wrath of God, that thou canst neither live chaste, nor find in thy heart to marry, and so be compelled to fall into the abomination of the pope, against nature and kind. Moreover, God is a wise father, and knoweth all the ™fiP°ftn£ infirmities of his children, and also merciful ; and therefore ^^god hath created a remedy without sin, and given thereto his 1° liberty11 favour and blessing. Let us not be wiser than God with our Godforbk. imaginations, nor tempt him ; for as godly chastity is not every man's gift, even so he that hath it to-day hath not power to continue it at his own pleasure, neither hath God promised to give it him still, and to cure his infirmities with out his natural remedy ; no more than he hath promised to slake his hunger without meat, or thirst without drink. Wherefore either let all things bide free as wise2 God hath ^°^af-a created them, and neither vow that which God [requireth not, ^''tows! nor forswear that which God3] permitteth thee with his favour and blessing also : or else, if thou wilt needs vow, then vow godly and under a condition, that thou wilt continue chaste so long as God giveth thee that gift> and as long as neither thine own necessity, neither charity toward thy neighbour, nor the authority of them under whose power thou art, drive thee unto the contrary. The purpose of thy vow must be salted also with the wj«™£>£>e wisdom of God. Thou mayest not vow to be justified thereby, 0'SUvowl!ply or to make satisfaction for thy sins, or to win heaven or an higher place ; for then didst thou wrong unto the blood of Christ, and thy vow were plain idolatry and abominable in the sight of God. Thy vow must be only unto the further- ^mlde"* ance of the commandments of God ; which are (as I have said) nothing but the taming of thy members, and the service of thy neighbour : that is, if thou think thy back too weak for the burden of wedlock, and that thou canst not rule thy wife, children, servants, and make provision for them godly, and without overmuch busying and unquieting thyself, and drown ing thyself in worldly business unchristianly, or that thou canst serve thy neighbour in some office better being chaste [2 So Pent, of 1534. Day omits wise.] [s So Pent, of 1534. D. wants these words.] 440 PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF NUMBERS. Shtoany38'" tnan married; and then thy vow is good and lawful. And' thanrtontame «?ven s0 must tnou vow abstinence of meats and drinks, so far- it may4™**' forth as it is profitable unto thy neighbours, and unto the dec°e"v?thd' taming of thy flesh ; but thou mayest vow neither of them unto the slaying of thy body : as Paul commandeth Timothy to drink wine, and no more water, because of his diseases. Thou wilt say that Timothy had not haply forsworn wine. I think the same ; and that the apostles forsware not wedlock,' though many of them lived chaste ; neither yet any meat or drink, though they abstained from them ; and that it were A»ourdmngs good for us to follow their example. Howbeit though I vow, G0edh0anodur°f and swear, and think on none exception, yet is the breaking, n0eI|h°bour.r 0I" God's commandments except, and all chances that hang of God : as if I swear to be in a certain place at a certain hour, to make a love- day1, without exception, yet if the king. in the meantime command me another way, I must go by God's commandment, and yet break not mine oath. And in like case, if my father and mother be sick and require my presence, or if my wife, children, or household be visited, that my assistance be required, or if my neighbour's house be a fire at the same hour, and a thousand such chances ; in which all I break mine oath, and am not forsworn, and so forth. Read God's word diligently and with a good heart, and it shall teach thee all things. [} 'Love-days: days anciently so called, on which arbitrations were made, and controversies ended between neighbours and acquaintance.' N. Bailey's Universal Etymological Engl. Diet. London, 1755.] PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF DEUTERONOMY. 441 A PROLOGUE INTO THE PLFTH BOOK OP MOSES CALLED DEUTERONOMY. This is a book worthy to be read in, day and night, and never to be out of hands : for it is the most excellent of all the books of Moses. It is easy also and light, and a very This book d , ° d apreaching pure gospel, that is to wit, a preaching of faith and love : £Tf*ith and ¦ deducing the love to God out of faith, and the love of a man's neighbour out of the love of God. Herein also thou Here thou , .. , . ,. .... mayest learn mayest learn right meditation or contemplation, which is arightmedi- d ~ , # r tationorcon- nothing else save the calling to mind, and a repeating in the tempuaon. heart, of the glorious and wonderful deeds of God, and of his terrible handling of his enemies and merciful entreating of them that come when he calleth them ; which thing this book doth, and almost nothing else. In the four first chapters he rehearseth the benefits of God done unto them, to provoke them to love, and his mighty deeds done above all natural power, and beyond ah natural The works of capacity of faith, that they might believe God, and trust in pematurai. him and in his strength. And thirdly he rehearseth the fierce plagues of God upon his enemies, and on them which through impatience and unbelief fell from him; partly to tame and abate the appetites of the flesh which alway fight against the Spirit, and partly to bridle the wide raging lusts of them in whom was no Spirit ; that though they had no power to do good of love, yet at the least way they should we must ab- abstain from outward evil for fear of wrath, and cruel ven- outward evii. 7 though not geance which should fall upon them and shortly find them gj "fe^'oF* out, if they cast up God's nurture, and run at riot beyond his 0fGod.seanc?' laws and ordinances. Moreover he chargeth them to put nought to, nor take unto the law ought away from God's words, but to be diligent only tomaynotadd , ,, . . , J nor diminish. keep them in remembrance, and in the heart, and to teach their children for fear of forgetting ; and to beware either of making imagery, or of bowing themselves unto images, 442 PROLOGUE TO THE manded°tom" saYing> " Ye saw no image when God spake unto you, but m^es1/"™ heard a voice only, and that voice keep, and thereunto cleave; for it is your hfe, and it shall save you." And finally, if (as the frailty of all flesh is) they shall have fallen from God, and he have brought them into trouble, adversity, and cum- Godismer- brance and all necessity; yet if they repent and turn, he that repent, promiseth them, that God shall remember his mercy, and receive them to grace again. In the fifth he repeateth the ten commandments; and, that they might see a cause to do them of love, he biddeth them remember that they were bound in Egypt, and how God delivered them with a mighty hand and a stretched out arm, „christhath to serve him, and to keep his commandments: as Paul saith delivered us, L and therefore that we are bought with Christ's blood, and therefore are his we ought to o > itnTour1"' servants, and not our own, and ought to seek his will and foerihis5™ke. honour only, and to love and serve one another for his sake. In the sixth he setteth out the fountain of all command ments : that is, that they believe how that there is but one God that doth all, and therefore ought only to be loved with Love only is all the heart, all the soul, and all the might. For love only the fulfilling . . ' & . « ofGodlaws 1S *ne fohhhng of the commandments, as Paul also saith unto the Romans, and Galatians likewise. He warneth them also that they forget not the commandments, but teach them theii* children ; and to shew their children also how God dehvered them out of the bondage of the Egyptians, to serve him and his commandments, that the children might see a cause to work of love likewise. we must . The seventh is altogether of faith : he removeth all oc- trust only in o mouSdves0.' casions that might withdraw them from the faith, and pulleth them also from all confidence in themselves, and stirreth them up to trust in God boldly and only. Of the eighth chapter thou seest how that the cause of all temptation1 is, that a man might see his own heart. For when I am brought into that extremity, that I must either How a man suffer or forsake God, then I shah feel how much I believe examine and trust in him, and how much I love him. In like manner, himself how . , . lOTethood ^ mJ brother do me evil for my good, then if I love him neighbour, when there is no cause in him, I see that my love was of God ; and even so if I then hate him, I feel and perceive that my love was but worldly. And finally, he stirreth them to the P That is, of trial] BOOK OF DEUTERONOMY. 443 faith and love of God, and driveth them from all confidence of their own selves. In the ninth also he moveth them unto faith, and to put cod stirreth x up his people their trust in God ; and draweth them from confidence of unto &nh. themselves, by rehearsing all the wickedness which they had wrought from the first day he knew them unto that same day. And in the end he repeateth how he conjured God in Af^™y Horeb, and overcame him with prayer ; where thou mayest learn the right manner to pray. In the tenth he reckoneth up the pith of all laws, and T£eec]?i($Jmd the keeping of the law in the heart ; which is to fear God, {j^,1*™ of love him, and serve him with all their heart, soul and might, and keep his commandments of love. And he sheweth a reason why they should that do : even because God is Lord of heaven and earth, and hath also done all for them of his own goodness, without their deserving. And then out of the And if we 1 - nit -i • iin -,, flrstloveGod, love unto God he bringeth the love unto a man s neighbour, then out of o o ' that love we saying, God is Lord above ah lords, and loveth all his servants ™f0°ere an ^or ^e keeping of the commandments of God andItoedotour teacheth wisdom, as thou mayest see in the same chapter, God'andou'r where Moses saith, Keep the commandments, that ye may neig our. un(jerstail(j what ye ought to do. But to search God's secrets blindeth a man ; as it is well proved by the swarms of our sophisters, whose wise books are now, when we look in the scripture, found but full of foolishness. P To examine, to question.] 445 A TABLE EXPOUNDING CERTAIN WORDS OF THE FIFTH BOOK OF MOSES CALLED DEUTERONOMY2. Avims. A kind of giants ; and the word signifieth crooked, unright, or wicked3. Belial. Wicked, or wickedness ; he that hath cast the yoke of God off his neck, and will not obey God4- Bruterer. Prophesier, or soothsayer5. Emims. A kind of giants so called, because they were terrible and cruel ; for Emim signifieth terribleness6. [2 In Day's folio this table is prefixed to the book of Numbers, and called, ' An exposition of certain words of the ivth book of Moses called Numeri,' whereas they are all words found in Deuteronomy. Ill the Pentateuch of 1534 the table is in its proper place.] [3 Avims. Qi!)}? . Deut. ii. 23. Gr. Evaioi. Vulg. Hevsei, Lu ther, Caphthorim. Authorised version, Avims. Tyndale refers the name to the root nil? 5 and his explanation of that root is in con- T T formity with that of lexicographers.] '[* Belial. Ty'tQ. Deut. xiii. 13. Most lexicographers have con sidered this word as a compound of i^Q and ^yt, and have therefore interpreted it either unprofitable, or ignoble, (Simon's Lex.) Tyndale has construed it as by "6l j without a yoke : and Sebastian Munster, who published the first volume of his translation of the scriptures from the Hebrew in 1534, observes in a note, 'Per Belijaal Hebr. intelligunt hominem pervicacem, quasi 7IJ? i^O, absque jugo legis divinse.' Buxtorf gives both interpretations ; but places Tyndale's first. Lex. Hebr. et Chald. Basil. 1689, under root ^j;.] [6 In Deut. xviii. 10, where our authorised version has, 'that useth divination, or an observer of times,' Tyndale writes, 'a bruterar, or a maker of dismal days.'] [6 Emims. C'/Dfr*. Deut. ii. 10. Tyndale refers this name to the root Qitf , as does Prof. Robertson, and Joh. Simon. The latter - T gives D^N as the correct reading, here and in Gen. xiv. 5; and gays of Q">a , rad. inusit. Terribilis fuit.] 446 TABLE expounding WORDS IN DEUTERONOMY. Enacke. A kind of giants, so called haply because they wore chains about their necks ; for enach is such a chain as men wear about their necks'. Horims. A kind of giants, and signifieth noble ; because that of pride they called themselves nobles, or gentles2. Rock. God is called a rock, because both he and his word lasteth for ever3. Whet them on thy Children. That is, exercise thy children in them, and put them in ure4. Zamzumims. A kind of giants ; and signifieth mischievous, or that be always imagining5. [i Enacke. CjMJN Deut. ii. 10. The verb p^y is, to bind round the neck; and the substantive signifies a neck-chain.]. [2 Horims. D'Hn • Deut. ii. 12. Joh. Simon's Lexicon, under root "nn> n°bili stirpe natus est, has -|j-j m. in plur. D^lHj nobles. Lee acknowledges the same signification, but refers the word to TJn> white, and then says, ' Nobles, as arrayed in white robes.'] [3 Tyndale obviously alludes to Deut. xxxii. 4, and 31.] [* Deut. vi. 7. Tyndale used the words, 'Whet them,' where our authorised version has, 'teach them diligently,' but acknowledges whet or sharpen, in its margin, to be more close to the Hebrew idiom. The verb is ptif, the pihel form of pty, and is acknowledged by lexicographers to mean sharpen.] p Zamzumims. Q'StDf. Deut. ii. 20. Prom QQt, he turned in his mind, he resolved in his mind, comes HST j headlong audacity, a heinous crime, lewdness. Roberts. Clav. Pent. No. 2997. Joh. Simon's Lex. agrees with Tyndale in referring the name of this giant race to the same root.] PROLOGUE OF THE PROPHET JONAS. [INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. In the preface to Sir Thomas More's ' Confutation of Tyndale's Answer to his Dialogue,' he concludes his list of books * made in the Enghsh tongue' by Tyndale, as follows : ' Then have we Jonas made out by Tyndale, a book that whoso delight therein shall stand in peril that Jonas was never so swallowed up with the whale, as by the delight of that book a man's soul may be so swallowed up by the devil, that he shall never have the grace to get out again. Then have we by Tyndale also the answer to my dialogue.' The title-page of this Confutation bears the date of 1532 ; but Mr Anderson has also found 'Jonas in English,' at the end of a list of books denounced by Stokesley, bishop of London, on the third of December, 1531, in a Lambeth MS. No. 306, fol. 65. These notices of it are sufficient to justify our fixing upon the early part of 1531 as the probable date of the publication of the Prologue to Jonah. But whether it was pub hshed along with an English translation of Jonah by its author, or without that accompaniment, must still be reckoned doubtful. Mr Anderson says, that ' it contains abundant internal evidence, that the prophetical book was appended.' (Annals of Engl. Bib. B. I. section 8. Vol. I. p. 289, note 47.) But he allows that 'no copy of this edition,' that is, of an edition containing both the Prologue and text, 'is known to exist.' And on the other hand, in the bible called Matthew's bible, pubhshed in 1537, whose editors were obviously desirous to use Tyndale's translations for every portion of scripture which he had rendered into English, whether previously pubhshed or not, we find that the text of Jonah is from Coverdale's translation, which they were fain to employ in so much of the scripture as Tyndale had not translated. The preference thus manifested for Tyndale's versions, in a bible dedicated to Henry VIII. by editors who must have been aware of the king's dislike to him, would not have been shewn by them, if they had not felt that his translations had an un deniable claim to be preferred before Coverdale's, on the plain ground that he had made his translations directly from the inspired original text, whilst Coverdale, according to his own title-page, had but ' trans lated from the Douche and Latyn,' or, in other words, from Luther's German Bible and the Vulgate. It is therefore contrary to all proba bility that editors, whom the fear of provoking their wilful sovereign could not withhold from manifesting their esteem for Tyndale's trans lations, and who must have taken steps unknown to us to procure, as they did, his unpublished versions of the books from Joshua to the 448 introductory notice. second of Chronicles, both inclusive, would have preferred reprinting Coverdale's translation of Jonah, if there had been a translation of that prophet published by Tyndale, and well known to all persons interested in such subjects, as the Prologue to Jonah certainly was. It is surely much more reasonable to beheve, that when More and Stokesley spoke of what Tyndale had published in 1531, as ' Jonah in English,' there was no more intended than when the former said, ' Then have we by Tyndale the Wicked Mammona,' videlicet, his treatise on that parable. The same may be said of the mention of both in a catalogue of prohibited books, printed in the first edition of Foxe's Acts and Mons. pp. 573 — 4, but omitted in subsequent editions, as if Foxe thought it too inaccurate for readmission. They there stand together as follows : ' Item, a book calledjhe prophet Jonas. teaching to understand the right use of Scripture. Item, a treatise of the justification by faith only, otherwise called The Parable of the Wicked Mammon.' The enemies of the truth were only thinking of Tyndale's doctrines, when they denounced his publications. On the other hand, there seems to have been such a general consciousness of a similarity between the work to which Jonah had been called, and that which the reformers undertook, as occasioned the issue of a remarkable number of separate editions of this prophet. If Tyn dale was thereby led to select the history of Jonah for his theme, it appears from Masch's Le Long, that bibliographers have been able to collect a list of two and twenty editions of Jonah, with Latin versions or paraphrases, besides the vernacular versions, printed during the age of the Reformation and before its progress was brought to a pause. The copies of the Prologue compared with Day's folio for the present reprint are those contained in a Bible of the date of 1549, in the Baptists' College, at Bristol, and the Bible printed by Nicolas Hyll, vi. May, mdli. in the same collection; marked 24, B, in Mr Anderson's Catalogue.] prologue to the prophet JONAS. 449 THE PROLOGUE TO THE PROPHET JONAS. As the envious PJnhsJtines_stopped the wells of Abraham, Therapists and filled them up with earth, to put the memorial out of JgJJ'^ff, . mind, to the intent that they might challenge the ground ; ^fe they even so the flgshly-minded hypocrites stop up the veins of 5^ pub" be fife, which are in the scripture, with the earth of their expositors3 traditions, false similitudes, and lying allegories; and that of hke zeal, to make the scripture their own possession and merchandise, and so shut up the kingdom of heaven, which is God's word ; neither entering in themselves, nor suffering them that would. The scripture hath a body without, and within a soul, The scripture spirit, and life. It hath without a bark, a shell, and as itandasuui. were an hard bone, for the fleshly-minded to gnaw upon : and within it hath pith, kernel, marrow, and all sweetness for God's elect, which he hath chosen to give them his Spirit, and to write his law, and the faith of his Son, in their hearts. The scripture containeth three things in it : first, the Thescnpture _ , ° , containeth law, to condemn all flesh ; secondarily, the gospel, that is to three """e^ say, promises of mercy for all that repent and acknowledge their sins at the preaching of the law, and consent in their hearts that the law is good, and submit themselves to be scholars to learn to keep the law, and to learn to beheve the mercy that is promised them; and thirdly, the stories and lives of those scholars, both what chances fortuned them, and also by what means their schoolmaster taught them and made them perfect, and how he tried the true from the false. When the hypocrites come to the law, they put glosses The manner to, and make no more of it than of a worldly law, which in reading the ¦ 1 m lawof God. is satisfied with the outward work, and which a Turk may also fulfil : when yet God's law never ceaseth to condemn a L1 The margins throughout this Prologue are not Tyndale's own.] r -i 29 [tyndale.] 450 prologue to the man, until it be written in his heart, and until he keep it naturally without compulsion, and all other respect, save only of pure love to God and his neighbour; as he naturally eateth when he is an hungred, without compulsion and all The papisii- other respect, save to slake his hunger only. And when cal and cor- x . ottheTisS thej come to the gospel, there they mingle their leaven, and say, ' God now receiveth us no more to mercy, but of mercy receiveth us to penance ;' that is to wit, holy deeds that make them fat bellies, and us their captives both in soul and body. And yet they feign their idol the pope so merciful, that if thou make a little money elister in his Balaam's eyes, there is neither penance, nor purgatory, nor any fasting at all, but to fly to heaven as swift as a thought, and at the twinkling of an eye. How the Pa- And the lives, stories, and ffests1 of men, which are pists wring ' " "^ sc1rip1turesthe contained in the bible, they read as things no more pertaining unto them than a tale of Robin_Hood, and as things they wot not whereto they serve, save to feign false descant and juggling allegories, to stablish their kingdom withal. And one of the chiefest and fleshliest studies they have is to magnify the saints above measure and above the truth; and with their poetry to make theftTgreater then ever God made them. And if they find any infirmity or sin ascribed unto the saints, that they excuse with all diligence, diminishing the glory of the mercy of God, and robbing wretched sinners of all their comfort ; and think thereby to flatter the saints, and to obtain their favour, and to make special advocates of them, even as a man would obtain the favour of worldly tyrants : as they also feign the saints more cruel than ever was any heathen man, and more wreakful and vengeable than the poets feign their gods, or their furies that tor- t ment the souls in hell, if their evens2 be not fasted, and their images visited and saluted with a pater-noster (which prayer only our lips be acquainted with, our hearts understanding none at all) and worshipped with a candle, and the offering of our devotion in the place which they have chosen to hear supplications and meek petitions of their clients therein. But thou, reader, think of the Jaw of God, how that it is t1 That is, doings. So edition of 1549; but Hylls' bible and Day have gifts.] [2 Evens, eves ; tho saints' eves.] "iPROPHET JONAS.- 451 ah^gejher spiritual, and so spiritual that it is never fulfilled with deeds or works, until they flow out of thine heart, with as great love toward thine neighbour, for_nq deserving of his, yea, though he be thine enemy, as Christ loved rthee,- and died for thee, for_jno deserving of thing, but even when thou wast his enemy ; and in the mean time, throughout all our infancy and childhood in Christ, till we be grown up into perfect men, in the full knowledge of Christ, and full love of Christ again, and of our neighbours for his sake, •after the example of his love to us, remembering that the fulfilling of the law is. a fast faith in Christ's blood, coupled with our profession, and submitting ourselves to do better. And of the gospel, or promises, which thou meetest in the scripture, believe fast3 that God will fulfil them unto thee, and that unto the uttermost jot, at the repentance of thine heart, when thou turnest to him and forsakest evil, even of his goodness and fatherly mercy unto thee, and not for thy flattering him with hypocritish works of thine own feigning : so that a fast faith only, without respect of all works, is the forgiveness both of the sin which we did in time of ignorance with lust and consent to sin, and also of that4 sin which we do by chance, and of frailty, after that we are come to knowledge, and have professed the law out of our hearts. And all deeds serve only for to help our I neighbours, and to tame our flesh, that we fall not to sin again, and to exercise our souls in virtue ; and not to make \ satisfaction to God-ward for the sin that is once past. And ah other stories of the bible, without exception, are the practising of the law and of the gospel ; and are true and faithful ensamples, and sure earnest that God will even so deal with us, as he did with them, in all infirmities, in all temptations, and in all like cases and chances. Wherein ye see on the one side how fatherly and tenderly, and with all compassion, God entreateth his elect, which submit them selves as scholars, to learn to walk in the ways of his laws, and to keep them of love. If they forgat themselves at a time, he would stir them up again with all mercy : if they fell and hurt themselves, he healed them again with ah com passion and tenderness of heart. He hath oft brought great [3 Fast : stedfastly.] [* So D. Hyll's B. has all the.] 29—2 452 PROLOGUE TO THE God correct- tribulation and adversity upon his elect ; but all of fatherly eth wherehe d x t d loveth. iove oniV) to teach them, and to make them see their own hearts, and the sin that there lay hid, that they might after- God casteth ward feel his mercy. For his mercy waited upon them, to none away " d x butsucnas ri(j them out again, as soon as they were learned, and come refuse to keep o 7 d wii/not' to tue knowledge of their own hearts ; so that he never cast h&avo?ce.unto man away, how deep soever he had sinned, save them only which had first cast the yoke of his laws from their necks, with utter defiance and malice of heart. Which ensamples how comfortable are they for us, when we be fallen into sin, and God is come upon us with a scourge, that we despair not, but repent with full hope of mercy, after the ensamples of niercy that are gone before ! And therefore they were written for our learning, as testi- Rom.xv. fieth Paul, Rom. xv. to comfort us, that we might the better put our hope and trust in__God, when we see how merciful he hath been in times past unto our weak brethren that are gone before, in all their adversities, need, temptations, yea, and horrible sins into which they now and then fell. such as hard- And on the other side, ye see how they that hardened hearts, and their hearts, and sinned of malice, and refused mercy that hearken not , d Gocftodo'if was °ffere(i them, and had no power to repent, perished at God casteth fjjg ]atter end, with all confusion and shame, mercilessly. Which ensamples are very good, and necessary to keep us in awe and dread in time of prosperity, as thou mayest see by 1 cor. x. Paul, 1 Cor. x. that we abide in the fear of God, and wax not wild, and fall to vanities, and so sin and provoke God, and bring his wrath upon us. ofhGod°uahrets ^nc^ ^irdly, ye see in the practice, how as God is merci- oaEhre^ ful and long-suffering, even so were all his true prophets and thSnjuries preachers ; bearing the infirmities of their weak brethren, and paTi'eMel1 their own wrongs and injuries, with all patience and long- suffering, never casting any of them off their backs, until they sinned against the Holy Ghost, maliciously persecuting the open and manifest truth : contrary unto the ensample of hismmisters1 ^e P°Pe' which in sinning against God, and to quench the ?o«PoJcercu" trutn of nis Holy Spirit, is ever chief captain and trumpet- threnl>re" blower to set other at work, and seeketh only his own free dom, liberty, privilege, wealth, prosperity, profit, pleasure, pastime, honour and glory, with the bondage, thraldom, captivity, misery, wretchedness, and vile subjection of his PROPHET JONAS. 453 brethren ; and in his own cause is so fervent, so stiff and cruel, that he will not suffer one word spoken against his false majesty, wily inventions, and juggling hypocrisy, to be unavenged, though all Christendom should be set together by the ears, and should cost he cared not how many hundred thousand their lives. Now, that thou mayest read Jonas fruitfully, and not as a poet's fable, but_as an obligation between God^and thy soul, as_ an earnest-penny given thee of God, that he will help thee in time of need, if thouturn to him, and as the word of God, the only food and life of thy soul, this mark and note. First count Jonas the friend of God, and a man chosen of God, to testify his name unto the world ; but yet a young scholar, weak and rude, after the fashion of the apos tles while Christ was with them yet bodily, which, though Christ taught them ever to be meek and to humble them selves, yet oft strove among themselves who should be greatest. The sons of Zebedee would sit the one on the right hand of Christ, the other on the left. They would pray that fire might descend from heaven, and consume the Samaritans. When Christ asked, "Who say men that I am?" Peter answered, "Thou art the Son of the living God;" as though Peter had been as perfect as an angel. But immediately after, when Christ preached unto them of his death and passion, Peter was angry and rebuked Christ, T1Jni^u,at and thought earnestly that he had raved, and not wist what naed ^J chSt. he said; as at another time, when Christ was so fervently busied in healing the people that he had no leisure to eat, they went out to hold him, supposing • that he had been be side himself. And one that cast out devils in Christ's name they forbade, because he waited not on them ; so glorious1 were they yet. And though Christ taught alway to forgive, yet Peter, ^J^im- after long going to school, asked whether men should forgive fhefapos°ueslf seven times; thinking that eight times had been too much. And at the last supper Peter would have died with Christ ; but yet within few hours after he denied him, both cowardly and shamefully. And after the same manner, though he had so long heard that no man might avenge himself, but rather turn the other cheek to, than to smite again ; yet when Christ [} Glorious, for vain-glorious.] 454 PROLOGUE TO THE was in taking, Peter asked whether it were lawful to smite with the sword, and tarried none answer, but laid on rashly. So that though, when we come first unto knowledge of the truth, and that peace is made between God and us, we love his laws, and beheve and trust in him as in our father, and have good hearts unto him, and be born anew in the Spirit, yet we are but children and young scholars, weak and feeble; and must have leisure to grow in the Spirit, in knowledge, love, and in the deeds thereof, as young children must have time to grow in their bodies. And God, our father and schoolmaster, feedeth us and teacheth us according unto the capacity of our stomachs, and maketh us to grow and wax perfect, and fineth and trieth us as gold in the fire of temptations and tribulations ; as Moses Deut. viii. witnesseth, Deut. viii. saying : " Remember all the way by God doth which the Lord thy God carried thee this forty years in the mercifully » , try and tempt wilderness, to humble thee, and to tempt, or provoke thee, us, to move _ 7 7 x > jr ' our hearts *^a* ^ might be known what were in thine heart. He brought towaidsnim. thee into adversity, and made thee an hungred, and then fed thee with manna, which neither thou nor yet thy fathers ever knew of, to teach that man liveth not by bread only, but by all that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." For the pro mises of God are life unto all that cleave unto them, much more than is bread and bodily sustenance ; as the journey of the children of Israel out of Egypt into the land promised them ministereth thee notable ensamples, and that abundantly, as doth all the rest of the bible also. Howbeit, it is impos sible for flesh to believe and to trust in the truth of God's promises, until he have learned it in much tribulation, after that God hath delivered him out thereof again. God, therefore, to teach Jonas, and to shew him his own heart, and to make him perfect, and to instruct us also by his jonasofhim- ensample, sent him out of the land of Israel, where he was a self was an 1 "nmMtobB" ProPnetj t° g° among the heathen people, and to the greatest jnes'sagl"^ an<* mightiest city of the world then, called Niniveh, to preach i»m wShhL tnat within forty days they should ah perisFfoFlheir sins, and Hoiy spirit, tnat the city. g^^ ^e overthrown. Which message the free will of Jonas had as much power to do as the weakest-hearted woman in the world hath power, if she were commanded, to leap into a tub of living snakes and adders : as haply, if God had commanded Sarah to have sacrificed her son Isaac, as he PROPHET JONAS. 455 did Abraham, she would have disputed with him ere1 she had done it ; or though she were strong enough, yet many an holy saint could not have found in their hearts, but would have run away from the presence of the commandment of God with Jonas, if they had been so strongly tempted. For Jonas thought of this manner : Lo, I am here a pro- The camai ° , x imagination phet unto God's people the Israelites, which, though they n£tm™'^ith. have God's word testified unto them daily, yet despise it, and §£u.ft.od's worship God under the likeness of calves, and after all manner fashions, save after his own word ; and therefore are of all nations the worst, and most worthy of punishment : and yet God, for love of few that are among them, and for his name's sake, spareth and defendeth them. How then should God take so cruel vengeance on so great a multitude of them to whom his name was never preached, and therefore are not the tenth part so evil as these ? If I shall therefore go preach, so shall I lie2 and shame myself, and God thereto, and make them the more to despise God, and set the less by him, and to be the more cruel unto his people. And upon that imagination he fled from the face or pre- Jonas.soiong J- ° L as he was m sence of God ; that is, out of the country where God was j^™^,, worshipped in, and from the prosecuting of God's command- abide the' ment ; and thought, I will get me another way, among the DUtcI°d :God' heathen people, and be no more a prophet, but live at rest caiTebdehim0Cl and out of all cumbrance. Nevertheless, the God of all mercy, agam* which careth for his elect children, and turneth all unto good to them, and smiteth them to heal them again, and killeth them to make them live again, and playeth with them (as a father doth sometime with his young ignorant children), and tempteth them, and proveth them to make them see their own hearts, provided for Jonas how ah things should be. When Jonas entered into the ship, he laid him down to Jonas's flesh 1 i ii- i • , . • rebelled sleep, and to take his rest : that is, his conscience was tossed |gai?stthe ¦*¦ Spirit. between the commandment of God, which sent him to Niniveh, and his fleshly wisdom, that dissuaded and counselled him the contrary, and at the last prevailed against the commandment, and carried him another way, as a ship caught between two streams ; and as poets feign the mother of Meleager to be between divers affections, while to avenge her brother's death [l Old spelling, yer.] [2 So bible of 1549. Day has laye.] 456 PROLOGUE TO THE She sought to slay her own son1. Whereupon for very pain and tediousness he lay down to sleep, for to put the command-. ment, which so gnew2 and fretted his conscience, out of The wicked mind ; as the nature of all wicked is, when they have sinned seek to cover 7 .... theisrwithkeQ* a good3, to seek all means with riot, revel, and pastime, to wo?ksholy drive the remembrance of sin out of their thoughts ; or, as Adam did, to cover their nakedness with aprons of pope-holy works. But God awoke him out of his dream, and set his sins before his face. How Jonas For when the lot had caught Jonas, then be sure that his was trapped. . jjfraid.a(le sins came to remembrance again, and that his conscience raged no less than the waves of the sea. And then he thought that he only was a sinner, and the heathen that were in the ship none in respect of him ; and thought also, as verily as he was fled from God, that as verily God had cast him away. For the sight of the rod maketh the natural child not only to see and to knowledge his fault, but also to forget all his afrafd'con-8 father's old mercy and kindness. And then he confessed bis '!nssfhhis sm °Peiuy> an(i had yet lever perish alone, than that the other should have perished with him for his sake ; and so, of very desperation to have lived any longer, he bade cast him into the sea betimes, except they would be lost also. 1^.^°^ To speak of lots, how far forth they are lawful, is a light4 fusfiylaw" question. First, to use them for the breaking of strife, (as when partners, their goods as equally divided as they can, take every man his part by lot, to avoid all suspicion of deceit- ^<*! ¦¦ fulness ; and as the apostles, in the first of the Acts, when they sought another to succeed Judas the traitor, and two persons were presented, then, to break strife, and to satisfy all parties, did cast lots whether should be admitted, desiring God to temper them, and to take whom he knew most meet, seeing they wist not whether to prefer, or haply could not all agree on either,) is lawful, and in all like cases. But to abuse them unto the tempting of God, and to compel him therewith to utter things whereof we stand in doubt, when we have no commandment of him so to do, as these heathen here did, though God turned it unto his glory, cannot be but evil. \} See the story in Ovid, Mctam. vra. iv.] [2 Gnew, i.e. gnawed.] [3 A good, for of good, i. e. in reality.] L4 Not difficult.] PROPHET JONAS. 457 The heathen shipmen, astonied at the sight of the miracle, Miracle feared God, prayed to him, offered sacrifice, and vowed vows, heathen to i pi iii, know God, And I doubt not but that some of them, or haply all, came and '° ?al1 r . . upon him. thereby unto the true knowledge and true worshipping of God, and were won to God in their souls. And thus God, which is infinite merciful in all his ways, wrought their soul's health out of the infirmity of Jonas ; even of his good will and purpose, and love, wherewith he loved them before the world was made, and not of chance, as it appeareth unto the eyes of the ignorant. And that Jonas was three days and three nights in the As Jonas lay do three days belly of his fish, we cannot thereby prove unto the Jews and n°dh*-netne infidels, or unto any man, that Christ must therefore die, and £ chrfstiiy' be buried, and rise again : but we use the ensample and a»d three3 likeness to strength the faith of the weak. For he that be-eafthsmthe heveth the one, cannot doubt in the other : inasmuch as the hand of God was no less mighty in preserving Jonas alive against all natural possibility, and in delivering him safe out of his5 fish, than in raising up Christ again out of his sepul chre. And we may describe the power and virtue of the How Christ sh^wpth his resurrection thereby, as Christ himself borroweth the simili- deathand . . . resurrection tude thereto, Matt. xii. saying unto the Jews that came by0,l^Js the about him, and desired a sign or a wonder from heaven, to certify them that he was Christ : " This evil and wedlock- breaking nation " (which break the wedlock of faith, where with they be married unto God, and believe in their false works,) " seek a sign ; but there shall no sign be given them, save the sign of the prophet Jonas. For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the belly of the whale, even so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth." Which was a watch-word (as we say), and a sharp threatening unto the Jews, and as much to say as thus : ' Te hard-hearted Jews seek a sign ; lo, this shall be your sign. As Jonas was raised out of the sepulchre of his fish, and then sent unto the Ninivites to preach that they should perish ; even so shall I rise again out of my sepulchre, and come and preach repentance unto you. See, therefore, when ye see the sign, that ye repent, or else ye shall surely perish, and not escape. For though the infirmities which ye now see in my flesh be a let unto your fathers, ye shall then be with- p D. has this. Bible of 1551 has his.] 458 PROLOGUE TO THE Christ by the mouth of his preached repentance to the Jews. Where there is no repent ance, there God poureth out his vengeance. Gildas a writer of the British Chro nicle. Wickliffe a preacher of repentance. They slew Kichard the Second. They set up Henry the Fourth.Henry the Fifth.Henry the Sixth. Christ now preachethrepentance unto us. out excuse when ye see so great a miracle, and so great power of God shed out upon you.' And so Christ came again after the resurrection in his Spirit, and preached repentance unto them by the mouth of his apostles and disciples, and with miracles of the Holy Ghost. And all that repented not perished shortly after, and the rest [were] carried away cap tive into ah quarters of the world for an example, as ye see unto this day. And in hke manner, since the world began, wheresoever repentance was offered and not received, there God took cruel vengeance immediately : as ye see in the flood of Noe, in the overthrowing of Sodom and Gomorrah, and all the coun try about ; and as ye see of Egypt, of the Amorites, Cana- anites, and afterward of the very Israelites ; and then, at the last, of the Jews too, and of the Assyrians and Babylonians ; and so throughout all the empires of the world. Gildas preached repentance unto the old Britains that in habited England. They repented not, and therefore God sent in their enemies upon them on every side, and destroyed them up, and gave the land unto other nations1- And great vengeance hath been taken in that land for sin since that time. Wickliffe preached repentance unto our fathers not long since. They repented not ; for their hearts were indurate, and their eyes blinded with their own pope-holy righteous ness, wherewith they had made their souls gay against the receiving again of the wicked spirit, that bringeth seven worse than himself with him, and maketh the latter end worse than the beginning : for in open sins there is hope of repentance, but in holy hypocrisy none at all. But what followed ? They- slew their true and right king, and set up three wrong kings a row, under which all the noble blood was slain up, and half the commons thereto, what in France, and what with their own sword, in fighting among themselves for the crown ; and the cities and towns decayed, and the land brought half into a wilderness, in respect of that it was before. And now Christ, to preach repentance, is risen yet once again out of his sepulchre, in which the pope had buried him, and kept him down with his pillars and poleaxes, and all dis- guisings of hypocrisy, with guile, wiles and falsehood, and with t1 See p. 143.] PROPHET JONAS. 459 the sword of all* princes, which he had blinded with his false merchandise. And as I doubt not of the ensamples that are past, so am I sure that great wrath wih follow, except repent ance turn it back again, and cease it. When Jonas had been in the fish's belly a space, and the Jonas called • • i i r i uPon God rage of his conscience was somewhat quieted and suaged, and S",1."!0^ he come to himself again, and had received a little hope, the qualms and pangs of desperation which went over his heart half overcome, he prayed ; as he maketh mention in the text, saying, "Jonas prayed unto the Lord his God out of the belly of the fish." But the words of that prayer are not here set. The prayer that here2 standeth, in the text, is the prayer of praise and thanksgiving, which he prayed and wrote when he was escaped, and past all jeopardy : in the end of which The sacrifice prayer he saith, " I will sacrifice with the voice of thanks- offerethunto giving, and pay that I have vowed ; that saving cometh of the Lord." For verily, to confess out of the heart that all benefits come of God, even out of the goodness of his mercy, and not deserving of our deeds, is the only sacrifice that pleaseth God; and to believe that ah the Jews vowed in their circumcision, as we in our baptism ; which vow Jonas, now being taught with experience, promiseth to pay. For those outward sacri fices of beasts, unto which Jonas had haply ascribed too much before, were but feeble and childish things, and not ordained that the works of themselves should be a service unto the people ; but to put them in remembrance of this inward sacri- The saeriHces p p - of the old fice of thanks and of faith, to trust and beheve in God the !?? wf J8 or\ ¦* darned to put only Saviour : which signification, when it was away, they b^c*fSeth" were abominable, and devilish idolatry and image-service ; as thanksgiving. our ceremonies and sacraments are become now, to all that trust and believe in the work of them, and are not taught the significations, to edify their souls with knowledge and the •doctrine of God. When Jonas was cast upon land again, then his will was Jonas did that free, and had power to go whither God sent him, and to do mandedhim. what God bade, his own imaginations laid apart. For he had been at a new school, yea, and in a furnace, where he was purged of much refuse and dross of fleshly wisdom, which [2 The employment of the word here, in this and the preceding clause, is doubtless a part of what would be esteemed internal evidence that a translation of Jonah accompanied the prologue.] 460 PROLOGUE TO THE resisted the wisdom of God, and led Jonas's will contrary unto the will of God. For as far as we be blind in Adam, we cannot but seek and will our own profit, pleasure, and glory ; and as far as we be taught in the Spirit, we cannot but seek and will the pleasure and glory of God only. Nmivehwas And as [to] the three days' journey of Niniveh, whether wori'dL lhe it were in length, or to go round about it, or through all the streets, I commit unto the discretion of other merr. But I think that it was then the greatest city of the world. And that Jonas went a day's journey in the city : I sup pose he did it not in one day, but went fair and easily; preaching here a sermon, and there another, and rebuked the sin of the people, for which they must perish. And when thou art come unto the repentance of the Ninivites, there hast thou sure earnest, that howsoever angry God be, yet he remembereth mercy unto all that truly re pent and believe in mercy : which ensample our Saviour christ is Christ also casteth in the teeth of the indurate Jews, saying, merciful to ... . " ~ them that " The Ninivites shall rise in judgment with this nation, and repent and do ? condemn them ; for they repented at the preaching of Jonas, and behold a greater than Jonas is here :" meaning of him self, at whose preaching yet, though it were never so mighty to pierce the heart, and for all his miracles thereto, the hard hearted Jews could not repent ; when the heathen Ninivites repented at the bare preaching of Jonas, rebuking their sins The doctrine without any miracle at all. Whv ? For the Jews had of the Phari- " .. " .... sees and the leavened the spiritual law of God, and with their glosses had papists make x o S?sLithati* ma(ie it altogether earthly and fleshly, and so had set a veil or covering on Moses's face, to shadow and darken the glori ous brightness of his countenance. It was sin to steal ; but to rob widows' houses under a colour of long praying, and to poll in the name of offerings, and to snare the people with intolerable constitutions1 against all love, to catch their money out of their purses, was no sin at all. doctrinehof ^° smite father and mother was sin ; but to withdraw and hyPpocri- help from them at their need, for blind zeal of offering, unto atcthiTday.s the profit of the holy Pharisees, was then as meritorious, as it is now to let all thy kin choose whether they will sink or swim, while thou (buildest and makest goodly foundations for holy people, which thou hast chosen to be thy Christ, for to [i Laws imposed by despotic authority. Justin. Instit. Lib. 1. Tit. ii. § 6.] call for mercy. PROPHET JONAS. 461 supple thy soul with the oil of their sweet blessings; and to be Thebimdand thy Jesus, for to save thy soul from the purgatory ofthe blood works of the that only purgeth sin, with their watching, fasting, woolward- ' going2, and rising at midnight, &c, wherewith yet they purge not themselves from their covetousness, pride, lechery, or any vice that thou seest among the lay-people. It was great sin for Christ to heal the people on the Papistical ° . sins. sabbath-day, unto the glory of God his Father ; but none at all for them to help their cattle, unto their own profit. It was sin to eat with unwashed hands, or on an unwashed table, or out of an unwashed dish ; but to eat out of that purified dish that which came of bribery, theft, and extortion, was no sin at all. It was exceeding meritorious to make many disciples ; but to teach them to fear God in his ordinances, had they no care at all. The high prelates so defended the right of holy church, Papists d taught them- and so feared the people with the curse of God and terrible reives and x x their works pains of hell, that no man durst leave the vilest herb in his ^f" garden untithed. And the offerings and things dedicate unto God, for the profit of his holy vicars, were in such estimation and reverence, that it was a much greater sin to swear truly The false and by them, than to forswear thyself by God. What vengeance trine of u» then of God, and how terrible and cruel damnation, think ye, preached they to fall on them that had stolen so the holy things? And yet saith Christ, that righteousness and faith, in keeping promise, mercy, and indifferent judgment, were utterly trodden under foot, and clean despised of those blessed fathers, which so mightily maintained Aaron's patrimony, and had made it so prosperous, and environed it, and walled it about on every side with the fear of God, that no man durst touch it. It was great holiness to garnish the sepulchres of the Blind and prophets, and to condemn their own fathers for slaying of doctrine.'0 them ; and yet were they themselves, for blind zeal of their own constitutions, as ready as their fathers to slay whosoever testified unto them the same truth which the prophets tes tified unto their fathers. So that Christ compareth all the righteousness of those holy patriarchs unto the outward beauty [2 The imaginary merit of forswearing clean linen, and wearing woollen in its stead.] 462 PROLOGUE TO THE of a painted sepulchre, full of stench and all uncleanness within. And finally, to beguile a man's neighbour in subtle bar gaining, and to wrap and compass him in with cautels of the law, was then as it is now in the kingdom of the pope : by the reason whereof they excluded the law of love out of their hearts, and consequently all true repentance ; for how could they repent of that they could not see to be sin ? The Phari- And on the other side they had set up a rkhteflusaess sees set up a . " •" '- ¦¦ ¦ „J> —? ., righteousness 0f holy works to cleanse their souls withal ; as the pope ot works to . d._. ' xx sou™ withai! sanctifieth us with holy oil, holy bread, holy salt, holy can dles, holy dumb ceremonies, and holy dumb blessings, and with whatsoever holiness thou wilt, save with the holiness of God's word; which only speaketh unto the heart, and sheweth the soul his filthiness and uncleanness of sin, and leadeth her by the way of repentance unto the fountain of Christ's blood, By the world- to wash it away through faith. By the reason of which false ly and fleshly . . ' tit i • , * interpreta- righteousness they were disobedient unto the righteousness ot tions of the ° * . . ° theJew? ^°d' which is the forgiveness of sin in Christ's blood, and harteneT6 could not believe it. And so, through fleshly interpreting the law, and false imagined righteousness, their hearts were hardened, and made as stony as clay in a hot furnace of fire, that they could receive neither repentance, nor faith, or any manner1 of grace at all. The heathen But the heathen Ninivites, though they were blinded repented at . ° * . ofeJjnashing with lusts a good2, yet were m those two3 points uncorrupt and unhardened; and therefore, with the only preaching of Jonas, came unto the knowledge of their sins, and confessed them, and repented truly, and turned every man from his evil deeds, and declared their sorrow of heart and true re pentance with their deeds, which they did out of faith and hope of forgiveness ; chastising their bodies with prayer and fasting, and with taking all pleasures from the flesh ; trusting, as God was angry for their wickedness, even so should he forgive them of his mercy, if they repented, and forsook their misliving. \} So B. of 1551. Day has moisture.] [2 So B. of 1551. Day omits a good.] t3 So Day. Hyll's Bible of 1551 has three. The two points in which the Ninivites were unhardened and the Jews hardened are placed in con trast, viz. misinterpretation ofGod's law and imaginary righteousness.] PROPHET JONAS. 463 And in the last end of all thou hast yet a goodly ensample A B°°d and -r , ' ,„ ° , . r profitable of learning, to see how earthy Jonas is still, for all his trying example. in the whale's belly. He was so sore displeased because the Ninivites perished not, that he was weary of his life, and wished after death, for very sorrow that he had lost the glory of his prophesying, in that his prophecy came not to pass. But God rebuked him with a likeness, saying, ' It grieveth thine heart for the loss of a vile shrub, or spray, whereon thou bestowedst no labour or cost, neither was it thine handywork. How much more then should it grieve mine heart the loss of so great a multitude of innocents as are in Niniveh, which are all mine hands' work ? Nay, Jonas, Note here " the great I am God over all, and father as well unto the heathen as™*0*0* . . Goa* unto the Jews, and merciful to all, and warn ere I smite; neither threat I so cruelly by any prophet, but that I will . forgive, if they repent and ask mercy ; neither, on the other side, whatsoever I promise will I fulfil it, save for their sakes only which trust in me, and submit themselves to keep my laws of very love, as natural children.' On this manner to read the scripture is the right use The right x © manner how thereof, and why the Holy Ghost caused it to be written : ^jf8^6 that is, that thou first seek out the law that God will have thee to do, interpreting it spiritually, without gloss or covering the brightness of Moses's face ; so that thou feel in thine heart how that it is damnable sin before God not to love thy neighbour that is thine enemy as purely as Christ loved thee; and that not to love thy neighbour in thine heart is to have committed already all sin against him. And therefore, until that love be come, thou must know ledge unfeignedly that there is sin in the best deed thou doest; and it must earnestly grieve thine heart, and thou must wash all thy good deeds in Christ's blood, ere they can be pure, ah our deeds and an acceptable sacrifice unto God, and must desire God g^ff in the Father for his sake to take thy deeds a worth4, and bl00d- to pardon the imperfectness of them, and to give thee power to do them better, and with more fervent love. [4 A worth, i.e. at worth; meaning, to esteem them as having worth (value) for Christ's sake. In his answer to Sir Thos. More, Tyndale says, ' We have promises that that little we have is taken a worth and accepted.'] 464 PROLOGUE TO THE And on the other side, thou nmsjjsearchjhligently fofcjlie promises of mercy which God hath promised thee again. Which two points, that is to wit, the law spiritually inter preted, how that all is damnable sin that is not unfeigned love out of the ground and bottom of the heart, after the ensample of Christ's love to us, because we be all equally created and formed of one God our Father, and indifferently bought and ah the pro- redeemed with one blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ; and mises made ... . , - . . chris°are *kat ^e Promises he given unto a repenting soul, that thirsteth Katrepem™ ana< longeth after them, of the pure and fatherly mercy of God, through our faith only, without all deserving of our deeds or merits of our works, but for Christ's sake alone, and for the merits and deservings of his works, death, and passions that he suffered altogether for us, and not for him- The two self : which two points, I say, if they be written in thine heart, open an the are the keys which so open all the scripture unto thee, that scripture. d x x ^ no creature can lock thee out, and with which thou shalt go in and out, and find pasture and food everywhere. And if these lessons be not written in thine heart, then is all the scripture shut up as a kernel in the shell, so that thou mayest read it, and commune1 of it, and rehearse all the stories of it, and dispute wittily, and be a profound sophister, and yet understand not one jot thereof. And thirdly, that thou take the stories and lives which are contained in the bible for sure and undoubted ensamples that God so will deal with us unto the world's end. Herewith, reader, farewell ; and be commended unto God, and unto the grace of his Spirit. And first see that thou stop not thine ears unto the calling of God, and harden not thine heart, beguiled with fleshly interpreting of the law, and false imagined and hypocritish righteousness, and so2 the Ninivites rise with thee at the day of judgment, and condemn thee. And secondarily, if thou find ought amiss, when thou seest thyself in the glass of God's word, think it necessary wisdom to amend the same betimes, monished and warned by the ensamples of other men, rather than to tarry until thou be beaten also. I1 B. of 1551 and Day have commen, which some editors have supposed to be the same as comment.] [2 Thus B. of 1551, but Day has least then.] PROPHET JONAS. 465 And thirdly, if it shah so chance that the wild lusts of thy flesh shall blind thee, and carry thee clean away with AJv^fi^ them for a time ; yet at the latter end, when the God of lesson- all mercy shall have compassed thee in on every side with temptations, tribulation, adversities and cumbrance, to bring thee home again unto thine own heart, and to set thy sins which thou wouldest so fain cover, and put out of mind with delectation of voluptuous pastimes, before the eyes of thy conscience ; then call the faithful ensample of Jonas and all Howthou 7 x mayest at aU like stories unto thy remembrance, and with Jonas turn unto {^^wJVj thy Father that smote thee, not to cast thee away, but to u,y-jjjSftto lay a corrosive and a fretting plaster unto the boil that lay comfort- hid and fret inward, to draw the disease out, and to make it appear, that thou mightest feel thy sickness and the danger thereof, and come and receive the healing plaster of mercy. And forget not that whatsoever ensample of mercy God ^f^™81 hath shewed since the beginning of the world, the same is mgJ1cy1that promised thee, if thou wilt in like manner turn again, and is in fchrist- receive it as they did; and with Jonas be aknowen of3 thy ' sin, and confess it, and knowledge it unto thy Father. And as the law which fretteth thy conscience is in thine heart, and is none outward thing, even so seek within thy heart the plaster of mercy, the promises of forgiveness in our Saviour Jesus Christ, according unto all the ensamples of mercy that are gone before. And with Jonas let them that wait on vanities, and seek Inthy heart are the words God here and there, and in every temple save in their hearts, J^'g^,, go, and seek thou the testament of God in thine heart. For ^Sues ana in thine heart is the word of the law ; and in thine heart is. cnrist.of the word of faith in the promises of mercy in Jesus Christ : so that if thou confess with a repenting heart and knowledge, and surely believe that Jesus is Lord over all sin, thou art safe. And finally, when the rage of thy conscience is ceased, oursimsof > . . . . ourselves: and quieted with fast faith in the promises of mercy, then but remission: „ . A * > and forgive- offer with Jonas the offering of praise and thanksgiving, and "oSetrf *?Sf- pay the vow of thy baptism, that God only saveth, of his only ^j,™*?,},,,, mercy and goodness ; that is, believe stedfastly, and preach £k£ s constantly, that it is God only that smiteth, and God only that [3 Be aknowen of is equivalent to acknowledge. So Sir Thomas More : ' We say of a stubborn body, that standeth still in the denying of his fault, This man will not knowledge his fault, or he will not be aknowen of his fault.' Confutacion, p. 157.] SO [tyndale.] 466 PROLOGUE TO THE PROPHET JONAS. healeth : ascribing the cause of thy tribulation unto thine own sin, and the cause of thy deliverance unto the mercy of God. And beware of the leaven that saith, we have power, in our free-will, before the preaching of the gospel, to deserve grace, to keep the law of congruity, or God to be unrighteous. johni. And say with John in the first [chapter], that as the law was given by Moses, even so grace to fulfil it is given by Christ. And when they say our deeds with grace deserve heaven, Rom. vi. Say thou with Paul, (Rom. vi.) that " everlasting life is the John i. gift 0f God through Jesus Christ our Lord ;" and that (John i.) Rom. viii. we be made sons by faith ; and therefore (Rom. viii.) " heirs of God with Christ," And say, that we receive all of God Godhathno through faith, that followeth repentance; and that we do not need ol our o x * _ wemusfdo our works unto God, but either unto ourselves, to slay the seiv«f°andur" sin that remaineth in the flesh, and to wax perfect ; either ofroturenerigh- unto our neighbours, which do as much for us again in other things. And when a man exceedeth in gifts of grace, let him understand that they be given him, as well for his weak brethren, as for himself : as though all the bread be committed i unto the panter1, yet for his fellows with him, which give the thanks unto their lord, and recompense the panter again satisfledfor W1*a other kind of service in their offices. And when they "Xy say that Christ hath made no satisfaction for the sin we do befofebap^ after our baptism ; say thou with the doctrine of Paul, that in our baptism we receive the merits of Christ's death through repentance and faith, of which two baptism is the sign : and though when we sin of frailty after our baptism, we receive the sign no more, yet we be renewed again through repent ance, and faith in Christ's blood ; of which twain that sign of baptism, ever continued among us in baptizing our young children, doth ever keep us in mind, and call us back again unto our profession, if we be gone astray, and promiseth us !insa?eMal forgiveness. Neither can actual sin be washed away with ™ hr1«t™y our works, but with Christ's blood ; neither can there be any blood other sacrifice, or satisfaction to God ward for them, save Christ's blood : forasmuch as we can do no works unto God, but receive only of his mercy with our repenting faith, through Jesus Christ our Lord and only Saviour: unto whom, and unto God our Father through him, and unto his holy Spirit, that, only purgeth, sanctifieth, and washeth us in the innocent blood of our redemption, be praise for ever. Amen, [> Panter, or pantner : the keeper of the pantry.] THE PROLOGUES UPON THE GOSPELS AND EPISTLES. [INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. Toe this reprint the text of Day's folio of 1573 has been collated with the prologues in three New Testaments in the Baptist College library, viz. Tyndale's New Test., printed at Antwerp in 1534, by Martin Emperour; a 4to. New Test, of 1536, unnoticed by Mr Ander son, but described in the printed catalogue of the Test, and Bibles in the collection of Lea Wilson, Esq. ; and a New Test, of Coverdale, of tho date of 1538, in which all Tyndale's prologues are inserted, but not with perfect faithfulness ; for its editor has suppressed here and there a sentence or a clause that bore too hard on popery to be pala table to the ruling powers of that date. The full title of the 4to. is, " The Newe Testament yet once agayne corrected by Willyam Tindale, whereunto is added a necessarye table wherein easily and lightely may be founde any storye contayned in the gospells of S. Matthew, S. Marke, S. Luke, S. John and in the Actes of the Apostles. Jesus sayde, Marke xvi., Go ye into all the worlde and preache the glad tydinges to all creatures: and he that boleveth and is baptised, shal be saved. Prynted in the yere of our Lord God MD and XXXVI."] 30—2 468 PROLOGUE UPON THE PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OP ST MATTHEW. Here hast thou, most dear reader, the new Testament, or covenant made with us of God in Christ's blood, which I have looked over again, now at the last, with all diligence, and compared it unto the Greek, and have weeded out of it many faults, which lack of help at the beginning, and oversight, did sow therein. If aught seem changed, or not altogether agreeing with the Greek, let the finder of the fault consider the Hebrew phrase or manner of speech, left in the Greek words ; whose preterperfect tense and present tense are oft both one, and the future tense is the optative mood also, and the future tense oft the imperatjve mood in the active voice, and in the passive ever. Likewise person for person, number for number, and interrogation for a conditional, and such like, is with the Hebrews a common usage. I have also in many places set light in the margin to understand the text by. If any man find faults either with the translation, or aught beside, (which is easier for many to do than so well to have translated it themselves of their own pregnant wits at the beginning, without an ensample,) to the same it shall be lawful to translate it themselves, and to put what they lust thereto. If I shall perceive, either by myself or by infor mation of other, that aught be escaped me, or might more plainly be translated, I will shortly after cause it to be amended. Howbeit, in many places methinketh it better to put a declaration in the margin, than to run too far from the text. And in many places, where the text seemeth at the first chop1 hard to be understood, yet the circumstances be fore and after, and often reading together, make it plain enough. Moreover, because the kingdom of heaven, which is the ll Lit. at the first proposal of a bargain; on the first consideration.] GOSPEL OF ST MATTHEW. 4rJ9 scripture and word of God, may be so locked up that be which readeth or heareth it cannot understand it, as Christ testifieth how that the scribes and Pharisees had so shut it up (Matt, xxiii.), and had taken away the key of knowledge Matt, xxiii. (Luke xi.), that the Jews, which thought2 themselves within, Luke xi. were yet so locked out, and are to this day, that they can Tne jews to understand no sentence of the scripture unto their salvation, lockeKt0 though they can rehearse the texts every where, and dispute derstandmg o */ t/ ' x 0jf the scrip- thereof as subtilly as the popish3 doctors of Duns's dark learn- JJ™8- d ing, which with their sophistry served us as the Pharisees did the Jews : therefore, that I might be found faithful to my Father and Lord, in distributing unto my brethren and fellows of one faith their due and necessary food, so dressing it and seasoning it, that the weak stomachs may receive it also, and be the better for it ; I thought it my duty, most dear reader, to warn thee before, and to shew thee the right way in, and to give thee the true key to open it withal, and to arm thee against false prophets and malicious hypocrites; whose per petual study is to blind4 the scripture with glosses, and there to lock it up where it should save the soul, and to make us shoot at a wrong mark, to put our trust in those things that profit their bellies only, and slay our souls. The right way, yea, and the only way, to understand the The right scripture unto salvation, is that we earnestly and above all "„ ™^d" things search for the profession of our baptism, or covenants ^"?^ures- made between God and us. As, for an example, Christ saith, (Matt, v.), " Happy are the merciful, for they shall obtain Matt. v. mercy." Lo, here God hath made a covenant with us, to be merciful unto us, if we will be merciful one to another; so that the man which sheweth mercy unto his neighbour may be bold to trust in God for mercy at all needs : and con trariwise, judgment without mercy shall be to him that sheweth not mercy. So now, if he that sheweth no mercy trust in God for mercy, his faith is carnal and worldly, and but vain presumption : for God hath promised mercy only to the merciful. And therefore the merciless have not God's word that they shall have God's mercy, but, contrariwise, P Day, thought. Test, of 1536 has though.] [3 So Tyndale in the New Tests, of 1534 and 1636 ; that of 153S Omits popish.] . [4 So D. The Tests, have leaven.] 470 PROLOGUE UPON THE Matt. vi. that they shall have judgment without mercy. And, (Matt. vi.) " If ye shall forgive men their faults, your heavenly Father shall forgive you ; but and if ye shall not forgive men their faults, no more shall your Father forgive you your faults." Here also, by the virtue and strength of this covenant, wherewith God of his mercy hath bound himself to us un worthy, he that forgiveth his neighbour, when he returneth and amendeth, may be bold to believe and trust in God for remission of whatsoever he hath done amiss. And contra riwise, he that will not forgive, cannot but despair of forgive ness in the end, and fear judgment without mercy. me general The general covenant, wherein all other are comprehended Gndhlah ° and included, is this : If we meek ourselves to God, to keep ™s! e w' all his laws, after the example of Christ, then God hath bound himself unto us, to keep and make good all the mercies pro mised in Christ throughout all the scripture. in these com- All the whole law, which was given to utter our corrupt uconEtaed nature, is comprehended in the ten commandments. And the law. ten commandments are comprehended in these two, Love God Ant. ed. ¦ x and thy neighbour. And he that loveth his neighbour, in God and Christ, fulfilleth these two ; and consequently the ten ; and finally all the other. Now if we love our neigh bours in God and Christ, that is to wit, if we be loving, kind, and merciful to them, because God hath created them unto his likeness, and Christ hath redeemed them and bought them with his blood, then may we be bold to trust in God, through Christ and his deserving, for all mercy. For God hath promised and bound himself to us, to shew us all mercy, and to be a Father almighty to us, so that we shah not need to fear the power of all our adversaries. where no Now if any man, that submitteth not himself to keep the are, there the commandments, do think that he hath any faith in God, the f.titli is Vtiin Ant. eu. ' same man's faith is vain, worldly, damnable, devilish, and plain presumption, as is above said, and is no faith that can justify, or be accepted before God. And that is it that James meaneth in his epistle. For " how can a man believe," Kom. x. saith Paul, "without a preacher?" (Rom. x.) Now read all the scripture, and see where God sent any to preach mercy to any, save unto them only that repent, and turn to God with all their hearts, to keep his commandments. Unto the dis-> obedient, that will not turn, is threatened wrath, vengeance, GOSPEL OF ST MATTHEW. 471 and damnation, according to all the terrible acts1 and fearful examples of the bible. Faith now in God the Father, through our Lord Jesus what faith ~, . .. , i • , n itisthat Christ, according to the covenants and appointment made ^*- between God and us, is our salvation. Wherefore I have ever noted the covenants in the margins, and also the pro mises. Moreover, where thou findest a promise, and no covenant expressed therewith, there must thou understand a covenant ; that we, when we be received to grace, know it to be our duty to keep the law. As for an example, when the scripture saith, (Matt, vh.) "Ask, and it shall be given you; Matt.vii. seek, and ye shah find ; knock, and it shall be opened unto you;" it is to be understood, if that when thy neighbour asketh, seeketh, or knocketh unto thee, thou then shew him the same mercy which thou desirest of God, then hath God bound himself to help thee again, and else not. Also you see that two things are required to be in a Two things ... , p p • , , . are required christian man. The first is a stedfast faith and trust in to be in a christian almighty God, to obtain all the mercy that he hath promised wanT_ us through the deserving and merits of Christ's blood only, without all respect to our own works. And the other is, that we forsake evil and turn to God, to keep his laws, and to fight against ourselves and our corrupt nature perpetually, that we may do the will of God every day better and better. This have I said, most dear reader, to warn thee, lest thou shouldest be deceived, and shouldest not only read the scriptures in vain and to no profit, but also unto thy greater damnation. For the nature of God's word is, that whosoever What the read it, or hear it reasoned and disputed before him, it will God's word begin immediately to make him every day better and better, till he be grown into a perfect man in the knowledge of Christ and love of the law of God ; or else make him worse and worse, till he be hardened that he openly resist the Spirit of God, and then blaspheme after the example of Pharao, Korah, Abiram, Balaam, Judas, Simon Magus, and such other. This to be even so, the words of Christ (John iii.) do well John m. confirm : '¦' This is condemnation," saith he ; " the light is come into the world, but the men loved darkness more than light, for their deeds were evil." Behold, when the light of God's word cometh to a man, whether he read it or hear it preached f1 So Day. N. T. has curses.] 472 PROLOGUE UPON THE When we hear God's will and do it not, then God with- dfaweth his mercy and favour from us. Ant. ed. He that hearkeneth to the word of God and doth it, the same shall be blessed in his deed. Ant. ed. Matt. xxv. Luke xii. Matt. vii. and testified, and he yet have no love thereto, to fashion his life thereafter, but consenteth still unto his old deeds of ignorance ; then beginneth his just damnation immediately, and he is henceforth without excuse, in that he refused mercy offered him. For God offereth1 mercy upon the condition 4hat he will mend his living ; but he will not come under the covenant ; and from that hour forward he waxeth worse and worse, God taking his Spirit of mercy and grace from him, for his unthankfulness' sake. And Paul writeth, (Romans i.) that the heathen, because when they knew God, they had no lust to honour him with godly living, therefore God poured his wrath upon them, and took his Spirit from them, and gave them up to their hearts' lusts, to serve sin, from iniquity to iniquity, till they were thoroughly hardened and past re pentance. And Pharao, because when the word of God was in his country, and God's people scattered throughout all his land, and yet he neither loved them nor it; therefore God gave him up, and in taking his Spirit of grace from him so hardened his heart with covetousness, that afterward no miracle could convert him. Hereunto pertaineth the parable of the talents. (Matt, xxv.) The Lord commandeth the talent to be taken away from the evil and slothful servant, and to bind him hand and foot, and to cast him into utter darkness, and to give the talent unto him that had ten, saying, "To all that have more shall be given ; but from him that hath not, that he hath shall be taken from him." That is to say, he that hath a good heart towards the word of God, and a set purpose to fashion his deeds thereafter2, and to garnish it with godly living, and to testify it to other, the same shall increase daily more and more in the grace of Christ. But he that loveth it not, to live thereafter and to edify other, the same shall lose the grace of true knowledge, and be blinded again, and every day wax worse and worse, and blinder and blinder, till he be an utter enemy of the word of God, and his heart so hardened, that it shall be impossible to convert him. And (Luke xii.) the servant that knoweth his master's will, and prepareth not himself, shall be beaten with many stripes, that is, shall have greater damnation. And (Matt, vii.) all that hear the word of God, and do not thereafter, build on [i So Day. N. Test, has him.] [2 So N. Test. Day wants this clause.] GOSPEL OF ST MATTHEW. 473 fsahd ; that is, as the foundation laid on sand cannot resist what it is to violence of water, but is undermined and overthrown, even so the'sanT"' the faith of them that have no lust nor love to the law of God, builded upon the sand of their own imaginations, and not on the rock of God's word, according to his covenants, turneth to desperation in time of tribulation, and when God cometh to judge. And the vineyard (Matt, xxi.) planted and hired out to Matt xxi. the husbandmen, that would not render to the lord of the fruit in due time, and therefore was taken from them, and hired out to other, doth confirm the same. For Christ saith to the Jews, " The kingdom of heaven shall be taken from you, and given to a nation that will bring forth the fruits thereof:" as it is come to pass. For the Jews have lost the spiritual knowledge of God, and of his commandments, and also of all the scripture, so that they can understand nothing godly. And the door is so locked up, that all their knocking is in vain, though many of them take great pain for God's sake. And (Luke xiii.) the fig-tree that beareth no fruit is Luke xhl commanded to be plucked up. And, finally, hereto pertaineth, with infinite -other, the terrible parable of the unclean spirit, (Luke xi.) which, after he is cast out, when he cometh and Luke xt findeth his house swept and garnished, taketh to him seven spirit that re- worse than himself, and cometh and entereth in and dweiieth worse sort than he was there, and so is the end of the man worse than the beginning. ^t"0jtehwa3 The Jews, they had cleansed themselves with God's word from Ant ed- all outward idolatry, and worshipping of idols ; but their hearts remained still faithless to God- ward, and toward his mercy and truth, and therefore without love also and lust to his law, and to their neighbours for his sake ; and through false trust in their own works (to which heresy the child of perdition, the wicked bishop of Rome, with his lawyers, hath brought us Christians3) were more abominable idolaters than before, and became ten times worse' in the end than at the beginning. For tho first idolatry was soon spied, and easy to be rebuked of the prophets by the scripture; but the latter is more subtle to beguile withal, and a hundred times of more difficulty to be weeded out of men's hearts. This also is a conclusion, nothing more certain, or more proved by the testimony and examples of the scripture, that [3 This parenthesis is in D. but not in N. Test, of 1536.] 474 PROLOGUE UPON THE such as are if any that favoureth the word of God be so weak that professors of d .n , x the word of he cannot chaste his flesh, him will the Lord chastise and God, and will mo'uI^Sw scourge every day sharper and sharper with tribulation and wiiiGod6111 misfortune, that nothing shall prosper with him, but all shall scour'|esnd go against him, whatsoever he take in hand ; and the Lord Ant **¦ will visit him with poverty, with sicknesses, and diseases, and shall plague him with plague upon plague, each more loath some, terrible, and fearful than other, till he be at utter de fiance with his flesh. Let us, therefore, that have now at this time our eyes opened again, through the tender mercy of God, keep a mean. Let us so put our trust in the mercy of God through Christ, that we know it our duty to keep the law of God, and to love our neighbours for their Father's sake which created them, and for their Lord's sake which redeemed them, and bought them so dearly with his blood. Let us walk in the fear of God, and have our eyes open unto both parts of God's covenants, being certified that none shall be partaker of the mercy save he that will fight against fit ufinttfe^ tne nesh> to keep the law. And let us arm ourselves with God,uan°dfour tnis remembrance, that as Christ's works justify from sin, to^ontinue3 and set us in the favour of God, so our own deeds, through w!rT."- working of the Spirit of God, help us to continue in the favour and the grace into which Christ hath brought us ; and that we can no longer continue in favour and grace, than our hearts are set to keep the law. Furthermore, concerning the law of God, this is a general conclusion, that the whole law, whether they be ceremonies, sacrifices, yea, or sacraments either, or precepts of equity between man and man, throughout all degrees of the world, all were given for our profit and necessity only, and not for any need that God hath of our keeping them, or that his joy is increased thereby, or that the deed, for the deed itself, doth please him : that is, all that God requireth of us, when we be at one with him, and do put our trust in him, and love him, is, that we love every man his neighbour, to pity him, and to have compassion on him in all his needs, and to be merciful unto him. This to be even so, Christ testifieth in the seventh of Matthew, "This is the law and the prophets:" that is, to do as thou wouldest be done to, (according, I mean, to tbe doctrine of the scripture,) and not to do that thou wouldest not have done to thee, is all that the law requireth GOSPEL OF ST MATTHEW. 475 and the prophets. And Paul to the Romans (xiii.) affirmeth Rom. xm. also, that "love is the fulfilling of the law," and that he which tove is the loveth, doth of his own accord all that the law requireth. thefiiaw.g of And (1 Tim. i.) Paul saith, that "the love of a pure heart, and i Tim. j. good conscience, and faith unfeigned, is the end" and fulfilling of the law. For faith unfeigned in Christ's blood causeth Faith is the thee to love for Christ's sake; which love is the pure love w.t. only and the only cause of a good conscience. For then is the conscience pure, when the eye looketh to Christ in all her deeds, to do them for his sake, and not for her own singular advantage, or any other wicked purpose. And John, both in his gospel and also epistles, never speaketh of any other law, than to love one another purely, affirming that we have God himself dwelling in us, and all that God desireth, if we love one the other. Seeing then that faith to God, and love and mercifulness to our neighbours, is all that the law requireth, therefore of necessity the law must be understood and interpreted by them : so that all inferior laws are to be kept and observed, as long as they be servants to faith and love ; and then to be broken immediately, if through any occasion they hurt either the faith which we should have to God-ward in the confidence of Christ's blood, or the love which we owe to our neighbours for Christ's sake. And therefore, when the blind Pharisees murmured and grudged at him and his disciples, that they brake the sabbath-day and traditions of the elders, and that he himself did eat with publicans and sinners, he answered, (Matt, ix.) alleging Esaias the prophet, " Go rather Matt ix and learn what this meaneth, I require mercy, and not sa- Godrequireth crifice." And, (Matt, xh,) " 0 that ye wist what this meaneth, rScrinee. I require mercy, and not sacrifice." For only love and mer- MattAn. cifulness understandeth the law, and else nothing. And he 0nl loveun. that hath not that written in his heart, shall never under- t'Slaw^"1 stand the law ; no, though all the angels of heaven went W- T" about to teach him. And he that hath that graven in his heart, shall not only understand the law, but also shall do, of his own inclination, all that is required of the law, though never law had been given ; as all mothers do of themselves, without law, unto their children all that can be required by any law ; love overcoming all pain, grief, tediousness, or loathsomeness. And even so, no doubt, if we had continued 476 PROLOGUE UPON THE in our first state of innocency, we should ever have fulfilled the law without compulsion of the law. And because the law (which is a doctrine that, through teaching every man his duty, doth utter our corrupt nature) is sufficiently described by Moses, therefore is httle mention made thereof in tbe new testament, save of love only, wherein all the law is included; as seldom mention is made of the new testament in the old law, save here and there are promises made unto them, that Christ should come and bless them and deliver them, and that the gospel and new testament should be preached and pub lished unto all nations. THE GOSPEL AND THE TWO TESTAMENTS. Gosnel W.T. New testa ment. W.T. Our works extend no bour. Ant. ed. The Gospel is glad tidings of mercy and grace, and that our corrupt nature shall be healed again for Christ's sake, and for the merits of his deservings only ; yet on that con dition, that we will turn to God, to learn to keep his laws spiritually, that is to say, of love for his sake, and will also suffer the curing of our infirmities. The new testament is as much to say as a new covenant. The old testament is an old temporal covenant, made between God and tbe carnal children of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, otherwise called Israel, upon the deeds and the observing of a temporal law ; where the reward of the keeping is temporal hfe, and prosperity in the land of Canaan; and the breaking is rewarded with temporal death and punishment. But the new testament is an everlasting covenant made unto the children of God, through faith in Christ, upon the deservings of Christ ; where eternal life is promised to all that believe, and death to all that are unbelieving. My deeds, if I keep the law, are re warded with temporal promises of this life ; but if I believe in Christ, Christ's deeds have purchased for me the eternal promise of the everlasting life. If I commit nothing worthy of death, I deserve to my reward that no man kill me ; if I hurt no man, I am worthy that no man hurt me. If I help ^'oufnelgh- mv neighbour, I am worthy that he help me again, &c. So that with outward deeds, with which I serve other men, I deserve that other men do like to me in this world; and they extend no further. But Christ's deeds extend to life ever lasting unto all that believe, &c. GOSPEL OF ST MATTHEW. 477 These be sufficient in this place concerning the law and the gospel, new testament and old ; so that, as there is but one God, one Christ, one faith, and one baptism, even so understand thou that there is but one gospel, though many write it, and many preach it. For all preach the same Christ, and bring the same glad tidings. And thereto Paul's epistles, with the gospel of John, and his first epistle, and the first epistle of St Peter, are most pure gospel, and most plainly and richly describe the glory of the grace of Christ. If ye require more of the law, seek in the prologue to the Romans, and in other places where it is sufficiently entreated of;- REPENTANCE. Concerning this word repentance, or (as they used) whyTyndaie " penance," the Hebrew hath in the old testament generally repentance. ..' , , , p .... s . . J rather than yw [sob), turn, or be converted : for which the translation penance. -* lw ^ ' Ant. ed. that we take for St Jerome's' hath most part converti 'to turn, to be converted,' and sometime agere panitentiam. And the Greek in the new Testament hath perpetually fxeravoew, to turn in the heart and mind, and to come to the right knowledge, and to a man's right wit again. For which peTavoew St Jerome's translation hath sometime ago pceni- tentiam, 'I do repent ;' sometime pozniteo, 'I repent ;' sometime pceniteor, ' I am repentant ;' sometime habeo poenitentiam, ' I have repentance ;' sometime pcenitet me, ' it repenteth me.' And Erasmus useth much this word resipisco, ' I come to myself, or to my right mind again.' And the very sense and signification both of the Hebrew and also of the Greek word is, to be converted and to turn to God with all the heart, to know his will, and to live according to his laws ; and to be cured of our corrupt nature with the oil of his Spirit, and wine of obedience to his doctrine. Which conversion or turn ing, if it be unfeigned, these four do accompany it and are included therein. Confession, not in the priest's ear, (for that is but man's p^/of re invention,) but to God in the heart, and before all the con- ffed.6' gregation of God; how that we be sinners and sinful, and that our whole nature is corrupt, and inclined to sin and all unrighteousness, and therefore evil, wicked, and damnable ; and his law holy and just, by which our sinful nature is re- [! The Latin Vulgate.] 478 prologue upon the What man ner of satis faction we ought to make. Ant. ed. buked : and also to our neighbours, if we have offended any person particularly. Then contrition, sorrowfulness that we be such damnable sinners, and not only have sinned, but are wholly inclined to sin still, Thirdly, faith (of which our old doctors have made no mention at all in the description of their penance), that God for Christ's sake doth forgive us, and receive us to mercy, and is at one with us, and will heal our corrupt nature. And fourthly, satisfaction, or amends- making, not to God with holy works, but to my neighbour whom I have hurt, and to the congregation of God, whom I have offended, if any open crime be found in me ; and sub mitting of a man's self unto the congregation or church of Christ, and to the officers of the same, to have his life cor rected and governed henceforth of them, according to the true doctrine of the church of Christ. And note this, that as satisfaction or amends-making is counted righteousness before the world, and a purging of sin, so that the world, when I have made a full mends, hath no further to complain ; even so faith in Christ's blood is counted righteousness and a purging of all sin before God. Moreover, he that sinneth against his brother, sinneth also against his Father, almighty God : and as the sin com mitted against his brother is purged before the world with making amends or asking forgiveness, even so is the sin committed against God purged through faith in Christ's blood only. For Christ saith, (John viii.) " Except ye believe that I am he, ye shall die in your sins :" that is to say, ' If ye think that there is any other sacrifice or satisfaction to God- ward, than me, ye remain ever in sin before God, howsoever righteous ye appear before the world.' Wherefore now, whether ye call this {/xerdvoia) repentance, conversion, or turning again to God, either amending, &c. ; or whether ye say, ' Repent, be converted, turn to God, amend your living,' or what ye lust ; I am content, so ye understand what is meant thereby, as I have now declared. ELDERS. nlniethethem IN the old Testament the temporal heads and rulers of noteprKts. the Jews, which had the governance over the lay or common people, are called elders, as ye may see in the four evan gelists. Out of which custom Paul in his epistle, and also GOSPEL OF ST MATTHEW. 479 Peter, called the prelates and spiritual governors, which are bishops and priests, elders. Now, whether ye call them elders or priests, it is to me all one, so that ye understand that they be officers and servants of the word of God : unto the which all men, both high and low, that will not rebel against Christ, must obey, as long they preach and rule truly, and no longer1. THE OFFICE OF ALL ESTATES. A bishop must be faultless, the husband of one wife, honestly apparelled, harberous 2, apt to teach, not drunken, no fighter, not given to filthy lucre, but gentle, abhorring fight ing, abhorring covetousness, and one that ruleth his own house honestly, having children under obedience with all honesty. RULERS. Ye that are rulers in the earth, see that you love right eousness, and that you commit none unrighteousness in judg ment. Thou shalt not favour the poor, nor honour the mighty, but shall judge thy neighbour righteously. THE COMMONS. Te shah not deceive your brethren, neither with weight nor measure, but shall have true balances and true weights ; for I am the Lord your God. P In Day's folio this kind of appendix to the prologue ceases here. The articles which follow are from the New Test, of 1536.] P Hospitable.] 480 PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OF ST MARK. A PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OF ST MARK. Of Mark, read (Acts xii.) how Peter, after he was loosed out of prison by the angel, came to Mark's mother's houset where many of the disciples were praying for his deliverance. And Paul and Barnabas took him with them from Jerusalem, and brought him to Antioch, Acts xii, and Acts xiii. Paul and Barnabas took Mark with them when they were sent to preach ; from whom he also departed, as it appeareth in the said chapter, and returned to Jerusalem again. And, Acts xv. Paul and Barnabas were at variance about him ; Paul not willing to take him with them, because he forsook them in their first journey. Notwithstanding yet, when Paul wrote the epistle to the Colossians, Mark was with him, as he saith in the fourth chapter ; of whom Paul also testifieth, both that he was Barnabas' sister's son, and also his fellow-worker in the kingdom of God. And, 2 Timothy iv., Paul commandeth Timothy to bring Mark with him, affirming that he was needful to him to minister to him. Finally, he was also with Peter when he wrote his first epistle, and so familiar, that Peter calleth him his son : whereof ye see of whom he learned his gospel, even of the very apostles, with whom he had his continual con, versation ; and also of what authority his writing is, and how worthy of credence. PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OF ST LUKE. 481 A PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OP ST LUKE. Lucas was Paul's companion, at the leastway from the xvith of the Acts forth1, and with him in all his tribulation ; and he went with Paul at his last going up to Jerusalem. And from thence he followed Paul to Csesarea, where he lay two years in prison; and from Csesarea he went with Paul to Rome, where he lay two other years in prison. And he was with Paul when he wrote to the Colossians, as he testi fieth in the fourth chapter, saying, " The beloved Lucas the physician saluteth you ;" and he was with Paul when he wrote the second epistle to Timothy, as he saith in the fourth chapter, saying, " Only Lucas is with me i" whereby ye see the authority of the man, and of what credence and reverence his writing is worthy of, and thereto of whom he learned the story of his gospel ; as he himself saith, how that he learned it and searched it out with all diligence of them that saw it, and were also partakers at the doing. And as for the Acts of the Apostles, he himself was at the doing of them, at the least of the most part, and had his part therein, and there fore wrote of his own experience. [! That is, forward.] r i 31 [TYNDALE.] 482 PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OF ST JOHN. A PROLOGUE UPON THE GOSPEL OP ST JOHN. John, what he was, is manifest by the three first evan gelists: first, Christ's apostle, and that one of the chief: then, Christ's nigh kinsman, and for his singular innocency and softness singularly beloved, and of singular familiarity with Christ, and ever one of the three witnesses of most secret things. The cause of his writing was certain heresies that arose in his time, namely two ; of which one denied Christ to be very God, and the other to be very man and to be come in the very flesh and nature of man. Against the which two heresies he wrote both his gospel and also his first epistle ; and in the beginning of his gospel saith, that " the Word" or thing " was at the beginning, and was with God, and was also very God ;" and that " all things were created by it ;" and that " it was also made flesh," that is to say, became very man ; and " he dwelt among us," saith he, " and we saw his glory." And in the beginning of his epistle he saith, " We shew' you of the thing that was from the beginning, which also we heard, saw with our eyes, and our hands handled." And again, "We shew you everlasting life, that was with the Father, and appeared to us, and we heard and saw it," &c. In that he saith that it was from the beginning, and that it was eternal life, and that it was with God, he affirmeth him to bo very God. And that he saith, " We heard, saw, and felt," he witnesseth that he was very man also. John also wrote last, and therefore touched not the story that the other had compiled, but writeth most of faith, and promises, and of the sermons of Christ. This be sufficient concerning the four evangelists and their authority and worthiness to be believed. A PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE ROMANS. [INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. This prologue is called 'an introduction to Paul's epistle to the Romans,' in a list of forbidden books given by Foxe, Vol. iv. p. 667, London, 1837 ; and Sir Thomas More says of it : " Then have ye his [Tyndale's] introduction into St Paul's epistle, with which he intro- duceth and bringeth his readers into a false understanding of St Paul, making them, among many other heresies, beheve that St Paul were in the mind that only faith were alway sufficient for salvation, and that men's good works were nothing worth, nor could no thanks de serve, nor no reward in heaven, though they were wrought in grace. And these things teacheth Tyndale as the mind of St Paul ; when St Paul saith himself that they which so misconstrue him, to the depraving of men's good works, be well worthy damnation." Pref. to Confu- tacion, 1532. Dr Robert Ridley, prebendary of St Paul's, had taken angry notice of it at an earlier date. In writing to archbishop War- ham's chaplain, Henry Golde, afterwards implicated in the affair of the Kentish nun, who pretended to have revelations from heaven, he enumerates the "Introduction into the epistle of Paul to the Romans," with the Prologue afterwards called the Pathway, as proving Tyndale and Roye to be manifest Lutherans, and as teaching " altogether most poisoned and abhorrable heresies that can be thought." The date of this letter is Feb. 1527 ; and the Prologue to the Romans appears to have been pubhshed by Tyndale, as a separate pamphlet, in 1526. It might have given this opponent of the reformation more ground for calling Tyndale a Lutheran than either More or he seems to have been aware ; for the greater part of it is in fact a paraphrase, and sometimes a literal translation, of Luther's preface to the •Romans, a Latin version of which had been published in 1523, with this title: "Prsefatio methodica totius Scripturse in epistola ad Romanos, e verna- cula Martini Lutheri in Latinum versa ; per Justum Jonam." The passages more or less closely copied from Luther will be distinguished with quotation marks in this reprint : and the marginal notes are to be understood as taken from Day's folio : for there are no margins to this prologue in the Testaments collated by the editor ; and though there are several in the copy of this prologue introduced into Mat- thewe's Bible, first ed. of 1537, which has also been collated, they are generally different from Day's.] 31—2 484 PROLOGUE UPON THE A PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE ROMANS. The episue to the Ro mans is the exeellentest part of the new Testa ment. Here you must note these words. Law, how it is to he un derstood. 'Forasmuch as this epistle is the principal and most excellent part1 of the new Testament and most pure evange^ hon', that is to say, glad tidings, and that we call gospel, and also is a light and a way unto the whole scripture; I think it meet 'that every christian man not only know it, by rote and without the book, but also exercise himself therein evermore continually, as with the daily bread of the soul. No man verily can read it too oft, or study it too well ; for the more it is studied, the easier it is ; the more it is chewed, the pleasanter it is ; and the more groundly it is searched, the preciouser things are found in it,' so great treasure of spiritual things lieth hid therein. ' I will therefore bestow my labour and diligence, through this little preface or pro logue, to prepare a way in thereunto, so far forth as God shall give me grace, that it may be the better understood of every man : for it hath been hitherto evil darkened with glosses and wonderful dreams of sophisters, that no man could spy out the intent and meaning of it ; which never theless of itself is a bright light, and sufficient to give hght unto all the scripture.' ' First, We must mark diligently the manner of speaking of the apostle, and above all things know what Paul meaneth by these* words, the law, sin, grace, faith, righteousness, flesh, spirit, and such like ; or else, read thou it ever so oft, thou shalt but lose thy labour. This word law may not be understood here after the common manner, and (to use Paul's term) after the manner of men,' or after man's ways ; as that thou wouldest say the law here, in this place, were nothing but learning, which teacheth what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done, as it goeth with man's law, 'where the law is fulfilled with outward works only, though the heart be never so far off. But God ll Luther, right corner-stone.] EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 485 judgeth after2 the ground of the heart, yea, and the thoughts and the secret movings of the mind : therefore his law me lawof requireth the ground of the heart,' and love from the bottom the bottom th thereof, 'and is not content with the outward work only, but rebuketh those works most of all, which spring not of love, from the ground' and low bottom of the heart, though they appear outward never so honest and good ; as Christ, in the gospel rebuketh the Pharisees above all other that were open sinners, and caheth them hypocrites, that is to say, simulars3, and painted sepulchres : which Pharisees yet lived ' no men so pure, as pertaining to the outward deeds and works of the law; yea, and Paul (Phil, iii.) confesseth ofstPauiwas himself that, as touching the law, he was such a one as no cutorofthe • t Christians. man could complain on ; and, notwithstanding, was yet a murderer of the Christians, persecuted them, and tormented them so sore that he compelled them to blaspheme Christ, and was altogether merciless, as many are which now feign outward good works. ' For this cause the 115th4 psalm calleth all men liars, because that no man keepeth the law from the ground of the heart, neither can keep it, though he appear outwardly full of good works. For all men are naturally inclined unto if webenot evil, and hate the law. We find in ourselves unlust and good, then iti- •, dothsinreign tediousness to do good, but lust and delectation to do evil. m us- Now where no free lust is to do good, there the bottom of the heart fulfilleth not the law ; and there no doubt is also sin, and wrath is deserved before God, though there be never so great outward shew and appearance of honest living. For this cause concludeth St Paul in the second chapter, No man can .1 i -r it . t /«ii fulfilthelaw, that the Jews ah are sinners and transgressors of the law, butchrist though they make men believe, through hypocrisy of outward works, how that they fulfil the law ; ' and saith, that he only which doth the law is righteous before God, meaning thereby, that no man with outward works fulfilleth the law. " Thou," saith he to the Jew, " teachest a man should not break wed- [2 After is wanting in Matthewe's Bible.] [3 So D. but in M. B. dissemblers. The word dissimulars will occur presently, and means persons who conceal what they are ; whilst simulars means such as pretend to be what they are not.] [4 The 115th of the Vulgate is the 116th ofthe Hebrew and of our authorised version.] 486 PROLOGUE UPON THE lock, and yet breakest wedlock thyself. Wherein thou judgest another man, therein condemnest thou thyself; for thou thyself doest even the very same things which thou judgest." As though he would say, Thou livest outwardly in the works of the law, and judgest them that live not so. Thou teachest other men, and seest a mote in another man's eye, but art not ware of the beam that is in thine own eye. For though thou keep the law outwardly with works, for fear of rebuke, shame, and punishment, either for T^epure md love of reward, advantage, and vain-glory ; yet doest thou Is loathe" a^ Wlt^01lt iust an(i l°ve toward the law, and hadst lever a same of love. great deal otherwise do, if thou didst not fear the law;' yea, inwardly, in thine heart, thou wouldest that there were no law, no, nor yet God, the author and venger of the law, if it were possible; so painful it is unto thee to have thine appetites refrained, and to be kept down. ' Wherefore then it is a plain conclusion, that thou, from the ground and bottom of thine heart, art an enemy to the law. What prevaileth it now, that thou teachest another man not to steal, when thou thine own self art a thief in thine heart, and outwardly wouldest fain steal if thou durst ? Though that the outward deeds abide not alway behind with such hypocrites and dissimulars, but break forth, even as an evil scab cannot always be kept in with violence of medicine. The law 'Thou teachest another man, but teachest not thyself; yea, cannot be » « ' satisfied but thou wottest not what thou teachest, for thou understandest by mward ' lova not the law aright,' how that it cannot be fulfilled and satisfied, but with an unfeigned1 love and affection; much less can it be fulfilled with outward deeds and works only. crelsShsin. ' Moreover, the law increaseth sin, as he saith, (chap, v.) M"B' because man is an enemy to the law, forasmuch as it requireth so many tilings clean contrary to his nature,' whereof he is not able to fulfil one point or tittle as the law requireth it ; and therefore are we more provoked, and have greater lust to break it. spwtuld.'8 ' For which cause sake he saith, (chap, vii,) that " the law is spiritual ;" as though he would say, If the law were fleshly, and but man's doctrine, it might be fulfilled, satisfied, and stilled with outward deeds. But now is the law ghostly, and no man fulfilleth it, except that all that he doth spring f1 So M. B., but Day has inward.] EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 487 of love from tho bottom of the heart. Such a new heart and lusty courage unto the law-ward canst thou never come by of thine own strength and enforcement, but by the operation and working of the Spirit. For the Spirit of God only The spirit of maketh a man spiritual and hke unto the law, so that now a man , spiritual. henceforth he doth nothing of fear, or for lucre, or van tage's sake, or of vain-glory, but of a free heart and of inward lust. The law is spiritual, and will be both loved and fulfilled of a spiritual heart ; and therefore of necessity requireth it the Spirit, that maketh a man's heart free, and giveth him lust and courage unto the law-ward. Where such a spirit is not, there remaineth sin, grudging, and hatred against the law ; which law nevertheless is good, righteous, and holy.' j^^. ' Acquaint thyself therefore with the manner of speaking h°"y',and of the apostle, and let this now stick fast in thine heart, that it is not both one, to do the deeds and works of the law, and to fulfil the law. The work of the law is whatsoever a man works of the .,/». p . law and the doth or can do of his own free-will, of his own proper fulfilling of 7 x 1 the law are strength and enforcing. Notwithstanding, though there betwothinss- never so great working, yet as long as there remaineth in the heart unlust, tediousness, grudging, grief, pain, loath someness, and compulsion toward the law, so long are all the works unprofitable, lost, yea, and damnable in the sight of God. This meaneth Paul, (chap, iii.) where he saith, " By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in the sight of God." Hereby perceivest thou, that those sophisters are but deceivers, who teach that a man may and must prepare himself to grace, and to the favour of God, with good works, By the works before he have the Spirit arid true faith of Christ. How j»™™ 1 be justified. can they prepare themselves unto the favour of God, and to that which is good, when they themselves can do no good, nor can once think a good thought, or consent to do good, the devil possessing their hearts, minds, and thoughts, cap tive at his pleasure ? Can those works please God, thinkest thou, which are done with grief, pain, and tediousness, with an evil will, with a contrary and grudging mind ?' 0 holy Prosperus, how mightily with the scripture of Paul didst thou confound this heresy twelve hundred years ago, or thereupon2 ! [2 Prosperus, or Tiro Prosper of Ries in Aquitain, lived in the earlier half of the fifth century, and distinguished himself by his de- 488 PROLOGUE UPON THE sF.hitaaiasoi3 ' ^° ^u'ni tne iaw 1S to ^° *he works thereof, and what- fuifiiiedbe soever the law commands, with love, lust, and inward affec- spirituaiiy. tjon an(j delectation, and to live godly and well, freely, willingly, and without compulsion of the law, even as though there were no law at all. Such lust, and free liberty to love1 the law, cometh only by the working of the Spirit in the heart; as he saith in the fifth chapter.' feuh™ "aire ' Now 1S the Spirit none otherwise given, than by faith oV ood.pirit oniy> m that we believe the promises of God' without waver ing, how that God is true, and wuT fulfil all his good promises towards us for Christ's blood's sake, as it is plain, (chap, i.) : " I am not ashamed," saith Paul, "of Christ's glad tidings, for it is the power of God unto salvation to as many as believe ;" for at once and together, even as we believe the glad tidings preached to us, the Holy Ghost entereth into our hearts, and looseth the bonds of the devil, which before possessed our hearts in captivity, and held them, that we could have no lust to the wih of God in the law ; and ' as the Spirit cometh by faith only, even so faith cometh by hearing the word, or glad tidings, of God, when Christ is preached, how that he is God's Son and man also, dead and risen again for our sakes, Son^by™" as he saith in chap. iii. iv. x. All our justifying then christ? cometh of faith, and faith and the Spirit come of God, and not of us. 2* When we say, faith bringeth the Spirit, it is not to be understood, that faith deserveth the Spirit, or that the Spirit is not present in us before faith : for the Spirit is ever in us, and faith is the gift and working of the Spirit : but through preaching the Spirit beginneth to work in us. fence of the doctrines of Augustine, and by his argumentative replies to their Pelagian opponents. Cave, Script. Eccles. under date of 444. The main tenor of his writings was to the effect designated by Tyndale ; and a single passage translated from them by Milner may serve as a specimen of his view of the question respecting man's ability to do good. ' The mind, which originally had light from the supreme hght, involves the will in darkness, and leaving the light chooses to grow black in earthly darkness, nor can it voluntarily lift up its captive eyes on high ; because, by the robbery of the tyrant, it hath even lost the knowledge of the greatness of the wound under which it lies prostrate.' Milner's Hist, of the Church of Christ, Cent. V. ch. 13.] f1 So D., in M. B. love is wanting.] [2 The passage included between the asterisks is not in Day's folio.] EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 489 And as by preaching the law he worketh the fear of God ; so by preaching the glad tidings he worketh faith. And now when we believe, and are come under the covenant of God, then are we sure of the Spirit by the promise of God, and then the Spirit accompanieth faith inseparably, and we begin to feel his working. And so faith certifieth us of the Spirit, and also bringeth the Spirit with her, unto the work ing of all other gifts of grace, and to the working out of the rest of our salvation, until' we have altogether overcome sin, death, heU, and Satan, and are come unto the everlasting life of glory. And for this cause we say, Faith bringeth the Spirit.* 'Hereof cometh it, that faith only justifieth, maketh righteous, and fulfilleth the law : for it bringeth the Spirit through Christ's deservings ; the Spirit bringeth lust, looseth the heart, maketh him free, setteth him at liberty, and giveth him strength to work the deeds of the law with love, even as the law requireth; then at the last out of the same faith, so working in the heart, spring all good works gjj,0^®. by their own accord. That meaneth he in the third chapter : S^L*0 for after he hath cast away the works of the law, so that he soundeth as though he would break and disannul the law through faith, he answereth to that might be laid against him, saying, " We destroy not the law through faith, but maintain, further, or establish the law through faith ;" that is to say, we fulfil the law through faith.' ' Sin in the scripture is not called that outward work of sin. only committed by the body, but all the whole business, and whatsoever accompanieth, moveth, or stirreth unto the out- Sin. what ward deed; and that whence the works spring, as unbelief, proneness, and readiness unto the deed in the ground of the heart, with ah the powers, affections, and appetites, wherewith we can but sin ; so that we say, that a man then sinneth, when he is carried away headlong into sin, altogether, as much as he is, of that poisonous inclination and corrupt nature, wherein he was conceived and born. For there is none outward sin committed, except a man be carried away altogether, with life, soul, heart, body, lust and mind there unto. The scripture looketh singularly unto the heart, and unto the root and original fountain of all sin ; which is unbe lief in the bottom of the heart. For as faith only justifieth and bringeth the Spirit and lust unto the outward good 490 PROLOGUE UPON THE John xii. Eph. iv. works; even so unbelief only damneth and keepeth out the Spirit, provoketh the flesh, and stirreth up lust unto the evil outward works, as it happened1 to Adam and Eve in Gen. m. Paradise.' Gen. iii. sm m the ' For this cause Christ caheth sin unbelief; and that not- chiefiy called ably in John xvi. " The spirit," saith he, " shall rebuke the Joim via. world of sin, because they beheve not in me." 2*And, (John viii.) " I am the light of the world." And therefore (John xii.) he biddeth them, " While ye have light, believe in the light, that ye may be the children of light ; for he that walketh in darkness knoweth not where he goeth." Now as Christ is the light, so is the ignorance of Christ that darkness whereof he speaketh, in which he that walketh knoweth not whither he goeth ; that is, he knoweth not how to work a good work in the sight of God, or what a good work is. And therefore Christ saith, " As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world ; but there cometh night when no man can work:" which night is but ignorance of Christ, in which no man can see to do any work to please God. And Paul exhorteth, (Eph. iv.) That they " walk not as other heathens, who are strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them." And again, in the same chapter : " Put off the old man, which is corrupt through the lusts of error," that is to say, ignorance. And, (Rom. xiii.) " Let us cast away the deeds of darkness," that is to say, of ignorance and unbehef. And, (1 Pet. i.) " Fashion not yourselves unto your old lusts of ignorance." And (1 John ii.) " He that loveth his brother dweiieth in light, and he that hateth his brother walketh in darkness, and wotteth not whither he goeth, for darkness hath blinded his eyes." By light he meaneth the knowledge of Christ, and by darkness the ignorance of Christ. For it is impossible that he who knoweth Christ truly should hate his brother. Furthermore, to perceive this more clearly, thou shalt understand, that it is not possible to sin any sin at all, except a man break the first commandment before. Now the first com mandment is divided into two verses : " Thy Lord God is one God ; and thou shalt love thy Lord God with all thine heart, f1 So Matt. Bible. D. has fortuned.] [2 The passage between the asterisks is not in Day nor in Luther ; but in 1536 edition of Tyndale's New Testament, and in Matthewe'S Bible.] Horn. xiii. I Pet. i. 1 John ii. EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 491 with all thy soul, with all thy power, and with all thy might." And the whole cause why I sin against any inferior precept is, that this love is not in mine heart ; for were this love written in mine heart, and were it full and perfect in my soul, it would keep mine heart from consenting unto any sin. And the whole and only cause why this love is not written in our hearts is, that we beheve not the first part, that " our Lord God is one God." For wist I what these words, "one Lord and one God," mean ; that is to say, if I understood that he made all and ruleth all, and that whatsoever is done to me, whether it be good or bad, is yet his will, and that he only is the Lord that ruleth and doeth it ; and wist thereto what this word, "mine," meaneth; that is to say, if mine heart believed and felt the infinite benefits and kindness of God toward me, and understood and earnestly beheved the manifold covenants of mercy wherewith God hath bound him self to be mine wholly and altogether, with all his power, love, mercy, and might; then should I love him with all mine heart, soul, power, and might, and of that love ever keep his commandments. So see ye now, that as faith is the mother of all goodness and of all good works ; so is unbelief the ground and root of all evil and all evil works. Finally, if any man that hath forsaken sin, and is con verted to put his trust in Christ, and to keep the law of God, do fall at any time, the cause is, that the flesh through negli gence hath choked the spirit arid oppressed her, and taken from her the food of her strength ; which food is her medi tation in God, and in his wonderful deeds, and in the manifold covenants of his mercy. * ' Wherefore then, before all good works, as good fruits, there must needs be faith in the heart whence they spring. And before ah bad deeds, as bad fruits, there must needs be unbelief in the heart, as in the root, fountain, pith, and strength of all sin: which unbelief and ignorance3 is called the head of the serpent, of the old dragon, which the wo man's seed, Christ, must tread under foot as promised unto Adam.' ' Grace and gift have this difference. Grace properly Grace, howit is God's favour, benevolence, or kind mind, which of his in the scrip0- tures. [3 And ignorance, is not in Day, nor in Luther ; but in Matthewe's Bible and the Tyndale of 1536.] 492 PROLOGUE UPON THE own self, without deserving of us, he beareth to us, whereby he was moved and inclined to give Christ unto us, with all Gift, what it his other gifts of grace. Gift is the Holy Ghost, and his working, which he poureth into the hearts of them on whom he hath mercy, and whom he favoureth. Though the gifts of the Spirit increase in us daily, and have not yet their full perfection, yea, and though there remain in us yet evil lusts and sin, which fight against the Spirit, as he Ga,v- saith here in chap. vii. and Gal. v., and as it was spoken Gen. iii. before, in Gen. iii., of the debate between the woman's seed and the seed of the serpent ; yet nevertheless God's favour is God for so great and so strong over us for Christ's sake, that we Christ's sake, ° o ' receiveth us. are counted for full whole, and perfect before God. For God's favour toward us divideth not herself, increasing a little and a little, as do the gifts ; but receiveth us whole, and altogether, in full love for Christ's sake, our Intercessor and Mediator, and because the gifts of the Spirit, and the battle between the Spirit and evil lusts, are begun in us already.' 'Of this now understandest thou the seventh chapter, where Paul accuseth himself as a sinner, and yet in the rhere is no eight chapter saith, " there is no damnation to them that are damnation to.0.1- « . ,~ . . them that are m Christ, and that because of the Spirit, and because the m Christ. ' r gifts of the Spirit are begun in us. Sinners we are, because the flesh is not full killed and mortified : nevertheless, inas much as we believe in Christ, and have the earnest and be ginning of the Spirit, and would fain be perfect, God is so loving and favourable unto us, that he will not look on such sin, neither will count it as sin ; but will deal with us ac-t cording to our belief in Christ, and according to his pro mises which he hath sworn to us, until the sin be full slain and mortified by death.' Faith, what ' Faith is not man's opinion and dream, as some imagine arid feign, when they hear the story of the gospel; but when they see that there follow no good works, nor amend ment of living, though they hear, yea, and can babble many things of faith, then they fall from the right way, and say, Faith only justifieth not ; a man must have good works also, feigne3nflth. ^ he will be righteous and safe. The cause is, when they hear the gospel or glad tidings, they feign of their own strength certain imaginations and thoughts in their hearts, EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 493 gaying, I have heard the gospel, I remember the story, lo! I beheve; and that they count right faith; which never theless, as it is but man's imagination and feigning, even go it profiteth not, neither follow there any good works, or amendment of living.' * But right faith is a thing wrought by the Holy Ghost in us, which changeth us, turneth us into a new nature, and be- getteth us anew in God, and maketh us the sons of God, as thou readest in the first of John ; and killeth the old Adam, and maketh us altogether new in the heart, mind, will, lust, and in all our affections and powers of the soul; the Holy Ghost ever accompanying her, and ruling the heart1. Faith True faith is is a lively thing, mighty in working, valiant, and strong, ever doing, ever fruitful ; so that it is impossible that he who Faith is not is endued therewith should not work always good works with out ceasing. He asketh not whether good works are to be done or. not, but hath done them already, ere mention be made of them ; and is always doing, for such is his nature ; for quick faith in his heart, and hvely moving of the Spirit, drive him and stir him thereunto. Whosoever doth not good works, is an unbelieving person, and faithless, and looketh round about him, groping after faith and good works, and wotteth not what faith or good works mean, though he babble never so many things of faith and good works.' 'Faith is, then, a lively and a stedfast trust in the The true de- favour of God, wherewith we commit ourselves altogether faith. unto God ; and that trust is so surely grounded, and sticketh so fast in our hearts, that a man would not once doubt of it, though he should die a thousand times therefor. And such trust, wrought by the Holy Ghost through faith, maketh a man glad, lusty, cheerful, and true-hearted unto God and unto all creatures: whereof, willingly and without compul sion, he is glad and ready to do good to every man, to do service to every man, to suffer all things, that God may be loved and praised, which hath given him such grace; so that it is impossible to separate good works from faith, Good works • • • •, , r p cannot he even as it is impossible to separate heat and burning from gPt^ate&om fire. Therefore take heed to thyself, and beware of thine own fantasies and imaginations ; which to judge of faith and I1 So Tynd. of 1536 and M. B. ; Day has only 'and bringeth the Holy Ghost with her.'] 494 PROLOGUE UPON THE Righteous ness, and how it is to be under stood. Flesh and spirit, what they are, and how to un derstand them. John iii. How this word flesh is to be under stood in the scripture. Incredulity is the chief of all sins. good works will seem wise, when indeed they are stark blind and of ah things most foolish. Pray God, that he wih vouch safe to work faith in thine heart, or else shalt thou remain evermore faithless; feign thou, imagine thou, enforce thou, wrestle with thyself, and do what thou wilt or canst.' ' Righteousness is even such faith ; and is cahed God's righteousness, or righteousness that is of value before God. For it is God's gift, and it altereth a man, and changeth him into a new spiritual nature, and maketh him free and liberal to pay every man his duty. For through faith a man is purged of his sins, and obtaineth lust unto the law of God ; whereby he giveth God his honour, and payeth him that he oweth him ; and unto men he doth service willingly, wherewithsoever he can, and payeth every man his duty. Such righteousness can nature, free-will, and our own strength, never bring to pass. For as no man can give himself faith, so can he not take away unbelief; how then can he take away any sin at all ? Wherefore all is false hypocrisy and sin, whatsoever is done without faith or in unbehef, as it is evident in the fourteenth chapter unto the Romans, though it appear never so glorious or beautiful outwards.' 'Flesh and Spirit mayest thou not here understand as though flesh were only that which pertaineth unto unehastity, and the Spirit that which inwardly pertaineth unto the heart: but Paul calleth flesh here, as Christ doth, John hi., ah that is born of flesh ; that is to wit, the whole man, with life, soul, body, wit, will, reason, and whatsoever he is or doth within and without ; because that these all, and all that is in man, study after the world and the flesh. Call flesh therefore whatsoever we think or speak of God, of faith, of good works, and of spiritual matters, as long as we are without the Spirit of God. Call flesh also all works which are done without grace, and without the working of the Spirit, howsoever good, holy, and spiritual, they seem to be : as thou mayest prove by the fifth chapter unto the Galatians, where Paul numbereth worshipping of idols, witchcraft, envy, and hate, among the deeds of the flesh; and by the eighth unto the Romans, where he saith that the law by the reason of the flesh is weak ; which is not understood of unehastity only, but of all sins, and most especially of unbelief, which is a vice most spiritual, and ground of all sins.' EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 495 'And as thou callest him flesh which is not renewed with Fiesh is the Spirit, and born again in Christ, and all his deeds, even described. the very motions of his heart and mind, his learning, doctrine, and contemplation of high things, his preaching, teaching, and study in the scriptures, building of churches, founding of abbeys, giving of alms, mass, matins, and whatsoever he doth, though it seem spiritual and after the laws of God ; so, con trariwise, call him spiritual who is renewed in Christ, and all his deeds which spring of faith, seem they never so gross, as whatsoever the washing of the disciples' feet done by Christ, and Peter's **&*» «pi- fishing after the resurrection ; yea, and whatsoever is done within the laws of God, though it be wrought by the body, as the very wiping of shoes and such like, howsoever gross they appear outwardly. Without such understanding of these words thou canst never understand this epistle of Paul, nei ther any other place in the holy scripture. Take heed, there fore ; for whosoever understandeth these words otherwise, the same understandeth not Paul, whatsoever he be.' ' Now will we prepare ourselves unto the epistle.' ' Forasmuch as it becometh the preacher of Christ's glad tidings, first, through opening of the law, to rebuke all things, ^,Sproat-y and to prove all things sin, that proceed not of the Spirit tfon for ail0" and of faith in Christ ; and to prove ah men sinners, and preachers- children of wrath by inheritance ; and how that to sin is theh nature, and that by nature they can none otherwise do than to sin ; and therewith to abate the pride of man, and to bring him unto the knowledge of himself and to misery and wretchedness, that he might desire help; even so doth St Paul. And he beginneth, in the first chapter, to rebuke un- The manner behef and gross sins, which all men see, as idolatry, and as doctrine. the gross sins of the heathen were, and as the sins now are of all them who live in ignorance, without faith, and without the favour of God ; and saith, " The wrath of the God of hea ven appeareth through the gospel upon all men, for their un godliness and unholy hving." For though it be known, and Nature is so 5 m i , •¦ , , n • , ~ . blindthatwe daily understood by the creatures, that there is but one God, «»nnotsee ". d ' ? nor under- yet is nature of herself, without the Spirit and grace, so cor- *%£££ of rupt and so poisoned, that men neither can thank him, neither rne?c™d hia worship him, neither give him his due honour ; but they STchSt0 blind themselves, and fall without ceasing into worse case, son? hIS even until they come unto worshipping of images, and work- 496 PROLOGUE UPON THE ing of shameful sins, which are abominable and against nature, and moreover they suffer the same unrebuked in others, having delectation and pleasure therein.' demnethaii ' ^n *he second chapter the apostle proceedeth further, and hypocrites, rebuketh ah those holy people also, which, without lust and love to the law, hve well outwardly in the face of the world, and condemn others gladly ; as the nature of all hypocrites is, to think themselves pure in respect of open sinners ; and yet they hate the law inwardly, and are full of covetousness, and envy, and of all uncleanness (Matt, xxiii.). These are they which despise the goodness of God, and according to the hardness of their hearts heap together for themselves the How^stPaui wrath of God. Furthermore, St Paul, as a true expounder hypocrites. 0f the law, suffereth no man to be without sin ; but declareth that ah they are under sin, who of free-will and of nature will live well, and suffereth them not to be better than the open sinners, yea, he calleth them hard-hearted and such as cannot repent.' mce'be^een ' In tae third chapter he mingleth both together, both the theeGentiie.d Jews and tlie Gentiles ; and saith, that the one is as the other, both sinners, and no difference between them, save in this only, that the Jews had the word of God committed unto them. And though many of them believed not thereon, yet is God's truth and promise thereby neither hurt nor diminished ; and he taketh in his way, and allegeth the say ing of Psalm li., " that God might abide true in his words, and overcome when he is judged." After that he returneth to his purpose again, and proveth by the scripture, that all men, ah men are without difference or exception, are sinners; and that by the sinners. ... works of the law no man is justified ; but that the law was The way how given to utter and to declare sin only. Then he beginneth we must he° -ii-i • i ,1 made right- and sheweth the right way unto righteousness, by what means eous. o d o 7 d men must be made righteous and safe ; and saith, they are all sinners and without praise before God, and must, without their own deserving, be made righteous through faith in Christ ; who hath deserved such righteousness for us, and is become unto us God's mercy-seat, for the remission of sins that are past : thereby proving that Christ's righteousness, which cometh upon us through faith, helpeth us only. Which righteousness, saith he, is now declared through the gospel, and was " testified of before by the law and the prophets." EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 497 Furthermore, saith he, the law is holpen and furthered through Jf^°5$}.in" faith; though that the works thereof, with all their boast, fa'Jj"gof*e are brought to nought, and are proved not to justify1.' ' In the fourth chapter, after that now, by the three first chapters, sins are opened, and the way of faith unto righteous ness laid, he beginneth to answer unto certain objections and cavillations. And first, he putteth forth those blind reasons, f^e* to1" which commonly they that will be justified by their own *eJt^liu« works are wont to make, when they hear that faith only, papi°"use without works, justifieth ; saying, ' Shall men do no good E«onUof works ? Tea, and if faith only justifieth, what need a man to study for to do good works?' He putteth forth therefore Abraham for an example, saying, What did Abraham with his works ? Was all in vain ? Came his works to no profit ? And so he concludeth that Abraham, without and before all works, was justified and made righteous ; insomuch that, be fore the work of circumcision, he was praised of the scripture, and called righteous by his faith only (Gen. xv.) : so that he did not the work of circumcision, for to be helped thereby unto righteousness, which yet God commanded him to do, and was a good work of obedience. So in like wise, no doubt, none other works help any thing at all unto a man's justify ing: but as Abraham's circumcision was an outward sign, whereby he declared his righteousness which he had by faith, and his obedience and readiness unto the will of God ; even G°°d works are outward so are all other good works outward signs and outward fruits S.of true of faith and of the Spirit ; • which justify not a man, but shew that a man is justified already before God, inwardly in the heart, through faith, and through the Spirit purchased by Christ's blood.' ' Herewith St Paul now establisheth his doctrine of faith, rehearsed afore in chapter hi., and bringeth also the testi mony of David, Psalm xxxii., which calleth a man blessed, not of works, but in that his sin i3 not reckoned, and in that faith is imputed for righteousness, although he abide not afterward without good works, when he is once justified.' For wsfi|reedflrst we are justified, and receive the Spirit, for to do good works ; *J» n„^low" neither were it otherwise possible to do good works, except W01*s" we first had the Spirit. For how is it possible to do any thing well in the sight [! And are proved not to justify, is not in Day.] [tyndale.] 498 PROLOGUE UPON THE of God, while we are yet in captivity and bondage under the devil, and the devil possesseth us altogether, and holdeth our hearts, so that we cannot once consent unto the will of God ? f No man therefore can prevent1 the Spirit in doing good. The Spirit must first come, and wake him out of "his sleep with the thunder of the law, and fear him, and shew him his miserable estate and wretchedness ; and make him abhor and hate himself, and to desire help ; and then comfort him again with the pleasant rain of the gospel, that is to say, with the sweet promises of God in Christ, and stir up faith in him to believe the promises. Then, when he beheveth the promises, as God was merciful to promise, so is he true to fulfil them, and will give him the Spirit and strength, both to God's mercy love the will of God, and to work thereafter. So we see faith in his that God only, who, according to the scripture, worketh all promises, so " ° r ' auathGngsin in all things, worketh a man's justifying, salvation, and health ; justStio™ yea> aneiaw. be understood, that every man may do what him lusteth : but not to be under the law is to have a free heart renewed with the Spirit, so that thou hast lust inwardly, of thine own accord, to do that which the law commandeth, without com pulsion, yea, though there were no law. For grace, that is to say, God's favour, bringeth us the Spirit, and maketh us love the law : so is there now no more sin, neither, is the law now any more against us, but at one and agreed with us, and we with it. But to be under the law is to deal with the what it is to be under the works of the law, and to work without the Spirit and grace : law- for so long, no doubt, sin reigneth in us through the law; that is to say, the law declareth that we are under sin, and that sin hath power and dominion over us, seeing we cannot fulfil the law, namely, within in the heart, forasmuch as no man of nature favoureth the law, consenteth thereunto, and de- lighteth therein ; which thing is exceeding great sin, that we cannot consent to the law ; which law is nothing else save the will of God.' •This is the right freedom and hberty from sin and from J^mand' the law ; whereof he writeth unto the end of this chapter, |Si^™, that it is a freedom to do good only with lust, and to live the law" well without compulsion of the law. Wherefore this freedom is a spiritual freedom ; which destroyeth not the law, but mi- nistereth that which the law requireth, and wherewith the law is fulfilled ; that is to understand, lust, and love, where with the law is stilled, and accuseth us no more, compelleth us no more, neither hath ought to crave of us any more. Even Example. as though thou wert in debt to another man, and wert not able to pay, two manner of ways mightest thou be loosed : one way, if he would require nothing of thee, and break thine obligation ; another way, if some other good man would pay for thee, and give thee as much as thou mightest satisfy thine obligation withal. On this wise hath Christ made thee2 free from the law; and therefore is this no wild fleshly liberty, that should do nought, but that doth all things, and is free from the craving and debt of the law.' ' In the seventh chapter he confirmeth the same with a P So M. Bib., but Day has us.] 502 PROLOGUE UPON THE similitude of the state of matrimony. As when the husband dieth, the wife is at her liberty, and the one loosed and de parted from the other ; not that the woman should not have the power to marry unto another man, but rather now first of all is she free, and hath power to marry unto another man, which she could not do before, till she was loosed from our con- her first husband : even so are our consciences bound and sciencesSHan CTdto in danger to the law1 under old Adam, as long as he liveth SdAdamTso m us > f°r the law declareth that our hearts are bound, liveth inus. and that we cannot disconsent from him ; but when he is mortified and killed by the Spirit, then is the conscience free and at liberty ; not so that the conscience shall now do nought, but now first of all cleaveth unto another, that is to wit Christ, and bringeth forth the fruits of hfe.' So now to be under the law is not to be able to fulfil the law ; but to be debtor to it, and not able to pay that which the law re quireth. And to be loose from the law is to fulfil it, and to pay that which the law demandeth, so that it can now hence forth ask thee nought. ' Consequently Paul declareth more largely the nature of sin, and of the law ; how that through the law sin reviveth, The law re- moveth herself, and gathereth strength. For the old man quireth of us 7 o o cannothlp°a1y!'e atl^ corrupt nature, the more he is forbidden and kept under of the law, is the more offended and displeased therewith; forasmuch as he cannot pay that which is required of the law. For sin is his nature, and of himself he cannot but sin. There fore is the law death to him, torment, and martyrdom. Not that the law is evil ; but because that the evil nature cannot suffer that which is good, and cannot abide that the law should require of him any good thing ; like as a sick man cannot suffer that a man should desire of him to run, to leap, and to do other deeds of a whole man.' ' For which cause St Paul concludeth, that where the law is understood and perceived in the best wise, there it doth no The law doth more but utter sin, and bring us unto the knowledge of our- ciarewhat11" selves ; and thereby kill us, and make us bound unto eternal damnation, and debtors to the everlasting wrath of God; even as he well feeleth and understandeth, whose conscience is truly touched of the law.' In such danger were we, ere the law came, that we knew not what sin meant, neither yet knew P A legal phrase for ' Responsible to the law.'] EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 503 we the wrath of God upon sinners, till the law had uttered it. 'So seest thou that a man must have some other thing, yea, and a greater and a more mighty thing than the law, to make him righteous and safe. They that understand not the law on this wise are blind, and go to work presumptuously, supposing to satisfy the law with works. For they know not that the law requireth a free, a willing, a lusty, and a loving heart. Therefore they see not Moses right in the face ; the vail hangeth between, and hideth his face, so that they cannot behold the glory of his countenance, how that the law is spiritual, and requireth the heart.' I may of mine own strength refrain, that I do mine enemy no hurt ; but to love him with all mine heart, and to put away wrath clean out of my mind, can I not of my own strength. I may re- Whatwemay d 7 d © d doofour- fuse money of mine own strength ; but to put away love ^sw*nmay unto riches out of mine heart, can I not do of mine own notdo- strength. To abstain from adultery, as concerning the out ward deed, I can do of mine own strength ; but not to desire in mine heart is as impossible unto me as is to choose whether I will hunger or thirst: and yet so the law requireth. Where fore of a man's own strength is the law never fulfilled ; we must have thereunto God's favour, and his Spirit, purchased by Christ's blood. Nevertheless, when I say a man may do many things outwardly clean against his heart, we must understand that man is but driven of divers appetites ; and the greatest appe tite overcometh the less, and carrieth the man away violently with her. As when I desire vengeance, and fear also the in convenience that is like to follow, if fear be greater, I abstain ; if the appetite that desireth vengeance be greater, I cannot but prosecute the deed : as we see by experience in many murderers and thieves; who though they are brought into never so great peril of death, yet, after they have escaped, do even the same again : and common women prosecute their lusts, because fear and shame are away: when others, which wj™^' have the same appetites in their hearts, abstain at the least gj^j outwardly, or work secretly, being overcome of fear and of Commuted. shame ; and so likewise is it of all other appetites. 'Furthermore the apostle declareth, how. the Spirit and the flesh fight together in one man ; and he maketh an ex- ample of himself, that we might learn to know how to work 504 PROLOGUE UPON THE The tiesh is aright, I mean, to kill sin in ourselves. He calleth both the contraryunto ° , ivi thespirit Spirit, and also the flesh, a law ; because that like as the nature of God's law is to drive, to compel, and to crave, even so the flesh driveth, compeheth, craveth, and rageth against The spirit the Spirit, and will have her lusts satisfied. On the other lustetn con- r . •,/»,, • n trajv to the side, the Spirit driveth, crieth, and fighteth against the flesh, and will have his lust satisfied. And this strife dureth in us as long as we live ; in some more, and in some less, as the Spirit or the flesh is stronger ; and the very man his own self is both the Spirit and the flesh, who fighteth with his own self, until sin be utterly slain, and he altogether spiritual.' ' In the eighth chapter he comforteth such fighters, that they despair not because of such flesh,' neither . think that they are less in favour with God. And he sheweth how that There is no the sin remaining in us hurteth not; for there is no danger danger to ... them that to them that are in Christ, which walk not after the flesh, are in Christ 7 ' but fight against it. ' And he expoundeth more largely what is the nature of the flesh, and of the Spirit; and how the Spirit cometh by Christ, which Spirit maketh us spiritual, tameth, subdueth, and mortifieth the flesh; and certifieth us that we are nevertheless the sons of God and also beloved, though that sin rage never so much in us, so long as we follow the Spirit, and fight against sin, to kill and mortify it. And because nothing is so good to the mortifying of the flesh, as the cross and tribulation, he comforteth us in our passions and afflictions1 by the assistance of the Spirit, which maketh in tercession to God for us mightily with groanings that pass man's utterance, so that man's speech cannot comprehend The right them; and the creatures mourn also with us2 of great desire work of faith i i /. . ? the0fleshtif'y *hat they have that we were loosed from sm and corruption of the flesh. So we see that these three chapters, the vi. vii. viii., do nothing so much as to drive us unto the right work of faith ; which is to kill the old man, and mortify the flesh.' ' In the ninth, tenth, and eleventh chapters he treateth of God's predestination ; whence it springeth altogether ; whether we shall beheve or not believe ; be loosed from sin, or not be P So Tynd. N. Test, of 1536, and Matt. B. Day has, And because the chastising of the flesh, the cross and suffering are nothing pleasant, he comforteth us, &c] P So Day. But Tynd. Test, and M. B. have, And with the mourning also of the creatures with us.] EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 505 loosed. By which predestination our justifying and salvation Predestina- are clean taken out of our hands, and put in the hands of God handsof God. only ; which thing is most necessary of all. For we are so weak and so uncertain, that if it stood in us, there would of a truth be no man saved ; the devil, no doubt, would deceive us. But now is God sure, that his predestination cannot deceive him, neither can any man withstand or let him ; and there fore have we hope and trust against sin.' ' But here must a mark be set to those unquiet, busy, and high-climbing spirits, how far they shall go ; which first of all bring hither their high reasons and pregnant wits, and begin first from an high to search the bottomless secrets of God's predestination, whether they be predestinate or not. These must needs either cast themselves down headlong into despe ration, or else commit themselves to free chance, careless. But follow thou the order of this epistle, and noosel thyself3 how far we x d may proceed with Christ, and learn to understand what the law and the jn predestina- ' tion. gospel mean, and the office of both the two ; that thou mayest in the one know thyself, and how that thou hast of thyself no strength but to sin, and in the other the grace of Christ ; and then see thou fight against sin and the flesh, as the seven first chapters teach thee. After that, when thou art come to the eighth chapter, and art under the cross and suffering of tribulation, the necessity of predestination will wax sweet, and thou shalt weh feel how precious a thing it is. For except thou have born the cross of adversity and temptation, and hast felt thyself brought unto the very brim of despe ration, yea, and unto hell-gates, thou canst never meddle with the sentence of predestination without thine own harm, and without secret wrath and grudging inwardly against God ; for otherwise it shah not be possible for thee to think that God is righteous and iust. Therefore must Adam be well mortified, Predestma- o d tion is not and the fleshly wit brought utterly to nought, ere that thou Jg^J *£ mayest away with4 this thing, and drink so strong wine. Take heed therefore unto thyself, that thou drink not wine, while thou art yet but a suckling. For every learning hath its time, measure, and age ;' and in Christ is there a certain childhood, in which a man must be content with milk for a season, until he wax strong and grow up unto a perfect man in Christ, and be able to eat of more strong meat. P Find shelter, as a child with a nurse.] P Away with, i.e. bear with.] 506 PROLOGUE UPON THE Which are good woTks meet to be done. 'In the twelfth chapter he giveth exhortations.' For this manner observeth Paul in all his epistles ; first he teacheth Christ and the faith, then exhorteth he to good works, and unto continual mortifying of the flesh. So ' here teacheth he good works in deed, and the true serving of God, and maketh all men priests, to offer up, not money and beasts, as the manner was in the time of the law, but their, own bodies, with killing and mortifying the lusts of the flesh. After that, he describeth the outward conversation of christian men, how they ought to behave themselves in spiritual things, how to teach, preach, and rule in the congregation of Christ, to serve one another, to suffer all things patiently, and to commit the wreak and vengeance to God : in conclusion, how a christian man ought to behave himself unto all men, to friend, foe, or whatsoever he be. These are the right works of a christian man, which spring out of faith. For faith keepeth not holi day, neither suffereth any man to be idle, wheresoever she dweiieth.' ' In the thirteenth chapter he teacheth to honour the worldly and temporal sword. For though that man's law and ordinance make not a man good before God, neither justify him in the heart, yet are they ordained for the fur therance of the commonwealth, to maintain peace, to punish the evil, and to defend the good. Therefore ought the good to honour the temporal sword, and to have it in reverence, though as concerning themselves they need it not,' but would abstain from evil of their own accord; yea, and do good without man's law, but by the law of the Spirit, which go- verneth the heart, and guideth it unto all that is the will of God. 'Finally, he comprehendeth and knitteth up all in love.' Love of her own nature bestoweth all that she hath, and even her own self, on that which is loved. Thou needest not to bid a kind mother to be loving unto her only son; much less doth spiritual love, which hath eyes given her of God, need man's law to teach her to do her duty. And as in the beginning the apostle put forth Christ, as the cause and author of our righteousness and salvation, even so 'he setteth him forth here as an example to counterfeit, that as he hath done to us, even so should we do one to another.' hTvi^g'iywfth ^ d not by works. must be justified without deservings, without works, and with- w- T- out help of the law ; but alone by Christ. In the iiird and ivth he proveth the same with scripture, The law con- examples and similitudes, and sheweth that the law is cause the believing x of God s pro- of more sin, and bringeth the curse of God upon us, and gygfJ118"" justifieth us not ; but that justifying cometh of grace pro- w- T- mised us of God, through the deserving of Christ, by whom (if we beheve) we are justified without help of the works of the law. And in the vth and vith he exhorteth unto the works of love, which follow faith and justifying. So that in all his epistle he observeth this order ; first he preacheth the damnation of the law, then the justifying of faith, and thirdly the works of love. For on that condition, that we love henceforth and work, is the mercy given us ; or else, if we will not work the will of God henceforward, we fall from favour and grace ; and the inheritance that is ' freely given us for Christ's sake, through our own fault we lose again. r t 33 [tyndale.] 514 PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. A PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE EPHESIANS. In seeking any other satisfaction than Christ. we deceive ourselves. W.T. In this epistle, and namely in the first three chapters, Paul sheweth that the gospel and grace thereof was foreseen and predestinate of God from before the beginning, and de served through Christ, and now at the last sent forth, that all men should beheve thereon ; thereby to be justified, made righteous, living and happy, and to be delivered from under the damnation of the law and captivity of ceremonies. And in the fourth he teacheth to avoid traditions and men's doctrine, and to beware of putting trust in any thing save Christ ; affirming that he only is sufficient, and that in him we have all things, and besides him need nothing. In the vth and vith he exhorteth to exercise the faith, and to declare it abroad through good works, and to avoid sin, and to arm them with spiritual armour against the devil, that they might stand fast in time of tribulation and under the cross. THE PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE PHILIPPIANS. Hereby are Paul praiseth the Phihppians, and exhorteth them to that works stand fast in the true faith, and to increase in love. And be- Bave us not. _ , tha'tfe'the1'1' cause tnat false prophets study always to impugn and destroy An'tmed.' the true faith, he warneth them of such work-learners or teachers of works, and praiseth Epaphroditus : and ah this doth he in the first and second chapters. In the third he reproveth the faithless, and man's righte- PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE TO THE PHILIPPIANS. 515 ousness which false prophets teach and maintain; and he setteth himself1 for an ensample, how that he himself had lived in such false righteousness and holiness unrebukeable2, that no man could complain on him, and yet now setteth nought thereby for Christ's righteousness' sake. And finally, he Man-s right. affirmeth that such false prophets are the enemies of the S™88' cross, and make their bellies their God; for further than 2°'°™' p , i*i ii God's word, they may safely, and without ah peril and suffering, willw°di°us- they not preach Christ. A PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE COLOSSIANS. As the epistle to the Galatians holdeth the manner and fashion of the epistle to the Bomans, briefly comprehending all that is therein at length disputed ; even so this epistle fol loweth the ensample of the epistle to the Ephesians, contain ing the tenor of the same epistle with fewer words. In the first chapter he praiseth them, and wisheth that they continue in the faith, and grow perfecter therein; and For faith, then describeth he the gospel, how that it is a wisdom that preached, o r ' bringeth confesseth Christ to be the Lord and God, crucified for us, the spmtand ' 7 power to iul- and a wisdom that hath been hid in Christ, since afore the w'hi.Iaw' beginning of the world, and now first begun to be opened through the preaching of the apostles. In the second he warneth them of men's doctrine, and describeth the false prophets to the uttermost, and rebuketh them according. In the third he exhorteth to be fruitful in the pure faith, with all manner of good works one to another ; and describeth whosohath ., . a Pure faith, all degrees, and what their duties are. abound with In the fourth he exhorteth to pray, and also to pray for t^™*3- him, and saluteth them. P So Test. D. has him.] P D. adds, that was so.] 33—2 516 PROLOGUE UPON THE FIRST EPIST. TO THE THESSALONIANS. ' A PROLOGUE ¦If UPON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE THESSALONIANS. Not the re- This epistle did Paul write of exceeding love and care, gospTif but e and praiseth them in the two first chapters, because they did ance to the receive the gospel earnestly, and had in tribulation and per- makethus secution continued therein stedfastly; and were become an blessed. d * w- T- ensample unto all congregations ; and had thereto suffered of their own kinsmen, as Christ and his apostles did of the Jews ; putting them thereto in mind, how purely and godly he had lived among them to their ensample ; and thanketh God that his gospel had brought forth such fruit among them. He meaneth In the third chapter he sheweth his diligence and care, tne^sh'ouid lest his so great labour, and their so blessed a beginning, word'they should have been in vain ; Satan and his apostles vexing received. them with persecution, and destroying their faith with men's doctrine. And therefore he sent Timothy to them to comfort them, and strengthen them in the faith; and thanketh God that they had so constantly endured ; and desireth God to increase them. In the fourth he exhorteth them to keep themselves from sin, and to do good one to another ; and thereto he in- formeth them concerning the resurrection. In the fifth he writeth of the last day, that it should come suddenly ; exhorting to prepare themselves thereafter, and to keep a good order concerning obedience and rule. PROLOGUE UPON THE SECOND EPIST. TO THE THESSALONIANS. 517 THE PROLOGUE UPON THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE THESSALONIANS. Because in the fore-epistle he had said the last day should come suddenly, the Thessalonians thought it should have come shortly ; wherefore in this epistle he declareth himself. And in the first chapter he comforteth them with ever- Patience and lasting reward of their faith and patience in suffering for the For Christ's' , .... . .. . sake, reward- gOSpel, and with the punishment of their persecutors in ever- cr0wnoftlle lasting pain. WMtL In the second he sheweth that the last day should not int ed. come till there were first a departing, as some men think, ^|ree*5JnatTe from under the obedience of the emperor of Bome ; and that fS'day is"5 Antichrist should set up himself in the same place as God, and int «L' deceive the unthankful world with false doctrine, and with false and lying miracles, wrought by the working of Satan, until Christ should come, and slay him with his glorious coming and spiritual preaching of the word of God. In the third he giveth them exhortation, and warneth them to rebuke the idle, that would not labour with their hands, and avoid their company if they would not amend. A PROLOGUE UPON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO TIMOTHY. This epistle writeth St Paul to be an ensample to all bishops, what they should teach, and how they should teach1 ; P So Day. The words and how they should teach are not in the collated Testaments.] 518 PROLOGUE UPON THE FIRST EPISTLE TO TIMOTHY. and how they should govern the congregation of Christ in all degrees ; that it should be no need to govern Christ's flock with the doctrine of their own good meanings. The office of In the first chapter he commandeth that the bishop w.t. ' should maintain the right faith and love, and resist false preachers, which make the law and works equal with Christ and his gospel. And he maketh a short conclusion of all Christian1 learning ; whereto the law serveth, and what the end thereof is, also what the gospel is ; and setteth himself for a comfortable ensample unto all sinners and troubled con sciences. In the second he commandeth to pray for all degrees ; and chargeth that the women shall not preach or wear costly apparel, but to be obedient unto the men. In the third he describeth what manner persons the bishop or priest and their wives should be, and also the dea? cons and their wives ; and commendeth it if any man desire to be a bishop after that manner. The pope and In the fourth he prophesieth, and sheweth before, ofthe his prelates x x ? » $ain?yeset iaise hishops and spiritual officers, that should arise among wh* fahSt *ae Christian people, and be, do, and preach clean contrary thesJopeedici' to the fore-described ensample ; and should depart from the loose it again faith in Christ, and forbid to marry, and to eat certain meats, Antined.ey' teaching to put trust therein, both of justifying and forgive ness of sins, and also of deserving of eternal hfe. wsho'pslU *n tne ^h ^e teacheth how a bishop should use himself dSIwi7 toward young and old, and concerning widows what is to be w"i"r' done, and which should be found of the common cost ; and teacheth also how men should honour the virtuous bishops and priests, and how to rebuke the evil. In the sixth he exhorteth the bishops2 to cleave to the gospel of Christ and true doctrine, and to avoid vain ques tions, and superfluous disputings, which gender strife, and quench the truth ; and by which also the false prophets get them authority, and seek to satisfy their insatiable covet ousness. P So Testaments. D. has Christs.] p So Day. The Tests, have bishop.] PROLOGUE UPON THE SECOND EPISTLE TO TIMOTHY. 519 THE PROLOGUE UPON THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO TIMOTHY. In this epistle Paul exhorteth Timothy to go forward as Bishops must be vitnlsnt in he had begun, and to preach the gospel with all diligence, as their voca- it need was, seeing many were fallen away, and many false w- T- spirits3 and teachers were sprung up already. Wherefore a bishop's part is ever to watch, and to labour in the gospel. In the third and fourth he sheweth before, and that mis hath ai- notably, of the ieopardous time toward the end of the world, fStilierfni . - _ . . .... . ,,, . -i ,, ourspiritu- in which a false spiritual living should deceive the whole ffl- world with outward hypocrisy and appearance of holiness; under which all abominations should have their free passage and course, as we (alas !) have seen this prophecy of St Paul fulfilled in our spiritualty unto the uttermost jot. THE PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO TITUS. This is a short epistle ; wherein yet is contained all that is needful for a Christian to know. In the first chapter he sheweth what manner a man a wnatman- , , . . . neramana bishop or curate ought to be, that is to wit, virtuous and bishop or x o ' curate ought learned, to preach and defend the gospel, and to confound to^ the doctrine of trusting in works and men's traditions ; which ever fight against the faith, and carry away the conscience captive from the freedom which is in Christ, into the bondage of their own imaginations and inventions, as though those things should make a man good in the sight of God, which are to no profit at all. [3 Test, of 1534 wants the words, false spirits.] 520 PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO TITUS. In the second he teacheth all degrees, old, young, men, women, masters and servants, how to behave themselves ; as they which Christ hath bought with his blood, to be his pro per or pecuhar people, to glorify God with good works. Seafe G°ordso In tlie third ne teacheth to honour temporal rulers, and trfefarea^- to obey them ; and yet bringeth to Christ again, and to the £e?ingofe grace that he hath purchased for us; that no man should mandments, think that the obedience of princes1 laws, or any other works, oni^jus'ti- should justify us before God. And last of all, he chargeth "w. i. to avoid the company of the stubborn and of the heretics. ¦¦; A PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL UNTO PHILEMON. In this epistle St Paul sheweth a godly ensample of christian love. Herein we see how Paul taketh poor Onesimos unto him, and maketh intercession for him unto his master, and helpeth him with all that he may, and believeth himself none otherwise than as though he himself were the said Onesimos : which thing yet he doth not with power and authority, as he well might have done, but putteth off all authority, and whatsoever he might of right do, that Philemon might do likewise toward Onesimos; and with great meekness and wisdom teacheth Philemon to see his duty in Christ Jesus. PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS. 521 A PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE HEBREWS. About this epistle hath ever been much doubting, and whether this that among great learned men, who should be the author cpistieor s thereof ; divers affirming that it was not Paul's, partly hf "atS,™ because the style so disagreeth, and is so unlike his other Ant. ed. epistles, and partly because it standeth in the second chapter, this learning was confirmed to us-ward, that is to say, taught us by them that heard it themselves of the Lord. Now Paul testifieth, (Gal. i.) that he received not his gospel of man, nor by man, but immediately of Christ, and that by revelation. Wherefore, say they, seeing this man confesseth that he received his doctrine of the apostles, it cannot be Paul's, but some disciple of the apostles. Now whether it were Paul's or no, I say not, but permit it to other men's judgments ; neither think I it to be an article of any man's faith, but that a man may doubt of the author. Moreover, many there hath been, which not only have some deny denied this epistle to have been written by any of the apos- ^e°n™tten ties, but have also refused it altogether, as no catholic or iSSSelft. Md godly epistle, because of certain texts written therein. For Ant.td)0110' first he saith in the sixth : " It is impossible that they which were once lighted, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were become partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted of the good word of God, and of the power of the world to come, if they fall, should be renewed again to repentance" or conversion. And in the tenth it saith : "If we sin wil lingly after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a fearful looking for judgment, and violent fire which shall destroy the adversaries." And in the twelfth it saith, that Esau found no way to repentance, or conversion ; no, though he sought it with tears. Which texts, say they, sound, that if a man sin any more after he is once baptized, he can be no more 522 PROLOGUE UPON THE forgiven ; and that is contrary to all the scripture, and there fore to be refused to be catholic and godly. Unto which I answer, If we should deny this epistle for those texts' sakes, so should we deny first Matthew, which in his xiith chapter affirmeth, that he which blasphemeth the Holy Ghost shall neither be forgiven here nor in the world to a solution of come : and then Mark, which in his third chapter saith, that doubts. he that blasphemeth the Holy Ghost shall never have for giveness ; but shall be in danger of eternal damnation : and thirdly, Luke, which saith there shah be no remission to him that blasphemeth the Spirit of God. Moreover, John in his first epistle saith, " There is a sin unto death ; for which a man should not pray." And 2 Pet. ii. saith, " If a man be fled from the uncleanness of the world through the knowledge of our Saviour Jesus Christ, and then be wrapped in again, his end is worse than the beginning ; and that it had been better for him never to have known the truth." And Paul, 2 Tim. iii. curseth Alexander the coppersmith, desiring the Lord to re ward him according to his deeds ; which is a sign that either the epistle should not be good, or that Alexander had sinned past forgiveness, no more to be prayed for. Wherefore seeing no scripture is of private interpretation, but must be expounded according to the general articles of our faith, and agreeable to other open and evident texts, and confirmed or compared to like sentences ; why should we not understand Thisnottobe these places with like reference as we do the other, namely PaSrsepistie. when all the remnant of the epistle is so godly and of so great learning ? The first place in the vith chapter will no more than that they which know the truth, and yet willingly refuse the light, and choose rather to dwell in darkness, and refuse Christ, and make a mock of him (as the Pharisees, which when they were overcome with scripture and miracles, that Christ was the very Messias, yet had they such lust in iniquity, that they forsook him, persecuted him, slew him, and did all the shame that could be imagined to him) cannot be renewed, (el? ixerdvoiav saith the Greek,) to be converted : that is to say, such malicious unkindness, which is none other than the blas pheming of the Holy Ghost, deserveth that the Spirit shall never come more at them, to convert them : which I beheve to be as true as any other text in all the scripture. EPISTLE OF ST PAUL TO THE HEBREWS. 523 And what is meant by that place in the tenth chapter, where he saith, " If we sin willingly after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacri fice for sin," is declared immediately after. For he maketh a comparison between Moses and Christ, saying : "If he which despised Moses' law died without mercy, how much worse punishment is he worthy of, that treadeth the Son of God under foot, and counteth the blood of the covenant, by which blood he was sanctified, as an unholy thing, and blasphemeth the Spirit of grace?" By which words it is manifest that he meaneth none other by the fore words, than the sin of blas phemy of the Spirit. For them that sin of ignorance or infirmity, there is remedy ; but for him that knoweth the truth, and yet wil lingly yieldeth himself to sin, and consenteth unto the hfe of sin, with soul and body, and had rather lie in sin than have his poisoned nature healed by the help of the Spirit of grace, and maliciously persecuteth the truth, for him, I say, there is no remedy ; the way to mercy is locked up ; and the Spirit is Mercy is taken from him for his unthankfulness' sake, no more to be from him which wil- given to him. Truth it is, if a man can turn to God and gJ1D'(gy1*;dh beheve in Christ, he must be forgiven, how deep soever hesoult hath sinned; but that will not be without the Spirit, and such blasphemers shall no more have the Spirit offered them. Let every man therefore fear God, and beware that he yield not himself to serve sin ; but how oft soever he sin, let him begin again, and fight afresh, and no doubt he shall at the last overcome, and in the meantime yet be under mercy for Christ's sake, because his heart worketh, and would fain be, loosed from under the bondage of sin. And that it saith in the twelfth, Esau found no way (e«s fxerdvoiav) to be converted and reconciled unto God, and restored unto his birth-right again, though he sought it with tears, that text must have a spiritual eye. For Esau in selling his birth-right despised not only that temporal promo tion, that he should have been lord over all his brethren, and king of that country; but he also refused the grace and mercy of God, and the spiritual blessing of Abraham and Isaac, and all the mercy that is promised us in Christ, which should have been his seed. Of this ye see that this epistle ought no more to be L to sin. 524 PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS. refused for a holy, godly and cathohc, than the other au thentic scriptures. And now therefore, to come to our purpose again, though this epistle (as it saith in the sixth) lay not the ground of the faith of Christ, yet it buildeth cunningly thereon pure gold, silver, and precious stones ; and proveth the priesthood No place in 0f Christ with scriptures inevitable. Moreover, there is no the scriptures x . describetithc work In a^ *ne scripture that so plainly declareth the mean ing fig?re°nof mg and significations of the sacrifices, ceremonies, and figures mlmfJtfS" of the old Testament, as this epistle : insomuch that, if wil- w?t? ° ' ful blindness and malicious malice were not the cause, this epistle only were enough to weed out of the hearts of the papists that cankered heresy of justifying of works, concern ing our sacraments, ceremonies, and all manner traditions of their own inventions. And finally, in that ye see in the tenth, that he had been in bonds and in prison for Christ's sake, and in that he so mightily driveth all to Christ, to be saved through him, and so cared for the flock of Christ, that he both wrote ™thatitIe' an(i sent where he heard that they began to faint, to com- tSrertJf'the fort, courage and strength them with the word of God, OTgnttobe of and in that also that he sent Timothy, Paul's disciple, r?ty%riththe both virtuous, well-learned, and had in great reverence ; it is w. t! easy to see that he was a faithful servant of Christ, and of the same doctrine that Timothy was of, yea, and Paul him self was of, and that he was an apostle or in the apostles' time, or near thereunto. And seeing the epistle agreeth to all the rest of the scripture (if it be indifferently looked on), why should it not be authority, and taken for holy scripture? PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST JAMES. 525 THE PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST JAMES. Though this epistle were refused in the old time, and denied of many to be the epistle of a very apostle, and though also it lay not the foundation of the faith of Christ, but speaketh of a general faith in God, neither preacheth his death and resurrection, either the mercy that is laid up in store for us in him, or everlasting covenant made us in his blood, which is the office and duty of every apostle, as Christ saith, mkepfcHei, John xvth, " Ye shall testify of me ;" yet, because it setteth £ prtaofen up no man's doctrine, but crieth to keep the law of God, tu,re.scnp" and maketh love, which is without partiality, the fulfilling of the law, as Christ and all the apostles did, and hath, thereto, many good and godly sentences in it, and hath also nothing that is not1 agreeable to the rest of the scriptures, if it be looked indifferently on ; methinketh it ought of right to be taken for holy scripture. For as for that place for which haply it # was at the beginning refused of holy men, as it ought, if it had meant as they took it, and for which place only, for Thepa ist3 the false understanding, it hath been chiefly received of the ^for their papists; yet if the circumstances be well pondered, it will throughmis- appear that the author's intent was far otherwise than they STg the same. took him2 for. For where he saith in the second chapter, " Faith with out deeds is dead in itself," he meaneth none other thing than ah the scripture doth; how that faith, which hath no good deeds following, is a false faith, and not the faith that3 justifieth, or receiveth forgiveness of sins. For God pro- miseth them only forgiveness of their sins, which turn to God to keep his laws. Wherefore they that purpose to continue P D. has omitted not, by an evident misprint. Not is in all the collated testaments.] P D. omits him.] [3 So edition of 1538, and edition of 1536. But Day and Antw. edition of 1534 have, None of that faith justifieth.] 526 PROLOGUE upon THE epistle of ST JAMES. stih in sin, have no part in that promise ; but deceive them selves if they beheve that God hath forgiven them their old sins for Christ's sake. And after, when he saith that man is justified by deeds, and not of faith only, he will no more than that faith doth not so1 justify every where, that no thing justifieth save faith. For deeds also do justify. And as faith only justifieth before God, so do deeds only justify before •ujlffieth7 *^e wor^ • whereof is enough spoken, partly in the prologue on Paul to the Romans, and also in other places. For as Paul affirmeth (Rom. iv.) that Abraham was not justified by works before God, but by faith only, as Genesis beareth record ; so will James, that deeds only justified him before the world, and faith wrought with his deeds ; that is to say, faith, wherewith he was righteous before God in the heart, did cause him to work the will of God outwardly, whereby he was righteous before the world ; and whereby the world perceived that he believed in God, loved and feared God. And as (Heb. xi.) the scripture affirmeth that Rahab was justified before God through faith, so doth James affirm that through works, by which she shewed her faith, she was jus tified before the world : and it is true. P All the Tests, have so ; which is wanting in Day.] PROLOGUE UPON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST PETER. 527 THE PROLOGUE UPON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST PETER. This epistle did St Peter write to the heathen that were converted ; and exhorted them to stand fast in the faith, to grow therein, and wax perfect, through all manner of suffering, and also of good works. In the first he declareth the justifying of faith through Christ's blood, and comforteth them with the hope of the life to come ; and sheweth that we have not deserved it, but that the prophets prophesied it should be given us : and as Christ, which redeemed us out of sin and all uncleanness, is holy, so he exhorteth to lead an holy conversation ; and, be cause we be richly bought and made heirs of a rich inherit ance, to take heed that we lose it not again through our own neghgence. In the second chapter he sheweth that Christ is the foun- christ is an dation and head corner-stone, whereon all are built through man. faith, whether it be Jew or Gentile ; and how that, in Christ, they are made priests to offer themselves to God, (as Christ did himself,) and to flee the lusts of the flesh, that fight against the soul. And first he teacheth them, in general, to obey the worldly rulers; and then in special, he teacheth the servants to obey their masters, be they good or bad, and to suffer wrong of them, as Christ suffered wrong for us. In the third he teacheth the wives to obey their husbands, Mm outfit to yea, though they be unbelievers ; and to apparel themselves "j™ "j* godly, and as it becometh hohness : and thereto, that the Ant- ed- husbands suffer and bear the infirmity of their wives, and live according to knowledge with them : and then, in general, he exhorteth them to be soft, courteous, patient and friendly one to another, and to suffer for righteousness, after the ensample of Christ. In the fourth he exhorteth to fly sin, and to tame the to watch is d not only to flesh with soberness, watching, and prayer ; and to love each $%£' other, and to know that all good gifts are of God ; and every jjf ' abstain from ..but also to avoid " occasions 528 PROLOGUE UPON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST PETER. draVus'to man *° ne^P Q1S neighbour with such as he hath received of $;T God ; and finally, not to wonder but to rejoice, though they must suffer for Christ's name sake ; seeing as they he here partakers of his afflictions, so shall they be partakers of his glory to come. In the fifth he teacheth the bishops and priests how they should love and feed Christ's flock, and warneth us of the evil, which on every side lieth in wait for us. THE PROLOGUE UPON THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST PETER. as God re- This epistle was written against them which thought in tL deed that christian faith might be idle and without works ; when itself, so doth ° . . he not >n an yet the promise of Christ is made us upon that condition, works"' that we henceforth work the will of 'God, and not of the flesh. Ant ed. Therefore he exhorteth them to exercise themselves diligently (rood works ° d our faHh"^ in virtue aild- aU g00^ works, thereby to be sure that they the tree! ^ of have the true faith; as a man knoweth the goodness of a W-T" tree by his fruit. Then he commendeth and magnifieth the gospel ; and willeth that men hearken to that only, and to men's doctrine not at all. For, as he saith, there came no prophetical scripture by the will of man, but by the will of the Holy Ghost, which only knoweth the wih of God: neither is any scripture of private interpretation, that is to say, may be otherwise expounded than agreeing to the open places, and general articles, and to the covenants of God, and all the rest of the scripture 1. And therefore, in the second, he warneth them2 of false teachers that should come, and through preaching confidence in false works, to satisfy their covetousness withal, should deny Christ : which he threateneth with three terrible P This last sentence is not in the Test, of 1538, but is in Day, and in the two Testaments of 1534 and 1536.] P Test, of 1538 has, In the ii. ch. he warneth us.] PROLOGUE UPON THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST PETER. 529 examples ; with the fall of the angels, the flood of Noe, and overthrowing of Sodom and Gom°rrah; and so describeth them, with their insatiable covetousness, pride, stubbornness, and disobedience to all temporal rule and authority, [with their abominable whoredom, and hypocrisy, that a blind man may see that he prophesied it of the pope's holy spiritualty, Hemophc* which devoured the whole world with their covetousness, i,or?'s „ ' 7 spiritualty. living in all lust and pleasure, and reigning as temporal Ant- ed- tyrants.]3 In the third he sheweth that in the latter days the people, through unbehef and lack of fear of the judgment of the last day, shall be even as epicures, whohy given to the flesh: which last day shah yet surely and shortly come, saith he ; for a thousand years and one day is with God ah one. And he sheweth also how terrible that day shall be, and how suddenly it shall come ; and therefore exhorteth all men to look earnestly for it, and to prepare themselves against it with holy conversation and godly living. Finally, the first chapter sheweth how it should go in The eondi- the time of the pure and true Gospel : the second, how it ^'t^1 should go in the time of the pope4 and men's dectrine : the Arft.'eT8' third, how at the last men should believe nothing, nor fear God at ah. THE PROLOGUE UPON THE THREE EPISTLES OF ST JOHN. In this first epistle of St John is contained the doctrine of a very apostle of Christ, and ought of right to fohow his gospel. For as in his gospel he setteth out the true faith, and teacheth by it only all men to be saved, and restored [» The passage between brackets is in the editions of 1534 and 1536, and in Day ; but was omitted in the edition of 1538.] P So Day and Test, of 1534. But Test, of 1538 has antwhrist instead of the pope.] 34 [tyndale.] 530 PROLOGUB UPON THE THREE EPISTLES OF ST JOHN. unto the favour of God again ; even so here, in this epistle, he goeth against them that boast themselves of faith, and yet continue without good works ; and teacheth many ways, ¦wttE'tEew ^a* wnere true faitn 1S> there the works tarry not behind ; wori£OB°0^ and contrary, that where the works fohow not, there is no w' T- true faith, but a false imagination and utter darkness. And he writeth sore against a sect of heretics, which then began to deny that Christ was come in the flesh, and calleth them very antichrists ; which sect goeth now in her full swing. For though they deny not openly, with the mouth, that Christ is come in the flesh, yet they deny it in the heart, Christ's Mood with their doctrine and hving. For he that will be justified nurchaseth o d s?nfiandno°f an<^ saved through his own works, the same doth as much as marW works. \,Q that denied Christ to be come in flesh; seeing that Christ came only therefore in the flesh, that he should justify us, or purchase us pardon of our sins, bring us in the favour of God again, and make us heirs of eternal life with his works only, and with his blood-shedding, without and before all our works. So fighteth this epistle both against them that will be saved by their own good works, and also against them that will be saved by a faith that hath no lust to do works at all, and keepeth us in the middle way, that we believe in Christ to be saved by his works only ; and then to know that it is our duty, for that kindness, to prepare ourselves to do the commandment of God, and to love every man his neighbour, as Christ loved him; seeking with our own works God's honour and our neighbour's wealth only, and trusting for eternal hfe, and for all that God hath promised us, through Christ's deserving1. The two last epistles, though they be short, yet are goodly ensamples of love and faith, and do savour of the spirit of a true apostle. p Day and Anfc. Test, of 1534 have for Christ's sake. The Otbel- testaments as in the text.] PROLOGUE UPON THE EPISTLE OF ST JUDE. 531 A PROLOGUE ON THE EPISTLE OF ST JUDE. As for the epistle of Judas, and though men have, and yet do doubt of the author, and though it seem also to be drawn out of the second epistle of St Peter, and thereto allegeth scripture that is nowhere found; yet, seeing the matter is so godly, and agreeing to other places of 2 holy scrip ture, I see not but that it ought to have the authority of holy scripture. AN EXPOSITION UPON CERTAIN WORDS AND PHRASES OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. Infbrnvs and Gehenna differ much in signification, though we have none interpretation for either of them than this Enghsh word Hell : for Gehenna signifieth a place of punish ment ; but Infernus is taken for any manner of place beneath in the earth, as a grave, sepulchre, or cave. Hell; it is called in Hebrew the valley of Hennon; a place by Jerusalem, where they burnt their children in fire unto the idol Moloch ; and is usurped and taken now for a place where the wicked and ungodly shall be tormented, both soul and body, after the general judgment. t» Give room to the wrath of God. (Rom. xii.) Wrath is there taken for vengeance : and the meaning is, Let God avenge, either by himself or by the officers that bear his room. p So the Tests. Day wants other places of] 532 EXPOSITION UPON WORDS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. There tarry and abide till ye go out. It is in Mark, the vi. chap. " Wheresoever ye enter into an house, there abide till ye go out thence." And, Luke ix. it is, "Into whatsoever house ye enter, there tarry and go not out thence :" that is to say, whosoever receiveth you, there abide as long as ye are in the city or town, and go not shamefully a begging from house to house, as friars do. Dust. "Shake off the dust of your feet." (Matt, x.) Why are they commanded to shake off the dust? For a witness, saith Luke, that that deed may testify against them in the day of judgment, that the doctrine of salvation was offered for them, but they would not receive it. Ye see also that such gestures and ceremonies have greater power with them, than have bare words only, to move the heart and to stir up faith, as do the laying on of hands, and anoint ing with oil, &c. Hypocrites, can ye discern the face of heaven, and not discern the signs of the times ? That is to say, they could judge by the signs of the sky what weather should follow, but they could not know Christ by the signs of the scripture ; and yet other signs might not be given them. He that saith he knoweth Christ and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar. To know Christ is to believe in Christ: ergo, he that keepeth not the commandments, be lieveth not in Christ. The end of such Prologues of the old Testament and new Testament as were made by William Tyndale. 3 9002 00489 8616