HOW SVPERIOR POWERS OGHT TO BE OBEYD OF THEIR subiects: and Wherin they may law­fully by Gods Worde be disobeyed and resisted. Wherin also is declared the cause of all this present miserie in England, and the onely way to remedy the same.

BY CHRISTOPHER GOODMAN.

¶The Lord hath broght vpon them a nation from a farre contrey, an impudent nation and of a strange langage.

Baruch 4. Deut. 28.

Printed at Geneua by Iohn Crispin. M.D.LVIII.

VVILLIAM VVHITIN­GHAM TO ALL THEM that loue to knoWe the trueth and foloWe it: Grace and peace.

IGnorance the mother of error and professed enne­mie to Gods Trueth, hath two daughters by whose flatteries and subtile practises she blyndeth mens eyes, obscureth the Trueth, and withdraweth vs from the way of knollage: Custome, and Negligence. Wherof the first so bewitcheth vs, that althogh we wallowe and walter in darcke blyndenes, yet as it were by dreaming we seme to walke in the bright sunne shyning: so that Custome and compagnie may farre soner drawe vs to perdition, then Trueth and reason bring vs to the vnderstanding of our error. The other being a domestical seruante and wel ac­quaynted with our maners, by crafty flatte­rie doth ouercome vs. For the fleshe is pro­wde and swelleth against God, she glorieth in her owne wisdome, she loueth her owne consel, she deliteth in her owne imaginatiō and policie: and albeit we knowe that slothful Negligence is an impediment and blocke in our nature to stoppe vs from Trueth: yet willingly we gyue place to her [Page 4] flattering persuasions, and suffre her to tray­ne vs to wilful destruction. So that betwixt Custome and Negligence we rather holde with damnable Ignorance, and wisshe to be plonged in abominable errors, then by dili­gent study and serching of the Trueth lear­ne to knowe our duetie to God, ād what he requireth of vs to do towardes our neigh­bour. Then if we wolde auoyde these euils, we must loue and embrace the cōtrary ver­tues: and if Custome be wicked and with­holde vs from God, we must spedely reiect her and cleaue vnto God: and if Negligence haue noseled vs in the denne of Ignorance, we must purchase by diligence to proffit in the schole of knollage. For the acheuing wherof (whē M. Christopher Goodman one of our ministers, according to the course of the text, expounded bothe faithfully and cōfortably this place of the Actes of the A­postles,Act. 4. d. Iudge whether it be iuste before God to obey you rather then God) certeyne lear­ned and godly men moste instantly, and at sondry tymes required hī to dilate more at large that his Sermon, and to suffre it to be printed, that not onely we here present, but our bretherne in England and other places might be persuaded in the trueth of that doctrine concerninge obedience to the magis­trat, and so glorifie God with vs. Whiche re­quest he admitted not easely, til at lēgth wel wayinge how many perished in their igno­rance [Page 5] for lack of meanes to attaine to the knollage of the trueth: and also conferringe his articles and chief propositions with the best learned in these partes (who approued them) he cōsented to enlarge the said Sermō and so to print it, as a token of his duetie and good affection towarde the Churche of God: and then if it were thoght good to the iudgement of the godly, to translate the same into other lāgages that the proffit ther of might be more vniuersal. Ther is no dou­te but many ouercome with olde Custome, or yelding to negligēt Slothfulnes wil ether dispraise this proffitable worke, or neglect it. For euel Custome deliting in Ignorance wil straight way flie to her wonted argu­mēt: What is this newe doctrine?Mar. 1 c. Act. 17. c and whē ­ce is it? Negligence on the other part crieth maliciously: We haue bookes ynough: what nede we yet to be set to schole? Thus Satan with double subteltie deludeth the worlde, keping his euer so fast tyed in the bandes of blynde Ignorance, that they can nether stirre hand nor fote: they are blynde and can not se what is good: and thogh it be offered, yet are they insensible and can not fele it. The trueth of Gods worde is to them moste odious: but mans dreames and deuils doctrines are in greate estimatiō and reuerence. Their false prophets and papisti­cal priests haue so charmed them, that I­gnorance is holden for knollage, error for [Page 6] trueth, superstition for religion, disobe­dience for obedience, the Masse for the Lor­des Supper, Purgatorie for Christs blood, workes for faith, Belial for God, and as S. Paul saieth,2. Cor. 11. d If they bring you into slauerie, ye endure it: if they deuoure you, ye suffre it: if they spoile you of your goods, ye are content: if they preferre them selues and thrust you downe, ye forbeare it: if they smite you on the face, yet ye can susteine it. And thus the children of Satan had rather rot in their barbarous ignorance, then by submitting thē selues to the mercies of God, aspire to the perfect vnderstanding of his heauenly will reueiled vnto vs by his worde. But thou the sonne of God, shewe thy duetie and loue towarde thy merciful Father, endeuour to knowe his wil, declare thy affection towardes his Scriptures, be zealous of his glorie, reuerence his ministers, and receaue thank­fully his graces geuen to his Churche by them. Proue diligently and trie by the tou­chstone who speake the wordes of God in pure simplicitie as in Gods presēce,2. Cor. 2. d. and who cehoppe and change the same, making mar­chandise therof to traffique according to mans pleasure. Nether do we desire onely that you shulde be persuaded in this trueth because we our selues so beleue: but we ex­hort you,Iob. 4. f. that as the Samaritās dyd not one­ly beleue in our Sauiour Christ because of the womās report which broght the newes, [Page 7] but forasmuche as they them selues heard him, and knewe that Christ was the Sauiour of the worlde: so whē you shal wel examine these things by the rule of Gods worde, you wolde not so much by our report as by your owne iudgement and knowlage credit the trueth. Remēbring that the worthy people of Beroe were cōmēded by the holy Gost,Act. 17. c. because they tryed by Gods worde whether the ministers preachīg agreed with the same or no. Seing then by these examples we are bonde to seke the wil of God manifested vnto vs in his Scriptures, what excuse shal we alledge for our pretensed ignorance? Be­holde here▪ thou hearest the Eternal spea­king by his minister, in whose mouthe he hath put his worde, and whose lippes must kepe the Lawe ād the vnderstāding therof, as wryteth the Prophet Malachie.Chap. 2. a Beware therfore that thou neglect not him that brīgeth the worde of God, but quickely gyue eare ād obey. For if thou desirest to knowe thy duetie to thy Prince, and his charge likewise ouer thee, read this book and thou shalt wel vnderstāde both: If thou wishe for Christiā libertie, come and se how it may easely be had: If thou woldest loue God aboue man, here thou shalt knowe how to obey God rather then mā. Let the Apostles of Christ here be thy schole maisters, and then the more thou learnest: the lesse occasiō shalt thou ha­ue to repent. Obedience is necessarie where [Page 8] God is glorified, but if God be dishonored thy obedience is abominable in the sight of God, be it neuer so beautiful in mans eyes. Gods worde is our guyde to leade vs in our doings: when it commandeth vs to obey God, we must disobey man in the contrary: for no man can serue two maisters: and when our heauēly maister cōmandeth obe­dience to man, it is euer to be vnderstand, in the Lord. So that obedience to Gods La­wes by dissobeyīg mās wicked lawes is muche commendable, but to disobey God for any duetie to mā is all to gether damnable: as in the discourse of this booke thou shalt fully be asseured, if God open thyn eyes to se the trueth, ād moue thy heart to embrace it. The Spirit of God, which is the schole­maistre to leade vs into all trueth, lighten your hartes, gyue you myndes to vnderstan­de, and courage to execute his holy wil, to the setting forth of Christes kingdome, the proffit of his Churche and confusion of Sa­tans power and Antichrists. Amen. From Geneua this first of Ianuarie. 1558.

THE PREFACE.

AS there is nothīge to be cōpared to true obediē ­ce, in preseruīge the cō ­mō welth of townes, ci­ties, and kingdoms: or in maynteyninge true reli­giō,True obe­dience rendreth to God due honor & also to man as his office requireth. what gre­at daunger it is, not to put differē ce betwene obedience and disobe­dience. Christiā peace & cōcorde (for ther­by euery mā is instructed how to render vnto God his due honour & glorie: & to man that, whiche his office requi­reth) Euē so is ther nothinge more ha­tefull to God, nether more hurtefull to mā, then so to be bewitched with Sa­tans false illusions, that they are not able to put difference betwyxte obe­dience & disobedience: but as men without all iudgemēt and naturall sen­se, take thone for thother, beinge in them selues playne contrarie, whiche is the onelie cause of all disorder and la­mentable confusion, where with the whole worlde is bothe this daie, and hath bene also frō the beginning, most miserably defaced and oppressed. For when vile man, replenished with pri­de, vayne glorie, and grosse ignorance, will measure obedience with the crow­ked lyne of his owne corrupte iudge­ment, [Page 10] and not with the infallible trueth of Goddes holie worde, he must nedes preferre his owne decrees, phantasies, and ordināces, to the cōfortable Lawes and liuelie preceptes of God his creator. Then in place of iustice, he receaueth iniustice, for right wronge, for vertue vice, for lawe will, for loue hatred, for trueth falshod, for playne dealing dissi­mulation,what plags come for disobediēce. for religion superstition, for true worshippe detestable idolatrie: and to be shorte, for God Sathan, for Christ Antichrist, and with him suche plages of God, and disorder amonge mē, as are this daye set before oure eyes to beholde in all places throughout the vniuersal worlde, and haue bene like­wise euen from the beginninge. When Adam was placed in paradise,Gen. 3. beinge a creature moste perfecte, and abundinge in all wisdome and heauenlie knowled­ge, and wolde at the persuasion of his wif measure obedience rather by his o­wne reason,Adam disobeied God and was greuouslie punished. then by the worde & sen­tence of God before pronounced: be­hold, he was not onelie spoyled of wis­dome & knowledge, becomminge a ve­rie foole, in comparison of that, whiche [Page 11] he was before: but also sodaynlie de­stitute of all other singuler giftes, as of innocencie, and immortalitie, was con­foūded at the voyce of the Lord, assha­med at his owne nakednesse, and felt the dredfull indignation and curse of God, whiche he had procured, not one­lie to him self, but broght the same also vpon all his posteritie after him.All mākinde was iustly punished for Adams disobediēce When the whole worlde was so corrupted in their owne wayes in the dayes of faith­full Noha, no regarde was at all to the obedience of the liuinge Lorde, nor yet to the godlie admonitions of iust Noha:Gen. 6. but euerie man was so drowned in his owne lustes,The worl­de plaged in Nohas dayes for disobediēce that the space of an hun­dreth & twenty yeares was not sufficiēt to moue them to repentance. And ther­fore could they not escape the strange and horrible iudgement of God, whiche immediatlie after folowed moste iustlie. And althogh in that wicked generation abonded all kinde of wickednesse, as well agaynst God as man, in so muche as the earthe then might be compted a verie hell, yet from whence proceaded all this rebellion against Goddes migh­tie maiestie, but onelie for that they [Page 12] measured all thinges after their owne corrupt reason,The cause of all diso­bedience is, not to measure oure doings by Godds worde. Rom. 2. and not by his holie La­wes and preceptes? Whiche they had now receaued of their forefathers, hear­de of Noah, yea, and had them ingraf­ted naturally in their hartes. The pro­bation wherof might easilie be deduced from all ages euen to oure tyme by in­numerable and euident examples, if it were nedefull in so playne a matter. For who is so blynde that maye not se how man sheweth his rebellion,We must not measu­re our obe­dience af­ter our ou­ne phante­sies. neuer so muche, as when he woulde be moste obedient in his owne sight and iudge­ment? not measuringe the same by the streght lyne and true touchestone, whiche is the Lawe and worde of God, but suffringe him self to be led by his owne corrupte iudgemēt and affectiōs.

This turned the Wisdome of the Gentiles into mere folishnesse, inuētin­ge shamefull idolatrye for true wor­shipp,Rom. 1. as witnessethe the Apostle.

Mat. 15.This blynded the Ieues with hy­pocrisie and cloked holynesse, makinge the Lawe of the liuinge Lorde to geue place to their inuented traditions by man.Disobe­dience is the puddle of all herisies and error. Out of this stinkinge puddle of [Page 13] mans brayne haue issued forthe so gre­at diuersitie of opinions and daunge­rous herisies, wherwith the Churche of God hathe bē at all tymes horriblye tormented. Finallie from hence hathe Antichriste filled his pestilente cupp of all sortes of deadlie poyson,Apo. 17. Antichriste is the pla­ge of God for mās disobedience. where of he hathe made the whole earthe almost, and her kinges and Princes, not onelie to drinke: but to be most vilelie ouer­come and dronken. In whose defence they haue armed them selues against the Lorde ād Christe his Son:Psal. 2. whō not­withstanding with impudent mouthes they professe, where as in verie dede they persecute him moste cruellie in his Saincts by all means possible,The tyrāts are Anti­christes tormentours and perse­cute Christ fightin­ge, as men in a rage, vnder the banner of that filthie beast. And yet these men in the middle of their furie, without all obedience & ordre, subuertinge the La­wes of God and of nature, will be cal­led notwithstandinge the defenders of the faithe, mayntayners of true religiō, autours of peace, teachers of obedien­ce, ād most discrete gouernours of com­mon weales and policies. To the intent therfore that these disguised personnes [Page 14] (whiche abuse the whole worlde) may appeare in their owne liuely shape, and be knowen as they are in dede, I haue thoght it good,Thoccasion wherefore this treatise was writ, and what proffit we may gather therof. hauinge occasion by this worthie answere of Peter and Io­hn, and beinge hereto of diuers godlie persons prouoked, somewhat to wryte of true obedience: to wit, what God him self requiereth of vs, and what he commandethe to be geuen also to men. Wherby (God willinge) the disguised clokes, and craftie pretences of obe­dience, vsed and practised by the vngodlie worldlings, shalbe discouered: who haue soght alwayes, and yet do seeke vnder the pleasant name of obedien­ce, onlie to mayntayne their ambition, pride and libertie: wherby we shall le­arne also how in tymes past we haue bene shamfullie abused in yelding to the willfull wil of man, in obeying his vngodlie commandements, and fearin­ge man more then God: and finallie how it behoueth vs to repent oure for­mer ignoraunce, and with diligence to redresse the same, hauinge more lighte and fuller knowledge.

‘PETER AND IOHN ANSWERED VNTO thē, and said: Whether it be right in the sight of God to obey you rather thē God, iudge you.’Act. 4.

CHAP. I.

¶To whome this answere was geuen, and vpon what occasion, how litle the malice of the Iues preuailed agaynst the Apostles, in sekinge to stopp the Gospell by their craftie fetches and chastisynges.

TO the end we may haue more sensible fealinge of all these things,The circū stance of the answere wayed. let vs diligentlie consider this answere of S. Peter & Iohn: aswell to whō it was made, as vpon what occasion. After that these ii Apostles, through the malice of the Priests, the Gouerno­ure of the Tēple and the Sadduces,Act. 4. we­re violentlie throwne into prison the night before, for preaching to the people at Ierusalem in the porche of Salomon, the resurrection from death in the Name of Iesus: and the next [Page 16] daye folowīge were set forthe, ād pre­sented to the whole Senate and Con­cile of Ierusalem, where was assembled all the chief Rulers and Elders of the people of Israell, Annas also the hie Priest, and Caiaphas, ād Iohn, and Ale­xandre, men of great reputation, with others of the kinred of the high Bis­shopp, to be examined of thē, in whose name or power they had cured the la­me criple (who beinge aboue 40 ye­res olde, and lame from his birthe was daylie broght to the porche of Salo­mō to begge his almes) Peter replenis­shed with the holie Spirit, āswered wi­the great boldnesse, that they wroght that miracle in the Name and power of Iesus Christ the true Nazarit, Wh­ome the Ieues had crucified, and God had raysed from the death: in so mu­che as the mouthes of the whole Con­cile were stopped & had nothinge to saye against them, but as men astunnis­shed wondred at the constant bol­denesse of Peter and Iohn in their an­swere. Then (saithe S. Luke) did the whole Concile, that is, all these fore­named Magistrates by common con­sent [Page 17] straytelie charge the Apostels Peter and Iohn,The ma­gistrats cō ­mande the Apostles not to preach Christe. hereafter not so muche as once to speake to anie man, muche lesse to preache in the Name of Iesus: thinking by this means to stoppe the course of the Gospell, ād hinder the glorie of Christ, whō they before had crucified as a malefactor and blasphe­mer of Gods Name. And althoghe they were destitute of all reason and Scripture to answere the Apostels, who had all redie cōfounded the: yet throu­ghe auctoritie and ponishmēte, whiche they threatned, they thoght craftelie to put the Apostles to silence, and so at length to obtayne the victorie. As we see this daye the Papistes their succes­sors, expresse enimies of the Gospel,The pa­pists suc­cead the Iewes in malice ād persecutiō. ād sworne soldiars of Antichriste, euery where practise, who beinge ouercome with the manifest Scriptures, and their blasphemous mouthes stopped with the truthe of Gods worde, fight notwith­standing maliciouslie agaynst Christe with power, auctoritie, threatnyngs,Papists are the generation of Vipers. Iohn. 8. horrible ponishmentes, and cruell mur­ther, resemblinge that old serpēt, who­se broude they are, whiche was a mur­therer [Page 18] from the begyninge.

But when the whole assembly had craftelie cōsulted, and wrought all that they coulde agaynst the faithfull seruā ­tes of God:The Gos­pell increaseth when it is perse­cuted. they were neuer the lesse disapoynted of their porpose. For the glorie of Christe more brightelie shyned, and the truthe of his Gospell was better knowen ād farther published, and their falshod and raginge madnesse more es­pied, and abhorred of the godlie. For what extreame madnesse was this to set them selues agaynst God, so to truste in their owne power as thoughe they were able to resyste and ouercome the power of the all mightie,Rom. 1. whiche is the Gospell of oure Sauiour Iesus Christe (as wit­nesse the the Apostle) To thinke that the threatnings of mē, shulde more pre­uayle with the Apostels of Christe, then the threatnings of God ād his hor­rible iudgementes apoynted for the di­sobediēt?We must rather fe­are Goddes iudgemēts then mans threatnyn­gs. Coulde not the Iewes distroye Christe and his doctrine, whiles he was mortall and liued amongest them in the fleshe, to whom they did almoste what they list, an yet would after [Page 19] thinke to bringe it to passe, when he was risen agayne by his mightie pow­er, and made immortall? Yf they coulde not keape him in the graue for al their diligent watche, when he was dead and buried: thinke they it possible to pluke him downe from heauē, from the right­hande of his father, where he fitteth and reigneth in euerlastīge glorie? Oh vay­ne and foolishe men: he hathe ouerco­me al readie the whole world, and cast forthe of it the Chief Prince & Ruler Satan, who is no more able to preuay­le agaynst his truthe and seruauntes.Christe ād his word are inuin­sible. A­re you more subtile or stronger then Sa­tan, who is your lorde and maister so longe as you fight agaynst Christe the Sonne of God? Coulde not so mightie a Prince with stande his power, and you leawde souldiars of his, wil thīke to optayne the victorie? Deathe, whiche no man can escape, coulde not holde him, neither the power of hell praeuay­le agaynst him: and yet would you ha­ue him at your commandement, mo­ste maliciouslie and traitrouslie sigh­fightinge against his hōnor, who soght [Page 20] by all means, and yet doth, to do you good and saue you? But ô miserable and vile wretches, double is your con­demnation in the sight of God, which not contented to forsake Christe your selues, do so maliciously with your threatenings labour to frustrate others of his moste confortable graces.Mat. 23. Full wel doth our Sauiour Christ paynt for­th your raginge enuie, sainge, Wo be to you Scribes, Pharisies, and hypo­crites, because you shutt the kingdome of heauen before men, not entering yo­ur selues, neither wil you suffer such as come, to enter.

CHAP. II.

¶ How the papisticall Churche and Conciles can not but erre, and how they beinge compared to the Iewes, are no lesse deniers and blasphemers of Christ▪ then the Iewes.

Great occasions of re­pentance offered to the Iewes. I wil not here rehearse what iuste occasiō of re­pentance was offered to this whole assemblie of the Iewes (if their har­tes had not bene harde­ned) as wel by the playne and sensible [Page 21] doctrine taught by the Apostels, whi­che they coulde not improue with all their learninge:An horri­ble falling awaye frō God. as by the mightie po­were of God declared in so manie and wonderful miracles wroght by them in the name of Christe to cōfirme his Gos­pel and resurrection, whiche the Iewes notwithstāding stubbernly did reiecte: Nether yet wil I speake of the strange defection and notable falling awaie from God amongest them in Ierusalem,Rom. 3. and 9. The Iewe­she churche errethe. whiche at that tyme (in the iudgement of mā) appeared to be the onelie Chur­che of God, to whom appartayned the promises, who of al other nations had the Lawe, and Prophetes to instructe them, who onelie professed the true and euerliuinge God: and yet amongest them all that were assembled, was not so muche as one man to stande vpon Christes parte with the Apostels, but cō sented and agreed with one accorde, that in the Name of Christe they shulde preache no more to the people. Onelie this I woulde put you in remembrance of, before we proceade anie further, how vayne and vncertayne the doctri­ne of the blasphemous Papistes is, whi­che [Page 22] is grounded vpon no other founda­tion,The papi­stes churche erreth. then vpon the auctoritie of their Churche, their Councils, and decrees of men. And here in dare I make the papistes them selues iudges,The Iew ishe chmr­che was firste. whither their Churche be of more auctoritie or anti­quite, then was the Churche of the Ie­wes whiche was the first of all, ād aucto­rised by God immediatlie: Or whither their Concils at the appoyntment of the Romishe Antichriste, were more or­derlie called and assembled, then was this Concil holden at Ierusalem by the appoyntmēt of the Chief priest and Bishopp? As for their Churche, the Ie­wes had the manifeste worde and pro­messe of God· yea, there was no other Churche, then visible vpon the earthe, besides that whiche the Apostels then began to buylde vpon the true coner­stone Iesus Christe: where as the pa­pistes haue not so muche as one worde or promesse to proue that they are (as they impudentlie bragge) the Chur­che of God, but manie rather moste playnlie prouinge them to be the verie Synagoge of Satan, and liuelie mem­bers [Page 23] of Antichriste. Yf then this, whi­che seemed the true Churche of God, ād auctorised by him, so shamefullie er­red: maruel it is that the papisticall Sy­nagoge and members of Satan shuld be founde establishers of the veritie, which alwayes since they haue bene raysed vp from hell, haue soght nothing but the vtter subuersion therof? Nether can they defende them selues by anie auctoritie to assemble, or by anie learninge, or outwarde shewe of holynesse:The locusts which ca­me out of the bottō ­les pit. seīg in none of these poyntes they may be compared to this assemble, wher of S. Luke maketh mētion. For here was the highe Prieste Annas, here was Caiaphas, here were the temporal Magistrates, the gouuerners of the Temple, the Seniors of Ierusalem, the learned Scribes, and Pharisies. And what coulde anie man wishe fore in the iudgment of man, that the­re was not, to make a lawfull Con­cil? And yet thou seest the counclusion was agaynst the Lorde ād his anoynted Sōne. Wilt thou then hope for anie bet­ter at the papistes assembles and Con­cils, who in persecuting Christe conti­nuallie, [Page 24] and his holie worde, shewe them selues open enemies to bothe? Doest thou here beholde the Iewes, whiche professed the true liuinge God, without all apishe maumetrie and I­dolls, forbidden in their Lawe: neuer­thelesse malitiouslie to consulte agayn­ste their true Messias: and will not yet cease to credit the papistes, sayng, That their Churches and Concils can not erre,The papi­stes are more wic­ked then Iewes. where as they dishonor the li­uinge Lorde, hauing their Temples re­plenished with all kinde of idolatrie: yea, when their owne consciences do condemne them, that there was neuer the like impietie committed in all Isra­el, as their filthie Concils haue taught and commended? But thou wilt say perchaunce, that there is no cōparison betwixt the Iewes, playnelie denying Christ,The papi­stes denye Christ, as well as the Iewes do. and the papistes whiche do con­fesse him: and therupon wilt conclude, that the papistical Concils may not so easilie erre, as those whiche were holdē of the Iewes at Ierusalem, againste the Apostels and their doctrine. As concer­ninge their Concils, I may not answere [Page 25] now: for that were an infinite worke to repeate all their absurdities. Yf any mā wolde but once reade them ouer, he sholde nede no other persuasion to ab­horre them, and to cōfesse this my say­ing most true in all the Concils holden by the Romishe Antichriste.The papi­stes are more blas­phemous then the Iewes. But to cō ­pare them with the Iewes in denying of Christe, thou shalt proue them more blasphemous. For the Iewes after a sor­te did cōfesse their Christ and Messias in wayting for him dayly to delyuer them, and saue them from the miserie wherin they were, and now are, ād from al their enimies accordinge as God promised: but when they wolde not acknolledge him, whom their fathers did persecute and crucifie, and whom the Apostels taught to be risen and ascended, they playnlie denied Christe. They beleued that he shulde be their Captayne and delyuerer, but after an other sorte, then by his deathe and passion: and to an o­ther ende, then to suffer in this worlde the shame of the Crosse.

Euenso do the papistes confesse Christe, but in effecte withe the Iewes [Page 26] deny him.The papi­stes cōfesse Christ, but in effect deny him. They confesse Christe whi­che is come in the fleshe, borne of the virgin Marie, crucified for the synnes of the worlde, &c. Whiche all hither­unto is wel, and agreethe with vs. But for as muche as they are not with him contented, but wil haue an other Chri­ste besides him:1. Tim. 2 they are manifest de­niers of Christe. For (as writethe the A­postel) There is but one God, one Me­diator betwixt God and man, the man Iesus Christe, whiche gaue him selfe to be the redemption for all. Now when the papistes beleue not onlie in this Christe and Sauiour,The papi­stes cōfesse Christe to be here in the world in the for­me of brad a dead God not able to do anye thinge. which came in the fleshe, and was borne of the virgine, but also in that Christe, whom they imagi­ne to come, and to be in the worlde in the forme of bread, and borne aboute with the handes of man, not able to go him selfe: when they beleue not onelie vpon Christe crucified, and hanged v­pon the Crosse, but in the coniured I­doll, hanging by a corde ouer the al­ter: not onlie in Christe glorified vpon the right hande of the father, who li­uethe and reignethe for euer, but in [Page 27] their rownde cake, which (they say) is consecrated, when with out sense and feeling it lieth closed in their box,The boxy mowly, wormy, musty rot­ten and corrupted Christe. subiecte to mowleinge, wormes, and corruption, reserued & kept to be worshipped as their God, but to their condemnation for euer. More ouer when they haue other aduocates then Christe, other sacrifices for synne, o­ther merites and means of saluation: it helpethe them no more to proue that they are Christians, thus impudentlie denying him and his office, then it hel­peth the Iewes, in saying they beleue in the true Messias to come, which is all readie come,The papi­stes vnder the name of Christi­ans worke treason agaynst Christ. and reueled to the world. Ye so muche the more is their condemnation, for that vnder the Na­me of Christe, whom they dare not de­ny, they worke preuie treason agaynste him, to subuerte the truethe of his Gos­pel, and whole fruite of his death and passion: which is our redemption from death, and hope of euerlasting life, purchased by that perfecte obla­tion, which was offred once for all,Hebr. 10.1. Ioh. 2. as a sufficient sacrifice for the synnes of the [Page 28] the whole worlde.

CHAP. III.

¶What inconuenience had commē to the Churche of God, if the Apostels had ob [...]yed the commandement of the Concil, and what euills haue com­men lately vpon England through the prea­ching of vnlawful obediēce and yelding to vn­godly Rulers.

LEt vs leaue the vngodlie papistes with their wi­cked decrees and Con­cils,The infi­nit slaughter of martyrs in Englande. as mē that passe the Iewes in all maner of wilful stubbernesse and cruel persecution of the trueth, as the horrible slaghter of thousandes of martyrs, which with in these few yeres in Englande alone do witnesse: and re­turne to the Apostels, Peter and Iohn, to examine what answere they framed to these men of auctoritie, and Rulers, gathered to gether of all sortes, as you haue harde, as wel of the Cleargie as of the Laitie, of suche as thē had the onlie gouernement of Ierusalem vnder the Romayns, to whom they were then tri­butaries, [Page 29] which charge and threatning of the whole Concil, done with so gre­at aduisement and consultation, oght not lightlie to be estemed, especiallie, of the seruantes of God,We must not yelde in Gods cause, when man threat­neth. and their sub­iects, as the Apostels then were. They were charged and threatned to preache no more in the Name of Christe cruci­fied. An heauy commandement dout­lesse to Peter and Iohn, especiallie if it might haue taken place: seing it was all together contrarie to their vocation and charge geuen vnto them by their maister Christ, to preache his Gospell throughout all the worlde,Luk. 24. act. 1. and to be­gyn at Ierusalem, for which cause they were called and chosen from amongest all others, and had bene of longe tyme instructed of their maister Christ in the knowledge of all his holie Scriptures, ād replenished with wonderful giftes of the holie Goste, to cure all deseases, to cast out diuels, to drinke poyson, to tre­ad vpon serpentes, and to distribute the holye Spirit, and all those to be as it we­re seales and cōfirmatiōs of their doct­rine, whiche all had bene to no porpose, yf this commandement and threatninge [Page 30] of the Magistrats shuld haue bene o­beyed,Relenting of the mi­nisters mo­ste dange­rous. & the Apostels yelded to their auctoritie. Then the foundation of the Churche shuld haue ben shaken, and the whole assemble discouraged: for the two Chief Captayns gyuinge ouer, who durste haue presumed further?

And truelie, if the Apostels at that tyme had bene no further instructed, then the moste parte of men are in the­se our dayes, and especiallie haue bene, and yet be in our miserable countrie of Englande: they would haue bene in great perplexitie, and sore afrayde to haue made this, or the like answere sayng:we maye safely folo­we the example of the Apostels aproued by the holy Gost. Iudge you whither it be lawful before God to obeye you, rather then God. For the moste parte of men, yea and of those whiche haue bene both learned and godlie, and haue geuen worthie testymonie of their profession to the glorie of God: haue thoght and taught (by the permission of God for our synnes) that it was not lawful in anie case to resist and disobeye the superior powers:A dange­rous doc­trine. but rather to laye downe their heades, and submitte them selues to all kindes of punishmentes and tyrannye, [Page 31] thinkinge them selues sufficientlie dis­charged before God of their vocation and duetie, hauing onlie the comman­dement of the superiour power to the contrarie, were it neuer so vngodlie ād cleāe againste all natural reason:1. Cor. 3 Man can not dispē ­ce with that which God com­mandeth. wher­by manye hauinge commandement to preache no more Iesus christ to the people, without anie trouble of conscience haue keapt silence, and thought thē sel­ues sufficientlie discharged: nether cō ­sidering that they were made stewards of Godes holye mysteries, and that not at the appointment of man, or for them selues, but by the ordināce of our Sauiour Christ Iesus, and to be faithful distributers to others. Nether yet mar­kinge this present answere of Peter and Iohn, whom they might safely haue folowed with better assurance: who in suche case,False bre­thern which betray God and his trueth in yelding to the pa­pists. haue lefte this lesson for all men, rather to obaye God then mā. Others, hearinge the Name of God blasphemed by the false doctrine of the wicked and shaueling priestes, dur­ste not once open their mouthes to speak one worde in their maisters be­halff and his infallible truethe: but stopt [Page 32] theyr mouthes as dōme dogges, ād dur­ste not barke against the rauenīge wolff when they knew and saw him cōming. Many not minding to obiecte them sel­ues to anie daunger, regardinge more their owne safetie, then the preseruatiō of their flocke,No mini­ster oght to flie and forsake his flocke, except he be persecuted one­ly, and not his flocke. wolde not abide the wilde beaste commyng, but moste sha­mefullie fledde before the daunger ca­me, shewing them selues playne hire­lings, and no true pastores: leauinge the selie shepe of God to be deuoured, and that because they had entred in to the folde before to feede of the flocke, to eate the fleshe, and deuoure the people of God as bread,Psal. 14. rather then to do their dueties.

They which please man ra­ther then obey God.But all these and suche like are here condemned and conuicted of euel, which fearing man more then God, ga­ue eare and obedience to man, rather then to God. Wherof, besides the iu­ste shame that came vpon them selues, and the displeasure of God powred ge­nerally vpon all (for as muche as we all were betrayers of our maister, thoghe not all a like) iust occasion of offence and of like disobediēce to God, was mi­nistred [Page 33] to all sorts of men, of what vo­cation so euer they were.we must obey the preachers onely whē they bring Gods worde. For when they sawe the teachers and leaders of others to set vp obedience of man rather then of God, and the same confirmed by their owne example: those whiche knewe no other, thoght it their parte to do the like also in their vocation and office. And suche as were play­ne enimies to God,The papi­stes laughe in their sleues, when they see their wi­cked pro­ceadinges promoted by vnlawfull obe­dience. the wicked papistes or dissolute persons, laughed in their sleues: seing bothe them and their wi­cked proceadings therby promoted and furthered. Where as to defend their kyngdome of darckenes, ambitiō and idle belies, there is no kyng so go­dly, no contrey so peaceable, nor no kyngdome so stronge, which through their deuilishe entreprises and wicked persuasions, they haue not studyed vt­terly to subuert and destroy. As the ex­ample of that desperat Moncke,A moncke who to poison king Iohn, wittingly and willi­ngly poysoned him self. O malicious deuil. Likewise the oration of that mo­ste traiterous and pestilent Cardinal Pole,Cardinal Pole. doth yet witenes to all the papists shame and confusion: wherin he goeth [Page 34] about to perswade the wicked Emperour rather to tourne his power ād armie a­gaīst Kynge Hēry the eight ād Englād, this doggs owne cōtrey, thē against the infidels, Turckes, and Sarracenes: blas­phemouslie termīg the worde of God ād Gospel of saluation to be the Turckesh sede. O impudēt mouth: ô blasphemous beast, which saist in thi heart, Ther is no God. And yet to all your shame ād vtter destructiō of your cōtrie, you haue re­ceaued him as a God, whome before in your lawful kyngs dayes, you moste iu­stely condemned as a traitour and very sonne of Antichrist. The Counsellers, whose office is to brydle the affectiōs of their Princes ād Gouuernours, in geuīg such counsele as might promote the glorie of God, ād the welthe of their cōtrie by this persuasion of obediēce, haue hi­therto sought, and yet apearinglie do, how to accōplishe and satisfie the vn­godly lustes of their vngodlie ād vnlawful Gouernesse, wicked Iesabel: who for our synnes, contrarie to nature and the manyfeste worde of God, is suffred to raigne ouer vs in Goddes furie, ād haue therby moste wickedlie betrayed Chri­ste, their countrie, and thē selues (so muche [Page 35] as lieth in thē) to become slaues to a strange and foren nation, the prowde Spaniards. The Nobles also, which (thoghe vnworthilie wil be so called) hea­ring no other preaching,To obey is good, but whome, wherin, ād howe far­re, ought to be cōsidered but that they must obeye their Prince, neither know­ing whō, wherin, nor how farre, haue in like maner, as men disguised vpon a stage, turned their nobilite to open shame amongest all nations, whiche now be­holde their follie, and wōder ther at: se­inge they are made instrumētes of im­pietie, and destroyers of their natiue countrie, which firste were ordayned in Realmes to stande in defence of trewe religion, lawes, and welth of their na­tion, and to be a shylde (to their power) agaynst their enimies in tyme of warre, and a brydel at home to their Princes in tyme of peace: neither to suffer them in this sorte to rage agaynst God, and vt­terlie to conteme the holsome lawes of the Realme, to satisfie their filthie luste and vayne glorie, nor so cruelie to murther, and agaynst nature to deuoure the people of God, their subiects, whom they are charged by their office to suc­coure and defende, and haue therfore a [Page 36] feareful compt to make for donige the contrarie.

The iusti­ces & other vnder offi­cers.The Iustices likewise in Townes and Cities, as Maieres, Shryffs, Baylyf­es, Constables, Iealers and all suche inferior officers, folowing the same ex­sample of vnlawful obedience, whose office and charge it is to minister iustice whithout respecte of persōs,Officers ād Iudges degenerat. to defende the symple and innocēt, and to punishe all transgressors and malefactors, blas­phemours of Goddes holie Name, vio­lent oppressers of innocentes, as be the bloudthurstie papistes: are nowe be­come ministers of iniustice, and tyran­ny, made tormentours of their owne naturall Countrye men, most blouddie butchers of their brethren, and merci­lesse murtherers of the childrē of God: and that in suche cruel sorte, as neuer was hearde of before since the deathe of Christe, where anie profession of his Name hathe bene. In so muche that they are made a spectacle and gasinge-stock to all countries and nations, a­mongest whom is anie feare of God or ciuile policie, whiche woulde not haue beleued it to be possible, if their eares [Page 37] and eyes were not this day sufficient wittnesses. For to vnderstand that the papistes were cruell butchers and vn­satiable bloudsuckers,The papi­stes natu­rally thurst for bloud. had bene no newes at all, they haue bene such from the beginninge. But when they bothe heare and see those that professe the Gospel, and woulde be counted Chri­stes shepe,Fals Gos­pelers, slaues vnto papistes. turned for feare of displea­sure, or losinge of their office in to the nature of bloudthurstie woulues, to ex­ecute agaynst God and their conscien­ce, the vngodlie commandements of the papistes: to be at commandement, not onlie to their vnlawful Quene, but also to euery shauen Sir Iohn, to im­brue their handes with them in inno­cent bloude: this makethe all men to wonder and be astonished.

To conclude,The cōmon people. the residue of the co­mon people, seing their superiours of all degrees ād estates, by whom they shul­de be gouerned with godlie lawes, and to whom they ought obedience in the feare of God onelie, thus couardly to forsake their obedience to God, and vt­terlie contemne the office wherwith he had charged them, to satisfie the vnlawful [Page 38] commandements of their wilful Go­uernesse: thinke it in no case their parte to deny to her like obedience: but with bodies and goodes,Men that do against their con­science and Godes worde. at home ād abrode, to fulfill and mayntayne her will ād ty­ranny, not withstandinge their owne conscience doth condemne thē, and the worde of God dothe playnelie testifie, that it is euell and vngodlie which they are commanded to do. Being deceaued by misunderstanding this place of Pau­le and such like:Rom. 13. It behoueth euery sou­le to be subiecte to superior powers, because there is no power but of God. For the powers that are, be ordinances of God: ād therfore he that resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinaunce of God.

But how litle this and other like ob­iectiōs make for their purpose, we shall God willinge vnderstande, after that we haue better examined this present ans­were of Peter and Iohn: who are not cō trarie to Paul, nor Paul to them, rightly cōsidered▪ For thoghe this answere was made of Peter ād Iohn in their owne cause to the Magiestrates ād Rulers of Ierusalem: yet is it no lesse generall then the saynge of. S. Paule: and partayneth to al [Page 39] conditions of men, as wel Magiestrates and Rulers, as inferior persons and sub­iectes: teaching them bothe their of­fice moste rightlie: the one, what to commande, and how to rule: the other, whom to obeye, and wherin to be sub­iecte, as in their places folowinge shall euidentlie appeare.

CHAP. IIII.

The trueth of this answere was so sensible, that the verie aduersaries coulde not withstand it.

ANd firste to returne to the answere,The enemies of God cā not denye this ans­were to be treue. we may be assured that it is certayne ād an vndouted true the, that in all things, and of all men, ād in all places, God is to be obeyed before mē. In so muche as the Apostels were not afrayed to cōmite the iudgement ther­of vnto their extreame enemies: whom they knewe right well, would haue ge­uen contrarie sentence, if their answe­re had not bene withe out all contro­uersie. As thoghe they would haue sa­yed. After that we haue bene [Page 40] charged with this office to preache to all people and nations, ād that by God him selffe, to whom all powers are sub­iecte, and all men are bownd to obeye, whose iudgementes none can escape, and whose wrathe no fleshe is able to abyde:Psal. 104. whiche with the breathe of his mouthe, moueth the heauens, and ma­kethe the mightie mountaynes to sha­ke and tremble, and dryueth all pow­ers (be they neuer so stronge) to dust ād powder. We are contēted to make you iudges, which charge vs to the contra­rie: whither this dreadful God may ap­proue our doings in obeyēge you beīg men, and his creatures, yea earthe, ve­rie dust and asshes in comparison of his Maiestie? Whither man, of what aucto­ritie so euer he be, is able to discharge vs in the presence of oure God, if in holding our peace at your commande­ment,Preachers must prea­ch Christe in season and out of season. we transgresse the expresse com­mandemēt of God? That is, not to prea­che Iesus Christ crucified: who hathe chosē vs to the same ēd, indued vs with knowledge, reuealed vnto vs his secret counsels, the mysterie of our redem­ption, and armed vs with all giftes [Page 41] of the holie Gost, necessarie for the accomplishement of so waightie an entreprise. We nede not herein to vse many wordes or reasons: nor to desier anie arbiters to define this mat­ter: be you your selues iudges. Which kinde of speaking, men commonlie vse, when the matter is euident and out of doubte, knowen to all men, be they of neuer so slender iudgement, and nede no further reasons, or Scriptures to pro­ue it. The like kinde of reasoninge, the Apostle vseth agaynst the Corinthians:1. Cor. 11. who permitted their wemē to praye ba­reheaded in the Congregation, which he condemned as an vndecent custome, not becommyng the Sayncts of God. For amongest other reasons, he likewi­se makethe them selues iudges in the matter, sayeng: Iudge ye amonge your selues, whither it be cumlie for a womā to praye bareheaded in the Congrega­tion. Cōcludinge, that verie nature do­the teache the contrarye. In like maner this answere is so true and sensible (that rather God is to be obeyed then man) that there cā be none so malitious or ignorante, whom verie nature will not [Page 42] compel to confesse it, if he had no fur­ther knowledge. Nether had these men, for all their great a doo, lōge consulta­cion, hie learninge and wisdome (desie­rous also to take occasion agaynst the Apostels) anie thinge to saye for the cō ­trary. But as Gods enemies are accu­stomed, when their mouthes are stopt, either with raylinges, or threatnings, to expresse their rage: so did they with Peter & Iohn,They shuld not so haue escaped if they had bene befor our cruell Counselors Pharisies and Hypocrits of Englande. dimitting them at the last with bitter wordes and menaces: and they departed notwithstandinge from the Concile, by the means of this answere, conquerours.

CHAP. V.

¶To obeye man in anie thinge agaynst God, is Vn­lawfull ind playne disobedience.

NOw for as muche as we are assured of the trueth ād certantie of their answere,what things are to be considered. wherof none can iustlie doute: let vs so­mewhat further consi­der what thinges are prīcipallie here in conteyned. First we maye hereof iustlie conclude, that to obeye man in anie thinge contrary to God, or his precepts thoghe he be in hiest auctoritie, or ne­uer [Page 43] so orderly called there vnto (as the­se men, wherof Luke speaketh, were) is no obedience at all, but disobedience.

Secondlie, that it is not a sufficient discharge for vs before God, whē we denye to accōplyshe their vnlawful demā des and threatnings, except we do the cōtrarie euery man in his vocation and office, as occasion is offred, and as his power will serue. Whiche thīges playn­lie vnderstāde, as they shal geue a clere light in this controuersie: so do I not doute by this present answere and facte of Peter and Iohn, to proue moste manifestlie, that althoghe we were destitute of other examples, yet this might appeare sufficient. As touchinge the firste,Obedien­ce against God is dis­obedience, that there is no obedience agaynst God which is not playne disobedience: the Apostles say, Iudge you whither it be right or iust in Godds sight to obeye you rather thē God: which is as muche as thei would saye, It is not iuste nor lawful. Thē if it be not lawful and iust in God­des sight, who iudgeth things truelie ād as thei be in dede, it must nedes folowe that all maner of obediēce agaynst God ād his worde, is playne disobediēce, and [Page 44] the workers therof likewise condem­ned as rebells. Why? Bycause it is vniust and vnlawfull before God: And all true obedience is lawful, which must not be measured by the will of mā, but by the iuste Lawes and ordinances of the liuinge Lorde.what God once wil­lith in his Law to be done or not to be done that cā no man dis­pence wi­th be it ne­uer so smal in the sight of man. So that after God hathe once pronounced anie thinge that he would haue done, either in his Lawe or otherwise: there is no man that may or can dispence therwith, seeme it of neuer so litle importance in the iudgement of men. He that commandeth the contrarie, is a rebell: and he that obey­eth likewise. Neither dothe this apper­tayne to the Apostles and ministers on­lie in their office, but is a generall argument for all sortes, estates, and degrees of men: for as muche as God hathe like auctoritie of all, and all owe vnto him first and principall obedience: and se­condly vnto men for him, and in him onlie: except they wil be enimies to God, and deny him to be their Lorde. For so muche it is in effecte, when we preferre men to God, obedience to man, before the obedience to God. It is not the au­ctoritie of the Prince, or the feare of his [Page 45] punishmēt, that cā excuse in his presen­ce: who cōmādeth his people generalie,Deu. 4. high and lowe, riche and poore, man ād womā, to heare his voyce, and to obser­ue his statutes. Nether to declyne vpon the right hand, nor vpon the lefte: ne­ther to adde anie thinge therto, or to take anie thinge from it: but to do that onlie, whiche the liuinge Lorde commā deth. And if we be the shepe of the Lor­des foulde, it is not sufficiēt for vs to heare the voyce of our pastor, ād to folowe him, except we also deny to heare, mu­che more to folowe anie other: that is, which calleth not with the voyce of the true pastor.Ioh. 10. And as there ought to be no creature of like auctoritie amon­gest vs, as our soueraygne Lorde and God, whose creatures we be, and the workemanship of his owne hādes: euen so, there is none like to him in dignitie, or may be cōpared to him in power, none like to him in riches, or so able to rewarde his subiectes, beinge Lorde of heauē and earthe, disposer of all things present and to come: distributer not onlie of all corporall and earthlie bles­sings to those that feare and serue him: [Page 46] but also powreth vpon them all spiri­tuall and heauenlie graces in great a­boundance. Moreouer, as by his auctoritie, power, dignitie, riches and liberali­tie, he maye of right demande of vs obedience: so must we persuade our selues in not rēdring the same to him willing­lie, that none cā deliuer vs from his horrible punishementes and destruction, whiche he threatneth vpon all such as wilfully trangresse his holie preceptes,Deu. 28, and .30. No cōmandement shall excuse vs in the daye of vengeance. ād declyne from his Lawes. Nether wil he regarde by what means, or by whose cōmandement we transgresse his lawes. For that can be no excuse for vs, thoghe he be Kinge, Quene, or Emperour that commandeth or threatneth vs. For what is kinge, Quene, or Emperour compared to God? Is the punishement of earthe,Esai. 2. ashes, of vile man, whose bre­ath is in his nostrilles, more to be fea­red then the plages of God, who hath power both of body and soule to destr­oye thē euerlastingly? Was it any ear­thly power that broght the waters vpon the vniuersall worlde,Gen. 7 and drowned all mankinde for synne, viii persons excepted? Did man destroye Sodome and Go­morrhe [Page 47] with fier and brymstone?Gen. 14. Exod. 3 4.5.6.14. Came the plages of Egypt, the drowninge of Pharao, the ouertrow of the Cananites, the subuersion of Ierusalem, by the power of man? If these be the workes of man and not of God, feare man and not God:Amos 3. but if there be none of these euells which cometh vpon a­nie Citie, or contrie, wherof the Lor­de is not the worker: beware that the feare of mans punishment, cause thee not to fall in to the handes of this mightie reuēger, whiche is an horrible thin­ge, as the Apostle writeth.Heb. 13. Princes therfore, and all powers vpon thee arth, are not to be compared vnto God, who­se Lieutenants onlie they shuld be, and are no longer then he wil, in whose handes their hartes are,Pro. 21. to moue and turne at his pleasure. And for that cause it is their duetie to seke all means possible, wherbie the glorie of God might be ad­uanced, by whom they are them selues so highlie exalted aboue their bret­hern, and in no cause to minister oc­casion of rebellion agaynst his mightie Maiestie: but rather to be examples to others (ouer whom they are constitute) of all Godlie liffe and lawfull obe­dience. [Page 48] In consideration wherof, God him selfe appoyntīg his people to haue a kinge, which, when they shulde come in to the lande of promesse (for that was the first promotion that God ordeyned amongest his people,what ma­ner of man the Lorde woulde haue cho­sen kinge. Deut. 17. which yet came not to suche pride to desire an Empe­rour) did with great circumspection, as well appoynt them what maner of man they shulde chose, as the lawes by the whiche he shuld rule others, and be o­beyed of them. When thou commest (saithe the Lorde by Moyses) to the lande which thy Lorde geueth thee, and shalt possesse it, thou shalt with out doute, put or constitute a kinge to thee: but whō thy Lorde thy God shall chose. Moreouer he saith, from the middle of thy brethern shalt thow appoynt a Kīge ouer thee. For thou mayst not appoynt a strāger, which is not thy brother. Whi­ch lawe, as it proceaded from the wise­dome of God, who thoght it necessarie for his people: euen so is our miserable ignorance and vnspeakeable ingratitu­de to be lamented, which nether do vn­derstand the goodnesse of God in these lawes, not yet will vouchesaffe to con­sult [Page 49] with his heauēly wisedome: all men rather sckinge to chose and procure them selues Princes and kinges after their owne phātasie, ād by vngodlie fet­ches and policies, then to folowe the appoyntment of the Almightie: preferrin­ge theyr owne wittes to the wisedome of God, whiche neuer fayleth them that folowe it. In comparison of whom all o­thers at lengh, shall shewe them selues to be meere fooles.Gods La­wes must diligentlie be folowed in election of kinges ād Rulers and not mans phā ­tasie. Yf we wilbe the people of God, let vs then searche and dili­gentlie folowe the Lawes of God, espe­ciallie in so weightie matters, as the e­lection of kinges and Princes, by whom Realmes and nations are either preser­ued if they be Godlie, or vtterly di­stroyed, and shamefullie oppressed if they be vngodlie. The first poynt or cautiō that God requireth of his people to obserue, is,The firste note and obseruatiō in chosinge of a kynge Ezechi. 20 that they chose suche a kinge, as the Lorde dothe appoynt, and not as they phantasie. And what one is he or how shuld he be knowē? The people of Israel (you will saie) had their kī ­ges appoynted them by the mouthe of God and anoynted of his Prophets: as [Page 50] Dauid, and his sonne Salomon. For Sau­le, thoghe he was appoynted ād anoye­ted in Goddes furie, yet was he not of the Lordes chosinge after this mea­ning of Moyses, who willethe them to appoynte a kinge that the Lorde shal chose: to wit, of his fauour and good­nesse, suche a one as shall obserue the Lawes folowing,Two notes to knowe whether a kinge be chosen of God or no as we shall see here after. Two means had the Israeli­tes to knowe their kinge, whither he was of God electe or no. The firste, by the expresse commandement and promesse made to some especiall man, wherof they neded not to doute: as was made to Dauid, ād to Salomō his sonne expresslie. The secōde is by his wor­de, which he hathe now left to all men to be the ordinarie means to reueale his will and appoyntment. Which (if we vnfaynedly folowe in our doings) we nede no more to doute, then if God shulde now speake vnto vs out of the heauens, as then he did to the Is­raelites. The worde then geueth vs these notes to know whither he be of God or not, whom we woulde chose for our kinge. Firste (as was sayd) if he [Page 51] be a man that hathe the feare of God before his eyes, and zeluslye with Da­uid, and Iosias, dothe studie to set for­the the same, hatinge vnfaynedlie al papistrie and idolatrie. For this cause God willeth that he shuld be chosen from amongeste his brethern, and shul­de be no stranger: bycause suche then had not the feare of God, but were ido­laters, to whom no promesse of anie kingdome was made, and who also would leade the people to idolatrie. Also in that his exercise is appoynted,None oght to be chosen a kinge or Ruler but such as wil maintaine and prom­ote Godes Lawes. The secōd note why kinges ar chosen frō amongest their bre­thern. the worde, Lawes & statutes of God, it is manifeste that he is not chosen of God, except he be such a one: and oght not to be anoynted or elected as their kinge and Gouernour, what title or right so euer he seeme to haue therūto, by ciuile policie, except he be a pro­moter & setter forthe of Godds Lawes and glorie, for whiche cause chieslie, this office was ordeyned.

The nexte rule to be obserued is, that he shulde be one of their bre­thern, meaninge of the Israelits: part­lie to exclude the oppression and [Page 52] idolatrie, whiche commeth in by stran­gers, as our Contrie now is an example: and partlye, for that strangers cannot beare such a natural zeale to straunge realmes and peoples, as become the bre­thern:The gouernement of women is against nature, and Gods ordinance. but chieflie to auoyde that mon­ster in nature, and disordre amongest men, whiche is the Empire ād gouerne­ment of a woman, sayinge expreslie: From the myddle of thy brethren shalt thou chose thee a kinge, and not amon­gist thy sisters. For God is not contrarie to him self,Gen. 3. whiche at the begynninge appoynted the woman to be in subie­ction to her housbande, and the man to be head of the woman (as saithe the A­postle) who wil not permitte so muche to the womā,1. Cor. 14 1. Tim. 2. as to speake in the Assem­blie of men, muchelesse to be Ruler of a Realme or nation. Yf women be not permitted by Ciuile policies to ru­le in inferior offices, to be Coūsellours, Pears of a realme,women by ciuell poli­ce are ex­cluded frōe all offices in a comon welth. Iustices, Shireffs, Bay liues and such like: I make your selues iudges, whither it be mete for them to gouerne whole Realmes and natiōs?

If the worde of God can not per­suade [Page 53] you, by which she is made subiect to her housbande, muche more to the Counselle and auctoritie of an whole realme, which worde also appoynteth your kinges to be chosen from amonge their brethern, and not from their si­sters: who are forbidden as persons vn­mete to speake in a Congregacion▪ be you your selues iudges, and let nature teache you the absurditie therof.

And thus muche haue I of pourpose noted in this matter, to let you see to all our shames, how farre ye haue bene led besydes your commun senses and the manifest worde of God, in electing,Winche­ster proueth her a bastard in his boke de Vera o­bedientia, and Bōner also in the preface of the same boke. kyng Ed­ward the VI. a­noynting, and crowninge a woman to be your Quene ād Gouernesse, and she in verie dede a bastarde, and vnlaw­fully begotten. But beit that she we­re no bastarde, but the kinges daugh­ter as lawfullie begotten as was her si­ster, that Godlie Lady, ād meke Lambe, voyde of all Spanishe pride, and stran­ge bloude: yet in the sicknesse, and at the deathe of our lawfull Prince of Godlie memorie kynge Edwarde the sixt, this shulde not haue bene your [Page 54] firste counsele or question, who shul­de be your Quene, what womā you shul de crowne, if you had bene preferrers of Goddes glorie, and wise coūselours, or naturallie affected towardes your countrie. But firste and principallie, who had bene moste meetest amengest your, brethern to haue had the gouernement ouer you, and the whole gouernement of the realme, to rule them carefullie in the feare of God,They haue now plen­tie of both sortes. and to preserue them agaynst all oppression of inwarde ty­rants and outwarde enemies. Wherbie you might haue bene assured to es­kape all this miserable & vnspeakable disordre, and shamefull confusion, whi­che now by contrarie counsele is bro­ght worthely vpon vs. I knowe ye will saye, the Crowne is not intayled to the heyre males onelie, but appartay­nethe aswel to the daughters:The title of the Crowne belongeth onely by Gods worde, to the heyres males. and ther­fore by the Lawes of the Realme, you coulde not otherwise do. But yf it be true, yet miserable is this answere of suche as had so longe tyme professed the Gospel, and the lyuelie worde of God. Yf it had bene made of pagās and heathens, whiche knew not God by his [Page 55] worde, it might better haue bene bor­ne with all. But amōgest them that bea­re the Name of Godds people, with whō his Lawes shulde haue chief aucto­ritie: this answere is not tollerable to make the constant and vndouted Lawe of God, whiche oght to be the lyne of all ordinaunces, to geue place to the vayne and vngodlie decrees of men, as experience hath now taught you. Moreouer, in anoynting her as if she had bene a man, was no lesse absurditie, v­singe thervnto suche greasinges ād shā ­lesse Ceremonies, ād that in the face of all the people: as thoghe Moyses lawe yet were in force,Youre owne Lawes dothe not prefer abastard to her that is lauful be­gotten▪ and Christ our Sau­iour not comē: which hath put an end to all suche outwarde Ceremonies: who­se annoyntings were spirituall. For as he was replenished with all graces of the holie Gost, and that with out measure, and aboue all his felows, kings, Priests, and Prophetes: so hathe he left no other annoyntinge to be vsed of his ser­uaunts: but of the same sorte, that is,Heb. 1. Psal. 45. spirituall. And yf Moyses with his Ceremonies were now in full auctoritie, as he was before Christe: Yet were it [Page 56] not lawful by him to anoynte anie wo­man,Leuit. 8. 1. Sam. 15. 1 Reg. 19 to ani maner of office or dignitie, seing that this Ceremonie was neuer appoynted to anie other but onelie to Priests, kinges, and Prophetes. How durste you then be so bolde and impudent ô Papists, (for this was your entreprise) to transgresse the order of God in the Lawe of Moyses by anoyntīge a womā? And also to contemne the libertie of the Gospell, in reducinge and bringing agayn the Iewishe Ceremonies, from whiche by Christe we are delyuered? But it is no maruell if you be all wa­ies like your selues, stubberne and re­bellious enimies to God and contem­ners of Christe. And therfore leauinge you to your selues, we will retourne to Goddes appoynted limites in his Lawe, for the lawfull election of kinges and Princes. Ye haue hearde the two fir­ste cautions or rules, that is, how he muste be of Godds appoyntment, and not of mans▪ The thirde rule to be obserued in electing of kinges. And also from amon­gest your brethren and not of your si­sters, and why. The thirde caution that God specifieth in this election is, that he be none such as hath great nomber [Page 57] of horses: meaning, as trusteth in his owne power, and preparation of all thinges, for defence of him selfe, ād to ouercome his enemies. For vnder this name of horses, he comprehendeth all ingeynes and furniture of warre: suche a one, as trusteth in them, and make­the not God his arme and bockler, with faitheful Dauid, is not meete to be kin­ge of the Lordes people.Psal. 52.

For by such means shulde they be broght to Egypte agayne, to their olde miserie and slauerie, if they delited in their horses, from whence the Lorde woulde haue them kepte, and not in a­nie case to returne. As no doute, he woulde haue had vs miserable Engli­she men, warelie to haue kepte vs in that libertie of Iesus Christe and our consciences, wherin so mercifullie he had broght vs: and not by placeinge an infidel woman ouer vs, to returne to our olde vomite, muche more viler thē the slauerie of Egypte, I meane the ser­uitude of that Romishe Antichriste.What o­ther notes God geueth to chose by.

Other obseruations he geueth also, not to seke manie wiues, nor to heape vp muche golde: but chiflie that he ha­ue [Page 58] an example of Goddes Lawes prescribed vnto him, to reade in them all the dayes of his life, that he maye learne to feare the Lorde and to keepe his cō ­mandements, and not to lifte him self vp aboue his brethren: meaning, he shulde rule with all holynesse and humblenesse, as did Moyses and Dauid. And therby, dothe God promisse that his da­yes, and the dayes of his children shall be prolonged in the middle of Israell.

Of the whiche we may iustlie conclu­de, that by the ordinance of God, no o­ther kinges or Rulers, oght to be cho­sen to rule ouer vs, but suche as will se­eke his honor and glorie, and will commaunde and do nothing contrarie to his Lawe.As the kings charge is greater, so is he more bonde to God to performe the same. Wherewith they are no lesse, ye muche more charged, then the com­mon people: because their charge is double: that is, not onelie to feare God them selues, but to see that their peo­ple feare him also, to whom they owe in that case all humble obedience and reuerence. For they be (as was sayed) Goddes subiectes and Lieutenantes, for whose cause they must be reuerenced, doinge their duetie. But if they will [Page 59] abuse his power, liftinge them selues a­boue God and aboue their brethern, to drawe them to idolatrie, and to oppres­se them, and their contrie: then are they nomore to be obeyed in any comman­dements tending to that ende: but to be cōtemned as vile Sergeantes in comparison of the high Iudge and Magi­strate, who oght to do nothing, but as he is commaunded to do by the Iudge ād superior power according to the la­we. Other wise, if he lift him selfe abo­ue the chief Iudge, lokyng to be hono­red and obeyed more then he: who would not abhorre suche a Sergeant, ād not onelie to withstande his cōmande­ment, but to accuse him as a rebellious traytor, and banishe him from a mon­gest them? And yet here is but rebel­lion agaynst man, who is but mortall. What oght we thē to do vnto that kin­ge or Prince, that lifteth him selfe vp agaynst the Maiestie of God,If it be heynous to di­sobey mā, much more God the Lorde of al thinges. who is im­mortal, to whome belongeth all power, dominion and honor? Is he anie more in comparison of God, then the Sergeant in respecte of the Iudge? Shall the Ser­geant be punished as a traytor, and this man honored as a kinge, which doth no [Page 60] parte of the office therunto belongin­ge? Or rather is not his crime and trea­son greater, and deseruith so muche more, as God is more excellent, compa­red to anie worldlie power, then is a­nie kinge or Prince compared to the moste vileste Sergeant?

Moreouer, whence hathe he this ho­nor? Of him selfe? Is anie man natural­lie borne a kinge, Or hathe he it of God? And if of God, wherto, but to vse it with God, ād not agaynste him. Seing then it is not iuste in Goddes sight to obeye man rather then God: neither that their is anie dispensacion of man that cā dispēce with his holie cōmandements,Kinges oght to rule in Gods feare with him ād not againste him. To obey a wicked Prince in his wic­kednes is plaine dis­obedience to God. neither the auctoritie of Prin­ce, nor feare of punishment can excuse vs. Seing also, that kinges are institute to rule in Goddes feare and Lawes, as subiectes and Sergeants to God, and not agaynste his Lawes, and aboue him: it muste nedes followe (as we firste say­ed) that all obedience geuen to suche, wicked Princes agaynste God, is play­ne rebellion in his iudgemente. And in that case to obeye God, and disobeye man, is true obedience, how so euer the [Page 61] worlde iudgeth. For as none will con­demne Peter and Iohn of disobedien­ce, because they woulde not herein o­beye their ordynarie Magistrates: no­more will anie which haue right iudge­ment, condemne the like resistance in others, which alike is lawfull to all.

Or ells shulde the Israelites be excu­sed,1. king. 1. by cause they obeyed their wicked kinge Ieroboam in worshippinge his calues in Dan, and Bethel.

Then shuld that cruell butcher Doeg,1. Sam. 22 in killinge Ahimalech with LXXXV Pri­ests or Leuites, and the whole towne of Nob, at the commandement of vngo­dlie kinge Saul,Mat. 2. They will make all these blāles (the papistes are [...]o impudēt) rather thē they will seme to offende. Mat. 27. haue bene preferred to the reste of all his seruantes and souldiars. And the souldiars also of cruell Herode shuld be blamelesse in murthe­rīg ād sheading the bloude of so many infantes in Bethlehem at Herods com­mandement. Then shulde the wicked Iewes be gyltlesse of Christes deathe ād his Prophets, whom they consented to murther by the parsuasion of their Ru­lers. And the counterfayte Christians this day, which euerie where (but espe­ciallie in our miserable countrie) im­prison, [Page 62] famishe, murther, hange, and burne their owne countriemen, and deare children of God, at the commande­ment of furious Iesabel, and her false Priestes and Prophetes, the blouddie Bisshopps and shauelynges, shulde be giltlesse in all their doinges. But all the­se doth God (who is a Ielious ād righ­teous God, and cannot abide his honor to be geuen to any other,Exod. 20. Psalm 9. Gen. 4. nor suffer the bloude of the innocent longe to crie vnto him for vengeance) condemne as blasphemers, idolatres, and cruell mur­therers: which saithe: Thou shalt haue no other Goddes but me. Thou shalt not kill. And if God dothe make this, diso­bedience (as thou mayst playnely see) what commandement of man can aul­ter his sentence, before whom there is no obedience in euil thinges? Yea, if the whole multitude, from the hiest to the lowest, wolde agree and consent to do euel,The com­mandemēt of the Prince shall not excuse thee in euill doyng. yet muste not thou followe them saith the Lorde. For if thou do (notwith­standing the commandement of thy Prince, or example of all others) thou art with them a rebell, and a rebell a­gaynst thy Lorde and God: from whose [Page 63] wrathe and heauie indignation, no man can defende thee in the dreadfull daie of his visitacion, which is at hande.

CHAP. VI.

How it is not inough to denye wicked comman­demēts of all kinde of Rulers, except we with­stand them also, euery man accordinge to his vo­cation, in doing the contrary.

AS by this answere afore mentioned, we haue be­ne taught not to geue place to the vnlawfull commandemētes of Magistrates, in what aucto­ritie so euer they be, because it is no­thing but rebellion in the iudgement of God: euen so may we learne by the same answere and example of the A­postles, how God requiereth more at our handes, that is, to withstande their preceptes, in doing the contrary: euery man accordinge to his office and e­state wherin God hathe placed him. For as man thinketh him self not fullie [Page 64] obeyed,It is not inoughe not to do the wi­ked com­maunde­ment of a kynge, but also to do the contrarie. when we abstayne from those thinges which he forbiddeth, except moreouer we do the contrary, which he commandeth: euenso may we mu­che more thinke, that God is not fullie obeyed, when we will not do the vngo­dlie commandements of men, except also we applye our selues with all dili­gence to do the contrary. So did Peter and Iohn make answere, denying to do as they were comaunded by the Magi­strates. And as they denyed in wordes, so did they, ād the rest of the Apostles in effecte, as the course of the historie doth witnesse.Act. 5. Who went all to gether to the Temple after they were dimissed, and preached openlie in the face of all the people Iesus Christe crucified, not with standing all the afore named threat­nynges and menacinges, yea afterwar­de, when they had bene imprisoned and then by the Angel of God deli­uered, and whipped moste vilely, as if they had bene slaues: yet were they no­thing therby discouraged, but conti­nued in one mynde and answere, sayng as they did before with one voyce and consent: God muste be obeyed before [Page 65] man, and boldlie preached their maister Christ, contemning all displeasures which they for his Names sake sustened,Act. 5. remembring well his sure and conforta­ble promesses who said: Blessed are you when men reuile you and sklander you,Matth. 5. and speake all euill againste you, lying, for my sake: be glad and reioce, for gre­ate is your rewarde in the kingdome of heauen. For so did they persecute the prophetes before you.

Thus see we thē, how the trueth of this doctrine is not proued onely by the fir­ste examination of Peter and Iohn:Al the apostels to ge­ther she­wed the like con­stancie. but also confirmed the second tyme by the rest of all the Apostels agreeinge therin, and suffringe vile scourginge for the same: not onely boldlie affirminge it in the presence of all the Magistrates at Ie­rusalem, but as constantly approuinge it in their doinges: when contrarie to their commandemētes, they ceased not more diligentlye to publishe the doct­rine of saluation: reioysinge and praysi­nge God, who had made them worthie to suffer for his Sōnes sake, their Lorde and maister. O worthy and manful souldiars, O moste trustie and payne­ful [Page 66] seruantes: neither feringe the prow­de lokes and malitious threatninges of the whole Senate and power of Ierusa­lem:No power can preuail against the faithfull. nor shrinking in their office, for all their cruel punishments. But the mo­re they were forbidden, and the oftener they were punished: the stouter, strong­er, and mightier were they to fight aga­inst their enemes with the spiritual sw­orde, wherwith they were charged in their maisters quarel: beinge assured all­wayes of this, that he who gaue thē au­ctoritie to preach, woulde geue thē strengh also for the performance therof, as he had promesed▪ sayinge:Mar 28. I will be with you to the end of the worlde. And he beinge with thē, (as the Apostle saithe) what should they care who were against them?Rom. A worthie example ād mirour for all such to beholde as are called of God to be his messengers and disposers of his holie mysteries, how faithful they oght to be in the distribution of the sa­me,1. Cor. 4. omitting no maner of occasions, o­beying no contrarie commandements, nor fearing the cruel threatninges of men.

[Page 67]God hath geuen them the char­ge of moste pretious iewels, and ine­stimable riches: not to be hid in a cor­ner, or retayned with them selues:Ephe. 3. but rather (as the Apostle exhorteth) to styrre vp the gyfte of God, which is in them, and not to neglect it,1. Tim. 4. to preache the worde of God, and to be instant in season and out of season, to conuince,2. Tim. 4. reproue, and exhorte with all softnesse and learning.Ephe. 6. For this is that sharpe and two edged sworde wherewith God hath not onely armed them agaynste their enimies:Heb. 4. but to fight also manfullie for others agaynst all powers worldly and spiritual, with this mightie and spiritual sworde the worde of God.

For otherwise, if Christe him self had ceased to preache his Fathers will, for which cause partly he was sent in to the worlde, for feare of threatninges, conspiracies, commandements, and pu­nishments of men: where had bene this comfortable doctrine of saluation? When shulde he haue suffred death, for our redemption and delyuerance?

How shuld the Apostles and all [Page 68] other faithfull martyrs, which by their deathes in all ages, haue geuen glorie to Christ,Christ dis­obeyed wicked magistrates and so sa­ued vs: but we o­bey vniust magistrates and destroy our selues. haue left behinde them so wo­rthie monumentes, and comfortable writinges, besides the notable examples of constancie in sealinge vp their doctrine with the sheading of their bloud, if they had yealded or shronke in execu­tinge their office for feare of anie po­wer. And in oure miserable Countrie, where Antichrist this day is againe for oure synnes exalted, if commandemēts of tyrantes shuld haue taken place in all men, as it did with many hirelinge preachers, some moste shamefullie de­nying their Maister Christe, taking v­pon them the marke of the beaste, mi­nistring poyson for foode to their flo­cke, some in makinge a spoyle and praye of their flocke, and as cowardes takeyng them to their feete, leauing the poore lambes of God with out all comforte, to be deuoured of the wilde rauenous beastes▪ some also in playng on both partes with the halting Israe­lites,1. kin. 18. 2. Cor. 6. thinke to serue God and Baal: if in all others (I saie) as in these, the vngodlie decrees of men shulde haue [Page 69] taken place: how coulde we haue had these worthie examples of so many hundreth martyrs, who haue glorified Chri­ste moste constantlie,Obedience to death. in offringe vp the­ir liues as a moste swete sauour to the Lorde? And that of all sortes of men and women, young and olde, riche and poo­re, learned and vnlearned, all being he­rein persuaded (not able perchaunce to do anie more for the comfort of others, in so generall a defection from God) haue chosē rather with the losse of this corporall lyfe, to obeye God, then o­therwise to lyue in welthe and obeye man. For the which, the Name of God be praysed for euer, who styrre vp our hartes by their examples, and prepare vs with the grace of his holie Spirite to the like constancie and obedience.

Besides this we learne by the cōman­dements of God, that so oft as he forbiddeth any thing which he wolde not to be done, in the self same,When God for­biddeth one thinge he commā ­deth the contrarie. he comman­deth vs the contrarie, as for example: Thow shalt not murther, Steale, Com­mit adultrie, or Beare false wittnes. It is not ynough to abstaine frome these [Page 70] thinges, neither is God therin fullie obeyed, except we do the contrarie, so oft as occasion is ministred, that is, to saue, preserue, and defende, as well the goodes as the persones of our brethren and neghbours. And this is a certayne and general rule, not onely in these ex­amples here named: but in all other preceptes whither they be of the Ten commandments, or anie other besides conteyned in the Scriptures: that what so euer God forbiddeth anie man, in the same he is charged to do the con­trarie according to his power, thogh all the worlde would stande agaynst him. In confirmation wherof, let vs o­nelie consider the notable example of the Godlie Prophet Daniel,Dani. 6. who when he was commanded in the name of kin­ge Darius (by whome he had bene pro­moted to great honor,Daniel was no Englishe courtier: for he coulde not flatter. and of all other was in best fauor, and hiest reputation with him) to aske nothing of his God, or anie other for the space of thirtie dayes, but onely of Darius his kinge, according to the decree made at the requeste of his vngodlie counsel, pur­poslie [Page 72] agaynst Daniel, would not obeye the commandement, being not igno­rant that it was a publike decree, which all (he onely excepte) obeyed. And also how death (and that moste terri­ble, to be cast among the hungry ly­ons) was appoynted for a punishment to the transgressors.Note this al ye Gen­telmen ād Nobles of Inglande But Daniel not contented to do as he was comman­ded, did as he was accustomed, the contrary▪ not once, but thrise euery day, transgressinge the kinges commā ­dement, prayinge to the liuinge Lorde his God. And to the intent it might be knowen abrode to al men, that he con­temned this vngodly commandement,Daniel bu­rned with the zeal of Gods glory and wolde not hide it he set open his windowes more then cu­stome, to the ītēt that all whiche wolde, might beholde his doing: so glad was he to be knowen to serue the true and mightie God. Here wolde our worl­dly wise men, no dout, condemne Da­niel of rashnes and follye in doing, more then was expedient. What nede he thus to prouoke the indi­gnation of a Prince, who had pow­er with a worde of his mouth to di­stroye [Page 72] him? Yf he wolde not aske anie thinge in the Name of Darius as others did,The coūsel of the wordlye dissemblers yet might he haue abstayned from praying to God for that space. Was thirtie dayes so great a matter, that he might not abstayne from praying to God, to gratifie therby his Prince to whome he was so muche bounde? And if he wolde nedes praye to God, could he not haue done it preuely and secret­ly? What nede he to set open his win­dow in the sight of al men? This was an open contempte of the kinges Maiestie: this was a greater offence,Carnal Gospelers are halters ō both sides then the facte it self. Thus wolde the politike ād worl­dlinges reason, as our carnall Gospel­lers do daylie, to mayntayne their sha­meles halting vpon both partes, to clo­ke their owne impietie, and to intice o­thers to do the like. But faythful Daniel had learned an other lesson, and of a more faithfull scholemaister: euen the verie same that instructed here the Apostles, the Spirite of God, the au­ctor of wisedome,Ioh. 16. and trueth: that he oght not onelie to contemne the kinges vnlawfull commandement, [Page 73] but to do the plaine contrarie.Daniel was not so wyse as our glaue­ring Gos­pellers. Ne­ther thoght he it sufficient to do this secretly, except openly he shewed to all the worlde whose seruante he was, and what God he honored. O­therwise, how colde he haue declared to the people, that he loued his God with all his harte, soule and power, as was commanded?

CHAP. VII.

All men are bound to follow the like example, as wel as the Apostles and Daniel, of what estate and condition so euer they be.

HEre are all excuses ta­ken away from all men, that will be true Chri­stians, and haue the A­postles and Daniel for their instructers and teachers: whither they be Counsellers, Nobles, Peares,Englishemē will nether be Apostles Prophets nor good men. or inferior and ciuile offi­ciers. But they will peraduēture excuse them selues, as thogh God had no thing to do with thē, because they be not A­postels, nor Prophets. Neuertheles they may be assured, they shall be as they e­uer haue bene, subiecte to his plages [Page 74] and punishments: and so will he haue a do with them, thogh they would haue noght to do with hym. Yf the temperall sworde had bene committed to the A­postels, as wel as was the spirituall: if they had bene Pears of a realme, and knowen so wel their duetie towarde God and their contrye, as they did to Christ and his Churche, being Apostels, woulde they haue lyfted vp their swor­de agaynst Goddes glorie, to the sub­uersion of the trueth and their nation, at the commandement of their Prince and kinge? Or wolde they not rather haue answered: we are appoynted of God to set forthe his glorie, and to defend his people, and cannot therfore obeye you?How should they iudge well of other mēs matte­res, that cō demne thē selues in their owne If that woulde not serue, must they then haue ceased at their threatnin­ges with death and displeasure? Is that sufficient to discharge them, if in not v­sing their power to suppresse tyran­ny and idolatrie, they suffer the peo­ple of God to be deuoured? Iudge you your selues that beare this Na­me, whither God coulde approue their doinges.

[Page 75]Matathias that worthie Captay­ne of the Iewes,1. Mac. [...]. as it is wryten in the firste boke of the Machabees, coulde not so lightly excuse him self when he was commanded by the cruel officiers of wicked Antiochus (which had spoyled their Tēpel, rased their waules, murthe­red their brethern, and set vp idolatrie, in so muche as all for the most parte, applied them selues to their wicked parsuations) that he, with the residue shul­de forsake the Lawes and sacrifices of their God, to worshipp strange Goddes: he made answere,A notable answere for all true Christians to practise. to the officer of An­tiochus the kinge (which would to God our Noble men had perfetly learned) That thoghe all Nations appartey­ning to kinge Antiochus shulde o­beye him, so that euery man would declyne from the Lawes of his coun­trie: yet I, (saieth he) my children, and brethern, wil stand in the conuenant of our fathers &c. Which thing he per­forme din dede to the glorie of God, to his owne saluation, and comforte of his brethern and countrie for euer.

And euen at the self same ty­me [Page 76] he slewe, not onely a Iewe, one of his owne brethern, which came to sacrifice in his presence at the alter Modim, ac­cording to the prescript of Antiochus: but killed also the kīges officer, that cō pelled him therto, and afterwarde di­stroyed the altar, ād folowed the Lawe of God with a zeale, as did Phinees. Ma­tathias had then a litle power amongest his brethern, but nothing to defende him self agaynst the kinge, and also being charged with children and kins­folk (which semed to be all his power) woulde nether pollute him self, nor suf­fer thē to be polluted with wicked ido­latrie, nor coūseles, to be oppressed with tyrannie.Matathias was no publik persone. And yet we reade of no aucto­ritie or office he had to excuse him by: but onelie this one thing which was co­mon to all other of his natiō, the Lawes of their countrie, and couenant of their fathers. Which cause he thoght sufficiēt to discharge his cōscience before God, and to approue his doings. For as muche as God had commanded him not onely to denie to do the commandement of the cruell tyrant Antiochus (vnder whō all Ierusalem then was by conqueste) [Page 77] but manfully to professe him and his, as open aduersaries to his Lawes and to resiste idolatrie by force,Loke wel vpon this example al ye inhabi­tantes of Englande in killing the idolatrer and the kinges seruant (by whom he was compelled) and in subuerting the altar, where vpō the idolatrous sacrifice shuld haue bene done. Whi­ch was, as you see, manifeste resisting of the superior power, being but mā, to the intent he might shewe true obedience to his Lorde and God, īn defending and maynteyning his Lawes (which he calleth the couenant of their fathers) yea and with the temporal sworde to the vttermost of his power. Thē if Ma­tathias herein did discharge his con­sciēce before God and man, in resisting by temporal power the kinge, his com­mandements and officiers: it is not one­ly the office of Apostles ād preachers, to resist, but the dewtie likewise of all o­thers according to their estate and vocation. But you will say perchance, that this boke of the Macabees is not of suf­ficient auctoririe to persuade your con­sciences in the like case, because it is not reputed to be amongest those bo­kes which are autentique, and named [Page 79] Canonical. Trueth it is, but that thou (which art in like and better estate, be­cause of thy power and auctoritie, whe­rewith thou art as wel charged before God as kinge or Emperour) mayst and shuldest with a safe conscience, folowe this worthie example, it is moste true and certayne.Matta­thias fact depēdethe not of the auctoritie of the hi­story but of the worde of God. Matta­thias doing ād the A­postels are both like. For the facte of Matta­thias dependeth not vpon the auctori­tie of the boke, wherin it is contey­ned: but vpon the worde of God, whervpon it was grownded. For hathe he do­ne anie otherwise in his vocation, then the Apostles did in theirs? Did not they say, that God is to be obeyed rather then man? And so sayed Mattathias, and muche more playner: that thoghe all nations woulde obeye Antiochus: yet he, and so many as he coulde procure, shulde obeye the true God and his Lawes. And like as the Apostles, accor­ding to their answer, openlie and playnly in fight of the people did vse the spi­ritual sworde, manfully fighting a­gaynst all rebellion of man in Goddes cause: so did Mattathias vse the tem­porall sworde according to his power, [Page 80] moued by the same reason agaynst i­dolatrie and oppression which is ma­nifeste rebellion agaynst God. Yea and if their were nether example nor Scrip­ture to proue his facte: yet would verie natural reason compel euery man to alowe the same, as moste Godlie. And that therin he did nothing but his due­tie, which thing was approued in the iudgement of that age, and as a law­ful facte and monument wryte and left to be red and practised of all pos­teritie, the Lawe of nature so directing their iudgments.

But to put you out of all doute, we will confirme it with an other te­stimonie most surely auctorised, and the very same in effect,Iosua made the like answere to the Israe­lites. Iosue. 24. of that re­nowmed and worthie Capitayne Iosua, the sonne of Nun, whome God him self had chosen to succede Moyses in the gouernement, and leading of the people of Israel: who after he had declared the benefites of God do­ne vnto them, from the tyme that he had chosen them to be his people, (namelie to Abraham whom he cal­led [Page 80] from idolatrie, to Isaac and Iacob, and to the rest of the people, their posteritie, in deliuering them out of Egypt, preseruinge them in the wildernesse, and geuing to them his Lawes) spa­ke these wordes to the Elders ād all the multitude, sayng: Now therfore feare ye the Lord, serue him vnfaynedlie and faithfullie, take away the Goddes whi­ch your fathers worshipped, beyonde the Riuer, and in Egypte, and serue the Lorde. But yf you wil not serue the Lor­de, chose vnto you this day whom you will serue▪ whither ye wil serue the Goddes beyonde the Riuer, or the Gods of the Amorites in whose lande ye dwele. As for me and my familie, we will serue the Lorde: answering as did Matathias. And this spake he in his later dayes,The papists wil saye, because he was olde that he doted. to admonishe them afore hande not to in­cline to idolatrie and to neglecte the Lawes of God, which is the cause of all euill, and gapp to all mischiff. Which sayng of Iosua, the true seruāt of God, seemed so Godlie in the sight of all the people, that all were compelled with a uehemencie of spirite to say: God for­bid, that we shulde forsake the Lorde, [Page 81] to serue strange Goddes. For the Lorde our God him self, broght vs out of E­gypt and from the house of bondage.

What wilt thou more to proue this facte of Mattathias, ād therbie thy due­tie also, whither thou be of the Seniors of the people, or of the multitude? Here is thy confession, if thou be of God. Yf all men would serue strange Godds,Forget not this yf ye feare God and loue your liues. yet will I and my familie serue the liuinge Lorde. And agayne, God forbid that we shulde leaue the obedience of our God, by whome we are created, rede [...]d and saued, to serue strange Goddes. And how caneste thou say that thou seruest God thy Lorde, except thou vse all su­che means as he hath geuen to thee in defence of his glorie, beit counsel, lear­ning, auctoritie, power in bodie or in soule? All muste serue the Lorde, when he demaundeth it. And when demaun­deth God these thinges of vs, if not then chieflie, whē Satā begynneth to rage, the worde of God despiced, his Name blas­phemed, his Churche scattered, his chil­dren miserably oppressed, imprisoned, famished and murthered? Either now must the counsele of the Coūseller, the [Page 82] learning of the learned,Other now serue the Lorde or neuer. Luk. 3. the auctoritie of the honorable, the power of the No­bles, the bodies of the subiectes serue the Lorde, or neuer. For now will the Lorde trye who are his people in separating the chaffe frō the corne, those that loue the Lorde vnfaynedlie, ād wil serue him in dede from the halting dissemblers ād hypocrites, who thīking therby to escape present daūgers, runne headlonge to their owne destructiō, thiking therby to escape the feareful voyce of the Lorde, fall in to the pit. And if they come foor­the of the pit,Esai 24. Iere. 48 Hosa [...]. 6 they are taken in the net, and cannot escape saithe the Lorde.

There is no waye but one, to turne agayne vnto the Lorde, who hathe woū ded vs,Repent o countrie­men your vnlawfull obedience, ād now at last turne to your Lord God and he will heale vs: he hathe striken vs, for our synnes, and he will bynde vs vp agayn, ād within two day­es will he restore vs to lyffe, ād the thir­de day rayse vs vp, and we shal come before his face saithe the Prophet. And by what other means can we turne vnto the Lorde to be healed of our woundes, to be restored to lyffe agayne, to be lif­ted vp and broght before his presence: [Page 83] but by vnfayned repentance, euerie man of what estate, or condition soe­uer he be? Considering with teares how shamefullie he hathe fallen from God, and by what means, and to call for grace and strength to turne back by the self same means and wayes,Rom. 6. to obey God in walking the contrarie. And to Folowe the counsell of the Apostle, that as before we haue geuen our members to serue vnclennes and iniquitie: so now (after true repentance) make them to serue rightousnes and holynesse. Wher before we serued men and not God, now to serue God and not man, but in God: Where as we abused all the gyftes of God to mayntayne idolatrie and ty­ranny, now to vse the same to the resto­ring of Gods glorie, and preseruation of his humble and afflicted children:God grant this for Christes sake, to sinke in your myndes. whe­re as before we haue troughe contempt of his graces, especiallie the worde and Gospel of our Sauiour Iesus Christe broght vpon vs shame and confusion, now by reuerent receauing of them a­gayne, and framing our liues thervnto, we may remoue these plagues, ād finde [Page 84] fauore ād grace in the sight of our God, who for this cause hathe striken vs, and by all maner of means callethe vs bac­ke from our wickednesse, readier to re­ceaue vs, then we to desier him.

CHAP. VIII.

The conclusion of these two parts with a farther de­claration of the same, that it is both Lawful and necessarie some tymes to disobeye and also to resi­ste Vngodly magistrats and wherin.

VVherfore (deare bret­hern in the Lorde) to re­turne to our pourpose, you may well vnderstāde of these thīgs which ha­ue bene hitherto men­tioned, not only the cause of all our miserie in England this day, to haue bene for that we nether taught, knewe, nor vsed true obedience: but also what obediēce God requireth of all mē,Obedience ād what he cō ­demnethe for disobedience. Obedience is to heare God rather then man, and to resiste man rather then God, as by the answere and doinges of the Apostles, and examples of others ye haue bene instructed. Whereī you may see how litle [Page 85] the commandments, threatnynges, power, auctoritie, or punishments of a­nie kinge, Prince or Emperour, oght to preuayle with vs agaynst the com­mandement of God, where with we a­re charged.

Can we then pretende ignoraunce any more? Beholde,Ignorance can not excuse you much lesse when the trueth is so plainlye taught. verie nature doth teache all men, which be not destitute of their comō sense ād reason, that God oght rather to be obeyed then man: in so muche as the Apostles therin feared not the iudgment of their enimies.

Shall auctoritie of man, or power of Princes bleare our eyes anie lōger:We must not yelde to autori­tie and power. seing there is none so ignorant whose cons­ciēce doth not beare him witnesse, that God is moste worthie of all honor, and onely to be feared for his power: who made the heauens and the earthe, and man ruler therof, by whose power and wisdome, as all thinges were created, so by his wonderful prouidence are all thinges preserued and gouerned?

Shall the threatnings of man or punishment of Princes moue vs to leaue vndone that which he commandeth,Threanin­ges oght not to fear vs. ād our vocation requireth? Shulde we ho­nour [Page 86] thē for their offices and great ti­tles, because they are called kīges, Princes, or Emperours? This muste we do so longe as they will be subiectes to God, and promoters of his glorie,This doct­rine of obe­diēce, is dayly sea­led with the bloude of Sainctes of whome they haue their auctoritie, as the exam­ples of the Godlie Patriarkes, and Pro­phets, of Christe him self, and his Apo­stles, and of all martyrs in all ages vntil this day do witness. Which with their bloude haue sealed vp this doctrine for an vndouted veritie: that there is no o­bedience agaynst God, which in his iudgment is not manifeste rebellion.

Doest thou then vnfaynedly bele­ue in God, and haste geuen thy self to serue him, and after art commanded of thy Prince or Ruler, what name so euer he beare, to committ idolatrie in wors­hippīg a piece of bread for thy Sauiour (as do the Papistes) which is open blas­phemie agaynst the Sonne of God?

1. Cor. 10Arte thou willed to be present at the idole seruice, which the Apostle S. Paul forbiddeth: or ells to make, or erect images in Churches or tēples, to heare Ma­sses, to trot on pilgremage, to purche­sse pardōs, to cōfesse the Popes auctori­tie, to esteme Gods worde for heresie▪

[Page 87]Art thou charged to be a tormen­tour of the Saincts of God, to lay holde vpō thē as did the Scribes ād Pharisies, the chief Bishopp and Priests whith their officiers vpon Christe and his Apostles: to bringe them before the Concile to caste then in prison, to flatter them to reuile thē opēly, to famishe them se­creatly, and hange them in their gay­les, to racke them,The Shirefs [...]ealers and other infe­rior officers condemned to bringe them to the galows, to the stake, and cōsumyng fier: to see execution done vpon then, as vpon theues, murtherers, villains, who­remongers, adulterours, traytors, idolaters, & blasphemers: when inwardlye thy conscience cryeth vnto thee, Take heede ād beware what thou doest to the­se men, for they are the verie seruantes of God,Mat 27. Euery mās answere to vnlaw­full dissobedience. as Pilate was admonished by his wiffe? Art thou (I saye) cōmanded to do anie of these thīges, and fearest God? Beholde, here art thou taught what answere it behoueth thee to make, and that by the Apostles of Christe: which is, Iudge you whither it be lawfull in Godds sight to obey you rather then God. And agayne, God must be obeyed before man.

[Page 88] Losse of li­ninges is not a suffi­ciēt excuse to indāger thy soule.If thou wilt alleadge the daunger of losinge thy lyuing and office, wherby thou and thy familie are founde: consi­der it is a greater matter to lose thy soule, and to bring the cursse of God vpon thy whole housholde, to whome it were farre better to begg in the feare of God,God is the reuenger of inocentes bloude. Psal. 9. thē to be gyltie of innocēt bloud, which the Lorde must nedes reuēge ac­cording to his promesse. Yf thy innocēt brother, which is broght to thee, because he is the seruant of God, be ready for Christes sake to offre vp his life in sacrifice: what great thing is it for thee to offre vp thy vile liuing for the same cause of rightousnesse?Mat. 16. For as he in losinge his life hath assurance to fin­de it euerlastingly: euen so mayst thou be assured in forgoing thy office, be­cause thou wilt be no tormentour of Goddes children, agaynst thy duetie and conscience,To loose in the world, is to gayne in the hea­vens. Mat. 10. Psal. 105, to haue the rewarde of rightousnesse at the hands of God, who estemeth all thinges done to anie of these litle ones, as done to him self: and forbideth thee to touche them, sayng, Touche not myne anoynted ones.

[Page 89]Therfore, as there is no power or punishment that shuld cause thee to do euil: so is there no office or promotion, which thou shuldest not willingly for­goe, rather then in reteyninge it to be an instrument of iniurious oppression, hauinge this rule of our Sauiour Chri­ste alwayes before thine eyes:Mat. 7. What so euer ye would that men shulde do to you, that do you to them also.

Neither is this ynough, rather to suffer iniurie and losse, then that thou wouldest be a worker of iniurie to o­thers by any means: but more ouer it is thy parte to be a withstander of euil,withstand the euil, ād supporte the Godly and a supporter of the Godly to the vt­termoste of thy power, as thou hast par­tly harde all ready, ād partly shalt hea­re now folowing. For as God hath not created vs for our selues,Gen. 2. 1. Cor. 10. Gala. 6. but to seke his honor and glorie, and the profit of our neighbour, especially of such as be of the housholde of faithe: euen so are we īdetted to God, to bestowe all those gyftes, be they spiritual or corporal,Our detts to God. whe­rewith God hath blessed vs to the self same end, stryuing agaynst all impedi­ments, helping, defending, comforting, [Page 90] and deliuering to the vttermoste of our power all such as we are assured do fea­re God,Defend, helpe, con­forte, and deliuer the godly opp­ressed, and deleuer your owne soules. Exod 23. and stande in nede of our ayde and supporte. Otherwise we shewe our selues to haue more compassion vpon brute beastes, as our neighbours oxe, asse, or shepe, which Gods Lawe dothe charge vs to helpe, saue, or drawe forthe of the diche, althoghe it were the bea­ste of our enemie.

Shall we helpe our neighbours beast and not him selfe?Are we then bound to do this to vn­reasonable and brute beastes, yea to a­ny thing belonging to our neighbour, and shall we be afrayde to do the like to him self, what tyme he is in necessi­tie? Yf his shepe or other of his cattel were readie to be deuoured in our pre­sence of wolues, or suche wilde beastes: are we not bounde as wel in conscience as by the Lawe of God, to driue the wilde beaste awaye and saue his cattel, who can deny this to be our duetie? Can we be excused then in suffringe the sou­les and bodies of the children of God our brethern, to be moste pitifully di­stroyed of Gods enemies, by false doc­trine and cruel murthering, and put not to our handes and power to deliuer [Page 91] them?

The verie Gentils with out God were taught so muche of nature,Not to wi­ [...]thstande euill, the very Gen­tils codē ­ned as in­iurie. that to do wronge to a nother is not onely in­iurie, but also they condemne him as an iniurious persone, which can, and will not withstande wrōge done to a nother. Wo be to thee thē (ô miserable En­glande) amonge other nations and peo­ples,wo to En­gland and her vngod­ly Magi­strates. which hast a longe tyme delited in iniustice and cruel oppression. Wo be vnto you moste vngodlye and careles counsellers. Wo be to you Rulers and Magistrats, from the hieste to the lowe­ste: for that you ruling with out the fea­re of God,The wol­u [...]she pa­pists. see your owne fleshe ād bloude, the very lābes of God dayly to fall by flockes, not in to the diche or pit, but in to the vnsaciable mouthes of the wolueshe papistes:your horri­ble plagues are at hāde yf ye amēd not. not onely to be hurte and iniuried, but cruelly to be deuou­red both bodie and goodes, and their poore wiues, children, and families de­stroyed, ād go a begginge. And yet nei­ther the sorouful sobbes, ād cōtinual teares of the lamētable mothers, nor the pitiful crye of the spoyled infātes, nor the extreame necessitie of their dispersed ser­uāts, [Page 92] besides the shamefull betrayinge ād subuertiō of the whole Realme day­lie approchinge,Ye haue your hono­urs to defē de and helpe the go­dly, yea ād all others from oppression and in iurie. can once moue your harde ād stonie hartes with pitie to de­fende their cause, and delyuer them frō tyranny: beinge promoted to your ho­nours and offices to that end. Can you, escape the condemnation of the Lawe, whiche prefer the preseruation of your beastes and cattell to the pretious lyues of your owne brethern,Esai. 1. the Image of the liuinge Lorde,The Gentiles shall condemne you in the workes of the lawe. Rom. 2. whom you are bo­unde to loue as your selues? Shall not the Gentils, whiche lyue besides the La­we, stand in iudgment agaynste you whiche professe the Lawe, when they are more preste to defende their peo­ple from iniuries, then you yours? Your owne offices, auctoritie, and po­wer, shall in that daye put you to silen­ce, and confounde you.

Was there euer the like contempt of Gods worde in Capernaum? The like idolatrie amonge the heathen? Or like tyranny and cruell murthering at Ieru­salem?Luk. 10. And yet to Capernaum Christ hathe threatned that it shall be easier for Tyre and Sidon in the last day, then [Page 93] for it.Nomb. 33. Exod. 23. and. 34. The Gentiles he commanded to be distroyed as his extreame enimies. And as for Ierusalem that worthie Ci­tie of the Lorde, escaped not his seue­re iudgement:Mat. 24. not leauinge one stone vpon another, as oure Sauiour himself afore prophecied, ād as their miserable state and dispertion this daye doth te­stifie.Englande shall not escape. Will God then spare Englande a­lone, and punishe all other nations for lesse impietie?

Can he of his iustice spare you coun­sellers, you Nobles and inferior offi­cers: Whiche spare not to spoyle, op­presse, accuse, condemne, and murther the people of God, to deface his glory, and to distroye the whole Englishe Na­tiō from the earthe, so moche as in you lieth?

Repent, repent you miserable mē: for your synnes be at the highest,Repent shortly: for Goddes heauy wrath is at hande Esai. 29. your cupp of iniquitie is full, and the houre of your heuy visitation is come: when it will be to late for you to flee from the great wrath of Gods indignation, whiche shortlye is like to be powred vpon you. Then shall you well percea­ue that there is no saluation but vnder [Page 94] Gods protection, no comforte with out Christe,The cause of all these miseries. no obedience agaynst God, no power that can dispence with the char­ge of the Almightie and his comman­dements: especiallie when all your co­unsels agaynst him and his poore ser­uants shall fall vpon your owne hea­des: your wisedome turned to follie, your noblenesse to vilenesse, your rule and dominion taken from you, and you made slaues to others:Write this vpon your dore postes ād in your wel deck­ed chābers. For it will suerly come yf ye repēt not. your fayre how­ses and gorgeous buildinges destroyed, your great possessions geuen to your e­nimies, your wiues to be rauished, your mayds deflowred, and children murthe­red with out mercy, your pride and hie lokes abated, your welthe turned to miserie, your delicate faare and costlie a­parell to extreame hunger and begge­rye, your ioye and pastance to weepin­ge and continuall sorrowe, and in the end shamefull deathe as you haue de­serued. And why? Bycause you haue chosen to obeye man rather then G [...], and sought rather to mayntayne [...] owne pride and dignitie, then his honor and glory.

[Page 95]And therfore beholde ô prowde man,Ierre. 50. I am come to thee (saithe the Lorde of hostes) because thy daye is come, and the tyme when i will visite thee. For the prowde shall fall and be distroyed, and there shall be noman to lift him vp. I will kindle a fire in his Cities, that shall consume all thinges aboute them, &c.

And iustly maye the Lorde do all this to you, seinge he gaue you not this di­gnitie, makinge you Coūsellers, Noble men, Rulers, Iustices, Mayers, Shireffs, Bayliffs, Counstables, or Gaylers to ex­alt your selues agaynst his Maiestie,The end of all offices and to fight agaynst Christe and his members: but to humble your selues in his presence, to promote his glorie, and to defende all those whom he commit­ted to your charge. How commeth it then to passe, that ye haue thus betray­de him and his people, in banishinge his truthe to receaue falsehod, and haue changed Religion in to superstition, true honoringe of God, in to blasphe­mous idolatrie, and now (to fini­she your procedinges) are readye to [Page 96] to sell your subiects for slaues to the prowde Spaniards,The Spa­niardes are godles a people with out God.

That wicked woman, whom you vntruely make your Quene, hath (saye ye) so cōmanded. O vayne & miserable men.Maries vnlauful gouerne­ment. To what vilenesse are you broght, and yet as men blynd, see not? Because you would not haue God to raigne o­uer you, and his worde to be a light vn­to your footestepps, beholde, he hath not geuen an hypocrite onely to raigne ouer you (as he promised) but an Idola­tresse also:Iob. 34. God forbiddeth wo­men to raigne, and nature ab­horreth the same. not a man accordinge to his appoyntment, but a woman, whiche his Lawe forbiddeth, and nature abhor­reth: whose reigne was neuer counted lawfull by the worde of God, but an expresse signe of Gods wrathe, and no­table plague for the synnes of the peo­ple. As was the raygne of cruell Iesa­bel, and vngodlie Athalia, especiall in­strumentes of Satan, and whipps to his people of Israel.

This you see not, blynded with i­gnorance: yea, whiche is more shame, where as the worde of God freethe you from the obedience of anie Prince, be [Page 97] he neuer so mightie, wise, or politike, commanding anye thinge whiche God forbiddeth, and herein geuethe you au­ctoritie to withstand the same, as you haue harde: Yet are you willingly be­come as it were,Marie a bastard. bondemen to the lu­stes of a most impotent and vnbrydled woman: a woman begotten in adultrie a bastard by birthe, contrarie to the worde of God ād your owne lawes.Reade H [...]lles Cronicle in the 24. of the reinge of kinge Henry. 8. Oxforde. Cambridge. Orliance. Paris. Angiers. Burges. Bononie. Padua. Tholosa. Leu. 10 Deu. 19 Eph. 2. Gala. 3. And therfore cōdemned as a bastarde by the iudgement of all Vniuersities in Englā ­de, France, and Italie: as well of the Ci­uilians, as Diuines. For now are we free­de from that Ieweshe yoke to rayse vp seede to our brethern departing with out issue, by the comyng of our Sauiour Iesus Christe, who hathe destroyed the walle and distāce betwixt the Iewes and Gentiles, and hathe no more respecte to anie Tribes (for conseruation wherof this was permitted) but all are made o­ne in him with out distinction, which ac­knowledge him vnfaynedlie to be the Sonne of God and Sauiour of the worl­de. For in Christe Iesus there is nether Iewe nor Gentile, Grecian or Barba­rous, bonde nor free, &c. And therfore [Page 98] it muste nedes followe, that kinge Hen­rie the eight, in marying with his bro­thers wife, did vtterly contemne the free grace of our Sauiour Iesus Christe, which longe before had deliuered vs from the seruitude of that lawe:kinge Henry cō ­mitted incest in be­gettinge Marie. and also committed adulterous incest con­trary to the worde of God, when he begate this vngodlie serpent Marie, the chief instrument of all this present mi­serie in Englande.

And if any would saie, it was of a ze­le to fulfyll the lawe which then was abrogated, he must confesse also that the kinge did not marie of carnall lu­ste, but to rayse vp seede to his brother: when the contrarie is well knowne to all men. Let no man therfore be offen­ded, that I call her by her propre name, a bastarde, and vnlawfully begotton: se­ing the worde of God, which cānot lye, dothe geue wittnesse vpon my parte. And moreouer, that suche as are bastar­des shulde be depriued of all honor:Deu. 23. in so muche as by the Lawe of Moyses they were prohibited to haue entrance in to the Cōgregatiō or assembly of the Lorde to the tenth generation. Consider thē your vngodlie proceadinges in defraw­ding [Page 99] your cōtrie of a lawfull kinge: and preferringe a bastarde to the lawful be­gotten dawghter, and exaltinge her whiche is, and will be a comon plague ād euersion of altogether: for as muche as she is a traytor to God,The Gos­p [...]ll [...]rs holpe her to the crown and she burneth thē. & promis breaker to her dearest frindes, who helpinge her to their power to her vnlawfull rei­gne, were promised to inioye that reli­gion which was preached vnder kinge Edwarde: which not withstanding in a shorte space after, she moste falsely o­uerthrewe and abolished. So that now both by Gods Lawes and mās, she oght to be punished with death, as an opē idolatres in the sight of God, ād a cruel murtherer of his Saīts before mē, ād merciles traytoresse to her owne natiue coūtrie.

For Gods worde she abhorreth, Anti­christe hathe she restored, her fathers Lawes contemned, her promesse brokē, and her brother Godly kinge Edwarde as an heretique condemned▪ M. Bucer Paulus Phagius, maistris Martyr, &c. not thinkinge it ynoughe to expresse her tyranny vpon thē that liued, except she shewed cruel­tie, or rather a raging madnesse on the bodies of Gods seruāts lōge before bu­ried, drawīg thē forth of their graues to [Page 100] burne thē as heretikes. And in fine vtter­ly abhorring the Englishe nation, hath ioyned her self to adulterous Philip, the Spanishe kinge:who is more blind then they that can and will not see? Here vnto the lawes of the real me, the will and prophecie of her father doth prouok thē to whome she hathe, and dothe continually labor to betray the whole kingdome. And yet ye can­not, or will not see it, nether yet for all this be stirred vp to bridell her affecti­ons, and withstand her vngodly doin­ges, to promote the glorie of God, and to preserue your brethren, and your selues: but thinking to reteyne your pro­motions by flattery, do hastelie drawe Gods vengeance vpon your selues and others.

For do you thinke that Philip will be crowned kinge of Englande, and retey­ne in honor Englishe counsellers? Will he credite them withe the gouernement of his estate, who haue betrayed their owne? Shall his nobilitie be Spaniardes, with out your landes and possessions? And shall they possesse your promotiōs and lyuinges, and your heads vpō your shulders? Come they to make a spoyle of the whole Realme, and leaue you ād yours vntouched? Where is your great wisdome become? Your subtile counsels [Page 101] and policies, where of you bragge so muche, to whome these thinges be hid, that euerie childe espieth?

If Esai the Prophet had not forespoken these secret iudgments of God,Esa. 3.4 29. in blynding the eyes of the prowde con­temners, I coulde not cease to wonder at your grosse ignorance, as now I consider with greife of harte, the miserie which is like shortly to come vpon you in full measure, for this calamitie, alrea­die powred vpon others, through your procurements and studies. Which fea­refull iudgment of God loke neuer to escape, except suddaynlie ye repent and change your vngodlie purpose.Esai· 28. If you be at a couenant with deathe (as you thinke) you shall not auoyde it, if you thinke to escape the comon destructiō, making dissimulation and lyes your refuge, yet shall you be reuealed: for the Lord him self will destroye all your counsels, because they are not of him.

Yt is not your going to the Masse, your praysing of the Pope, your flat­tring of your Quene, and shauen Pri­ests of Baal, that can defende you in [Page 102] that day: nether yet your licences whi­che some of you purchasse of an infidel to departe out of your countrie,Licences purchased of infidels and lyinge in idola­trous pla­ces, is thought good inough of carnall gospelers. some lyinge in idolatrous places, differing no thinge from them in ther dissolute liuinge, some passinge in to Italie to please their Quene, and to get an opinion of men that they approue her procedings, rather coueting to haue the name of a blasphemouse papiste, then of Christe our Sauiour. Thikinge by suche vnlaw­full meanes to worke miracles: but their gaines at length will be confusion,Their dea [...] proue what they be. as now their frute whiche they haue brohgt thence do witnesse that is the want of Gods feare and open dissimu­lation.

This is not the way (ô vaine men) to winne Gods fauour, and to escape his fearfull iudgmentes: but to increase his wrathe and hastē his vengeance, who will not be mocked, nether suffer his holye Name lōge to be blasphemed. Cō sider with your selues, and returne to the right way, and walke in it while ye haue tyme, and I will shewe it vnto you.

[Page 103]You haue synned moste greuouslie agaynst the Lorde:The onely means to escape mi­serie. Psal. 103. knowe your trans­gressions, and with teares confesse thē, euery man vnfaynedlie vnto the Lor­de, who is redie to mercie and slowe to anger. You haue despised and abused the worde of his dearely beloued Son­ne Iesus Christ, the Author of saluatiō, in the dayes of our Godlie kinge Ed­warde (which is the cause why God hath thus plaged vs with a tyrant) seke after the worde agayne and receaue it with all reuerence. By geuing auctoritie to an idolatres woman ye haue banished Christe and his Gospell,Folowe wyse counsel, least ye and al your land perishe. and in his pla­ce restored Antichriste with all his infe­ctions, wherin your owne consciences condemne you of euil. Then in takinge agayne the same auctoritie from her, you shall restore Christe and his worde and do well. In obeyinge her, ye haue disobeyed God. Then in disobeying her, ye shall please God. Because you haue geuen place to her and her coun­sells, you are all become idolatrous hypocryts, and also traytors to your owne Countrie: then by resisting her [Page 104] selues damnation for their transgressiō and her wicked decrees, you must be made true worshippers of God, ād faith­full Englishe men.

Other meās there are not, but to tur­ne to God by repentāce, to banishe fal­sehode by receauīg the trueth, to ouer­throwe Antichriste, and all kinde of i­dolatry by honoring Christe and his Gospell: to suppresse tyranny by iusti­ce: to withstande oppression and mur­ther by defending the iuste and inno­cent, and punishing the workers of ini­quitie, of what estate or condicion so e­uer they be, as after (God willing) shall be proued at large. For as by this means onely Gods honor must be restored,Restore goddes honour and escape Gods vengeance and you escape his vengeance, to obeye thē that obeye God, and resiste them that resiste his Maiestie, rēdringe vnto all ac­cordinge to his Lawes: euenso, when they shulde vnderstand that their sub­iectes be no more as it were brute bea­stes with out sense or iudgment: but that they knowe wherein, ād how farre they owe obediēce, ād would no more be led by their deuilishe and vngodlie lustes, as they haue bene and yet are pre­sentlie.

[Page 105]Then woulde their Princes and Rulers also geue them selues with all diligence,yf they knewe ri­ghtly how to obey and wherin, thē shulde these thin­ges here mentioned come to passe. Deu. 17. to studie and applie the same Lawe of God: then woulde they do no­thinge them selues, nor commande o­thers, where in they where not assured to please him. Then woulde they lear­ne to obeye God, which now rebel a­gaynst him: and to folow the examples of the Godlie kings and Rulers, hauing the boke of the Lorde euer with them, neuer suffring it to departe from them.Gods boke teache the true obedi­ence. But as worthie Iosua, Iosias, and Iosa­phat, to reade and studie in it day and night. Not to declyne from it them sel­ues, nor yet to suffer their subiects the­rin to be ignorāt, which is the onlie wi­sedome of God and comforte of all mens consciences. Then shulde the Ru­lers loue and preserue their subiectes. And the subiects likewise reuerentlie obeye their superiours. To conclude, then shuld all be blessed of God, feared of their enimies, sure from all daūgers, voyde of all idolatrie and false religiō,Deu. 4. and estemed of all nations the wysest and mightieste people vpon the earthe, as God promissed to Israel, so longe as [Page 106] they shulde lyue.

CHAP. IX.

Answers to the contrarie obiections of such as teache all maner of obedience to Magistrats to be lawful, taken forthe of the New Testament.

BVt for as muche as the­re is nothing so mani­fest and true, which is not either obscured vt­terlie by contrary rea­sons of mans brayne, or ells discredited by other places of Scripture wrōgfully vnderstāde and applyed by many: I haue here thoght expedient before I proceade anie further, for the better establishing of the trueth, to an­swer and satisfie, so far as shal please God to geue vnto me, all suche reasons, auctorities, and Scriptures, as are alead­ged to the contrarie: to the intent that we may not onlye see the trueth, and so be styrred to imbrace it, but also may espie the falsehod, ād learne to auoyde it.

And because amongest all other au­ctorities ād reasōs, there is none of greater force thē that which is wryten in the Epistle of S.Rom. 13. Paul to the Romains: we will firste of all others begin with it.The firste obiection. Let eue­rie soule (saith he) submitt him self [Page 107] to the auctoritie of the higher powers: for there is no power but of God, and the powers that be, are ordeyned of God. Who soeuer therfore resisteth power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and they that resist, shal receaue vnto them selues damnation. Here (say they) is a general doctrine affirmed by the A­postle, that euery man (none excepted) must be subiecte to superiour powers: and if euery man muste be subiect, none oght to disobey.

Besides this, beholde the Apostle doth not barely affirme this proposi­tiō, sayīg: Euery person (for that he meanethe by euery soule) must be subiecte to the Magistrates and Rulers, of what condition so euer he be, but proueth the same with a moste sure argument gathered of the ordinance of God▪ because there is no power but of God. And ther­fore to resiste powers, is to resiste God him self, whose ordinance it is. And not contented with one reason, he con­firmeth the same with a nother depen­ding of Gods punishments, which he hath appoynted for all them that re­siste, which is, to receaue to them selues damnation for their transgressiō: [Page 108] so that they cōclude, that it is not onely Paules auctoritie that maketh all men subiecte to their superiours (which not­withstanding were sufficient, being the Apostle of Christe) but also the same is by good and stronge reasons con­firmed.

AnswereIn answering to this obiection, I will not longe holde you in rēdring the cau­se,The cause wherfore the Apostle was mo­ued thus to write. which as we may probably gether mouid the Apostle to write this to the Romains cōcerning obedience to their superiours: but in few wordes touche so muche as seemeth necessarie. It may a­peare very credible (which some God­lie and learned do wryte) that amōgest the Romayns, after they had receaued the Gospel, there were many vnder that name, which woulde be deliuered from all subiection: thinking the office of Magistrates nomore necessarie to them that professed Christe: as do this day the Anabaptists and Libertins.Anabap­tists. Libertins Others, who had bene once freed from tribute and custome paying, to strange Magi­strates, woulde therat take an occasion by preaching of the Gospell to paye no more tribute to their superiours. Such [Page 109] were diuers of the Iewes,Denyars of tribute who coūted it for abōdage. And that kīde of secte was raysed vp euen in Christes dayes, as ap­peareth whē the Pharisies sent their dis­ciples with Herodes seruātes to knowe his iudgment, whither it were lawful for them to paye tribute to Caesar or no.Mat. 22 And in the Actes, Gamaliel maketh mention of one Iudas Galilaeus,Act. 5. which was autor of that secte, and moued mu­che trouble amōgest the people, sayng: It was not lawful to paye tribute. By these and suche like opinions, the A­postle (perceauing the office of Magi­strates to come in to contempte, and men to esteme it not lawful, which God him self ordeyned in defence of his re­ligion and Ciuile policie (was moued to wryte as is before mencioned▪ exhor­ting all men to esteme the office of Ma­gistrates as Gods ordinance, and to o­beye them whom God had appoynted Rulers ouer them.

Then as the Apostle wryteth we con­fesse, and so muche as he speaketh we graūte, that is, that all men are bownd [...]o obey such Magistrates, whome God [...]athe ordeyned ouer vs lawfully ac­cording [Page 110] to his worde, which rule in his feare according to their office, as God hathe appoynted. For thogh the Apost­le saith: There is no power but of God: yet doth he not here meane anie other-powers, but such as are orderly and law­fullie institute of God. Ether els shulde he approue all tyranny and oppression, which cometh to anie commonwelth by means of wicked and vngodlie Ru­lers, which are to be called rightlie di­sorders, and subuersions in comon wel­thes, and not Gods ordinaunce. For he neuer ordeyned anie lawes to approue, but to reproue and punishe tyrantes, i­dolaters,we may resiste tyrantes and yet not Godes ordi­nance. papistes and oppressors. Then when they are suche, they are not Gods ordinaunce. And in disobeying and re­sisting such, we do not resiste Gods or­dinaūce, but Satā, and our synne, which is the cause of such. Or els, if we shall so conclude with the wordes of the A­postle,By the pa­pistes ga­therīg. Satan oght not to be resisted. that all powers what so euer they be must be obeyed and not resi­sted, then must we confesse also, that Satan and all his infernall powers are to be obeyed. Why? because they are [Page 111] powers and haue their powers also of God,Iob 12. Iam. 4 which cannot touche man any farther then God permitteth. But S. Ia­mes geuethe vs, contrarie commande­ment, saing: Resiste the deuel and he will flee awaye from you.

And that the Apostle Paule dothe so restrayne his wordes to all lawfull powers, we nede not to seke far of. For in the self same Chap.The proffe of this an­swere. after he do­the expounde his mynde: that is, what powers and Magistrates he meaneth: Such (saith he) as if thou doest well, thou nedeste not to feare, but if thou doest e­uel. And agayne wilt thou be out of fea­re of the power? Do wel then: and so shalt thou be praysed of the same. For he is the minister of God for thy welthe. But if thou doest euill, feare: for he bea­reth not the sworde for noght: for he is the minister of God, to take vengeance of them that do euill &c. Whereby we may playnly vnderstāde, that althoghe, he saithe, There is no power but of God: yet he meaneth suche power as is his or­dināce and lawfull: whose office stādeth in these two poyntes, to defēd the good, and to punishe the euel: not to be feared [Page 112] for wel doing, but for euil, to whom the sworde is geuen for that purpose. And to such, with the Apostle we graūt also, that euery persone must be subiecte ād obedient:The papists argument is fully answered for they are Gods ordinaun­ce. And to disobey or resiste such, is to disobey and resiste God him self. And therfore do deserue iustlie to receaue Gods punishment, which, as the Apostle threatneth, is damnation. And this ma­kethe nothing agaynst our former sen­tence, but rather confirmeth the same: approuīng no obedience but that whi­ch is lawful, that is to say, according to Gods appoyntment and ordinance, as doth more euidētly appere in his wor­des folowing: partly in that he demaun­deth obedience to such for conscience sake, and not for feare of vengeance o­nely. As thogh he would saye: so farre is it from reason and Gods worde that a­ny man shulde disobey or contemne the Magistrates, ordeyned by God to punishe vice and mantayne vertue, that he nedeth no other to reproue him of euil in so doing, then his owne propre cōscience, which will (iustly examined) teache him how Gods ordinance oght [Page 113] to be reuerenced, especially seruing to the preseruation of the people, in sup­pressing wickednesse, and promoting Godlynesse.

For that cause he willeth after to paye their tribute, not to euery man that will demande (for vnlawful demandes may be lawfully denied) but to whome tri­bute belongeth, custome to whom custome, feare to whom feare, and honour to whom honour is due.

Obedience then he requireth of all mē, tribute also, custome, feare,Obedience is cōmaunded to all men: but yet vnder cōdition. and honor: but vnder this condition of iustice and aequitie, to render these dueties to them that haue iuste title thereūto. And who are they, but (as I sayed before) such as God hath appoynted to rule o­uer vs in his feare, for our profit, and preseruation of the comon welthe?

To this also dothe the sayng of S.The secon­de obiectiō ād answere 1. Pet. 2 Pe­ter wel agree, thoghe it be broght in of the other partie to proue the contrary: Submit your selues to euery ordinaūce of mā for the Lordes sake: whither it be to kīge as to the chief, or vnto Rulers as vnto them that are sent of him, for the punishment of euel doers, and the pray­se [Page 114] of thē that do well. Beholde how Pe­ter here nether dissenteth from him self in his answere before to the Cōcile, nor here disagreeth from Paule, willīg obe­dience to kinges and inferior Rulers: not to all, but to such as are appoynted to punishe euill doers, and prayse the contrary: and to disobey such, muste nedes be condemned for wicked and vngodlie rebelliō. For suche there were as maye playnly appere by. S. Peters wordes folowing, whiche vnder the pre­tence of libertie woulde couer and clo­ke their malice. And this the Apostle forbiddeth in all maner of subiectes, and iustlye.

The thyrde obiection and answ­ere.But you will saye, the wordes of Pe­ter folowing concerning the obedience of seruantes to Maisters, dothe charge vs farther then with godlie Rulers, and such as rule according to their office. For to seruantes he writeth on this wi­se. Seruantes obeye your Maisters with all feare, not onely if they be good and curteous, but also thogh they be frowarde: [...] for so the greke worde dothe sig­nifie, a cōbrous, frowarde, or a persone harde to please and selfe willy. Wherof [Page 115] they will conclude, that Peter comman­deth obedience to all kinde of persones, good and bad: what so euer they com­mande must be done. and why? becau­se he so chargeth seruants to obey their maisters.

Neuertheles this is to be obserued in reading the wordes of Peter (as also in all the holy Scriptures) that we must so take them as they agree with him self, and not agaynst him.Answere. For the Spirit of God changeth not his mea­ning: but what he saithe once, he saythe for euer. Saint Peter here seemeth to preuent the obiection which seruantes (desierous of libertie) might haue obie­cted, being willed to obey their Mai­sters: as thoghe he would saye: I am not ignorant that there are many Maisters troblesome, frowarde, and importu­ne ouer you:Of what maner of maisters Peter spea­keth. which are not so gent­le and curteous towardes you as be­comethe them: well: that is their faut and infirmitie, which you must for Christes sake, whom you professe, pa­tiently sustayne and beare. For thogh your Maisters be roughe or frowarde (he saith not wicked and vngodly) that is no [Page 116] cause why ye shuld not faithfully serue them for the tyme of your seruitude, so longe as they will nothing of you, but that which is good and godlie.

Then the mynde of S. Peter is that the shreudnesse or frowardnes of Maisters, is no lawful or iust occasion why the ser­uantes shulde be disobediēt. And as this is the verie meaning of the Apostle in that place so is it not like that he would write contrarie to him self, when he sayed:Act. 4. God oght rather to be obeyed then man. Nether can he be iudged contrary to the Apostle Paul,The true knot of obedience. Ephe. 6. who bindeth vp all lawful obediēce whith this knot, In the Lorde: speaking vnto childrē, ād exhortyng thē to obeye their fathers & mothers. But how? In the Lorde saith he. And why? For that is iust. Then if Paule charge not children with further obe­dience to their parentes, then in the Lorde, to whom principallie they are by Gods commandement and nature bounde, will Peter bynde seruantes to their Maisters anie further thē in the Lorde? And if it be iuste obedience onlie which is in the Lorde: can ther be any lawful obediēce agaynst him, either of childrē [Page 117] towardes ther parētes, seruātes towar­des their Maisters,God is our chief Father, Lorde and maister. or subiectes towardes their Rulers or Magistrates? No, God is the first and principal Father, Maister ād Lorde, to whō firste obedience muste be geuen as he doth demāde: and to others in him, and for him onely, as we were taught at the beginning.

And that S. Peter had onely res­pecte to the rough condicions of Mai­sters, and not to their vnlawful commandement agaynst God and their conscience (which they are bownde to do for no mans pleasure) the wordes do playnelie witnesse. For this is thākes worthye (sai­the he) if a man for conscience towardes God indure grief, suffring wongfully. For what prayse is it, if when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye take it patient­lye? &c. Then ye see the meanyng of S. Peter is not to make vs subiecte to anie euill or vngodlie commādemen­tes, but to persuade all seruantes not to cast of their duetie, during the tyme of their seruitude,S Peter approueth not frowarde maisters. notwithstāding they be roughlie dealt with all of their Mai­sters, which thing is not spoken here of S. Peter to incourage or mayntayne [Page 118] frowarde Masters in their frowardnes, nor yet to forbid the seruantes which feare God to seke after lawful remedie at the hādes of superior powers, who for that cause are ordeyned to see iustice administred to all sortes of mē,Seruantes oppressed may seke lawfull remedy against their maisters. as well to seruantes as others: but that they shulde not thīke the sharpnesse of their Maisters to be a cause sufficiēt to free them from doing their duetie vpō the othér parte.

In like case may we conclude of Princes ād Magistrats,How far wicked Princes may be obeyed. thogh they be rough and frowarde: yea, thoghe before God they are wicked, vngodlie, and repro­bate persons (as was Saule) yet so longe as their wikednesse brasteth not out ma­nifestly agaynst God, ād his Lawes, but outwardly will see them obserued and kept of others, punishing the transgres­sors, and defending the innocent: so longe are we bounde to render vnto such, obedience, as to euill and roughe Mai­sters: because we may not take Gods of­fice in hande to iudge of the harte any farther then their outwarde deedes do geue manifest testimony. Otherwise, if without feare they transgresse Gods Lawes them selues and cōmande others to do the like, then haue they lost that [Page 119] honor and obedience which otherwise their subiectes did owe vnto them: and oght no more to be taken for Magistra­tes: but punished as priuate trāsgressors, as after I haue promised to proue.

Here vnto they adde the saying of our Sauiour Iesus Christe to Peter,The fourth obiection. Mat. 26. Ioh. 18. whi­ch bad him put vp his sworde, after he had strickē the seruāt of the high Priest, and cut of his eare: not mynding by the sworde to make resistance. Wherevpon they gather that althogh it be lawful in doctrine and preaching for the seruants of God to withstād and reproue the eni­mies, as Christ him self and his Apostles did: yet it is not permitted to do the sa­me by anie outwarde or bodely for­ce. For thē as Christ answered, he might haue obtayend of his Father 12. Legions of Angels for his defence.

To this we shall sone answere,Answere. if we consider who spake this, to whom, and for what cause it was spokē. Which cir­cumstances well waied, geue a great light to all like facts and sayinges. First we must diligently consider the office of our Sauiour Iesus Christe, which as it was in all poyntes spirituall, aswell [Page 120] concerning his kingdome which he himself affirmeth not to be of this worlde, as his Priesthod and Prophecie: euen so for his owne parte,Ioh 18. coulde he vse no temporal force or power for the accompleshment of the same, because he de­nieth that he either came to raigne in this worlde, or ells to be a iudge therin: as he answered the man, which would haue had him to comande his brother to deuide the landes bewixt them, sayng: Man,Luk 12. who made me a iudge or deuider ouer you? And being demanded to geue iudgment agaynst the woman taken in adultrie,Ioh. [...]. he woulde not take that office vpon him, but sayd vnto the woman, when her accusers were gone: Nether do I condemne thee: go thy waye, and syn­ne no more.

why Christ v­sed not the d [...]f [...]nce of the tempo­ral power.Thus as concerning Christes owne persone, who had all thinges and powers both in heauen and in earth at his co­mandement, it is euident that he woul­de vse no temporal power agaynst his enimies: for that he was not therwith charged. Which exāple taketh not waye the office or duetie of such as are char­ged [Page 121] with the tēporall sworde, to vse it in defence chieflye of Gods glorye, and the preseruation of those that are vn­der them.

Secondly why he forbad Peter also,Why Pe­ter was forbyd to vse the sworde. and in him all the reste of the Apostles, we can not be ignorant. For who kno­weth not that the Apostles were wit­nesses of Iesus Christe chosen forthe of the worlde (as S.Act 1. Ioh [...] Iohn saithe) not to de­fende their Maister by the temporall sworde (for that were to vsurpe vpon another mans office, not apperteyninge to th [...]m) to whom onelie the spirituall sworde was comitted, to fight manful­lie with it agaynst the worlde,Ephes. [...]. Hebr 4. Satan and all spirituall powers. For as the A­postle saith: Thoghe we walke compas­sed with the fleshe,2 Cor. 1 [...]. yet do we not warre fleshlie. For the weapōs of our warrfare are not carnall thinges, but stronge by the power of God to cast downe holdes: wherwith we ouerthrowe imaginatiōs of euery high thinge that is exalted a­gaynst the knowlege of God, and brin­ge in to captiuitie euery thoght to the obediēce of Christe. Wherfore, seīg the office of the Apostles also is spirituall, [Page 122] as their Maisters was: and had onely spi­rituall weapons to vse in the defence of the Gospell, wherof they were ministers: it is not good reason to conclude their purpose,The absurdite of this reason. that Magistrates and other inferior officers, oght not to vse the tem­porall sworde in defense of religion: be­cause Christe woulde not suffer Peter to fight with the temporall sworde. But ra­ther as Christe requireth of Peter and of all the rest, the faithfull vse of the spirituall sworde, where with they were charged, or ells they shulde be subiecte to malediction and iudgmēt: For wo be to me (saith Paule) if I preache not:1. Cor. 9. As the preachers are charged to vse the spi­ritual sworde, so are the Magistrats bonde to set forthe Gods glorie poral sw­orde. e­uēso may not they escape iudgment ād the curse of God, which vse not the temporall sworde cōmitted vnto them with all indeuour in the defence of Gods glorie and his Church, wherewith eue­ry man is charged, according to his vocation and power, none except.

To be shorte, if our Sauiour Christ shulde, as he might by his power, haue with­stand the Iewes that came to apprehend him and put him to death, how shuld he haue dronken of that cup which his Fa­ther had geuen him? That is, how shul­de [Page 123] he by his deathe and passion haue redemed vs,Rom. 5. Iohn. 10. for which cause he came in to the worlde: not to haue his liffe takē from him agaynst his will, but willin­glie to lay it downe for all.

Then we see that there is nothing in this saying of Christe to Peter, which can condemne lawfull resisting of vn­godlie Rulers in their vngodly com­mandementes. For thogh it was profi­table to all men that Christ without a­ny resistance shulde be crucified, being the sacrifice appoynted of God the Fa­ther to saluation: yet is it not therfore lawfull for the inferior officers, or per­mitted to the subiectes, to suffre the blasphemie and oppression of their su­periors to ouerflow their whole coun­trie and nation, when both power and means is geuen vnto them lawfully to withstand it, and they by their profes­sion and office are no lesse bounde to put it in execution.

CHAP. X.

Obiections out of the olde Testament, and Answers to the same.

[Page 124] THis muche being spokē to satisfie such obiecti­ons as are comonlye al­ledged forthe of the New Testament: let vs see also what may be sayed agaynst vs in the old, and after what sorte they may be truely answered.The firste obiection out of Ier. 29. Ie­remie they alleadge in his letter sent from Ierusalem to the captaynes in Ba­bylon, to the Priests and Prophetts, and to all the people of Israell that then we­re in Babylon, counselling them how to behaue them selues, and to escape danger. The effect wherof was this: not to rebell, that they might escape, but to remayne still and abide the ap­poynted tyme of the Lorde: yea, to se­ke the peace of the Citie wherinto God had broght them, and to praye to God for it. For (saithe he) with the peace of that Citie, shall your peace be also.

Baruch. 1.And the like is wryten in Baruch the Prophet tending to the same end, that they shulde pray for the longe liffe of Nabuchadnezer ād Balthazer his sone, that vnder their shaddow (that is prote­ction) they might lyue and serue them [Page 125] a longe tyme. Wheerin (saye they) two things are to be noted agaynst our o­pinion. The firste, that he forbiddeth them to rebell, and exhorteth them pa­ciently to abide the tyme appoynted of their delyuerance. The seconde, that they are bownd to pray for their eni­mies, and welthe of their Cities, and therin also are bounde to obey them.

This Epistle or letter of Ieremie sent to the Iewes at Babylon then captiues,Answere. we maye not deny to be his: thoghe of the Prophecie of Baruch some do dou­te, and esteme it not as Canonicall. Ne­uertheles because they tend bothe to o­ne effecte in this matter,The cause why Iere­mie and Baruch thus coū ­selled. we will admit­te bothe. Firste, granting that their co­unselle to quietnes and to abstayne frō rebellion was good and necessary be­cause it proceaded from the Spirite of God and of knowledge, which spake or wrote nothing that God had not reue­led vnto them: and wherof they also shuld not admonishe others, to the intēt they might geue no credit to false Pro­phetes, which woulde stirre them vp to sedition, perswading them that they shulde not longe continewe in Baby­lon, [Page 126] when as the Lorde had other wise appoynted. Wherof when God assured them by his Prophet, it must nedes be counted extreame madnesse and rebel­lion agaynst God, if they shulde haue done the contrarie, As we reade of wi­cked Achab,1. Kinges 22. who crediting the flatterīg coūselle of the false Prophetes, disobey­ed God in contēning the trueth tolde hī by Micheas: but to his owne destructiō.

Therfore this matter is sone āswered, where we haue the secrete counselle of God reueled vnto vs, admonishing vs to abide in any place, ād not to departe til he call vs: we are more then rebells to do the contrarie, ād muste sustayne the daunger worthelye. But this is not our questiō, whether we oght to remayne in any place so longe as God hathe com­māded vs:The state of the que­stion. but whither we oght to do e­uill at the commandement of Prince or power, wheresoeuer we be, or in what estate, be it neuer so miserable. For tho­gh Ieremie coūselled thē with pacience to remayne in Babylon, yet nether he, nor Baruch would permit thē to followe the exaple of the Gētills there, in idola­trie or euell doīg: as the Epistle of Iere­mie [Page 127] sēt also to the Iewes captiues in Babylō ād wrytten in the prophecie of Ba­ruch,Baruch. 6 doth abundantlie witnesse. And as the exāples of Daniel also, Sidrach,Dani. 3. Misach, ād Abdenago do teache vs: which not wihstāding their Captiuitie, woulde not obey the kīges cōmandemēt to do euill.

Also in that they are willed to pray for the good estate of the Citie wherin they dwelled, that is Babylō, and for the lōge liffe of Nabuchadnezer ād his sōne the cause is also alleadged, to the ītēt that the peace of that Citie shuld also be the­ir peace:why the Iewes we­re willed to pray for Nabuchadnezars longe life. ād for that Nabuchadnezer ād his sōne shuld be their shadow ād protectiō, God so mouīg their hartes. Which causes are sufficient why the people of God shulde be thākfull, that is, to wishe well to the places and persons where, ād of whom they receaue any benefit, especially peace and protection, as was pro­mised to the Iewes in Babylon.

But what is this to the purpose? The Ie­wes were cōmāded of God by the Prophetes especiallie to tarry in Babylō, where thē for their syns they were captiues, because their owne Citie Ierusalē, ād all their coūtrie was destroyed ād subiecte to [Page 128] Nabuchadnezer and there remayned no other place where they might haue peace, but in Babylon and vnder his iu­risdiction. Is this then a sufficient excu­se for you that inioye your countrie and are charged with the defence ther­of, to suffer your selues willingly to be spoyled of Gods glory, and peace of your consciences, that is, true religion: and you for the same cause to be op­pressed, remoued and murthered, to ge­ue place not onely to them that hate you, but to the greatest enemies of Christ, the papistes, and idolatrous Spa­niards?

Wherfore the Iewes shulde be quiet in Babylon.The Iewes were willed to be quiete in Babylon, because that they and their brethren also disperced shuld therby finde more fauour and comforte: shall you therfore forsake God and betraye your countrie to bringe the vengean­ce of God ād his horrible plagues vpō your selues and your brethern, wherof you haue alreadie felt some portion? The Iewes were willed to praye for Nabuchadnezer and his sonne, for that by them they shulde passe ouer a great part of their captiuitie with peace, and [Page 129] be also by them defended from other enemies. Are you therfore excused, that permit your selues to be made a pray to Satan, Antichriste, and to all sortes of Gods enimies, at the commandement of an vngodlie woman? Who seeketh but to consume the Englishe nation, and in the end to cut your throtes that nowe are in auctoritie, whom she vseth as in­struments, to bring her wicked purpo­ses to passe.

Is your condition now all one with the Iewes?The mise­rable estat of Englād In dede brethren it is like to be muche worse, and that shortly with­out Gods vnspeakable mercy: but as yet their is some difference. They were ca­ptiues ād prisoners vnder their enimies, in a strange countrie, but you are yet in your owne countrie and howses (thogh moste vnnaturally you haue dryuen out many by tyranny). You haue yet your owne lawes amongest you, that is, the Lawe of God ād of your Realme, if you woulde vse them: by the which you ha­ue had all peace ād quietnes. And in cō temning these, ye see in to what case ye are broght, and in to what miserie, rea­die to fall. You may yet with Gods hel­pe, [Page 130] and your endeuor promote his glo­ry, vnderprop that Realme and comon welth, which by your falsehod is fallīg in to vtter ruine. The fall wherof, you ād yours chiefly, which haue greatest charge shall haue greateste cause to bewayle.

If your Iesabell, thoghe she be an vn­lawfull Gouernesse, and oght not by Gods word and your owne lawes to ru­le, would seke your peace and protectiō as did Nabuchadnezer to his captiues the Iewes: then might you haue some pretence to follow Ieremies counselle: that is,Nabuchadnezer is to be p [...]f [...]r­red to your Iesab [...]l in the z [...]ale of God Nabuchadn [...]zers de­cree. Daniel. 3. to be quiete, and praye for her lisse, if she would cōfesse the onelie God of the Christians, and not compell you to idolatrie no more then did Nabuchadnezer: who acknowledged the God of the Iewes to be the true and euerlasting God, and gaue the same commādement throughout all his dominiōs, That what soeuer people or nation spake euill of the God of Israell shuld be rent in pie­ces,Iesabel worshi [...]p [...]th Maozin ād caus [...]th o­thers to do the like. and his howse counted detestable. For (saith he) Ther is no other true God that so coulde deliuer his seruātes, as he did Sidrach Misach ad Abdenago.

But because her doīges tēd all to the contrarie, that is to blaspheme God, ād [Page 131] also compell all others to do the like, what cloke haue you here to permitte this wickednesse?

To be shorte, if she at the burninge of three hundreth Martyrs at the leste, coulde haue bene satisfied ād vnfayne­dly moued to confesse the true Christe and Messias, and repented her former rebellion in geuing contrarie comman­dement to all her dominions, charging thē to receaue agayne the true religion and to expell all blasphemous idolatrie of the pestilent papistes: and that none shulde speake any euill agaynst Christe and his Religiō (as did Nabuchadnezer by the exāple of three persōs onely, whō the fire by the power of God coulde not touche) then were she more to be borne with, and reuerenced as a Ruler (if it we­re lawfull for a woman to rule at all) then were there also some probabilitie in the reasons of the aduersaries of this doctrīe. Otherwise as you now see, it maketh nothing at all for their purpose.

Another Argumēt is gathered of the words written in the same Prophet Ieremie:The second obiection out of Ie­remie. 27. speaking of the dominion which God was purposed to geue vnto Nabu­chadnezer kīge of Babylō on this wise: [Page 132] I haue made the earthe ād mē (saithe the Lorde) ād the beastes vpō the earthe in my strēgth and stretched out hand, and it do I geue to him that pleaseth me. And therfore haue I geuē all this lande in to the hands of Nabuchadnezer my seruant. And all natiōs and mightie kinges shall serue him, and till the tyme of his lande do come, that is, till I visite him, and his countrie also. And it shall come to passe, that I will visite the na­tion or kingdome which will not serue the kinge of Babell with sworde, fami­ne, and pestilēce. Wherfore serue ye the kinge of Babell and lyue. Beholde, saye they, (who thinke it in no case lawfull to withstande vngodlie Rulers) This wicked kinge is cōstitute of God, and ma­de his seruante. And moreouer those that shulde withstand him, are cursed and threatned with sword, famine, and pestilence. And therfore to disobey su­che,Answere. Ieremie. 5. wherfore Tyrantes are called Gods in­strumentes. muste nedes be vnlawfull.

Nabuchadnezer as it is wrytten in Ie­remie, is called the maule of the Lorde, and his instrumēt of warre, by the which he was determyned to beate doune all Nations and kingdoms, punishing them [Page 133] for their synnes and idolatrie. And ther­fore the Lorde calleth him his seruāte, for that he had chosē him to that office. Nether oght we to maruell that God will vse the labours of vngodlye perso­nes, seing all being his creatures are at his commandement, as is Satan with all his infernall spirites. Then God, hauing appoynted Nabuchadnezer to this offi­ce to be his tormentor, as well in skour­ginge ād correcting his owne people, as in destroyinge his open enimies: it was requisite that God shuld minister vnto him sufficient power, for the accompli­shment of his determinat counselle, which the Lorde did in such abundance, as no Nation was able to resiste him, that shuld not perishe either with the sworde of Nabuchadnezer, or famine, either els in that the Lorde hī self would from heauen fight on his parte withe the plague of pestilence.

And of this what thing els gather we, but firste the purpose of Ieremie: that was to drawe the Iewes frō their follie, which after they had once forsaken the Lorde by rebellion, did thinke also by their policie to escape Gods appoynted [Page 134] punishmēt. No no, woulde Ieremie say: it is to late,The mea­ning of the Prophet. and ye are to weake to fight againste the Lorde whose worke this is. When ye were Lordes within your sel­ues, and had full libertie to honor your Lorde God, accordīge to the Lawes whiche he gaue vnto you, and whereby ye were assured to lyue without feare of all natiōs, you wolde not. And therfore sh­all you serue a strange kinge, strange lawes, and a strāge nation til you be wel corrected ād humbled: till you haue felt by experience what an inestimable cō ­fort it is to haue the liuinge Lorde to be your kinge ād gouernour. And therfor woulde Ierē. say, Serue Nabuchadnezer.

Seinge thē this is the appoynted pla­gue of God for disobeyinge him and his Lawes, to serue strange kinges, and to be captiues▪ you are hereby warned ād ta­ught, rather to turne with all spede to the liuinge Lorde, and to set vp his true rel­igiō againe, that he may defend you: thē in proceadinge in your blasphemye for the cōmandement and feare of any creature, to hasten Gods wrath and Iu­dgements. The Israelites because they woulde not receaue the oft admonitiōs [Page 135] of Gods P [...]ophetes to feare the Lord, co­oulde not afterwarde escape his plagues, nor the feare of men: no more shal you (ô inhabiters of Englāde) without spee­die repētance escape the Spaynishe pla­gue of adoulterous Philippe whom the Lorde will make his sworde and maul to beate downe your townes and Cities, ād to deuoure the people therof.Mans yo­ke is vn­supporta­ble. For seinge you haue with the Israelites forsakē the swete ād plesant yoke of God and Christe his Sonne: you shal indure the importable yoke of this cruell and beastly na­tion.

But what, shall we obey then say you? Yes verely: but against your wills in ca­ptiuite and thraldom, as did the Israeli­tes in Egypt and Babylon, to serue them with your bodyes and goodes. Seinge ye woulde departe with nothinge to serue our Maister and Sauiour Christ, thinke you to escape this by obeyinge your wicked Rulers? By what other means haue you fallen into the handes of your enemies, but by this kinde of obedience onely? Whiche as you haue harde sufficiently proued, is in Gods sight plaine di­sobedience and rebellion. But you [Page 136] will say: Ieremie willed the Iewes to ser­ue Nabuchadnezer which was a wicked Prince, and then with out the feare of God, and therfore are we bownd to ser­ue our Quene, thoghe she be an vngo­dly idolatres?what obe­dience and seruice Ie­remie re­quireth. Ieremie speaketh but of bodely seruice, and such as subiectes o­we to their superiours in Ciuile ordi­naunces, and outwarde doinges, and not to defile their consciences in com­mitting euill. For in suche thīges, both God and his Prophetes, and the exam­ples of all the godly do forbid all obe­diēce. They were made subiectes to the kinge of Babylon to serue him with their bodies and goodes, as were his o­wne people: and also to paye tribute to him as did strangers, which he had like­wise subdued. The which thing was for their punishment. And therfore of due­tie they must patientlie beare them.

Thē in fewe wordes I answere, that al­thoghe it be moste lawfull with patien­ce to beare the punishment of the Lor­de for our synne, and not to repine or rebell agaynst it: yet is it our parte ne­uerthelesse, and bownden duety, to de­fende and mayntayne the cause of God [Page 137] with all our might: and to whithstand all maner of aduersaries, euen to the losse of our goods and liues: being euer assu­red of this promesse of our Sauiour and Maister, That he that loseth his liffe for his sake, shall finde it:Mat. 19. and he that loseth father or mother, frindes or goodes in his cause, shall be rewarded an hundreth folde in this worlde, and in the worlde to come with liffe euerlasting.

It is not then wisedome to repine at the rodde when it is layde vpon vs to beate vs, but to returne backe to our mercifull Father with vnfayned repen­tance,Godes pla­gues oght to moue vs to repentance and not to harden vs in euill. calling for mercy before hande whiles he doth but menace vs. And ther­fore the threatning or counselle of Ie­remie, is but an admonition for vs to o­beye God in true religion whan we ha­ue tyme: that therby we may escape the like plagues: ād no defēce at all for our vngodlie behauiour in yelding to the deuilishe decrees of anie vngodly Ma­gistrates, what names or titles soeuer they beare. For this answere of the A­postles must euer more preuaile: God must be obeyed rather then man. And there is no obedience in euil that can [Page 138] please the almightie.

Laste of all we haue to consider the sainge and doinge of the worthie serua­nte of God the kinge and Prophet Da­uid,The thirde obiection. 1. Sā. 24 and .49. who woulde not lift vp his hand a­gainste kinge Saule, notwithstanding he sought to haue murthered Dauid, saīge: God forbid that I shoulde touche the a­noynted of the Lorde: and why? Because he is the anoynted of the Lorde. If it be not lawfull thē to touche the kinge be­cause he is the Lordes anoynted: it is li­kewise vnlawfull to disobey or resiste, for that he is the Lords anoynted.

AnswereTo whiche I answere, that to consider the bare wordes, it woulde seeme true as they say: but wayīge the cause, the mat­ter is easie to answere.The cause why Da­uid was hated of Saule. The occasion wh­erfore Saul, hated Dauid, was for that he knewe he should succeade him in his kingdome. As Saule him selfe doth con­fesse in the same Chapter, saynge: I kn­owe of a suertie that thou shalt reigne, and that the kingdom of Israell shal be establisshed in thy hande.1. Sa. 24 Swere to me therfore by the Lorde, that thou wilte not cut of my seed after me, nor destroye my name frome my fathers howse. This [Page 139] beinge thē Dauids owne priuate cause,None oght to reuenge his owne priuate cause. it was not lawfull for him in that case to seke his owne reuengemēt: especially in murtheringe violently his anoynted ki­nge, and the anoynted of the Lorde. For it is not written of Saule, that he was an idolatrer or constrayned his people to worshippe strange Godes, nor yet was a­boute to sel thē to the enemies of God the Philistines, against whom he foghte manfully and many tymes. Nether that he was an open oppressor and cōtemner of the Lawes of God, as are this day all the rulers in miserable England. And therfore Dauid beinge but a priuate man, coulde haue done no violence to his kinge without Godes especial inspi­ratiō,Rulers cō ­temninge Gods lawes are as well subiect to the punishement of the same as priuat persōs. except in reuēginge his priuat cause he had vsurped Gods office and soght to haue established him self in his king­dome, not taryīge the Lords appoītmēt.

But where as the kinges or Ru­lers are become altogether blasphemers of God, and oppressors and murtherers of their subiectes, then oght they to be accōpted no more for kinges or lawfull Magistrats, but as priuate mē: and to be examined, accused, condemned and pu­nished by the Lawe of God, wherunto [Page 140] they are and oght to be subiect, and being conuicted and punished by that Lawe, it is not mās, but Gods doing: who as he dothe appoynte such Magistrates ouer his people by his Lawe, so doth he condemne aswel them as the people trāsgressing agaynste the Lawe. For with God ther is no respecte of persones, as here after folowith more largely.

Thus we see that althoghe Dauid thoght it not lawful in his priuate cause to touche Gods anoynted, yet are no people or nation therby cōstrayned ei­ther ot obeye their anoynted in vnlaw­ful demandes, or els forbidden to with­stand the open transgression of Gods Lawes and mans. For in that case Saules seruauntes would not obeye him,1. Sam. 22 com­mandinge them to murther Ahimelech and the rest of the Leuites ād Priestes:Deu. 17. so that not to withstand such rages of Princes in tyme according as the Lawe re­quireth (which commandeth that the euill be taken forth from amōgest you) is to geue them the bridle to all kynde of mischiffe, to subuerte all Lawes of God and man, to let will rule for reason, and therby to inflame Gods wrathe [Page 141] agaynst you, wholy, as your selues in Englande are this day an example to all natiōs and people that beare the Name of Christe.

These are the obiections for the moste parte, or at the least the chiefest,The obie­ctions do cleare this doctrine and noth­inge dar­ken it. whi­ch are comonly alleadged agaynst this veritie moste playne and euidente: that is that there is no obedience to be a­lowed agaynst God, which is not in his sight disobedience. Also that it is law­full for all men according to their vo­catiō to resiste to the vttermost of their power all such as are open enimies of God, and labour to make them slaues to Satan. These obiections as you playnly see, make nothing to the cōtrarie: but if they shall be depely considered, do ra­ther strongly confirme the same. Ther­fore deare brethern, let no man feare to shewe him self Gods seruante openly, and to forsake in tyme the shamefull bōdage of Satan, to call back the trueth of Gods worde agayne, wherby ye were once in freedome both of consciēce and bodie: and vtterly to abolishe all vile papistrie the doctrine of deuils, and onely cause of all your calamitie, [Page 142] both of bodie and soule.

CHAP. XI.

It apperteyneth not onely to the Magistrates and al oth [...]r inferior officers to see that their Princes be subiect to Gods Lawes, but to the comon people also: wherby the tyrannie of the Princes and re­bellion of the subiects may be auoyded.

TO resiste euill and to mayntayne goodnesse, to honor God truely and to expel idolatrie, euery man will confesse to be a good and godly acte, ād cannot but highlie commende the wor­kers therof, as men acceptable to God, and worthie members of a comon wel­the: but when men cōsider the daungers and displeasures, which commonly hap­pen to such, then is there great curtesie made who first shall take the enterprise in hand: and longe disputations made whither it be their duetie or no: and to what sortes of men it doth belong, as thogh any were exempted out of that nomber which do professe the Name of God. If the superior power be an idola­t [...]er or a cruel tyrant suppressing true religion and murthering the Sainctes of [Page 143] God (as Iesabel of England doth with all her rable of papistical Bishopps, and shauelinges) who is so ignorant of God, or destitute of all humanitie or natural iudgment, that wil not aknowledge such a one to be vnworthie the societie of the godly and honest: muche lesse to haue the auctoritie and rule ouer great nations and whole kingdoms?

And not with out cause. For by the Ciuile Lawes, a foole or idiot borne, and so proued, shall lose his landes and inhe­ritance wherunto he is borne, because he is not able to vse them a right: but especially oght in no case to be suffered to haue the regiment of a whole nation or kingdome. And it is moste certeyne that there is no such euil can come to a­ny comon welth by fooles and idiots, as dothe by the rage and furie of vngodly Rulers, maynteyners of idolatrie ād ty­rannie. For follie hath comonly ioyned with it simplicitie,The gou­uernemēt of fooles more tolerable then of tyrants. voyde of malice and easie to be ordered: but idolatrie and tyrānie resēbleth more the nature of wilde beastes, cruell beares, ād ragīg lyōs, thē the cōdicion of mā. For simplicitie, they are replenished with craftines▪ for loue, [Page 144] they shew malice: and for patience, fu­rious rage ād madnesse and beinge bor­ne as it were a comō plague to all men, cannot once studie for the preseruation of a fewe.

This besides reason, experience tea­cheth all men to be moste true, that it were better to haue anie foole, thē such an vntamed beaste to be ouer thē. And that suche being altogether with out God, oght to haue no auctoritie ouer the people of God, who by his worde requireth the contrarie as is moste mani­feste. And yet to punishe, and depose such a one according to the commande­mēt of God,Deu. 17. there is none that thinketh it Lawfull: or at the least will confesse it to appertayne vnto them, either to do it them selues, or to see it done by others. As for the wicked counsellers, they are playne Gnatos and flatterers,Suche as onelye flatter the apptites of their prince. thinking their office to be applyed vnto their kī ­ges and Quenes will, as thogh they had no charge of the whole Realme. And therfore will labour to cōpasse nothīge but that which their Princes lust after, or may at the least please them, not pas­sing if the whole Realme do perishe, so [Page 145] they maye obtayne their fauours. Su­che, Achitophels deserue to haue Achi­tophels rewarde, for their deuilishe coū ­selle with out mercie. And as it is with them, so is it with the reste of all estates, as before hath bene touched. Neuerthe­lesse, the matter is so euident vpon their partes, that all will cōfesse that it chief­ly belōgeth to inferior Magistrats to see a redresse in such disordres: and they thē selues can not well deny it.

But as touching the comon and sym­ple people, they thinke them selues vt­terly discharged, whither their Prince be godlie or vngodlye, wise or foolishe,The vaine excuse of the cōmū people. a preseruer of the comon welthe or ells a distroyer, all is one to them, they mu­ste be obedient, because they are igno­rant, and muste be led them selues, not meete to leade others. And because their doinges are counted tumultes and re­bellion (except they be agreable to the commandmentes, decrees, and procea­dinges of their superior powers and Magistrates, and shal in doing the contrary be as rebells punished) therfore of all o­thers (say they) we haue least to do, yea nothing at all withe the doinges of our [Page 146] Rulers. Yf they rule well, we shall fare the better: if they be vngodly they ha­ue the more to answere for their vngod­lynesse. What haue we to do with their matters? Thus do all sortes of men from the highest to the louest slyppe their heades out of the coller: and as careles persones not passing which end goeth forwarde, geueth the brydle wholie to their Rulers till destruction remediles ouerflowe all.

To the intent therfore that this sim­plicitie, ignorāce, and subiection of the inferior people, do not altogether blyn­de them, and cause them (as hitherto it hath bene proued almost in all places and countries) to suffer them selues like brute beastes rather then reasonable creatures, to be led and drawen where so euer their Princes commandementes haue called: either to arme them selues agaynst Christ their Sauiour in ouerthrowing the truthe of his Gospel to bringe in Antichriste and papistrie: or els to fy­ght agaynst their owne brethern the seruātes of God, to robbe them, expel them out of their one howses, possessions and countrie, to torment them and cruelly [Page 147] put them to death: as thoghe the cōmandement of the Prince coulde make that lawfull, which God forbiddeth as dete­stable:Ignorance can not excuse the people. as thoghe they being made in­struments to their Princes in executing vngodly tyrannie, shulde not be parta­kers likewise with thē of Gods vengeāce in the daye of his dreadfull visitatiō, whē nether their ignorāce can excuse, them, nether cōmandement of kinge or Prin­ce defende thē, but they workinge wic­kednesse with their Rulers shall drinke of the same cup with them also.

To the intent (I saie) that they shul­de be no more so blynded, nor runne headlonge (as they do) to their owne de­struction: I haue thoght good moreouer and besides that which hitherto hathe bene spoken in general (wherof not­withstanding they might also gather what belongeth to them in their condi­cion and estate) to snewe vnto them mo­re especially what may be demanded of comon people by Gods worde, and what the people also may lawfully deny to do by the same worde of God. Which as it oght to be permitted and preached to all men in general: so [Page 148] shulde it be the comon and onely rule wherby to frame and ordre all mens liues and doinges.

And to auoyde all incomodities that are accustomed to happen in all co­mon welthes,Two extremities to be auoy­ded. To muche libertie is not to be permitted to the peo­ple. as wel vpon the Magistrats parte as of the people, there are two ex­tremities: wherof bothe muste be war­ned. The first is, that the Magistrates permit not to their subiectes ouermuche libertie, least therby they fall in to con­tempte and subiection of their people: wherof folowethe for the moste parte, all kynde of dissolutnesse, ād carnall li­bertie, subuertiō of all good Lawes and ordres, alteracion of common welthes and policies, contempt of God and man: and to be shorte, all thinges turned to disorder and confusion. The seconde apparteyneth on the other parte, to the people,The liber­tie of the people. which oght not to suffer all power and libertie to be taken from them, and therby to become brute bea­stes, with out iudgmente and reason, thinking all thinges lawfull, which their Rulers do with out exceptiō, com­māde them, be they neuer so farre from reason or godlynesse: as thoghe they [Page 149] were not reasonable creatures, but bru­te beastes: as thoghe there were no dif­ference betwixt bonde slaues, and free subiectes: and as thoghe they had no portiō or right at all in the coūtrie whe­re they inhabite: but as they were alto­gether created of God to serue their kinges and gouernors like slaues, and not their kings & gouernors appoynted of God to preserue his people, wher of they are but a portion and members, albeit they occupie the cheif roume ād office, not to bringe the rest of the members in cōtempte and bondage, but to comfor­te them, defende them, and norishe them as members of the same bodie.

And as the people may be assured by Gods worde that this libertie appartey­neth to them, which becommeth mem­bers of one bodie and brethern,Deu. 17. Subiectes oght not to suffer thē selues to be made slaues. because the Lorde God him self (from whom kinges haue their auctoritie and power) calleth their subiectes and people their brethern, charging them in no case to lift them selues aboue them, but as bret­hern to rule in all humblenesse and loue ouer them: euenso, the people, if they suffer this right to be taken from them, [Page 150] which God of his singuler fauour hath graunted then are they an occasiō that their kīges and Rulers are turned to ty­rantes,1 Sam 8 and cruel oppressors, according as Samuel promised the people of Israel shulde come vpon them, insomuche as they had refused his gouernement, who ruled ouer them, in all iustice, and hum­blenesse, and in such sorte as no man coulde charge him with any crime. And therfore the Scriptures pronounce that they reiected not Samuel, but God him self ī whose feare he ruled. This (saith Samuel) shal be the Lawe of the kīge, whi­ch shall rule ouer you. Your childrē shall he take to serue in his chariot, and to be his horse men,The descrip [...]ion of a wicked kinge and tyrante. and they shall runne be­fore his chariot, and he shall constitute also Captayns of a thousand, and of fiue hundreth, and others to till his gro­wnde, and to gather his harueste, to ma­ke weapons for warre, and harnesse for his chariots. Moreouer, he shall take your daughters to make his anoynt­mēts, to serue his kitchin, and to be his clothiers: besides this he shall take your fyeldes and your vineyardes, your be­ste orchardes of oliues and geue to his seruaunts, and of your corne and vines [Page 151] shall he take the tenthes, and geue them to his Eunuches, and seruauntes: your seruauntes also and maydes and the chif of your youthe and your asses, shall he take to do his worke. And of your cattell shall he take the tenth, and you shall become his seruauntes: and you shall crye out that day in the sight of your kinge whom you haue chosen, and the Lorde God will not heare you that day: and why? Bycause they had rather haue a kinge and Ruler of their owne appoyntment, then of the Lordes.

Wherfore to auoyde the daungers vpon both partes,Both Magistrates and cōmōs oght to o­bey Gods Lawes. it is more then neces­sarie that bothe be subiecte to that Ru­le, and with all diligent care, labour to reteyne it, wherby both maye learne their duetie, and be constrayned iustly to execute the same. For when the co­mon people and subiectes haue so lar­ge libertie by the negligence of their Rulers, that customes and vnlawful v­sages shall be preferred to Gods Lawes, and statutes, and that to maynteyne the same customes, they care nothing if all other good Lawes, either of God or man, do perishe: how is it possible [Page 152] without daungerous tumultes, and rebellion, to brynge them to any good ordre and reformation, except there be some comon, and approued Lawe, which verie nature, and the feare of God will teach them to reuerence, and obeye? As for example: amongs other customes which mayntayne idlenes, and serue the gree­dy appetite of the bellie (which all men are loth to forgo) how harde a thinge were it to bryng them frome their San­ctes dayes?kinge Ed­warde de sierous that God shuld ha­ue had his due honour sowght the abolishment of all Sainctes dayes. The abolishment wherof, godly king Edwarde in his tyme coulde not bryng to passe. So great was the nomber of Papistes in the Perlament house, which maīteyned those superstitiouse dayes, some bearīg the name of mē, ād so­me of womē, ascrybīg that to the creatures of God, which apperteyneth to him alone, for as muche as euery day is the Lordes worke, and oght to serue to his honour onely. They haue nowe in tyme of papistrie, dayes of Peter and Paule, Marie,All dayes are the Lordes ād onelye appertayne vnto him and Iohn, withe the reste of the Apostles: they haue Georges daye, and katherines, Dunstans day the coniu­rer, and Loye the smithe, with innume­rable others, which maynteyne the idle­nesse [Page 153] of them and of their seruaunts contrarie to the ordinaunce of God,Sainctes days with the seruice appointed vnto them oght by Gods wo­rde to be abolished. ap­poynting six dayes for their trauell, and the seuenth daye onely to reste, and that to the honoring of our Lorde God.

Also by what means may the peo­ple be drawen from the dayes of riote and bancketing, which they terme frin­dly feasting and goodfelloweshipp: as from Whitsontides dronkennes and sur­fet, Midsōmers shewes and vanities,How har­de a thing it is to al­ter euil customes. Christmas riote and bawdry, Shrofte­twesdayes glottony, and Lents supersti­tious obseruations, excepte by some Lawe of greater importance, the rude people be otherwise perswaded? And what other Lawes are there able to bringe this to passe besides the Lawes of God? Wherin if they be not instructed, it is impossible for any auctoritie or pow­er to withholde them, with out great daunger and tumultes from such kin­de of disordres and vnlawfull custo­mes.

Therfore if thou be a Ruler and co­uete to haue the people obedient to thee in Gods feare,The mea­ns to bre­ake euil custome. this muste be thy first and principall studie to, procure [Page 154] that they may truely know God by the playne and diligent preaching of his worde, wherī if they be well instructed, there is no custome so longe continued, no idlenesse so longe vsed, no super­sticion so deeply rooted, which they will not gladly and peaceably for go at thy commandement: yea, there is nothing which is euill, that they can for shame stande in: nor any good and law­full demande, that they will deny thee. By these means onely shalt thou ob­tayne honour, maintayne thy right, wi­nne the hartes of thy people, and haue them all obedient.

And as the Magistrates by this me­ans, are sure to finde obedience, and es­cape all rebellion, tumultes and disor­dres amonges their subiectes: euenso is there no other rule for the subiectes to escape the idolatrie, tyrannie, and op­pression of their superiors, then in re­teyning (as their chief possession) the self same Lawe and worde of God. Per­mitting rather all thinges wordlie to be taken from them, as landes, goodes, house, cōtrie, father, mother, wiffe, children, yea liffe it self, then to be depri­ued [Page 155] by any means of that heauenly treasure and precious perle,Mat. 13. for the which they must sell althinges. Wherof to be fullie perswaded, it is necessary to vn­derstande what maner of people you are.

Yf you be the people of God, and vn­fayned Christians, then muste ye also knowe that the Lawe of God,what treasures God hath com­mitted to the charge of his people. and Christe your Sauiour, doth appertayne vnto you: wherin, as without shame ād condemnation ye may not be ignorāt: euenso no power, commandment, or threatninges, shulde cause you to de­parte from it, wherin onely standethe that comforte and saluation, which no creature can restore agayne vnto you.

The heathen which knewe not God a right, but were idolatrers, yet made their religiō to haue the highest place in their comon welthes: as Aristotle wri­teth in his Politiques. In the name whe­rof they might demande any thinge of their kinges and Rulers, and they durst not denye them: and might also with out offence deny all thinges whi­ch their Rulers demaunded contrarie to their religion. In so muche as this [Page 156] prouerbe was comon amongest all, Vs­que ad Aras: meaning that agaynst their religion (as they were perswaded) they were bownde to no persone: father, mo­ther, frende, or gouernour: their loue ād obedience towardes thē coulde stretch no further then to the Altars, that is, so farre as with obseruing their reli­gion, they might lawfullye performe.

Yf the Gentills then had their reli­gion in such honour and reuerence that agaynst it (thoghe in dede it was meere superstition and idolatrie) they woulde acknowledge no obedience: in what e­stimation shulde Gods worde and the religion of our Sauiour Iesus Christe be amongest vs that professe his Name, and are assured of his doctrine to be the vndouted trueth and power of God to saluacion of all beleuers?In what reuerence we oght to haue Gods worde. Yf the hea­then kinges and Magistrates coulde cō ­pell their subiectes no farther then the Alters: shall any auctoritie or power compell vs farther then God, and his a­noynted our chief kinge, Lorde ād Mai­ster? Let it be counted shame to vs, that the ignorant Gentils shuld be founde more carefull and zelous in defending [Page 157] their superstition and manifeste idola­trie, then we are in mayntayning the true worship of God and his heauenly wisedome.

Yf we were Turkes, Sarasins, Iewes or papistes, which either knewe not God a right, or els denied his Sonne Iesus: it were no great maruell if we were led after the lustes of our vngodly Princes. For as our Maister teacheth, When the blynde leadeth the blynde,Mat. 15. bothe fall in to the diche. But if we will be taken for the people of God and his sonnes by adoption in Christ Iesus, then it beho­ueth vs likewise to geue obediēce, prin­cipally to our Lorde and Maister, to our mightie God and moste louinge Father, as Malachi the Prophet exhorteth.Mala. 1. The sonne reuerenceth the father, and the seruaūt the maister: yf I be your Father (saith the Lorde) where is the honor that you geue me? Yf I be your Lorde and Maister where is my feare? Notinge vnto vs how it is in vayne to call him Father or Lorde, so long as we geue him not that honour and reuerence which he demandeth.

Also, if we will not be taken for [Page 158] blynde and ignorante persones, then must we shewe forth this light by wal­king as becomethe the childrē of light,Ephe. 5. Iohn. 12. as the Apostle requirethe indifferently of all Gods children with out exceptiō, or excuse either of guide or Ruler. For the blyndnesse of our guide, whither he be of the Cleargie or Laytie may be no excuse to vs, if in folowing him we fall and perishe: it is our owne faute, and we must beare our owne iudgment. For Christe hereof admonisheth vs:Mat 15. Let thē a lone (saithe he) for they are blind gui­des, and leaders of the blynd. And agayne,Mat. 23. accordinge to their workes, see ye do not.

Yf thou hauynge sight, had appoyn­ted to thee a blynde guide, wouldeste thou folowe him into a daungerouse pit or deepe water, wherin both might pe­rishe because he was thy guide? Then truely mightest thou be iudged of all men worse then either oxe or asse, or a­ny other vnreasonable beaste, whiche will not be driuē in such places, as to th­eir outwarde sēses appeare daūgerous.

Nature onely teacheth all creatures this, to flie frome those daungers that [Page 159] shulde hurte them: and to desier all thi­nges that do them good.Nature teacheth to flee hurtful thinges And when God hath made this comon to all beastes, ād inferior creatures, paynefully to seeke their preseruation: hathe he denied the same to man, whome aboue all others he will haue preserued?God hath created all thinges for mans commodite For whose preser­uation chieflie he hath not onely crea­ted all thīges and prescribed his Lawes and commandements to prohibet mur­ther, and euery other thinge tendinge to his destruction: but also to shewe the abundance of his mercies, spared not his dearelye belouid Sonne, but gaue him to the cruell death of the Crosse, that man might haue full saluation, not onely here in this world, but euerlastin­gly in the worlde to come.

Wherfore, if he tender vs so muche, as to seeke by all meās possible our liffe and preseruation, then must it likewise followe, that he hath constitute no la­wes, or ordinances to our destruction, so longe as we shall be founde obedient vnto them. Then is there no power that ruleth accordinge to these lawes, which either can or will cōmande vs anie thī ­ge, tēdinge to our destructiō. But if anie [Page 160] so do by Gods permission because of our synnes,Tobi. 3. Esai. 3. ād rebellion towardes him (for which cause onelie he suffreth wi­cked Princes to be our Gouernours) it is (deare brethren) to drawe vs to repen­taunce, and knowledge of our synnes, and not that we shulde forsake the Lawes of our God, and to contynew in our wonted rebellion, by yelding to the vngodlie commandments of wi­cked men.

CHAP. XII.

¶How muche the comon people owe to God for his benefits receaued, what obedience he require­the, how farre they are charged, what thinges they haue promised, and how ignoraunce maye not excuse them.

ALL these thinges being well considered, it is an easie matter for all ma­ner of subiectes to knowe what libertie belongeth vnto them, by the worde of God, whiche they maye law­fullie clayme, as their owne possessiō, and are likewise bounde at all tymes to practise: wherin also appeareth what thinges are prohibited vnto them, whi­che [Page 161] they maye in no case exercise. Yf you therfore be Gods subiectes and people, and he your Lorde God and lo­uinge Father, who is aboue all powers ād Princes, ād hath made no Lawes, but such as are for your preseruation, and singuler comforte: then without all controuersie there maye be nothinge lawfull for you by anie commandment of man, whiche your Lorde God in anie case forbiddeth: and nothinge vnlawfull or forbidden to you whiche he com­mandeth, whither it appartayne to the firste Table or the Seconde.A rule for all to obserue. Which rule if ye obserue, you maye be assured to please God: like as by doinge the con­trarie, ye shall purchase his heauie wra­the and indignation. For no mā can ser­ue two Maisters at once: but he shall ha­te the one, ād loue the other.Mat. 6. And in ha­tinge your firste and chief Lorde to o­beye and please man, beholde your im­pietie is intolerable, prefarringe vile mā his creature, to the Almightie God and creator of all.

How muche we are bownde to his Ma­iestie, our owne conscience doth beare vs witnesse: whiche can not deny but [Page 162] that we haue receauid of him alone our liffe mouing and being, our wisedome strēgthe, bewtie, riches, childrē, ād all thī ges that are good ād profitable, in whose power we may do all thīges,Ps. 1.7.17 ād with out hī all fleshe is turned to dust ād powder.

Moyses charged hys with no­thinge that God had not commanded.Remember the example of the wor­thie Captayne and Prince Moyses, whō God chose to delyuer his people from Egypt, who woulde not charge thē with anie thinge at any tyme whiche the Lorde his God had not commanded, euer­more speakinge on this wise, These are the statutes and preceptes of the Lorde: Thus sayth the Lorde:Exod. 19. Deu. 4.20 and, Heare ô Israel the voyce of the Lord, &c. In so muche, as he had this for his onlie shil­de agaynste the murmuring people: It is not agaynst Aaron and me that ye mur­mure but against the Lorde: which beīg chosen and appoynted of the Lorde, did onely execute his will and commande­mentes. Yea, as for them selues they cō ­fessed that they were nothinge. As for vs (sayde Moyses) what are we? meaninge but earth ād asshes, the creaturs of God, nothinge differinge from others, sauing for that auctoritie, wherunto they were [Page 163] called, ād the obediēce which they shewed in executīge not their owne willes, but the will and pleasure of God.Deut. 10 And why? but because they knew they were the people of God with whō they were charged, and beinge his people,Godes peo­ple must be gouer­ned onely by Gods Lawes. Exod. 19. how it behoueth them to be ruled by no other Lawes and ordinances, then by such as God had geuen them.

Wherfore if Moyses and Aaron, Gods electe and chosen seruants had no more power ouer the people then his expresse comandement permit, and that the people so far and no farther were bownd to obeye them: how can we assure our sel­ues that we offende not Gods Maiestie, whose people we woulde be called, whē witheout his worde, yea cōtrary to his expresse cōmandemēt we satisfie the re­questes and statutes of vngodly rulers?

For as Moyses coulde cōmande nothī ­ge but frō the mouthe of the Lorde: so coulde the people obey nothing but that whiche proceaded from his mou­the also: aswell because they were his people, as for that they had (opromised with one voyce and consent before God ād Moyses, whē the Lorde commanded [Page 164] him to say on this wise to the people. You haue seene what I haue done to the Egyptians, and how I haue caried you vpon the winges of Egels, and led you forthe to me. Yf therfore ye will diligēt­lye heare my voice, and obserue my cō ­mandement, you shalbe my propre peo­ple before all nations: For myne is the earthe. And you shalbe vnto me a kyn­gely Priesthod, and an holy people. Whiche wordes when Moses had prono­unced before the whole people, they all to gether with one accord,The people promiss to God and Moses. āswered: Wh­atsoeuer the Lorde shall speake, that will we do. And Moyses praised them (or God rather by moyses) sainge, They did well in so answering.Deu. 18. And therfore promised to rayse them vp a Prophet li­ke to him, &c. And this was the coue­nant onlye that God made with them before he gaue them the Lawe in wry­tinge, and the promes that they made to obserue the same Lawe, that they might therby be his deare and chosen people.

This example ought neuer to de­parte from the eyes of all such as are, or woulde be Gods people. Wherin as [Page 165] in a most clere glasse it dothe appeare how they are bownd to God, what God requireth of them, and what they haue promised to him. For as the Lor­de God required nothinge of the Israe­lits, but that whiche was their duetie to do, and he by his exceadinge benefits in delyueringe them from their eni­mies had well deserued: euen so he byn­deth thē to nothinge, but to obeye him. Nether did they promisse anie farther, saynge: We will do all thinges (not what Moyses or Aaron or anie other after them shall of them selues commande) but whatsoeuer our Lorde God shall speake, that will we do. More then this God required not, nether were they bownde any farther but to the Lawes of God onely, whiche they promised for them and their posteritie to obser­ue.All christians are no lesse bonde to ob [...]y God and his Law­es, then were the Israelits. And God for that cause blessed them aboue all nations, with his vnspeakable benefits.

So are we no lesse bownde to obeye the self same God of Israel, whom we also professe in Christe Iesu our Moyses and Captayne, by whom we are not o­nely delyuered from bodely seruitude, [Page 166] but from the moste vile and dangerous bondage of Satan through synne our spirituall enemie. To this worthiest de­lyuerer also haue we in Baptisme pro­mised no lese, yea, muche more obe­dience: because of the more abundan­ce of graces, which by him we haue re­ceaued. And besides this are moste stra­ightly charged so to do. Not by the voyce of anie earthly creature, but by the mouth of God the Father speakinge frō the heauens: This is my dearely belo­ued Sonne,Mat. 4.17 in whom I am delited, heare him: whose fidelitie also no lesse passed the faithfullnesse of Moyses, then did his honor and dignitie being the Sonne of God, and promysed Sauiour, doing nothing at all, nor teaching any thing which his heuenly Father had not ap­poynted him to do and to teache.

Wherfore, as the Iewes had the Lawe of God and his commandementes for a sufficient discharge agaynst all contra­rie commandementes, of what auctori­tie so euer they were, being no farther bownde to any creature thē the self sa­me Lawes of God approued: euenso, all such as beare the Name of Christ and woulde be taken for the people of God, [Page 167] thoghe they be of the basest ād loweste state of subiectes,The cōmā dement of Princes cā not bynd vs contra­ry to Gods worde. are no farther bownd to any Prince or superior power, nor to their commandementes, then the cō ­mandement of the chief kinge ād Lorde doth approue ād permitte, nor then their promesse agayne to him doth require.

Nether may it be a sufficiēt dischar­ge for thee to alleadge ignorāce, because thou art a subiecte, and therfore hast nothing to do, to inquire of the doinges or to examyne the commandementes of thy superiors or Rulers,The vngodly opinion of the cōmō people. but wilt say wi­th the multitude, If they commāde well thou art obedient, if otherwise thou art excused in doing as thou art cōmanded, and they onely haue to answer to God by whō thou art thus charged. Descea­ue not thy self (deare brother) For aswell art thou charged by Gods worde to knowe what they commande thee, and not to do it except it be lawfull,As wel the obeyer of wickednes as the commāder shal be pu­nished. as they are charged by their office to will nothīg of thee, which Gods worde approueth not. For as they in commanding ād doing e­uill, shall not escape Gods heauy wra­the and iudgmētes: no more shalt thou, being made an instrument of [Page 168] their impietie and vngodlynesse. Ther­fore to be ignorant in these thinges, al­thogh thou be a subiecte, is to contem­ne the commandement of God, and to neglecte thine owne saluation: for as muche as God hath charged thee bein­ge one of his people, with the same Lawes (the Ceremonies except) wherwithe he charged his people Israel before, and willith thee no lesse to knowe his pre­ceptes, and to obeye them, then he wil­led the Isralites.Deu. 6.11 Of them he required to haue his Lawes wrytē vpon their do­res and postes, to instructe their chil­dren in the same, to talke of them sit­ting at home, and when they walked in the waye, when they went to bed, and whē they shuld rise.why the Christiās oght greater obedi­ence to Gods worde thē did the Iewes. Ioh 1. But to thee besides all this, God hath sent a more shining light, our Sauiour Iesus Christe: which euery man may clerely beholde, exce­pte he be wilfully blynde with the stub­berne Iewes. He is the light that shine­the in darknesse, and lightneth euery man that commeth in to this worlde. He hathe taken away the shaddoues ād Ceremōies of the Lawe, that thou mayst clerely beholde the will of his Father. [Page 169] He hath vncouered Moyses face,Exod 34. 2. Cor. 3. to the-intent thou mayst fully consider the se­crets of God. For these are the dayes wherof the Prophet Ioel spake,Io [...]l. 2. Esai▪ 44. Act. 2. when all shulde be Prophets, and see visiōs. And it shal come to passe in the latter dayes (saith God) that I wil powre furth my Spirite vpō all fleshe, ād your sonnes ād daughters shall prophecie, your younge men shall see visions, and your auntients shall dreame dreames. And moreouer v­pon my seruauntes and handemaydes in those dayes, will I powre my Spirite, and they shall prophecie.Act. 2. Which pro­phecie. S. Peter affirmeth to be fulfilled in the kingdome of Christe, where all thinges are as playne and euident to all sortes of men and women, which profes­se Christe vnfaynedly, as before his ty­me they were to the Prophets them sel­ues, or to such as God appeared vnto in dreames or visions.

And therfore, if ignorance of Gods Lawes coulde not excuse the Iewes before Christes commyng, which were con­tynualy subiecte to the punishment of God for their transgressions (thoghe many thinges were obscure as in shadowes [Page 170] and figures: how muche lesse cā it excu­se any mā now in so great lyght of the Gospel? Seing then thou knowest thy self bownd to obeye thy Lorde God a­boue all others, because of the inestimable benefits thou hast receaued of him in Christe Iesus, and because he requi­reth the same of thee, and thou hast also promised no lesse to him in thy baptis­me and profession: and last of all in that thou canest not pretende ignorance in such knowledge▪ and shyninge bright­nesse, nor yet escape Gods vengeance, which he with out respecte of persones wil powre indifferently vpon all trans­gressors, be they superior powers, or inferior subiectes. It is thy parte then, beīg a subiecte, to learne this lesson of the Apostles (whē so euer thou shuldest be constrayned,Both hie ād lowe must learn this lesson of the Apostels. by commandement or force of tyrantes to do euill) That God must be obeyed before man. Which vn­to thee will be as sufficiēt a defence and buckler in all assaultes and daungers, as it is to all other sortes of men in aucto­ritie and office: as was before declared.

Art thow then, being a subiecte com­maūded to worshipp stockes and stones [Page 171] which this day to our shame are ere­cted agayne in Englande?Idols for the true God. Beholde thou hast Gods commandement for thy de­fence: Thou shalt commit no idolatrie, nor make to thy self any grauen image &c.Exod. 2 [...]. Deu. 5. Art thou charged to be at the idola­trous Masse, wherin Christe thy Lorde is blasphemed? Beholde,The abo­minable masse for the holy Supper of the Lords. he hath geuen thee an other charge: that is, to celebra­te his Supper, according as he left in ex­ample, sayng: Do you this, that is, which ye se me do, ād not which the powers of the worlde, or the pestilēt papistes com­mande. Also do it (saith Christe) in re­membrance of me,Mat. 26 Cōparison betwixt the masse and the Lordes Supper. 1. Cor. 11 and not of your frin­des alyue or departed, as teache the Pa­pistes. For none of thē died for you. Mo­re ouer do it to shewe forth the deathe of Christe, til his coming, as witnesseth the Apostle: and not to make a new sa­crifice for synne, as the Papists blasphe­mously both teache and preache.How the Sabbath is abused. Art thou commanded by men to disho­nour the Sabbathe day in worship­ping of Sainctes and abstayning v­pon their dayes and euens from thy lawfull busines? Beholde, God thy Lorde chargeth thee no further then onely with his daye of reste, saying: [Page 172] See thou keepe holie the Sabbath of the Lorde thy God: and not of Peter, Paule, Marie,To swear by Saincts is contrarie to Gods worde. Deut. 6.10 Iosua. 23. Esai 45. Iames or Iohn. Art thou commā ­ded to sweare in the name of Marie and all the Saincts in heauen? (which is the papistical othe) Beholde, the Lorde sai­the, Thow shalt onely sweare in the Na­me of thy Lorde and God. Art thou commanded not onely to take the Name of the Lorde in vayne, but also to forswere thy self moste shamefully agaynst Gods glorious Maiestie, and the honor of our Sauiour Christe? (as all they haue done which lately haue sworne to acknow­ledge Antichriste the bloudy butcher of Rome to be their head and gouernour) Beholde, The Lorde will not suffer his house vnpunished that taketh his Na­me in vayne: muche lesse such periured and forsworen wretches. Art thou com­manded to persecute thy parentes and frendes, charged not to succour them in their necessitie, because they professe the doctrine of saluation? Art thow for­bidden lawfull mariage, because thou art a minister of Gods worde, and per­mitted to lyue in all kinde of filthie vn­clennesse, as do the Sodomiticall Prie­stes, [Page 173] Mōkes, Freers, Nōnes, Cardinales, Deanes, Archdeacons, and all other o­ther orders of Satan:Leu. 20. beholde such do­the the Lorde God as most abominable of all other, cōmāde to be put to death.

To be shorte, when they contra­rie to their othe and profession, com­mande thee to receue Antichriste, the beastlie Bishoppe of Rome, with all his filthie dregges of damnation:The sume of Antichrists doctrine to burne the worde of God and the faithfull in­terpreters and professers of the same: to forgo the comfortable preaching of the Gospel, and reading of the Scriptu­res: to persecute Christe in his mēbers: to ayde the enimies with thy goods and bodie agaynst the deare childrē of God: to fight in other countries with out any iuste cause or occasion, and to suffer thy wiffe, children, kinsfolkes and countryemen to be moste cruelly spoyled,Vnlawful warres. oppressed and murthered for want of thy defence at home (as they most shamfully haue done of late, which at the cō ­mandement of that cruell tyrāt,Oh lamē ­table mi­serie. prepa­red them selues to fight agaynst the Frēche kinge, and their owne brethern the Skottes, whiles the Spaniards put [Page 174] them selues in a redinesse to entre the Realme and make a generall spoyle and pray of all.

These thinges and many such li­ke are playnly forbidden you by the manifest worde of God: and therfore to do them for feare or pleasure of anie Prince or power, is playne disobedience and rebellion agaynst the Almightie. And contrarie wise, to answere in this case, and to do as the Apostles haue taught, that is, to obeye God rather then man, is the onely waye to dischar­ge your cōsciences, to do your dueties, and to please God: no more to be made by ignorance the instrumentes of his sworen enimies (what title so euer they beare) to subuerte Gods glorie, oppres­se your brethern, and distroye your countrie: but repenting your former i­gnorance and impietie, to be made in­strumentes of the contrarie to the vtter­most of your power, least you be taken in your synne, and preuented with the bitter cup of Gods indignatiō, alreadie prepared for the workers of iniquitie, and all such, as are ayeders, and parta­kers with them, when nether power can defend the superiors, nor their com­mandmentes, [Page 175] excuse the subiectes.

CHAP. XIII.

The redinesse of the people to defende idolatrie, su­perstition, and earthly commodities: and their slouthfulnesse in maynteyning the cōtrarie. How they are charged to see the Lawes of God kept, and the transgression of the same punished, if their rulers do neglecte them. And that they may law­fully punish their Magistrates as priuate persones transgressing the Lordes precepts.

BVt what remedie? (saye you) we being but subiectes with out power, ād wisedome cannot helpe it. The more pyttie dea­re Countriemen,Rebellion against the lawful gouernement of godly kinge Edwarde ād obedience to the vn­iuste vsur­pation of wicked Marie. that you haue so stoutly or rather stubber­nely shewed your willes and power in the dayes of Godly kynge Edwarde the VI. your late Prince and gouernour, and the zelous seruant of God: who so­ght to rule you in Gods feare, ād vnder whom you had the confortable worde of God, ād were deliuered from the Ro­mishe Antichrist, and from all super­stition, for the most parte, hauing your Realme free from strangers, and quiete from all enimies, enioying your goods and freinds in peace with out all force. [Page 176] imprisōning, reuilīg, banishing, or murthering) It is to be lamented (I saye) that then receauing all these blessin­ges of God, by the means of so worthie a Prince, ye were able to conspire, rise and rebell with the daunger of bodies, goods and soules, agaynst your godlie and lawfull kinge: and that chiefly to defende the deuilishe Masse, and all the puddels of poperie with the Caterpil­lers and rable of all vncleane spirites, as Cardinalls,Reu. 16. Bishopps, Priestes, Monkes, Freers, Nonnes &c. And now in these matters wherin consisteth the glorie of God, the preseruation of your owne liues, and defence of your countrie you are without all will, power and helpe.

To restore Antichrist agayne, whom ons God had banished to all your com­fortes,How fare mans iugdment differeth from Gods. you were not ashamed to terme it obedience, and to counte your selues therin no rebells, but lawfull resisters: but to defende Christe and his confor­table Gospell (which then you had in possession) that are you persuaded to be open rebellion. To arme your selues a­gaynst your superiors, to defend your [Page 177] cōmons and earthly commodities with holden from you, by the greedy desier of new vpstarte gentlemen, how wil­ling and redie haue you shewed your selues?Worldely cōmodities preferred to spiritu­al benefites But to holde and reteyne your spiritual possession not promised one­ly, but geuen in to your handes, you are moste slowe without all hope and cou­rage. Shall not this be to your iuste condemnation? When God calleth you to a rekening, what cā you haue to answere? Are ye any better then the Gergezites,Mat 9. which desiered Christe to departe from them because they loste their hogges and swyne? yea, ye are worse then they were by muche, because ye haue professed Christe ād receaued him and his do­ctrine, and with him vnspeakable bene­fytes and treasors. And yet notwithstan­ding haue not onely desiered him to de­parte from amongest you as they did: but layde violent handes vpon him, persecuting him with sword, banishmēt, fi­re, and cruell death, as thogh he had be­ne your mortal enimy. O ingratitude intolerable! Christe your mercifull Lorde (who destroyed nothinge of yours, but preserued and increased, euen your [Page 178] swine & hogges, & all other beastes ād cattell in great abūdance) you haue despiced and vtterly denied, to haue Anti­christe to be your Lorde ād gouernour, ād with hī all filthie swine, wilde beares, wolues, bores, tygers, and lyons to deuoure, destroye, ād ouerthrowe all thin­ges: not your fieldes ād pastures onely: but villages, Townes, Cities, and Ca­stels, yea your selues, your wyues, and children, and what so euer you counte moste precious.

Wel, the day of the Lorde will come, when you shal fele what it is to fight for your Masse, and to betraye the Gospell, to rise and rebell agaynste your lawfull Prīce, ād to obeye ād defende a bastar­de, and opē enimie to God, an vtter de­struction of the whole realme: to mur­ther and banishe your naturall coun­triemē ād louing brethern, to honor ād receaue strangers Gods expresse aduer­saries: a cruell people, a prowde nation: a people of a farre and of a strange lan­gage,Baruch. 4 Ieremi [...]. 5. Deut. 28. whose tōgue ye shall not vnderstā de, an impudēt natiō, ād hard harted people, with out all pitie and mercie, whi­ch nether will be moued with the lamē ­table voyce of the mothers, nor shewe [Page 179] anie compassion for the pittifull crye of their sucklinges and infantes. And whi? because ye haue chosē to obeye vi­le man, yea a raginge and mad [...] womā,A Godly and moste necessarie admonitiō rather then the almightie and mercifull God. Repent, repent, ô ye people of En­gland, for your destruction is at hande. Forsake with spede the vnlawfull obediēce of fleshe and bloude, ād learne to geue honor ī tyme to the liuīg Lorde, that he maye staye his hāde, ād drawe to him agayne his stretched out arme, that you may fynde mercie, and that the bothom of your cupp be not turned vpwarde.

Alas saye you, what is this we heare? Be not the people, of them selues as she epe without a pastor?The vaine excuses of the people. If the Magistrates and other officiers cōtemne their duetie in defending Gods glorie and the Lawes cōmitted to their charge, lieth it in our power to remedie it? Shall we that are subiectes take the sworde in our hādes? It is in dede as you say, a great discouraging to the people whē they are not stirred vp to godlynesse by the good exāple of all sortes of Superiors, Magistrates ād officers in the faithefull executīg of their office: ād so muche more whē they [Page 180] are not defended by them in their right and title, as wel concerning religion, as the freedome of their naturall coūtrie: but moste of all when they, which shuld be ther guydes ād Capitayns, are beco­me instrumētes to inforce them to wic­ked impietie. Neuertheles, all this can be no excuse for you, seing, that euil doinges of others, whether they be Lordes, Dukes, Barōs, knights or any infe­rior officers, may not excuse you in e­uil. And thoghe you had no man of power vpon your parte:Deu. 4.5 & 6. 1. Chro. 29. yet, it is a suffi­cient assurance for you, to haue the warrāt of Godds worde vpon your side, and God him self to be your Capitayne who willeth not onely the Magistrates ād officers to roote out euil from amongest them, beit, idolatrie, blasphemie or open iniurie, but the whole multitude are therwith charged also, to whō a por­tiō of the sworde of iustice is cōmitted, to execute the iudgementes which the Magistrates lawfully commande. And therfore if the Magistrates would whol­lye despice and betraye the iustice and Lawes of God, you which are subiectes with them shall be condemned except [Page 181] you mayntayne and defend the same Lawes agaynst them, ād all others to the vttermoste of your powers, that is, with all your strēgth, with all your harte and with all your soule, for this hath God required of you,Exod. 17 ād this haue you promised vnto him not vnder cōdition (if the Rulers will) but without all exceptiōs to do what so euer your Lorde and God shall commande you.

As touching idolatrie,Deut. 13. it is worthie to be considered what Moyses wryte­the, or rather the Spirite of God by hī, how the Lorde in that place chargeth the whole people to stone to death without mercy the false Prophet or drea­mer, when anie shulde rise vp amongest thē, yea thoghe the thinges came to passe which he before spake, if that therby he soght to perswade thē or drawe thē to idolatrie. And also howe he suffred such amōgest his people to try ād proue thē, whether they woulde loue him with all their harte and with all their soule, meanīg (as euery mā may well perceaue) that if they shulde yelde for all their signes ād wonders to idolatrie, ād not punishe such false Prophetes and dreamers as [Page 182] God had raysed vp: that thē they loued him not, yea that they had playnly for­saken and denied him, for that he com­manded expreslye that euerie such Pro­phet shuld be put to death, and therfore chargeth to take the euill frō amongest them. Which commandemēt as it is not geuen onely to the Rulers and Gouer­nours (thoghe I confesse it chieflie ap­perteyneth to their office to see it executed, for which cause they are made Ru­lers) but also is comon to all the people, who are likewise bownde to the obser­uation of the same: euenso is the punishment appoynted of God, belonging to all maner of persons without exception, being found transgressors. For the Lor­de is a iust punisher,Ecclesi 35 Deut. 10. Leui. 19. with whom there is no respecte of persons, who willeth his people to be like him in their iudgemē ­tes. In iudgemēte (saithe the Lorde) co­mitte no vnrighteousnes, nether respect the face of the poore, nether be you a­frayde at the cōtenaūce of the mightie, but iudge vprightly to your neghbour.

Deut. 13.Moreouer that euery persone both high and lowe is charged of God with this Lawe, and none freede from the pu­nishmēt, it is euidēt in the same Chapter [Page 183] folowing: Where God doth not permit somuche as priuie whispering in thy eare, tending to idolatrie, vnpunished, no not of thy dearest frende or kinsmā, sayng: Yf thine owne naturall brother,What zeale we oght to God in punishinge idolatrers. sonne, daughter, or the wyffe of thine owne bosome, or thy neghboure whom thou loueste as thine owne liffe, secreat­ly prouoke thee to idolatrie, to serue strāge Gods, either farre or neare, geue not place to him, nether heare him, ne­ther let thine eye haue pitie vpō hī, ne­ther shalt thou pardō him, or hide him, but shalt vtterly sley hī: thy hande shall first be vpon such a one to kill him, and then the handes of all the people &c.

The like commandement is also ge­uen in the 17. and 18. Chap. of the same boke, charging all the people of God in generall, to see idolatrie punished with­out mercie, and that in all persones. Wherfore we may moste certaynely conclude, that if the Rulers and Magi­strates in this case, woulde not execu­te the Lawes of God where with they are so straightly charged, that then the people are not discharged, excep­te they put it in execution to take [Page 184] the euil from amongest them, to whom it also belongeth. Next, that no persone is exempted by any Lawe of God from this punishment, be he kinge, Quene or Emperour, that is, either openly or pri­uely knowne to be an idolatrer be he neuer so neare or deare vnto vs, he must dye the death. For God hath not placed them aboue others to transgresse his Lawes as they liste,As al per­sones oght to obey Godes La­wes, so og­ht they to be punished if they transgresse them. but to be subiecte vnto them as well as others, ouer whom they gouerne. And if they be subiecte vnto his Lawes, they muste be subiect to the punishment also, when they be fownd disobedient transgressors: yea, so muche the more as their example is more daungerous. For looke what wicked­nesse reigneth in the Magistrates, the subiectes comonly take incouragement therby to imitate the same,1. king. 14.21. as we see in the examples of Ieroboam. Achab and wicked Manasses, who being suffred in the beginninge to commit idolatrie, and to erecte idoles, made the same li­kewise laufull to all their subiectes.Num. 25. For the same cause God commāded Moyses to hāge vp all the capitaynes and heads of the people, for that by their example they made the people idolatrers also: he [Page 185] had no respect to their auctoritie, because they were Rulers, but so muche the rather woulde he haue them so shar­plie punished, that is, hanged agaynst the sunne without mercy: which iudge­ment, thoghe it was done at Gods com­mandment firste, and after at Moyses, yet were the people executors of the same, and all did vnderstand that it was iuste: and not for that tyme onely, but to be a perpetuall example for euer, ād a sure admonition of their duetie in the like defectiō from God, to hāge vp such Rulers as shulde drawe them frō him.

And thoghe it appeare at the firste sight a great disordre, that the people shulde take vnto them the punishment of transgression, yet, when the Magi­strates and other officers cease to do their duetie, they are as it were, with­out officers, yea, worse then if they had none at all, and then God geueth the sworde in to the peoples hande, and he him self is become immedialty their he­ad (Yf they will seeke the accomplish­ment of his Lawes) and hath promised to defende them and blesse them.Leui. 26. Deu 27.30

And althogh the rebellion of the [Page 186] people, their ingratitude and contemp­te of Godes Lawes hath bene such at all tymes, that it is a rare thinge to shewe their duetie in this behalf, by anye e­xāple:Iud. 19.20 yet is there one facte of the Isra­lites worthie memorie, ād appertaynīg, to this purpose, whiche is written in the boke of the Iudges, at what tyme they had no lawfull Magistrate in all Israell. Who notwithstandinge rose vp whollie together agaynst the Tribe of Benia­mī in Gabaa (because of that shamefull vilanie, which the sonnes of Belial had done to the Leuites wiffe) and sayed or agreed amongest them selues,The cōmō people wi­th out a Gouernour prepare thē selues to warre. that none shuld departe to their houses or tentes, before they were reuenged of their owne brethern the Beniamites, to flea those detestable persons, which had so shamefully abused the Leuites wiffe, albeit she was an harlot, and they without a guide or Capitayne: not kno­wing when they came to the felde who shulde be their gouernour to leade thē, and geue the onset, before they had cō ­sulted with God, who appoynted vnto them Iuda. Here do we see the eleuen [Page 187] Tribes, to whome the Leuite made his complaynt, in sendinge to euery Tribe a portion of his wiffe, did not excuse them selues to shew iustice, bicause they wanted a lawfull Magistrate to gouerne them, nor thoght them selues discharged for that they were as sheep­pe without a pastor: except they did thus arme them selues againste the son­nes of Belial the vngodly Beniamites to see the Iudgementes of God executed accordinge to his Law (and as they saide them selues) to cut of the euil frō amongest, then demādinge in the end the wicked mē that had cōmitted that vilanie.

But you wil say: It is an other matter for the people to enterprice such an acte being without a Ruler, and when they haue a Ruler appoynted vnto them, without whom they may do no­thing. To this I answered before, that it is all one to be without a Ruler, and to haue such as will not rule in Gods fea­re. Yea it is much better to be destitut altogether, then to haue a tyrant and murtherer. For then are they nomore publik persons, contemning their pu­blik [Page 188] auctoritie in vsinge it agaynst the Lawes, but are to be taken of all men, as priuate persones, and so examyned and punished. Neuer the lesse, to the in­tent ye may vnderstande, that the go­uernour oght not to take away all rig­ht from the people, nether discharge thē vtterly, from the execution of iustice: let vs consider a like example of the peoples zele vnder the worthie Capi­tayne Iosua,Iosua. 22. who when they but harde that the Sonnes of Ruben, the Sonnes of Gad,The people assemble in Gods cause. and the half Tribe of Manasses, had erected vp an Altar in their portiō, which God had geuen them beyonde Iordane, thinking that they had so do­ne, to haue sacrificed theron, and so to haue fallen from God: assembled them selues together wholly, agaynst the Rubenytes, Gaddites and half Tribe of Manasses to reuenge that defection from God (as they tooke it) thoghe afterwar­de they proued it to be nothing so. Which facte, as it declared an earnest true zele in the people for the defen­ce of Gods glorye, and his religion: so Iosua their Capitayne, nether did nor [Page 189] ought to haue reproued them: yea, happie might Iosua thinke him self, that had his people so readie to mayn­tayne of their owne accorde the La­wes of God, whiche before in the dayes of Moyses were so stubburne and re­bellious. And if this redinesse was commendable, hauing a worthie Magistrat and godly Capitayne: how necessary is it to be vsed amongest the people when they haue vngodly and wicked Prin­ces, who seke by all means to drawe them rather from the Lawe of God, then to incourage them to mayntayne the same? Wherfore this zele to de­fend Gods Lawes and preceptes, whe­rewith all sortes of men are charged, it is not onely prayse worthie in all, but requyred of all, not onely in abstaynin­ge from the transgression of the sayed Lawes, but to see the iudgemētes therof executed vpon all maner of persones with out exception. And that if it be not done by the consent and ayed of the Superiours, it is lawfull for the people, yea it is their duetie to do it thē selues, as well vpon their owne rulers and Ma­gistrat, [Page 190] as vpon other of their bretherē, hauing the worde of God for their war­rant, to which all are subiecte, and by the same charged to cast forthe all e­uill from them, and to cut of euery rot­ten membre, for feare of infecting the whole body, how deare or pretious so euer it be. If death be deserued, death: if other punishmētes, to see they be ex­ecuted in all.

Rom. 13.For this cause haue you promised obedience to your Superiors, that they might herein helpe you: and for the same intent haue they taken it vpon them. If they will so do, and keepe promisse with you accordinge to their office, then do you owe vnto them all humble obedience: If not, you are dis­charged, and no obedience belongeth to them: because they are not obedient to God, nor be his ministers to punishe the euell, and to defend the good. And therfore your studie in this case, oght to be, to seeke how you may dispose and punishe according to the Lawes, such rebells agaynst God, and oppres­sers of your selues and your countrie: and not how to please them, obeye [Page 191] them, and flatter them as you do in their impietie. Which is not the waye to obtayne peace, and quietnesse, but to fall in to the handes of the allmigh­tie God, and to be subiecte to his fea­refull plagues and punishmentes.

CHAP. XIIII.

This is no doctrine of Rebellion, but the onely do­ctrine of peace and means to inioye quietlie the comfortable blessinges of God, which oght not to be wisshed for onely of the people, but carefully soght for also.

ANd althoghe this seeme a strange doctrine, per­relous, and to moue se­dition amōgest the people, and to take from the lawfull Rulers all due obedience: yet whoso will consi­der the matter a right, shall finde it sounde and true doctrine, and the onely doctrine of godly peace and quietnesse, and means to auoyde all strief and rebellion, by whiche onely Superiors shall rule in the feare of God, [Page 192] and subiectes reuerently obeye them without grudging or murmuring. For is there anie lawes more parfit then are the Lawes of God? Or did anie mā better know the nature of man, then he which created man? Or anie more desierous to keepe them in his feare, and true obedyence, then God him self, who chose them for his people? Then who is so mad and impudēt,God which made man knoweth best what Lawes are moste expedient for his preser­uation. to thinke that peace ād quiet­nesse can be amongest anie people or nation, by obseruing the Lawes of wic­ked men, rather then in reteyning the wholsome Lawes of God? That mā whi­ch is not able to rule him selfe, can bet­ter gouerne his subiectes and defende them, than God may his people? That the people shall rather enioye all bles­singes of God, in yelding to the wicked­nesse of the vngodlie Rulers, then to see them straightlie punished for transgres­sions of the confortable Lawes of the al­mightie? For after that God had once geuen his Lawes to his people, he shewed them playnlie by Moyses that he requi­red nothing els of them,Deut. 10. but to feare him and to walke in his wayes, to loue him, and serue him with all their harte [Page 193] and to keepe his preceptes and statutes, which he cōmanded them that day. And why? bycause (saithe Moyses) he is the God of Gods, the Lorde of Lordes, the greate mightie and dreadful God, whi­che hath no respecte of persones, nor ta­keth anie rewardes. And this fructe shall you be suer of in keepinge his La­wes. He wilbe your prayse, ād your God:Deut. 4. that is (as in an other place the same Moyses writeth) He will make you a wise people, a mightie Nation, praysed and cōmēded of all Natiōs, which shall saye, This is onlie a wise people, and a people of vnderstandinge ād mightie. For what people is so great, whiche hath their God so friendly and familiar with them, as the Lorde our God is in all thinges that we call to him for? For whiles we obey his Lawes, and suffer them in no case, ād in no persone to be transgressed and left vnpunished (to the vttermoste of our power) we are assured that the blessinges which God after promised, shalbe pow­red vpō vs: that is to be blessed at home and a brode, in the frute of our wombe,Deut. 28. of our lande, of our beastes and cattell. And the Lorde will make our enemies [Page 194] which rise agaynst vs to fall before vs, to entre in one waye agaynst vs, and to flee by seuen wayes afore vs. And all the people of the earthe shall see that the Name of the Lorde is called vpon amongest vs, and shall be afrayde of vs.

Yt is then no newe doctrine which God so longe ago taught to the Israe­lites, nor no rashe or perelous doctrine wherby they are onely made wise, and moste strongly defended. Nether yet dothe it minister occasion of rebellion, without which there can be no godlie peace or quietnesse, as your experience in Englande hath all readie (as I suppo­se) sufficiently taught you: who haue felt rather hellike tormentes, and sha­mefull confusion, since ye permitted the wilde bores to caste downe the hedge of the Lordes vinyarde, that is, his Lawes and preceptes, then anie ma­ner of godly peace, either in conscien­ces or bodies:Let your owne con­sciēces be Iudges in this behalfe which miserie shall haue no end before you reclayme with a ve­hement zele and loue, your right title and possession of Gods Lawes, which [Page 195] you haue moste vnthankfully geuen ouer and neglected.

Yf the true zele of Gods people had bene in you when poperie began to be preached in the place of the Gospell, when the Masse was reduced in place of the Lordes supper, and that by the ig­norant Papists and malicious shaue­lyngs,The con­tempt of Gods wo­rde is the dore to all licentious wicked­nes. when Antichrist was restored to displace Christ: coulde ye haue suf­fered this vnponished? Or if you had punished it as you were then charged by Gods Lawes and mans, durste they ha­ue proceaded to such impietie? If you had required the Magistrates to rule you in Gods feare and not in tyrannie, and that you woulde reuerence them as Gods ministers so rulinge you, other­wise, not to acknowledg them but as his enimies, and so to take them: durst either that Iesabel so ragingly haue trodē Gods worde the Gospell of Christ our Sauiour as a polluted sowe vnder her feete, either els so rashely destroy­de her fathers and brothers Lawes be­fore her? Durste she without all sha­me so openly and vnfaythfully haue broken promisse to them (whiche [Page 196] to their owne sorrow, and all others this day) were her chief promoters? Assure your selfs no. If you had required all Massemongers, and false Preachers to haue bene punished with deathe (as is appoynted by Gods worde for such blasphemers and idolatrers, and if they to whom it apperteyned, had denyed, your selues would haue seen it performed at all tymes, and in all places) then shuld you haue shewed that zele of God, whi­ch was cōmended in Phinees,Num. 25. destroyin­ge the adulterers: and in the Israelites againste the Beniamités, as before is noted. Ye then had not the Pristes of Baal so swarmed abrode, nor the seruātes of God haue bene in such abundāce mur­thered. But great was our synnes befo­re, that this deserued: and colde was our zele to Godwardes after, that this sha­me haue suffred: and grosse is our blynd dulnes, whiche wil not yet see nor seeke to remedie it.

what ru­les are to be obserued in resisting the superi­or powersNeuerthelesse in all these enterprises you muste be certaine and sure of this one thinge, that vnder the name of Re­ligion and pretence to promote Gods glorie, you seeke not either your priua­te [Page 197] gaynes or promotiō, as did all the carnall Gospelers, and such as would be cō ted the chief pillers and mainteyners of the same in tymes past amongest you. And therfore vnder the cloke of Christ, seekyng the worlde, when Christ se­med to haue the vpper hande: are now returned to their oldemaister Antichri­ste, to be his hired souldiars, and to fight vnder his banner agaynst Christ and his seruantes, by whom they were firste promoted. Which treason God is prepa­red all redie to reuenge, to pluck from them his fethers, and to set furth to the whole worlde their shame and naked­nesse. For he is a iust God,Psal. 5. and hateth iniquitie, and therfore will be no cloke to couer their falshode and couetous­nesse.

Also ye must beware that priuate displeasure, and worldly iniuries moue you not more to seeke reuengement of your aduersaries, then the true zele and thirste of Gods worde, the liuely foode of your soules. For then do you seeke your selues, and not God: then take you his office out of his hande, to whom ye oght to commit all your priuate dis­pleasures [Page 198] and iniuries:Deu 32. Ezech. 9. Rom 12. then can ye not loke to haue Gods right hande vpon your parte, but rather may be assured to finde him your enimie, and strongly armed against you. To resiste euill ther­fore is your parte, and to mayntayne Godlynesse, but symply and vnfayned­ly, for the loue of vertue, and hatred of vice, yf you will be sure to prosper, and auoyde Gods heauy displeasure,Psal. 7. Iere. 17. who is the sercher of your hartes and secreats, and will in tyme disclose them and make them knowen to all men.

But you perchaunce would gra­unt me all this, that it is both lawfull and godly, if the people wholie toge­ther woulde follow the example of ze­lous Phinees and the Israelites,A doute which trobleth the people. as be­fore was mentioned, and take punish­ment them selues vpon all blasphe­mers of God, manifest betrayers of their countrie, and cruell murtherers of their brethern: seing the Lawes of God and publycke peace can be by no other means restored. But when the people them selues agree not, [Page 199] when they are deuided amongest them selues, and the greatest parte of them perchance papistes, and will be mayn­teyners of such vngodly proceadings as are now broght in to Englande, how is it possible that by the weaker parte, Gods glory shulde be resto­red?

To this I answere, that as I know the restoringe of Gods worde,The ans­were. and comfortable doctrine of our Sauiour Christe to be the onely worke of God, and of no man (thoghe he for­sake not man as a meane external) and also am not ignorant that he re­gardeth not the multitude and stren­ghe of man to accomplishe his pur­pose,Num 13. 1 Sam. 14. Iudith: 9. Iudges. 6. who hath bene accustomed to geue the victorie to a few in nom­ber, and weake in strengh, that the glorie might be his: so will I not counselle you rashely to cast your selues in to danger, but patiently and ernestly to call to the lyuing Lorde for mercy, and acknowledging your syn­nes (for which this plague is powred v­pon you) to desier him to shewe some si­gne [Page 200] of conforte: who hath promised to heare your groninges, and to beholde your affliction,Exod. 2.3 as he did the groninges and oppression of his people in Egypt, when they were broght to full repen­tance ād fealing of their synnes: so that he came downe from heauen, ād appea­red to Moyses, and sent him to be their Capitayne, whom they once had forsa­ken: as you haue done Christe.

Iudg. 3.And as he also sent Othoniel to deli­uer his people, whē they cryed vnto him in that captiuitie that they were in vn­der the idolatrous kynge of Mesopo­tamia for the space of eight yeres.A suer signe that God hear­eth our pra­yers when he geuith vs a mea­ne to deli­uer vs.

Nether is this ynough to call vpon God for helpe, except ye vtterly forsa­ke the wicked doctrine and doinges of the papistes, ād seeke also (to the vtter­most of your power) for remedie in fo­lowing the example of the people of God, as it is writen: whiche did not o­nely serue God and call to him for hel­pe, at what tyme they were destitute of their worthie Capitayne Iudas Macha­beus:1. Mach. 6 but also soght it, and demanded it where it was like to be founde. And as­semblinge [Page 201] them selues together, came to Ionathan his brother, desiering him to be their guide and Capitayne, to helpe them in their miserie, and to defende them agaynst the enimies of God, their whole nation being then moste cruelly oppressed on euery side, and the moste parte of them in vile slauery, seruinge the strāge Gods of the heathen. Thē Io­nathā pityinge their estate and his ow­ne, did not deny their requeste, but wil­lingly toke in hande that dangerous enterprise, beīge assured that the cause was lawfull, to maintaine to his power Gods glorie ād to succour his afflicted natiō, as his brother Iudas had done before him. And doinge the same with a si­mple eye, accordinge as he was boūde, God prospered his doinge, and he had good successe

Therfore yf they did well in demā ­dinge succour, and he discharged his conscience in graunting their request, why is it not also lawfull for you to see­ke helpe of thē that be able ād willing: and for them likewise to graūte helpe, to whom God hath lente it for that vse [Page 202] especially?

But I know your answere: experience (saye you) hath taught vs the contra­ry. For if God had bene pleased herein with. Syr Thomas Wyat that valiant Capitayne taking in hande the like enterprise: it shulde vndoutedly haue had better successe. But he being a man, and of God, of great estimation amon­gest all goodmen, was notwithstan­dinge apprehended, condemned, and at the last (althogh he was promised his pardon) as a traytor beheaded.Sir Henry Isley. And besides him Sir Henry Isley knight, with many godely men for the same facte, hanged, and murthered. The like also ye will af­fir me of that Noble man Henry Lorde Graye, Marques Dorset, ād Duke of Su­ffolke:The Duke of Suffolk who onely for the zeale that he had to promote Gods glorie, and the li­bertie of his countrie, prepared him self with that power he coulde make to the ayde of the sayed Wyat, accordinge to his promisse. But beinge deceaued, or rather betrayed by such as he trusted vnto,The Lorde Thomas Graye. was in the ende also apprehended, and with his brother the Lorde Thomas Gray (a Gentleman of great courage, [Page 203] and towardnesse, likewise beheaded.

Althogh I minde not to stand long in the praise of these worthye mēs factes, who moste cowardly were of many be­trayed, which since perchance haue felt some parte of worse misery: yet so mu­che must I nedes confesse in their be­half, that none but papistes, or tray­tors can iustly accuse them of treason or disobedience. Of whō to be misdai­ned or slandered, is in the eyes of the godly, no small cōmendation, ād pray­se. For to passe ouer with silēce the duke of Sulffolke (whose noble parētage and ernest loue that he bare to the promo­ting of Christes Gospell, and the welth of his coūtrie, is to all Englishe men suf­ficiently knowne) what I beseche you moued Wyat that worthy knight to ri­se? Was it his pouertie? Beholde, he was a famous Gētleman of great landes and possessions, stowt and liberall in the ser­uice of his Prince, faithefull to his countrie, and mercifull to the poore. Soght he ambitiously honour? Which of his enemies coulde herewith iustly charge him? Did he this bicause he was of a troublesome ād busy nature, which [Page 204] coulde not be vnder lawfull gouerne­ment. His great wisedome, modestie, ād gentle behauiour at all tymes, ād to all persons, did well declare the contra­ry: euer more being founde a faythfull Capitayne to his Prīce in the fielde, ād an obediēt subiecte at home. What thē moued him to this dangerous entrepri­se? Verely, the zeale of Gods trueth and the pitie that he had to his Coun­trie,what mo­ued M. wy at to this enterprise. for the miseries he sawe to appro­che by the vsurped power of vngodly Iesabell, and her merciles papistes the sowldiars of Antichriste. Yf it be treasō to defend the Gospel and his Countrie frome cruel strangers and enemies, thē was Wyat a traytor ād rebell. but if this was his duetye, and all others that pro­fessed Christe amōgest you, then are all such traytours, as did deceaue him: and such as toke not his parte also, whē ty­me ād occasiō by him was iustly offered.

And thogh his enterprise had not such sucesse, as we would haue wisshed: yet was it no worse then our cowardnesse, and vnworthinesse deserued. Whiche nether oght of anie therfore to be con­demned, nether shulde be anie discouragemēt [Page 205] to others in the like. For some tymes we see the verie seruantes of God to haue euill successe in their doinges,How dangerous it is to iudge the cause by the suc­cesse. Iud. 29 ac­cording to mās iudgement: and yet God is well pleased therwith. As the example of the Israelites, wherof we made men­tion before dothe moste manifestlie approue: at what tyme they armed them selues agaynst the Beniamites, and that at the commandement of God, and yet were twise disconcfyted, losing the first tyme 22. thousand men: and the next day folowing 18. thowsand: bothe tymes, consulting with the Lorde, and folowing his commandement.

If thou wilt here pronounce accor­dīg to the effecte, behold, thou shalt preferre the vile ād adulterous Beniamites to the seruaūtes of God: those which moste abhominably abused the Leuites wiffe, to them that with the zele of God soght to haue the transgression punis­hed. Euen so, saye I of worthie Wyat: Yf you iudge his facte according to the successe in mans reason: then shall you prefarre to him all the false and flattering Counsellers, all wicked and blouddy Bishoppes, and all others that would be [Page 206] counted Nobles, which in very dede be traytours to God and his people. But Wyat, I dowte not, departed with prayse the seruant of God, where all these are left to perpetual shame and destruction without speedie repentance. O noble Wyat, thou art now with God, and those worthy men that died for that en­terprise▪ Happy art thou, and they whi­ch are placed in your euerlastinge inhe­ritance, and freed from the miserie of suche as were your enimies, in so iuste and lawfull a cause: who liue as yet patrones of idolatrers, of theues and murtherers, agaynst whō thou and thine shall stande one daye as iudges to their cōdēnation.

For what can you Nobles or Coūsel­lers saye for yourselues at that daye, whē God shall call you to accompt (ye kno­we not how sone) which haue permitted Wyat, and with him the whole Churche and comon welth of England to fall in­to the handes of Gods enimies, and would not reskewe him, some of you hauing then in your handes sufficient power not onely to haue supported him and others which feare God accordinge to duety ād promisse. but to haue tamed [Page 207] the rāping lyons, raginge beares, ād ra­ueninge wolues?The condē nation of the Nobles in for­sakinge Wyat. Haue ye not herein iu­stly cōdemned your selues as faynt har­ted cowardes and manifeste trayters, not onely to Wyat, but to God him self, to his poore oppressed seruantes, and to your owne natiue and ruynous coūtrie? But your vngodly fetches and wicked doinges (wherof I am not all together i­gnorant) with your names, I do now purposlye omitte: perchāce God in the meane season will chaunge your myndes, softē your harde hartes, and call you to repentāce. Otherwise doute ye nothīge, but God will minister either to me, or some other (or it belonge) the like occa­sion to set forth your shame and naked­nesse to all posteritie, as you moste wor­thely haue deserued: who hithervnto haue shewed your selues (in contemnyng so many ād notable occasiōs offered by Gods prouidence,Gospellers fearinge man more then God are made instrumēts of Satan. as well synce as in the dayes of Wyat) to be mē in whom is nether zele to religion, nor loue to your coūtrie. And therfore I leauinge you to Gods mercies, or fearefull iudgementes, will speake a worde or two by the waye, to thē which will be called Gospellers, ād [Page 208] yet haue armed them selues agaynst the Gospel drawing forth with them out of their countrie to mayntayne Philipps warres, and to please Iesabel (who see­keth by that means, to cut their throtes craftely) their poore and ignorant tenā ­tes and other souldiars without know­ledge, whiles their brethern be burned at home and their countrie like to be wasted, spoyled, oppressed, possessed, and replenished with vngodly Spanyardes. Is this the loue that ye beare to the worde of God? (ô ye Gospellers) haue ye bene so taught in the Gospel to be wilfull murtherers of your selues, and others a­brode, rather then lawfull defenders of Gods people, and your countrie at ho­me? Is Gods cause become iniuste ād not meete to be defended: and the cruel murther and shamefull slaughter of Princes approued? This hathe not the Gospell taught you, but chieflye in all your doinges to seeke the kingdome of God, next to loue your neighbour as your selues: and in no case to be murtherers (as all you are) that either for pleasure of Princes, or hope of promotion, or gayne of wages are become Capitayns, or souldiars [Page 209] in vnlawfull warres, especially in this case and daungerous tyme.

Then which of you all now for shame can accuse that zelous and godly man Wyat, whither ye be of the Nobles, Coūsellers, Lords, knightes, or of the comon souldiars? I wil make your owne consciences iudges in this matter, whi­ther worthie Wyat or you shuld be takē for traytors? He,whither wyat and those that died with him: or the Counsele­rs Nobles and other that yet lyue are traytours. who in the feare of God and loue towardes his countrie soght to defende all, ād to distroye none: or you, who seekinge the defēce of none, labour to destroy all? He, who indeuered him self to withstande wicked Iesabel, and the onely traytors of Gods truthe, and their coūtrie, as Priests, Bishopps, and papistes: or you that haue bene their maynteyners, with shildes ād bucklers. He, w­ho according to the worde of God, soght with the daunger of all his goods, lan­des, and liffe, to keepe out strāgers, whi­ch were comynge to rule ouer you, and to deuoure you: or you, which haue be­ne meanes with your liues, lands, and goodes to bringe them in, and to defend them? He, who would be openly knowen in his doinges as he was in harte, their e­nimie: [Page 210] or you which hate them inward­ly, and yet do what you may to shewe your selues friendes outwardly? But tell me your gaynes in the end. To conclu­de, he who did his indeuour amonge his contriemen at home to defend them,Souldiars goinge with their Captayns to vnlaw­full warres and leuing their coūtry destitute, are rebells to God and traytours to their country. Gen. 9. Deut. 5. Leui. 24. The condē nation of London in forsakinge wyat. or you whiche helpinge your enemies abr­ode, labour to destroie your friēdes and countrie at home?

Also you subiectes ād souldiars, which are gone with them to butcher your sel­ues and others without cause or cōscien­ce, contrarie to the worde of God, be you assured that before him you shall be condemned as rebells and disobedient per­sones, where as your godly bretheren which in a iust and lawfull cause died with faithfull Wyat, are alowed before God, and of all goodmen commended.

O London, London, thou that boasted thy self to be the Ierusalem of all Englā de, wherin Christ chieflie was preached, and the truethe of his Gospell best kno­wne, remēber how thou forsookest that godly Capitayne, ād what promisse thou madest him. Thou (I say) which mightest haue bene an example and cōforte to all the Cities, and Townes in Englande, ād [Page 211] to haue made the papistes to tremble ād quake for feare. God graunt that for thy faynt harte in that behalf, and sha­mefull falling from God in murthering then and synce so many of his seruantes and Prophetes, thou be not left likewise destitute and desolate, not one stone left vpon a nother, as happened to Ierusalē.Mat. 24. Thou canst not herein defende thy self, which synce hast bene readie, and yet art to maintayne wicked Iesabell in her ty­rannie at home, ād in her vngodly & nedeles warres abrode with thy goods and bodie at her commandement, being therby made an ayeder, helper, and furthe­rer of all her vngodly oppression and tyrannie. And therfore must nedes be par­taker with her of the dreadfull plagues and punishments, which God hath ap­poynted for such impietie.

Wherfore to conclude this matter, yf Wyats cause was iuste and lawfull, as thou muste nedes confesse: for if he we­re fautie in anie poynt, it was chieflie in this, that he pretended rather the cause of his countrie, then of Gods Religion, which allwayes oght to be preferred, [Page 212] and with out the which no Realme or nation may long cōtynewe in quietnes­se: for thē God keepeth not watche ouer thē. Yf also he was betrayde of others, and soght not to betraye any: if he pur­posed Gods glorie, and the defence of his countre: If the iustnesse of the cause oght to trye his doīges, ād not the effect that folowed, or the preuētīge of tyme, where vnto he after a sorte was inforsed: thē oght no persone, whither he be a Ruler, or subiecte, Counseller, Noble, pu­blicke or priuate to be discouraged, but rather incouraged by Wyats example. The people to seeke and demande hel­pe of thē that are able, and they to graūt thē succour willīgly: seeking by all me­ans possible to restore Christ agayne, ād his kīgdome, with whom you haue lost all godlye libertie ād quietnesse: and to expell Antichrist and all his adherentes, by whom you are broght in this misera­ble slauery and bōdage, both of bodies and soules.

And thoghe it succede not the first or seconde tyme, no more then did the en­treprise of Wyat, or of the Israelites: yet when God shall see your zele and dili­gence, [Page 213] to be applyed onely in seekinge to maynteyne his kingdome, and the glorie therof: he wil helpe no dowte at lenghe to confounde all his enimies, as he did the thirde tyme confort the Is­raelits to the vtter destructiō of the ad­ulterous Beniamits.We oght to be cōtented with Go­ds worde onely and loke for no newe reuelation. We must now loo­ke for no reuelations from the heauens to teache vs our duety, it being so play­nely set before our eyes in his worde. And if in this case considerately begone in the feare of God, it shuld happen any of you to perishe, consider you perishe but in the fleshe to lyue with God: lea­uing in the meane tyme an example be­hinde you, that you liued in his feare and soght his glorie according to your duetye.

CHAP. XV.

What remedy or counsell is left, to the poore and af­flicted seruantes of God, at what tyme they are destitute of all outwarde meās and supporte of mē.

TO the people of Israel, whom God from amon­ge all nations chose to be his peculiar people, he did not onely geue his Lawes, ordinances [Page 214] and statutes: but also instituted all kinde of officiers to see the same Lawes put in execution. And besides this, appoynted such as might be leaders and defenders of them in tyme of warre agaynst their enimes, and such as shuld mayntayne their right at home in tyme of peace: as were their iudges and princes appoyn­ted ouer euery Tribe, besides their kin­ge and chief gouernour, to whome it was lawfull for the people ād for euery Tri­be to resorte in tyme of daunger, to as­ke counsele and desier helpe, who were likewise bounde to heare their cause, and support them, whither it were by counselle or bodely trauell.

In like maner God hath no lesse mercifully delte with you in Englande,The gra­ces of God towardes Englande are most abundant if they would vse thē not onely geuing vnto you his Lawes and holy worde, with farre greater light and playner declaration of his will and pleasure then euer was published to the Is­raelits: but also hath furnished you wi­th all sortes of Magistrates, officers, and gouernors necessarie for the accomplis­hment, or rather execution of the same. To whom it oght to be no lesse lawfull [Page 215] for you to resorte for comforte in your necessitie, then it was to the Israelites, and they as muche bownd to heare you. For this cause haue you Mayres, Shiriffs, and Aldermen in Cities, Counstables ād Bayliffs in Townes, knights ād Iustices, in Shires and countries. To these oght the people to haue concurse in necessi­tie, who shuld be their refuge and ayde in all trouble and aduersitie.

But if all these be so shamfully cor­rupted, and so myndles of their charge and office, that nether the Citezens can be cōforted, nor suckered by their May­res, Shiriffes, and Alder men: nether the poore Townesmen and Tennants by their Iustices and Landelordes, but all geuen ouer as it were to Satan, and to serue the lustes of their chief Rulers, ca­re not whether the poore people sinke or swyme,It is impo­ssible for the people to peryshe and the Rulers to escape. so it be well with them (thogh it be a thinge impossible that the peo­ple can be distroyed and they escape daūger, or that their neyghbours house cā be consumed with fyer, and theirs re­mayne vntouched) Yf all I saye, in whō the people shuld loke for comforte, were [Page 216] all together declyned from God (as in dede they apeare to be at this present tyme in England, without all feare of his Maiestie or pitie vpon their brethern) and also, yf the least and weakest parte of the people in all places feared God, and all outwarde means of helpe vtter­ly taken from them, nether being able to fynde remedie amōgest them selues, nether cā see how to be supported of o­thers: thē assure your selues (deare bret­hern and seruants of God) there can be no better counsell, nor more comforta­ble or present remedie (which you shall proue true, if God graunte you his Spi­rite and grace to folowe it) then in con­tynual and dayly inuocation of his Na­me, to rest whollie and only vpon him, make him your shilde, buckeler and re­fuge, who hath so promised to be to all them that are oppressed and depend v­pon him: to do nothing commanded agaynst God and your conscience, pre­ferring at all tymes (as you haue lear­ned before) the will of God, to the will, punishments, and tyranny of Princes: sayng, and answeringe to all maner of [Page 217] persones: This hath God commanded, this must we do. That hath God forbid­dē, that will we not do yf you will rob­be vs and spoyle vs for doinge the Lor­des will, to the Lorde must you make answere, and not to vs: for his goodes they are, and not ours. If ye will impri­sone vs, behold, ye are oppressors. If ye will hange vs or burne vs, beholde ye are murtherers of them which feare the Lorde, and are created to the Image of God: for whose contempte ye shall be straytly punished. And for our parte, yf you take from vs this vile and corrup­tible lyffe, we are assured the Lorde will geue it vs agayne with ioye, and immortalitie both of bodie and sou­le.

Yf God geue you grace to make this or the like answere, and strengh to contemne their tyrannie, you may be certayne and sure to finde vnspeakable conforte and quietnes of conscience, in the mydle of your danger and grea­test rage of Satan. And thus boldly con­fessinge Christ your Sauiour before men (as by the example of thousandes of your bretheren before your faces [Page 218] God doth mercifully incourage you) you may with all hope and patience wayte for the ioyfull confession of Christ agayne before his Father and Angells in heauen, that you are his obe­diente and dearely beloued seruantes, being also assured of this,Tyrantes can go no farther then God permittith. that if it be the will of God to haue you anie lon­ger to remayne in this miserable worl­de, that then his prouidence is so care­full ouer you, ād present with you, that no man or power can take your liffe from you, nether touche your bodie a­nie further then your Lorde and God will permit them.Mat. 10. Whiche nether shall be augmented for your playne confes­sion, nor yet diminished for keepinge of silence. For nothing cometh to the seruants of God by hap or chaūce, who­se heares of their heads are numbred. Wherof yf you be so assured as you oght to be, there can be nothing that shuld make you to shrinke from the Lorde. If they do cast you in prisō with Io­seph, the Lorde will delyuer you: yf th­ey cast you to wilde beasts and lyons, as they did Daniel, you shall be preserued: yf in to the sea with Ionas, ye shall not [Page 219] be drowned: or in to the durtie dongeon with Ieremie, you shall be delyuered: ei­ther in to the fyrye furnace withe Si­drach, Misach, and Abednago, yet shall you not be consumed. Contrarie wise,None can lose their lyfe but by Godes ap­pointement yf it be his good pleasure that you sh­all glorifie his holie Name in your de­ath, what great thing haue you loste? Changing death for liffe, misery for fe­licitie, contynuall vexation and trou­ble, for perpetuall rest and quietnesse: chosinge rather to dye with shame of the worlde being the seruantes of God, then to lyue amongest men in honor being the seruantes of Satan, and con­demned of God. Otherwise, if you ge­ue place to the wickednesse of men to escape their malice and bodily dangers, you shewe your selues therin to feare man more then the mightie and dread­full God: him that hath but power of your bodie, and that at Gods appoyn­tement, then God him self, who hath power, after he hath destroyed the body, to cast both bodies and soules in to hell fyre, there to remayne euerlastingly in tormentes vnspeakable.

[Page 220]And moreouer that which you lo­ke to obtayne by these shamefull shi­efts,Shamfull shiftes. you shall besure to lose with gryef and trouble of Conscience. For this sa­ying of our Maister being true and cer­tayne,Mat. 16. That they which seeke to saue their liffe (meanynge by anie worldly reason or policie) shall lose it: what shall be their gaynes at lengh, when by dis­simulation and yelding to popishe bla­sphemie, they dishonor the Maiestie of God to inioye this shorte, miserable and mortall lyffe: to be caste from the fauour of God, ād companie of his hea­uenly Angells, to inioye for a shorte ty­me their goodes and possessions amon­ge their fleshly and carnall friends:Of such you haue had suffi­cient profe before your eyes. when as their conscience within shall be deeply wounded withe hellike tor­mentes? when goddes curse and indi­gnation hangeth contynually ouer the heades of such, ready to be powred do­wne vpon them? when they shall finde no comforte, but vtter dispayer with Iudas, which for this worldly riches (as he did) haue solde their Maister: sekinge either to hange them selues with Iu­das,Iudas. to murther them selues with Fran­ces [Page 221] Spera,Spera. Hales. Morgen. to drowne them selues with Iustice Hales, either els to fall in to a raginge madnesse with Iustice Morgen? What comforte had Iudas then by his mony receaued for betraynge his Mai­ster? Was he not shortly after compel­led to cast it from him with this pitifull voyce:Mat. 27. I haue synned in betraying in­nocēt bloud? Coulde anie of these fore­named persons, after they had commyt­ted the like treason to our Sauiour Ie­sus Christ finde anie more comforte in their friendes, from whom they were so loth to departe? Or anie more pleasure in their possessions, or assurance in th­eir treasures? Beholde, they had all mo­ste miserable lyues for the tyme, and shamefull endes.

Then deare brethern in Christ, what other rewarde can anie of you lo­ke for, commytting the like offences? Haue you anie more assurance of Gods mercies then they had? Woulde not Christ spare his owne Apostle Iudas, and yet will pardon you? Did not iud­ge Hales appearingly professe the Gos­pell a longe space, and was greatly commended for a godly man amon­gest [Page 222] the Godly?wicked Day of Chichester was the cause of his desperation And yet after by the im­portunate perswations of the pestilent papistes denyinge his Maister, sustayned this horrible iudgment, that he and such like might be a perpetuall example for you and all men to feare the like or worse punishemente.

You see therfore how there is no truste but in God, no comfort but in Christ, no assurance but in his promis­se, by whose obedience onely you shall auoyde all danger. And whatsoeuer you lose in this world and suffer for his Name,Mat. 10. it shall be here recompenced with double according to his promisse, and in the worlde to come with liffe e­uerlastinge: which is to finde your liffe, when ye are willinge to lay it downe at his commandement.

The second and laste remedie.I am not ignorant how vnnaturall a thinge it is, and contrarie to the fleshe, willingly to sustayne suche cruell dea­the, as the aduersaries haue appoynted to all the children of God, myndinge constantly to stand by their profession: which to the spirite notwithstanding is easie and ioyful. For thogh the fleshe be frayle, the spirite is prompte and redy. [Page 223] Wherof (praysed be the name of God) you haue had notable experience in many of your brethern very martyrs of Christe, who with ioye paciētly and tryumphinghe, haue suffed and drunke with thurste of that bitter cupp which nature so muche abhorreth: wonderfully strēg­thned no dowte by the secreat inspira­tion of Gods holy Spirite. So that there oght to be none amōgest you so feeble, weake or timorous, whom the wonder­full examples of Godes present power and singuler fauour in those persons, shulde not incourage, bolden, and forti­fie, to shewe the like cōstancie in the sa­me cause and profession.

Neuertheles, great cause we haue thankfully to consider the inspeakable mercy of God in Christe, which hath farther respecte to our infirmitie, that w­hen we haue not that boldenesse of spi­rite to stande to the death, as we see o­thers, yet geuing so muche to our wea­knesse, he hathe prouided a present re­medie, that beīg persecuted in one place, we haue libertie to flee in to a nother: where we cannot be in our owne coūtrie [Page 224] with a safe consciēce (except we would make opon profession of our religion,Mat 10. The greate cōfort that Englishe banish­hed for Christe sake finde in other Countryes which is euery mans duetie, and so be broght to offre vp our liues in sacrifice to God in testimonie that we are his:) he hathe mollyfied and prepared the hartes of stranges to receue vs with all pitie and gladnesse, where you may be also not onely delyuered from the fea­re of death and the papisticall tyrannie practised without all measure in that coūtrie: but with great freedome of cō ­science heare the worde of God conty­nually preached, and the Sacraments of our Sauiour Christ purely and duely ministred, without all dregges of pope­rie, or supersticion of mans inuention: to the intent you being with others re­fresshed for a space, and more strongly fortified, may be also with others mo­re willing and ready to laye downe your lyues at Gods appoyntment. For that is the chiefest grace of God, and greatest perfection, to fight euen to the bloude vnder Christes banner, and with him to geue our liues.

But if you will thus flee (welbelo­ued in the Lord) you must not chose [Page 225] vnto your selues places according as you phantasie, as many of vs which ha­ue left our countrie haue donne: some dwelling in papisticall places amongest the enimies of God in the myddle of impietie: in France, as in Paris, Orlian­ce, and Rone: and some in Italy, as in Rome, Vaenice, and Padua. Which per­sons in fleeing from their Quene, runne to the Pope: fearing the daunger of their bodies, seeke where they may poyson their soules: thinking by this means to be lesse suspected of Iesabell, shew them selues afrayd and ashamed of the Gospel, which in tymes paste they haue stowtly professed. And lest they shuld be thoght fauorers of Christe, haue purpos­ly ridden by the Churches, and Congregations of his seruauntes their bret­herne, nether mynded to comforte others there, nor to be comforted them selues. Wherin they haue shewed the coldenesse of their zele towarde religion, and geuen no small occasion of slander to the worde of God, which they seemed to professe. For beinge returned againe into their Countrie, they either become Idolaters with the papistes to please the [Page 226] Quene, and kepe their possessions, or els dissemblers with the rest of counter­fete christians: but to their owne con­demnation at length, except the Lorde graunt vnto them speedie repentance. For who so are ashamed of Christ, and his Gospel,Mat. 10. thus denying him before mē: them hath he promised to deny, and be a shamed of before his Father, and An­gells, in heauen. This maner of fleeinge then is vngodly, and (as you heare) daungerous: and therfore not lawfull for you therin to folow theire exam­ple.

Nether is it ynoughe to keepe you out of the dominions of Antichriste, ād to place your selues in corners where you maye be quiete, and at ease, and not burthened withe the chardges of the poore, thinking it sufficient if you haue a litle exercise in your hou­ses in reading a chapiter or two of the Scriptures, and then wil be counted ze­lous persons and great gospellers. No brethern and sisters, this is not the way to showe your selues manfull souldiars of Christ, except you resorte where his [Page 227] banner is displayed, and his standarde sett vppe: where the assemble of your brethern is, and his worde openly prea­ched, and Sacramentes faithfully mini­stred. For otherwise, what may a man iudge, but that such either disdayne the compagnie of their poore brethern, whome they oght by all means to hel­pe and comfort, according to that power that God hath geuen them for that ende onely, and not for their owne ease: or els that they haue not that ze­le to the house of God, the assemble of his seruantes, and to the spirituall gyf­tes ād graces (which God hath promised to powre vpon the diligent hearers of his worde) as was in Dauid: which desie­red being a kinge, rather to be a dore-keeper in the house of God, then to dwel in the tentes of the vngodlye:Psal. 84. la­mentyng nothinge so muche the iniu­ries done vnto him by his sonne Abso­lon (which were not small) as that he was depryued from the comfortable exercices in the Tabernacle of the Lor­de, which then was in Sion. Nether dothe there appeare in such per­sons [Page 228] that greedie desier (wherof Esai maketh mention) whiche oght to be in the professers of the Gospell,Esa. 2. who neuer woulde cease or reste, till they shuld cli­me vp to the Lordes Hill: meaninge the Churche of Christe, sayng one to a no­ther: Let vs ascende vp to the Hill of the Lorde, to the house of the God of Ia­cob, and he will teache vs his wayes, and we shall walke in his foote steppes. For the Lawe shall come forthe of Sion, and the worde of the Lorde from Ierusalem. Whiche zele the Prophet dothe not mē ­tion in vayne, but to shew what a thurst and ernest desier shuld be in the true Christians, and how the same apeareth in seekinge and resortinge to those pla­ces, where it is set forthe in greateste a­bundance and perfection, as was after Christes ascention in Ierusalem. And as that zele shewed them to be of Christe, by the like must we be iudged Chri­stians also, that if we flee for Christe, the places where vnto we flee may beare witnes for what cause we are fledde.

Nether is yt a sufficient excuse [Page 229] which many aleadge, that they beleue to be saued by Christe, that they haue sufficient knowledge of their duety, and the reste, they can supplie by their owne diligence. Whose faithe is not so muche (I dare saye) but they haue neede to de­fier with the Apostles, Lorde increase our faithe. And if they will so confesse, why do they forsake the chiefest means that God hathe ordeyned, which is the open Congregations of his people, whe­re his worde, the fountayne of faith, is moste purely preached, and where the Godly examples of others maye be a sharper spurre to prick them forward. And as for the knowledge and diligence of such, may be no buckler to defend their doinges. For yf they haue those gyftes wherof they boste, where may they bestowe them better then in the Churche of God? Except they will saye,Worldly respects which hinder vs frō God oght to be auoyded. they are borne to them selues, and haue the gyftes of God which he would haue comon to others, applyed to their owne priuate fantasie, which is to lappe them vp in a clowte, and not to put them forth to the vantage of the owner, as did [Page 230] the vnprofitable seruant: and as all they do, to whome God hath geuen ei­ther learninge, coūsel, or worldly substā ce, which eithet for the strēght of Cities, pleasantnesse of ayre, trafficke or mar­chādise, or for anie other worldely res­pect or politie, do absente thē selues frō the Congregatiō and companie of their poore brethern, where Christ hathe ad­uaunced his standarde, and blowen his troumpet, as is afore sayed.

Yf God then geue you not strength-at the firste to stand in his profession to the death, nor that you cannot be quiete in conscience, abiding in your coūtrie: you see how his mercy hath ge­uen you libertie to flee, and what pla­ces he hath appoynted for you to flee vnto,The gra­ces of God towardes Englande are most abundant if they would vse thē that is, were ye may do good to your selues and others, where ye may be free from superstition and ido­latrie, where your faithe may be in­creased rather then diminished, and your selues strengthned, confirmed, and more strongly armed.

But if you in taryinge will nether stande manfully to Christe your [Page 231] Maister, but betraye him with the Pa­pistes in doinge as they do, nor yet with thankes vse this remedie that God hath graūted to oure infirmitie, to resorte to his Churches godly īstituted: what answere shall you be able to make to his Maiestie when he shall call for ac­coumpt of your doinges? How shall you auoyde his wrathfull indignation, now redie to be powred vpon his eni­mies? Assure your selffe, they shalbe taken in there synne: ād you also as God doth fynde you. Yf in the tentes of his enimies, doinge as they do vnder theire standerde, to be stryken with them, and also to peryshe. For in takinge part with theire impietie, you must be par­takers of theire cupp likewise. Nether is this anie newe or hard doctrine that may excede your capacitie, but may rather be termed your a. b. c. & first principles, where in none oght to be ignorant. That is if we wylbe Christs scholers, we most learne to bea­re his crosse, & to folowe him: not to cast it ofe our shulders with the enimies, and rūne from him. It is the sa­me [Page 232] lesson which of children we learned in the Lordes prayer, that the Name of God the Father may be sanctified: His kingdome come: His will be dōne. Marke it brethern, that your daylie prayer turne not to your euerlastinge confu­sion. For yf you daylye praye, that by you his Name maye be sanctified, that is, that he may be worthely honored for his maiestie ād wōderfull power, re­uerenced for his mercy and infinite wisdome, feared for his iustice, ād iuste iud­gemētes: and yet for feare of the vngo­dly, do blaspheme his Name by dissimulatiō ād outwarde idolatrie, are ye not herein iudges of your owne condemna­tion? Prayng that his Name may be ho­nored with your lyppes, and blasphea­me him in your deeds? When you praye that his kingdome may come, and yet you your selues do buylde and establishe the kingdome of Satan? Whē you desier that his will may be donne, and contrarie therunto, studie to main­tayne and accomplishe the wil of Sa­tan and his members?

Wherfore be nomore disceaued [Page 233] in so playne a matter.1. Kin. 19 The cōclusion conteyninge the effect of the whole boke. Yf the Lorde be God, folow him: if Baal be God, go after him. Playe no more the hypo­crites, praye not with your lippes only, but expresse the same in your workes. Subiecte your selues whollye to God: for he hath redemed you. Honor him alone: for you are his people. Let not the example of any leade you in to er­rour: for men are but mortall. Truste in the Lorde: for he is a sure rocke. Bewa­re of his iudgementes: for they are ter­rible. Trust not to your owne shiftes: for they will disceaue you. Marke the end of others, and in tyme be warned. These lessons are harde to the fleshe, but easie to the spirite. The waye of the Lorde is a strayte path, but most faithe­full, sure, and comfortable. In this waye haue you also promised to walke with Christ: and for the same cause do you beare his Name, that you shuld forsake the worlde and the fleshe, to yelde vnto him all honour and obedience, before the face of men in earthe, that he may bestowe vpon you the glorie of his Fa­ther which is in heauen. To whom with [Page 234] the Sonne, and holy Ghost be euer­lasting prayse, honor and glo­ry for euemore. Amen. From Geneua, this first of Ianuarie. M. D.LVIII.

FINIS.

WILLIAM KETHE TO the Reader.

THe vayne harte of mā, full frayle is and blynde,
vncerteynely setled, and rest can none fynde:
Whose hap is in wandring, to wade the wronge way,
As one apte by kinde to runne still astray.
For, what thīge so good by truethe hathe bene wr­oght,
Or what so well framed hath nature forth brought,
Which man is not prone by crafte to accuse,
And natures good gyftes dothe not sore abuse?
Thus see we how man, contemning Gods grace,
Is wholie inclyned, that ill shulde take place:
Whose will (truethe reiectinge) delitth that to haue,
Which nature corrupted woulde seeme still to craue.
Sith man then in iudgeinge, so thwartly is bente.
To satisfie fansie, and not true intente:
How hardly in this case, can such iudge vpright,
Whē trueth doth but peepe out, as semth to our sight.
Ful nedefull then were it, we had this respecte,
Before we receaue oght, or oght do reiect:
The thinge to decide so with Iudgement and skill,
That trueth may be stickler, and not our one will.
Beholde here a trueth drawne forth of her graue,
By power sore oppressed, and made a bonde slaue:
Whose chaīs, thogh this Autor could not rēt or teare,
Yet hath he forth broght hir, in to moste clere ayer.
With whome now to reason, whoso wil assaye,
Shal learne how ill Rulers we oght to obeye.
Whiche kill, how they ca [...]e not in their cruell rage.
Respectīg their will more, thē lawe, othe, or charge.
[...] longe fostered by suffrance and awe,
Haue right rule subuerted, and made will their lawe:
Whose pride, how to temper, this truthe will thee tell,
So as thou resiste mayste, and yet not rebell.
Rebellion is ill, to resiste is not so,
When right through resisting, is donne to that foo,
Who seeketh, but by ruine, agaynst right to raigne,
Not passinge what perishe, so she spoyle the gayne.
A publick weale wretched, and to farre disgraste,
Where the right-head is of cut, and a wronge in steed plaste,
A brut beast vntamed a misbegotthen;
More meete to be ruled, then raigne ouer men.
A maruelous madnesse, if we well beholde,
When sighes shall assaut mē, to see them selues solde:
And yet whē frō slauery, their friēds woulde thē free,
To stick to their foes so, still slaues to be.
For France spiteth Spayne, which Englend doth threat,
And England proud Spanyards, with salte woulde fayne eate:
Yet Englande proud Spayne aydeth with men, ships, and botes.
That Spayne, (France subdued once) may cut all their throtes.
A people peruerse, repleate with disdayne,
Thogh flattrie fayne hide woulde their hate, and vile trayne.
Whose rage, ād hotte luste, disceate, crafte and pride,
Poore Naples their bondeslaue, with great grefe hath tryed.
Lo, these be the byrdes which Englāde muste feede,
By plantinge of whom, to roote out their seede
Their owne landes ād lyues, by them firste deuourde,
Their maydes then ād wyues, moste vilelie deflourde.
Is this not stronge treason, ye vnnoble bloudds?
To ayde suche destroyers, both with landes ād goods?
But when they thus pinche you, and ye put to flight,
To what forte then flee you: or where will you light?
For Englande thus solde, for Spaniardes to dwell,
Ye maye not by right, possesse that ye sell.
They seinge your treason, agaynste your owne state,
Wil not with theirs trust you, which they know ye hate.
To Skotlande or France, yf ye then shulde cry,
Your vile deeds now present, they may well reply,
And Dutchlād abhorth you: this thē doth remayne,
Whē Spaniards are placed, ye muste to newe Spayne.
But, oh dreadfull plague, ād signe of Gods wrothe,
On such noble Gnatos, stronge foes to Gods trothe.
Whom fonde feare hath framed, to prop such a staye,
As countrie and people, so seekth to betraye.
Which thinge herein proued, to be with out doute,
All such full well finde shall, as reade it throughout.
Yf then their hartes fayle them the right to defende,
Confusion remayneth for suche a meete end.

Geue not thy glorie to an other: nether that whiche is profitable for thee, to a strange nation.

Baruch. 4.

The way to life it streicte and fewe finde it.

Mat.7.

Imprinted at Geneua by Iohn Crespin. the first of Ianuarie. Anno. D. M.D.LVIII.

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