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Scripture
John Jewel (1522-1571)
Anglican
bishop | Puritan leader in the English
Reformation
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"Their city
Jerusalem was sacked, their houses overthrown, their temple
razed, and not a stone left upon a stone; their library
destroyed, their books burnt, the tabernacle lost, the
covenant broken. No vision, no revelation, no comfort for
the people left; nor prophet, nor priest, nor any to speak
in the name of the Lord."
Among all his creatures in heaven or
earth, God hath not made any like unto the sun in the
firmament, the beams whereof are beautiful and pleasant, and
do give comfort in all places to all things. It rejoiceth
the whole, and relieveth the sick; it causeth birds to sing,
fishes to play, cattle to stir, worms to creep, grass to
grow, and trees to bring fruit; it reneweth the face of the
whole earth.
Yet a blind man hath no pleasure in the
beauty thereof, because he is blind, and cannot see it; yet
a dead man hath no warmth by the heat thereof, because he is
dead, and feeleth it not.
Adam was placed in Paradise in perfect
estate, and in the company of God’s angels; God walked and
did talk with him. He heard the voice, and beheld the
presence of God. The rivers yielded waters abundantly, the
trees brought him food of life. He had plenty without
travail; he had pleasures, joy, and his heart’s desire.
But Adam was unthankful; he knew not God,
the worker of his happiness; he knew not the place in which
he was; he knew not his own estate and blessedness;
therefore the wrath of the Lord grew against him; he fell
into the snares of the devil, he became mortal, and returned
to dust.
What nation in all the world so happy as
Israel? they were delivered by a mighty hand out of Egypt,
from the tyranny of Pharaoh, from service and villainy.
Their children were no more slain before their faces. They
passed through the bottom of the sea, as upon dry land. When
they were hungry, there went forth a wind from the Lord, and
brought them quails from the sea, and manna was given them
from heaven to eat; when they thirsted, the rocks opened and
poured out water, that they and their beasts might drink.
In battle they were mighty and strong, no
power was able to stand against them. The Lord went before
them by day in a pillar of a cloud, to lead them the way;
and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them light. When
they called upon the Lord, he heard them. When they trusted
in him, they were not confounded.
But they grew unmindful of all these
mercies, and murmured against the Lord, and against his
servants; therefore God raught forth his hand against them.
He sware in his wrath that they should not enter into his
rest. He sent his angel, and destroyed them in the
wilderness.
Even so fareth it with all such which
regard not the word of their salvation; because they have
ears and hear not, nor will understand with their hearts,
the fury of the Lord shall be kindled against them. The
Prophet saith in the name of God to Israel (Jer. 7:25), “I
have sent unto them all my servants the Prophets, yet would
they not hear me, nor incline their ear.”
And (II Esd. 9:31), “Behold, I sow in my
law in you, that it may bring forth fruit in you. But our
fathers which received the law kept it not; neither observed
thine ordinances, neither did the fruit of thy law appear.
For they that received it perished, because they kept not
the thing that was sown in them.” Samuel telleth Saul (I
Sam. 15:26), “Thou hast cast away the word of the Lord, and
the Lord hash cast away thee.”
Again, Jeremiah saith (6:10), “How do ye
say we are wise, and the law of the Lord is with us? They
have rejected the word of the Lord, and what wisdom is in
them?” Again, “Unto whom shall I speak, and admonish, that
they may hear? Behold, their ears are uncircumcised, and
they cannot hearken; behold, the word of the Lord is unto
them as a reproach, they have no delight in it; I will cause
a plague to come upon this people, even the fruit of their
own imaginations; because they have not taken heed unto my
words, nor to my law, but cast it off.”
After this sort doth God shew the cause
why his word taketh not place in us, because we are wilful,
and will not hear it, nor receive it, nor take delight in
it, nor let the fruit thereof appear, but reject it, and
make it a reproach, and cast it away from us; and therefore
is it that the Lord doth cast us away; that we are unwise;
that we please ourselves with our own devices, and follow
our own imaginations, and perish, because we have not
understanding to hear the instruction of the Lord’s word,
but like ignorant men disallow it, and cast it behind the
back.
The consideration hereof moveth me to say
somewhat of the Holy Scriptures, which are the bright sun of
God; which bring light unto our ways, and comfort to all
parts of our life, and salvation to our souls; in which is
made known unto us our estate, and the mercy of God in
Christ our Saviour witnessed.
That we may the better see the path which
we have to walk in; my meaning is, truly, and plainly, and
shortly, to shew you what authority and majesty the word of
God beareth; then, what profit we may reap by it; also, how
needful it is, that we be well instructed in the Holy
Scriptures; and what pleasure and delectation a Christian
conscience may find in them; and lastly, whether they be
dark and doubtful, or plain and easy for your understanding:
that when we know the majesty and authority of the word, and
what comfort and profit God giveth us by it, we deprive not
ourselves thereof by our unthankfulness, nor close up our
eyes that we see it not; but hear it in reverence and in
fear, that it may be fruitful in us, and we receive it not
in vain.
God’s Word Is Authoritative
The Scriptures are the word of God.
What title can there be of greater value? What may be
said of them to make them of greater authority, than to say,
“The Lord hath spoken by them? that they came not by the
will of men, but holy men of God spake as they were moved by
the Holy Ghost?” (II Peter 1:21) At the word of proclamation
of an earthly prince we stand up and vail our bonnets, and
give good heed to it; we are bound so to do, it is our duty:
such honour belongeth to the powers that are placed to rule
over us; for they are ordained of God. And whosoever
resisteth them, resisteth the ordinance of God.
If we should have a revelation, and hear
an angel speak unto us, how careful would we be to mark, and
remember, and be able to declare the words of the angel! yet
is an angel but a glorious creature, and not God. And what
is a king? great and mighty, yet mortal and subject to
death: his breath departeth, and his name shall perish. Both
he and his word, his power and his puissance, shall have an
end.
But the word of the Gospel is not as the
word of an earthly prince. It is of more majesty than the
word of an angel. The Apostle saith (Heb. 2:2), “If the word
spoken by angels was steadfast, and every transgression and
disobedience received a just recompense of reward, how shall
we escape if we neglect so great salvation which at the
first began to be preached by the Lord, and was confirmed
unto us by them that heard him?”
God saith, by the prophet Isaiah (55:11),
“My word shall accomplish that which I will, and it shall
prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.” And the same
Prophet saith (11:8), “The word of God shall stand for
ever.” And “It is more easy that heaven and earth pass away,
than that one tittle of the law should fail,” saith our
Saviour (Luke 16:17). For it is the word of the living and
almighty God, of the God of Hosts, which hath done
whatsoever pleased him both in heaven and in earth.
By this word he maketh his will known. “I
have not spoken of myself (saith Christ, John 12:49); but
the Father which sent me gave me a commandment what I should
say, and what I should speak.” And again (John 15:22), “If I
had not come and spoken unto them, they should not have had
sin, but now have they no cloak for their sin.” No man hath
seen God at any time. He is invisible, no eye can reach unto
him. The only begotten Son which is in the bosom of his
Father, he hath declared him; he hath shewed us the throne
of grace, that we may seek for mercy, and find grace in time
of need; he hath disclosed unto us the will of his Father;
he hath left unto us, and ordained that we should hear his
holy word.
This word the angels and blessed spirits
used when they came down from heaven to speak unto the
people; when they came to the blessed Virgin, and to Joseph,
and to others, they spake as it was written in the Prophets,
and in the Scriptures of God; they thought not their own
authority sufficient, but they took credit to their saying,
and authority to their message out of the word of God.
This word the Prophets vouched and
alleged to the people. Albeit they were sanctified in their
mothers’ womb; albeit God had endued them with his heavenly
Spirit; although a seraphim came unto one of them and
touched his mouth with a hot coal; albeit he saw the Lord
sitting upon an high throne; yet they would not speak as of
themselves, but only in the name of the Lord; for thus they
use to say, The Lord hath spoken. This is the word of the
Lord. Hear what the Lord saith. Saint Paul, albeit he was
taken up into the third heaven, and into paradise, and heard
words that are not lawful for man to utter, yet he wrote not
his own words to the churches of Rome, of Corinth, and
Thessalonica, and of other places, but delivered them which
he had received, and taught them according to the
Scriptures.
This word is the true manna; it is the
bread which came down from heaven; it is the key of the
kingdom of heaven; it is the savour of life unto life; it is
the power of God unto salvation. In it God sheweth unto us
his might, his wisdom, and his glory. By it he will be known
of us. By it he will be honoured of his creatures.
Whatsoever truth is brought unto us contrary to the word of
God, it is not truth, but falsehood and error; whatsoever
honour done unto God, disagreeth from the honour required by
his word, it is not honour unto God, but blasphemy.
As Christ saith (Matt. 15:9), “In vain
they worship me, teaching for doctrines men’s precepts.” By
Isaiah God saith, `Who required this at your hands?” And by
Jeremiah (7:22), “I spake not unto your fathers, nor
commanded them, when I brought them out of the land of
Egypt, concerning burnt offerings and sacrifices. But this
thing commanded I them, saying, Obey my voice, and I will be
your God, and ye shall be my people; and walk ye in all the
ways which I have commanded you, that it may be well unto
you.”
Again (Jer. 23:28), “What is the chaff to
the wheat? saith the Lord. What are your dreams to be
weighed with the truth of God? Search the Scriptures. In
them ye shall learn to know me, and how you should worship
me; in them ye shall find everlasting life. The words of the
Lord are pure words, as the silver tried in the furnace;
there is no filth nor dross remaining in them; they are the
storehouse of wisdom, and of the knowledge of God; in
respect whereof, all the wisdom of this world is but vain
and foolish.
Numa Pompilius, king of the Romans,
Lycurgus, king of Lacedemon, and Minos, king of Creta, were
wise men, and of great government; they devised laws to rule
the people, and bare them in hand, that they were taught by
revelation, that so their ordinances might win the more
credit, and be established for ever. But where are they now?
Where is Numa, Mines, or Lycurgus? Where be their books?
What is become of their laws?
They were unwise, and had no knowledge
nor understanding of God; they and their laws are dead, and
their names forgotten. But the law of God came from heaven
indeed. God wrote it with his finger, it is the fountain of
all wisdom, and therefore shall it continue for ever, and
never have an end.
Here let us behold the great power and
work of God. When Moses received the law, God himself came
down in person, with thousand thousands of angels; the air
was darkened at his presence, the Mount stood all covered
with fire, the earth shook, the heavens thundered, the
people stood afar off, and fled for fear, and said unto
Moses, “Talk thou with us, and we will hear; but let not God
talk with us, lest we die.” This was the first proclaiming
and publishing of the law; such force and credit God gave to
his word, and warranted himself to be the Lord.
Since that time, so many thousand years
are already passed. In the mean time, the people of Israel
were oppressed by tyrants, were spoiled and chased out of
their country; first, by Nebuchadnezzar into Babylon; after
that, by Antiochus into Syria; and lastly, were as vagabonds
driven from country to country.
Their city Jerusalem was sacked, their
houses overthrown, their temple razed, and not a stone left
upon a stone; their library destroyed, their books burnt,
the tabernacle lost, the covenant broken. No vision, no
revelation, no comfort for the people left; nor prophet, nor
priest, nor any to speak in the name of the Lord.
In all those times of decays, of
sackings, of darkness, and of misery, what was done with the
word of God? It was wickedly burnt by Jehoiakim, king of
Judah; and Antiochus burnt the books of the law, and cut
them in pieces. No man durst be known to have them, and
avouch the having; so thought they utterly to deface the
glory of God, and abolish all remembrance of his laws.
Then came the Pharisees; they drowned the
word of God with their traditions; they took away the key of
knowledge, and entered not in themselves, but forbad them
that came in. After them came heretics; they denied some one
part, and some another part of Scripture. They razed,
blotted, corrupted, and altered the word of God; of the word
of God they made it their own word, or, which is worse, they
made it the word of the devil.
By the space of so many thousand years,
the word of God passed by so many dangers of tyrants, of
Pharisees, of heretics, of fire, and of sword, and yet
continueth and standeth until this day, without altering or
changing one letter. This was a wonderful work of God, that
having so many and so great enemies, and passing through so
many and so great dangers, it yet continueth still, without
adding or altering of any one sentence, or word, or letter.
No creature was able to do this, it was God’s work.
He preserved it, that no tyrant should
consume it; no tradition choke it; no heretic maliciously
should corrupt it. For his name’s sake, and for the elect’s
sake, he would not suffer it to perish; for in it God hash
ordained a blessing for his people, and by it he maketh
covenant with them for life everlasting. Tyrants, and
Pharisees, and heretics, and the enemies of the cross of
Christ, have an end, but the word of God hath no end.
No force shall be able to decay it. The
gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Cities shall
fall; kingdoms shall come to nothing; empires shall fade
away as the smoke; but the truth of the Lord shall continue
for ever. Burn it, it will rise again; kill it, it will live
again; cut it down by the root, it will spring again. “There
is no wisdom, neither understanding nor counsel against the
Lord.” (Prov. 21:30)
God’s Word Is Profitable
Let us behold the nations and kingdoms
which sometimes professed Christ, and are now heathenish;
Illyricum, Epirus, Peloponnesus, Macedonia, and others.
Again, let us behold such kingdoms and countries, which were
in times past heathenish, and knew not God; as England,
Ireland, Rome, Scotland, and divers other.
They were all without the Gospel, without
Christ, without God, and without hope of life. They
worshipped idols, even the work of their own hands. To them
they appointed priests for their service, days and places
for the people to resort together to worship them.
Here in England, Paul’s church in London
was the temple of Diana; Peter’s church in Westminster was
the temple of Apollo. In Rome, they had the temple of the
great god Jupiter, and in Florence the temple of Mars; and
in other places they had temples dedicated to other idols.
Jupiter, Mars, Apollo, and Diana were
unclean spirits and filthy devils; yet gave they thanks to
them for their peace and prosperity, prayed to them in war
and in misery, and commended unto them their wives, their
children, themselves, the safe keeping and custody of their
souls. They built gorgeous churches and chapels; set up
images of silver and gold to them; prayed, lifted up their
hands, did sacrifice, and offered up their children to them.
A horrible thing to say, yet true it is,
the darkness of those times were such, that men slew their
own children, and offered them up to idols. They said, Great
is Jupiter, great is Apollo, and great is Diana of the
Ephesians. These are the gods of our fathers; our fathers
trusted in them; they made us, and have defended us, and
have given us victory against our enemies. Whosoever denied
them were thought worthy to die.
Thus were the kings, and the princes, and
the people persuaded, and so continued they by the space of
some thousand years, without controlment or contradiction.
They had great props of antiquity, universality, and
consent—antiquity of all times; universality of all places;
consent of all the people. So strongly and so mightily were
they founded, who would think such a religion, so ancient,
and so universal, and so defended by common consent, should
ever possibly be removed?
But when the fulness of time came, God
sent forth his word, and all was changed. Errors fell down,
and truth stood up; men forsook their idols, and went to
God. The kings, and priests, and people were changed; the
temples, and sacrifices, and prayers were changed; men’s
eyes and hearts were changed. They forsook their gods, their
kings, their priests; they forsook their antiquity, customs,
consent, their fathers, and themselves.
What power was able to work these things?
What emperor by force ever prevailed so much? What strength
could ever shake down so mighty idols from their seat? What
hand of man could subdue and conquer the whole world, and
make such mighty nations confess they had done amiss? This
did the Lord bring to pass by the power of his word and the
breath of his mouth.
This was it that led captivity captive,
and threw down every high thing that lifted itself up
against the Lord, and brought all powers under subjection
unto the Lord. It is the image, the power, the arm, the
sword, and the glory of God. It is mighty, of great force
and virtue, of authority and majesty, because it is the word
of God; therefore the glory thereof is great.
Knowledge of God’s Word Is Necessary
Now it followeth, that we consider how
necessary and needful it is for us to be guided by the word
of God, in the whole trade of our life. The word of God is
that unto our souls, which our soul is unto our body. As the
body dieth when the soul departeth, so the soul of man
dieth, when it hath not the knowledge of God. “Man liveth
not by bread only, but by every word that proceedeth out of
the mouth of God.” (Deut. 8:3)
Behold, saith God (Amos 8:11), “I will
send a famine in the land, not a famine of bread, nor a
thirst of water, but of hearing the word of the Lord.” Their
tongue shall wither, their heart shall starve, they shall
die for hunger. (Isa. 59:10) “They shall wander from sea to
sea; and from the north unto the east shall they run to and
fro to seek the word of the Lord, and shall not find it.
They shall stumble at noon-day, as at the twilight; they
shall grope for the wall like the blind, and truth shall
fall in their streets.”
For how shall they be saved, unless they
call on the name of the Lord? “How shall they call on Him,
in whom they have not believed? how shall they believe in
Him, of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear
without a preacher? and how shall they preach except they be
sent?” (Rom. 10:14) Chrysostom therefore saith, “Neither can
it be, I say it cannot be, that any man shall attain to
salvation, except he be always occupied in spiritual
reading.” The wise man saith (Prov. 24:18), “Where there is
no prophecy, the people decay.”
When the Scriptures are not opened, when
there is none that can edify, and exhort, and comfort the
people by the word of God, they must needs perish; for they
know not the way in which they should walk; they know not
whom to honour, nor upon whose name they should call; they
know neither what to believe, nor what to do. Hell hath
enlarged itself, and hath opened his mouth without measure;
and they that are wilful and ignorant, and the children of
darkness, go down into it.
They become thrall and captives unto
Satan; their heart is bound up; they understand nothing;
their eyes are shut up, they can see nothing; their ears are
stopped up, they can hear nothing; they are carried away as
a prey into hell, because they have not the knowledge of
God.
So doth Christ tell the Sadducees (Matt.
22:29), “Ye are deceived, because you know not the
Scriptures, nor the power of God.” Thus he teacheth, that
error is the child of ignorance. The cause why you are so
deceived, is because you know not the Scriptures; you have
hated the light, and loved darkness; you have neither known
the Father nor me. He that knoweth not the truth of God,
knoweth not God.
Herein, in this case, there is no plea of
ignorance. Ignorance will not excuse us. Chrysostom saith,
“Thou wilt say, I have not heard the Scriptures. This is no
excuse, but a sin.” Again he saith, “This is the working of
the devil’s inspiration; he would not suffer us to see the
treasure, lest we should get the riches; therefore he
counselleth us, that it utterly availeth us nothing to hear
the laws of God, lest that upon the hearing he may see our
doing follow.”
Gregory saith, “Whoso know not the things
that pertain unto the Lord, be not known of the Lord.”
Origen also giveth reason of this practice of Satan: “Unto
the devils it is a torment above all kinds of torment, and a
pain above all pains, if they see any man reading the word
of God, and with fervent study searching the knowledge of
God’s law, and the mysteries and secrets of the Scriptures.
Herein standeth all the flame of the devils; in this fire
they are tormented, for they are seized and possessed of all
them that remain in ignorance.”
Carneades, a philosopher, was wont to say
of his master and reader, Chrysippus, If it had not been for
Chrysippus, I never had been any body; he was my master and
teacher; he made me learned; whatsoever I have, I have it of
him. How much better may we use the like words of the
Scripture, and say, Unless it were for the word of God, our
wisdom were nothing, and our knowledge were nothing.
Whatsoever we have, we have it by the word. Without it, our
prayer were no prayer; without it, our sacraments were no
sacraments; our faith were no faith; our conscience were no
conscience; our church were no church. Take away the light
of the sun, and what remaineth but darkness? Heaven and
earth are darkened. No man can see his way, or discern the
things about him; even so, if the word of God be taken away,
what remaineth, but miserable confusion and deadly
ignorance?
When the Philistines had shorn the hairs
of Samson, they fell upon him, took him, bound him, and
plucked out his eyes; they danced about him, and made scorn
and games of him. We are Samson; the strength of our hairs
is the knowledge of the will of God; it is laid up in our
heads, in the highest and principal part of us; if that be
shorn off, if we be kept from hearing, reading, and
understanding of the word of God, then will error,
superstition, and all wickedness, get the upper hand, and
fall upon us, and bind us, and pluck out our eyes, and make
scorn of us, and utterly destroy us.
When the people of Jerusalem were
besieged, and wanted food to eat, they fed on rats and mice,
and many unwholesome and filthy things. A woman was driven
for want of meat to do a cruel part upon her own child; she
took her own babe, which was the fruit of her own body,
killed it, cut it in pieces, dressed it, and fed upon it: a
loathsome meat, especially for a mother to eat her own
child. But she was driven to it by extremity and hunger; it
was so cruel a thing to lack wherewith life might be
preserved.
Even so fared it with us and our fathers,
after it pleased God to take away his Gospel, and to send a
famine of hearing the word of the Lord. We were driven to
eat those things which were loathsome and horrible to
behold; we were driven to feed upon our own children, even
the fantasies and vanities of our heart. There was no
substance in them, they could not feed us.
In this case were the children of Israel,
when they grew weary of the word of God, and left the
ordinances set down unto them. God had no pleasure in them,
their prayers and sacrifice were not accepted. “I cannot
suffer (saith the Lord, Isa. 1:13, 12) your new moons, nor
sabbaths, nor solemn days. Who hath required this of your
hands?”
In such case were the Scribes and
Pharisees, when they forsook to be guided by the word of
God, and took away the key of knowledge; they fed upon their
own devices, they neglected the commandments and will of
God, and followed their own traditions; therefore Christ
reproved them (Matt. 15:7): “O hypocrites, Isaiah prophesied
well of you, saying, This people draweth near unto me with
their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips, but their
heart is far off from me. But in vain they worship me,
teaching for doctrines men’s precepts.”
Therefore if we seek to know the
sacraments of the church, what they are; if we would be
instructed in the sacrament of baptism, or in the sacrament
of the body and blood of Christ; if we would learn to know
our Creator, and to put the difference between the Creator
and a creature; if we desire to know what this present life
is, and what is that life which is to come; if we would
believe in God, and call upon the name of God, and do
worship unto God; if we would be settled in perfect zeal and
true knowledge; if we would have an upright conscience
towards God; if we would know which is the true church of
God, it is very needful that we hear the word of God. There
is no other word that teacheth us unto salvation.
God’s Word Blesses Us
Now it remaineth we speak of the
delectation and pleasure which the word of God giveth. The
word of God is full of sad and grave counsel, full of the
knowledge of God, of examples of virtues, and of correction
of vices, of the end of this life, and of the life to come.
These are the contents of the word of God. These things (say
you) are great and .weighty of themselves, there is no
vanity or pleasure in them.
They are great and weighty, I grant; and
because they are so weighty, they be the more worthy, that
we hear them. But we must take a delight and settle our
fancy, that it may like of the weight and greatness. They
were unto the Prophet David, “more sweet than honey and the
honeycomb.” If we taste them with such an affection as he
did, we shall feel and see the great, and weighty, and
heavenly pleasure which is in them.
Many are delighted in the stories of
Julius Caesar, of Alexander the Great, of mighty and
victorious princes; they have pleasure to read of their
wars, of their victories, and of their triumphs; and many
take their pleasure in travel to far countries, to see the
divers fashions and behaviour of men.
If it were possible we might stand upon
such a hill, from which we might at once see all parts of
the world, the cities and towns, and mountains, and forests,
and castles, and gorgeous buildings, and all the kings and
princes of the world, in their princely estate; if we might
see the variety of the whole world, how some live quietly in
peace, others are turmoiled in war, some live in wealth,
others in poverty and misery; some rise, others fall; to see
and behold so great variety of things, it cannot be but it
would delight us.
Such a hill, from whence we may take
views of so great variety, such a story in which we may read
of noble princes, of their wars and victories, is the word
of God. Upon this hill you may at once behold all the works
of his hands, how he made heaven and earth, the sun and the
moon, the sea and floods, the fishes in the water, the fowls
in the air, and the beasts in the field. Upon this hill you
may stand and see his angels, and his archangels, and
blessed spirits, how some of them fell, and some continued
in glory; how God hath sent them in message, how they have
come down from heaven to serve the sons of men.
Here you may read of the wars of the God
of Hosts; how he hath pitched his tents in the midst of his
people, and hath gone before them, and fought for them; how
the Amorites and Canaanites were rooted out; how the
Amalekites were overthrown by the lifting up of Moses’ hands
in prayer; how the wall of Jericho fell down flat at the
sound of a trumpet, and the shouting of the people; and how
one hundred and eighty-five thousand Assyrians were slain in
one night by the hand of one angel, when God raught out his
hand from heaven to give victory to his people.
Here may you see how God plagued and
overcame his enemies; how he drowned Pharaoh in the Red Sea,
and his horses, and men, and chariots, all together. Here
may you see Nebuchadnezzar, a mighty prince, so bereft of
his wits, that he forsook his palaces, and the company and
order of men, and lived in the fields after the manner of
beasts. Here may you see how God struck king Antiochus and
king Herod with filthy diseases, and caused lice to eat
their flesh; how he sent down fire and brimstone from
heaven, and destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah for their sins; how
he made the earth open, and swallow up Dathan and Abiram;
how king Uzziah was stricken with leprosy, and carried from
the temple, and cut off from his kingdom.
What stories of any princes or people in
any age can report unto us so strange battles, so mighty
conquests, so wonderful deliverance in extremities, so
dreadful subduing of the enemies, as the hand of God hath
wrought, and the story of the Scriptures declareth unto us?
This word also sheweth the goodness and
mercy of God towards the people which put their trust in
him; how he made them terrible to their enemies; how he made
their enemies their footstool; how he led them safe through
the Red Sea; how he sent his angel to go before them, and
guide them; how he gave them water out of a rock, and rained
down bread from heaven; how he brought them into a land that
flowed with milk and honey, and sware unto them, that he
would be their God, and they should be his people.
In this word are to be seen wonderful and
strange works of God, such as are beyond the course of
nature, and pass the reason of man: that the sea parted, and
stood on both sides as a high wall; that at the word of
Joshua the sun stood still, and went not on his course.
Hezekiah spake the word, and required it, and the sun went
back ten degrees. At the word of Elias, fire came down from
heaven to consume his sacrifice.
Here may you see an ass open his mouth,
and speak and reprove his master; three servants of God walk
in a hot burning furnace without hurt; Daniel in the den
among lions, and not devoured; Peter in the raging sea, and
not drowned; lepers cleansed, the lame to go, the dumb to
speak, the deaf to hear, the blind to see, the dead to rise
out of their graves and live; simple and unlearned men to
speak in strange tongues; the devil to go out of the
possessed, and to say, I know thou art Christ the Son of
God.
Here may you see twelve poor silly men,
without spear, or sword, or force, make conquest and win the
whole world. No power could repress them, no might could
withstand them. It is reckoned a great matter for a king or
a nation to yield submission unto another king or nation. It
must therefore be a matter of great wonder to see all kings
throw down their maces, and all people to yield before so
few, so simple, so unarmed; and to acknowledge they embraced
lies, and lived in ignorance; and that these twelve are the
servants of the Highest; and to see how God hath chosen the
foolish things of this world, to overthrow the wise; and the
weak things of this world, to confound the mighty things:
such force did God give to their words. He made them the
sons of thunder; they shook the foundations of the world;
they threw down whatsoever stood against them.
Here you may see the fight of God’s elect
children; how they patiently suffered afflictions in their
bodies, rather than they would deny the truth of God; they
gave their backs to the scourge, their necks to the sword,
their bodies to the fire. No tyrant, no menacings, no rack,
no torment, no sword, no death could remove them from the
love of the Gospel which they had received.
The more of them were cut down, the more
did spring up; the more were killed, the more were left
alive. Augustine saith, “They were bound, and shut up, and
racked, and burnt, and yet were increased.” This is the
victory that hath overcome the world. For the Lord answered
(St. Paul, II Cor. 12:9), “My power is made perfect through
weakness.” It liveth in death; it is made whole and sound by
wounds and stripes; it is increased by those means whereby
men destroy it.
Jacob saw a ladder stand upon the earth,
and the top of it reach up into heaven, and the angels of
God go up and down by it. This was but a dream and vision in
his sleep; yet when he awoke, he took pleasure and comfort
of this vision.
We have not only the delight of this with
Jacob, but we have other far greater visions. We see Isaiah
beholding the Lord as he sat upon an high throne; we see
Paul taken up into the third heavens; we see the glory of
God appear, and hear the voice which came out of the cloud,
saying (Matt. 17:5), “This is my well-beloved Son, in whom I
am well pleased; hear him.”
We see Jesus Christ, the Son of God, born
of a virgin, and how “he made himself of no reputation, and
took on him the form of a servant, and was made like unto
man, and was found in shape as a man; that he humbled
himself, and became obedient unto the death, even the death
of the cross.” (Phil. 2:7) We hear him cry with a loud
voice, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” We hear
him say, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
do.” And, “Father, into thine hands I commend my spirit.”
(Luke 23:34)
Here we may see the sun to be darkened,
that the moon giveth no light; the earth to shake, the rocks
to cleave asunder, the vail to rent, the graves to open, and
Christ rise from the dead, and go up into heaven, and sit at
the right hand of his Father.
Here may we see the overthrow of
“Babylon, which made all nations to drink of the wine of the
wrath of her fornication” (Rev. 14:8): how she is destroyed
with the breath of God’s mouth. Here we behold the
resurrection of the dead, and four-and-twenty elders sit
before God on their seats, and the Ancient of days sit upon
his throne, and the judgment-seat, and the books opened, and
all flesh appear before him; and how some are taken into
everlasting life, and some are sent into everlasting death.
What tongue is able to express these
pleasures and delights which are laid open to us in the word
of God? . . .
Thus have I performed promise, and simply
and homely opened those four things which I took in hand. I
have declared what weight and majesty the word beareth; what
huge harvest of profit we may reap by it; how needful it is
for us travelling through the wilderness of this life, and
what repast and pleasure we may find in it.
God’s Word Is Understandable
But all this notwithstanding, some take
exception, and say, the Scriptures are dark and doubtful,
the matters are deep, the words are hard, few can understand
them. One taketh them in this sense, another in a sense
clean contrary. The best learned cannot agree about them;
they are the occasion of many great quarrels. John seeth
this book sealed with seven seals, and an angel preaching
with a loud voice, “Who is worthy to open the book, and to
loose the seals thereof?” (Rev. 5:2) No man can open it, no
man can read it. St. Peter saith (II Peter 3:16), “Among the
Epistles of Paul, some things are hard to be understood,
which they that are unlearned and unstable, pervert as they
do all other Scriptures unto their own destruction.” And St.
Paul saith (I Tim. 6:16), “God dwelleth in the light that
none can attain unto,” whom man never saw, neither can see.
Therefore, although the majesty be never
so weighty, the profit, the necessity, and the pleasure
never so great, yet it is not good for the people to read
them. Pearls must not be cast before swine, nor the bread of
the children unto dogs. Thus they say. Indeed the word of
God is pearls, but the people are not swine.
They may not read them (say some); they
are not able to wield them; the Scriptures are not for the
people. Hereof I will say something, and a word or two of
the reverence and fear, with which we ought to come to the
hearing of them.
God saith (Deut. 30:11), “This
commandment which I command thee this day is not hid from
thee, neither is it far off. It is not in heaven, that thou
shouldest say, Who shall go up for us to heaven, and bring
it us, and cause us to hear it, that we may do it? Neither
is it beyond the sea, that thou shouldest say, Who shall go
over the sea for us, and bring it us, and cause us to hear
it, that we may do it? But the word is very near thee, even
in thy mouth, and in thy heart, for to do it.” Thou needest
not run hither and thither, nor wander over the sea, nor
beat thy brains in searching what thou shouldest do, or by
what means thou mayest live uprightly. The word and
commandment of God will teach thee sufficiently.
The Prophet David saith (Ps. 19:8), `The
commandment of the Lord is pure, and giveth light unto the
eyes.” And (Ps. 119:105), “Thy word is a lantern unto my
feet, and a light unto my paths.” Thy word is not dark, it
is a light unto my path, it giveth light unto the eyes. What
is clear, if the light be dark? or what can he see, which
cannot see the light?
Human knowledge is dark and uncertain;
philosophy is dark, astrology is dark, and geometry is dark.
The professors thereof often-times run amuck; they lose
themselves, and wander they know not whither; they seek the
depth and bottom of natural causes, the change of the
elements, the impressions in the air, the causes of the
rainbow, of blazing stars, of thunder and lightning, of the
trembling and shaking of the earth, the motions of the
planets, the proportion and the influence of the celestial
bodies.
They measure the compass of heaven, and
count the number of the stars; they go down, and search the
mines in the bowels of the earth; they rip up the secrets of
the sea. The knowledge of these things is hard; it is
uncertain; few are able to reach it; it is not fit for every
man to understand it.
But the holy Spirit of God, like a good
teacher, applieth himself to the dulness of our wits; he
leadeth not us by the unknown places of the earth, nor by
the air, nor by the clouds; he astonisheth not our spirits
with natural vanities; he writeth his law in our hearts; he
teacheth us to know him and his Christ; he teacheth us
(Titus 2:12), that we should “deny ungodliness and worldly
lusts, and that we should live soberly, and righteously, and
godly in this present world”; he teacheth us to look “for
the blessed hope and appearing of the glory of the mighty
God, and of our Saviour Jesus Christ.” This matter is good,
and it is plain; the words are plain, and• the utterance is
plain.
Chrysostom saith, “Therefore hath the
grace of the Holy Spirit disposed and tempered them so, that
publicans, and fishers, and tentmakers, shepherds, and the
Apostles, and simple men, and unlearned, might be saved by
these books; that none of the simpler sort might make excuse
by the hardness of them; and that such things as are spoken
might be easy for all men to look on; that the labouring
man, and the servant, the widow woman, and whosoever is most
unlearned, may take some good, when they are read. For they
whom God ever from the beginning endued with the grace of
his Spirit, have not gathered all these things for vain
glory, as the heathen writers use, but for the salvation of
the hearers.” . . .
As for the wisest and learned men in
matters of this world, they have not always proved the
readiest and most willing to set forth the glory of God:
they have not been the meetest scholars for this school. Who
were they that resisted Moses and Aaron, the servants of
God? Not the people, but the wisest and best learned in
Egypt. Who were they that stood against Elias? Not the
people, but the learned and wise men, and the prophets and
priests of Baal. Who were they that stoned and killed the
Prophets? Not the people, but the chiefest and wisest in
Israel.
Who were they that resisted Christ and
his Gospel, and sought to deface the glory of God? Not the
people, but the Scribes, and Pharisees, and high-priests,
and all the troop of their clergy. They called Christ a
deceiver, and Beelzebub, a companion of publicans and
harlots; they laid in wait every where to entrap him, they
sued him to death.
St. Paul saith for conclusion in this
matter (I Cor. 1:19), “It is written, I will destroy the
wisdom of the wise, and will cast away the understanding of
the prudent. Where is the wise? where is the Scribe? where
is the disputer of this world? Hath not God made the wisdom
of this world foolishness? For seeing the world by wisdom
knew not God, in the wisdom of God, it pleased God by the
foolishness of preaching, to save them that believed.
Brethren, you see your calling, how that not many wise men
after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are
called, but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world
to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of
the world to confound the mighty things, and vile things of
the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen.”
Mark, saith he, how mercifully God hath
dealt with you. Few of the learned sort, few such as are
counted wise, embrace the Gospel with you, or join with you
in faith, or keep you company. God hash let them be deceived
in their wisdom; they take themselves to be wise, and yet
are become fools, and contrary to worldly judgment. God hath
made you, which were weak and simple, and of no reputation,
wise and righteous, and sanctified and redeemed in Christ
Jesus. And Christ saith (Mart. 18:3), “Except ye be
converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter
into the kingdom of heaven.” . . .
Therefore Christ said (Matt. 11:25), “I
give thee thanks, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth,
because thou hast hid these things from the wise and men of
understanding, and hast opened them unto babes,” even to
such as have no learning, which rejoice in nothing but in
thee. The wise and learned of the world cannot hear them,
cannot see them; but they to whom it pleased thee to give
understanding. It is thy mercy. Flesh and blood cannot reach
the knowledge of thy will. The Spirit of the Father hath
revealed it.
Christ saith (John 10:3, 5), “My sheep
hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me; they
will not follow a stranger.” My people are simple as sheep,
they are rude, and know not what they do; yet they know my
voice, and follow me; they know their shepherd from a thief;
they follow not the call and voice of a stranger. So we see
that God chaseth no man away from hearing his word; he
loatheth not the poor, because of his poverty; he refuseth
him not, for he is the God of the poor, they be his
creatures.
St. Augustine saith, “Almighty God, in
the Scriptures, speaketh as a familiar friend, without
dissimulation, unto the hearts both of the learned and of
the unlearned.” He abaseth himself, and speaketh to their
capacity; for his will is, that all should come to the
knowledge of the truth, and be saved.
God’s Word Is to Be Revered
Now let us consider with what fear and
reverence we ought to come to the hearing or reading of the
word of God. “The angel of the Lord appeared unto Moses in a
flame of fire, out of the midst of a bush.” (Exod. 3:2) When
Moses turned aside to see, God said unto him, “Come not
hither, put thy shoes off thy feet, for the place whereon
thou standest is holy ground.”
Again, when God had appointed to speak
unto the people from Mount Sinai, he said to Moses, “Go unto
the people, and sanctify them today and tomorrow, and let
them wash their clothes, and let them be ready on the third
day; for the third day the Lord will come down in the sight
of all the people upon Mount Sinai.” (Exod. 19:10)
The word of the Lord is the bush, out of
which issueth a flame of fire. The Scriptures of God are the
mount, from which the Lord of Hosts doth shew himself. In
them God speaketh to us; in them we hear the words of
everlasting life. We must be sanctified, and wash our
garments, and be ready to hear the Lord. We must strip off
all our affections; we must fall down before him with fear;
we must know who it is that speaketh; even God the maker of
heaven and earth; God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ;
God which shall judge the quick and the dead, before whom
all flesh shall appear.
This word is holy. Let us take heed into
what hearts we bestow it. Whosoever abuseth it, shall be
found guilty of high trespass against the Lord. We may not
receive it to blow up our hearts, and wax proud with our
knowledge; we may not use it to maintain debate and
contention; we may not use it to vaunt ourselves, or to make
show of our cunning.
The word of God teacheth lowliness of
mind; it teacheth us to know ourselves. If we learn not
humility, we learn nothing. Although we seem to know
somewhat, yet know we not in such sort as we ought to know.
The Scriptures are the mysteries of God;
let us not be curious; let us not seek to know more than God
hath revealed by them: they are the sea of God; let us take
heed we be not drowned in them: they are the fire of God;
let us take comfort by their heat, and warily take heed they
burn us not. They that gaze over-hardly upon the sun, take
blemish in their eyesight.
When the people of Israel saw the manna
in the desert, they said, Man Hu? what is
this? So they reasoned of it when they took it up in their
hands, and’ beheld it. They asked one another what good it
would do. The Scriptures are manna, given to us from heaven,
to feed us in the desert of this world. Let us take them,
and behold them, and reason of them, and learn one of
another what profit may come to us by them; let us know that
they are written for our sake, and for our learning, that
through patience and comfort of the Scriptures we may have
hope. They are given us to instruct us in faith, to
strengthen us in hope, to open our eyes, and to direct our
going.
If we withhold the truth in
unrighteousness, if we know our master’s will, and do it
not; if the name of God be ill spoken of through us, the
word of God shall be taken away from us, and given to a
nation which shall bring forth the fruits thereof. God shall
send us strong delusions, that we shall believe lies; our
own heart shall condemn us, and we shall be beaten with many
stripes.
Therefore we ought diligently to give
heed to those things which we hear, we must consider of
them, we must chew the cud. “Every beast that cheweth not
the cud is unclean” (Lev. 11: 3-8), and not fit for the
sacrifice. Let us be poor in spirit, and meek in heart; let
us be gentle, as becometh the lambs of Christ, and as his
sheep; let us hear his voice, and follow him; let us be of a
contrite spirit, and tremble at the words of God; let us,
when we know God, glorify him as God.
So shall God look upon us; so shall the
spirit of wisdom, and understanding, and of counsel, and of
knowledge, and of the fear of God, rest upon us; so shall we
be made perfect to all good works; so shall we rejoice in
his salvation, and with one mouth glorify God, even the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
"An Oxford graduate and an Anglican
bishop, John Jewel was one of the outstanding Puritan
leaders in the English Reformation. He was born at Buden in
Devon County on 24 May 1522. Jewel, one of the earliest
Puritans, received a B.A. in 1541. He became a tutor and
lecturer of rhetoric and privately taught the Reformed
principles of the Scripture to his students until Edward VI
came to the throne in 1546. Jewel then made an open
declaration of his Protestant faith and became a close
friend of the Reformer Peter Martyr, who was then visiting
Oxford.
On the accession of Queen Mary in 1553,
Jewel was one of the first forced to flee for his life.
Eventually he joined English exiles in Frankfurt, Germany,
and became more vocal in his criticism of the Roman Church.
From Frankfurt he went to Strasbourg, France, and Geneva,
Switzerland. In Geneva he resided with Peter Martyr. In 1559
Mary died and Jewel returned to England, and in 1560 he was
appointed bishop of Salisbury. From this time onward he
wrote extensively in defense of the Reformed faith. Years of
study then came to fruition in his Apologia pro Ecclesia
Anglicana, translated into English in 1562 as
An Apology in Defence of the Church of England.
Jewel’s labors and previous exiles led to
an early death—at age forty-nine. He was known for great
piety and a warm concern for the poor. His writings included
controversial titles: A Defence of the “Apology”
(1565) and A View of a Seditious Bull Sent into England
by Pope Pius V in 1569. He also produced An
Exposition upon the Two Epistles to the Thessalonians
(1583), A Treatise of the Holy Scriptures (1582), and
A Treatise of the Sacraments (1583)."