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AN HOMILY

OF GOOD WORKS: AND FIRST OF FASTING.

THE life which we live in this world, good Christian people, is of the free benefit of God lent us, yet not to use it at our pleasure after our own fleshly will, but to trade over the same in those works which are beseeming them that are become new creatures in Christ.  These works the Apostle calleth good works, saying [Eph. 2:[10].], We are Gods workmanship, created in Christ Jesu to good works, which God hath ordained, that we should walk in them.  And yet his meaning is not by these words to induce us to have any affiance, or to put any confidence, in works, as by the merit and deserving of them to purchase to ourselves and others remission of sin, and so consequently everlasting life.  For that were mere blasphemy against Gods mercy, and great derogation to the bloodshedding of our Saviour Jesus Christ.  For it is of the free grace and mercy of God, by the mediation of the blood of his Son Jesus Christ, without merit or deserving on our part, that our sins are forgiven us, that we are reconciled and brought again into his favour, and are made heirs of his heavenly kingdom.  "Grace," saith St. Augustine,1 "belongetha to God, who doth call us: and then hath he good works, whosoever received grace.  Good works then bring not forth grace, but are brought forth by grace.  The wheel," saith he, "turneth round, not to the end that it may be made round, but, because it is first made round, therefore it turneth round.  So no man doeth good works, to receive grace by his good works; but, because he hath first received grace, therefore consequently he doeth good works."  And in another place he saith:2 "Good works go not before in him which shall afterward be justified; but good works do follow after them, when a man is first justified."  St. Paul therefore

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Margin Notes:  By "...Augustine...": August. de Diver. Quaest. ad Simplic. Lib. I, Qu. 28.  By last quotation: August. de Fide et Operibus, cap. 4.

a belongeth] belonging from 1582.

1 Vocantis est ergo gratia: percipientis vero gratiam consequentur sunt opera bona, non quae gratiam pariant, sed quae gratia pariantur.  Non enim ut ferveat calefacit ignis, sed quia fervet: nec ideo bene currit rota, ut rotunda sit, sed quia rotunda est.  Sic nemo propterea bene operatur, ut accipiat gratiam, sed quia accepit.  Augustin. ad Simplic. Lib. I, Quaest. II, 3; Opp. VI, 90 C.

2 Sequuntur enim justificantum, non praecedunt justificandum.  Augustin. de Fide et Operibus, 21; Opp. VI, 177 C.

 

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teacheth that we must do good works for divers respects: first, to shew ourselves obedient children unto our heavenly Father, who hath ordained them, that we should walk in them; secondly, for that they are good declarations and testimonies of our justification, thirdly, [Matt. 5:16] that others, seeing our good works, may the rather by them be stirred up and excited to glorify our Father which is in heaven.  Let us not therefore be slack to do good works, seeing it is the will of God that we should walk in them, assuring ourselves that at the last day every man shall receive of God, for his labour done in true faith, a greater reward than his works have deserved.  And, because somewhat shall now be spoken of one particular good work, whose commendation is both in the Law and in the Gospel, thus much is said in the beginning generally of all good works; first, to remove out of the way of the simple and unlearned this dangerous stumblingblock, that any man should go about to purchase or buy heaven with his works; secondly, to take away (so nighb as may be) from envious minds and slanderous tougues all just occasion of slanderous speaking, as though good works were rejected.

This good work which shall nowc be entreated of is fasting, which is found in the Scriptures to be of two sorts; the one outward, pertaining to the body; the other inward, in the heart and mind.  This outward fast is an abstinence from meat, drink, and all natural food, yea, from all delicious pleasures and delectations worldly.  When this outward fast pertaineth to one particular man or to a few, and not to thed whole number of the people, for causes which hereafter shall be declared, then it is called a private fast.  But, when the whole multitude of men, *women, and children in a township or city, yea, throughe a* whole country, do fast, it is called a public fast.  Such was that fast which the whole multitude of the children of Israel were commanded to keep the tenth day of the seventh month, because Almighty God appointed that day to be a cleansing day, a day of anf atonement, a time of reconciliation, a day wherein the people were cleansed from their sins.  The order and manner how it was done is written in the sixteenth and twenty-third chapter of Leviticus.  That day the people did lament, mourn, weep, and bewail their former sins.  And, whosoever upon that day did not humble his soul, bewailing his sins, as is said, abstaining from all bodily food until the evening, that soul, saith

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*former line 29*

Margin Notes:  Last 5 lines: Lev. 16:[34], 23:[2732].  [Lev. 23:29].

b nigh] much 1623.  c which shall now] which now shall from 1563 B.  d not to the] not the 1623.  e through] so WHITGIFT, though every edition of the Homilies entiref an] omitted 1623.  g chapter] chapters from 1582.

 

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Almightyh God, should be destroyed from among his people.  We do not read that Moses ordained by order of law any days of public fast throughout the whole year, more than that one day.  The Jews, notwithstanding, had more times of common fasting, which the prophet Zachary reciteth [Zech. 8:[19].] to be the fast of the fourth, the fast of the fifth, the fast of the seventh, and the fast of the tenth month.  But, for that it appeareth not in the Leviticali law when they were instituted, it is to be judged that those other times of fasting, more than the fast of the seventh month, were ordained among the Jews by the appointment of their governors, rather of devotion, than by any openj commandment given from God.

Upon the ordinance of this general fast good men took occasion to appoint to themselves private fasts, at such times as they did either earnestly lament and bewail their sinful lives, or did addict themselves to more fervent prayer, that it might please God to turn his wrath from them, when either they were admonished and brought to the consideration thereof by the preaching of the Prophets, or otherwise when they saw present danger to hang over their heads.  This sorrowfulness of heart, joined with fasting, they uttered sometime by their outward behaviour and gesture of body, putting on sackcloth, sprinkling themselves with ashes and dust, and sitting or lying upon the earth.  For, when good men feel in themselves the heavy burden of sin, see damnation to be the reward of it, and behold with the eye of their mind the horror of hell, they tremble, they quake, and are inwardly touched with sorrowfulness of heart for their offences, and cannot but accuse themselves, and open this their grief unto Almighty God, and call unto him for mercy.  This being done seriously, their mind is so occupied, partly with sorrow, and heaviness, partly with an earnest desire to be delivered from this danger of hell and damnation, that all lustk of meat and drink is laid apart, and loathsomeness of all worldly things and pleasures cometh in place; so that nothing then liketh them more, than to weep, to lament, to mourn, and both with words and behavourl of body to shew themselves weary of this life.  Thus did David fast, [2 Sam. 12:1623] when he made intercession to Almighty God for the childs life, begotten in adultery of Bethsabe, Urys wife.  King Achab fasted after this sort [1 Kings 21:2729], when it repented him of murdering of Naboth, and bewailedm his own sinful doings.  Such

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h saith Almighty] saith the Almighty from 1582.  i Levitical] omitted after 1574.  j open] express 1623.  k lust] desire 1623.  l behavour] behaviour from 1563 B.  m Naboth, and bewailed] Naboth, and bewailing 1567, 1570; Naboth, bewailing from 1571.

 

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wasn the Ninivites fast [Jonah 3:510], brought to repentance by Jonas preaching.  When forty thousand of the Israelites were slain in battle against the Benjamites, the Scripture saith [Judg. 20:[2126].], all the children of Israel and the whole multitude of people went out to Bethel, and sat there weeping before the Lord, and fasted all that day untilp night.  So did. Daniel, Hester, Nehemias, and many others in the Old Testament fast.

But, if any man will say, It is true, so they fasted indeed; but we are not now under that yoke of the Law, we are set at liberty by the freedom of the Gospel; therefore those rites and customs of the old Law bind not us, except it can be shewed by the Scriptures of the New Testament, or by examples out of the same, that fasting now under the Gospel is a restraint of meat, drink, and all bodily food and pleasures from the body, as before: first, that we ought to fast is a truth more manifest than that it should here need to be proved; the Scriptures which teach the same are evident.  The doubt therefore that is, is whether, when we fast, we ought to withhold from our bodies all meat and drink during the time of our fast, or no.  That we ought so to do may be well gathered upon a question moved by the Pharisees to Christ, and by his answer again to the same. [Luke 5:[3335].] Why, say they, do Johns disciples fast often, and pray, and we likewise, but thy disciples eat and drink, and fast not at all?  In this smooth question they couch up subtilly this argument or reason.  Whoso fasteth not, that man is not of God.  For fasting and prayer are works both commended and commanded of God in his Scriptures; and all good men from Moses till this time, as well the Prophets as others, have exercised themselves in these works.  John also and his disciples at this day do fast oft, and pray much; and so do we the Pharisees in like manner.  But thy disciples fast not at all: which if thou wilt deny, we can easily prove it.  For whosoever eateth and drinketh fasteth not: thy disciples eat and drink: therefore they fast not.  Of this we conclude, say they, necessarily, that neither art thou, nor yet thy disciples, of God.  Christ maketh answer, saying, Can ye make that the children of the wedding shall fast while the bridegroom is with them?  The days shall come when the bridegroom shall be taken from them: in those days shall they fast.  Our Saviour Christ, like a good Master, defendeth the innocency of his disciples against the malice of the arrogant Pharisees, and

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Margin Note. [Dan. 9:3, 10:23; Esth. 4:16; Neh. 1:4].

n Such was] Such were from 1582.  o of people went out to] of the people went to from 1582.  p until] till 1623.

 

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proveth that his disciples are not guilty of transgressing any jot of Gods law, although as then they fasted not; andq in his answer reproveth the Pharisees of superstition and ignorance.  Superstition, because they put a religion in their doings, and ascribed holiness to the outward work wrought, not regarding to what end fasting is ordained.  Of ignorance, for that they could not discern between time and time: they knew not that there is a time [Eccles. 3:4] of rejoicing and mirth, and a time again of lamentation and mourning; which both he teacheth in his answer, as shall be touched more largely hereafter, when we shall shew what time is most fit to fast in.3  But here, beloved, let us note, that our Saviour Christ, in making his answer to their question, denied not, but confessed, that his disciples fasted not, and therefore agreeth to the Pharisees in this, as unto a manifest truth, that whoso eateth and drinketh fasteth not.  Fasting then, even by Christs assent, is a withholding of meat, drink, and all natural food from the body for the determined time of fasting.

And that it was used in the primitive Church appeareth most evidently by the Chalcedon Council, one of the four first general Councils.  The fathers assembled there, to the number of six hundred and thirty, considering with themselves how acceptable a thing fasting is to God, when it is used according to his word; again, having before their eyes also the great abuses of the same crept into the Church at those days, through the negligence of them which should have taught the people the right use thereof, and by vain gloses devised of men; to reform the said abuses, and to restore this so good and godly a work to the true use thereof, decreed in that Council, that every person, as well in his private as public fast, should continue all the day without meat and drink till after the Evening Prayer, and whosoever did eat or drink before the Evening Prayer was ended should be accounted and reputed not to consider the purity of his fast.4  This canon teacheth so evidently how fasting was used in the

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q they fasted not; and] they fasted, and from 1582.

3 See p. 293.

4 Solent plures, qui se jejunare putant, mox ut signum audiunt ad nonam, manducare: qui nullatenus jejunare credendi sunt, si ante manducaverint quam vespertinum celebretur officium.  Theodulfi Aurecliancusis Episcopi Capitulare, cap. 39; Sirmondi Opp. II, 941, or Concil. Mansi XIII, 1005.  Gratian, following earlier compilers, cites the passage as "ex Concilio Cabilonensi" in Decret. III De Consecr. i, 50.  Aquinas, in his Secunda Secundae, 147, vii, 3, made the further mistake of ascribing it to the Council of Chalcedon; and Dr. Corrie thinks he is the earliest writer who has done so.

 

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primitive Church, as by words it cannot be more plainly expressed.  Fasting then, by the decree of those six hundred and thirty fathers, grounding their determination in this matter upon the sacred Scriptures, and long continued usage or practice, both of the Prophets and other godly persons before the coming of Christ, and also of the Apostles and other devout men in the New Testament, is a withholding of meat, drink, and all natural food from the body for the determined time of fasting.

Thus much is spoken hitherto to make plain unto you what fasting is.  Now hereafter shall be shewed the true and right use of fasting.

Good works are not all of one sort.  For some are of themselves, and of their own proper nature, always good; as, to love God above all things, to love myr neighbour as myself,s to honour fathert and mother, to honour the higher powers, to give to every man that which is his due, and such like.  Other works there be, which, considered in themselves without further respect, are of their own nature mereu indifferent, that is, neither good nor evil, but take their denomination of the use or end whereunto they serve.  Which works, having a good end, are called good works, and are so indeed; but yet that cometh not of themselves, but of the good end whereunto they are referred.  On the other side, if the end that they serve unto be evil, it cannot then otherwise be but that they must needs be evil also.  Of this sort of works is fasting, which of itself is a thing merely indifferent, but isx made better or worse by the end that it serveth unto.  For, when it respecteth a good end, it is a good work; but, the end being evil, the work itself is also evil.

To fast then with this persuasion of mind, that our fasting and othery good works can make us good, perfect,z and just men, and finally bring us to heaven, this is a devilish persuasion, and that fast soa far off from pleasing God,b that it refuseth his mercy, and is altogether derogatory to the merits of Christs death and his precious bloodshedding.  This doth the parable of the Pharisee and the Publican teach.  [Luke 18:[1013].] Two men, saith Christ, went up together to the templec to pray, the one a Pharisee, the other a publican.  The Pharisee stood and prayed thus withind himself: I thank thee, O God, that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, and as this publican is: I fast

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r my] thy 1623.  s myself] thyself 1623.  t honour father] honour thy father 1623.  u mere] merely 1623.  x but is] but it is from 1582.  y and other] and our from 1570.  z us good, perfect] us perfect from 1567.  a fast so] fast is so from 1582.  b pleasing God] pleasing of God from 1582.  c to the temple] into the temple from 1567.  d within] with 1623.

 

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twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess.  The publican stood afar off, and would not lift up his eyes to heaven; but smote his breast, and said, God, be merciful to me a sinner.  In the person of this Pharisee our Saviour Christ setteth out to the eye and to the judgment of the world a perfect, just, and righteous man, such onee as is not spotted with those vices that men commonly are infected with, extortion, bribery, polling and pilling their neighbours,f robbers and spoilers of commonweals, crafty and subtile in chopping and changing, using false weights and detestable perjury in their buying and selling, fornicators, adulterers, and vicious livers.  Thisg Pharisee was no such man, neither faulty in any such like notorious crime; but, where other transgressed by leaving things undone which yet the law required, this man did more than was requisite by law,h for he fasted twicei in the week and gave tithes of all that he had.  What could the world then justly blame in this man? yea, what outward thing more could be desired to be in him, to make him a more perfect and a more just man?  Truly, nothing by mans judgment: and yet our Saviour Christ preferreth the poor Publican without fasting before him with his fast.  The cause why he doth so is manifest.  For the Publican, having no good works at all to trust unto, yielded up himself unto God, confessing his sins, and hoped certainly to be saved by Gods free mercy only.  The Pharisee gloried and trusted so much to his works, that he thought himself sure enough without mercy, and that he should come to heaven by his fasting and other deeds.  To this end serveth that parable; for it is spoken to them that trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and despised other.  [Luke 18:9.]  Now, because the Pharisee directedk his works tol an evil end, seeking by them justification, which indeed is the proper work of God without our merits, his fasting twice in the week and all his other works, though they were never so many and seemed to the world never so good and holy, yet in very deed before God they are altogether evil and abominable.

The mark also that the hypocrites shoot at with their fast is to appear holy in the eye of the world, and so to win commendation and praise of men.  But our Saviour Christ saith of them [Matt. 6:[16].], They have their reward, that is, they have praise and commendation of men, but of God they have none at all.  For whatsoever tendeth to an evil end is itself by that evil end made evil also.

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e such one] such a one 1587, 1595, 1623.  f neighbours] neighbour from 1570.  g This] The from 1563 G.  h by law] by the law 1623.  i twice] thrice 1623.  k directed] directeth 1623.  l works to] work to from 1570.

 

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Again, so long as we keep ungodliness in our hearts, and suffer wicked thought to tarry there, though we fast as oft as did either St. Paul or John Baptist, and keep it as straitly as did the Ninivites, yet shall it be not only unprofitable to us, but also a thing that greatly displeaseth Almighty God.  For he saith [Is. 1:[1314].] that his soul abhorreth and hateth such fastings, yea, they are a burden unto him, and he is weary of bearing them.  And therefore he inveighethm most sharply against them, saying by the mouth of the Prophet Esay [Is. 58:[35].], Behold, when yen fast, your lust remaineth still, for ye doo no less violence to your debtors.  Lo, ye fast to strife and debate, and to smite with the fist of wickedness.  Now ye shall not fast thus, that you may make your voice to be heard above.  Think ye this fast pleaseth me, that a man should chasten himself for a day?  Should that be called a fasting, or a day that pleaseth the Lord?

Now, dearly beloved, seeing that Almighty God alloweth not our fast for the work sake,p but chiefly respecteth our heart, how it is affected, and then esteemeth our fast either good or evil by the end that it serveth for, it is our part [Joel 2:[13].] to rent our hearts, and not our garments, as we are advertised by the Prophet Joel; that is, our sorrow and mourning must be inward in the heart,q and not in outward shew only; yea, it is requisite that first, before all things, we cleanse our hearts from sin and then to direct our fast to such an end as God will allow to be good.  There be three ends, whereunto if our fast be directed, it is then a work profitable to us and accepted of God.  The first is, to chastise the flesh, that it be not too wanton, but tamed and brought in subjection to the spirit.  This respect had St. Paul in his fast when he said [1 Cor. 9:[27].], I chastise my body, and bring it into subjection, lest by any means it cometh to pass that, when I have preached to other, I myself be found a castaway.  The second, that the spirit may be more fervent and earnestr in prayer.s  To this end fasted the prophets and teachers that were at Antioch, [Acts 13:[13].] before they sent forth Paul and Barnabas to preach the Gospel.  The same two Apostles fasted for the like purpose, [Acts 14:[23].] when they commended to God by their earnest prayers the congregations that were at Antioch, Pisidia,t Iconium, and Lystra;u as we read in the Acts of the Apostles.  The third, that our fast be a testimony and witness with us before God of our humble submission to his high Majesty, when we confess and acknowledge our sins unto him, and are inwardly touched with sorrowfulness of heart, bewailing the same in the affliction of our bodies.  These are the three ends or right uses of fasting.  The first belongeth most properly to private fast; the other two are common as well to public fast as to private.  And thus much for the use of fasting.

*Lord, have mercyx upon us, and give us grace, that, while we* live in this miserable world, we may through thy help bring forth this and such other fruits of the Spirit, commended and commanded in thy holy word, to the glory of thy Name and to our comforts, that after the race of this wretched life we may live everlastingly with thee in thy heavenly kingdom; not for the merits and worthiness of our works, but for thy mercies sake, and the merits of thy dear Son Jesus Christ: to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be all laud, honour, and glory for ever and ever.  Amen.

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*former p. 287, line 8*

m inveigeth] envieth 1563 A.  n when ye] when you from 1570.  o ye do] do ye 1623.  p work sake] works sake from 1563 B.  q in the heart] in heart from 1567.  r fervent and earnest] earnest and fervent from 1582.  s in prayer] to prayer from 1567.  t Antioch, Pisidia] so in allu Lystra] Listris till 1574.  x Lord have mercy] See below, p. 293, note o.

 

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THE SECOND PART OF THE HOMILY OF FASTING

IN the former Homily, beloved, was shewed, that, among the people of the Jews, fasting, as it was commanded them from God by Moyses, was to abstain the whole day, from morrowa till night, from meat, drink, and all manner of food that nourisheth the body; and that whoso tasted aught before the evening on the day appointed to fasting was accounted among them a breaker of his fast.  Which order, though it seemeth strange to some in these our days, because it hath not been so used generallyb in this realm of many years past, yet that it was so among Gods people (I mean the Jews, whom, before the coming of our Saviour Christ, God did vouchsafe to choose unto himself a peculiar people above all other nations of the earth), and that our Saviour Christ so understood it, and the Apostles after Christs ascension did so use it, was there sufficiently proved by the testimonies and examples of the holy Scriptures, as well of the New Testament as of the Old.  The true use of fasting was there also shewed.  In this second part of this Homily shall be shewed, that no constitution or law made by man, for things which of their own proper nature be mere indifferent, can bind the conscience of Christian men to a perpetual observation and keeping thereof; but that the higher powers hathc full liberty to alter and change every such law and ordinance, either ecclesiastical or political, when time and place shall require.

But first an answer shall be made to a question that some may make, demanding what judgment we ought to have of such abstinences as are appointed by public order and laws made by princes and by the authority of the magistrates, upon policy, not respecting any religion at all in the same; as when any realm, in consideration of the maintaining of fisher towns bordering upon the seas, and for the encrease of fishermen, of whom do spring mariners to go upon the sea, to the furnishing of the navy of the realm, whereby not only the commoditiesd of other

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a morrow] morning 1623.  b used generally] generally used from 1582.  c hath] have from 1582.  d only the commodities] only commodities from 1582.

 

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countries may be transported, but also may be a necessary defence to resist the invasion of the adversary.e

For the better understanding of this question it is necessary that we make a difference between the policies of princes, made for the ordering of their commonweals, in provision of things serving to the more suref defence of their subjects and countries, and between ecclesiastical policies in prescribing such works by which, as by secondary means, Gods wrath may be pacified and his mercy purchased.  Positive laws made by princes for conservation of their policy, not repugnant unto Gods law, ought of all Christian subjects with reverence of the magistrate to be obeyed, not only for fear of punishment, but also, as the Apostle saith [Rom. 13:45.], for conscience sake; conscience, I say, not of the *thing, which of the owng nature is indifferent, but of our obedience,* which by the law of God we owe unto the magistrate, as unto Gods minister.  By which positive laws though we subjects, for certain times and days appointed, be restrained from some kinds of meats and drink, which God by his holy word hath left free to be taken and used of all men with thanksgiving [1 Tim. 4:34.] in all places and at all times; yet, for that such laws of princes and other magistrates are not made to put holiness in one kind of meat and drink more than another, to make one day more holy than another, but are grounded merely upon policy, all subjects are bound in conscience to keep them by Gods commandment, who by the Apostle [Rom. 13:1.] willeth all, without exception, to submit themselves unto the authority of the higher powers.

And in this point concerning our duties which be here dwelling in England, environed with the sea as we be, we have great occasion in reason to take the commodities of the water, which Almighty God by his divine providence hath laid so nigh unto us, whereby the encrease of victuals upon the land may the better be spared and cherished, to the sooner reducing of victuals to a more moderate price, to the better sustenance of the poor.  And doubtless he seemeth to be too dainty an Englishman, which,h considering the great commodities which may ensue, will not forbear some piece of his licentious appetite upon the ordinance of his Prince with the consent of the wise of the realm.1  What good English heart would not wish thei old

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*former line 14*

e as when any realmof the adversary] this imperfect in allf more sure] most sure from 1582.  g the own] it own from 1582.  h Englishman, which] Englishman, who 1623.  i wish the] wish that the from 1582.

1 The Parliament which sat from January 12 to April 10, 1563 N. S., during which time was also sitting that Convocation which agreed to the Second Book of Homilies, passed "An Act touching certain polite constitutions made for the maintenance of the Navy," enacting (among other things) that every Wednesday, except in Christmas week and Easter week, should be observed "as a fish day," and that no person should eat flesh on any fish day without a proper license, except that on Wednesdays any person who should have three dishes of sea fish at his table might also have one dish of flesh at the same meal.  This was done "for the benefit and commodities of this realm to grow as well in maintenance of the Navy as in sparing and increase of flesh victual;" and the statute contains this special clause: "And because no manner of person shall misjudge of the intent of this statute, limiting orders to eat fish and to forbear eating of flesh, but that the same is purposely intended and meant politicly for the increase of fishermen and mariners and repairing of port towns and navigation, and not for any superstition to be maintained in the choice of meats; be it enacted, that whosoever shall by preaching, teaching, writing, or open speech, notify that any eating of fish and forbearing of flesh mentioned in this statute is of any necessity for the saving of the soul of man, or that it is the service of God, or otherwise than as other politic laws are and be, that then such person shall be punished as spreaders of false news are or ought to be."  Stat. 5 Eliz. c. 5, 11, 12, 22, 23.  The Act 2 and 3 Edw. VI c. 19, ordering every Friday and Saturday and certain other days to be observed as fish days, and forbidding the eating of flesh on them, was partly based on similar considerations: as was also the previous Proclamation of King Edward VI on the same subject; one passage of which, where this realm is described as "environed with the seas," was manifestly in the mind of the person who wrote this portion of the Homily.  See Cardwells Documentary Annals, No. VI, vol. I, p. 32, 724, ed. 1839.  See also No. LXXXV ibid. p. 370.

 

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ancient glory should return to the realm, wherein it hath with great commendations excelled before our days, in the furniture of the navy of the same?  What will more daunt the hearts of the adversaryk than to see us as welll fenced and armed on the sea as we be reported to be on the land?  If the Prince requested our obedience to forbear one day from flesh more than we do, and to be contented with one meal in the same day, should not our own commodity thereby persuade us to subjection?  But now that two meals be permitted on that day to be used, which sometime our elders in very great numbers in the realm did use with one only spare meal, and that in fish only, shall we think it so great a burden that is prescribed?  Furthermore, consider the decay of the towns nigh the seas, which should be most ready by the number of the people there to repulse the enemy; and we which dwell further off upon the land, having them as our buckler to defend us, should be the more in surety.m  If they be our neighbours, why should we not wish them to prosper?  If they be our defence, as nighest at hand to repel the enemy, to keep out the rage of the seas, which else would break upon our fair pastures, why should we not cherish them?

Neither do we urge that in the ecclesiastical policy prescrib-

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k adversary] adversaries from 1582.  l us as well[ us well 1582, 1623.  m surety] safety 1623.

 

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ing a form of fasting to humble ourselves in the sight of Almighty God, that that order which was used among the Jews, and practised by Christs Apostles after his ascension, is of such force and necessity, that that only thought to be used among Christians, and none other: for that were to bind Gods people unto the yoke and burden of Moyses policy; yea, it were the very way to bring us, which are set at liberty by the freedom of Christs Gospel, into the bondage of the Law again, which God forbid that any man should attempt or purpose.  But to this end it serveth, to shew how far the order of fasting now used in the Church at this day differeth from that which then was used.  Gods Church ought not neither may it be so tied to that or any other order now made or hereafter to be made and devised by the authority of man, but that it may lawfully for just causes alter, change, or mitigate those ecclesiastical decrees and orders, yea, recede wholly from them, and break them, when they tend either to superstition or to impiety, when they draw the people from God rather than work any edification in them.

This authority Christ himself used, and left it unto hisn Church.  He used it, I say; for the order or decree made by the elders for washing ofttimes, which was diligently observed of the Jews, yet tending to superstition, our Saviour Christ altered and changed the same in his Church into a profitable Sacrament, the Sacrament of our regeneration or new birth.

This authority to mitigate laws and decrees ecclesiastical the Apostles practised, when they, writing from Hierusalem unto the congregation that was at Antioch, signified unto them that they would not lay any further burden upon them, but these necessaries, that is, that they should abstain from things offered unto idols, from blood, from that which is strangled, and from fornication, [Acts 15:[2829].] notwithstanding that Moyses law required many other observances.

This authority to change the orders, decrees, and constitutions of the Church was after the Apostles time used of the fathers about the manner of fasting, as it appeareth in the Tripartite History, where it is thus written.2  "Touching fasting, we find that it was diversely used in divers places by divers

[Continued on Page 292]

Margin Note:  Last line: Tripart. Hist. Lib. ix, cap. 38.

n unto his] to his from 1582.

2 Nam in ipsis jejuniis aliter apud alios invenimus observari.  Romani enim tres [al. sex] ante Pascha septimanas, praeter Sabbatum et Dominicam, sub continuatione jejunant.  Illyrici vero, et tota Hellas, Alexandria quoque, ante sex septimanas jejunant: eaque jejunia Quadragesimam vocant.  Alii vero &c.

Sed etiam ciborum abstinentiam non similem habent.  Nam alii omnino ab animatis abstinent: alii ex animantibus pisces solummodo comedunt.  Quidam cum piscibus vescuntur et volatilibus, dicentes haec secundum Moysen ex aqua habere substantiam.  Alii vero etiam caulibus et ovis abstinere noscuntur.  Quidam sicco tantummodo pane vescuntur: alii neque hoc.  Alii usque ad nonam jejunantes horam sine discretione ciborum reficiuntur.  Et innumerae consuetudines apud diversos inveniuntur.  Cassidor. Hist. Eccles. Tripart. IX, 38, from Socr. V. 22.

 

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men.  For they at Rome fast three weeks together before Easter, saving upon the Saturdays and Sundays, which fast they call Lent."  And after a few lines in the same place it followeth: "They have not all one uniform order in fasting.  For some do fast and abstain both from fish and flesh.  Some, when they fast, eat nothing but fish.  Others there are which, when they fast, eat of all water fowls as well as of fish, grounding themselves upon Moyses, that such fowls have their substance of the water, as the fishes have.  Some others, when they fast, will neither eat herbs nor eggs.  Some fasters there are, that eat nothing but dry bread.  Others, when they fast, eat nothing at all, no, not so much as dry bread.  Some fast from all manner of food till night, and then eat without making any choice or difference of meats.  And a thousand such like divers kinds of fasting may be found in divers places of the world, of divers men diversely used."  And, for all this great diversity in fasting, yet charity, the very true bond of Christian peace, was not broken, neither did the diversity of fasting break at any time their agreement and concord in faith.3  "To abstain sometime from certain meats, not because the meats are evil, but because they are not necessary, this abstinence," saith St. Augustine,4 "is not evil.  And to restrain the use of meats when necessity and time shall require, this," saith he, "doth properly pertain to Christian men."

Thus ye have heard, good people, first, that Christian subjects are bound even in conscience to obey princes laws, which are not repugnant to the laws of God.  Ye have also heard that Christs Church is not so bound to observe any order, law, or decree made by man to prescribe a form in religion, but that

[Continued on Page 293]

Margin Notes:  By "... diversely used.": Euseb. Lib. V, cap. 24.  By "... St. Augustine ...": Dogm. Ecclesiast. cap. 66.

3 5" @*< 8"JJ@< BV<J,l @J@4 ,DZ<,LFV< J, 6" ,D0<,b@:,< BDl 88Z8@Ll, 6" *4"NT<\" Jl <0FJ,\"l J< :`<@"4< Jl B\FJ,Tl FL<\FJ0F4.  Iren. Epist. ap. Euseb. Hist. Eccles. V, xxiv, 10.

4 Abstinere autem ab aliquibus, non quasi malis, sed quasi non necessariis, non est malum.  Moderari vero eorum [MSS. carnium] usum pro necessitate et tempore proprie Christianorum est.  Gennadius de Ecclesiasticis Dogmatibus, c. 33 (al. 66), Augustin. Opp. VIII, Append. 79 B.

 

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the Church hath full power and authority from God to change and alter the same, when need shall require; which hath been shewed you by the example of our Saviour Christ, by the *practice of the Apostles, and of the fathers since that time.o*

Now shall be shewed briefly what time is meet for fasting: for all times serve not for all things; but, as the Wise man saith [Eccles. 3:[1, 4].], all things have their times.  There is a time to weep, and a time again to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to rejoice, &c.  Our Saviour Christ excused his disciples, and reproved the Pharisees, because they neither regarded the use of fasting, nor considered what time was meet for the same.  Which both he teacheth in his answer, saying [Matt. 9:[15].], The children of the marriage cannot mourn while the bridegroom is with them.  Their question was of fasting, his answer is of mourning, signifying unto them plainly, that the outward fast of the body is no fast before God except it be accompanied with the inward fast, which is a mourning and a lamentation in thep heart, as is before declared.  Concerning the time of fasting, he saith,* The days will come when the bridegroom shall be taken from them: in those days they shall fast.  By this it is manifest, that it is no time of fasting while the marriage lasteth and the bridegroom is there present; but, when the marriage is ended and the bridegroom gone, then is it a meet time to fast.

Now to make plain unto you what is the sense and meaning of these words, We are at the marriage, and again, The bridegroom is taken from us.  Ye shall note, that so long as God revealeth his mercy unto us, and giveth us of his benefits, either spiritual or corporal, we are said to be with the bridegroom at the marriage.  So was that good old father Jacob at the marriage, when he understood that his son Joseph was alive [Gen. 45:2628] and ruled Egypt under king Pharao.  So was David in the marriage with the bridegroom, when he had gotten the victory of great Goliah [1 Sam 17:4958], and had smitten off his head. Judith and all the people of Bethulia were the children of the wedding, and had the bridegroom with them, when God had by the hand of a woman slain Holofernes [Judith 1316], the grand captain of the Assyrians host, and discomfited all their enemies.  Thus were the Apostles the children of the marriage, while Christ was corporally present with them, and defended them from all dangers, both spiritual and corporal.  But the marriage is said then to be

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*former line 4*

Margin Note* Matt. 9:[15]; Luke 5:[35].

o Lord, have mercy (p. 287, line 8) since that time.] not in 1563 A 1, the Homily not being then divided into two Partsp in the] of the 1623.

 

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in the fieldss shall the fowls of the air eat.  This punishment had Almighty God determined for Ahab in this world, and to destroy all the male kind that was begotten of Ahabs body, besides that punishment which should have happened unto him in the world to come.  When Ahab heard this, he rent his clothes, and put sackcloth upon him, and fasted, and lay in sackcloth, and went barefooted.  Then the word of the Lord came to Elia, saying, Seest thou how Ahab is humbled before me?  Because he submitteth himself before me, I will not bring that evil in his days; but in his sons days will I bring it upon his house.  Although Ahab, through the wicked counsel of Jezabel his wife, had committed shameful murder, and against all right disheritedt and dispossessed for ever Naboths stock of that vineyard; yet upon his humble submission in heart unto God, which he declared outwardly by putting on sackcloth and fasting, God changed his sentence, so that the punishment which he had determined fell not upon Ahabs house in his time, but was differredu unto the days of Joram his son.  Here we may see of what force our outward fast is, when it is accompanied with the inwardw fast of the mind, which is (as is said) a sorrowfulness of heart, detesting and bewailing our sinful doings.

The like is to be seen in the Ninivites. For when God had determined to destroy the whole city of Ninive, and the time which he had appointed was even now at hand, he sent the Prophet Jonas to say unto them [Johah 3:[410].], Yet forty days, and Ninive shall be overthrown.  The people by and by believed God, and gave themselves to fasting yea, the king, by the advice of his council, caused to be proclaimed, saying, Let neither man nor beast, bullock nor sheep, taste any thing, neither feed nor drink water; but let man and beast put on sackcloth, and cry mightily unto God; yea, let every man turn from his evil way and from the wickedness that is in their hands.  Who can tell if God will turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce wrath, that we perish not?  And upon this their hearty repentance, thus declared outwardly with fasting, renting of their clothes, putting on sackcloth, and sprinkling themselves with dust and ashes, the Scripture saith, God saw their works, that they turned from their evil ways, and God repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them, and he did it not.

Now, beloved, ye have heard, first, what fasting is, as well

[Continued on Page 296]

s fields] field from 1571.  t disherited] disinherited 1623.  u differred] deferred from 1563 H.  w inward] outward 1563 A.

 

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that which is outward in the body, as that which is inward in the heart.  Ye have heard also, that there are three ends or purposes, whereunto if our outward fast be directed, it is a good work that God is pleased with.  Thirdly, hath been declared, what time is most meet for to fast, either privately or publicly.  Last of all, what things fasting hath obtained of God, by the examples of Ahab and the Ninivites.  Let us therefore, dearly beloved, seeing there are many more causes of fasting and mourning in these our days than hath been of many years heretofore in any one age, endeavour ourselves, both inwardly in our hearts and also outwardly with our bodies, diligently to exercise this godly exercise of fasting in such sort and manner as the holy Prophets, the Apostles, and divers other devout persons for their time used the same.  God is now the same God that wasx then; [Ps. 14:7.] God that loveth righteousness, and that hateth iniquity; [Ezek. 33:11.] God which willeth not the death of a sinner, but rather that he turn from his wickedness and live; God that hath promised8 to turn to us, if we refuse not to turn unto him.y  Yea, if we turn our evil works: from before his eyes, cease to do evil, learn to do well, seek to do right, relieve the oppressed, be a right judge to the fatherless, defend the widow, break our bread to the hungry, bring the poor that wander into our house, clothe the naked, and despise not our brother which is our own flesh; then shalt thou call, saith the Prophet, and the Lord shall answer; thou shalt cry, and he shall say, Here I am.z  Yea, God which heard Ahab and the Ninivites, and spared them, will also hear our prayers, and spare us, so that we, after their example, will unfeignedly turn unto him: yea, he will bless us with his heavenly benedictions, the time that we have to tarry in this world, and after the race of this mortal life he will bring us to his heavenly kingdom, where we shall reign in everlasting blessedness with our Saviour Christ.  To whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be all honour and glory for ever and ever.  Amen.

 

Margin Notes8 Zech.1:3; Mal. 3:7].  : Is. 1:1617, 58:7, 9].

x that was] that he was from 1582.  y unto him] to him from 1567.  z Here I am] Here am I from 1567.

 

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