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A00593 Clavis mystica a key opening divers difficult and mysterious texts of Holy Scripture; handled in seventy sermons, preached at solemn and most celebrious assemblies, upon speciall occasions, in England and France. By Daniel Featley, D.D. Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1636 (1636) STC 10730; ESTC S121363 1,100,105 949

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Adag Semper Africa aliquid apportat novi c. so in the places of moist meetings monstrous sinnes are begotten monstrous oaths monstrous blasphemies monstrous murders monstrous uncleannesse here Popery is familiarly broacht nay Atheisme freely vented Gods creatures abused his Sabbath profaned the actions of the State censured the watchfull Magigistrates and the zealous Ministers of the Gospell and all that make profession of Religion nick-named jeared and made a parable of reproach here prophane Musicke and impure Songs are played and sung even in time of divine Service here 's no difference of dayes holy or common nay no difference of day or night I had almost sayd nay nor of Sexes If the hands of the religious Magistrates be not strengthened and their zeale stirred up to take some course to abate the incredible number and reforme the unsufferable abuses of these sinks of all impurity especially about the skirts and suburbs of the city we have cause to feare a worse fire than that which lately affrighted us falling in that place where it might bee as a dreadfull beacon to warne both City Borough and Suburbs I meane such a fire as fell upon Sodome and Gomorrha t Caus in Polyhist symb Polycritus writeth of a Lake of troubled water in Sicily quam si quis ingrediatur in latum extenditur into which the deeper a man wadeth the larger it doth extend it selfe Such a lake my discourse is fallen into the water is foule and troubled and the deeper I sinke into it the more it enlargeth it selfe and lest it should overflow the bankes of the allotted time I will suddenly leape out of it into my second part which is Christs prerogative whereby he is become the first fruits of them that slept Wee have surveyed the ground let us now take a sample of the fruits in the spreading whereof abroad I must handle two things 1 The reference 2 The inference 1 The reference is to Leviticus 23.10 When you reape the harvest you shall bring in a sheafe of the first fruits of the harvest unto the Priest ver 7. and he shall wave it And to Exod. 34.22 You shall observe the feast of weeks the feast of the first fruits of wheat harvest Now let us set the truth to the type As the first fruits were reapt in the harvest when the corne was ripe so Christ was cut off by death in his ripe age 2 As the sheafe that was offered was shaken before so there was an u Mat. 28.2 earthquake at Christs lifting out of the grave 3 As the sheafe was offered the morrow after the Sabbath so Christ the first day of the week after the Sabbath was presented alive to his Father at his resurrection Lastly as there was a distance of time between the first fruits which were offered on Easter day those that were offered at the day of Pentecost so there is a distance of time between Christs rising from the dead which was 1600. yeers ago ours which shall be at the last day Thus much for the reference now to the inference which is twofold 1 Christs prerogative in that he is the first fruits 2 The Saints communion with him in that they are of the heape 1 Christs prerogative * Joh. 3.31 Hee that is in heaven is above all for x Mat. 28.18 to him is given all power in heaven and earth and y Phil. 2.9 a name above all names z Eph. 1.22 he is the head of the Church and a Eph. 5.23 Saviour of the body he is the first b Heb. 1 6. begotten of the Father c Mat. 1.25 first borne of his Mother the first d Col. 1.18 Rev. 1.5 begotten of the dead e Col. 1.15 first borne of every creature Therefore as Quiros strongly concludes in every order both of creation and regeneration of nature and grace of things visible and invisible hee hath the preheminence among all let him have the precedency in our love and affections let us not set any thing above him on earth who hath the first place in heaven If hee bee the head of men and Angels let the knees of all in heaven in earth under the earth bow to him if hee bee the bright morning starre let the eye of our faith bee earely upon him if hee bee f Apoc. 22.16 Alpha and Omega the First and the Last let him bee first in our thoughts and last in our memory g Apoc. 1.8 let us begin our prayers in his name and end them in his merits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Primâ dicta mihi summâ dicende Camenâ If he be the first fruits Reshith bicorre the first fruits of the first fruits let all the sheaves do homage to him let us sanctifie him in our minds let us offer him the first fruits of our hearts the first fruits of our lips the first fruits of our hands the first fruits of the earth the first fruits of our thoughts the first fruits of our desires the first fruits of our prayers the first fruits of our labours the first fruits of our substance so will he esteem us h Jam. 1.18 the first fruits of his creatures and we shall receive the i Rom. 8.23 first fruits of the spirit here in our regeneration and the whole harvest hereafter in our glorification as our holy brethren that are fallen asleep in soule have received already who rest from their labours and their workes follow them and here you may see them I may say of them as Isaac said of Jacob Gen. 27. The smell of my sonne is as the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed And behold here as in a corne field Allude to the Hosp tall children in blew coates blew flowers intermingled Here the Preacher read the Catalogue printed of all the poore relieved in the Hospitals of the City which followeth Children kept and maintained at this present at the charges of Christs Hospitall in the said house in divers places of this city and suburbs and with sundry nurses in the country 905 Which is a farre greater number than hath hitherto beene since the foundation The names of all which are registred in the books kept in Christs Hospitall there to bee seene from what parishes and by what meanes they have beene from time to time admitted Children put forth apprentices discharged and dead this yeere 69 There hath beene cured this yeere last past at the charges of Saint Bartholomews Hospitall of souldiers and other diseased people to the number of 832 All which were relieved with money and other necessaries at their departure Buried this yeere after much charges in their sicknesse 121 Remaining under cure at this present at the charge of the said Hospitall 262 There hath beene cured this yeere last past at the charges of Saint Thomas Hospitall of souldiers and other diseased people 731 All which were relieved with money and other necessaries at their
eleven Apostles or to more than five hundred brethren that saw him all at one time nay what to more than five millions of Confessors and Martyrs signing the truth of it with their blood and shewing the power of it as well by the wonders which they wrought in his name as the invincible patience wherewith they endured all sorts of torments and death it selfe for his name I might produce the testimony of Josephus the learned Jew and tell you of Paschasinus his holy Well that fils of his owne accord every Easter day and the annuall rising of certaine bodies of Martyrs in the sands of Egypt and likewise of a Phoenix in the dayes of Tyberius much about the time of our Lords resurrection rising out of her owne ashes m Lactant. in Poem Ipsa sibi proles suus pater suus haeres Nutrix ipsa sui semper alumna sibi Ipsa quidem sed non eadem quia ipsa nec ipsa Eternam vitam mortis adepta bono But because the authours of these relations and observations are not beyond exception I will rather conclude this point with an argument of Saint n De civit Dei l. 22. c. 5. Haec duo incredibilia scil resurrectionem nostri corporis rem ●am incredibilem mundum esse crediturum idem dominus antequam vel unum horū fieret ambo futura esse praedixit unum duorum incredibilium jam factum videmus ut quod erat incredibile crede●et mundus curid quod reliquum est desperatur Austines to which our owne undoubted experience gives much strength The same Spirit of God saith hee which foretold the resurrection of Christ foretold also that the doctrine thereof should bee publickly professed and believed in the world and the one was altogether as unlikely as the other But the latter wee see in all ages since Christs death and at this day accomplished in the celebration of this feast why then should any man doubt of the former The Apostles saw the head living but not the mysticall body the Catholike Church of all places and ages We have read in the histories of all ages since Christ and at this day see the Catholike Church spread over the whole face of the earth which is Christs body how can wee then but believe the head to bee living which conveigheth life to all the members I have set before you the glasse of the resurrection in the figures of predictions of the Old Testament and the face it selfe in the history of the New may it please you now to cast a glance of your eye upon the Image or picture thereof in our rising from the death of sinne to the life of grace All Christs actions and passions as they are meritorious for us so they are some way exemplary unto us and as none can bee assured of the benefit of Christs birth unlesse hee bee borne againe by water and the Spirit nor of his death unlesse hee bee dead to sinne nor of his buriall unlesse hee have buried his old Adam so neither of his resurrection unlesse hee bee risen from dead workes and continually walketh in newnesse of life See you how the materiall colours in a glasse window when the sun-beames passe through it produce the like colours but lesse materiall and therefore called by the Philosophers intentionales spiritales on the next wall no otherwise doth the corporall resurrection of Christ produce in all true believers a representation thereof in their spirituall which Saint John calleth o Apoc. 20.5 the first resurrection Saint Paul p Heb. 6.1 repentance from dead workes Sinnes especially heinous and grievous proceeding from an evill habit are called dead workes and such sinners dead men because they are deprived of the life of God have no sense of true Religion they see not Gods workes they heare not his Word they savour not the things of God they feele no pricke of conscience they breath not out holy prayers to God nor move towards heaven in their desires but lye rotting in their owne filthinesse and corruption The causes which moved the Jewes so much to abhorre dead corpses ought to be more prevalent with us carefully to shunne and avoid those that are spiritually dead in sinnes and transgressions they were foure 1 Pollution 2 Horrour 3 Stench 4 Haunting with evill spirits 1 Pollution That which touched a dead corpse was by the law uncleane neither can any come nigh these men much lesse embrace them in their bosome without morall pollution and taking infection in their soules from them 2 Horrour Nothing so ghastly as the sight of a dead corpse the representation whereof oft-times in the Theater appalleth not onely the spectatours but also the actours and yet this sight is not so dreadfull to the carnall man as the sight of those that are spiritually dead I speake of foule notorious and scandalous offenders to them that feare God Saint John would not stay in the same bath with Cerinthus and certainely 't is a most fearefull thing to bee under the same roofe with blasphemous heretickes and profane persons who have no feare of God before their eyes 3 Stench The smell of a carkasse is not so offensive to the nostrils as the stench of gluttony drunkennesse and uncleannesse in which wicked men wallow is loathsome to God and all good men 4 Haunting with evil spirits We read in scriptures that the men that were possest of the divel came q Mat. 8.28 out of the tombs and graves and we find by dayly experience the like of these rather carkasses than men that the devill hankereth about them and entereth into their heart as he did into Judas filling them with all wickednesse and uncleannesse After they have exhausted their bodies with incontinency their estate with riotous living and have lost first their conscience and after their credit they fall into the deepest melancholy upon which Sathan works and puts them into desperate courses r Psal 73.19 O how suddenly doe they consume perish and come to a fearefull end Me thinkes I heare some say wee heard of places haunted by evill spirits in time of popery are there now any such not such as then were solitary houses ruined pallaces or Churches in which fearefull noyses are said to have beene heard and walking spirits to have beene met For at the thunder of the Gospell Sathan fell like lightning from heaven and hath left those his old holds but places of a contrary condition such where is the greatest concourse of people I meane profane Theaters disorderly Tavernes Ale-houses places of gaming and lewdnesse yea prisons also which were intended for the restraint of wickednesse and punishment of vice are made refuges of Malefactors and schooles of all impiety and wickednesse Quis custodes custodiet ipsos As in the hot sands of Africa where wilde beasts of divers sorts meet to drinke strange monsters are begotten which gave occasion to that proverbe ſ Eras
word of God as it is written which here I must change and say Hearken unto the word of God as it writeth For to the Angel of Thyatira the second Person which is the Word of God thus writeth Write It is a great honour to receive a letter from a noble Personage how much more from the Sonne of God St. d E● 40. Quid est aliud Scripture sacra n ●i quaedam epistola Omnipotentis Dei ad creaturam suam Gregorie excellently amplifieth upon this point in his epistle to Theodorus the Physician If your excellencie saith he were from the Court and should receive a letter from the Emperour you would never be quiet till you had opened it you would never suffer your eyes to sleepe nor your eye lids to slumber nor the temples of your head to take any rest till you had read it over againe and againe Behold the Emperour of heaven the Lord of men and Angels hath sent you a letter for the good of your soule and will you neglect to peruse it Peruse it my son studie it I pray thee meditate upon it day and night Where letters passe one from another there is a kinde of correspondencie and societie and such honour have all Gods Saints they have fellowship with the Father and the Sonne O let us not sleighten such a societie whereby we hold intelligence with heaven let us with all reverence receive and with all diligence peruse and with all carefulnesse answer letters and messages sent from the Sonne of God by returning sighes and prayers backe to heaven and making our selves in the Apostles phrase commendatorie letters written not with inke but with the Spirit Thus saith the Son of God Not by spirituall regeneration as all the children of promise are the sonnes of God but by eternall generation not by grace of adoption but by nature Who hath eyes like a flame of fire and feet like fine brasse Eyes like a flame of fire piercing through the thickest darknesse feete like brasse to support his Chuch and stamp to pouder whatsoever riseth up against it like fine brasse pure and no way defiled by walking through the midst of the golden candlestickes Wheresoever he walkes he maketh it holy ground Quicquid calcaverit hic rosa fiet There are three sorts of members in holy Scripture attributed to our head Christ Jesus 1 Naturall 2 Mysticall 3 Metaphoricall Naturall hee hath as perfect man Mysticall as head of the Church Metaphoricall as God By these members wee may divide all the learned Commentatours expositions They who follow the naturall or literall construction of the words apply this description to the members of Christs glorified body in Heaven which shine like flaming fire or metall glowing in a furnace But Lyra and Carthusian have an eye to Christ his mysticall eyes viz. Bishops and Pastours who are the over-seers of Christ his flocke resembling fire in the heat of their zeale and light of their knowledge whereby they direct the feet of Christ that is in their understanding his inferiour members on earth likened to fine brasse to set forth the purity of their conversation and described burning in a furnace to expresse their fiery tryall by martyrdome Alcasar by the feet of fine brasse understandeth the Preachers of the Word whom Christ sendeth into all parts to carry the Gospel Those feet which e Esay 52.7 Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace Esay calleth beautifull Saint John here compareth to the finest brasse which f Beda in Apoc Pedes sunt Christiani in fine seculi qui similes erunt orichalcho quod est aes per ignem plura medicamina perductum ad auri colorem sic illi per acerbissimas persecutiones exercebuntur perducentur ad plenam charitatis fulgorem Beda and Haimo will have to bee copper rendring the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not the most resplendent brasse such as was digged out of Mount Libanus but Orichalchum that is copper and thus they worke it to their purpose As brasse the matter of copper by the force of fire and strong waters and powders receiveth the tincture of gold so say they the Christians that shall stand last upon the earth termed in that respect Christs feet shall by many exercises of their patience and fiery tryalls of their faith be purified and refined and changed into precious metall and become golden members of a golden head I doe not utterly reject this interpretation of the mysticall eyes and feet of Christ nor the former of the naturall members of his glorified body because they carry a faire shew and goodly lustre with them yet I more encline to the third opinion which referreth them to the attributes of God For me thinkes I see in the fiery eyes the perfection of Christ his knowledge to which nothing can bee darke or obscure as also his vigilant zeale over his Church and the fiercenesse of his wrath against the enemies thereof Bullenger conceiveth our Saviour to be pourtrayed by the Spirit with eyes like a flame of fire because hee enlighteneth the eyes of the godly but Meyerus because he suddenly consumeth the wicked both the knowne properties of fire for in flaming fire there is both cleare light and intensive heat The light is an embleme of his piercing sight the heat of his burning wrath Where the eye is lightsome and the object exposed to it the eye must needs apprehend it but the Sonne of Gods eyes are most lightsome nay rather light it selfe in which there is no darknesse and g Heb. 4 13. all things lye open and naked before him yea the h Apoc. 2.23 heart and the reines which he searcheth In Courts of humane justice thoughts and intentions and first motions to evill beare no actions because they come not within the walke of mans justice but it will not be so at Christs Tribunall where the secrets of all hearts shall be opened Let no man then hope by power or fraud or bribes to smother the truth or bleare the eyes of the Judge of all flesh For his eyes like flames of fire dispell all darknesse and carry a bright light before them Let not the adulterer watch for the twi-light and when hee hath met with his wanton Dalila carry her into the inmost roomes and locke doore upon doore and then take his fill of love saying The shadow of the night and the privacy of the roome shall conceale mee For though none else be by and all the lights be put out yet he is seen and the Sonne of God is by him with eyes like a flaming fire Let not the Projector pretend the publike good when he intends nothing but to robbe the rich and cheate the poore Let not the cunning Papist under colour of decent ornaments of the Church bring in Images and Idols under colour of commemoration of the deceased bring in invocation of Saints departed under colour
against his owne body doth not his conscience tell him that God is highly displeased with him doth hee not feele the effects of his wrath in his soule and oftentimes in his body and estate also and if the hand of God upon him bring him not to a sight and a sense and an acknowledgement and a detestation also of his sinne dare any man secure his salvation On the contrary if after his relapse his heart smite him and hee feeles the pricke of conscience if there bee any sparke in the weeke any bitter fume drawing teares from his eyes any fervour of zeale any heate of love in him any vehement desire of saving grace though hee receive the sentence of death in himselfe and breathe out his last gaspe in a disconsolate sigh and with a lamentable groane yet none doubteth but that he may passe even by the gates of Hell into Heaven There is nothing so easie or frequent as for a man to slip or fall who walketh upon the ice and what is this world compared by Saint John to a sea of glasse Apoc. 15.2 but slippery ice in which though they who goe most warily slide often and receive grievous falls yet they may take such hold on the one side upon the promises of God Jer. 31.40 I will not turne away from them to doe them good but I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from mee and on the other side upon Christs praier I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not that they fall not irrecoverably or so dangerously as that they dye of their fall Luke 22.31 For whose comfort in their fearfullest conflicts with dispaire I will lay such grounds of confidence as will amount to a hope that maketh not ashamed and at least to a morall assurance of the recovery of their former estate In the ninth of Proverbs and the first wee have a description of a house built by Wisedome b Prov. 9.1 Wisedome saith hee hath built her an house shee hath hewen out her seven pillars By this house albeit some of the Ancients understand the incarnation of the Sonne of God who is the Wisedome of his Father and might bee said then to build him an house when hee framed a body to himselfe yet may it bee applyed to the spirituall house which every Christian buildeth by faith upon the rocke Christ Jesus for as that so this standeth upon seven pillars 1. The constancy of Gods love in Christ 2. The certainty of his decrees 3. The truth of his promises 4. The power of regenerating grace 5. The efficacy of Christs prayer and intercession for all Beleevers 6. The safegard of the Almighties protection 7. The testimony of the true ancient Church which the Apostle himselfe graceth with the title of the pillar and ground of truth The first pillar to support this building is the constancy of Gods love to all that are in Christ which may be thus hewen to our purpose They upon whom God setteth such an especiall affection in Christ that hee maketh a covenant of peace and entreth into a contract of marriage with them can never bee cast utterly out of favour much lesse grow into eternall hatred and detestation in such sort that they become the objects of endlesse misery and subjects of everlasting malediction For this kindnesse whereby the Lord our Redeemer hath mercy on us Esa 1.54.8 With everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer Ver. 10. The mountains shal depart and the ●●ls be removed but my kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed is everlasting The covenant of this peace is immoveable this contract is indissoluble * Hos 2.19 20. I will betroth thee unto mee for ever I will betroth thee unto mee in righteousnesse and in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercies I will betroth thee unto mee in faithfulnesse and thou shalt know the Lord. But all true beleevers are embraced with this love comprised within this covenant parties in this contract What then can steale their hearts from Christ or alienate his love from them z Rom. 8 35.38 What shal separate them from this love of God in Christ shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or perill No neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. That fire which generateth and produceth its owne fuell can never goe out and what is the fuell which nourisheth this heavenly flame but grace and vertue in us which it selfe continually worketh in all them that are new creatures in Christ Men affect others because of worth but contrariwise Gods affection causeth worth in all who are indeared unto him All the spirituall beauty they have wherewith he is enamoured is no other than the reflection and glisening of the beames of his grace which a Heb. 12.2 Looking unto Jesus the beginner and finisher of our faith beginneth and consummateth all good in us b Phil. 2.13 For it is God that worketh in us both to will and to doe of his good pleasure working in us both the wil the deed Philosophy teacheth that the celestiall and superiour bodies work upon the terrestriall and inferiour but not on the contrary The stormes or calmes in the aire change not the motions or influence of the starres but contrariwise the motions conjunctions and influences of the Starres cause such variety in the ayre and earth The rayes of the visible Sunne are not moved at all by the motion of the object but immoveably flow from the body of that Planet and though blustering windes tyrannize in the ayre and remove it a thousand times out of its place in an houre yet they stirre not therewith in like manner though our affections are transported with every gale of prosperity and storme of adversity and our wills somewhat yeeld to every wind of temptation yet Gods affections like the beames of the Sunne remaine immoveable where they are once fixed Wee play fast and loose even with those oftentimes to whom wee are bound in the strongest bonds of duty and love wee praise and dispraise with a breath frowne and smile with a looke Esay 55.8 love and hate with a conceit but Gods affections are not like ours John 13.1 nor are his thoughts our thoughts For having loved his owne which were in the world 2 Tim. 2.13 hee loveth them unto the end and though we beleeve not yet hee abideth faithfull he cannot deny himselfe The second pillar is the certainty of Gods decree for the salvation of the Elect 2 Tim. 2 19. and thus I reare it up The foundation of God standeth sure having this seale The Lord knoweth them that
of sinnes is peculiarly attributed to the Spirit and by a metonymie termed the Holy Ghost Barradius bringeth us an answer out of the schooles that z Barrad in harmon Evang. remission of sinnes is a worke of Gods goodnesse and mercy now workes of goodnesse are peculiarly attributed to the holy Spirit who proceedeth as they determine from the will of the Father and the Sonne whose object is goodnesse as workes of wisedome are attributed to the Sonne because hee is the word proceeding by way of generation from the understanding of his Father This reason may goe for currant in their way neither have I any purpose at this time to crosse it but to haste to the period of this discourse in which that I may better discover the path of truth in stead of many little lights which others have brought I will set up one great taper made of the sweetest of their waxe The Holy Ghost is sometimes taken for the person of the Comforter which sealeth Gods chosen to salvation sometimes for the gifts effects or operations of the Holy Ghost as it were the prints of his scale left in the soule these are principally three 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spirituall power or authority 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vertue or ghostly ability to worke wonders and speake with divers languages 1 Is common to all them that are sanctified 2 Is peculiar to Christs Ministers 3 Restrayned to the Apostles themselves and some few others of their immediate successors z Joh. 3.5 Exce●t a man be borne of the water and of the spirit 1 Regenerating grace is termed the holyGhost 2 Spirituall order or ministeriall power is called the Spirit or holy Ghost in this place and Luk. 4.18 Esay 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me to preach the Gospell c. 3 Miraculous vertue is called the holy Ghost Act. 2.4 And they were filled with the holy Ghost and spake with divers tongues 1 The Spirit of grace and regeneration the Apostles received at their first calling 2 The Spirit of ecclesiasticall government they received at this time c. 3 The Spirit of powerfull and extraordinary operation they received in the day of Pentecost 1 In their mindes by infallible inspiration 2 In their tongues by multiplicity of languages 3 In their hands by miraculous cures Receive then the Holy Ghost is 1 A ghostly function to ordaine Pastors and sanctifie congregations to God 2 Spirituall gifts to execute and discharge that function 3 Spirituall power or jurisdiction to countenance and support both your function and gifts Thus have I opened the treasury of this Scripture out of which I now offer to your religious thoughts and affections these ensuing observations And first in generall I commend to the fervour of your zeale and devotion the excessive heat of Christs love which absumed and spent him all for us flesh and spirit His flesh he offereth us in the Sacrament of his Supper his spirit hee conferreth in the sacred rite of consecration His body hee gave by those words Take eate this is my body his spirit hee gave by these Receive ye the holy Ghost a gift unestimable a treasure unvaluable for it was this spirit which quickned us when wee were dead in trespasses and sinnes it is this spirit which fetcheth us againe when wee swoune in despaire it is this spirit that refresheth and cooleth us in the extreme heat of all persecutions afflictions sorrowes and diseases to it we owe 1 Light in our mindes 2 Warmth in our desires 3 Temper in our affections 4 Grace in our wils 5 Peace in our consciences 6 Joy in our hearts and unspeakeable comfort in life and death This is the winde which bloweth a Cant. 4.16 Blow upon my garden that the spices thereof may flow out let my beloved come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits upon the Spouse her garden that the spices thereof might flow out This is the breath which formeth the words in the cloven tongues this is the breath which bloweth and openeth all the flowers of Paradise This is the blast which diffuseth the savour of life through the whole Church This is the gale which carryeth us through all the troublesome waves of this world and bringeth us safe to the haven where we would be And as the Spouse of Christ which is his mysticall body is infinitely indebted to her head for this gift of the spirit whereby holy congregations are furnished with Pastors and they with gifts and the ministery of the Gospell continually propagated so wee above all nations in the world at this day are most bound to extoll and magnifie his goodnesse towards us herein among whom in a manner alone this holy seed of the Church remaineth unmixed and uncorrupt not onely as propagated but propagating also not children onely but Fathers Apostolicall doctrine other reformed Churches maintaine but doe they retaine also Apostolicall discipline laying of hands they have on Ministers and Pastors but consecration of Archbishops and Bishops they have not And because they want consecrated Bishops to ordaine Pastors their very ordination is not according to ancient order Because they want spirituall Fathers in Christ to beget children in their ministery their Ministers by the adversary are accounted no better than filii populi whereas will they nill they even in regard of our Hierarchy the most frontlesse Papists must confesse the children begot by our reverend Fathers in the ministery of the Gospell to be as legitimate as their owne For albeit they put the hereticke upon us as the Arrians did upon the Catholike Fathers calling them Athanasians c. yet this no way disableth either the consecration of our Bishops nor the ordination of our Priests not onely because we have proved the dogge lyeth at their doores and that they are a kinde of mungrils of divers sorts of heretickes but because it is the doctrine of their Church b See Croy in his third conformity Whitaker in fine resp ad demonstrat Sanderi Rivet procem de haeref q. 1. Cath. orthod that the character of order is indeleble and therefore Archbishop Cranmer and other of our Bishops ordained by them if they had afterwards as Papists most falsly suppose fallen into heresie could not lose their faculty of consecration and ordination The consecration of Catholicke Bishops by Arrians and baptisme of faithfull Christians children by Donatists though heretickes is made good as well by the decrees of ancient as later Councels determining that Sacraments administred even by heretickes so they observe the rite and forme of words prescribed in holy scripture bee of force and validity Praysed therefore for ever bee the good will of him that dwelt in the bush that the Rod of Aaron still flourisheth among us and planteth and propagateth it selfe like that Indian fig-tree so much admired by all Travellers from the utmost branch whereof issueth a gummy juyce which hangeth
delicate fruits they who overcome not eat not x Apoc. 2.17 the hidden Manna as they partake not of the Spouse her graces so neither have they any right or title to her titles They are no Temples but rather styes no dove-cotes but cages of uncleane birds no habitations for the holy Ghost but rather haunts of uncleane spirits They indeed live and move in God for out of him they cannot subsist but y Gal. 2.20 Neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Rom. 8 9. 2 Cor. 6.16 God himselfe liveth and moveth in the godly God is in all places and abideth every where yet hee z Ephes 3.17 dwelleth onely in the hearts of true believers For they and they onely are the Temple of the living God Doctr. 4 Are. In the Romane Kalendar no Saints are entred till many miracles be voiced upon them after death but in Gods Register wee finde Saints in the Church on earth among the a Rom. 1.7 Romanes b 1 Cor. 1.2 Corinthians c Eph. 1.1 Ephesians d Phil. 1.1 Philippians at e Act. 9.32 Lydda and elsewhere But what Saints and how Saints by calling Saints by a holy profession and blamelesse conversation Saints by gratious acceptation of pious endeavours rather than of performances Saints by inchoation Saints by regeneration of grace Saints by daily renovation of the inward man Saints by devotion and dedication of themselves wholly to God Saints by inhabitation of the holy spirit in them which maketh them a holy Temple of the living God In this life we are f 1 Cor. 3.23 Gods for all things are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods in the life to come g Apo. 21.22 And I saw no Temple therein for the Lord God almighty and the Lambe are the Temple thereof God is ours In this life wee are Gods Temple but in the life to come God is g Apo. 21.22 And I saw no Temple therein for the Lord God almighty and the Lambe are the Temple thereof ours Now God dwelleth with us and is but slenderly entertained by us but there wee shall dwell with him and have fulnesse of all things yet without satiety or being cloyed therewith Doctr. 5 The Temple Not the Temples but the Temple Gen. 1.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As the learned Hebricians from the construction of the noune plurall with a verb singular as if you would say in Latine Dii or Numina creavit gather the trinity of persons in the unity of the divine nature so from the construction here of a singular adjunct with a subject plurall wee may inferre the plurality of the faithfull in the unity of the Church For wee that are many yet are truely one many graines one bread many sheepe one fold many members one body many branches one vine many private oratories or chaplets but one Temple The parts of the Catholike Church are so farre scattered and dissevered in place that they cannot make one materiall yet they are so neare joyned in affection and fast linked with the bonds of religion that they make but one spirituall Temple They are many soules and must needs have as many divers naturall bodies yet in regard they are all quickned guided and governed by the same spirit they make but one mysticall body whose head is in heaven and members dispersed over the earth Can unity bee divided If wee are rent in sunder by schisme and faction Christ his seamelesse coate cannot cover us all The Philosophers finde it in the naturall the States-men in the politicke and I pray God wee finde it not in the mysticall body of Christ h Cyp. de simplic prel A velle radium à sole divisionem lucis unitas non capit ab arbore frange ramum fructum germinare non poterit à fonte praecide rivum prorsus arescet That division tends to corruption and dissolution to death Plucke a beame if you can from the body of the sunne it will have no light breake a branch from the tree it will beare no fruit sever a river from the spring it will soone bee dryed up cut a member from the body it presently dyeth cast a pumice stone into the water and though it bee never so bigge while it remaines entire and the parts whole together it will swimme above water but breake it into pieces and every piece will sinke in like manner the Church and Common-wealth which are supported and as it were borne up above water by unity are drowned in perdition by discord dissention schisme and faction It is not possible that those things which are knit by a band should hold fast together after the band it selfe is broken How can a sinew hold steddy the joint if it bee sprayned or broken or cut in sunder Religion beloved brethren is the band of all society the strongest sinew of Church or Commonwealth God forbid there should bee any rupture in this band any sprayne in this sinew The husbandman hath sowed good seede cleane and picked in this Kingdome for more than threescore yeeres and it hath fructified exceedingly since the happy reformation of Religion in these parts O let no envious man sow upon it those tares which of late have sprung up in such abundance in our neighbour countries that they have almost choaked all the good wheat Let no roote of bitternesse spring up in our Paradise or if it bee sprung let authority or at least Christian charity plucke it up Wee are all one body let us all have the same minde towards God and endeavour to the utmost of our power to i Eph. 4 3. preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace that our spirituall Jerusalem may resemble the old Byzantium the stones whereof were so matched and the wall built so uniformely that the whole City seemed to bee but one stone continued throughout It was the honour of the k Psal 122.3 Jerusalem is builded as a City that is compacted together old let it bee also of the new Jerusalem that it is a City at unity in it selfe Doctr. 6 I have held you thus long in the Porch let us now enter into the Temple Glorious things are spoken of you O ye chosen of God yee are tearmed vessels of honour lights of the world a chosen generation a royall priesthood a peculiar people a celestiall society yet nothing ever was or can be more spoken to Your endlesse comfort and superexcellent glory than that you are Children of the Father Members of the Sonne and Temples of the holy Ghost Seneca calleth the world Augustissimum Dei Templum a most magnificent Temple of God David the heaven Solomon the Church Saint Paul the Elect in the Church and in a sense not altogether improper we may tearme the world the Temple of the Church the Church the Temple of our bodies our bodies the Temples of our soules and our soules most peculiarly the Temples of the
to the capacity of their nature and consequently all may truely and properly bee said to live how then is life appropriated to God and God by this attribute living distinguished not onely from fained deities which were no creatures but also from creatures which are not God I grant that other creatures live and that truely and properly For the Angels live in heaven the Birds in the ayre the Fishes in the sea Men and Beasts in the earth the Divell and damned ghosts in hell but none of them live the life of God their life differeth as much from his as their nature from his 1 His life is his nature their 's the operation of their nature the life of Angels is their contemplation of Divels is their torment of Men is their action of Beasts their s●●e and motion of Plants their growth in briefe Hee is life they are but living 2 His life is his owne he liveth of himselfe and by himselfe and in himselfe their life is borrowed from him as all light is from the sunne 3 His life is infinite without beginning or ending their life is finite and had a beginning and most of them shall have an end and all might if he had so pleased 4 His life is entire altogether and perfect their 's imperfect growing by additio● of dayes to dayes and yeeres to yeeres 5 His li●e is immutable their 's mutable and subject to many alterations and chang●s To dr●w towards an end you heare what You are not prophane or common houses but the Temple not the Temple of Divels but of God ye● the living God marke I beseech you what will ensue upon it Use 1 If the ●●●thfull are the Temple of the holy Ghost to robbe or spoile any of them must needs bee sacriledge in the highest degree To assault and set open Gods house what is it but after a sort to offer violence to God hims●●fe and commit a worse burglary than that which our lawes condemne ●●th death 2 If 〈◊〉 Saints of God are the Sanctuaries of the most High what need they 〈◊〉 ●he ungodly pursue them fearefully to flye and basely to seeke to 〈◊〉 person for s●ccour o● place for refuge They carry a sanctuary about 〈…〉 of their bodies Why should they take sanctuary who are 〈…〉 s●nctu●ry oftentimes to save the greatest offenders from God● 〈◊〉 Such a sanctuary was Noah to the old world Lot to 〈…〉 Saint John to those that were in the house Saint 〈…〉 were in the shippe with him So soone as Noah left the 〈…〉 entr●●● into the Arke the world was drowned so soone as Lot lets God 〈◊〉 and ●led 〈◊〉 Zoar Sodome was burned with fire and brimstone from heaven so soone as Saint John left the bath where he met Cerinthus the Hereticke and got out of the house the house fell downe so soon as the Christians were safe at Pella out of Jerusalem Jerusalem was destroyed The house of Obed-Edom was blessed for having the Arke in it and thrice happy are those houses which have many of these Temples in them 3 If Gods chosen are his most holy Temple they must not admit Idolaters into their communion nor profane persons into their houses for this were to set open the Church of Christ to Belial and to entertaine Gods enemies in his owne house 4 Are our bodies and soules the Temple and our faculties and members the Chappels of the holy Ghost how holy then ought wee to be in our inward and outward man how pure in our soules and cleane in our bodies What a horrible and abominable thing were it for a man to doe any notorious villany or commit any filthinesse in the Church upon the Communion Table the savage Gothes and barbarous Infidels would not doe so wickedly Can we possibly beleeve that we are the Temple of the living God if wee bee so dissolute and impure and profane as some are Know wee not that so oft as wee sweare vainly and use curses and execrations wee profane Gods Temple so oft as wee draw bloud of our brother wee pollute it so oft as wee corrupt him wee destroy it so oft as wee defile our bodies with fornication or our soules with Idolatry wee commit filthinesse and practise wickednesse in the Temple of God in the presence of God even under his eye Men and brethren in this case what shall we doe for who hath not in some kinde or other polluted Gods holy Temple his soule and body Lactantius giveth us the best counsell that may bee d Lact. de ira Dei c. ult Mundemus hoc Templum Let us cleanse and purifie this Temple which wee have defiled You will say How is this to be done Gorrham answereth you out of the Law 1 The pavement according to the rites prescribed by Moses was to be broken up and all dead mens bones cast out let us in like manner breake up the ground of the heart and cast all dead workes out of our consciences 2 It was to bee swept all over and washed let us in like manner wash our inward Temples with tears and cleanse them with hearty repentance and godly sorrow for our sinnes 3 It was to be sprinkled with bloud let us in like manner through faith sprinkle our consciences with the bloud of the Lambe 4 It was to bee perfumed with sweet odours and incense let us in like manner perfume our inward Temple with zealous prayers and sighes for our sinnes When God shall see his Temple thus purified his house thus prepared for him hee will returne into it and dwell in it againe and take delight in it and enrich it daily more and more I will locke up the gates of this Temple with the golden Key of * Lact. l. de ira Dei c. ult Sit Deus in nobis non in templo sed in corde consecratus mundemus hoc templum quod non fumo nec pulvere sed malis cogitationibus sordidatur quod non cereis ardentibus sed claritate luce sapientiae illuminatur in quo si Deum semper crediderimus habere praesentem cujus divinitati secreta mentis pateant ita vivamus ut propitium semper habeamus nunquam vereamurs iratum Lactantius Let God bee consecrated or set up by us not in the Temple but in our hearts and let us carefully cleanse this Temple which is soyled and blacked not with smoake and dust but with impure thoughts and earthly desires which is not enlightned with burning tapers but with the light and brightnesse of wisdome in which if wee beleeve that God is continually present to the beames of whose divine eyes the inmost Closets of all hearts lye open let us so live that wee may ever enjoy his favour and never feare his wrath Gracious Lord who hast placed thy Tabernacle in the midst of us in our hearts consecrate them wee beseech thee for holy Temples unto thee sprinkle them with thy bloud cleanse them by thy grace enlighten them with thy
Babylon before his comming into the flesh and after his death first under the fury of the Heathen next the cruelty of the Arrian Emperours and since that under the insolency of the Turke in the East and tyranny of Antichrist in the West As hee is termed by the Prophet Esay Vir dolorum a man of sorrowes so we finde her Uxorem lachrymarum a wife of teares as he was crowned with thorns so she lyeth in the briars as he was laid in wait for at his birth so she at her new birth as he fled from Herod into Egypt so she from the Dragon into the wildernesse as he was tempted once so she is alwayes as he bare his crosse to Golgotha so she hath borne hers in all parts and ages of the world Indeed sometimes she hath had lucida intervalla times of lightsomenesse and joy when Kings have been her nursing fathers and Queenes her nursing mothers but for the most part she sitteth in darknesse as a close mourner yet solacing her selfe with c Micah 7.8 Rejoyce not against mee O my enemy When I fall I shall rise when I sit in darknesse the Lord shall be light unto mee hope of better times Hence it is that all the pictures that are drawne of her in Scripture are either taken from a d Apoc. 12.13 child-bearing woman frighted by a Dragon gaping to devoure her babe or a e Lament 1.1 widow making lamentation for her husband or a mother f Matth. 2.18 weeping for her children or a g Psal 39.12 pilgrime passing from country to country or an hermite lodged in the wildernesse as here in my Text. The Saints of God are described in holy Scripture clad in three sutes of apparrell different in colour 1. Blacke 2. Red. 3. White Blacke is their mourning weed Red their military ornament White their wedding garment They mourne in blacke for their sinnes and grievous afflictions They fight in red against their bloudy persecutours They triumph and sit at the marriage feast of the h Apoc. 16.11 And white robes were given to every one of them Lambe in white Two of their sutes they are well knowne by on earth the third is reserved in Gods Wardrob and shall be given them in Heaven The two former may be called their working day apparrell but the last their Holy-day or Sunday For they weare it not but upon their everlasting Sabbath in Heaven Their red and blacke vests doe not so much cover their bodies as discover their state and condition in this world where they alwayes either stand and fight with their bodily and ghostly enemies or sit downe and i Job 7.1 weep for their irrecoverable losses and incurable wounds Their life is a i Job 7.1 continuall warfare upon earth three potent enemies continually bid them battell 1 The World Without 2 The Flesh Within 3 The Divell Both within and without The Divell never ceaseth to suggest wicked thoughts the World to present dangerous baites the Flesh to ingender noysome lusts The Divell mainly assaulteth their faith the World their hope the Flesh their love and they fight with three speciall weapons 1 Temptations 2 Heresies 3 Persecutions Temptations I call all vitious provocations heresies all false doctrines in matter of faith and salvation persecutions all outward afflictions Temptations properly lay at the will heresies at the understanding persecutions at the whole person which though the Church of Christ for the most part in her noble members couragiously endureth and therefore is fitly compared to the Pyrausts which are nourished in the fire and to the Phoenix because she riseth againe out of the ashes of the burnt bodies of Martyrs yet sometimes especially in her weake and more feeble members to escape this fire she flies into some wildernesse or remote or obscure place where God alwayes provideth for her Division And the woman there is the frailtie of her nature fled there is the uncertainty of her state into the wildernesse there is the place of her retirednesse where she is nourished by God there is the staffe of her comfort a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes there is the terme of her obscuritie and the period of all her troubles And the woman c. Though all the prophecies of this booke are darkned with much obscurity yet by illustrating the vision set downe through this whole chapter and hanging it as it were a great light in the most eminent part of it we shall easily discover what divine truth lyeth hid in every corner thereof The holy Apostle and the Evangelist S. John in a divine rapture saw a most faire and glorious woman in travell and an ugly red Dragon with seven heads and ten hornes standing before her with open mouth ready to devoure her child of which she was no sooner delivered but her son was taken up to the Throne of God and she carried with the wings of an Eagle into the Wildernesse the Dragon thus deceived of his prey after which his mouth watered cast out of his mouth water as a floud after her to drowne her Such was the vision marke now I beseech you the interpretation thereof By the woman all that have dived deepe into the profound mysteries of this booke understand the Church whose beautie and glory is k Ver. 1. There appeared a great wonder in heaven a woman cloathed with the Sunne and the Moone under her feet and upon her head a crowne of twelve starres illustrated by the Sunne cloathing her and the Moone supporting her and the Starres crowning her The Sunne either signifieth the knowledge of Gods Word which enlighteneth the Church throughout or Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse who cloathes her with the robes of his righteousnesse Mal. 4 2. and exalteth her to his throne of glory above the Moone on which she standeth and thereby sheweth her contempt of this uncertaine and mutable world ruled by the Moone and subject to as many changes as that planet Thus it seemeth cleere what is meant by the Sunne and Moone but what shall we make of the crowne of twelve starres set upon her head It seemeth to represent either the number of the twelve Patriarkes the Crowne of the Jewish or the twelve Apostles the Crown of the Christian Church The man child which this woman had no sooner brought forth but he was caught up unto God in his Throne Ver. 5. and was to rule all Nations with a rod of Iron is undoubtedly our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ as by comparing the fift verse of this chapter with Psal 2. v. 9. and Apoc. 2.27 and 19.15 appeareth most evidently As for the Dragon he is so set out in his colours v. 9. that any may know him there he is called the old Serpent the Divell and Satan which deceiveth the whole world The waters which he casteth out of his mouth are multitudes of people which he stirreth up to persecute the Church He is described with
of the Martyrs sepulchres when she had no Churches but caves under ground no wealth but grace no exercises but sufferings no crowne but of martyrdome yet then she thrived best then she spread farthest then she kept her purity in doctrine and conversation then she convinced the Jewes then she converted the Gentiles then shee subdued Kingdomes whence I inferre three corollaries 1 That the Roman Church cannot be the true Church of Christ For the true Church of Christ as she is described in the holy Scriptures hath for long time lien hid beene often obscured and eclipsed by bloudy persecutions but the Roman or Papall Church hath never beene so her advocates plead for her that she hath beene alwayes not onely visible but conspicuous not onely knowne but notorious And among the many plausible arguments of perswasion and deceiveable shewes of reason wherewith they amuse and abuse the world none prevaileth so much with the common sort and unskilfull multitude as the outward pomp and glory of the Papall See For sith most men are led by sense and judge according to outward appearance the Church of Rome which maketh so goodly a shew and hath born so great sway in the world for many ages easily induceth them to beleeve that she is that City whereof the Prophet speaks x Psal 87.3 Glorious things are spoken of thee thou City of God What more glorious and glittering to the eie than the Popes triple crowne and the Cardinals hats and their Archbishops Palls and their Bishops miters and crozures their shining images their beautifull pictures their rich hangings their gilt rood lofts their crosses and reliques covered in gold and beset with all sorts of pretious stones These with their brightnesse and resplendency dazle the eyes of the multitude and verily if the Queenes daughters glory were all without and the kingdome of Christ of this world and his Church triumphant upon earth all the knowne Churches in the Christian world must give place to the See of Rome which hath borne up her head when theirs have beene under water hath sate as Queene when they have kneeled as captives hath braved it in purple when they have mourned in sackcloth and ashes But beloved y Rom. 10 17. faith commeth not by sight but by hearing and we are not to search the Church in the map of the world but in the Scriptures of God where we find her a pilgrim in Genesis a bondwoman in Exodus a prisoner in Judges a captive in the book of Kings a widow in the Prophets and here in my text a woman labouring with child flying from a red Dragon into the wildernesse I grant that Christ promiseth her a kingdome but not of this world and peace but it is the peace of God and joy but it is in the Holy Ghost and great glory but it is within z Psal 45.13 The Kings daughter is all glorious within c. 2 That none ought to despise the Churches beyond the seas under the Crosse but according to the command of the blessed Apostle a Heb. 13.3 Remember them that are in bonds as bound with them and them that suffer adversitie as heing our selves also in the body Their turne of sorrow is now ours may be hereafter God hath begun to them in a cup of trembling it is to be feared it will not passe us but we and all the reformed Churches shall drink of it Our Church in Queene Maries dayes resembled this woman in my text theirs now doth both never a whit the lesse but rather the more the true Churches of Christ because they weare his red livery and beare his Crosse 3 That we ought not to looke for great things in this world but having food and raiment as the woman had here in my text to be therewith contented and as she withdrew her self from the eye of the world so ought we to retire our selves into our closets there to have private conference with God to examine our spirituall estate to make up the breaches in our conscience to poure out our soules in teares of compunction for our sins of compassion for the calamities of our brethren of an ardent desire and longing affection for the second comming of our Lord when he shall put an end as to all sinne and temptation so to all sorrow and feare Amen Even so come Lord Jesu To whom c. THE SAINTS VEST A Sermon preached on All-Saints day at Lincolnes-Inne for Doctor Preston THE XXIV SERMON APOC. 7.14 These are they that came out of great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the bloud of the Lambe Right Honourable Right Worshipfull c. THe question which the Elder moved to Saint John in the precedent verse to my Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what are these mee thinks I heare some put to mee at this present saying What are these holy ones whose feast yee keep what meane these devotions what doe these festivities intend what speake these solemnities what Saints are they Virgins Confessours or Martyrs whose memory by the anniversary returne of this day you eternize 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence came they or rather how came they to bee thus honoured and canonized in our Kalendar My direct answer hereunto is my Text These are they c. and the exemplification thereof shall be my Sermon The palmes they beare are ensignes of their victory the robes they weare are emblemes of their glory the bloud wherein they dyed their robes representeth the object of their faith the white and bright colour of them their joy and the length of them the continuance thereof Yea but these holy ones you may object at least the chiefe of them had their dayes apart the blessed Virgin hers apart and the Innocents apart the Apostles apart and the Evangelists apart how come they now to be repeated why committeth the Church a tautologie in her menologie what needeth this sacred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or congeries of feasts blending of devotions thrusting all Saints into one day and that a short one in the rubricke It is that men may see by that which we doe what we beleeve in that Article of our Creed the communion of Saints Wee joyne them all in one collect wee remember them all upon one day because they are all united into one body admitted into one society naturalized into one Kingdome made free Denisons of one City and partakers of one a Col. 1.12 inheritance of the Saints in light In a word we keep one feast for them all upon earth because they all keep one everlasting feast in heaven the marriage b Apoc. 19.9 supper of the Lambe The Romanes beside severall Temples dedicated to severall deities had their Pantheon or all-gods temple See wee not in the skie here single starres glistering by themselves there constellations or a concourse of many heavenly lampes joyning their lights do we not heare with exceeding delight in the singing of our Church
circumveniat why doth he compasse the earth but to circumvent us Circumvention is more easily understood than prevented or avoided A Wrestler who can circumvenire come about his adversary taketh hold where hee list to his best advantage in a duell fought on horse-backe hee that can nimbly turne his beast and circumvenire come about his Antagonist hee striketh him at pleasure when a passenger is met by a theefe at every turne he is properly circumvented when a city is environed and begirt with a puissant army that is circumvented there is no hope to escape By which few instances you may perceive how apt this phrase is to expresse the great danger of Satan his temptations Yet the Kings Translation lest Satan get advantage of us commeth neerest to the Greeke Etymology which imports to have more or the better to gaine over and above and Oecumenius the Greeke Scholiast descanteth upon this signification of the word after this manner * Oecumenius in 2 Cor. 2.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doth not Satan gaine over and above when hee gaines upon us both wayes when hee getteth an advantage of us both by sinne and repentance both by vitious pleasures and by godly sorrow as hee would have done upon this Corinthian whom first hee perswaded to make an incestuous match to satisfie his lustfull desires and after hee felt the smart of his sinne and severe censure of the Church hee wrought upon his sorrow and sought to drive him into desparation But why doth the Apostle say lest hee get advantage of us was Saint Paul in any danger or had Satan any designe upon him We may piously conceive that Saint Paul joynes himselfe with them because hee esteemed all those whom hee begot to Christ by the Gospell no other than his own children and the Father cannot but suffer in the losse of his childe The f Cypr. de laps Plus pastor in gregis sui vulnere vulneratur shepheard must needs be endamaged when any of his flocke is diminished g 2 Cor. 11.29 Who is offended saith Saint Paul and I burne not yet this is not all Saint Paul was further interessed in this businesse than so for the Corinthians had excommunicated this incestuous person by order from the Apostle himselfe and therefore if he had miscarried Satan had made his advantage upon all upon the incestuous person whose soule hee would have ruined upon the Church which hee had maimed of a member upon the Corinthians and S. Paul himselfe under whose hands this patient had beene so roughly handled that hee died in the cure These were Satans reaches or as they are here called devices which he could not carry so closely but that the Apostles vigilant eye descryed them for saith hee Wee are not ignorant of his devices Did the housholder know what night the thiefe would come to rob him he would certainly guard his house did the birds know a snare were laid for them would they come neare it were the fishes aware that a net were spread for them would they run into it had the souldiers certaine notice of an ambush set for them would they bee surprized Loe here beloved snares of temptation nets of circumvention ambushes of destruction prepared by a most subtle enemy and wee are not ignorant of them if then we be taken entangled or surprized can we lay the blame upon any thing but upon our carelesse and retchlesse folly Could wee plead with him in the Poet Non expectato vulnus ab hoste tuli I was wounded by a dart I was not aware of our case deserved some compassion but when wee know our enemy and are foreshewed what fiery darts hee prepareth for us and when and how hee will cast them at us if we receive our deaths wound our blood must needs bee upon our selves Satan assaults us two maner of waies by his lions paw by his serpents sting by open force and by cunning sleights by the one in time of persecution by the other in time of peace of the latter the Apostle here speaks saying wee are not ignorant of his Devices Devices are subtle meanes to compasse our ends such as are trickes in gaming fallacies in disputing sleights in wrestling mysteries in trading policies in state and stratagems in war the enemy of our soule is full of them cui nomina mille Mille nocendi artes Lypsius hath written of all the warlike engines used by the ancients and Vegetius of their military policies and Captaine-craft but never any yet was able to recount much lesse describe all Satans poliorcetickes and stratagems Some of the chief and most dangerous partly out of scripture and partly out of experienced souldiers of Christ I purpose to acquaint you with at this time 1. The first stratagem policy or device of Satan is To observe the naturall constitution of every mans minde and body and to fit his temptations thereunto For hee knoweth well that as every plant thrives not in every soyle so neither every vice in every temper and complexion Though there bee in every man a generall aversenesse from good and propension to evill and albeit nature as it is corrupted since the fall bee a step-dame to all vertue and a mother to all vices yet shee is not equally affected in every one to all her owne children Some ill conditions are more incident to some climats to some countries to some families than others The Easterne people were for the most part given to sorcery the auncient Jewes to idolatry the Greeks to curious heresie the Latine Church to superstition Unnaturall lust seemeth to bee naturalized in Italy pride in Spaine levity in France drunkennesse in Germany gluttony and new fangled fashions in great Brittaine Ambition haunteth the Court mostly faction the University luxury and usury the City oppression and extortion the Countrey bribery and forged cavillations the Courts of justice schisme and simony the Church Pliny writeth of some families that they had privie marks in their bodies peculiar to those of that line the like may bee found in mens mindes and every one herein is like the Leopard Cognatis maculis parcit fera hee h Greg. mor. in Job l. 29. Priùs conspersionem uniuscujusque intuctur pòst tentationum laqueos apponit favoureth his owne spots These spots Satan curiously marketh and accordingly frames his suggestions hee observes our walkes and spies our usuall haunts and there sets gins for us As the Mariner marks the wind and accordingly hoiseth up or striketh saile or as the cunning Oratour learneth which way the Judge propendeth and ever draweth him where hee seeth him comming on so the Devill maketh perpetuall use of the bent of our nature to helpe forward his temptations rightly considering that it is a very easie matter to bow a tree the way it bendeth of it selfe to cast a bowle swiftly downe the hill to push downe a wall where it swaggeth already to trip up his heeles whose foot is sliding Hee
nothing remaines for God so that unlesse a man put a sacrificing knife to the throat of his concupiscence and cut the wind-pipe of his worldly desires and bind himselfe as it were with cords to the hornes of the Altar the flesh and the world will devoure all and nothing will be left for charity to bestow but a few scraps cast into the almes-basket The sacrifices of righteousnesse In these words I note foure particulars 1 Rem Sacrifice 2 Numerum Sacrifices 3 Qualitatem of righteousnesse 4 Effectum and trust in the Lord. Rem Sacrific● Sacrificium as i Lib. 10. de Civit Dei c. 6. Austine defines it est omne opus bonum quod agitur ut sanctâ societate inhaereamus Deo relatum ad illum finem boni quo veraciter beati esse possimus Sacrifices are either 1 Legall and these of three sorts 1 Burnt-offerings 2 Sinne-offerings 3 Peace-offerings 2 Evangelicall and these may be divided as the schooles speake into 1 Sacrificium redemptionis seu universalis sanctificationis 2 Sacrificia specialis sanctificationis For the Legall they were umbrae futurorum viz. 1 Of Christs sacrifice In which respect Nazianzen calleth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 St. k Lib. 2. cont Faust Manich. c. 17. Austine termeth them praedicamenta unius veri sacrificii and St. Cyril saith Parturiebant veritatem sacrificii 2 Of the spirituall sacrifice of Christians that is holy offices of Religion and charity So saith St. l Lib. 10. de Civit Dei c. 5. Austine Quaecunque in mysterio tabernaculi de sacrificiis leguntur ad Dei proximi dilectionem referuntur and Justin Martyr Figurae eorum quae vel praedestinati ad Christum vel Christus ipse gesturus erat Now as the shadow vanisheth in the presence of the body so these after Christs oblation upon the Crosse Tunc as m Lib. 4. cont Marcion c. 1. Tertullian speaketh elegantly compendiatum est Novum Testamentum legis laciniosis operibus expeditum As those that cast metals saith n L. de spiritu sanc Cyril of Alexandria first make a mold after the fashion of the bell vessell or image which they cast but after the metall hath run and the vessell is cast or the work finished they lay aside their mold of earth so after the worke of our redemption was finished the types and molds of the law were cast away This Origen after his maner expresseth by an excellent allegory Til Isaac was born weaned Hagar Ishmael remained in Abrahams house but afterwards they were turned out of doors so til Christ the true Isaac was born and weaned the bondwoman her son the Old Testament and types therof remained in the Church but after his birth and ascension they were for ever cashiered For Evangelicall sacrifices they are of two sorts 1 The prime and soveraigne 2 Subordinate and secundarie 1 The prime and soveraign is of Christ himselfe who offered his body for our redemption and by his bloud entred into the holy place of which St. Austine excellently noteth Unum manebat cum illo cui offerebat unum se fecit iis pro quibus offerebat unus ipse erat qui offerebat offerebatur 2 Subordinate sacrifice to this are referred 1 The sacrifice of commemoration or the commemoration of Christs bloody sacrifice in the Sacrament of our Lords supper o Tert. de pudicit c. 9. quo opimitate dominici corporis vescimur anima de Deo saginatur which in this respect p In Psal 95. Chrysostome calleth coeleste simulque venerandum sacrificium and Irenaeus novi testamenti novam oblationem 2 The workes of charity which are called q 1 Pet. 2.5 Heb. 13.16 De idelis sacrifices and we must still offer them if we beleeve Tertullian Spiritualibus modo hostiis litandum Deo and r Con. Juli. l 10. Cyril Crasso ministerio relicto mentalis fragrantiâ oblationis And these we are to offer the rather because we are eased of the burden of the other The difference between us and those under the law is not in the duty of offering but in the kind of sacrifice ſ Iren. l. 4. c. 34. oblationes hic oblationes illic Quippe cum jam nona servis sed a liberis offerantur t Cap. 21. omnes justi sacerdotalem habent ordinem not to distribute the mysteries of salvation but to offer spirituall sacrifices to God 2 Numerum Sacrifices in the plurall number plurall in specie and in individuo For we are to offer divers kinds of sacrifices and we are often to offer them There are ordinary sacrifices and extraordinary morning and evening sacrifices of the soule and sacrifices of the body internall and externall whereunto St. u Lib. de spirit sanct Cyril applyeth that description of Solomons Queene Psal 45. All glorious within in inward devotion in a vesture embroidered with gold in respect of her outward oblations It is not enough to offer to God inward sacrifices we must offer also outward First because God requireth them Secondly because we receive from him outward blessings Thirdly because we sin in outward things and therefore ought to seek to t Quo sensu opera placant Dei iram Vid. in fra pacifie and appease his wrath by our outward sacrifices Of these there are divers kinds I will note three 1. Of almes and charitable deeds whereunto the u 1. Tim. 6. Heb. 13. Apostle exhorteth x 1. Cor. 13. Of these three the greatest is charity haec est Regina virtutum saith S. Chrysostome it is as the purple robe which in ancient time was proper to Princes If thou seest this purple robe of charity upon any say certainly he is the child of God he is an heire of the kingdome of heaven 2. Of mortification whereunto the y Rom. 12.1 Apostle exhorteth Hereby we expresse the z 1. Cor. 9.27 2. Cor. 4.8 dying of the Lord Jesu in our bodies 1. By temperance in our diet which is not more salubrious to the body than healthfull to the soule 2. By fasting which without doubt is an act tending to religion and helping it For so wee read a Luke 2.37 Anna served God with fasting and prayer and Christ promiseth a b Mat. 6.13 reward unto it and the Fathers generally make fasting and almes-deeds the two wings carrying our prayers to heaven 3. By Christian modesty in apparell habit and deportment cura corporis incuria animae The pride and luxury of this age in this kind exhausteth mens estates and eats up all their holy oblations What shall I speake of our plastered faced Jezebels who are worse than those Idols which we have cast out of our Churches Those are but dead Idols these are living and rank themselves with our gravest Matrons all bounds of modesty are broken and markes of honesty confounded 3. Of obedience whereunto the c Heb. 13. Apostle exhorteth If
some of the reformed Churches with eyes sparkling like fire and stamping with his brazen feet to see these abominations of Jezebel winked at as they are in so many places I meddle not here with any deliberation of State fitter for the Councell Table than the Pulpit but discover to every private Christian what his duty is to refrain from the society of Idolaters I beseech them for the love of him who hath espoused their soules to himselfe and hath decked them with the richest jewels of his grace and made them a joynter of his Kingdome to beware that they be not enticed to spirituall fornication to forbeare the company of all those who solicite them in this kind nay farther to detect such persons to authority that they may learne not to blaspheme the truth of our Religion nor seduce his Majesties subjects from their allegiance to the Prince and conformity to his Lawes Pliny writeth of certaine m Plin. nat hist l. 8 c. 15. Indiginis innoxii peregrinos interimunt Efts in Tyrinth and Snakes in Syria that doe no hurt to the natives but sting strangers to death it may bee some have the like conceit of our English Seminary Priests and Jesuites who have done so great mischiefe beyond the Sea that they have no power or will to hurt any here at home and therefore dare more boldly converse with them because their outward carriage is faire But I beseech them to consider that the Panther hideth her ougly visage which shee knoweth will terrifie the beasts from comming neere her alluring them with the sweet smell of her body but as soone as they come within her reach shee maketh a prey of them Therefore as you tender the salvation of your body and soule your estate in this life and the life to come take heed how you play at the hole of the Cockatrice and familiarly converse with the great Whore or any of her Minions lest they draw you to naughtinesse and spirituall lewdnesse Have no part with them that have no part in God or have part with abominable Idols If the good Bishop Saint Ambrose being commanded by Valentinian the Emperour to deliver up a Church in his Diocesse to the Arrians gave this answer That hee would first yeeld up his life Prius est ut vitam mihi Imperator quàm fidem adimat shall wee give up our soules which are the Temples of the living God to Idolatrous worship If Saint John the Evangelist would not stay in the bath with Cerinthus the Hereticke shall we dare freely to partake with worser Heretickes in the pledges of salvation and wash our soules with them in the royall bath of Christs bloud o Ambros ep 37. Pollui se putabat si Aram vidisset ferend●mve est ut Gentilis sacrificet Christianus intersit Constantius the Emperour thought himselfe polluted if he had but seen an Heathenish Altar and Saint Ambrose proposeth it as a thing most absurd and intolerable that a Christian should be present at the sacrifices of the Heathen Our Saviour in this place and Saint p 1 Cor. 10. Paul in the first Epistle to the Corinthians would not have Christians to eate any of those things that were sacrificed unto Idols Nay the Prophet q Psal 16.4 David professeth that he will not so much as name an Idol Their offerings of bloud will I not offer nor make mention of their names in my lips I end and seale up my meditations upon these words spoken to an Angel with the words spoken by an r Apoc. 14.9 Angel If any worship the Beast and his Image and receive his marke in his forehead or in his hand the same shall drinke of the wine of the wrath of God and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone before the holy Angels the Lamb and the smoake of their torments shall ascend for ever ever And they shall have no rest neither day nor night which worship the Beast and his Image whosoever receiveth the print of his name Gracious Lord who gracest the Ministers of the Gospel with the title of Angels make them in their knowledge and life angelicall keep them not only from sinnes of omission and commission but also from sinnes of permission that all may see their works and their love and their service and their faith and their patience their love of thee and their service to thee and their faith in thee and their patience for thee and their growth in all these graces and that thou maist have nothing against them And sith thou hast displayed the Romish Jezebel unto us by her three markes of imposture impurity and idolatry breed in us all a greater loathing and detestation of her abominations preserve us by the sincere preaching of the Word and powerfull operation of thy Spirit that wee bee neither deceived by her imposture to beleeve her false prophesies neither defiled in our body by her impurity to commit fornication nor in soule by her idolatry to eate things sacrificed unto Idols SERMONS PREACHED AT OXFORD FOURE ROWES OF PRECIOUS STONES A Rehearsall Sermon preached in Saint Maries Church at Oxford Anno 1610. THE XXXV SERMON EXOD. 28.15 16 17 18 19 20 21. 15. And thou shalt make the breast-plate of judgement with cunning worke 16. Foure square shall it be being doubled 17. And thou shalt set in it settings of stones even foure rowes of stones the order shall be this a Rubie a Topaze and an Emrald in the first rowe 18. And in the second row thou shalt set a Carbuncle a Saphir and a Diamond 19. And in the third row a Turkeise and an Agate and an Amethist 20. And in the fourth row a Beril and an Onyx and a Jasper and they shall be set in gold in their inclosings or imbosments Hebrew fillings 21. And the stones shall bee with the names of the children of Israel twelve according to their names like the engravings of a signet every one with his name shall they be according to the twelve Tribes Right Worshipfull c. QUintilian a Institut orat lib. 1. cap. 1. instructing parents how to lay the ground-colours of vertues in the soft mindes of tender infants and acquaint them with the rudiments of learning adviseth Eburneas literarum formas iis in lusum offerre To give them the letters of the Alphabet fairely drawne painted or carved in ivory gold or the like solid and delectable matter to play withall that by their sports as it were unawares those simple formes might be imprinted in their memories whereby we expresse all the notions of our mind in writing even so it pleased our heavenly Father in the infancy and nonage of his Church to winne her love with many glorious shewes of rites and ceremonies as it were costly babies representing the body of her husband Christ Jesus and to the end she might with greater delight quasi per lusum get by heart the principles of saving knowledge
ardebat cor vestrûm in vobis cùm exponeret vobis Scripturas The second jewel was a Saphir according to the Hebrew derivation from Sepher a booke wherein we may reade both the doctrine and graces of the second Speaker Hic lapis ut perhibent educit corpore vinctos saith Vincentius and was not his doctrine a Jayle-delivery of all deaths prisoners It is a constant tradition among the Rabbins that the tables of stone Bellar. l. 2. de Verb. Dei wherein the ten Commandements were written with the finger of God were of Saphir For although Pliny affirmeth Nat. hist l. 37. that the Saphir is a stone altogether unfit for sculpture yet this can be no just exception against this tradition sith the engraving of the ten Commandements was done by the finger of God above nature Moreover it is cleare out of this Text that the name of one of the Patriarchs was written in the Saphir Such a Saphir was the second Speaker having the Lawes of God imprinted in his heart The third jewell is a Diamond in Hebrew called Jahalom because it breaketh all other stones in Greek Adamas that is unconquerable because it can neither be broken by the hammer nor consumed in the fire nay the fire saith Zenocrates hath not so much power as to stain the colour much lesse impeach the substance of this stone Call to mind among the vertues of a Magistrate conspicuous in this divine Oratour his unconquerable courage unstained integrity and the comparison is already made Pliny reporteth Adamantem sideritem alio Adamante perforari thinke you not that if a man could have a heart as hard as the Adamant this Adamant pointed with sacred eloquence could breake it and make it contrite Lastly Pliny addeth that the Diamond is a soveraign remedy against poyson Et ideò regibus charissimus iisque paucis cognitus in high esteem with Princes if as our gracious Soveraigne hath so all Christian Princes had such Diamonds as this if such Preachers were their eare-rings they should be free from the danger of all poysoned and hereticall doctrine If as the stones placed in the second row agree with the gifts of the Speaker so they sort as well with the doctrines of his Text I am sure you wil all say that this second order of stones is not out of order A most remarkable story of the Carbuncle we have that cast in the fire among live coals it seemeth to have no grace in it but quench the other coals with water it shineth more gloriously in the ashes than ever before so our Saviour in the brunt of his passion while he was heat by the fire-brands of hell Scribes Pharisees Jewes Romans seemed to be dead and lose all his colour beauty nay was indeed dead according to his humane nature his soule being severed from his body but after the consummation of his passion and the extinction of the fiery rage of his persecuters with his bloud in his resurrection he shewed himself a most glorious Carbuncle shining in majesty burning in love After his resurrection in the day of his ascension hee taketh possession of his throne in heaven which Chap. 1. V. 26. in Ezekiel is said to bee like a Saphir stone now sitting at the right hand of God the Father having conquered sin death hell made all his enemies his footstoole he is become the only true orient Diamond in the world whether you take the name from the Greek ἄδαμασ ab ά δαμαω or the Hebrew םלהי from םלה being invincible himselfe and overcomming all adverse power breaking his obstinate enemies in pieces like a potters vessell with a rod of iron The embossment of gold in which these gems of divine doctrine were set was his Text taken out of A Sermon preached by Doctor John King then Dean of christ-Christ-Church and Vicechancellor of the University of Oxford afterwards Lord Bishop of London upon Easter day in Saint Peters Church in Oxford ESAY 26.19 Thy dead men shall live together with my body shall they rise awake and sing yee that dwell in dust for the dew is as the dew of herbes and the earth shall cast up her dead IT would aske the labour of an houre to settle this one only member I finde such a Babel of tongues at odds about so few words Variae lectiones Whereas we reade terra projiciet or ejiciet the earth shall cast up or bring forth as it doth her herbs and winter prisoners Junius hath Dejecisti in terram Castalio terram demoliris the Seventy Terra cadet S. Jerome Dejicies in terram the Chaldee paraphrase Trades in infernum and for mortuos in Hebrew * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rephaim from a word signifying to cure per antiphrasin the Seventy reade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wicked or ungodly S. Jerome Gigantes stout and robustious against God But to set you in a right and inoffensive way I reduce almost an infinity of distractions to two heads For all of them either speak of the resurrection of the dead indefinitely which they doe that say Terra ejiciet to wit postquam in terram dejecisti For the earth cannot cast up that it hath not and Manium terram demoliris or of the destruction of the wicked one only species of the dead which the Seventy call impios others Giants mighty to transgresse both senses as the Northern and Southern rivers running from contrary points meet in the Ocean so these from sundry and discrepant conceits run into one common place of the generall resurrection save that the latter adde a straine to the former of Gods vengeance and wrath prepared for the wicked Sense twofold Thus having set the letters of my Text together accorded the words it remaineth that their scope and intent be freed from question There is not one of the learned Scribes old or new Jew or Christian whose spirit and pen hath not fallen upon one of these two senses viz. that the Prophet either speaketh of the resurrection of the dead at the last day or of the restitution and enlargement of the people from their present straights in which say they calamity is a kind of death captivity as the grave Gods people as the seed in the ground Gods grace and favour as the comfortable dew to revive and restore them to their wonted being Of these two companies some goe after the literall grammaticall sense lending not so much as the cast of their eye toward the allegory as Strigelius Clarius Brentius Others on the other side of the banke standing for the shadowed resurrection are not so peremptory but si quis aliter sentire mavult per me liber hoc faciat and Calvin himself in his commentary layes out as it were a lot as well for the true as the typicall resurrection Falluntur Christiani qui ad extremum judicium restringunt Prophetatotum Christi regnum ab initio ad finem
after what order our Popist Priests are made whether after the order of Aaron or Melchizedek If after the order of Aaron then are they to offer bloudie sacrifices and performe other carnall rites long agoe abrogated if after the order of Melchizedek then they are very happie For then they are to be Kings and Priests then they are not to succeed any other nor any other them then as hath beene shewed they are singular everlasting and royall Priests We may put a like interrogatorie to many of our Brownists or Anabaptisticall Teachers who run before they are sent and answer before they are called being like wandering starres fixed in no certaine course or wilde corne growing where they were not sowne or like unserviceable pieces of Ordnance which flie off before they are discharged If men though endowed with gifts might discharge a Pastorall function or doe the worke of an Evangelist without a lawfull mission St. Pauls question had beene to little purpose u Rom. 10.15 How shall they preach unlesse they be sent What calling have these men ordinarie or extraordinarie If ordinarie where are their orders if extraordinarie where are their miracles If Christ himselfe would not take upon him the Priesthood till he was called thereunto as Aaron what intolerable presumption is it in these not to take but to make their owne commission and to call men by the Gospell without a calling according to the Gospell It is not more unnaturall for a man to beget himselfe than to ordaine himselfe a Priest But because these men will not be ordered by reason I leave them to authority and come to the Sixth observation which is the Prerogative of Christ Obs 6. who was ordained a Priest of Melchizedeks order whereby he was qualified to beare both offices Kingly and Priestly For that Christ alone may execute both charges besides the faire evidence of this Scripture Uzziahs judgement maketh it a ruled case who presuming to burne incense to the Lord incensed the wrath of God against himselfe A rare and singular judgement and worthy perpetuall memorie he who not content to sway the royall Scepter would lay hold on the Censer and discharge both offices was for ever discharged of both and even then when he tooke upon him to cleanse the people was smitten with a foule and unclean x 2 Chr. 26.20 disease So dangerous a thing is it even for Soveraigne Princes the Lords Annointed to encroach upon the Church and assume unto themselves and usurpe Christs prerogative Whereof the Bishops of Roane and Rhemes were bold to bid their Sovereigne Lewis the then French King beware informing him Quod solus Christus fieri potuit Rex Sacerdos that it was the prerogative of Christ alone to beare both offices And Pope y Causab l. de libert Eccles Gratian. dist 96. cum ad verum Nicolas himselfe concurreth with them in judgement When the truth that was Christ saith he was once come after that neither did the Emperour take upon him the Bishops right nor the Bishop usurp the Emperours because the same Mediatour of God and man the man Christ Jesus distinguisheth the offices of each power assigning unto them proper actions to the end that the Bishop which is a souldier of Christ should not wholly intangle himselfe in worldly affaires and againe the Prince which is occupied in earthly matters should not be ruler of divine things viz. the preaching of the Word and administration of the Sacraments To make a medley saith z Syn. ●p Synesius of spirituall and temporall power is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is great difference between the Scepter and the Censer the Chaire of Moses and the Throne of David the tongue of the Minister and the hand of the Magistrate the materiall sword that killeth and the spirituall that quickeneth To the King saith St. a De verb. Esa Chrysostome are the bodies of men committed to the Priest their soules the King pardoneth civill offences and crimes the Priest remitteth the guilt of sinne in the conscience the King compelleth the Priest exhorteth the Kings weapons are outward and materiall the Priests inward and spirituall A like distinction St. b Hieron ad Heliod Rex nolentibus praeest Episcopus volentibus c. Jerome maketh betweene them The King ruleth men though unwilling the Bishop can doe good upon none but those that are willing the King holdeth his subjects in awe with feare and terrour the Priest is appointed for the service of his flocke the King mastereth their bodies with death the Priest preserveth their soules to life But the farthest of any St. c Bern. de consid ad Eugen. Reges gentium dominantur●●s vos non sic aude ergo usurpare aut Dominus Apostolatum aut Apostolicus Dominatum Bernard presseth this point and toucheth Pope Eugenius to the quicke It is the voice of the Lord Kings of the Nations rule over them c. But it shall not be so with you goe to then usurp if thou dare either an Apostleship if thou art a Lord or Lordlike dominion if thou art an Apostle thou art expressely forbid both if thou wilt have both thou shalt lose both But why doe I prosecute this point Doth it concerne any now adayes Doth any one man beare both these offices I answer affirmatively the High-priest at Rome doth For he compasseth his Mitre with a triple Crown and as if he bare this name written upon his thigh King of Kings and Lord of Lords challengeth to himselfe a power to depose Kings and dispose of their Kingdomes Doth any one desire to know who is that man of sinne spoken of by the d 2 Thes 2.3 Apostle who opposeth and exalteth himselfe above all that is called God Let him learne of the Prophet who are called gods Dixi dii estis e Psal 82.6 I have said ye are gods and it will be no matter of great difficultie to point at him who accounteth that hee doth Kings a great honour when he admitteth them to kisse his feet hold his stirrop serve him at table and performe other baser offices prescribed in their booke of ceremonies I can tell you who it was that made the Emperour Henrie the fourth with his Queene and young Prince in extreme frost and snow to waite his leisure three dayes barefooted and in woollen apparell at the gates of Canusium it was Gregory the seventh otherwise called Hildebrand I can shew you who set the Imperiall Crowne upon the head of Henrie the sixt not with his hand but with his foot and with the same foot kicked it off againe saying I have power to make Emperours and unmake them at my pleasure it was Pope Coelestine I can bring good proofe who it was that would not make peace with Frederick the first till in the presence of all the people at the doore of St. Markes Church in Venice the Prince had cast his body fl●t on the ground and the Pope
Cedars stately built and richly furnished with all the rarities which nature or art affoords Why were Jewels and precious Stones and rich metals created but for mans use And what better use can be made of them than to shew forth the glorie of God and the splendour and magnificence of his Vicegerents on earth Certainely they were never made to maintaine the luxurie of private men which is now growne to that excesse especially at Court that the Embassadours of forreine Princes speake as loud of it abroad as the poore cry and wring for it at home Where shall we finde a Paula deserving the commendation which St. q In Epitaph Paul Non in marmora sed lapides vivos Jerome giveth her for laying out her money not upon marble or free-stone but upon those living stones which she knew one day should be turned into gemmes and laid in the foundation of the heavenly Jerusalem Doth not the liberality of most of the wealthy of this age resemble their heart which is hard cold and stony The greatest expence they are at is in building houses of Cedar for themselves by which they are better knowne than their houses by them As the world so the Proverb is turned upside downe it stood thus Non domus Dominum sed Dominus domum but now it is thus overturned Non Dominus domum sed domus Dominum the house gets no credit by the owner but the owner if he have any by the house Ye will thinke when ye come into many of them that ye are fallen into an Egyptian Temple most glorious without but within nothing to be seen but the picture of a Jack an Ape or a Cat or some such contemptible creature as that superstitious Nation worshipped I sharpen my stile the more against this abuse of our age because it is well knowne that the superfluous expence upon the Sepulchres of the dead and the erecting of houses of Cedars for the living farre above I will not say the wealth but above the ranke and worth of those that dwell in them is the cause why the Arke of the Lord lieth yet in many places under the curtaines nay not so well but under the open aire without cover or roofe to keepe out raine and weather If that which hath beene luxuriously cast away in building houses of pleasure and ambitiously if not superstitiously consumed in erecting Statues Obelisques Tombes or Monuments for the dead had beene employed in rearing up houses for Prophets and erecting Temples to the living God the Prophets of God should not need to complaine as now they are constrained against the men of this age in the words of the Prophet Haggai c. 1. ver 4. Yee dwell in sieled houses and the house of the Lord lieth waste or in the like in my text Behold now ye dwell in houses of Cedars and The Arke of the Lord within the Curtaines Before the Sunne rise you see no light but through mists and vapours and shadowes on the earth even so before the Sunne of righteousnesse Christ Jesus arose in the Firmament of his Church there was no light of the Gospell to be seene but through mists and obscure shadowes so the Å¿ Heb. 8.5 10.1 Apostle termeth the types and figures of the old Law among which the Tabernacle and in it the Arke and therein especially the Tables Rod and Pots of Manna shadowed the state of the Christian Church and presented to the eye of faith the principall meanes of salvation under the Gospell which are three 1 The preaching of the Word summarily contained in the two Tables 2 The Sacrament of Christs body and bloud figured by the Manna 3 The exercise of Ecclesiasticall discipline lively set forth by the budding of Aarons rod. As for Baptisme which is the Sacrament of entrance into the Church the type thereof was set at the entrie into the Tabernacle where stood a great Laver in which those that came to worship God after they had put off their clothes bathed themselves as we Christians put off the old man and wash away the corruption of originall sinne in the Font of Baptisme before we are admitted as members into the Christian Church whereunto three sorts of men belong 1 Some that are to be called 2 Others that are already called into it 3 Such as are called out of it into Heaven 1 The first are in the state of nature 2 The second in the state of grace 3 The third in the state of glorie Answerable whereunto God commandeth three spaces or partitions to be made 1 Atrium the outward Court for the people 2 Sanctum the holy place for the ordinarie Priests 3 Sanctum sanctorum the most holy place for the High-Priest to enter once a yeere and shew himselfe to God for the people Which are similitudes of true things For as by the outward Court the Priest went into the holy place and from the holy place into the most holy so from the state of nature the children of God are brought into the state of grace and from the state of grace into the state of glorie If any question these mysticall expositions for the first I referre them to St. t Apoc. 11.2 John who saith expressely that the Court was given to the Gentiles and was not therefore to be mete with a golden reed for the second to St. u 1 Pet. 2.9 Peter who calleth all Christians Priests for whom the holy place was appointed for the third to St. * Heb. 9.24 Paul who openeth the vaile of that figure and sheweth how Christ our High-Priest after his death entered into the holy of holies and there appeared before God for us To these observations of the Tabernacle may be added many the like resemblances betweene the Arke and the Church In the fore-front of the Tabernacle there was the Altar of burnt-offerings and a place of refuge for malefactors who if they could take hold of the hornes of the Altar were safe Christs Crosse is this Altar the hornes whereof whosoever take hold by faith be they never so great malefactors escape Gods vengeance In the Sanctuarie was the mercy seat towards which the Cherubims faces looked to teach us that the Angels of x 1 Pet. 1.12 heaven desire to looke into the mysteries of the Gospell The dimensions of the Arke were small and the limits of the militant Church in comparison of the malignant are narrow The outside of the Arke was covered with skins but the inside was overlaid with gold in like manner the Church hath for the most part no great outward appearance pompe or splendour but yet is alwayes most y Psal 45 13. glorious within The arke when it was taken by the Philistims conquered Dagon and cast him downe on his face even so the Church of Christ when shee is in captivitie and greatest weakenesse in the eye of the world getteth the better of her enemies and is so farre from being diminished by persecution that
were the greatest pilgrims both in life and death for they spent all their life in wearisome and dangerous peregrinations and after their death their bodies went as it were in pilgrimage and there visited first Sechem and then Machpelah where they tooke up their rest It is the usuall wish and proverbiall speech of men Though I toile and moile here yet I hope one day I shall rest in my grave No man can promise himselfe so much for not only the bodies of men accursed of God have been digged out of their graves to teach us that there is no sanctuary for a wicked person living or dying but even Gods servants have been oftentimes removed out of their earthly beds some in honour to them and others out of malice again●●●em to dishonour and disgrace them The bodies of Gervasius and Protasius Martyrs were translated from a blind and obscure place in Millaine where they lay to a more celebrious and illustrous Church to doe them the greater honour on the contrary Eusebius writeth that divers Martyrs in France were by the Gentiles plucked out of their graves and burnt to ashes and their ashes cast into the river Roan and the Papists as if they would make it knowne to the world that no Painims or Gentiles should out-do them in wreaking their malice against the professors of the truth both digged up Wickliffes and Peter Martyrs wives and Paulus Fagius their bones after they had been long interred Nec livor post fata quievit The Tombe-stone is said to be the bound of malice and death a supersedeas for envie and all uncharitable proceedings yet blind zeale in persecuting the members of Christ Jesus exceeds these bounds and all termes of common humanity O unheard of cruelty saith the blessed Martyr Saint h Cyp. de laps Saevitum est in plagas jam in servis Dei non torquebantur membra sed vulnera Cyprian Their rage falleth upon the stripes of Gods servants and they now torture not so much their members as their wounds We may goe on further because Popish cruelty hath gone on further and say Saevitum est in cadavera saevitum est in ossa saevitum est in cineres saevitum est in manes the rage and malice of Papists against Protestants is not satisfied with their bloud nor expireth with their life they fall like savage Jackals upon their carkasses they digge up their graves they rifle their coffins they burne their bones they persecute their ghosts and this is their charity which they so much bragge of But I leave them and come to the sepulchre which Abraham bought where the Patriarchs were laid And were laid in the sepulchre Though it little import the soules of Gods Saints in heaven what becommeth of their dead corpse on earth no more than it concerneth a newly elected King when hee hath his Princely robes on him what becomes of his old cast suits of apparrell in which regard Saint i Aug. confes l. 9. c. 11. Nihil longé est à Deo nec timendum mihi ille ne agnoscat in fine saeculi unde resuscitet Monica told her sonne at her death that shee tooke no care where shee was interred yeelding this for a reason It is nothing to mee saith shee whether I lye farre from home or from any Church I am sure nothing is farre from God neither doe I feare but that hee will find mee at the last day and raise up my corpse wheresoever it lies Yet because the bodies of Gods Saints were temples of the holy Ghost and served as instruments in the performance of all duties of piety and charity our piety and charity in some respect extendeth to them piety I say not to worship them for that is idolatrie not to pray to them for that at the best is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will-worship and unwarrantable devotion not to pray for them for that is superstition but to give God thankes for them and to expect their and our joyfull resurrection charity to preserve their good name alive and to bury their dead corpses although I grant with Saint k Lib. 1. de civit Dei c. 12. Omnia ista curatio funeris conditio sepultu●ae pompa exequia●um m●gis sun● solatia vivorum quàm subsidia mortuorum Et c. 13. Si enim paterna vestis annulus tantò charior est posteris quantò erga parentes major est affectus nullo modo spernanda sunt corpora quae utique multo familiarius atque conjunctius quàm quaelibet indumenta gestamus Austine that the care of funeralls and pompe of herses and rites of buriall are rather comforts of the living than helpes of the dead yet with the same Austine I cannot but acknowledge that the bodies of our parents or friends may challenge more affection and respect to them than the apparrell ring or jewell they wore which yet wee make great account of and carefully keep for their sake Doth not Nature her selfe teach us this worke of mercy to the dead Doe not some birds that are loving to man if they spy a dead corpse in the wood cover it over with leaves Doth the young Phenix as l Annal. l. 10. Phoenici cura primo sepeliendi patris sublato myrrhae pondere subit patrium corpus in Solis templum perfert Tacitus writeth as soone as ever it hath life take care of burying the parent carrying his corpse with a quantity of Myrrhe and laying it in the Temple of the Sunne and shall not men endued with reason and understanding doe the like not onely to their parents and friends but even to strangers and their very enemies especially if there bee worth in them Alexander the great opening Cyrus Tombe set a crowne upon his Herse and carefully shut it againe Hannibal gave Marcellus the Romane Consull an honourable buriall put his ashes in a silver pot and crowned it with a crowne of gold and sent it to his sonne to interre it To speake nothing of Cannibals man-eaters and other savages all civill people in the world bury their dead though in a different manner and with severall rites The Jewes washed the Egyptians embalmed the corpse the Romanes burnt them with sweet perfumes and kept the ashes in an urne or pot the Ethiopians curiously paint them and lay them in a glazed coffin the most common and most agreeable to Scripture is interring the corpse Moses alludeth to it m Gen 3.19 Dust thou art and to dust shalt thou returne and Solomon n Eccles 12.7 Then shall the dust returne to the earth as it was and David o Psal 30.9 What profit is there then in my bloud when I goe downe to the pit shall the dust praise thee or shall it declare thy truth The Greekes for the most part and other Nations also excepting those above named interred their dead and therefore p Plin nat hist l. 2. c. 63. Haec nascentes excipit natos alit novissimè
teacheth quia minister huic populo in salutem datus as a minister of salvation to this people Here then I cannot but reflect upon mine owne calling and preach to Preachers and all Ministers of the Gospel that by the example of our Lord and Master the high Priest and Bishop of our soules we take chiefly and in a speciall manner to heart the calamities of Gods people and ruine of his Church The eyes of our Saviour here as likewise of q Esay 22.4 I will weep bitterly labour not to comfort mee because of the spoiling of the daughter of my people Esay r Jerem. 4.8 9.1 Jeremy and ſ Ezra 10.1 Ezra glazed with teares are looking-glasses wherein wee may see the duty enjoyned to us by the Prophet Joel t Joel 2.17 Let the Priests the Ministers of God weep between the porch and the altar For in the spoiling of the country and demolishing the Churches and the houses of Prophets and Prophets children Gods honour suffereth whereof we ought to be most jealous the soules of men are in no lesse danger than their bodies and estates whereof we are to render an account and as we are Gods mouth to the people to declare his will to them so we are their mouth to God to present their supplications to him All the measures of the Sanctuary were double to the common As the measure of our knowledge is greater so the measure of our g●iefe and sorrow in the affliction of Gods people ought to be corresponding The same proportion holds in sorrow and joy And therefore as in the common joy Saint u Cypr. ep 1. Exprimi satis non potest quanta ista exultatio fuit quant● laetitia cum de vobis prospera fortia comperissemus ducem te illic conf●ssionis frat●ib●s extitisse sed confessionem ducis de consensione fratrum creviss● c. Et Ep. 5. In com●uni g●udio Ecclesiae Episcopi portio m●jor est Ecclesiae enim gloria Praepositi gloria est Cyprian allotteth the Bishop a greater portion so also in the common griefe our portion must needs bee the greatest Wee stand upon the watch-towers of Sion and the people take notice of dangers from the fiering of our beacons we are as the praecentores chori to give them the tune we are as Trumpeters in Gods army and if the Trumpet bee cracked or give an uncertaine sound how shall the souldiers prepare themselves to fight the Lords battels If we like Epaminondas ought to fast that the people may feast the more securely watch that they may sleep with more safety weep that they may rejoyce more freely how much more ought we being the Asaphs in this sad quire accord with you in your groanes and cries when we are strucke with the same griefes and feares when the enemy aimeth not so much at the Common-wealth as at the Church and not so much at the body as at the soule of the Church the Religion wee professe and our most holy faith O ubi estis fontes lachrymarum O where are you fountaines of tears where are gales of such sighes such as love and devotion and sympathy breathes out in my Text If thou knewest And so I passe to the last step 5. Oravit he prayed saying O that thou knewest or If thou knewest In this prayer of our Saviour our thoughts may find themselves holy imployment in seriously considering 1. The manner or forme of speech which is 1. Figurative 2. Abrupt 3. Passionate 2. The matter which presenteth to our spirituall view 1. The intimation of a desire O that or If. 2. The exprobration of Ignorance Thou knewest 3. The aggravation upon the person Thou even thou 4. The designation of a time In this thy day The sentence riseth by degrees and Christ in every word groweth more and more upon Jerusalem It is sinne and shame to be ignorant most of all for Jerusalem and that in the day of her visitation especially of those things that belong to her peace If other Cities might plead ignorance yet not thou if thou mightst plead ignorance at another time yet not in this thy day if in this thy day thou mightst plead ignorance of other things yet not of those things that belong to thy peace To begin with the forme and manner which the more imperfect it is the more perfectly it expresseth the passion or rather compassion of the speaker As a cracked pipe or bell giveth a harsh or uncertaine sound so a broken heart for the most part uttereth broken speeches interrupted with sighes Constantine kissed the empty holes where Paphnutius eyes were plucked out and we cannot but reverence the seeming emptinesse and vacuity in Scripture sentences where the omission of something is more significant than the supply if the speech had been filled up would have been Those which have bin transported with passion utter halfe x Calv. in harm Scimus in quibus ardent vehementes affectus non nisi dimidiatâ ex parte sensus suos effari sentences and faulter in the midst of a period as the father in the Poet who lost his only sonne beginning to vent his griefe and saying Filius meus pollens ingenio My sonne of rare parts my sonne of great hope there stops and before he could say mortuus est is dead became himselfe speechlesse Christ was here seized on by a double passion 1. Of Commiseration 2. Of Indignation Commiseration out of the apprehension of the overthrow of Jerusalem the Queen of all Cities and the Sanctuary of the whole earth Indignation at the obstinacy ingratitude and bloud-thirsty cruelty and desperate madnesse of the present inhabitants who wilfully refusing the meanes of their salvation runne headlong to their owne perdition I have been the briefer in handling the forme that I might enlarge my selfe in the matter Thou knewest Ignorance of Gods judgements draweth them upon a state for the Lord hath a controversie with the land saith y Hos 4.1.6 Hosea because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the land My people perish for lack of knowledge The Schooles rightly distinguish of a double ignorance 1. Facti of the fact 2. Juris of the Law Ignorance of the fact in some case excuseth but not of the law which all are bound to take notice of for Lex datur vigilantibus non dormientibus The law is given to men that are awake and may and ought to heare it not to men when they are asleep The law for the violation whereof the greatest part are condemned is written in the tables of their hearts to exclude all plea of ignorance and certainly of all the errours of Popery one of the grossest is their entitling ignorance the mother of devotion for so farre is ignorance from being the mother of any vertue that it is both 1. Peccatum 2. Mater peccati 3. Poena peccati It is sinne and the punishment of sinne and the parent of sinne