Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n according_a judge_v life_n 2,307 5 4.5145 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A01451 Doomes-Day booke: or, An alarum for atheistes, a vvatchword for vvorldlinges, a caueat for Christians. By Samuel Gardnier [sic] Doctor of Diuinitie. The contentes the following page sheweth Gardiner, Samuel, b. 1563 or 4. 1606 (1606) STC 11576; ESTC S102820 100,754 118

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

coherence is good for the head and the members go together it were abs●rd to part the one from the other But Christ is the head and we are the members conglutinated and coa●nuuated to that head The antecedeut and forepart of the argument is accompanied by sundrie consequences in the following verses That if Christ our head be not risen 1 Our preaching is vaine 2 your faith is vaine 3 we are false witnesses who h●ue testified so much 4 ye are yet in your sinnes 5. They which are asleepe in Christ are perished The analogie of head and members maketh good the consequent That therefore we shal li●e as Christ hath risen wherfore the fathers call the resurrection of Christ the misterie of our resurrection and the Apostle termeth it The first fruits of them that slept 3 Thirdly from the purifit of the contraries he formeth his matter thus It by one man came death by one man must also come the resurrection from the de●de But the first is true therefore the second The argument holdeth the contraries so answering one another Adam and Christ Death and the Resurrection But wee all die in bodie th●ough Adam therefore wee must liue in bodie againe by Christ 4 The forme that the Apostle so accurately descri●eth of the resurrection thus We shall not all sleepe but we shall be all changed in a moment in the twinckling of an eie at the last Trumpet for the trumpet shall blow and the deade shall be raised vp incorruptible and we shal be changed And thus For the Lord himselfe shall descend from heauen with a shout with the voice of the archāgel with the trumpet of God the dead in christ shal rise first thē shal we which liue and remaine bee caught vp with them also in the cloudes to meet the Lord in the aire so shall we euer be with the Lord. This Graphicall and ord●r●ie description of the resurrection euicteth the necessarie also intall●●le certaintie of the resurrection For if it were not a matter vndoubted to what purpose is it that it is thus described These are the chiefe arguments wherewith the Apostle vrgeth the resurrection in that famous fiftéenth charter of his first Letter to the Corinthians Vpon which subiect hée disputed often as at Athens where he preached vnto the people of Iesus and the resurrection as in the Consistorie before Faelix where he maketh this constant profession I haue hope towards God that the resurrection of the dead which they themselues looke for also shall bee both of iust and vniust Of the resurrection of the dead am I accused of you this day Peter in sundrie places witnesseth the resurrection as when he saith Which shall giue accounte to him that is readie to iudge quicke and dead and thus when the chiefe shepheard shall appeare yee shall receiue an incorruptible Crowne of glorie Also his last Chapter of his last Epistle is nothing else but illustration of this Article S. Iohn deliuereth like diuinitie thus We know that when he shall appeare we shal be like him for we shal see him as he is In the Reuelation y● spirit speaketh euidently thus And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which was the book of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their workes And the Sea gaue vp her dead which were in her and death and hell deliuered vp the dead which were in them and they were iudged euerie man according to their works In the next Chapter we haue this discourse which openeth the resurrection vnto vs God shall wipe away all teares from their eies and there shall be no more death neither sorrow neither crying neither shall there be any more paine Saint Iames auoucheth as much saying Be patient vnto the comming of the Lord. Be patient and settle your heart for the comming of the Lorde draweth neere the Authour of the Epistle to the Hebrews hath much good matter in the behalfe of the resurrection In the tenth Chapter after much discourse appertaining thereunto he summeth it vp thus Knowing in your selues how that ye haue in heauen a better and enduring substance c. In the next chapter he saith Others also were racked and would not be deliuered that they might receiue a better resurrection Thus haue we the old and new Testament on the side of this doctrine which is sufficient but because Atheists who pester this land as the Frogs and Caterpillers did Pharaos Court doe arraigne the integritie of the Scriptures and iudge of this matter by naturall reason it is not amisse t● stop their mouthes by confuting and confounding them this way Wherefore we set vpon them thus 1 The soule did not sinne without the body therfore the bodie must be punished with it Therefore the bodie must rise againe The Philosophers doe denie the sequence and say that it is enough that the minde bee rewarded according to the actions thereof and that it is not néedefull that the bodie which was not principall but accessarie in the sinne and only but the instrument to serue sins turne should partake with the mind And they shew comparisons for the same of Artificers and craftsmen who for making a house or any other peece of worke haue their hire and couenants when as the instruments wherewith they wrought are not rewarded neither are they damnified though the worke by them be not accordingly performed Of a poisoned pot which is not therefore dissolued and broken in péeces especially if it be of any price though many haue drunke their destruction out of it Of a sword which a man will not breake or cast from him because a man hath beene slaine with it But yet by their leaue who take these similitudes for such sure studdes there be many in their vnstaied affections that will dash in peeces such intoxicated cups and breake that weapon against a wall that hath beene the occasion of a mischiefe But we turne away all the force of such reaso●ing by distinction of instruments as they are of coniunct and diuided nature The bodie the souls instrument is of the first difference and is conioyned and coupled with the mind wherfore it du●ly taketh such part as the mind doth The minde draweth on the bodie to commit vncleannesse the bodie therefore falleth thereupon iustly into diuers maladies The mind is disposed to fel onie for which the hands and the feete are manacled and the necke is hazarded and the whole bodie vndergoeth the penaltie This argument deducted from the rule of Gods iustice pleaseth Paul so wel as he maketh vse of it hauing pro●ed the resurrection Therefore my beloued brethren be ye stedfast vnmoueable aboundant alwaies in the worke of the Lord forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vaine in the Lord But this labor commeth
my Father which is in heauen The Apostle hath set it downe for an irrefrugable conclusion we shal all appeare before the iudgement ●eate of Christ Answerable to this is this his other Aphort●me we must al appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ that euerie man may receiue the thinges which are done in his bodie c. But the Godly shal make a very easie reckoning For Christ is their comfort●● their conscience there cleerg● as witnesse of their 〈◊〉 heauenly possession But the wicked because their conscience shal condemne thē the deuil shal accuse th●● Christ shal be against thē shal haue a world of wo●●n answer to make answers They shal say to the mountaine hide vs and to the hilles co●er vs. But from hence groweth a question how the Godly can bee iudged seeing they shall sitte Assistants with Christ in the iudgement as Esai saieth The Lord shall enter into iudgement with the ancients of his people and the Princes thereof that is to say with the elect companie as Christ saith to his Apostles Ye shal sit vpon twelue Thrones and iudge the twelue Tribes of Israel as Paul saith Know ye not that wee shall iudge the Angels We answer that iudgement is of double nature there is a iudgement of Absolution there is another iudgement which is of Condemnation In the iudgement of Condemnation are the wicked only wrapped adulterers adultresses fornicators vncleane persons vsurers oppressors slanderers blasph●mers hers deceiuers ep●cures Machi●ilians Atheists The godly haue onely but iudgement of Absolution that is to say they are iudged to be quit and deliuered and blessed They shall be absolued of all the slanderous imputatiōs of the world and wicked men against them Besides men the euill spirite also shall be iudged Christ denounceth infernall fire to the diuell and his angels Goe yee cursed into Hell fire prepared for the diuell and his angels Of this their condemnation speaketh Peter thus God spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe into hel and deliuered them into chaines of darknes to bee kept vnto condemnation Of this Paul speaketh when he saith Rnow yee not that we shall iudge the Angels Iude consenteth with the rest expresly saying The Angels also which kept not their s●st estate but le●t their own habitation he hath referred in euerlasting chaines vnder darknes vnto the iudgement of the great day These are to be iudged as ringleaders of all 〈…〉 of all the band of sinners as Iudas did the band of souldiers against Christ Also this iudgement shall extend it selfe vnto the senslesse vnreasonable creature the heauen the earth and whatsoeuer is conteined in them Esai speaketh of new heauen and a new earth that are promised The new heauens and the new earth which I will make shall remaine before me Paul sheweth somuch saying The feruent desire of the creature waiteth when the sons of God shal be reuealed because the creature is subiect to vanitie not of its own wil but by reason of him which hath subdued it vnder hope because the creaturs also shal be deliuered frō the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God Lastly antichrist is rankt in the ranke of those that shall haue condemnatorie iudgement His dam●ation decréed against him is thus spoaken of Whom the Lord shall consume with the spirite of his mouth and shall abolish with the brightnes ●f his comming Thus haue we the seuerall persons that shall be iudged seuerally the sen●les creature shal be purged the godly shal be absolued the wicked shall be condemned Sathan the muster maister of malignant men shall be throwne downe into hell and Anti-christ as the sonne of perdition the opposite a●uersarie to our Sauiour Christ shall be destro●ed by the wrath●●l● indignation of Christ The eleuenth Chapter The thinges that are to be iudged AS all persons are to be iudged so they shall bee ●asted to their co●rsest branne Their thoughtes wordes workes shal be as throughly ransacked as euer Laban did ra●sacke Rachels st●ff● That all thinges shal be scanned Saint Iohn hath declared I saw the dead b●th great and small ●●and before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was open●d which is the booke of life and the deade were iudged of these things which were writtē in the bookes a●cording to their works God is said i● haue counting bookes by him because all thinges are as certaine to him as if he had Ac●●●ries and Clarkes in heauen to make enrolement thereof and to keepe the recordes of them 〈◊〉 hath three seuerall 〈◊〉 or Bookes 1. The booke of prouidence 2. Of Iudgement 3. Of life The booke of his prouidence is the absolute knowledge of a particularities p●st present to come This Book is me●●oned by Dauid in these wordes Thine eyes did see my substance yet being vnperfect and in thy bookes were al my members written which day by day were ●ashioned when as yet there were none of them As in another place thus Thou tellest my ●●ttings puttest my teares into thy bottel are not these things noted in thy bookes The booke of Iudgement is that whereb● he giueth iudgement which is of two sections The first is his ●ore knowle●ge in wh●ch all the affaires of men their designme●ts and 〈…〉 as plainely set downe to him as if they were p●nned Wee may ●et them slippe in a careles●e ●orge fulnesse but God hath ●ckets of our dooings by him and keepeth them in per●ect remembrance Of which the Prophet Dauid saith thus Thou hast set my misdeedes before thee and my secret sinnes in the sight of thy countenance So that be they neuer so olde they are as new to him as if they had beene doon but yesterday For he rippeth vp the s●ane of Amalek doone more then three hundreth yeares before and commaundeth Saul to conferre it He y● numbreth the stars calleth them all by their names hath numbred our sins and will name them vnto vs as periuries blasphemies adulteries lyes vsuries and such like The second leafe or tome of this second Booke is euerie mans particuler conscience which maketh conuulsions thinges in vs and is instead of a thousand witnesses setting before vs the thinges that we haue done The booke of life is the decree of Gods election in which God hath set downe who are sealed vp vnto eternal life The opening of these bookes is Gods reuealing vnto euerie man his owne proper sins in thought word and deede committed against heauen and against him and then also by his omnipotent power hee that can of stones by Iordans brooke side raise vp Children to Abraham shall breake a sunder our stonie consciences so that wee shall haue compunction and remembrance of all sorepassed actions Now the conscience of the wicked is feared with a hot yron and is past feeling but then it shall be so sensible
any of these which is the period of my labors and desires the Lordes name be blessed for it Doomes day Booke The first Chapter Of the vnquestionable certaintie of the worldes end THe s●curitie and iniquitie of these ●●mes haue thrust this argument vpon me For hauing beene foure and fourtie yeres su● feted with peace and plentie we haue not onely forgotten but as it were set our faces against ple●ie So that spa●●●● the iudgements of God not by his word but by the state of the times wee make a moc●●●● them and whatsoeuer Preachers tell vs of the dissolution of the world of 〈…〉 of all flesh of the generall countie day wee 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 T● cut the ve●●●ase 〈…〉 of truth doe wee not finde that the wor●d sedde vpon 〈…〉 and ●ucke vp these su●●●● damnable ep●nons to the sub●●●sion of their soules 〈◊〉 that 〈…〉 no 〈◊〉 at all or iudgement to ●●me sensuall 〈…〉 2. Or that God ●ath adiourned the ●●me of his c●mm●ng and that it will belong ●ce he come of the generation of those 〈◊〉 al the ●est of them that Saint Peter taketh to ●●ske It is therefore high time to put the world in mind of their lying vani●ies which so 〈◊〉 their soules and so call them from deade wo●k 〈◊〉 so bee it may 〈…〉 se●ue the liuing God by placing before 〈◊〉 ●yes the day of doome which must certainely come and shortly come which shall giue to euerie one according to their workes That is to them which by continuance in well doing seeke glory and honour and immortalitie eternall life but vnto them that are contentious and disobey the truth obey vnrighteousnesse shall be indignation and wrath Now if this shrill trumpet and passing Bell will not wake vs out of our lithargie of carnall securitie there is no recouerie of vs For this is the onely cooler I can consider of to quēch or qualifie our hot sinfull lustes If we looke vp to this clocke or dyall we shall bee wary how we spend our time Daniel by strewing ashes vppon the floore found out the fallacy of the Priestes of Baal by the mature meditation of our fraile condition that wee are but dust and ashes and that we are sure of a resurrection and retribution according to the nature of our actions we shall des●tie and dispeli the subtilties of the deuill For all his deuises by the memorie hereof shall bee subdued vnto vs as the deuill himselfe was driuen away by Christ by telling him of Scriptures The remembrance of this will bee a staffe and crotch as luckie vnto vs in this our wearisome perambulation of the few and euill d●●e● of our life as that of Iacobs was vnto him wherewith he passed ouer Iordan If we looke to the end as the wisemen to the star it will leade vs as it did them the right way to Christ For why are older men better keepers of their Church then young men but because they consider they are nearer their end yong men by their sinnes with the younger Sonne who went farre from his father are farther off from God the farther they thinke in regard of their youth they are from their end They are as proud of the healthfull estate of their bodies as Nabuchadonozar was of the statelynesse of his Pallace saying to themselues I● not this a strong bodie as Nabuchadonozer saide to himselfe Is not this great Babell The cause of the sinnes of the people that were endlesse was their carelesnesse of the end as Ieremie flatly telleth Hierusalem Her filthines is in her skirts she remembreth not her last end While Moses considered that hee had but a time in the world ●ee forsooke the worlde betime and chose rather to suffer aduersitie with the people of God thē to inioy the pleasures of sins for a season Tell me worldly man that sayest with Peter It is good to behere whether if thou hadst hired a house whose foundation reeleth and rocketh and threatneth a downfall thou wouldest not make hast out of that house It is certaine thou wouldest Hast thee saue thee escape for thy life I counsaile thee as the Angell counselled Lot Escape into the Mountaine and holie hill of the Lord as Lot was aduised when Sodom was destroied for the Lord will fire the house of this worlde and the heauens the beautifull roofe of the house according as hee hath immutably decreed saying Heauen and earth shall passe And as in this chapter it shall be fully prooued vnto thee He that made the heauen can fold it vp like a booke againe can rolle it together like a skin of Parchment He that made the sea and set the waues thereof in a rage and caused it to boile like a pot of oyntment can say to the ●●oods Be ye dried vp He that made the drie land can rocke it to and fro vpon her foundations as a drunken man reeleth from place to place He can cleath the Sunne and the Moone in sack-cloath and commaund the starres to fall downe to the earth and the mountaines of the land to remoue into the sea It is the greatest follie in the world to dreame here of a dwelling place Wee haue here no continuing Citie but we seeke one to come Of his fathers house Christ hathsaid That there are many mansiōs but he neuer said so much of Horeb or Thabor or of the wildernesse of this world But the worde is alreadie gone out of Gods mouth It is appointed vnto all men once to die nay twise to die as God threatned Adam Thou shalt die the death wherefore the Apostle maketh vp the former sentence with this addition After that commeth the iudgement Beleeue this as the Samaritans did not because of my worde but because the Lorde himselfe hath spoken it by the mouth of his Prophets euer since 〈◊〉 world began The Deluge or flood which Moses diligently hath described vnto vs. ●s a liuely representation of the worldes dis●●tion Saint Peter ●●●●teth so much from thence against the mockers of his time thus Wherefore the worlde that then wa● perished ouerflowed with the water but the heauens and earth which 〈◊〉 now are kept by the same werde in store 〈◊〉 ●lerued vnto fire vnto the day of iudgement This his 〈…〉 is taken from the example and it is fashioned thus If God could in times past marre the face of the whole world hee is able to doe the like againe But the former he hath done alreadie ouerwhelming the whole earth a handfull of seede as it were onely rese●●ed to renue the same againe with riuers of waters And the latter is to be looked for that he waste the worlde againe with riuers of fire and brimstone Christ in many places is plaine in this point Heauen earth shall passe away but
my words shall not passe away In the reedition of a Parable the effect thereof elsewhere is thus deliuered The Haruest is the ende of the world So shall it be in the ende of this world And in the 49 verse of that Chapter the same wordes are repeated The 25. Chapter of Matthews Gospell handleth no other Argument but it is Doomes dayes discourse altogether It is the gracious promise Christ hath giuen to his Church I am with you alway to the ende of the world The Apostle taking this Text from Christs mouth doe est-soones put their people in remembrance hereof It is Paules saying to the Romans The creature shall be deliuered from the bondage of corruption In his first Letter to the Corinthians he is large in this point Then shal be the end when he hath deliuered vp the kingdome to God c. To the Thessalonians he sayth When they shall say peace and safetie then shall come vpon them sudden destruction c. The e●de of all things is at hand saith Saint Peter What better witnesses would a man wish to haue for the eu●●ence of the case We heare God himselfe speake and therefore let euerie aduersaries mouth be stopped in the certaintie of the worlds end let vs be fullie grounded With these authenticke and pregnant proofes we may heare what the Heathens say not that the sacred mysteries of our faith haue neede of any grace from the lippes of Poets and Philosophers but that Heathens may bee vanquished with their owne weapons as the head of Goliah was cut off by his owne a●ming sworde and the Baalites were lanched with their owne shredding kniues and that such as beare the name of Christians might bee ashamed who denie that in their hearts which the heathens who were without God in the world confessed with their tongues Ouid describing God deliberating with himselfe about the Deluge among other things hee relateth this of him Esse quoquem ●ati●● reminiscitur affore tempus Quo 〈◊〉 quo tellus corrept ●qu● r●g●●●●li 〈…〉 l●mol●s operola laboret The D●●●mes decree a dismall day to come Wherein the Sea the soyle● and frame coelest●ll And 〈◊〉 worldly masse and spacious rome 〈…〉 vtter wracke and ruine fall Plato whose eyes were broader then the worlde and saw so much into this Diumitie as his wisdom was but a little wide of 〈◊〉 h●n●leth the worlds creation in such sort as Euse●●●s auerreth that ●e plowed with Moses Heiser and was helped by his Bookes which is not much vnlikely Plato hauing bin in Egypt as the storie of his life sheweth and the Egyptians being so carefull keepers of the rolles and registers of Moses the Iewes bringing them into Aegypt there being such free passage one to another betweene the Iewes and the Aegyptians His Dialogue super●cribed Timaeus giueth clusters of conclusions in the case So that giue we that the worlde was created as Plato contendeth this consequence will necessarily follow thereupon that it shall likewise bee dissolued For the composition thereof plainly proouing the beginning thereof as well in regard of the materiall as the effecient cause euerie thing compounded hauing a compounder and the compound matter of things contrarie req●ring the aide of thinges simple from whence they may haue their originall composition the duration or dissolution thereof must stand to the ●●rtesi● and will of the compo●nder whose will is free and will not be inforced as things naturall are in their ●c●io●s or admit that ne●essarie co●erence of causes which the 〈◊〉 cast in their con●●ts Id●iue this long dilated Argument into a narrow roome and 〈◊〉 it vp thus The worlde 〈…〉 mooued prese●ued by a first cause but that first go●●●ing and preset●●ng cause is at absolute libertie to d ee as it p●●s●th wherefore when that arch fli●ht from it the whole 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 ther of immediately falleth The Sect of Phelos●phers called Sto●cks not onely pronounce the dissolution et the world but they go further and determine as Cicero recordeth the maner of it that it shall bee brought to a generall combustien Heraclitus as Themistius an Expositor vpon Aristotle hath it and Seneca surnamed by some a Christian Gentile or a Gentile Christian are of the mind that it shall perish by water But the scheole of Philosophers goeth most with the first opinion of the two whose steppes the Mathematicians tread in who make the starres the Incendiaries of the world running into a c●urse and concourse ●●ereunto Berosus is verie busie there about who as Seneca saith is so nice as to calculate the verie nicke and exegent of time when it shall be reduced to his finall conslo●ration The time appointed is as he fan●seth when as all the Eelestiall signes who now haue their seuerall ●erambulatie●e and ●ettings shall meete togither in Cancer Of this kinde we haue vntnesses enough for hauing a sufficient company to make a grand Iurie what aduantage should wee ha●e i● we should ransacke the whole worlde from the Center to the Circum●erence for euerie such authoritie Let the Perepatecians prate as they please to the contrarie who peremptorily auouch th● worldes eternitie Among whom their great master Aristotle is the chiefest and Galen the Phisitians God is not behind who measureth the nature of the world by experience saying as we see by dayly sight that the world hath alwayes stoode so it shall still stand Of which vain is Manlius comming in verie good●ily with such a spoke saying Our fathers haue not seene neither shall their childrens children see any other world then this Vpon which string harpeth the blinde Harpers and ianglers at this doctrine whom Peter statly ouercame in disputation who considering how the world keepeth at a stay do promise the perpetuity of the same vnto themselues in a restie securitie Thus shooting their fooles bolte Where is the promise of his comming For since the fathers died all things haue continued alike since the beginning of the creation Let these I say and such like blurt out their vaine tattle as they please we haue aduersaries of their owne marke and calling that shall replie against them and repell them Against those forenamed grand-captaines of the controuersie we culle out Philosophers as thēselues are Pithagoras the Sloicks and the broode of Epicures if they wil admit of them as for Plato their Deisted Philosopher they dare not denie him but they will giue him the first place in the schooles Against the Latins Plinie and his ●●●plices 〈…〉 Sen●●a who is worth them all and will forte them at the 〈◊〉 L●stly I desire no other Iudge in the cause then our common 〈…〉 ●hich considereth of the natu●e of the whole b● the con●equence of the seuerall pa●ts which doe ordeyne and 〈◊〉 the whole But euery particular part of the world that pe●●● whe●●ore common sence it selfe setteth downe that the whole
their eyes shall haue better obiect before them their feete shall be exalted aboue the cloudes and the whole bodie shall be mantled with immortalitie as sayeth Chrysostome If to infringe this which hath beene deliuered any shall obiect this saying of the Apostle Flesh and blood cannot inherite the Kingdome of God and so inferre hereupon that the bodies of men shall not rise againe we answer them thus that by fleth and blood is not meant the bodies of men simply but as they are now in the state of corruption that which the Apostle calleth animale corpus The fleshly man or the earthly man and what soeuer is of nature without the spirite which being depraued and corrupted must needes be renued Wherefore Christ said to Nicodemus vnles a man be regenerate and borne a new he cannot enter into the kingdome of God The vnregenerate man is called Flesh therefore Christ immediatly after the former words said That which is borne of the flesh is flesh wherefore of force wee must be regenerated neither onely the flesh the bodie or a part of the minde is to be renued which couetteth and is angry but especially the reason the minde the will And Christ else where teacheth that the whole man as he is in the state of nature is called flesh and bloud For thus Christ answereth Peter Blessed art thou Simon Bar Iona for flesh and bloud hath not reuealed these thinges but the spirite of my father In which wordes Christ comprehendeth the better parts of the mind For they be those by which we vnderstood and the truth is reuealed vnto vs. Therefore these must be turned and transposed and created a new that we may be as Christ saith like the Angells in resurrection For the infirmitie of this mortall bodie is such as it cannot take the least taste or smack of heauenly glorie as we perceiue in the Prophets and Apostles who were men without soules when at anie time God did appeare vnto them And not without cause said God to Moses Thou canst not see my face neither shall man see me and liue Wherefore the German and right sence of the wordes of the Apostle is this as we are nothing else but flesh and bloud weake mortall sinfull Curuae in terris animae coel est ium in mes wée cannot inherite the kingdome of God Lastly if that of Salomon shall be laid against vs The condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts are euen as one condition and so argue that a man shall rise no more from the dead then a beast we will answere them by Salomon who explaineth himselfe in the words following they are like in dying As the one dieth so dieth the other but in their estate after death they differ of which Salomon speaketh not The sixt Chapter Of the certaintie of the iudgement or the day of doome THe general iudgement being the consecution of the resurrection the end therof y● last blast of that shril trūpet giuing this Eccho surgite mortui venite ad Iudiciū Arise ye dead come to iudgement We are to enter into the tractation hereof in this place This subiect matter though it be of vnquestionable assurance Yet because the schoole of Cyclopical Atheists Epicures carnal minded men is so great who as se●pents grouel wholly in the dust only giue themselues to earthly things licking vp this Aphorisme of Socrates the Philosopher Quae supra nos nihil ad nos Those things that are aboue vs appertaine not vnto vs we list to light a candle before the Sun and aswel by scriptures as irrefragable reasons determine the absolute certaintie of this matter 1. The scriptures are plaine and plentifull in the point Hanna the mother of Samuel thus prophecieth hereof saying The Lords aduersaries shall be destroied and out of heauen shall he thunder vpon them the Lord shall iudge the ends of the world and shall giue power vnto his kinge and exalt the horne of his anointed which is Christ Isaiah sermoneth it thus Then shall they goe into the holes of the rockes and into the caues of the earth from before the feare of the Lord and from the glorie of his maiestie when he shall arise to iudge the earth That the prophet by these wordes aimeth at doomes day appeareth by the Angells exposition of the same And the kings of the earth and the great men and the rich men and the cheif captaines and the mighty men and euery bondman and euery free man hid themselues in dennes and among the rockes of the mountaines And said to the mountaines rocks fal on vs and hide vs frō the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe For the great day of his wrath is come and who can stand In another place he preacheth thus Behould the day of the Lord cometh cruell with wrath and fierce anger c. But in another place ●e is most pathetical in the point The lord wil come with fire his charets like a wirlewind that hee may recompence his 〈◊〉 with wrath and his indignatiō with the flame of fire For the Lord wil iudge with fire and with his sword all flesh Daniel deliuereth the like doome saying And at that time shal Michael stand vp the great prince which stādeth for the childrē of the people and there shall be a time of trouble such as neuer was since there began to bee a nation vnto that same time and at that time thy people shall be deliuered euery one that shall be found written in the booke And many of them that sleepe in the dust of the earth shall awake some to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetuall contempt And they that bee wise shall shine as the brightnes of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnes shall shine as the starres for euer and euer Ioel writeth thus of it I will shew wonders in the heauens and in the earth bloud and fire and pillars of smoke The Sunne shall be turned into darknes and the moone into bloud before the great terrible day of the Lord come Zephaniah singeth the same songe with the rest The great day of the Lord is neere it is neere and hasteth greatly euen the voice of the day of the Lord the strong man shall crie there bitterly That day is a day of wrath a day of trouble and heaumes a day of destruction and des●lation a day of obscuritie and darknes a day of cloudes and blacknes a day of the trumpet and a ●arume against the strong citties c. Malachie hath also good matter to this purpose The day commeth that shal burne as an ouen and all the proud yea all that do wickedly shal be stuble the day that co●meth shall burne them vp saith the Lord of hosts and shall leaue them neither roote nor branch In the new testament we haue verie