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A00800 A godly sermon preached at Paules Crosse the 31. day of October 1591. By VVilliam Fisher, Master and keeper of the hospitall of Ilford in Essex. ... Seene and allowed Fisher, William, student of diuinitie. 1592 (1592) STC 10919; ESTC S117556 27,863 65

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yet euerye one that shalbe found written in the booke of lyfe shall be delyuered and to the same effect it is that this booke was ordained for this people to be as it were their Passeouer to auoid and escape the dayes of miserye which the Lorde did threaten to bring vpon them Prouide that the doore postes of your consciences maye be sprinckled with the bloode of the Lambe or that your repentaunce maye bee recorded in the booke of lyfe and you are sure of an euerlasting Passeouer to escape Gods most dreadfull vengeance But if you wll sée that prerogatiue which is Instar omnium in stéede of all other Then consider againe and againe of that which is written in 20. Apoc. ver 12. Wherin the glorious maiesty of our Sauiour Jesus Christ is moste truely described euen as he shall come to Judge the quick and the dead for it is said And I saw the dead both great and small stād before God and the bookes were opened another book was opened which is the book of lyfe the dead wer iudged of those things which were written in the bookes acording to their workes But now what are these bookes that shall be opened before the booke of lyfe be opened doubtles these thrée the booke of the Lawe the booke of the Gospell and the booke of Conscience First the booke of the Law shal be opened and laid before vs that it maye appeare what duetye we ought to haue done towardes God and man through loue And euen as Moyses commāded the Leuites to put this booke in the side of the Arke that it might be for a witnes against them when they disobeyed the same Deu. 31. So shall all the workers of iniquity in the fearefull day of the Lord find this booke a swift witnes against them And if Iosias rent his cloathes and wept for wo when he heard the law red and thereby sawe how much duety was required and how little he had performed what sorrow and heauines shall compas vs about and if it were possible dissolue our teares and turne them into drops of blood When in the presence of this our seuere Judge we shall both heare and sée not onelye what we haue left vndone in that book commanded but also what we haue done therein forbidden In the meane time therefore let vs not onelye be hearers of the Law but dooers also lest then we finde Gods fauour vnrecouerable and our repentance vnprofitable Secondly the booke of the Gospell shal be opened that thereby it may appear what mercy what grace what frée pardon what remission of sinne what imputation of righteousnes and what assuraunce of lyfe and Saluation you might haue had in Christ Jesus If you had bene so happye to haue sought it by repentance and to haue laid holde vppon it by faith At the opening of this booke shall you sée before your eyes all the swéete promises and tender inuitations which our Sauiour Christ offred vnto you through preaching of the gospell to haue drawne you to repentance Then shall all the benefites of his bitter passion be laid open before your eyes and you shall sée that he was debased himselfe to haue brought you to honour that he was wounded himself to haue healed your wounds of sinne and that he died himselfe to haue saued his enemies from death and to haue purchased eternal life to all penitent sinners And as the booke of the lawe shall shewe what wee ought to haue done so the booke of the Gospell shall shewe what we ought to haue beleeued and both to one end Christ knoweth that so much more Just and dreadfull may be our Judgement O ye proude contemners of the worde of trueth consider of this you which thinke the Gospell to base for your déepe wittes haue regarde vnto it lest the time come that you repent it and féele the smart of it And as the ritch man begde of Abraham that poore Lazarus might dip but the tippe of his finger in water to coole his tormented tongue so the day may come that you will be glad●● 〈…〉 e in your harts that the 〈…〉 rascall a●d ab●●ct minister among vs all as you 〈…〉 ●● vs might be suffered to bring y●u euen the least all drop of the water of lyfe ye a the least comfort of the Gospell to refresh your 〈…〉 〈…〉 les but it will be to late to late Thirdlye the booke of Conscience shall be opened and shewe what abhominable sinnes we haue done and committed Conscientia Codex est in quo quotidiana conscrib 〈…〉 r peccata ●aith Chrisost in Psa 50. The conscience is a booke where in a mans dayly sins are written Therfore keepe this boke well cleare frō the blots and blemishes of sinne and then the reward thereof will be so strong and substantiall on thy side y ● it is called mille testes a thousand witnesses Sillogismus practicus a conclusion of Experience Cordis scientia the knoweledge of a mans owne hart It is murus Aeneus as Horace saith a brasen wall It is maxima consolatio rerum incōmodarum The greatest cōfort in aduersity saith Tully nay it is ger Benedictionis the field of blessing Hort is delitiarum The garden of pleasures Gaudium An 〈…〉 m The ioy of Angels Habit 〈…〉 m Spiritus sancti The habitation of the holy Ghost saith Hugo de Anima Lib. 2. Cap. 9. But suffer this booke to be 〈…〉 and ●●lluted with sinne and what is it then It is formidinis mater saith Chrisostome the Mother of all feare It is confusionis tabula saith August It is the table of confusion And of all other bookes in the world you can not abyde to look into the book of your guilty consciences This made the Father I meane Adam a cr●ep●ish in Paradice and this made him say Abscondi me Gen. 3. This made the sonne I meane Caine a runnagate and so restlesse that hee durst abide noe where for feare his throat should be cut Gen. 4. This made Ionas conuey him selfe into the bottome of the shippe thinking there to hyde him selfe from the booke of his owne Gauled conscience This made Iudas betake himselfe to the halter because he coulde not abide to see the abhominable treacherye hee had committed against the innocent bloode of Jesus This made Ecebolus that turne cote heretike to cast him selfe downe before the Church and to detest him selfe saying Calcate me in sipidum salem Trample vpon me vnsauorye salt that I am Now then if it be such a feareful horrible thing to looke into the booke of a guilty conscience in this life what shame and confusion shal ouerwhelme vs in the lyfe to come when nothing shall be concealed when all pleates and wrinckles shall be vnfolded when al coūsels and secrets shal be discouered when there is not an idle word of our tongues or a wicked thought of our herts that shall escape our accompt and when all our falts shall appeare vppon record
Judgement For otherwise as nothing els brought Philippe to his deaths wound but because he wold not hear the cōplaint of Pausanias And as nothing wrought that maine confusion vpon the Lacedemonian estate that neuer could be recouered but onlye their slacknes in hearing poore mens causes So indeed nothing more fretteth the hartes or astraungeth the minds of poore mē then delaying of their causes from hearing Which is doubtlesse a great faulte in our Courts in England both ecclesiastical ciuil that it is so long before poore mens causes can come to hearing Indeed some times I know they are the longer by meanes of their careles and couetous Lawyers careles of their cause and couetous of their money for they can tell how to spin or rather to spill a cause to draw it out like a thréede from tearme to tearme vntill their clyents coats be thréed bare and their purses money bare And therefore to be plaine I lyke not this same Ad idem in proximum which is so much vsed among the Ciuilians nor these same néedeles and trifling Demurrars which are so ordinary among the cōmon Lawyers for both these proue many tymes to be the very bane and murrain of many a good mans right But let a mans cause runne thorow all the delaies and pikes that the cunning of any drawlatch can deuise yet vnlesse he make earnest and great meanes to haue it heard it shal neuer be hearde vntill doomesday Be wise then ye Judges of the earth and learne to be forewarde ready to heare of him which one day shall Judge you all and suffer not good mē to be discouraged or poore men to be eaten out of all they haue thorow your delayes If you doe you shall finde that the Grand Judge him selfe will make no delay to rewarde you therafter to measure his vengeance accordingly Lastly the Lord heareth the voice of the penitent nay the very breath and the least thought in his heart tending to repentance And therfore it is said If any man be a woorshipper of God and doth his will him doth he heare Ioh. 9. Now this is his will euen your holynes 1. Thes 4. And he willeth not the death of a sinner but that he should be conuerted and liue And besides this very thing is warranted vnto vs in this Scripture why they did no soner wish wel in there harts but the Lord heard it We cannot so say of any mortall Prince his subiectes may speake and cry and call long inough and yet if they be not within his hearing they are neuer y ● nere And therfore this is a flat dash to that peeuish reason of the papists which tell vs that as a mortall Prince must be laboured vnto by meanes and mediatours so must the Lord our God be solicited by Saints and Angells Alas there is no proporcion in this comparison for God only is himself Scrutator Cordis the searcher of our harts we cannot do it but by meanes And what iniury or rather villāy is it to make him in his hearing of no more capasity or excellency then a mortal creature And so let this suffice for our first encouragement to drawe vs on to repentāce for that the Lord vouchsafeth to hearken and hear all them which haue but any motion of so happy a purpose Of the second Comforte ANd a booke of remembrance was writtē before him c. Let vs now in these words consider of that which was a second cōfort encouragemēt for this people to procede in their repentance That it was acceptable to the Lord we perceiue by his attentiue fauour in hearing them But now you shall vnderstand that it was very honorable besides And y ● he doth vouchsafe them the rarest welcome home to his mercye and grace that euer was heard of for he caused a booke of remembrance c. And to what end Surely that it might for euer be remembred how much he deliteth in al penitent sinners which assone as euer they forsake sin he will embrace honor in his bottomles and abundant mercy Also that it might neuer be forgotten that howe great and how generall soeuer the corruption was yet they were the people which became penitent and turned vnto the Lord at the preching of Malachi therefore some cause why all posterity should be encouraged not only to follow their example but also to haue them in Admiration It shall be expedient that here we consider first what is ment by the booke of remēbrance then to whom it doth apertaine For this book of remēbrance it is very strange We read of certaine stones of remembrāce which being ingrauen with the names of the children of Israell and set in golde Aron was to weare that he might remember them to Godwards And we finde that there was a sacrifice of Remembrance made by fire for a sweete sauour vnto the Lord to signifie that God will not forget him that offereth it Leuit. 2. And we vnderstand of a Saboth of Remembrance to be obserued and celebrated for a memorial of the blowing of Trumpets and of the Jubile Leuit. 23. And who can be ignorant of Absalons piller of remembrance which he erected because he had no sonne to kepe his name in memorie But what this booke of Remembrance should importe that wee doe not so easelye perceiue Surely some learned wryters are of opinion that hereby we are to vnderstand this booke of Malachies prophecy Which because it was writtē at the Lords appointment was doutles written before his face and because it can not be red openly in the congregation without recitall of this their conferrence therefore it may be termed iustly a booke of remēbrance Euen as the gospell it selfe is a booke of Remēbrance in respect of that which Marie Magdalen did to our Sauiour Christ for wheresoeuer this gospell shall be preached through out all the world there shal this also that she hath done bee spoaken of for a memoriall of her saith Christ Jesus himselfe Math. 26. And in this sence it doeth maruelouslye approue and confirme the authority of this booke of Malachies Prophecy as beeing written in his presence and at his appointment But by the censure and in the Judgement of the most learned and godly writers that I haue red there is another meaning to be vnderstoode by the booke of remembrance For thereby is signified the booke of lyfe wherein the righteous are written and whereof we read Exod. 32. Psal 69. Apoc. 3. And it is ment that therein the Lorde did write their names presently vpon their repentance for a memoriall thereof And that you may sée in what stéed it wil stād you to be writen in the booke of the Lordes Remembraunce and to be remembred in the booke of lyfe consider first of that which is set downe Daniell 12. ver 1. And thereby may you perseiue that albeit there fall out such a tyme of trouble as neuer was since the worlde beganne
against vs euen in the bookes which we our selues haue caried in our owne bosomes Alas alas who shall endure it and not desire that the déep may swallow him vp or that the mountaines maye couer him or that the hilles may fall vpon him Haue a ●are then good people and an eye to your bosome booke I meane the conscience the verye register of all your secrets Now all these bookes being opened the booke of the Law to show what wee ought to haue done The booke of the Gospell to shewe what we ought to haue beleeued and the book of our owne consciences to shew what abominable sins we haue committed that we haue neither by loue satisfied the Law nor thorow faith relyed vpon the gospell what followeth Then shal the booke of lyfe which is here called the booke of Remembraunce be opened wherein the Lord hath set downe vpon record whatsoeuer good thing we haue done for the obtaining of the crowne of lyfe and the auoiding of the snares of death and namely these foure things First the Names of all Gods Saints and seruants and this is apparant by the wordes of Moyses Exod. 32. 32. If thou wilt not forgiue thē I pray thee race my name out of the booke of lyfe which thou hast written And Daniell praieth that the wicked may be raced out of the boke of lyfe and that they may not be written with the righteous Psal 69. So that as Assuerus had his booke of rememberaunce wherein the names of such as had don him hye seruice at any time wer vsually written and as he finding that Mardocheus had discouered two traitours which sought to laye violent hands vpon the King caused him to be honored by putting on his owne rich apparel and by wearing his royall crowne vpon his head Ester 6. In lyke maner our heauenlye King séeing the good that we haue done for the supplanting and subuerting of the enemies of his trueth will he not recorde our names in his book will he not giue vs the rich robes of his innocencie and the royall crowne of his euerlasting glorye Read you the 2. of the Re and you shall see that the Lord doeth professe this fauour Very notably he tolde the Church of Ephesus that heknew her workes her labor and her patience c. And so he tolde the church of Smirna the Church of Pergamus and the Church of Thyatyra that he knew not onely what yet they had done but also did remember and recite in particuler their good reckoning with them for the one and promissing to rewarde them for the other Secondly in this booke of Remembraunce we shall finde written the teares of our affliction and therefore Dauid saith Thou haste counted my wandrings put my teares into thy bottle are they not in thy register Ps 56. 8. Can there be a greater comfort then this when wee are brought to the stake to bee burnt or to the sworde to be cut as flesh to the potte or to the wilde horsses to be torne in a thousand peeces Let the butcherlike tirants glut their hartes by making ashes of our bodies or foules meat or dogs meat of our flesh what care wee They can not scrape our teares out of the booke of Remembrance nor race our bloode out of the register of lyfe Thirdly In this booke of Remēbrance we shall finde written the works of our compassion for so much doth the wordes of our Sauiour Christ importe Math. 25. Who shall say to them on the right hand Come ye blessed of my Father inherite ye the kingdome prepared for you frō the foūdation of the world for I was an hungred ye gaue me meat c. Then shall the righteous aunswer him and say Lord When sawe we thee anhongred c. Then shall he answer and say Verely in asmuche as you haue done it to one of the least of these my brethren ye haue done it vnto me And so much doth the woordes of Iob import Cap. 31. ver 35. Where he saith that the Almighty will witnes his pitty towardes the poore albeit his enemy should write a booke against him And so will he doe for vs If wee giue but a cuppe of colde water for his names sake we shal not lose our rewarde We see that Princes haue their bookes of Subsidies of Beneuolence of priuye Seales wherein they set down whatsoeuer good they receiue at the hands of their Subiects by free gift or vpō lone or lending And so it is with our heauenly potentat I warrant you if you releeue the poore he sets it down in his book for a subsidy or a beneuolēce don to him if you lend to the poore needy he sets it downe for a priuy seale lent to him he will become your debter and sée it discharged to the vttermost Therefore ye rich men out with your subsidie extend your beneuolences and send abroad your priuye seale money the Lord will not forget it he will not faile but set it downe in his booke of Remembrance And heere right Honorable and beloued in the Lord I cannot but put you in minde of a necessary Beneuolence and a Christian subsidy to be supplyed in respect of the Godly preachers called and appointed for this place which as you know is vsually and best furnished with learned men from both the vniuersities But how hardlye and vnwillinglye they ar drawen hither it is but to wel known And why because they are faine to come at their owne great coste and charge which can not stand with their poore and small abilitye For I speake not for my selfe and other● my brethren which thankes be to God are prouided for sufficiently to do any seruice appliable to our calling without beeing chargeable to you But for fellowes in Colleges and other poore students in the vniuersities men of rare knowledge and singuler guifts which being enioyned to supply this place are not more often sent for then commonlye they refuse to come And for my parte I cannot greatlye blame them for why should they labour and haue no hyre Or tread out your corne with the Oxe and haue their mouthes musted No man is hound proprijs stipendiis militare to make warre at his owne charge Why should not he that preacheth the Gospell liue of the gospel Or why should not they which sowe spirituall things reape your temporall things Might it therfore please you the right honorable the Lord Maior and the read● the right wor●●●●full your brethren and Maie●●trats of th● famous cittie of London ●● impar●●●ou 〈…〉 berality and ye●rly contribution in 〈…〉 〈…〉 I know●●●o●e learned 〈…〉 godly B●shop which in my hearing hath not onely promised before 〈…〉 but 〈…〉 ed before God to giue a good portion for●●er towardes thi● so good a purpose 〈…〉 I am sure it will bee a● freelye and thorowlye performed make triall when you please And albeit perhaps you will not pre●ent him yet the cause being so reasonable and important I hope
God will stirre vp your harts not to be long or much behinde him And in trueth I ●●●●der that this noble Cittie of London hath not heretofore looked into this want and had ●are to supply it 〈…〉 in there is no charitable w●●ke almost vndo●● or at the least vnprouided for You haue sundry not able fr●e schooles founded in this Cittye where by you giue ●u●ture to the rude and learning to the ignorant You haue many goodly hospitals endewed wherein yo●●e●e me and allowe Phisick to the 〈…〉 ●●rger● to the sore meate to the hungry drink to the thirsty cloaths to the naked houseroom for the h 〈…〉 ourles and good and godly education to Orphanes and infants And you haue store of faire and sweete Conduits wherebye you spare not for any coste to conuey water into euery place almost of this populus citty Yea there cannot be a fountaine heard of or a deuise thought of to yeelde store of water but lyke good and careful gouernours your hands are in your purses to laye out what so euer it will cost And will you bestow nothing vppon the blessed Pypes and sugred Conduites which bring you the water of lyfe You cannot bring water a quarter of a myle to the Cittie without your own great charges And doo you thinke it reason that the water of life should be brought you 40 or 50. myles at other mens charges Consider but of the excellency thereof and thinke but of the happines of these our daies wherein wee may haue it either for loue or money The waters of Sylaris in Lucania maketh soft things hard as a wand laid in it all night wil be as hard as a stone by the morning But the water of lyfe will make hard thinges soft as your hard stonye heartes it will turne into tender fleshy hartes The water of Sinnesana in Campania maketh mad men wise and sober and so this water chaungeth worldly folly into Heauenly wisedome The water of Clytumnus if O●enor shéep being neuer so blacke vse to drinke of it it wil make them as white as the driuen snowe So this water albeit sinne hath made you as blak in soule as any Ethiopian is in bodye yet it will wash you and purge you and make you cleane and white And as the water of Bethesda when it was moued by the Angell cured them which stept into it whatsoeuer disease they had So this water will cure and recouer al the infirmities of your sicke soules if ye step into it and embrace it when Gods ministers moue it and poure it out before you To be shorte as Varro writeth of Zame a fountaine in Affrica that it runneth with such sweete singing noise that thereby bothe men and beasts are allured to drinke of it So the waters of lyfe running and falling in this publik and famous place through such learned pipes and gratious Conduites as comes from the Vniuersities are moste pleasant and of maruellous force to allure all men bothe cleane and vncleane to taste of them and to hath their sinfull soules in them Wherefore the vertue and excellencie of this water being so singuler and soueraigne as you haue heard I hope it will not grudge you with all spéede to prouide that it maye haue moste frée and plentifull passage to this Cittie thorow your Christian relief and lyberalitye I am not the first that hathe moued this sute but you may be the first that euer tendered it or prouided for it two and fifty poundes a yere would bountifully performe it a good parte whereof as I haue toulde you a Reuerend and moste learned Bishoppe meaneth to yeld And if you would vouchafe to ioyne with him and to lay out the rest and so make vppe the somme out of your common treasurye for the cittie you should not onely be thankfully remembred in this place vnto the worlds end but also this good woorke of your compassion shall be recorded in the booke of the Lords Remembrance and at the last day you shall reap the frute of your well doing finde that with such sacrifice God is highlye pleased Lastly in this booke of Remembrance shall be written the sorrow and remorse of our penitent and broken harts And hereof what better testimony then this present Scripture The Lord caused a booke of Remembraunce to be written c. It is doubtles a great and gratious fauour when the Lord sayeth At what time soeuer a sinner shall repent I will blot his wickednes out of my Remembrance Ezech. 18. But this passeth and is with out all comparison that he will make a memoriall of it and write a booke of Remembrance of our repentaunce and recorde it in the booke of lyfe So that with Israel we shal not onelye escape all euill or the greatest euill in this lyfe but also at the last and most de●adfull time be tide what shall come the day of the Lord neuer so glowmingly sound the trumpet neuer so fear fully arrise the dead neuer so sinfully approch the deuils neuer so fiearsly smoake the mountaines melt the hilles tremble the earth vanishe the sea flash and flame the whole vn●uersall worlde neuer so furiously yet this shal be our comfort and refuge that we haue repented vs of our sinnes and that our Repentance is of record and written in the booke of the Judges remembrance And so to come to the next obseruation in this comfort Seing the Prophet in plaine termes saith that this booke was written for them that feared the Lord and thought vpon his name let all the woorkers of Iniquitye which forget God and put farre from the● the euill day which saith in their hartes tush God hath forgotten hee wil not sée it which are at their leagues with death and at their bargaines with hell let them all stand backe and know that there is no place for their names in this booke And why the Lord himself yeelds the reason Whosoeuer sinneth against me I will put his name out of my booke Ex. 32. And againe I will make their rememberance to cease from among men No No Ieremie telleth them plaine enough where they shal be writen euen in the dust or in the earth Ier. 17. and why because they haue forsaken the Lord the fountaine of liuing waters Therefore let them write their names vpon their owne stately houses and vpon their sumpteous tombes and Sepulchers no man will controll them But it is their Judgemēt to be scattred lyke the chaffe before the wind Psal 1. To be withered lyke grasse before the Sonne Psal 37. and to melt or consume lyke waxe before the fire Psal 68. that is to be forgotten and to be raked vppe and buried in the forlorne ashes of all obscuritye and obliuion And yet their punishment shall not be forgotten I warrant you for that is written and set downe in another kinde of booke then we haue yet spoken off I meane the blacke booke of Gods most bitter vengeance wherof Ezechel speaketh Chap. 2. Which