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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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Solomon Eccles. 11.9 Dan. 7. Mal. 4. and many more after the Law by Christ Mat. 24. Paul 2 Thes. 1. Peter 2 Pet. 3. Iohn Rev. 2● 2. The types of it which are so many pledges doe certainly though fearfully foretell it such as were those dreadfull executions done upon wicked men in all ages as the drowning of the world the burning of the Cities Sodome c. the opening of the earth to swallow Corah Dathan and Abiram the destruction of Ierusalem c. yea he spared not the very Angels Iud. 6.2 Pet. 2.4 These stupendious works are monuments of a strange judgement to come 3. The exact fulfilling of the signs so many of them as belong to times past and present which were given as fore-runners of that judgement such as were 〈◊〉 Christs warres the apostacie of the Church the detection and falling of Antichrist c. 4. From the need of it for in this world the godly are oppressed and not righted and the wicked flourish and are not punished many times therefore of necessity there must be a time wherein all these things must be set in order 1. Let every man repent Act. 17.30 Here is no trifling it will certainly be and therefore repent or perish 2. Judge nothing before the time let us not judge one another but leave all judgement to God 1 Cor. 4.4 3. Let us not be impatient or fret at the prosperity of the wicked or be discouraged at the afflictions of the righteous for there shall come a time wherein the godly shall have full reward and honor and wicked men everlasting shame and paine Every man The whole world must come to judgement good and bad wee must all appeare before the Tribunall seat of Iesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.10 not onely all the godly but all the wicked of all sorts which will appeare by a distribution 1. The Pagans shall come to judgement such as have sinned without the law Rom 2. 2. The Iewes that crucified Christ or still doe deny him to be come in the flesh Rom 2. 3. Papists 2 Thes. 2. 4. Atheists that mock at his comming 2 Pet. 3.3 In the true Church 1. Grosse offenders Mal. 3.7 Rev. 21. 22. 2. Civill honest men Mat. 5.19 3. Rich and mighty men of the world God will not accept the person of Princes Iob 34.19 Iam. 5.1 3. 4. Hypocrites Mat. 23. Psal. 5● 16 5. The unmercifull Mat. 25. Iam. 2.13 6. Apostates Heb. 10.27 2 Pet. 2. 7. All that trouble the godly 2 Thes. 1. Gal. 5 1● 8. Inordinate censurers Rom. 2.1 2.3 Iam. 3.1 9. All unruly persons that will not be ordered according to Gods ordinances Mat. 25. goates 10. All that use scant measures wicked balances and false weights Mat. ● 10 11. Yea as I said before all the godly must be judged we must all appeare It is said the godly shall not be judged Iob. 3.18 6.54 They shall not be judged with the judgement of condemnation The Use. Therefore every man should stir up his heart to a carefull examination of himselfe and make his account and provide for his answer at that day and the rather should wee attend hereunto because the most men are after an unspeakable manner forgetfull of their latter end and suffer themselves to be drowned in the cares of life as if there were no time of cha●ging or reckoning The fourth and last point is the cause of the judgement imported in these words according to their works According to their works It shall be t● every man at that day according to his works if his works be evill he shall be damned if his works be good he shall be saved 2 Cor. 5 1● Rom. 2. For the better understanding of this doctrine divers questions and objections are to be resolved It seemes then faith shall not be inquired after It shall yea and that chiefly as appeares in the 7. verse of this Chapter and in many other Scriptures which avouch we are saved by faith yea and works are mentioned to this end because by them Christ shall evidently prove to the world the faith of his Elect hee will th●n shew their faith by their works yea faith is comprehended under the word works as being indeed the noblest of all works and that which most shineth in the life of a Christian it is the chiefe obedience required in the Gospell and the just live by their faith But how can works be looked upon in the Elect seeing they are not acknowledged as having merit in them Can they be saved by their works Works shall be inquired after in the godly not as meritorious causes of their salvation for the merit of heaven is onely in Christs works which onely are perfect But works shall be examined and judged 1. As the witnesses in that Assise that give in evidence concerning their calling and faith 2. As the conditions of Gods promises concerning reward in heaven not for their merit but of Gods free grace that will so crowne them Observe that the Scripture no where saith for their works but according to their works But how can the works of men be numbred they are so infinite The books shall then be opened viz. first the booke of Gods remembrance in which are fast graven the deeds of all men Rev. 20. Mal. 3.16 Secondly the consciences of all men shall be extended to an exact view of all the works of their life past By what law shall mens works be examined seeing the Pagans have not the Scriptures to guide them and the faithfull have not fulfilled the morall law in their owne persons The infidels shall be judged by the law of nature Rom. 2. the wicked in the Church by the morall law and the godly by the Go●p●ll Shall not wicked men be judged for their originall sin but onely for their evill works By works may be meant 1. both the worke of our fall in Adam as well as 〈…〉 worke 2. This phrase according to workes doth include all workes and yet not exclude the respect of other things besides workes a● faith in the godly and originall sinne in the wicked 3. Workes are but the ●ruits of corruption of nature and so syn●●dochically it is comprehended under them But shall no man be then judged for other mens workes as well as for their owne may not children be iudged for their fathers sinnes or one man iudged for the evill done by another as the Pharises for the blood of Abel and Zachar●as God as an absolute Monarch and iust governor may with temporall punishments chastise the posterity of wicked Parents and to warn the world 〈…〉 but hee cannot iudge them to eternall damnation further then they be guilty of their fathers sinnes either by consent assistance or 〈…〉 the Pharises be sent to hell for Abels bloud onely to farre as they were not warned by that example to avoid bloud To con 〈◊〉 no man
maintaine good workes Tit. 2.8 They must shew their faith by their workes and so they are justified before men by the workes which they behold Iam. 2. They are the expresse words of S. Iames also in his third chapter vers 13. Let him shew by good conversation his workes And the Apostle Paul saith If there be any praise thinke on those things that may get praise Phil. 4.8 Yea some Christians are charged to be patterns of good workes Tit. 2.7 Now for explication of this point I would consider first what workes may bee shewed and then secondly what workes may not bee shewed For the first I will only now instance in the Apostles catalogue in the second of Titus Old men may safely shew sobriety gravity temperance soundnesse of their faith love and patience Old women may safely carry themselves in a holy behaviour and be teachers of good things especially to the younger women Young women must shew their sobriety love and obedience to their husbands discretion chastity care of their children and houshold affaires Young men may shew that they be sober-minded Ministers offend not by teaching uncorrupt doctrine with gravity and sincerity nor when in conference they speake soundly and things that cannot be justly taxed Servants offend not by shewing obedience to their masters and all good faithfulnesse and desire to please them well in all things For the second the shew is condemned in divers sorts of workes as 1 Secret duties of what kind soever must not be done to the beholding of others thus to pray or fast that others may see or heare is not lawfull Mat. 6. 2 Such workes as are done deceitfully are justly taxed for the shew of them as when Ananias and Sapphira will make a shew of bountie which was not performed as they pretended Act. 5. 3 All workes that are done with affectation when the praise of men is simply and onely sought are Pharisaicall and ill done 4 All the workes that are done about the use of the meanes of godlinesse if practice bee not joyned with them are rejected of God and the shew of them is condemned Thus to make a shew of hearing Sermons reading the Scriptures frequent and long prayers strict observing of the Lords day and the like when there is not a sound care of a holy life are not good workes n●r is the shew of them commended Esa. 1. Mic. 6. 5 To shew care of lesser duties and live in the carelesse and manifest neglect of greater and more necessary duties is likewise Pharisaicall and condemned Mat. 23. Thus of the beholding of good workes They may glorifie God To glorifie God is in the etymologie of the word to make God glorious Now the glory of God is the excellencie of God above all things as is by way of exposition added Esa. 35.2 The question then is How can God be made glorious or excellent seeing his excellencie is as infinite as his nature is and to that which is infinite nothing can be added For the resolving of this question we must understand that if Gods nature be considered in it selfe it is so excellent as nothing can be conceived or done that should bring glory to it But when the Scripture speakes of glorifying of God it meanes it of such an excellencie as to our capacity by reflexion and resemblance some way expresseth the similitude of Gods excellencie which we call his glory And so God is glorified by himselfe or by us God hath made divers impressions of his owne excellencie and set it out by way of image or similitude as First in the divine nature of Christ. For Christ as the Sonne of God is said to be the splendor and brightnesse of his Fathers glory Heb. 1.2 Secondly in the humane nature of Christ. For in his humane nature did the God-head dwell and shine as the candle in the lanthorn and so the glory of God appeares amongst men for when Christ was incarnate and came to dwell amongst men they saw his glorie as the glorie of the onely begotten Sonne of God Iob. 1.14 Thirdly in his workes for the invisible things of God as his power and wisedome in the excellencie of them are made visible unto our observation in the creation and government of the world in the great booke of the creatures is the glory of God written in great letters Rom. 1. Thus the heavens declare the glory of God Psalm 19.1 And in this great booke the glory of the Lord is said to endure for ever and the Lord will alwaies rejoyce in this impression of his glory in his workes Psalm 104.31 and as all the workes of God are his glory in that they do some way set out his excellencie so especially miracles are in a high degree resemblances of Gods glory and therefore are these workes of wonder called the glory of God Thus the power of God in raising Christ is called his Glory Rom. 6.4 and so the marvellous workes mentioned Psal. 97.4 5 6. so Christ in working the miracle in Canaan of Galile is said to shew his glory Ioh. 2.11 And as workes of miracles are called the glory of God because God hath in them stamped some lively resemblance of his excellencie so also workes of speciall justice done upon Gods enemies are called his glory also as the se places shew Exod. 14.14 Num. 14.21 Esa. 13.3 So also Gods mighty working in delivering his servants is called his glory also Psal. 105.5 6. and 57.6 and 85.9 Fourthly in man God hath imprinted his glory and so in all sorts of mankind they are called the glory of God in respect of their resemblance of Gods soveraignty man is as it were a visible God in this visible world and in respect of his superioritie over the creatures resembles God 1 Cor. 11.17 And as God hath imprinted his glory upon all men in generall so in a speciall manner upon some men as 1 Upon such men as shine in the outward dignity and preeminence of their places in this world above other men their glory is said to bee Gods glory 1 Chron. 29.11 12. 2 Upon such men as are indued with the grace of God and the vertues of Jesus Christ these beare Gods Image and are therefore called his glory Esa. 46.13 2 Cor. 3.18 Psal. 90.17 3 In a more principall manner upon such as be received up to glory in heaven Thus God will be glorified in his Saints at the day of Judgement 2 Thes. 1.10 This is that glory of God which the godly doe hope for with so much joy Rom. 5.2 Fifthly in certaine visible signes and testimonies of his presence Thus the consuming fire on mount Sinah is called the glory of God Exod. 24.6 16 17. So also the cloud that filled the Temple Exod. 40.34 and the cloud that rose upon the Tabernacle in the wildernesse And so the signes of Gods presence in heaven are in a speciall respect called his glory Thus Stephen saw the glory of God and
Fourthly because it is never sought but by fooles for it is a wise mans honour and reputation to passe by an offence but every foole will be medling or quarrelling saith Solomon Fiftly because oftentimes it proves damnable to one of the parties who being slain in the act of malice must needs be damned for ever besides the curse of God brought upon the murderer making his life miserable and oftentimes his end fearfull Doct. 7. That it is conscience or meer necessity that makes any man suffer Men endure not wrong by nature but either by necessity because they cannot right it or else for conscience sake because God hath so required it Which should warne Supe●iours to take heed that they doe no wrong for the persons wronged if they want conscience may so remember the wrong as sometimes to finde a desperate way of revenge to the mischiefe of the wrong doer though the party wronged doe evill in so doing as followeth in the next doctrine Doct. 8. Inferiours being wronged even in blowes by the Superiour ought not to resist but endure it servants may not resist the correction of their masters nor strike againe that is horrible and egregiou●ly sinfull Which shewes the grievous pride and naughtinesse of divers servants that boast or threaten that they will take no blowes their resolution shewes they are voide of knowledge in the feare or conscience of Gods will And so it is alike sinfull in children wives or subjects to resist or returne blow●s for blowes or evill for evill neither doth this embolden masters or other superiours to do wrong because as was heard before they shall receive of God according to all the wrongs they have done Doct. 9. To suffer griefe and wrong is profi●able for besides that it is all ●●●ite to them when it makes them more humble and takes away their sin it makes them judge themselves before God for the sinnes they are guilty of and weanes them from the world and breeds a greater desire of heaven and the like fruits Besides all these this Text tels us of one commodity more that is praise or thanks it is an honourable thing to suffer wrongfully it winnes them a great deale not only of compassion but also of reputation among men As it makes the evill more hatefull so doth it procure love to him that suffers wrongfully It is a vertue worthy thanks yea the coherence with the next verse seemeth to import that God will give him thanks that suffers wrong if he endure it patiently not that God is bound to doe so or that such suffering merits any such thanks of God but God is so good and compassionate and he likes this vertue so well that he is pleased to crowne this patience with that high degree of liking it It is thank-worthy not because it deserves thanks but because it declares the party to bee such and so worthy in Gods gracious acceptation that he will of his owne grace yeeld him that encouragement Thus of the Doctrines that may be particularly gathered out of the words of this verse Before I leave the verse there are divers things to be considered of about Conscience For where this verse mentions conscience towards God it giveth us occasion to thinke what that conscience should bee and to informe our selves in divers things about it There are many reasons may be assigned why men should be carefully instructed about Conscience it is a necessary doctrine for first we see by experience that of most things that concerne us men know least about Conscience many men knowing little more of it than the bare use of the word Conscience Secondly men through this ignorance doe many notorious injuries and abuses to their conscience by resisting the motions of conscience not knowing what to make of them and by smothering the scruples of conscience and by deading the conscience or else by vexing them and many other wayes Thirdly God hath given men a great charge about the keeping of their consciences which he placed in their soules as a great treasure and God would have it respected and looked to with as much care as any thing he hath given us 1 Tim. 1.19 Fourthly God doth require that men should get grace and goodnesse into their consciences as well as into their hearts or words or lives which they can never doe if they bee not taught Fiftly Gods Word in all the directions and precepts of it doth binde and oblige mens consciences to see to the obedience of them now what can conscience doe if men know not what belongs to their consciences and the natures and works of conscience But above all things it should awaken men to study the knowledge of conscience yea of their own consciences if they consider that the conscience of every man is one of the principall bookes shall bee opened at the last day for evidence before the Tribunall Seat of Christ and therefore men were best to looke about them in this world to see to it what is written in this booke for it is indeleble and will stand upon record either for them or against them at that day Now concerning conscience divers things are to be considered First what conscience is Secondly what the worke of conscience is Thirdly what the prerogatives of conscience are Fourthly the kindes or sorts of consciences Last of all what it is that bindes the conscience which is to be inquired into because men are injoyned to suffer wrongs patiently for conscience sake even servants from their Masters For the first To know what conscience is we must looke both to the Etymology of the word and to the definition of the thing The word Conscience imports a knowledge with another Conscie●●●●● quasi cum alia scientia Conscience that is science conjoyned and the reason is because conscience is a thing in us that knowes what wee have done and therein joynes with some other thing that knowes it too Some of our actions conscience sees within and the Angels and men see them without but for our secret thoughts conscience is onely joyned with God or with our owne mindes as they are joyned with God Conscience is a thing within us which God hath plac't there of purpose to be his witnesse or 〈◊〉 to discover all we think or doe and as it is joyned with the minde of man it is the knowledge of what we know or the thinking of what we think To thinke of other things is the understanding or mind but to thinke what we think is the conscience of a man Or else conscience may be called so because it is a concluding science Consci●ntia quasi c●●●ludens scientia and the reason of the terme in that sense may be thus because looke what discourse conscience hath with God or the mind of man it u●tereth it by way of a Syllogism which they call a practicall Syllogisme As for instance if the conscience speake within to a murtherer it speaketh by Syllogisme thus Every
must know that in the first sense none enjoy good daies but good men Now good daies in the sense of the Scripture must be considered either in generall or in particular In generall and so first all the daies of Christ after he is revealed in a Christian are good daies and so all the daies of a true Christian from his conversion to his death are good daies Which appeares thus Saint Paul saith that Christ is our Passeover and the Passeover is a feast which we must keep 1 Cor. 5.8 and such high festivall daies are good daies especially the first and last daies of the Passeover were good daies in a speciall solemnity that is the day of thy conversion to spirituall life and the day of thy death which is the beginning of the day of eternall life Secondly all the daies in which Christians enjoy the preaching of the Gospel in the power of it and other ordinances of Christ in their glory all these daies be good daies for they are daies in which God makes rich feasts unto all Nations as is effectually described in the Allegory Esay 25.8 Thus David saith One day in Gods courts is better than a thousand any were else Ps. 84.10 The righteous flourish when Christ comes down upon their souls as rain upon the mowne grasse Ps 72.6 7. Thirdly those be good daies in which we see the Church of God in generall to prosper when God keeps his Church as his vineyard waters it every moment and watcheth it night day and destroieth every thing that might annoy it In particular a Christian finds divers sorts of good daies as first the Sabbath daies well sanctified are good daies above all other daies of the weeke when his body enjoyes rest and his soule is blessed according to Gods promise with spirituall rest and grace in Jesus Christ. Secondly the daies in which the soule of a Christian after sin and the judgement of God for it is humbled soundly and anew admitted into Gods presence and reconciled to God those daies when God entertaines the repenting sinner that prayes unto him especially at the first reconciliation are wonderfull good daies Iob 33.25 26. with the coherence 36.11 Psal. 90.14 Luke 4.21 with Esay 61.1 2 10. Thirdly all the daies in which a Christian thrives and prospers in the knowledge of Gods Word and growes in the spirituall understanding in the mysteries of Gods kingdome are all good daies for this knowledge is that wisedome Solomon speakes of which makes a man so happy Pro. 3.18 2 16. Thus of the good daies that are so in the judgement of the inward man God is pleased also to grant such good daies as are or ought to be so accounted in the judgement of the outward man and so First the daies of youth in which a man hath strength of body and vigour of mind to fit him not onely for the comforts of life but for the service of his Creator are good daies Eccles. 12.1 it being a blessed thing to beare Gods yoake in a mans youth Secondly the daies of speciall prosperity in the world which sometime God grants unto his people are also good daies when God gives his people aboundance of blessings in their families and estates and withall publike honour and respect with all sorts even the great ones of the world as was in the case of Iob which he describes in the whole 29th Chapter of his booke but then it must have this indeed that in this prosperity the godly man be imployed in all well-doing and get himselfe honour by the flourishing of his gifts and good workes as is shewed in that Chapter by Iob. Thirdly such daies in which a man enjoyes a quiet estare free from all trouble or vexation or contumely at home or abroad being free from Gods afflicting hand or mans injurious dealing are good daies and such as perhaps are specially meant in this place Thus of the sense of the words Divers Doctrines may be observed from hence 1. That the daies of men usually are evill which is true not onely of the wicked but of the godly also This Iacob said long agoe his daies were few and evill Gen. 47.9 but of this point before Only this may serve for great reproofe of those that so little minde a better life and so willingly love this life that though they live in much misery are loath to thinke of dying and make no conscience to provide for a better life 2. It is evident from hence that the life of man is but short whether he live happily or miserably yet his life is reckoned by daies not by longer measures of purpose to signifie the shortnesse of our lives This is expressely affirmed in other Scriptures Iob 10.20 Iob saith his daies were few and of all men that are borne of women that they have but a short time to live Iob 7.1 And this is resembled by divers similitudes so our life is compared to a Weavers shuttle Iob 7.6 to a Post for swift running out Iob. 9.25 to the grasse of the field Iob 7.12 Esay 40.6 to an hand breadth so as he saith his age is as nothing Psal. 39.5 to a watch in the night Psal. 90.4 to a sleep ver 5. to a tale that is told ver 9. Thus the life of man is said to be short either as he is in Gods sight with whom a thousand yeares are but as yesterday when it is past Psal. 90.4 or in his owne account if he measure time to come as he measures time past and in plaine reckoning let the life of man be improved according to mans utmost strength ordinarily a mans yeares are threescore and ten and if he live to fourescore it is but labour and sorrow to him Psal. 90. Quest. But what should be the cause that mens lives are so short Answ. If there were no other cause but the will of him that hath the disposing of the times and seasons in his owne power yet that might satisfie us but we may ghesse at other causes as both the mercy and justice of God This world is so bad to the godly that it is Gods mercie to take them quickly out of it and contrariwise it is so good to the wicked considering their desects that it is justice in God to take them hence and send them to their owne place which is hell Besides many men bring speedy death upon themselves by their owne ill courses or by sinning against their owne bodies by lewd courses and by eating up their owne hearts with worldly cares and sorrowes or by living in any grosse sin to provoke God to cut them off or by falling into such disorder as the Magistrate cuts them off or by laying of violent hands upon themselves or by getting their goods unlawfully to bring upon themselves that curse Ier. 17 11. Finally in this last age of the world there may be this reason assigned that the Lord makes haste to have the