Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n dead_a great_a write_v 3,370 5 5.8199 4 true
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
A57327 Confirmation revived, and, Doom's-day books opened in two sermons, the one preach'd at Coventry before the Right Reverend Father in God, John, Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, upon his first performance of confirmation in that city, June 23, 1662 : the other preach'd at Warwick before the Right Honourable the judges of Assize for that circuit upon the 2d of July next following / by John Riland. Riland, John, 1619?-1673.; Riland, John, 1619?-1673. Doom's-day books opened. 1663 (1663) Wing R1518; ESTC R26991 41,777 76

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

of Hosts For as the Kings S●m 11. 1. ●ebr of the Earth Goe forth to Battell in the Spring So also doe those Princes of Darkness Not that they are Idle all the Autumne and Winter of our years but now in the Spring and Prime of our dayes now is the chief time wherein they choose to Lead forth their Armies against us The Unclean Spirit findes no rest in Dry places ●at 12. 43. such was Christ the Prince of this world comes and has nothing in me But when the Breasts are full of ●ohn 4 30. Milk and the Bones of Marrow there he comes and finds forrage sits down and layes siege to the Soul And now what shall we doe Per Baptismum regeneramur in vitam post Bapt. Confirmamur in pugnam now is the time we are making ready to Battell If others use Crosses Chrismes Balsams and I know not what mixtures Nobis sufficit quod Spiritu inungimur with us the Spiritual Oyntment is Preparative enough for a Spiritual Combate And so though we have no Anoynting with Oyle yet if we have the Anoynting with the Spirit 't is enough Here is no Chrism indeed but yet a Ghostly Combate and a Good Christ to Conduct us through it No sweet-breath'd Balsams but Fragrant prayers and Devotions No other Indelible Character we own but that of Love No Oyly mark upon the Head or Forehead but yet a Deep impression upon the Heart a New life we hope though not a New garment Let those of Rome like Martha Cumber themselves with those many things while we with Mary choose the Better part and so sit down at the Feet of JESUS It was an antient Canon Ad Confirmationem non Cara●za de Concil nisi Jejuni accederent Fasting should accompany Confirming however we doe by the Literal pray God we all come with a Spiritual fast to this holy Ordinance If haply you have taken food into your Stomachs yet I hope no rancor nor malice into your minds and then though you have not Fasting bodies yet if truly Hungring souls I doubt not but we shall Conform to the Intent of that Canon Thou tookst me out of my Mothers Bowels saith the Psal 71. 6. Psalmist You that are yet Unconfirm'd Christians if you consider the Churches care and mercy in providing for you sufficient Sureties when you could not provide for your selves where have you been all this while but in the Bowels of a Tender Mother But now God is taking you out of the Bowels and allowing you to Hang upon the Breasts of your Mother Those Breasts of Consolation there fully and freely to Suck the Sweetness of the Word and both her Sacraments In regard whereof we should all be Infants of Dayes ●sa 65 2● even as New-born Babes all our Dayes still desiring that sincere Milk still drawing like a Childe feeding like a Childe and when we are Men yet we should never put away this Childish thing Many like Nero have ripp'd up their Mothers Bowels yet with a purpose contrary to His viz Never more to see that place where once they lay but rather to Curse the Womb that bare them and the Paps that gave them suck Thus if the Great ones have gone astray like lost sheep it concerns the Churches care to gather the Lambs into her bosome Indeed what with those nipping Northerly winds many of our old Fruit-bearing Trees have been so blasted and Inrecoverably shattered from that cold Corner that now our greatest hopes are in the Succesful Growings up of Gods Nursery Ye are Gods Nursery and the Growing hopes of the Church and however some of you may be but Children in understanding yet I trust you are not men in malice men in mischeife nor I hope ever will be Ye have Born the yoke of Christ in your youth 't is well But yet whereas David beseeches God O cast me not off when I am old forsake me not when I am Gray-headed Let me beg of you O cast not God ●sal 71. 9. off in the time of your old age and y●u that are Green proselytes beware you prove not Gray-headed Apostatates THE END Doom's-day Books OPENED A SERMON PREACHED Before the Honourable JUDGES the last Assizes at Warwick July the 2 d. 1662. BY John Riland Arch-Deacon of Coventry and heretofore Fellow of St. Mary Magdalen-College in Oxon. Psal 96. 13. For He Cometh for He Cometh to Judge the Earth LONDON Printed by I. G. for Richard Royston Book-seller to His sacred Majesty 1663. DOOM'S-DAY BOOKS OPENED Rev. 20. 12. And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the bookes were opened BEing resolved what in me lies to decline all particular reflections I made choice of this Subject which is of equal concern to all for that all must dye all must rise all must appear and stand before God and those bosome-bosome-Books of ours which are now fast shut all must be opened That Day will discover all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 3. 13. The Text represents us with one Judge and a Great Many Prisoners the behaviour on this side the manner of Proceedings on that together with the clear and undoubted evidence of the whole matter The Judge is God before God the Prisoners are all mankind the dead small and great Their Behaviour submissive and such as becomes Prisoners they stood the manner of Proceedings upon them the Books were opened Lastly the Evidence made good by a Divine and Infallible Affaedavit S. John saw it I saw the dead c. And now were I so Fit for this Text as this Text you see might be Fitted for this time perhaps somewhat would be done upon it But my encumbrances have of late been very many and the going off of one beckoned the coming on of this other Service Many that are here this day cannot but know that Publique Engagement to the which but a few daies since I was elsewere commanded and that upon a * Subject not to speak of it's Novelty or Difficulty A Sermon ●pon Confirmation in ●oventry every way remote from the present occasion And although the Womb of one Cloud may at once be big with Dark Waters and Bright flashes Thunders and Lightnings Hailestones and Coales of fire and contain them all at one and the same time ●s 18. 11 12 yet I must needs acknowledge my Narrowness not at all Receptive at once of such Contrarieties VVhatever that Fruitful Creature may Performe or the more Fruitful Phancy of Pliny be allowd to Imagine I am sure I never could hope with any the least Pregnancy to receive a Later till fairly rid of a Former Burthen Beside I have been strangely cut short of the expected allowance for time The Judges stood at our door when we did not think them gotten o're their own Threshold And indeed the unexpected suddainness of this Assize has much disabled me from Discoursing as I ought of that other here before us So that I
as the Small it seems they all 2 Circumstance must Stand before God And if S. John sees them all here in the same posture of poor and wretched Prisoners GOD no doubt beholds them all with the same Eye of a Just and Impartial Judge There is not a Chaire afforded for the Ease of a Prisoner of quality while the Poor man his Fellow-Prisoner bears upon his Legs till he grows to the ground he stands on No they all stand before God The Athenians had a liberty to question their chiefest Magistrates though not in yet after their Office And the Egyptians they sate upon the Carcases of Diod. Sic. their greatest Commanders Here the Books were all Indifferently Opened and the Volume-Accounts of the Greatest were read and duely Stated as well as the Smaller Papers of the Meanest person were produced Books they say are the Uprightest Iudges and the most Faithful Counsellours which whatever men may doe understand nothing of any Personal Distinctions or Favourable Indulgencies unto any in which regard the Text here makes use of them in the setting forth of this Judgment The Great mans Charge wrote in Court-hand or Characters is not charily folded up with a Seal of Favour clapt upon it or a clasp of Gold while the lesser bills of a mean person drawn at length are laid open to publick View so that he that runs may read them No but the Books of all as they were equally view'd by the same Eye so were they exactly Wrote and Impartially opened by the same hand of Justice I have heard of one who was content to have his Picture drawn on condition he might hold his Finger over the Wart he had upon his face while it was a drawing Too many such Imperfect Pieces we meet withall even from those Pencils which should draw Justice to the Life while the Soft Finger of affection is suffered to cover the deformities of the Foulest matters But when God once to shame our deficiencies undertakes to give us this exact draught of Judgment he will put by the Kindness of the Finger The narrow covering thereof must be removed in that day and Blemishes as well as Beauties all must be naked before him with whom we have then to do If as some are of opinion the renew'd Heavens ●ixa ●run● om●ia quae nunc ●●ventur ad ●●rvitium ho●inum Ansel and all the luminaries thereof shall then leave off their rolling and be still It may give us somewhat to conceive of that unmoved stillness there will be in the Lord of Heaven and steadiness in the Father of those Lights even in the Unchangeable God who shall not suffer the least sway of Affection or shadow of Turning Look not on his Countenance nor the Heighth of his Sam 16. 7. stature for I have refused him saith the Lord concerning Eliab where also we have the reason of that refusal For the Lord seeth not as man seeth c. ●bid On the other side when God had said By me Princes rule as doubtless they doe and Nobles and all ●rov 8. 16. ● 17. Iudges of the Earth it follows at the 17th vers I love them that love me 'T is not provided they be Nobles or Iudges or the like before spoken of but them indifferently who ere they are I love them that love me Justice may well be allow'd to Wear when in some regards she is a pair of Balances he that weighs with them indeed distinguisheth of the worth but the Balances themselves make no Difference in the weight of Gold or Lead And as it is in Weights so is it in Measures the same I think may serve as well for Silks as Sackcloths In both which we have the Resemblance of an Even-handed and Unbyassed Justice Thus God himself sets an Equal Rate upon the Atonement of all Souls The Rich shall not give more the Exod. 30. 15. Poor shall not give less than half a Shekell For as the Heavens keep an Equi-distance from the Earth however they seem yet they doe not stoop to Kiss the Tops of the Loftiest Mountains nor doe they quite Disdain and look aloof off from the Lower Valleys So it is with the GOD of Heaven He is no Respecter of persons but in every nation and of every Act. 10. 34 Condition He that fears him is accepted of Him If he does draw nigh to the humble 't is the Grace and not the Man that bowes him and Inclines him If He does behold the proud afarre off 't is the Sin and not the Psal 138. 6. Soul that estranges Him Whatever Others may think I doe not believe we shall all Rise in the same stature but Rise we must and the Lofty-siz'd man jutt's no nearer to Him nor doe those of Lower Measures sink at all the further from Him The Sun-beams can assoon reach the depths of the most Depressed Hollows as the heights of the most Exalted Mountains Nil apud Deum Magnum est quod vel à Minimo dari S. Anselm nequeat the greatest Present to God may be offered by the meanest Hand In the acceptance whereof He looks not at the Fine Glove the Rich Perfume or the Gold Ring upon the Finger but only The Cleanness of the Hand in His Eye-sight Psal 18. 24. Pharaoh's Butler and Baker the Heads of Both are Lifted up though to a Several kind of Advancement Gen. 40. 20. yet not for the Diversity of their Dreams the Gayest and Best things in this World are little better but according to the Difference of their demerits Ioseph and Agag must both be brought out of Prison but for several purposes and designations Ioseph shaves and shifts himself but Agag appears in delicate apparel Gen. 41. 14. Both come forth with their Rayment chang'd yet the One to be Advanc'd to the Throne the Other to be Hewn in pieces Now as the Eye of Pharaoh did not at all respect the shaved Face or the change of Rayment in the Promotion of Ioseph neither did the Sword of Samuel give any regard to those delicacyes of Habit in the Execution of Agag So shall it fare with all mankind in that Day Iosephs and Agags Slaves and Princes the exalted Butler and the condemned Baker rising men and declining men we are all Deaths Captives and at the Last day must all be brought forth of our several Prisons and change our Garments though in order to designs and purposes very farre distant one from another Some like Ioseph to be Exalted unto Thrones in Heaven Others like Agag to be Cut in pieces for those Infernal Cauldrons Some with the Baker to be made meat for those Hellish Fowles to Feed upon while Others are Preferr'd to be Cup-bearers to the Great King To tast again of the pure Blood of the Gen. ●0 19. Grape and Drink it anew with Christ in his kingdome Matth. 26. ● And all this not according to Honour Wealth Wit or any
see plainly I must of necessity take my leave of the Judge upon his Throne and the Prisoners at the Bar the Deportment of the one and the Proceedings of the other with the like passages of that fair road into which the words did at first spread themselves the exact following whereof I confess is a business above my power at present and so without any more Prefacing betake my self wholly to that other matter the Text affords us The which being very Plain and Serious I hope it will not be expected the discourse should come forth in any other habit but be suffered to go Plain and every way suitable to the Subject it treats of which is Death the Resurrection and Judgement It were too much Pharisaical to Paint a Sepulcre why should we trouble our selves to make a Coffin of VVrought Carved work 'T is but lost labour methinks to stick and dress a Dead Corpse with Rose-budds and throw Flowres into a Grave VVho would be at the cost to Enamell and Gild a Death-head or overlay a Charnel-house with Gold And as Death can well spare all kind of Pompe as Superfluous so in regard of the Resurrection or Judgment it is not all requisite It is not the merry Dulcimer the VVarbling Harp or the Lute but the shrill and doleful Trump that bidds us Rise at the last day when we shall behold Christ Jesus come down not in a Sun-beam but on a Cloud to Iudgment All which things seem to bespeak our greatest Seriousness in the Subject now before us Concerning which what we have to say is wrapt up in these three propositions The First presents us with the Worlds Funeral I ●rop 1. wish the Sermon might be clad in a Suit of Mourning fit for it thus That we and all that were before us except Two or Three and all that shall come after us except those that shall be found alive at Christs coming For they shall not sleep at all but be changed Cor. 15. 51. all I say in the eye of Prophecy are but a company of dead men I saw the dead c. Secondly These dead men shall live with their ●rop 2. Dead bodies shall they Arise again at the last day which is expresly set down elsewhere and here also Implied ● 16. 19. in that though they were Dead and are so styled yet they are seen standing before God which supposes they were Alive and Risen again I saw the dead stand before God Thirdly As there is an appointed time for all men ●rop 3. once to Dye and for all those same men once to Rise againe So it is most certain that after those Appointed times are come then comes the Judgement as here no sooner did the Dead Arise and stand before God but presently the Books were opened Concerning which Iudgement being most proper and agreable to the present occasion I shall enlarge upon these following Considerations as they lye before us in the Text. First We shall consider the Generality of this Iudgment The dead that is All at one time All in one place All were presented at once to the View of S. Iohn That Divine Eagle who Soaring a loft upon the Wings of an Extaticall Spirit beheld a whole VVorld of Carkasses underneath him He saw the dead c. Secondly The Impartiality of this Iudgment High and Low Rich and Poor the Mean man and the Mighty man one with another one as well as another All must come and stand before the same Iudge all must abide the Doom of the same Books all must equally pass through the Severities of the same Triall The dead both small and Great Thirdly The Over-ruling Authority of this Iudgment here intimated in that High and Low Poor and Rich the Mighty as well as the Mean man all appear in the self same Humble deportment in such a posture as becomes Prisoners they all stood before God Fourthly The deliberate and convincing Legality in all the Proceedings of this Iudgment matters were not transacted and huddled over in the Dark but all must be done above-board No arbitrary Power nor extravagant Humour no adventurous Rashness nor supine Negligence must carry businesses without-Book but as all must go by the Book so those Books shall be opened that every one may read his own Endictment the Books were opened Lastly the Certainty and Importance of the whole the Certainty the highest that may be no less then ocular Demonstration attested by no meaner a person then S. Iohn whom we have here though in a Higher Place yet still in the old Posture Leaning upon Iesu's Bosome thence drawing and declaring all these secrets unto us I saw thus for the Certainty As for the Importance It seems of no small concernement to us for whom and not for himself alone he saw whatever things he did see the which 't is apparent he saw so as you and I and all the Christian VVorld might both hear and see as we do this day and if possible become better thereby Thus we have laid our Foundation large enough be sure but how we shall be able to Finish God knows I much fear my Lot may lye in that Verse of the second Lesson for this Morning Prayer even now read unto us This man began to Build and was not able to Finish Luc. 14. 30. The disciples said Whence should we have bread Mat. 15. 33. in the Wilderness to Fill so great a Multitude I may well say on the contrary whence should I have matter amongst Crowdes and Throngs so as to satisfy the just and natural Cravings of these several Parts and Propositions However every Mouth must have its Meat and God who has made the One I trust will provide the other Not to answer those Lustfull expectations that look for Quailes yet if we can be furnisht with Bread we must not talk of Philip's 100 or 200 penny-worths but with some few Pennyworths of wholsorne Bread though it be but small Dole at the Worlds Joh. 6. Great Funerall Every one must be content to take a Little ●b v 7. And that our Distribution though but Mean may yet be Methodical I begin with the First Proposition viz. That however in our own Dim-sightedness we may seem to Live Move c. yet in the view of this Prop. 1. Eagle-Ey'd Prophet we are all but a Company of Carkasses a multitude of dead men I saw the dead c. The Dead he saw and no doubt all us that are here Alive yea and himself too in the number all helping to make up that great Congregation of the dead then before him Although there went abroad this saying among the brethren that this Disciple should not dye ●o 21. 23. yet he professeth whom it most concerned to know the truth thereof that Jesus said not to him that he should not dye but if I will that he tarry till I come Ibid. what is that to thee Indeed Christ was neer
outward Wearing but according to their outward and Inward Working as here it followes in the Text The dead were Judged according to their works Indeed during the Night of this Life one may chance to stumble and Dash against the Tomb-stone of a great Man and those Graves that are worth a Coffin we see for a time how they swell above their Fellows while the Poor bare Winding-sheet is quickly made Level with the Earth and sooner sinks into a Total dis-appearance But in the Day-light of the next Life it shall be far otherwise whatever difference there may seem in Graves those Prison-houses here there shall be no such distinction betwixt the Prisoners hereafter The Pharisee may Paint his Sepulchre to please Men but without the sad colours of a true repentant Sorrow he can never paint his Soul so as to please God Yea however in the respect aforesaid there may be some Inequality amongst Tombes yet none at all amongst the Bones therein contained and therefore death is called A land of Darkness and without any Job 10. 2● order Could we go down into those Chambers of death look amongst that Rubbish of mortality and there behold those Pitifull Remaines of mans ruine Alas the Head of an Emperour retaines not the Print of the Imperial Diadem upon it we can see no Character at all no not of one of the three Crownes upon a dead Popes skull no signe of these formidable and Majestique Robes upon the bone of a Judges shoulder The renowned Ribband leaves no mark upon the back or Breast of Knights or Nobles Nor does the Honourable Garter make any Lasting Impression upon that shin-bone which used to wear it and be adorned with it Which Impartial and undistinguishing Indifferency in the next World is further imply'd in that as we are Sentenc'd by The Book so shall we be Summon'd by The Trumpet Both which contain in them some Secret significations of this Impartiality The former I have already touch'd upon For the Trumpet Aquinas observes a Three-fold use thereof amongst the Jewes Congregabantur ad Concilium ●p 3 aep q. 76. ●2 commovebantur ad Praelium vocabantur ad Festum They were Summon'd therewith in Council Incited in Set Battels Invited to Solemn Festivals To which we may adde a Three-fold use of it among Christians viz. At Ordinary Meales as in some Colledges and at your Sheriffs Tables At Church Assemblies as in some Countries at your General Assizes as in this and most other places all is done by the sound of the Trumpet We have all these met together in the Text before us Here is the Grand Council of the Kingdom to be kept * Christs last Battel to be Fought the Festivall of ●ene dicitur ●a Dei quia ●pugnam cùm ●m●cis decre●am venit ●●s Lud. de ●a Christi ●b 12. 23. all Saints and Angels to be Solemniz'd The great Supper of the Lamb to be celebrated the general assembly and Church of the First-born to be congregated and the worlds great Assizes to be held by Christ the Judge of those Assizes And 't is not without cause that all is transacted by the Trumpet For as God is gone up with the sound of the Trumpet we doubt not but ●●l 47. 5. he will come down again in the same manner Now we know the Jewes had not one kind of Note for the poor Pesant and another peculiar strain for the Princes of Israel but all were summoned by the same note of the Trumpet Nor with us Christians is there one kind of call for the Governour Another for the Servitour no but Tutor and Schollar to their Colledge-meales Master and Servant to Church-meetings the Commander and common Souldier to Field-Services the great Counsellour and the poorest Client to the general Assizes all must listen to the same sound and Summons of the Trumpet How much more at the blowing up of the last Trump by an impartial Severeness and all Personal Irrespectiveness will God be sure to maintain the Uniform and undistinguishing usage thereof when by the same blast of an Archangel Judges and Justices Counsellors and Clients Jurors and Prisoners Priest and People all shall be summoned to the same Triall all brought to the same Bar all Commanded to the same Posture Which invites me to the third Circumstance considerable in this Judgement viz. The Over-ruling Authority thereof here signified in that they all stood before God And so on to the fourth considerable viz. The deliberate and convincing Legality of this Judgment The Bookes were opened and thence to the certainty and Importance of all these passages I saw c. Indeed when I first began to consider of this Subject my main designes were set upon these last Observations and had thought to have practically reduced all to the present occasion Especially my Eye was much upon the opening of these Books in one whereof was wrote Quaecunque fecimus What we have done In the other Quaecunque fecisse debemus What we should have done And in them I saw was contained matter of most Pertinency to the business now before us First I should have enquired what 's meant by these Books and for that I had willingly sate down at the Feet of S. Austin Thomas Aquinas and our Pious and most learned Champion of the Church of England Dr. Hammond All which do unanimously agree that by these Books here are signified the Court-rolls of Conscience those bosom-records of all our thoughts words and actions there carefully reserved and then fully and faithfully to be Produced in that day Secondly I had observ'd that all things whatever are exactly Book'd down we neither think speak nor act any thing without Book If we can make a shift for Matter to fill those Books God will be sure to be Furnish'd with Books to hold that Matter whatever it be Which One thing if but duely consider'd as Judah said concerning Benjamin How shall I goe up to my Father and the Lad be not with me We may say ●en 44. 34. concerning CHRIST How shall we dare to Goe up and stand before Our Father if The Holy Childe JESUS be not with us Lastly That although these Books in many secure Souls are kept close shut untill that Day Their opening now implies they were shut till now yet then they shall be suddainly perfectly and entirely opened Mira mentis celeritate c. saith S. Augustine All shall be clearly seen by one quick Glance of an Enlightned Soul Conscience being that Divining-Cup ●id 2. which God as it were has cramm'd within us at our First making and will one day as certainly discover our Thieveries as our own proper goods and Treasures whatever has been Bagg'd up in these our Mortall bodies this Treacherous Cup Betrayes all And yet as Benjamin's Sack cannot throughly be search'd till the Beast be unladed no more can these full Ibid. 11. discoveries be made within us till by death we have all laid down this Load
and Luggage of Mortality But you see I could not fairly come to this but by making a rude and immethodical climbing over those other Heads and time will not allow of that just discourse due unto all Therefore since we now cannot come so farre as the opening of these Books and a most dangerous thing it is to goe away and leave them shut Let us heartily beseech God to open them unto us in mercy here before He opens them to all the world in judgement hereafter Concerning which Judgement I have some few words of Application as to this dayes business and so I shall conclude We have spoken all this while of a Iudgment to come but what 's that may some say to this present day of judgment I answer thus We all profess to believe That Christ shall come again to Iudge both the Quick and the Dead c. yet did we indeed really believe those there would not be so much need of these Assizes Truth is they are for the most part a sort of Infidel certainly more than half-Heathen Christians that put our Honourable Judges to all this trouble Well but if those General Assizes must be in that Day as surely as These of ours are at this Day of what mutuall concernment are they one to another Briefly thus These should mind us of Those Those should guide us in These the Present should serve as a Prospect of the Future the Future should serve as a Patern of the Present Judgment Thus as Deep Calls unto Deep and One Dolefull Creature Cryes unto Another such Correspondency ●sa 34. 14. there might be betwixt This and That Judgment to come that by a good improvement The Lesser may be Blessed of the Greater For the First viz. that These should mind us of Those Who can hear mention of a Publick Gaol-delivery and the Iudges approach for that purpose and not think of the Resurrection in the One and the Coming of the Day of Iudgment in the Other Who can hear the Triumphant Sounding of the Sheriffs Trumpets or the Sad Clinking of the Prisoners Fetters but must needs make some reflections upon The Trump of God in the One and the Clattering of Those Everlasting Chains in the Other Who can be by at the Arraigning of the Prisoners and the Reading of their Indictments and not Contemplate what S. John here saw viz. The Dead Stand before God and the Books Opened In a word How can any one Stand and Observe the Witnesses Evidence the Prisoners Plea c. at This day without some apprehensions of Those our Thoughts Accusing or Excusing one another in That day ●om 2. 15. Or is it possible one should be present in Body at Mans Pronouncing of Iudgment upon Condemned Prisoners and at the same time not be present in Spirit at Gods Finall Sentence upon Damned Sinners Goe ye Cursed c Whoever he be that has the Advantage of the One and yet receives no Benefit by the Other is nothing more than a mere Idol that has Staring Eyes but Sees not wide Gaping Ears but Hears not and which is yet more an Immortal Soul but Understands not For the Second viz. that Those should Guide us in These To keep then to our Patern here before us First Let Judgment be done Universally Solomon denies not the doing of Justice to Harlots 1 King 3. 16 nor does God refuse to hear the pleadings of the Devil Job 1. 10. 'T is not well that Judgment should drop down like the Rain in Amos One peice was rained upon and the Amos 4. 7. piece whereon it rained not withered And yet as one of our reverend Bishops observes considering those infinite numbers of evil thoughts plots and purposes c. which go unpunisht of those many hundreds of sins that cry daily unto God scarce one or two are condemned by man Let our Judges make as clean work as they can 't is certain God and his Angels will find somewhat to Glean after their sickles else what need there Another Judgment if this were altogether exact and perfect But yet as the House of that Romane Magistrate stood continually open for all that came for Justice so should there ever be in the Frame and purpose of your Wills a readiness to Justice a Willingness to Mercy and in those regards the doors of your hearts should still stand open to receive all Commers That 's for the Generality Secondly Let it be done Impartially Of the Levites it is said Nec dextram nec sinistram cognoverunt Levitae Utinam nec Iuristae It were well if Lawyer Levite and all were unconcerned in this Right and Left hand Knowledge In works of Charity the Left must not know Mat 6. 3. what the Right hand does but in Works of Justice there should be neither right hand nor left and therefore with them of old the statue of a Judge was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. a meer handless statue for what reason it is not hard to conjecture This we are sure of Better Herodot is it for us to Enter handless into Heaven then having two hands full of Corruption to be cast into Hell fire That 's the second Circumstance Let all be done Impartially Thirdly Let all be done Authoritatively I magnify mine office saith S. Paul As he did his Apostolical 't were well if all would magnify their Iudiciall Rom. 11. 13. Proceedings Nothing but sin can Vilify them Facinus quos Inquinat aequat Sin is the greatest Lucan Leveller in the world It brings down the Bench and layes it even and level with the Lowest Barre If the giving of a Testimony may fetch down a Justice and set him amongst the Witnesses the Committing of Iniquity hales him yet lower and claps him up among the Prisoners Conscience Impleading the One all the while the Law Arraigns the Other That 's the third Circumstance Fourthly Let all be done Deliberately and with a convincing Legality together with what other merciful and holy considerations may be taken in by the opening of these Books there we have them both in one Psal 36. 6. Verse Thy Righteousness is like the Great Mountains Thy Iudgments are a great deep i. e. In all Gods proceedings there is a leisurable stilness like the great deep yet withall a Solid and Apparent Legalness like the great Mountains I 'l only speak of the First Do but observe here the Throne is prepared the Judge is come the Benches set the Boards filled the Barrs made ready witnesses prisoners and all brought forth yet no further proceedings till the Books be opened He that believes makes not haste nor does a Isa 28. 16. Wise man make too much haste in beleeving much less does a good man in condemning He dares not give credit much less Sentence without Book And in this the Iudges sword may learn of the Mowers Sythe which however as you come along you may hear them Whetting and Whetting again