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A09266 An introduction to the worthy receiving the sacrament of the Lords Supper by that late learned minister of Gods holy word, William Pemble ... ; published since his death by his friend. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1633 (1633) STC 19580.5; ESTC S2842 67,079 98

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death as afflictions laid upon the Corinthians for their profane abuse of the Sacrament For this cause many are sicke c. God corrected them to bring them to repentance and amendment of their fault that so leaving their sinne they might escape eternall condemnation This then is the full meaning of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. Eternall and Temporall judgement whereunto all are liable that profane ●he Sacrament in not discerning the Lords Body be they beleevers or unbeleevers godly or wicked Only here is the difference the one sort by this sinne deserve both and have both being punished eternally and temporal●y too for the most part But the other deserves both yet feels but one being in mercy chastised with temporall afflictions that comming to repentance they may avoide eternall punishment Wherefore I take it our last Translators have with good reason rendred this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not Iudgement but Damnation the highest degree of judgement and that proper punishment which this sin of unworthy receiving doth deserve So that the observation which some here make upon the word that the Apostle here useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereby signifying not exitium aeternum but castigationes temporales is not here to be admitted Neither doth the Analysis of this place require it nor yet the use of the word in other places It being apparant that these words are used indifferently in the same signification Having now s●ene what is meant by Damnation it is easie to understand what is meant by eating and drinking damnation which is in plaine termes To commit such a sinne in profaning the Sacrament as deserves both eternall and temporall judgement Not that there is in those outward elements of Bread and Wine any destructive and hurtfull quality or that Christ signified by those elements is become of his owne nature a savour of death and cause of damnation unto any but because in the prophane use of those holy things they commit a fearefull sinne whereby Gods wrath is provoked against them to the punishing of them with temporall and eternall plagues The Sacrament is not as poyson which of its nature workes death in the eater but it is the food of life most healthfull and nourishing unto the soule if it be received into an heart duely prepared for i● But as the fruits of that tree of knowledge of Good and Evill might be wholesome in it selfe yet Adam did eate his death when hee tasted of it contrary to Gods Commandement so this Table of the Lord which is a feast of choisest delicates for refreshing of the soule when men come rightly prepared thereto becomes the bane and destruction of soules when men present themselves thereat with unbeleeving impenitent and unholy hearts This the Apostle signifies in that word Hee eateth and drinketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to himselfe damnation to teach us that the cause why these things ordained for our good prove hurtfull unto us is not in the things themselves but in mans sinne that unworthily partakes of them That other interpretation He eats damnation to himselfe not unto Others who communicate with him this sits well against the Schismaticall humours of some who thinke our Sacraments and solemne assemblies polluted by the sinne of those that are wicked amongst us and therefore dare not joyne with us in the worship of God for feare of infection but this fits not so well unto the Text wherein Non quis damnationem incurrat sed quis sit huius exitij author indicatur as Beza truly notes upon this place and word From these words thus expounded I deduce this practicall conclusion The profanation of Gods most holy worship deserves eternall and temporall punishment I frame the Conclusion generally touching every part of Gods worsh●p as well as the Sacrament T is a high dishonour to the very person of Christ when the Sacrament of his Body and Bloud is abused t is also a horrible sinne committed against the majesty of God whensoever we profanely mocke and contemne him in any of those things wherein he would be sanctified and honoured by us And therefore wee may ascend from the particular to the generall and consider how great a sinne it is to profane any one wha●soever of the sacred ordinances of Gods service and what punishment they incurre that doe so All offences become greater or lesse according as the person against whom they are committed is of more or lesse dignity Therefore a sinne ag●inst ●od is greater than a wrong against our Neighbour Further those offences which immediately touch th● person offended are more hainous than those that strike him at the rebound Therefore if we compare the sinnes of the first table with the sinnes against the second in the generall wee may judge those sinnes whereby God himselfe is immediately contemned in this worship are greater than those wherein he is despised mediaté secundariò because wee neglect our duety to man But not to enter into an exact comparison about this point this is for certaine That all offences committed in the matter of Gods worship are of a most provoking nature such as he cannot endure without severe punishment inflicted on the offendors Atheisme Infidelitie hatred of God c. bee sinnes the very names whereof be terrible Idolatry Superstition Wil-worship Profane and Negligent worship these have gentler names but be most hatefull sinnes against which Gods wrath and jealousie burnes to see his holinesse and honour trampled in the dust by base and sinnefull wretches A King must needs take it very tenderly to be dis-regarded in those very ceremonies wherein he lookes for speciall honour from his subiects much more must God be offended if when he hath made us for to honor him made orders according to which wee should shew our reverence and subjection wee shall out of our pride devise other wayes of our owne to worship him or out of negligence and profanenesse of spirit doe those things hee hath prescribed we care not how Against this sinne God hath ever revealed from heaven his fierce wrath upon States and Kingdomes as well as private persons by whom he hath beene despised and neglected in his worship Cursed saith Ieremy chap. 48 10 is he that doth the workes of the Lord negligently This was a particular threatning against those that would spare Moab and not execute the full judgement of God upon that people in their utter destruction but kept backe their swords from bloud Notwithstanding the rule is appliable to all particulars whatsoever in Gods service Cursed is he that doth any thing negligently which God sets him about for it is Gods worke who as he is a bountifull rewarder so is he a severe exactor of faithfull service at our hands He will not balke us in our reward and accordingly he lookes wee should not falter with him in our obedience To sleight him in his worship doing matters by halves seeming more
he hath finished it or if our unworthines should discomfort us we see that Christ stayes not till we can deserve him but as hee died for us when we were unworthy so evē whilst we are unworthy hee offers himselfe to us in all the benefits of his death Wherefore let us in a lively faith fasten our eies upon this Brazen serpent lifted up on the crosse to cure the fierie stingings of sinne let our eyes our thoughts and our affections be drawne after him and learne we as the Apostle exhorts to trust perfectly unto that salvation which is brought unto us This for Faith 2. In the next place is required the exercise of Repentance to which there is no provocation in the world more powerful than the serious meditation of Christ crucified Two motives there are which commonly best prevailes with all natures to worke in them sorrow for an offence and they are both in this matter most lively vigorous 1. Mercy wonderfull and incredible to a desperate offender beyond all hope and expectation of his When we were of no strength when we were sinners when we were enemies even then Christ in his time died for vs as the Apostle notably aggrauates the death of Christ Rom. 5 6.8.10 How hopelesse was the state of us men being once fallen by our first transgression and yet even in the extremity of misery how proudly and rebelliously did we carrie our selves against that majesty whom wee had offended Yet then behold in God the riches of all patience gentlenesse and compassion he is mindfull of us when we had forgot both him and our selves his mercifull wisedome prevents all thought and care and possibility in us of providing the means of our recovery Now where malice and unworthinesse is thus overcome by goodnesse certainely if there be any sparke of grace of noble nature of ingenuity left within us it cannot bee but our hearts should be overcome with sorrow for offending so gracious a Master and rent asunder with godly griefe for the displeasure of so loving a Father 2. The horrible n●ture of the offence which when it is smal is sleighted but strikes the hart with astonishment and confusion when t is capitall Now sinne is of the worst deserving quality that possibly may be and it appeares by nothing so much as the furious displeasure of God inflicted on Christ when he bare our sins in his body upon the tree Trace him from the Garden to Golgotha and you shall see whole armies of sorrowes ready to invade him every steppe he treads the deeper hee wades into a sea of bloud and wounds and stripes and waters of affl●ction men and divels yea and God himselfe fight against him he is forsaken of God persecuted despised and scorned of all the world assailed and tempted by all the powers of hell become the astonishment of Angels the wonder and amazement even of senselesse creatures Ah my Brethren were our soules in his stead and did wee feele but the least part of that anguish which possessed and incompassed that holy person within and without how miserable might we judge our case to be Blessed we are now that in this we feele it not but yet wee shall not be blessed alwaies unlesse wee can compassionate his feeling of it Wherefore let us turne our thoughts upon our crucified Saviour and looking upon him whom we have pierced let us as we are commanded Zach. 12.10 Mourne for him as one mourneth for his onely son and be in bitternesse for him as one that is in bitternes for his first-born Let us see the cause of his sufferings to be in our selves and lament wee for our sinnes that have slaine the Lord of Life And now let us learne to acknowledge what a detestable thing sin is which deserved so horrible a punishment that could turne the favourable countenance of the most mercifull and pittifull God into frownes and fierce displeasure against his eardely beloved Sonne as soone as he beheld in him the person of an offender Shall the pleasures of sinne be sweete to us which caused Christ to drink of the bitter cup even downe to the dregges Shall wee make a jest of that that made God angry in the greatest earnest that ever was Seemeth that a light thing in our eyes that brought on Christ a burden so heavie that it pressed the bloud out of his veines the soule out of his body Oh how would these meditations dash in peeces the conceptions of lust in their infancie How mightily effectuall would they be to mortifie our corruptions and crucifie the body of sinne in us Know this and remember it that of all motives to repentance and preservatives against the infection of sinne there is none so powerfull as continually in all places and imployments to beare about with us in our hearts and meditations The Dying of the Lord Iesus And this of Repentance it followes that wee speake of the third grace to bee exercised in this holy commemoration of Christs death which is Thankfulnesse A grace of singular use in this Sacrament which thence takes its name of Eucharistia whereby it is frequently stiled Sorrow and joy must here be mingled together a sorrow for sinne that deserved such sufferings bu● a ioy unspeakable and glorious in Thanksgiving to Christ for his great mercie in taking upon him such sufferings And great cause there is we should be thankfull for the death of Christ in th●se three respects 1. Because by it the greatest blessing that ever was is purchased for us namely pardon of sinne reconciliation with God grace and glory 2. Because there is on our part the greatest undesert of it that may be For wherin was God beholding unto us we were his creatures when we were at best and then he needed us not wee were his enemies when wee were at worst and he had iust cause to hate and punish us 3. In regard of the infinite disproportion betweene us and Christ who died for us the iust for the uniust the Lord for the slave the King for the subject the Creator for the creature All th●se are forcible motives to stirre up in us a thankfull rejoycing in the Lord our Saviour that hath done so great things for our soules It should make our hearts breake forth into blessings and thankes and praises admirations and extolling of the wonderfull favour he hath shewed to the sonnes of men Wherefore if it be possible let us bring our hearts in tune to beare a part in that new song which the Elders sing before the throne of the Lambe Rev. 5.9 10. Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seales therof for thou wast slaine and hast redeemed us to God by thy bloud out of every kindred and tongue people and nation and hast made us unto our God Kings and Priests and we shall reigne on the Earth And for a sweeter harmony let the Angels be admitted into this quire with them and the Saints sing we
they displeased God in the celebration of it because they observed the outward forme but with irreligious and gracelesse hearts making to themselves no spirituall benefit at all So is it with any Church wherein purity of Doctrine Sacraments and Discipline is maintained but this forme of god●inesse is without the power of it no fruits thereof appearing in mens obedience unto the Gospell I ●peake not this to accuse our brethren but to warne our selves They feele the smart and no doubt doe know their sinnes Our duety is to pray for them that God would speake peace to his people in their affliction and restore unto them joy of heart for the daies of mourning which they have seene Well le ts pitie them and looke wee to our selves whose priviledges and blessings are as many as theirs and our sinnes haply more Be we instant in prayer that God will pardon the deformities of our reformed Church I meane the neglect of his Worship the contempt of his Word the scorning of his Ministers the profanation of the Sacraments the despising of government the schismes and discords amongst us the profanenesse of mens lives the Infidelity Atheisme Pride Intemperance Injustice with such corruptions as disgrace Christian Religion discredit our most Christian Church dishonour God and provoke his wrath against the Land T is not the power of an enemy the conspiracy of Iesuits the malice of hell that shall endanger us if our sinnes doe not fight more powerfully against us than the force or craft of any adversary Spare then O God thy people and be mercifull to the iniquities of the remnant of thine heritage Pardon our sins and helpe us graciously So shal thy blessing alwaies continue upon the head of thine anointed thy favor upon his posterity thy peace upon this Church and prosperity upon thy people I have but one word more to say and I have done and that is Vse 2. ●or exhortation that wee would put in practice what we know touching this point Profanenesse in matters of Gods worship bring temporall and eternal punishments upon a man Apply this to that condition wherein thou art whether adversity or prosperity If affliction be upon thee on thy body thy soule thy name thy estate thy friends come to scrutiny and make search where and what thy sinne is Say with thy selfe Doe not I neglect some parts of Gods worship doe I not use others carelesly Where thou findest the fault repent of it amend it speedily and so God will remove his rod from thee and in due time make thy paths prosperous But if they be so already and thou desirest to have thy peace continued unto thee here learne the way to enjoy comforts and prevent many sorrowes Attend diligently unto the worship of God doe not slubber it over doe him service and doe it faithfully else t is no service but sloath Heare the Word but attentively and mix it with faith pray but fervently fast but unloose the bonds of wickednesse receive the Sacrament but fruitfully Doe not these things as common businesses goe not to Church as thou wouldest goe to thy chamber preach not nor heare a Sermon as thou wouldest doe an Oration pray not to God as thou wouldest speake to a man come not to the Lords Table as to an ordinary repast Put on other affections and thoughts in sacred than thou doest in civill businesses advise thy selfe before thou meddle with them in doing of them stirre up thy heart to a regard of God with whom thou hast to doe of thy soule whose well or ill-fare depends much upon these things Know that it is no light matter to mocke God to his face to come before him with the body and draw neere with the lips but turne from him in thy heart to make a shew of regarding him but indeed to sleight him Remember Salomons rule Take heed to thy ●ort c Eccles. 5.1 when thou goest to the House of God i. e. to performe any worship to him take heed to thy footing be advised whereabouts thou goest and be more neare to heare that is to obey Gods will declared unto thee in his Word than to offer the Sacrifice of fooles i. e. to observe the ceremonie and outward worship without obedience and inward grace as fooles doe who thinke by such service they please God whereas in so doing they doe evill and sorely offend him Only this spirituall service in faith and obedience is acceptable all other without this is vaine neither pleaseth God nor profits us This doing wee shall have good prosperity providing well for our comfort in this life in the escape of many evils that profanenesse would bring on us and also for our happinesse in the world to come Thus much be spoken touching the punishment of the sinne of Vnworthy receiving namely that by so doing men runne them into hazzard of temporall and eternall judgements in this 29 verse I now proceed unto the 30 verse wherein the Apostle shewes unto the Corinthians the danger of their profanation of the Sacrament by a particular instance of their present miserable condition wherein they now were by reason of such their offence What hee had spoken generally touching all unworthy Communicants that they eat and drinke damnation unto themselves he declares to be most true in a reall experiment among themselves in the words of the 30 verse For this cause many among you are weake and sicke and many sleepe They need not looke farre for a proofe let them but turne home their eies upon themselves they might see apparant marks of Gods anger against them for their sinnefull abuse of the blessed Sacrament The weake and sickly bodies the dead carkasses of so many amongst them were witnesses sufficient that God was highly displeased at them for profaning his holy Table The words fall into two parts First a Cause For this cause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for this matter namely a sinne before mentioned for not discerning the Lords Body in the Sacrament Secondly an effect and that is a particular punishment described 1. by the persons upon whom t is inflicted The Corinthians and that not one or two but many there were that suffered it Many among you c. 2. by the qualities and degrees of this punishment t is Bodily upon the outward man in three degrees Weaknesses Sicknesses and Death Many are weake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sicke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and many sleep 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. are dead Of these briefly and plainly For this cause The Apostle here admonisheth them of that which of themselves they would not easily have thought of God punisheth them yet still they profane the Sacrament and why they are not aware that those plagues were sent of God for that their sin Therefore the Apostle points out unto them the true cause of all their misery For this cause saith hee are ye punished whatever else they might vainely imagine t was their abuse of the Lords
Supper that drew on all that mischiefe To teach us That Many men are punished who yet are ignorant of the cause why they are punished Naturally we are all children of darknesse and like men in the darke wee know nor by whom nor wherefore we are smitten When God strikes us for sinne Satan deales with us as the Iewes with Christ blindfold him and then bid him prophesie who smote him So in afflictions wee commonly grope as blinde men ghessing at this cause and that but seldome fastening on the right It is the great unhappinesse of our ignorant and corrupted mindes never to know aright our friends or our foes and t is the policie of Satan to delude our judgements by carnall reasoning that when God afflicts us to bring us to repentance wee should yet then doe more and more wickedly by not seeing nor amending the sinne for which wee are punished that so by sinne we might be brought into misery and by misery our sinne might be yet increased This note serves us unto a double use 1. To let us understand what among other is one true cause of mens Vnprofitablenesse under the afflicting hand of God Hence their murmuring and impatience and want of reformation because they do not rightly discerne the cause wherefore this or that punishment lyes upon them Creatures accustomed unto darknesse are of all other most fierce and furious as beasts of prey so men abiding in the darknesse of corrupted nature have brutish and fell affections full of rage and wrathfulnesse when they are provok'd by any smart and paine they flye upon God and man and all that comes next to hand hoping to rid themselves of their afflictions not by a reformation but by revenge But when once such men are brought forth into the light they grow tamer then they see the foulenesse of their offences how much evill they have done yet how l●ttle they s●ffer in comparison whence they truly judge that t is unreasonable to murmure against God who hath so great reason to chastise them 2. To teach us what just cause there is that we should be corrected of God to the end wee may come to the knowledge of our selves Indeede corrections of themselves cannot doe this t is the Word and Instruction that brings us to knowledge of our estates But ordinarily instructions pierce not till corrections have sharpened them A man that lives at peace and hearts ease is apt to passe by rebukes with very little notice of them perhaps with contempt because hee iudgeth himselfe well but when chastisements have softned the heart and awakened the conscience then rebukes have a keener edge and they wound deeply Wherefore Salomon saith excellently Prov. 6.23 The commandement is a lanterne and instruction a light and correction with instruction are the way of life Instructions are the light that guides us in the way but corrections ioyned with them doe quicken our eye-sight and make us heedfull to follow the directions of the Word It is with man in this case as with dogges and other unreasonable creatures for every man borne is as Iob speakes like a wilde Asse colt which when they are punished for any fault wee usually bring them unto the sight of that thing wherein they have done it else they le never amend it Such is our dulnesse in discerning of our faults that we seldome acknowledge and amend them till correction have made us looke about us and learne that which instruction alone could not teach us It is good for mee saith the Prophet David that I have beene afflicted that I might learne thy Law Had hee not been taught it before Yes but Vexatio dat Intellectum Adversity was a better Schoolmaster than Instruction and that makes him now to heed what before hee attended not Wherefore when Gods hand is any time heavie upon us let this bee our first care that Every one know the plague in his owne heart as Salomon speakes 1. King 8.38 This knowledge of the sinne is the first step to repentance and that is the only way to escape the punishment Let us imitate the Church in the third Chapt. of the Lamentations first lay downe this as a general conclusion That sinne brings affliction Wherefore doth a living man complaine a man for the punishment of his sinnes vers 39. Thence goe to a particular application to our selves entring into a serious consideration of our owne waies to finde the sinne for which we are afflicted Let us search and try our waies and turne againe unto the Lord. Let us lift up our hearts with our hands unto God in the heavens Wee have transgressed and have rebelled and thou hast not pardoned c. vers 40.41 42. Without this course observed there is nothing to be expected from a man in affliction and misery but only sullen and uniust complaints with stubborne continuance in his sinne Hee wil blame God and curse men cry out upon the malice of Satan the malignity of the Starres the unhappy concourse of second causes hee will finde fault with all things and that mostly which is least to be blamed not considering meane while that his sinne hath procured all this unto him Why criest thou in thine affliction saith God to the Iewish Church Ier. 30.15 complaining bitterly of her miserable estate Why criest thou What doest thou complaine to no purpose If thou wilt grieve at any thing grieve for thy sinne never looke to cure thy sorrow till thy sinne bee cured for so it followes Thy sorrow is incurable for the multitude of thine iniquity because thy sinnes were increased I have done these things unto thee Now to avoide this mischiefe observe a few directions which may help us to finde out our sinne when we lie under punishment they are these 1. Diligent meditation in the Word whereby wee shall learne what are the sinnes that goe before such and such punishments whereunto wee must ioyne humble prayer unto God for wisedome to discerne of our owne corrupt hearts and lives that so by the light of the Word and assistance of the Spirit we may follow the search till wee finde out the malefactor When the Israelites were beaten by the Cananites at Ai and that they were ignorant for what offence that disaster happened to them Ioshua and the Elders betake them to fasting and prayer before the Arke After that God saith to Ioshua Get thee up wherefore liest thou th●● upon thy face Israel hath sinned Iosh. 7.20.21 T was Achans privie theft of execrable goods that had troubled all Israel till that be expiated God will not bee with them any longer Let us doe the like when any unknowne sinne troubles us when our bodies are distempered our estates vexed our consciences disquieted and we know not well wherefore Fall wee downe before the Arke goe to the Word Prayer aske counsell of God and hee shall discover unto us what is that Achan what the secret accursed sinne that workes us all this woe 2. Consider
of the Lord unworthily most shamefully abusing that to profanenes and impiety which God hath appointed for the exercise and increase of holinesse and true devotion Hitherto of the Sinne it selfe how and by whom it is committed In the next place wee must consider of the quality of it T is very hainous and they that commit it are guilty of the body and bloud of the Lord. A very hard censure of a fault that seemes not to bee very great What to profane the Sacrament shall it bee counted murder and bloud-guiltinesse an abetting and consenting to the damnable fact of Iudas and the Iewes in crucifying the Lord of Life A very horrible offence But here not much out of the way let us learne one observation that may be of use to rectifie our judgements in this and other the like matters T is this The quality of Sinne is not to be measured by ours but by Gods Iudgement of it As the heavens are above the Earth so are my waies higher than your waies and my thoughts above your thoughts saith God Esay 55.8 T is true in all things and it holds in this also about the nature of si●ne God seeth not as man seeth he iudgeth not as man iudgeth T is as naturall to man to extenuate sinne as it is to sinne to make a small fault of a great and no fault of a little one Our love to the pleasure of sinne blindes our iudgement in discerning of its filthy nature Whence issued that notorious depravation of the Law of God by those favourable and flattering interpretations thereof which the Pharisees of old brought in and those of Rome still maintaine yea naturally every one of us allow them in our harts Alas what great harme can there be in 't to be rashly angry when a man 's urg●d to it to call our brother foole to looke on a woman with some ill desire and no more to sweare by Ierusalem by the Temple the Altar by ones Head this Hand this Light or such other little oathes these be small matters veniall sinnes and why should we bee so nice as not to thinke that the Pharisees were in the righ● leaving out such petty matters as not forbidden by the Law True most men would thinke so but our great and onely Doctor Christ Iesus whom wee ought to heare hath taught us another lesson not to iudge any thing a toy and trifle that breakes Gods Law and brings the soule in danger of hell fire See Matth 5. For a man whose calling requires it not to reprove his brother when hee sees him runne into an ill co●rse and by loving rebuke to reclaime him wo●ld be interpreted by most for a courtesie rather than an unkindnesse Why should he meddle and put his friend into melancholy provoke him to anger and dislike of him with many pretences See now what God iudges of this kinde-heartednesse he ca●ls it hatred of our brother in plaine tearmes Levit. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sinne upon him Saul had a faire excuse one would have thought the people must have a little content in the spoyle of the Amalekites and God must ●ave a sacrifice too if then something of the best bee spared from destruction will Samuel take it so hainously Yea that hee will and God also who by Samuel tells Saul that however he sleight the matter yet this his offence is Rebellion and that as bad as Witchcraft and that his transgr●ssion is Iniquity and Idolatry and that which will grieve Saul more than the losse of Gods favour he shall lose his Kingdome for it 1 Sam. 15. It s a small thing to eate an Apple true but t is a great matter to disobey God and if Adam transgresse though but in taking of an Apple he shall dye for it and all his posterity Nothing then is small whereupon depends the sanctity of Gods commandement and our obedience Now here you must remember that there 's a double reason why wee our selves are not equall judges of the nature and quality of sinne 1. Because we are the parties accused and impleaded as guilty of sin and therfore we cannot be equall arbitrators in our owne cause where love of sin and of our selves must needs make us partiall 2. Our judgement is not the rule of righteousnesse but only Gods will and Gods law Hee is Iudge and the only L●●-giver that must save or destroy acquit or condemne He is the person offended that only can without partiality interpret the quality of the offence Let this then bee a caution to make us looke about us and advise what we have to do when wee deale with sinne We know not what we goe about when we meddle with it it 's like entermedling with State businesses a small matter as a word misplaced a circumstance not observed throwes a man before hee is aware into a Premunire or Treason Power is in the hand of a King and t is hee must interpret how farre hee takes himselfe wronged by the attempt So in sinne when wee meddle with it wee meddle with God our chiefest Soveraigne Lord our allegiance to heaven is streight-waies called in question every offence in this case is Capitall and incurres the punishment of rebellion Wherefore it concernes us so to thinke of sinne as God speakes of it and in this point lesse than in any to leane unto our owne wisedome but to be rul'd by his All our Distinctions Extenuations Qualifications Rejections upon other good Intentions with a thousand such other shifts will vanish away into horror and utter confusion when God shall lay righteousnesse in the ballance and censure our sinnes according to his most impartiall and exact judgement Thus much I thought it not amisse to obserue by the way seeing the Apostle seemes to goe farre in censuring this sinne of unworthy communicating to be no lesse fault than guiltinesse of bloud that wee may not thinke the Spirit of God here speaks by an Hyperbole but that we may learne as here so in other things to bring ou● judgements to his and not to qualifie his by our Rhetoricall devices Wee must now proceede to enquire what the Apostle meanes when hee saith that such as eate and drinke unworthily are guilty of the body and bloud of the Lord. By the body and bloud of the Lord he meanes the Death of Christ Iesus whose body was crucified and his bloud shed by the Iewes But here the question is how such as profane the Sacrament are guilty of Christs death I answer Guiltinesse of a fault reacheth partly to the Actors partly to the Abettors of it such as give counsell and ayd to the doing or consent to it when t is done Those are the principall these the accessory and in all crimes that are capitall the same punishment is due unto both Now the Iewes were the principall actors and so in the first place guilty of
to content our idle humours than ayming sincerely at his glory is a foule contempt and cannot but bring a curse upon us Yee have despised my Name saith God unto the Priests Mal. 1.6 Wherein say then In that Ye offer uncleane bread upon mine altar verse 7. Matters were come to that passe in this Prophets time that neither Priest nor People cared a ●ot how God was served Any thing they thought would content him and therefore they presumed to offer that to him which they durst not present unto their Prince or Governour the blinde the lame the torne the sicke any thing which their covetousnesse could best spare was a sacr●fice good enough for God Yea the whole frame of Legal Ceremonies they were utterly weary of them counting them base and contemptible and in effect nothing but an unprofitable drudgery Doth God take this well at their hands No hee curseth them for this their impiety Cursed bee the deceiver which hath in his flocke a male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing The reason followes For I am a great King saith the Lord of Hosts and my Name is dreadfull among the heathen Wherefore it must needs be a horrible offence in the Iewes the people of God thus to vilifie so great a maiesty when even the Gentiles themselves yeelded a more awefull reverence thereunto I shall not neede to stand long in prouing a truth so evident the time and paines will haply bee better imployed in making application of it to our selves A threefold use of this point I commend unto your consideration and practice Vse 1. First Information of our iudgement touching such evills as wee see doe befall men in this life Wee behold the best Churches in great calamities the best men sorely afflicted and we wonder that God should deale so rigorously with those that serve and worship him Wee ghesse at many causes but seldome doe we hit upon the right which here the Apostle intimates unto viz. Profanation of the ordinances of Gods worship This Irreligiousnesse in Gods service is the maine cause as of other sins so of all judgements Vnrighteousnesse against man issues from irreligion towards God and therefore in punishment we must chiefly cast our eyes that way if wee will follow the streame up unto it first fountain We commonly looke another way and put off our calamities vpon other causes If any other but the Apostle had told these Corinthians that their sicknesses and death was sent upon them ●or their profanation of the Lords Supper they would haue doubted of his opinion Many were sicke and dyed but what of that men cannot live or bee well alwayes these things come at adventure or by course of Nature t was want of care in their dyet t was the malignity of some unwholsome dish want of exercise ill temper of the body infection of the aire and such like causes have made them weake and sickly want of physicke want of looking to old age or some such matter hath brought them to their end Any thing rather than what the Apostle speakes of should be reckoned up as the cause of their present griefes But hee having a better spirit to judge of matters tells them plainly that what ever they may imagine t was for abuse of the Sacrament For this cause that sicknesses and deaths reigned amongst them When the Iewes endured so many miseries even from their first plantation in the land to their finall casting out from thence they were seldome aware of this point that their corruptions and abuses in Gods worship brought such plagues upon them If the Philistims Canaanites and other Borderers upon them doe spoile their Country tyrannize over them and oppresse them with cruell slavery as they did in the times of the Iudges they will interpret this to be nothing but an old grudge which these Nations bare against the Israelites for dis-possessing them of their Countrey for which they were hated and all occasions sought to worke revenge If the Kingdome be divided that 's nothing but Rehoboams folly and ill counsell of ill advised Courtiers If Israel make warre on Iudah or Iudah upon Israel that 's but policy to keepe downe one another lest one should encroach upon both Kingdomes If there be civill warres that 's thorough the factions of potent and ambitious States-men If a Forreiner invade them t is nothing but the pride of ambitious tyrants that cannot be content with their owne but seeke after glory and greatnesse in the ruine of other Kingdomes Yea if a Salmanasser or Nebuchadnezzar carry them away captive out of their land though they may thinke in the generall that God is not well pleased with them yet they would resolve these effects into other causes more proper as they conceive T was weaknesse in their Kings degenerating from their ancient valour want of good confederates of good counsellors of skilfull and trusty commanders of hardy souldiers they were over-borne by multitude and these or some thing like these were the cause of this misfortune but of their sinnes they thinke not of that matter Many there were no doubt who iudged better touching the successe of Civill and Ecclesiasticall affaires whose eyes God had opened to discerne the equall dependance betweene the sinnes and the punishments of the present age wherein they lived but for the generality of the State their thoughts went another way after worldly and politicke reasons Which was the cause that being so often smitten yet they returned not to God that smote them because they were ignorant of their sins for which he smote them Thence in many grievous calamities of the State they did what they could by all politick means to uphold the ruines thereof but yet there was no reformation at all of the horrible corruptions of Gods pure Religion This they looked not after as if all had beene well on that side whereas indeed the maine crakce which threatned the downefall of that glorious state was not in the roofe or sides of the building barely in the Lawes and Civill governement but in that onely strong pillar whereupon all rested viz. Religion now rent and shivered in pieces Had wee a history of those times of the Iewish state compiled by Iewish Politicians living then and relating unto us the same publicke events which wee finde recorded in Scripture it would quickly appeare by the comparison that God iudged otherwise of the causes of those things than the State then did Those stories would be like unto these written in latter ages touching Christian Common-wealths where Church and State are put asunder as having little dependance one upon another All notable events prosperous or unhappy the rising or decay of states or great men in the state c. are curiously enquired into all consells and circumstances scanned and censured but for Religion what entercourse it hath with such events there is scarce so much as a glance that way So ●linde and earthly is every man in
discerning aright of Gods iudgements and the course of his government over all humane affaires Wherefore that man may see his error in this point God hath beene pleased by revelation from heaven to make knowne unto him the chiefe cause of such calamities as come upon States and Kingdomes professing true Religion For which purpose God raised up Prophets from time to time to put the Iewes in remenbrance of that which otherwise they would not have thought of viz. that for their abominable corruptions in Gods worship and other sinnes proceeding thence they were thus plagued These men cryed out loud enough to be heard saying as it is 2 King 17.13 Turne from your evill waies and keepe my commandements and my statutes But then as now the poore Prophets preached to little purpose they might talke till they were weary few men regarded what they said Wherefore God hath caused their Sermo●s and the Stories of their times to be recorded in everlasting monumen●s that all ages of the world may take notice of the true cause of Gods iudgements Wherein wee see that God le ts passe as scarce worth the naming all civill considerations and brings all the prosperity or adversity of Church or State unto this head viz. the Neglect or Regard had unto Religion and Iustice. The children of Israel did wickedly in the sight of the Lord they served Baal and the gods of the Nations they forsooke the Lord they walked not in his statutes these be the reasons for which matters goe ill with them as we may finde it at large expressed Iudg. 2. 2. King 17. 2. Chron. 36. Yea in this matter God gave unto them a generall rule whereby to rectifie their iudgement and ours in the like case in the 29. of Deut. Where Moses tells them that when their posterity or the stranger from a far land should see the plagues of the Iewes countrey and the diseases thereof where with the Lord should smite it they would aske after the reason of it and say Wherefore hath the Lord done thus unto his land what meaneth the heate of this great anger The answer followes Then men shall say because they have forsaken the Covenant of the Lord God of their fathers which hee made with them when hee brought them forth out of the land of Egypt For they went and served other gods and worshipped them gods whom they knew not and whom hee had not given unto them And the anger of the Lord was kindled against this land to bring upon it all the curses that are written in this booke vers 14 15 16 17. According to this observation wee may judge of the state of the Christian Church ruinated in the East by Saracens and Turkes over-run in the West by Goths Vandals and other Northren nations then when pure Religion was corrupted by Sects and Heresies by superstitious abuses brought into the worship of God especially into the Sacrament more and more polluted by abominable vaniti●s by pride and contention among the Bishops by negl●gence in the inferiour Clergie by tur●ing Religion into regular hypocrisie each one serving God after the statutes of Ahab and decrees of the house of Om●i I meane after the rule of his new devised order but not according to that rule prescribed in the Word whereby alone all must walke that looke for peace upon themselves and the Israell of God When thus by superstition profanenesse impiety and all filthy corruptions in doctrine and manners the name of Christian became even to be a dishonour unto Christ God dealt with them as before he had done with the Iewish Church delivering them over into the hands of cruell enemies who vexed and spoyled them on every side But what shall wee say unto Churches reformed and purged from the leaven of such corruptions may we apply this rule unto them Yea wee must even in these daies of distresse and trouble wherein God dasheth the nations of the earth together breaking them one upon another like earthen vessels Now that the Kingdomes of the earth are shaken and the Church of God persecuted and afflicted with fire sword and desolation We that are yet but passengers going on in quiet by the way cannot but behold and bewaile her sorrow which sitteth upon the ground weeping sore in the night for these miseries that are come upon her Oh that our heads were full of water and our eyes a fountaine of teares that we also could weep day and night for the slaine of the daughter of Zion But now if wee stand still and wonder and enquire How doth the City sit solitary that was full of people how is shee become a widow shee that was great among the Nations a Princesse among the Provinces ●ow is shee become tributary Heare what answer her selfe will make The yoke of my transgressions is bound by his hand they are wreathed and come up upon my necke therefore it followes he hath made my strength to fall the Lord hath delivered mee into their hands from whom I am not able to rise up And againe The Lord is righteous for I have rebelled against his commandements Heare I pray you all people and behold my sorrow my virgins and my young men are gone into captivity And againe Behold O Lord for I am in distresse my bowels are troubled my heart is turned within me For I have grievously rebelled Yea this is it T is the sinnes of a Church that kinde a fire in her palaces Her sinnes that sharpen her enemies sword to the slaughter Her sinnes that destroy her strong Hold and make the rampart and the wall to lament and languish together Let us not here cry out upon men complaine upon Princes blame wee know not whom nor for what as if all had been well had they done or would they doe as wee have contrived it but lay we the blame where the fault is and say we That they be the sinnes of the Church that kept good things from her and brought evill upon her And be we still sighing in silence for t is the Lord hath done this even he hath done that which he had devised he hath covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger and cast downe from heaven to earth the beauty of Israel Indeede Reformation is a glorious name a Church reformed and restored unto purity of doctrine and discipline is a glorious society But it s one thing to have Gods pure worship established by Law another thing to have it settled in mens hearts and observed in their practice The doctrine of a Church may be pure the Sacraments rightly administred the government duely ordered and yet God may be highly dishonoured by that Church when that which is well adpointed is not yet well used This is haply the Corinthians case here in the Text they did not for ought we can prove pervert the Institution of the Sacrament adding or omitting any thing materiall to the essence thereof but yet