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A11462 Sermons made by the most reuerende Father in God, Edwin, Archbishop of Yorke, primate of England and metropolitane Sandys, Edwin, 1516?-1588. 1585 (1585) STC 21713; ESTC S116708 357,744 396

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there neither is nor euer was a more learned ministerie in any nation vnder heauen Neuerthelesse I acknowledge It is much to be lamented that the glorious Gospel of Christ nowe shining with so perfect beautie as it doth in the midst of so great light so many should still remaine in darkenesse liuing as men without God in this present world and perishing through the ignorance of his sauing truth In the meane while they which are the chiefe and principal causes hereof think they haue very wel discharged themselues by accusing others as if when they against all both religion and reason haue drawne vnto themselues those possessions which ought to maintaine such as labour in the Gospel a Bishop by striking the earth with one foote might raise vp learned pastors sufficient to furnish a whole prouince But whosoeuer bee the principall cause of this disorder they vndoubtedly cannot wash their hands of it that presume to take vpon them the charge of soules for which they knowe themselues vnfit and altogether vnsufficient In these which destroie because they cannot saue there is onely a defect which although it woorthily deserue punishment doeth neuerthelesse mooue some pitie and compassion if there be a willingnesse to do that which there wanteth abilitie to performe But against such as wittingly and wilfully suffer the sheepe for which Christ died to die for want of instruction the soules of them that perish doe crie as the bloud of Abel against Cain for vengeaunce and wrath Giue attendaunce therefore to reading to exhortation to doctrine exercise these things and giue your selues vnto them that al may see how you profite and howe the Church doth profite by you Ye are fed by the sweate of other mens browes ye receiue things temporall without any corporall labour of your owne But with what conscience doe ye this if they which minister vnto your necessities reape not that at your hands for which they minister You can perhaps alleage many colourable excuses for your selues But wil you alleage the same in that day when a strict account of your stewardship shalbe required by him that cōmeth to iudge both quicke and dead Consider these things and be ye stedfast vnmoueable abounding alwaies in the worke of the Lord knowing that your labour in the Lord is not in vaine Is it not better for you to saue both your selues and others than by not sauing others not to saue your selues 15 They which are saued must bee sanctified in truth they which are of the truth must be consummate and made perfect in one They are no better therefore than soule-murtherers be they neuer so paineful in their teaching that teache such doctrines as doe either poison the Church with heresie or dismember rent it asunder with schisme Of heretikes S. Paul forewarning the Church of Ephesus saith I knowe that after my departure there will rauening woolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Of Schismatikes hee writeth in most earnest manner as well to the Church of Corinth as of Rome To the one I beseech you brethren by the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye all say one thing and that there be no schismes amongst you To the other Marke them diligently which cause diuision These serue not the sauiour they serue the destroier of the world They haue ouer them a king to wit the Angel of the bottomlesse pit whose name in Hebrue is called Abaddon that is to say a destroier Their pestilent properties S. Iohn sheweth by comparing the harme which they doe in the Church to the torments which they suffer that are stung with scorpions 16 Now as these destroie by ill teaching so likewise there are others who teaching well but liuing ill doe more harme by their life in one houre than good by their doctrine in many yeres Sozomene writeth that when barbarous nations saw how the Christian priests which were captiues did by their sober and reuerend behauiour damme vp the mouthes of euil speakers they thought them to be men full of wisedome and vnderstanding and hoped to finde fauour at the hands of God if they should woorship him after the maner of those woorthie and graue sages Could the auncient Prophets the blessed Apostles the holie Fathers in former times haue inlarged the bounds of the Church in so strange wise as they did had they not conuerted moe by the rare integrity of their maners than by the force aud power of their words Not without cause therefore doth the Prophet make request in the Psalme that the priests of the Lord may put on righteousnesse as a garment For if their shame be seene who shall hide the nakednesse of the people Thus we see what should especially be reformed in the principall part of the house of God 17 It remaineth nowe that somewhat be spoken of the maner of reformation Christ in reforming the Church proceeded orderly knowing that disorderly remedies of euils are as dangerous as the euils for which they are sought His orderly proceeding appeareth in this that he first visited and then reformed Visitations if they bee vsed according to the true intent and prupose whereunto they were ordeined are needefull and profitable in the Church For howsoeuer they b● nowe abused by men of corrupt mindes the cause for which they were first established was the maintenance of truth the rooting out of heresie the confirming of good orders the redressing of things amisse the continuing of religion peace innocencie amongst men If we reape not this fruite and commoditie by them the fault is in our selues in the parties visited when they hide and conceale that which should bee reformed in the visitors when they are carelesse in admonishing and if that doe not serue in punishing offenders detected and lawfully conuicted before them Let the one sort therefore remember the sinne of Achan howe close it was kept and howe God plagued Israel till it was reuealed and let the other consider the example of Christ which proceeded no lesse seuerely in punishing than orderly in searching out the faults and abuses of the Temple 18 The rod in the hande of the pastor is as necessarie as the staffe yea perhaps more because they are moe whom feare doth constraine than whom loue doth allure to become vertuous It is noted that in the daies of Iason a dissolute and carelesse high priest the inferior sort of priests being let alone were no more diligent about the seruice of the altar but despised the temple and regarded not the sacrifices they became frequenters of games heathenish exercises not without great disgrace to their calling When Nehemias returning from captiuitie found that Eliashab the high priest had chambered his kinsman Tobia in the court of the house of God where aforetime the offerings the incense the tithes of corne of wine and of oyle appointed for the Leuites had beene laide by which meanes it came to passe that
good And as it is profitable for them to be constrained so is it a thing verie reasonable to constraine them For why should not the Church enforce her lost children to returne to saluation if lost children enforce others to turne to destruction Seeing that the whole seruice in our Church is no other than Gods written worde as there can be alleaged no iust cause why any man should withdrawe himselfe from this word so appertaineth it vnto princes that feare God within their dominions to compel euery subiect to come and heare this worde least the church by this euill example should be greatly offended Gods causes are zealously to be seene vnto and the winning of mens soules is religiously to be sought And thus much briefly touching the seruice of God To see the Gospel eueriewhere preached the ministers prouided for and the people compelled to come heare the worde This is the feare of God which Samuel requireth 22 Whereunto must bee added a speciall regard to the common wealth It is commonly saide that the common wealth is sore diseased and that euerie member of that bodie seemeth to be grieued Remedie would bee sought in time least remedie come too late But I am no Phisition for that bodie and therefore is it not fit for me to minister any medicine to it But I shall pray for the health thereof and set it ouer to such as haue skill and can helpe The care of the common wealth chiefly appertaineth to the head of the common wealth who is Parens Patriae the mother of this sicke childe It is required at our handes to feare and serue the Lorde in trueth That prince doth serue God in trueth and in deede which is careful that the euill may be punished and repressed and that the good may bee defended and aduaunced When generally all men are seene vnto that euerie man doe his duetie then God is in trueth and synceritie serued 23 The prince is set as the head ouer the bodie as the chiefe shepeheard ouer the flocke These titles are giuen to Princes and gouernours to put them in minde not onely of their honour and preeminence but of their charge and office also But the prince cannot doe this alone it is a burthen too heauie for one to weeld And therefore hee must according to the counsel which Iethro gaue vnto Moses choose out of all the people men wise and fearing God louers of the trueth such as hate couetousnesse and out of them make rulers ouer thousands hundreds fifties and tennes that they may sit and iudge the people at all seasons Magistrates should bee chosen out of all the people for their woorthinesse It is vnmeete that such things as should followe deserts bee procured by other sinister meanes Magistrates should be wise men furnished with learning vnderstanding good skil and long experience men that feare God religious louers of his trueth fauourers of the Gospell and of all such as liue in the feare of God True and vpright dealers such as will stedfastly fasten their eies vpon the causes brought before them and not regard the face of any man lastly haters of couetousnesse bribes and rewardes Good officers should thus be qualified And to the end that magistrates may be such it must be prouided that there may be choise of officers without sale of offices It is not probable that he which obtaineth such a roume for a price wil leaue it freely or deale iustly in it A greater corruption than this cannot enter into a common wealth For by this meane both the prince and people are deceiued To punish the euil to maintaine the good to ouerlooke the whole and to choose appoint forth worthie officers for the gouernment of the common wealth this is the duetie of a prince that feareth God That prince which doth this serueth God in trueth 24 Homer bringeth in Iupiter sitting in the middest of the assemblie of gods whom he menaceth and threateneth on this wise Let not any god or goddesse attempt the breache of my mandate If I vnderstand that any doe I wil giue him small ioie of this place or prouide him another farre ynough hence a dwelling place the gates whereof are yron and the ground brasse I will plunge him as deepe vnder hel as heauen is ouer earth He shall well knowe his might to be somewhat beneath mine For if ye thinke your selues to be stronger than I am make triall of your strength fasten a chaine in heauen and ioyne all your force at the end thereof But yee shall neuer be able to pull Iupiter out of heauen no though ye sweate much about it whereas if I list to put but my finger to the haling of you I wil pluck vp sea and lande with you So much am I superior vnto gods and men Kings and princes in their seuerall dominions haue such power through the prouidēce of almightie God by whose appointment they weare their crownes that their ordinaunces bee not lightly broken vnlesse themselues be carelesse to haue them kept For by reason of the Maiestie that God hath giuen them they are feared of all estates and conditions of men They can throwe downe whom they wil and whom they wil they can aduaunce They haue the chaine and the reine in their hands they can draw others whither they wil but others are not able to drawe them vnlesse they list This power and strength and glorie which GOD hath giuen vnto kings and whereby they are able to leade the worlde as it were in a string leaueth them vtterly without excuse if they vse it not to the benefite of the common wealth They cannot serue God in trueth and giue the bridle to their subiects to sinne without restraint These times of greatest and grauest consultation are fit occasions wherein Princes may most effectually shewe howe heartily and truely they feare the Lord. These are the times to prouide chaines that is to say good statutes and lawes to holde all men within compasse and to binde together the skattered parts of the common wealth When the great counsel of Rome entered into the Senate to consult for the good gouernment and defence of the Empire first they went sacrificed to Iupiter and there euerie man offered vp and left behinde him his priuate affections promising that their consultation should onely tend to the common benefite Leaue you all priuate affections likewise cast them behinde you seeke not your owne commoditie Let it appeare that you loue your Countrie God the Prince and the common wealth require a faithfull performance of this seruice at your hands Seeke by Lawe the syncere setting foorth the maintenance and continuance of Gods true religion Let this be your first and principal care and so shal ye serue the Lorde in trueth 25 Seeke by Lawe to represse the gainesayers and the enemies of this trueth This libertie that men may openly professe diuersitie of religion must needs be dangerous to the
and their prayer tooke away the force of the fire The scriptures are full of examples of all sorts Kings Prophets Apostles faithfull Christians haue called vpon the Lord in the time of their troubles hee hath heard them graunted their requests and deliuered them from their distresses Wherefore before all things the Apostle heere exhorteth vs vnto praier 10 But for whom First generally for all men then specially for kings and them that are placed in authoritie It seemeth some were of opinion that praiers should be made onely for the faithfull for the brethren for Christians and not for Infidels Paul to meete with this vncharitable error saith Let supplications be made for all men S Iohn in his Canonicall Epistle seemeth to make exception against this generall doctrine There is a sinne vnto death I say not that thou shouldest praie for it This is that sinne which Christ calleth sinne against the holy Ghost which neuer shall be remitted and therefore is not to be praied for But because it is hard for vs to discerne who sinne vnto eternall death Christian charitie wil that we hope wel of all and obserue the generall rule to praie for all There were secrets reuealed to the Apostles of Christ which are hidden from vs they had the gift of prophecying and discerning of spirits to foresee and knowe which gifts these times haue not Paul rapt into the third heauen learned secrets not to be reuealed hee knewe that Himenaeus and Alexander were reprobates We may not so iudge of others Who art thou that iudgest an other mans seruaunt In outward shewe after the iudgement of man Paul being a violent persecuter of Christ sinned vnto death yet was hee the elect vessell and glorious instrument of God Christ is the propitiation for the sinnes of the whole world he wil haue all men to be saued and to come to the knowledge of the trueth We must therefore haue a charitable meaning towards all and pray for all as he hath died for all Praie euen for your enemies for them that persecute and slander you Blesse them that curse you Wish well to them that doe ill to you For God suffereth his raine to fall and his light to shine both vpon good and bad Abraham praied for Abimeleck Moses for Idolaters Samuel for Saul Stephen for them that stoned him and Christ for them that cruelly put him to shamefull death Let vs imitate these holie paternes 11 As we should praie for all men so chiefely for kings and such as are in authoritie because they chiefly neede it In Pauls time the kings and rulers of the people were Ethnickes tyrants enemies to Christ and cruel persecuters of the Gospel wherevpon some thought it not conuenient for the Church to pray for them who sought to destroie it S. Paul abateth this opinion teaching them that they should chiefly praie for such as for men in greatest daunger and most needing the helpe of their praier Praie for him that praieth not for himselfe The prophet Ieremie requireth the Israelites to praie for the cruel persecutor of Gods people Nabuchadnetzar For God in his mercie giueth good princes and in his ire he giueth wantons as Esay saith and hypocrites as Iob writeth Both euill and good are the ordinaunce of God We must praie for ill princes because the kings heart is in Gods hand that he may turne their mindes and staie their persecutions of euil make them good and of strangers from the common wealth of his Saints make them pillers and staies vnto the Church For good princes we ought heartily to praise the Lord for them especially to pray as the prophet did for Salomon Giue thy iudgements to the King O God and thy righteousnesse to the Kings Sonne For it is the singular gift of God not onely to set vp rightfull gouernement in the world but also to cherishe and preserue the same Euen they whom he hath furnished with the spirite of righteousnesse and of iudgement are vnable furtherfoorth to execute their charge than they be specially directed by the hande of God and assisted from heauen with all helpes necessary for their calling If the Christians did praie for the wealth and prosperitie of those princes which bent all their force and power against the kingdome of Christ surely for such as are defenders of the faith and zealous patrones of Gods people wee ought daily and hourely to powre out supplications that God would grant them a long life a safe gouernementt a sure dwelling valiant souldiers faithfull counsellers a good people a quiet world and whatsoeuer the hearts of men or kings doe desire And let all such as wil not say Amen to those praiers assure themselues that they are neither duetifull Christians nor faithfull subiects but disloyall contemners of Gods ordinance and rebellious despisers of his commaundement who spake by the mouth of his Apostle saying Praie for Kings and all such as be in authoritie 12 If any Church any people any nation in the world haue cause to praise the Lord for their prince this Lande hath more than any in respect of the wonderfull blessings wherewith God by the ministerie of his handmaide hath enriched vs far beyond all that we are possibly able to conceiue Israell was well apaide with the good gouernement of Debora Iudith and Hester But they thought themselues twise happie when God gaue them Moses Samuel Dauid Salomon Iehosaphat Ezechias Iosias to gouerne them England liked well and tooke it for no small blessing of God when Henrie the first H. the second Edward the first Edward the third Edward the fourth H. the fift H. the sixt H. the seuenth H. the eight Edward the sixt bare rule ouer it But did God euer blesse the throne of any man as hee hath doone the royall seate of his annointed at this day Hath the like euer beene heard of in any nation to that which in ours is seene Our Debora hath mightily repressed the rebel Iaben our Iudith hath beheaded Holophernes the sworne enemie of Christianitie our Hester hath hanged vp that Haman which sought to bring both vs and our children into miserable seruitude And if we may compare with the ancients of Israel Moses was not more milde nor Samuel more iust nor Dauid more faithful nor Salomon more peacefull nor Iehosaphat more readie to assist his neighbours nor Ezechias more carefull for Gods cause nor Iozias more zealous to restore syncere religion If yee make the comparison betweene her owne predecessors neither was Henrie the first better learned nor Henrie the second more easie to forgiue and put vp iniuries nor Ed. the first more chast nor Ed. the third more loath to accept of forrein dominion being offred nor Ed. the fourth more iust in yeelding all men their owne nor H. the fift more happie nor H. the sixt more holie nor H. the seuenth more prudent nor H. the eight more valiant in quelling the Pope nor
wee haue to praise our God that in publike doctrine touching the substance of religion wee all agree in one truth we all builde vpon one foundation Christ Iesus slaine and offered vp for our full redemption according to the doctrine of the scriptures So much the greater pitie it is that there should be such dissent in matters of small importance in rites and circumstances that by contention in such things the course of the Gospel should be hindered Christs aduersaries strengthened and his church offended The ministerie cannot bee well executed without her rites which rites are left indifferent to euerie policie so that they be not disagreeing from the word so that they tend vnto edification so that they be seemely and according to decent order Bee it graunted that some rites vpon some consideration might be bettered or omitted yet can I not say neither any man I suppose can prooue that any thing is set downe to be obserued in the Church wicked or contrarie to the woord And it were scarse wisedome when as in many yeres a beautifull and a costlie house is builded if a windowe be set a litle awrie or some small like eye sore doe appeare in respect thereof to disturbe the whole house to put it downe and laie it flat with the ground For euerie change being so full of perill surely these great alterations vpon so light aduise these newe common wealthes howsoeuer they be shadowed with the plausible name of reformation yet in seeking for vndoubtedly this is sought and that by many to haue the patrimonie of the Church diuided mangled and impaired they threaten the vtter ouerthrowe of learning and religion For take away liuing at which roote this axe especially striketh and ye take away learning take away learning and yee ouerthrowe teaching take away teaching and what shall become of the church of Christ Where there is no vision there the people cannot choose but come to decaie There is no state no not the state of a prince excepted to whom feare honour obedience and tribute is due that may more rightly chalenge a competent and sufficient liuing than the minister of the word of God They seeme to haue put out the verie light of nature in themselues which repine at the reasonable maintenance of them that minister before the Lorde in these sanctified labours For who doeth plant a vineyard and doeth not eate of the fruite thereof or who feedeth a flocke and eateth not of the milke of the flock Marke how the scriptures both in the Lawe and in the Gospell doe beate vpon this point In the Lawe it is saide Thou shalt not mussle the mouth of the Oxe Doeth God take care for Oxen No his care is for vs. For our cause it is that he hath saide The labourer is worthie of his hire For our cause he hath ordeined that they which preache the Gospell should liue of the Gospell Hee had a care of his church and therefore gaue charge Let him that is taught in the word make him that taught him partaker of al his goods This is large yet but reasonable For if we haue sowen vnto you spiritual things is it a great matter if wee reape your carnall things is it much to make vs partakers of all your goods The Elders that rule well are worthie of double honour specially they which labour in the woord and doctrine They which labour amongst you and are ouer you in the Lorde and admonish you haue them saith the Apostle we beseeche you in singular loue for their works sake It was foreseene no doubt by the spirite how Gods portion should be pinched howe the ministers of the word should be contemned howe iniuriously men in these last vncharitable daies would seeke for the hauocke and spoile of the Church this mooued him in so large and ample sort to speake of maintenance and honour due to his ministers If any man bee slowe and rechelesse in dooing his office if there bee any Idol-sheepeheard that feedeth himselfe onely and not his flocke let him be reformed or remooued But for the fault of a fewe that the whole state should be subuerted and the patrimonie of the church of Christ spoiled and deuoured it were verie hard No prince nor people Christian or Heathen could euer consent to such a thing without sacrilege Wel as we are at vnitie in substance of religion so God graunt that at length in these things also we may agree and be as one euen as becommeth the congregation of Christ which is a societie linked and knit together not sundered by diuision and rent in peeces by varietie of opinions and iudgements To this vnitie Paul exhorteth Be of one meaning This vnitie Christ commendeth to his Disciples saying Be one 6 Of this vnitie and coniunction of men agreeing in the trueth ariseth that brotherly concord whereof S. Paul in the woordes that followe saith Be like minded hauing the same charitie Where dissent in religion is there can hardly be consent in loue Diuersitie of religion sundered the Iewe and Gentile caused the one to be an abhomination to the other Wherefore hee that came to bring religion into the world came not to bring with it peace but a sword a sworde to diuide asunder not onely kingdomes and cities but euen the man and the wife the father and the childe a sword to cut off one brother from another For there can be no agreement betweene Christ and Beliall the light of the one and the others darkenesse such as are not of one true religion with vs their profession may be friendshippe but their practise is deceit they may with speeche and countenaunce flatter and fawne but they carie for the most part a malitious heart set vpon mischiefe Caine spake Abel faire ynough but for the diuersitie of his sacrifice he hated him and spying opportunitie shed his bloud Herod pretended to worship Christ whose death he fully purposed in his malitious mind There was neuer therfore wise Israelite that would trust an Amorite It is and will bee true for euer that Constantine saide Qui perfidi sunt in Deum in Principem fideles esse non possunt They cannot be sure to their Prince who to God-ward are not syncere They count trueth heresie and No PROMISE TO BE KEPT WITH HERETIKES is their posie Children they are like to their father which is a murtherer and lier from the beginning But when we speake of loue and charitie we speake of the badge of Christianitie of the vertues of true Christians who consenting in faith bring foorth the fruite of faith which is loue without which howe neere soeuer we approche vnto Christ in word and in outward profession we are in deede none of his He cannot agree with Christ that is at discord with a Christian. God is so delighted with this affection that he professeth himselfe to hate them that are enemies of it yea the soule of the Lord abhorreth
Sabaoth Such traficke is as bad in the house as on the daie which God hath sanctified Wherefore in the Lawe these two are iointly coupled together Yee shall keepe my Sabaoths and reuerence my Sanctuarie The prophaning therfore of the temple the house of God the place of praier is an euident token that amongst the Iewes all religion was now trodden vnder feete all reuerence of God abolished This sheweth that there was nowe no difference at all holie and common pure and prophane cleane and vncleane all was one When they which ought not to die but without the citie were suffered to liue within the temple yea of and at the altar when Gods owne house was made a denne of theeues we cannot easily imagine a degree of prophanesse beyond this At this the Lord himselfe doth seeme to woonder Is this house become a denne of theeues whereupon my name is called before your eyes What reuerence or seruice is it likely that they would shewe other-where vnto the Lorde who liued as theeues in that glorious sanctuarie where all the earth should tremble before him 24 In the house of God they had the Lawe both red and expounded they offered sacrifice and they praied But because the seruice for which the temple was ordeined though not only yet principally is praier therefore he hath saide My house shalbe called the house of praier In Deuteronomie it is called the place which God chose to cause his name to dwel there It is true indeede saith Salomon that God will dwell on the earth No doubt where his truth is syncerely professed where his sacraments are rightly and duely ministred where his name is called vpon by heartie praier where two or three are gathered together in his name that is to say to serue him in these things there the woorking of his spirite is so forcible and effectuall his mercie is so obiect euen vnto sense his grace is in such sort felt seene and tasted that he seemeth as it were to stand before mens eyes to walke to inhabite to dwel amongst them when they are thus occupied The dore of the Church is the gate of the Lorde and the righteous wil surely enter into it They reioice when they heare men say We wil goe into the house of the Lord the house of praier where as many as call vpon the name of the Lord shall vndoubtedly bee saued But because no man can call on him in whom he doeth not beleeue nor beleeue without hearing the word of God requisite therefore it is that the house of publike praier should also be the house of publike preaching For this cause the Iewes heard the Lawe euery Sabaoth day in their Synagogues 25 And as they did not onely heare the word but also offer sacrifice in the house of God so we in our Churches haue both the Gospell preached and the Sacramentes which are seales of the Gospel administred knowing that Christ hath commanded both alike Hee which sent his Disciples to teache sent them also to baptize he which inioined them to preache gaue them also an other charge Hoc facite Doe this in remembrance of me Therefore as often as we speake vnto you out of these places as often as here we minister the Sacrament of baptisme to your children in token of their new spirituall birth as often as we doe here present our selues at the Lords table to eat of his bread and to drinke of the wine which he hath prepared for the comfortable nourishment of our soules wee keepe the Lordes institution and not our owne wee doe as he hath commaunded not as we haue deuised we vse the house of God not as theeues but as Saints 26 For these things the Sanctuarie was erected for these the house of God was sanctified and for praier Therefore the twelue told the rest of the Disciples as it is in the historie of their Acts We will giue our selues continually vnto praier and ministration of the word Aaron was appointed vnder the law as to offer so also to pray for himselfe and for the people Be this sinne against the Lord saith Samuel farre from me that I should cease to praie for you The request which Salomon made vnto GOD in the first dedication of the temple was that if his people Israel should at any time for their sinnes be ouerthrowen before the enemie or heauen bee so shut vp that they should bee in distresse for want of raine or if there should be famine in the land or pestilence or blasting or mildew or grassehopper or caterpiller if the enemie should beseege thē if they should fall into any aduersitie whether it were of bodie or of minde his eares might alwaies bee open to the praiers which they should make before the Lord in the house of praier Heare the supplications of thy people Israel which pray in this place 27 Nor only their supplications but moreouer Salomon addeth As touching the straunger that is not of thy people Israel who shall come out of a farre countrie for thy names sake and shall come and praie in this house heare thou in heauen thy dwelling place and doe according to all that the stranger calleth for vnto thee that all the people of the earth may knowe thy name and feare thee as thy people Israel doe Agreeable wherevnto are the words of the prophet Esay It shal be in the last daies that the mountaine of the house of the Lord shall be prepared in the top of the mountaines and shalbe exalted aboue the hils and all nations shall flowe vnto it And againe The strangers that cleaue vnto the Lord to serue him and to loue the name of the Lord and to be his seruaunts euery one that keepeth the Sabaoth and polluteth it not and embraceth my couenaunt them will I bring also to mine holie mountaine and make them ioyful in mine house of praier their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall bee accepted vpon myne alter For myne house shall be called an house of prayer for all nations This prooueth that article of our Christian faith to be most certain wherein we acknowledge the Church of Christ to be Catholike vniuersal For we must vnderstand that there was a time when the Lord gaue expresse charge comandement No vncircumcised in the flesh shall enter into my Sanctuarie The adoption the glory of the sons of God y e couenants the law the seruice of God the promises al the riches wherwith the church of Christ is adorned did belong vnto Israel vnto none else they were the only people that obteined mercie al y e world besides was Loammi amongst them God was knowne but as for the nations they heard not of him Iudea was the onely garden of the Lord the rest of the earth was a meere wildernesse they were the vineyard and we the forrest they within the wals of the citie of God and we
is sufficient for them Thy testimonies saith Dauid are my counsellers Their counsell was to him sufficient Hee red not the scriptures at idle times or at leisure they were his meditation continually Reading was not irkesome and tedious vnto him his eies did preuent the night watches to meditate in the word The time was not lost which was so bestowed For by thy commaundements saith he thou hast made me wiser than mine enemies The diligence of that noble Eunuch chiefe officer to the Queene of Ethiopia is greatly commended as a woorthie president for Christian Courtiers to behold and followe Many cannot reade yet al ought to heare I will hearken saith Dauid what the Lord God will say Who doth not reioyce to heare a prince speake gracious and fauorable wordes But I wil heare the lord speake saith the prophet For he wil speake peace vnto his people A bad seruaunt an euill wife a cursed childe a damnable creature that will not gladly heare the voice of the Lord the husband the father the creator Christ taught dailie in the temple and doubtlesse he was daily heard But hearing of the woord may not daily be attended least it hinder more weightie affaires Is there any thing more weightie than the matter of saluation Is the earth of more account than heauen a short miserable life than a blessed and immortall Philip of Macedonia casting off the suite of a poore woman with a short answere that he had no leisure to heare her cause she aunswered boldly Why then hast thou leisure to be a king I may as boldly aske of them which say they haue no leisure to heare Gods word how they will finde the leisure to be saued This word only saueth Receiue ye therfore the word ingrafted which is able to saue your soules 13 If there bee no saluation but by faith no faith but by hearing the woord of God how should the people be saued without teachers The mother Citie of the Realme is reasonably furnished with faithfull preachers certaine other Cities not many in number are blessed too though not in like sort But the sillie people of the Land otherwhere especially in the North parts pine away way and perish for want of this sauing foode they are much decayed for want of prophecie Many there are that heare not a sermon in seuen yeres I might say safely in seuenteene Their bloud will be required at some bodies hands The Lord deliuer vs from that hard account and graunt redresse with speede 14 But why doth the countrie want preachers The people pay tithes of that they haue therefore there must needes be sufficient to maintaine them If things were well ordered this sequele were good But the chiefest benefices were by the Pope long since impropriated vnto a Monkes which deuoured the fruits and gaue a sillie stipend vnto a poore Sir Iohn to say Masse And as they left it so we finde it still Where liuings were not impropriated by the Pope there they are for the most part so handled that patrons maintaine themselues with those tithes which the people giue and ministers haue that which the patrons leaue The worlde dealeth with Gods Clergie as Dionysius the tyrant with Iupiters Idoll They make themselues as merie with spoyling Christs patrimonie as he with robbing Iupiter of his golden cloake which being too heauie for Sommer and too colde for Winter he tooke away and left in stead of it a cotten coate light for the one time and warme for the other To take from them which liue idly and superstitiously in the Church they pleade it to be lawfull because those vnprofitable members were vnwoorthie to enioie the fat of the earth Abbeies being eaten vp and other profites gone now as greedie cormorants they sease also vpon the Church of Christ. It is not fit forsooth that men sanctified vnto heauenly things should be ouermuch encombred with these earthly commodities and therefore euen of great deuotion and zeale they will ease the Church of these her burthens Thus by men that cannot stand without the fall of the Church of God all meanes are inuented to begger the ministerie A deuise no doubt of Satan and a practise of his impes to cause a famine of the bread of life by staruing the Oxe that should treade out the come and to withdrawe Gods people from seeking the Lord by weakening and discouraging such as should guide them in the waie of life Thus you see how God must be sought in his word which woord because all men must heare and learne therefore many must be sent to teache it 15 But because the seede which is cast into the earth groweth not vp vnlesse it be watered with the dewe of heauen neither doth the sound of the woord bring any man vnto Christ except the grace of the spirite be with it which grace God offereth so freely vnto men that there needeth no more but Aske and Haue for this cause it followeth in the Prophet Call vpon him while he is neere We may reade and heare of God as of one farre off But when we praie vnto God we acknowledge that he is as it were within sight when we cal vpon him we speake to him as vnto one which is present He is neuer so clearely and plainely found his presence is neuer so familiarly enioied as by heartie praier Praier consisterh of two parts Thankesgiuing for that which we haue receiued and requesting of that whereof our soules or bodies haue neede 16 The good king Dauid falling into consideration of the infinite mercies of God bursteth out into these carefull woordes What shall I render to the Lord Finding no way to requite hee resolueth thus I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord. Perhaps the Prophet had the more care to shewe himselfe thankefull towards God by reason of the griefe which himselfe sustained through mens ingratitude towards him He maketh pitifull complaint that his familiar friends who ate bread at his table who tooke sweete counsell with him whom hee had many waies benefited were vnthankefull and requited him with trecherous dealing An honest hearted man is neuer so grieued as when his friendlinesse is requited with ingratitude If it be saith S. Ambrose a fault to bee matched euen with murther not to requite man with thankefulnesse what a crime is it to deale vnthankefully with God Dixeris maledicta cuncta cum ingratum hominem dixeris Wee haue named all the naughtinesse that can bee obiected when wee haue termed a man vnthankefull saieth another Lycurgus beeing asked why in his Lawes he had set downe no punishment for ingratitude answered I haue left it to the gods to punish All the punishment which man could deuise he though too easie for a fault so heinous The ingratitude of Ierusalem did more wound the heart of the sonne of God Christ Iesus than the speare that pierced him through the heart vpon the crosse Hee
Disciples kept themselues secretly together in a parlour at Ierusalem for feare of the Iewes and there serued God Such priuate congregations the Ecclesiasticall histories plentifully set foorth and commend In such tempests to serue our God in deserts in hils in dennes and holes of the earth wee must bee content But conuenticles or priuate meetings when the gospell of God being strengthened with the ciuill hand hath his free and safe passage is publikely and syncerely preached when al persecution and feare therof is wholy vanished haue beene euer suspitious and they are the nurces of all errors It is the propertie of froward sectaries whose inuentions cannot abide the light to make obscure conuenticles when the doctrine of truth is set at libertie The Donatists the Arrians the Anabaptists the Familie of loue with all others of the like sort fostered vp their errors in secret and darke corners But such as bee of the flocke of the great sheepeheard Christ ought to assemble themselues in one sheepefold Peruersitie neuer wants excuses neither is satisfied with any reason but no man can in right refuse to communicate with vs in our Church It is the sanctuarie of the Lord the house of God the arke of God wherein the treasures of heauen are laide open for our vse no other than such as God hath commanded The golden pot with Manna the flourishing rod of Aaron and the tables of Moses these are no bugges to fray away Gods children They haue nothing offered them but the heauenly foode whereupon the elect of GOD should feede euen that bread which Christ hath sanctified and broken vnto vs for our comfort 25 Such stray sheepe therefore as will not of their owne accord assemble themselues to serue the Lorde in the midst of this holie congregation may lawfully and in reason ought to be constrained thereunto For though religion cannot bee driuen into men by force yet men by force may be driuen to those ordinarie meanes whereby they are woont to be brought to the knowledge of the truth Parents cannot constraine their children to be learned But parents may constraine them to repaire thither where they may be taught Thus you see that God must be serued of vs in holinesse holinesse openly declared and professed not secretly kept and laide vp onely in our hearts and bosomes 26 It followeth in the words of Zacharie And in righteousnesse This righteousnesse hath chiefly respect to the second table and putteth vs in minde how we ought to vse our neighbour In dooing right vnto him we serue the Lord Iesus whose commaundement this is in righteousnesse One lesson well obserued were sufficient for this matter If we could loue our neighbours with that kindenesse which we doe our selues which is the precept of the Lawe we would not want in any part of righteous duetie towards men Render vnto euerie one that which is due this is righteousnesse 27 They which are in authoritie are called Iustices to the end that their name might put them in minde of that duetie which they owe to the common wealth If they doe not see that Lawes be put in practise and execution if in iudgement they doe not iustly punish transgressors and deale in deciding matters of controuersie betweene man and man with an euen hand if for feare they cruelly cast away the innocent for cowards beene euer cruell or for fauour spare the rich if they be men of corrupt minds patrones of euill men and of euill causes for their owne commoditie if they be not wise with Salomon if they feare not GOD with Moses if they loue not the truth as Dauid if they hate not couetousnesse as did Samuel surely they doe not serue God in righteousnesse and iustice because they are iniurious towardes their neighbours 28 The minister of Gods woord is also a seruaunt Wee are your seruaunts brethren for Christes sake whose embassage wee bring If we bee fraudulent or negligent in performing the parts of this duetie we are most vnrighteous 29 To serue in iustice is the duetie of euerie man The riche man is a seruaunt to the poore to releeue and comfort him as he is able For that is right and to that end God hath made him rich that he as a faithful steward might bestowe those riche blessings vpon the familie and houshold of God Iohn the Bishop of Constantinople who for his liberal releeuing of the needie was surnamed the Almner was woont to prouide daily meate for the poore and when it was made readie to come foorth and himselfe see it serued This seruice is of vs very slenderly and slackely doone Christs impotent miserable members are sent away not releeued To suffer him in his members so to begge who hath giuen thee all that thou hast is horrible ingratitude it is not the part of a Christianly afdicted heart of one that serueth his Lord in righteousnesse 30 The counseller at the Law is a seruant to his client whom he ought to serue in righteousnesse Take not excessiuely of the poore for that is not right and equall Of right you should euen without monie pleade his cause so God commaundeth who wil no doubt in that respect pay you your fees with a bountiful hand Take not of both parties for that is trechery and not iustice Thou takest not those fees but stealest them Neglect not thy clients cause if thou promise performe neither take vpon thee more than thou canst well answere If with words and subtile handling thou winnest an euil cause to another mans wrong thou art guiltie of that wrong if thou doest by negligence loose a good cause thou art guiltie of that losse and seruest not thy client nor thy God in righteousnesse 31 To conclude and knit vp all in a woord of what trade or vocation soeuer we be this we must knowe that hee onely serueth God in holinesse and righteousnesse who denying impietie and worldly concupiscence liueth soberly iustly and holily in this present world soberly as touching himselfe iustly towards his neighbour and holily as concerning God he that casteth off the olde Adam and putteth on Iesus Christ he that truely repenteth that leadeth a newe life who heareth the word and worketh it who knoweth the will of God and doth it 32 And this we must doe coramipso before him The seruice which we doe before him must bee zealous heartie and syncere We may not serue God with lukewarme seruice as the Laodiceans did For then God no doubt will vomit out vs as he threatened to doe them Vehement therefore and zealous must we bee for the house of God for the glorie of God and in Gods seruice 33 But euerie zeale God doth not accept or like of For as there is a zeale according to knowledge so there is a blinde headie zeale voide of true knowledge and therefore of true faith S. Paul in his blinde zeale persecuted the Church of God The Iewes
they would learne two short lessons of S. Paul and learne withall to followe them the matter easilie might be amended The one is to loue men not their monie Non quaero quae vestra sunt saith S. Paul I seeke not yours but you This lesson is hard but good and the other is like it I can doe nothing against the trueth but for the trueth saith the Apostle Nothing in a bad cause but in a good cause all things These lessons well learned would quickely cut off many euil pleas and driue back causelesse controuersies 15 You to whom the sword of iustice and iudgement is committed take heede vnto it Let it not spare mightie men for their sinnes are mightie sinnes If such offend their fall draweth down others with them God therefore commaunded Moses to hang vp the princes of the people vpon gibbets that they might be examples of punishment who had beene examples in sinning The good Consul Iunius Brutus spared not his owne sonnes but cut off their conspiring heads And Aulus Fuluius in the like case did the like thing Pilate abused his office when vpon sute hee spared Captaine Barrabas the murtherer and killed Christ our sauiour Spare not traitors murtherers or theeues least you bee partakers of their sinnes Your lenitie towardes them is crueltie towards the common weale the enemies of whose peace they are Serue God in feare loue his trueth promote his Gospell The seate the iudgement the sword is the Lordes defend therefore his cause see to the keeping of his statutes enlarge his kingdome aduaunce his glorie for he hath promised to glorifie them that honour him but they that despise him shall be full base hee shall make them vile and contemptible 16 Doing of iudgement may also generally be taken for iust dealing Iustice is a vertue which giueth euery man his own Render vnto euerie man y ● which is his Let euerie man performe his office fulfil his dutie let euerie man do right one to another do as you would be done vnto If this Law were obserued the people shold be eased of great expenses iudges iustices of great trauel Christ saith if a man take thy coat frō thee rather than striue giue him also thy cloake There is verily a fault amongst you because ye goe to Lawe one with another why doe you not rather suffer wrong Why doe yee not rather sustaine any kinde of tollerable harme Abraham gaue place to Lot and would not contend his onely reason was wee are brethren But brotherhoode is nowe adaies no argument of agreement our times are so vnlike their times and we so vnlike them There were no better meane in my opinion to bridle these quarelling and contentious mindes of wranglers than to burthen such as faile in their cause with great expenses amerciaments It would make them beware of quarels and vniust contending if they were sure to paie well for it Doe iudgement deale iustly one with another paie vnto al men that which is due that which is not due seeke not to haue at any mans hands 17 The second duetie to our neighbour is mercie Hee hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to doe iudgement and to loue mercie Bee mercifull saith our Sauiour as your father is also mercifull This mercie as Christ there teacheth wil shewe forth it selfe in three properties First it will bridle that vncharitable rashnesse of iudging and condemning others Nolite iudicare Iudge not Mercie will not bee hastie to iudge There be iudgements ciuill and iudgements Ecclesiasticall iudgements publike and priuate iudgements Christ neither forbiddeth the magistrate neither the publike minister to iudge according to the Lawe neither the parent or master to iudge and correct their offending children or seruaunts It is vncharitable priuate iudgement which God forbiddeth when men vnaduisedly take vpon them to giue sentence of others as if God had resigned his owne right into their handes they condemne whom they list and say what they list euen as they fancie so they iudge This man is a Saint and that man a sinner he the seruant of God and hee the childe of death Who art thou that so iudgest anothers seruaunt Is it not to his own master only to whom he stands or fals Who art thou that takest such seueritie vpon thee that dealest so vnmercifully with thy brother He is a sinner so thou either art or hast beene or maist be iudge therfore thy selfe trie and examine thine owne woorkes Iudge I say thy selfe and iudge not him least thou be condemned of the Lord for both not iudging and iudging If a brother be ouertaken with a fault ye that are spirituall shew mercie restore him with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe least thou also be tempted Verily this mercilesse iudging of others is the cause why wee fall into many perils and secret temptations Loue mercie therefore and iudge not Hee that iudgeth with the Pharisee with the Pharisee shall be iudged 18 Another fruite of mercie is forgiuenesse They who are hastie to iudge are for the most part in forgiuing slowe But forgiue and yee shall bee forgiuen Howbeit such as sit in iudgement ought to correct and not to remit because they deale not with iniuries doone to themselues but to the lawes and common wealth or church But in priuate iniuries wee must all remember the words and followe the example of our Sauiour Be mercifull and forgiue Christ forgaue them that put him to death Stephen them that stoned him Ioseph them that solde him the king his vnthriftie seruaunt 1000. talents If wee forgiue not others it is in vaine to praie that which wee dailie praie Forgiue vs. For so doth Ecclesiasticus wel teache vs. He that seeketh vengeance shall finde vengeance of the Lord and he will surely keepe his sinnes Forgiue they neighbour the hurt that he hath doone to thee so shall thy sinnes be forgiuen thee also when thou praiest Should a man beare hatred against man and desire forgiuenesse of the Lord Hee will shewe no mercie to a man that is like himselfe and will he aske forgiuenesse of his owne sinnes If hee that is but flesh nourish hatred and aske pardon of God who will intreate for his sinnes And our Sauiours commaundement is If thou bring thy gift to the altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee leaue there thine offering before the altar and goe thy waie first bee reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift Whereunto S. Chrysostome alluding saith That God had rather want thy sacrifice due to him than reconciliation should not be made betweene thee and thy brother 19 The next and third fruite of mercie mentioned by our sauiour is Giue and it shall be giuen vnto you He that loueth mercie giueth almes but the couetous man is cruell God is so carefull to haue the
poore releeued that he hath bound himselfe by promise to make almes most gainefull to the giuer so that it is not in this as in other common expenses but whatsoeuer we laie out that we laie vp He that giueth to the poore lendeth to the Lorde a sure discharger of his debts to the vttermost For hee leaueth not a cup of colde water giuen in his name vnrewarded The occasions which we haue to shewe foorth this fruite of mercie are very many and great we haue the poore with vs and we haue them with vs in great numbers Are we not woorse than Iewes if we suffer our Christ at whose hands we haue receiued all our riches in his naked and hungrie members to beg his bread at our dores pitifully to die euen in the midst of our streetes for distresse for colde and hunger If our gospell bring foorth in steade of mercie this crueltie in stead of kindenesse this hardnesse of heart doubtlesse God will take his pretious gospell from vs and giue it to a people that will bring foorth better and sweeter fruite Nowe if the loue of God and mercie towards our brother can not pierce our flintie heartes yet let shame of the worlde compell vs and our owne commoditie induce vs well to consider of this lamentable case If that which is giuen were giuen in good order it would ease this common griefe By good order and wise prouision the impotent might be so releeued that they should not need to beg and such as are able might be forced in the sweate of their browes to eate their owne bread And if the matter were taken in hande by them by whom it should I doe not doubt but GOD would touche the hearts of many a man with tender mercie that they would both cheerefully and liberally contribute to this worke of mercie which God doth more esteeme than any other sacrifice nay he refuseth sacrifice and craueth this The Lorde loueth a cheerefull and a bountifull giuer and will plentifully reward him Let euerie good man set forward this worke it is the worke of the Lord the fruite of mercie good and gainfull not onely to others but also to our selues For behold howe the works of mercie doe returne backe againe vnto them from whom they proceed Iudge not and you your selues shall not bee iudged Forgiue and yee shall bee forgiuen your selues giue and it shall bee giuen vnto you 20 All which notwithstanding the bowels of compassion are in some men so maruellously dried and closed vp that they turne away their faces from all men that desire any thing at their hands though they aske it not of gift but of loane vnlesse they aske to buie the loane with vsurie The Iewes euen till this day will not lend vpon vsurie among themselues but lende freely to their brethren and without gaine Iudas himselfe that solde his master for monie was not more cruel harted I suppose than these men are who for monie deuoure their brethren Their hearts are yron hearts They haue no sparke of pitie or compassion left in them Let them not thinke but that one day their gaine shall be their exceeding losse If Chrysostome thought that one euill gotten groate laide vp amongest a chestful of monie would be as a canker to fret out and eate vp the rest what shall become then of so much gotten by so vnmerciful vngodlie meanes Where is loue where is mercie when lending of monie is become merchandise Inough hath beene saide in this place of this matter which if it be not amended be yee assured that the Lorde God in his iust wrath will plague you both in your selues and in your posteritie for it 21 Nowe that we haue seene what duetie we owe to men let vs see what God requireth to be performed vnto himselfe Hee hath shewed thee O man what is good Our dutie towards him is to humble our selues and to walke carefully with our God He that will walke with God must be of an humble heart It is the milde-hearted and not the proude-minded the Publican and not the Pharisee that walketh with him 22 To walke with him is to be syncerely and heartily carefull to set forward his cause to promote his gospell to defende his trueth to amplifie his kingdome to the vttermost of our powers Princes and they that iudge the earth whome God hath blessed with so high an honour especially should in feare and reuerence serue their God loue his woord and gospell earnestly cheerefully aduaunce maintaine and defend true religion They are able to doe most good and therefore most is required of them Bishops and ministers the dispensers of Gods blessed mysteries should carefully trauell in their Lords cause and glorie in season and out of season to preache the gospell euen so much as in vs lieth or else the Vae of God which hangeth ouer our heads shall be powred downe vpon vs. But the saying of S. Paul is verified in these our daies vpon al sorts of people All men seeke their owne The preferring of true religion the seeking of Gods glorie is the least part of mens care or thought It was otherwise with Moses who both loued Gods seruice with perfect loue hated superstition with perfect hatred Theodosius for want of this warmenesse zeale in Gods quarell suffered by his too much lenitie the Arrians who denied Christ to be God quietly to spreade abroad their heresies in his dominions without checke or controlling The good Bishop Amphilochius vpon this occasion repaired to the Emperor who had at that time with him his sonne and heire Arcadius The Bishop did his obeysance and dutie to the Emperor but saluted not his sonne wherewith the Emperor finding fault saide Why salute ye not our sonne who shall sit on our seate No Emperor for somuch as thou doest not care for the sonne of God but sufferest him to loose his honour and place neither shal thy sonne be regarded or sit on thy seate Here at his owne cause called into question hee waxed warme and foorthwith expelled the Arrians out of his dominions Many of them who are hoat in their owne matters are colde in Gods cause Yet our Prophet biddeth vs carefully to walke with our God and to bee earnest in seeking of his kingdome and glorie 23 Be carefull ouer your conuersation giue no cause of slander to them which are without or of offence to the litle ones Let not the gospell be discredited by your behauiours Be careful that the light of your life so shine before the worlde that therein your heauenly father may be glorified Yee ought to shine as lights Take heede that your light be not turned into darkenesse Be bright starres and not mistie cloudes If an Eclipse fall amongst you the rest of England will be darkened with it Ye are seene and marked of men and Angels The world hath many eies eares and tongues London Westminster the Innes of Court and Chancerie from
5 Cornelius the Ethnike-captaine being placed in Cesarea ouer the Iewes putteth vs in minde howe the kingdome of Israel was taken from the Israelites and giuen to others Israel was the elect and welbeloued people of God the happie seede of Abraham to whom pertained the adoption and the glorie and the couenant and the Lawe that was giuen and the seruices of God and the promises A most free people as themselues boasted We are Abrahams seede and were neuer bound to any man A plentifull land flowing with milke and honie a most flourishing kingdome a mightie and victorious people for the Lord of hosts did fight for them Yet this elect beloued free and mightie people was ouerthrowen wasted translated brought into most miserable bondage and slauerie first by the Caldeis then by the Meedes afterward by the Grecians and last of al by the Romans And this was the Lords dooing I haue made the earth saith he the men and beasts that are vpon the ground by my great power and by my out-stretched arme and haue giuen it vnto whom it pleased me The name of God bee praised for euer and euer for wisedome and strength are his and he changeth the times and seasons hee taketh away kings and setteth vp kings The most high beareth rule ouer the kingdome of men and giueth it to them whomsoeuer he will 6 Iesus the sonne of Syrach shewing the causes why GOD translateth kingdomes A kingdome is translated saith he from one people vnto another because of vnrighteous dealings and wrongs and riches gotten by deceit and couetousnesse and pride The things that destroied Sodome were pride fulnesse of breade aboundance of idlenesse and that she strengthened not the hand of the poore needie The sinnes that consumed Gods people in the wildernesse and of sixe hundred thousand left but two aliue was loathing of the heauenly Manna and lusting after the flesh-pots of Egypt worshipping of idols fleshly fornication tempting of God and muttering against magistrates The cause why Iurie was laide wast and Israel caried away captiue was the contempt of Gods woord preached by Ieremie three and twentie yeres and that there was no trueth no mercie no knowledge of GOD amongst them Swearing lying murther theft and adulterie had gotten the vpper hand and one bloud guiltinesse followed an other Therefore did the Land mourne and euery one that dwelt therein was rooted out God is alwaies a iust God one that hateth all iniquitie hauing no respect to countrie or calling If our faults be like we may looke for like punishment Let vs recount with our selues and compare our selues with others Are we not as guiltie of vnrighteous dealing of oppression of extortion are we not as couetous are we not as proude as euer any people was Is there not as much pride belly-cheere idlenesse vnmercifulnesse in the citie of London as was in the citie of Sodome Doe wee not as much loath the true bread of heauen Cleaue we not as fast vnto idolatrie and superstition Commit we not adulterie and filthie fornication Tempt we not God Doe wee not mutter against the magistrates as the Israelites did in the wildernesse Is there more trueth mercie and knowledge of God lesse swearing lying murther theft adulterie and bloudshed in England than was in the Lande of Iurie If kingdomes then be translated for wrongfull dealing for couetousnesse and pride howe can vnrighteous couetous proude England stand long If God spared not the flourishing citie of Sodome can he in his iustice spare the sinnefull citie of London If God ouerthrewe the mightie people of Israel in the wildernesse for their sinnes can he winke at our fowle and manifold offences If the Land of Iurie was laid wast and the elect Israel caried away captiue for their ingratitude will not God punish and plague our shamefull contempt our wilfull disobedience For these examples are written for vs that we should not offend as they did least the like fall vpon vs as fell vpon them knowing that if God spared not the braunches of the true oliue hee wil not spare the twigges of the wilde oliue If hee spared not the transgressing Angels the offending Iewes neither will hee spare vs most vile and sinnefull Gentiles Our sinne no doubt hath iustly prouoked our God to anger Let our sighing and groning our earnest praier and true repentance remooue his wrath least our Niniuie sinke and perish in her sinne Yet remaine there a fewe daies of repentance for the safetie of our citie 7 Nowe to the former circumstances of Cornelius S. Luke addeth also the description of his maners testifying therein that he was deuoute that he feared God with all his familie that hee gaue much almes that he praied God continually Here is he set forth as a perfect paterne of true Christianitie an obseruer keeper of the Lawe of the almightie And because the Lawe is conteined in two tables his pietie towardes God is commended first secondly his loue and duetie towards men So that it is shewed howe he liued towards God how he ordered his familie and howe he behaued himselfe towards his neighbours 8 Towards God he was deuoute he feared God hee praied continually The foundation of deuotion is faith the fruits are the feare of God and praier Faith commeth by hearing of the word he heard by reason that he remained amongst the Iewes that there was one true God who was onely to be honoured He had heard of the promised seede in whom all people should bee blessed of the Messias which should bee the Sauiour of the people He beleeued in this promised Messias and thereupon hee is called deuoute for without this faith there is no deuotion no pietie no religion That feare that praier that commeth not of faith is but vaine it is reiected as sinful in Gods sight Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne The tree must be good before it bring foorth good fruite As the braunche cannot beare fruite of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can ye except ye abide in me saith Christ. Cornelius brought foorth good fruite and therefore by faith he abode in Christ that is he beleeued The fruites of his faith were the feare of God and praier vnto God for neither can we feare God as we ought nor call vpon him rightly except wee beleeue in him Howe shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued And they beleeue not in God that doe not feare him that doe not call vpon him For true faith will exercise the faithfull herein This feare of God hath euer respect to religion Come ye children and hearken vnto me I will teache you the feare of the Lord saith the Prophet That is I will instruct you in true religion I will teache you the true worshipping of God This is the first lesson that a Christian should learne And as all Christians so especially such
instrument to receiue it withall is faith He that beleeueth is made partaker of it and not of it onely but of eternall life also For he that beleeueth in me hath life eternall saith our Sauiour Christ. But this faith this iustifying faith doth worke through loue and sheweth it selfe by workes The good tree will be fruitfull The beleeuing iustified childe of God will feare God and worke righteousnesse 46 This doctrine of iustification by faith in the death and resurrection of Christ Iesu is witnessed by all the Prophets It is no newe doctrine but olde not onely proceeding from the Apostles but also from the Prophets For Moses and all the Prophets beare witnesse of him And as they so the Apostles after them Whose steppes we must followe and acknowledge that no doctrine is to be established but that which is testified by the Apostles and Prophets The true Church of Christ doth builde her faith on their foundation God will be worshipped and serued according to his prescript woord and not according to the braine of man The Prophets and Apostles with all such as be ministers of the woord are heere and elsewhere called witnesses Yea Christ himselfe termeth himselfe a witnesse of the truth For this cause am I borne and for this cause came into the worlde that I should beare witnesse to the truth And Christ saith to his Apostles Ye shall be witnesses vnto me both in Ierusalem and in Samaria euen to the vttermost endes of the earth 47 The truth is to bee testified by publike preaching Paul commendeth the Thessalonians for beleeuing his testimonie His testimonie was the Gospel which he did preache and testifie vnto them According to the voice that did speake vnto him when he was cast off his horse I haue appeared to thee for this purpose to appoint thee a minister and witnesse both of things which thou hast seene and of the things in which I will appeare vnto thee The truth is also testified by writing By the writings of the Prophets Apostles and Euangelists the truth of God Iesus Christ was most plainely testified As Iohn to name one of them among many This is that Disciple which testifieth of these things The truth is also witnessed when as it is testified in bloud for a martyr is a witnes Christ told Peter that when he was young hee girded himselfe and walked whither he lusted but when he waxed old other should gird him and carie him whither hee would not Nowe this saith Iohn he spake signifying by what death he should glorifie God Many Martyrs haue thus testified the truth with suffering for it But they ouercame by the bloud of the Lambe and by the woord of their testimonie not louing their life no not to the death That minister which will neither testifie it by publike preaching nor by writing will hardly testifie it by suffering but will rather say with Peter I knowe not the man But I must here make an end for the time hath ouertaken me and without repetition as you knowe the maner is To God the father God the son God the holie Ghost three persons one almightie almerciful God be rendred all thanks all glorie giuen for euer and for euer Amen The fifteenth Sermon A Sermon preached at Strausborough in the time of Q. Maries reigne 2. COR. 6. 2 Wee therefore as helpers beseeche you that ye receiue not the grace of God in vaine 3 For he saith I haue heard thee in a time accepted in the day of saluation haue I succoured thee behold now the accepted time beholde now the day of saluation THE Prophet to abate the hawtie conceit which naturally wee haue of our selues in such sort as euery man were his owne God and had no other whom to praise for the graces and gifts wherewith he is beautified and set forth as a mirror for al other creatures to beholde and woonder at indeuoureth to turn away our eyes frō too much gazing vpon our owne excellencie by pointing as it were his finger at him who is author of euerie good perfect gift saying Hee made vs and not we our selues For what end and purpose Zacharie teacheth namely that we might serue him in holinesse and righteonsnesse before him all the daies of our life For we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath ordeined that we should walke in them Ye are not saith S. Paul to the Corinthians your owne Why so For you are bought with a price Glorifie therefore God in your bodie and in your spirite for they are Gods Forsomuch then as we are all of the houshold of God all one in Christ all members of one and the same spirituall bodie woorshipping one Lord receiuing one baptisme professing one faith expecting one glorie to be reuealed vpon vs in that great day it is our duetie in token of our neere coniunction in the spirite with one heart one minde and as it were with one mouth to present our selues before his mercie seate to praise him to heare his word to receiue the seales of his merciful couenaunt in the Gospel and to offer him our needeful supplications together that in all things it may appeare that we are one as hee and the father are one euen one God to be blessed for euer 2 With what zeale desire Gods people of old were woont to do this we may gesse by that which we reade of y ● Prophet Dauid who being persecuted of his wicked vnnatural son driuen from y e presence of that glorious tabernacle which with great triumph ioye himselfe had placed in the Citie of Dauid where he was woont with the rest of the people to call vpon the name of the Lord to heare the Lawe and to offer sacrifice vpon those beautiful altars conceiued such a deepe impression of griefe by the sorowfull meditation of those sweete and heauenly comforts whereof his soule had tasted in former times that forgetting quite the losse of all other royalties whatsoeuer he maketh mone for nothing but onely this that he might not nowe be partaker of those inestimable benefites and the comforts of minde and conscience which he was woont to receiue at the hand of God at such time as with the rest of the Israelites he resorted to the tabernacle where God promised to be present and fauourably to heare the petitions there made vnto him Of this his great miferie he complaineth him lamentably in diuerse of his Psalmes but especially in the 84 where he breaketh out into these woords of great zeale O Lord of hosts howe amiable are thy Tabernacles My soule longeth yea and fainteth for the courts of the Lorde mine heart and my flesh reioice in the liuing God He goeth on and magnifieth the blessed estates of those sillie birds which might haue their nests and lay their young euen
into them also the selfesame blessing of increase and fruitfulnesse And as vnto these so likewise vnto man the greatest in honour though in order the last of all his creatures he gaue the same power to spread out himselfe by propagation and to replenish the face of the earth 2 For the seemelier and better ordering whereof to the ende that as God himselfe is most pure and therefore hateth all vncleannesse so the actions of men who in nature resemble him might be framed according to the paterne of his image hee prescribed a way how man as beseemeth the excellencie of his creation nature might not after a brutish beastly maner but in al honestie cleanlines bring forth the honorable fruit of his bodie that so Gods creation and work might be continued his kingdom inlarged his name by reason of the multitude much more praised And this meane or way appointed by God was matrimonie a state whereof the chosen vessel of God writeth this as the iudgement of the holie Ghost Mariage is honourable Wherein for your better instruction and learning my purpose is to shew you the reasons of the honour which it should haue and also of the great disgrace which it hath amongst men 3 Mariage is honourable first in respect of the author by whom it was ordeined Secondly in regard of the causes thereof Thirdly for the dueties which are required of the parties maried Touching the first it appeareth in the beginning of the booke of Genesis howe after that God had perfectly accomplished his creation and had giuen the Lordeship ouer all liuing creatures vnto Adam he saide It is not good that man be alone let vs make him an helper that may be before him let vs make woman Whereupon our Sauiour in the Gospel inferreth That therefore which God hath ioyned together let no man separate approouing mariage to bee the institution of God and a naturall order proceeding I meane from the God of nature to bee obserued and vsed for euer Neither did hee onely confirme this lawe and ordinaunce of God in plaine woords and in his teaching but he also did honest and honour the same with his presence For being called to a mariage he his mother and kinsfolke gladly went there to feast with others where it pleased him miraculously to increase their cheere and withal their honour For it is not nothing which this doth adde to the holy and reuerend estimation thereof that the first miracle which Christ wrought was wrought at a mariage and is so by the holie Ghost recorded Nowe besides this that almightie God himselfe ordeined mariage and that in Paradise a most heauenly habitation and that before the innocencie was stained with sinne besides this that Christ did allow and many waies approoue the same yea and moreouer vouchsafed to resemble his spirituall coniunction with his Church vnto this estate we finde that the Patriarkes the Priests and Prophets the holiest men of God Abraham Moses Aaron and the rest of that blessed companie haue chosen to liue rather in mariage than otherwise acknowledging thereby the state of mariage to be vndoubtedly no lesse allowable if not more honourable than single life 4 Concerning the second point that is to say the honour which riseth from the causes for which GOD did institute the state of wedlocke the scripture noteth especially three The first is mutuall societie helpe and comfort And this were a cause sufficient to esteeme of mariage highly if there were no other For God hath saide It is not good that man be alone Let vs make him an helper and helper and not an hinderer 5 The second cause why matrimonie was ordeined and must be honoured is increase and propagation For although that this may be as we see it it is in lewde and shamelesse persons too often without this estate of mariage yet this is so much against the dignitie of humane nature that such broodes haue beene alwaies basely accounted of by men which haue had but the bare light of naturall vnderstanding Wherefore the blessed Apostle hath saide I will that the younger sort marie and bring foorth children giuing vs thereby to vnderstand that there can be no seemely propagation of mankinde saue onely in mariage Children begotten in the state of matrimonie are the blessing of God and the fruite of the vndefiled wombe is a reward as Salomon wisely acknowledged in the Psalme For a man to be honoured with the name of a father to be renued and continued in his posteritie if it be not a speciall blessing of God a very exceeding great reward why are men women so desirous to see the fruit of their bodies Why was Anna so exceeding in crauing children at the hands of God Why was barrennesse so grieuous vnto Sara Why did it seeme reprocheful vnto Elizabeth Is it a small benefit that God hath raised out of the bodie of Abraham so many Patriarchs Priests Prophets Iudges and Kings such a multitude not onely of men of reputation on earth but also of blessed saints and citizens in heauen If it were an honour vnto Abraham to be a father of many nations surely mariage which made him a lawfull and an honourable father ought very honourably to be esteemed 6 Another cause of honour giuen vnto mariage is for that it is a remedie against vncleannesse Let euerie man haue his wife and euerie woman her husband for the auoiding of fornication Vpon which words of S. Paul Ambrose writeth verie aptly Qui abstinēt a licitis in illicita prolabuntur They which forbeare things lawfull to vse fall many times to vse things which they should forbeare And he bringeth in the Manichees for example as we may bring in the Papistes and namely that ponde of Rome adioyning to a Nunrie wherein were founde the heads of seuen thousand bastards It is true that all haue not neede of this remedie because all are not subiect to the daunger and perill of this disease But if any man be subiect to this disease let him beware howe he despise this remedie There bee no doubt that haue the gift of chastitie by birth and there be that haue made themselues chast by indeuour but of all this men are not capable As it is the gift of God so it seemeth to be a rare and not a common gift Such as haue it and so liue sole they are more fit to labour in Gods Church it must needes be graunted for they are combred with fewer cares But be these cares neuer so many and great better it is to marie than to burne and to be burthened with ordinarie and nest cares than with vnordinarie and dishonest carelesnesse to be destroied There are many that deceiue themselues thinking a single and a chast life to be all one To bee pure in bodie and in spirite this is chastitie Hee that seeth a woman and in his heart hath
to admonish the wicked of his wicked waie his bloud will I require at thine hand and for speaking against sinne Elias was persecuted Zacharias stoned Esaias cut in pieces Ieremias cast into a dungeon Iohn Baptist Stephen Paul Iames Peter Iustine Athanasius Cyprian Polycarp of our owne Bishops and teachers not a fewe in other nations huge multitudes both heeretofore and of late in most cruel and sauage maner tormented with all extremitie that might be deuised to increase the bitternesse of their death 6 Many auncient Prophets and woorthie Fathers of the primitiue Church casting these accounts in their minds haue shunned and laboured by what meanes they could to auoide this office Doubtlesse mans flesh is fraile we are all weake and ful of infirmitie If this office require a strong man to beare the burthen of so great a trauell certainly it is altogether vnfitly cast vpon me I would haue wished rather rest for this my wearysh bodie full of diseases and as the Prophet speaketh almost worne away like a clowte If this office in respect of the hardnesse thereof of the great daungers incident into it and in consideration of mans vnablenesse to performe it haue made so many so loath to enter vpon a charge of such difficultie and daunger before God and the world what may I then thinke of my selfe From the bottom of my heart I confesse with S. Paul Minimus sum I am the least of the Apostles not woorthie to bee called an Apostle Wherefore as Moses was contented to take vpon him the charge and keeping of a fewe sheepe in Madian but beeing called to guide the great and mightie people of Israel aunswered Mitte quem missurus es Send whom thou wilt send So although considering the great want of labourers in the Church of Christ I were contented to vndertake the care and charge of a smal flock yet beeing called to this great this wise and riche people remembring my vnfitnesse thereunto I sawe no aunswere more conuenient for me than that of Moses before mentioned But God hath his secrete and vnsearchable working and I am as clay in the potters hand Si passeres non cadunt in terram absque prouidentia diuina fortuito fient Episcopi If sparrowes fall not on the grounde without the prouidence of the almightie are Bishops made at all aduenture saith S. Cyprian Here I see God hath placed mee by the hand of his chiefe minister with the aduise of her wise honourable counsellers and the choise of them to whom it apperteineth not without your great contentation and liking as I am giuen to vnderstand I haue therefore submitted my selfe and taken vpon me this heauie yoke as the searcher of all secrets will beare me record vnwillingly willingly In respect of my many imperfections my vnfitnesse to execute this great and weightie office in such sort as it ought to bee performed I receiue it vnwillingly but in regard of the calling which I am perswaded proceedeth from the determination of almightie God I willingly submit my selfe hereunto It is you it is you dearely beloued that haue drawne me hither Her Maiestie could spie nothing in me woorthie of this roome but your too much and on my part altogether vndeserued liking The Lord bee mercifull vnto mee and graunt mee his grace that in some measure I may aunswere your expectation 7 And now to the matter which I haue chosen to speake of at this present Wherein it shall not bee a thing vnnecessarie for your better vnderstanding somewhat to consider of the circumstances occasions wherepon the words which I haue red doe depend Christ hauing cured a poore sicke man which had beene eight and thirtie yeres diseased whom he found lying by the pond of Bethsaida desirous of remedie but lacking one to helpe him into the water where it was to be had the blinde Iewes because this was doone vpon the Sabaoth day found themselues much grieued and thereupon persecuted Iesus who after an Apologie made in defence of that holie action perceiuing their malice to be increased thereby rather than abated left them and went beyond the sea of Galilee Howbeit the multitude left not him but because they had seene the signes and woonders which hee wrought miraculously recouering the sicke and restoring them to perfect health therfore they flocked after him in great troups When Iesus therefore had lifted vp his eyes and sawe that a very great multitude came vnto him hee saith to Philip Whence shall we buie bread that these may eate 8 The first reason therefore why Christ forsooke Ierusalem and went beyond the sea of Galilee was to the ende hee might conuey himselfe from the tyrannie and persecution of the wicked So we reade in the Gospel according to S. Matthew that hearing howe his forerunner was beheaded he went aside tooke boate and retired into a solitarie place apart Whereby wee are giuen to vnderstand that if our liues be particularly sought wee may lawfully flee from the cruell and bloudie hands of our persecutors Christ foretelling his Disciples of the grieuous heauie entertainement which they should finde at the handes of the worlde giueth them this lesson Beware of men and withall this license When they shall persecute you in this Citie flie into an other Herein I neede not much to perswade fraile and fearefull flesh is euer readie to flie perill But what scripture those wen can alleage for themselues that flie not for the Gospel but from the Gospell that flie before they be persecuted or their bloud sought as yet I cannot learne Belike they feare least they should bee repayed with their owne measure No our Gospel is a doctrine of mercie and not of malice they which syncerely professe it are full of clemencie and altogether ruled by pietie our Church consisteth of milde sheepe and not of cruel woolues the popish Church is the wooluish and bloudie Church we seeke reformation and not destruction knowing that Christian hearts are to be perswaded by the Scriptures and not by fire and fagot to be inforced Yet doe I not meane by this speeche but that the obstinate the resisters and disturbers of religion the false prophets and deceiuers of the people may be lawfully cut off the sword may lawfully be drawne against such as are manifest traitors vnto the trueth and to the state But this is not the matter whereof they stande in feare It is not outward daunger but inwarde terror for which they flie Fugit impius nemine persequente the wicked man flyeth when no man pursueth him he trembleth where nothing is to be feared the wagging of a leafe doeth make him shake because his heart is euill 9 Another cause why Christ went aside into the wildernesse may seeme to haue beene a desire of taking some rest after the great and manifold trauels that hee and his Disciples had susteined as appeareth by the woords which he spake to his disciples
daungerous to admit vnwritten verities The Pope will not haue his doctrine tyed vnto this ground and why Hil. ad Constant lib. quem ipse tradidi● Ambros in Luc lib. 3. cap. 3. August contra liter Petilia lib. 2 cap. 7. The grounds of Poperi● Miracles 2. Th●ss 2. Actes 8. Foule spirites Esay 8. 1. Sam. 28. Precepts of men 1. Cor. 3. Legends Viu●s Ann●t in Hieron de Ecclesiast scriptorib Traditions Doctrines builded vpon the foresaide grounds against scripture Religion builded vpon such groundes though it were not iniurious is notwithstanding friuolous vncertaine The second difference betweene true Christianitie and Poperie is in the ende Ephe. 3. Dan 9. Man is humbled by true doctrine touching original sinne Ephe. 2. Rom. 7. Thraldome of will Grace Workes Gal. 5. The truth seeketh to throw downe men and to aduance Christ. The Church of Rome seeketh her own glorie and gaine Iohn 5. She paireth diminisheth mans original corruption Psal. 51. Gen. 6. Shee boasteth of freewill Rom. 9. Cantic 1. Iustification by workes Psal. 143. Psal. 130. Of merites and workes of supererogation She desireth excessiuely outwarde pompe Eccles 10. She maintaineth it by vile merchandise She robbeth God of the honour which he shold haue by Faith Inuocation and Obedience Heb. 10. Prou. 28. Psal. 33. Psal. 46. Exod. 20. The third difference betweene true Christianitie and Poperie is in y e meanes and maner of proceeding 1. Tim. 4. After what sort men must come to the waters of life Ierem. 23. What commodities such as come shall receiue Iob. 30 Eccles. 9. Iob. 21. 2. Sam. 7. Luke 1. Acts 13. Ier. 33. The vse of Parliamentes Things to bee considered in the person of Samuel He was a Minister Iohn 6. Phil. 2. He was a godlie magistrate yet misliked by them ouer whom he was placed Exod. 15. 2. Sam. 17. Psal. 70. Crysippus Exod. 2. Demosthenes Themistocles Valer. Max. lib. 7. cap. 2. 1. Sam. 7. Rom. 13. He was both a Prophet and a Prince Luke 16. Exod. 4 2. Reg. 12. Things contained in the wordes of Samuel 1. The duetie of the minister 2. The duetie of the Prince 3. The dutie of the people 4. The punishmēt if this dutie be not performed Samuell zealous in Gods cause but milde in his owne 1. Sam. 15. Exod. 32. Iohn 2. By his owne example hee giueth ministers to vnderstand that it is their duetie to Pray to Teache His praier was earnest as appeareth by his words Be this sinne farre from me that I should cease to pray Luke 22. Psal. 6. 2. Par●l 33. Exod 3● 1. Sam. 1. Plato Matth. 15. He prayed for the prince the people 1. Tim. 2. 2. Sam. 10. 2. Sam 20. 1. Reg. ●1 1. Reg. 12. Ier. 38. The next dutie of the minister is to teache not what they list but the good right way Col. 1. Eph. 4. 1. Tim. 4. 1. Iohn 1. Matth. 15. Esay 30. Ier. 6. Deut 12. Iohn 14. 1. Cor. 11. Gal. 1. 1. Pet. 4. Such as doe not this worke should not be suffered to beare this office Zach. 11. Acts 1. 1. Reg 2. Punishment due vnto such as teach waies contrarie to that which is good right Deut. 13. 1. Reg. 18. 2. Reg. 10. Trip hist. lib. 9. cap. 25. The duetie of the Prince towards God and the common wealth How princes doe serue God as Princes 2. Reg. 22. Aug. cp 50. 2. Paral. 3● 2. Paral. 34. Dan. 6. Dan. 3. The first point of kingly seruice vnto God is to purge his Church From false doctrine and Idolatrie 1. Sam. 2. Acts 17. 1. Mac. 2. From occasions of offence 1. Cor. 14. 1. Cor. 14. From Simonie Iohn 10. Heb. 5. Acts 8. Ambrosius 1. Tim. 5. The next point of princely service to God is to prouide that his people may be taught the way of saluation Matt. 28. 1. Tim. 2. Luke 10. Luke 16. Prouision to be made for teachers to that purpose 1. Tim. 5. Apoc. 2. Cic. de Off. lib. 1. Iohn 3. Tit. 1. The people to be constrained to heare what soeuer they pretend to the contrarie Luke 14. Aug. epist. 204. Acts 9. The duetie of the prince towardes the common wealth With the prince other officers must be ioyned of whose choise howe great care should be had Exod. 18. The power of princes if they list to vse it vnto good purposes Making of Lawes to remedi● abuses in the common wealth Libertie of professing diuers religions is daungerous to the state Smaller abuses in attire dyet c. Corruptions in officers vnder the prince Deceit in the meaner trades of life Vsurie Adulterie Corner contracts without consent of parents The poore Deut. 15. Esay 10. Execution of Lawes Solon Valer. lib. 7. c. 2. Ier. 48. The duetie of the people towards God Psal 34. Towardes higher powers Rom. 13. Ios. 1. Psal. 2. Towards the common wealth Ier. 29. Greg. Nazian Subsidies Matth. 22. Rom. 13. Val. lib. 5. cap. 6. Exod. 36. The punishment if by the minister the prince and y e people y e foresaide duties be not performed Solemne assemblies ordained in the Church to the praise of God for speciall benefites Nehem. 8. Hester 9. 1. Mac. 13. Deut. 16. Psal. 118. As great cause of the like assemblies presently in England as euer any where Three things contained in this parcell of scripture aboue written Our vineyard hath florished The Church of God like a vineyarde which must first be cleansed then planted and thirdly fensed to the ende it may flourish The Church of England blest with an ouerseer wise and learned religious iust peaceful performing the aforesaid dueties therein Eccles. 10. Psal. 1. 1. Reg. 3. Psal. 44. Acts 20. The vineyard of England purged of Idolatrie and superstition Christ planted in y e vineyard of England The vineyard fensed with Lawes of discipline 1. Cor. 1. Esay 5. The fruits of this vineyard many one speciall which is peace both spirituall and ciuill The fruite of ciuil peace plentie The end why God sendeth these temporal blessings Exod. 16. Gen. 13. The plagues which follow temporal blessings when they are abused The vineyard deuoured by litle foxes Why the Church enemies are termed foxes why litle Iohn 18. Iud. 7. The Church enemies resemble foxes in foure properties In rauening In crueltie In wilinesse In casting an euil sauour Matth. 8. The meanes which they vse to destroy the Church force fraud force open secret open by fier and sword Apoc. 12. Secret force by trecheries sorceries poisonings Their fraud in perswading by arguments drawne from antiquitie Ier. 9. From the authoritie of their Church and Pope Col. 1. Frō the excellencie of their sacrifice From fained Prophecies Their fraude in perswading by promises of reconciliation 2. Cor. 5. Their stratageme of raising vp slanderous reports The foxes must be takē To whom by whom Howe Why foxes must be takē Deut. 13. Gal. 5. Acts 13. Exod. 32. Phil. 3. Tit. 3. They must be taken if it may be to