Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n authority_n king_n prince_n 2,168 5 5.4153 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

waters are stored with 〈◊〉 and the aire and firmament was replenished with Fowl For yet hitherto they were like to wide and great store-houses which were empty and void In which dayes work are four branches 〈◊〉 the Edict or Precept Secondly the Execution or performance of 〈◊〉 Thirdly the allowance and commendation of it in the end of the twenty first verse Lastly another special Precept for the preserving of these things so made in 22. verse Touching the Commandement we may note That to say or to command in word may seem to be but a weak thing for words we hold to be but winde yet such words as God speaketh doe receive such and so great power and authority from the Speaker or Commander that of necessity that which is said must needs be done If a King doe command the power of his authority being joyned with the weaknesse of his word doth cause it to be very powerfull and effectual If a Princes authority can make his word so great how much more can Gods omnipotencie give strength to his word and cause that which he saith to be most certainly done This the reason that by the virtue and force only of his word what 〈…〉 faith is done and cometh to passe The second thing to be noted is to whom God spake namely to the Waters For as Moses was willed to speak to the stony rock Numbers the twentieth chapter and the eighth verse so doth God here speak to the waters neither is it a fond thing thus for God to speak to deas and senselesse creatures for though they have no cares and cannot heare yet they can understand when God doth call and speak to them and have power to doe his will when he commandeth If then the waters and rocks can heare and understand and doe what God doth say and bid them how much more should we which have eares and understanding hearts and active hands take heed we doe the like Now touching the Tenor of Gods precept we see it concerneth the producing and bringing forth of living things in abundance and great multitude And though God saith Let the waters bring forth fowles it argueth not as Symplicius the Atheist absurdly gathereth that here the water is said to be the matter of which the 〈◊〉 were made for in the second chapter of Genesis and the ninteenth verse this is explained that they were made of the earth though they were brought forth of the waters Touching the creatures moving in the waters the word here used doth in a generall term signifie such things as are quick and live and move comprehending therein all the particular creatures besides fish or fowle which either creep or crawle or move in either of these elements as Froggs Snakes Flyes c. Man by practice can attain to the Fishes motion that is to swim and move upon and in the waters but he cannot by any devise attaine to fly and move as Birds or mount in the ayre It is a wonder to heare that iron could swimme in the second of Kings the sixt chapter and the sixt verse but it is by the same power of God by which a feather can fly aloft By the firmament or Aire is meant the nether and grosser part of the aire which region is full of foggy fumes and vapours which come from the earth and so high and farre the sowls can abide and endure to flie But the farther and higher part and region of the aire which is more pure and cleer are called penetralia 〈◊〉 which is so free from grosse vapours and earthly mists that no earthly thing can breath or abide therein As therefore Water is a 〈◊〉 element for Fishes which breath not so this lower region of the aire is for all Fowls But let us come to that which is common both to fish and fowls and maketh both of them live and move the one by swimming the other by flying and that is the soul of life Concerning which generally It signifieth a breath or 〈◊〉 it of life For seeing we can understand and conceive best things sensible therefore spiritual things for our capacity are termed by things sensible The breath therefore being of 〈◊〉 things the most pure and 〈…〉 is called by 〈…〉 these things are in their 〈…〉 distinct breath life and soul 〈◊〉 life is the 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 of a soul so breath is the effect and 〈◊〉 of life Neither is it 〈◊〉 that here is added to the soul life because it 〈…〉 needfull instruction and distinction between the soul of man hereafter 〈◊〉 be handled which is a soul of more than 〈…〉 life of a double life and therefore 〈◊〉 whereas these 〈◊〉 have a soul of a single life and therefore are mortal Deinde dixit Deus Producat terra animantia in species ipsorum Pecudes Reptilia bestiasque terrenas in species suas et fuit ita Gen. 1. 24. Place this Sermon and the next betwixt pag. 92. and 93. THIS verse and all the rest to the end of the chapter doe contain the furnishing and 〈◊〉 of the earth with living Creatures and so 〈◊〉 to passe the finishing and 〈◊〉 of the whole work of Creation For this sixt 〈◊〉 work 〈◊〉 the bringing forth of Beasts and Cattel of all 〈◊〉 and the bringing in of Mankinde into the world to be Lord and 〈◊〉 of them and all the rest In which we observe the three usual parts Gods Decree commanding the Execution performing it and Gods 〈◊〉 of it being done For the Decree we may note as before That God is the Commander the Earth is that which is commanded and the effect of the commandement is that it should bring forth Cattle and 〈◊〉 things Having shewed before how God speaketh and 〈◊〉 his will to dumb deaf and senselesse Creatures as here he doth to the Earth we will come to the tenor and meaning of the Decree and Commandement to it For that phrase here used of bringing forth is taken from the manner of women great with 〈◊〉 which when their time is come to bring forth their young therefore the Fathers doe call this Parerperam terre as it were by resemblance the children of the earth or her travail not that 〈…〉 before made and hid in the bowels and 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 For as the waters were not in the rock before Numbers 〈…〉 chapter and the eighth verse but even at that 〈…〉 God commanded it gushed out waters only by the power 〈◊〉 God 〈◊〉 the virtue of Gods word and the power of the Commander caused the Earth to bring forth all these things 〈◊〉 of it 〈◊〉 it 〈…〉 power to doe it Now the several kindes of Creatures which here the Earth is willed to bring forth are reduced to three heads Beasts Cattle and creeping things Cattle are called Jumenta à 〈◊〉 because they are made to be our servants to help us in our labours and affairs And they are such as doe need us as much as we need them for Sheep Oxen
remember from whence they were fallen and repent the second of the Revelations the fift verse or according to that of the fifty first of Esay the first verse They should look to the rock whence they were hewed and to the hole of the pit whence they were digged This then planteth in them humilitie for no question but only for humilitie there needed no mention of these words whence they were taken God had said in the 19. verse Out of the earth wast thou taken dust thou art and to dust shalt thou return And Moses in the second chapter before the seventh verse saith Man was made of the dust of the ground and here again Out of the earth wert thou taken this iteration of the same thing in effect is not needlesse for the holy Ghost setreth down nothing that is needlesse for true is that saying that Nunquam nimis discutitur quod nunquam satis But this is 〈◊〉 so often to put us in minde of humility lest that should stick still in their stomachs which made them first to transgresse and to banish the thought from their mindes that they should be as Gods which thought were enough to cherish pride but rather that in remembrance of their sorrow and repentance they should cast dust upon their heads with Jobs friends the second of Job the twelfth verse The second use is the Justification of Gods righteousnesse and equity Man was not a native of Paradise he was a stranger he was not borne there for God took him elsewhere and put him into this Garden at the first the fifteenth of the former chapter He was brought from the Earth and put here And again here non est sumptus unde missus but missus unde sumptus he is not taken from whence he was sent but tent to the Earth from whence he was taken He was brought I say to Paradise not made there for this Garden of Eden was given him to take all pleasure and full use of it at the first upon a condition he should keep Gods Commandement in the seventeenth of the former but he brake the Law of Paradise and therefore according to his just demerrits he is sent to Earth from whence he was taken and this answereth with Gods truth and his Justice Yet this Justice is tempered with mercie for God sendeth him but to the Earth from whence he was taken The sinne of the Devil you see in the 14. Of Esay the 14 verse what it was He would ascend above the height of the Clouds saying Ero 〈…〉 I will be like the most high but God brought him down to the grave and sent him to Hell fire spoken of in the twenty first of the Revelations the eighth verse So man carrieth upon his forehead his sinne Ecce homo factus tanquam unus 〈◊〉 Adam would be as God knowing good and evill the very same crime then that was in Satan is in Adam the transgression of them both is one and the same This was mercy then not to punish them alike not dealing so with man as he had done with the Angell Lucifer Adam is here made as a scape Goat that had all the sinnes and 〈◊〉 of the people upon his head and so was sent into the 〈◊〉 the sixteenth of Leviticus the twenty first verse Adam had his sinne upon his forehead by the last verse and here is sent to the earth to till it So that this is mercy with judgement 4 The end of his sending The fourth point is the end Ut operaretur terram to serve to till to dresse the ground from whence he was taken this is the end Not to walk up and down unprofitable and to be idle nor to be at case and doe nothing but to be occupied in labour and service for none are to be exempted from this labor none I say as Job speaketh from him that grindeth in the mill to the Prince that sitteth upon his 〈◊〉 Paul in the first to the Thessalonians the fourth chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse admon sheth them to love them that labour among them in the Lord for their work sake yea even the sonne of Man came not to be served but to serve the twentieth of Matthew the twenty eighth The servant which is idle and unprofitable shall be cast into utter darknesse the twenty fift of Matthew the thirtieth verse there is his punishment Sr. 〈◊〉 saith That God sent not Adam out of Paradise to the earth to make the earth a Paradise or garden of pleasure but a place of labour 〈◊〉 operaretur that he should work and till the Earth for though the rich man in the sixteenth of Luke lived at case and fared 〈◊〉 every day and made this world a world of pleasure whereas Lazarus lived in pain and labour yet mark what was the end It was said by Abraham in the twenty 〈◊〉 of that chapter Remember that in thy life time thou receivedst thy pleasure and Lazarus pains now therefore he is comforted and thou art tormented so was he punished for making this world to himself a Paradise Abraham made not this world a garden of pleasure but removed his tent from place to place the thirteenth chapter and the eighteenth verse Idlenesse and fullnesse of bread is afterwards punished The office of the Priest is not to be idle but to serve the fourty fourth of Ezechiel the sixteenth Mare mortuum made by labor The best Writers are of opinion that where now is mare mortuum the dead Sea was heretofore in times past made by mans labour only for a place of pleasure as the Garden of God but God changeth it into the contrarie Tyrus sometimes lived as in Eden the garden of God the twenty eighth of Ezechiel the thirteenth but in the seventeenth verse God will cast Tyrus to the ground and bring it to ashes And if we will live in the earth in 〈◊〉 and in pleasure as in Eden and make it our Paradise be assured there will follow pains and a great torment The second use Secondly He must doe this service to the ground And so was Kain said in the second verse of the chapter following to be a tiller of the ground In the twenty second verse they wrought metals taken out of the ground as brasse and iron and in other places they work in quarries of stone as in mines of metal we labour the earth for bread and for drink all must operari terram Apply hither the thirty second of Jeremy the fourty third verse Kings themselves live in this world but to serve they are Gods servants in things holy and in things civil for they are the Ministers of God to reward the good and punish the wicked the thirteenth to the Romans the fourth verse And in the sixt verse for this cause pay you tribute to Princes for that they are Gods Ministers If the King say put this man in prison and feed him with the bread of affliction it is done the 1 of
sustained and held up by the same power Heb. 1. 3. So that it is q.d. I must give a caveat to you because you set your eyes too much on nature and art attributing things now to the influence of the heaven or the industry of things on earth that it is none of these means but only God that still 〈◊〉 rule and maintain all for under these two rain above and man below is comprehended all other ordinary means we are wont to ascribe all things to Sol homo Therefore Moses to prevent that evill that we tie not these things either to nature or art but that we may ever in all things look up to God which is before them above them and can doe all things without them and will rule all things after them therefore he doth teach us this point he telleth us that howsoever things doe concurre and meet together in humane matters here below yet we must defie these ordinary means and evermore glorifie God who is able either without rain or the help of man to make the earth fruitfull Now this which Moses speaketh of rain and man holdeth in all other things as in Fish Fowl and Cattell But because it were too tedious to reckon up all the particulars therefore he maketh choice of the earth and the fruits thereof which doth most need the help of man and benefit of rain for other things being put together will alone bring forth and multiply by kinds without mans help But the fruits of the earth are most laborious for before the earth can bring forth it requireth our help both to till and plant it and the influence also of the heavens doe most appear in these things insomuch as the fruits of the earth may seem to reason to be the effect of mans labor and the dew of heaven But Moses by telling us that it is not so in this teacheth us how we may have a right judgment in all the rest for it holdeth in all as in this touching earthly fruits he setteth down two kinds Virgultum agri herbas horti The first comprehendeth all that hath wood in them the other all which have sinowy substance as every green tender herb hath Touching which he reasoneth thus seeing these which need most the labor of man and seasonable rain were brought forth by Gods power before either rain or man ever was Then God is much more able to doe any otherthing without the help of man or any thing else The fruits of the earth doe need two things 1. First a power of being Secondly a power of growing 2. Remove rain and the labor of the husbandman and we cannot see how either they should live or grow yet saith Moses God without either plough or showers did cause all things to grow out of the earth and to bring seed grain and fruit For the meaning of this verse we must mark these three propositions 1. First that the originall fountain of things naturall as now they stand is from God and his blessing not of ordinary means for rain mens art industry though they be naturall yet have they a blessing and virtue from God by which they are available But to speak more specially of rain 38. 28. Asketh Quis est pater pluviae The answer is God for he granted out a writ decree or mandate for rain Job 28. 26. He giveth us rain and seasonable times Act. 17. 26. And as it is his royall power and authority to command it so is it to countermand it and to give an inhibition to restrain it Esay 5. 6. And lest any should make exception against him he saith Amos 4. 6. It is I which doe cause it to rain upon one City and not another It is not Plannets nor nature nor fortune but God himself Judg. 6. 37. We see both set down his giving out a commandement for the ground to be wet and restraint for the flesh contra seeing then it is in his only power to give or restrain therefore there is a prayer made a prayer nominatim for rain 1 Kings 8. 35. 36. And there is a speciall thanksgiving for this benefit Psal. 68. 9. And this is the reason saith St Augustine why God made not the rain as a sweat to evaporate out of the ground and so to moysten the clods but would have it rather to ascend upwards into his place that we might lift up our eyes to know and acknowledge that it cometh only from him 2. The second royall prerogative of God is that though we have never so much rain or men to help yet all is nothing worth and cannot avail without Gods blessing doth accompany it which is shewed 1 Cor. 3. 7. Paul may plant and Apollo may water there is the husbandry and rain but both the tiller and waterer is nothing unlesse God giveth the encrease therefore we must see and behold God in them all for if when God sendeth rain he give not his blessing with it and make it pluviam benedictionis Psal. 80. 19. Or if he send in tempestivam pluviam unseasonable rain nor the first nor the later rain Ezekiell 34. 26. Or if he send it not in plenty Esdras 10. 9. For they had rain yet they wept for want or if he sendeth too much what good will it doe the earth 3. The third prerogative of God is that God without rain can make things fruitfull but the rain cannot doe so without God It is not these means of tillage or rain that can doe it Deut. 8. 3. But God without them can doe it 2 Chron. 14. 11. It is all one with God with a few for quantity yea with no means to doe things a little oyle and meal shall streach it self out and encrease untill rain come So Christ in want can make five loaeves and two fishes to feed five thousand and so for the quality the worst and most unnourishing meat which they durst not give Daniel 1. 〈◊〉 for fear lest they should not look faire by Gods blessing made them look with better countenance than the rest which fared more deliciously Wherefore saith Daniel Try us for we know that God can doe it without means or with base means 2 Kings 4. 40. the Prophet by Gods word without 〈◊〉 quality yea to shew Gods power could make poysonfull meat which is contrary to nourishment to nourish he made Coloquintida to nourish them which of it self would excoriate the intralls and scowre them to death 4. The fourth and last prerogative is not only to doe all this but to make that which is by nature clean opposite and contrarie to a thing that it shall be a means effectually to work his effect as the putting in salt into salt water can make the water fresh which is contrarie to nature for it maketh fresh water salt 2 Kings 2. 20. So Christ by putting clay upon a blinde mans eyes caused him to see which was enough to make him blinde
John 9. 6. The rock of 〈◊〉 which is set in repugnance to water Numbers 20. 11. yet out of it he caused streams to gush And this power of God appeared most in the beginning of the Gospel in setting abroad Christian Religion for as he in the beginning out of darknesse brought light 2 Cor. 4. 6. So by men of no learning no authority or countenance strength or wealth did cause the Gospell to be planted in all the World that we may know this Caveat to be worth the noting that he is the cause of things natural now in the state of generation as he was of things supernaturall in the beginning of Creation And that we may know that he is able to doe things above besides and without yea and sometimes contrarie to these ordinarie means that so we may be taught neither in the want of them to dispair nor when we have plenty to be proud and presuming in them but ever look back to God which is above all means and of himself as able to doe all in all To whom be all honour glorie power wisdome and dominion for ever and ever Amen Aut vapor ascendens è Terra qui errigaret universam superficiem Terrae c. Gen. 2. 6,7 18 May 1591. TOgether with the conclusion of the works of Creation in the fourth verse I told you that 〈◊〉 in the 5. verse adjoyned a necessary Caveat touching second causes lest now we should ascribe the proceeding and doing of things either to ordinary means or second causes either naturall as to rain or artificiall as to mens labour and industrie which two doe include all other means whatsoever To this end he declared that God is the Author of second causes and therefore as he did all things before them so now they are he is likewise able to doe and bring any thing to passe as well without them yea with means and by causes contrary to such an effect as well as with all the means that are in the course of nature or may be invented by the industry of men Moses then now passeth from the Creation of other things unto the narration of the History of Man by the 6. verse which sheweth the generation of rain spoken of in part before that so there might be an ordinary proceeding from one thing to another Now then to speak of them both apart First Touching the Creation of the Rain we must lay this ground That God either without vapours or clouds can if he please bring store of rain to the Earth 2 Kings 3. 17. which plenty by Gods power was without winde rain or clouds But for the naturall generation of Rain we must note that there are two issues proceeding from the Earth which here are set down as the causes of it 1. The first is a moist or foggie steem or vapour 2. The second a dry smoke fume or exhalation It is not wonderfull that the Earth should yeild a dry fume because it is naturally inclined to drynesse but it is strange that the Earth should give out a moist fume for that is contrary to her nature and qualities There are three estates and degrees in the generation of Rain out of the words 1. The beginning and originall of it is vapor expirans a moist steem loosned from the Earth 2. The proceeding of it is vapor ascendens lifting it self into a cloud above 3. The perfecting of it is vapor descendens which is the dissolving of the cloud and so dropping down these are three proceedings of this generation God is able to rostrain this course of the rain Job 36. 27. and might have caused 〈◊〉 not to be loosed from the Earth 〈◊〉 ascend up but to sweat out to moisten the dry clodds as it is in our bodies But God caused it to lift it self thither that he might water the Earth from his Chamber Psal. 104. 13. But being loosned from the Earth the nature of such a cloud is vanishing and dissipating it self in the Aire to nothing James 4. 14. therefore God bindeth it together in a cloud and maketh it a compact and condense matter Job 26. 8. And for the dissolving of the clouds he is said Cribrare aquas 2 Sam. 22. 12. And these are the three proceedings of rain and the three degrees ingendring it Finxit verò Jehova Deus hominem de pulvere terrae sufflavitque in nares ipsius halitum vitae sic factus est homo anima vivens Verse 7. NOw touching the 7. verse at which I said 〈◊〉 the repetition of the Historie of Man and his generation That we may not trust in him nor his help we read Gen. 1. 26. that Man was created but not whence nor how nor after what sort these circumstances are not there set down there we read that man was made Male and Female but the order how is not set down Therefore that which briefly he touched omitting some things there now here he supplyeth shewing that God first made the Man and out of his side took the Woman Concerning which having shewed that Man is made the chief Creature of all the rest both in regard of his superior part of the soul as also of the inferior part of his body and also in the end of this verse he expresseth more fully the other part of his soul and in handling both he observeth the very order which he used before First to speak of the lesse perfect and more base part of the body and then of the soul. Touching the body in the first part of the verse there is two things expressed to be considered of 1. First the Matter 2. Secondly the Mould in which he was made and framed in his bodily shape The dust is the origine and beginning of Man which though it be often repeated yet God is fain in the 3. of Gen. 19. 〈◊〉 tell it to Adam again to humble him that he may know how absurd a thing it was for him once in pride to imagine that he should be as God for he must needs see by this that he should be but an earthen God if he were any which is as bad as to be of stone or wood The Saints of God have ever confessed this to humble them As Abraham Gen. 18. 27. Job 10. 9. Psal. 104. 29. 1 Cor. 15. 47. 2 Cor. 5. 5. which doth shew that we must take notice and regard of this point to humble us that the clouds and rain were made before us and of a purer more fine and better matter than our bodies were for they were of the vapour of the Earth but we of the base and grosse clod and dust of the Earth but 〈◊〉 comfort us in this thought he telleth us that that which is wanting in the matter is supplyed in the form and shape of our bodies God by saying that he framed Man speaketh after the manner of men Rom. 9. 20 21. In which phrase of speech he is 〈◊〉
is to be praised would not accept their praise but answered them Why tempt ye me O ye Hypocrites And when one said to him Magister bone good Master which was a praise of simplicitie not of hypocrisie as the other he refused it and said Why dost thou call me good Mark the tenth chapter When one said Blessed is the womb that bare thee he repelled that saying Nay rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it Luke the eleventh chapter and the twenty eighth verse For as the shewing of the Kings treasure was the means of the betraying them Isaiah the thirty ninth chapter so when we shew our good works with a desire to be praised for them it takes away all commendation from them This thing being dangerous if notwithstanding we be desirous to have our good deeds seen that shall be fulfilled which Sirach saith He that loveth dangers shall perish therein Qui amat periculum peribit in co cap 3. 27. But to disswade us from this the Apostle saith Be not desirous of vain glory Galatians the fift chapter and Philippians the second chapter and the third verse The Preacher saith all is vanity which men seek after in this life and therefore concludes Time Deum Ecclesiastes the twelfth chapter to teach us that without God all the praise of the world is but vanity Now as we fail in having respect to God First when we make not him the fountain of our praise Secondly if we make him not the end of it so in doing good works to be seen we commit two vanities First when we content not our selves with this perswasion that God sees our works and will reward them unlesse man see them and praise us for them The tryall whether we make God the fountain of our praise is if we seek it by wayes agreeable to his will not by wickednesse Secondly not by vanity for his delight is not in beautie riches or strength he delighteth not in any mans Legs in the hundred and fourty sixt Psalme Thirdly not by falshood as the Apostle saith I will not glory of any thing which the Lord hath not wrought by me in the second to the Corinthians and the eleventh chapter Hereby we shall seek the praise of God rather than of men in the twelfth chapter of John nay though they seek praise by righteousnesse and doing good works yet they make not God the fountain of their praise the Hypocrites when they would be praised did those works that were most glorious as to offer sacrifice in the temple but they neglected mercy and justice which are the chief things that God respecteth in the twenty third chapter of Matthew They washed not their hearts in the fifteenth chapter of Matthew which God especially regardeth but looked only to outward things and they that doe mercy and justice which are the chief things of the Law yet they will not doe them but when they may be seen Whereby they shew that they make not God the fountain of their praise and so the praise they seek for is hatefull to God Secondly this desire of vain glory is injurious to God when we make not him the end of our praise for we may doe good works coram in the sight of men but not with purpose to have them seen that so we may receive glory For God hath given us the joyes and use of all his Creatures but reserveth the glory of them to himself therefore the Apostle saith howsoever ye have the joy of Gods Creatures in eating and drinking yet let God have the glory Doe all to the glory of God in the first to the Corinthians the tenth chapter and the thirty first verse For though he giveth us the use of all things yet gloriam meam alteri non dabo in the fourty second chapter of Esay Therefore if we doe good works to commend our selves and not to glorifie God we are injurious to him for he hath testified that he will not give his glory to any other And therefore Peter and John say It is not by our own godlinesse that we have made this man whole but it is the name of Christ and faith in him that hath raised him in the third chapter of the Acts Therefore not only Nabuchadnezar when he snatched Gods glory to himself was punished in the fourth chapter of Daniell But even Herod also because he did but suffer that glory to rest upon him that was attributed to him by others when he should have ascribed all to God in the twelfth chapter of the Acts and the twenty second verse Then as it is injurious to God so it is hurtfull to our selves for though we see many miracles wrought by Christ yet they are afraid to confesse and believe him Because they love the praise of men more than the praise of God in the twelfth chapter of John and the fourty third verse And therefore Christ saith How can you believe which seek glory one of another and seek not the honor that commeth of God alone quomodo potestis credere qui gloriam sibi quaeritis in the fift chapter of John and the fourty fourth verse Secondly as it is an obstacle to grace so it is a provocation to all wickednesse For the Jews doubted not to crucisie the Lord of glory to get praise of the wicked Secondly that we may doe this Christ willeth us to take heed for there is a double corruption in us First a rebellion against Gods precepts which make us say quare as Pharaoh in the fift chapter of Exodus and the second verse Who is the Lord that I should hear his voice And as the Scribes and Pharisees said to Christ By what authority doest thou these things in the twenty first chapter of Matthew and the three and twentieth verse Secondly the blindnesse of our understanding which makes us ask quomodo which is the question of ignorance so that it is not without cause that he bids us take heed that we beware of this sinne as being a hard precept both for our rebellion to yeeld unto and also in regard of our ignorance which is such as we cannot see how it should be lawfull to seek praise by well doing the hardnesse of avoiding this sinne is of two causes First it ariseth from the nature of sinne it self for as we are corporall and visible so we are most affected with those things that are visible as John reasoneth He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen in the first Epistle of John and the fourth chapter whereupon it commeth to passe that our corruption that though we believe the reward of God to be great yet because it is invisible and the worlds reward is present therefore pleaseth us more Secondly from the originall of vain glory for when the woman looked upon the fruit albeit it greatly pleased her yet that which did strike the stroak was eritis sieut dii in the third chapter of Genesis the hope of present
Jews and Gentils So the matching of Jews with Gentils doth signifie the affinity that should grow between the two Churches The same was shewed by the stuff where of 〈◊〉 Tabernacle was made by the first Temple which was built upon the ground of a Gentile Araunah the second book of Samuel and the twenty fourth chapter with timber sent by Hiram a Gentile the 〈◊〉 book of Kings the tenth chapter by the second Temple which was founded by Cyrus and 〈◊〉 Heathen Princes By which we may perceive that God had this in minde and in a purpose To gather the Gentils into the Church of Christ and to be of the people of the God of Abraham which thing was not only foreshewed but plainly performed For not only there came of the 〈◊〉 from the East to Christ Matthew the second chapter but Grecians from the West to see Christ John the twelfth chapter The second thing in the Prophecy is that not only the People should be gathered to be of the Church but the Kings and Princes for when Peter saw the sheet let down from heaven Acts the tenth chapter and the eleventh verse he was taught that Nations should come immediatly to the Church for then Cornelius and others were converted to the faith but Princes came not till three hundred yeeres after that was performed when the Prophet foretelleth the poore shall eate and be satisfied Psalme the two and twentith and the twenty sixth but for Rulers it was not so performed therefore the Pharisees object Doe any of the Rulers beleeve but this simple People that know not the Law John the seventh Chapter therefore the Apostle saith you knew your calling that not many noble not many mightie but the base and weake things hath God chosen as it is in the first of the Corinthians a great number of the poore people were at the first joyned to the Church of Christ and not only they but as it was foretold the rich upon earth shall eate and worship Psalme the two and twentith and the twenty ninth verse so Sergius Paulus Acts the thirteenth the noble man of Berea Acts the seventeenth the Eunuch chief governor for the Queene of Ethiopia Acts the eighth chapter her Lord Treasurer and the elect Lady the second Epistle of Saint John and the second chapter So both Lords and Ladies were brought to the Church but as yet no Princes for they stood up against Christ Acts the fourth chapter both Herod and Paul gathered themselves against Christ the holy sonne of God Paul had almost got one King to the Church that is Agrippa Acts the twenty sixt chapter and the twenty eighth verse Thou almost perswadest mee c. but there must bee a time when the kings of Arabia shall bring presents Psalme the seventy second a time when Kings should bee foster fathers and Queenes nursing mothers to the Church Isa. the fourty ninth chapter therefore under the Law he confirmed the hope of Kings by shewing grace to the King of Ninevey who repented at the preaching of Jonas and to the Queen of the South who came to honour Salomon Matthew the twelfth chapter no less than he confirmed the hope of the poor by calling the poor Widdow of Zarepta and of the humble by the example of Naaman Luke the fourth chapter by whose example all sorts of people both poor and rich both Prince and Subject have hope be gathered into the Church wherein the people of this English Nation have speciall cause to magnifie God for the first prince that professed the Gospel was Constantine the great born in England and ever since Christ hath had a Church of the Gentils not only dispersed Gentils John the seventh chapter a few only of them to worship him but the fulness of the Gentils Romans the eleventh chapter Now not only the simple and unlearned people but the Rulers themselves doe follow Christ John the seventh chapter wherein we are to exalt magnifie the power of Christ that he contents not himself with the inferiour people to be worshipped of them he will not only be the God of the Mattocks and Staves but of the Shields To teach us that he can turne the hearts of Captains and Princes whither he will Secondly That when this was performed the Princes were not Togati such as delighted in peace but Armati men of warre and hard to be brought under to the obedience of the Gospel such persons as at their pleasure will not hear when they think good but take away their life Esther the 6. chap. These men were the harder to be subdued to Christ being without Religion for the most part Nulla fides pietasque viris qui Castra sequuntur The Rulers of the people shall come to thee as it is in the Psalms God would not have David build him an Altar because he was a man of warre and had shed blood the first book of the Chronicles the twenty eighth chapter and the third verse But to gather a Church and Temple of the Gentils he hath no respect of that but sheweth his power in bringing them to his Church which were most cruel The Psalmist saith God is highly to be exalted among the Princes of the People At this ●ime the people of Abraham were at a poor stay like sheep appointed to the slaughter Romans the tenth verse In which regard it was not like it would come to passe that the Princes and mighty men would subject themselves to them Paul confesseth that the Sect which he followed was every where evil spoken of Acts the twenty sixt chapter That he and the rest of the Apostles were as the filth of the world and the off-scouring of all things the first epistle to the Corinthians the fourth chapter the thirteenth verse therefore unlikely that the great men of the world should yeeld to them Again that they should doe this of themselves voluntarily without constraint that where they had occupied their shields upon Gods People now they should use them for their defense that they should bring bountifull gifts to the Church whereof we see examples in the new Testament Matthew the second chapter The Reason is to be taken four wayes First When God shall be exalted then shall the Princes of the people be gathered to the people of the God of Abraham This is true for this Psalme is of Christs ascention of which Christ saith When he is exalted omnes traham ad me John the twelfth chapter So that it is as much as if the Prophet should say When Christ is exalted then the Nations shall come to him Secondly When the Princes of the people be gathered to the ●…ple of Abraham then shall Christ be exalted that is when the Kings of the earth doe imbrace the Christian Religion God shall be exalted and have more glory for every King is worth ten thousand and when one King followeth Christ it is a greater glory to Christ than if many people the second book of Samuel