Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n england_n france_n king_n 3,694 5 4.2233 3 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
A08578 An explanation of the generall Epistle of Saint Iude. Delivered in one and forty sermons, by that learned, reverend, and faithfull servant of Christ, Master Samuel Otes, parson of Sowthreps in Norfolke. Preached in the parish church of Northwalsham, in the same county, in a publike lecture. And now published for the benefit of Gods church, by Samuel Otes, his sonne, minister of the Word of God at Marsham Otes, Samuel, 1578 or 9-1658.; Otes, Samuel, d. 1683. 1633 (1633) STC 18896; ESTC S115186 606,924 589

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

World for that is to become a vassall unto our servants it is an uncertaine service to serve the Flesh this master is so cholerick so weake so sickly that wee may looke every day to be turned out of doores and that which is worst of al he is least contented when he is most satisfied It is an unthrifty service to serve the Divell all his wayes are death the more service wee doe him the worse is our estate It is an irreligious service to serve Antichrist for such as have the marke of the Beast shall perish with the beast But he that serves God hath the greatest Lord who is most able and the best Lord who is most willing to preferre his followers and reward his servants Let us then serve him for we are his servants Iure creationis jure sustentationis jure redemptionis By right of creation sustentation redemption If every haire of our head were a life and every life as long as Methuselahs it were too little to serve God True it is that Cham was pronounced the first servant as I observed Gen 3. Gen. 8. before for man was made to rule and not to serve But as sinne brought in the first nakednesse and the first travell of women in paine and the first death and the first sorrow and the first flood so it brought in the first service Onely by Christ wee are Manumised Hominis dignitas in tribus splendet The dignity of Rom. 8. 15. man shineth forth in three things In imagine Dei in the image of God In ejus creationis ex nihilo in his creation of nothing In eius dominio super omnes creaturas in his dominion over all his creatures ut ergo tria haec per peccatum amisit sic per gratiam recuperavit as hee lost these three things by sinne so by grace hee hath recovered them dum Domino servit a quo defecit while hee serves God from whom hee fell Now therefore by grace wee are called servants and if that John 15. Iohn 3. Mar. 3. Gal. 3. be too little wee are called the Friends of God Friends of the bridegroome and if that be too little wee are called Brethren Sisters of Christ if that be too little wee are called The Sonnes of God if that be too little wee are called the Spouse of God the wife of the Apoc. 19. 7. Lambe And if all this bee too little wee are called the members of The Pope no Apostle of God yet cals himselfe servum servorum God and of Christ Iesus O the breadth and length and depth and heighth of the love of God towards us that we should be called not forreiners but servants not servants but friends not friends but brethren not brethren but sonnes not sonnes but wives not wives but members 1 Cor. 12. By the way observe here that the Pope not calling himselfe servum Dei the servant of God but servum servorum a servant of Gen. 9. servants calleth himselfe by a cursed title as Cham was and indeed he is a servant of servants that serveth not Christ But say some hee calleth himselfe a servant of servants to shew his humility Indeed hee is lowly in name as any Apostle but as proud in spirit as the Whore of Babylon that makes herselfe Lady over Kings and Emperours For did not Pope Zachary make Childerike the French King to trot by his bridle three miles together Did not Hildebrand cause Henry the fourth to stand three dayes at his gates with his wife and his child barefooted Did not Clement the fifth make Dandalus Duke of Venice to lye under his Table like a dogge to gather crummes Did not Alexander the third tread on the necke of that noble Fredericke in Venice Did not Innocent depose King Iohn of England Did not Clemens the seventh labour to depose Henry the eighth Did not Pius quintus send a Bull against our Queene Did not Clemens the eighth cause the French King to goe bare-footed to Saint Dennis as a Penitentiary The troubles of these five hundred yeeres past may bee ascribed to Popes all Grecia yet rueth it all Africa the mother of Martyrs feeleth it the German Emperours tossed like tennise balles may not forget it the Kings of France have felt it the States of Italy have beene shaken with it the Kings of England have beene deposed whipped murdered Let King Iohn speake Richard the second Henry the eighth and Queene Elizabeth Is this a servant of servants that will thus insult over Kings and Emperours Oh no no. But to leave him Are we with Iude the servants of Iesus Christ Then must we not onely apply our selves to serve him as I have already said but we must imitate the vertues of Iesus Christ and we must attend his pleasure But first wee must imitate his vertues In our Lord and Master Christ Iesus shined many excellent vertues Yea all vertues Love Patience Humility Meekenesse Mildenesse Mercie Puritie Pietie Constancie Obedience c. these must shine in us else falsely wee are called the servants of Christ Christiani nomen frustrà ille sortitur qui Christum minimè imitatur August de vita Christian● Quid tibi prodest vocari quod non es In vaine hath hee got the name of a Christian which doth not imitate Christ What doth it profit thee to bee called that which thou art not To bee called a Christian and not to bee indeed a Christian a Saint and not to bee Saint the servant of Iesus Christ and not to bee We must attend to Gods service We owe more to God than servants to their Masters the servant of Iesus Christ Qualis haberi velis talis sias If thou wilt be the servant of Iesus Christ thou must bee holy as hee is holy gracious as hee is gracious mercifull as hee is mercifull yea perfect as hee is perfect though not by adequation for that is beyond our power yet by imitation for that is all our duties Againe are wee Christs servants then must wee attend his Pleasure and depend upon his Will and performe all such holy offices as becommeth servants But as Peter Martyr saith wee In Rom. cap. 1. are contrary to servants we are rather Quarter-masters and checkemate with God for servants bestow all their time in their Masters businesse we no time or little time in Gods matters For our goodnesse is as the Morning cloud and as the Morning dew it Hos 6. 4. goeth away Servants beaten fall to prayers wee being chastised of God fall to murmuring and cursing like Iob that cursed the day of his birth Like Ieremy that cursed him that told his father of a man-child Servants are not familiar with their Masters Iob 3. Ier. 20. enemies wee countenance Gods enemies in all places Many Protestants are like Aesops Crow of divers feathers their Religions like Ioseph his party-coloured coat or like the rainebow of all colours we read how Iehoshaphat joyned with
of their cruell affections are called by the name of beasts but Christ by his Spirit shal so reforme them and work in them such mutuall peace and unity that they shall bee as Lambes favouring and loving one another and cast away all their cruell affections And againe the Prophet speaking of the Kingdome of Christ saith They shall breake their swords into mattocks and their speares into sithes Nation shall not lift up a sword against Nation neither Mich. 4. 3 4. shall they learne to fight any more but they shall sit every man under his Peace both good and pleasant Vine and under his Fig-tree and none shall make them afraid meaning that peace and unity shall flourish among them and division and dissention shall be utterly banished Our God is the God of peace the Divell on the contrary is Heb. 13. 20. the Author of all dissention it was he that caused division between Abimelech and the men of Sichem Hee was a murtherer Ind. 9. 23. from the beginning But God is the Author of peace Litigiosi Iohn 6. 44. ergo non sunt ex Deo Contentious persons therefore are not of God For God is not the author of confusion but of peace Peace is one fruit of the Spirit so saith the Apostle The fruits of the Spirit 1 Cor. 14. 33. are love joy peace c. but no peace no Spirit of God Paul is not earnester in any thing than in moving men to imbrace peace Writing to the Philippians he saith thus If there be any Phil. 2. 1 2. consolation in Christ if any comfort of Love if any fellowship of the Spirit if any compassion and mercy fulfill my joy that ye be like minded having the same love being of one accord and of one judgement that nothing bee done through contention or vaine-glory c. And againe I pray Phil. 4. 2. Evodias and beseech Syntiches that they bee of one accord in the Lord. This was Christs Ave and Vale ever Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you Dulce nomen pacis res ipsa tum jucunda tum salutaris the very name of peace is sweet and comfortable the fruit and effect thereof pleasant and profitable Innumeris potior triumphis more to bee desired than innumerable Triumphes This blessed peace is the language of heaven the Angels brought it from heaven Glory in the highest heavens to God in earth peace towards Luke 2. men good will This is the Legacy which Christ bequeathed to his Disciples Pacem meam do vobis My peace I give unto Iohn 20. 19. you this was the usuall salutation of the Iewes Shenim Vbenim peace be unto you this is one of those speciall blessings which all the Apostles in all their salutations pray for Grace bee with you and peace this David commendeth O quàm bonum quàm Gal. 1. 9. jucundum O how good and pleasant a thing it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity it is not bonum non jucundum good Psal 133. 1. and not pleasant or jucundum non bonum pleasant and not good but bonum jucundum good and pleasant There bee some things that be bona sed non jucunda good and not pleasant as patience and discipline some things be jucunda sed non bona pleasant but not good as voluptuousnesse carnall pleasure some things are nec bona nec jucunda neither good nor pleasant as envie worldly sorrow c. and there be some things bona iucunda which are both good and pleasant as peace honesty charity This peace Christ commendeth to his Disciples Have salt in your selves and have peace one with another this was a Mar. 13. peece of the blessing which God taught the high Priest that God would grant them his peace When GOD would have a Numb 6. 6. Temple builded for his worship he would not have it in Davids 2 Sam. 7. 5. time because it was troublesome and full of Warre but in the Contention cause of Destruction dayes of Salomon who is interpreted Rex pacis the King of Peace When Christ came into the World it was in the dayes of Augustus when the whole World was at Peace and Christ is the corner Luke 2. stone making peace among men Tale bonum est bonum pacis Aug. ut in rebus creatis nihil gratiosius soleat audiri nihil delectabilius concupisci nihil utilius possideri such and so great a good is the good of Peace that among al the things created nothing is heard of more acceptable nothing desired which is more delectable nothing possessed more profitable Peace is the sweetest harmony that ever sounded the strongest bond that ever united politicall bodies together the chiefest prop pillar preservative of common wealths Cum alii sunt pacem recipientes alii retinentes alii facientes when some embrace Peace others retaine it others make it Let us therefore Brethren Bee diligent to keepe the unity of the Ephes 4. 3 4 5. spirit in the bond of peace being one body and one spirit even as wee are called into one hope of our calling For there is but one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father over all which is above all through all and in us all For contention breedeth division and division is the mother of destruction here and ever hereafter here it impoverisheth us so saith the Apostle If yee barke one at another and bite one another yee shall at last bee devoured one of another the end of Gal. 5. 15. barking is biting the end of contention is consumption the end of dissention destruction This Christ layeth out by two similitudes saying Every Kingdome divided against it selfe shall be Mat. 12. 25. brought to nought and every Citie or House divided against it selfe cannot stand hereafter it damneth us For unto them that are contentious and disobey the truth and obey unrighteousnesse shall bee Indignation and Wrath Tribulation and Anguish c. Herein the Divels are wiser than Men Est Daemonum legio concors there is an agreement among Aug. the Divels In Mary Magdalen of seven in another of a whole leagion and Christ saith That if Sathan cast out Sathan hee is divided against himselfe and how shall his Kingdome indure The Divels Mat. 12. 26. Luke 11. 15. agree in mischiefe and they all obey one head to do a mischiefe Conyes are but small things yet joyning together they overthrow the Isles of Anaph Maiorica and Minorica The Cranes are not great but being conjoyned they beate the Pigmae Herrings are but little yet their forces being put together overturne a great ship Gnats are but small creatures yet many being united together drave backe Iulian the Apostata Rats are not great yet many of them together devoured Hatto of Moguncia Hist. tripart Our bodies stand of foure contrary Elements Fire Water Ayre Earth but because they are
sanctity and holinesse then hypocrites as drie clouds make shewes of raine corrupt trees a shew of fruite wandring starres of light so they of religion They have a shew of holinesse saith the Apostle but inwardly they denie the power of it outwardly 2 Tim. 3. 5. they professe to know God but inwardly in their workes they doe deny him being abominable disobedient and unto every good Tit. 1. 16. Mat. 7. 21. worke reprobate They cry Lord Lord but they doe not the will of the Lord they say The Lord liveth yet they sweare to deceive Herod will make a great bragge of loving and worshipping of Christ Goe your wayes and search diligently for the Child and when yee Mat. 2. have found him bring me word that I may come and worship him Iezabel will proclaime a solemne feast the Herodians will speake 1 Reg. 21. 9. Christ faire Good master thou art true and teachest the way of God truly The adversaries of Iudah and Benjamin will pretend to worship God wee will build with you wee will sacrifice with you Simon Mat. 22. Magus will offer money to the Apostles that on whomsoever he God will reward the hypocrite as hee is not as hee sheweth lay his hands hee may receive the Holy Ghost and Saul will say that he hath done all that God commandeth and Iudas will come to Christ with a kisse and say Haile Master But Herods purpose was to kill Christ Iezabels to get away Naboths Act. 8. 1 Sam. 13. Mat. 26. vineyard the Herodians drift was to tempt and intrappe Christ the adversaries of Iuda Benjamin to hinder the worke of God to spie out their libertie Simon Magus to make gaine of the Holy Ghost Iudas to betray Christ for none will weep faster then the Crocodile and as did Ismael none will give a fairer Ier. 41. 6. 2. Cor. 11. kisse then a Iudas and no Divell is so dangerous as the white Divell as hee that changeth himselfe into an Angell of light but such trees without fruit such welles without water such clouds without raine such lampes without oyle such starres without light such eares without corne such lampes without oyle as they live not the life of the righteous so shall they not dye the death of the righteous Therefore brethren let us not bee like silver white in shew and yet makes blacke strikes and lines nor like the Vintner that delivers good wine to his guests and drinkes the lees himselfe For though wee can talke holily and speake religiously yet Not Mat. 7. 21. every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven but he that doth the will of God which is in Heaven It was wittily observed of one that God in forming man first frames the heart but the Painter in portraying a man first deciphers the face so the hypocrite he is all in shew nothing in heart his heart is with Venus or Bacchus or Mammon his face his countenance only with God It is written of the foxe that hee faines himselfe dead when hee comes among birds or poultery but when hee sees them come neere unto him hee suddenly preyes on them So the hypocrite as one dead unto the world and a man mortified converseth amongst the harmelesse untill he getteth some occasion of calumniating biting and devouring this is Iohn Baptists generation of Vipers that inwardly nourish poison Mat. 3. 7. but outwardly hisse forth a kind of zeale Salomon speaketh of a generation that is pure in their owne eyes and yet are not washed Pro. 30. 12. from their filthines these are the generation of hypocrites they professe well and make a shew of religion but expresse it not like the figge-tree that bare leaves but no fruite The profession Mar. 11. of many is as the travell of the mountaines we have two faces with Ianus one to looke forward another to looke backward we have two hands with Ioab one to embrace withall another 2 Sam. 3. to stabbe withall we have two tongues with Iudas one to salute Christ another to betray Christ we have two hearts with Israel Mat. 25. Psal 78. one for God another for the world The frogge Borax hath two livers one for meate another for poison The Arrians had two faiths one for the truth and Nicene Councell another for the Many Christians in shew few in deed truth time they had fidem annuam ac fidem menstruam a yeerely faith a monethly faith The Israelites cried Haile King Salomō haile King Adonia Apuleius Parret said Ave Auguste Imperator Ave Antoni haile Augustus the Emperor haile Anthony And many hypocrites 1 Reg. 1. have said Haile Mary Haile Elizabeth and to gaine the world we would say Ave Papa Haile Pope Ave Turca Haile Turke haile Divell We make profession of any religion under heaven In Aegypt all the dust was turned into lice all the waters into blood and in England not all but most religion is turned into Exod. 7. hypocrisy Wee can say The Lord liveth yet we sweare to deceive Coelum aedificamus voce vita autem Infernum We build heaven with our voice but hell with our life wee are Angels in words but Divels in deeds like the Peacocke we are Angels for our feathers Divels for our feet and Hell for our voice Augustine would not have the Churches of Africa excommunicated for drunkenesse for then no professor had beene left in Africa and if all hypocrites temporizers and formalists in England were excommunicated few or no Professors would be left in England The good man the sincere professor should then have iust cause to cry out with the Prophet Woe is mee for I am as the summer gathering and as the grapes of the vintage there is no cluster to eate Mich. 7. 1. my soule desired the first ripe fruits There bee many starres in heaven but few give light as the Sunne and Moone doe many many birds in the ayre but few Phoenix's as in Arabia many stones in the earth but few precious stones as the Diamond many trees in a forrest yet few Cedars as in Libanus many Israelites but few true Israelites like Nathaniel who had no guile Rara avis in terris nigró que simillima Cygno A rare bird and comparable to a blacke Iohn 1. 47. Swan Hypocrisy in a Christian is as rottennesse in an apple For as rottennesse beginnes at the heart of the apple so doth hypocrisie beginne at the heart of a Christian and as rottennesse corrupteth the favour the odour the colour the vigour of the whole apple so doth hypocrisie the soule of a man it taketh from it the dignity of grace the odour of a good name and all goodnesse whatsoever For as rottennesse marres the apple so doth hypocrisie the Christian Foris Cato intus Nero a Cato without and a Nero within is monstrous One saith Canis mortuus minùs faetet in naribus hominum