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A15673 A glasse for the godly Contayning many comfortable treatises to perswade men from the loue of this world, to the loue of the world to come, and exhorting them with cherefulnes to passe through the crosses and afflictions of this life. Full of spirituall comfort for all such as hope to be saued by Iesus Christ. The first [-second] part. By R:W: minister of Gods word. Wolcomb, Robert, b. 1567 or 8. 1612 (1612) STC 25941; ESTC S121029 292,196 642

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by my workes But on the contrarie all appearing christians are not true christiās For to many that will say Lord Matt. 7.22 Lord haue we not by thy name prophecied by thy name cast out diuels by thy name don manie great works Christ wil thus professe I neuer knewe you depart from me yee that worke iniquitie So that the visible outward Church in this world hath good and bad hath worthy vnworthy hath elect and reprobate Matt. 13.24 Mat. 13.47 Mat. 13.3 For it is the fielde wherein there growes wheate tares and it is the draw-net which cast into the sea gathereth of all kindes of things and it is the receiuer of the séede of Gods word which sowne fell foure wayes some by the way side some vpon stony groūd some among thornes some in good ground And all this is plainely set foorth by our Sauiour in the parable of them that were called vnto the marriage Of which parable partly out of the words of Christ partly out of the circumstance of the time persons when and to whō they were spoken we may gather this to be the sense meaning The King that made a mariage for his Sonne is God the Father The Kings Sonne is Christ The mariage is the blessednes of heauen which the elect after this life shall for euer enioy with Christ The first worthier sorte that were called are the Iewes The seruāts whom the King sent are the prophets The calling to the marriage is the drawing to faith and repentāce This calling the Iews despised being giuē to the loue of earthly things many of them chiefly the rulers of the people contumeliously entreated the prophets slew them Therfore God destroied them by his hoasts warriors that is by the armies of the Romans First vnder the cōducting of Vespasian after of Titus his sonne and hée burnt vp Ierusalem their Citie with fire Afterwards reiecting the Iewes God sent the Apostles vnto the Gentiles and called thē into the place room of the Iews in whose stéed they were are and shall be vnto the ende of the world as wel good as bad that is as well elect as reprobate of whō the one are of euill made good by the holy Ghost the other are left in their natural wickednes The marriage garmēt is true holines which is of 2. sorts th' one is the holinesse of Christs sacrifice imputed vnto vs by Faith the other is an holines wrought in our mindes by the sanctification of the holie Ghost which shews it selfe by holines of life Whosoeuer are not clothed which this wedding garment shal be throwne out from the marriage into vtter darknes that is into the eternall torments of Hell and that shall bee done by the Seruants that is Gods holie Angels Therefore beeing all inuited and called to the marriage of the Kings Sonne that is to the fruition and participation of the ioyes of heauen Wée must neither contemne and refuse the abundant mercie of God that so louingly bids vs either by addicting our selues whollie to the vanitie and mucke of this world or by despising of Gods Messengers who are sent to inuite vs neither must wee presume to approach without the marriage garment making onely a bare profession naked shew without any sinceritie For though we spin Hypocrisie with neuer so small a thréede so that the eyes of man cannot discerne it yet when the King of heauen whose eyes are ten thousand times more bright then the Sunne shall come in to sée the Guests hée will pull off the vizard from the masked dissembler and discouer the counterfeiter and as the Hypocrite pretends onely loue amitie to Christs religion and entends far otherwise with his heart So the King shall Ironically and colourably call him Friend but a painted friēd and therefore hée shall say How camest thou in hither and hast not on a Wedding garmēt Binde him hand and foote Take him away and cast him into vtter darknes Wherefore that wee may examine our selues our soules and consciences the better whether wée are arrayed with the Wedding garment or not and that we may labour and pray that we may be more and more apparelled therewith whereby we may neuer be cast out of the presence of the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and that we may know how to professe CHRIST aright For it is a most important matter and to professe is not enough except wee professe aright it shall be vnfolded First what the Wedding garment is without which wee cannot be partakers of Heauenly blessednes secondly what Hypocrisie is and how detestable and odious it is in the sight of God The Wedding garment is Iustification 1 What the Wedding garmēt is and Sanctification or Faith good workes or to belieue well and to liue well All this is but true holinesse which is of two sorts Namely the righteousnes of Christs sacrifice imputed to vs by Faith and inherent righteousnes wrought in vs and brought into vs by the holy Ghost So that this garment is of two colours partly red partly white It is red by reason of Christs blood shead on the Crosse for the purging of our soules and this is our Iustification and Righteousnes before God It is white by reason of holy harmeles cōuersation which shines before the world this is the putting on of the new man Christ Iesus the washing of our robes the makīg of them white in the bloud of the lambe our sāctification holines in the eyes of men Iustificatiō is attained by Faith sanctification brīgeth forth good works iustificatiō cānot be wtout faith faith cānot be wtout good works iustification therfore holines are inseparable companions where the one is there is also the other They agrée in the efficient cause For God is the Author and worker of them both by the merit of Christ They agree in the instrument which is Faith for faith receiues Iustification and Faith brings foorth sanctification they agrée in the scope ende that is our eternall life but iustificatiō as the cause sāctification as the way therfore the Apostle saith Eph. 2.10 that we are Gods workmāship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which god hath ordained that we should walk in them What then is this true faith by which we are iustified before God accounted righteous absolued frō the guiltines of all our sins Rom. 11. reputed as holy as if wee had neuer sinned had our selues fulfilled all the cōmandements of God Faith is the means helpe instrumēt whereby a sinner doth apprehēd Christ which all his benefits Eph. 3.17 Luk. 2.11 doth applie them particularly to himself is ioyned to Christ doth liue in Christ This faith is liuely effectuall both in respect of our affections in respect of our actions It is liuely in respect of our affectiōs for it works in
mount vp to the Heauen and his head reach vnto the clouds yet shal he perish for euer like his dunge and they which haue seene him shall say where is he he shall flee away as a dreame and they shall not finde him shall passe away as a vision of the night so that the eye which had seene him shall doe so no more his place shall see him no more Christ speaking of the euill seruant that shall say in his heart Matt. 24.48 My maister doth defer his comming and therefore shall begin to smite his fellowes to eate and to drinke with the drunken that seruants Maister will come saith he in a day when he looketh not for him and in an houre that he is not w●re of and will cut him off and giue him his portion with hypocrits there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth And what is the portion of hypocrites What but that spoken of in the scripture Iob. 13.16 which saith that the hypocrite shall not come before God It is gréeuous to be tortured in fire and brimstone it is gréeuous to be thrust out of the blessed companie and out of heauenly glorie it is greeuous to know that there shall be none end of these torments but how vnspeakable and intollerable anguish shall it be to be secluded and separated from the very sight of heauen and of the king of immortalitie so that nothing shall be seene heard or felt but lamentation woe and mourning Wherefore if we will auoid these extreame and exquisite paines we must in no case presume to come to the wedding but in the wedding garment One saies of earthly glorie Cic. lib. 1. Offic. and reputation of this world Compendiaria est via ad gloriam vt qualis quisque haberi vult talis sit It is the readie way to glory that euery one be such a one indeed as he would seeme to be Much more it may be said of eternall glorie that the direct way to it is to be such Christians indeed as we appeare outwardly to be that is to be godly in word and godly in worke Seneca saies That it makes a far greater matter what manner of person thou appeare to thy selfe Epist 87. then what manner of person thou appeare to other and that none can long beare a counterfaite shewe ficta in naturam suam citò recidunt fained things doe soone returne to their owne nature but those things that are supported by truth and doe rise from soliditie they growe greater and better as he writes to Nero the Emperour God is the soūder searcher ●éer of hearts God is not mockt God cannot be blinded God will quickly desire the guest that is not fitly apparrelled God will challenge him and say vnto him Friend how camest thou in hither and hast not on a wedding garment God will punish him commaund his Angels to take him away and to cast him into vtter darkenes 1. Cor. 2.11 where shall be wéeping gnashing of téeth None knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him therefore euery one must seuerally enter into the closet of his own mind and examine his owne soule priuately whether his heart be sincere before the Lord and whether his soule be frée from hypocrisie and dissimulation God deceiues none and may be deceiued of none his eyes are the infallible touchstone that trie our faith whether it be true liuely and effectuall But the fruits of good workes are the touchstone wherby men make iudgmēt of faith Matt. 22.33.35 Matt. 7.16.17.18 And for this cause our Sauiour saith Either make the tree good his fruit good or else make the tree euil his fruit euill for the tree is knowne by his fruite do mē gather grapes of thorns or figs of thistles so euery good tree bringeth forth good fruit and a corrupt tree bringeth forth euill fruit a good tree cānot bring forth euil fruit neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and an euill man out of an euill treasure bringeth forth euill things for of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Where there is séene zeale and deuotion charitie and commiseration patiēce humilitie an earnest endeuour sincere desire to kéepe the lawe of God it may be said that there is a Christian faith and there is an vnfained Christian Where there is seene coldnes in religion neglect of the word praier and sacraments enuie strife malice couetousnes deceit dissimulation pride incontinencie swearing drunkennes and other markes of the flesh it may be said that there is no manifest step and trace of true faith there is no sincere Christianitie there is no signe of the marriage garment Where there is séene haunting of the Church listning to sermons and outward fauour countenance to the word of God and frequenting of the vse of the Sacraments and continuall boasting of faith profession yet without the life and soule of faith and profession which is performance and practise it may be said that there is false semblance and hypocrisie or else what manner of thing is hypocrisie It is said of Epicurus Cic. ● Tuscul that he did put on but the bare habite of a Philosopher and was not a Philosopher in truth It may as truely be spoken that many in this age put on but the naked shape of Christians and are not Christians indéed and that many colour their wickednes by outward pretence of religion and by bearing Bibles in their hands and the word in their mouth though it be neuer setled in their hearts being like the Carbuncle that hath a firie shew yet neuer flames and like those that vse muske and pomanders to conceale their vnsauorie and stinking breath Diogenes séeing one clothed in a Lyons skin Laer. l. 6. cap. 2. flattering himselfe as if he were thereby valorous Wilt thou not cease saith he to disgrace the apparell of valour may it not be said to him that hath but a shew of godlines 2. Tim. 3.5 and religion and by works denieth the power thereof Wilt thou not cease to disgrace the profession of Christianitie Plut. in regum Imperat. apoph For as Alexander the great when some commended the frugalitie of Antipater in that he led an austere life exempt from all deliciousnes he said that Antipater wore a white cloake outwardly but inwardly his heart was wholly of purple colour wherein he glaunced at his dissembled parsimonie and thriftines whereas else his heart desired honors and the purple robes of Princes euen so against the outward zeale and pietie and protestations and humilitie of some in our time it may be obiected that these are but the disguised cloakes of hypocrisie seruing onely for the shadowing shrowding of irreligiousnesse impietie falsehood and haughtines 2. Mace 6.23 There was once an
Is it any thing vnto the Almightie that thou are righteous or is it profitable to him that thou makest thy wayes vpright Or what things wants God that is in our power Is it the beasts of the Forrest Psa 50.12 or the fowles on the Mountaines or the wilde beasts of the fielde If I be hungrie I will not tell thee saith the Lord for all the world is mine and all that therein is Thirdly it is required that the thing done or offered by vs be equiualent and answerable in price and dignitie to that which we re●iue againe and which hee at whose handes ●e merite rewards vs withall but no works ●ours are coūteruailable and méete to be laid ●n the balance against Saluation and eternall life which we receiue of God For what proportion can there be betwéene our works and eternall life Rom. 8.18 which made the blessed Apostle to conclude and count That the Afflictions of this present time are not worthy of the glory Rom. 6.23 which shall be shewed vnto vs. So that our Almes and workes of mercie can merite nothing with God Chárisma and the eternall inheritance is the free gift of God And therefore when the Scripture sayes that God shall render to euery man according to his works Psa 62.13 Matth. 16 27. Ro. 2.6 Reuel 22.12 and that Christ shall pronounce the sentence of the last Iudgement after the workes of Mercie done or not done by the shéepe and goates The meaning is not that works are the causes that doe merite saluation but that the Elect shal be rewarded according to their workes not as if they were the causes of life and reward but as they are vndoubted effects arguments and declarations giuing true testimonie of the causes both of the one and the other For the true and onely causes of life and recompence are the decree of God from euerlasting and his calling of vs to life and iustifying of vs at the due time For in that Christ when he calls the Elect and sends them into possession of eternall life sayes vnto them Come yee blessed These words shew sufficiently the cause of their sending into eternall life to bee for that they are blessed with all spirituall blessings in Christ and freed from the curse of the law Eph. 1.13 Gal. 3.14 and heires and sonnes of God by his frée promise consequently cal ed and iustified For Adoption and Calling and Iustification are partes of that blessednes which in due season shal be reuealed And therefore whom Christ first called Bless●d of his Father Matt. 25.34.37 he calls after Righteous and he calls the kingdome of heauen an Inheritance Neither must wee suppose when Christ sayes For I was an hungred that hee yéeldes a reason of the blessednes of the Elect that it doth flowe from their Almes works but the reason is drawne from the effects that demonstrate the cause and beare infallible recorde thereof As though our Sauiour should say thus Goe into Heauen because yee are blessed and ordained to the Kingdome of heauen For by your Almes and works of mercie you haue giuen plaine testimony that you are blessed and prepared from euerlasting to that heauenly Kingdome Why then sayest thou doth he pronounce the sentence in the last doome after works because workes are more perspicuous better knowne vnto vs as effects are better knowne then the causes For God wil haue all things in the last iudgement to be apparent and manifest to our senses that true and liuely Faith may be discerned by her natural properties and true fruits least otherwise the maske vizard of Faith should be pretended in stéed of true and effectuall Faith And Christ speakes onely of the works of mercie not to shew the cause of saluation but to commend thsoe works vnto vs and to excite and encourage vs to performe embrace them the more readilie in that our labour in the Lord in the works of godlines shall not be frustrate or lost to shew that the inheritance possession of heauen pertaines onely to the Sonnes of God For who so much prooue themselues to be the sonnes of God to be like vnto him as the mercifull doe Therefore Christ sayes Bee yee mercifull as your Father also is mercifull And when he calls the Elect to the possession of Heauen hee sayes Luk. 6.36 Come in herite the kingdome as your owne and duely belonging vnto you by right of inheritance For the Sonnes of GOD ought also to inherite the Kingdome of God Wherefore if wee will haue mercie we must shewe mercie Iam. 2.13 for there shal be condemnation merciles to him that sheweth no mercie 2. To whom wee must giue Next wee must impart our Almes and works of mercie vpon all those that shall stād in neede of helpe For wée are commanded to loue our Neighbour as our selues and who is our Neighbour but hee that may be succoured and ayded by vs in his distresse of whatsoeuer state sorte or condition hee be This Christ prooues Luk. 10.29 by the example of him that fell among Théeues and was wounded and robbed and therefore was to be comforted by anie that should finde him in that pitifull plight Howbeit the Priest and the Leuite that passed that way did disdainefully neglect to affoorde him reliefe vpon a false supposall that hee was not ioyned to them by the band of Neighbor-hood and onely the Samaritane considering his lamentable case did estéeme him for his Brother and Neighbour therefore executed on him the offices of kindnes and Charitie Lib. 6. c. 11 For this cause Lactantius iustly calls the saying of Plautus detestable when he sayes Malè meretur qui mendico dat quòd edat Nam illud quod dat perit Et illi producit vitam ad miseriam That is Hee doth ill that giues meate to a beggar for that he giues is lost and hee prolongs the miserable life of the beggar Indéed the couetous and Machiauillian miser is very ingenious to deuise such reasons that he may pretend some colourable excuses why he hardens his hart and turnes his eyes and refraines his hands from imparting out of his superfluitie on the wants of the poore But we ought not to deuise such causes why we should withholde our bountie rather we ought to regard the commaundement of our gratious God and Lord who commands vs not to turne our eies from our owne flesh that is from the poore who are made of the s●me substance of which our selues are And therefore worthilie also Lactantius reprooues that spéech of Cicero Namely Ibid. apud Lactant. That wee must often giue of our goods vnto men that neede if they be meete to receiue and he checks it saying Quid personas eligis quid membra inspicis pro homine tibi habendus est quisquis precatur ideò qui● te hominem putat Why doest thou chuse persons why doest thou behold the
wearie of well doing he meaneth that we should not be wearie of succouring and reléeuing the néedie and wretched But if we refer well doing to the exhortation in the sixth verse Keckerman in analys Gym Log. where the Apostle exhorts the hearers to maintaine their Minister saying Let him that is taught in the word make him that hath taught him partaker of all his goods then the meaning is that Paul procéeding in his exhortation to maintaine the Minister doth in these words preoccupate and preuent an obiection which some might make saying If we be so liberall to the Ministers and continue in it we shall wast consume our substance To which the Apostle answeres that we shall not consume but encrease our store for God will not forget our workes of pietie charitie that please him so well but in due time we shall reape if we faint not But howsoeuer we refer well doing either to the reléeuing of the néedie or to the maintenance of the Ministerie this exhortation serues also for continuing in good workes of what sort or nature soeuer they be The reason and motiue why we should continue in well doing is this For in due season we shall reape if we faint not Eccakein Eclúesthai To be wearie and to faint is all one thing and to faint or to be wearie is as it were to be dissolued and loosed as if one ioynt or finew were separated from another So that Paul saith that in due season we shall reape the fruit of our good works if we make no breach and interruption of well doing and if we conioyne one vertue to another vertue and one good worke to another good worke as the ioynts and sinewes of the body are compacted and vnited among themselues and as the linkes of a chaine are knit and fastned one to the other The Apostle had said before Verse 7.8 Whatsoeuer a man soweth that shall he also reape for he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reape corruptiō but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting In which words he vseth a Metaphor borrowed spéech cōparing the life aswell of the godly as of the vngodly vnto sowing of séede as though the Apostle in those words did say generally that euery one shal receiue either a reward or a punishment according to his déeds done in this world And he procéedes in the same metaphoricall spéech saying In due season we shall reape if we saint not In which words he puts a difference betwéene the time of sowing and the time of reaping Now is the time to sowe and to doe good to other while Christ doth shine vnto vs in this life by his Gospel but the time of reaping and of haruest shall be in the world to come Ecclus. 11.4 Salomon saith He that obserueth the winde shall not sowe and he that regardeth the cloudes shall not reape that is he that will alwaies looke for happie and prosperous successe in well doing shall neuer doe good For men will euer be vngratefull and the world will euer recompence euill for good to the godly And therefore least we should be wearie and faint in well doing S. Pau sets before vs a most ample and large reward when he compares eternall life vnto an haruest or a reaping What doe good workes merite then since they are rewarded No for well doing is the path leading to Heauen but Heauen it selfe and eternall life is the gift of God Rom. 6.23 through Iesus Christ our Lord. When we doe well we are in the way to Heauen and well doing shall be plenteously rewarded but none by his godlines deserues the reward In psal 120. for God rewarding our works dona sua coronat crowneth his owne gifts saith S. Augustine Why is it called a reward then Not because it is a reward merited but freely giuen of Gods mercie and because as the day labourer workes all the day and receiues his wages in the euening so when we haue done good workes all our life long in the euening of our daies that is in the end of our life we shall receiue the reward of euerlasting ioy Although good workes cannot saue vs nor make vs righteous before Gods iudgement throne Isai 64.6 Psal 130.3 for all our righteousnes is a menstruous cloath and if God should be extreame to marke what is done amisse who may abide it yet we must labour diligently to abound in all good workes and to perseuere in them whether we consider God or whether we consider our neighbour or whether we consider our selues If we respect God we must doe well and continue in well doing that his commaundements may be obeyed 1. Io 5.3 1. Thes 4.3 1. Pet. 1.14 Tit. 2.14 Eph. 4.30 Gal. 5.22 Matt. 5.16 Eph. 5.1 that his will may be done that we may shew our selues obedient children to God our father that we may shew our selues thankefull for our redemption by Christ that we may not grieue the spirit of God but walke according to the same that God by our good workes may be glorified and that we may be good imitators and followers of God If we respect men we must doe well and continue in well doing Luk. 6.38 1. Pet. 3.14 1. Cor. 10.32 that our neighbour may be holpen in worldly things that he may be wonne by our example to godlines that we may preuent the giuing of any offence and that by doing good we may stop the mouthes of our aduersaries Lastly if we respect our selues we must doe well 2. Cor. 5.17 Eph. 5.8 2. Pet. 1.8 10. Iam. 2.17 2. Tim. 2.6 Psal 89.32 Gal. 6.9 and continue in well doing that we may shew our selues to be new creatures that we may walke as the children of light that we may be assured of our faith and saluation that we may discerne true faith from counterfait and dead faith that faith and the gifts of God may be continued vnto the end that the punishments of sinne both temporall and eternall may be auoided and that the reward may be obtained which God fréely in mercie hath promised to men for their good workes These are the causes for which we must doe well and continue in well doing not to merite eternall life by our good works for when we haue done all that we can doe we are vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 and we haue done but that was our commanded dutie but we must doe good workes continue in them for Gods glorie our brethrens edification and the declaration of the truth of our faith This doctrine we propose this doctrine we perswade this doctrine we vrge presse and therefore our aduersaries slaunderously abuse our Church when they call vs licentious Libertines and those that open a schoole to sinne wickednes that dehort and disswade men from good works For though we teach not that good workes are to be done because they merite the reward