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A15447 Seuen goulden candlestickes houlding the seauen greatest lights of Christian religion shewing vnto all men what they should beleeue, & how they ought to walke in this life, that they may attayne vnto eternall life. By Gr: Williams Doctor of Divinity Williams, Gryffith, 1589?-1672.; Delaram, Francis, 1589 or 90-1627, engraver. 1624 (1624) STC 25719; ESTC S120026 710,322 935

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meaner Schollers cannot doe so profoundly as the grauer Diuines can doe and the older men cannot doe it so often as the yonger sort can doe and yet neither must be contemned for if the young men had had the time of the aged no doubt but they would doe as well as the aged Aristotle Et si senex haberet oculum inuenis videret vt iuuenis And if the ancient men had the strength bodies of yong men it is not vnlikely but that they would still take paines as young men Neither doe I say this to vphold sloath or negligence in any Age for to our vttermost ability as I said before we must all continue constant vnto death but to reproue our partiall Age that adoreth the Sunne rising in the East and applaudeth the quicke wits and many Sermons of youth but make none account of aged Paul and the best labours of declining age Philemon v. 9. vnlesse with the Israelites they can make vp the same tale of Brickes as they did in youth though they haue neither Straw nor Stubble neither sight of eyes nor strength of bodies to performe it and to shew how euery man should doe his best Iuxta mensuram Donationis Christi according to that measure of grace which he hath receiued from Christ And so much for the filling of the Apostles with the gifts and graces of the Holy Ghost CHAP. V. Of the effects and fruits of their filling with the Holy Ghost and how this Spirit sealeth them and sheweth them to be the true seruants of Iesus Chist THirdly For the effects of their filling it is said The fruits and effects of the holy Ghost that they began to speake with other tongues as the Spirit gaue them vtterance First They began to speake because the Spirit of God is neuer idle but where it sees cause will speake though it should cost the speakers life Secondly They spake with other tongues i. e. not as carnall men talking of fleshly or worldly matters nor as wicked prophane wretches belching forth Blasphemia in deum Blasphemies against God but as regenerate and sanctified men they shew forth magnalia dei the wonderfull workes of God And hereby all men might know whether they were the seruants of Christ by this Spirit of Christ for as our Sauiour saith of the false Apostles the same is true of all Apostles Matth. 7.16 by their fruits you shall know them for as in whomsoeuer the spirit of Satan is you shall see that he will reueale them by their lewd words and by their wicked works which are the workes of darkenesse so in whomsoeuer the Spirit of God is hee will seale them and marke them with a foure-fold marke saith Bonauenture that is signo 1. Veritatis credendorum 2. Honestatatis morum 3. Contemptus mundanorum 4. Charitatis Dei et proximorū 1. With true Religion The holy Ghost sealeth vs with a four-fold seale 2. With an vpright conuersation 3. With contempt of vanity 4. With perfect charity First It worketh Faith in their hearts for this is the fundamentall root of all other graces and therfore the Apostle well obserueth out of the Prophet that a man first beleeueth Faith is the root of all graces and then speaketh for we haue beleeued saith he and therefore haue wee spoken whereas if they had not beleeued they would neuer haue spoken of the wonderfull workes of God and therefore the holy Ghost did first worke faith in their hearts and then it caused the same to speake and to expresse it selfe by this preaching of the works of God And Secondly of good workes which are Secondly because the verity of our faith is euer knowne by the sinceritie of our life therefore these signes shall follow them that beleeue Gregor de 7. pec Magdal First to suppresse sinne First They shall cast out Deuils i. e. vitia voluptatis they shall suppresse all sinnes as Saint Gregory expounds it because euery sinne is as bad as the Deuill Secondly They shall speake with new tongues i. e. vtter forth verba vtilitatis Secondly to praise God holy and heauenly words and because our naturall tongues were like the poison of Aspes these may well be called new tongues when they doe sing a new song Thirdly to bridle their lusts Thirdly They shall take vp serpents i. e. concupiscentias sensualitatis the biting and poisonous concupiscences of our sensuall flesh shall be though not quite taken away from them yet they shall bee taken vp in their hands as Hercules is said to haue held the two serpents which Iuno sent to deuoure him in both his hands while hee was but a childe in his cradle and they shall be so restrayned and held fast that they shall not be able to doe them violence Fourthly to beare all iniuries Fourthly If they drinke any deadly poison it shall not hurt them i. e. iniurias aduersitatis if they must swallow downe lies and slanders yet for all the malice and the mischiefe of the wicked non inflammantur per superbiam non suffocantur per maliciam non disrumpuntur per inuidiam they shall neither swell with enuy nor burst with malice nor any wayes perish through their indignity Luke 21.19 but in their patience they shall possesse their soules And Fiftly to doe good vnto all men Fiftly They shall lay hands on the sicke and they shall recouer them i. e. adiutoria charitatis remedia iniquitatis they shall exercise such deeds of charity that by their good counsels and admonitions they shall recouer many a languishing dying soule Thirdly of contempt of vanities and bring them backe againe to sauing health And Thirdly because these things cannot be practised vnlesse the pompe and pride of worldly vanities be quite contemned and troden vnder feet therefore the Spirit of God worketh in them a minde to forsake all worldly things And Fourthly Fourthly of charity Rom. 5.5 because no worke is good vnlesse it proceedeth from the root of charity therefore the Spirit of God diffuseth this loue into the hearts of his seruants that they wish no euill to any man but are ready to doe good euen to them that hate them And these foure seales and signes of Gods Spirit are expressed in the twelfth chapter of the Reuelation where Saint Iohn saw a woman clothed with the Sunne Apoc. 12.1 and the Moone vnder her feet and vpon her head a crowne of twelue Starres and she being with childe cryed trauelling in birth and paine to be deliuered For this woman signifieth the Church of Christ or euery faithfull Christian soule And first her Sun-like shining is the brightnesse of her good workes and heauenly conuersation which doth so shine before men Matth. 5.16 that they glorifie God which is in heauen Secondly the Moone vnder her feet signifieth her contemning and trampling vnder feet all the vaine and variable things of this sublunary world Thirdly her crowne
aegroti quantum ad iustitiam Dei In regard of the state of the patient to free him from sinne and to satisfie the Iustice of God For it behoued the Mediator betweene God and man Ne in vtroque deo similis longe esset ab homine aut in vtroque homini similis longe esset à Deo to haue something like vnto GOD and to haue something like vnto man lest that in all things being like vnto man hee might be so too farre from God or being in all things like vnto God hee might be so too farre from man and therefore Christ betwixt sinfull mortall men and the iust immortall God did appeare a mortall man with men and a iust God with God 1 Tim 2.5 and so the Mediator betwixt God and men was God and man Christ Iesus and fitly too saith Saint Augustine Quia ille congruè satisfacit qui potest debet Because that is most agreeable to reason that he should make satisfaction Two speciall reasons why Christ was made man which ought and can satisfie but we know that none ought to doe it but man and none can doe it but God and therefore God was contented to be made man and that for these two especiall reasons First to shew the greatnesse of his Loue to man First to shew the greatnesse of his loue for hee had seemed to haue loued vs the lesse if he had done lesse for vs but now Quid tam pietate plenum quam filium Dei pro nobis factum esse faenum What can more commend the loue of God to man then to see the word God made flesh for man Iohn 3.16 and therefore the Euangelist to shew the greatnesse of Gods loue to mankinde saith God so loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne that is to bee incarnate to be made flesh and to suffer death that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Secondly to erect our hope that was already deiected Secondly to erect the hope and to strengthen the faith of man and to strengthen our faith which was alwayes wauering for wee saw two things that were to be done for man and yet could not be done by any man but such a one as should be God and Man The first was a remoueall of that great euill which suppressed vs. The second was a restoring of that great good that we were depriued of First Magnitude mali The euill that oppressed all men was foure-fold the greatnesse of that euill which suppressed euery man and could not be taken away by any man consisted in foure things 1. The waight of sinne 2. The height of Gods wrath 3. The power of death 4. The tyranny of the diuell And these could not be abolished by any creature but onely by him that created all creatures and can worke all things mightily according to the purpose of his owne will Secondly Magnitudo boni The good that man lost was two-fold the greatnesse of that good which was taken away from all men and could be restored by no man consisted in two things 1. The repairing of Gods image here in this life 2. The enioying of the blessed vision of God in the next life For none could restore the image of God to man but hee that was the liuing image of God Heb. 1.3 and the ingrauen forme of his person and the Kingdome of Heauen none could giue but God that giues it to all that loue him and therefore to take away the euill which we had deserued and to restore vnto vs that good whereof we were depriued God himselfe that made vs was contented to redeeme vs by taking our flesh vpon him Vt natura offendens satisfaceret That the nature offending might make satisfaction and because satisfaction could not be made without bloud for without bloud there is no remission Heb. 9.22 saith the Apostle he was made flesh that he might die and shed his bloud for vs Aug. serm 101. de tempore Vt iniusta mors iustam vinceret mortem liberaret nos iustè dum pro nobis occiditur iniustè That so his vniustly inflicted death might ouercome our iustly deserued death and might most rightly free and deliuer vs because he was most wrongfully slaine for vs as Saint Augustine speaketh Quest 2 Secondly It will be demaunded why the word that is the Sonne should be incarnate and made flesh rather then the Father or the Holy Ghost Resp Why the Son rather then the Father or the Holy Ghost was made man Saint Augustine thinketh that the cause pertained more specially vnto the Sonne then to the Father or to the Holy Ghost for that the Diuell attempted to vsurpe the dignitie and authority of the Sonne of God saying in his heart that he would be like vnto the most highest that is the image of the Father and sought to intrude himselfe into his glory to be the Prince of this world and the Head of euery creature which things were onely proper vnto the Sonne of God and therfore it behoued the Sonne to come into the world to ouercome the Diuell that would haue wronged him and all other men that were to be members of him But we finde many other reasons to shew why the Word was made flesh rather then the Father or the Holy Ghost As First because it is the office of the Word to declare the minde of God First because the Incarnation of God was made for the manifestation of God but we declare and manifest things by words and Christ is the word of the Father the wisedome the knowledge and the interpreter of his Fathers will euen as our word is the interpreter of our minde as Origen and Clemens Alexandrinus doe declare and therefore the word was rightly incarnate that God in him might be seene and heard and vnderstood of vs according to that saying of the Euangelist that which wee haue heard and seene 1 Iohn 1.1 and our hands haue handled of the word of life that declare we vnto you For as he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word in respect of his person which is a name of relation vnto the minde as Sonne is to the Father so is he the word in respect of his office i. e. of his office as he is the second person of the Trinitie for as it is the propertie and office of the eternall minde i. e. the Father to beget the word i. e. the Sonne so it is the propertie and the office of the Word to declare the Minde but because this spirituall inuisible and ineffable Word as he is God could neuer be seene nor heard nor vnderstood of vs therefore was he made flesh that he might be heard and seene And this the Apostle seemes to shew vnto vs when hee saith God heretofore at sundry times Heb. 1.1 and in diuers manners spake vnto the Fathers by the Prophets but in these last
forgiue them without exceeding great repentance Indeed I confesse that such grieuous sinners are in a grieuous case and that it is not likely God would haue vsed such fearefull threatnings but against haynous sinners yet I told you before that no sinne was so great but the Mercy of God is greater and able to forgiue if they be able to repent And therefore Others say that the former clause forgiuing iniquity and transgression and sinne is to be vnderstood of the sinnes of Gods Elect be they great or be they small he forgiues them all and this latter clause not making the wicked innocent to be vnderstood of the sinnes of the Reprobate of what quality soeuer they be for he will haue mercy on whom he will haue mercy Exod. 33.19 and whom hee will he hardneth c. And I yeeld this to be true in it selfe but because God onely knoweth absolutely How both sentences are reconciled Ex priori from the causes infallibly who are his and we know it onely Ex posteriori by the effects of Gods fauour and the fruits of his Spirit if we would be assured of the remission of our sinnes and would more certainely know how both these sentences may be reconciled I say briefly that the first sentence is to be vnderstood of the penitent and amending sinners of what quality soeuer their sinnes haue beene and the latter clause of continuall vnrepentant transgressors for God will pardon any sinne if you be sorry for it and forsake it but no sinne if you continue in it For God shall wound the head of his enemies Psal 68.21 and the hayrie scalpe of such a one as goeth on still in his wickednesse saith the Prophet And therefore if any of vs haue sinned yet let vs not continue in sinne for mercy and wrath come from God and if we continually sinne in the time of grace we shall suddenly be destroyed in the day of vengeance Quia non delinquenti sed peccata relinquenti misericors Deus est Because God will not be mercifull vnto them that offend of malicious wickednesse Rom 3.8 and doe still goe on in sinne that grace may abound whose damnation is iust as the Apostle speaketh But thou wilt say thou hopest God will giue thee grace to repent and thou meanest to leaue thy sinnes before thou beest compelled to leaue the world It is true beloued that our sinnes shall be pardoned whensoeu●r we repent but we cannot repent That men cannot repent when they will whensoeuer we will because repentance is the gift of God and we haue not God at our command but as a Father truely saith Qui dat paenitenti veniam non semper dat peccanti paenitentiam God which alwayes pardoneth the repentant sinner doth not alwayes giue repentance vnto sinners but as they neglected him Rom. 2.5 so he reiecteth them and suffereth them to heape vnto themselues wrath against the day of wrath And therefore though God be slow to anger and suffereth long yet he is full of Iustice and will not suffer euer but at last the fire of his fury will be kindled and then Furor arma ministrat His wrath will quickly afford him weapons and as Lactantius saith Tarditatem irae grauitate supplicij compensabit He will requite the slownesse of his wrath with the seueritie of his vengeance for as the old distich saith Ad veniam tardus Deus est Serior esse solet vindicta Jeuerior ad praemia velox Sed pensare solet vt grauiore moram God vseth to come to punish on leaden feet but he payeth home with iron hands he will reach them farre and hee will smite them full And therefore To day if yee will heare his voyce Psal 95.8 harden not your hearts and deferre not your amendment till to morrow for Qui non est hodie cras minus aptus erit If thou wilt not doe it to day it will be farre harder for thee to doe it to morrow and if thou wilt not doe it at all thou art in a most feareful case for God absoluing will neuer absolue thee that is he will neuer forgiue thy sins because thou wilt not forsake thy sinnes And so much for the denyall of pardon and absolution vnto the wicked CHAP. XII Of a two-fold visitation of God and the full opening of that point how God doth and that iustly visite the sinnes of the Fathers vpon the children and yet punish none but for his owne sinnes FOr the second GOD saith not onely that he will not absolue the wicked but he addeth further that hee will visite the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children Touching which we must first obserue that visitare est post longum tempus recordare To visite is after a long time to call to minde to remember That there is a two-fold visitation of God and to see those things againe which we seemed to haue quite forgotten and we finde a two-fold visitation of God First when he seemeth to forget our miseries to sleepe in our afflictions euen sometimes vntil we be almost ouerwhelmed with the raging waues of this world Matth. 8.24 as the Disciples were with the waues of the Sea Yet at last when he seeth his time First God visiteth the afflicted and not when we thinke it sit he will awake as a Gyant out of sleepe and he will asswage the windes and rebuke the Seas and deliuer his people out of all their miseries thus he remembred Noah Gen. 8.1 thus hee visited his people that were in Egypt Exod. 3.7 and thus when wee seeme to be forsaken of God because wee are despised among men Luke 1.68 he will when he seeth time visite vs and redeeme vs o●t of our distresse Secondly God visiteth the wicked Secondly When God suffereth the wicked to goe on in sinne and to passe from one wickednesse to another and yet still to flourish like a greene Bay-tree to build them houses to enlarge their possessions and to haue all things at their desire he seemeth to forget their impieties or to haue taken no notice of their wickednesse yet at last as the Prophet speaketh when they least thinke of it He will visite their iniquities with the rod Psal 89.32 Psal 50.21 and their sinnes with scourges Yea he will reprooue them and set before their faces the things that they haue done and then he will seuerely punish all their sinnes and that two wayes 1. In themselues 2. In their children First It is iust with God and so it seemeth iust with men To render vengeance to them that feare not God For this cause we finde 2 Pet. 2.4 He spared not the Angels that offended Nor any man that sinned but thrust Adam out of Paradise destroyed the whole world by the deluge God will punish sinners Sodome and Gomorrha with fire and brimstone Corah Dathan and Abiram Saul Nabuchadnezzar Iudas Herod and many more he
of publique prayer lest God should visite you with some mortall sicknesse cast not your accounts on the Sabbaoth day lest God should then call you to giue your last account in a fearefull iudgement and aboue all play not then in your houses when you should be at prayer in the house of God lest God should then smite you in earnest and your play would proue to be like the play of Abners seruants nothing else but death and destruction 2 Sam. 2.16 but all excuses set a part let vs all frequent the Church and there pray to God for grace if we would haue God to be mercifull vnto our soules CHAP. III. Of the time when we must pray and of the manner how wee ought to pray FOr the time when we must pray Saint Paul bids vs to pray continually Colloss 4.2 and in the Epistle to the Collossians and so in that to the Ephesians we are aduised to be instant in prayer quidem omni tempore Ephes 6.18 and that at all times But this is not so to be vnderstood as that we should doe nothing but pray as the Heretickes called Euchytae professed to doe for prayer is considered two manner of wayes First as it respecteth the cause which is a certaine vehement desire of charity and so in minde and spirit it is perpetuall Quia in fide spe charitate continuato desiderio semper oramus Because in Faith Hope and Charity with a continuall desire we doe alwayes pray saith Saint Augustine and the spirit helpeth our infirmities Rom. 8.26 and maketh intercession for vs with gronings that cannot be expressed and thus euery Christian man may say with the Church in the Canticles Though I sleepe yet mine heart waketh or though I doe not alwayes pray with my tongue yet my desires doe alwayes speake vnto God Secondly as it respects its owne proper reason and manner to be done and so it ought to endure so long as without tediousnes or wearines it may be stirred vp by the zeale and feruor of the inward desire of the heart and therefore we say that 1. Aliud est sermo multus 2. Aliud est diuturnus affectus It is one thing to speake alwayes and another thing to desire continually and that it is one thing to pray with the voyce and tongue and another thing to pray in minde and spirit Now you must vnderstand that in heart and affection we should alwayes thinke of God We should euer pray in heart and affection and commend our selues by our desires vnto him continually and whether we eate or drinke worke or play sleepe or wake or whatsoeuer we doe else wee should desire all to be according to his will for the glory of his Name that he seeing our desires may grant our requests to giue vs grace and glory that so both mentalis manualis oratio as the old Postillers terme them our outward actions and our inward affections may be as continuall prayers crying alwayes in the eares of God but in voyce and tongue wee are not inioyned alwayes to pray but to keepe our appointed times both in our priuate and in our publique prayers and as often as occasion shall be offered either extraordinary afflictions befall vs or some blessings bestowed on vs we should ouer and besides our vsuall times betake our selues to our extraordinary prayers either for our deliuerance from our troubles or of thankefulnesse for our blessings receiued First for priuate prayers although in respect of the efficacy and powerfull mouing of God to obtaine our requests or the honour that we shew vnto God I cannot equalize it with publique prayers yet as I said before this argueth more familiarity with God and is the truest triall of a Christian man and in some respects yeeldeth better fruit of honour vnto God and more profit vnto our selues then the publike prayers vsually doth or conueniently can doe because that in a priuate prayer a man may both aske those things and confesse those sinnes which in the face of the Church he would be loath to doe and therefore the practise of Gods seruants the Counsell of Gods Church and the precept of Christ himselfe should exceedingly moue vs to the practise of this excellent exercise Gen. 24.63 for Isaac euery euening would walke abroad to talke with God Dan. 6.12 Daniel would neuer misse to pray to God three times euery day and the Prophet Dauid saith Seauen times a day will I praise thee Psal 119.164 because of thy righteous iudgements and I haue read it decreed in one of the Councels that euery Christian man should pray vnto God twice at least euery day that is at morning when hee riseth and at night when he goeth to bed and especially before he goeth to bed for as Seneca saith most truly of men rising in the morning Quem dies vidit veniens superbum Hunc dies vidit fugiens iacentem Many a man rose well in the morning and hath beene seene dead before the euening So may I say of men going into their beds many haue been seene going liuely into the same and neuer seene aliue come out againe and therefore euery man should so prepare himselfe when he goeth into his bed as if he went into his graue for as Menander saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sleepe is nothing else but a short kinde of death and so the Poet saith Stulte quid est somnus gelidae nisi mortis imago Sleepe is the image of death And so Somnus vt est mortis sic lectus imago sepulchri As sleepe is the image of death so our beds are the very pictures of our graues And our Sauiour Christ doth most earnestly exhort euery man to priuate prayer saying When thou prayest enter into thy closet and shut the doore and pray vnto thy Father in priuate and he that seeth thee in secret will reward thee openly and therefore euery man should appoint certaine times vnto himselfe for his priuate prayer to God That we shold neuer misse the appointed time for publique prayers Secondly as we should not misse our appointed times of priuate prayers so much lesse should we omit the inioyned times for Gods publique seruice for God himselfe hath appointed vs a day in the weeke to serue him and to pray vnto him hee might haue inioyned sixe for himselfe and haue left but one for thee but he did in a manner make himselfe poore to inrich vs leauing sixe for vs to do our owne affaires and requiring but one for himselfe to be serued by vs. And our Church hath appointed an houre or two of that day to pray to praise our God And yet we see many times on that day yea sometimes in that houre of prayers the Tauernes full and the Churches emptie and as those men in the Gospell had each one his seuerall excuse for not comming vnto the supper so haue these their exceptions for not comming vnto the Sermon