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A08770 The compasse of a Christian directing them that be tossed in the vvaues of this vvorlde vnto Christ Iesus. A. P., fl. 1582. 1582 (1582) STC 19054; ESTC S102898 60,800 156

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sometime by y● certaintie of the day that it shall come and the terriblenesse thereof when it commeth as Sainte Luke paynteth it out There shal be trouble perplexitie Luke 21. 25. 2● amongst nations the s●● and the waters shall rore and mens hearts shall faile them for feare and for looking after those thinges that shall come vpon Mat. 24. 27. the earth sometime by the suddenesse of it euen as the lightning shineth out of the East and goeth vnto the West so shall the comming of the Sonne of man be And sometime by the vncertaintie Mark 13. 3● of the houre whether at euening or at midnight at the cock crowing or in the dawning least if he come suddenly should finde you sleepinge Sometime also by the vigilantnesse crueltie of our enemie the deuill who goeth about like a deuouring and roring Lyon continually seeking whom 1. Pet. 5. 8. he may deuoure But how little account wee make of all these fatherlye warnings and admonitions all those which haue eyes to see may see it and let all them that haue heartes of fleshe Eze. 36. 26. and 9. 4. lament and mourne for the same that they may be spared from the euill day not perish with the careles worlde but especially with our owne Lande with whome it cannot be but that the Lord hath a great controuersie vnles we should thinke that the most high●st doth speake wordes in vayne nay Esai 45. 19. he saith not in vaine vnto the séede of Iacob séeke ye me it is not for nought that the Lord hath continued y● preachinge of his worde amongst our nation this many yeares rysinge vp early late to send Prophets Preachers Iere. 7. 13. and wise men vnto vs who haue pyped very sweetely and mourned very lamentably vnto vs. And Mat. 11 17. therefore if we will not daunce at their 〈…〉 th nor wéepe at theire mourning that is if we wil not reioyce at y● great mercies and sweet promisses of God which he offereth vnto vs by them nor tremble and feare at the mournful longe of his heauie plagues and iudgements which he thundereth out aginst vs by theire mouthes In like sort if we will needes harden our hearts like an Adamant stone stop our eares Zic 7. 11. 12. to shut out the graces of God frō our soules which he so plentifully offereth vnto vs yet let vs knowe that a Pr●phet hath bene amōgst vs and y● grace mercy by the preaching of y● Gospell hath bene generally proferred vnto our Lande that thereby we may be● cleane without excuse and our blood● iustly vpon our owne heades For if they bee worthie of stripes for theire ignorance which neuer saw any light of knowledge howe much more worthy are they of punishment who through longe continuance of the true light shyninge amōgst them haue almost forgotten what darknesse meaneth if they take not the benefit of it but remaine still vnfruitfull and vnthankfull for the same Surely this is the estate of our nation at this day for haue we not had the Gospell so longe time amongst vs that the most of vs eyther neuer sawe or haue almost cleane forgotten what poper●● meaneth Well looke vnto it therefore and let vs not thinke our selues to bee happier then other Landes because we haue the Gospell vnlesse we bringe forth such fruites of repentance and newenesse of life as the same doth require at our handes For to that ende hath he sent it amongst vs and therefore if it take not his effecte wherefore it was sent yet let vs be sure that the Lorde will bee knowne to be Kinge at the Last and it shall bee saide vnto vs as the holie Ghost doth testifie in a certaine place Prou. 1. 24 30. because I haue called and yee refused I haue stretched out my hand and none would regarde but ye haue despysed my counsell and woulde none of my correction therefore I will also laugh at your destruction and will mocke when your feare commeth like sudden desolation and your destruction as a whi●le winde when affliction and anguish shall come vppon you then shall they call but I will not answere they shall seeke mee early and shall not finde mee and why the reason is added because they refused knowledge and did not chuse the feare of the Lord they woulde none of my counsell but despysed my corrections And what other thinge is if but a castinge awaye of the L●des counsell when we will not giue such entertainement vnto his worde as the same requyreth at out handes or how much better is it thē a despysing of his corrections when we wil not be warned by so many spectacles of his anger applying them rather vnto second causes and so take occasion thereby vnto greater securitie This sinne of casting away or despysing the Lords counsel how greatly it doth displease him our Sauiour Christ doth make knowne vnto vs by pronoūcing of so grieuous woes against those cities of Iuda ●at 11. 2● wherein he had preached most done most of his great workes because they repented not affirming that it shoulde be easier for Sodom Gomorrham y● iudgemēt day then for them For saith he if the great workes which are done amōgst you had bene done in thē they had repented long agoe in sackcloth ashes and may it not as well be saide of England in this respect also that it shall be easier for Fraunce Flastder● Spaine and for Rome in the iudgement daye then for them For who knoweth howe wonderfull their● repentance shoulde haue beene ear● this time if they hadde the Gospell preached amongst them so longe as we haue had the same And besides that theire wante of it hath made them to commit many sinnes through Ignorance because they knewe no better but our hauinge of it hath left vs cleane without excuse so that now wee haue no cloke for our sinnes Iohn 15. 22 and therefore in conclusion our condemnation must needes be farre more iust and greater then theires excepte wee repent in time Thus much haue I thought good to speake vnto y● carelesse which are so soundly lulled asleepe in Iezabells bedde a bedde of securitie that if it be possible some of them may bee awaked whylest the Ebr. 3. 8. day is present prepare them selues to come vnto Christ For admitte it be so that many haue gotten greate and excellent knowledge by the preachinge of the Gospell yet what is this knowledge without repentance surely euen deade For who knoweth not that practise is it which giueth life therevnto as the Apostle witnesseth in a certaine place where he● hath these wordes though I had all knowledge and knewe all secretes ●ea if I had faith that I coulde remoue 1. Cor. 1● ● moue mountaines and had no loue it coulde profit me nothing And as repentance or newnesse of conuesation is that which giueth life vnto our knowledge so also it abandoneth from
of losinge Gods fauour for the same any more It shal be good for vs to procéede vnto the certaintie and vnmoueablenes of our estate and condition after that we b● once thus called vnto the hope of gods kingdome For as it is an 〈◊〉 which cannot be warranted vnto vs by any fleshly righteousnesse that wee can doe so in like sort the certaintie therof cannot be decayed by any sinne which we at any time through infirmitie shall committe or fall into no more then the weaknes of man is able to ouermatch the strength of God or our infidelitie to make his faith to be of none effecte And therfore these things considered the sinnes of Gods children are no cause why theyr faith should be darkened or their hope decayed but rather there is great cause in them why their humilitie should be increased and they more freely driuen out of themselues into the strength of Christ for our saluation doth not reste in our selues but in the Lorde who hath decreed from euerlastinge ●● saue some and therefore as vnpossible as it is for his decree to be altered so vnpossible it is for that number which he hath thereunto appoynted to be damned Heauen and earth shall passe away like a scrowle but no one iote or title of the words shall passe till all thinges ●e accomplished All fleshe is Esay 40. grasse and the glorye thereof as the floure of the grasse but the word of the Lord endureth for euer His giftes callings are without repentance he Rom 11. 2● Pro. 16. ● hath created all thinges for himself euen the wicked for the day of euil And so it may be saide on the contrarie side that he hath created his childrē for the day of saluation and glorie and to y● end y● the heires of promise may yet Heb. 6. 17. be more strengthned in this he hath boūd himselfe vnto thē by two immuble things to the ende that wee may hold fast the hope that is set before vs which we haue as an ancore of y● soul● both ste●fast and sure which two immutable things are these his worde and an oath His worde in that it is vnpossible that God should lie As the prophet Samuell doth testifie the same The strength of Israel wil not Sam. 15. 29. lie nor repent him for hee is not a man that should repent And again Rom. 23. 19. that wicked Balaam coulde say thus much also God is not a man that he should lie nor the sonne of a man that he should repeat him hath he saide and shal he not doe hath hee spokē and shall he not accomplish He hath saide that the righteous shall Psal 112. 6. neuer be moued but be had in euerlasting remembrance He hath said that Israel shall be saued in the Lord they Esay 45. 17. shall not bee ashamed nor consounded world without ●●d He hath saide that he will be mercifull to our transgressions and will remember our sinnes and iniquities no more Let vs neuer Ierem. 31. 34. thinke that the most highest doth at any time speake wordes in vayn Surely Esay 45. 18. 19. 20. 21. as he hath created the earth not in vaine but to be inhabited so hee hath not saide in vaine to the seede of Iacob seeke yee mee Nay I the Lorde speake righteousnesse and doe righteous thinges as he testifieth by the Prophet Esay Yea hee hath sworne the same also And that is the second thing wherby he hath bound himselfe vnto vs namely his oath I haue sworne by my name saith he the worde is gone foorth of my mouth in righteousnes and shall not returne again y● euery knée shal bow vnto me all tōgues shal sweare by my name By bowing of the knee and swearing by the name of God is meant y● who le seruice of God wherein he will be serued and worshipped of his Church And marke the emphasis of the word for it is a worde of drawing he hath sworne that they shall do it will they ●ill they If they be Gods children he will drawe them to glorifie him here in this life and will also glorifie them in the life to come Therfore y● faithfull cannot pearish And beside this consider his oathe that he hath sworne which is very plentifull in the Scriptures as in y● Psalmes I haue sworn by my holinesse that I will not faile Dauid But in Esay it is notably described where hee hath these wordes As I haue sworne that the waters of Noah shall no more goe ouer the earth so haue I sworne that I will no more be angrie with thee nor reprooue thee the mountaines shall remoue and the hilles shall fal downe but my mercie shall not departe from thee nor the couenant of my peace fall away So that hereby it is plaine that the estate of Gods children is more surer then the mountaines and hils Fitly therefore is the Church of Christ compared vnto the Mat. 7. 26. house that is buylded vpon a rocke which although the raine fall y● winde blow the flouds come and beate vpon it yet they shall neuer bee able to disturbe the same And why because it is buylded vpon a rocke not a rocke of stone for all such shall come to naught but Christ Iesus vpō whom all the faithfull are buylded for there is so neare a coniunction betwene thē that Christ is theires and they are his God doth beholde all the righteousnes of Christ in them and hath punished all theire sinnes in him and therefore as vnpossible as it is for God to be angry with Christ so vnpossible it is for him to be angrie with vs which belōg vnto him Feare not therefore litle Luke 12 32. ●●ocke it is your heauenly Fathers pleasure to giue you a kingdome nay he hath giuen it vnto vs already for doth not the scripture say that as hee is meaninge Christ euen so are we 1. Ioh. 4. 1● in this life what is Christ Christ is freed from condemnation alreadie euen so are we although we be in this life Christ is the heire of heauen and hath the same already in possession in the same estate are we how be it not so fully yet in as greate assurance although we be in this life and therefore marke it for a speciall poynt that the Rom. 8. promisses of eternall life of saluation and of being the sonnes of God are Ioh. 3. still spoken of in the present tence that they are the sonnes of God and not y● Ioh. 6. they shal be that they haue eternal life alreadie as it were and not that they shall haue it And in Saint Iohns Gospel it is very plentiful Verely verely Ioh. 5. 24. I say vnto you saith Christ he that heareth my worde and beleeueth in him that sent me hath eternal life shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life already as though it were a thinge done past neuer to
in him nay although he be so defiled with sinne that he i● become as blacke as euer was the blacke horsse which is spoken of in the reuelation So that frō the cro 〈…〉 Reuel 6. 5. of the head to the s●●le of the foote there Esa 1. 6. be nothing but woundes sores and swellings full of corruption Yea although his veri● righteousnes he as a Esa 64. 6● verie clo●t defiled with corrupt 〈◊〉 and his wisdome tending alltogether vnto death and destruction For this is the state of euery naturall man vntill such time as he be borne againe yet notwithstanding I say his blindnes is such that in no wise he can bee brought to haue any distrust or misliking of himselfe but rather is caried away with a vaine perswation of that which ought to be in him and is not in trueth hauing his heart lifted vp in pride because he hath an outward● knowledg of some thing that appertaineth vnto religion and christian conuersation thinking it a sufficient perfe●tion to be able how to define Repentance although he neuer feele the effect thereof in him selfe For his owne sins which are so monstrous and wherein he hath euery way so grieuously offended God a most daungerous disease and incurable not because there is no remedie soone to heale it but rather because the sens●esnesse of our nature is such y● in no wise we can be brought to any feeling of our disease yea and the more daungerously we are infe 〈…〉 therewith the lesse willing are we to yéelde vnto our sinnes nay that which is worst the more perfecte we thinke our selues to be And therefore these things considered how or which way should we be brought to recey●● any medicine for the curing thereof For the patient must first of necessit●● be brought to feele his disease knowe the daunger thereof before he can or will haue any desire of the Phisition In this sense spake our sauiour Christ when he vsed these words The whole Mat. 9. ●● Mark 2. ●● Luke ● ●● neede no Phisition but those that are sicke Not that there were or are at any tune any so perfect which neede not Christ who is the heauenly Phisition of our soules but rather shewing thereby how litle Christ our sauiour shal profit those which persw●d● themselues to be whole without him by his ministerie not for that he can not as I haue before shewed but rather because they will not in so much as they feele not theire owne disease nor knowe the daunger therof How truely therfore doth the Prophet vse these wordes Oh Israel thy damnation is of thy selfe The Lord offreth vs mercy but we refuse it he ●raueth but we will not heare he knocketh but we will not open and why because we perswade our selues that we haue no néede of his helpe not y● there is any so rude as to vtter the same in wordes But the foolish man Psal 14. 1. 53. 1. hath said in his heart there is no God Sure our great and pensiue care y● we haue in labouring by right and wronge to become rich in those things that shal perish And on the other side our wonderfull carelesnesse in seeking those heauenly riches which will neuer decaye and whereby we are made righteous If there were no other thing this is sufficient to laye open our shame euen vnto the whole world not as in a glasse or darke speaking but face to face whereby it may plainely bee seene that they trust more in the creature Then in God Rom. 1. 5. which is the Creator who be blessed for euer and euer Amen Truely the Lord hath not deserued to be thus recompe●sed at our handes his mercies do require better merites then these are for what could he haue done more for his vinyard Israel then ●sa 5. 4. he hath done vnto England And how commeth it then that our fruit is nothing but wild grayes We al confesse that the night is past long since and why do we not beginne to cast off th● workes of darknesse Wel if God spared not the naturall branches for this and such like corruptions how shall he spare vs which are the wild oliues if our sinnes be no lesse the iudgementes and threatnings of God in his worde are plentifully thundred out against vs but alas we do not beleu● them and as for his mercies we make them a bulwarke vnto our sinnes As for example admonish any man at any time of his sinnes this will be his answere accustomably Tush God is mercifull loe thus we imagine of his mercies that we vtterly ouerthrowe contemne his iustice But in the end we shall knowe and well vnderstand that as mercie floweth from him towardes the penitent beleeuer so iudgment with seueritie in no lesse measure commeth from him vpon the obstinate and disobedient sinners But how should we be brought to beleeue these things our heartes are so choaked with infidelitie that we will giue credit to nothing before we feele or s●● it put before our eyes Suerely our securitie is such y● we may be very wel compared vnto an Oxe which is driuē to the Butchers stall or a foole led to the stockes for the property of an Oxe is when he is driuen to the Butchers stall to go ioyfully because his hope is that he shall be driuen to some better pasture and neuer feareth vntill the are be readie to be laid vpon his head So likewise a foole when he is led to the stockes goeth wilfully and neuer feareth vntil his feete bee fast snared therein A comparison verie fit for the securitie of this age who in like manner goeth forwardes weltering in the broade way without remorse of conscience perswading them selues that that is the perf●ct waye because the greatest nomber do walke therein and neuer perceiue theire owne folly vntill they be snared in the trappes of destruction In the meane time if ani● man seeing them in this case do pittie theire miserie and seeke by the authoritie of the worde to reclaime them and set them in the right waye who is so deadly a for vnto 〈◊〉 as such an on● s 〈…〉 eth to be For they can in no wis● disgest his counsell and therefore it commeth to passe oftentimes that in stead● of profitting they purchase vnto them selues some blemish as it is witt●n in the prouerbes He that reproueth Prouerb a scorner getteth a blot That is some reprochfull worde or prinie blemish otherwise by sclaunder or so forth Not that they are made worst therby before the Lord but rather better yet men do so accounte of it and therefore greate cause haue Gods children to proceede without discouraging in exhortation admonition and reproofe also seeing God doth so w●ll allow of it when occasion is offr●● although it come so to passe oftentimes that they cast pearles before swine Mat. 7. 6. and giue that which is holie vnto dogges He that obserueth the Prouer. winde shall
and thankfulnes and not g●ut●h or murmure for any thing whatsoeuer commeth vnto vs from them humbly acknowledginge our owne ignorance and blindnes in chosinge vnto our selues any way or meane that may profit vs vnto eternal life and thus hauing our heartes prepared we should bec●●e fitte ground to receiue the seede of God● wo●● 〈◊〉 to our endles comfort For sure it is that before the Lord can sow any 〈◊〉 seede in the furrowes of our hard heartes he must first of necessitie breake ●● ● mo●●fy the same with the pl 〈…〉 ●● his law teare in s●●der the hard 〈◊〉 of vyces sins with the sharp harrow of his iudgments y● so the wéedes which our own flesh do naturally yéeld forth may be pluckt vp by y● rootes scatered vpon the vpper 〈◊〉 of the earth that is laide plai●●● open before our eyes whereby our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may bee made manifest vnto vs and we by that meanes dr●en forward more earnestly to séeke for our Physitiō Christ Iesus and more willingly take the purgations which he by his seruātes shal minister vnto vs how sharpe so euer it be for curing therof Dasig●rous diseases require sharpe bitter medicines to purge out the corruptiō which is the cause of the same yea the more daūgerous the d●sease is the more sharpe medicine it requyreth Wel thē if it be so as it is most true as by a 〈◊〉 example it may be made more plaine that french pockes is a f●r more daungerous disease then the messels and therfore requireth a more bitter purgation for y● curing therof then the other doth But our diseas which naturally we are infected 〈◊〉 is far more per●●o●s thē eyther that messels or fre●●he pockes for it is no better then a most lothsome lepry which doth not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or foote but the whole body 〈◊〉 e●ery member thereof within and without so that there is no place fr●● which disease although it bee not bodely 〈◊〉 kinge out into scur●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the open face of the world which may make vs lothsome vnto the ●y●● o● men and hasten our naturall death yet it is spirituall and breaketh out into blasphemous swearinge lying deceauing cursed speaking flaunder murder drunckenesse and such like which maketh vs lothsome in the eyes of the eternal God and bringeth speedely vpon vs though not bodely death yet that spirituall and eternall death of both bodie and soule in hell fire which is endlesse endlesse and hopelesse from which y● Lord for his Christ his sake deliuer vs all Amen CAP. II. By what meanes mans corruption i● made knowen vnto him and of the endes of the Lawe MOst true it is that we are all by nature infected with this spirituall leprosie of sinne and corruption which maketh vs lothsome in the eyes of the almighty as it hath beene already some what touched and yet not so sufficiently as the necessitie of the matter requireth For although the Disease ●● both grieuous and generall yet the knowledge feeling thereof is very sparing and although that all bee infected with the same yet not one amongest a thousand wil in trueth confesse him selfe so to be such is the blindnes of our stubborne and crooked nature as for example aske a naturall man which hath his life as voyd of th● feare of God as it may be whether he be proud couetous deceiptfull ● blasphemer of the name of God or how much his nature is enclyned therunto he will straight wayes answers with a shew of thankfulnes vnto God affirming that his nature both is and hath bene alwayes from his youth frée from any such things wondring euen with cursed speaches how why or for what cause any man should conceiu● so euil an opinion of him A maru●lous blindnes and yet commonly this will be theire answere although there appeare no better fruit in all the actions of their life and thus Satan pulleth vs forward from euill to worse in adding vnto our blindnes wilful stubbernes and therfore one degree farther off frō being cured for ● it were so that wee were simply blinde there were some hope that we would receiue light whē occasiō is offred to discerne some part of our disease with desire to be cured because of the danger which otherwise through the longe continuance of it might ensue vpon vs. But seeing ●●●s far otherwise that wee are not 〈◊〉 blinde but also through the va●●e wisdome of our owne conceits c●rryed away in a false perswasiō of our selues that we do both knowe and very well perceiue our owne estate to be good yea and so perfect that the same can by no meanes be bettered Seeing it is so I say how or which way is it possible for a●●e man to worke for ou● health when we our selues be ●o 〈◊〉 off frō any dread 〈◊〉 of being sick What the● shal we leaue it thus ruinous as we finde it ● God forbid for y● which is vnpossible to men is possible to God And although the plater b● nothing Corin. 3. 6. and the vvat●rer as litle vvorth except the Lord giue increase yet ●● is sinne in the planter not to plant and no better in the waterer not to water how ●●de vnfruitful soeuer y● barre● groūd of mens heart seeme to be vnto them and why because we know not what the Lord will bring to passe by their labours who by the ministery of his word doth not only cleanse the lepers and gaue sight vnto the blind but also bringeth far more mightie things to passe as in turninge raueninge wolfes into meeke lambes and cruel Leopards into gentle Kids and deuouring Lyons into t●me Calues yea and the venemous Aspes or Cockatrices into the nature of innocent delightfull children not that beastes are thus changed but the holy Ghost meaneth the wilde and sauage affections of men who although they bee as rauening deuouring cruell and venemous as any of these wilde beastes yet the power and force of the worde gospel of Iesus Christ is such y● it will make thē as tame meeke gentle and delightfull as Lambes Kids Calues or little childrē not so only but much more for y● excellencie of it is such that it will rayse by those y● be dead euē to life againe therfore great cause haue y● ministers saints of God euē with bouldnes and exceeding hope to take this spirituall weapon both in hearte and hand 〈◊〉 a sufficient armoure to stand and preuaile against all the engins and f●ery darres of y● wicked how 1. Cor. 10. 5. luk 10. 17. 18. great and cruell soeuer they seeme to be For it is the word of God onelye which casteth down strong holds and euery thing which exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God yea and bringeth into captiuitie euery affection vnto the obedience of Christ which worde as it is a sufficient defence against all dangers a perfect purgation to cleanse vs from all ill humors yea a most pre●●ous salue
and see howe all the powers of his bodie are chaunged ●nto tremblinge and feare his ●n●es which before were so stiffe nowe doe willingly yeelde them selues vnto the grou●de with weeping and wringing o● hands to cra●●e pardon labouringe by all meanes and wayes that hee can deuise or procure euen with greate importunacie that he 〈◊〉 obtaine the same willingly yeeldinge him sel●e vnto the prison to the ●etters and to the hote yron so that he may escape with life he weigheth not these other punishmentes yea and the more terible the sentence of death is which the iudge doth pronounce against him the more is his feare and labour to aauoyde the same Hereby you see then as in a cleare glasse what it is in trueth to confesse our sinnes and by what meanes we are brought therevnto For as the thiefe or wicked person can not bee brought vnfay●edly to confesse his facte before it hee made knowne and hee himselfe attached to appeare be●ore a iudge to bee condemned for the same so likewise the case standeth with euery one of vs who by nature are no better then theeues and murderers before the Lord that we can by no meanes bee brought in trueth to yelde vnto the same before the monstrousnesse and vgly shape of these our sinnes with the paine and penaltie due thereunto bee set before our owne consciences and we as it were summoned before Gods iudgement seate to be condemned for the same you see also the fruit and effectes which folowe the true acknowledgment of our sinnes which is feare trembling weeping wringing of handes and importunate sute euery kinde of way for pardon and the reason is verie good for if the face of an earthly Iudge which can but kill the body bee so terible vnto that partie which is brought before him for his facte what shall wee thinke then or howe terrible is the face and sentence of that eternall and heauenly Iudge of Iudges who after hee hath killed Ap●● 20. 11. can cast both bodie and soule into hell fire and from whose countenance flyeth away both the heauens and the earth Well then these comparisons beinge well thought vpon and we so perfectlie experienced in the lesser which is before man will willingly I doubte not yeelde vnto the trueth of the greater which is when anie mans conscience for sinne doth sommon h●● before the Lord. Let vs not therefore hereafter bee anie more so blinde and ignorant as to thinke that we are come to greate perfection in Christianitie before we are entred into the first steppe that appertayneth vnto the trueth thereof which is the vnfayned acknowledginge of our sinnes vnfayned I call it when these passions of the minde before repeated are stirred vp in vs through the sighte thereof otherwise it is fayned and to noe purpose For if wee call to minde the testimonie of holie scripture to prou● and confirme the same we shall see it and as in a glasse behold it very plentifully prooued and sufficiently euery way warranted vnto vs howe that this hath alwayes bene the Lordes purpose and intent dealinge with all his children elect in the beginning of theire calling euen so to humble theire soules with the sight of their sinnes that they were almost fettered in the chames of desperation as we may see it in the poore Publican who seemed Luke 18. 13 so vile in his owne eyes That hee durst not lift them vp to heauen So likewise the people of the Iewes Act. 2. 37. which were conuerted at the preaching of Peter and the rest of the Apostles were in such distresse and trouble of minde for theire sinnes that they could not tell which way to wind out of it But being pricked in their heartes cried out vnto the Apostles and saide men and brethren what shall we do Which doth importe a marueylous distresse that they were in A notable example of this also we haue in the sixtenth of the Actes in the Act. 16. 3● conuersion of the keeper of the prison who when hee sawe the greate power of God in shaking the foundation thereof for the delyuerance of his Saintes came tremblinge and quakinge in marueylous feare sayinge What shall I doe that I maye bee saued Which requeste doth giue vs to vnderstand that he iudged him selfe to be no better thē a condemned wretch In like maner the Prophet Abacuk speaking of the beginning of his calling saith thus of it When I heard my bellie trēbled my lips shooke at the voice rottennesse Abacuk 1. 1● entred into my bones and I trembled in my selfe that I might be spared in the daie of the Lorde See here the Prophete taketh these troubles anguishes of mind which hee was brought into by the hearing of the word as a warrante vnto his owne soule that the Lord would spare him in the day of euill A verye apte proofe we haue of this also in the booke of kings where it was said vnto Iosias the kinge that because his hearte 2. King ●● 19. 20. did melt when he heard the booke of the Lawe read and those iudgementes pronoūced which the lord pretended to bring vpon Ierusalem and the temple for the sinnes of Manasses because I say his heart did melt he rent his clothes wepte at the hearing thereof therfore the Lord tolde him that these miseries shoulde not bee in his dayes but that he shoulde be gathered to his fathers in peace and not see them And what should I saye of Dauid the king who beeing a man after Gods owne heart yea and also a figure of Christe what wonderfull distresses anguishes of minde soule was he in not only in the beginning of his calling but also throughout his whole life as it appeareth very plentifully in the Psalmes where he vttereth these voyces Many saye vnto my soule there Psal 3. 2. is no helpe for him in his God and agayne I fainte in my mourning Psal 6. 6. and cause my bedde euerie night to swim with my teares and aga●●e howe long wilte thou forget me O Psal 13 1. 2. Lord for euer how long wilt thou hide thy face from me howe long shall I take counsell with my selfe hauing daily wearines in my heart and againe there is nothing sounde Psal 38. 3. in my flesh because of thy displeasure there is no rest in my bones because of my sinnes and againe my heart trembleth within me the Psal 55. 4. 5. sorrowes of death are fallen vppon me feare and trembling is come vppon me and an horrible feare hath couered me yea his troubles Psal 42. 7. were such and his temptations came so thicke one in the ne●ke of another that his soule refused comforte and Psal 77. 2. it seemed vnto him that the Lorde had vtterly reiected his soule * reade the 88. Psalme Thus you see it plainely proued out of the word of God how the Lorde hath alwayes dealte with his children in calling them vnto
the hope of his kingdome that they might be pricked forewardes to bring vnto him that acceptable sacrifice of a sorowfull spirite and broken hearte Psal 51. 17. which hee at no time will despise but hath bounde him selfe by promise that at what time soeuer any do come vnto him which are ouer burdened Mat. 11 28. with the sight of their sinnes they shall finde refreshing here you see also the trueth of this doctrine verified that the Lorde doth first wounde before he maketh whole hee firste Osce 61. humbleth before hee doeth exaulte bee bringeth dovvne to Hell beefore 1 Sam. 2. 6. hee raiseth vppe to Heauen And to conclude hee maketh vs to see our miserie before he will bestow vpon vs his mercy for to whom is meat most sauery but to hun that is moste hungrie to whome is liberty most delightfull but to him which is in the most miserablest bondage and to whom is life most sweete but to him that is in the greatest danger of death For offer liberty to such a one as is fre● from bōdage or life to him that is in no dāger of death and they will laugh thee to scorne but goe to some prison and offer liberty to him that hath hen long in chaines and life vnto him that is already iudged to die and thou shalt sée how thākfully he will receiue thy proffer and how mindefull he will be of the same A similitude very fit to teach vs for what cause the Lord doeth thus deale with his children in humbling of them to the ende that they may praise him in trueth for deliuering them out of such wonderfull miserie and neuer be vnmindefull of so great a benefitte In this sense it was sayde of Marye Magdalē that she loued much because many sinnes were forgiuen her For who amongst the children of women was there euer found● to be a more greuouser sinner then she which was Make 16. ● Luke 8. 2. a common harlot and had ●●uē deuils rast out of her that is to say a greate many we know not the number and who againe was there euer founde to shew foo●th y● like affection of loue vnto our lauiour Christ as she did after she perceiued that these greate sinnes were forgiuen her and she redeemed Iohn 12. ● from the danger therof for she washed his fee●e with her teares and wyped them with the heire of her head In this sense also it is sa●d of the Apostle saint Paul that hee laboured more aboundantly then all the reste of the Apostles and what moued him so to do euen this because hee perceiued that many and grieuous sinnes were forgiuen him What the●● shall wee sin much that we may loue and laboure much God forbid The holy Ghoste hath no such meaninge neither is it saide that they loued and laboured much because they had sinned much but because many sinnes were so giuen them There is none of vs all but doe commit many and grieuous sins and the more wee doe commit the worse we are to be liked for the lesse doe we loue and the lesse also is our labour in the waies of Godlines but if wee were come vnto this steppe that wee did clearelie see these sinnes and were perfectlie humbled and wearied with the burden of them hungring and thirsting for easement there is no doubt but that wee should quickly perceiue and feele the great loue of God towardes vs in pardoning and forgiuing all these our sinnes whiche we haue committed against him and so by that meanes wee also might bee drawē with Mary and Paule to loue and labour much because many sins are forgiuen vs. But before wee can haue faith to beleeue and strength to feele that many sinnes are forgiuen vs we must first learne to knowe feele both that wee haue committed many sinnes yēa that we doe nothing els but sinne and to the ende that we may vnfainedly bee brought vnto the knowledge therof the best meane or way that we can vse is this euē so set the purenes and seuerity of the law as it is in it selfe without Christ against our own affectons vntill such time as we be euen plunged into nothing and perfectly hūbled therby for this is the office of it to this end it was ordayned The vse of th● Lawe First to reueale vnto vs our sins as it is very plainly declared in y● e●●stle to y● Romanes where it is writtē by y● lawe shall no flesh be iustified in Rom. 3. 20. his fight for by it cōmeth the knowledge of sin againe the lavve causeth Rom. 4. 15. vvrath for vvhere no lavve is there is no trāsgressiō that is to say there is no trāsgressiō knowē according to y● which y● Apostle speaketh in another place where hee vseth these words I had not knovvē sin but by Rom. 7. ● the lavv for I had not knovvē that lust had beene sin except the lavve had said thou shalt not lust so th●n hereby you may eastly perceiue y● the first office of the lawe is to reueale or make knowē vnto vs our sinnes Secondlie it goeth forwardes and maketh vs to bee out of measure sinnefull For to this ende the lavve Rom. 5. 20. entered that sinne might abounde And after this sorte the Apostle reasoneth in another place where hee hath these wordes Sinne tooke occasion Rom. 7. 13. by the commandement and deceiued me and thereby slew me wherfore the lawe is holie and the commandement is holie and iust and good Was that thē which is good made death vnto me God forbid but sin that it might appeare sin wrought death in me by that which is good that sinne might be out of measure sinnefull by the commandement And thus you see how the Lawe doeth proceede not onely in reueiling vnto vs our sinnes but also in making vs out of measure sinnefull not onely in be wraying the corruptions of oure workes but also of our wordes and not of our wordes and works alone but also of our thoughts not in condemning some iustifyinge the rest but in vtterly reiecting of all If there haue been but one thought in all our life time out of square and admitte it to be so that we were free frō sinne both in worde work thought yet the s●ueritie of the Lawe is suche that it wholy depriueth vs of all hope of life because wee were borne in sinne and hauing thus bewrayed in vs such a huge heape of corruptions whereby we perceyue our selues to be aboue measure sinfull yea nothing els but a masse and lumpe of sinne doth it leaue vs so noe but then it proceedeth in setting before our eyes the iudgmentes of God for the same threatning condemning and cursing vs for not fulfillinge that in euery poynt which we are not able to performe in one of the least poyntes therof Deut. 28. 16. 1 13 c. pronouncing vs To be cursed in the field cursed in the towne
through ignorance doe suffer the law to take such holde and enter so far into their consciēces where it hath nothing to do For the conscience of a spirituall man is the state of Christ where there should be nothing els but toy peace comfort and consolation in the holy Ghost And therefore the law which bringeth horror and seare hath nothing to do with it but vpon the flesh and old man which is corrupted with pride many other deceyuable lustes and therefore requyreth a burden to be laide vpon the same that it may be kept vnder and not triumph euer the spirit ● inwarde man which should alwayes bee at libertie in the ●●ye of heauenly things Yet I saye when contrarie to the office which it is appointed vnto they will place the ●●a●ghtnesse and seueritie therof vpon theire consciences it must needes bee greate cause of disquyetnesse and feare diuers wayes for it vrgeth vpon vnpossible dueties it checketh for neglecting the same it threateneth and curseth them for doing those things which it hath forbiddē And thus y● poore conscience being so much ouer charged with Righteousnes actiue in the Lawe palsiue in the Gospell sorrow and feare because it tooketh onely vpō y● Actiue righteousnesse of the Lawe what he hath done what he hath lest vndone and altogether forgetteth that Passiue rigteousnes as t● beleue and ● he saued by that which Christ hath suffered for v● Passiue righteousnesse of faith which is begotten in them by the seede of God through the bowels of Iesus Christ whereunto they ought to haue theire chiefe and onely respect to strengthen themselues within tune of trouble And it may be that by reason of the greate afflictions which the minde is ouerpressed with the seede of God be so darkened in them that they are in doubte whether it be of his seede or not And therefore to speake somewhat for the comforting of those which are so lowe brought admitie that in thine owne iudgement thy faith is vtterly darkened and rased out so that thou canst not perceyue any one sparkle of it in thee to refresh and ease thy sorrowfull minde withall yet thinke with thy selfe that y● which hath once beene truely vnfaynedly in thee the same must needes be in thee still For Rom 3. 1 it is vnpossible that our vnbeliefe should make the faith of God to be of none effecte for he is alwaies one Mal. 3. 6. vnchaūgable howsoeuer we doe seeme to be vnto our selues His giftes ●om 11. 29. callings are without repentāce how so euer he dealeth with vs by affl●ctions in this life Notable instruction to this purpose we haue in the 89. ●salm 89. 30. 34 Psalm where y● holy Ghost vseth these wordes ●f my children forsake my ●aw walke not in my iudgment in they breake my statutes keepe not my commandements then wil I visite their transgressions with the rod theire iniquitic with stroaks But my louinge kindnes will I not vtterlie take from them nor falsifie my trueth my couenant will I not breake nor chauge that which hath gone out of my lippes ●ere you see then by plaine testimonies that the most deare children of God when so euer they do offend him must looke for some punishment at his hande for the same though not such as they will appoynt vnto thē selues but rather such as he in his wisedome shal see to be cōuement profitable for the bettering of their manners furtherance of theire saluation Yea and it may be y● he will e●●rcise or punish them with this crosse euen by darkninge their faith to make them see theire miserie without him tha● afterwardes when strength shall come againe they may learne to liue more warely and become more thākful vnto God for his mercies towards them But in conclusion how straūgty to euer he doth punish them which are his we haue the warrant from his owne mouth who can not lye that he will not take his mercy from them nor fa 〈…〉 ye his trueth Yea and for more assurance he h●th sworne the performance thereof by an oth saying As I haue sworne that the waters of Noah shall no more go ouer the earth so haue I sworne that I wil no more be angrie with thee nor reproue Esai 54. 9. 10. thee the moutaines shal remoue the hilles shall fall downe but my there●e shall not departe from thee nor the couenant of my peace fall a●aie And what though wee at sometime bee blinde shall wee thinke therefore that the Lordes sight is demined also and what though nowe and their wee bee weake and feeble that we thinke or imagine therfore that the Lordes strength is decayed in lik● sorte far be it from vs so to do● for that were to imagine of the Lord as of a mortal man who iudgeth alwaies according to the present estate and from whose eyes a thinne s●umme of drosse will hide great● and pretious● matter who thinketh also that when things are hidde and darkened for a time that they are lost gone for euer specially if they be such as are deare pretious vnto them But there i● no such matter in the Lord who doth not onely see the bottome and ground of all things but also is the beginner ender of euerything y● is done Who at some time is prouoked through our securitie and coldnesse in prayer to cast a thinne scumine of infidelitie vpon our faith and darken it withall to wake vs vp to more watchfulnesse and earnest callinge vpon him But we alas such is our weakenesse do thinke by and by that all is gone and loste and wee vtterly forsaken then we beginne to grone and crye then wee sigh and sobbe then we sorrow and lamerite then wee beginne to call to mind our vnthākfulnes for his former merci●s bestowed vpon vs. And this is y● fruite which y● Lord doth seck at our hands by thus afflicting of vs. who is so farre from taking away his seede of faith from vs that after our earnest prayer true acknowledgement of our selues doeth both kindle and encrease the same to a far greater measure then ●uer it was before These thinges being well thought vpon may be a good mean to make vs more wise and valiant in this spirituall warfare then we haue beene heretofore For as the ashes caste vpon the fire put it not out but is a means to preseru● the same in the nighte againsts morninge which otherwise would he consumed And as the barrennes of the trees in w●nt ● are a means to preserue the root● against sommer which then wil ascende vp his iuice into the bodye and branthes therof wherby they are greatly inlarged and made farre more fruitefull then euer then were before e●en so are afflictions vnto y● children of God which doe not onely keepe them from the barrennes of sin but also increase ●nd 〈◊〉 them in the 〈◊〉 ● fruite 〈…〉 nes of Gods holy spirite ●●
are straightly forbidden in the worde of God As aduiterie fornication vncleanenesse ●llo 31. vnnaturall lustes euill concupiscence couetousnesse deceipte lieing swearing cursed speaking and such like For if those former good affectiōs may at some time be a hunderance vnto vs in the waye of life much more these ●●illes at all times and therefore not to be suffered at any time nor in any person if they will norish any hope of saluation in them selues For they are no other thē the very whelpes of Babilon which Psal 137. 3. we are charged to destroy and breaks theire bones in peeces while they are yonge lest through theire longe contiduance they growe to such strength and take so sure holde vpon vs y● wee become slaues vnto them Let vs looke vnto it therefore and roote them out as soone as any m●tion thereof doth appeare in vs. Good admonitiō to this purpose we haue in the Epistle to the Ep●e 4. 26. Ephesians Be angrie and sinne not let not the Sunne goe downe vpon your wrath And again in y● 4 Psalm Tremble and sinne not examine thine owne hearte vpon thy bedde and be still That is we should striue with our heartes euen in our secrete chambers vpō our bed against sin y● it sleepe not nor haue any continuance with vs for feare of the discommoditie that may come thereby True it is that sinne will be in vs so longe as we doe remaine in this body but let vs Rom. 6. 12 take heede that it do not raigne and beare rule in vs otherwise then a condemned wretch which hath alreadie Rom. ● 3. receyued the sentence of death And let vs giue it such welcome as the seed Gen. 3. 15 of the serpent with whom we must be at continuall enmitie and striffe And all be it the case stand so with vs that we are not onely guilty in the affection but also drowned in the action of euery sinne that can bee named yet let vs knowe for our comforte that true repentance is of strength to purge them all away and make vs pure in the sight of God As it is witnessed in the fourth of Esay where the Lord maketh this promise vnto the people vpon the condition of repentance Though your sinnes vvere as crimson they shall bee made vvhite as snovve and though they were redde as scarlate they shall be made like vvolle And therfore if the Lorde at any time in mercie shal reueile or make knowen vnto any man all the sinnes that hee hath committed throughout his whole life yet there is no cause why we should dispaire how great grieuous so euer they be For the Lord in opening of them hath no such meaning in him but rather thereby doth dra●●e vs to a consideratiō of our inordinate steppes how farre we haue strayed aside from him and doth moue vs also by that meane to looke into the word of God which is a lanthorne vnto Psal 119. 109. our feet a light vnto our pathes that thereby we may sée how to turne againe into the right way and what dueties there are required of vs for the purginge and cleansinge away of these greate sinnes There may the theefe which hath stoalne learne to Ephes 4. 28. steale no more but laboure truelie ●ith his owne handes in some lawfull vocation that he may be able to minister vnto the necessitie of others There may the deceitfull per●ured person learne to restore home his euill gotten gooddes and take ● more righteous course afterwardes There may the fornicators and adulterers 1. Cor. 7. 2. learne to leaue off their vncleānesse and content them selues euerye man with his owne wife and euerye woman with her owne husbande Leuit 24. 15 16. 1. Tim 6. 7. 8 There may the blasphemous swearer learne to feare an oath and tremble at the maiestie of God and the greedye couetous person to contente himselfe with foode and rayment because hee ●en 3 19. brought nothing into this worlde and shall carrie as little out There may the proude person learne to be● humble because he is made of duste and to dust shall returne And to conclude there may euerie Psal 119 9. sinner learne to redresse his mordinate Phil. 3. 8. wayes and to esteeme of all the pleasures and profites of this life as do●gue in respecte of Christ For this is the fruite which the Lorde by reueylinge our sinnes doeth looke for at our handes and this change is requyred in euerie one of vs before wee can truelye be turned vnto Iohn 3 3. him in so much as it is the fruite of our secōd birth without the which no man can see the kingdome of God Therfore it standeth vs vpon so much the more earnestly to practise this change in our selues that wee may euery day be re●ued into a more perfitte shape then other For true and vnfayned repentance is nothinge els then a continuall striuing to better our manners And to this ende are all those spirituall exercises appointed by the holy Ghost in the church of Christ as prayer preaching prayses sacramentes with such like If therefore our mindes in frequentinge of them be not to profite this way I see not how wee shall profite our selues at all yea although we frequent them very often May we not read for warrant hereof very plentifully in the olde Testament howe that the Lorde did euen loath their Sacrifices and other spirituall exercyses commaunded in the Lawe for the seruice of God when men are holden in them without any conscience of sinne or carefull practise vnto newenes of life whereunto chiefly they were ordeyned as sayeth the Lorde by his Prophet Bring no more oblations in vaine ●ay 1. 11. Incense is abhomination vnto me I cannot suffer your nevve moones nor Sabbaoth daies it is iniquitie nor solemne assemblies my soule hateth your nevve moones your appointed feastes they are a burdē vnto me I am vvearie to beare thē When you stretch foorth your hands I vvil hide mine eies from you and though you make manie praiers I vvill not heare you And againe in another place Take avvaie from me Amo● 5. 23. the multitude of your songes I can not abide the melodie of the vials And againe Hee that killeth a Bullock Esay 56. 3. is as he that slevve a man and he that sacrificeth a sheepe is as if he cut off a dogges necke hee that offreth an oblation as if hee offred svvines blood and he that remembreth incense as if he sanctified an Idole And why doth the Lorde thus abhorre those thinges which otherwise he hath commanded The causes are set downe also which be these the neglects of iudgement wante of mercy towards their brethren for so saith the holy Ghost Their handes are full of Esay ● blood the preferring of their owne wayes which is sinne wherein they did set their whole delight before the wayes of God They thought that the
bare vse of these outward ceremonies or shadowes was so much as y● Lord did require or looke for at their hands supposing him to be affectionated like vnto a common strumpet who alwayes looketh vnto the gifte neuer respecteth the minde or qualities of the giuer They had forgotten that the Lorde vvill haue mercie and not sacrifice Os● 6. 6. and therefore made no conscyence in falsifying their weight making their measure small and price Amos. 8. 5. 6. great that they might bie the pore for siluer the needie for shovves Yea and in the time of theire newe moones sabaothes also they thought euery day to be ten till these feastes were ouerpassed that they might be● at whome againe to vtter their refus● corne thinking all y● time loste which was spent in the seruice of God preferring euē the basest of their odde reckoninges that made any thinge for their priuate profit before it And this was the cause why the Lord did abhorre their sacrifices which otherwise he both commanded and commended But we may speake much more profitablie of this in applyinge the same vnto our time sor were not their sacrifices in that time of the lawe as pretious in the sight of God as our sacramentes are nowe vnder the Gospell And are not our sinnes also of this age as monstruous as euer were theirs And what is behinde t●●● that those our seales of Baptisme and the Lordes Supper which wee make so much accounte of and so smoothelye shrowde our selues vnder should not be as loathsome in the eyes of God as euer were theirs at that time Surely I can perceiue no reason to the contrary so long as wee are holden in them without remorse of sinne or care vnto newnesse of life whereunto they were appoynted For these outwarde seales are so farre foorth profitable vnto vs as we are partakers of those spirituall graces which are figured vnder them in Baptisme Therefore we haue to consider our ●ree forgiuenesse of sinnes washed away in the bloud of Christ that as Christ died and was buried for our sinnes Rom so wee also shoulde die vnto sinne that it haue no more rule in our mortall bodies And as Christ is rysen againe frō the dead death hauing no more dominion ouer him so wee should after liue in newnesse of life offering vp vnto God our bodies and soules which he hath purchased and redéemed vnto him selfe The Lordes Supper also is a meane to refresh and renue our dull memories in these so greate mercyes and benefites bestowed vpon vs in Christ that euerye daye wee may become more thankefull then other for the same These considerations or profitinges in the obseruation of the Sacramentes beeinge layde aside there remayneth not one sparke of Religion or holynesse in them as the holye Prophet Dauid moste plainelye prooueth vnto vs out of the fi●tie Psalme where hee saith I vvill not reprooue thee for thy sacrifices Psal 50. 8. and burnt offerings vvhich haue not beene continued before me saith the Lord. I vvill not take a bullock out of thy house or goates out of thy folde the vvhole vvorlde is mine and all that therein is But what followeth Offer to god praise and paie thy vovves vnto the moste 14 highest Loe these are the dueties which the Lorde doeth chiefly lo●ke for at our handes for by offring of praise is meant no other thing then a continuall thankfull remembrance of the great benefites bestowed vpon vs in Christ which the Lordes supper doeth The Lordes Supper liuelie represent vnto vs as I haue before shewed by paying or performing our vowes Wee are taught also manfullye to fight vnder y● banner of Christ against Baptisme the deuill the worlde and our owne fleshe whereunto we haue bound our selues vnder the seale of baptisme as by a solemne oath made in our behalfe by two or thrée witnesses These I say are the thinges which wee must haue our chiefe respecte vnto in the partaking of those outwarde elementes or els they can bringe no profit vnto vs there is no religion in them and therfore so lothsome vnto the Lord that in no wise he can digest the same but is ready euen to belche against it yea it shal be saide vnto those in the end● which do frequent them in this sorte Who hath required these things at Esa 1●● your handes Surely the knowledge of this can not but be very profitable for our time if wee would let it take some roote in our heartes For who seeth not that the most parte of men are caried away with a blinde perswasion of religion holinesse which they themselues doe thinke to be truely in them because they doe resorte vnto the outward ceremonies commaunded in the word and although all those duties wherefore these spirituall exercises are ordeyned be cleane shut out of theire lyues they make no conscience of it at all but without blushing will set an impudēt face vpon it y● they are as good christians as any can be although theire liues do testifie vnto the whole world that there is not one sparke of true and vnfayned christianitie in them Well I can thinke more of this then nowe ray leasure will serue to condemne at large Yet thus much may I say that Christ can haue no enterance into vs nor we any way vnto him except the path be first prepared by repentance by an vnfayned acknowledginge of our sinnes with earnes● stryuinge to better our conuersation Shut vp thy hearte from these things and thou dost so much as in thee lyeth to wall thy selfe about with brasse that Christ by his spirit may haue no enterance into thee and prouokest him in like sort so to hedge vp his mercies and graces from thy soule that thou shalt neuer haue any parte in them Howe miserable then will thy case be for hauing once shut out thy selfe from Christ the way to heauen also is shutte vp from thee hell gapeth with open mouth ready to receyue thee and y● deuiles waite with great diligence to carry thy soule into the euerlastinge tormentes thereof Looke vnto it therefore and let vs be wise for if the entertainement of Christ will bee a meane to set vs frée from all these miseries what greate diligence ought we to vse in preparinge a way for him that he may haue free passage vnto vs. Certaine it is that before he can come the way must bee prepared and there is no● other meane to prepare the same but by repentance For our barraine heartes are that very desart which y● Prophet Esay speaketh of where the Lordes Esai 40. 3. 4. way must be prepared before his comming by filling vp euery lowe valley and daungerouse hoale which is our ignorance and infidelitie that must be filled vp with the true knowledge of God by beating downe euery high mountaine that is our pride and arrogancie which must be beaten vpon with the mattocke of Gods iudgements till such time
be called backe againe as most certaine it is net no more then the Father is to bee called backe againe from the worke of creation or the Sonne from the worke of redemption or the holy Ghost from the office of sanctification A notable testimony of this vnmoueable estate of the Church we haue in the Psalmes where the holy Ghost vseth these wordes If my children Psal 49. 30 forsake my lawes and walke not in my iudgemēt if they breake my statutes and kepe not my commaundementes then will I visit theire transgressions with the rod theire iniquitie with strokes but my louing kindnes willl I not take from them nor falsifie my trueth my couenant will I not breake nor chaunge that which hath gone out of my lippes according to that which is writtē in Malachie I am thy Lord Ma●●● ● I chaunge not and the Sonnes of Iacob are not consumed And therfore when the Lorde doth correcte vs it is not to the end that we should bee consumed but rather to put vs in minde that we haue sinned against Psal 94 12. him and that we may bee spared in 1. Cor. 11. 32. the euill day and not condemned with the world but more of this in his due place Hereby you see then that in the worke of our saluation the Lorde hath no respecte eyther to our sinnes or vertues but vnto his own vnchaūgable purpose vnto his euerlastinge decree and couenant which can not be altered Therefore in Deuteronemie it is thus written The Lorde Deut. 4 31. thy God is a mercifull God he will not despise thee nor forsake thee neyther forget the couenant which he sware vnto thy fathers Abrahā Isaac and Iacob Saint Paul saith That if it be but a mans couenant Gal. 3. when it is finished no man doth abrogat or adde anie thing therunto Much lesse in the couenant of God which is writtē not in paper or parchment but in his euerlastinge decree counsel which is sealed also not with a signet in ware but with the very finger and power of God in the bloodshedding death of his Sōne Iesus Christ and in raysing him again from y● same Neyther hath he left it thus but hath sealed the assurance thereof vnto our heartes also by his spirit which doth testifie vnto our conscience that wee Rom. 8. 16. are those to whom this new couenant doth belong y● God is our Father we his children and therefore are imboldened ● Cor. 2. 16. through the mind of Christ to fly vnto him in al our troubles as our stay and refuge to cast our whole care vpon him because that we are fully perswaded that it is he alone which careth 1 Pet. 5. ● for vs. So that now euen amongest a multitude of cares which the world is ouer whelined in we are become carelesse not after the māner of a desperat person which contēneth meanes but rather by the prerogatiue of a free mind which we haue and do obtaine both after in the middest of all christian lawful meanes that are to be vsed caring only for heauenly things True it is that vnto the sight iudgement of the world there are none so miserable as they which are thus minded and why because a fewe outwarde things doe satisfie them because they seeke not there own but are more ready to take wrong thē do any they looke still vnto those spirituall good things which the Lord hath prouided for thē not man 〈◊〉 12. 1● they make long strydes vnto that striue to forget more more this trash pelfe that is behind thē And as it is with Iohn 10. 5 thē in life so also it is in religion they will heare no voyce but the voyce of Christ in his wor●e all other soundes are straunge vnto them and therefore will not heare their voyces No though Gal. 1. ● it be an Angell from heauen they will not haue their ●aith to hange vpō men but 〈◊〉 ●arnestly to get setled iudgement in them selues that although the whole world bee ouerwhelmed with e●●ours s● as ther be not a man left to instruct thē yet they will not be offended at the matter but haue sufficient in theire owne ●●somes to keepe them in the trueth as ●lya● who although al Israeli runne a whoring after Ball 1. King 19. 1● yet he wil constantly follow the liuing God and as Micheas who although al Balles Priestes flatter y● king of Israell ● King 22. 14. speake pleasant things vnto him yet he wil speake nothing but y● which y● Lord hath put in his mouth and with y● Apostls also who although many of the Disciples forsake Christ yet they 〈◊〉 6. ●8 knowe not whither to goe but vnto him Where y● deade carkas is thither 〈◊〉 2● 28 will the Eagles resorte where Ies●s Christ is there wil y● faithful be They wil follow y● Lābe whither so euer he 〈◊〉 14. 4. goeth not only to y● breaking of bread which Hipecrites wil do but also vnto y● very death whē y● tryal shal be made for death is vnto them life and therefore they long for it as y● scripture doth very plentifully witnesse y● same and Christ is all the gaine y● they séeke for From whence I pray you commeth all these thinges or what should moue thē thus to despise this life the things thereof is it not the assurance which they haue of y● heauenly life that is laid vp for thē in christ this is some parts of the fruit of our iustifying faith and yet not all for looke further and wee shall see more greater testimonies of the same then al these For what is the cause why a great many are so valiant that theire feare is past and they care not what man can do vnto them yea they receyue euery bondage as a liberty euery death as a life they take greatest occasiō of ●oy in y● middest of those tormēts whereby their enemies goe about to make them most so●owfull yea theire tormentors often times are more vexed and wea●ed in tormentinge then they them selues are in bearing the tormentes why because the Lord is with them in euery place to comforte them as he Esai ●● 2. hath promised by Esai the Prophet saying when thou walkest through y● waters I will be with thee through the floudes y● they shall not ouerflowe thee when thou goest through the fire it shall not burne thee nor the flames kindle vpon thee the holy ghost meaneth not here that the wicked by their ●gins y● they vse against Gods childrē shall not be able to take awaye their naturall life but their spirituall heauenly life which afflictiōs are meanes to confirme and make more sure vnto them yea in far greater glory also which they themselues are well experienced in and therfore some of thē al though their torments were to be stoned racked torne