Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n king_n people_n power_n 4,914 5 5.4287 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A03949 Bromelion A discourse of the most substantial points of diuinitie, handled by diuers common places: vvith great studie, sinceritie, and perspicuitie. Whose titles you haue in the next page following. S. I., fl. 1595.; Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605. Summa totius Christianismi. English. 1595 (1595) STC 14057; ESTC S107410 412,250 588

There are 17 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

his Isaac youth and to perish in the sloure of his age tried also with famine in a straunge land This thought of minde grieued him being among strangers whose dispesition he knewe not but shrewdly did suspect what would fall out It may be saith he to his wife I shall die for thée because some other would possesse thy beauty So he perswaded her to call him brother His last and no doubt not the least sorrowe was to sée his desire preuented For he thought to poure aboundance of blessings on his eldest sonne Esau but God turned it otherwise What passions and seas of sorrowe possessed his hart to heare his sonne Esau whome he made so great account of to cry out in bitter teares and that out of measure Insomuch that betwixt feare and anger his mind was sore vexed For he was stricken with a maru●lious great feare and his anger enforced him to say who and where is he And after long absence when Iacob came to sée his father we reade not of any comfortable words that his father gaue him Yet was this Iacob for all his fathers Iacob blessing a patterne of sorrowe Iobe and Iacob all one The very first time of his sorrowe two mightie distresses the hazard of his fathers curse and the feare of death by his brother Esaus sword Next he that should be heire of so great possessions and blessings must vnder go a seruile life for seuen yeares and for seuen watching night and day in heate and cold a faithfull seruant and yet mistrusted to be false he that should haue béene most plentifully rewarded groind and grudged at and pursued with hatred His heart and cheefest ioy for whome he serued fourtéene yeares taken away in bitter sorrow of child-birth His sorrowe increased with w●●ull griefe to sée his eldest sonne Reubin to commit incest his daughter Dina to be de●loured by a stranger Two other of his sonnes imbruing their hands with murther and thereby putting him in feare of his life Pincht with famine brought into a strange country where his posterity should liue in sorrowe And if his youngest sonne Beniamin be taken from him then do they bring his heare head with sorrow to the graue As though he had begunne and ended his life in sorrowe Ioseph put Ioseph in feare of his life among his owne brethren solde vnto merchants and as it were vtterly bannished from the presence of his father and all his kindred falsly accused and slaundered cast out of fauour and throwne into prison in a strange country wher was no hope of help to be looked for Moses in his youth like to be cast away and drowned like Moses to be put to death by withstanding the mighty king Pharao hated of his owne people who being sent for their deliuerance thought him to be the cause of their oppression whom they grudged against saying Why hast thou brought vs into the wildernesse to slay vs enuies reprochfully vsed especially of Core Dathan and Abiram the princes of the people My penne would faile mée and I should be too tedious vnto you if I should write this matter to the full And what should I more say for the time will not serue mée to tell of Dauid and all his troubles being worst thought on Dauid of whome he best deserued his guiltlesse blood sought for of him whose honour and life he had preserued readie to be cast out of his throne by him whome he could haue vouchsafed his throne his rebellious sonne Absolon and for whom he wept bitterly Murther and incest among his owne children Oh sorrows more then tragicall Iobs sorrowes Iob. are knowne to euerie one losse of goods the vntimely death of his children greuous sores on his body from top to toe the heauie temptation of his wife the strangenesse of his familiars enmitie of his friends Yea his sorrow was so great that he cursed the day of his birth Michaiah Ieremiah Daniel and all the prophets examples of sorrow to Prophets Christ succéeding ages Our sauior Christ fainting and as it were ouercome of sorrowe his sorrowes being surpassing great Apostles and more then straunge and wonderfull The Apostles appointed hereeunto especially the Apostle S. Paule who may stand for all the rest and in whome you may perceiue all the sorrowes that might befall them As is worthely set downe 2. Cor. 11. 23. In stripes aboue measure in Paul prison plentiously in death oft once stoned and left for dead night and day in the déepe sea and almost cast away by shipwracke In perils of waters in perils of robbers in perils of mine owne nation in perils among the Gentiles in perils in the cittie in perils in the wildernesse in perils among false brethren In wearinesse and painfulnesse in watching often in hunger and thirst in fastings often in cold and in nakednesse A learned man writing of the sorrowes of the godly in this worlde compareth them vnto a shippe tossed on the sea hauing alwaies weather and winde against them Our life is but short and in this shortnesse good Lord how many chaunges how many stormes and how many tempests Abel Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph the Israelites chasticed in the wildernesse of the Lord and in continuall stormes warre and battaile before they could be placed in the land of Canaan And when they were come thither and long had dwelt there in the end their temple was spoiled their people murthered their cities rased and they led captiues into straunge countries Let euery one looke into himselfe and behold what cause of sorrow our own rebellious and disordered desires which neuer suffer vs to enioy any long rest of mind which bring vs sometimes more sorrow thē we can put off moue vs vnto Some are troubled with one vnquietnesse some with an other Some cannot rest for cares of the world som swel with pride and come to their fall some boile in rancer consume themselues some fry in lust and end their daies in sorowful diseases being spectacles of sorow some carried away headlong with anger and sléepe goeth from their eies to thinke howe they may bee reuenged Such procure sorrowe to themselues and néede no sorrowe to be laide vpon them The daies of this world to the godly are nothing else in a manner but dismall daies and sorrowfull times yea the estate of all in this world is but sorrowfull Either we are hated of the world or else which is worse of God assaulted of Sathan subiect to the manifold diseases both of body and soule the one miserable the other most daungerous and intollerable Many in number and diuers in nature are the sorrowes that fall out in the world Some are afflicted by exile and banishment some by captiuitie and imprisonment some by famine and nakednesse some by perill persecution some by slander and reproachfull contumely some by rackings tearing in péeces some by slaughter sword some by fire and fagot some by
he staid not long there Let vs therfore satisfie our selues with the knowledge of Gods creatures if it be but in a measure be contented though we sée not all but by and in them that we doo know let vs praise honor him who in such comely bewtifull vnsearchable sort hath made all Timantes a cunning Painter taking in hand to expresse the sorow of Agamemnō for the death of his daughter Iphigenia perceiuing his skill wold not reach so far couered the prince his face with a vaile leauing his sorrow to be cōceiued by the mind of the beholders whose eyes in this respect he could not satisfie In like sort finding my self vnable to fulfill thy desire and to set downe the consideration of all Gods creatures thinke it good to leaue the rest to thy studie and labour and take that to be sufficient for this present purpose which I haue said vsing silence where much may be spared thy studie eased and minde delighted For breuitie bringeth attention and a long discourse tediousnes The learned Philosophers and searchers of gods works perceiuing the excellency of gods creatures and the bewtifull frame of the world gaue it a a name agréeable thereunto and called it Bewtie it selfe For if the works of men deserue great commendation and that the Carpenter in the frame of his house the Mason in his stoneworke the Painter in his pictures may excel how much more excellent and passing bewtifull shall the frame of the whole world be and the workmanship of euery creature made and ordeined and created of God Who as he is in all respects worthie praise so doubtlesse must the works be which procéed from him infinit incomprehensible only good only almightie only wise only excellent in whatsoeuer may be said to be his When the Disciples of our Sauiour Christ shewed VVhether to endure him the faire building of the Temple and the garnished worke Maruell ye at these things saith he The time shall come that there shall not be a stone left vpon a stone which shall not be throwne downe The Temple it selfe yea euen the bewtifull gate of the Temple shall come to hauocke and ruine There is nothing excellent in the world that is of long continuance and the world it self hath but his time and shall passe away as though it had neuer bene nor euer created not through the default of the workemanship but through their procurement for whose benefit it was made and created Shewe me the light which will not darken shewe me the flower which will not fade shewe me the frute which will not corrupt shewe me the garment which will not weare shewe me the strength which wil not weaken shewe me the bewtie which will not wither shewe me the time which will not passe and tell me if thou canst whether that the worlde bee of the continuance but of an houre The ende whereof is compared to the trauaile of a woman the comming of a théefe in the night the flashing of lightning sodaine and vnlooked for in a moment in the turning of a hand in the twinkling of an eye before a man can say what is done or what is towardes For as GOD said It repenteth mee that euer I made man so not long after he vttered his voyce to Noah and sayd An end is come He created man and he fell he made the world and it shall not alwayes endure Man was made out of the dust and to dust he shall returne the world was made of nothing and to nothing shall it vanish it shall ware olde as a garment and at length be consumed with fire The goodnesse of the Lorde is great in the continuance of the worlde and longer should the time be if the wickednesse of men did not abounde Which time if it were not shortned no flesh should be saued but for the Elects sake for the benefit of the good and godly the dayes of the world shall be cut off Let mee alone saith God to Moses that I may consume this people vtterly Now come many miseries losses extremities and plagues vppon the world but for the sin that is practised in the world Which doubtlesse will be the cause of the ende of the world and of the destruction of gods bewtiful frame fire and brimstone fell vpon Sodom and Gomorrha a part of the world wheras if it had pleased God it might haue lighted on all the world The windowes aboue and the depthes beneath were opened and the whole earth was ouerwhelmed with water A token of a greater iudgement and of a greater destruction when not a part of the earth shall bee consumed with fire but the whole earth yea euen the heauens also and the whole world it selfe The glorious Sun shall be turned into darknesse and the Moone into blood the starres shall fall from heauen and the powers of the heauen shall be shaken the earth shall be dissolued the sea and the waters shall roare And if the wordes of the Apostle Saint Peter bee true as without all peraduenture they are moste certaine because the spirite of God hath set them downe which cannot lie neither can be deceiued as the world of old perished being ouerflowne with water so the heauens and the earth which are now are kept by the power of God in store and reserued vnto fire against the day of iudgement and of the destruction of vngodly men This latter day the end of the world shall come as a theefe in the night in the which the heauens shal passe away with a noise and the elements shal melt with heat and the earth with the workes that are therin shall be burnt vp Sin iniquitie and wickednes saith the wise man hath cast downe the thrones of the mightie and brought the earth to a wildernes and so it shal fal out the therby all things shal be brought to desolation and not only the earth but the whole world shal come to nothing Yet thrée daies and Niniue shal be destroied yet but a while and y● a litle while and the time of the world shal be expired For the end of all things is at hand Plentifull Sodom bewtiful Gomorrha are defaced their beastly lustes and the abusing of Gods benefits was the cause Man should neuer haue died if he had neuer disobeied and the bewtie of the world should still haue continued if the inhabitants of the world had giuen no other cause But now all things tend to their decay the heauenly powers do faile in their operations and the hearbes haue not their former force and the Phisitian is driuen to vncertainties The bodie of man is not so perfect and healthfull as in the beginning but subiect to manifold diseases his time holdeth not out to hundreths as heretofore it hath done but fewe are his daies because his daies are euill Death to man destruction to the world yea all the creatures of the earth do grone vnder the burthen of that misterie whereunto they
the way much like to him that ranne after his shadow to catch it when it ranne away from him as fast as he followed it Where shal a man think sée fortune chance more then in drawing of lots but as we shall read Pro. 16. 33. This fortune matter is ruled by God The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposition therof is of the Lord. Looke into all waightie matters which were commited vnto lots and you shall plainly sée and perceiue gods worke liuely set downe Especially in the historie of Ionas the Prophet and of Achan that sold the Babylonish garment Iosh 7. and of the choosing of Matthias vnto the Apostleship in which businesse after they had made their praiers vnto God that he would shew them out the man whom he had chosen they committed the matter to lots and the lot fell on Matthias So you sée what a follery the deuised spéech of fortune is and y● those matters which we think to be done by chance are brought to passe by gods appointment Yet some more wise thē the rest letting passe Destinie all spéeches of fortune and chance haue surely thought and stedfastly affirmed that the affaires of men and men themselues are ruled by destiny And herehence come those spéeches He was borne to this or to that he was marked to be of this or that condition his destinie was to die by such or such a death One dares not go such a way for théeues an other if he sée a swoorde drawne thinketh hée shall be thrust through with it an other feareth to dwell in rotten houses lest by this meanes they should come by their destinie and a thousand such like feares doo possesse their Multi fata vitantes in fata incider●nt hearts being readie to tremble at euery shaking of a leafe That which the wicked feareth doth often fall vnto them but the righteous is bolde as a Lyon and putteth his trust in God and is not amazed with such vaine feares and is fully perswaded that so long as he kéepeth himselfe in the feare of God and doing well no euill shall come vnto him Contrariwise they that thinke all is dispatched by destinie feare euery houre lest they be dispatched them selues and in stéed of a quiet heart and minde there is nothing but faintnesse and feare of trembling What carke and care to defende themselues and to preuent mischiefes and yet all in vaine if Gods prouidence bee otherwise whereunto we must haue speciall regarde in all our actions and endeuours and so to rest our selues contented with Gods will whatsoeuer falles out If any bee giuen to lewdenesse or any naughtie disposition if any hurt come or any gréeuous trouble or hazard of life surely will they say he was borne vnder an ill Planet and vnder an vnlucky signe Which indéed is not so but rather Gods punishment laide vppon him who oftentimes giueth ouer some to an euill mind and lets them runne on that their punishment might bee the greater and bringeth many to their death by his secret and most iust iudgements But suppose that the Plannets and the Starres the heauenly influences and celestiall bodies doo worke any inclinations in the mindes of men or foreshewe some gréeuous euents yet these leaude inclinations and fearefull euents cannot come nigh them nor touch them nor hurt them that frame their liues according to the rule of Gods word No better witnesses in this matter then they that haue beene more priuie hereunto then the common sort To the proofe whereof I will shewe two examples or euidences and instances Socrates a learned Philosopher being iudged by one that was skilfull to be dull sensuall and incline● to sundry foule vices They that were present knowi●g the wisedome and vertue of Socrates laughed him to scorne for his great iudgement and other of his frinds were verye muche agréeued and displeased with him to heare him say so Nay saith Socrates let his iudgement nothing mooue you For certainly such a one had I bene had not the instruction of Philosophy amended the corrupt inclination of my nature Well then if the instruction of Philosophy may so much preuaile as to alter our mindes and inclinations much more shall the word of God and the force of his holy spirit be effectuall in vs to the full performance of so good a purpose The other proofe to disprooue all matters of destiny taken out of one of the destiny writers is this Take no notable thing or any great matter in hand neither begin any long iourny in the houre of Mars if you can by any meanes know when it is Then followeth that which dasheth all by his own confession But saith he who so euer put their whole trust in God and do guide their liues by the rule of his holy word be they neuer so simple and vnlearned God will so direct them that they shall auoid all such daungers and perillous times And contrariwise the wicked being learned yea thogh they know the times shall not haue power to auoid them As I haue séene saith he in many which afterward they did well consider though too late It is not therefore blinde chaunce nor heauy destiny but Gods prouidence which in great wisedome ordereth all things and bringeth all things to passe and hath the times and seasons and all plagues and punishments in his hand to send them foorth or to keep them back All which he disposeth to the benefit and good of his chosen children as also to the destruction of the wicked and vngodly and to the greater manifestation of his owne glory partly by his mercy Haman the Agagite as we shall reade in the history of Ester hated Mordecay the Iewe vnto death the reason was onely this because Mordecay bowed not his knée vnto him One mans death could not satisfie his ●nger he thinketh in his mind to destroy a number euen th whole nation of the Iewes To bring his matters to pale what is his pollicy First he doth falsly and that gréeuou● accuse the Iewes to the king to procure his hatred and heauie displeasure against them and furthermore to make his purpose sure he offereth to bring into the kings treasury tenne thousand talents of siluer if so be the king woulde giue foorth commaundement that all the people of the Iewes might be destroyed The King yéedeth Haman maketh haste and being in iocund ioy foorthwith Haman causeth a gallowes to be made for Mordecay and all his minde runneth vppon sheading blood The king is requested in the Iewes behalfe Mordecay his good déed that that hee did for the king in opening treason that was practised against him is called to remembraunce and the cause of this pretended murther made manifest that it was onely the mallice that Haman had conceiued against Mordecay for no matter of waight God turneth the heart of the king and maketh him to call back his wicked decrée Mordecay is honoured as the onely man whom the king
the dagge charged cannot shoote off or the poinado readie can do no hurt No counsell and no practise against Gods care and prouidence and mercy What hindered king Saul from killing Dauid who afterward was king in his place Or who hindered the desperate Iewes from killing the Apostle S. Paul Or how came it to passe that Esau after he had purposed the death of his brother Iacob yet in stéed of crueltie shewed him mercy There was no other cause but Gods working and his prouidence who defendeth his with a stretched out arme and turneth his wrath against the rest Where also we may learne in the examples before remembred that none méete sooner with harme then they that most meant it they dig a pit for others and fall into it themselues they thinke it shall not so fall out but they know not what Gods power is and how he bringeth his matters to passe Which he so doth that we may haue iust cause to say Doubtlesse there is a God that iudgeth the earth and ruleth all things by his prouidence And the more that we may wonder hereat and glorifie God certain it is that Gods prouidence doth then shine most brightly when our matters are most troublesome yet how troublesome soeuer they be God directeth all to a good end to the good of the one and the punishment of the other to his iustice and to his mercy The thunder séemes to shake the heauens the lightning to burne vp all raine and haile and tempestes make men agast and yet in a moment God taketh away all and maketh the weather faire The blustering windes are vp the sea rageth riseth vp in mountains and threatneth to ouerflow the earth and suddainly there is no such matter but a still and quiet calme The Aramites they come in multitudes and readie to swallow vp the Israelites nothing before them but feare and hunger and famine and death and suddainly againe safetie and plentie and peace As if one in a dreame had séene dreadfull things as to bee slaine by his enemies or deuoured of wild beasts or drowned in the sea but when he was awake it was nothing so In all extremities God helpeth his by his gratious and mightie prouidence yet so that he will haue vs also to put Nomb. 14. 44. too our helping hand and not to stand still idlely and looke that God should do all for vs neither are we againe to put our selues rashly into daunger and so to tempt God If God do offer vs meanes of deliuerance let vs not neglect them or be slow to vse them if he foresheweth daungers let vs not rush into them as king Ioas did who although he were a godly king yet through his rash enterprise lost his life who being foretold what would fall out yet foolishly would aduenture God hath graunted vnto men the reason to beware and also to consult of doubtfull and daungerous matters which God vseth diuersly to the performance of his prouidence Let wisedome and care and diligence be vsed and commit thy wisedome and counsels to Gods will and then God will further our causes Be flothfull and negligent and sée what will follow euen dangers and mischiefs before thou art aware Yet let vs wade further into the affaires of men and search these two waightie points concerning prosperitie and aduersitie What greater prosperitie can there be in the world then is the prosperitie of a king yet nothing is more ruled by gods prouidence then this matter as though God had especiall care of them that should represent his owne person Wherein he hath alwaies regard to them who walke vprightly to kéepe his statutes and commandements As it was said vnto Ioshua Meditate in the lawe of the Lord that thou maiest obserue and do according to all that is written therein For then shalt thou make thy way prosperous and then shalt thou haue good successe and I will be with thée saith the Lord whither so euer thou goest Which is confirmed by the example of king Dauid who gaue his sonne Salomon this charge Take héede to the charge of the Lord thy God to walke in his waies and kéep his statutes and his commandements and his iudgemēts and his testimonies as it is written in the lawe of Moses that thou maiest prosper in all that thou doest and in euery thing whereto thou turnest thée That the Lord may confirme his word which he spake vnto me saying If thy sons take héed to their way that they walke before me in truth with all their hearts and with all their soules thou shalt not said he want one of the posteritie to sit vpon the throne of Israel Nowe marke howe the prouidence of God doth worke vpon this foundation and vpon this ground King Saul when hee thought vppon no such matter was made king by Gods appointment for God commanded the prophet to annoint him king who so continued vntill he disobeied Gods commandement And then he that annointed him was the messenger to tell him that God had dispossessed him of his kingdome Because saith he thou hast cast away the word of the Lord the Lord hath cast away thée that thou shalt not be king ouer Israel any more The Lord this day hath rent the kingdome of Israel from thée and hath giuen it to thy neighbour that is better then thou The like we reade of king Salomon the sonne of Dauid who had so large a promise with this excription if he kept the couenant of God Salomon brake it and in stéed of worshipping the true God he followed after other Gods euen strange Gods and such as his godly father knewe not Wherefore the Lord said vnto Salomon Forasmuch as this is done of thee and thou hast not kept my couenant and my statutes which I commanded thee I wil surely rent the kingdome from thee and will giue it to thy seruaunt As we reade 1. K. 11. 26. Ieroboam Salomons seruaunt and the ●uerscer of his works lifted vp his hand against the king and this was the cause The Prophet Ahijah met with Ieroboam and the prophet caught his garment and rent it in twelue péeces and bid him take ten péeces vnto himselfe signifying that the most part of the kingdome should be his because his maister king Salomon did most worship God aright but fell away from him by idolatry And that the prouidence of God may be more manifest we reade that after Ieroboam rebelled against Salomons son which sate in his throne I say this young and vnwise king he gathethereth a greater power to go against him But the word of God came vnto Shemaiah the man of God saying Thus saith the Lord Ye shal not go vp nor fight against your brethren the children of Israel Returne euery man to his house For this thing is done by me They obeied therefore the word of the Lord returned and departed And so was Ierochoam king Salomons seruant established in the crowne and the true heire put by
because God gaue it him Salomon the father would haue slaine him Rehoboam the sonne would haue executed him as a traitor and yet behold it was not in their power which only worke of Gods prouidence in disposing of kingdomes Adonijah Salomons brother considering it made him relent from his purpose of séeking the crowne by mightie meanes as otherwise he would haue done if it had not béen for that For this is his confession putting forth a request vnto Salomons mother 1. K. 2. 15. Thou knowest saith he that the kingdome was mine and that all Israel set their faces on me in token of their fauour and consent that I should raigne because I was the elder brother howbeit the kingdome is turned away and is my brothers for it came vnto him by the Lord. God saith king Nabuchodonozor that heathen king according to his will worketh in the inhabitantes of the earth and none can stay his hand nor say vnto him what doest thou Whom he wil he setteth vp and whom he will he throweth downe And according to that which I haue said Daniel told that wicked king Belshasar the sonne of proud Nabuchodonozor when he sent for him to reade the writing that was against him and to giue the interpretation O king heare saith the prophet The most high gaue vnto Nabuchodonozor thy father a kingdome and maiestie and honour and glory and so forth Thou hast séene Gods iudgementes against thy father and yet thou hast not humbled thy heart though thou knewest all these thinges but hast lift thy selfe vp against the Lord of heauen and hast praised thy gods of siluer and thy gods of gold and hast not glorified God in whose hand thy breath is and all thy waies Therefore hath God sent thée this writing to shew thée that thy kingdome is at an end that he hath giuen it vnto others As the same prophet speaketh elswhere God chaungeth the times and seasons he taketh away kinges and setteth vp kinges Next to a kingdome to be in great honour credite and estimation is like the prosperitie of a king Some are exalted vnto honour and some are left in disgrace Studie and deuice with thy selfe how it should come to passe And when thou hast done thy reason cannot attaine it Looke in the word of God and thou shalt learne the cause Which is this Psalme 75. 6. Promotion and preferment commeth neither from the East nor from the West nor yet from the South The Prophet knowing that the minde of man would wonder hereat beginneth the wonder himself And why saith he And then resolueth the matter God is the iudge he putteth downe one and setteth vp another As the Magistrate is appointed of God for the punishment of the wicked but for the praise of them that doo well so God by his prouidence dooth order preferment and to those that are good in his sight he saith Ye are Gods but giueth them a warning there withall that they should not be exalted in pride Ye shall die like men Not only honor is the gift of God but contempt is his punishment Psal 107. 40. God powreth contempt vpon Princes as saith the Prophet Mal. 2. 9. and for their wickednesse and tyrannie causeth their subiects to contemne them It is not so much the lacke of dutie in the inferiours but it is the hand of God to dispossesse them of their honours And as he debaseth the wicked so he lifteth vp them that feare him and causeth the vnworthie that is them that are thought vnworthie in the sight of the world to weare the crowne When Hannah the mother of the Prophet Samuel gaue thanks to God in her song of praise she hath these words The Lord bringeth lowe and exalteth hee raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth vp the begger from the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherit the seat of glorie As is manifestly séene in the examples of Saul who was exalted to be a King from lowe estate and as hee was séeking after his fathers asses Dauid who was taken from the shéepefull to bee a mightie Ruler Lastly of Ioseph who from the dunghill and filthie prison was made to sit among Princes The prosperitie of wealth and riches from whence commeth it if not from the prouidence of God which giueth thée power to get substance and denieth the same to othersome for all their carke and care labour they and sweats they neuer so much as hath bene heretofore declared in the commodities of the feare of God Where this cannot sufficiently be wondred at that when the wicked haue taken toile and labour God taketh all away from them and maketh the iust and godly to be the right owner● It is a small thing in the sight of God suddainly to make a poore man rich as it is most easie to him to bring ragges to rodes and shackles and fetters to the scepter and to the crowne The benefits and blessings of God and the worke of his prouidence in matters of prosperitie is greatly to be séene among the godly as also his punishments and plagues and matters of griefe and aduersitie are powred vppon the vngodly as it were out of gods hand Search the causes of warres which is one of gods mightie scourges and dooth as it were contain in it self all other miseries sicknesse famine pouertie and such like and sée whether God hath not the only ordring The Prophet Esay 7. 17. speaking of wars whereby the Israelites should be vexed sheweth by whose meanes that vexation should come vpon them The Lord shall bring vpon thee and in that day the Lord shall hisse for the flie that is at the vttermost part of the flouds of Egipt and for the bee which is in the land of Ashur meaning by the parable of the bée their enemies the Egiptians and the Assirians who although they were a far off yet should come flying toward them and sting them to death The furious and cruel mind of man in war thinking vpon nothing but slaughter and hauocke sword and fire robbery and rauishment Yet as the mightie ship is turned about with a small rudder and the fierce horse is guided by the bridle so dooth God ouermaster their purposes and disposeth all things according to his pleasure Which thing doth liuely appeare in the aforesaid Prophecie Chapter 10. Gods anger is stirred vp against the Iews and he is disposed to execute his vengeance and the wicked that shall performe it are called by the name of hammers axes sawes and also may well be sayd to bee whippes and scourges and héere in this place they are compared to a rodde and to a staffe O Ashur the rodde of my wrathe and the staffe in their handes is mine indignation I will send him to a dissembling nation and I will giue him a charge against the people of my wrath to take the spoyle and to take the praie and to treade them vnderféete lyke the mire in the stréete In
them that oppresse them yet they that haue respect to gods working herein receiue much comfort by gods good spirit and perceiue oftentimes gods gratious and mightie hand in deliuering and defending them that he may be praised of them for his mercie wherof they haue so rare comfortable experience Otherwise god hath such great care ouer the godly that euen the angels of his wrath which are farre more mightie then tyrants and all the oppressors of the earth euen those wrathfull angels shall not hurt them As we reade Reue. cap. 7. 2. Those angels to whome power was giuen to hurt the earth and the sea they were charged not to hurt the earth neither the sea vntill the seruants of god were sealed in their foreheads Those houses in Egipt whose doore postes were sprinckeled with blood were safe from the destroying angell when other houses not so marked were stroken with death The angels that came to destroy Sodome confessed they could doo nothing till Lot was gone out of Sodome The diuel could not hurt Iob without gods leaue If then neither angels nor diuels much lesse can tyrants and wicked men hurt vs when gods pleasure is to the contrary But if his pleasure be so that they shall preuaile against vs let vs flie vnto god by true repentaunce for our sinnes and waite patiently his good leisure when it shall please him to send helpe and redresse For hée vseth then to sende remedie and comfort when men thinke none God ruleth all things according to his good pleasure and will his order of gouernment is moste beautifull and excellent his iudgements moste right and vnblameable the meanes that he vseth and whereby hée worketh are diuerse and wonderfull as is best knowne to his wisedome and hid from mans vnderstanding Turning all to the good of his people sometimes restraining the power of the wicked and sometimes making them to fulfill and obey his will against their owne willes So that the godly may say I haue bene yoong and now am old and yet sawe I neue● wonderfull workes and that my soule knoweth right wel The last part of this text which I haue read vnto you doth shewe out the punishment of God and their il successe which distrust Gods prouidence Which is made manifest in the iudgement of God against the prince that gaue out such distrustfull words and said Though the Lord would make windows in the heauen could it come so to passe But it was answered him that he should sée great plentie but should not eate thereof And so it caine vnto him for the people trode vpon him in the gate and he died For in this fearefull example let vs censider of what estate countenance and calling this man was that said If God would open the windowes of heauen could it be so By his estate and degrée he was a prince and one of the kings chiefest nobles and such a one on whome the king leaned who should haue glorified God most For the higher the degrée is the more doth God require at their hands If a meane man had spoken it there had not bene so great cause of offence neither should it haue bene so much regarded But séeing a noble man and that a prince did speake it eueris one thought so too and all their hearts no doubt were daunted According as we reade Eccle. 13. 24. When the rich man speaketh euery one holdeth his toong and looke what he saith they praise vnto the cloudes But if the poore man speake they say What fellow is this and though he speak wisely yet can it haue no place When king Abimelech had told his seruants waightie matters they were all affraied The worde of a magistrate superior and high calling pearce farre and that which they speake is in euery mans mouth It preuaileth much among the lower sort either to drawe them to good or to mooue them to the contrary If their spéeches and déedes be otherwise then well vs maketh great men great examples as we reade And he smote downe the chosen men that were in Israel According as we sée in a realme when the heades and chiefe doers of any rebellion be cut off and put to death the rest their courage is gone and all things are quiet If the sinne and offence be notorious in persons of account God sometimes maketh their punishment to be notorious also that y● matter may be remembred and that there may be a feare in euery mans heart that they do not the lyke How highly his and all such spéeches do offend and displease God we sée by his example Farre be it therefore that any should distrust gods prouidence either in féeding and nourishing vs as wee say there is no mouth but God sendes meate and as it is in the Psalme He giueth foode to all flesh for his mercy endureth for euer Or that we should distrust him and his power in other matters whatsoeuer for god is aboue all and ruleth all But yet the nature of man is too distrustfull and lightly none do put their trust in god but they that know gods prouidence and are fully perswaded thereof And yet to sée how backward men be that euen the very best haue bene found faultie herein as Moses an excellent prophet and one that saw gods wonders and his miracles the disciples also that were continually in Christ his presence and did so often sée his mightie and straunge working When the people of Israel murmured for want of flesh and were destrous to satisfie their lust and not their hunger God spake vnto Moses and told him that the people should not eate flesh a day or two or fiue or ten or twentie but a whole moneth vntill it came out at their nosthrils God heard them granted their request But how in his anger as the words doo import which follow Because ye haue contemned the Lord which is among you and haue wept before him saying Why came we hither out of Egypt Which plentie when Moses had heard from god yet he doubted greatly and measured gods power by his simple reason and therewithall gaue foorth distrustfull spéeches saying Sixe hundred thousand footemen are there of the people among whom I am and thou saiest I will giue them flesh that they may eate a month long Shal the shéep and the béeues be slain for them to finde them either shall all the fish of the sea be gathered togither for them to suffice them And the Lord said to Moses Is the Lordes hand shortned Thou shalt see now whether my word shall come to passe vnto thee or no. Our Sauior Christ to try what was in man hauing a great multitude present and minding to reléeue to féed them he saith to one of his disciples Whēce shal we buy bread that these may eate This he said to proue him for he himselfe knew what he would do Philip his disciple answered him Two hundreth peniwoorth of bread are not sufficient for them that euery man
not imagine that there are more gods then one because God said Let vs make but rather the authoritie of the Trinitie is proued vnto vs that though there be thrée persons in the Godhead yet there is but one God For as God the father createth so is God the sonne the wisedome of all the creation and from God the holy Ghost procéedeth the vertue and power of all things The excellent qualities of the soule and wherein the image of God consisteth is especially to be séene in these two points namely Holinesse and Holinesse and Righteousnesse Righteousnesse yet furthermore they had Frée-will and by their creation were immortall and frée from death and last of all God gaue vnto them this great priviledge as to haue the soueraigntie the rule and gouernment ouer all his creatures By which we plainly vnderstand that our first parents in their time were frée from all sinne which time is called their time of innocency In respect whereof Salomon searching the nature of man and comparing the time of his iniquitie to the time of his innocency doth thus pronounce of him Onely loe this haue I found that God hath made man righteous but they haue sought many inuentions and are gone astray through their owne foolishnesse and so are the cause of their owne destruction and are fallen away from the image of God which hee had planted in them The image of God consisteth in the depth of wisedome in the vnmeasurablenesse of power in the infinitnesse of his goodnesse and mercy being perfect holy perfect righteous doing all things according to the pleasure of his own will in whom onely dwelleth life and immortalitie The most of which qualities if not all man at the first was indued withall which were and are in God in the highest degrée but to man they were giuen onely in a measure and in a farre inferiour degrée and that with a condition if so be hee did continue in the obedience of gods commaundements This image of God in our first parents is nothing else but the natural conformitie and disposition of the soule and of all the functions powers and operations thereof vnto the lawe of god whereby fréely and voluntarily it inclineth vnto true and perfect holinesse and righteousnesse that according to that rule he might serue god his Creator all the dayes of his life For as god is a spirit so will he be worshipped in spirit and truth and in sinceriie of heart and minde hating all manner of counterfait and false worship wherunto the nature of man is now too much inclined and had rather worship any thing then god himselfe Also his dealing to his neighbour should bee inst and vpright but such are vanished out of the world and now there is nothing but subtiltie and craft and wrongfull dealing and all iniury and oppressien practised good hearbes are plucked vp and nothing is now to be séene but wéedes The holinesse that god requireth of vs and according to the which our mindes and hearts were first framed is the holy obedience and true worship of god ioyned with a sincere loue of god procéeding from an effectuall faith in the knowledge of God his word and his works In stéed wherof now ratgneth idolatry the loue of the world and worldly lustes the ignorance of God his word is more rife then the knowledge of the same and none more accepted then they that most despise it The righteousnesse also which God nowe requireth and wherwith we are inabled is such a louely respect and friendly regard of our neighbours that we haue care of them as of our selues and wish no otherwise vnto them then to our selues and doo vnto them as we would other should do vnto vs and that not outwardly for a fashion but inwardly and from the heart not in a word onely but in déed yea in our thought secrets This holinesse and righteousnesse was once planted but neuer came to perfect growth the good corne is choked vp and as we say il wéeds grow apace The dayes of this present euill worlde are such that now the age wherein we liue may well be termed an iron age and worse if worse may be in respect of the first age and the beginning of the worlde which time was a golden and precious time when the hearts and mindes of men were as fine and pure as golde or if there bee any thing that may bee saide to be more pure Now is there a vaile cast ouer our mindes and consciences our faces are couered as it were with visors and a thicke skinne is growne ouer the heart all shame is banished and a holie minde and a true and sound heart is either very rare or no where to be founde Which in the beginning was not so So that now we had néede daily to haue these wordes often repeated vnto vs. Lord who shall dwell in thy tabernacle Who shall rest in thine holy mountaine and bee receiued into heauen when this life is ended None but suche as walke vprightly and woorke righteousnesse and that speake the truth from their heart Who doo not abuse their tongue in slaundering nor doo any euill to their neighbours nor receiué and beléeue a false report against them In whose eyes a vile and wicked person is contemned and who maketh much of them that feare the Lord who performeth his oath and chaungeth not his mind although it be to his owne hinderance Who giue not their money to vsury séeking thereby the vndooing and vtter impouerishing of their neighbors who take no rewarde against the innocent or stande against them and doo them harme And they that doo these things and whatsoeuer else may stand with an vpright conscience in the feare of God they shall neuer bee mooued that is they shall not be cast from Gods presence as they shall bee that doo the contrary but their part shall bee in the kingdome of heauen and their soules onely shall rest among the blessed soules Let vs looke into our first creation and let that be our example and our patterne and let that be the high way for vs to walke in In the soule of man there are two especiall parts first his vnderstanding and reason secondly his will and desire and all the motions affections and inclinations that procéede from the same His vnderstanding by his creation was furnished with all knowledge méete and conuenient for him so that hée néeded not any to teach him but God had endued him with that knowledge which might haue well directed him chiefly in those things that pertaine to the worship and seruice of God to his owne saluation and the benefite of his neighbour And not only his vnderstanding and reason was fraught with all knowledge but his will also and his desire was most readie to performe the worship of God his will and desire was most readie to the obedience of Gods commandements Then by his vnderstanding hee was able to discerne the trueth perfectly
him not to hurt me If he thus said The spotted shal be thy wages then all the shéep bare spotted if he said thus the party coloured shal be thy reward then bare al the shéep party coloured Thus hath God taken away all your fathers substance and giuen it vnto me And the angell of god said vnto me in a dreame Iacob lift vp now thy eies and sée all the héegoats leaping vpon the shée-goats the are party-coloured For I haue séen all the Laban hath done vnto thée And now arise get thée hence out of this country and returne into the land where thou waste borne Then his wiues aunswered and said vnto him Haue wée any more portion and inheritaunce in our fathers house Therefore all the riches which god hath taken from our father is ours and our childrens now then whatsoeuer God hath said vnto thée doe it Then Iacob rose vp and set his sonnes and his wiues vpon camels and he carried away all his flocks and all his substance which he had gotten and so fled Which thing when Laban heard he made haste and ouertooke them and spoke angerly vnto Iacob And againe he said I am able to doe you euill But the God of your father spake vnto me yesternight saying Take héede that thou speake not to Iacob ought saue good Iacob said vnto Laban Except the God of my father the God of Abraham and the fear of Isaac had béene with me surely thou hadst sent me away nowe emptie But God beheld my tribulation and the labour of mine hands and rebuked thée yesternight Then Laban said Now therefore come and let vs make a couenant Gene. 27. 41. Therefore Esau hated Iacob because of the blessing wherewith his father blessed him And Fsau thought in his mind the daies of mourning for my father will come shortly then I will slay my brother Iacob Gene. 32. Now Iacob went forth on his iourny and he was to méete with Esau And Iacob fearing his brother praied vnto God and said I am not worthy O Lord of the least of thy mercies which thou hast shewed vnto thy seruaunt I pray thée deltuer me from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau For I feare him least hee will come and smite me and the mother vpon the children Gene. 33. And as Iacob lift vp his eyes and looked behold Esau came and with him foure hundred men So Iacob went and bowed himselfe to the ground seuen times vntill he came neare to his brother Then Esau ranne to méete him and imbraced him and fell on his necke and kissed him and they wept And Esau said What meanest thou by all this droue which I met Who answered I haue sent it that I might finde fauour in the sight of my Lord. God chaunged Esaus murthering minde and malicious heart and turned it to loue his brother Iacob and to imbrace him louingly and friendly Concerning the hardning of hearts howe it pertaineth to God Rom. 9. 18. He hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardneth Deut. 2. 30. Sihon the king of Heshbon would not let vs passe by him For the Lorde thy God had hardened his spirit and made his heart obstinate because he would deliuer him into thine hand as appeareth this day Iosh 11. 20. It came of the Lord to harden their harts that they should come against Israel in battell to the intent that they should destroy them vtterly and shewe them no mercy but that they should bring them to naught as the Lord had commanded Moses 1. Sa. 2. 25. Ely warned his sonnes saying If one man sin against an other the Iudge shall iudge it but if a man sin against the Lord who will pleade for him Notwithstanding they obeyed not the voice of their father because the Lord would ●ley them Iohn 12. 40. He hath blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts that they should not sée with their eyes nor vnderstand with their hearts and should be conuerted and I should heale them To you saith Christ to his Disciples all thinges are opened that pertaine to the kingdome of heauen but to them which are without all thinges are spoken in parables God hath made mankinde of two sorts the one contrarieto the other the one to declare his mercy the other to declare his wrath and iudgement in both to set foorth his glory Rom. 9. 22. 23. The which thing the Apostle for our better vnderstanding doth teach vs by similitudes and comparisons Hath not the potter power of the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honor and an other to dishonor What and if God would to shewe his wrath and to make his power knowne suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction and that he might declare the riches of his glory vppon the vessels of mercy which he hath prepared vnto glory 2. Tim. 2. 19. 20. The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his and let euery one that calleth on the name of Christ depart from iniquitie Notwithstanding in a great house are not only vessels of gold of siluer but also of wood and of earth and some for honor and some for dishonor And that we may know and apply it to our selues whether wee pertaine to God or no he setteth downe the tokens and markes Verse 21. 22. If any man therefore purge himselfe he shall be a vessell to honour sanctified and méete for the Lord and prepared vnto euery good worke Fly also from the lustes of youth and follow after righteousnesse faith loue and peace with them that call on the Lord with a pure heart Rom. 8. 29. 30. Those which he knew before he also predestinate to be made like to the image of his sonne that he might be the first borne among many brethren Moreouer whom he predestinate them also he called and whome he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them also he glorified Concerning the other sort whom he made to declare his wrath and iudgement thus we reade Exod. 4. 21. And the Lord said to Moses when thou art entred and come into Egipt againe sée that thou doe all the wonders before Pharaoh which I haue put in thy hand but I will harden his hart he shall not let the people goe Cap. 10. 1. Againe the Lord said vnto Moses Goe to Pharaoh for I haue hardned his hart the hart of his seruants that I might worke these my miracles in the midst of his realme Caep 9. 16. Of Pharaoh God said And indéed for this cause haue I annointed thée to shewe my power in thée and to declare my name throughout all the world cap. 14. 4. I will harden Pharaohs hart that he shall followe after you so I will get me honour vpon Pharaoh and vpon all his host the Egiptians also shall knowe that I am the Lord. Pro. 16. 4. The Lord hath made all things for his owne
looking for of iudgement Vppon this gift of faith and perseuerance the godly doubt not to call vpon God in all afflictions Rom. 8 38. 39. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor any creature shall be able to seperate mée from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. 2. Cor. 1. 21. 22. It is God which stablisheth vs with you in Christ and hath annointed vs who hath also sealed vs and hath giuen the earnest of the spirit in our hearts Iom 1. 6. 7. 8. 9. He that wauereth is like a waue of the sea tost of the winde and carried away Neither let that man thinke that he shall receiue any thing of the Lord. A wauering minded man is vnstable in all his waies Hebr. 4. 16. Let vs therefore go boldly vnto the throne of grace that we may receiue mercy and find grace to help in time of néed Hehr. 10. 21. 22. Séeing we haue a high Priest which is ouer the house of God let vs drawe neare with a true heart in assurance of faith sprinckeled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bedies with pure water 1. Iohn 4. 17. Herein is the loue perfect in vs that we should haue boldnesse in the day of iudgement by reason of this perseuerance wherewith he hath inabled vs. Yet the godly may swarue and fall as did Moses Aaron Dauid Peter but at length by Gods grace they returne againe 1. Iohn 3. 9. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not finally For his séed remaineth in him neither can he sin because he is borne of God Through the power of his word and the operation of his holy spirit 2. Pet. 1. 10. Wherfore brethren giue diligence to make your calling and election sure For if ye do these things ye shall neuer fall No man is made righreous but hee that is made holie and framed to good workes Ephe. 2. 10. For we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus to good workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in them Ephe. 1. 4. He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy without blame before him in loue The way whereby God by his mercy doth prepare his elect to his kingdome is by the mediation of our sauiour Christ while they stedfastly beleeue not onely that he is their perfect sacrifice but their aduocate and intercessor to God for them Heb. 9. 13. 14. 15. 16. For if the blood of Bulls Goates and the ashes of an heifer sprinckling them that are vncleane sanctifieth as touching the purifieng of the flesh How much more shall the blood of Christ which through the eternall spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God And for this cause is he the mediatour of the newe Testament that through death which was for the redemption of the transgressions that were in the former Testament they which were called might receiue the promise of eternall inheritance 1. Tim. 2. 5. For there is one God and one Mediator betwéene God and man which is the man Christ Iesus As concerning infants which die assoone as they are borne who are elected and chosen vnto life by Gods secret purpose the way is more speedie For they are presently in the hands of God Because he accepteth the children of the faithfull Gene. 17. 7. Moreouer I will establish my couenant betwene me and thée and thy seede after thée in their generations for an euerlasting couenant to be god vnto thée and to thy seede after thée Exo. 20. 6. Shewing mercy vnto thousands to them that loue me and kéepe my commandements 1. Cor. 7. 14. For the vnbeléeuing husband is sanctified by the wife and the vnbeléeuing wife is sanctified by the husband else were your children vncleane but nowe are they holy Chap. 5. After what sort almightie God doth execute and effectually declare his counsaile touching Reprobation BY these things whereof we haue spoken it may easily The old Adam is the foundation of the reprobation which mans iudgement can attaine vnto appeare howe God maketh them to goe to their owne place whom he created to that end that he might be glorified in their iust condemnation For as Christ the second heauenly Adam is the foundation very substance and effect of the elects saluation so also the first earthly Adam because he fell is the first author of the hate and so consequently of the damnation of the reproued For whē god moued with these causes which he onely knoweth had determined to create thē to this end to shewe foorth in them his iust wrath power he did likewise orderly dispose the causes and meanes whereby it might come to passe that the whole cause of their damnation might be of themselues as hath bin declared before in the third chapter Whē man then The iudgement of God towards infants that are reprobate was fallen willingly into that misrable estate whereof we haue spoken in the chapter before God who hateth iustly the Reprobate because they are corrupt in part of thē he doth execute his iust wrath assoone as they are borne and towards the rest that be of age whō he reserueth to a more sharpe iudgement he obserueth two waies cleane contrary one to the other For as concerning some he sheweth How Reprobaton is first manifested No calling to the Cospell them not so much fauour as once to heare of Iesus Christ in whome onely is saluation but suffereth them to walke in their owne waies and runne headlong to their perdition And as for the testimonies that God hath left to thē of his diuinitie serue them to no other vse but to make thē without all excuse yet through their owne default séeing their ignoraunce and lacke of capacitie is the iust punishment of the corruption wherein they are borne And surely as touching that they can attaine vnto in knowing God by their light or rather naturall darkenesse albeit they neuer failed in the way but so continued yet were it not in any wise sufficient for their saluation For it is necessary for vs that shall be saued that we know God not onely as God but as our father in Christ The which misterie flesh and bloud doth not reueale but the sonne himselfe to them whome his father hath giuen him As An vnprofitable calling or of none effect concerning others their fall is more terrible For he causeth them to heare by preaching the outward worde of the gospell but because they are not of the number of the elect being called they are not And forasmuch as they are not able to receiue the spirit of truth therefore they cannot beléeue because it is not giuen vnto them Wherefore when they are called to the feast thy refuse to come so that the worde of life is folly vnto them and an offence finally the sauour of death to their destruction There
We must learne our hearts to bee content with it nay to take it as a rich and liberall portion what euer it be and as a barre to hold in our affections from raunging into gréedie desire For our affections are as gulfes that are most insatiable which would neuer rest with contentation in any thing but still be inflamed with the desire of more and drawe and hale vs forward and so hold vs in continuall torment The remedie whereof the Lord hath appointed our owne estate to be whatsoeuer it is that it might appease our affections and settle them with rest peace and good liking as in the seate which our good God hath séene to be conuenient for vs and therefore hath set vs in it to finde ease quiet comfort and contentment therein For if thine heart be not setled in thine estate with good liking and contentation as in a good prouision it is impossible that euer thou shouldest become thankfull for it For to séeme to ioy without ioy is to play the hipocrite and to dissemble with God Now if there be any of vs who are so loaden with infirmities and ouercome of their owne weakenesse that this godly sobrietie cannot take place in euerie respect as it ought let him or them become earnest sutors vnto the Lord to preuaile against their corruption which dooth so abounde that it cannot neither will of it owne accord entertaine sobrietie and contentation And let them bee well assured that the vnfained petition and praier of them that are so loaden with the burthen of their wants their praiers being continued cannot returne emptie from that God who by name calleth out such to come vnto him with promise that he will heare him and them whosoeuer For he that hath begunne this grace within them will also in good time make it perfect So that all vnséemly behauiour all vncleannesse pride and excesse couetous desires and discontentments shall vanish away by litle and litle when as the grace of God hath fully taught vs to liue soberly 2. After we be fully perswaded to liue soberly then also Righteously shall we be desirous to liue both righteously and godly For the grace of God cannot be without his true effects To liue righteously is so to order our life as euery man may haue his owne at our hands for iustice and equitie is a vertue that giueth to euery one his due This vertue doth first and principally touch Kings Princes Magistrates Iudges and Lawiers whome God hath made the Lordes and Rulers of right and to minister true iustice vnto the people Secondarily and more nearly it concerneth euery one particulerly and namely by this generall rule of Right that we should wish and do to euery one as we would that King other should wish and do to vs. The King and Prince in a realme ought chiefly to take care that he make and ordain no lawes wherby his subiects should be iniured and wronged and that it may be said of him as it was of King Dauid who ruled the people committed to his charge prudently with all his power And that the King might deale vprightly therefore God commanded that his lawe should be written in a booke that the King might haue it alwaies before his eies and that in ruling well and vprightly he might prosper According to that we reade Ier. 22. concerning the King Iehoiakim Shalt thou raigne saith the Prophet to Iehoiakim because thou closest thy selfe in Cedar Did not thy father eate drinke and prosper when he executed iustice and iudgement when he iudged the cause of the poore he prospered Was not this because he knew me saith the Lord But thy eies and thy heart are only for couetousnes and for oppression Therefore thus saith the Lord of Iehoiakim he shall be buried as an asse is buried Prou. 20. 8. A King that sitteth in the throne of iudgement chaseth away all euill with his eies The care of iustice shall preserue the King and establish him in his throne For a King by iudgement maintaineth the countrey Prou. 29. 4. yea so much the more ought the King to haue care hereof because his whole land shall be punished for the want of it as where it is vsed the land shall prosper the better for it Iustice and iudgement they are the strong holdes and fenced places of the land they are the keies of the country and they kéep vs better then all the block-houses or places of defence whersoeuer They are better able to encounter with our enemies then any garrison of men how well practised or prepared soeuer they may be But contrariwise the neglect of iustice is worse then rebellion it pulleth Princes out of their throanes maketh the land cast out her inhabitants ioyneth with forreine power openeth the gates of all our castles and holds taketh the weapon from the warriour the heart from the valiant souldier wisedom and forecast from the wise counsailour and poisoneth al our munition What is it for Kings and Princes to take care for a mightie nauie or a valiant army or forcastles and bulwarkes for shot and ordinance if Gods ordinances bee not fulfilled accordingly and iustice and equitie be not executed in the land For God can giue ouer a great number into the hands of a fewe and make things impossible séeme very easie Next to the King and Prince are they to looke to the Iudge due ministration of iustice whom the King doth put in his place and whom he doth put in trust to see all things rightly performed That they may haue regarde to bee men of courage to feare God to deale truly and to hate couetousnesse Yea such as that godly King Iehoshaphat would haue to be vnder him as we reade 2. Chro. 19. whom he did vnto his great commendation worthily exhort vnto their dutie that through the counsaile and countenance of the King they might haue heart to do it And he said to the Iudges whom he had set in the land throughout all the strong citties citie by citie Take héed what ye do for ye execute not the iudgements of man but of the Lord and he wil be with you in the cause iudgement Wherefore now let the feare of the Lord be vpon you take héed and do it for there is no iniquitie with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receiuing of reward That the Iudges should not be danted or corrupted they know séeing they are men of reuerend grauitie and great wisedome that they beare the person of the King as though the King himselfe were there in presence The Princes armes are hung ouer them the best of the shire do homage and reuerence vnto them they countenance them out before the people the Sheriffe waiteth vppon them with all his power Yea more then this God hath appointed them in his seate and calleth them by his owne name Gods that they may be put in minde that God in all rightfull causes will maintaine them
forgetfull This third part setteth downe the cause of our sanctification in these wordes Who gaue himselfe for vs that hee might redeeme vs from all iniquitie and purge vs to bee a peculiar people zealous of good workes The cause of our sanctification lieth The cause of sanctification partly in the death and passion of Christ and partly in the power of his holie spirite who is his vicegerent and deputie here on earth Before it pleased our sauiour to die for vs and by the shedding of his pretious bloud to clense vs from our sinnes we were altogither polluted and as the Prophet saith lying in our bloud Gréeuous sinnes in the sight of God miserable wretches appointed to death because through our iust desertes we were to looke for nothing els but eternall tormentes In which miserable and wofull estate our pitifull Sauiour séeing vs to be in gaue himselfe and offered himselfe most willingly to doe vs all the good he could and to make vs of a defiled and vnclean● people cleane and holy And because in the lawe of Moses sacrifices were offered vp for the sinnes of the people and beastes slaine and bloud shed as we reade Heb. 9. 22. All thinges were by the lawe purged with bloud and without shedding of bloud is no remission and forgiuenesse therefore it pleased our Sauior Christ to shed his dearest bloud that as the Prophet Esay ca. 53. saith by his stripes we were healed so by his bloud we might be clensed Which thing the Prophet Dauid meaneth in his 51. Psal which is the Psalme of his repentance wherein he sheweth his heartie griefe and his vnfeigned sorrow for those hainous sinnes whereby he had prouoked Gods wrath against him Haue mercie vpon me O God according to thy louing kindnesse according to thy compassions put away mine iniquities Wash me throughly from mine iniquitie and cleanse me from my sinne Purge me with hisope and I shal be cleane wash me and I shal be whiter then snowe Now if the bloud of bulles and goates and heiffers in the time of Moses lawe which law God ordained though Moses was the minister if the bloud of these beastes in Moses lawe sprinckling them that were vncleane did sanctifie and clense them by an outward kinde of clensing and sanctification Howe much more saith the Apostle Heb. 9. 14. shall the bloud of Christ that most perfect and absolute sacrifice who through the eternall spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God At the time of his death and passion this matter was most notably declared when as his side being pierced through with a speare there issued out from thence both water and bloud to giue out a most effectuall signification that hée was the cause of our sanctification and cleansing from our sinnes Which is prooued by that which we reade I. Corinth 6. Knowe ye not saith the Apostle that the vnrighteous shall not inherite the kingdome of God Be not deceiued neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor wantons nor buggerers nor theeues nor couetous nor drunkardes nor railers nor extortioners shall inherite the kingdome of God And such were some of you and who can say my heart is cleare But ye are washed but ye are sanctified and made cleane in the name of the Lord Iesus that is by the shedding of his bloud and also we are sanctified and made cleane saith hée by the spirite of our God According to that of the Prophet Dauid in the Psalme aforesaide Wash me throughly and cleanse me from my sinne and establish me with thy frée spirit which may assure me that I am drawne out of the slauery of sin and that my guiltinesse shall be no more laid to my charge The law entred thereupon that the offence should abound that is the it might be known to be notorious neuerthelesse where sinne abounded there grace abounded much more That as sinne had raigned vnto death so might grace also raign by righteousnesse and sanctification vnto eternal life through Iesus Christ our Lord. The which grace that is the forgiuenesse of our sinnes through the blood of Christ the good spirit of God the holy Ghost doth certifie vnto our hearts And therefore it is well said to be the comfortor as our Sauiour Christ promised that after his ascention vp into heauen hée would send the comfortour Ib. 14. 16. and 16. 7. By the vertue of which spirite the power of sinne is beaten downe and our hearts are renued our mindes altered our liues chaunged and we become new creatures which before were foule and filthie ougly and loathsome through the deformitie of sinne and now are we sanctified and made holy But wherefore hath Christ redéemed vs from all our 〈◊〉 of good workes iniquitie and purged vs that we might be a peculiar people vnto himselfe if it bee not to this intent and purpose that wee should bee zealous of good workes A thankfull minde would aske how so great benefits might be requited and if no recompence could be made as certainly it cannot it would be desirous to know how part of a mends might be made and would be maruellous readie to put in practise any dutie which might shewe the thankfulnesse thereof Thou néedest not in this matter to go farre to enquire and search it out only this is required of thée that thou maiest shewe thy thankfulnesse bee zealous of good workes For we are the workmanship of God esperially by grace created anew in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that wee should walke in them Heere are all carnall gospellers condemned who liue in hope that vnder the countenance of their profession all libertie of life will be borne out well inough Who turne the grace of God into wantonnesse and make their profession their shame making Christ his death to bee nothing else but as it were a boude vnto their lewde life Here may we sée that the Lord hath not laide downe his life to purchase no other thing at our hands besides a profession of the truth but that he bought with his bloud a zealous addicting of our selues to Christian conuersation It is a wonder to sée how the wicked will boast of the benefite of Christ his blood how mightie it is to merite how sufficient to saue from sinne But for all that they will not giue ouer any libertie of life that before they haue enioyed whereas the life of Christ was giuen to purchase a new conuersation as well as a new profession For he gaue himselfe for vs that we might giue our selues vnto him being a peculiar people zealous of good workes Let vs marke it then my brethren that he gaue himselfe for vs that our life might be let out to honour him He made not so slender a purchase with so great a price as if he had a déep and sorrowfull sigh or a good word at our last breath that would suffice him no his life was
giuen to wicked waies with gréedinesse and are so subiect to the bondage and slauery of the diuell and of sin that we thinke no way better then the broad way that leadeth to destruction thinking that heauen is in this world and that hell is but an old wiues tale saying vnto our selues Peace peace and all is in safety when sodainly either death shall ouertake vs or the latter day bring vs to iudgement True it is that which the eie seeth not the heart rueth not and the diuell hath diuers deuices to blinde the eies of our vnderstanding to make vs still to run on vntill it be too late to turn backe Being destitute of the grace of God and not as yet regenerate we are holden vnder the euill spirit of bondage setting all our delight in earthly and transitorie things yéelding vp our selues to our fleshly desires being strangers from God and strangers from our redéemer strangers from the life to come and altogither vnacquainted with his grace Wherby although we may think we are in the estate of fréedome and as fréemen yet are we of no better account then the basest seruants that liue and againe vnder such a maister whose seruice is nothing els but tyrannie shaddowed ouer with flattery a roaring lion seeking after his pray a gréedy wolfe clothed in a shéep skin But as Christ came into the world to destroy the workes of the diuel so hath he caused his grace to be published and sent his spirit into our hearts to open the eies of our vnderstāding to turn our harts and make them relent to make vs sée how cruell our maister is whome we serue and how dangerous an estate we are in being nothing but bondage slauery death destruction And this is the peculiar effect of the spirit of God and of his grace to shew vs our miserable estate by the law of God to strike our consciences with the rememembrance of our sinnes that we may vnderstand that we are in a desperate estate vnlesse we fly to Christ for succor Wherfore being directed by the spirit of god our stubburn harts are made to yéeld and to shed abundance of teares in consideratiō we haue offended God Which spirit of fréedom prouoketh vs to flie vnto Christ our only succour by a stedfast faith to take hold of the promises of gods mercy through the death of Christ whereby it commeth to passe y● our sins are forgiuen and although we are vnworthy therof are we accounted numbred among the children of God This is that spirit of adoption that maketh vs reioyce vnder the glorious libertie of the sonnes of GOD. Which maketh our ioy so much the more aboundant in consideration of our fearefull estate whereby we were so miserable So that wee may boldly triumph with the Apostle saying Reioyee in the Lord alwaies and againe I say reioyce For what greater ioy can there be then the ioy and peace of a quiet conscience being fully resolued of forgiuenesse of sinnes and of the fauoure of God who hath aduanced vs to so high a dignitie as of his enemies to make vs his sonnes and children Wherefore in meditation of our former estate let vs follow the Apostles counsaile 1. Pet. 1. 17. Passe the time of your dwelling here in feare and liue not carelesly as thongh we might doe what we list much like to wanton children which had néed continually to be corrected with the rod. But as the Apostle saith Brethren be not children in vnderstanding but as concerning maliciousnesse be children but in vnderstanding be of a ripe age so manie I say brethren as concerning wickednesse and vngodly behauiour let vs be children but as concerning the feare of God let vs grow from strength to strength vntill we be of a ripe age A dutifull seruaunt standeth alwaies in feare and distrust that that which he doth to his maister be not perfitly and sufficiently done as one desirous to continue his maisters fauour and good liking toward him So also a dutifull child should be careful still to please his father for feare not onely of loosing his fathers good wil but also of hindering himselfe from the which otherwise his father would leaue him and do for him How much more should an adopted child looke vnto himselfe and to his waies because he is taken in but of fauour without any desert and onely vpon pitie and compassion rather then vpon any other consideration Wherefore it is not for vs to make a triumph of our adoption and to make our boast and vaunt of it but rather in a godly sort to humble our selues through feare forecasting with our selues how to continue Gods good will toward vs which through our negligence and carelesse behauiour may be remooued For as they that come to goods to landes and possessions by fauour friendship and by adoption through their own foolishnes may dispossesse themselues of all so if a godly wisdome be not vsed the benefit of adoption may greatly be disgraced in vs and we may bring our selues into that case as iustly to thinke that we are none of Gods children So did that godly king Dauid and that holy blessed Apostle S. Peter by their infamous sinnes so alter the certaintie of their adoption as though they had quite béen forsaken of God So the it is not without great cause that the Apostle vseth these words Let him y● standeth take héed least he fall As if he had said let the adopted children of God take héed lest they offend God and let the testimony of a good cōscience be alwaies a reioycing vnto them and that the certaintie of our adoption may alwaies be warranted vnto vs. Where is therefore our ioy or where is our chiefest care grounded and setled not in the things of this world neither in this world Better it is to be in the house of mourning then to be in the house of laughter better it is to mourne for our ●innes past then in worldly sort to reioyce of our adoptions Considering that whē Adam and Eue were in the chiefest worldly ioy and thought themselues in the estate of Angels and in high fauour with God they procured thēselues to be mimiserable wretches and not worthie the name of gods children Who before had a blessing if they had continued in the fauour and grace of God and could haue perceiued their happie estate or if at lestwise they could haue foreséen the danger that would haue followed but instéede of a blessing they receiued a curse and instéed of fauour great displeasure Although we may be certified of our adoption yet it beh●ueth vs so long as we dwell in this world and are compassed with this our sinnefull flesh to be circumspect and wise to be warie and watchfull knowing that the broade way is as neare vnto vs as the narrowe way the right hand as neare as the left the diuel tempting the world inticing the flesh yéelding nay fighting and resisting the good spirit
According to that of the Apostle S. Paul Philip. 1. 12. I would you vnderstood brethren that the things which haue come vnto me are turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell So that my bands in Christ are famous throughout all the iudgement hall and in all other places In so much that many of the brethren in the Lord are boldned through my bands and dare more franckly speake the word Yea the aduersary king Agrippa himself was almost become a Christian Fiftly our constancy and courage shal be a cause of greater condemnation to our enemies whose consciences are by this means made without excuse As the same Apostle in the chapter recited saith In nothing feare your aduersaries enemies which is a token to them of perdition and destruction and to you a token of saluation and that of God For vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not only ye should beléeue in him but also suffer for his sake Sixtly and lastly we shall confound the kingdome of the diuel which is only established by lies and vntruth All which perswasions are forcible in●ugh to prepare vs Not to be ouer rash to make vs offer our selues as Peter did and me thinks I heare euery one say They are ready Mat. 20. 31. Christ said vnto his Disciples All ye shal be offended by me this night but Peter answered and said vnto him though all men should bee offended by thée yet will I neuer bee offended Iesus saide vnto him Verily I say vnto thée that this night before the Cocke crowe thou shalt denie me thrice Peter said vnto him though I should die with thée yet will I not deny thée Likewise also saide they all Yet for all that all of them were either offended or they denied or were scattered and Peter the foremost man denied and fors●ore Christ Sée the euent of foolish rashnesse and vndiscréete boldnesse Go to now ye that are so hastie and so hardie and so ready All such boasting is in vaine For that ye ought to say if the Lord will and if the Lord giue strength we will do so Know ye not that your wils are wauering and flesh is fraile and sathan is subtile and the world is tyrannous and cruell and againe ye know not how all things wil fall out Promise nothing before the time but pray to God to make thée able Sit down first and cast thy accounts bethinke thy selfe of the force of thy enemies the diuels potentates of thy weakenesse which of it self cannot stand and many the like matters This wil aske a long time to consult and deliberate with thy selfe Who seeth not that they that are most cowardly in the battel are most valiant before they come to the field Great boasters may well be compared to barking dogs which haue no courage to fight when they be set vpon Our sauior Christ moueth vs to great wisedom in this matter for he knew what was in man how that the boldest would be readie inough to draw backward For after that he had exhorted to the bearing of his crosse and the enduring of persecution he put forth a parable to make euery one fully to bethinke themselues lest they should reuolt after they were resolued Luke 14. Which of you saith he minding to build a tower sitteth not downe before and counteth the cost whether we haue sufficient to performe it lest that after he hath laid the foundation and is not able to performe it all that behold him begin to mocke at him saying This man beganne to build and was not able to make an end Be not rash without wisedome and ●ast with thy selfe what may fall out If thou be couragious and venterous then behold flattery faire meanes and sugred promises As King Antiochus went about to perswade the poungest of the seuen brethren not only with words but swore also vnto him by an oath that he would make him rich and wealthie if he would forsake the lawes of his fathers and that he would take him as a friend and giue him offices If there bee any shewe of faintnesse to bee perceiued in thée then come thundring threatnings like thunderbolts to cast thée downe Besides although thou be neuer so innocent and guiltlesse and without fault yet be sure thou shalt haue false reports raised vp mischéeuous accusations intollerable and diuellish slaunders deuised against thée and laide to thy charge These are they which subuert the state of the world and heere they are they obserue not the kings lawes therefore it is not the kings profit to suffer them When the Iewes led Christ to Pilate they did accuse him but falsly and vndeseruedly saying We haue found this man peruerting the people and forbidding to paie tribute to Cesar saying that he is Christ a king The malicious Iewes laid hands on the Apostle Saint Paul and mooued the people Crying Men of Israel helpe this is the man that teacheth all men euerie where against the people and the lawe and this place Certainly saith Tertullus the Orator accusing the Apostle before Felix the Gouernour we haue founde this man a pestilent fellowe and a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes throughout the worlde Looke to these matters cast thy count prepare thy minde least after thou hast appointed with thy selfe to be constant thou become wauering Many feares to hold vs back flesh and blood loth to depart from worldly comforts life swéete death bitter Thy enemies shal be they of thine owne houshold and of thy own kindred no trust in the world no comfort in the earth Be not too bold of thy owne strength mightie pillers haue fallen downe Peter an Apostle and one of the chiefest and most bold and venterous yet in time of triall was found nothing so but rather weake and childish Shall I present vnto you a domesticall example of one of our owne nation being had in reuerent regard and renoume of the enemy himselfe Doctor Cranmer archbishop of Canterbury and in high office and estimation with king Henry the eight of famous memorie dearely beloued of the king although he did contrary his procéedinges in many matters Who was so constant in the profession of Christ his trueth and christian religien that no threatninges could quaile him no torments feare him Yet marke and perceiue how flattery and faire meanes and swéete promises for the time ouercame him vntill God by his grace did lift him vp after his fall According to the swéet saying of the Prophet Dauid Psal 37. 32. The wicked watcheth the righteous and seeketh occasion to slay him but the Lord will not leaue him in his hand nor condemne him when he is iudged It may be thought a néedlesse worke to set downe word by word the Syren song and eloquent and forcible perswasion that made so excellent a member so constant a martyr to fall Againe if I should referre the Reader to the booke either the booke may not be in place because it is not of so easie
Achab did that wicked King of Israel Some will say it is an eafie matter for a man to ouercome his sinfull affections and wee may doo well if wee will But I aske them who was more able and better furnished then the blessed Apostle S. Paul yet he findeth the matter so hard to performe that he confesseth it to the whole world Rom. 11. 22. I delight in the law of God concerning the inner man but I see an other lawe in my members rebelling against the lawe of my minde and leading me captiue vnto the lawe of sinne which is in my members that is in all the sences and in all the parts of my bodie Yea he seeth it to be a matter so impossible that he is faine to crie out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me And seeth no other meane of deliueraunce but only praier for Gods helpe that it would please God to beate downe the power of sinne in him I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me And answere was made My grace is sufficient for thee and my power is made perfect through thy weaknesse For that which is impossible to man is most easie for God to bring to passe Most truly therefore might he say Very gladly will I reioyce rather in mine infirmities that the power of Christ may dwell in me and master and mortifie sinne which would full faine haue the better hand ouer me Many will not be knowne of their sinnes when they be admonished of them because they are loth to leaue them yet some of a better minde and more tractable will acknowledge them and in their minde will mislike them and also will not sticke to confesse that they would faine leaue them and would thinke themselues happie if they might be rid of them yet find in themselues no power at all to forgo them No maruell then though the Apostle Heb. 12. perswadeth vs to cast off sinne which cleaneth vnto vs and hangeth on so fast But how may we forgo them how may we be rid of them we cannot it is impossible to vs. Craue it and beg it as the apostle did once twice thrice yea often euer at the hands of God in earnest and humble praier and he will performe it vnto thée and after a while thou shalt perceiue how weake the power of sin will begin to be in thée So that thou shalt be daily lesse proude lesse giuen to drunkennesse to theft to whoredome and the like till thou growest at the last to hate that sin that troubled thy soule so much till in time thou hast gathered that strength that thou maiest dispossesse and throwe out that strong man Behold then how great cause the godly haue to reioyce at their infirmities in that not only the power of their ruling sinnes is abated but also by the power of Gods good spirit and by the grace of Christ who dwelleth in the harts of the godly they are quite ouercome and ouerthrowne Whereby we may gather these two comforts First that this is a sure token vnto vs that we appertaine vnto God and secondly that the diuel shall haue no power to destroy vs séeing that we haue escaped his snares and that his bands that held vs in so fast are loosed burst and broken I will adde but one ioy more which is most pertinent To do good for euill and for the present purpose And that is that the godly reioyce to do the wicked good as the wicked reioyce to hurt them and sport and solace themselues in their sorrowes At the conuertion of the sinner and wicked the Angels in heauen reioyce and it is not to be doubted but that the godly beare them company heerein and are as greatly ioyfull The enemy of the Prophet Eliseus sought his death but he set bread water before them and sent them away in peace when they were al in his hand and at his word they might haue bene put to death When Dauid might haue saline Saul yet he reioyced in preseruing his life The Prophet Ieremy counselled the Israelies to pray for the life of King Nabuchodonosor who held them in captiuitie although he were a wicked and an idolatrous King Our Sauiour Christ praied for the life of his persecutors O Lord laie not this sinne to their charge for they know not what they do So did the blessed Martyr S. Stenen when the stones flue thicke about his eares Thus doo they pray for them that persecute them that God would turn his wrath from them and that in mercy he would call them as the Apostle Saint Paul was called from persecution to profession thus doo they speake well of them that hate them blesse them that curse them thus do they good for euil and séeke the preseruation of their liues who gréedily hunt after their ouerthrow death According to the examples of the Apostles 1. Cor. 4. 12. We are reuiled and yet we blesse we are persecuted and suffer it we are euill spoken of and we pray I say the truth in Christ saith S. Paul Rom. 9. 1. I lie not my conscience bearing mee witnesse in the holie Ghost that I haue great heauinesse and continual sorrow in my heart For I would wish my self to be seperate from Christ for my brethren that are my kinsmen according to the flesh but his professed and vtter enemies by persecution Yet he calleth them brethren Brethren my hearts desire and praier to God for Israel is that they might bee saued Accounting the good and welfare of his enemies the greatest ioy that might befall him More might be said but I haue stood vpon this point of the ioy of the godly somewhat too long Wherefore as a matter more proper to the godly I will The sorrow of the godly returne vnto the words of my text and intreat once againe of their sorrow The world shall reioyce and ye shall sorrow as if they were both borne and bred to it and should end their liues in the same For as the oxen appointed to the slaughter are let runne a fatting at their pleasure and other oxen kept vnder daily labour of the yoke so fareth it with the godly that are exercised with trouble all the daies of their life while the wicked escape run at randam gathering fat and growing grosse dying shortly nay more then that eternally If the godly haue any comfort in this world it continueth not long and therefore their life may well be said to be a mixture of swéet soure and a continual interchange of sorrow comfort comfort sorrow Which if they consider wel is a benefit vnto them so far forth as to draw their minds frō earth to heauen from y● world to God Wherunto they are the more moued bicause the world maketh a wonder of them a gazing stock a matter of contempt and derision As the Apostle 1. Cor. 4. 13. hath foretold We are counted as the filth of the worlde and the
vnto thée from thy God For I will set mine eies vpon them for good and I wil bring them again to this land and I wil build them and not destroy them and I wil plant them and not roote them out saith the Lord. Therfore they shall come reioyce in the height of Sion and shall run to the bountifulnesse of the Lord euen for the wheat for the wine and for the oile for the increase of shéep bullocks and their soule shal be as a watred garden they shall haue no more sorrow Then shal the virgin reioyce in the dance and the yong men the old mē togither for I wil turn their mourning into ioy wil comfort them giue them ioy for their sorrows And y● voice of ioy and the voice of gladnesse and the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride shal be heard in their stréets as also the voice of them y● shal say Praise the Lord of hostes because the Lord is good for his mercy endureth for euer Hagar Abrahams handmaid being ready to wéepe out her hart with sad mournfull teares and pittious lamentable cries God caused her to behold ioy and gaue her the life of her infant when it was ready to die with thirst promised her moreouer that of him shuld come a great people What trobles did king Dauid endure whē he was a subiect vnder king Saul who continually sought his death and most cruelly and vndeseruedly to shead his innocent blood how many feares how many flights how many dangers Where death was God made life appeare where contempt was God gaue credit and when his crosses were ended God gaue him his crowne to reioyce him Which made him thankfull to God saying Thou hast turned my mourning into ioy thou hast loosed my sackcloth and girded mee with gladnesse Therefore shall my tongue praise thee and not cease O Lord my God I will giue thankes vnto thee for euer Ieremiah the Prophet beaten cast into prison readie to starue for hunger like to be put to death but the Lord hi● him Who had regard of his trouble and of his sorrow and sent him ioy with great credit For in the sight of them that were led into captiuitie Zabuzaradan the chiefe steward according to the commaundement of king Nabuchodonozor who willed him to looke well vnto him and to doo him no harme but euen as he himselfe would desire to be dealt withall loosed him from the chaines which were on his hands and intreated him most kindly saying If it please thée to come with me into Babel come and I wil looke wel vnto thée but if it please thée not to come with me into Babel tarry still Behold all the land is before thée whither it séemeth good and conuenient for thée to go thither go So the chiefe steward gaue him vittailes and a reward and let him go If we looke vpon the deathfull sorrow of chaste Susanna do we not in reading her storie reioyce with her to sée what ioy of heart God sent her The Apostle Saint Peter being in prison his bands were loosed the prison doore set wide open and he by an Angel willed to come forth so was his ioy increased vpon the suddain beyond expectation Tolet goe other examples I will vse but this one King Ashuerus through the accusations of wicked Haman gaue out his letters that the Iewes should be slaine throughout his dominions A pittifull thing it was to sée and heare the outcries of the poore distressed Iewes Mardocheus gréeuously mourning yea Hester the Quéene her selfe fainted and fel down in a swoune Yet behold after a while the kings heart and mind is changed after a while life ioy yea and a solemne and a yearly remembrance of that ioy throughout their posterities and generations After a tempest a calme after stormie weather faire All which examples ought to be sufficient incouragements vnto vs not to be daunted or dismaied for any sorrow but rather to sustaine our selues with the hope of ioy to come After pouertie may come wealth after sicknesse Psal 107. 41. health after imprisonment libertie after shame by false reports credite againe after miserie dignitie after hatred good will after sorrow ioy and who knoweth what a day may bring foorth The seruant that endureth much drudgery that is beaten vndeseruedly that continueth painfully that performeth faithfully is in time released and with riches store and plentie blessed when as to remember what great miserie hee hath abidden and gone through is one of his chiefe ioyes Experience prooueth this to be true and the example of Iacobs seruice vnder Laban vnrequited by his grudging maister but plentifully rewarded by God himselfe dooth shewe howe thy sorrowes may bee turned into ioy Feare not saith Tobit to his sonne though thou bee poore for thou hast many things if thou feare God For indéed all Gods blessings especially pertaine to them that feare him though otherwise enioyed by vsurpation and an easie thing it is with God suddeinly to make a poore man rich The sorrowes of sicknesse may ende in ioyfull health King Hezekiah had fiftéene yeares added to his daies and it reioyced him more then his kingdome Compare Iosephs imprisonment with his honour and Susannais credite with her shame and Mordecais miserie with his dignitie and Esaus hatred Pro. 16. 7. toward Iacob altered to good will and louing affection and sée whither it be not true that Christ hath said set downe in the behalfe and respect of the godly Ye shall sorrow but your sorrow shal be turned into ioy It was a benefite and a ioy to Hezekiah to haue his daies prolonged and it was promised to king Iosiah for a great blessing to haue his daies cut off But the cause of this blessing and ioy was the great sorrowe that he tooke considering the great plagues that were to come vpon his people As it was answered by Hulda the Prophetesse These euils which you haue heard read vnto you shall come vpon this land because of their idolatry But to the king that sent you thus shall you say Thus saith the Lord because thy heart did melt when thou heardst what was spoken against this place and didst rent thy clothes and wéepe before me I haue heard it saith the Lord. Behold therefore I will gather Esay 57. 1. thee to thy fathers and thou shalt be put in thy graue in peace and thine eyes shall not sée all the euil which I wil bring vpon this place Moses wéepeth and mourneth to himselfe that he could not be partaker of his desire as to enter into that promised plentifull pleasant land that hée could not sée that goodly mountaine and Lebanon and was angry with his people who were the cause that he was bereaued of his ioy but in that he was taken vp into paradise and placed in the heauens were not all sorrows think you fully and most aboundantly requited with ioy The world
hath many dumps and amidst their ioyes doe often wéepe but the sorrowes of the godly are such that neither make them to breake their sléep nor yet to be heauy hearted For Paul Silas being in prison in fetters and cold iron Act. 16. Sung a Psalme and praised God The reason that may mooue them both so to do is great waightie the one remembring that their ioyes shall end in perpetual sorrowes the other reioyce knowing that their sorrowes shal not alwaies last and y● their crosse and their crowne are ioyned both togither as matters inseparable For of all other they were the most miserable if their hope were onely in this life Mat. 5. 4. Blessed are they that mourne for they shall be comforted Luke 6. 21. Blessed are they that weepe now for they shall laugh Looke vpon Lazarus wéeping on earth and reioycing in heauen In the midst and in the multitude of my sorrowes that I had in my heart saith the Prophet Psal 44. 19. Thy comfortes haue refreshed and reioyced my soule In the Lords word will I comfort me which is so full of heauenly promises Phil. 4. 4. Reioyce in the Lord alway and againe I say reioyce The sorrowes of persecution turned into ioyes let your patient minde be knowue vnto all men The Lord is at hand to succor you to giue you ioy What bréedeth patience in troubles so much as that when they know that their sorrowes shal be turned into ioy Ye sorrowed with me for my bandes saith the Apostle Heb. 10. 34. and suffered also with ioy the spoiling of your owne goodes knowing in your selues how that ye haue in heauen a better and induring substance Whosoeuer shall forsake houses or brethrē or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands and possessions for my names sake he shal receiue a hundred f●●d more and shall inherite euerlasting life And who would not be patient in trouble and persecution seeing it shal be requited with such icy No trouble so bitter as the trouble of persecution yet this is the comfort that it is but short though it séeme vnto vs long Else the Apostle would not haue vsed this spéech Yet a while and that a very little while and that shall come will come and will not tarry yea and bring his rewardes with him The flesh is fraile and rebellious the world is cruel persecution is most gréeuous and therefore ye haue great néede of patience that after ye haue done the will of God yée might receine the promise Through which and other like waightie causes and considerations the same Apostle being mooued praied for the Collossians that they might be strengthened with all might through the glorious power of God vnto all patience and long sufferance and that with ioyfulnesse Which ioyfulnesse hée himselfe expressed in his owne person most liuely speaking thereof more then once and twice To the Collossians chapter 1. 24. Now reioyce in my suffrings and to the Cor 2. epist 7. he writeth thus Ye are in our hearts to die and liue togither I vse great boldnesse of speech toward you I reioyce greatly in you I am filled with comfort and am exceeding ioyous in all our tribulation For if there be any bitternesse in persecution as certaine it is that it is most great it is altogither swallowed vp of spirituall ioy for worldly ioy cannot attaine to that strength as to endure it Through faith we haue accesse vnto this grace wherein we stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God neither doo we so only but also we reioyce in tribulations For whē we are most weake then is God most strong and able to giue vs strength to endure our triall 2. Cor. 4. 8. We are afflicted on euery side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie but not ouercome of pouertie We are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but we perish not Neither do wee faint though our inward man perish because our inward man is renewed daily and strengthned comforted in hope which maketh vs not ashamed although the world would laie shame inogh vpon vs. And in an other place he speaketh of himselfe and of all the faithful 2. Cor. 6. 8. We must approue our selues as those that haue hope in God by honor and dishonor by euil report good report as deceiuers yet true as vnknowne and yet knowne as dying and behold we liue as chastened and yet not killed as sorrowing and yet alwaies reioycing The vine the more it is pressed the more it riseth the spice y● more it is beaten the swéeter it smelleth the fire y● more it is kept vnder the more it bursteth out the Israelites the more they were oppressed the more they multiplied and so is it with the godly the more their outward sorrowes be the more are their inward ioyes In this matter the Apostle S. Iames is of the same mind with the Apostle S. Paul who in the beginning of his epist maketh persecutiō one of his chéefest matters to speak of giuing it a great cōmendatiō encouraging other therein by shewing them what shall ensue My brethren count it excéeding ioy when ye fall into this especiall temptation of affliction and persecution Excéeding ioy he termeth it because no earthly ioy may be compared to that which they that are afflicted and persecuted both féele and shall also be partakers of As in the same chapter is declared Blessed is the man that suffereth temptation that is affliction and persecution for when he is is tried he shall receiue the crowne of life because the Lord hath promised That he may be bold to say I haue runne my race I haue fought a good fight and henceforth is laid vp for me the crowne of righteousnesse And because of this ioy which was fully setled in their mindes and hearts Saint Peter and the rest of the Apostles as we shall reade Actes 5. 41. when they were reuiled threatened and beaten departed reioycing that they were counted worthie to suffer rebuke for his name The world saith Christ shall hate and excommunicate you and thinke they please God highly in killing you And because I haue saide these thinges vnto you your hearts are full of sorrow But marke againe another spéech of his and sée howe hee dooth raise vs vp in comfort and in ioy Hee that will follow mee must take vp his crosse and follow mee and whosoeuer shall forsake houses or brethren or sisters father mother wife children landes possessions yea bid farwell to the world and hate and despise his owne life for my sake hee shall receiue an hundreth folde more and shall inherite euerlasting life For the ioy of conscience which Gods children féele euen in their afflictions is a thousand fold more worth then all worldly treasure These things saith Christ haue I spoken vnto you that my ioy might remaine in you and that your ioy might be full The prince of our peace and saluation was consecrated
vnto God through affliction and persecution Whereby the Apostle signifieth that there could be no worke more acceptable in the sight of God then that The captaine in war sheweth himselfe most venterously and if he die he is resolued What is his comfort and his ioy this that he cannot please his prince and countrey better The souldiers likewise through the captains valiant exploits are incouraged hauing the selfesame comfort and ioy with their captaine And a valiant souldier aimes at nothing more then at honour and renowme How should the extremitie of sorrow or the dint and horror of death pull vs backe séeing the recompence is so glorious honour renowme and ioy But many are loth to venture fearing their own frailty weaknesse Good it is to be aduised and to cast al circumstances to pray to God for strength and when thou art resolued doubt not that God will laie more vpon thée then thou art able to beare neither will God suffer vs to be afflicted aboue our power but in the bitter hest of persecution and in the smarting sorrow of death approching he wil giue a comfortable issue and fill thy heart with swéet ioyes Comfort in warre makes death séeme nothing so sorrowfull and séeing in affliction and persecution many haue suffered before thée and thou art not like to bee the last bee not faint-harted yea althogh thou mightst escape knowing that thou shalt receiue a better resurrection Moreouer it is not the least comfort that the faithfull and the godly yea and Christ himself doth help vs with their praiers wherby the extremitie of paine is mitigated vnto vs or sufficient strength courage granted vs to endure euen to the end and in the end For this cause saith the Apostle to the Colloss cap. 1. We cease not to pray for you that ye might be strengthened with all might through his glorious power and addeth this comfortable clause Giuing thankes vnto the father which hath made vs meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light And if as yet thou desirest greater comfort● more abundant ioy if thou mightest haue thy choice thou canst not make a better choice then the quietnesse of conscience and ioy of the holy Ghost Can a mother forget her children if she could or would yet the Lord wil not forget vs being vnto him as the signet vpon his right hand and therfore in cōtinual remembrance and as the apple of his eie and therfore most tender So that the prophet Dauid had great cause to say to the great comfort and ioy of the godly Right deare in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Psal 116. 15. Knowing therfore that the cause is Gods cause and his glorie and that it is his wil we should suffer in fulfilling his wil let vs commit our soules vnto him in weldooing as vnto a faithfull creator Let me adde a constant Martir his exhortation in verse who neither feared nor doubted but most willingly and ioyfully was to giue vp his life for the profession of the truth and maintenance of the Gospell Cotent thy selfe with patience with Christ to beare the crosse of paine Who can and will thee recompence A thousand fold with ioyes againe Let nothing cause thy heart to quaile Launch out thy boate haul vp thy saile Put from the shore And at the length thou shalt attaine Vnto the port that shall remaine For euermore Thus if it please God that they shall be put to the shedding of their blood and the losse of their liues for the testimony of a good conscience for the profession of his truth and maintenance of his Gospell ye sée that it is a matter that brings heapes of ioyes so that although there be great sorrowes yet this persecution and triall of their faith makes them in a maner not to appeare Else how could it haue bin true which the Apostle reporteth of the churches of Macedonia 2. Cor. 8. 2. that in the great trial of affliction their ioy abounded As though in their extremitie they had felt no sorrow nor perceiued any discomfort In token whereof the Apostle willeth the Philippians to be so bold that in nothing they shuld fear their aduersaries which is saith he to them a tokē of perditiō but to you a tokē of saluatiō and the of god And that which furthereth ●ur saluation with what ioy is it vndertaken and performed Neuerthelesse God séeing our heartes and knowing our readinesse doth not alwaies put vs to the triall and yet accepteth our readinesse as though we had béen tried doth send vs comfort ioy and that after such a sort as we least looked for That we might praise him in his iudgementes and woonder at his mercies and giue him thankes for his goodnesse that worketh so great deliuerances for his people And to increase our ioy the more God worketh our deliuerance Ioy by deliuerance Their enemies being destroied by the destruction of our enemies The Israelites being deliuered saw the Egyptians their enemies drowned in the red Sea and their dead careases lying on the Sea shore Then sung Moses and the children of Israel When the Iewes were deliuered from the cruel massacre Eze. 38. 16. 21. 22. 23. and bloudie slaughter which was deuised and pretended and purposed against them and almost put in mischieuous execution through the meanes of that proud and wicked Haman Haman himselfe was destroied and hanged and fell into the pit that he had made for others Then had the Iewes rest and ioy and they remembred it for euer This also is plainly set downe in the storie of godly Tobit chap. 1. If king Senacharib had slaine any when he fled from Iudea I buried them priuily but the bodies were not found when they were sought for of the king Therefore when a certain Niniuite had accused me to the king because I did burie them I hid my self and because I knew that I was sought to be s●aine I withdrew my selfe for feare Then all my goodes were spoiled neither was there any thing left me besides my wife Anna and my sonne Tobias Neuertheles within fiue and fiftie dayes two of his sennes killed him and another of his sonnes reigning in his stéed appointed Achiacharus my brothers sonne to be the ouerseer of his accountes who made request for me and I came againe to Niniuie When Herod was dead who sought Christ his death then he being a babe and infant was brought againe into the land of Israe● Presently after the death of King Herode mentioned Actes 12. the bloody tyrant being punished by Gods iudgement and that after a strange sort then the word of God grewe and multiplied and flourished and God gaue his seruants libertie If we aske an example in our owne realme Quéene Mary and mischieuous Gardiner bishop of Winchester being taken away and strooken by the hand of God our gracions Soueraign whom God long preserue to his glory and our comfort came then to her