Selected quad for the lemma: child_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
child_n wretched_a year_n young_a 17 3 5.3668 4 false
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
A43607 Syntagma theologicum, or, A treatise wherein is concisely comprehended, the body of divinity, and the fundamentals of religion orderly discussed whereunto are added certain divine discourses, wherein are handled these following heads, viz. 1. The express character of Christ our redeemer, 2. Gloria in altissimis, or the angelical anthem, 3. The necessity of Christ's passion and resurrection, 4. The blessed ambassador, or, The best sent into the basest, 5. S. Paul's apology, 6. Holy fear, the fence of the soul, 7. Ordini quisque suo, or, The excellent order, 8. The royal remembrancer, or, Promises put in suit, 9. The watchman's watch-word, 10. Scala Jacobi, or, S. James his ladder, 11. Decus sanctorum, or, The saints dignity, 12. Warrantable separation, without breach of union / by Henry Hibbert ... Hibbert, Henry, 1601 or 2-1678.; Hibbert, Henry, 1601 or 2-1678. Exercitationes theologiae. 1662 (1662) Wing H1793; ESTC R2845 709,920 522

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

pravitate versamur Damnatus home antequam natus As soon as ever we are born we are forthwith in all wickedness And Austin man is condemned as soon as conceived Our great Grandmother Eve did not bring forth before she had sinned therefore corruption is conveyed by the impurity of the seed being in it incoativè as fire is in the flint Therefore man is at his birth overspread with sin as with a filthy morphew In ancient times and the custome in some places remains to this day great men and Princes kept the memory of their birth-dayes with feasting and triumph Gen. 40.20 And Herods birth-day was kept Origen in his fragments upon Matthew affirms that the Scripture gives no testimony of any one good man celebrating his birth-day I say an ancient and commendable custome if in honour of God for his mercy in our creation education preservation c. But indeed Our sospitator while we reflect upon our birth-sin we have little cause to rejoyce in our birth-day The birth-day of Nature should be mourned over every day the birth-day of Grace is our joy and glory and is worthy to be rejoyced in Eternity which is the day of glory is one continued triumph for our birth-day in grace Behold I was shapen in iniquity Psal 51.5 and in sinne did my mother conceive me Bastard The Greeks call such children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they are subject to contumelies The Hebrews call them brambles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such a one as Abimelech Judg. 9.14 as growing in the base hedge-row of a concubine Nothus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spurius quasi ignotus Judg. 11.1 It is an ignominious thing to be a bastard Bastards are despised by all many brands of infamy are set on them by the Law 1. A bastard properly is not a son Qui nati sant ex prostibulo planè incerto patre sed certissimâ infamiâ Abraham was Pater when he had Ishmael but not filii Pater till he had Isaac so that he cannot inherit his fathers lands unlesse he be made legitimate by Act of Parliament 2. A bastard may be advanced to no office in Church or Common-wealth without special licence favour and dispensation A bastard shall not enter into the Congregation of the Lord Deut. 23.2 even to his tenth generation Children Children if good are a great blessing what can more rejoyce our hearts than to see our children It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a blessed misery saith he the work of Gods hands framed and fitted for Gods building But if otherwise to be childlesse is a mercy saith Euripedes and Aristotle concludeth that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is no blessing unlesse it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to have a numerous issue unlesse they be vertuous It is said that Pasiphaes issue were ever a shame to the Parent None are so ready to drink in false Principles and corrupt practices as young ones Plato reporteth of one Protagoras that he gloried of this that whereas he had lived sixty years in all he had spent forty of them in corrupting of young people What a wretched childe was that who when his father complained that never father had so undutifull a childe as he had F●l Holy state answered yes my g●ardfather had That regenerate men may have unregenerate children Regeneratus non regenerat ●ilios ●arnis sed generat ut Oleae semina non Oleas generant sed Oleastros Idem Mat. 19.13 Austin illustrates thus 1. As corn that is never so well winnowed brings forth corn with chaffe about it 2. And the circumcised Jew begat uncircumcised children so holy parents do beget unholy children begetting their children not according to Grace but according to Nature for grace is personal but corruption is natural It is our duty to present our little ones to Christ as well as we can 1. By praying for them before at and after their birth 2. By timely bringing them to the Ordinance of Baptisme with faith and much joy in such a priviledge 3. By training them up in Gods holy fear A populous posterity is the blessing of God Let us not take too much thought for providing for them God hath filled two bottles of milk against they come into the world He that feedeth the young ravens will feed our children if we depend on him Lo Psal 127.3 children are an heritage of the Lord and the fruit of the womb is his reward Boy Girle Si puellam viderimus moribus lepidam atque dicaculam laudabimus exosculabimus Haec in matronâ damnabimus persequemur Puerilitas est periculorum pelagus childhood and youth are vanity Eccles 11.10 Education Erasm de vitá c. Origenis pag. 1. Refert nonnihil ubi nascaris sed magis refert à quibus nascaris plurimùm verò à quibus a teneris instituaris Education consisteth in three things viz. 1. Religion 2. Learning 3. Manners Touching the former David and Bathsheba joyned together to season the tender years of Solomon with sweet liquor of celestial Piety Chrys Hom. 2. By the meanes of Hanna Samuel came presently from the corporal to the spiritual Dugge Evince taught Timothy the holy Scriptures from his childhood Hierom would have L●ta to teach her daughter Paula the Canonical Scriptures Ad Letam beginning with the Psalmes and ending with the Canticles the Psalmes as the easiest and sweetest the Canticles as the hardest To this end catechizing is very requisite For education in learning Pharaoh's daughter trained up her adopted son in all the learning of the Egyptians Paul was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel Aristippus that famous Philosopher was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught by his mother The eloquent tongue of Cornelia was a great means of the eloquence of the Gracchi her two sons Philip procured two Schoolmasters for his son Alexander Plu. Aristotle for his Teacher and Leonides for Directer and Informer And Constantine procured three several Tutors for his three several sons One for Divinity Euseb the other for the Civil Law the third for Military Discipline Concerning behaviour we must bring up our children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in instruction and information that may formare mores frame their manners and put a good mind into them as the word imports Let not these things be delayed Thou mayest be taken from thy children or they from thee who then shall teach them after thy departure Moreover Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit adorem Testa diu great trees will not easily bend and a bad habit is not easily left Besides dye cloth in the wooll not in the webb and the colour will be the better the more durable Train up a childe in the way he should go and when he is old Prov. 22.6 he will not depart from it Espousals Contracts or espousals before marriage were a very ancient and laudable custome both amongst
been anciently conceived to be of an amorous operation causing love and conducing to coition and conception It is said to be of pleasant smell and colour by some Writers others say It is of a ranck and unpleasant savour Howsoever our Divines conclude Annotac in loc those were not like to be Mandrake Apples which Reuben brought to his mother Leah because at that time of the year which was Wheat-harvest and that was about the beginning of May in those hot Countreys the Mandrake Apples are not ripe But rather that the original word which in the general signifieth amiable imports some flowers of the field such as pleased little children Tremel for Reuben that gathered them was but young having a beautiful colour and withal a delightful smell so that Rachel was taken with a special delight in them and desire of them Some render it Lovely flowers others Violets others Lilies others again Cherries of Jury The Greek and most Interpreters Mandrakes or Mandrake apples It is a plant very amiable Drus according to the name both for sweetness of smell loveliness of the flower and for the peculiar vertue it hath to cause sleep affection and conception The Hebrew word is not used in all the Old Testament but only in Gen. 30. and Cant. 7. in which almost all Interpreters both Jews and Christians do turn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it Mandrakes It hath allusion to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Loves and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Beloved and it appears by the smell they are said to give that they were lovely and pleasant Aben-Ezra saith that Mandrakes are fragrant and yield a pleasant smell hence Loves and Mandrakes grow both upon one Hebrew root but how they should be good to cause conception he wondreth sith by nature they are cold Austin saith that he made trial and could not find any such operation in them and that Rachel coveted them meerly for their rarity beauty and sweetness Strange assertions there have been concerning this plant Psend Epid. which seem at least dubious or rather false Dr. Browne enumerates four 1. The first a catachrestical or farre derived similitude it holds with man that is in a bifurcation or division of the root into two parts which some are content to call thighs when as fair a resemblance is often found in others And whereas illiterate heads have been led on by the name in the first syllable as expressing its representation others have better observed the Laws of Etymology and derived it from a word of the same language that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spelunca because it delighteth to grow in obscure and shady places 2. The second assertion concerneth its production that it naturally groweth under places of execution arising from fat or urine that drops from the body of the dead which conceit is not only refuted as erroneous in the foundation but in jurious unto Philosophy in the superstruction making putrefactive generations correspondent unto seminal productions and conceiving inequivocal effects and univocal conformity unto the efficient 3. The third affirmeth the roots of Mandrakes do give a shre●k upon eradication which is indeed ridiculous for such a noise may be observed in other plants being firmly rooted upon divulsion of parts 4. The last that there follows an hazard of life to them that pull it up or they live not very long after or that some evil sate pursues them A conceit not only injurious to truth being confutable by daily experience but somewhat derogatory to the providence of God And were as the same Author concludeth to introduce a second forbidden fruit and inhance the first malediction making it not only mortal for Adam to taste the one but capital unto his posterity to eradicate or dig up the other It is good therefore to leave these Fables and hold unto the former By these Mandrakes and other sweet smells are held forth Christs Spouse the Church which is the Lords field and garden where all kind of divine and heavenly flowers grow where is variety and abundance of all sweetness and ●ragrancy namely all the sweet incomes of Spirit and life from Christ As also that the Spouse doth entertain Christ with all her sweetness Honoureth him with all her pleasant fruits As the favour love and goodness of God is great which he hath laid up for those that fear him so all the goodness and fruits of the Spirit and grace that flow from them are unto his honour and praise and consecrated unto his use and service And Reuben went in the dayes of wheat-harvest and found Mandrakes in the field Gen. 30.14 Cant. 7.13 and brought them unto his mother Leah c. The Mandrakes give a smell and at our gates are all manner of pleasant fruits new and old which I have laid up for thee O my beloved Serpents Many have too curiously troubled themselves in going about to define the kind or species of the Serpent that deceived Eve some affirm it was a Dragon another a Basilisk a third a Viper and others a common Snake Wherein men still continue the delusion of the Serpent who having deceived Eve in the main sets her posterity on work to deceive in the circumstance endeavouring to propagate errours at any hand There is indeed a great difference of Serpents noted in natural history for some are very little some exceeding great Plin. hist l. 8. c. 14. Se●pentum quot colores tot dolo●es Isidor some according to the signification of the Latine word creep and some fly And some are in the mixture of colours very specious and delightful to the eye and such a serpent it is like the Devil used when he tempted Eve However seeing the Devil made use of that subtil creature as the fittest instrument to bring about that his cursed design it gives us to know that wit unsanctified is a fit tool for the Devil to work withal neither is there a likelier Anvil in all the shop of Hell whereon to forge mischief than one that is learned and lewd Ingeniosè nequam witily wicked Among Serpents mentioned in Scripture two kinds are very famous Nullum animal tantá c l●ritate l●nguam movet ut Serpens adco ut triplicem liaguam habere videatur cum unam sit Plin. l. 6. c. 37. 1. The Viper whose tongue is present death as we have clear evidence besides what is affected by natural Historians from Scripture Record When a Viper came and fastned upon Pauls hand they looked when he would fall down dead And when John the Baptist would shew how hurtful and dangerous the Scribes and Pharisees among the Jews were the calleth them A Generation of vipers The vipers tongue is worse than the Lyons tooth 2. The Asp A kind of serpent not known in these parts of the world Some write that the biting of an Asp is uncurable and others say that it killeth withou●remedy within four hours space Hence The poison of
with the Master for the injury And Ahab sets his Judges on work by a course of Law to condemn Naboth for his Vineyard but the Law sound him guilty for the Text saith Hast thou slain and got possession Or 2. By writing Naboth died by Jezabels letters and Vriah was slain by Davids which so nearly concerned him that by the Lords righteous sentence the Sword never departed from his house by which sentence it is observed good Josiah fell by the Sword many hundred years after By permission as Governours of Kingdoms Countries Cities Corporations Families Qui non p●ohib●i malum cum potest facit which hinder not the evil they may and ought Eli hindred not his sons from running into reproach and therefore he fell with them Pilate though he wash his hands never so often if he hinder not the death of Christ he remains guilty By provocation Gal. 5.26 Ahab was most wicked whom Jezabel provoked therefore take the Apostles Rule Provoke not one another neither to sin by perswasion nor to wrath by rash and scand●lous speeches nor to revenge to right thine own wrongs But rather provoke one another to love and to good works By consent and countenancing sinful actions Vitia alio●um si feras faeis tua Saul when Stephen was stoned kept the cloaths and this was a consent and communication Hitherto refer all participation in the action as receiving stoln goods silence and concealment connivance and too much indulgence c. It was a proud saying of Isidore the Monk Non habeo Domine quod mihi ignoscas Rom. 7. I have nothing Lord for thee to pardon When St. Paul himself that had been in the third heaven complains of his inward impurities O what need is here of a Saviour sith guilty culpable souls are such as cannot plead their own cause without an Advocate If I wash my self with snow-water Job 9 30 31. and make my hands never so clean yet shalt thou plunge me in the Ditch Psal 130.3 and mine own Cloaths shall abhor me If thou Lord shouldst mark iniquities O Lord who shall stand Every mouth must be stopped Rom. 3.19 and all the World must become guilty before God I know nothing by my self 1 Cor. 4.4 1 Tim. 5.22 yet am I not hereby justified Be not partaker of other mens sins Punishment of sin Sinners imagine not their last act will be Tragical Callecius in orbem Sap● latet molii coluber s●b graminis umb●â Mant. Culpa habet plus de ratione mali quàm paena Aquin. because their former Scenes have all been Comical the end is so far off that they see not those stabbing shames that await them in a killing ambush When Seneca asked the question Quid est homini inimissimum he answered alter homo Our enemies studies are the plots of our ruine but more truly in sin who slily makes us work our own overthrow when we know not of it and endure our own damage when we see it not Elementum in loco non ponderat saith the Philosopher and it is true of sin But how light soever it seemeth in the committing it will one day lie full heavy even as a Talent of lead Zeeh. 5.7 or as an huge Mountain Hebr. 12.1 When once we come to a sight and sense of it when Gods wrath and mans sin shall face one another Sin before it be committed is blandus amicus in committing dulce venenum But after committed Scorpio pungens like those Locusts that had effeminate faces but stings in their tails Rev. 9. Sin and punishment are knit together with Chains of Adamant Ra●ò antecedentem seclest um deseruit p● de poena clauds Horace Flagitium flagellum sicut Acus filum Punishment follows sin even as the soul of Remus as is reported did his brother Romulus Where iniquity breaks-fast calamity will be sure to dine to sup where it dines and lodge where it sups Sin hath venome in it appear it never so fair as Pope Alexander poysoned the Turks brother in candid Suckets Sin is like those Lamiae certain shapes of Devils which taking on them the shew of beautiful women devoured children and young men allured unto them with sweet enticements A cerain Gentleman of Rome being infinitely in debt and yet sleeping securely When the was dead Augustus the Emperour sent to buy his bed saying it seemed to be a wonderful one Even so we may well wonder to see men sleep securely in sin when we consider that their damnation slumbreth not 2 Pet. 2.3 Though the Lord speak not instantly to every sinner as he did to Abimelech Gen. 20.3 Behold thou art but a dead man yet 't is true of every sin Cheys when it is finished it brings forth death So soon as Jonah entred into the Sea the storm rose to teach us that ubi peccatum ibi procella where there is sin especially committed with rebellion there will inevitably arise a storm of divine wrath When men will not hear then there is no remedy but they must feel For when God laies siege to the soul he hath both warning-pieces and murdering-pieces if the one will not reclaim sinners the other shall ruine them The sinner therefore is blinder than Balaam that walks on in an evil course and sees not the sword of Gods vengeance before him I have read in the History of Scotland that a Lady had a room hanged with curious Arras behind which were placed certain Cross-bows ready bent and charged and in the midst of the room there was a goodly brazen image resembling the King holding in the one hand a fair golden Apple set richly with Smaragds Jacincts Saphiers Topazes Rubies Turkasses and such like precious stones which the King viewing demanded whom the image did represent to whom she answered him and said she provided it as a gift for him and therefore desired him to accept it though not worthy so high a dignity wherein the King delighting removed the Apple the better to advise it whereupon the Cross-bows discharged so directly upon him that striking him through in sundry places he fell down stark dead and lay flat on the ground Even so the poor sinner is not aware Prov. 7.23 till a Dart strike through his liver It is storied that in the inmost part of Affrick are certain wild beasts having the countenance of a woman which in like manner are called Lamiae as before And my Author saith that they have their paps and all the rest of their breast so fair as any Painters wits can devise by which being uncovered they deceitfully allure men unto them and when they have taken them they do forthwith devour them So doth sin making a man cry out at last wo is me now Jer. 4 31. for my soul is wearied because of murderers It is best of all therefore not to sin and next to that to amend upon punishment Pliny makes mention of a
constrained to fell one of his sons into perpetual bondage that he might thereby save the rest from a present famine who calling all his dear children unto him and beholding them as Olive-branches round about his table could not resolve which he might best spare His eldest son was the strength of his youth even he that called him his father and therefore not willing to part with him his youngest boy was his nest-chick whom he dearly beloved A third resembled his progenitors having his fathers bill and his mothers eye and for the rest one was more loving and another more diligent a third more manly c. Therefore he could not afford to part with any Like as a Father pitieth his children Psal 103.13 Mother The Greeks commonly called their children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Latine Chari 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 darlings and so they are especially to mothers which usually are most tender of them There is an Ocean of love in a parents heart a fathomlesse depth of desire after the childs welfare in the mothers especially I was my fathers son Prov. 4.3 tender and onely beloved in the sight of my mother Widow It is a calamitous name The word by which a widow is expressed in the Hebrew as well as her condition calls for help and pity It comes from a root that signifies either 1. To bind indeed the widow may be so called both because she is as it were bound about with afflictions and sorrows As also by the rule of contrary speaking bound that is she is not at all bound but free and loosed from her husband 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7.1 2 3. 1 Cor. 7.39 Or 2. To be silent death having cut off her head she hath lost her tongue and hath none to speak for her When the Apostle saith of the widow indeed that she is desolate he seemeth to allude to the Greek word for a widow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desolor destituo which comes of a verb that signifies to be desolate and deprived So the Latine Vidua à viduando God therefore pleads for such as his Clients and takes special care for them The Pharisees are doomed to a deeper damnation for devouring their houses Mat. 23.14 And Magistrates charged to plead for them Isa 1.17 And all sorts to make much of them and communicate to them Deut. 24.19 20 21. Plead for the widow Isa 1.17 Fatherless These two desolate names are often found alone but oftener as one in Scripture the widow who is dis-joyned from her husband and the fatherlesse who are bereaved of their parents Per viduam Pupillum omne genus miserorum hominum significatur Pined are commonly joyned together And in a large sense these two names signifie any that are in distresse and need out charity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tenebrae orphans are as it were darkling We are orphans and fatherlesse saith the Church Lam. 5.3 And we are all Orphans said Queen Elizabeth in her speech to the children of Christs Hospital let me have your prayers and you shall have my protection Judge the fatherlesse Isa 1.17 Infant As a tree by the roots is fastned to the earth and by the fibrae the little strings upon them draws nourishment from the earth so is it with an infant in the womb the Navel fastens it to the mother and by the veine and arteries in the Navel it fetcheth in nourishment and spirits Hence Plutarch likens the Navel to the roap and Anchor which stayes the Infant in that harbour of the mothers womb and when it is cut the Infant goes from harbour to the sea and stormes of the world Hence some make the Infants tears a presage of sorrows as if he wept to think upon what a shore of trouble he is landed or rather into what a sea of stormes he is lanching when he comes into the world such storms as he shall never be fully quit of till he is harboured in his grave Infants are not innocents Infantes non sunt insontes but estranged from the womb they go astray as soon as they be born Psal 58.3 The first sheet wherein they are covered is woven of sin and shame Vt u●tlea statim urit cancri retrecedunt ●●hiuus asper ell Ezek. 16. Infants have sin though unable to act it● as Pauls viper stiffe with cold might be handled without harm yet was no lesse venemous But no sooner can they do any thing but they are evil-doing as young nettles will sting young crab-fish go backward and as the young urching is rough Therefore an Infant as soon as he liveth hath in him the seeds of death Not onely is man acting sin but nature infected with sin the subject of and subjected to the power of death Rom. 5.14 Sin is the ●eed of death and the principle of corruption God doth Infants no wrong when they die their death is of themselves for they have the seed of death in them The Macedonians being to conflict with the Grecians took their young King in his cradle and brought him into the field thinking either they could not be beaten their Soveraign being present or that none would be so inhumane as to hurt an helplesse infant Suffer little children to come unto me and forbid them not Luke 18.16 for of such is the kingdome of God Birth The first woman was in a sense born of a man Mulier dicitur virago quia de viro sumpta from which she receives her name but since all men are born of a woman That is the formation and production of man is from the woman in her the body of man is framed by the mighty power of God and all the pieces of it put together and in her man receives his life and quickning Hence it was that Adam who at first called his wife woman because she was taken out of man calls her afterwards Eve because she was the mother of all living And upon this ground some Nations have made a Law that all descents should be reckoned by the mother because the mother gives the greatest contribution towards the bir●h and bringing forth of man Plut. de clar Mul●er cap. 9. Apud Lycios siquis percontetur quà familiâ ortus c. A matribus genus suum repetere solebant quod plurima substantia quâ constamus materna sit The birth of man speaks two things his 1. Frailty 2. Faultinesse For he is born of a woman the weaker vessel who both breedeth beareth and bringeth forth in sorrow a weak sorry man And is ante partum onerosa in partu dolorosa post partum laboriosa every way calamitous neither is the child in a better condition And as that which is weak cannot produce that which is strong so neither can that which impure send forth that which is clean An Heathen could say cum primum nascimur in omni continuo
There are some who have attained the last degree or step of old age who have not attained the first degree of wisdome And this is sad upon a double account 1 Because it is the duty of old men to shew forth wisdome 2. They have had a great opportunity to gather wisdome a price hath been in their hands though possibly they have not had hearts to make use of it How much time every one bath had such a talent he hath had and he shall be reckoned with answerably Time is not an empty duration God hath filled time with helps to eternity Turpis et ridiculus esi 〈◊〉 clementacius and with meanes to know him the onely true God which is life eternall An old man ignorant is more childish than a child It is bad enough when children and young men are ignorant but to see old men ignorant of the things of God with what teares should we lament it Old men are to be reverenced 1. Propter ipsam atatem Levit. 19.32 2. Propter prudentiam Job 12.12 3. Propter Experientiam 4. Propter Pietatem Pro. 16.31 Canities tunc venerabilis est quando ea gerit quae canitiem decent c. Cgrysost Else it is mucor potius q●àm canities As Manna the longer it was kept against the command of God the more it stanke S●epe nigium cor est cap●t album Mult a 〈…〉 c●mveniunt in commoda Horat. The white rose is soonest cankered so is the white head soonest corrupted Satan got great advantage against old Solomon Asa Lot and others whom when young he could never so deceive The Heathens can warn us to look well to our old age as that which cometh not alone but is infected with many diseases both of body and mind To live long and dye in a full age is a blessing yet it is infinitely better to be full of grace than to be full of dayes but to be full dayes and full of grace too a venerable spectacle To be full of years and full of faith full of the fruits of righteousnesse which are by Christ this is comely and beautifull beyond all the beauty and comelinesse of youth Such may be truly said to have filled their dayes for those dayes are filled indeed which are full of Goodnesse Semper aliqrid novi ad po●ta● Solet sen●ctusesse deformis infirma obliviosa edulenta lucrosa indocilis et molesta saith Cato in Plutarch As Africa is never without some Monster so never is old age without some ailement Old age and misery are never seperated Therefore let no man be so besotted as to make that ●he talke of his old age which should be the trade of his whole life I have been young Psal 37.25 and now am old The evil dayes the years when it will be said I have no pleasure in them Eccl. 12.1 Cast me not off in the time of old age forsake me not when my strength faileth Psal 71.9 The World Mundus THE great body of the world Heil Geog. l. 1.31 like the body of man though it have many parts and members is but one body onely A body of so exact a forme and of so compleat a Symmetry in respect of the particular parts and all those parts so beautified and adorned by the God of Nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ab ornatu mundus à munditie that from the Elegancy and beauties of it it was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Grecians and Mundus by the Latines both names declaring the composure of it to be full of ornament and all those ornaments conducting mankind of the knowledge of God There is 1. Mundus mundanus Act. 17.24 2. Mundus immundus 1 John 5.19 3. Mundus mundatus 2 Cor. 5.19 There are two sorts of men in the world 1. Of the world Psal 17.14 2. Not of the world John 17.16 The former are opposed to the Citizens of the new Jerusalem Terrigena fratres animam hàbentes triticeam such as have incarnated their souls are of the earth speak of the earth and mind earthly things as if they were born for no other purpose The latter indeed have their commoration on earth but their conversation is in heaven Pearls though they grow in the Sea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet they have affinity with the heaven the beauty and brightnesse whereof they resemble That which the soul is in the body that are Christians in the world Chrysost for as the soul is in but not of the body so Christians are in but not of the world Two things occasion fashion in this world 1. Multitude 2. Greatnesse For as Cyprian said Insipit esse licitum quod solet esse publi●um Quod est consue●um praesumitur esse justum custome is not only another nurture but another nature What is done of many speak the Lawyers is at length thought lawful for any It is an Axiom in the Bible that amity with the world is enmity with God He that is a Parasite to men is not the servant of Christ it is an unhappy thing to converse in the tents of Kedar As in a Chess-play so long as the game is in playing all men stand in their order and are respected according to the place First the King then the Queen then the Bishops c. But when once the game is ended they are all confusedly tumbled into a bagge and perhaps the King is lowest Even so it is with us in this life the world is a Stage or Theatre V●iversus mundus exercet Histriouem whereon some play the part of sicut supra but when our Lord shall come with his Angels to judge the world all are alike great men and mean persons in the same sin shall be bound together and cast as a fagot into hell Let us not then conform our selves according to the greatest for Ego Rex meus is no good plea when God shall reckon with us at the last dreadful day The world is both 1. Transitory and 2. Unsatisfactory The fashion of this world passeth away One of the Kings of Egypt minding one day to ride in pomp caused his Chariot to be drawn with four captive Kings the hindermost of which looking back nodded his head at one of the wheeles which the King observing asked him his reason he answered it did resemble the changable fortune and affaires of the world which the King seriously considering set them at liberty and restored them In mundo nihil constat in orbem vertitur orbis Quidmirum recti quod sit in orbe nihil Yea the ruine of the goodliest pieces in the world Arist Polit. foreshews the destruction of the whole How ill beseeming and unworthy a thing is it then for a Christian to set his heart on the things of this world Omnia praetereunt praeter amare Deum considering that they are vain and transitory rather shews and shadows of things than
are reconciled to God St. Chrys on those words in Colos Chrysost in Cap. 1. Epist ad Cosos it pleased the Father by him that is by Christ to reconcile all things unto himself whether they be things in earth or things in heaven understandeth by things in heaven the holy Angels of God who saith he became enemies to all men by reason of their universal rebellion against the Lord their God But now beare good will to us after we are reconciled to God by Christ and are of the houshold of faith Hereupon it is as our Saviour saith that the Angels in heaven rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner unto God Heb. 1 14. and the Apostle writing to the Hebrews saith they are all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be heires of salvation They guard such as their proper charge saith devout Perkins that be in Gods favour and carry them as a nurse doth a child in her armes that they dash not their foot against a stone Perkins on Revel 1. Psal 91.11 Wherefore some Christian Philosophers out of Act. 12.15 where speech being made of St. Peter it is said it is not he it is his Angel collect that every elect man of God hath his good Angel to protect him to guide him in all his wayes and upon occasion when it seemes good to God many as Elijah had Thus we are at peace with good Angels as for the bad we must have no peace with them Origen on● Rom. 5. for then we shall have no peace with God Origen on the 5. of the Romanes tells us that Ipse supra omnes cateros pacem habet apuà Deum qui impugnatur à diabolo c. he above all others hath peace with God who is ever combating with Satan Warre against Satan procures peace with God Wherefore being he will do us no good the Lord so works as that he shall do us no hurt As for the other creatures all of them are in league with a good man their lesive facultie is restrained by the supreme power from doing violence to the Lords redeemed whereas the wicked are still exposed to the danger of their power The starres in their courses fought for Israel against Sisera Judg. 5.20 The fire did not hurt the three children in the fierie surnace The hungry lyon preyed not upon Daniel in the den Isa 11.6 8 9. lying at the mercy of that ravenous beast A little child saith the Prophet Isaiah shall lead the young lyon the sucking child shall play on the hole of the Aspe and the weaned child shall put his hand on the Cocokatrices den neither these nor any of the rest shall hurt or destroy in his holy mountaine in his holy Church It was a most comfortable promise which God made to Judah and Israel and in them to his peculiar people that he would make a covenant for them with all creatures Hos 2.18 the beasts of the field the fowles of the aire the creeping things of the ground heaven earth corn oyle and all Yea the child of God shall tread upon the lyon and the serpent and they shall not hurt him Thou shalt be in league saith Eliphaz the Temanite to Job with the stones of the field Psal 91.13 Job 5.23 and the beasts of the field shall be at peace with thee Thus Gods Children in Christ Jesus shall receive no detriment by any thing that God made but by his blessed providence they shall find assistance and comfort from all his creatures Now the God of peace that sent his Son with the Gospel of peace and his messengers with the glad tidings of good things grant that we may live in peace and depart in peace according to his word to leade an everlasting Sabboth of rest in the highest heavens Great mens births are commonly celebrated with the joyful acclamation of their dependants every one being in a readiness to noise abroad the newes that includes happinesse whereby others might be partakers of their joys and excited to do the like in imitation Thus the glorious and blessed Angels the inhabitants of heaven and the immediate attendants of the most high do the birth of the Son of God the King of Kings like wel-bred Courtiers in significant terms divulge the birth of so great a Prince and melodiously express what good what great benefits come by the birth of so good so great a person Which ought to be a forcible incentive unto us after their example to render due honour unto God and ●o worship that day-star which from on high hath visited us with everlasting comforts All the holy Angels of God are obliged to praise him but we much more he restored not them to any felicity for they lost none we lost the primitive goodness of our unblemished creation and yet restored he us He redeemed not them they needed it not nor the wicked Angels that needed it but wrought our redemption when we were enemies worthy condemnation O then let us praise the Lord for his peace and merce for both endure for ever What the Angels sung will serve our turn Glory be to God on high c. The parts of our discourse are 1. The glory we owe to God 2. The peace God sent on earth 3. Gods good will towards men Concerning the two first I have no more to say than what I have already but proceed unto that last and maine point whereupon depend all our future hopes of eternal blisse which is Gods good will and mercy I confesse that the very name of peace is a sweet word and sweeter the work but sweetest that of mercy which is the cause of it Being then that mercy must be the subject of my present meditations first I betake my self to thee O God of mercy and eternal Spirit of truth humbly beseeching thee to enable me by thy gracious illumination and to rectifie the retired cogitations of my soule that whilest I display thy mercy thy goodness thy salvation and when all is done there may be in mens hearts a deep impression of true joy and a perfect sense may be obtained of thy loving kindness and good-will toward them To behold God sitting in his throne of justice is to a sinner most full of dismal horrour but to view him seated in his throne of mercy is to a distressed soule most full of heavenly consolation If there be any that obstinately forget God and carelesly cast behind their backs his sacred ordinances let them expect to be torn in picees of him and none to deliver them let them look to be consumed of that God whose Jealousie burns like fire If there be any that are heartily submissive and sincerely penitent in the sight of our all-seeing God for their enormities let them joy up in abundance for in him there is mercy and plenty of redemption although all of us have highly offended him and multiplyed our transgressions above measure yet if we can
Socer and after banished into France with his wanton Herodias died an Exile The Jews that persecuted Christ and his Apostles what punishments they had their lamentable wars and more lamentable destruction is a sufficient testimony Herod Agrippa that put James John's brother to death was put to death by vermine as his Grandfather was If we take a slight view of the Ten Persecutions Nero who robb'd Peter and paid Paul Peter of his life Paul with death was his own death kill'd himsel Domitian that banished John into Pathmos and crucified Simon Bishop of Jerusalem that put Publius Bishop of Athens to death was killed and his statues and monuments taken quite away Trajan that caused Simeon Bishop of Alexandria to be crucified and Ignatius Bishop of Antioch to be devoured of wild beasts suffered many miseries in his time Tiber overflowed all Rome Pantheon burnt with thunderbolts Cities in Asia shaken with grievous Earthquakes and the whole Empire almost wasted by a most wretched dearth Adrianus in whose Persecution Alexander Bishop of Rome with Hermes his wife children and household to the number of twelve hundred and fifty persons were burnt all in a furnace and Theodorus a Deacon had his tongue cut out of his head his hands and feet cut off afterwards beheaded and was cast to dogs at this time there were ten thousand crucified in Mount Ararat round with thorns and their bodies pierced through with darts at last he died doubting of the life to come Antoninus Verus and his brother Lu●us persecuted Polycarpus Bishop of Smyrna and Justin the Philosopher put to death but in their time there did an unheard of Plague spread over a great part of their Empire Severus a most severe Emperor in persecuting the Christians caused Irenaeus Bishop of Lions and Calixtus Bishop of Rome to be martyred but after he himself was slain and the Roman Empire afflicted with Civil wars Maximinus who martyred Hypolitus Bishop of an head City in Arabia was killed by his soldiers Decius in whose reign another Bishop of Antioch suffered death died miserably in the Scythian war suffocated in a fen In the persecution under Valerian died Cypriun Bishop of Carthage that Caesar of the Christian But he was vanquished by Sapor King of Persia and served instead of a footstool when the Persian took horse I had almost forgot one thing A Judge in the time of Severus condemned one Agapeius a youth of fifteen at whose execution the Judge fell down from his seat and cried his bowels burnt within him and so died Dioclesian and Maximian raised a Persecution which like a flood ran over all the Roman Provinces Syria Tyre Egypt c. But at last Dioclesian in his old days poyson'd himself and Maximian died a dogs death he was hang'd up for a sign of Gods wrath by Constantine Thus in these Ten Persecutions Gods Ministers run through fire and water as the Prophet David speaks of the afflictions of Gods children and were not spared But God spared not to punish those wicked Emperors the raisers of them Then after Julian the Apostate plays the devil but God the Lord of Hosts for the Persian got the honor of the day and Julian wounded sprinkling his blood up toward heaven died blaspheming Vicisti tandem puer Galilee Vulence seduced by the Arrians made havock of the Church but being taken of the Gothes in a Cabin whither he fled was burnt there I could proceed The Mahumetan Persecution I need not insist on Only The Saracens they are vanished Selymus the first Turkish Emperor rooted out of that Nation and the Turks they never are at ease but at continual war whose end by the judgment of the more learned is at hand Neither need I and therefore will not insist on the Persecutions continued under the Popes in Italy Germany Spain France England and in the Eastern tract of the world But who knows not the state of that Church from whom are hidden what deaths many and most of them died Take one for all Boniface the 8. of whom it is reported He came in like a Fox he reigned like a Lion and died like a Dog Let these Examples be as so many arguments to induce Gods Ministers howsoever persecuted to rejoice for Blessed are you when for Christs sake ye suffer persecution for yours is the kingdom of heaven Mat. 5. They that will not receive your crying aloud without sparing shake the dust off your feet against them Sodom and Gomorrah shall be in a better case at the last day than they Mat. 10.14 cap. 11.22 cap. 12.42 It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Siaon than for them The Ninevites and the Queen of the South shall rise up in judgment against them Therefore tell them their own soundly and fear not Though ye be among scorpions as the Lord said to Ezekiel spare not for fear of the ensuing dangers For whosoever spareth incurs his own destruction and the destruction of the people both shall be overwhelmed in the flood of Gods wrath both shall sink into the gulf of everlasting perdition both being as the Prophet Jeremy speaks sifted in the sieve of vanity Yea Press things home to the Conscience and spare not though no hope of amendment of their life appear God bids thee and duty birds thee because God bids thee 1.2 Though ye will not be believed as Jeremy was not where Azariah Johanan and all the proud men said to him Thou speakest falsly Yet cry aloud and spare not leave the event to God Go saith he to Ezekiel and tell this people whether they hear or hear not If they do they shall have life if not judgments are prepared for scorners and stripes for the back of fools Prov. 19. ult For if they heir not you when you cry from God to them God will not hear them when they cry to him or you for them Jer. 7.16 Now God Almighty enable embolden and encourage all his Ministers to cry aloud to those whose minds are wandring that their hearts may turn to God to those that are in pursuit of their own wicked lusts that they may be reclaimed to those that are afar off that they may hear and return homeward to God to those that are asleep in sin that they may awake to righteousness to those that stop their ears that they may open them with gladness to those that hear carelesly that they may hear diligently to those that are dead in sins that they may arise and be quickned with the life of grace to the life of glory Again As we must take heed of our Doctrine so we must take heed of our Lives that we be unspotted of this wicked world Mundamimini qui fertis vasa Domini Ye that carry the vessels of the Lord be clean The Breast-plate of the Priest had this inscription HOLINESS TO THE LORD signifying that we should have Holiness imprest in our hearts Remember the Orders ye have taken they are holy Holy Orders Be