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A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

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shall leave a seed behinde him Cain and Abell resemble all mankinde Elect Reprobate as the variety in names so in natures and dispositions Secondly you heard that from this tree doe sprout two branches that is a pair of brethren to whom all mankinde may be reduced from whom both Sion the City of God and Babell the City of Satan take their beginning concerning whom in the variety of their names we observed the variety of their natures the one called Cain that is a possession sets out those people whose felicity is to get and which count it the only misery to lose the things of this life the other called Abell that is vanity doth set out unto us those which reckon all things in this life to be vanity as the Preacher teacheth us to value them thereby we considered what account we made both of the one and the other In the world Cain is called a great Jewell and Abell despised as a thing of naught Second and third Division Now we are come to a second and third division 1 In their Trades For in this verse they are divided by their trades and calling 2. In their Religion in the next by their religion and profession in the service of God both which divisions have their ground the second chapter and the seventh verse Man consists of Body and Soul to fill both Earth and Heaven For where man is said to consist of two parts body and soul the one formed of the dust of the earth the other breathed by God that is to shew that as according to Gods commandement the first chapter of Genesis and the twenty sixt verse He hath a care to fill the earth by bringing forth children so he must be as carefull to fill heaven by a second generation that as he was to till the earth from whence his body was taken chapter the third Mans vocation maintain life and religion a spirituall life So he must imploy his study in Gods service from whence he received his soul his care must be not only to leave behinde him a long generation but semen sanctum Mal. the second chapter as they must have a vocation whereby to maintain naturall life So they must be religious and offer sacrifice that leading a spirituall life here on earth they may obtain eternall life in heaven 1. The naturall life then the spirituall and why But as Cain was first born after the flesh and then Abell So alwaies flesh goeth before the spirit nature before grace as the Apostle witnesseth the first of the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter That is not first which is spirituall but that which is naturall and then that which is spirituall Therefore God was first to feed the Israelites with Manna and to give them water out of the rock the sixteenth chapter of Exodus before they would receive the Law which after was published upon mount Sinai the twentieth chapter of Exodus For as the Apostle sheweth there is a debt due to the flesh Rom. the eight chapter which must be paid before the spirit can with quietnesse attend upon Gods service which being provided for the spirit is the fitter to attend upon Gods worship Children are not to be trained up in idlenesse and why Before we come to their severall vocations we have first to consider in generall that Adam would not have either of his children trained up in idlenesse and therefore he sets not only his younger sonne But to labor in a vocation but even his heir to a trade and occupation knowing that whereas God hath ordained that man shall live by some painfull vocation chapter the third there is a thing that both touched him and his the necessity whereof is such as Job saith Man is born to labor even as a bird to flie the fifth chapter of Job and the seventh verse And as he imployeth in trade as well the eldest as the youngest So Abell the good no lesse then Gain the wicked sonne for the godly have no liberty to live without some honest calling and therefore the Apostle saith Let a man abide in that calling wherein he is called the first of the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the twenty fourth verse If the godly may not live idlely much more ought wicked children to be set to some trade of life The second point to be observed is that there is no sooner mention made of the birth of these two brethren but presently the Holy Ghost setteth down their trade commending unto us from Adams example that which Salomon after teacheth the twenty second chapter of the Prov. Teach a childe in the beginning of his waies and he will not depart from it when he is old Seasonable instruction in youth and why for without seasonable instruction children and youth are but vanity the eleventh chapter of Eccle. and the third verse All are not fit for one and the same calling and why Both these sonnes are not set to one vocation to shew that all men are not fit and meet for one and the same calling for as there is this diversity in the earth out of which man is taken that one part of it is sandy some clay and some gravell And as in the heavenly light there is that diversity which the Apostle speaks of the first of the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter and the fourty first verse one star differing from another in glory So the like variety appeareth in the dispositions of men in so much as we see all men are not meet for one thing Fourthly from hence we learn that albeit the labors and trades of men be diverse Callings must be such as God alloweth and are serviceable to the Common-wealth and why yet they must be such as both God alloweth and such as are serviceable to the publique wealth we may not say because Cain a reprobate was a husbandman that therefore God dislikes husbandary for God affirmeth of Noah that he was a just and upright man and yet he was an husbandman Genesis the ninth chapter nor that the office of keeping sheep is therefore lawfull in Gods sight because Abell the just was a sheephcard for Juball the sonne of wicked Lamech was the father of them that dwelt in tents and kept Sheep Genesis the fourth chapter and the twentieth verse and yet himself a wicked man the person doth not make the calling lawfull but it must be taken from God himself and be such as God alloweth touching husbandry Christ saith My father is the Husbandman the fifteenth chapter of John and the first verse and you are Gods husbandry saith the Apostle the first of the Corinthians the third chapter and the ninth verse Therefore the calling of an husbandman is allowable for the other calling God himself is called the Shepheard of Israel the eightieth Psalme and the first verse and Christ saith of his Church I have other sheep which I must gather under my government
scattered be a misery the remedie against that is to be in the unity of a flock and the way to be delivered from being a pray is to be under the defence of a Shepheard The one is the wisdom the other is the strength of this poor Creature Then to erre from the Fold and Shepheard is the only evil that can be fall them so the Prophet 〈◊〉 Ezekiel the thirty fourth chapter They stragled on every Hill and 〈◊〉 the ninth chapter our Saviour describes the misery of the people to shew them that they were as Sheep without a Shepheard If to erre be a misery then our felicity stands either in staying in the Fold or if we be gone astray to return to the Shepheard that is to Christ who promiseth life and aboundance of life to him that converteth unto him the tenth chapter of St. Johns Gospel and the tenth verse Secondly For the term of Shepheard and Bishop it is applyed to Christ by Congregation being a flock Every Governor is a Shepheard not only in regard of the state of the Church but in respect of the Common-wealth For it is first applyed to Joseph who was a politick Magistrate Genesis the fourty ninth chapter so to Joshuah when Moses prayeth for a civil Governor to be 〈◊〉 over the People Numbers the twenty seventh chapter so Psalm the seventy seventh Thou leadest thy People like sheep by the hand of Moses and Adron Psalm the seventy eighth He took me from the Sheepfold to feed Israel And in the first book of Kings the twenty second chapter Ahab being slain the People of Israel are amazed 〈◊〉 Sheep wandring on the waters without a Shepheard So Isaiah 44. 〈…〉 est This was the opinion of the Heathen and therefore such temporal Governors are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not only so but as it followeth they are Pastores animarum For seeing men are reasonable Creatures God forbid but a Magistrate should have a greater regard of men than rural Shepheards of Sheep that are pecora 〈…〉 the the fift chapter the mount of God from whence came the Law But here is Gods own hill from whence came the Gospel As the term Shepheard so is Pastor Ezekiel the thirty fourth chapter and the eighteenth verse to tread on the good pastures and drink of the deep waters These are applyed to the state Civil as Psalm the twenty third and the second verse The Lord is my Shepheard he maketh me to rest on green 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 to the still waters But as these terms are applyed to the Common-wealth so also the Church is a flock and the Shepheard is Christ. All that came before him were but theeves as he saith I am the true Shepheard and therefore it is more excellently applyed to him 〈◊〉 to any other For no Shepheard can say of his 〈◊〉 he made them but we are the Sheep of his Church Psalm the hundred and tenth No shepheard bought his sheep with his blood but Christ 〈◊〉 purchased his Church with his blood Acts the 〈◊〉 chapter No shepheard feedeth his flock with himself as Christ 〈◊〉 feed us with the preaching of his word being in his divine nature 〈◊〉 and with his flesh in his humane nature But the Apostle 〈◊〉 not himself to call him Shepheard but Bishop There was in the Church Pastores Doctores Ephesians the fourth chapter and the eleventh verse and the first epistle to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter Both Teachers and Governors They fed men by teaching and so made them more able in the inward man but there were other Pastors by oversight called Bishops Both titles have their ground in John the twenty first chapter and the sixteenth verse where Christ saith to Peter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the one word signifies to feed the other to governe So there are pastores 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of their gifts makes the difference of titles Many have the gift of feeding by teaching that have not the gift of oversight and Government St. Paul gave Titus power to order Titus the first chapter to Timothy to receive accusations the first epistle to Timothy the fift chapter to put to silence to correct to visit Acts the fifteenth chapter every one hath not such power neither is it fit they should have Out of which words for our moral instruction seeing it hath pleased Christ to the office of Pastors to add Bishops he left us exemples as the first epistle of Peter the second chapter to teach us that have or that must have a regard of others must be free from sleep Therefore it is said of such Hebrews the thirteenth chapter Vigilant pro animabus vestris unlike those of whom Isaiah the fifty six chapter Their shepheards lye a sleep and delight in sleeping Nebemiah the second chapter and the first verse neither must they be negligent Some have a care but it is to feed themselves with the milk and cloath themselves with the fleece 〈◊〉 the thirty fourth chapter They are Episcopi uberum vellerum but it is of the souls that they must be carefull That is the end of their Government as also of civil Magistrates and Masters of Families And that Governor that hath not this end is no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he aimeth at a wrong mark Thirdly For the erring and turning again he saith Ye went astray and so hazarded your souls We know it is one thing to be lost and another to erre Luke the fifteenth chapter The groat was lost the Sheep was not lost but strayed away of it self and that is a voluntary thing but this is not to be applyed to matter of opinion but to error of life as Proverbs the fourteenth chapter Nonne oves errant quia operant 〈◊〉 That straying is set forth in the riotous young man Luke the fifteenth chapter who by mispending his goods on Harlots was brought to misery They that stray are such as commit sinne with greedinesse Ephesians the fourth chapter that is not by the negligence of such as are set over us but by our own corruption As we goe astray by errors of life so by errors of opinion as James the second chapter That wait upon lying vanities and for sake their own mercy by crrors of life and opinion They for sake their fathers house as John saith in the first epistle of John and the second chapter Those things I write ne peccetis So we preach ne erretis We say as the Angel did to Sarai her maid Agar Remember whence thou commest and whither thou goest Genesis the sixteenth chapter Therefore the Disciples when others went astray said to Christ John the sixt chapter Whether should we goe away that is we say not to forsake the fellowship of the Church nor to withdraw themselves For in such my soul hath no delight 〈◊〉 the tenth chapter But Peter confesseth here you have sinned and gone astray what then If we
and commendeth the poor widows oblation Luke the twenty first So both Cain and Abel bring their offerings to God The things they had in common are Three First Offerings Secondly To offer to God Thirdly They offer of their own and that which they had gotten by their honest vocations 1. We may not worship God with empty hands or give that which cost nothing First In that they both offer something it is plain we may not worship with empty hands Exodus the twenty second and give him that which cost us nothing in the second of Samuell and the twenty fourth chapter Our service must be as Paul speaketh in the first to the Corinthians the ninth chapter and the eighteenth verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such are worse than Cain for he brought somthing and therefore shall condemn those that content themselves with the sacrifice of the lips The oblation is originally Mincah that is a thing brought not 〈◊〉 from them they must proceede of a willing affection and therefore also are called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Psalmist saith in the twenty ninth Psalm afferte Deo They thought it not a weariness to serve God as the people did Matthew the third They considered he was a God of infinite Majestie and power in comparison of whom all the Kings of the earth are but crickets and grashoppers Isaiah the fourtieth and the twenty third verse 2. Both offered to God and not to Idols Secondly They both offered to God not to Idols Hosea the second not to the creatures as the Sun and Moon and stars of whom they say Jer. the fourty fourth and the seventeenth verse Let us offer up Cakes to the Queene of heaven Much lesse doe they offer to Devills in the first to the 〈◊〉 the tenth chapter and the twenty sixth verse nor to their own bellies and backs making their bellies their God and sacrificing to their backs on which they think they never bestow cost enough 3. Both offered that which they had lawfully gotten Thirdly they both offered of that which they had gotten by their own labour and industrie It was not the fruit of sinne for God saith I will not have the price of a whore in the twenty third of Deuteronomie and the eighteenth verse no sacrifice be it never so beautifull shall come into Gods house if it be unlawfully gotten But we must offer to God that which we have gotten by following some honest calling Three severall differences in the sacrifice The things which they had in severall are three 1. The time when they offered The first is the time when they offered which circumstance and the rest sheweth that there is a great difference between their sacrifice for the Holy Ghost is 〈◊〉 diligent to set down Abell's sacrifice than Cain's Of Cain it is said he offered in fine dierum that is it was long before he could 〈◊〉 in his heart to give somthing to God but Abell gave primitias the first thing that ever he had Cain served himself first and God after But Abell did contrary Cain served himself first and God last but Abell was carefull of Gods service in the first place and after provided for himself And this is a materiall point diligently to be considered There are none so hard hearted all their life long but if they draw near their end that sickness come then they will offer in fine dierum and in novissimo die Jer. the fift Those are times that will compell men to be mindfull of God But if we will have our offerings pleasing to God they must be primitiae 2. Difference in the things which they offered Secondly that which they had in severall was the thing it felf which they offered which was diverse and different God doth not 〈◊〉 fault with Cains offering but maketh choyce of Abel's Cain's was that which came next to hand for Cain offered to God that which came first to hand any thing as he thought was good enough Abel's was the first and fattest of his sheep but Abell made choyce of the fattest of his sheep As God is the first and best thing so he offered to God the first of his sheep and the fattest among them But Cain confounded this order Of the difference of whose minds in offering these verses are witnesses Abel when he would offer saith Sacrum pingue dabo nec macrum sacrificabo Cain saith Sacrificabo macrum nec dabo pingue sacrum Cain was of the same minde that the Priests were that would be served before God had his part in the first of Samuel the second chapter and sixteenth verse So Cain will have enough for himself before he will once offer any thing to God Secondly when he doth offer he maketh no choyce of his oblation but thinketh any thing good enough but the Prophet saith Cursed be he that offereth a lame offering to God and sacrificeth a corrupt thing for I am a great King Mal. the first chapter and the fourteenth verse Offer such to thy Prince would he be content to accept such offerings but we will offer the best things to earthly Princes how much more to the great King of Heaven and therefore the Wiseman saith Honour God with thy substance and that with the first fruits of thine increase Proverbs the third and the ninth verse 3. Difference in the persons that offered The third thing observed by the Apostle is the person of the party that offereth Abel was a faithfull man that made his sacrifice the better accepted Heb. the eleventh and the fourth verse By faith Abell offered a better sacrifice than Cain the faith of Abel was his assurance that God was a great God and would not accept of lame offerings and therfore is carefull to bestow the best and first thing he had Abel's was to testifie his faith in Christ and to expresse his thankfulness For knowing that sacrifices are testimonies of the thankfulness of the heart Abel to testifie his faith in the blood of Christ and to expresse his thankfulness for the same doth choose out of his flocks the fattest of his sheep Faith maketh men offer often and of the best things Faith maketh men offer often and better things but they that are without faith care not how few times they offer nor how small their oblations be We are to know therefore that these two may not be severed neither fides from obtulit nor obtulit from fides where there is faith there will be offerings for so saith the Apostle that from the increase of faith there was an increase of offerings in the Church But when there is little faith or none at all as in Cain there are offerings seldome made and when they offer it is the smallest and meanest things they have the second to the Corinthians the eighth chapter and the seventh verse As ye abound in faith and word and knowledge and
of his sinne is dispatched in a word My sinne is greater but he takes his punishment in pieces and thinks of it particularly whereupon one saith of Cain and the wicked that the repetition which they make is eorum quae ferunt non quae fecerunt they are generall in their sinne but particular in their punishment For as of the abundanee of the heart the mouth speaketh Matthew the twelfth chapter so we may gather by Cains words that he thinks more of his punishment than of his fault that which offends him stood more in his sight and grieved him more than that which offended God but the godly are of another minde for they will be content to have the punishment remain upon them so that the guilt may be taken away But there is a third point in this repetition which is a perverting of the order which God set down in giving the Sentence God began with the curse ended with casting out of the earth but Cain beginneth with his casting out of the earth wherein he sheweth what is his greatest grief for if a man suffer many pains he will speak of that first which doth most pinch him and complain first of the losse of that thing which he doth most of all affect in that he first complaineth he is cast out from the face of the earth he sheweth he took more care for the face of the earth than the face and presence of God and it grieved him more to be deprived of the good will of men than of the favour of God It is otherwise with the Saints of God for they crie Psalm the seventy third and the twenty fift verse Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none in earth whom I desire besides thee Psalm the 〈◊〉 third Thy kindness is better than life it self and when they come to make composition between heavenly things and earthly we see what David saith in the second of Samuel the fifteenth chapter and the twenty fift verse If I finde favour in Gods sight I will see the Ark again that is the presence of God and makes choice of that as his greatest felicity not to enjoy his Scepter or to be restored to his Wives and Children which earthly men would make most account of so the Apostle Philippians the third chapter and the eighth verse Esteeming all things as dung in respect of Christ. Whereby we see that as Cains punishment grieved him more than his sinne so the earthly part of his punishment offends him more than the heavenly One thing more is to be added that is Cains Commentary or interpretation of Maledictus for he saith that to be cursed is to be cast out from Gods presence The presence or face of God hath reference to the power of God or to his favour from the presence of Gods power knowledge or spirit there is no escaping Psalm the one hundred and thirty ninth If I climb up to heaven 〈◊〉 art there if I goe down to hell thou art there also of which the Prophet saith Jeremiah the twenty third chapter and the twenty fourth verse coelum terram ego 〈◊〉 but that is not his meaning but that he is cast out from the presence of Gods favour so are 〈◊〉 words to be taken to Moses Exodus the tenth chapter and the twenty eighth verse Get thee from me and look thou see my face no more Rsalm the thirty first and the twenty second verse I said in my half I am cast out from thy presence and Psalm the eightieth Turn again O Lord cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved so that we must know that albeit God be present every where with his power yet he is not present with his favour and not only that but it signifieth the place where the favour and grace of God is intailed that is his House and Church of which the Prophet saith Psalm the ninty fift Let us come before his presence or face with thanksgiving When shall I come and appear in the presence of God Psalm the fourty second of which presence Christ saith Matthew the eighteenth chapter When two or three be gathered together I am amongst them and the Apostle in the second to the Corinthians the second chapter In the presence of Jesus Christ forgive I them that is in the Church where God speaketh to us in his word and we again speak to him by prayer so Cains punishment is both spirituall and ecclesiasticall for that he is not only shut out of Gods favour but cast out of the place where the presence of his favour and grace is shewed and the punishment was justly inflicted upon Cain that durst commit so great an offence in the presence and sight of God and when it was committed feared not Gods presence but denyed it as if God knew not of it The second point is Cains admonition wherein the first thing to be observed is how in this repetition it comes to pass that Cain saith whosoever shall finde him will kill him seeing in the sentence there is no mention of death the reason comes from the guiltiness of his conscience severiorum seipso Judicem habet 〈◊〉 whereupon it falleth out that though the Judge absolve yet the party guilty addeth a sentence of condemnation upon himself so doth Cain condemn himself as worthy of death God indeed afterward saith He 〈◊〉 shedeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed Genesis the ninth chapter but seeing Cain 〈◊〉 God hath uttered his opinion of murther that it is a sinne mortall it may be said to him ex ore 〈◊〉 te 〈◊〉 Luke he 〈◊〉 chapter that men may know that wisedome is justified of 〈◊〉 children 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter so 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 of her children Secondly Where he saith he shall be killed with a 〈◊〉 and bloody death this is secundum dictamen rationis ut 〈…〉 fecit expectes Cain is told by his own conscience that 〈◊〉 he 〈◊〉 murthered Abel so himself must look to be murthered This is that Lex 〈◊〉 written naturally in the hearts of all men which made the bretheren of Joseph to say Genesis the fourty second chapter and the twenty first verse We have sinned against our brother in that we saw the anguish of his soul when he besought us and we would not hear him therefore is all this come upon us By that Law it was just that as Hammon had made Gods people afraid so he himself should fear and be dealt with as he had purposed to deal Esther the seventh chapter and the sixt verse therefore the Prophet saith Isaiah the thirty fift chapter and the first verse Woe be to them that spoile for they shall be spoiled and our Saviour Christ saith agreeably Matthew the seventh chapter With what measure ye meat the same shall be measured to you again Thirdly He saith Omnis qui inveniret there could but one kill him and yet his 〈◊〉 tells him he deserveth to die at the hands
of every man even of every beast in as much as he hath first taught beasts to kill men by his own confession it is just that as the Prophet speaks Micah the seventh chapter and the fift verse The Wife of his bosome and the Children of his loyns shall break the bonds of nature with him as he before hath thewed himself unnaturall to his brother And this is a great part of Cains punishment that albeit there be none to kill him yet he shall be in continuall fear of death that a man shall not only fear Gods threatning but his own fancy that he shall fear not one but every one that meets him as if every one knew his fault that he shall fear not only where there is cause of fear as wilde beasts but tuta timere and this is a part of Gods curse that God will send faintness into their hearts so as they shall be afraid at the shaking of a leaf Leviticus the twenty sixt chapter and the thirty sixt verse at every shadow as the Midianites were of their dreams Judges the seventh chapter and at every noise and rumor in the second of the Kings the seventh chapter and the sixt verse These feares are great punishments and arguments of a guilty conscience and this sheweth that albeit wickedness be secret yet it will not suffer a man to be quiet Wherein we are to observe how Cain de scribeth the state of them that are out of Gods favour and cast from his presence that they fear either no fear as Psalm the fifty 〈◊〉 If the Prince frown upon a man there is no hope of favour any where else so if God be once offended so that a man despair of his favour he will fear every creature the starres of heaven fought against Sisera Judges the fift chapter and the twentieth verse The stones in the street will cease to be in league and peace with him Job the fift chapter therefore when God saith quaerite faciem meam Psalm the twenty seventh our soul must answer thy face Lord will I seek For if we seek the Lord our God we shall finde him Deuteronomie the fourth chapter and the twenty ninth verse and that is so necessary that the People say If thy presence goe not with us carry us not hence Exodus the thirty third chapter and the Prophet speaketh Cast me not from thy presence Psalm the fifty first for without the assurance of Gods favour and protection we shall fear every shadow every noise that we hear Secondly Cain in these words sheweth what was his chief fear and what did most grieve him that was that he should die not the death of the soul but the bodily death by the hand of man he feares the shadow of death but not the body of death as the Apostle speaks Romans the seventh chapter but eternall death is that which he should have feared most of all for it hath a body and shall be found though the bodily death is often sought and cannot be found Job the third wherein Cain shewes what he is that is animalis homo in the first to the Corinthians the second chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phillippians the third chapter not having the spirit so was Saul afflicted in the first of Samuel the fifteenth chapter Honour me before the people he respected worldly honour more than Gods favour whereupon saith Augustine quid tibi honoratio haec proderit miser If 〈◊〉 death fall upon Cain what shall it profit him to live on earth but this sheweth plainly that the life of the body was Cains chief felicity and that the greatest grief he had was for the death of the body as if he should say let me live though it be but in fear and sorrow This is the affection of flesh and blood as the Devill saith of Job Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life Job the second chapter that is so long as life is not taken away man is well This being Cains complaint it is an implied petition and the request is Quasi pro magno beneficio ut non 〈◊〉 which request may be well uttered if it be rightly taken for not only the wicked feare death but the godly say themselves we sigh and would not be uncloathed but cloathed upon in the second to the Corinthians the fift chapter they would passe to immortality without the dissolution of the body and soul. That prayer for life is well if it be for a good end as Hezekiah praieth he may live to the end he may bewaile his sinnes in the 〈◊〉 of his soul Isaiah the thirty eighth chapter repentance is the end that he sets David saith I will not die but live and praise the Lord Psalm the one hundred and eighteenth the Apostle Paul albeit in regard of himself he desires to be dissolved yet because it is profitable for the Church that he should still remain in the flesh he desires to live Philippians the first chapter and the twenty second verse so life may be sought if it be for this end to doe good but if our end be the escaping of death for a time the case is otherwise Touching the end of Cain's desire It may be he 〈◊〉 life that he might repent and praise God and doe good for charity 〈◊〉 the best in the first epistle to the Corinthians and the thirteenth chapter But we see what doth continually vex Cain and all the wicked that is the doubt of the forgivenesse of sinne which is the worm of the spirit and a continuall fear of death which they know they have deserved at the hands of all Gods creatures Dixit verò Jehova illi Propterea quisquis interfecerit Kajinum septuplo vindicator imposuit Jehova Kajino signum ne eum caederet ullus qui foret inventurus eum Gen. 4. 15. Septemb. 26. 1599. CAINS chief complaint and petition therein implied was handled verse the fourteenth This verse contains Gods answer which is a yeelding or granting to that petition of his and that effectuall for God provideth for the safety of Cain's life not only by his word and command but by a visible mark which he set upon Cain Wherein we are generally to observe First That as the Prophet tels us in the one hundred and tenth Psalme God dealeth not with any sinner according to his sinnes and deserts for if God did not in wrath remember mercy 〈◊〉 the third chapter he should not in justice have suffered Cain to open his mouth for it is just that he which turneth away his car from hearing the law when he prayeth should not be heard Proverbs the twenty eighth chapter and the ninth verse That he which will not hear Gods Prachers shall not be heard of God when he prayeth And the Lord in the Propher saith more plainly in the second chapter of Zechary and the thirteenth verse that as he by his Prophets cried unto the people and they would not
therefore they would have another seed like the starres of heaven such as should have their conversation in heaven it is that which the Prophet tells us there is semen nequam Isaiah the first chapter that is a naughty and corrupt seed such was the seed of Cain and there is semen sanctum Isaiah the sixt chapter such a seed was it that Adam desired Cain was a naughty seed but they would have a holy seed for there is not only good seed but tares as Christ sheweth Matthew the thirteenth chapter Such is the difference that is in seeds A holy seed is such as shall sinne but yet shall not doe sinne in the first epistle of John the third chapter that is not operarius iniquitatis Matthew the seventh chapter because the seed of God is in them but they that sell themselves to all manner of sinne are the corrupt seed such as power out themselves to all wickedness because they have not the seed of God in them but the Serpents seed of whom it may be said verò ex patre Diabilo estis John the eighth chapter Fiftly This other seed might be another seed yet not like Abel that is a seed more civill and temperate in the course of this life than Cain was and his posterity but they desire a seed for Abel that is such another seed as Abel was They desire a Child not simply but pro Abele that is such a Child in whom they may finde the spirit of Abel that they might say here is another Abel that though Abel be taken off yet there might another like Abel be ingraffed The last point is in these words For Abel whom Cain 〈◊〉 There were many things that Cain could endure well enough in Abel but the cause why he 〈◊〉 him was for that he had a desire to please God and to sacrifice to him in the best 〈…〉 could his desire was to offer plurimam hostiam 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse that is a Sacrifice that should be in 〈◊〉 more and in quality de 〈◊〉 of the best of his sheep so they would not only have one religious as Abel but one that should be opposite to Cain and as it were the Heir of Abels 〈◊〉 one that might accomplish that which was lacking on Abels part in the first to the Thessalonians the third chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse 〈◊〉 as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him 〈◊〉 was born after the spirit Galatians the fourth chapter so they might have one to maintain his quarrel and might uphold that holy seed Concerning which as God hath a purpose that the patience of his Saints should appear Romans the ninteenth chapter 〈…〉 patientia Sanctorum for which cause he suffers Abel to be 〈◊〉 so he will have his providence appear too and therefore he sets up Seth so as Tubal-Cain with all his armor shall not remove him So we see in every of these words there is a power They would have this other seed like Abel in all things saving in this that Abel was but shewed only to the world but they would have Seth a permanent seed So doth God make the distinction between his Saints to some he saith as to Peter John the twenty first chapter Follow me that by thy death thou maist glorifie me Of others he saith as of John the Evangelist I will have thee tarry still that is he will have some Saints to be 〈◊〉 as Peter and others he would have to live out all the dayes of their life as John the Evangelist and John that dieth in Domino is no less blessed 〈◊〉 Peter that dieth pro Domino So 〈◊〉 he would have Abel 〈◊〉 taken a way and 〈◊〉 to live out the course of nature yet the one is no lesse acceptable to him than the other Lastly These words contain a plain 〈◊〉 of Eve not only in regard of her stile for of Cain she said I have obtained a man of the Lord but of Seth Deus posuit The one is 〈◊〉 Evae the other positio Del. But in regard of that account which now she makes of Cain Why should not Cain be still her Jewell as before for he lives still and hath a great and mighty seed She faith the cares not 〈◊〉 him for that he is cut off from Gods Church a stranger from the promises of God And as for Abel whom before she 〈…〉 now she desires one like him though he should be 〈…〉 Abel 〈◊〉 So she condemnes her self for having so great a 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wisedome at last is justified of her Children For a time 〈◊〉 〈…〉 accounted of but at last Abel shall be found to be 〈…〉 case Out of which we see that which the Prophet 〈◊〉 That men must not make too much 〈◊〉 in 〈…〉 Isay 〈◊〉 twenty 〈◊〉 chapter if the Lord 〈◊〉 and come not so soon as we 〈◊〉 we must wait and he that 〈◊〉 will come Hebrews the second chapter Give not over if Abel be lost God will provide another seed Secondly We see here the propriety of the Church it is a thing set as the Prophet speakes in the twenty eighth chapter of Isaiah I will lay a Stone in Sion a chief corner Stone upon which Stone the Church is built so as the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Matthew the sixteenth chapter Therefore the Apostle saith Colossians the first chapter the faithfull are radicati fundati in fide whereupon it followeth that as God himself is from everlasting and world without end Psalm the nintieth so he will be with his Church to the end of the world Matthew the eighteenth chapter so we see there is a reward for the righteous though he were killed touching the body yet he lives still in heaven And now in as much as there is one like Abel he revives in earth and so he hath his reward in heaven and earth Howsoever before Cain was preferred before Abel yet now by the testimony of Adam and Eve is counted one not worthy the ground that he treads upon but Abel is acknowledged to be a great blessing and therefore hath his desire one like him Sed ipsi Schetho genitus est filius cujus nomen vocavit Enoschum tunc coeptum est invocari nomen Jehovae Gen. 4. 26. Februar 17. 1599. YOU see here that albeit Moses might have deferred these two verses to the next chapter wherein he drawes down the genealogie of the godly seed yet he could not contain himself but before he concludes this chapter he will make some mention of some that regard the worship of God as well to shew that God did not clean forget his promise and his people as also that he might counterpoise the evill of the wicked that went before as last of all that he might make a good conclusion that as he had a good beginning in Abels oblation so he might end it well in the invocation of Enosh and he doth end
Congregation of such as did invocate the name of the Lord. AMEN LECTURES PREACHED UPON Severall choice Texts BOTH out of the Old and New TESTAMENT LECTURES Preached in the Parish Church of St. GILES without Cripple-gate LONDON Sed advolavit ad me unus ex istis Seraphim habens in manu sua prunam quam forcibus sumpserat ab altari Admovitque ori meo dicens c. Isaiah 6. 6. Octob. 1. 1598. IN the Liturgy of the ancient Church these words are found applyed to the blessed Sacrament of Christs body and blood for it is recorded by Basill That at the celebration thereof after the Sacrament was ministred to the people the Preist stood up and said as the Seraphin doth here Behold this hath touched your lips your iniquity shall 〈◊〉 taken away and your sinne purged The whole fruit or Religion is The taking away of sinne Isaiah the twenty seventh Chapter and the ninth verse and the speciall wayes to take it away is the Religious use of this Sacrament which as Christ saith is nothing else but a seale and signe of his blood that was shed for many for the remission of sinnes Matthew the twenty sixt Chapter and the twenty eighth verse for the Angell tells the prophet that his sinnes are not only taken away but that it is done sacramentally by the touching of a Cole even as Christ assureth us that we obtain remission of sinnes by the receiving of the Cup Now as in the Sacrament we consider the Element and the word so we are to divide this Scripture For first in that the Seraphin touched his mouth with a burning Cole taken from the Altar therein we have the element and the word of comfort which the Prophet received was that the Angell said to him Behold this Cole hath touched thy lips and now thine iniquity is taken away and thy sinnes purged And there is such an Analogie and proportion between the Sereaphim and the Priests between the Altar and the Lords Table between the burning Cole and Bread and Wine offered and received in the Lords Supper As we cannot but justifie the wisdome of the ancient Church in applying this Scripture to the holy Eucharist For as St. John sheweth this vision shewed to the Prophet Isaiah is to be understood of our Saviour Christ John the twelfth and the fourty first verse for saith the Evangelist These things said Esay when he saw his glory and spake of him and therefore by this burning Cole taken from the Altar is meant Christ Jesus who by the Sacrifice of his death which hee offered up to God his Father hath taken away our iniquities and purged our sinnes as it is in the sixt chapter to the Hebrewes and therefore for the confirmation of our Faith wee are here taught That our sinnes are no lesse taken away by the element of bread and wine in the Sacrament then the Prophets sinne was by being touched with a Cole The occasion of this touching is set downe in the former verses of this Chapter which doe stand upon a vision and a confession The vision shewed to the Prophet was That hee saw the Lord sitting upon an high Throne as a Judgeready to give Sentence before whom the very Angells were forced 〈◊〉 cover their faces The confession that hee made was Woe is mee for I am uncleane I am a man of polluted lips mine eyes have seene the King and Lord of Hosts From whence wee learne that howsoever by the consideration of his former life and the sinnes that have scaped from him a man may bee brought to some remorse of Conscience yet then especially hee is humbled when hee seeth the vision of Gods glory and therefore nothing is more 〈◊〉 to bring us to repentance than to consider that at the last generall day Wee shall see Christ Jesus the sonne of God come in glory and sit downe in his Throne of glory and give Sentence of condemnation upon the wicked The Prophet who otherwise was no grievous sinner but only guilty of omission for that he had beene silent and did not glorifie God with his 〈◊〉 as he should have done notwithstanding in the sight of Gods glory is touched with remorse cryeth out Woe is me Whereby again wee learne that wee sinne not only when wee speake of these things which wee should not but when wee are silent when we should apply our tongues to Gods glory so that though the excellency of our upright and honest conversation bee never so great in the world yet the Majesty of God is such as shall shew That even those duties that we have omitted shall be sufficient to confound us before his glorious presence unlesse it please him to be mercifull to us therefore when wee appeare before his judgement-seate it shall bee in vain for us to alleage what wee have done forasmuch as the least duty that wee have lest undone is enough to condemn us It shall bee our duty therefore notwithstanding all our righteousnesse to judge our selves worthy to bee destroyed for our iniquities and sinnes of omission Ezechiel the thirty sixt chapter and the one and 〈◊〉 verse and to say with this Prophet Woe is mee for I am a man of polluted lips We must acknowledge that nothing belongs to us but Woe and that God may in justice confound us for the least duty we have omitted Upon this confession made by the Prophet there came an Angell flying from God which by touching his lips with a hot Coale assured him that his sinne was taken away wherefore as by the former wee learne that wee should repent us of our sinnes when wee consider the great Majesty of God so by this wee are taught what to hope for that is that if wee bee penitent God will not bee wanting unto us but will send a Seraphin unto us with a word of comfort to assure us that all our iniquities are purged Two parts First Elementall The outward element appointed by God to confirme his faith was the flying of a Seraphin unto him to touch is mouth with the Cole Secondly Invisible grace the word or invisible grace signifyed by the element was that by that touching his sinne was taken away In the outward action wee are first to consider the element it selfe that was the burning Cole on the Altar next the application persormed by a Seraphin who tooke the Cole from the Altar and touched the Prophets lips First The Element First therefore considering that none can take away sinne but God only wee must needs confesse that there was in this Cole a divine force and virtue issuing from Christ who is the only reconciliation for our sins without which it had not beene possible that it could have taken away sinne But what is here said of this Cole is to bee understood of Christ of whom Esay speaketh in this place When hee saw the glory of Christ John 12. 41. for hee is the Cole by which our sinnes
are taken away There are two natures in a Cole that is the Cole it selfe which is a dead thing and the burning nature and heate that it hath which setteth out first Christs humane nature which is dead in it selfe And then his divine nature containing the burning force of that is represented in this burning Cole So the element of bread and wine is a dead thing in it selfe but through the grace of Gods spirit infused into it hath a power to heate our Soules for the elements in the Supper have an earthly and a heavenly part Secondly that Christ is to bee understood by this burning Cole wee may safely gather because his love to his Church is presented with fire Cantit the eighth chapter and the sixth verse It is said of Christs love the Coles thereof are fiery Coles and a vehement flame such as cannot be quenched with any water nor the floods drown it even so all the calamities and miseries that Christ suffered and endured for our sakes which were poured upon him as water could not quench the love that he bare us Thirdly quia non solum ardet ipse sed alios accendit so saith John the Baptist of him There cometh one after me that shall Baptize with the holy-Ghost and with fire as it is in the third chapter of Luke the sixteenth verse therefore the graces of the holy-Ghost are also represented by fire Acts 3. the union whereof hath a double representation First it is signified by water in Baptisme for sinne that is derived 〈◊〉 us from another being as a 〈◊〉 may be washed away with water and therefore the Propher saith there is a fountaine opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of 〈◊〉 for sinne and 〈◊〉 Zach. the thirteenth chapter and the first verse therefore 〈◊〉 said to Saul bee Baptized and wash away thy sinnes Acts the twenty second Chapter and the sixteenth verse that is meant of originall sinne and the corruption of our nature by which wee are guilty of the wrath of God but because through the whol course of our life sinne by custome groweth more to be strong and to stick fast in our nature so as no water can take it away therefore 〈◊〉 Grace of God is set out by fire as having a power and force to burn 〈◊〉 sinne for by custome sinne is bred and setled in our nature and is 〈◊〉 drosse that must be tryed and purged by fire so the holy Ghost speaketh of actuall sinnes the first of Isaiah and the twenty fift verse and the sixt ter of Jeremiah and the thirttieh verse Ezech. the twenty second chapter and the eighteenth verse The house of Israel is to mee as drosse that is by custome of sinne and in regard of this kinde of sinne there needs not only water to wash away the corruption of our nature and the qualitie thereof but fire to purge the actuall sins that proceed from the same The sinnes of Commission came by reason of the force of concupiscence and from the lusts that boyle out of our corrupt nature and the grace that takes them away is the grace of water in Baptisme but the sinnes of omission proceede of the coldnesse and negligence of our nature to doe good such as was in the Church of Laodicea Rev. the third chapter and the fifteenth verse and therefore such sinnes must bee taken away with the fiery Grace of God Secondly for the quality of the Cole it is not only a burning Cole but taken from the Altar to teach us that our zeale must bee 〈◊〉 and come from the spirit of God The fires that are appointed by earthly Judges to terrifie malefactors from offending may draw a skinne over the spirituall wounds of their Soules so as for feare they will eschue and sorbeare to sinne but it is the fire of the Altar and the inward Graces of Gods spirit that taketh away the corruption and healeth the wound therefore as in the Law God tooke 〈◊〉 there should ever bee fire on the Altar Leviticus the sixt chapter and the ninth verse so for the sinner that is contrite and sory for his sinne there is alwaies fire in the Church to burne up the Sacrifice of his contrition and repentance even that fire of Christs Sacrifice The love which hee shewed unto us in dying for our sinnes is set 〈◊〉 unto us most lively in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood unto which wee must come often that from the one wee may fetch the purging of our sinnes as the Apostle speaks and from the other qualifying power si in luce John the first chapter the seventh verse wherefore as by the mercy of God we have a fountain of water alwaies flowing to take away originall sinne so there is in the Church fire alwaies burning to cleanse our actuall transgressions for if the Cole taken from the Altar had a power to take away the Prophets sinne much more the body and blood of Christ which is offered in the Sacrament If the hem of Christs garment can heale the ninth chapter of Matthew and the twentith verse much more the touching of Christ himselfe shall procure health to our soules here we have not somthing that hath touched the Sacrifice but the Sacrifice it self to take away our sins Secondly the Application The application of this Cole is by a Seraphin for it is an office more fit for Angells than men to concurre with God for taking away sinne but for that it pleaseth God to use the service of men in this behalfe they are in Scripture called Angells Job the thirty fifth chapter and the twenty third verse Malachi the second and the seventh verse The Priests lips preserve knowledge for hee is the Angell of the Lord of Hosts and the Pastors of the seven Churches in Asia are called Angells Apoc. the first chapter and the first verse for the same office that is here executed by an Angell is committed to the sonnes of men to whom as the Apostle speaks Hee hath committed the ministery of reconciliation 2 Cor. the fift chapter and the eighteenth verse to whom hee hath given this power that whose sinnes soever they remit on earth shall bee remitted in heaven the twentith chapter of Saint John and the twenty fift verse So when Nathan who was but a man had said to David etiam Jehova transtulit peccatum 〈◊〉 the second booke of Samuel the twelfth chapter and the thirteenth verse it was as availeable as if an Angell had spoken to him And when Peter tells the Jewes that if they amend their lives and turn their sinnes shall be done away their sinne was taken away no lesse than the Prophets was when the Angell touched his lips Acts the third chapter and the ninteenth verse for not hee that holds the Cole but it is the Cole it selfe that takes away sinne and so long as the thing is the same wherewith wee are touched it skills not who doth hold it but wee
populus Dei Abrahami quia Deisunt protectiones terrae valde excelsus est Psal. 47. 10. Januar. 7. 1598. IT is a prophecie of the manifesting of Christ to the Gentils and of the gathering of them into the flock of Christ which is the third of the three benefits which we celebrate in the great solemnity of Christs birth and is called by the Fathers the Churches holi-day for Christ is the head to his Church and the Church is his body and the fullnesse of him that filleth 〈◊〉 in all things Ephesians the first chapter and the twenty third verse 〈◊〉 signifie unto us that Christ is an unperfect head till all the body consisting both of Jews and Gentils be gathered to him Christ had a Church before his nativity which was the Synagogue of the Jews but he had not a Church of the Gentils till he was come in the flesh Presently after his birth some of the Gentils which came from the East were called to be as it were Proctors to the rest of the Gentils before which time they were not incorporated into the Church of Christ which is his body Ephesians the third chapter and the sixt verse Neither is it said only of a few of the Gentils or as Christ saith A scattering of the Gentils John the seventh chapter and the thirty fift verse But the whole company of the Gentils or as the Apostle speaks That the fulnesse of the Gentils should come in to be of Christs Church Romans the eleventh chapter and the twenty fift verse Not a few of the common people but the Kings and Princes of the people And this is Christs second nativity For as he was first born at Bethlehem of his mother the Virgin so he hath another birth foretold by the Prophet Psalm the eighty seventh and the third fourth verses I will think of 〈◊〉 and Babiton behold Palestina Tyrus and Ethiopia loe there is he borne not at Sion only but among the Gentils he shall be manifested to be the God of the Gentils as well as Jews In those words we have first a Prophecie Secondly A Reason rendred In the first we have to consider First The calling of the People Secondly Of the Princes of the people First touching the God of Abraham it is Christ whose day Abraham desired to see and in seeing whereof he did so much rejoyce John the eight chapter that is not only the day of his birth which he saw as we learn by the oath which he caused his servant to take Genesis the twenty fourth chapter but also the day of his passion which he saw long agoe and rejoyced in seeing of it when he said to his sonne Isaac in the mount The Lord will provide a sacrifice Hic providebit Dominus Genesis the twenty second chapter and the eighth verse Secondly The People of the God of Abraham are his children and posterity not only they that are the seed of Abraham comming out of his loyns and are the children of the flesh Romans the ninth chapter the eighth verse but the children of the promise for if they that come out of Abrahams loyns were only his children then the Agarins the Turks and Ismaelites should be the people of God but in Isaac shall thy seed be called They that lay hold of the promise by faith They that are of the faith are the children of Abraham Galatians the third chapter and the seventh verse That have the same spirit of faith the second epistle to the Corinthians the fourth chapter that Abraham had As the Apostle saith He is not a Jew that is one outward but a Jew inward is the true Jew Romans the second chapter the twenty eighth verse They that worship the Messias by beleeving in him with the faith of Abraham they are Abrahams children and the people of 〈◊〉 God which thing John Baptist affirmeth Matthew the third chapter God can of stones raise up children to Abraham So the Gentils which worshipped stones and therefore were like unto them Psalm the hundred and fifteenth were notwithstanding raised up to be children to Abraham Concerning which joyning of the Gentils to the Church of Christ which is the bringing of them into one flock John the tenth chapter and the sixteenth verse The ingraffing of them into the true Olive Romans the eleventh chapter And the incorporating of them into his body Ephesians the third chapter That we which are sinners of the Gentils Galatians the second chapter might have hope God hath from time to time left recorded in his word that this should come to passe And because under two or three witnesses every matter is established 〈◊〉 the nineteenth chapter and the fifteenth verse therefore before the Law we have chosen three proofs First Noah saith God shall perswade Japheth to dwell in the tents of Shem Genesis the ninth chapter and the twenty seventh verse Secondly In semine 〈◊〉 omnes gentes benedicentur Genesis the twenty second chapter And which 〈◊〉 the people shall be gathered to him Genesis the fourty ninth chapter and the tenth verse Again in the time of the Law three testimonies First of Moses Deateronomy the thirty second chapter alleged by St. Paul Romans the fifteenth chapter and the tenth verse Rejoyce ye Gentils with his people Secondly Of 〈◊〉 Numbers the twenty fourth chapter and the seventeenth verse There shall come a starre of Jacob and shall bring under all the sonnes of 〈◊〉 that is all wicked Thirdly Job who though he were a Gentile yet being a member of the Church of Christ did by a true faith confesse I know that my Redeemer liveth Job the nineteenth chapter After the Law and before the second temple the Prophet saith In the name of God Isalah the fourty ninth chapter and the fixt verse It is a small thing Hosea the first chapter and the sixt verse I will call them a people that is no people applyed by Paul Romans the ninth chapter And Joel the second chapter I will poure my spirit upon all flesh alleged by the Apostle Acts the second chapter and Romans the tenth chapter After the second Temple Agga veniet defideratus cunctis gentibus Hagga the second chapter Great people and mighty Nations shall come to seek the Lord they shall take hold of the skirt of him that is a 〈◊〉 and say we will goe with you Zacherie the eighth chapter and the twenty third verse And from the rising of the Sonns to the going down my name is great among the Gentils 〈◊〉 the first chapter and the eleventh verse This God hath from all times revealed That the gate of faith should be opened to the Gentils to enter into the flock of Christ. This was shewed by Abrahams matching with Keturah a Gentile by Mosos matching himself with Zipporah a Midianite and Gentile by Salomon matching with Pharaohs daughter as in the Genealogie of Christs birth Salomon is matched with Rahab Booz with Ruth to signifie that Christ should save both
Jews and Gentils So the matching of Jews with Gentils doth signifie the affinity that should grow between the two Churches The same was shewed by the stuff where of 〈◊〉 Tabernacle was made by the first Temple which was built upon the ground of a Gentile Araunah the second book of Samuel and the twenty fourth chapter with timber sent by Hiram a Gentile the 〈◊〉 book of Kings the tenth chapter by the second Temple which was founded by Cyrus and 〈◊〉 Heathen Princes By which we may perceive that God had this in minde and in a purpose To gather the Gentils into the Church of Christ and to be of the people of the God of Abraham which thing was not only foreshewed but plainly performed For not only there came of the 〈◊〉 from the East to Christ Matthew the second chapter but Grecians from the West to see Christ John the twelfth chapter The second thing in the Prophecy is that not only the People should be gathered to be of the Church but the Kings and Princes for when Peter saw the sheet let down from heaven Acts the tenth chapter and the eleventh verse he was taught that Nations should come immediatly to the Church for then Cornelius and others were converted to the faith but Princes came not till three hundred yeeres after that was performed when the Prophet foretelleth the poore shall eate and be satisfied Psalme the two and twentith and the twenty sixth but for Rulers it was not so performed therefore the Pharisees object Doe any of the Rulers beleeve but this simple People that know not the Law John the seventh Chapter therefore the Apostle saith you knew your calling that not many noble not many mightie but the base and weake things hath God chosen as it is in the first of the Corinthians a great number of the poore people were at the first joyned to the Church of Christ and not only they but as it was foretold the rich upon earth shall eate and worship Psalme the two and twentith and the twenty ninth verse so Sergius Paulus Acts the thirteenth the noble man of Berea Acts the seventeenth the Eunuch chief governor for the Queene of Ethiopia Acts the eighth chapter her Lord Treasurer and the elect Lady the second Epistle of Saint John and the second chapter So both Lords and Ladies were brought to the Church but as yet no Princes for they stood up against Christ Acts the fourth chapter both Herod and Paul gathered themselves against Christ the holy sonne of God Paul had almost got one King to the Church that is Agrippa Acts the twenty sixt chapter and the twenty eighth verse Thou almost perswadest mee c. but there must bee a time when the kings of Arabia shall bring presents Psalme the seventy second a time when Kings should bee foster fathers and Queenes nursing mothers to the Church Isa. the fourty ninth chapter therefore under the Law he confirmed the hope of Kings by shewing grace to the King of Ninevey who repented at the preaching of Jonas and to the Queen of the South who came to honour Salomon Matthew the twelfth chapter no less than he confirmed the hope of the poor by calling the poor Widdow of Zarepta and of the humble by the example of Naaman Luke the fourth chapter by whose example all sorts of people both poor and rich both Prince and Subject have hope be gathered into the Church wherein the people of this English Nation have speciall cause to magnifie God for the first prince that professed the Gospel was Constantine the great born in England and ever since Christ hath had a Church of the Gentils not only dispersed Gentils John the seventh chapter a few only of them to worship him but the fulness of the Gentils Romans the eleventh chapter Now not only the simple and unlearned people but the Rulers themselves doe follow Christ John the seventh chapter wherein we are to exalt magnifie the power of Christ that he contents not himself with the inferiour people to be worshipped of them he will not only be the God of the Mattocks and Staves but of the Shields To teach us that he can turne the hearts of Captains and Princes whither he will Secondly That when this was performed the Princes were not Togati such as delighted in peace but Armati men of warre and hard to be brought under to the obedience of the Gospel such persons as at their pleasure will not hear when they think good but take away their life Esther the 6. chap. These men were the harder to be subdued to Christ being without Religion for the most part Nulla fides pietasque viris qui Castra sequuntur The Rulers of the people shall come to thee as it is in the Psalms God would not have David build him an Altar because he was a man of warre and had shed blood the first book of the Chronicles the twenty eighth chapter and the third verse But to gather a Church and Temple of the Gentils he hath no respect of that but sheweth his power in bringing them to his Church which were most cruel The Psalmist saith God is highly to be exalted among the Princes of the People At this ●ime the people of Abraham were at a poor stay like sheep appointed to the slaughter Romans the tenth verse In which regard it was not like it would come to passe that the Princes and mighty men would subject themselves to them Paul confesseth that the Sect which he followed was every where evil spoken of Acts the twenty sixt chapter That he and the rest of the Apostles were as the filth of the world and the off-scouring of all things the first epistle to the Corinthians the fourth chapter the thirteenth verse therefore unlikely that the great men of the world should yeeld to them Again that they should doe this of themselves voluntarily without constraint that where they had occupied their shields upon Gods People now they should use them for their defense that they should bring bountifull gifts to the Church whereof we see examples in the new Testament Matthew the second chapter The Reason is to be taken four wayes First When God shall be exalted then shall the Princes of the people be gathered to the people of the God of Abraham This is true for this Psalme is of Christs ascention of which Christ saith When he is exalted omnes traham ad me John the twelfth chapter So that it is as much as if the Prophet should say When Christ is exalted then the Nations shall come to him Secondly When the Princes of the people be gathered to the ●…ple of Abraham then shall Christ be exalted that is when the Kings of the earth doe imbrace the Christian Religion God shall be exalted and have more glory for every King is worth ten thousand and when one King followeth Christ it is a greater glory to Christ than if many people the second book of Samuel
this place Touching the first We see by experience that in this life many unprofitable servants that bury their talents doe for all that enjoy light and withall have great joy and gladnesse and therefore the holy-Ghost tells them that howsoever they escape here yet in the world to come they shall be sure to be cast into darknesse and to weep continually they shall hear that Memento which the rich man received from Abraham Luke the sixteenth chapter Thou in thy life time receivedst pleasure but now pain So shall it be with the unprofitable servants that are not diligent to imploy their talents to their Masters glory Secondly He alludes to the measure of weeping which is found in this place for many unprofitable servants lose their talents in this life and are deprived of the comforts that should cheer them up they weep and indure much sorrow But because our weeping in this life is mixed with many comforts which doe mitigate our grief the Holy Ghost tells us That howsoever they may finde means to delay grief and weeping here yet the greatest weeping is behinde in the world to come where shall be no mitigation of grief Rachel wept and lamented much for her children because they were not but the weeping and lamentation of these men shall be far greater not only because they are destitute of comfort in the midest of these miseries but for that they shall never finde any means to mitigate their anguish and grief Therefore as one giveth counsel Sic legat homo histerias ne fiat historia so sic audite parabolam hanc ne fiat is parabola Pro puero isto supplicabam praestititque mihi Jehovah petitionem meam quam petebam ab eo Quemobrem ego quoque precario datum sisto eum Jehovae omnibus diebus quibus fuerit ipse rogatus precario est Jehovae c. 1 Sam. 1. 27.28 Febr. 2. 1598. THey be the words of Hannah the mother of the Prophet Samuel uttered by her when she offered him unto God being weaned in the Tabernacle but are applyed by Prosper to the Virgin Mary offering up Christ to God his Father in the Temple Luke the second chapter It is certain That not only that Prophecie which Malachi uttered touching the comming of the Lord of Hosts into his Temple in his own person Malachi the third chapter and the first verse must be fulfilled but that also of Daniel That being come he should also be offered up to God signified by that vision which the Prophet had of one like the Sonne of man who was brought to the ancient of dayes that was to God his Father Daniel the seventh chapter and the thirteenth verse Which thing was truly performed on the day of the Virgins Purification For as the day of Christs nativity is a memorial of Christ given to us by God so the Feast of Purification is a memorial of Christ given to God by us Oblations were of two sorts Numbers the twenty eighth chapter and the fourth verse agnus matutinus and agnus vespertinus the representation of Christ in the Temple by his Parents was the morning Lamb and the offering up of himself as a sacrifice in his passion was the evening Lamb. In his oblation he was the author and beginning of our saith in his passion the finisher and accomplishment of our faith Hebrews the twelfth chapter For the application of this Scripture that it may not seem strange but lawfull and warrantable both by Scripture and practise of Christs Church we are to know that it is lawfull and usual to compare things spiritual not only with things natural as with seed Matthew the thirteenth chapter with things artificial as husbandry and building the first epistle to the 〈◊〉 and the third chapter with moral and occonomical as when God is compared to a housholder Matthew the twentieth chapter but things spiritual with spiritual Scripture with Scripture and one story with another to apply that which is spoken of one member of Christs Church Zechariah the fourth chapter and the twelfth 〈◊〉 to another member of the same body 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse and not only so but it is usual to apply that to Christ the head which is affirmed of the body as where it is said of the Congregation of the Jews Hosea the eleventh chapter I called my sonne out of Egypt the same is applyed to Christ the head of that body Matthew the second chapter Out of Egypt have I called my sonne because as Christ the head was truly the sonne of God so he makes all the members of his mystical body to be sonnes So that which God spake to a part of the body the second book of Samuel the seventh chapter I will be his Father is by the Apostle applyed to Christ the head of that body Hebrews the first chapter and the fift verse And so is this speech of Hanna in offering her sonne to God applyed by the ancient Church to the oblation of Christ in the Temple as those were of the Prophet Lamentations the first chapter and the twelfth verse to the sacrifice of his passion So this application is warrantable For if Hannah did offer to God Samuel her sonne much more ought the Virgin to offer up Christ in token of thankfulnesse who is a greater than Samuel as he was greater than Salomon Matthew the twelfth chapter This composition is fit and hath congruity both in respect of the mothers their songs being compared together 1 Sam. 2. Luke 1. which in effect are all one and for the persons of the children for they were both Nazarites verse eleven Luke the second chapter He shall be called a Nazarite Secondly Though there have been some that were both Prophet and Priest or King and Prophet yet all three Priest Prophet and Prince did not concurre in any but in Samuel who therefore was a representation of Christ annointed by God Prophet Priest and King Thirdly Samuels love to his enemies for whom he ceased not to pray the first book of Samuel and the twelfth chapter expresseth Christs love who prayed for his persecutors Luke the twenty third chapter father forgive them which love Christ also shewed in that when we were enemies he reconciled us to God Romans the fift chapter In respect of which resemblance Bernard saith Fortior est compositio quam positio In those words we have to consider two donations First Gods giving to Hannah vers the twenty seventh Secondly Hannahs giving back again to God verse the twenty eighth As the first donation begins with prayer and ends with gift so the latter begins gift and ends with prayer And it is agreeable to reason that the child which came by intercession should end with intercession Concerning which donations we are to note joyntly First That we can give nothing to God but we must first receive it from him As Hannah could not offer her child to the Lord unlesse she first had received him
the eighth chapter If we will come 〈◊〉 we must not be 〈◊〉 but diligent and watchfull We must use both attention Luke the twenty first chapter Take 〈◊〉 to your 〈◊〉 and contention Luke the thirteenth chapter Strive to enter Therefore the Prophet saith Psalm the thirty seventh Hope in the Lord and 〈◊〉 doing good there is both hope and diligence The Apostle saith We have great and 〈…〉 made us the second epistle of Peter the first chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse That is our hope but we must be diligent adding to our hope virtue to virtue knowledge and these if we be without we 〈…〉 of the promises which 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 the fift chapter That faith worketh by 〈◊〉 And he that hath this 〈…〉 himself the first epistle of John the third chapter and the third 〈◊〉 Job 〈◊〉 did perfectly hope was not negligent as he 〈◊〉 〈…〉 in eum Job the thirteenth chapter and the 〈◊〉 verse so he sheweth his carefulnesse Veritas omnia opera 〈◊〉 Job the ninth chapter Paul that said He was sure of the love of God Romans the eighth chapter doth not cease to be diligent lest he should be vexed first epistle to the Corinthians the ninth chapter The same Paul saith Philippians the third chapter and the tenth verse I forget that which is behinde and indeavor towards that which is before This is that which concludes this point i. seeing faith sheweth it is possible to attain to Heaven though it be hard we must use diligence which may make it a thing possible Not that we are sufficient of our selves as from our selves to think any good or to use any diligence to bring this to passe for all our sufficiencie is of God the second epistle to the Corintbians the third chapter And therefore the Apostle when he had said I labored more than they all correcteth himself yet not I but the grace of God within me the first epistle to the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter and the tenth verse He did not say before It was I that persecuted the Church but the sinne that dwelleth within me but ascribes that wholly to himself But if we doe any good thing we must wholly ascribe that to God who by his spirit doth give us grace and ability to doe it And therefore whosoever feel themselves to receive grace the second epistle to the Corinthians and the sixt chapter and be indued with virtue from above Luke the twenty fourth chapter they must take heed they be not wanting to that grace and heare it in vain but having grace from God we must labour to make that possible which faith sheweth to be possible Secondly They must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make it apparent there is a secret diligence but that which the Apostle requireth is an ostensive diligence For as James saith Ostende mihi fidem ex operibus James the second chapter and eighth verse So the Apostles meaning is I care not for the concealed diligence let me see it appear by your outward conversation For if the Heathen being indued with the light of Nature only did shew the work of the Law written in their hearts by doing moral virtues Romans the second chapter much more ought Christians that are indued with grace from above to shew forth this diligence that it may be visible to the world The Apostle shews there are two hopes Spes internae dulcedinis extremae operationis the one is concealed and inward the other is apparent and to be seen The inward hope bringeth this to passe That the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts Rom. 5. 5. and therefore is to be likened This hope doth likewise effect this That we have the spirit of God bearing witnesse to our spirits that we are the Chrildren of God Rom. 8. It is as it were absconditum Manna Apoc. the second chapter which doth inwardly feed our souls But howsoever this be good yet not without danger for as the Apostle sheweth there are that have been lightned with knowledge and have tasted of the Heavenly gift and were made partakers of the holy Ghost and have tasted of the good word of God and the powers of the world to come and yet fall away Hebrews the sixt chapter and the fourth verse Therefore he calls not for this diligence but will have them make it evident which he expresseth in these words that it be the same diligence which is the third point Wherein he teacheth in what this demonstrative diligence standeth that is as the former verse sheweth in the work and labour of love and in ministring to the Saints that is the doing of works of charity makes the oftensive diligence Whereby he teacheth that this oftensive or demonstrative diligence is the touch stone of our hope as the Apostle saith The works of love are the touchstone of faith for true faith worketh by love Galatians the fift chapter This diligence cannot deceive us of which our Saviour Christ saith John the fift chapter They that have done good shall come forth into 〈◊〉 life and the comfortable sentence pronounced by the Judge at the 〈◊〉 day upon all those that have shewed forth this diligence in doing the works of mercy shall be Come ye blessed possesse the kingdome prepared for 〈◊〉 Matthew the twenty fift chapter It 〈◊〉 not to say to a brother or sister that is naked and destitute of daily food Depart in peace warm your selves fill your bellies but the inward compassion must shew it self outwardly by giving them those things which are needfull to the body James the second chapter and the fifteenth verse Therefore the Apostle Peter willeth them that are perswaded of the great and pretious promises that are made them not to stay there but make their election sure to them by this oftensive diligence that to their faith they add virtue to virtue knowledge which if they doe they shall never fail the second epistle of Peter the first chapter And the Apostle St. John saith Hereby we know that we are translated from death unto life because we love the brethren and that not in word and tongue only but in deed and truth the first epistle of John the third chapter and the fourteenth verse God to assure us of his mercifull promises in Christ is said not only to have sealed us but also to have given us the earnest of the spirit into our hearts the second epistle to the Corinthians the first chapter and the twenty second verse The concealed diligence is as the earnest which a man puts in his purse but the oftensive diligence is like to a seal which may be shewed to all men for as Christ witnesseth Our lights must so shine before all men that the wicked and ungodly by seeing our good works may take occasion to glorifie God and be converted Matthew the fift chapter If we use diligence and shew forth our diligence in doing those works of love we shall attain to hope and that not faint or
of the Apostle in taking arguments from the Sacrament is double First to perswade Christians to cleanness of life which he doth in the first to the Corinthians the tenth chapter Ye cannot be partakers of the Lords table and the table of Devils Secondly bending him self here against Schismes and contentions that were amongst the Corinthians he takes another argument from the nature of this Sacrament to exhort them to the unity of the spirit that for as much as they all are partakers of one Sacrament and drank all of one spirit therefore they should seek to be at unity and concord with themselves The Apostle sheweth this to be a good consequence from the beginning of the chapter and we see an example of this kinde of argument in the ninth chapter of Luke where the Disciples say Master we saw one cast out Devils in thy name and we forbade him because he followeth not us And this Apostle saith in the first epistle to the Corinthians the first chapter that because they were divided so that some were Pauls some of Apollo therefore they were no true Christians Thus we see that as from the Sacrament of cleanness he exhorts them to cleanness of life so from the Sacrament of unity he moves them to love and concord and tells them they ought to avoid dissention To perswade unto unity and love nothing is more effectuall than the consideration of the naturall body which although it have many members diverse in quality situation and use so as the one is more noble than the other yet they grudge not one at another For the foot doth not say because I am not the hand I am not of the body nor the eare because I am not the eye I am not of the body in the first to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter and the fifteenth verse neither doe they contemn one another For the eye which is the most excellent member doth not say to the hand I have no need of thee nor the head to the foot I have no need of you in the first to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter and the twenty first verse but contrariwise there is a sympathy and fellow feeling So as if one member be grieved all the rest are grieved and if one be honored all the rest rejoyce with it verse the twenty sixt so if men could be perswaded that they are one body there would not be such divisions and dissentions in the World as there are for howsoever they be diverse in respect of nature Some Jewes some Grecians as also in respect of estate some bond some free as the Apostle here speaks yet their diversities are not greater than those which we see between the members of the body naturall And now the Apostle goes about to perswade them they are one body and therefore ought to be at unity which he doth thus That body which hath one beginning and one nourishment is one body But all the faithfull have one beginning in the fountain of regeneration that is in baptisme and are all nourished with one nourishment for they are all baptized into one body by one spirit and all made to drink of one spirit therefore they are all one body and consequently should live in unity one with another In regard of which unity which the body hath not only with Christ her head but with the members among themselves the Apostle calleth the body Christ in the first to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter and the twelfth verse Now to come to the consideration of these things our way is First to set down the necessity of being of this body Secondly the means how we come to be of this body that is by the spirit Thirdly that the spirit is the means so as withall baptisme and drinking is required that is our incorporation into the body of Christ which is his Church is both by the spirit and by baptisme For the obtaining of the spirit two things are to be practised First that we have a thirsting desire after the spirit Secondly that we ask it of God by prayer First For the necessity of our incorporation whereas the Psalmist saith Psalm the eighty ninth God hath not made all men for nought we must first set down this that there is a necessity that some should be faved for it falls not into a man that is wise to doe any thing in vain much less may we think that God the fountain of wisedome will suffer all men to perish and therefore that there are some elected and chosen out to be saved Secondly and therefore our speciall aim should be to be of that number but scattering renting and dividing is an enemie to safty and they that will be safe must be recollected and gathered together under some head It that which made Moses pray to God to set a rule over his people and that the congregation of the Lord should not be as sheep which have no Shepheard Numbers the twenty seventh chapter and the sixteenth verse When Christ saw the multitude he had compassion on them because they were dispersed scattered abroad as sheep having no Shepheard Matthew the ninth chapter and the thirty sixt verse and not only so but Christ did that that he might gather together in one the Children of God which were scattered John the eleventh chapter and the fifty second verse Thirdly before Christ had a body and before he was manifested in the flesh the Congregation was called a Synagogue because it was then sufficient for them to be gathered together sub uno pastore though they were not ruled by one spirit But now they must be not only under one Shepheard but must all be one body and that not a dead Carkasse but a living body such a body that liveth not by a soul but by a spirit for that is the difference that the Apostle makes between Adam and Christ in the first to the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter The first man Adam was made a living soul but the second Adam was made a quickning spirit This quickning spirit is it by which the mysticall body of Christ liveth which goeth through the body and giveth life to every member This is a mysticall incorporation and is spiritually to be conceived and the union between Christ and his mystically body is so straight that speaking of it he saith Acts the ninth chapter Why persecutest thou me and the Apostle understanding the Church calleth it Christ in the first to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter and the twelfth verse then he that will be saved must not be a part but be gathered and that into the body of Christ because Christ is only the Saviour of his body Salvator corporis Ephesians the fift chapter and the twenty third verse So that if a man be out of the body and be not a member of Christs body he cannot be saved and so Christ himself tells us John the fifteenth chapter If the branch abide not in the vine it cannot bear
hath no doubt a seed that is the wicked which are his Children which are alwaies at warre with the seed of the Church As the seed of Serpents doth prove to be Serpents so for that wicked men are the seed of the old Serpent Christ calls them Serpents Matthew the twenty third chapter and because Judas was the child of the Devil therefore Christ calleth him a Devil John the sixth chapter the seventieth verse The reason why the wicked are called Serpents is because they stop their cares like Serpents and will not hear the voyce of the 〈◊〉 salm the fifty eighth because they sharpen their tongues like Serpents and hide Adders poyson under their lips Psalm the hundred and fourtieth that is blaspheme God and speak evil of men So 〈◊〉 as the Elect are the seed of the woman spiritual so the wicked and 〈◊〉 are the cursed seed of the spiritual Serpent And God pronounceth that there shall be perpetual hostility between them There is a corrupt seed Isaiah the first chapter and the fourth verse The other a holy seed Isaiah the sixth chapter and the thirteenth verse Our Saviour expounds the good seed to be the children of the kingdome and the cockle to be the children of the world Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the thirty eighth verse The Apostle compares the children of God and the children of the Devil together the first epistle of John the third chapter and the tenth verse between these is that perpetual enmity that is here spoken of The same is between the Church of God Acts the twentieth chapter and the Synagoue of Sathan Apocalyps the twenty ninth chapter between the two Cities the Citie of God whose foundation is upon the holy hill Psalm the eighty seventh and great Babylon Psalm the hundred thirty seventh and Apocalyps the eighteenth chapter between the two Camps or Tents whereof the Prophet speaks that is the Tabernacles of the Lord God of Hostes and the Tents of the ungodly Psalm the eighty fourth This enmity is within every one of us as Peter speaks Abstain from fleshly lusts which wage warre against the soul the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the eleventh verse We wrestle not with flesh and blood but with spiritual wickednesse Ephesians the sixth chapter therefore he saith The weapons of our warfare are not carnal but spiritual and mighty through God to overthrow strong holds the second epistle to the Corinthians the tenth chapter and the fourth verse And the thing that God aimeth at is that there be not only an enmity between these two Cities and Camps but that this enmity be perpetual and send at the least to the killing of sinne and to the vanquishing of Sathan So soon as this Sentence was given there was enmity between Cain the seed of the Serpent who was of the evil one the first epistle of John the third chapter and the twelfth verse and Abel who was spiritually be gotten by the Church of the seed of the world Genesis the fourth chapter Ismael and Isaac the one being born after the flesh the other after the spirit persecuted one another Galatians the fourth chapter He that was of the Serpents seed mocked and derided the seed of the woman Genesis the twenty first chapter and the ninth verse Jacob and Esau being divers seeds the one hated the other and vowed to kill the other Genesis the twenty seventh chapter and the fourty first verse Lastly This enmity was practised between the Church of God Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the Synagogue of Sathan Apocalyps the nineteenth chapter Of these spiritual Combats the Scripture hath many examples and therefore it is called The book of the warres of the Lord Numbers the twenty first chapter and the fourteenth verse The Serpent deserved to have been utterly destroyed and God who calleth things that were not as if they were Romans the fourth chapter and the seventeenth verse was able to have destroyed him at least to have chained him up that he might not trouble his servants as he will at the last day Apocalyps the twentieth chapter and the tenth verse but the Councel of God in suffering him still to practise his malice against us is for our good that we should be still exercised and kept in a warre for as Christ saith What thanks is it Luke the sixth chapter and thirty second verse and what praise is it to obtain eternal life the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the twentieth verse unlesse in this life we doe somthing towards it The Apostle saith No man is crowned except he strive aright the second epistle to Timothy the second chapter and the fifth verse Therefore God hath appointed us an enemy that is the Devil whom we must continually fight with If we resist his allurements by pleasure and his terrors in oppressing us with crosses we shall at the length be crowned with the crown of life and then he will according to his promise tread down Sathan under our foot so that he shall not trouble us any more Romans the sixteenth chapter and the twentieth verse But in the mean time he is opposed against us by the wise Councel of God as an enemy that we should continually strive against him As this is a threatning to the Devil so it is a promise in respect of us and that a promise of grace to be shewed us that are of the seed or the woman without which grace we cannot strive with the Serpent nor once conceive any desire to resist him And therefore if we have any desire to resist the Devil and his temptations it is not of any natural power of our selves but the grace of Gods spirit working in us who saith I will put enmity between thy seed and the woman Whereupon whereas the Apostle saith that by reason of the continual rebellion that is between the flesh and the spirit we cannot doe that we would Galatians the fifth chapter and the seventeenth verse Augustine saith that yet we are bound to thank God that he gives us his spirit to stirre us up to the resisting of the flesh and the corrupt lusts thereof for hereby he perform his promise which he makes in this place And except we had the grace of his spirit it were impossible for us but that we should be at agreement with the flesh and like well of the temptations thereof for naturally we are given to make league with bell and death Isaiah the twenty ninth chapter and the fifteenth verse to be friends with our 〈◊〉 and worldly lusts which doe still solicite and perswade us to break Gods Commandement and Law And if by the special grace of God he work in us some dislike of our flesh and the corruption thereof for a time yet this is not perpetual and though it did continue perpetually yet it is not 〈◊〉 mortal and to the death for we never labour to kill sinne and to 〈◊〉 the old man utterly but all that