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A09442 Lectures vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation: preached in Cambridge anno Dom. 1595. by Master William Perkins, and now published for the benefite of this Church, by Robert Hill Bachelor in Diuinitie. To which is added an excellent sermon, penned at the request of that noble and wise councellor, Ambrose, Earle of Warwicke: in which is proued that Rome is Babylon, and that Babylon is fallen Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1604 (1604) STC 19731; ESTC S114472 318,460 389

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all three and that the Father doth the Sonne doth and what the Sonne doth the holy Ghost and the Father do in outward actions Secondly Christ after his ascension teacheth not bodily but by his spirit for Christ being at his Fathers right hand sendeth his comforter to leade vs into all truth Now seeing the holy Ghost speaks in the Scripture he teacheth vs we see how the church of Rome sinneth in that they will haue a iudge which must speake for Christ he being in heauen and the Scriptures being not able to speake but are as a dumme iudge therefore the Church that is men in the Church they must be iudge of Scriptures But we see that the holy Ghost speaketh in the Scriptures and Christ he is iudge alone of them The Church is an instrument onely and cannot giue sentence of them but they be of themselues sufficient to take away any doubt whatsoeuer 2 Faith is no part of repentance but a cause of it for they be 2 distinct parts of Christianity the first a sermon beleeue and repent where repentance followeth faith as a fruite of it Thirdly obedience is no part of repentance but a cause thereof ergo repentance stands not in these three properties neither is all one with regeneratiō for this goeth before them for godly sorrow is the cause of repentance but regeneration is before godly sorow ergo before repentance too The second point is how we must practise repentance this stands in two things first true humiliation secondly true reformation of life Humiliation stands in confessing our sins miseries and wants and in condemning our selues for them and in harty praier to God for pardō Reformation is the changing of our bad actions to good and if need require to make satisfaction to men Dauid Psal. 32. first humbled himselfe secondly he prayed for pardon and withall promiseth reformation of life Manasses fel from God but he prayed to God humbled himselfe 2. Cron. 33. 12. So the prodigal son And Dauid in all these Psalmes of repentance humbles himself Psal. 32. 38. 51. 130. 143. 77. And so must we do if we truly repent Then we see the dānable doctrine of the Papists which make repentance stand in contrition and confession of sins to a Priest satisfaction for a man may do all these and yet be a reprobate So did Iudas he had contrition confessed his sinne made satisfaction and yet his repentance was not true repentance Another abuse is that they make contrition a part of repentance which is indeed no grace but may be a cause of grace Besides to confesse all sinnes to a priest is a gibbet to a mans conscience and more then God himselfe requireth Last of all to teach that a man must satisfie Gods iustice is to ouerthrow the satisfaction of Christ. The third point is Who commaunds this It is Christ. Now some out of these words gather that God giueth sufficient grace to euery man to repent if they will for say they if he command repentance and yet some cannot then he but mockes them and it is as if we should bid one bound hand and foot to rise and walke Ans. The Lord giueth not that commaundement to euery particular man but to the Church or to some people which shal become a Church and then he doth it to gather the elect Now in the Church there be elect and reprobate now this commandement to repent is giuen to the elect directly but to the reprobate by consequence as they be among the elect in the church And this commaundement is giuen to both for diuers ends first to the elect to shew them what they ought to do not their ability what they can do secondly that it may be an outward means to bring them to repētance for when he giueth them this commandement he is present by his spirit Phil. 2. 12. he bids them work out their saluation but addeth God giueth the will the deed shewing that God giuing that commandement is present by his spirit to worke in them abilitie to performe it Now the wicked being in the Church haue the same commaundement not directly neither to those ends but first to keepe them in outward ciuill order secondly to make them without excuse But whereas they reason thus If Christ command all to repent then all haue sufficiēt grace to repēt but the first is true ergo Ans. The first part is false vnles it be restrained thus if he command to this very end that they should repent and practise it for he giueth cōmandement to some not that they may do it but as to Pharaoh to harden their harts For the second part that he giueth commandement to all the meaning is he giueth it onely to the elect directly because he giueth them his spirit to obey it but to the wicked by consequence as they be mingled in the Church with his owne children The fourth point is who must repent namely the Angel and whole Church of Ephesus Ob. But they had repented before how then doth he bid thē repent againe Ans. There are two degrees of repentāce one is the beginning the other is the renewing of it In the practise of which two stands the whole life of a Christian first to begin to repent when he is truly called and secondly in continuing and renuing it dayly as he often falleth If we haue begun by Gods grace we must not stay there but go on and be renued euery day There is no man but he shall see in him selfe daily new sins slips and wants for which he must haue renewed repentance Then seeing we daily increase our sins we must take heed we lie not or continue in sin without this repentance for we are not so much condēned for sin as for lying in sin this if a man repent brings not condemation but lying in sin doth then aboue all things take heed of this let vs daily labor to know our sins to be acquainted with our wants to humble our selues pray for pardon 2. Cor. 5. 20. I beseech you saith Paul be reconciled to God they were reconciled before for they were iustified and sanctified but he would haue them to labour to be more assured of their iustification and to haue a more full and sensible feeling of it and that because their apprehension by reason of their weaknes is but sin all The like must be had of vs. The fift point is why or for what cause namely for their decay in loue especially and other wants Christ prescribeth to thē repentance not that they had none at all And so Christ preacheth to vs by his Ministers to repent of this decay in loue if we haue had loue and feele it now decayed we must repent if we haue not then we must labour to haue it And Christ we see giueth a large commaundement not for drunkennesse whooredome theft or such grosse sins but euen for their decay in loue want of knowledge faith feare
Leaders Elders Salt Starres Angels and Shepheards Prophets to teach Seers to foretell Remembrancers to put in mind Trumpets to sound Watchmen to admonish Husbandmen to plow vp Stewards to distribute Maydens to keepe pure the doctrine of truth Fishers to catch men Leaders to go before Elders to gouerne Salt to season Starres to giue light Angels to declare and Shepheards to feed to feed I say soundly by doctrine liberally by charitie and religiously by life By doctrine for Sacerdos sine doctrina est nauis sine velis a Priest without knowledge is a ship without sailes By liberalitie for Nihil habet homo adeò diuinum quàm benefacere man is in nothing more like God then in doing good By life for cuius vita despicitur eius oratio contemnitur his words are not esteemed whose life is not approued And that it may be said of them as it was of Origen Quale habuit verbū talem habuit vitam as his words were so were his workes They must not be barren like mount Gilboah but weaned as Samuel was before they be offered vnto the Lord. They must be pure water if they will cleanse others and more then whetstones if they will sharpen others They must be in integritie Abrahams in meekenesse Moses in knowledge Arons in pains Paules and in praying Samuels and remēber that as Augustine said Manus pauperū sunt gazophylaciū Christi The hands of the poore are the treasurie of Christ. I need not speake much of the dutie of a Minister for euery one wil teach him his duty that wil not be ranged within any dutie himselfe These Churches were then like Dauids Worthies excellent aboue all the Churches of the world but because they lost their first loue were not faithfull to the death maintained the doctrine of Balaam suffered women to teach bare a name onely to liue had but a litle strength were neither hote nor cold and repented not as they should haue done of all their sins they are reprehended by Iohn threatened by Christ and the Candlesticke of the Gospell is now taken away from them Iam seges est vbi Troia fuit Now Mahomet rageth where Messiah did raigne Are they reprehended let vs hearken are they threatened let vs feare are they fallen let vs labour to continue From Iohns reprehension we see that as one said hereof our Elders haue complained hereof do we complaine and hereof they which liue after vs will complaine that men waxe worse and liue not according to the doctrine of Gods word From Christs threatning we see that God is mercifull who first offereth peace before he fight against vs that we being forewarned might be forearmed And by the wofull downefall of these seuen Churches let vs that stand take heed that we fall not for if God spared not the old world who despised Noah the Sodomites who vexed Lot Ierusalem which abused the Prophets Colossa Hierapolis and Laodicea who reiected Paule and these Asian Churches who did not grow in righteousnesse as they did in riches how shall we escape if we neglect so great saluation and for this cause these Sermons are most worthie to be considered of in this present age O then let vs now consider this season redeeme the oportunitie not harden our hearts but regard the time of our present visitation As the day openeth and shutteth with the Sunne so saluation openeth and shutteth with the Gospell Whilst it is called to day let vs heare his voice He that laboureth in Sommer is the sonne of Wisedom but he that sleepeth in haruest is the son of confusiō All things in the world do take their time the bird to build her nest the husbandman to sow his seed the mariner to go to sea the gardener to set his trees the sicke patient to take physicke the cooke to season meates and the dresser of the vineyard to gather his fruite It will be too late to build in Sommer to sow in haruest to go to sea when the ship is lanched to transplant trees when they are old to take phisicke when we are dying to season meates when they are vnsauorie when winter is come to gather fruite The fiue foolish virgins came too late Diues in hell repenteth too late the time present is only ours Is the fig-tree fruitlesse it shall heare that sentence Neuer fruite grow on thee any more Get thee then righteousnesse before thou come to iudgement vse Physicke before thou be sicke and whilst thou maist yet sinne shew thy conuersion as the wise man exhorteth euery man But alas whereunto shall I liken this generation we are like the Ephesians we haue lost our first loue or the Laodiceans we are neither hote nor cold or the twilight neither day nor night or the Autumne neither faire nor fowle or one sicke of an ague one day well another ill or a man in a Lethargie neither aliue nor dead or Hermaphroditus neither male nor female or to those creatures called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which liue in water or on land or the Lionesse which the oftener she breedeth the fewer cubs she beareth or the Mariner who is onely good in a storme or the Marigold that shutteth and openeth with the Sunne or the Mermaides which are halfe flesh half fish I would to God we were either hote or cold that as the hotest regions bring foorth sweetest spices so most zealous people might be most fruitfull in good workes that as the Sunne in the heauen is swiftest at her setting so the sonnes of God might be best at their ending But is it so no the more we are taught the more ignorant are many and the older we are the colder in religion We haue indeed many of vs as it was said of Aristogîton Marte● or rather religionem in lingua religion in tong but when trial is made of vs euery Phocion can espie our halting and then with Archilochus we thinke it better clypeum abjicere quàm interire euen to cast off all religion then to vndergo the least disgrace for religion The Moone desiring to be apparelled as the rest of the Planets answer was made her that her diuerse chaunges could admit no kind of habite And we desiring to be attired with the robes of Christians it is to be feared that since we tread not the Moone vnder our feet we shall neuer be clothed as the Church was with the Sunne Who is wise and he shall vnderstand these things and prudent he shall know them Let vs therefore labour to grow in grace to abound in knowledge to be full of good works and to ouercome all the vnderminers of our future saluation Then shall we eate of the tree of life not be hurt of the second death tast of the hidden
glorie but be feruent and earnest doubling and repeating the same Behold he comes in the cloudes c. In the fifth and sixth verses are contained a large description of Christ partly by his offices partly by the execution of his offices which are these First he is a faithfull witnesse Secondly he is the first begotten of the dead Thirdly he is Prince of the kings of the earth Secondly the execution of his offices which stands in fou●e actions first he loueth the Church secondly he washeth away the spots of it in his bloud thirdly made vs kings and priests to God the Father and of these three actions in the former verses The fourth action is his second comming to iudgement to iudge both quicke and dead In this seuenth verse is a narration or large declaration of the second coming of Christ to iudgement In the words consider first this note of attention Behold secondly S. Iohn propounds Christ his coming it self thirdly the maner of it in the cloudes and that is amplified that it shall be open euery eye shall see it fourthly the effect of his coming all tribes of the earth shall waile S. Iohn concludes it with two notes of asseueration Euen so Amen to confirme the second coming of Christ to all people Behold First S. Iohn he beginneth with a note of attention behold The spirit of God is accustomed when any thing especially is worth our marking to prefixe before it this note of attention Behold or such like Then this teacheth vs one speciall dutie which is often and euery day earnestly and seriously to consider of the second coming of Christ to iudgement The which consideration is a speciall meanes to beginne and to continue the conuersion of a sinner So Mat. 3. 7. when the Scribes and Pharisees obstinate enemies came to the baptisme of S. Iohn he vseth this as a meanes to make them to turne and beleeue in Christ saying O generation of vipers who hath forewarned you that you should flie from the vengeance to come So Act. 3. 19. Peter vseth this argument to bring the Iewes to repentance because the day of refreshing is at hand Act. 17. 30. 31. Paul perswades the Athenians to repentance because there is a day of iudgement appointed c. Now all these are to winne men to repentance by the consideration of this one point euen the day of iudgement and this makes Iohn to say Behold Secondly this word may serue to strike our hearts with a feare and reuerence of Christ when we consider that he shall come to iudgement So often as we consider of his coming so often we should haue our hearts liuely touched with awe and reuerence to him We stand in awe and reuerence to Magistrates when we consider that they haue authoritie to attach apprehend and to bring vs to their Courts and assizes how much more should this worke an awe and reuerence when we consider that Christ Iesus shall come and apprehend and attach each of vs before his barre of iudgement Secondly he propounds the coming of Christ himselfe He comes that is Christ shall descend from the highest heauen in his manhood to that place where the cloudes be to the earth locally In that he saith not shall come but in the present time he comes first he sheweth it is a thing not farre off but present secondly that it is certain euen as though he now came thirdly he wold haue vs consider of the coming of Christ not as a thing to come farre off but present This S. Iohn learned and so shold we by his example learne that it is present and perswade our selues so and therefore we should often thinke and consider of the coming of Christ seeing it is of so great vse Hence then our dutie is to do that euery day which we would do in the day of iudgement seeing it is alwaies present we must do think and speake that which we would do that day He which can do so he is an happie man Now that a man may come to do this we must daily consider of that coming of Christ not as a thing to be delayed or farre off but as a thing present we must euery day call our selues to a reckoning and accompt perswade our selues this may be the last day and so to carie our selues euery day as we would in the last day Now if we were so perswaded then we should see lesse wickednesses in our life we would repent and seeke to be reconciled to God in Christ we should be more faithfull see more grace daily in our liues And the cause of the want of faith and repentance and of grace it is the want of this perswasion that we should carie our selues euery day as we would in the last day euen in faith and repentance In that he saith He commeth Hence we gather he is absent in bodily presence in regard of his manhood he is not here but in heauen till the day of iudgement for if Christ were alwaies bodily present he could not be said to come but onely to manifest himselfe being before present Then the opinion of the Papists which hold the bodie of Christ is present in or about the bread of the Sacrament is most false and friuolous He proceedeth and setteth out the manner of Christs comming in two things first that he comes in the cloudes secondly that his coming is open and visible to euery eye With cloudes Here S. Iohn speaketh after the maner of the auncient Prophets who to set out God in his maiestie and glorie say he comes with cloudes rides on the wings of the wind as though he had said he comes in exceeding maiestie and glorie These words are added to make a distinction betweene the first and second coming of Christ. His first coming was in humilitie borne of a poore virgin entertained in a stable and in an Inne but his second comming is with glorie maiestie and dominion in the cloudes And the reason is because he came first to be a redemption and a Sauiour and therfore in the state of a seruant but his second coming is to be a iudge of all men yea of his enemies and therefore in this coming he cometh with all might maiestie and glorie The vse of this consideration is set downe in the 97. Psalme to make the very mountaines to tremble to confound the wicked and vngodly and to comfort the godly in that day Secondly it is not secret but in open appearance euery eye shall see him he shall come in maiestie and glorie not secretly but in visible shew to all the world all men shall see him with their owne eyes all I say which were since the world began to his coming In these words he sets downe three points first that all men shal see him secondly that all men being raised againe shal haue life and motion and their senses restored to them as before they died thirdly that all men
euer in respect of his manhood for after he ascended into heauen there he liueth in glorie with the Father and holy Ghost because in the manhood of Christ dwelleth the power of the Godhead bodily Colos. 2. The second thing is why he liueth for euer namely that he might giue eternall life to his Church and all his true members God giueth vs eternall life by his Sonne 1. Ioh. 5. 11. and this is the ground of all ioy this that Christ liueth to giue vs eternall life is the foundation of the Church and the ground of our happinesse We must then consider of Christ as a roote he liueth not for himselfe as a roote doth not liue for it selfe but to giue life to all the branches and true members of the Church And we must consider of the manhood of Christ as a common treasurie or storehouse of eternall happinesse therefore Iohn 6. Christ saith My flesh is meat indeed and he which eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud shall liue for euer shewing that his flesh and manhood hath power to giue life and quicken his true members yet not as considered in it selfe but as the same is ioyned with the Godhead and is the manhood of God and the flesh of God for it hath all this power from God The meanes whereby he giueth eternall life is the mysticall coniunction betweene him his members First God the father giueth Christ to the Church and euery true member of the same as he hath promised to giue him Now he giueth him as he is Mediator of the Church euen whole Christ yet the Godhead of Christ is not giuen of the Father but onely by the operation thereof in the manhood whereby the manhood is made able to satisfie Gods iustice but the manhood of Christ that is really giuen his very substance his flesh and bloud is really giuen to euery beleeuer and the benefits of the manhood also are truly giuen vs as righteousnesse and life eternall as really as lands or goods are giuen to men Now to whom Christ is giuen with him God giueth the Spirit of Christ for Christ and his Spirit come together and this Spirit createth in the heart of a man the instrument of faith by which Christ giuen of God is receiued of vs and we by faith apprehend his bodie and bloud and the merits thereof And we receiue not Christ in imagination or in our braine but euen as God the Father giueth him in the word and Sacraments really and truly And as the spirit of Christ createth in vs faith so it knitteth vs also to Christ our head really though mystically now from this mysticall coniunction betweene Christ the head and vs the members proceedeth eternall life thus First he which is ioyned and knit to Christ in this life and receiueth him he beginneth by this coniunction to liue an eternall life in dying to all his sins and to liue to God to liue as Christ liueth a spirituall life And this I may call the first benefit of our spiritual vnion with Christ. Secondly man thus vnited shall rise to glorie in his bodie And so the second fruite of this mysticall coniunction with Christ is the resurrection of the bodie for this coniunction with Christ after it is begunne it is perpetuall it is neuer broken so that though a man lie in his graue many thousand yeares yet he is thē vnited to Christ is in the graue a mēber of Christ by vertue of this mysticall vnion he shall be raised at the last day As we see the sappe of trees in winter time is in the roote and the branches seeme to die but in the spring when the heate of the Sunne cometh then it creepeth out into the branches and they bud and bring foorth fruite so man hath his winter time in the graue but in the last day because he is ioyned to Christ the roote he shall haue his Sommer and be raised by the power of this mysticall vnion Thirdly man so vnited shall liue euer therefore the third benefite is eternall life and happinesse By this mysticall vnion we shall haue eternall felicitie and euerlasting life in heauen there we must possesse it but it cometh from this mysticall vnion with Christ our head In this life it is begun and is neuer broken in regard of the roote and ground therof but lasteth for euer and by it Christ conueyeth eternall life to vs. In these words Behold I liue for euer Amen is the ground of two maine articles of our beleefe namely of the rising of the bodie and of life euerlasting for Christ he liueth for euer to giue life to vs for euer and this is the ground of our ioy as to Iob I know my Redeemer liueth c. Now doth Christ liue to giue vs life in heauen then we must haue our conuersation in heauen for where Christ is there should be our conuersation because he is the foundation and ground of eternall life to vs. Now that our conuersation may be in heauen we must often and seriously consider of this eternall life purchased to vs by Christ and for this cause he saith Behold I liue and withall as we must consider of it we must haue our affections set on him our ioy reioycing and affiance because Christ liueth that he might keep eternall life for vs. We vse to haue most care to preserue that part wherein life is preserued so seeing Christ is the foundation of our life and the author of it we should haue most care of him Now followeth the third part of the distinction though I was dead yet I haue the keyes of hell and death In these words we must not imagine hell to be a bodily place kept with locke and key as our houses be Nay it cannot be proued out of the Scriptures that it is a bodily place or the punishment of hell in regard of our soule and conscience is bodily seeing it is the sense feeling of Gods wrath and vengeance in bodie and soule therfore it is rather spirituall But Christ here borroweth a comparison from earthly stewards who when they haue any thing committed to them and haue the keyes put into their hands this sheweth they haue power and authority of al. So Christ hath the keyes of hell and death that is power ouer hell and death and dominion of them both As if he had said Though I once was dead in the graue yet now I haue power and dominion ouer hell and death and haue vanquished them both Seeing Christ alone hath power ouer hell and death no creature else properly hath authoritie to forgiue sinne but onely Christ for he which can forgiue sinne must haue power ouer hell and death but he can take away death the punishment of sin and hell the reward of it ergo he alone can forgiue sin Then we see the Priesthood of the church of Rome is full of blasphemie who hold that man called thereunto can properly forgiue sinne
the affection of Christ which things I also hate that is not their persons but their errors Which thing I hate First he teacheth vs to auoide and dislike the least honour or approbation which can be giuen to idols for these Nicolaitanes did not honour idols or offer to them but came into their temples and inuited by their friends did eate of the meate offered to them yet Christ hateth their dealing shewing he wold haue vs to do the like This also condemneth the practise of the Church of Rome who say they worship not idols yet they kneele downe to the images of Christ and Saints adore them light candles and tapers to them offer to them hang costly iewels about their neckes cloth them with costly apparell and so do indeed farre more then the Nicolaitanes did therefore hath Christ cause to hate them much more This also teacheth men which trauell to take heed that they trauell not without any calling to see newes out of the limits of the Church as to Spaine and Italie for then they being out of the bounds of the true Church offer themselues to occasions which may bring them to idolatrie though they hate images for being in idolatrous places they must come into their temples and do as their maner is offer to idols and kneele downe to them which they cannot without some approbation whereas they should hate the least approbation or liking of them Then it is good for men which trauell to trauell within the Church and not out but by some speciall calling and necessitie Further by this Christ would haue vs to hate all familiar societie with idolaters A man may I graunt liue with Idolaters in a ciuill course of peace but not to haue a speciall kind of familiaritie and amitie with them Now as Christ hated their idolatry so did he their fornicatiō giuing vs example to hate fornication first because our bodies are not our owne but the bodie of a faithfull man or woman is the bodie of Christ he hath bought it therefore we must consecrate and dedicate them to honour him not Satan his enemy Our bodie and soule is the member of Christ at least by profession then we must not take the member of Christ and make it the member of an harlot Our bodie and soule is the house and temple of the holy Ghost therefore we must keepe them faire pure and cleane fit to entertaine such a guest but they which pollute themselues with fornication make them sties and stables for the diuell Repent quickely Hauing laid downe the fault of the Church of Pergamus and the errors of the Nicolaitanes here he sheweth the remedie to escape and after the remedie addeth two reasons to moue thē to practise the remedie the first cōcerning the whole Church of Pergamus the second the Nicolaitans In the remedie note first what repentance is secondly why it is so often prescribed by Christ to his Church thirdly to whom To repent properly is to change the mind from euill to good from sinne to God thus when by Gods grace a man hath this purpose in his heart not to sin as before but in all things wholly to do the will of God for euer But here repentance as commonly in the Scripture is taken more largely for all the duties which go with or are in repentance as first humiliation confession of our sinnes condemning our selues for them secondly inuocation for pardon of them thirdly reformation of life when a man purposeth and indeuoreth in his life to do the will of God But why doth Christ so often repeate and prescribe repentance to his Church Ans. Not because it is a meanes to procure or demerit saluation and reconciliation with God for onely the death and passion of Christ and his merits alone can do that but he calleth them often to this dutie because it is the most excellent fruite of faith Repentance of it selfe procureth not Gods fauour but it is a token of Gods fauour procured in Christ. Secondly because it is a path way wherein all men must walke which must haue pardon of their sinnes and life euerlasting But to whom doth Christ prescribe repentance Ans. First to the whole church of Pergamus secondly to the Nicolaitanes As for the Church of Pergamus the Ministers and people thereof Christ before had commended them for worthie graces they had repentance before yet Christ bids them repent still Now in that he prescribeth repentance still to a repentant people it sheweth vs that the whole life of a Christian is a continuall practise of repentance a daily and perpetuall repentance When one hath begunne and repented once that is not enough but as euery day addeth to our age so euery day for our new sinnes we must haue new repentance 1. Cor. 5. Paule desired them to labour to be reconciled to God Now 1. Cor. 6. they were reconciled alreadie and had true repentance noting that they must labour to haue their reconciliation more increased in regard of the certaintie of it and their daily offences and sinnes Now we must thinke that what Christ spake to the Church of Pergamus is spoken to vs and if we be in the like sin we must learne to performe the same dutie which they are commanded here Christ moreouer prescribeth this not onely to the Church of Pergamus but to the Nicolaitanes which held two damnable errors and as they held them no doubt they liued accordingly yet Christ biddeth them repent Then great and grieuous sinners are not barred from Gods mercie if they will repent Excellent is that of Esay Our God is much exceeding much in mercie Psalm 130. God is much in mercie plenteous in redemption no man which is a grieuous sinner but God offereth him mercie if he will repent and lay hold on it Among vs in this Church are many ignorant and euill people yet if these will repent the Lord offereth his mercie though they be as wicked as the Nicolaitanes as Iudas or Herode were yet Christ offereth his mercie and merite if they will lay hold on it Then let all such wicked men breake off their sins by repentance of their idolatrie blasphemie fornication and humble themselues with Iob in dust and ashes and they shall find mercie But we must not abuse Gods mercie to presumption but be sure that though thy sinnes be as scarlet or crimson or as scarlet which can take no other colour yet there is mercie in store to helpe thee if thou repent This doctrine may be taught to malefactors not to imbolden them in sinne but to assure them that if they repent at any time the Lord will heare them yea though a man fall often into the same sinne which is dangerous yet if he haue grace to repent Gods fountaine of mercie is not drawne dry but still he hath in store onely they must repent for if they looke to haue the merit of Christ Christ looketh to haue their repentance Else I will come against thee