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A93601 Scintillula altaris. or, A pious reflection on primitive devotion : as to the feasts and fasts of the Christian Church, orthodoxally revived. / By Edward Sparke, B.D.; Thysiasterion. Sparke, Edward, d. 1692. 1652 (1652) Wing S4807; Wing S4806; Thomason E1219_1; ESTC R203594 218,173 522

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man of fervent Prayer Humiltiy Reverence miraculous Patience and forgiveness all evidenced in his Christian Deportment First his Faith through his eye S. Stephen stedfastly looking up into heaven there saw blessed visions even before his death while here on earth saw Christ standing at the right hand of God Mark that posture of encouragement our Creed Article telleth us of Christ sitting at the right hand of God but our St. Stephen here sees him standing i. in a readinesse of assistance defence And if Christ thus stand with his suffering servants who shall withstand their happiness but that as the sufferings of Christ abound in us even so also shall our consolation abound through him 2 Cor. 1. Prayer is all his shield v. 59. Calling upon God He who is invited to the Fountaine needs not go to the streams nor using Lord alone a name of power but through Justice not of willingness and therefore adding Jesus Dulce salvatore nomen the saving name of Mercy The good Angels and blossed Saints in Heaven are willing but not able uncharitable men on Earth neither of them Onely Christ is both and therefore invocated here Able because Lord willing because Jesus Quem in coelis quem in terris Psal 73. Whom then have I in Heaven c. His Charity 's extensive yet wisely begins at home would all men would do so for spirituall charity He takes care to recommend his soul to the right owner Col. 3. Lord Jesu take thine own into thine own custody Souls then survive the bodies in spite of Atheists who think but what they wish and are immediatly determined in their state of Bliss or Misery in spite of other Hereticks St. Stephen here quite contrary to most is all for his soul and nothing for the body For alas Quid proderit mundus Matth. 16.26 as our blessed Lord saith Matth. 16. c. the soul being of more price then all were there as many worlds as Empedocles and Democritus imagined * Laertius in vita Democriti i. Thousands Save This and save all and so the contrary according to that Dutch Proverb one of the wholsomest things I ever heard of from them Goods lost nothing lost Credit lost much lost Soul lost all lost Next unto Faith in God he adjoyneth Love to Men the best evidence in Foro exteriori without which all the rest had been but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a tinkling 1 Cor. 13.3 not a well-tuned Cymball But He a true Disciple of his great good Master Luke 23.34 Qui pendebat tamen petebat as Augustine sweetly who as he hung upon the Cross prayed Ignosce pater c. So this holy Saint forgives his enemies that is more then to give he that gives doth it Desuo of his goods but who so forgives gives De se something of himself yet more he prayes for them though enemies mortall enemies and in hot blood when he scarce had any time to think of his friends Lord lay nt c. more sorry for them Serm. 5. de Stepha then for his own ruine saith St. Augustine because eternall death followed their impiety but his Death eternall life And was not this the Apex the Height of Charity And 't is remarkable that he kneeled down when he prayed for his enemies that stood when for himselfe shewing the greatnesse of their sin that could not easily be forgiven and therefore the earnestnesse of his Piety Qui plus illorum dolebat peccata quam sua vulnera Cajetan in locum that did more lament their Sins then his own wounds Magnus clamor magnus amor his lowd voyce shewed his great affection and his kneeling down his reverend gesture in devotion the God of both parts challengeth both Exteriores actus demonstrent interiores affectus Dan. 6.10 Acts 9.40 cap. 26.36 Luke 22.41 In praying either stand as a servant before his master or kneel as a subject to his Prince Daniel prayed kneeling so St. Peter so St. Paul so Christ himself And the Centurists acknowledge this gesture the most ancient and most usefull in all sacred solemnities in all Ages among Christian Congregations Magdeburgenses centuria secunda And therefore not to kneel except in case of corporall infirmity argueth either Ignorance or Arrogance or some other worse infirmity of Mind And herein t is Saint Hierom so commends Asella for devotion Epist ad Marcellum that her knees were grown Brawny like the knees of Camels with her pious Geniculation Saint Stephen you see here used both postures and kneeling for his most earnest and last prayer Loco citato Wherein he was heard saith Augustine Si Stephanus non sic orasset Ecclesia Paulum non habuisset For if St. Stephen had not thus prayed the Church had never had St. Paul a Convert And Fulgentius saith whither St. Stephen went before being slain with stones thither St. Paul followed being holpen with his prayers And when he had thus spoken he fell asleep Such and so pretious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints asleep in respect both of Rest Resurrection Graves are grown but * Isa 57.2 Beds and Churchyards 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. sleeping places so here like Jacob his pillow is of stone whereon lying down as well as if on Down Saith Damianus Serm. de Steph. he taketh rest and fell asleep Foelix somnus it was an happy sleep being joyned with such rest that rest with pleasure that pleasure with eternity Thus blest St. Stephen as Nissen observes Oratione de Stephan esteemed the Ring of his persecutors with which he was inclosed as his Crown and every stone flung at him as a pretious one as a pretious Diamond so that that of David might be applied to him Psal 21.3 Thou hast set a Crown upon my head I a Crown of Proto-martyrdom upon his Name and on his Soul a Crown of Glory Anno Christi 35. POEM 7. STtout Champion of the Truth who by Dispute First Rescu'dst it and didst her Foes confute By Dint of Argument irrefragable Which they to Answer or resist unable To harder motives do themselves betake Even Threats and Stones but vain thy Faith to shake Who So through Sphaeres transparent Christ doth Ey Begins blest visions here nor fears to dy Captain of Martyrs Thou didst lead the van Of that same Noble Army you began To seal with bloud the Christian Faith's defence Teaching us to take Heaven by violence Thy Soul breath'd forth in Charitable groans Return'd a showre of Prayers for one of Stones Therefore blest Saint 'T is but a due Renown Thy Name and Day wear the chief Martyrs Crown Vouchsafe us the like Heavenly Visions Lord That we to Thee may Tongues Hearts Lives afford And for thy sake in mean time while we live May those that stone us like this Saint forgive The COLLECT PRAYER The Epistle Acts 7. from verse 55. to the end The
reigneth c. MErcifull GOD who hast made all Men and hatest nothing that thou hast made nor wouldest the death of a Sinner but rather that he should be converted and live have mercy upon all Jewes Turkes Infidels and Hereticks and take from them all Ignorance Hardnesse of Heart and contempt of thy Word and so fetch them home blessed Lord to thy Flock that they may be saved among the remnant of the true Israelites and bee made one Fold under one Shepheard JESUS CHRIST our Lord who liveth and reigneth c. EASTER DAY DISQUISITION 13. THis Festivall is as ancient as the Resurrection of our blessed Lord himselfe and therefore ought to be proportionably sacred to its subject as it was highly venerable to the Primitive Fathers of the Church witnesse their innumerable Sermons on it and most solemne Acts even of both Sacraments reserved for the same however this stolid disobedient Age contemn the devotions of Antiquity Christiani sine Christo as though they would be Christians by passing Acts of Oblivion upon the Records of Christianity But God hath still his thousands in our Israel whom I shall here greet with the old Christian salutation * The Eastern and Greek Churches salutation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is risen desiring the Reader but to Eccho with joy and gratitude that same usuall Response The Lord is risen indeed or to Paraphrase it with that good Christian who meeting his enemy said Surrexit Christus Christ is risen the Reconciler and therefore let us be friends again The first stone of Christian Faith was laid in this Article of the Resurrection in this was the first promise performed Ipse conteret He shall bruise the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 Augustine for in this Trophaeum de morte excitavit He triumphed over Death and Hell And the last stone of our Faith is laid in the same that is the Day of Judgement of which God hath given assurance unto all men saith St. Paul at Athens in that he hath raised Christ Jesus from the Dead Acts 17.3 In this Christ makes up his Circle in this he is truly Alpha and Omega His coming in Paradice in a promise and his coming to judgement in the clouds are tied together in the Resurrection and therefore all the Gospel all our Preaching our Believing and endeavour are all contracted into this one Article of the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.14 1 Cor 15. and that being all the signe Christ would at any time afford the Jews the Pharises Saduces or any that importuned him the signe of Jonas and the destroyed Temple still turning upon the Resurrection Matth. 12.35 And so true is that of Tertullian Resurrectio mortuorum est summa consolatio vivorum The Resurrection of the dead John 4.18 is the main Consolation of the living as without which all Christs former Actions and Passions had been fruitlesse 1 Cor. 15. But by which we hold our hopes of Immortality 1 Cor. 15.17 from whence all the Sundays of the year cheerfully borrow new Denomination and are as 't were new Christned The Lords Day in memoriall of this happy Reparation So that Ludolphus out of Nazianzen and others may well call this day Solennitas solennitatum the Festivall of all Festivities Most of the Learned applying that of David to it Psalm 118. Haec est Dies quam fecit Dominus Ludolph de vita Christi in Locum Psal 118.24 This is the Day which the Lord hath made c. And not onely for our gladnesse but also inverting it for his Honour Haec est Dies quae fecit Dominum So St. Cyril in locum This is the Day which in a sense made the Lord i.e. declared For hereby saith the Apostle was he wonderfully declared to be the Sonne of God Wonderfully indeed the wonder of all Miracles wrought by a God testified by Angels seen of Men of Men not onely as witnesses but partakers and yet a no lesse Benefit then Miracle a benefit both Corporall and Spirituall extending to both parts of Man And whereas Christs former Miracles for the most part tended but to the Bodies good as Restitution of Limbs Eyes to the Blind Ears to the Deaf Tongue to the Dumb and Feet to the Lame or else for Restauration of health as Healing diseases casting out Devils raising the Dead This an extensive benefit to both parts of man or for human sustenance as feeding many thousands with few Fishes multiplying the Loaves metamorphosing of Water into Wine c. But this miraculous benefit and beneficiall Miracle of Christs Resurrection extendeth it self both unto Soul and Body And first it cheereth up the Drooping body comfortably telling it That shall not alwayes sleep in Dust not ever be the Food of worms and companion of creeping things but shall be one day raised raised to incorruption to the society of Angels and vision of the blessed Trinity that even Flesh and Bloud though not as yet a while shall one day inherit the Kingdom of God So that the Body now the Body of every faithfull penitent may be as confident as ever Job was Scio quod Redemptor vivit I know that my Redeemer liveth John 19.25 c. and that he shal stand at the latter day upon the earth And though after my skin Worms destroy my Body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see c. And that not onely in Calvins sense Calvin in locum of a Temporall Restitution but even in Jobs own sense and the Fathers Exposition of a literal and numerical Reinvestion Again This likewise secures the Soul that she is Christs holy One whom he will never suffer to see corruption assureth Her that she neither hopeth nor beleeveth in vain 1 Cor. 15. This is the Foundation Article But happy Time This happy Day for us whereon Christ became the eldest child of the Grave the First born of the Dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 15.20 The first fruits of them that sleep all comfortable Relatives First still implying the later Christs Resurrection altogether as sure as Death Rom. 4. Rom. 4.25 Who died for our sins and rose again for our Justification For us you see Both not for Himselfe but us and that for both parts of us Souls and Bodies As if your meditation please to draw neer the Sepulcher Luke 24.6 Luke 24. you shall there meet with two Angels that will witnesse the Surrexit and tell you Non est hic Why seek you the living among the Dead He is not here but is risen But er'e with Peter and John we enter the Sepulcher Luke 24.6 't will be no uncivill Digression to take notice of the Company we meet with there that were the first Evangelists of these glad tidings and those were no lesse then Angels v. 4. to no greater then Women v. 10. Some mention but one yet St. John expressly telleth us of two Angels Duo propter
that perhaps in regard of his age above his name sake James the son of Alphaeus or for that he was elected an Apostle before him saith Aquinas * In Gal. 1. Lect. 5. Raulinster 2. de Jacobi Major or James the Great as being more intimate and great with his Master Christ then the other as being one of his Triumvirate one of the three admitted to the Transfiguration and the raising of Jairus Daughter Matth. 17. Luke 8. Lastly James the Great for that he was indued with so great courage as to tell Herod Agrippa of some reigning sin as John Baptist did his Brother Herodes Antipas though it cost him his life also and brought him first to drink of Christs Cup and to become Proto-martyr of all the Twelve Apostles Vitae merito magnus sed humilitate infimus Saint James the Great in the vertues of his life and death yet not without some vices interpolated or coming between them indeed readily coming unto Christ Matth. 4. at the first call Matth. 4. leaving all Imployments and Relations forthwith to attend him I say he was one of that first Quaternion of Apostles that either was invited or that ever addressed to our Saviour viz. Simon and Andrew Remigius apud Thomam James and John Some of whose vertues are wrapt up in either of their names as Simon intimates obedience to the will of God Andreas speaks a stout man in executing his Office St. John is denominated from Grace and Jacobus or James hints a supplanter sc of vices in himself and auditory the Etymologies are so obvious I forbear them Others affirm the four Cardinal vertues designed by these four chief Apostles referring Prudence to Saint Peter Justice to St. Andrew Temperance to St. John and Fortitude to this Saint James and yet this Fortitude not without some weakness for as the purest Gold hath Dross and choicest Wine its Lees so these rare vertues in them were not without mixture of some contrary vices here visible in James and John whom yet we cannot part being Brethren in the same infirmity viz. A fond ambition of some eminent advancement above all the rest of the Disciples which caused in them an unbeseeming emulation Matth. 20. Matth. 20.20 in locum and a complaint of Anselmus Isti ambitiosi illi invidiosi utrique tamen nobis profuerunt James and John were carnal in their pride the rest as carnal in their envy so that all the Twelve were faulty and may so far at least profit us as to shew all have their infirmities that none presume the best having their slips nor any despair since Christ forgives them Gal. 6.1 and enjoyns us the like Gal. 6. If a man fall into an offence ye which are spiritual c. As here Saint James and John did in moving of their Mother to an indiscreet Petition for that is evinced in Christs plural answer Ye know not what ye ask Vers 22. Though her words it was their own act and Saint Mark clears it Chap. 10. Mark 10.37 That it was their own suit yet here the old woman must colour the dotage Then came to him the Mother of Zehedees children Matth. 20.20 c. Desiring a certain thing of him c. This woman was named Solom the sister of Joseph Husband to the blessed Virgin as some think Aretius in locum Paludensis comparing Matth. 27.56 with Mark 15.40 Her Petition Verse 21. seems to beg for her two sons three things sc Ease Riches and Honor Ease that they may sit Riches in thy Kingdom and Honor one on thy right hand and the other on thy left The indiscretion of which request appears in the discreet answer consisting of correction Ye know not what ye ask c. And of direction Ye know that the Princes of the Gentiles c. Ye know not what you ask either for the matter if you think my Kingdom of this World or otherwise for the maner if you think to sit in my Kingdom before you have drank of my Cup And here the reply was as confident as the suit We are able Ye shall indeed saith Christ he says not ye can to take them off from their own reliance but he inabled them both indeed to drink it Johannes in persecutione Jacobus in passione * Remigius apud Paludensem in locum Saint John tasted that Cup in persecution both of the boyling Caldron and the banishment to Patmos but Saint James drank deeper of it by a literal Martyrdom Acts 12. Acts 12.1 2 3. c. Where Herod the King stretched forth his hands to vex certain of the Church Good Kings are said to be nursing Fathers to the Church but usurping Tyrants you see make a prey of her Herod here stretcheth forth his hands to vex her certain of the Church i. e. Certainly the best and principal as here whether out of any private grudge or general insinuation with the Jews as is most probable Vers 3. He killed James the Brother of John with the Sword c. and the murderer here was Herodes Agrippa otherwise called Herod the King not Herodes Ascalonita otherwise called Herod the Great that slew the Bethlemitish Innocents nor Herodes Antipas Matth. 2. otherwise called Herod the Tetrarch who beheaded Saint John Baptist Matth. 14. Chap. 14. But here the Grand-childe of that Herod the Great made away Saint James as I finde distinguished in an old Verse Guide ex Lyran that is better History then Poetry Ascalonita necat puerós Antipa Johannem Agrippa Jacobum claudens in carcere Petrum Great Herod slayes the Males the Tetrarch John The King kills James and Peter seiseth on Eusebius here mindes us of a most remarkable History Eccles Hist l. 2. c. 8. and which was generally received as authentick viz. That the Informer which brought Saint James unto his Trial and seeing the undantedness of his witnessing Christs truth was thereby converted like Saint Pauls Jaylor and declared himself a Christian and for the same became an immediate co-partner in his sufferings asking him forgiveness as they went to Execution which St. James expressed by prayer for him and exosculation as you may read the story in Eusebius together with the signal vengeance on their Murderer Herod Agrippa The maner of his death being not expressed in Scripture particularly is severally phansied but most probably concluded by Alstedius from the mention of the sword Verse 2. that he was Beheaded Jacobum securi percussum scribit Eusebius l. 2. c. 8. The hard-hearted Nation of the Jews no doubt being as dextrous in that art of Decollation as any of our Outlandish Neighbors Thus St. James somewhat like Henoch the shortest lived among the Patriarchs before the Flood with the shortest circuit finished the courie of his Apostleship Yet ere his death say some he first propagated the Gospel into Spain for which he is still owned there as Tutelar Saint of that grave Countrey I
Glory to God Grace might Redound to all These are the Churches Rent which here do pay To our grand Landlord every Quarter day And that shall either here prolong our Lease Or House us where our Term shall never cease Vpon the Vigils or eves of Festivalls Mat. 24.42 Mar. 13.35 ARGUMENT 2. AS Lent is the Terra firma of Religious Abstinence and the Ember weeks as it were the four main Continents Thereof so are these Vigils and Eves of Festivals even as so many dispersed Ilands yet not without their native Treasures and because our sinfull memories are so bad that an Annuall Monitor of Lent or the Quarterly Remembrancer of Ember weeks is not a sufficient Bridle for our Loosnesse therefore our pious Mother did Recommend these monthly and weekly Admonitions to her Children Wednesdayes and Frydayes being Anciently taken in that so Abundance of caution might oppose Abundance of Temptation we indeed having need of Philips dayly Memento and each morning to be minded of our Frailty especially at Festivalls wherein the world hath and will ever deserve blame as Job was not ignorant that his Childrens Banquet though it intended Amity might need a sacrifice Job 1. and therefore these Fasts have been set as ushers unto Festivalls Job 1.5 to Caution and Prevent disorder in them and a very wholsome Method it is both as to soul and body Hierom. Episto ad Eustochium valdè absurdum est nimiâ saturitate velle Honorare Martyrem Quem scias Deo placuisse Jejuniis It were but a fond thing to think we honour the Memoriall of an Apostle Saint or Martyr with excesse whom we know to have pleased God with Prayer and Fasting and therefore these are added as frequent circumspections to oppose such intemperance and daily incursions that so often Payment might make our debts the lighter and such even Reckonings keep God and us long Friends even everlasting Friends in Heaven POEM 42. LEnt is the Mother-Fast grand-Daughters these Wait on Humiliation God to please That like the Body of an Army stands While these are but particular Train'd Bands That like the spacious and the brackish main These as Rils flowing Thence and home again That more like Faith high-flown strong Pinnioned While these as Charity Distributed Many in One Fast are contracted there While these dispersedly run through the year That Devout Abstinence not only might Season our Spring but all Times else aright That none Extravagate at any Feast Each is attended with an humble Guest And because both those few to Sin and Fear More Fasting Days of old too added were That so Austereness might Hunt out and seek That Fox our sin unkennell him each week Nay Sin and Danger 's grown so high in force That all need now become days of Remorse One more at least then let each seven impart As voluntary Sacrifice o' th' Heart To make our sorrows weight and fill our Measure Of Griefs in some proportion to Sins pleasure And who such unexpected Odours brings God most accepts as Free-will offerings Since other Fasts then as Sins Brine appear Be these our salt to sprinkle all the year Vpon the DOXOLOGIE to the Sacred TRINITIE Matt. 28.19 1 Tim. 1.17 1 John 5.7 Rev. 8.4,11 The ARGUMENT MY Book drawes to a close and I desire it may end as all things ought with the Glory of God Nor can I close my sacred Hymnes with a sweeter Rellish then that harmonious DOXOLOGIE wherewith the Church was ever wont to conclude her Psalms and sacred Anthems and wherein she did but joyn with Angels in her Gloria Patri c. Ascribing Glory to the Father Son and Holy Ghost as c. indeed so it was in the Beginning Epist 7.8 Nor for the Matter onely but for the Form also being an Hymn more then Ancient saith Saint Basil As wee have Received even so we baptize and as we baptize so we beleeve and as we beleeve even so we give Glory and all this we use in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost Confessing at once Gods Excellencies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the Persons offices and Distinctions and the very Integrity of the Christian Faith it being a token of a true and sound understanding for matter of Doctrine about the Trinity when in Ministring Baptism and making Confession of our Faith and giving of Glory there is a conjunction of all Three and no one severed from the other two in confutation of the Arians and their later Spawn enacted in that famous Councel of * Magd. Cent. 4. F. 617. Nice consisting of 318 Bishops under CONSTANTINE the Great Anno Christi 320. 'T is as 't were the Abridgment of the Creed the Epitome of the Gospel the businesse of both Worlds and the usual Posture of Defence becomes it and therefore as it hath been reverently used from the Beginning may it be so to the End as 't is here Glory be to the Father and to the Sonne and to the Holy Ghost as it was in the Beginning is Now and ever shall be World without End Amen POEM 43. THese Riv'lets after a Maeander's stray Have at length found their Fountain and repay Their grateful Streams here to the Deity That fed their Pipes with Baptiz'd Poetry Oh may the Channel where these waters flow Be cleans'd by them They thence not soyled go 1 That Man at first had an Immortall Frame Till he by Sin self-murderer became That then a Mercifull Invention Repair'd his Progeny by th' onely Son Of the Omnipotent who Him thus sent To change Grace Life for Sin and Punishment The Glory of all this is onely Thine Aeternall FATHER of the sacred TRINE 2 And next for all those high designes of Grace Perform'd by our deer Lord for humane Race Combats or Conquests o're Earth Heaven and Hell Whose Life and Death did Miracles excell Whose sugered Benefits to all extend Unlesse their own fault and both lives befriend The Glory of all this returns to Thee Coequall SON of the bless'd Trinity 3 Then for the Noble Army the Red List In this small Book of Martyrs following Christ Whose Cause and Courage was so strongly knit Nor Toyle nor Torture e're could sever it One making their Life far and neer Christ Preach While th' other by Death made them the same Teach Hastning unto their Graves as cheerfully As Bees unto their honyed hives do fly And in the midst even of their flames to sing With conquering Patience their Foes torturing The Glory of all This is justly paid To Thee bless'd SPIRIT for thy sacred Aid Each Parcel's honour to Each Person be And the whole Glory to the TRINITIE A te Principium Tibi desinet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS APPENDIX SACRA OR Serious Attendants ON THE Sacred Solemnities Alia per Eundem E. S. B. D. Mart. Epig. l. 1. Quem Recitas mcus est ô Fidentine Libellus Sed malè dum recitas incipit esse tuns The Book thou
sent To every Part it 's Nourishment Not like Those whom Fond Appetite More then Concoction doth invite Having through ill Digestion The Rickets of Religion Her Head with Pious Notions Fraught Which Her mild Tongue discours'd and taught To all about her with an Eye Full of sweet humble Modesty To Good She ' had still an open Eare But most where the wise Charmers were Not like Some we now live Among Being Christians but in Ear and Tongue 'T was Her Great Care Reall to be And Uniforme in Piety Spotlesse from the Time-Vices Taint Whom God not Her self made a Saint Her Palate of such Temperance As was the Schoole of Abstinence Of Lovely Aspect sweet to all Candid Serene and Liberall Her Hands Compos'd of Charity And all Exacter Houswifery Her Book and Needle shar'd the Day And sweetly stole the Time away Yet for Her better Speed to Heaven She gave God two whole Dayes of seaven Besides his part of Each this She Which Crowned all did Constantly Her Foot no Novell Paths did Trace But in the good Old way kept Pace Untir'd Therein still finding rest Till of Eternity Possest This Gold-Finch of Her Family Scorning Earths Chaffe thus Soard on high Vertue and Beauty were at strife Which should most set Her out to Life Not Galba-Like where a faire Soule A Deform'd Body did enroule Nor yet like Specious Absolon Whose inside was Corruption But Her faire Structure and pure Mind Like those bright Golden Apples shin'd In Silver Pictures hung upon The Tents of Royall Solomon All Changes Stoutly She 'd partake And Welcome for the Senders sake So fixt that Full or Ebbing state Could nor depresse Her nor Elate Nor through all Turn's of Mortalls Wheele Did any more Contentment feele Thus did our Sublimated Friend In Christianity transcend And by faire consequence as Wife Was of a Correspondent life A Sarah Srongly Affectionate And as Respectfull to her Mate Right Hannah that did vow her Sonne To Heaven er'e Him thence Prayers wonne Wise Abigail which could controule All Passions with Her Prudent Soule And yet stout Hester like She proud To defend Truths or Persons Lov'd Like Happy Jacobs Lovely Mate Too-like her in her Teeming Fate One of th' Apostle's-Matron-Dresse Above Phantastick Garishnesse A very Dorcas for both Parts Of Pious Alms and Prudent Arts Therefore bewail'd like-her and Prais'd O could She too like Her be rais'd All these Examples to the Life Make up her Character as Wife But as a Step-Dame who can tell Me where to find a Paralell Prophaner Story yeildeth none And Sacred afford's only one One Naomi whose Worth and Fame Is Treasur'd in Her Comely Name Who indeed well deserv'd of Ruth For so advertising Her Youth Yet She propounded once to Part And 't was the Daughter would not start But this Indulgentest of Mothers Exceeded Her as She did Others Acting that speech where er'e Thou goe Or mak'st Abode I will doe so Thy God too shall be mine and I Desire with Thee to Live and Dye So that ' mongst most Affectionate Of Native Mothers seek Her Mate Such whose soft Nature Consort beares Both in their Childrens Smiles and Teares Whose Tenderlings are still well fed Yet better Taught and better Bred Who to their wholesome Nourishment Adde Educations Complement Who both in Health and Sicknesse can Act Tutresse and Physitian Not trusting Hyr'd or Borrow'd Care But their own Selves the Burthen Share And all this Constant to the Death Seald up with Prayers of latest Breath And such Diviner Counsell given As still guides Her dear Charge to Heaven When er'e Thou canst find such Another She She comes neerest to This Mother As Spanish Children they say Quake At mention of the Name of Drake English me thinks should Still'd and Tam'd Be when They hear this Mother nam'd who thus hath Purchased a mild Retaliation for her Child And sure They 'l under Curses dwell That with her Off-spring deale not well Whole Nature blushing as it were To see own Mother 's pass'd by Her Who Christneth that same Barbarous Name Of Step-Mother and mends their Fame And therefore justly so Admir'd Belov'd in Life in Death desir'd Lest all Relaps and Step-Dames prove As bad as er'e by Her Remove Remove alas a word of Paine To us of Loss to her of Gaine For from such Premises we know Can none but Good Conclusions Flow Her Sickness was but an Expresse Of Her Religious Healthinesse The Pious Groanes of Her Death Bed But Eccho's of a Life well Led The Grave an Embleme too may be Of Her Retyred Piety And Heaven it selfe the Church wherein She triumphs over Death and Sin She here Lying in a while did stay But in Heaven kept her Churching Day Now if Love Ground of Sorrow be Oh who to be so mourn'd as She If comfort yet Arise from Bliss Whose change to be so Joy'd in is Whose Life and Death did both Conspire Her speed to Saints and Angels Quire Where we shall once Re-meet and Sing Aeternall Hymns to Mercies King Meane time Deare Martha I shall pray And strive to follow the same way What in Caesar and Pompey were Great vices are great vertues here As Wife or Christian none Excel'd As step-mother none parallel'd And who Conceives not all This true Or Her or Vertue never Knew An Acrostick Epitaph M ary and Martha both were met in Thee As Act and Contemplation testifie Right Mary thy Soule Sought what did excell T hy Body still the Martha Busied well Having a while prov'd both with upright Heart A ll Mary now Th' hast chose the Better Part. Sprung from that Ancient Generous Finches Nest Pursu'dst with wings of vertue Heavenly rest And like a true Sparke of the Glorious Sphere Right upward tendedst untill fixed There Kind as in life to wonder so in Death Expiring but to Give an Other Breath The Recommendation of the Booke to himselfe multiplied Ed. and Sa. Sparke DEare pledges of my Love and hopes to you 'Bove all this Muse should be of welcome view As most ally'd and sprung from the same Head Surviving Monitors when Author dead Partners enough your losse of Mother mourne In their spirituall Teeming Rachels urne Who so many Benoni's hath left here That ever shall her Memory be deare Then though your Fate 's so cruell to deprive You doubly thus at once yet to revive Both in a sense againe here fixe your eyes And you may see their constant Pieties And though in this sense borne out of due time May here reflect on either in their Prime The Churches structure of Devotion To persons squar'd and Times proportion Her Feasts and Fasts freed from all just Complaints Commemorating not Adoring Saints And Piety I thinke 't is not a Crime As place and person To give dues to Time But sure Religion then must needs decay When as it's Christian Landmark's ta'ne away To you therefore that I might Propogate Something above fraile Natures brittle state A Christian Map o' th' world I somtime drew Where of both Globes you have an usefull view And for your further Guidance too you may Sarah and Hagar's History Survey But Chiefly This Peruse as Goshen Light To guide your steps in an Aegyptian Night Perhaps some others too as well as you May Deigne to take a profitable view And as some use by Jewels value more These Glories lost then while Injoy'd before Reflecting from your Duty naturall On their Matriculation spirituall And like the Method on 't or Matter told The one because 't is New the t'other Old And for all Sorts compos'd at least excuse My though no soaring yet high fixed Muse Then while the Age Reeles in false firing zeale This Book shall sober steady Truths Reveale At one side Scour'd from Rusty Heresies And Purg'd at other from wild Novelties Retaining Doctrine Primitve and cleane Reflecting on that Churches Golden meane Which like things Eminent had hardest Fate All Envying what they cannot Imitate Read then and Act this beaten Church way Tread And Sure to Heaven 't will you one day Lead FINIS
a sowre look a meer Phantasm an appearing unto men to Fast The fifth is the Gluttons Fast whose stomack doth but Arietare play the fighting Ram i. e. goes a little backward as part of a meal or so to return with the stronger Appetite The last and best is the Fast of Vertue and Religion which besides habitual temperance is the bodi 's parsimonious fare for spiritual advantage and this goes still accompanied with prayer in Scripture Neh. 14. Act. 13.3 Matth. 17.21 Nehemiah Fasted and Prayed before the Lord so Anna so the Disciples I these two together cast out the worst Devil that is This is that acceptable Fast by which God wooes his people so Convertimini in Jejunio to which they should answer with David We have humbled our souls with Fasting Psal 96. and then as Saint Austin saith they would compleat each other Augustin Cirel Hierome Chrysolog Jejunium orationem corroborat oratio Jejunium sanctificat Fasting corroborateth prayer while prayer bettereth and sanctifieth our Fasting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hippocrates his Aphorism is true on both sides Diseases for the most part both of Soul and Body owe their Original to fulness and redundant humours And indeed where Satan tempteth one Fasting he tempts 1000 full Prov. 30.9 Lest I be full and deny thee Prov. 30.9 and say Who is the Lord And many are the Elogies of such a Fast t is the August i. e. the harvest of the Soul the tithe of our time an unbloudy Martyrdom such a Fast saith Cyril is a greater Sacrifice then that of Abraham for that was to be done upon anothers Body saith he but this upon our own Scutum contra adversarium saith another t is the best Shield to quench the fiery darts of the Devil Fundamentum virtutum the foundation of all other vertues an Oar a Spur a wing to goodness as Chrysologus notes of the Prodigal his Fame pereo brings him to his ibo ad Patem his hunger makes him resolve of penitence and diligence I will arise and go c. But lest while I treat of abstinence I glut your patience I here injoyn my Quill forbearance POEM 13. LEnt signifies the spring and that of Grace Where Pray'r and Fasting keep their ancient place Which in a treble aspect sometime stood To God our own and to the Common good Gods honour below principlly stands In our obeysance to divine commands Which oft wooe Fasting with contrition joyn'd Whereof his Church this season hath design'd That all in Penitent dejection throw Their Souls and Bodies at his Footstool low That Ioels day our sins here so lament As may that last and blacker day prevent That in Iobs ashes and our dust abhorr'd We may once find Acceptance of the Lord Not as if these could satisfaction make Or our unprofitable service take So far with God as his least grain to merit By whose sole Promise we all good inherit But to demonstrate who Commands doth Prize Obedience herein before Sacrifice And as Lent upward so too downward looks This solemn Fast sends Christians to their Books As other Trades and at least once a year Bids them cast up Accounts and their state clear And if they thrive in Grace makes them improve Hence more and more in Gratitude and Love Or if they find decay and debts increase Warns them Compound with God now make their Peace By Prayer and Fasts Mourn but their own stock lost And with red Inke Christ all their debts hath cro'st Serpents your Fasting spittle kils they say And in the figure true it sins doth slay T is your Fed-horses neigh and are unclean And when Iews Feast with Quailes their soul 's most lean Fewel substract ill fires will out again Satan shall blow his Bellows but in vain Whose Piety's their Food have Angels fare Who Fast and sin as fast right Devils are And as it makes for soul's so bodie 's health A Friend both to the Church and Commonwealth The best Phylacticon ' gainst each disease Most spring from fulness saith Hippocrates And this blest Abstinence may best be born Now when the Sun cheers us with his return And now most opportunely we give way For Creatures to recruite their long decay Now then to spare earths teeming generation Prevents unnatural Depopulation And Cheers the Seas industrious patient Trade Whose strange varieties not vainly made Else while one Element suffers vastation T'other may multiply to In-undation Thus Souls States Bodies treble detriment Sustain that slight this threefold good of Lent The COLLECT-PRAYER being that for the first Sunday in Lent The Epistle 2 Cor. 6.1 to 11. The Gospel Math. 4.1 to 12. O Lord which for our sakes didst fast fourty days and fourty nights give us grace to use such abstinence that our flesh being subdued to the Spirit we may ever obey thy Godly motions in righteousness and true holiness to thy honour and glory which liveth and reignest c. Christ praying in the Garden Matt 20 Mar 14 Luc 22 * Ioan 18 * 41. And hee gate him selfe from them about a stones Cast and Kneeled downe and prayed 42. Saying Father if thou wilt take away this cupp from mee etc. 43. And there appeared an Angell unto him from heauen comforting him 45. And hee rose upp from prayer and came to his disciples and found them sleeping for heauines Here the Plate Vpon Palm-Sunday being that next before Easter DISQUISITION 11. THis day for some considerations beareth away the Palm from all the rest as beginning the Hebdonioda magna Sancta poenosae as antiquity calleth it the great the holy and the painful week the great as being that indeed wherein were the most various scoenes and greatest Interchanges of our Saviours life and death the holy as that wherein our meditations should be such in conformity to Christ by the apprehensions of our sins and his sufferings and the painful as that wherein was more then personated the last act of our blessed Saviours Tragedy on the Cross for the Mortification of our Sins and yet the great week beyond all this again for the happy Catastrophe of his Resurrection both for our Souls and Bodies Justification Rom. 4.2 Rom. 4. And first this day openeth a pleasing scaene presenting us our blessed Lord riding in triumph to Jerusalem and that in some measure of befitting equipage suiting at least the Prophesies if not his Majesty Zech. 9. yet with general Acclamations of Rex Israel Zech. 9.9 and gloria in excelsis round about him Behold thy King cometh the King of Israel and glory in the highest cheerfully and with a double Hosanna acknowledging his Godhead and Humanity and the dignity of both where I shall contract your speculations unto Christs Actions herein and theirs the Jewes Saint Mat. registereth the History at large chap. 21. where at the second verse Matth. 21. vers 2. Christ sends two of his Disciples for the Ass and the Colt In the very circumstances of
of that and I have done and here behold obedient Isaac the willing Porter of his funerall pile Loyall Vriah carrying the Instrument of his own destruction where by the Riddle of Tyranny his enemies make good that double Crucifige as 't were twice crucifying him once as with a Burden and secondly as with a Crosse the Crosse the worst of all the Jews four Tortures which for their slaves they had borrowed from Heathen Cruelties And Tully himself is here at a Non-plus In 7. Oratione contra Verrem To bind a Citizen of Rome saith he is hainous to scourge him villany a kind of Paricide to kill him but Quid dicam What shall I call it to put him on the Crosse O that were sure a strange Piaculum what shall I say to this The Apostle answereth somewhat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He humbled He emptied himself Phil. 2. Christ emptied himself of glory of Beauty of Help of Company of Life all his veins of bloud all his senses of delightfull objects for contrary Nay emptied his soul of Divine comfort emptied Phil. 2.7 humbled himself even to the death of the Crosse that sin might be carried out of the world as it came in i. upon the Woodden Horse whereon his nailed body is extended as the Hieroglyphick of his ample mercy Brachia in amplexus dimittit in oscula vultum What should I here trouble you with the nice Speculation of some Friers How big the nails were whether big enough to make Constantine an Helmet Ludolp de vita Christi in loc and a Bridle What severall sorts of wood the Crosse was of and why with the strict number of his stripes and wounds Let Granatensis and Acosta answer for their boldnesse numbring about 500. while more exact Osorius argueth from the Band of Souldiers full 660. in the Body 72. in the Head beside the 5 main Wounds in Hands and Feet and Side But Pauperis est numerare Numbring is but an argument of paucity though Starrs and Sands and every leaf in Autumn score a griefe All this were but a Substraction to Christs infinite sorrows who therefore in his Type assureth us Innumerable troubles have compassed me about Psal 40. And if any thing in this world could come ought neer them me thinks our Sins were likeliest O then let each of Them number out a wound in him find its Cure there And if they come short Why then to reach his multiplied miseries to our offences add his Enemies who had they been either Graves or Earth or Rocks or any thing but Jews how would they have Opened Rent Quaked in compassion added no more scoffs spunge spear unto his Grucifixion which yet They do even til the Sun 's ashamed the Temple 's angry and the Earth's afraid Insomuch that the very Astrologers of that Age acknowledged from that totall unnatural Eclipse of the Sun the Moon being at ful Aut Deus Naturae patitur aut machina mundi dissolvitur That either the world or its Maker was then a dying And Josephus telleth us of the Angels valediction a voyce heard in the Temple about that time Transeamus hinc Let us flye hence and pitch our Tents no longer about such wicked Persons And now one would think we were neer the Consummatum est his Passion finished Indeed of his outward suffering is somwhat opened to you but I have said nothing yet of his Internall Passion The deep impressions of all those ignominies and ingratitudes cast on him Nothing of the Burden of his Fathers anger which caused that second Agony on the Cross 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My God My God! wherein his Soul complaineth and even Descends to Hell and therefore we may well joyn prayer with that old Greek Liturgie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By thine unknown fuffering good Lord deliver us And here that Ecce homo is lost into an Ecce Agnus Dei Behold the slain Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the World Here I might wind you into the Labyrinths of School-Disputes Why Christ so earnestly did deprecate his Passion with a Transeat Calix Let this Cup pass from me whether out of the Dominion of his inferiour will or no or only out of human infirmity How far then and after he was Relinquisht of the Diety whether only in regard of momentary Suspension or of any Separation As also how his Temporall Passion could satisfie for our Eternall Debts Whether by the Excellence of his person or by the prevention of His graces in us But aiming more at the kindling of Devotion then swelling up a volume we will send these Questions back again to School while with more profit we now apply the QUARE The Quare Why all this was done and suffered What David said to his brother Eliab 1 Sam. 17.29 1 Sam. 17. when Goliah defyed the Hoast of Israel is there not a Cause the same me thinks Christ here answereth his brethren of flesh and bloud to their treble Ecce of Attention Admiration and Compassion Demanmanding also Why camest thou down hither Down from Heaven down to Earth down to misery down to the grave nay down to Hell it self ad triumphandum non ad patiendū an inchoation of his Triumph after the consummation of his Passion Why is there not a Cause saith Christ Do not Sins play the insulting Philistims and Satan defie the Israel of God and therefore he re-encountreth him like David with the Staffe and Sling of his Cross and passion slaying the Goliah Death and with his own Sword beheading him Is there not a Cause Yes hence we see a double one on Christs part Love on mans part danger on Christs part not onely ut implerentur omnia that all the Prophesies and Prefigurations might be fulfilled though even in that sense also saith the Evangelist ought not Christ to have suffered these things and so to enter into his Glory Luke 24.26 but likewise an invaluable love an incomprehensible Affection to poor mankind Non praevisa fides non opera Not Faith or any works foreseen which were effects not causes of this mercy but onely that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 1.9 Eph. 1. that same free grace good will and pleasure of the Diety of all the glorious persons of it Quorum opera ad extrà sunt indivisa Their actions outwardly being undivided though distinguished the love of the Father sends the Son John 3. John 3.16 Luke 2.34 John 10.16 The Holy Ghost overshadowed the blessed Virgin-mother Luke 2. yet neither impeadeth the voluntary coming of the second person who layeth down his life here none taketh it from him John 10. Misit tota Trinitas Thus the whole sacred Trinity wrongth this great work of Mans Redemption Vnicuique operanti cooperantibus duobus Whatsoever one worketh the other two cooperating consenting as here the Father of Mercies and the Spirit of Consolation joyn'd with the Son of everlasting love
is not here but is risen Hence then our Faith and Hope are quickened sufficiently both confirmed and fortified Now what though Afflictions and Diseases torture and even crucifie our Body What though our burdenous Tombstone stop up the mouth of our Grave and forbid Re-entry into the world what though the inviolable course of Nature seal up our Sepulcher for Time ner'e to open what though Corruption set worms and other noysom creatures as 't were to watch our carcasses yet shall they maugre all these the very same I say shall one day likewise find themselves redintegrated by this powerfull Resurrection we shall not be stoln away either by Mortality or Time then feare no more to trust thy Body then the Sower doth his Grain unto the Earth The Grave must come to Restitution and give account of each Dust and Atome committed to her trust and not so much as an hair of our head shall perish Luke 21. Luke 21.18 While the head is above water no fear of drowning Mirum esset si caput per unum corpus per aliud intraret 'T were strange indeed that the Head should enter Heaven at one door and the Body at another Socinus therefore was but sottish to deny the consequent of ours from Christs Resurrection Decet quemadmodum praecessit caput Bernard Serm. in Resurrect sequantur membra It is but naturall proportion that as the Head is gone before we all the other members should follow after Thus being acquainted with the Person observe next his Motion His progressive or Egressive motion Wherein are also those two poynts of locall motion Terminus à quo He is not here and Terminus ad quem He is risen The first is whence he rose and that was à statu mortuorum not from any Poeticall Limbus but from the state of the Dead à Sepulchro From the Grave From triumphing over Hell it selfe as Davids 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the Septuagints 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will bear it all Psal 116.10 He is not here Where our Meditations have overtaken the Disciples and are entring the Sepulcher where we find nothing but the Linnen left and Watchmen stupified But that Agnus occisus jam Leo vincens That Lamb which was slain Terminus à Quo. is now the Triumphing Lion of the Tribe of Judah too holy an One to see corruption He is not here in Earth or earthly Elements that is every where according to his Deity and Spirituall Influences Accedas Saducaee Sepulchrum inspice Come hither then Atheisticall Saduce and let thine Eye tutor thine Infidell Heart to a belief of the Resurrection Mark but the method of the Linnen Bern. in Fest Lineamina posita bene disposita That not onely remaining but keeping the severall postures of the parts that wore it And would a Thiefe have left it thinkest thou or left it so distinguished Or if the World had had a Thiefe so Honest Quam opportunitatem habuisset What time could he have had of stripping off those cleaving Sear-Clothes and bearing forth the Body so many Souldiers so many Watchmen present No no 't was that same Power onely which loosned formerly Saint Peters Fetters made this Winding sheet fall off the Deity it selfe so kept this Citie that the Watchmen watched but in vain In vain indeed for the sight of an Angell countenanced like lightning so terrified and amazed them that as though they had been struck with Lightning they became 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 28.4 Even as dead men Fitter to be buried in the Sepulcher then to watch it So that the envious Sanedrim endeavour to revive them with money that usuall Aqua vitae of ill fainting Causes hiring the Souldiers to say That His Disciples came by night and stole him away The Jewes strong delusion to this day O stulta insania dormientes testes adhibent Rhemigius in locum Alas fond dream of sleeping Watchmen saith Rhemigius if they slept how could they perceive the Theft If not perceiv'd how could they witnesse it Not taken away and therefore risen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For He is not here And this is the strangest Epitaph that er'e was read on Sepulcher Non est hic Turn over all the leaves of Story and Antiquity become Companions of the Sunne like Drake and Cavendish travell the whole Circle of the Earth view all the Monuments Pyramids and Tombs of Mortals and you shall still meet with there a Trophae of Deaths Conquest a Stone ingraven with an Hic jacet Here lieth such Christs Epitaph or such an one Here he lieth be he a Nebuchadnezzar a Nimrod or Baltshassar Here the bright Hellen and great Alexander Here the wise Cato and learned Aristotle or what ever other Grandees of the world Here lie their Bodies bound in Fetters of Corruption chambred up in Dust prisoners to the Grave and Captives unto Death Hic jacet But in an holy Pilgrimage come we to our Saviours Sepulcher and to our equall joy and wonder we meet with Ensignes of Death's overthrow the stone removed from off his Grave and there an Angel penning this his Epitaph No his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Song of victory Non est hic He is not Here. Hee who is Life it selfe could not be detained of Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Apostle 'T was impossible he should be holden of it But like his Type Samson Ruptis Laethi vinculis He breaketh the bonds of Death and casteth his Cords from him Nor from himselfe alone but from his Servants also 1 Corinth 15. 1 Cor 15.15 Where you may see one of them out-braving Death and Hell Where is thy sting where thy victory To which S. Bernard sweetly alluding Vbi opprobria Judaee Vbi fabulae Vbi vasa Captivitatis Where now thou stony Jew are all thy cruelties Alas Where are now the sports the Reed and Purple of your injured King and all those other Instruments of his Captivity Vbi mors victoria tua Bern. in Fest Nay Death it selfe Where 's now thy conquest Then alluding to the Answer as well as to the Question Confusus Calumniator raptor spoliatus The Mocker is mocked He that sitteth in Heaven hath laughed them to scorn and Death is swallowed up in Victory by CHRISTS glorious Resurrection Non est hic He is not here Mark Christian Reader Christus non quaerendus in Terrenis CHRIST is not to be sought for in these earthly Transitories I am sure not to be found there Not in the Avaritious man his Coffer Achan found a Non est hic in the Golden Wedge He is not here Not on the Ambitious Pinacle Haman found a Non est hic Hest 4. In the Chair of the scorner He is not here Not in the voluptuous mans bed Cant. 6. The Spouse her selfe found a Non est hic In Ease Idlenesse or worse He is not here And therefore
is it to have a Friend of the Judg before we come to the Barr and that is our consolation if not our own default Christ is ascended our Best friend our Brother our Advocate and now we have a Mediatour in Heaven I till this Peace-maker went up Sin had set open war 'twixt heaven and earth Justice with an unbound Arm fetched a more heavy stroke not only on single persons but upon whole Cities Gen. 17. Gen. 7 Gen. 19. nay on the whole sinful world Gen. 7. then no Moses in the gap no Jacob there to wrestle for a blessing but now happy day for us the Angel of the Covenant is gone up to hold the hand of the striking God of Abraham our Aaron is at the high Altar to pray for the People Heb. 9.24 The Sanctum Sanctorum Hebrews 9.23 Christ our high Priest is entered into the Heaven of Heavens once for all to make an Attonement for us what place then is there now left black Dispaire but only Hell Rouse thee afflicted soul and ly no longer in the groanes of Cain For though the envious man Satan be ever pleading against us at the throne of God yet now is salvation in heaven saith Saint John and the power of Christ which casteth down the accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 c. Rev. 12.10 There his Intercession cries louder for us then our sins against us Ostendit Patri vulnera saith Saint Augustine He is ever shewing to his angred Father those wounds He suffered for our sins and so whatever he be with us God is in Him appeased Thus pleadeth he our cause before the eternall Judge an Advocate 1 John 2.1 1 John 2. If any man sin c. Yet for all this presume not Ransomed Soul bee not high-minded but fear God forbid sinne should because grace abounds Desperation like Saul slayeth thousands but Presumption her ten thousands This were even to crucifie the Son of God afresh and grieve the Holy Spirit Eph. 4.30 Ephes 4.30 Lastly Though wee have now one yet have we but one Mediatour in Heaven we dare not admit of that Delusion that there are as many Saviours as good men Each one meriting for himselfe some for others and no fewer Intercessours then Saints and Angels since Noah Job and Daniel shall deliver but their own soules by their righteousnesse Ezech. 14. Ezeck 14.14 We dare not so rob God of his Honour nor derogate from Christ's all-sufficient merits and intercession for all the thinne Distinction of Mediatio Redemptionis Intercessionis Away with cobweb shifts and Aiery phansies Listen to infallibility 1 Tim. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one God and one Mediatour between God and man even He that was both and none but He Jesus Christ then to close with St. Bernards Counsel Ascendit Christus sequamur Fratres sequamur Agnum quocunque ierit sequamur patientem resurgentem multo lubentius Asceudentem c. Christ is now ascended into Heaven what do we groveling so on earth Letus follow Brethren let us follow the Lamb whither soever he goeth Let us follow him suffering Bernard in Festum Arising much more willingly ascending exaltationem concupiscimus omnes We all love to be exalted born Corahs all of an aspiring Nature yet change but the object set Heaven and grace in the place of earthly transitories and keep your Ambition stil Si consurrexistis coascendite if risen with Christ Ascend with him Borrowing the wings of the Dove Scalam de vitiis make a ladder of your Sins saith Aug. every one of which subdued is a new stepp toward Heaven POEM 17. THose three steps of Christs later Passion Were answer'd in his exaltation By triple opposites building him high As his foundation laid debasingly The degradation of his bitter death Sweetned by Reviviction Resum'd Breath His bed made in the dust with worms to ly Was fairly oppos'd by his Ascent on high And for his stooping to the infernall Pit He now at Gods Right hand of power doth sit The first step we have trod Le ts now ascend The rest and Heaven shall be our journies end To th'Mount of Olives then for That 's the place Christs wonted Pulpit that must have the Grace Of this Triumphant wonder there while he Instructs and comforts his disciples see Elijah in his Antitipe again Transported thence in a coelestiall wain The Clouds his Chariot and the nimble winds His winged horses Angels in their kinds His Train and Lacquayes yet no needed ayd As is of Enoch and Elijah said Thus stately mounted his etherial Chaire Glides through the yeilding Regions of the Ayre To th' everlasting doors which open wide To th' King of Glory who brings a spring Tide Both of new Joy and wonder to that place Where ne're till now appeared a Humane Face And if some serious minds Christs Passion thought Even to Heavens Quire some silence to have wrought And for awhile the Saints and Seraphins Thence interrupted in their sacred Hymns O here by contrary's what Floud of joyes When Christ ascends with such a Raptive Noise David as though H 'had heard the Melody Streight Tunes his Harp and joyns i th' Harmony Angels and Saints all one glad Chorus Sing The Welcome Triumphs of their Glorious King Where Gods Right hand being his triumphant throne He still for us makes Intercession And such as needs no help who Rivals joyn His honour and their own successe Purloyn As Angels Pry this Death so let us Scan What 's said or done to Them as here to Man Then from Christs Mount now let our souls take Rise Whos 's Olivet speaks Peace and victories Follow our Leader in this holy Fight From Earth and Sin leading to glorious Light Follow the Lamb we should whereso'ere he goes Through joyes Spirituall through temporal woes Suffering or Rising follow him but sure Ascending we will easily endure Born Corahs all yet be but Heaven the Hill We climb and then keep our Ambition stil Souls are but sparkles of Coeiestial fire O let them to their Center then aspire Though Bodies are slow Pac'd Let souls ascend And bodies will ore'take their joyes i th' end That so a full Beatifying ascent As Christs may be our Journall's complement The COLLECT The Epistle Act. 1. v. 1. to 12. The Gospel Mar. 16. v. 14. to the end Grant we beseech thee Almighty God that like as we do beleeve thy only begotten Son our Lord to have ascended into the heavens so we may also in heart and mind thither ascend and with him continually dwel who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the holy Ghost one God world without end Amen The comminge of the Holy Ghost Act. 2. 1 And when the day of Pentecost was come they were all with one accord in one place 2 And suddenly there came a sound from heauen ect 3 And there appeared unto them clouen tongues like fire and it sate upon each
long after Acts 6. And therefore doubtless Acts 6.14 they raged more against Saint John at first and somewhat was in it That he Preached in the Wilderness their Cities and Towns not enduring him witness their conspirasous Assemblies more frequent now then ever the Sanedrim or High Councel of the Jews daily sending their Sophisters to John John 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who art thou and why Baptizest thou c. Here Saint Johns holiest Reformation meets with furious opposition the best of asiions must expect affronts and yet not take them for discouragements St. John bates nothing here of resolution no Jonas he he waves not his Commission but maugre all difficulties prosecutes his Sacred Innovation Acts 6.10 as it was said of Saint Stephen all their disputants were not able to resist the Spirit by which he spake He that sent him gave success answerable unto his holy courage his Ministry wanted not the encouragement of company Converts or Disciples Matth. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 3.4 There went out to him all Jerusalem and all Judea and all the Region about Jordan c. A treble all as if there were one for each of City Court and Country the Grandees were not fuller of Indignation then the people of Love and Admiration all the Region round about nor went they out for novelty onely as now adays to see fine Reeds Reeds shaken with the wind with every wind of Doctrine But in the next Verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verse 5. Caught by the Voice of his Doctrine and Eccho of his Life happy Allurements They were baptized of him confessing their sins So that it was well the Wilderness was his Church and the mighty River Jordan his Font lest else he should have wanted room or Water for his Baptized Auditors One of which to honor him and his office was our Lord himself Verse 13. and came far to him also Then came Jesus from Galilee to Jordan to be Baptized of John Whose modesty would fain have then resigned his Office Verse 13. but for that Nunc permittas Suffer it to be so now I now was a fit opportunity before all Jerusalem c. for Christ to Miracle himself The Son of God the Holy Dove descending with a voice from Heaven c. Yet was it not any Nunc of Ostentation but of Righteousness c. Christs Baptism For Ecce Dominus ad Servum Magister ad Discipulum Verifying that I am meek and lowly Learn of me c. Beloved the Lord here comes unto his Servant the Master to his Disciple to be Baptized and that among the People But we may here ask as Bernard of his Circumcision Quid facitis Baptizantes Christum What do you washing of him in whom nothing was unclean Go wash your spotted Lambs and spare not 1 Pet. 2.22 but this Lamb is without blemish So far from having any that he knew no sin Saint Johns modest Answer might have been an Assertion Thou needest not to be Baptized at all c. Nay one might well with David Ask Jordan why it fled not c. And indeed Consider Christ abstractly as Totum integrale i. e. In his own single Purity a Body by himself as severed from us and he needed then no Baptism Jordan had more need of him Lavit aquas non aquae ipsum The Waters were as it were Baptized by him not he by them Vt aquae nos purgaturae prius ipsae purgarentur That the Waters which were to cleanse us by him might first be purified themselves He received no vertue but gave the waters cleanness and efficacy to the Sacrament But on the other side take him with his Reference to us this second as the first Adam Pars Communitatis as the Head of the People and then to fulfil all Righteousness he must needs be Baptized He will need that for thee and me which for himself he needed not for in his Baptism he put on us as we do or ought to put on him in ours Verbum clamat in voce i. e. Christus in Johanne in glossâ Ordin Gagnaeus in locum And therefore he came to John the Baptist who was indeed but the Instrument Christ himself the Institutor of holy Baptism Saint Johns was a Baptism unto Repentance Non peccata tollens sed eorum commonefaciens Not taking away sins but onely admonishing of sinners but Christs was a Baptism of Remission through his blood which is our Jordan For as many as are Baptized effectually are Baptized into his death Rom. 6.3 else all the Rivers of Damascus and Judah too withal the Fullers Soap in the World cannot fetch out the least stain no He by himself hath purged our sins Heb. 1.3 Heb. 1. And this is a sensible Demonstration of Christs yoke being easie and his burden light so changing Circumcision into Baptism freeing us from bloody Ceremonies from costly Sacrifices and painful Sacraments It is worth our thankful Meditation this and no doubt but many of the Jews were won by this same freedom from their burdens which easie change John 1.21 they did somewhat expect John 1. A blessing quite opposite to that worst curse of Egypt wherein God turned their water into blood But here indulgently our blood to water what was their Shambles is with us a Laver 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Laver of Regeneration Tit. 3. Tit. 3.5 The gentler the Mandate the heavier the Punishment that waits on the neglect of it But of this I have spoke before in the Feast of Circumcision and shall close it with that of Naamans servant which such Refractories may consult at their leisure 2 King 5.13 2 King 5. while we among the thronging Jews go forth a little into the Wilderness to see the Baptist What maner of Person for Habitation Habit Food and Rayment for that 's the scaene of his abode and Doctrine The Wilderness as Mount Olivet was said to be our Saviours Pulpit Regio vasta sed paucis habitata colonis Luke 1.39 What Saint Matthew here calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Wilderness St. Luke calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. The Hill-Countrey being the more barren the less frequented places of Judea yet not disinhabited for there was Joabs house 1 King 2. Nay Beza saith 1 King 2.39 That there were seven Towns whereof Joshua mentions fix at his dividing out the Country and the seventh was Hebron John 15.61 wherein was Zacharies house Luke 1.40 Where the childe grew saith the Text waxed strong in spirit and dwelt till the time of his publique Appearing So that the Fratres in Eremo have hence but little cause to challenge Saint Johns Brotherhood muchless his Patronage unless also when a very Infant as above declared Maldonat in Matth. 3. But here Maldonat is very angry at the Truth and will prove Saint John an Hermit by many Arguments and first from the Prophesie of him Isai
est hoc nomen non Hebraeum This a Syrian and no Hebrew name hinting him to have been some great mans son of that name and Country usual in Scripture to denominate men sons of their Fathers without other addition Neither is that Objection enough against it 1 Cor. 1.16 for it says not that many Noble but that many Noble are not called and one in Twelve is not many And this seems to me the more probable as wiping off that scandal of Julian the Apostata That mean Fishermen and such were easily seduced and therefore Christ did receive persons eminent in Learning Saul was so and of Authority in the State Nicodemus was so of Wealth and Ability Zacheus was so and so was Joseph of Arimathea and then why not so this Bartholomeus From whose deep silence in the Scripture even in the midst of all the Apostles contentions misprisions or other infirmities for which most of them were at sometime or other reprehended by their gracious Master I cannot but commend his prudence meekness unity modesty and taciturnity that let fall nothing to the breach of either and recommend them to your imitation For as silent and reserved as he appears in Scripture yet Ecclesiastick story rendreth him loud and eloquent in the advancing of his Masters Gospel First unto the Lycaonians and afterwards to the remoter Indians and lastly to the barbarous Armenians whereby their King Astyages for converting his Brother Palemon that after became Bishop of the place he was put to death or rather many deaths in one One so complicated as passed all parallel but the Barbarity of that place and Tyrant being first stoned and afterward excoriated Flayed alive Giving his kin and all that he had Job 1. not as Job saith for his life but for the Faith and Truth of Christ his Master nor is there yet an end of him For some write that they let him hang on the Cross till the day following still preaching Christ till they beheaded him and then indeed that was mercy An. Dom. 51. And hence it is called Duplex Festum A double Feastival some keeping the Five and twentieth of August to his memory others with us the Four and twentieth POEM 34. Fair Elims Wells and Palms did prerecord Th'Apostles and Disciples of our Lord Number and Nature both did signifie Their Doctrines pleasant Fruit and Victory Let us too pitch our Tents here rather dwell That each may have his Palm and Sacred Well May these Palms flourish to the day of Doom i th' hearts of men and all their sins o'ercome Scriptures are justly call'd Salvations Wells In draught whereof Saint Bartholomew excels His Name well suiting sure th' Original Hence doth him Son of Water-drawer call What Springs to Fields to Souls is Bartholomew Who to cool heats of sin brings a cold Dew Some think this was Nathaniel then his stile Runs high a man in whom was found no guile Some think him Princely born and that his Name the Son of Ptolomy imports the same Whose ere he was he for his Master gave His skin Christs truth not his own life to save Being such a fruitful Saint then 't is but Reason His Feast be kept in such a fruitful Season The COLLECT The Gospel Luk. 22. v. 16. unto v. 25. The Epistle Acts 3. ver 12 unto vers 17. O almighty and everlasting God which hast given grace to thine Apostle Bartholomew truly to beleeve and preach thy Word Grant we beseech thee unto thy Church both to love that he beleeved and to preach that he taught through Christ our Lord Amen S. MATHEVS For God to become man a Virgin soule for to conceaue bring forth yet not foule are Miracles yet these good Mathew brings as tidings fittest for an Anaclls wings Are to be sould by 〈…〉 The Plate here Vpon the Festivall of S. MATTHEVV DISQUISITION 32. OBserving Ecclesiastick order the first is here become one of the last scil Saint Matthew the first Pen-man of all the New Testament one of the last among these glorious worthies but so among the last as some choise Dish is at a Feastivall so of the last as none of the least remarkable conversions Mat. 9.9 and though under his own hand yet that of the Holy Spirits Guiding cannot be suspected of immodesty and as Jesus passed by from thence he saw a man sitting at the Receipt of custome named Matthew and said unto him Follow me and he Arose and followed him Wherein you have Christs Invitation and Saint Matthews resignation Our Saviours voice and his Saints Eccho Psal 27.8 somewhat like Davids Psalm 27. Seek yee my Face Thy Face Lord will I seek First the Invitation Mat. 9.9 as Jesus passed He saw c. where are the circumstances and substance of the call circumstances first of Person Jesus and Matthew Matthew a rich man a covetous rich man a covetous rich man in a corrupt office stiling himself the Publican in an Emphatical acknowledgment while the other Evangelists call him Levi and so needing a Jesus Mar. 2.14 Luke 5.27 c. 9.56 Salutare Nomen the saving name of Him who to that end came into the world Luke 9. and here passing forth from curing the Palsied mans body he healed Matthews soul it was his businesse thus to be doing Good even his meat and drink to do the will of his Father who would not the death of a sinner c. his Goodnesse still more amplified from the place and time for that he called Matthew sitting at the Receipt of custome Other Disciples Christ called as they were doing good Mat. 4.18 as Peter and Andrew from Fishing James and John mending their Nets c. But O the Miracle of Mercy he called Matthew when doing hurt and injury executing his hatefull office Sitting at the Receipt of custome and sitting the worst posture of evill the worst of all those three degrees of sinne Psal 1.1 observed out of Psalm 1.1 Now Matthew was a Graduated Publican seated in the chair of the scornful Genebrard in Psa 1. which is worse then either walking in the Counsell of the ungodly or standing in the way of sinners insomuch that Publicans and most hated persons were grown convertibles the Jewes paying no Custome before their Captivity that being indeed alwayes the leader of oppressions so that Publicans we find sometimes joyned with Heathens Mat. 18. sometimes with Harlots Mat. 18.17 c. 21.31 Luk. 15.1 chap. 21. but alwayes with sinners But now to the substance of the Call He saw and said c. he saw not only with Corporall eyes as hee saw many so but with eyes of compassion with eyes of Dilection Vbi Oculus ibi Amor. Here Christ's eye and Affection went together he saw him as a Pearl on a Dunghil as a chosen vessell for a better office He saw him with such eyes as looked on Israel in Egypt Exod. c. Exod. 3. as looked on Saint Peter weeping or on
to distinguish himself from Judas the Traytor though Iscariotes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Vir Marsupii The man of the purse c. help well yet both of a Name shadoweth out unto us that in the visible Church there will be alwaies some bad as well as good Professors Judas a Devil John 6. aswell as Judas the Saint the Church in an Ark and that had a Raven aswel as a Dove 'T is a Flock like Jacob's all Ring-streaked c 'T is a Net there will be Fish in it of all sorts A Garden will have Weeds aswel as Herbs and Flowers And 't is an Army wherin are spirits of all tempers 't is a Field wherin are Tares as well as Wheat and so shall grow together till the Harvest So that good men may distinguish themselves from ill and again may own their best Alliance for the more credit and advantage of the Truth and Gospel as S. Jude doth his brother James being a man of such repute as that he was surnamed the Just c. as is expressed in his commemoration The substance of St. Epistle of Jue 1. Judes Epistle consisting of a Salutation v. 2. an Exhortation v. 3. and a Caution Vers 2. v. 4. The first is mercy unto you and Peace and love be multiplied i.e. Mercy from God the father in pardoning your sins peace frō God the Son that Prince of peace applying it and Love from God the H. Ghost being the Spirit of love Or Mercy in pardoning your sins Peace in calming your Consciences and Love joyning you to God and one another The Exhortation is Vers 3. to continue stedfast in the Faith once given to the Saints Nay 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. earnestly to contend for it pro aris focis with might and main with all the wisdom of the Serpent that may consist with the Doves innocence to act like naturall agents ex extremum virium to the utmost of ability all little enough to countervail the malice and subtilty of the Supplanter as the caution intimates Vers 4. v. 4. Because certain ungodly men are craftily crept in c. of whose both fin punishment you may read in the sequell of that Epistle Against all which we must as S. Jude did give all diligence v. 3. to write of the common salvation Indeed giving all diligence not only in his writing but in his Travels and preaching the common salvation viz. first in Greece Pontus and Mesopotamia and afterward say Writers with his brother Simon into Persia where besides spiritual cures having restored Abgarus King of the Edesseni Unto whom he was sent Ambassad our saith Alstaed infra unto health is ill requited by the Heathenish Priests of that same Countrey being put to death and sacrificed anno Christi 51. propagating the Gospel both by Life and Death Now for his brother Simon Alstaed in Chronol c. 27. he was surnamed Zelotes from his pious heat and prudent zeal also from his Countrey the Canaanite Simon the Cananite Mat 10.3 who like a showring cloud one of those compassionate Bottels of heaven watered with the Gospel many dry and Desart places sc Aegypt Libya Persia Cyrene many parts of scorching Africa and divers other Regions towards the Western Ocean Simon the last Martyr of the Apostles besides his visiting of some Islands and among others if Historians deceive us not this of our Britain also though others attribute that to Joseph of Arimathaea Anno Christi 63. at length returning home unto Jerusalem Vide Alsted in loc cit that Carnificina Prophetarnm that Shambles of the Prophets having a while succeeded his brother James the Just in that See Episcopall is fastned to the Crosse in the 120 year of his age and so made the last Sacrifice of all the Apostles POEM 38. IN Holy Writ 't is a Divine command That by two witnesses each word should stand And here they are to make the Gospel good This pair of Martyrs seal'd it with their Blood These stood in first relation each to other Yet neerer kin by their Spiritual Mother St. Jude with golden Pencil doth indite A Catholick Epistle and doth write Unto the Jewes dispers'd and Gentilss both To weed up Errors in their early growth And were his Cautions fixed in Each Breast Nor Sin nor Faction would be in request That Love-Letter to Christ's Spouse his Heart mus'd His Hand wrot his Blood seal'd the Church perus'd And as he sent his brother Simon ran Bearing Christ's Name to th' Remote Ocean Adventuring to savage Affricans ' Mongst whom the worst of Monsters Sin he tames Turning their Black Religion to pure Grace Till Sin and Turk rebarbariz'd the place Thence sprinkling Lybian Deserts Egypt's Plains Cyrene and Persia tasting of his pains Nay on our British Isles too story some This Cananite bestowed first Christendom And after all this return'd home and dy'd Last Martyr of th' Apostlee crucify'd Well then is Simon here Zelotes term'd Whose Zealous life and death Christ's word confirm'd And that nor Sin nor Heresy obtrude ' Gainst Christian Faith both wrot and dy'd St. Jude THE COLECT PRAYER The Epistle of St. Jude v. 1 to v. 9. The Gospel Jo. 15. v. 17. to the end ALmighty God which hast builded thy Congregation upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the Head corner stone grant us so to be joyned together in unity of Spirit by their Doctrine that we may be made an holy Temple acceptable unto thee through Jesus Christ our Lord. Vpon the Festivall of all SAINTS DISQUISITION 36. THe former Festivals presented us with Singularities but this is Festum Catholicum 'T is or should be an universall Holy-Day Whereas Each of the former like a Jacobs-staff gave us the Hight But of particular Stars This like a fair naturall Day shews us the whole Heavens rich varieties Those as Contracted Perspectives Measuring Them one by one but This like a large Glass Ptesenting as 't were a Land-skip of All-Saints together Each of them a Flower this a Posie or if they Posies this a Garden Somtimes those shew'd the Leader somtime the Wings or Officers or peculiar Regiments of the Churches Army but This presents us here with her Camp-Royall her Generall Muster the Maine Battalia of that Noble Army the Army both of Saints and Martyrs I say This is the Catholick Solemnity and not a little mistaken by Some who mistake Themselves to bee the only Catholicks for the most part conceiving this Feast instituted in Contemplation onely of the Saints Triumphant so carrying on their manner of devotion Dr. Donne S 45. in Festum in consideration of them onely this misprision being grounded saith a learned Gamaliel of ours upon Boniface his dedicating that Pantheon given by Phocas to the Honour of Saints and Martyrs but of that kind only yet was there a better consecration afterward both of that Temple and
tell Sounding to each of us a serious caution A Timely pray'r and a due preparation First when or wheresoever it Thee find It proves or should A monitor o' th' mind If in thy Bed it waken thee There best It doth insinuate thy latest rest If as a dressing it salute thine eare It Hints Deaths Livery Thou once must weare And when thou hear'st it in thy cheerfull walke It seasons with Mortality thy Talke And if you heare it as at meat you sit Then thinke it sounds earth to earth I commit In pride of passions if the ●are it beat How streight it Damps the wild-fires cooles the Heat And when in Frollicks thou shalt heare This Toll May it forthwith all sinfull mirth controule To men buried alive This cheering Bell Doth Liberty infallible foretell And unto such as languish in exile This sounds a Returne home againe e're-while When most transported in the busie hall This in thine eare Thee to thy selfe doth call When Earths Affaires Thee from thy self estrange This tolls Thee Home unto thine own exchange What ever our conditions Good or ill This rings us in the eare with that news still Of Philips Monitor Remember man Or Davids Rather Thy life 's but a span Thus having rung all in next let it move Thine Heart and Tongue to Piety and Love Now shew thy Christian Sympathy and Groane With them whom even Bell mettall doth bemoane Do as thou wouldst be done for that is Kneel And pray as heartily as thou didst feel The burdens of the sick the worst they Ayle Knowing that fervent Prayers still prevaile And shall for soules or bodies better state For both therefore thy Prayers ejaculate From thy sick servant Lord let this Cup pass Yet with submission as Christs Patterne was Be pleas'd to act their Body's Physitian Howe'r be their Soules good Samaritan And though these winged Doves should not succeed Yet shall they once fly home with happy speed And more good company ' gainst thy Turne come And pay thy Parcels with a totall Sum. And yet relie not on that hoped Aide But let thy daily Debt be duely paid To God and Man Take care Accounts to Even With jarring Earth but Chiefly with just Heaven This Bell minds Thee o' th' Church That of Devotion Thy Neighbours Case Spurs on thy preparation For thou wouldst take the Hint did his house burne Shall not his Feavour make Thee mind thine urne Ensafe thy Goods then at this warning Given Remove from the worlds Dangers store in heaven There if thy Deeds laid up thou canst not miss Though this world turne to coale the land of bliss Meane time when thou dost such a Soule-Bell heare Thinke that St Jerome's Trump sounds in thine eare This triple use then of each passing Bell E're it pass from him He that makes doth well Vpon a Skeleton or Resemblance of Death Eccl. 12.1 Ioh. 17.13 LOe here the Frame of a rare Structure stands Which was a building too not made with hands Although on Earth where the Creator great Did an immortall heavenly Tenant feat The house then Fitted for such Guest of state Was built in opposition to all Fate Of strong Materials by Divine art For endlesse Fellowship and ne'r to part But This admitting Inmates the first day By their ill usage soon 'gan to decay And then through Rent and Homages neglect The Landlord forc'd the Tenant did eject And now like Buildings disinhabited That by all stormes and showres are injured Where Elves and Satyrs dance where Bats and Owles And Beasts of prey keep their Nocturnall howles All Shatter'd and Forlorne I such is this House Become through Sin and Death so Ruinous A Rendevouz of wormes and Creeping things VVhere they disport their dusty Traffickings Yet Look well on 't againe and you 'l descry I' th' Ruines of this Pyle its Dignity How wonderfully made Exact and even Strong Uniforme and erect toward heaven Let thy Thoughts then dwell henceforth in this place For thy Soule doth in such another Case Here fix thy Meditations startle not To thinke the best Skin Flesh and Bloud must Rot For St Markes Carpenter Can all Repaire And make this house more firme than e re more faire Strength'ning the timber-work with his Crasse wood The Morter temper'd with his precious Bloud VVhile on thy Part all Trouble and Expence Amounts but to true Faith and Penitence Acted in Pious Deeds and not delay'd But made good timely e'r too far decay'd Before the Keepers of the House do Grew Be-Palsi'd Trembles and the strong men bow E're the Nutrition Grinders become few Or what remaine unserviceable Chew Mind this this needfull object Early marke Before the Lookers forth the windows darke This debt pay as wise payment ought by Light E're Natures stars do set in Ages Night Or are Eclips'd by Sickness Chance or Griefe That none of Them Anticipate Reliefe Before the Portals of the Lips do Close And every whisper interrupt Repose Or ever Musicks daughters become mute Nor voice nor Eare Consorting sweetest Lute Before the Almond flourish and wax gray In that Trees spring boding the heads decay E're all ascents grow tedious and with Fear The way still block'd A load each Grassehopper Then This desire before Desire doth fail Which with endeavour too sure shall prevaise Before the Loosing of the Silver Coard While Spinall Marrow doth Thee strength Afford Or e're that Ewer broke resembling Gold Which the Braine 's vitall Moysture doth infold Before the Pitcher's broken at the well Or veines distemper'd such a Liver tell Before the Head or Phancy's turning wheele The Fractures of that Cisterne the Heart feele Before Man thus Goes to the House of Age Leaving his Friends to Mournefull Equipage Let him here commune often with his Urne His Spirit then doth and shall to God returne By whose kind Power both after some dismiss Ne'r more to part shall reunite in bliss Let outward Prudence then herein controule All slack ill-husbandry for our own soule Let 's streight Renew our Lease or rather buy This repair'd house whose Rate low whose Seat high Each Faithfull Pray'r and Charitable Act Passeth for Currant Coyne to this Effect In obitum Effigiem Librum venerandi Josiae Shute praeconis mellitissimi ab Authore nuper Editum SUrgito Lector adest Tibimet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anglus Scilicet egregius Shutus orator adest Flexanimus vates Animas Qui traxit in Aures Voce docens Sacrum quod pede pandit iter Malleus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 constans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui nequit à Recto Spe-ve Metu-ve Trahi Hunc tulit in Partum Dominus Minitante Procellâ Nec fuerant Tanto Sacula digna viro Umbra dat Essigiem resonat tihi Pagina Mentem Assolet ut Reliquis gratus adesto Tibi HEre 's that wise Charmer whose Sweet Ayres to Hear Each Soule delighted so to dwell i' th' Eare Whose Life and Doctrine's Combin'd Harmony Familiarized St Paul's Extasy