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A04503 An excellent treatise touching the restoring againe of him that is fallen written by the worthy, Saint Chrysostome to Theodorus a friend of his, who by leud liuing, was fallen from the Gospell; fit to read for reclaiming their hearts which are in like case. Englished (out of an auncient Latin translation, written in velume) by R.W. With an annexed epistle of comfort from one friend to another, wherin the Anabaptists error of desperation is briefly confuted, and the sinne against the holy Ghost plainly declared. John Chrysostom, Saint, d. 407.; Cottesford, Thomas. Epistle of comfort.; Wolcomb, Robert, b. 1567 or 8. 1609 (1609) STC 14631; ESTC S121653 61,720 216

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hold on it vex●th and alwayes reserueth to the torment And therefore it is termed vnquenchable not onely because it cannot be quenched it selfe but b●cause it doth not quench or sley them it taketh For the Scripture saith that sinners put on immortalitie to wit profitable not to honour of life but to perpetuitie of correction Now the force of the punishment and that punishment of that fire which is so forcibl●●o voice will serue to declare no speech will serue to vtter for in good or euill things subiect to corruption there is nothing like them Neuerthelesse that wee may conceiue some motion of that fire and torment The torments of hell set foorth in their colours call to mind in him that hath a burning ague what tribulation what anxietie of the bodie and soule standeth on each side and by this temporall maladie gather what those torments be which are inflamed with an eternall fire which are watered before that horrible iudgem●nt s at with a fierie streame of tormenting waues There what shall wee doe What shall we answere Nothing shall be t●ere but gnashing of t●eth but schritching and weeping and too to late repentance no way any helpe being found and euery way the torments increasing without any comfort Wee shall ●ee none but the executioners and tortors dreadfull to bee beholden and which is woorst of all we shall haue no solace of the very aire For vtter darknes shall compasse the place of torments and the fire which as it hath not a nature of consuming so hath it not of illumining but it is a darke fire the flame thereof giuing no light So that to them that are in it what feare what renting of their bowels what dismembring of their bodies what crosses there be to euery sense no tongue can tell And as the sortes of torments doe varie and differ so proportionably euerich one to his sinnes hath his paine multiplied Now if thou shouldest say how can the bodie continue in so wretched and such an endlesse tormenting Consider what things now and then in this life betide vs and by these small things coniecture great How that some times we see some troubled with long sicknes yet their life to indure and howbeit the bodie bee dissolued by some death yet the soule is not dissolued nor consumed whence it is apparant that when the body shall also become immortall no death may kill the soule or body For in this present life it cannot be that the punishment of the body should bée both grieuous and perpetuall but the one yeeldeth to the other for that the body cannot abide both But when each shall put off corruption th● corruption afore receiued shall end but the incorruption gotten shall be endlesse So let vs not thinke the very exceeding greatnesse of punishment will cause an end of dolor but as I said our sinnes shall aggrauate the chastisement and the incorruption of the bodie or soule shall not limite it Tell mee now what space of sensualitie and dainties will thou liken to these torments Let vs if we list bestow on delights an hundreth yeeres adde thereto an hundreth moe and tenne times an hundreth what benefit will there be gotten of it if we consider this euer-remaining paine May not the whole time of this life wherein wee seeme to take pleasure in pastimes and wallow in wantonnesse be reckoned as the dreame of one night in comparison of that eternitie Is there any therefore who to haue a delightsome dreame one night would vndertake sempiternall paines Or take that for this or this for that I disprayse not as yet delights nor vnfolde the bitternesse of them because the time serueth not for such speeches nowe but then I shall be occasioned when I see thee able to auoid the same For because thou art addicted to them thou mayest ghesse wee doted if we auouch that pleasure which all men reckon acceptable and gladsome were yrkesome and sowre But if by the mercy of God thou maiest escape out of this sort of sickenes at that time yea at that time thou shalt finde out what bitternesse yea what bane sensualitie hath Nowe m●ane while let vs imagine that pastimes and pleasure and voluptuousnesse are honest and comely What shall we say to the punishments laide vp in store for them What shall we say to them because the delights vade like a shadow and hastily flie away but the paine abideth for eu●r and euer Grant the time and space of pastime and punishment were all one is there any so foolish or so depriued of his fiue wits that would chuse to tolerate one day of paine for a day of pleasure sith the pangs of one houre and euery vexation of the body commonly causeth vs to forget all the time past consumed in delight Wherefore forasmuch as we may be ridde if in a moment we be turned from euery of those tormenting chastisements and inioy eternall goodnes why deferre we why stay we why doe we not vse the bountifulnesse of God For this is prouided by the vnspeakeable and infinite clemencie of God that labour and toile should not bee stretched farre nor be long or endlesse but short and as I may say for a minute of an houre Such is this present life if it be conferred with that euerlasting 2. Cor. 4. The clemency I say of God hath prouided that in this fleeting short life there should be labors and agonies but that in the life eternall there should be crownes rewards of good workes that trauell should soone be ended ●ut the reward of good deeds should last for euer And euen as this maketh them glad that through induring of toile inioye a crowne so it shall grieue and trouble those in the time to come that see they haue lost for a little and small time of delights perpetuall good things and haue sought for still induring euill things Let vs not therefore incurre this anguish of soule let vs awake while wee haue time And loe now is the acceptable time now is the day of saluation now is opportunitie of repentance and a time wherein repentance will not be fruitlesse But if we be carelesse of our life wee shall sustaine in hell not these calamities alone whereof we haue spoken but a more grieuous mischiefe For to be excluded from blisse and to be debarred from the things prepared for the Saincts causeth such affliction such wofulnesse as if no outward punishment tormented it were sufficient It surpasseth all paines of hell to want that beatitude the fruition of which lay in thy power For muse I desire you on the state of that life Heauenly blisse set foorth as much as a man may consider ●t for as it is in deed no ●peech can vtter Yet let vs comprehend an image thereof to the vtmost it may be by that we haue read and the darke speeches we haue receiued It is said of it in a certaine place Reu. 21.4 Isai 35. There shall
called together her friends and neighbours that they should reioyce with her but I will cal youre my friends neighbours together and will entreat them to meet not that they should be glad but that they should lament with mee not that they should reioyce but mourne with me greatly sorrow lifting vp their hands to heauen as they shall see me to doe and I will say vnto them howle and lament with me O my friends power out and bring foorth with me fountaines and floods of teares not for that I haue lost vnporzable weights of golde or innumerable talents of siluer not because I haue lost threades full of costlie pearles but for that my friend * Amicus alter i●se dearer than any gold and more pretious than any stone is I knowe not how while he sailed with vs ouer the large and broad sea of this life fallen downe into the very depth of destruction And if some one of my friends shall goe about to comfort and will me to leane of sorrowing I will aunswere him in the Prophets words * Or let me alone I wil weep bitterly you can not comfort me Suffer me to we●pe most bitterly neither hold on comforting mee for I weepe n●t through the affection of the flesh neither is my lamentation woman like wherein appeare immoderate teares to be blamed I mourne for that which th● great and famous Apostle S. Paul saith hee mourneth for when as he saith * 2. Cor. 12.22 That I may mourne for them that haue sinned and haue not repented The death of the soule is pitifully to be lamented seeing the death of the body is so bitterly taken Certes with reason shall one rebuke those that for the common death of their friends weepe without meane but when the wounds not of a body but of a soule are lamented ●nd of such a soule which in ●eath it selfe sheweth signes of ●er former beautie and won●erous gainesse with liue● tokens displaieth the floure ●f vertues extinguished in her ●ho is so cruell vnacquain●ed with vertue that would ●ot be prouoked to teares For it is a point in Philoso●hie to forbeare weeping for ●ommon death so in the death ●f a soule and such a soule ●o receiue comfort I adiudge ●oth vngodly and irreligious For ordinary death to keepe ●he eyes from teares is the ●hiefest thinge in the studie of wisedome but how shall not ●e seeme to be lamented for without intermission who of ●ate reckned the whole brauenesse of the bodie but like ●arued stones who accounted gold as clay who respected all ●elights as durt and now ●ttached by the sodaine feuers ●f lust and voluptie being depriued of the integrity an● beautie of his mind hath shaken hands with vertue and i● become a slane to vice an● pleasure This man shall I not bewaile This man shal I not moysten so long with riuer of teares vntill wit● weeping I stirre vp feeling i● him and by the warmth o● teares I raise some liuely motions in him if mournin● may doe ought And i● mourners of the body ceas● not from lamenting though they assuredly know thei● weeping profite them nothing to renew the life of him tha● is dead why should not we that know the soule may be● called from death by conuersion earnestly follow after the medicine of repentance tha● euen the sepulchre being opened with abundance of teares hee may bee recouered Yea also I thinke we are to be accused of sluggardie sith the lamenters of bodies and ordinarie death doe weepe so much continually yet certaine as we said that they shal not raise againe their dead if we that know that by repentance lamentation coupled which it a soule may be restored to his former estate for the kingly Prophet said * Psal 65. Or in the graue who shall praise thee In hell who shall confesse thy name do nothing so We know too that diuers in the dayes both of vs and our ancestors hauing sliden out of the straight path and straied from the entrance of the narrow way were so againe restored that their end answered their beginning obtaining the goale and crowne yea they were thought to haue place among the number of the Saints But as long as one remaineth in the flame fornace of lust these things seeme inpossible to him although * A thousand infinit examples shuld be alleged But if some small conuersion be begun and the penitent person cast vpward his eyes that burning flame will tarry behind him and by how much more swiftly he shall take his pace by so much more before him shall hee see all thinges sumpled with the coale of an heauēly dew Despaire the greatest enemy to our saluation So much worth is it that wee beware of one thing the greatest enemy to our saluation to our conuersion to our repentance to wit desperation which if it take hold in our mind how great desire soeuer we haue of saluation how great purpose soeuer to liue euerlastingly if I say despaire come all the entry to saluation is stopped the way to repentance is hindered and the beginning of anguish is engendred And how then shall he that is out of the way and to whom the doore is shut ve able to doe any good worke when as because despaire prohibiteth he cannot come to the entrance of goodnes For this cause the Diuell goeth about with tooth and naile to plant in our hearts such manner of cogitations For if the feare of despaire shall remooue vs from the way of vertue he hath no long combate with vs for why should hee assault when none resisteth And whoso shall haue the power to vndoe this knot incontinent his strength returneth the lustinesse of his mind encreaseth he shall be delighted with the renuing of those contentions the reason is he shall see himselfe chase the chaser and pursue the persecuter And if in case as in wrastling it falleth out he faulter againe and fall let him not be out of hope for shame but remember that is not the law of wrestling and iusting not once to fall for he may not be said to be conquered that falleth but in the end not to yeeld for hee that despaire hath maystered how can he either recouer might in contention or withstand and fight seeing hee taketh his heeles and doth not at all returne to the conflict Neither thinke that I speake of those alonely that haue trangressed in small and not much important things but my speech is of him that hath made himselfe a villaine to all mischiefe and hath dammed to himselfe the way to the kingdome of heauen and was one of the number not of the incredulous miscreants but of them that liked God and after this hath either fallen into fornication or into all sortes of vnchastitie which as the Apostle saith * Ephe. 5.3 to name is vnseemely This man I say ought not to misdoubt of saluation though such wickednesse
would God our hands were idle and did not worke our owne decay Which if they doe it hath great affinitie with most manifest outrage as if for example a champion leauing his aduersary should turne his hands on his owne head and buffet himselfe The diuell hath put vs to flight and hath dashed vs in sunder we haue need then to rise and to resist him When thou art once cast downe if thou be willing not onely to lie still but to throw downe thy selfe headlong this is to assent to thine enemie and to take in defence his part Blessed Dauid fell after rhe same sort thou diddest neither so alone but in more grieuous wise for he combined murder with adultery and what did he then Did he lie so Did he not rise and resist the enemy and so ouercame him that his good deeds profited his posterity ween he was gone For when Salomon had committed that hainous crime and was deemed worthy of a thousand deaths yet for Dauids sake the Lord said he would bestow the kingdome on him longer These be the words I will surely rent the kingdome from thee 2. Ki. 11.11 and will giue it to thy seruant Notwithstanding in thy daies I will not doe it 12. because of Dauid thy father 2. Ki. 19.34 but I will rent it out of the hand of thy sonne Hezechiah when he was much indangered albeit he were a iust man himselfe yet for blessed Dauid the Lord promised to helpe him * Or I will defend this citie to saue it for mine own sake and for Dauid my seruantes sake I will defend this Citie for mine owne sake and for Dauid my seruants sake I will saue it See what was the strength of repentance see what power conuersion had But if he had thus thought which thou now thinkest and had said it is impossible that the Lord should now be merciful to me he hath greatly honoured me and hath endued me with the gift of prophecy he hath exalted me to a kingdome he hath deliuered me from manifold dangers how then can I promerite clemencie at the hands of God forasmuch as I haue thus fallen If Dauid had thus thought he had lo●● not only that went afore but that that followed also For not only the wounds of the body if they be neglected bring death but the wounds of the soule semblably Are we so sottish to put a plaister to a bodily wound and neuer attempt to cure the soule Many wounds of our body may not be cured yet we dispaire not and though the Chirurgions say the wound is vncu●●able yet we earnestly and vrgently beseech them that they would mittigate some what the paine But in the wounds of the soule which are not vnsanable for the soule is not tyed to necessity neither abideth any passion we are remisse we are past hope we are pricked with no care When there is no hope our griefe of body may be healed yet we withdraw nothing from our care but here when no occasion is of desperation without vsing any labour we omit all care So you perceiue how that more ardently we loue our body then our soule knowing not that if we regard not our soule we cannot saue our body For the soule was not ordained for the body but the body for the soule and he that esteemeth not the higher but polisheth the inferiour marreth both But he that obserueth an order and garnisheth the first admitte hee doe not passe for the second by the saluation neuerthelesse of the first the seeond shall be saued The which is builded on the plot of Christ his words Feare ye not them which kill th●● body Mat. 10.28 but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both body and soule in Hell Thinke you we haue done enough and satisfied you in this thing that no infirmity of the soule is vncureable Or else is it needfull wee should vse other reasons and confirme it yet further For although a thousand times thou dispaire of thy selfe wee will neuer dispaire of thee Neither doe we this that wee mislike in other howbeit there be ods whether one dispaire of himselfe or another of him To dispaire of another is pardonable but to dispaire of him selfe is not because he is not master of anothers mind this ruleth his owne purpose Wherefore we hope there is a returne for you to the state of your former life and to the vertues of the minde which we know are in you Besides these things this we adde The Nineuits heard the Prophet saying definitely Jon. 2.4 yet forty dayes and Nineueh shal be ouerthrown notwitstanding they were not discouraged No not when they were not certaine that the Lord would not bring to passe his words and when in mans iudgement there was no hope of forgiuenesse And as soone as that abrupt saying was ended they determined repentance saying who can tell if God will turne and repent Verse 9. 10. and turne away his fierce wrath that we perish not And God saw their workes that they turned from their euill waies and God repented of the euill that he had said he would doe vnto them and he did it not If Barbarians and ignorant folke could vnderstand so much of the mercy of God doth it not much more behoue vs to do so who are instructed in the word of God and know this example was before our time and that many more like are contained in Gods booke either in words Isai 55.8 or in acts For my thoughts are not your thoughts neither are your wayes my wayes saith the Lord. 9. For as the heauens are higher then the earth so are my wayes higher thē your wayes and my thoughts aboue your thoughts Farthermore if we receiue our seruants who haue offended vs when they promise they will amend and account of them as before nay many times credit them more after reconcilement will not God much rarher deale thus with vs If he had made vs to punish vs thou mightest well despaire and doubt of thy saluation but if for his goodnes onely he made vs to enioy his euer-during blisse and rewards and doth al things from the beginning of the world till this day to this end and purpose that he may saue vs what matter of despairing what matter of misdoubting is there left We haue offended him say you more than euer any man For this cause shouldest thou more speedily and earnestly make satisfaction and be sorrowfull for thine offence and abandon those deedes with which God is offended Neither doth a grieuous iniury offende any body so much as to continue in it when there is time and opportun●tie of satisfaction To sinne is humane but to perseuer in sinne is diabolicall To conclude Hier. 3.7 Or and I said when she had done all this turne thou vnto me but she returned not behold how God by the Prophet mistiketh this more then that And I haue
backe again open sinners and blasphemers to earnest repentaunce for their owne sinfulnesse and to haue a sure trust in the mercy of God and in the merit of Christs passion and death though they be euen at the departure out of this presēt life for it is neuer too late so long as life lasteth Let vs therefore with all feruentnesse call vpon them and exhort them in any wise with a good courage and a sure and vndoubful faith aske call and cry for Gods mercy for his sweet sonne our Sauiour Iesus Christ his sake and vndoubtedly they shall haue it For since the beginning of the world hitherto was there neuer one that in faith asked mercy heartely but he had it through the gratious goodnesse of our aforesaid most mercifull sauiour Iesus Christ vnto whome with the Father and the holy Ghost be all honour laude and praise world without end Amen Yours at commaund to his power T. C. Giue all the honor laud and praise to God onely 1. Tim. 1. The prayer of Daniel turned into metre and applyed vnto our time Daniel IX O Lord thou high and fearefull God By whom all things do moue Thy mercies great are sure to such As thy precepts doe loue We sinfull men haue sore transgrest Against thy lawes deuine Full frowardly we haue fled backe From these precepts of thine Thy Prophets deare to speake were prest In setting forth thy name Both rich and poore as bold were bent For to gainesay the same To thee therefore thou Lord of hoastes All iustice doth belong To poure on vs such shame and griefe In this we haue no wrong Our shame is great and due to all Our flight is but in vaine To tread strange lands our sin hath sought Our shame doth still remaine But though such shame a reward iust To all in common be Yet mercy Lord and to forgiue Doth still belong to thee Indeede O Lord as for our selues No lesse confesse wee can But that thy lawes wee set at nought Much lesse haue kept them than Thy Prophets spake wee would not heare Ne of thee stand in awe Strange plagues from time to time we felt For breaking of thy lawe The force whereof so fiercely bent Was such as hath not bene For all the plagues in Moses lawe Fell on this Realme for sinne And yet to thee who made his sute His path way so to guide That flying vice might learne thy lawe And therein to abide Wwerefore thou sawest all would not helpe And couldst not hold thine hand But haste thy curse which now doth fall Vpon this sinfull land For as thou art a righteous God Thy workes doe soe appeare Consuming such as scorne doth take Thy louing voyce to heare But yet O Lord thou broughtest forth Thy flocke from Egipt land Whereby thy name was largely spread So now stretch forth thine hand But we haue sinned more then they Oh Lord yet stay thy rod. As for this land was sometime thine And thou also our God Our sinnes and eke our fathers faultes This day to passe hath brought That all which border vs about They set vs cleane at nought Now then O Lord hide not thy face Oh heare thy seruaunts cry Behold thine house sometime full rich How wast it doth nowe lie Thy truth is fled thy flock fast bound As sheepe led to be slaine Thy foes preuaile and prosper much Though mischiefe they maintaine And wilt not thou thy foes confound That thus thy workes reproue At least yet for thy great names sake Their vile intents remoue For why as for our owne deserts We can no such thing haue It is for thy great mercies sake That we such thinges doe craue Forgiue vs Lord intreated be To heare vs make no stay We beare thy name it is thy cause Oh Lord make no delay A Prayer against Despaire O Eternall God most louing and gratious father in Iesus Christ who art alwaies praysed and magnified by thy children in theyr great deliuerances and preseruation from their perils and daungers but especially when they perceiue themselues freede from the power of Satan death and hell from the which no creature can saue and deliuer them but thou onely O Lorde And because no chaine of the deuill or euill temptation is more strong to fetter the body and soule of man then despaire which is a wilfull forsaking of faith and confidence in thee O God it arising springing from fear and doubt as if thou wert not faithfull in thy promises or able in thy power to preserue vs Helpe Lord I beseech thee and free and deliuer me thy poore seruaunt from this temptation thraldome of Satan and soe strengthen I humbly pray thee my faith and confidence euer more in thee that in al my perils necessities wants sorrowes and griefe in this world I may haue a strong and stedfast hope in thee whereby I may ouercome repell and keepe backe the dangerous and subtill suggestions of Satan the world and the flesh to thy great glory and praise and my eternall and vnspeakable comfort through Iesus Christ my onely Lord and Sauiour Amen ¶ A Prayer for the Morning O Lord thou which couerest the night with darkenesse and causest man therein to take his rest and by euery day and night doest shew thy great glory in the heauens and also thy wisdome and power by gouerning and preseruing all thy creatures vpon the earth O Lord I thy poore seruaunt and creature doe most humbly thanke thee from the bottome of my heart for my sweete and comfortable rest this night past and for watching ouer mée by thine eye of prouidence and kéeping both my body and soule by thy grace from sinne and death beseeching thée O Lorde God my father Sauiour and comforter to blesse to sanctifie direct and preserue me in this thy new day and that I may become a newe creature vnto thée O God in holinesse and righteousnesse labouring faithfully and painfully in my calling that so my laboures this day may be sanctified and blessed vnto mée and mine and that I may shew forth thy praise in al my waies and declare my loue and charity vnto men in all my works that after the dayes of this my life and pilgrimage finished and ended here in this world I may liue with thee for euer in the world to come throgh Iesus Christ my Lorde and Sauiour who liueth and reigneth with thée and the holy Ghost euer one God world without end Amen ¶ A Prayer for the Euening O gratious and mercifull God I am most bound vnto thy heauenly Maiesty for my preseruatiō this day because I and al men are continually subiect vnto all dangers and perils griefes sorrowes sicknesse and death yea we lie open vnles thy grace and might doe defend vs vnto the temptations tyranny of the world the flesh the deuill which daily seek and desire our hurt and confusion both of body soule for euer Wherefore O gratious and euerliuing God as thy right hand and sauing health hath bene with mée this day and thou hast directed blessed and comforted mee thy poore seruaunt in all my wayes and labours for the which I most hūbly thank thée so I most earnestly entreat thy Maiesty in thy loue and mercy for Christ Iesus sake to keepe mée and al mine in safety this night and to couer vs vnder the shadow of thy winges from all perils and dangers whatsoeuer and that our soules as well as our bodies may take their swéet and comfortable rest and ioy in thée and likewise that thou wouldest grant that whensoeuer thou shalt knocke at the doore of our hearts to call vs vnto thee O God we may with the wise Virgins be watchfull haue oyle in our lamps that we may be receiued into eternall rest through Iesus Christ thy deare sonn and our onely Sauiour Amen FINIS
be no more death neither sorrowe neither crying neither shall there be any more paine What more felicitie is there than this life wherin no feare of pouertie nor sickenesse hurteth none dealeth vniustly none is indangered none conceiueth indignation none enuieth no desire inflameth no lust of meat no greedinesse of honour and renowne troubleth but euery spot of vice is blotted out and washed away where all things are in peace and ioyousnesse all things in quiet and rest where is light and brightnesse not such as is among vs but by so much more bright the sunne is now than any candle There is no night no darkenesse no concourse of clouds no extremity of cold or heate but such a temperature shall there bee of all things as they alone shall know which are worthy to inioy the same There is no old age nor the miserie thereof but euery corru●tible thing is done away and the glory of incorruption is euery where But moreouer to haue societie with the Angels Archangels and of all the celestiall and supernall powers to inioy the companie is much to bee esteemed but to obtaine the radiant sight of our Lorde Christ Iesus and to be lightened with the brightnesse of his maiesty that cannot be described it passeth all such and such like honour But lest thou bee daunted with these thinges on the sodaine I will allure thee by little and little to the attain●ment of them Behold now and looke vpon the heauen let thy thought also pierce a little aboue heauen after yonder the transforming of the whole creature For it shall not abide in this qualitie wherein it is but it shall be chaunged into another much more fine and faire as much let me say so as gold exceedeth lead Saint Paul teacheth this shall come to passe when he saith that the creature it selfe shall be freed from the bondage of corruption Rom. 8.21 For now vnder corruption it suffereth many things which corruptible bodies must needs suffer but when it shall cast off all frailetie and corruption it shall be adorned with wonderfull beautie for it shall not suffer corruptible bodies but it shall receiue them by resurrection uoyde of corruption whereby the very creature shall bee metamorphised into an excellenter habite There shall bee then no dissention any where but all things shall agree in amitie for the agreement of the saints shall be one there shall be no dread of the Diuell no ambushes of vncleane spirits the teare of hell shall be farre off there shall be death neither of the body nor of the soule but feare by the meanes of immortalitie shall bee shaken off Like as a kings sonne if first of all he be fostered vp in a poore cottage being apparalled in base raiment liueth vnder the feare of Tutors and gouernance of Masters wherby his young-age vnder strait discipline may bring his mans estate into good liking and make it worthy his famous progenitors but when the time commeth that he must both enter into the Court of his Dominion and take in hand his fathers Scepter all homely apparaile being reiected hee arayeth himselfe in princely attire and on a sud●aine putteth on the mitre of his father the glittering of ●urple continually is added ●he brightnesse of his diademe ●he rowte of his gard the ●ower of his name is increa●ed and he is made a new man ●o after such a manner shall ●he alteration of Saints be And to the end you may be ●iuen to vnderstand that pain●ed words is not all we speake ●et vs cast our eyes on that ●ountaine wherein Christ was transformed and let vs ●ehold his brightnesse that wherein when he was trans●ormed hee shined neither ●or all that by this meanes ●ll the glory of the world to ●ome shal be reuealed vnto vs. For that transformation was ●eclared not fully as in deede ●he blessednesse to come shall ●e but as much as the behol●ers eyes could beare And ●he Gospell saith * Mat. 17.2 his face did shine as the sunne but the glory of the incorruption shall not onely send foorth such a light nor such as the eyes of men can looke on but such shal be the future brightnesse as eye sight may not indure although it abode that in the transforming on the mount Whereby it is cleere that so much was reuealed as the eies of mortall men could suffer neither yet did they fully suffer it Verse 6. for it is said They fell on their faces Againe if thou shouldest be brought into an assemble where euery one should sit apparrelled in golden robes in the middest of whom one should shine decked in pearles and purple and if he promised that thou mightest be one of the number of those men of honour wouldest thou not assay and attempt all things to attaine vnto it So then open thy sight on the heauens and behold there an assembly gathered together not in brightnesse of gold neither in trimnesse of garments nor glistering in precious stones but clearer in righteousnes then either the starres glitter or the Sunne shineth Behold there a company not of men alone but of Angels Archangels thrones dominions principalities and powers and of the King that sitteth in the middest of them no speech may be for he surmounteth all speech and conceit of the mind of man by reason of his beautie his strength his glory his royalty his maiestie What then Tell me shall we beguile our selues of all these honors because of sloth in sustaining some labour and in resisting for a while the allurements of lust For if wee should dayly sustaine torments and suffer a little time hell fire to the end we might see Christ comming in glory accompanied with his Saints were it not good to indure all sorrow that we might be made partakers of so great blisse of so great glory Heare what the blessed Apostle Peter saith Matt. 17.4 It is good for vs to to be heer If he seeing a slender glimse of the glory to come sodainely reiected all things out of his mind relying on the delectation of the vision he saw what will one say if he beheld these things as they are in truth Namely at what time the court of heauen shall bee opened and the K●ng of heauen shall be reuealed not in a glasse darkely but face to face not by faith but by visage Many ignorant folke think it a thing all suffici●nt The torments of hell not so greeuous as the losse of the sight of Christ and to be wished for alone to be deliuered from the paines of hel I say to be remooued and cast off from that glory is a more grieuous torment then hell neither iudge I the torm●nts there so grieuous as it is to be driuen from the sight of Christ for th●s I assure you is more miserable then any punishment this onely exceedeth hell When we see an earthly king entring his pallace with his adherents and guard we admire and call those great men
of death But what tongue can tell or what vnderstanding conceiue how great these ioyes are of that supernall Cittie to be in the assembly of Angels with the most blessed soules to stand by the glorie of the Creator to beholde in presence the face of God to see that immeasurable light to feele no pangs of death to enioy the gift of euer-enduring incorruption Against despaire THe theefe acknowledged Aug. in lib. de symb Peter denied In Peter there is shewed that no iust man ought to presume of himselfe in the theefe that no wicked man being conuerted should despaire Therefore let the good feare least he perish through pride and let not the wicked despair throgh much naughtines Idem de vtil agen poen Let none despaire as Iudas the traitor not so much the haynous wickednesse which he committed was the cause of his eternall destruction as the despaire of forgiuenesse Let none distrust Amb. sup Luc. lib. 2. let none in the priuitie of his olde sinnes despaire of the rewardes of God God knoweth how to change his determination if thou know how to amend thy fault Let no man despaire of pardon Isido de sū bon lib. 2. although about the end of his life he bee turned to repentance God iudgeth euerie one according to his end not according to his life past To commit some foule offence is the death of the soule but to despaire Idem ibid. is to descend into hell Of Repentance IF I proffer thee golde Amb. in ser de eleem ieiun thou sayest not I will come to morrow but at the instant thou requirest it none prolongeth none maketh excuse the redeeming of our soule is promised and none maketh hast Conuersion is neuer too late the theefe went from the Crosse to Paradise Hier. in ep ad Laetam Greg. hom 34. sup eua There is greater ioy in heauen of a sinner conuerted then of a righteous man that standeth for a captaine also in warre loueth that souldier more who being returned from flight hath valiantly slaine his foe then him that neuer fled and hath neuer done any manly act So the husbandman loueth more that ground which after thornes yeldeth forth plentifull corne then that which neuer had thornes and neuer bare a fertile graine In nothing to sinne is only the property of God Amb. ep 3 ad Simplicianum it is the propertie of a wise man both to correct his fault and to repent for his sinne with God not so much the measure of time Hierom. in quod serm as the measure of griefe preuaileth not so much the abstinencie of meates as the mortificatton of vices Repentance is the medicine of our wound Isid li. 3. de sum bon the hope of saluatiō by which sinners are salued by which God is prouoked to mercy The which is not weighed by time but by deepenesse of lamentation and teares O repentance what new thing shall I speake of thee Cyprian de laud. paen Thou loosest all thinges which are boundē thou openest al thinges which are shut thou mitigatest all aduersitie thou healest that is bruised thou illuminest that is confounded thou incouragest all that is out of hope Be not negligent because the Lord forbeareth you when you sinne Aug. in lib. de vti poen for how much the longer hee waiteth that ye amend so much the more grieuously will hee punish if you bee negligent Idem de 10 chordis Better is a little bitternesse in the cheekes then a perpetuall torment in the bowels Id. de poen Althogh the theefe was pardoned in his latter end of all his sins yet he gaue not an example to them that are baptized to sinne and perseuere in euill For then he was first baptized with the baptisme of the spirit in that then first hee professed Christ The sweetenesse of the apple recompenceth the sowrenesse of the roote Hier. super Mat. the dangers of the sea for hope of gaine delight vs the hope of health asswageth the griefe of phisicke Hee that desireth the kirnell breaketh the nut and hee that will be partaker of euerlasting goodnesse repenteth It is no great matter to fall in wrestling but to lie when one is cast downe Chrys in ep ad Heliod Monach. It is not deadly to bee wounded in battle but after the wound is inflicted through despaire to be cured to deny a plaister to the bile And oftentimes we see wrestlers crowned after often slides and many downe-casts VVe see also a souldier after many flights to bee a stout man and to ouercome him that discomfited him Behold the kingdome of God is to be solde Aug. de spir anima buy it if thou wilt Neither think of some great thing for the greatnesse of the price it is worth so much as thou hast seeke not what thou hast but what manner of body thou art This thing is worth so much as thou art giue thy selfe and thou shalt haue it But I am euill thou wilt say and happily it will not receiue me by giuing thy selfe vnto it thou shalt be good Idem in soliloquijs That repentance is in vaine which afterward a fault polluteth lamentations profit nothing if sins be doubled It auaileth nothing to craue pardon of euils and anew to commit euils Hee that knocketh his breast Idem in quodā ser and correcteth not himselfe strengtheneth his sinnes and doth not take them away NAZIANZENVS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sicubi chalcógraphus titubârit lector amice Da veniam lapso sic petis ipse tibi FINIS AN EPISTLE OF COMFORT From one Friend to another wherein the Anabaptists error of Desperation is briefly confuted and the Sinne against the Holy Ghost plainly declared Whereunto is added certaine effectuall Prayers LONDON Printed for Iohn Helme 1609. An Epistle of comfort from one friend to another wherein the Anabaptists error of desperation is briefly confuted and the sinne against the holy Ghost plainely declared VVhereunto is added certaine effectuall Prayers Syr whereas it pleased you to require mee to write vnto you my mind concerning the true sense and meaning of this place of Saint Paule in his Epistle to the Hebrewes Heb. 6. It can not be that they which were once lightned and haue tasted of the he●●enly gift and were become partakers of the holy Ghost and hauing tasted of the good word of God and of the power of the world to come if they fall away and as concerning themselues crucifie the sonne of God afresh and make a mocke of him that they should be renued againe by repentance Syr Many in time past and at this present day mistaking this text and not truely vnderstanding it The error of the Nouatians now of the Anabaptists both haue bene and are encombred with the Nouations error which is that after man by baptisme and the holy ghost is
of Christ and the punishment of the vngodly are set first in the second place those that shew the ioyes of the world to come and in the last roome those that teach that by faith sincere repentance and amendment of our liues we may inioy that heauenly blisse My petition to thee is this that thou daine to accept my labour which if thou doe I shall bee occasioned to iudge my trauell well bestowed The Lord of his mercy grant that sith wickednes neuer more abounded nor men neuer lesse remembred the comming of Christ vnto iudgement wee may heartely repent vs of our sinnes because the wrath of God hangeth ouer our heads and that wee may as good Christians liue worthy of our vocation liuing so as though euery one particularly should say with that holy man S. Hierome as often as I remember that day euery member of my body quaketh for whether I eate or drinke or do any thing else mee thinketh alwaies that dreadful trumpet soundeth in mine eares arise O ye dead and come to iudgement because the last houre is at hand Amen As desirous of thy profit as of his owne in the schoole of Christ Iesus R. Wol. OENIPODES Non cistae sed pectori Sentences collected out of the fathers workes which haue such agreement with the former Treatise as that they are not vnfit for this place Of the punishments of hell and of the day of iudgement IN that terrible ho wex of the death of a wretched sinner Bernard in spec pec immediatly there will come euil spirits like roaring lions to snatch away their pray When suddenly shal appeare the horrible places of torments the Chaos and obscuritie of darkenesse the dread of miserie and confusion the terror of that fearefull mansion where is the place of weepers where is the place of groaners where is the voyce of them that crie wo wo wo bee to vs the children of Euah when the miserable soule departing from the body shall heare see and seele these and sēblable thinges yea a thousand times worse then may be spoken in what I pray how great and how wonderous feare and trembling shall shee be what tongue can vtter it what booke declare it what will now auaile the boasting of knowledge the pompe of the people the vanitie of the world the greedinesse of earthly dignitie what shall then auaile the appetite of ryot delitiousnesse of meate exquisite drinke curiositie of garments nicenesse of the flesh gluttony of the belly superfluousnesse of foode surfetting and drunkennesse curious building of houses possessiō of terrene goods scraping together of prebends hoording of riches whether can these thinges deliuer the wretched soule of a man from the mouth of the hydious and horrible Lion that is from the iawe of the cursed dragon when that cunning deceiuer Idem ibid. that sonne of iniquitie that most eager enemy of our soules shall miserably and dreadfully meet with thy soule how wilt thou be able to abide the fearefull sight of his terrible countenance the intollerable stink of his mouth the brimstone-like flames of his eyes How then wilt thou be of force to abide so great feare of so horrible a beast Be assured that the feare of his dreadfull presence exceedeth euery kind of torments which may be deuised in this world At which the Prophet quaking betooke himselfe to prayer saying heare my prayer O God when I call vpon thee deliuer my soule from the feare of the enemy He said not from the power of the enemy but from the feare of the enemy But alas my brother if the sinfull soule bee so much and so greatly daunted at the sight onely of Sathan how great confusion or how great horror how great affiction and how great lamentation shal she haue through his touching and tormenting when the Lord shall be about to iudge the sorrowfull world Hierom. ad Heliod it shall make a great noyse and one kindred shal strike the breast to another kindred The Kinges once most puissaunt shall quake without a guard foolish Plato with his schollers shal be brought forth then Aristotles argumēts shall not be profitable when that sonne of the poore woman which exercised a craft shall come to iudge the endes of the earth That iudge is neyther preuented with fauour Augu. li. 3. de symb nor mooued with pitty nor bribed with money neyther will he be appeased with satsfaction or repentance Here let the soul deale for it selfe while it hath time as long as there is a place for mercy because there will be a place of iustice Greg. hom 15. In the last day of iudgment when the heauens being opened the Angels ministring the Apostles sitting together Christ shall appeare in the seate of his maiestie all the elect reprobate shal see him that both the iust may reioyce without end of the gift of theyr reward and the vniust euer lament for the reuengement of theyr plague Ansel de similitudini bus mundi On the right hand there shall be our sinnes to accuse vs on the left hand infinite deuils beneath the horrible confusion of hell aboue an angry Iudge without the worlde flaming within our conscience burning there scarce the iust shall be saued Alacke wretched sinner whither wilt thou flee It is impossible to be hidden intollerable to appeare The ioy of the time present must be so vsed Greg hom 32. that the remembrance of the bitternes of the iudgment to come may neuer depart from vs. Of the ioyes of heauen SO great is the beautie of righteousnes Aug. lib. de morb so great is the sweetnesse of the euerlasting light that is of the immutable wisdome that although we might not tarrie in it more then one day for this alone innumerable yeares of this life replenished with delights and aboundance of temporal goods were not without cause and reason to be contemned Jdem li 3. de symb Wee can easilier tell what there is not in that eternall life then what there is There is not death there is not mourning there is not wearinesse there is not weaknesse there is not hunger there is no thirst no parching heat no corruption no lacke no sorrowe no sadnesse Make haste thither where you may liue for euer Ide devtil agen poen For if you so loue this miserable and transitorie life wherein you liue with such labour and wherein by running trauelling sweating breathing thou scarce get things necessary for the body how much more ought you to loue the life euerlasting where you shall sustaine no labour where alwaies is great quietnes great felicitie happy libertie happy blessednesse where shal be fulfilled that the Lorde spake in the Gospell Men shall be like the Angels And that the iust shall shine c. Temporall life compared with eternall life Greg. in homil is rather to be called death then life For the daily fainting of corruption what is it els but a certaine long continuance