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A29821 A description of an annuall world, or, Briefe meditiations upon all the holy-daies in the yeere with certaine briefe poeticall meditations of the day in generall and all the daies in the weeke / by E.B. Browne, Edward. 1641 (1641) Wing B5102; ESTC R6201 99,735 342

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shadowed the whole Iland So these Lawes were but the shadowes of good things to come as Saint Paul sai●h They were all under a cloud but now the vaile is taken away the partition wall is broken The Sun appeares the shadowes vanish and saving knowledge is apparent to all Nations in the world that doe not wilfully shut their eyes against that light Thirdly the Moone is called Phoebe to signifie as I conceive that all the splendor and brightnesse she hath it is from the Sun So these legall Ceremonies came from the Son of righteousnesse the wisdome of the Father God Almighty commanded instituted and ordained them It also shewes that they are true light though dim and darke And last of all the Moone is called Diana the Goddesse of Chastitie to shew her simplicity purity so likewise these ceremonies in themselves were harmlesse and undefiled but may bee abused as they are used Having taken a view of the Metaphor see it in the thing it selfe Circumcision is the cutting off the foreskin of mans flesh which in Latine is called Praeputium whereby God would have Abraham and his posterity distinguished from other Nations and therefore was called the signe of the Covenant betweene God and his people which was to bee performed the eight day after the birth of the child and they that refused to be circumcised were to bee out off from the living Gen. 17. The reason of which Law was to signifie that all that is begotten of man is corrupt and must bee mortified Now because Christ as on this day subjected himself to this Law Epiphanius writes that the followers of Ebion and Cerinthus gather from hence that Christians ought to be circumcised because the disciple ought to be as his master is But he confutes them thus Christ was not circumcised as a meere Man as they hold but being God he came downe from heaven by taking the true nature of man and was circumcised that this figure might appeare to have the spirituall effect from him that from thenceforth not figures any more but the truth might be divulged by him and his Disciples Hee was circumcised for many causes First that he might shew the truth of his flesh against the Manichees Secondly that it might appeare that his Humanity was not consubstantiall with his Divinity against Apollinaris Thirdly that he brought it not from heaven against Valentinus Fourthly that he might confirme Circumcision which did serve as a figure of his comming And lastly that the Jew●s might have no excuse left unto them for if he had not been circumcised they might have said they could not receive a Christ uncircumcised Origen saith As we dye with Christ dying and rise with Christ rising so wee are circumcised with Christs Circumcision so that we need not now to be circumcised Beda renders the reason thus Christ was circumcised to commend unto us the vertue of obedience by his owne example and that in compassion he might helpe those that being set under the Law were not able to beare the yoake of the Law and thus hee which came in the similitude of sinfull flesh doth not refuse the remedy whereby sinfull flesh was wont to bee cleansed there being the same remedie against the wound of originall sin in Circumcision which is now in Baptisme for as Athanas saith Nothing else was figured out by Circumcision but the spoiling of the old generation in that part of the body was cut away which was the cause of generation Therefore Christ being without originall sin needed not to be circumcised but onely to commend obedience by his example and to take away the yoke of the Law For our sakes only hee was circumcised in his flesh that we in him might be circumcised in spirit and Cyril saith that Christ was circumcised the eighth day and so rose againe the eighth day and intimat●d unto us the spirituall Circumcision when he said Goe teach all Nations Baptising them c. At the same time he had the Name JESUS imposed upon him which signifieth a Saviour because he is the salvation of the whole world which he prefigured in his Circumcision according to which the Apostle saith Yee are circumcised not with Circumcision m●de with hands ●ut with the Circumcision of Christ Now it is rende●ed by some of the Rabbins that the name of the Messias shall be Jesus for this reason among others that as the name of him who first brought the Iewes out of bondage into the Land of promise was Iesus of Iosuah which is all one so must his name be Iesus that shall the second ●ime deliver them from the bondage wherein they are and restore them to their old and ancient possession of Iewry which is the chiefe benefit they expect by the Messias which is true in a spirituall sense And the expresse name of Iesus was prophesied long before Christ as it is to be seene in the second book of Esdras which though it be not canonicall yet it is allowed for a good book in these words of God the Father Behold the time shall come when the signe shall appear that I have told c. And my son Iesus shall be revealed with these who are with him And after those dayes my sonne Christ shall dye and the earth shall render those that sleepe therein So now having taken a view of the old Law let us look into the new and the rather because this day is called New-yeares-day the beginning of the Iulian yeare And the Sacrament that came in place of the old is called the Sacrament of initiation the beginning or entrance into a holy profession And it is as a most effectuall pledge and witnesse of our renewing and restoring by Christ as it is well set downe in our Common Catechisme in these words For we being by nature borne in sin and the children of wrath are by the meritorious blood of Christ made the children of grace which is lively represented in the element of water for as water purifieth the uncleannesse of the body so saith the Apostle The blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sinne for wee are buried with Christ in Baptisme That is he hath by his death so fully satisfied for our sins that by his mighty power sin is dead in them that lay hold on him by a true and a lively faith which with repentance is required in persons to be baptized for the efficacy of Christs blood signified by the element of water in Baptisme is not only to set before our eyes the expiation and purgation from sinne but also to demonstrate our livelyhood and growth in grace for so saith the Apostle that like as Christ was raised from the dead to the glory of the Father so we also should w●lke in newnesse of life Now here are the great benefits we receive by Christ at our initiation mortification and vivification the casting off the old man and the putting on of the new The death of sinne and the life of
in the Red-sea So as on this day when the viperous brood of papisticall Englishmen for the extirpation of the true Religion and overthrow of all policie of the State had contrived and almost brought to effect their intended bloody monstrous prodigious Powderplot They thinking every thing had beene sure and they to rule the Land as they pleased when the King and Queen Prince and all the Flower of the Nobility the most of the reverend Clergy Prudent Judges and wise Counsellers of the Land should have beene with one fatall blow cut off and blowne into the trembling Aire with a horrible thunderclap in a mist of darknesse and cloud of powder yet even then upon the point of destruction Gods all-discerning Eye by the light of an obscure Letter discovered disclosed and confounded this devillish designe begotten in hell and hatcht at Rome But God be praised this Cockatrice was this day broke in the shell this Brat was smothered in the cradle and this fruit never came to perfection but was cropt in the bud And whereas they thought to have swallowed us up quick when there was none to help in the same place they themselves I mean their limbs were set as signes of wonderment and amazement The particulars of the story be briefly thus When that rare Phenix of blessed memory Queen Elizabeth expired as soone as that glorious Sunne King James of like happy memory arose in this Islands Hemisphere Papists like Locusts swarmed almost in every corner of the Land expecting an alteration or at least a tolleration for their Religion But when they saw their hopes frustrated and being denied the aid and assistance of forren Princes who had made peace with this Land to effect their trayterous combination then most wickedly divelishly and unnaturally they began to complot this damnable designe in manner following In the yeare of our Lord 1603 in the beginning of the said Kings reigne this horrible Treason was first of all contrived and invented by Robert Catesby Esquire as he confessed at his death and took all upon himselfe excusing the rest that they were allured and seduced by him And as he himself related to Thomas Winter and John Wright Gentlemen in these words I have bethought said he of a way at one instant to deliver us from all bonds and without any forreigne helpe to replant againe the Catholick religion which was to blow up the Parliament house with Gunpowder for said hee in that place have they done us all the mischiefe and perchance God hath design'd that place for their punishment This device they all applauded and commended for this said Winter struck at the root and would breed a confusion fit to beget new alternations but they were very fearefull of the miscarrying thereof lest if it should not take effect the scandall would be so great which their Catholick religion should sustaine thereby as not only their enemies but their friends also would with good reason condemne them as Winter himselfe confessed Therefore he went over beyond Sea and acquainted Guido Fawkes therewith who thereupon came into England with him and at the beginning of Easter Terme acquainted Thomas Percy therewith and about the middle of the said Terme they five to wit Catesby Percy Winter Wright and Fawkes met behinde S. Clements Church and in a chamber where no body else was upon a Primer gave to each other an oath for secrecy and in the next roome heard Masse and received the Sacrament thereupon then they went about the Plot and for that purpose Percy hired a house next the Parliament house of Whyniard keeper of the Wardrobe and Fawkes underwent the name of Pe●cyes man calling himselfe Iohnson Catesby provided a house at Lambeth to keep provision of powder wood and other materials for their intended mine which they made ready there and in the night conveyed them by boat to their house by the Parliament to avoid suspition by often comming thither and one Keyes was the keeper of Lambeth house as Fawkes was of the other so having all things thus prepar'd with fit tools baked meats and other necessaries the lesse to need sending abroad begun to make the Mine the eleventh of December 1604. and shortly after took Christopher Wright and Robert Winter Esqu into their fellowship with like oath for secrecy and Fawkes stood as Sentinel to descry any man that came neere to give them warning And as they were a working opportunity was given to hire a seller in which they laid the powder and left the mine Then because they wanted money they took into their fellowship Sir Everard Digby who promised 1500 pounds and Thomas Tresha● who promised 2000 pounds Percy promised all hee could get of the Earle of Northumberlands rents which was about 4000 pounds to provide galloping horses and other provisions so they bought thirty six barrels of Powder which they covered with wood and coales and put them in the said seller All things sorting thus fit for their purpose they had laid the plot thus that Percy should undertake to c●aze upon the Duke of Yorke because of his acquaintance in Court for they thought the Prince would be with his Father at the Parliament and take him into his custody because he with another Gentleman might enter the chamber without suspicion having some dozen others at severall doores to expect his comming and two or three on horseback at the Court gate to receive him he should the blow being given untill which time he should attend the Dukes chamber carry him safe away for they supposed most of the Court would be absent and such as were there not expecting or unprovided for any such matter would not make much resistance For the Lady Elizabeth It were easie to surprize her in the countrey by drawing friends together to a hunting neer the Lord Harringtons And As●by Mr. Catesby's house being not far off was a fit place for preparation Then for money and horses they thought they could provide in any reasonable manner having the Heire apparent and the first knowledge by foure or five daies was ods sufficient Thus while they thought all things sure and safe for their intended enterprise God whose eye sees into the secrets of all mens hearts and knowes their thoughts long before by a strange and miraculous event discovered all this horrible Treason for the Saturday which was but ten daies before the Parliament one of the Lord Mounteagles Footmen was met by an unknown man of a reasonable tall personage and delivered him a Letter charging him to put it into his Lords hand which when the Lord had read could not tell what construction to make of it whether as a foolish Pasquill or as a thing of consequence yet concluded not to keep it secret but presently that night reveald it to the Earl of Salisbury who acquainted three other of the Privie Councell therewith and they upon mature advice among themselves wondered at the strange contents thereof would not make too
such like should all have been comprehended under that fearfull Chaos and so the Earth as it were opened should have sent forth such sulphur'd smoke furious flames and fearfull thunder as should by their diabolicall doomesday have destroyed and defaced in the twinkling of an eye not only our then living Princes and people but even our insensible Monuments reserved for future ages And so not only we but the memory of us and ours should have beene thus extinguished in an instant O Lord what wonderfull distractions and dismall confusion would have beene then in the Land when they who alone could set order in such a time were all on the sudden swept away when the blame of so horrible a Massacre should have beene laid upon the most zealous professors of the truth when the Popes Buls should have been fixed upon the Gates of our chiefest Cities exposing the lives and estates of all that had not the mark of the Beast in their forehead to spoile ruine and destruction How would Atheists Papists Banckrupts and all kind of male-contents have made havock of all things how would they have triumphed in the downefall and danced in the ashes of the Church and Common-wealth How soone would they have turned this most flourishing Island into a desert Our ancient River the river Thames into the dead Sea our land into Acheldama a field of blood our strongest Towers and most magnificent buildings into a Babel of confusion our chiefe Cities into Golgotha's places of dead mens sculs Cursed bee the wrath of all traiterous Papists for it was fierce and their rage for it was cruell nay monstrous and prodigious to cut off the root and all the branches at one blow to remove and overthrow the foundation of Religion and Policy with one lift to offer up the royall stem and the flower of all the Nobility and Gentry the Lords Spirituall and Temporall the Bishops Earles Barons Judges Knights and Burgesses as a Holocaust or whole burnt offering to the Moloch of Rome O let it not be told in Gath nor published in Askalon lest the Heathen and Infidels abhor the name of our Nation that bred up such Vipers or blaspheme the holy profession of Christians for their sakes Or if the report of such a crying or rather thundring sinne cannot but be heard to the uttermost parts of the Earth let the authors and actors be descried to be no true beleevers but Hereticks and Miscreants no servants of Christ but factors for Antichrist and let the Turks Mores and Indians and all Pagans together with seduced Papists in the world know that thou O Lord whom we worship in spirit and truth didst miraculously detect and graciously prevent this bloody design intrapping the wicked devisers in the work of their own hands and taking the Incendiary in his own traine The waters saw thee O God the waters saw and swelled against the proud Spanish Fleet the winds saw thee O God the windes saw thee and furiously blustered at it and both windes and Seas obeyed thee in dissipating and overwhelming it in the narrow Seas And now the fire and Powder saw thee O God and it flew in the eyes and faces of them that would have put out all the eyes of this Island and defaced the whole beauty of this Kingdome for ever Death received the word and destruction observed Law confusion it selfe kept order in blowing up their estates and carrying up their quarters and fixing them for a terror to all Iesuited traitors over that house and in the very place which they would have with Gunpowder sent up all the principall Members of our body Politique every eye may now see that dreadfull judgement denounced in thy Word fallen upon the eyes that waited for the destruction of our Church and Commonwealth The young Ravens of the valley peck at them and the fowles of heaven have eaten them Thus hast thou hitherto fought for thine anointed and thy dearest Spouse and thou art still the same God with whom there are Issues even out of death it selfe Wherefore we beseech thee set our affiance in Thee and fashion our love more and more unto thee imprint the memory of this wonderfull deliverance in our hearts and the hearts of our seed with the point of a Diamond that the children that are yet unborn may in succeeding ages praise thee for it Give us a sight and sence of our crimson and skarlet sinnes that brought us so n●ere even to the brink of so bloody a destruction and utter desolation and open the eyes of the Seens of Israel that they may in this our day looke to those things that belong to our peace and prevent the danger and hinder the growth of that Romish weed which if it be not cut off by the execution of wholesome lawes in that kinde provided in time will overrunne the Garden of thy Spouse and destroy all her pleasant plants and flowers Stir them up seriously to consider that though the match by thy providence be taken out of the hand of the Traitors that the danger is not yet past but that they must follow the traine and search the lowest and darkest corners of the Vault and dig into the Barrels of Powder and finding that it was digged out of the rock and foundation of the Iesuits Trent faith that they ought to bend all their forces and by armes and lawes suppresse it and keepe out the grand enemy of the Truth and our peace that he never get footing in this Kingdome Let no such mysts of faire glosses and pretences be cast before their eyes but that they may cleerly see that the Bishop of Rome is the Engineer of these workes Iesuiticall doctrines and perswasions are the traine disloyall hearts the Vaults seditious councels practises the Powder and idolatrous blinde zeale is the fire that hath heretofore and is alwayes ready to set all Kingdomes and States professing the truth of the Gospell in a combustion Discover O Lord more and more the man of sin and make him seeme as odious to us as he is abominable in thy sight Alter their temper or spew them out of this kingdome who are neither hot nor cold among us O let the joyfull Mattens on our fifth of November and the dolefull even-song on theirs convince all enemies of the truth that thou mightily supportest the frame and fabrick of our Sion but hast pulled downe the floore and wilt in due time the wals of their Babylon So let thine enemies perish O Lord but let them that love thee be as the Bunne that goeth forth in his full strength Amen A description of the Aequator Or A Meditation on the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary AS opposite to the foregoing Rainbow you may behold the Aequinoctiall which I have placed as in the North side of this Court. Now the Reasons why I name this dayes commemoration a description of the Aequator are first because as the Aequator or Aequinoctiall is a line drawne in
my teares to wash those thy wounds that bled for my sinnes and in a lively faith to touch the print of thy na●les and thrust my finger into the hole of thy side thereby to take reall and corporall possession of thee that I may with Thomas truly call thee My Lord and my God my dread and my love my surety and my ransome my sacrifice and my Priest my Advocate my Iudge my desire and my contentment the life of my hope here and the hope of my life hereafter Before I was thine for thy hands made and fashioned mee but sith thou hast offered thy selfe to be my pledge and thy blood for my ransome thou art truly mine My Lord and my God O let the speare which ran thee thorow fasten my heart to thy crosse let the nailes which printed thy flesh imprint thy love in my soule Let the thornes which pricked thy temples not suffer the tēples of my head to take any rest in sin let the vineger which was given thee melt my adamantine heart into sorrow let the Spunge which was offered thee on the Crosse wipe out all my debts out of thy fathers tables Let others go on forward if they please I will stay still at thy crosse and take no other lesson For I desire no other Pulpit then that tree no other Preacher then thy crucified body no other text then thy death and passion no other parts then thy wounds no other amplification then thy extension no other notes then thy marks no other points then thy nailes no other booke then thy opened side The first Adam did eat the fruit of the forbidden tree Therefore thou the second Adam hangedst upon a tree By his fall all mankinde was so sorely wounded that the whole head was sicke and the whole heart faint from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot there was nothing but wounds and bruises and sores full of corruption therefore thy whole head was pained that whole heart wounded from the sole of thy foot which was gored with nailes to the crowne of thy head which was pricked with thornes there was nothing but cuts and stripes and markes and scars and sores and wounds in thy whole body Because our heads plotted and devised wickednesse on thy head was platted a crowne of thornes Because our eyes burned with lust thy eyes were bedewed with teares because wee belched out blasphemies against thy father thy face was spitted upon because our bodies have beene stretched wantonly upon our soft beds thy body was stretched upon the hard crosse O Lord our eares have offended thee by listning to wanton musick prophane speeches and songs therefore thou sufferedst in thine eares by hearing scoffes and blasphemous taunts we have offended in our smell by luxurious perfumes sweet odours therefore thou sufferedst in thy smell by the stench of Golgotha our taste hath offended in gluttony and drunkennesse therefore thou sufferedst in thy taste by gall and vineger because our feet were swift to shed blood thy feet were nailed to the crosse because our hands were defiled thy hands were bathed in blood Because all parts of our bodies offended thou wast punished in all parts In thy temples with thornes on thy cheeks with buffets in thy joynts with straines in thy flesh with stripes Lastly because our hearts most grievously offended in unchaste malicious covetous ambitious thoughts desires and affections and piercing our selves with worldly cares therefore thou wast most grievously pained in thy heart which was run through with a speare If all the sufferings of Martyrs since the world began were put in one skale and thine in the other thy passion would beare them all downe for thou barest the full weight of thy Fathers heaviest hand Never were there sufferings like thy sufferings because never such a sufferer the torments being infinitely improved by the bearer Never sweat like thy sweat because never any had a burthen like thine Never teares like thy teares because shed for them who thirsted for thy blood Never torments like thy torments because never fl●sh so pure and tender as thy flesh Never horror like thy horror being forsaken of thy father because never love like thy love of him nor sorow like thine because never sense and apprehension like thy sense and apprehension of the infinite displeasure of thy father for the sins of mākinde O my most bountifull Redeemer who bestowedst largely and wast bestowed liberally for me It concerneth mee to know how much I stood thee in for how should I estimate thy love if I cannot cast the totall of thy debt thou didst discharge for me But no heart can conceive what sorrow thou conceivedst no tongue can expresse what griefe thou didst expresse by thy bloody teares and these thy strong cryes when thou complain'dst that thy soule was heavie unto death and prayedst thy Father if it were possible to let this cup passe from thee I am appaled at thine agony I am astonished at thy feare I am amazed it thy patience I am ravished at thy love My heart riseth my veines swell my blood boyles within me against thy persecutors If it were in my power I would put them all to millions of torments I would inflict a thousand deaths upon Iudas that betrayed thee and Pilate that condemned thee and the envious Scribes and Pharisees that laid snares for thee and the perjured witnesses that gave false evidence against thee and that execrable rout that preferred a murtherer before thee the barbarous souldiers that spit upon thee and buffeted thee and the bloody executioners of the Iew●sh malice and Roman cruelty that banged nayled and goared thee But when I dive into thy bloody passion I finde my selfe as deepe in thy blood-shedding as they They were in that but instruments but I by my sins was a principall in the death of thee the Lord of life My sinnes by their tongues and hands did all this villany and outrage upon thee Their nailes and speares pierced but thy flesh but my sinnes pierced thy very soule My sins my sins O Lord by their hands crucified thee wherefore I condemne mine eyes to continuall teares my heart to perpetuall sighes and my thoughts to everlasting pensivenesse What shall I do to wash away the guilt of thy blood which alone can take away the guilt of my sins verily I should be utterly swallowed up in this gulfe but that the price of thy blood hath satisfied as for all other sinnes so for the guilt of spilling it selfe And now my anger and feare and trouble and anguish are all turned into joy and comfort and love and admiration of the infinite wisdome of thy Father in providing such a remedy and his justice in requiring such a satisfaction but most of all for all thine infinite love making so full a payment of the infinite debt of my sins What can I doe what can I suffer enough for thee gracious God to all the rest of thy blessings spirituall
nay of immortalitie if otherwise it turneth into deadly poyson for hee that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himselfe not discerning th● Lords body Now the only reason why I do compare the meritorious action of our blessed Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus on this day to Jupiter who as the Poets feine him was Lord of Heaven and Earth is for that as he overcame the malicious and revengefull Titan and all those monstrous and cruell Giants his sonnes called the Titanes and victoriously triumphed over thē so likewise Christ the Lord of glory and King of Kings as on this day being then the fifth of Aprill and first day of the Jewish weeke having overcome the dreadfull and spitefull Serpent the old Dragon in the Revelation according as it was prophesied of him Gen. 3. 15. and all those fiends that follow him sinne death and hell according to another prophesie in Hosea and having by his divine power raised himself from death to life as David long agoe foretold that God would not leave his soule in hell nor suffer his holy one to see corruption but that according to another prophesie of Hosea in the person of the children of Israel After two dayes he will revive in the third day raise up that we may live in his sight which is the same with the Sybils in these words He shall end the necessity of death by three dayes sleepe and then returning from death to life againe he shall be the first that shall shew the beginning of the resurrection to his chosen for that by conquering death he shall bring us life And last of all having according to his own promise which he oft times made to his Disciples That as Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the whales belly so should he be three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth destroy this Temple and in three dayes I will raise it up are his owne words in another place meaning the temple of his body And that the Sonne of man shall be delivered into the hands of men and they shall kill him but the third day he shall rise again in another place fast bound the Dragon in the bottomelesse pit and taking away the sting of death which is sinne gloriously triumphed over the enemies of mans salvation and rising out of the Sepulchre of death confounded the souldiers that were his guard with amazement caused the earth to quake and the Angels of God to descend from heaven to attend upon his triumphs did forty dayes walke upon the earth in this triumphant manner and made twelve apparitions to his Disciples and others The first was to Mary Magdalen alone Iohn 10. 14. The second to all the women together as they returned homewards Matth. 20. 9. The third was to Simon Peter alone about noone 1 Cor. 15. 5. Luke 24. 34. The fourth was in the afternoon to the two Disciples as they went to the Castle of Emaus which was some eight miles from Jerusalem the ones name was Cleophas and brother of Joseph who brought up our Saviour and the other as may be gathered by the circumstance of the story was Luke because he hath set it downe so exactly Luke 24. The fifth was after he returned invisibly from Emaus to Jerusalem where when the doores were all shut and his Disciples were assembled together for feare of the Jewes he came and stood in the midst of them Iohn 20 19. And all these apparitions were in one day which was called the first day of the weeke The sixth apparition was eight dayes after his resurrection being the twelth of Aprill to all his Disciples Thomas being then present and the doores shut That he might make evident that his omnipotency was not tyed to any secondary causes or hindred by the property of any naturall bodies which according to S. Austine was so much the more wonderfull because hee appeared unto them substantially and effectually not as a phantasma or shadow which vanisheth away and is without any corpor●all substance but did eat and drink and suffered his body to be handled by his Disciples The seventh apparition was to Peter Thomas Nathaneel the sons of Zebedeus and other two Disciples as they were fishing upon the shore of Tiberias which stood 36 miles from Ierusalem Northward betweene Bethsaida and Capernaum Iohn 21. The eighth was to the eleven Apostles on Mount Tabor in Galilee The ninth was to more then five hundred brethren at one time as S. Paul witnesseth The tenth was to James the son of Alpheus for he had beene seene before by Iames the son of Zebedeus but the certaine time of these foure last apparitions is not set downe But on the fourteenth day of May which was forty dayes after his resurrection he appeared to all his Apostles Disciples and friends together on Mount Olivet And in their sight with great triumph and joy he ascended into Heaven And last of all after his ascension he appeared to S. Paul as himselfe relates Thus as Luke affirmeth he shewed himselfe alive by many arguments for the space of forty dayes together and reasoned with them of the kingdome of his father Why then should any man mistrust the testimony of these men which saw him ate with him dranke with him touched him and heard him speak and whose entire estate and welfare depended wholly of the certainety thereof For what comfort had it beene or consolation to those men to have devised of themselves those former apparitions what encouragement might they have taken in these dolefull times of desolation and affliction to have had among them the dead body of him on whose only life their universall hope and confidence depended The Scribes and Pharisees being astonished at the sudden news of his rising againe confirmed unto them by their owne souldiers that saw it found no other way to resist the fame thereof but only by saying as their posterity do at this day that his Disciples came by night and stole away his body while the souldiers slept But what likelyhood or possibility can there be in this for first it is evident to all the world that his Apostles themselves who were the heads of all the rest were so dismaied discomforted and dejected at that time as they durst not once goe out of the doore for which cause only those silly women who for their sex esteemed themselves more free from violence presumed alone to visit his Sepulchre which no one man durst doe for feare of the souldiers untill by those women they were informed that the foresaid band of souldiers were terrified and put to flight by Christs resurrection And then how was it likely that men so much amazed and overcome with feare should adventure to steale away a dead body from a guard of souldiers that kept it or if their hearts had served to adventure so great a danger what hope or probability had there beene of successe especially considering the said body lay in
a new Sepulchre of stone shut up locked and fast sealed by the Magistrate how was it possible I say that his Disciples should come thither break up the monument take out his body and carry away the same never after to be seene or found without espiall of some one amongst so many that attended there or if this were possible as in reason it is not yet what profit what pleasure what comfort could they receive hereby We see that these Apostles and Disciples of his who were so abandoned of life and heart in his passion after two dayes only they were so changed as life and death cannot be more contrary for whereas before they kept home in all feare and durst appeare no where except among their owne private friends now they came forth into the streets and common places and avouched with all alacrity and irresistable constancy even in the faces and hearing of their greatest enemies that Jesus was risen from death to life that they had seene him and enjoyed his presence and that for testimony and confirmation hereof they were most ready to spend their lives And could all this proceed onely of a dead body which they had gotten by stealth into their possession Would not rather the presence and sight of such a body so torne mangled and deformed as Jesus body was both upon the Crosse and before have rather dismaid them more than given them any comfort Yes truly And therefore Pilate the Governour considering these circumstances and that it was unlikely that either the body should bee stolne away without privity of the souldiers or if it had been that it should yeeld such life heart consolation and courage to the stealers began to give eare more diligently to the matter and calling to him the souldiers that kept the watch understood by them the whole truth of the accident to wit that in their sight and presence Jesus was risen out of his Sepulchre to life and that at his rising there was so dreadfull an earth-quake with trembling and opening of Sepulchres round about such skriches cries and commotion of all elemēts as they durst not abide longer but ran and told the Jewish Magistrates thereof who being greatly discontented as it seemed gave them money to say that while they were sleeping the body was stolne from them by his Disciples All this wrote Pilate presently to his Lord Tiberius who was then Emperour of Rome And he sent withall the particular examinations and confessions of divers others that had seene and spoken with such as were risen from death at that time and had appeared to many of their acquaintance in Jerusalem assuring them also of the resurrection of Jesus Which information when Tiberius the Emperor had considered hee was greatly moved therewith and proposed to the Senate that Jesus might be admitted among the rest of the Roman Gods offering his owne consent with the priviledge of his supreme royall suffrage to that decree But the Senate in no wise would agree thereunto Whereupon Tiberius being offended gave license to all men to beleeve in Jesus that would and forbid upon paine of death that any officer or other should molest or trouble such as bare good affection zeale or reverence to that Name Thus much testifieth Tertullian against the Gentiles of his owne knowledge who living in Rome a learned man and pleader of causes divers yeares before hee was a Christian which was about 180. yeares after our Saviour Christs Ascension had great abilitie by reason of the honour of his Family learning and place wherein he lived to see and know the Records of the Romans Neither onely divers Gentiles had this opinion of Jesus Resurrection again from death but also sundry Jewes of great credit and wisdome at that time were inforced to beleeve it notwithstanding it pleased not God to give them so much grace as to become Christians This appeareth plainly by the learned Josephus who writing his Story not above forty yeares after Christs Passion tooke occasion to speake of Jesus and of his Disciples And after he had shewed how he was crucified by Pilate at the instance of the Jewes and that for all this his Disciples ceased not to love him still he adjoyneth forthwith these words For this love of his Disciples hee appeared unto them againe the third day when he had resumed life unto him Which expresse plaine and resolute words wee may in reason take not as the confession only of Iosephus but as the common judgement opinion and sentence of all the discreet and sober men of that time laid downe and recorded by this Historiographer In whose dayes there were yet many Christians alive that had seene and spoken with Jesus after his Resurrection and infinite Iewes that had heard the same protested by their fathers brethren kinsfolke and friends who had been themselves eye-witnesses thereof And thus much for the story of Christs Resurrection which I conclude with this divine Prayer Glorious Son of Righteousnesse who this morning didst prevent the dawning of the day by sending forth the beames of thy glorified body out of the Pit of darknesse and shadow of death shine upon my soule by the light of this grace Inlighten my dark apprehension of the mysteries of thy Resurrection Inflame my cold affections and revive my heart even deaded with pensive thoughts upon thy bitter passion O how did the surest ground of Faith shake the safest Ancor of hope loosen at the earthquake at thy death What smiting together of knees what wringing of hands what knocking of breasts what fainting of hearts what hanging down of heads were there at giving up of thy ghost when thy head hung down on the Crosse With thee the faith with thee the hope with thee the joy with thee the life of thy dearest Disciples might seeme to expire What should or could the prisoners of death ever expect when they saw him whom they thought to have been their Redeemer the Lord of life arrested by death and kept close prisoner in the grave so long O death how sharp was then thy sting O grave how fearfull was thy seeming Victory But blessed be the Angell which removed the stone and thereby made way that the stone which the builders refused might be preferred to be the head stone in the corner Blessed be the right hand of thy Father who in raising thee out of the grave raised our hope out of the dust for where is our hope Our hope is even in thee O Christ and thy Resurrection Thou art the life and the Resurrection of all that beleeve in thee Death like a Hornet by stinging thee hath lost his sting and now may make a buzzing noise to affright me but can thrust out no sting to hurt me The grave by thy lying in it is turned to a bed and a withdrawing roome to retire my selfe a while to put off this ragged flesh and attire my selfe with roabs of glory Now dare I insult over Death and Hell since
of Christ that he was suffred to leane on Christs bosome when he was at Supper He his brother and Peter were permitted to see Christs Transfiguration on Mount Tabor and they three were taken from the rest to behold his Agony in the Garden Wherefore the Mother of John dreaming that Christ should bee a temporall King presuming so much upon the love which shee saw in Christ towards her children boldly asked That they might have the greatest honour viz. one to sit at the right hand and the other at the left in his Kingdome Yet though this is noted by Saint Matthew to be the Mothers desire Saint Marke relating the same story Chap. 10. 35. saith That it was the desire of Iames and Iohn for which the other Disciples disdained them two to shew that it was their ambition to solicite their Mother to make such a petition which Gospell though it touched Saint Iohn who then lived and had the perusall thereof never denyed it nor took it il but approved that the other two Evangelists to be true so sincere simple and without all art of flattery or rhetorical amplification was all their writings that they do not spare Christ himselfe whom they adore and acknowledge to bee their God and Saviour but shew the infirmities of his flesh as he was a man as his hunger and thirst his being weary and how hee wept his passions of feare anger love c. therefore much lesse would they favour the Apostles or themselves And last of all Christ upon the Crosse to expresse the great love that hee bare this Apostle called the blessed Virgin his Mother and him her sonne And from that day to her death she lived with him Presently after the feast of Pentecost when hee with the rest had received the holy Ghost he with Peter was cast into prison for healing the cripple Acts 4. And a while after he with Peter was sent by the Apostles to preach the Word of God in Samaria Act. 8. Foure yeares after the death of the Virgin Mary he was present at the Apostolicall Councell in Jerusalem Now Iames his brother who was called the elder was beheaded two yeares before for this Councell was celebrated in the presence of Iames the younger Peter Iohn Paul and Barnabas c. about sixteen yeares after the Resurrection of Christ and fourteen after the Conversion of Paul Gal. 2. Act. 15. After the death of Paul he governed the Churches of Asia minor where he wrote his Gospell And in the 86. year of his age being cast into a vessell of boyling oyle and comming out unhurt by the command of Domitian the Emperour he was banished into the I le of Pathmos where he wrote his Revelation to the seven Churches in Asia It is related of him that hee turned certain peeces of wood into gold and stones by the sea side into Margrits to satisfie the desire of two whom he perswaded to renounce their riches and after they repenting that for worldly treasure they had lost heaven changed them into the same substance againe That he raised up a widow and a young man from death to life That he drunke poyson and it hurt him not and raised up two to life which had drunk the same before and that he called a young man to repentance that was captaine of theeves After the death of Domitian he came to Ephesus wh●re as Saint Austin relates he caused his grave to be made and in the presence of divers went in alive and being no sooner in and to their seeming dead they covered him which kind of Rest saith he was rather tearmed a sleepe than death for that the earth of the grave bubbleth or boyleth up after the manner of a Well by reason of John resting therein and breathing a signe of his slumbering therein And thus he dyed when hee was as some relate an hundred and twenty years old others say ninety nine and some ninetie one the truth of all which I leave to the dilig●nt search of the learned and conclude with the prayer for the day saying Mercifull Lord I beseech thee to cast the bright beames of light upon thy Church that it being lightned by the doctrine of thy blessed Apostle and Evangelist Saint Iohn may attaine to thy everlasting Gifts through Jesus Christ my Lord Amen Saint Peters day HAving made a briefe relation of the lives and deaths of the foure Evangelists who writ the Gospell of our Lord and Saviour Now I should set forth the glorious lustre of those Stars which were equall and some before them in the order of Apostleship The first in order is Simon whose surname was Peter the son of Iona of Bethsaida in Galilee The order of his precedency is noted by three Evangelists in four places where all the Apostles are nominated viz. Matth. 10. Mark 3. Luke 6. and Act. 1. But whether he were the first that was called to be an Apostle or no I cannot certainly determine for though Saint Matthew and Marke make relation that hee with his brother Andrew were first called yet Saint Iohn affirmes that two of Iohn's disciples followed Christ of which one was Andrew who went and told his brother Simon that he had found the Messias But whether he were first or second that was called to the Apostleship I leave to the learned The Evangelists make more mention of him than of any one Apostle besides as first they shew that Christ comming to his house healed his wives mother of a fever Then they shew how ready he was to walke on the sea at the command of Christ and yet because of a little tempest his strong courage failed him and he ready to sincke Then againe his noble confession that hee made of Christ for which Christ so highly commended him but presently after they shew his carnall feare for which Christ checked him Then they shew Christs love to him in making choise of him and the two sonnes of Zebedeus to be spectators of his glorious transfiguration and bitter agony in the Garden and in the first they say hee spake hee knew not what being overcome with joy and in the second they shew his carelesnesse for which Christ checked him by name because hee could not watch one houre Then they shew how inquisitive he was to aske questions how oft shall I forgive my brother in one place dost thou wash my feet in another and what shall this man doe in a third c. And last of al before his Passiō they declare his strong resolution Though all men fo●sake thee yet will not I. And yet presently after they shew how basely hee denied his Lord Christ All the particular relations that the Evangelists make of this Apostle are so many that it would make a little volume to make rehear●all of them And I have intended brevit● Therefore will I make a short story of his life after the Passion of Christ as it is related in the Acts and other Authors After the