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A04985 Sermons vvith some religious and diuine meditations. By the Right Reuerend Father in God, Arthure Lake, late Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells. Whereunto is prefixed by way of preface, a short view of the life and vertues of the author Lake, Arthur, 1569-1626. 1629 (1629) STC 15134; ESTC S113140 1,181,342 1,122

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What had become of his merit Finally how could his Kingdome subsist without this Resurrection when could he haue receiued the keyes of Death and of Hell made all knees bowe to him in heauen earth and vnder the earth been inuested with absolute power if hee had not risen from the dead He had neuer been honoured as a King The grace then of Edification argues his Resurrection And so doth the grace of Adoption also yea that former proues onely the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but this the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereof that resolues strongly that it must be so but this why it must so be for the Resurrection is not debitum carnis but sanctitatis it cannot be challenged by flesh but by holy flesh God will not suffer his Holy one to see corruption Psal 16. The Prince of this world came and had nothing in Christ Iohn 14. therefore it was impossible that he should be detained of the sorrowes of death Holinesse and Happinesse are inseparable as in God so in Christ the latter may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bee for a time suspended but because of the former they could not be long seuered But the name of Christ doth not onely note the Truth but the Condition also of his Resurrection for it must bee such a Resurrection as doth answer his double vnction First that of Edification for it must answer the Prophesies Bruise the Serpents head Gen. 3. be the death of death Osea 13. yea by death ouercome him that had the power of death which is the Diuell Hebr. 2. It did so for he led captiuity captiue Ephes 4. It must answer the Priesthood there must neede no more sacrifice for sinne with that which he hath offered he must enter Heauen and finde eternall redemption He did so for hee sits at the right hand of God for euer to make intercession for vs. Finally it must answer his Kingdome and he must raigne as Lord of lords he must haue the Key of Dauid shut and no man open open and no man shut He doth so in that state he walketh in the midst of the golden Candlestickes Reuel 1. cap. 19. These bee things wherein his Resurrection is answerable to his first vnction But it must also be answerable to his second Though we haue known Christ after the flesh yet we must now know him so no more all mortalitie and misery did end at his Resurrection For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb de laud. Constant was not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rursum sursum he not onely rose againe but rose to an heauenly life he brought to light life and immortality Hilar. in Psal 41. Id quod fuit in id quod non fuit surrexit nec amisit originem sed profecit in honorem the same body arose but not in the same state hee retained his nature but added glory to it The Lord shewed him the path of life Psal 16. in whose presence there is fulnesse of ioy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for euermore Therefore when he did eate and drinke after he rose and retaine the prints of the nailes wherewith hee was crucified all this was but dispensatio as the Fathers well obserue it serued onely to settle the Apostles faith as also did the concealing of his glory when he appeared vnto them But to conclude this point Non magnum est credere quia Christus mortuus est saith St. Austin It is not hard to beleeue that Christ dyed the Gentiles and Iewes plotters and actors of his death doe boastingly report it Sed fides Christianorum est resurrectio Christi Christians goe beyond them when they beleeue that Christ is risen and risen so The Priests bribed the Souldiers to deny it Euseb the Heathen abolished the Sepulchre that gaue testimony of it the Diuell raised vp euen in the Apostles dayes Heretickes to oppose it but maugre all this truth stands Christ is risen from the dead And thus much of the first subiect I come now to the second That is noted by Dormientes those that slept which is equiualent to Mortui and as manifold in sinne for sinne as it is vnderstood spiritually of the soule and body I need not put you in mind that the tense is no limitation of the subiect for in generall arguments the Holy Ghost indifferently vseth all tenses because all times are as one in God he giueth vs to vnderstand so much in his word But to come to the matter Marke a suddaine change while hee spake of Christ he vseth the word Dead no sooner hath hee taught that Christ is risen but he changeth the Dead into Sleepers Surely then Christs Resurrection made a powerfull alteration it turned death into sleepe In Marc. lib. 〈◊〉 cap. 5. and therefore Mos Christianus obtinet saith Bede It is vsuall in the Christian Dialect in acknowledgement that we beleeue the Resurrection to call the dead Sleepers hence are the places of sepulture called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dorters But are Dormientes all or some Surely the word will reach all mankinde and the Scripture applyes it indifferently vnto all take one place for many Dan. 12. Many of those that sleepe in the dust shall awake which words compared to the like Iohn 5. appeare to bee a description of the generall Resurrection The death then of all is but a sleepe But wee must not mistake this fauours not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it cast not the soule but the body into a sleepe and makes the receptacle thereof not of the soule to bee but a temporarie habitation The Sadducees of all ages thinke otherwise because they would haue it so you may read their dreames in the Booke of the Preacher and of Wisedome together with the refutation of them I will say no more to them but what this word warrants me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is none though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there bee their soules and bodies are to continue by Gods ordinance immortally mortall and God will vnite them againe neyther part shall cease to bee because neyther part shall cease to suffer The body shall not As the suggestions and actions of sinne were ministred and acted by it so the vengeance of sinne shall be endured therein And for the soule it is disquieted euen with the sleepe of the body while that rots the soule forecasts what racks what tortures are prepared for it and this hath it for an accessorie to its owne paine Sleepe then in this sense belongs to the wicked But in my Text by those that slept are meant the faithfull It is of them onely that this Chapter intreats 1 Thes 4. of those that sleepe in Christ their death is compared vnto a quiet a sweet sleepe because whereas in this life they are subiect to the Crosse impos'd or voluntary mortification in death they rest from their labours and sleepe without any terrours of euill so that this
the houre of the Crosse was not yet come Put Houre and Crosse together and then this word will yeeld another note which is that though the time of the Crosse be bitter yet it is but short the story of the Gospell shewes that it was quickly past ouer within the space of a day was all the bitternesse thereof ouercome And as the Crosse of Christ so that of Christians is not lasting St. Paul calleth them momentany afflictions 2. Cor. 5. King Dauid telleth vs that heauinesse may endure for a night but ioy will come in the morning Psal 30. and that the rod of the wicked shall not rest vpon the lot of the righteous Psal 125. But enough of the Time wee shall insist longer vpon the Cup and therein behold the nature of the Crosse Here then are two words Calix and Iste a Cup and this Cup. Touching the Cup I will not trouble you with the diuers coniectures concerning the originall of this phrase I will deliuer that which is fairely grounded on the Scripture Esay 63.8 Reuel 19. Psal 75.8 Obserue then that Gods wrath is compared to a wine-presse and the effects of that wrath vnto the wine strained out in the Psalme it is called red wine elsewhere deadly wine wine that is able to make men drunke sicke mad not corporally but mentally it surchargeth their wits and bereaueth them of all heart that drinke it This wine of Gods wrath is meant by the Cup. But it noteth withall that as calamities come from God so hee apportions to euery man his part hee giueth him to drinke as much as hee thinketh fit Of this Cup you may reade in the 25. of Ieremy where the Prophet is willed to send it from Nation to Nation and the contents of each of their Cups or rather draughts out of the Cup are foretold by that Prophet and by others in whom wee read their seuerall desolations But wee haue not now to doe with the Cup in generall but with this Cup the Cup whereof Christ was to drinke which was indeede an extraordinary Cup you will confesse it if I doe but touch at the quantity and quality of the liquor Touching the Quantity the Fathers obserue two kindes of ingredients the Principall and the Accessory The Principall are Malum Culpae and Malum Poenae Sinne and Woe the Sinne of Adam a ranke roote from whence haue sprung many branches all full laden with euill fruit and that of diuers kindes of diuers growths These Sinnes with their plenty and variety take vp a great roome in the Cup. And what Sinne doth not fill Woe may for Woe is the inseparable companion of Sinne God is offended with it and if God be offended then must the Sinner looke to bee afflicted the affliction due vnto vs is in one word called Death death temporall death eternall the seuering of the soule from the body of both from God and if from God then no lesse from blisse than from grace To say nothing of the Harbingers of corporall death that set forward our mortality and the companions of spirituall death that aggrauate our misery All these ingredients being put into the Cup if yet any thing be wanting the Accessories added vnto these Principals will make full measure I will mention onely two the treason of Iudas and the vnnaturalnesse of the Iewes Of Iudas there is a passionate complaint in one of the Psalmes where he is typed out in Achitophel Had it beene anenemy that had done me this wrong I could haue borne it but it was thou mysamiliar friend with whom I did eate of whom I tooke counsell It is a miserable thing to be betrayed but most miserable to bee betrayed by a friend a Lord by his Seruant a Master by his Disciple Christ by an Apostle Put this then into the Cup. And besides this the vnnaturalnesse of the Iewes Rom. 14. they were Christs kindred according to the flesh and Christ did vouchsafe to be the Minister of the Circumcision he preached his Sermons to them and amongst them did he work his Miracles he termed all the world but dogs in comparison of them and to seeke them whom hee compareth to lost sheepe hee was contonted to come downe from Heauen And see how they reward his kindnesse nothing will satisfie them but his bloud and that spilt in the most painfull in the most shamefull fashion And as if that were not enough they make a blasphemous and desperate prayer that the guilt of it might cleaue to them and theirs certainly this addeth not a little to the Cuppe By this time I thinke we haue measured out a very large draught neither is it possible to conceiue a larger But as the draught is great in regard of the quantity so in regard of the qualitie it was very bitter we must then obserue that this wine of Gods wrath is eyther merum or dilutum sheere or allayed Others that in this world haue had their cups haue had them more or lesse allayed neuer was any mans Crosse without some comfort if he were afflicted in soule hee had some ease in bodie if his honour failed yet his wealth abode or if both failed yet he found some friend to pitie him at lest he had some refreshing of meat or sleepe some way or other was his torture mitigated neuer did any man in this world drinke of this red wine vnmixt but our Sauiour Christ comfort from without hee had none for all forsooke him and he had as little in himselfe his body was tortured from top to toe by the Iewes and his soule was exagitated by the fiends of Hell As for his Godhead though the Hypostaticall vnion was not dissolued yet was the comfortable influence thereof into the manhood suspended for a time By all this put together wee may conclude that it was Vinum merum there was no allay of that bitternesse that was put into the Cup though it were poured in in great abundance Adde hereunto that Christ was not ignorant nor insensible of this great and bitter Cup not to know what we are to doe not to haue sense to feele what we doe is such stupiditie as may not be moued with such a Cup but if the eye of the vnderstanding be cleere to behold it and the heart be tender to feele it then will it moue with a witnesse Now none euer matched our Sauiour Christ in sapientia charitate in a piercing iudgement and a feeling nature and therefore the deeper impression did the apprehension of this Cup make in him I haue a Baptisme saith he Luke 12. wherewith I must be baptized quomodo coarctor and how am I grieued vntill it be past But the Euangelists doe open his sense thereof more distinctly they shew how it affected his head vpon the foretaste he beganne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee amazed how it affected his heart he began 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to droope to faint how it affected all his soule 〈◊〉
we exceed a proportion stinted vnto vs in the vse of the Creatures so they disproportion the harmonie of our bodies that are guiltie of this abuse and God doth in the end separate vs from them because wee for them separated our selues from God And this death we call the giuing vp of the Ghost But after these parts are dissolued there should seize on eyther of them a penall condition On the body for the graue is not only Sheol but also Shacath it doth not onely couetously swallow but digest it also verè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therein death gnaweth vpon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this rotten mouldring house this earthly Tabernacle of ours The Reason of it is because sinne is inherent and this leprous house cannot be purged except it be dissolued dust it is and to dust it must returne againe This is the penall condition of our body And as corruption seazeth on our body so should torments on the soule there is a worme to bite it a fire to scorch it vtter darkenesse to distresse it finally fiends that execute Gods vengeance on it being exiled from the ioyes of Heauen whereunto it was created and adiudged to the paines of hell which it hath deserued This is the penall condition of the soule Of these two penall conditions consists the second death for sinne By that which you haue heard concerning death you may easily ghesse what is Resurrection it is nothing but a recouerie from death for this is an infallible principle What riseth that dyed Resurrection then is as manifold as Death to the double death the Scripture opposeth a double resurrection The first Resurrection is from death in sinne and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nyssen when Grace quickens the soule and the soule is transformed formed into the Image of God the Image of being and doing good which the Scripture cals the Life of God and the partakers thereof new men The second Resurrection is from death for sin whether it be the dissolution or the penall condition Whatsoeuer the Heathen thought it is plaine that after the dissolution there is an habitude in the soule towards the body and a naturall desire againe to inhabit it yea it doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were trauaile with that appetite appetitus non est frustra Rom. 8. such a desire is an euidence of Gods purpose The soule shall againe bee re-vnited to the body But to bee free from the Dissolution is not the vttermost of mans desire he desires also to be free from the Penall condition Non est viuere sed valere vita better these parts neuer meete than not meete to their mutuall comfort and therefore the last branch of the Resurrection is the endlesse vnion of body and soule in beatitudine plenâ securâ in qua nihil concupiscet nihil metuet so throughly so vnchangeably blessed that they shall haue their hearts desire and bee free from all feare of euill I insist no longer hereon because this point must be resumed againe Let vs come on then and apply what hath beene said to the different subiects And here first wee must take for our guide a receiued rule Talia sunt praedicata qualia permittuntur esse à subiectis suis Death and Resurrection must be limited differently according to their different subiects And the first subiect is Christ Death in sinne would not agree with Him it will not stand with the grace of his holy vnction much lesse of his personall vnion he was the Holy one of God Luke 1. yea the Holy of Holies Dan. 9. Adde hereunto that a sinner implies a contradiction to a Mediatour neyther can they both consist in one for such a high Priest it behoued vs to haue that was holy harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners Hebr. 7. therefore could he not dye that death As he could not dye the death in sinne no more could hee vndergoe all the death for sinne hee could not vndergoe either part of the penall condition Not that of the Graue his body saw no corruption and why though it had sinne imputed yet had it none inherent and it is only sinne inherent that subiects vs to that part of death And if his body were free from corruption much more was his soule from torment it left the body to take possession of Heauen purchased and Hell conquered vpon the Crosse therein his meritorious power after conflict brake the knot wherewith the dissolution of body and soule came fast clasped with the penall condition and this he proclaimed in his last speech Iohn 19. Consummatumest the passion is now at a full end There remaines then no part of death for Christ to suffer but onely the dissolution the separation of his soule and body and to that he yeelded himselfe as an Offerer that could not be inforced as a Sufferer When hee had triumphed ouer principalities and powers the fiends of Hell and shewed his murdering crucifiers by the supernaturall Earth-quake and Eclipse how hee could rescue himselfe from death he laid downe his life in testimony of his loue to vs and presented that sacrifice of a sweete smell to God which only was able to redeeme vs. This being the limitation of his death the limitation of his Resurrection must needes be answerable it must be restrained to the re-vnion of his body and soule 〈◊〉 Serm. 1. de Resurrect and it is no more in effect than Quod potestate diuisit potestate copulauit with what power he laid downe his life with the same he tooke it againe Though the soule were seuered from the body yet was the God-head from neither the hypostaticall vnion persisted still his body continued vitae sacrarium Ambros Rom. 1. he declared himselfe mightily to be the Sonne of God by the Resurrection from the dead But farther to open the Resurrection of Christ These words seeme to be a bare assertion and indeed a bare assertion vttered by them that are witnesses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were enough to warrant an Article of Faith But the words imply a manifold proofe and the proofe lyes in the word CHRIST Acts 10. For Christ signifieth Annointed annointed as the Scripture speakes with the Holy Ghost and with power This vnction is with grace and that eyther gratis data or gratum faciens of Edification or Adoption The grace of Edification designed Christ to a threefold office to be a Prophet a Priest and a King and euery one of these implies a proofe of his Resurrection His Prophesie for his Resurrection was a principall argument of that whether you looke vpon the types prefiguring or the words foretelling it he was to make both good or else his Prophesie were liable to exception As the Prophesie so the Priesthood inforceth the Resurrection How could it appeare that the obligation was cancelled the Law fulfilled God pacified sinne purged if hee had not risen from the dead
those few cornes of good seed which I deriued from them At least if their leprosie ouer-spred my whole man yet was it not so deepe rooted or so strongly setled as by my ill diet it hath since beene What then may this house of my body this garment that couereth my Soule expect but to be vsed as the leprous house the leprous garment which in a fretting leaprosie were the garment to bee burnt the house to be plucked downe And indeed as impossible is it for the Iuie that springs and ouer-spreads a wall to be killed without taking in sunder of all the stones and separating them from the morter which knitteth them together as for the natiue sinne wherein I was borne branching it selfe ouer euery part of my body and power of my soule to be purged except I be dissolued my Soule part from my bodie and the parts of my bodie loose that knot wherewith each is linked to the other I doe not then complaine of the Decree it is iust it is necessarie my sinne maketh it iust and that this sinne be dispossest it becomes necessarie necessarie for All and then for me I would yeeld vnto it I would be contented with it blessed Apostle the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken were good I would obey it I would yeeld to death though death be bitter were there not a heauier thing that followeth death more terrible then death it selfe Let me feele Gods hand so I come not into Gods presence into the presence of the Iudge to giue an accompt for my life Blessed Apostle is it not enough that my Soule can no longer enioy her bodie no longer by her bodie enioy those things wherein shee hath placed her soueraigne good that shee can no longer solace her selfe with her mate take comfort in her of-spring eate the fruit of her labours receiue honour from others bestow fauours at pleasure bee an Oracle vnto many and to as many be a terror Blessed Apostle is it not enough that these things faile and I must part with them No thou sayest no when thou hast lodged my bodie in the the Graue thou sufferest not my soule to rest thou callest her to a straight accompt thou tellest her of a Iudgement How vainely haue I beene abused by heathenish prouerbs that told me death ends all and yet all is not at an end When I come to death I must come before my Iudge I must answere the Law the Law must trie my life how well I haue obserued it how answerable my carriage hath beene to it And Lord what a fearefull thing is this When thou blessed Apostle didst reason of these things thou madest Foelix a great man a heathen man to tremble and a greater then Foelix the King of Niniuie did tremble also when hee heard Ionas And yet how little did they know thy Law How much did their ignorance excuse their transgression thereof And what then will become of me that know so much and haue so little to plead Can I chuse but tremble O Lord while I liue I often heare of thy Law and the accompt that must be giuen thereof but I neuer had so much grace as Foelix or the King of Niniuie no not when I read the storie of Foelix and the King of Niniuie Neither of them onely but of good King Iosias also whose heart did melt at the reading of thy Law when he saw how vnanswerable the liues of his people were thereto And what wonder that Iosias heart did melt when Moses himselfe did quake at the receiuing of the Law Surely these all felt the terror of the Iudgement they knew what it was to come before their Iudge And I the more in my life I was senslesse the more sensible shall I bee hereof in my death vnexpected euils afflict the more especially if they bee great their impression must needs be deepe But bee I affected neuer so wofully I must appeare I must be tried hee that gaue the Law will inquire into the obseruance of his Law While we liue many couer our faults which when wee are dead they will not sticke to amplifie and he that liuing goeth for a Saint after his death is traduced as a diuell A heauie Iudgement yet how many vndergoe it But this is their comfort that of this Iudgmēt they haue no sense how their name fareth in this world in death they know not But against the other Iudgement there is no shelter all the stormes of it must light vpon vs in our owne persons we must answere for our selues and we are not so well knowne to our selues as to him that sifteth vs. Yet so much we know that we shall trauerse no Indictment we shal plead guiltie to euery Bill our owne conscience is a true counterpart vnto Gods Booke we shall bee charged with nothing out of the one which we shall not read distinctly in the other To read it were enough for the vttermost confusion for what man knoweth and doth not abhorre himselfe Had we a true looking glasse wherein wee might behold the manifold enormous sinnes of our life neuer could any thing be more vgly neuer would any thing be more abominable neuer were we so much in loue with our selues when we acted sinne as wee shall detest our selues when we see the staines of sinne But detestation and confusion are but the first part of this Iudgement the worme the sting bitter tortures euen before we are sentenced for Hell make vs to be wofull wretches Adde hereunto that which is the hight of shame the depth of paine Were no body priuie to our sinnes but our selues the knowledge of them wil confound vs but when they become knowne to others if they be but men sinners like our selues and therefore more likely to be temperate in their censure the shame groweth double but how manifold then will it be when the Angels shall bee witnesses to it the holy Angels whose puritie will the more illustrate it Nay God himselfe whose Image wee should beare and to whom how vnlike we are his presence wil make most manifest So that our shame will bee out of measure shamefull Our paine will bee no lesse painefull For here in this world the remorse of sinne euen in those that haue not a seared conscience is many wayes delayed in sleepe by feasts with companie many other outward helps but especially the putting farre off the euill day and the weake information that our distracted vnderstanding giueth our Heart and the hardnesse that doth benumme the senses thereof all these more or lesse doe mitigate our paine But after death these lenitiues are withdrawen from vs our eyes will be kept waking our stomacke fasting our friends farre from vs our wits that were wise to doe euill and to doe good had no vnderstanding at all shall then be wise onely to know our euill but good of ours it shall haue none at all to know and our heart was neuer so waxie to be wrought
pleasurably with sinne as it shall bee feeling when it is affected with all kind of woe This is our condition after death and such is the Iudgement where at we must appeare euen the first Iudgement Demie-Atheists though they would not hold an absolute imortalitie of their Soule yet for a time till the day of Resurrection they dreamt their Soules should bee as senslesse as their bodies but it was but the diuels Sophistrie to comfort the wicked with a Soules sleepe from the houre of death vntill the generall Assises of the world as hee did with hope of a generall pardon after some yeares of torment which made Origen to thinke that at length the diuels themselues should be released from paine But blessed Apostle I belieue thee I wil not flatter my self I do not more certainly expect death then I doe looke instantly thereupon to come before my Iudge I know that there is a Iudgement before a Iudgement a priuate before the publike I belieue as truly that euen now Diues burneth in Hell as that Lazarus is in Abrahams bosome and I doe no more doubt that Iudas went to his owne place then that the good thiefe was that day with Christ in Paradise no sooner doth the soule leaue the body but God doth dispose it to rest and paine O euer liuing God vnpartiall Iudge both of quicke and dead thy decree is past vpon my life for my arraignment I am here but a soiournour and yet accomptable for what so euer I doe here Let not this decree be vnknowne passe vnregarded of me if health if prosperitie promise a longer terme a carelesse life let me trie their perswasion by thy infallible word For there shall I learne that heauen and earth shall passe the greater how much more this litle heauen and earth of mine and that thy word onely endureth for euer Yea I see that all things come to an end but thy Commandement is exceeding broad and it is this Commandement that thou hast laid vpon my bodie and laid vpon my Soule a heauie Commandement that sounds nothing but that which is vnsauorie to flesh and bloud Death vnsauorie but Iudgement much more skin for skin and all that euer a man hath hee will giue for his life but life it selfe who would not part with that he might bee free from Iudgement My soule and body are loth to part but much more loth to appeare before thee it is grieuous to forgoe that which I loue but to feele that which I feare is much more grieuous if I die I want what I would haue but if I come to Iudgement then I must indure that which I abhorre death ends the pleasure which I take in life but Iudgement reckoneth for the inordinatnesse thereof And it is a double griefe to be so stripped to bee so tried but what shall I doe Thy word must stand and seeing it must stand let me not doubt let me not neglect let those two be euer before mine eyes let me vse this world as if I vsed it not seeing the fashion therof doth passe away and I change faster then it The little world hast thou proposed as a glasse wherin we may behold what will become of the great world both appeare subiect vnto Vanitie thou hast subiected both the frame of both must be dissolued so deepely is sinne rooted in either that nothing can extirpate it but the dissolution of the whole But the case of the greater world is better then that of the little that is dissolued but this must be arraigned also arraigned for it selfe arraigned for the great world also If that haue any euill it hath it from man man infected it and it is dissolued because of man but man for himselfe his owne sinne maketh himselfe and others mortall also good reason that he which hath baned the world so ruined the frame of all Gods creatures should account for it vnto the owner therof If a subiect trespasse against the King or his Image the Law doth challenge him it calleth for an amends and can the King of heauen and earth be wronged in his creatures be wronged in his owne Image and not challenge the offender No Lord there is great reason as for man to die that hath made all things mortall so for man to bee iudged that hath done it by sinne no reason that other things should suffer and he scape nay great reason why the blame of all should bee laid vpon him He deseruedly must be exposed to shame and blush for whatsoeuer himselfe hath deformed and what hee hath made to groane hee must sigh for it The maske must be plucked off where vnder in this life wee hide our selues and our sense must be rectified wherewith in this world wee excuse our selues we that would not iudge our selues must be iudged of the Lord. And his iudgement shall bee without respect of persons This Iudge standeth at the doore his Assizes are proclaimed no sooner are we quickned but wee are informed of death and Iudgement no sooner come we out four mothers wombe but we witnes our knowledge thereof euerie day of ourlife is a Citation day But as it wanteth not a date so it prefixeth not a day euerie one must dye once but the time of his death no man knoweth euerie man must be iudged no man knoweth how soone This vncertainety maketh death and Iudgement more terrible And it should make vs more watchfull watchfull for that which we are sure will come but when it will come wee are vnsure when it commeth it is fearefull but it commeth suddainely Did it concerne my temporall state I would take great care if the good-man of the house knew when the theife would come he would surely watch and not suffer his house to bee surprised And care wee more for our goods then for our selues For that which may be repaired then for that which being past hath no recouerie So senslesse are we so vsually are we ouer-taken Let it not be so with me O Lord let me euer meditate vpon Death and let me euer be prouided for Iudgement Before Sicknesse prouide Physicke and Righteousnesse before Iudgement A Meditation vpon Philippians 1. VERSE 21. Christ is to me life and death is to mee aduantage I Haue beene at Mount Sinai I haue heard the thunder I haue seene the lightning I haue felt the shaking thereof it hath put mee in mind of my mortalitie at it I haue learned what it is to bee arraigned before my Iudge Were there no other Hill I were in wofull case woe is mee if I haue no succour against death which I cannot auoid against iudgement which is so strict But blessed be God I haue a succour though God bring mee to Sinai in my passage out of Egypt yet is it not his pleasure that I should stay there the Cloud is risen and goeth before me I will vp I will follow it And see it bringeth me to another Hill it resteth me vpon Mount Sion I no sooner
this chastisement seeme not for the present to bee ioyous but grieuous yet afterward it yeildeth the peaceable fruit of righteousnesse vnto them which are exercised thereby See a great gaine in this death by it I which serued God at first only in the law of mind come thereby to serue God also by the same law working in my members Somthing I get by it but not so much as I would for my mortification leaueth too much life in my flesh and the old man is too strong irrecouerably to die by my strokes Therefore what I cannot doe should I not be glad when God is pleased to doe it pleased so to dissolue this bodie of sinne that it may cease from sinning yea be brought to that case that it may be fit for a glorious Resurrection And is not this a great Gaine the happiest seed time that promiseth the best Haruest that euer man can looke for When I die I sowe my bodie in corruption but when I rise I reape the same bodie againe in incorruption when I die I sow my bodie in weaknesse when I rise I reape it againe in power when I die I sow my bodie in dishonour when I rise I reap it againe in honour finally when I die I sowe it a naturall bodie but when I rise I reape it a spirituall And is not this gaine and this is the gaine of death Foolish were that Husbandman that would spare his seed and lose his Haruest but much more foolish were I if I should bee vnwilling to die that know death is the seed of such a Resurrection You see what my bodie gaineth by death my soule gaineth much more the grace I haue doth but set an edge vpon the desire of that I shall haue and hope deferred is the languishing of the soule but a desire accomplished is as a tree of life If I delight to behold Christ in the Looking glasse to heare him in the Riddle of his Word how shall I bee rauished with him when I shall see him face to face and heare him speake without Parables O my soule when thou thinkest hereon canst thou do lesse then break forth into Saint Pauls words I desire to be dissolued and to bee with Christ which is much better for mee It is good I confesse to bee in the Kingdome of Grace but much better to be in the Kingdome of Glorie Suffer mee sweet Iesu to desire the best I know the best should bee the vpshot of my desires I heare King Dauid say O how plentifull is thy goodnes which thou hast laid vp for all them that feare thee and that thou hast prepared for them that trust in thee before the sonnes of men Lord I hunger I thirst for these things to bee satisfied with the fatnesse of thy house I would drinke my fill out of the riuers of thy pleasures And seeing my soule cannot come to these except it come to thee for the good of my soule I desire for a time to bee freed from my bodie that my soule may attaine that blessednesse by which my bodie also in her due time shall be more blessed If my bodie gaine and my soule gaine when death putteth them so asunder how great will the gaine be when after death they shall both conioyne their gaines together and each shall communicate his good vnto the other When death approacheth mee it shall not be accounted either a thiese or a murtherer Let wicked men who haue their portion in this life and beyond this life expect no other good so account of death And well they may for it robbeth them of all that they account good and bereaues them of that which they account life But death cannot deale so with mee for it hath no power ouer my goods and ouer my life I lose nothing but that which I am willing to leaue I will at all times leaue the flesh pots of Egypt to bee fed with Manna and forsake the muddie waters of Nilus to drinke of that water that streamed from the Rocke it shall neuer grieue me to change the food of men for Angels food And for this mortall life why should it bee pretious vnto me that hindreth mee from that which is immortall No let this life die that death may be my entrance into that life that life which is indeed life the life of Saints yea the life of God By death I gaine this life because by death I come to Christ who by grace is my life here and when I die will be my life of glorie The yong mans Meditation vpon Death grounded vpon Wisdome 4. VERSES 7 8 9 10 11. Though the righteous be preuented with death yet shall he bee in rest For honourable age is not that which standeth in length of time nor that is measured by number of yeares But wisdome is the gray haire vnto men and an vnspotted life is old age c. He pleased God and was beloued of him so that liuing amongst sinners he was translated Yea speedily was he taken away lest that wickednesse should alter his vnderstanding or deceit beguile his soule WE would be immortall wee cannot be all sinners are doomed to die yet of a mortall life who doth not desire the longest tearme who would haue his Spring to proue his Autumne and be gathered before he is ripe It is vnpleasing enough to nature that it must bee dissolued but then to bee dissolued when soule and bodie begin each most comfortably to enioy the other must needs be most bitter It is now my case in the quicknesse of my sense must I taste of that potion mine eies must be closed when they doe but begin to iudge of colours and my eares doe but begin to iudge of sounds and they must be shut vp also my pallat hath but tasted and set an edge vpon my desire and I must away and leaue these delicates to others others must enioy whatsoeuer worldly thing I haue and the wormes must enioy me enioy my bodie And for my soule scarce hath it beene initiated with knowledge after which it thirsteth naturally scarce hath it giuen proofe of her vertue wherein it delighteth principally but I am taken from this Schoole wherein I thought to prooue wise from this Theater whereon I hoped to bee exemplarie but vnlearned as I am and vnrenowned I must yeild and my name must be buried with my Coarse What shall I say to all this and against this euill what is my comfort Surely I must calculate mine age a new and iudge better of Gods intent herein Gods Kalender is not like mans a thousand yeares to him are but as one day and one day to him as a thousand yeares Let a wicked man liue a thousand yeares because he is a wicked man his thousand yeares are but a day nay the worst part of a day that is the night for the euening and the morning did make the first day Let a good man liue but a day and because he is good he
is the chiefest and to be vsed Contra Luxuriam which is not the least of those seuen Deaths Heads When we looke vpon the Deluge of Sinne wee find that all the fountaines of the deepe the bottomlesse Pit are broken open and the streames thereof drowne many Soules in perdition yet amongst them there is none more vniuersall none more preualent then is this Sinne of Luxurie Desire you a proofe You shall haue a short but yet a pregnant one Men are turned into Women and Women into Men. Anatomize that Carrion well may you find more certainely you can find nothing worse therein There is nothing worse then this preposterous Vnreasonablenesse and vnreasonable Preposterousnesse Well what then is the Remedie Surely I know none better then that old one practised by the Church and therefore haue I chosen to recommend vnto the World this Penitentiall and shall be glad if any that is bewitch with that pleasing poyson may bee cured hereby This Psalme was occasioned by a wanton Man and Woman and therefore the better fitting to our Wantons of both Sexes and I doubt not but the most monstrous Changeling if hee meditate sadly hereon may bee brought to change againe but for and to the better I meane hee may resolue to turne from his Sinne and turne vnto God To worke this shal be my endeauour and to this end will I bend the Exposition of this Psalme Let vs come then to it There are two meanes of Instruction Rules and Examples a Rule is more apt to make a man wise but to make a man good there is much more power in an Example an Example is not onely a quicker but also a more quickning course Of Examples some are onely reported some are represented also the force of a Report is very great yet comes it far short of that which proceedes from a Representation for wee are much more affected with that which wee see then that which we heare this was the ground of instituting Tragedies and Commedies or to speake more to our purpose of those seuere Penitentiall Formes practised in the Primitiue Church Now the Doctrine of Repentance is in this Penitentiall deliuered not in a Rule but in an Example in an Example not reported but represented Ambrose therefore a Latine Father cals it Monumentum A liuing Portraiture of a Penitent Chrysosome a Greeke Father cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A speaking Image it doth so eye vs that it cannot but affect vs affect vs not Sensually as dead Pictures doe but Morally as a reflecting Example that transformes into it selfe all those that doe discreetly behold it Certainly if any this kind of Instruction will worke vs and worke Repentance into vs. Touching then this Vertue of Repentance wee may learne heare Whence it springs and What it is The Fountaine of it is opened in the Title but the Nature of it is vnfolded in the whole Body of the Psalme The Title doth set before vs a Person and his State the Person is Dauid for this is a Psalme of Dauid But the words must bee resolued into more then appeare for Dauidis is as much as a Dauide and de Dauide Dauid was the Author and Dauid is the Argument of it with his owne Pensil doth he draw this Picture of himselfe He represents Himselfe two wayes Cadentem Resurgentem in the State of a Sinner and the state of a Penitent In the state of a Sinner he confesseth that he went went into Bath sheba in the state of a Penitent in the other words Where you haue the Meanes by which he was brought to Repentance and the Successe of those Meanes The Meanes are Nathan the Prophet Nathan King Dauids subiect but as a Prophet he was the Embassador of God the King of Heauen had his Leidger with that King on Earth Neither doth the holy Ghost only mention the Meanes but giues vs also to vnderstand the needefulnesse and the powerfulnesse thereof the needefulnesse in the word Venit Nathan came to Dauid Dauid neuer sought to Nathan we are as carelesse to returne as wee are gracelesse to goe from God it is needefull therefore that God seeke vs that wee may seeke to him otherwise we will not nay we cannot The Meanes is no lesse powerfull then needfull that is intimated by After that that is after he had committed his Sinne. Sinne doth not only wound to death but disenable also to rise there from for the holy Spirit of Discipline will flie deceipt Wisd 1.5 will not abide when vnrighteousnesse commeth That which we cannot doe lying in the dregs of sinne God doth supplie by the Ministrie of his Word the Ministerie of his Word is the Meanes to worke Repentance Reade this truth in the Successe of those Meanes The Successe was King Dauids speedie and sollemne Conuersion speedie no sooner did Nathan reproue him but he gaue glorie vnto God he acknowledged his sinne and penned this Psalme Neither was his Conuersion only speedie but solemne also hee deliuered this Psalme to the chiefe Musician he would haue it published in the Church the Church to be a witnesse vnto his Conuersion I haue broken vp the Title and poynted out the Particulars to the fuller vnfolding whereof let vs now so listen that we may by Gods grace be led onward some steps in our owne Repentance The first thing that offers it selfe is the Person One Person is both Authour and Argument of this Psalme and when we consider the Argument we may wounder at the Author wounder that there should bee found a man so humble as to record his owne so notable defects But yet such Ingenuitie though neuer so distastfull to flesh and blood hath beene found in manie worthie Children of God especially in those that haue beene chosen to be Penmen of the Scripture they report as sincerely their owne faults as their vertues no lesse Gods Reproofe of them then his Fauours towards them such Ingenuity wee finde here in King Dauid But it was not only in King Dauid Moses went herein before him so did Samuel also Saint Mathew followeth them so did Saint Paule none of these spared themselues neither were they ashamed to record the errors of their life to record them I say which is much more then only to acknowledge them though the acknowledgement be publike They obserue not amisse who herehence gather That the Scriptures are diuine because the Penmen thereof are so vnpartiall such dealing is vnlikelie to come from flesh and blood whereupon it followeth well that they wrote as they were moued by the Holy Ghost 1. Pet. 1.22 Our lesson is the Humilitie of a Publican sauoureth much more of Gods Spirit then the Pride of a Pharisee and if wee desire either to resemble these worthies in our Persons or that our words should bee conformable to the Holy Canon wee must indite no lesse Penetentials then Panegyricks and make Remembrances of our Sinnes aswell as of our Vertues Certainelie
with an old disease a disease which hee brought from his Parents loines and cannot be quiet except he be eased of that except that be healed also And our euill Deeds when wee bethinke our selues of them wil discouer their fountaine which is our euill nature neither haue we sufficiently searched into our selues vntill wee finde the euill Tree that beareth euill fruite the root of bitternes that fructifieth in all our euill Deeds This we must obserue by the way as a fit preface shewing the reason of this branch of King Dauids Confession Let vs now come closer to the Text and see what this sinne is which he acknowledged and that is a Natiue Corruption Iniquitie wherein man is shapen Sinne wherein his Mother conceiues him That you may the better conceiue this I must first remember you of certaine grounded truthes which giue light hereunto without which it cannot be easily conceiued The first is that in the Creation God put this difference betweene Angels and Men that Angels had their seuerall Creations not so Men but as Saint Paul teacheth Acts 17.26 God of one blood made all the nations of men that were vpon all the face of the whole earth he would haue them all propagated from one Secondly as all mankind is deriued from One so with that One God was pleased to enter into a couenant for All and All were liable vnto and to communicate in that which befell that One this is cleare in the Comparison which Saint Paul maketh betweene the First and Second Adam Rom. 5. Thirdly the first Adam failed in his obedience so forfeited that which was couenanted on Gods part was subiect vnto that which was deserued on his owne no man can doubt of this that reades the third of Genesis Fourthly by the tenour of the Couenant man failing wrapt all his Posterity in his transgression and condemnation Rom. 5.12 the Apostle is cleare for this also By one man Sin entred into the world and death by Sin so that by the Fall all mankind becomes first guiltie then punishable both these Euils doth Adam communicate vnto his Posteritie I must open the latter branch a little farther because it is most proper to my Text. The punishment then of Adams Guilt was the losse of Holinesse and Happinesse Holinesse wherein and Happinesse whereunto hee was created in the losse of Holines stands so much of Original sin as my Text doth occasion me to speake of The Fathers vse to expresse it by the Parable of the Man that passing frō Ierusalem to Iericho fell amongst theeues Luk. 10.30 who robbed him and wounding him left him halfe dead The Schooles abridge it thus Supernaturalia sunt ablata Naturalia sunt corrupta both which being discreetly vnderstood containe a sound truth which I expresse more plainely thus The losse of concreated Holinesse consisteth in a Priuation and a Deprauation Adam was depriued of the Image of God according to which hee was created they call it vsually Original Righteousnes and the Powers that remained after he was thus stript were miserably peruerted he became not only auerse from God but aduerse to him also Sinne is an Auersion from God and a Conuersion to the world or a forsaking of God and things eternall to imbrace the world and things temporall God left Adam in the hands of his owne councell to chuse whether hee would follow Rationem Superiorem or Inferiorem as the Schooles speake that is cleaue to God or to the World but with this condition that which way soeuer hee bent thither should his inclination bee for euer after he preferred Earth before Heauen and so his propension hath been euer since out of loue of this earth to make head against God and goodnesse so that his Deprauation is not only Physicall but Morall not only an Impotency vnto Good but an Opposition to it also his vnderstanding is not only blind but a Sophister his owne Iudgement is a snare whereby he entangleth himselfe in error his will is so farre from making a good choice Ambros. Gen. 6.7 Gen. 8.21 Rom 7.18 Ier. 17.9 Rom 6 6. Rom. 7.24 that it commands alwaies for that which is worst all his Affections distast and abhorre the good which they cannot rellish and therefore not ensue Finally the Flesh is become Illecebra peccati sinne needes no other bait then mans senfualitie All the frame of the Imaginations of the Heart of Man are euill only continually from his youth and in his flesh dwelles no good thing the hear● is deceitfull aboue all things and hee beareth about him a Body of sinne and death And this is that Massa Corruptionis and Perditionis that woefull Being whereunto sinne brought Adam Whereby you may perceiue that though he hath lost his Goodnes hee hath not lost his Actiuenes and though sinne be Non ens a Priuation yet it is in ente a Dreprauation also by reason wherof men that were reasonable Creatures by Nature yea and Spirituall also 1. Cur. 3.1 1. C●● 2.14 are vouchsafed no better names in the state of Corruption then those of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sensuall and fleshly Men. Hauing thus opened the miserable case whereunto Adam brought himselfe it wil not be hard for you to vnderstand the words of my Text and acknowledge with King Dauid the Natiue Corruption of mankind or the Originall Sinne meant in this place First then the want of Originall Holinesse is in the Text called Iniquitie or Sinne and well may it so bee called for what is Sinne but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Vnconformitie to Gods Lawes and how vnanswerable is his being herein vnto that state wherein he was made were he only vnanswerable it were Sinne how much more when he is opposite thereunto and is become a rebell vnto God can any thing in the reasonable soule be lesse then Sinne ●on 7. that tempts vnto sinne but Concupiscence is Domesticus Hostis a traitour in our bosome that doth seduce vs and whose Lusts doe sight against the Soule 1. Vet. 2.11 Neither only doth it tempt to sinne but produce sinne also Iam. 1.15 et simile producit sibi simile wee must needs make the Tree Euill that beareth such euill fruit Neither can it be excused seeing the Leauen of Concupiscence hath seasoned all the powers of the soule euen of the Reasonable soule and so maketh the whole man come short of fulfilling the Law Deut. 6.5 Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy Heart with all thy minde with all thy strength c. Ioyne that generall Precept Exod. 20.17 with the generall Prohibition Non Concupisces thou shalt not lust and by them measure the state of a naturall man and he must be verie senslesse that doth not acknowledge sin in this Corruption he must needs make the Habits of no other nature then are the Actions which proceed therefrom They that yeeld it to be Vitium but not
done which haue denied Originall Sinne. Their Sobrietie is tolerable who supposing the vndeniable truth of that Radicall sinne seeke only the waies of clearing Gods Iustice in this propagation wherein as in such darke and doubtfull cases it often falls out Saluà fide holding the fundamentall point they differ about that which is not necessarie vnto Saluation That which is most vsefull for vs is to know rather how we may be rid of it De Moribus 〈◊〉 c. ● 1. c. 22. ●pis 29. then how we doe contract it which Saint Austin expresseth in a fit Parable of a man fallen into a ditch to whom hee that findeth him there should rather lende a hand to helpe him out then tire him with inquiries how he came in Wee see that our ground is ouergrowne with briars thornes yet we know that God made the earth to beare better fruits doe good husbands mispend their time in reasoning how they came there or doe they not rather with their plough and other instruments seeke to rid them thence surely they doe and we in the case of our soules should imitate them so doing That Originall Sinne is in vs no man can doubt that seeth how children die euen in their mothers wombe or so soone as they come out of it and the wages of sinne is death in them of Actuall it cannot be Rom. 6.23 it must bee then of Originall if they liue wee make hast to baptize them and what doth Baptisme implie but that they need a new Birth vnto life seeing their first was no better then a Birth vnto death Add hereunto that our Sauiour Christs Conception had not needed to be by the Holy Ghost if so bee naturall generation did not enforce necessarily the propagation of Originall Sinne which they should consider that magnifie ouer much the Conception of the blessed mother of Christ Let it suffice vs that the Church Catholique of old and the Reformed Churches haue resolued vniformly that we are sinners so soone as we begin to bee and this Leprosie is hereditarie to vs all that our worser part hath gotten the vpper hand of our better and we are by nature no better then a masse of Corruption and the Serpents brood the sense whereof should make vs all cry out with the Apostle O wretch that I am Rom. 7.24 who shall deliuer mee from this Body of Death King Dauid doth not onely confesse that there is such a Sinne but also that himselfe is tainted therewith I was shapen in iniquitie and in sinne my mother conceiued me The words must not be wrested some haue mistaken them as if Sinne were the cause of Generation That opinion though it bee found in some Ancients yet it is so grosse that it is not worth the refuting for we reade Gen. 1. Multiplie and increase Vers 28. spoken to mankind before euer Adam and Eue committed sinne except happily this were their meaning that before the Fall the lust of generation was in the power of man to fulfill or restraine it as reason saw fit but after the Fall reason became subiect vnto lust and man fulfilled it not when reason would but when lust vrged him and this opinion is not improbable A second mistake is that Dauid should lay the blame of his Sinne vpon his Parents and taxe their sinfull lusts in the act of generation but besides that he could not conceiue so ill of his vertuous and chast Parents this were to make Dauid a Cham and so to deserue a Curse while hee seeketh a Pardon for his Sinne. The Father 's abhorred this sense and obserue that King Dauid here speaketh not of the personall sinne of his Parents but the naturall which deriued from them he had in-herent in himselfe and that he was in the state of sinne before he saw light But this is strange his Parents were members of the Church circumcised not onely outwardly which is most certaine but inwardly also which is very probable and if circumcised then discharged from Originall Sin and in the state of Grace how commeth it about then that they should engender Children in the state of Corruption Saint Austin answereth briefly Parentes non ex principijs nouitatis De. Peecata Merit Remis L. 2. C. 2. sed ex reliquijs vetustatis generant liberos they that are regenerated doe beget Children not according to the new Adam but according to the old not according to Grace but according to nature for Grace is personall the corruption is naturall and God will that they shall only communicate their nature and leaue the dispensation of Grace vnto himselfe Saint Austin illustrateth it by those who being circumcised begat Children vncircumcised and Corne which being winnowed from Chaffe brings forth eares full of Chaffe And yet notwithstanding a Prerogatiue the Children of the faithfull haue Verse 16. which Saint Paul toucheth at Rom. 11. If the Roote be holy so are the branches But this Holinesse is in possibilitie rather then in possession and there is a distance betweene naturall Generation and spirituall Regeneration though by their naturall birth-right the Children of the faithfull haue a right vnto the blessings of Gods Couenant yet doe they not partake them but by their new birth which ordinarily they receiue in Baptisme ●it 3.5 which is therefore called the Bath of Regeneration Where hence we may gather the truth of Saint Hieromes saying Christiani non nascuntur sed siunt wee may not vainely boast with the Iewes we haue Abraham to our Father Ioh. 8.39 as if hee could not beget children in iniquitie but it must be our comfort that God corrects Nature by Grace and thereby maketh vs liuing members of the Church whereas such the best of naturall Parents cannot make vs to bee Wee owe this blessing to our Father in Heauen who conueieth it vnto vs by our Mother the Church our naturall Parents can yeeld no such benefit they yeeld the contrarie rather as is cleare in this Text. Ruffinvs giueth another good note hereof Qui ad munditiae locum iam peruenit c. He that is in the state of Grace must not forget the state of Nature if we remember whence we come we shall the better esteeme the estate whereunto we are brought No man can be so proud as to arrogate vnto himselfe the praise of that which he is if hee mind well what without Gods grace he was But King Dauid was long before Regenerated how comes he now to make mention of Originall sinne How comes hee now to lay the blame of his Actuall vpon that Surely not without good cause Circumcision in the Iew as Baptisme in the Christian did absolue from all the guilt of Originall sinne by meanes of Iustification and by meanes of Sanctification did impaire much of the strength thereof Much I say but not all there are still in vs reliques of the Old man a Law in our members rebelling against the Law of our mind Rom. 7.23
of Death secluded from the Liuing Skin for skin and all that euer a man hath he will giue for his Life though it be but his naturall Life which is temporall how much more would be giue for his better Life if hee knew it I meane his spirituall Life which is Eternall If it bee a thing desireable to hold our soule in our body how much more desireable is it to enioy God in our soule Especially seeing the soule may bee in the body and afflict it with hearts griefe but no soule enioyeth God that is not filled with vnspeakeable ioy But Life is not the vttermost of our desire we are by nature sociable and solitarines is a kind of Death it is so if we be only excluded from the societie of men Psal 42. Psal ●4 how much more if we be debarred the Communion of Saints King Dauids Psalmes shew how passionate he was when hee was debarred the visible Communion by banishment how much more passionate thinke you was he when he apprehended his exclusion from the inuisible through the deadlinesse of his sinne These things out of the Moralized Ceremonies must we set before vs as the Motiues vnto this Petition Purge me wash me me that haue lost the comfortable presence of my God the life of my soule and haue contracted the contagion of Death by my sinne and for this contagion am vnworthy to haue accesse vnto thy House in the companie of thy Saints the loue of that life maketh me abhorre the state of this Death the desire that I haue to that societie maketh this spirituall excommunication tedious vnto me and giue mee no rest breake my silence make me importune thee O God with Purge mee Wash mee expiate this impurity that hath so wofully distressed me These two words Purge and Wash looke to two parts of the Ceremony Vos 18.19 In the aforenamed 19. of Numbers you shall sinde that hee that had touched the dead was first sprinkled with the holy water and then was to haue his whole body bathed incleane water These two acts Ceremoniall looke to the two parts of spirituall Purification In Sin there are two things the Guilt and the Corruption the taking away of the Guilt was signified by the aspersion or sprinkling of holy water and the Corruption by washing in cleane water God that hath giuen his Law for vs to obey hath added a Sanction vnto it to hold vs in that wee should not dare to transgresse for feare of wrath and ordained that a deformity should accompany sinne and make it more odious vnto vs out of the loue that we beare to our selues When wee enter into consideration of our sinne the first thing that we should apprehend is the Guilt the danger that we stand in to God ward wee should set him before vs as a seuere Iudge armed with vengeance ready to lay on vs deadly strokes this should make vs breake into the first Petition Purge mee O Lord free me from Guilt let mee stand on good termes with my God But when wee haue made our peace with him and all is safe from without selfe-loue religious selfe-loue must make vs looke home suruey our selues fixe our eyes vpon our soules and take care to remedy the blemishes thereof Deformity in our outward man wee cannot endure I would we could endure it as little in our inward wee desire the exactest proportion the fairest complexion and where Nature faileth wee helpe it by Art and thinke no paines too great no cost too deare that is bestowed that way Our better part deserueth the greater regard by how much wee should desire more to recommend our selues to the eyes of God and Angels then to the eyes of mortall men yea to the eyes of our owne soules rather then to the eyes of our bodyes for that these are truer Iudges and Iudges of the best things Certainly King Dauid thought so who knowing that sinne carrieth with it not only a guilt but a staine also prayed no lesse Wash me then Purge me free mee O God both from staine and guilt But the Consequence must not be forgotten the staine and the guilt themselues desire this fauour were there no euill beyond them how much more when as I shewed you in the Ceremonie they are necessarily accompanied with an Excommunication so that purge me and wash me must imply a desire of restitution also a restitution into the Church and into the Communion of Saints a blessing that followed vpon King Dauids person being purified from his guilt and staine and King Dauid must bee thought to haue correspondently to the Law aymed at that blessing And let this suffice touching that for which King Dauid prayeth I come now to consider the Person of whom hee beggeth it in his Prayer The Person is God for it is to him to whom hee directs the whole Psalme And indeed none but God can doe this that hee prayeth for for who can free from guilt but hee to whom a sinner stands obliged by his guilt hee that set the Sanction to the Law must quit vs from the danger that is due from that Sanction and who is that but God And as God onely can purge the guilt so hee onely can wash away the staine hee onely that made vs can new make vs and hee reformeth man to his Image that first made him after his Image This is the worke only of God But see here is a limitation of Gods power hee would haue God to purge him but doe it with Hysop as if without Hysop hee could not doe it shall I say God forbid hee can doe more then wee can conceiue they are too presumptuous that set such bounds vnto God Faustus Socin that is a most absolute Lord no doubt hee might haue saued vs otherwise then he did This wee may boldly say hee would not doe it without Hysop and his will is that which doth menage his power what he hath freely decreed out of his good will that hee bringeth to passe by his vnresistable power Hee spake the word and made vs but he was pleased that the redeeming of vs should cost him more paines hee would vse the helpe of Hysop Hysop is literally vnderstood in the Ceremonie so wee finde it in that often cited 19. of Numbers but spiritually by Hysop the Fathers vnderstand Christ and make a correspondencie betweene him and that herbe in two respects in regard of the smalnes of the herbe and in regard of the vertue thereof the smalnes representing Christs Humility that vouchsafed to take vpon him the forme of a seruant the vertue noting Christs efficacie for as that Herbe worketh vpon our Inwards De doctr Chris● lib. 2. c. 16. so saith Saint Austin doth Christ worke vpon the Inward man Hysop worketh principally vpon the lungs say the Fathers which are the bellowes of our body and are an excellent Embleme of Pride and it was Pride wherby we lifted our selues vp against God that Christ came
vs his liuerie leaue vs no marke of our reference to him and this is that which I called depriuation But more distinctly in reiection we will obserue 1. from what Place and state both are included in Gods presence Secondly with what disgrace and danger a sinner deserues to bee reiected we may gather them both out of the words Cast out In the depriuation we will obserue first Whereof secondly how farre a sinner may be depriued Whereof first of what gift of the Holy spirit then What worth there is in the gift spiritus tuus thy holy Spirit or the Spirit of thy Holinesse a most precious gift of this a sinner deserueth to be depriued But how farre that appeareth in aufer as the taking away which wee will resolue into these two Notes the first is the taking backe of the spirit which God once gaue him and therefore some render it Ne recipias withdraw not secondly the spirit is so taken backe that nothing of it remaines with a sinner it is not a diminution but an ablation a stripping him wholy of the Spirit of God Finally both these reiection and depriuation must bee considered not in themselues but also in their consequences and the consequences are two and they much aggrauate the fearefulnesse of the iudgement The first is We cannot be reiected of our old good Master but wee shall fall into the hands of another who is much worse and wee shall be forced to weare a much worse Liuerie if we be stript of his Looke whatsoeuer good we lose we shall fall vnder the contrarie euill if we bee reiected if we be depriued This is the first Consequence A second is that such a sinners Case is desperate God will heare no mans praiers for him and he wil giue him no grace to pray for himselfe And what can follow but that being brought into so bad a case he senselesly runne a gracelesse course which commeth to the maine point of my Text which I told you was a desire of perseuerance in grace whereunto nothing can bee more opposite then this reiection and depriuation which is prayed against by our penitent King And so haue I broken vp this Text the parts whereof I shall now open farther vnto you God grant they may further our religious repentance First then of the manner of the Prayer I told you it is a deprecation a praying against When we are in danger we must not be senselesse bee it but corporall how much more if it be spirituall Now that we are sensible wee can giue no better proofe then if wee pray against the danger yea the more earnest wee are in prayer the more doe wee manifest the prouident feare of our soules Dauid had committed enormous sinnes adultery 1. Cor. ● 6 1. Iob. 3.15 murder of adulterers Saint Paul tels vs that none shall enter into the Kingdome of Heauen and of the murderer Saint Iohn tels vs that hee hath not eternall life abiding in him King Dauid finding himselfe in this danger had reason to fall vnto this kind of prayer especially hauing before his eyes the wofull example of his Predecessor Saul But what needed hee 1. Sam. ● God had promised that it should goe well with him and with his seed also and that when they sinne though hee will punish them he will not withdraw his Mercy as he did from Saul whom hee cast out from before his eyes yea and Dauid for his particular had his pardon brought vnto him by Nathan It is true But it is as true that he that doth recouer out of a desperate danger is not so soone secure as hee is safe behold it in a corporall danger If a man were ready to fall into a deepe pit and a stander by timely stretch out his hand and recouer him hee cannot so soone recouer his spirits as hee saued his life you shall see him looke wan feele his heart tremble scarce get a word from him or make him stand vpon his feet he will aske some pretty time before hee can come to himselfe againe And may we thinke that hee that found himselfe vpon the brinke of Hell that saw himselfe entring at the gates of aeternall death that was singed with the flames of that vnquenchable fire and felt the palpable darkenesse of that euerlasting night though by Gods mercy hee tumbled not into the pit came not into the Chambers of death was not deuoured of the fire nor cast into the vtter darknesse thinke wee I say that hee can soone forget those affrighting spectacles that hee can suddainly calme those stormes which they raised in his soule that hee can as soone be secured as hee is safe certainly he cannot they that haue beene exercised in such conflicts yeeld vndenyable proofe and therefore wonder not that King Dauid notwithstanding Gods gracious promise as if hee did forget it maketh this kind of prayer vnto God Adde hereunto that God doth not giue his promises to make vs idle but to exercise our faith in importuning God for a performance 1. ●im 4.8 Pietie hath the promise both of this life and of that which is to come yet doe wee not forbeare dayly to say the Lords Prayer that we may speed of both Our rule then is That wee must vse Gods Promises as directions in not as dispensations from the deuotion we owe vnto God And let this suffice touching the manner of the Prayer Let vs come now to the matter And first let vs looke to the Reiection wherein the first particular was the Place from whence a sinner deserueth to bee reiected that is here called the presence of God God from the beginning of the world had a speciall place whereat hee appeared to the Patriarkes and they performed their deuotions at it the learned gather it out of the 4. of Genesis where God threatneth that Cain should bee a vagabond and Cain complaineth that hee was cast from the presence of God that is excommunicated from the visible Church and the seuering of the sonnes of God from the sonnes of Men seemeth to haue bin in regard of the meeting in that speciall place But howsoeuer that may be doubted it is out of all question that when God made the Israelites a nationall Church hee had a visible presence amongst them hee commanded the Tabernacle to be built for that purpose whereinto he entred in the Cloud and rested betweene the Cherubims on the Mercy-seat This was the typicall presence of a spirituall residence of God of his gracious dwelling amongst his people This was a thing so much reuerenced by the Patriarkes Psal 27. that they held it a great blessing to enioy it Vnum petij aith King Dauid One thing haue I desired of the Lord and that will I still require that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the faire beauty of the Lord and to visit his holy Temple As it was a comfort to them to enioy
King Dauid contracted himselfe sinne which hee inherited from his Parents Iesus saued King Dauid from them both this was his spirituall saluation Ecclus cap. 47. But he had a corporall also God was with him in all his warres and bare downe his enemies before him Hee played with Lions as Kids and with Beares as with Lambes Hee slue the Giant Goliah subdued the Philistines and all the bordering Nations whereupon the people sung those words Psal 21. The King shall reioyce in thee O Lord how exceeding glad shall he be of thy saluation In the case of King Dauid wee must ioyne all three significations First The person of Iesus Secondly The spirituall redemption Thirdly the corporall deliuerance This obserued touching the saluation we must now consider what is meant by Ioy. Ioy I told you is a comfortable sense betweene reasonable and vnreasonable creatures this is a speciall difference that though both partake of blessings from God yet a true sense of them none haue but those that are reasonable pleasure animals may haue but ioy they cannot haue for ioy is an affection of a reasonable soule And reason hath taught naturall men not to receiue good but to be affected answerably to the good which we receiue In things that belong to our naturall life euery man giueth proofe hereof if a man bee hunger-starued what comfort will he expresse if one shall bring him sustenance He that shall be eased when he is tortured with paine how merrie will hee bee And how will his heart dance for ioy that should be receiued againe into the Kings fauour after some great disgrace Whatsoeuer our worldly distresse is we cannot choose but manifest our content when wee obtaine a release Whereby we may easily gather that ioy and good should goe together they doe so in God they should doe so in all that partake the Image of God as hee so they should ioy in that which is good A second thing that we must marke is that according to the good must the ioy be as great as manifold As great heauenly things call for greater ioy then earthly and those things that concerne our eternall life must yeeld vs more comfort then those things that belong vnto our temporall This discouers a great defect in the Worlds ioy if our hungry bodies be sed wee ioy God daily feedeth our soules with his Word and we ioy not if our bodies of sicke be made whole we ioy but who ioyeth in that medicine that restoreth his soule from death to life Who ioyeth in the recouerie of Gods fauour That would bee almost beside himselfe for ioy if hee might bee vouchsafed but a little fauour from a mortall King So farre are worldly men from equalling their ioy vnto the worth of good that the greater good can haue no share while the lesser taketh vp all their ioy yea that whereunto the Scripture hath in a manner appropriated ioy findeth little entertainment in our affections and that is the Gospell and Christ the substance thereof whose attendant the Angels the Prophets the Apostles in the Old in the new Testament make to be the affection of ioy In their Sermons you shall find ioy and saluation coupled together they make the newes of saluation not only gaudium magnum a great ioy but also gaudium solum the only ioy Luke 2. and that with an absit God forbid that I reioyce but in the Crosse of Christ Gal. 6. How much to blame then are wee that are so farre from making it solum our only ioy that wee are not come so farre as to make it magnum matter of any extraordinary ioy Yea in the most it findeth nullum no affection of ioy at all What shall I say then Those things which God hath conioyned let no man put asunder least at the Iudgement day ioy and we be put asunder when we shall wish but wish in vaine that God would ioyne vs together As ioy must bee as great as the good we haue so must it bee also as manifold A manifold good must not bee entertained with a single ioy I haue shewed that saluation is threefold and so a threefold good Dauid was a Prophet and had Reuelations of the Incarnation of Christ that hee should be borne of his Seed that he should be the Sauiour of the World and he ioyed in this saluation in this blessed contemplation of the Kingdome of Christ hee could not with Abraham see that day but hee must needs reioyce As the fore-sight of Christs Incarnation wrought in him ioy so could he not reape the fruit thereof to his owne redemption but he must ioy also the participation of it cannot but bring pleasure which wee cannot but with great pleasure behold therefore no doubt but King Dauids soule did sing his Daughters Magnificat and his Spirit reioyced in God his Sauiour Neither did his temporall deliuerance passe vnsaluted by this affection witnesse the eighteenth Psalme which is nothing else but an amplification of the ioy which hee tooke therein According to this good example should we learne to multiply our ioy as God multiplyeth his saluation Certainly the Church meant wee should doe so when it multiplyed the Feasts which in the old phrase of the Church are called gaudium gaudie dayes not so much from the corporall refection as from the spirituall exultation it meant we should ioyne ioy and saluation together spirituall ioy with spirituall saluation But the corporall hath almost worne out the spirituall ioy so much more doth the comfort of our bodies carrie vs away then the comfort of our soules But all this while we are not come vnto King Dauids Prayer the first branch of his Prayer that concerneth this ioy of saluation His Prayer is as I said for Restitution restore hee that prayeth so giueth vs to vnderstand two things that he feeleth a want and that hee remembreth what is the supply thereof both good signes of grace We hold it a signe of grace in regard of things temporall those poore and sicke that are in ne●d and paine we hold worthy of compassion when we heare there lamentable complaints but Vagrants that euen in the Prison being loaden with irons naked and halfe starued can be frollicke and glorie in their misery we hold as vnworthy of our pitie as they haue little feeling of their owne bad case Apply this now vnto our soules and see the difference betweene men and men and iudge thereby what regard they deserue to find at the hands of God How many bee there that want this ioy of saluation in whom notwithstanding there appeareth little sense that they haue of such want Surely they doe liue as if eternall saluation did nothing concerne them such are all prophane persons that say Let vs eat let vs drinke to morrow we shall die Quibus anima data eft pro sale ne putrescerent which make no more account of their soule then of a preseruatiue that keepeth their bodies from turning into
this respect wee may loue our selues more then others But to shut vp this point with some few obseruations The first is That seeing our Loue towards our neighbour must bee such as you haue heard you see how little brotherly and neighbourly Charitie there is in the world there bee few that obserue the Measure prescribed by Nature scarse any dreame of that which is prescribed by Grace Secondly you see that the loue of our neighbour must not bee mercinarie as for the most part the worlds is for who is hired to loue himselfe Or who seeketh for any other reward of that affection but only the loue of himselfe The Loue of our neighbour should be as free yea it should be cloathed with all the properties which before I specified First Sinceritie secondly Realitie thirdly Tendernesse and fourthly Constancie Thirdly you see that we must not loue our neighbour either in peccato or ad peccatum we must neither cherish any man in sinne neither may we tempt him to commit it And why We must not so loue our selues Qui amat iniquitatem odit animam suam such an affection is not Loue but hatred deadly hatred which leadeth vnto eternall death Fourthly and lastly you see that as we must bridle our selues and our lusts least we sinne and afflict our Soules if we haue sinned so must wee deale with our Neighbor also hold in as many as we can though against their wils to preuent their sinning And if they haue fallen we may not suffer their wounds to fester though we put them to smart and paine yet must we endeauour their reformation De Trinit S. Austins rule is worth our obseruing Potest odium blandire charitas saeuire radicem inspice attende verba illa blanditur vt decipiat Psal 141. haec saeuit vt corrigat Let the righteous smite me it shall be a kindnes let him reproue me it shall be a excellent oyle which shall not breake my head Christ doth so chastise his Church and God those whom he reputes children and not bastards Heb. 12. But enough of the limitation A word or two of the comparison and so I end I told you it is not a comparison of equalitie because this second Commandement is but like the first And indeed how should there bee equalitie in the Loues when there is so much inequalitie in the Persons But Christ putteth it out of all doubt in the Gospell when he telleth vs that We must forsake yea hate father mother brother sister yea euen our owne selues and liues if they come in competition with our Loue of Christ and the Gospell which is all one with the Loue of God Though there be no equalitie betweene the Loues yet there is a good Correspondencie for the second Commandement is like the first it floweth from it and beareth the very Image of it so like that Saint Iohn concludeth that He that doth not loue his brother whom hee hath seene 1 Iob 3. neuer loued God whom he hath not seene It is the best way to know whether a man be a counterfeit in his obseruance of the first Commandement by trying how he keepeth the second But take notice of three or foure points wherein the likenesse standeth First in Obiecto for a man in his Neighbour must loue nothing but God Secondly in Subiecto for this Loue must take vp all the powers of man as the Loue of God did though with a subordination And it makes the straitest knot straiter then either consanguinitie or affinitie or any other kind of societie Thirdly in Fructu a double fruit for it bringeth forth all the duties of the second Table as the Loue of God did the duties of the first It bringeth them forth most readily most cheerefully for what will hee sticke at that Loues Mat. 25. And it reapeth the very same fruit which the former did which is eternall life When I was an hungred yee fed me saith our Sauiour come yee blessed possesse the kingdome c. Fourthly in Duratione It lasteth as long as the other doth that is it is euerlasting for Charitie neuer fals away no more then doth the communion of Saints I omit other resemblances onely this I note concerning both Charities that they must be begun in this life Gal 5. otherwise wee shall neuer haue them in the life to come for it is a fruit of the Spirit after this life God giueth not his spirit therefore he giueth not Charitie from hence men carrie the Spirit and with it Charitie in hell there can be no charitie because none carrie the spirit thither I conclude The Ecclesiasticall storie reporteth that S. Iohn the Euangelist the beloued Disciple and chiefe Doctor of Loue as appeares by his Epistles when he grew so old that hee was caried to Church and could Preach no longer vsed to say nothing at all Church meetings to them that came to him but onely Filioli diligite inuicem Children Loue one another Children loue one another and being asked why he reiterated it he said Quia preceptum Domini est sisolum fiat sufficit Hier. in Epist ad Gal. there needed no other lesson to keepe all things well Sure I am there is no lesson more needfull in these bloudy in these malitious dayes and therefore insteed of a longer conclusion I will vse to you and I pray God I vse it not in vaine a Tautalogie or sacred ingemination not much vnlike vnto that of S. Iohn Loue your neighbors as your selues Loue your neighbors as your selues Loue your neighbors as your selues This Grace God graunt vs all for the publike good of Christendome and the priuate of euerie Societie through Iesus Christ To whom with the Father c. The ninth Sermon MATT. 22. VERSE 39. Vpon these two depend all the Law and the Prophets IN our inquiries wee desire to know not only what is true but also vpon what ground we may acknowledge it to be so neither are our doubts fully satisfied except we be informed of both Therefore our Sauiour Christ that vouchsafed an answere to the Pharisees question so answereth that he leaues no place for farther dispute for what he affirmed that hee confirmes he proues soundly that the Loue of God and our Neighbour so described as you haue heard deserue to bee accounted the Great Commandement and the proofe is contained in these words that now I haue read vnto you The summe of it is this That which is the briefe of the Bible may well goe for the great Comandement but the loue of God and our Neighbour are such a briefe therefore there is no question but they may iustly challenge that title of preheminence and we must acknowledge what Christ saith in Saint Marke that there are none greater then these But to open the Text a little more fully wee will consider therein first seuerally the parts of the Bible which are the Law and the Prophets and the contents of those
the Trumpet sounding in his eare Surgite mortui venite ad iudicium I will not stand to allegorize the two siluer Trumpets still sounded while the Sacrifice was burning at the Altar Verse 7. I will only bid you remember Saint Iudes note of Sodome and Gomorrah whose perpetuall burning God hath left as a remembrance of the euerlasting fire of Hell Some are yet more desperate and call for the Day of the Lord Let it come Let vs see it as you may read in the Prophets Foole hardie wretches that desire that which they will neuer be able to endure Luke 23.30 Vpon the first ouerture of it their hearts will faile them they will bee at their wits end they will call to the Hils and Rockes to couer them The Kings of the earth the great men the mightie men bond and free all sorts of men shall then crie out The great day of the Lambes wrath is come Reue. 6 1 Pet. 4.18 and who is able to stand And indeed If the righteous scarcely be saued where shall the wicked and vngodly appeare But to leaue them The last obseruation that I will giue vpon this dreadfull state shall be That wee are much bound vnto God that wee liue not vnder the Old Testament but vnder the New that God hath brought vs not vnto Mount Sinai but vnto Mount Sion Where God appeares in our nature and commeth meeke and in the forme of a seruant so sensible of our infirmities that hee cryeth not Esay 42.2 his voice is not heard in the street hee will not breake a bruised reed nor quench smoking flaxe He putteth vpon vs a light yoke and an easie burden his doctrine is a Gospel their feet are beautifull that bring it Esay 52 ● 7 this yeara is an yeare of Iubile his Trumpet soundeth nothing but deliuerance his Light is comfortable like the Sunne Psal 45.2 Cant. 5. v. 16 for he is the Sonne of Righteousnesse his lips are full of Grace his Mouth is most sweet In this Hill all things are louely there is nothing dreadfull at all And why God hath giuen vs the Spirit of Adoption which is the Spirit of Loue Rom 6 2. Tim 1. and of a sound minde so that wee can indure the very top of Mount Ston whereas they could not endure the bottome of Mount Sinai Time will not giue me leaue to pursue this comparison you may amplifie it out of Saint Paul 2. Cor. 3. Heb. 12. And if you will haue it to the full you must paralell the whole Oeconomic of the New Testament with that of the Old Only let me giue you this note for a farewell to this point That as the Patriarkes that were brought vnto Mount Sinai did beare themselues out vnder those terrors by casting their eyes forward vnto Mount Sion the place of comfort So wee lest we grow carnally secure during our abode at Mount Sion and surfet vpon the comforts thereof must cast our eyes backward vpon Mount Sinai and rowse our selues with the terrours thereof The solace of Sion is to none so pleasant as to him that commeth newly from Sinai their soules doe best rellish the Gospel whose consciences haue first sinarted from the Law or that haue beene exercised by that hopefull feare the point that commeth next to be handled in my text Hopefull feare then is the impression that was made on the Israelites by the dreadfull Harbingers of God First Feare Feare is argued from quaking For wee vsually say that men quake for feare And indeed what is quaking of the bodie but a consequent of feare in the soule For the spirits are conueyed by the arteries the sinewes and the veines into the outward parts to sustaine confirme them inable them to their functions and the vitall parts send them forth abundantly while themselues are secure But while we are or suppose our selues to be in any great danger all those forces repaire vnto and endeuour to safegard those principall inward fortresses especially the heart Whereupon the outward parts being vnfurnished fall as it were into a shaking Palsie and so Quaking is a consequent of feare But let vs fit this impression vnto the apparition and so you shall find that it followeth thereupon If there were nothing in these Harbingers but an Image of Gods Maiestie yet you shall not find in all the Bible that euer any man had any extraordinarie glimpse of Gods glory that did not vpon the apprehension thereof become as it were dead and giue himselfe ouer for a dead man Reade the storie of Gedeon and Maneah in the Booke of Iudges and of the Prophets whose inspirations were accompanied with Visions Ezechiel Daniel others the generall rule is Si te nouerim Domine me ipsum nouerim I shall neuer know how vile how fraile I am by any thing so well as by presenting my selfe before the glorious Maiestie of God Let vs descend to the second Image that is to bee beheld in these dreadfull Harbingers the Image of the Law and let vs see how that worketh feare The Image of the Precept I told you it is scarching and you cannot therewith search a man but you make him feare Aske Saint Paul he tried it and will tell you so he found by surueying himselfe That the Law was spirituall and hee was carnall and out of a sensible acknowledgement that his strength was nothing proportionable to the Law 〈◊〉 7. 〈◊〉 19. he brake out into those passionate words O wretch that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death King Dauid surueyed the Law and the excellent properties of the Law but what is the vpshot of his meditation Euen this Who knoweth how oft he offendeth Lord cleanse me from my secret faults keepe thy seruant from presumptuous sinnes lest they haue dominion ouer me And verily no man can behold himselfe in that glasse and consider what manner of person he is but hee will bee driuen to that prayer in the last Penitentiall 〈◊〉 143 Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant O Lord for in thy sight shall no flesh liuing be iustified The Precept then maketh afraid And doth not the Sanction also Certainly it doth The Prophets that had a sight of God armed with vengeance against sinners how doe we find them affected and affrighted C●ap 6. Esay saw the Lord sitting vpon a Throne high and lifted vp his traine filled the Temple aboue it stood the six winged Seraphins c. it is a Vision of iudgement and it made Esay crie out Woe is me for I am vndone 〈◊〉 3.2.16 c. Habakuk had a Vision of the like argument which he describeth more at large and heare what was the effect When I heard it my belly trembled my lips quiuered at the voice rottennesse entred into my bones Psal 119 Dauid confesseth of himselfe My flesh trembleth for feare of thee O Lord and I am afraid of thy iudgements But you will say
such obiects may worke feare in a naturall man but what need these Israeltes to feare They came armed against it they came prepared with Puritie with Modestie and should such men feare It is certaine they did feare and there was good reason for it for what proportion betweene mans Abilitie and the Maiestie of God when man is at the best And the Israelites ceremoniall preparation could not so suddenly become morall that will aske more time then three dayes The more they had of the old man the more they were subiect vnto this Passion and it might well rise in them though the obiect which they discerned were aloofe off as indeed it was for their Tents were in some good distance from the Hill and though they were so farre cut of danger yet were they not out of feare the dread of these Harbingers of God seised vpon them Adde hereunto that the spirit of the Old Testament as Saint Paul telleth vs is the spirit of bondage and feare and so this passion had good correspondencie with that Couenant Neither vpon them only but vpon Moses also did these dreadfull Harbingers worke for so must you vnderstand those words in the text Moses spake Saint Paul will tell you what he said Verse 19. Heb. 12. I exceedingly feare and quake so terrible was the sight in his eyes The Rhemists come in here vnseasonably with the doctrine of their Traditions and they will haue Saint Paul by tradition know that Moses spake those words As if he might not know it aswell by Reuelation for the spirit of Prophecie looketh aswell backward as forward Else how did Moses pen the Booke of Genesis that speaketh of things done so many hundred yeares before But what gaine they if we doe acknowledge he had it by tradition Doe wee denie all traditions Wee acknowledge traditions of many Histories as that of Iannes and Iambres Of Ceremonies as that of concluding the Passeouer with blessed Bread and Wine whence Christ tooke an occasion to improue them to an higher vse and institute the Eucharist Our question is about Articles of faith and I hope this is none and therefore they may keepe the note in store vntill they meet with a more pregnant place But let vs leaue those Wranglers and come to Moses Happily you wonder why hee should quake A man that came so neere God and was so deare vnto him God talked with him face to face as familiarly as a man talketh with his friend I but then these Harbingers did not appeare no Thunder no Lightning then no burning Hill no loud sounding of the Trumpet when these appeare they will make Moses himselfe to quake And why shall I say because there are some relikes of sinne euen in the best of Gods Saints during this life and being not perfect in loue they must needs bee subiect vnto feare If I should say so 1. Iohn ● I should say something but not all that is to bee said For our Sauiour Christ that was without all sinne when he appeared in our nature at the as it were Mount Sinai Certainly at the Tribunall of God where he had presented if not to the eyes of his bodie yet of his soule those dreadfull attendants vpon the Throne of Iudgement the sight cast him into an agonie and made him sweat water and bloud it made his humane nature to droope as himselfe confesseth and bee heauie vnto death And doe wee wonder that the seruant feareth where we see the sonne in such a case Let not the holy Ones of God thinke to bee priuiledged from that whereunto the Holy of Holies was pleased to bee subiect Let vs all rather confesse that that indeed is dreadfull which is dreadfull to such a person and let vs all feare that which Christ himselfe feared But why goe I so high as Christ If they should not haue feared the Mountaine would haue risen in Iudgement against them for that trembled Verse 18. Psal 18. it trembled exceedingly In the Psalme it is said that the Earth shooke and trembled the foundations also of the Hils were moued and were shaken alluding vnto this storie another Psalme saith that The Mountaines skipped like Rams Psal 114. and the little Hils like young sheepe and mouing the question What ailed yee O yee Mountaines that yee skipped like Rams and yee little Hils like Lambes The answere is made Tremble thou Earth at the presence of the Lord at the presence of the God of Iacob And shall not wee feare him nor tremble at his presence when the senselesse creatures shew themselues awfully sensible of his accesse vnto them surely our senselesnesse must needs bee without all excuse Yet some such there haue beene Such were the Scribes and Pharisees who when the Sunne lost his light the Rockes cleft the Graues were opened and the Earth quaked were so little touched that their heart could serue them to contriue a forgerie wherewith to countenance that villanie wherewith they brought Christ to his painfull and shamefull death This was a spirit of slumber indeed and neuer did a greater spirituall Lethargie seize vpon the sonnes of men God euer keepe vs from such senselesnesse and giue vnto vs the spirit of feare whensoeuer his dreadfull Harbingers present themselues before vs yea let vs often represent them vnto our selues that this feare may be seasonably present with vs. But let our feare be such as was that of Israel and of Moses a hopefull feare For there is a feare that deterres from God and there is a feare that doth only humble vs before God Ge● 4 The first is the Reprobates feare and maketh men like vnto Caine Renegadoes and Vagabonds forsake God and goe they know not whether But the godly mans feare maketh him tremble and yet keepe on his way though he goe quaking yet he goeth to God And indeed after God hath made vs sensible of our weaknesse and his greatnesse he vseth to support and strengthen his children he makes them experience the truth of that answere which Christ gaue to Saint Paul Psay 6 My grace is sufficient for thee my strength is made perfect in weaknesse 2. Cor. 12. vers 9. So did he hearten Esay with a cole from the Altar Daniel with a touch Deut. 15. Moses with an answere a kind answere and by Moses he bid the Israelites not feare And what wonder if he support his children in these tremblings seeing he supported the Hill for other wise the hil being al on fire trembling in the fire must needs haue bin consumed but it held out Yea and so did Moses Aaron when they entred into the cloud trod vpon that fierie hil no lesse securely then the three children did in the fierie Furnace whereinto they were cast by the appointment of Nebuchadnezzar 〈◊〉 3 And so shall the righteous at the day of iudgement when all the world is on fire and a lowder Trumpet shal sound then this at mount Sinai
rather because I wish that all Ministers would herein follow Saint Iohn Baptist and neither smother sinne which is no farther hated then it is knowne nor yet neglect Christian wisedome to winne a sinner who seldome distasteth the Law if it be seasoned with the Gospell neither murmureth at the reproofe if it doe not degenerate into a reproach If any thing will reclaime it is the prescribing of a good course coupled with the description of a sinners bad case Eccles 12 1● so the words of the wise will proue as goades and as nailes fastned by the Masters of the assemblies which are giuen from one shepheard they will hasten vs speedily and couple vs most firmly vnto the Church and our Sauiour Christ And thus much of the Inference I come now to the Argument of the words where of the first branch was the Workes they are two the first is Gods Hee giues repentance Though the Author be not exprest yet is he necessarily to bee vnderstood the Apostle is cleare for it 2. Tim. 4. The seruant of God must meekely instruct those that are contrarie minded trying if God at any time will grant them repentance and were not the Text so plaine the nature of the Worke putteth it out of all doubt for what is repentance but the Soules rising from death to life and no man euer quickned his owne soule hee must leaue that to God for euer the same God that made man after his Image must repaire his Image in man and therefore in the Psalme and in the Apostle it is plainely called a Creation But because the Authour is not exprest in my Text I forbeare further to speake of him and come vnto the Worke his Worke is Repentance The Grecians according to Lactantius speake better and more significantly that vse the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lactan. Lib 7. then the Latines that vse Paenitentia Tertullian before him writing against Marcion presseth the significancie of the Greeke word and because words doe lead vs to the vnderstanding of things we will a little looke into the word it may happily make vs to sound the things much better 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 commeth from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie properly the first facultie of the reasonable soule but by a Trope it is vsed oftentimes to note the whole whereupon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth a change of the mind signifieth a change either of the vnderstanding or ioyntly of the will also The vnderstanding of man is the first moouer in the whole course of his life because nothing is desired which is vnknowne our Appetite and our Will stirre not except they be informed of some thing which may occasion their stirring and informed they can not bee but by the vnderstanding Now the vnderstanding for want either of light or care doth very often mistake and then the Will that taketh all vpon trust must needs goe astray and we are called to a reuiew of our wayes Mens recitit se ab insania and vpon after thoughts alter our iudgements or as Lactantius speaketh in the place before cited after a fit of madnesse wee come to our wits againe This is the first kind of of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or changing of our mind But vse hath obtained and the practise of the Scripture which is the best Commentarie vpon the words to take 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in thesecond sense for the changing of the whole reasonable Soule and then it is compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the change of vnderstanding and of the will Inclinatio ●oluntatis st inclinatio totius su posits 〈◊〉 intell 〈◊〉 tot●●●uppositi in 〈◊〉 and indeed seldome doe they goe asunder for as it is true that whither the will bends thither the whole man inclines so it is as true that our vnderstanding cannot be resolued but it carieth vs with it which way so euer either of them incline they vsually earie the whole man though in a different manner the will by compulsion and the vnderstanding by perswasion so that we may not restraine this change to the one facultie but extend it also to the other by them to the whole man Adbi●ent penitentiam in bonis facti● sa●● citius ●er 〈◊〉 delinquunt quàm recte faciunt But Tertullian doth giue vs a good obseruation telling vs that the Heathen or those that are without the Church often change their mind and doe repent but it is of their good deeds of their temperancie truth liberalitie fidelitie and more vsually doe they change from better to worse then from worse to better He obserueth it of them that are without the Church I would it neuer had beene or now were not also true of them that are within the Church how many Iewes haue vncircumcised themselues and how many haue vnchristianed thēselues that were sometimes members of the Church How many doe dayly returne like Dogges to their vomit and like Swine to their wallowing in the myre yea how few are there of vs that doe not oftner sorrow for some thing which we haue done well then for many things which we haue done ill vnto whom I must remember that of Saint Peter It were better neuer to haue knowne the way of righteousnesse then after we haue entred it to turne from it 2 Epist cap. 2. Tertullian giueth the reason for they saith hee that repent of their Repentance towards God by how much they shall bee more acceptable to the diuell to whom they come by so much they shall bee more odious vnto God from whom they goe Wherfore we must adde one clause more to the definition of Repentance and not onely hold it to be a change of the mind but as Nazianzene and Theophylact 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Iamb Non est simplex mutatio animi sed mutatio in meliorem sententiam Rom. 12. Repentance is not onely a change of man but a change from worse to better Saint Paul openeth the change very plainely fashion not saith hee yourselues like vnto this present world but be yee changed by the renewing of your mind wherein he sheweth vs that as in sinne so in Repentance there is a whence and a whither Sinne is an auersion from God and a conuersion to the world so likewise Repentance must shake off the world and imbrace God Nazianzene setteth it forth in a very fit resemblance Orat. 40. comparing the Soule of a man to a paire of writing tables out of which must be wathed whatsoeuer was written with sinne and insteed thereof must be entred the writing of grace both these are necessarie in Repentance God hath dedicated both parts in his owne Repentance for as when he repentech of the euill intended against vs he doth not onely giue ouer to hate vs but also doth imbrace vs with Loue euen so when wee repent of our sinnes against God wee
those things whereof we both partake he is our brother but if the Communication or deriuation of them he is our father for he is the second Adam as the Church is the second Eue and as we are termed the sons of the Church or of Hierusalem the Spouse so are we also of Christ the Bridegroome who begetteth vs in and by his Church Wee beare the image of this second Adam as wee doe of the first and his children are we whose image we beare therefore Christ that saith I will declare thy name vnto my brethren Rom. 14. saith Esay 8. Behold here am I and the children which thou hast giuen vnto me As hee is so he calleth himselfe sometimes brother sometimes father And so haue you heard how he is The euerlasting father But the words beare also another interpretation which is That hee is the father of euerlasting things As hee is so are those things that are subiect vnto him both euerlasting And this distinguisheth betweene this world and that which is to come making Christ King of the later St. Paul telleth vs Heb. 2. that God hath subiected vnto him the world to come That temporall and eternall doe distinguish betweene these two worlds it is cleare in St. Paul teaching that those things which are seene are temporall but those which are not seene are eternall And touching the things which are seene the Preacher hath pronounced peremptorily vanity of vanities all is but vanity One generation passeth and another commeth and nothing abideth stedfast in the world 1 Cor. 7. St. Paul biddeth vs vse the world as if we vsed it not because the fashion of this world passeth away St. Iohn biddeth vs not to loue the world nor the things that are in the world Psal 102. for this world passeth away and the lusts thereof The Psalmist telleth vs that they all waxe old like vnto a garment and St. Peter 2 Pet. 2. Rom. 8. that the heauens shall melt with heate and the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt vp they shal be dissolued For all are subiect vnto vanitie But in the very same places where the temporalty of this present world is set down there is mention made of the eternity of that world which is to come you heard it out of the place to the Corinths and the words in the Psalme are very cleare 2 Cor. 4. Psal 102. 1 Iohn 2. The children of thy seruants shall continue and their seed shall stand fast in thy sight and St. Iohn Hee that fulfilleth the will of God abideth for euer St. Peter intimateth as much and so doth Salomon in the Preacher This our Prophet that in the fortieth is willed to cry All flesh is grasse and the glory thereof is as the flower of the field the grasse withereth the flower fadeth is willed also to cry That the Word of the Lord endureth for euer 1 Pet. 1. And this Word is the incorruptible seede by which wee are new-borne it is the food by which wee are nourished which endureth for euer it is the riches which ney ther rust can corrupt nor theeues spoyle vs of Iohn 6. it setteth vpon our heads an immarcessible Crowne and placeth vs in a Kingdome that cannot be shaken All the graces wherein stands the life of Christianity they are eternall graces they possesse vs of that which is eternall and make vs eternall possessours thereof Therefore well doth Christ in this respect also receiue this title of The father of eternity But eternity must be vnderstood à parte post not à parte ante The eternity à parte ante is Gods prerogatiue to be so eternall is to bee without beginning A creature hath his beginning and so farre is temporall but he may be continued for euer and so be eternall And in this sense doth the Prophet in this place speake of eternity and maketh Christ The father thereof And well may hee be called the father that was the Author and is the Disposer thereof for in his owne Person hee first gaue being vnto this both grace and glory and from his person doth it streame vnto vs wee no otherwise enioy it than as wee haue vnion with him And these three interests of Christ in these things doe make him to be termed the father of this eternity But now this title must looke back vnto the two formertitles and then wee shall see the sweetnesse that is in it In the Regall titles wee heard of that Wisedome and Power which wee may admire and adore but when I heare that the wonderfull Counsellour the almighty God is my father this sweetens these two glorious titles and maketh them the more comfortable to mee For whom doth the wisedome of a father prouide but for his childe and for whom so readily as for his childe doth a father vse his power I presume then of Christs pr●uidence of Christs supportance because Christ is my father Hee that is the king is my father and what I might not presume of a king of a father I dare presume yea and presume it constantly for he is vnchangeable My immortall father is not like my mortall that his wisedome or his power should steed me but for a time they will sticke to me for euer no death can take them from mee neither will they bee estranged vpon any dislike Can there bee greater comfort for a feeble for a sinfull soule than this assurance of such an euerlasting father The comfort is great that appeares in the person but in the inheritance there appeares much greater for wherein hath or doth this my euerlasting father spend his euerlasting wonderfull wisedome and mighty power hath he spent them to prouide me a momentany estate is his inheritance like that which is left by my mortall parents such as I may lose or must leaue No it is like himselfe his workes be are the image of his person they are eternall like himselfe Let then the world faile me let all earthly things be taken from me let them be vnto me as my parents naturall parents were but temporall yet shall I not want I can as little be poor as bee an Orphan My father neuer dyeth and the portion he giues mee endureth for euer When I reade of what stuffe Moses made the Tabercle Salomon the Temple much more when I reade St. Iohns description of the heauenly Ierusalem I now perceiue Gods meaning it is to let me vnderstand so farre as earth can shadow heauen how much more stable my inheritance of heauen is than the best inheritance I can get here on earth if it be of earth though on earth I may haue euery childe of God hath the earnest the first fruits of that which wee exspect in heauen And so haue you the first of these two titles which teach that Christs royall endowments are also spirituall I come now to the second which sheweth that as Christs kingdome is not of this world because it is as hee is
came the Nations should beat their swords into plough-shares Esay 21 and their speares into pruning hookes Nation shall not lift vp sword against Nation neyther shall they learne warre any more cap. 11. the same Prophet by an allegorie doth elsewhere teach that where Christ commeth and is entertained he doth ciuilize the most barbarous Nations The Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe the Leopard lye downe with the Kid the sucking childe shall play on the hole of the aspe and the weaned child shall put his hand on the cockatrice denne they shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountaine for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters couer the sea Worthily therfore doth the Apostle call Christ our peace whose kingdome is righteousnes Ephes 2.14 Rom. 14.17 peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Moreouer obserue that to whom we owe our glorie to him wee owe our peace the blessings of God doe much affect vs as being good but except we haue securitie in the possession of them wee lose most of our content for it is a great accession to miserie once to haue been happy and plus refert vndè quàm quò cadas he that taketh a downe-fall from an high place is more sensible of that which he hath lost than of that which he suffers Therefore the addition of peace vnto glory doth import no small comfort which Esay also foretold cap. 4. Vpon all the glory shall be a defence The Apostle speaketh significantly Phil. 4.7 The peace of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall bee as a Court of guard to keep our hearts and mindes in the state of grace whereunto we are brought by Christ They that are rich and are to conuey their goods by sea or land haunted with theeues pyrants doe thinke themselues to be so much more or lesse bound to those that will secure their passage as their goods are more or lesse precious Goods of greater price than is the glorie of the house before specified there cannot be how great then is our debt vnto Christ who safe conducts vs with our glorie through the wildernesse of this world maugre the might and malice of the Serpent and the Lion of all our deadly foes You haue heard who settleth the peace in the place you must now heare how Hee giueth it And it is truly tearmed a gift for whereas there are two kindes of peace one made betweene parties whereof each is able to make good his quarrell against the other yet they are contented to auoyde trouble to agree vpon reasonable conditions the other kinde of peace is that which a conqueror out of his goodnesse vouchsafeth to persons subdued which are at his mercie and whom by the law of armes he might make slaues Our peace is of this later sort we all deserued to bee captiues to the diuell for wee were all become children of wrath by Adams sinne Ephes 2.3 When we lay thus weltring in our bloud no other eye pitying vs then God said vnto man Thou shalt liue Ezech. 16. Hee gaue him this peace therefore is peace a free gift Neyther a free gift onely but a stable also they are not induciae but pax not a cessation from armes for a time that admitteth a returne to warre againe but a reconciliation for euer a couenant of salt Gods mercie shall not depart and this couenant shall not be remoued Esay 54.10 Ezech. 37. Prou. 1. v. vlt. You haue heard what the peace is the place where it resteth by whom and how they are ioyned together what remaineth but that euery man enquire whether he haue this peace or not in this enquirie we must proceede ascendendo not descendendo the lower must assure vs of the vpper degree The abolishing of the guilt of our sinne is the darkest branch of our peace which wee know onely by faith But for the triall of this point of faith we must haue recourse to our conscience and inquire what peace we find there For the peace of our conscience is the looking glasse of that peace which we haue with God if we finde none there we haue none with God and we may be sure we haue it with God if we finde it truly there Truely I say for a man may be deceiued in the triall of his conscience many haue quiet consciences but it is because they are seared Wherefore we must looke one steppe lower and iudge of the second degree of our peace by that which we finde in the third we must see it in our mortification and subiection of the flesh to the spirit for iustification which doth quiet the conscience is inseparable from sanctification which doth reforme our nature Finally to remoue all doubt concerning sanctification we must looke to the effects thereof for a good tree bringeth forth good fruit and our conuersation will testifie our sanctification if our deeds be seasoned with charitie the spirit of God doth rest in our soules This inquirie is most behoofe full in these daies wherein more talke of peace than doe partake thereof partake I say of that true and full peace which here is meant by Haggai Yet lest men stumble by ouer great curiosity and dis-hearten themselues for the diuell is apt to make men as well despaire that they haue not peace when they haue it as to presume that they haue it when they haue it not wee must distinguish inter pacem viatoris and comprehensoris the peace of the Church militant and that of the Church triumphant Touching the Church militant it hath outward crosses and inward conflicts We doe not alwaies apprehend the light of Gods countenance it is often ouercast and hee is despleased with vs but it is as a father with his childe of whom the Poet Sit licet in natos facies austera parentum Aequa tamen semper mens est amica voluntas Therefore the cloud will dissolue and the light will cheere vs againe The worme is not so dead but if we sinne it will giue vs a remembrance a happy remembrance for it awakeneth vs to repent and beleeue which so soone as we doe the smart is at an end The law of our members will often times rebell against the law of our mindes and carrying vs captiue vnto sin will make vs cry out with St. Paul Rom. 7. O wretch that I am who shall deliuer mee front this body of death but the conclusion is comfortable Thanks be to God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Finally very often when we speak vnto men of peace they will prepare themselues to war for except we will riot communicate with them in their sin they will hate vs so that we must redeeme our inward peace with an outward war In this case let it be our comfort that much happier is the war that keeps vs close to God than that peace which will separate vs from him Psal 23. Though I walke in the middest of the valley of
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was all ouercast with a heauinesse to death finally how it affected his body it made it sweat great drops of blood Put these together and you haue a faire commentary vpon that one word wherewith S. Luke doth expresse Christs sense calling it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Agonie or a sharpe conflict And indeed wee must confesse that there was much extraordinary in Christs Crosse and that it was such a draught as none could take but he And by this wee must obserue in the Cup and Christs sense thereof first that God would haue copiosam redemptionem not onely in regard of the person suffering which was both God and Man and therefore could to a little suffering adde an infinite worth but also in regard of the sufferings themselues which God would haue to be as great as the person of Christ was capable of And he would not haue it seeme strange vnto vs if we be put to a fiery tryall seeing God was pleased so farre to exercise the patience of his owne deare Sonne after his example we must be contented to take not only Calicem but Calicem hune to drinke not only of a Cup but of a very bitter Cup also as many in the primitiue Church and later ages haue done Secondly in the liuelinesse of Christs sense wee are taught quanti steterit salus nostra with how great heauinesse and horror Christ vndertooke and went through the redemption of our soules the more he felt of that the more are wee indebted to his loue and should detest our sinne yea wee must learne of Christs sorrow to sorrow our selues for our selues and by his heauinesse how to bee heauie when we haue offended God But enough of the Crosse Let vs come now to the wish of Nature It is exprest in two words transeat aufer let it passe take it away The words import that the Cup was making towards him and indeed the word houre sheweth that this was the time of taking it now death the reward of sinne temporall death fast clasped with eternall came to require due satisfaction to bee made to God Christ doth not denie that this is iust therefore let it goe on but yet transeat let it goe besides me let not me be the partie on whom it seizeth But how can that bee seeing Christ stood out as the surety of mankinde the execution must come out vpon him that hath vndertaken the debt if then God let his iudgements ire goe forth certainely they will not transire passe by the person of Christ for they are right arming Thunderbolts as the Wiseman calleth them Therefore Christ addeth a second word aufer though of themselues they would seize on me yet be thou pleased to take them from me let thy hand stay them which will not stay themselues But to leaue the words and come to the things that are obseruable in the Wish It is an inborne principle of nature for euery liuing thing to desire his preseruation and abhor destruction but this principle should be more liuing in the Sonnes of men who know that God made not death Wisd 1. and that it is the wages of sinne Rom. 5. Ambros Theophylact. in bunc locum because it is vnnaturall because it is penall it may bee feared it must bee deprecated we put off nature if our nature bee not so affected Especially if it be Calix iste such a Cup as Christs an extraordinary Cup wee may not only deprecate it but ingeminate our deprecation as Christ three times prayed the same words and St. Paul did the like against the buffettings of Sathan But we must marke that though all things were foreseene by Christ and resolued vpon yet it pleased God that hee should permit euery power of his soule to doe and suffer what was naturall vnto it Chrysostome and thereby declare vnto the world that he was a true Man Sermone 1. de Sancto Andrea Yea St. Ambrose and St. Bernard obserue that it was much more glorious for Christ to doe so than to haue done the contrarie that not only the passion of his bodie but the affection of his heart also might make for vs that whom his death quickned them his trembling might confirme his heauinesse glad his drooping cheere and his disquiet set at rest Theophylact obserueth that Christs Wish is a good warning to vs that wee doe not cast our selues into temptation 〈◊〉 de passione Christi St. Cyprian giueth the reason Quis non timeat si timet ille quem omnia timent he prefaceth his words with a passionate Meditation and they are foolishly hardy that presume of more than is exprest in the Wish of Christ And the Wish is not onely Admonitory but Consolatorie also It is no small comfort that it is lawful for vs to expresse our Wishes though they be contrary to Gods will yea his knowne will for so was Christs The more rigid is their Diuinity that are so zealous for Grace that they abolish Nature and will haue a Christian man forget to be a man But though this Wish may be common to Christ and vs yet is there as great difference betweene it as it riseth in vs and as it rose in him It rose in him neuer but according to the prescript of reason his reason was neuer preuented by his affection sicut quando voluit factus est homo as he was not incarnate but when hee was willing so onely when hee was willing did his affections stirre within him Nihil coactum in Christo Damascen lib. 3 Orthod sid cap. 20. the obiects could not worke his affections but when he saw it fit therefore shall you reade in the Gospell that Christ troubled himselfe when he groaned in spirit Iohn 11. But as for our affections they out-step our discretion and wee are transported with them before we are aduised which maketh vs retract them with our after wits Secondly Christs affections when they stirred neuer passed those bounds which were set them by reason but ours will not so be bridled seldome are we moued but we eyther ouer reach or come short of that which wee ought to doe Therefore our affections and Christs are fitly resembled to two Vials of cleane water whereof the one hath a muddy residence the other hath no residence at all stirre the water that is in the Viall without residence and though you trouble it yet you shall not see any foulenesse in it but no sooner is that Viall that had the residence stirred but the mudde mingleth with the water euen so our affections are tainted with concupiscence from which conception by the Holy Ghost did free our Sauiour Christ You haue heard the Wish of Nature and heard how it is bent against the Crosse But there is one point which may not be omitted Christs modesty in expressing this for it is but a conditionall Wish Christ limiteth it with If If it possible let this Cup passe Things are
of paines to fulfill Gods commands but so insolent so foolish are the most of men that they will haue their owne wils satisfie their owne lusts and rather than faile thereof they will breake Gods bonds and cast his cords from them And what Cup can be bitter enough to purge such peccant humours The last note that I gaue vpon the Text is the comparison betweene the Wish and the Will whereof I told you the one was conditionall the other absolute the one is but as it were a deliberation the other a resolution And indeed that difference we must hold when our Wishes and Gods Decrees are different neuer to present our desires but with a condition but to take heed of capitulating with God for that were to giue Law vnto the Law-giuer which should not be attempted and will not be endured But it is time to end Tract 104. Christ saith S. Austin being in the forme of a seruant might haue conceiued this prayer in silence but It a se voluit Patri exhibere peccatorem vt meminisset se nostrum esse doctorem he would so performe his deuotion as might make best for our instruction And Saint Chrysostome noteth herein an extraordinary instruction Sublimem admirabilis Philosophiae virtutem docet etiam Natur â abhorrente renuente Deum sequendum It is an high straine of Christian vertue that is taught vs in this patterne of Christ so farre to be masters of our naturall Affections that will they nil they we will doe what God doth bid vs. St. Cyprian telleth ys that we are not onely taught by Christ What to doe but How namely to imitate Christs offertory Prayer prostrating our selues humbly inuocating our Father reuerently and not presenting our desires otherwise than conditionally if we take this course we shall conclude with an absolute submission vnto the Will of God Certainly St. Bernard thought so for hee meditateth thus vpon my Text Noniam despero Domine Lord I am not out of heart now be my case neuer so bad Let my tribulation be irkesome vnto me and let me haue a comardly heart by nature let me be forward when I petition with Transeat Let this Cup passe take i● from mee I haue learned of thee to betake my selfe not to a carnall but an heauenly comfort Not my Will but thy Will be done will hold in all murmuring and hearten all fainting of my soule These words then are exemplary words they informe vs what Christ did to direct vs what we must doe Christs example is without exception because hee was without sinne and is of good vse for vs because we may fall into the like case The like I say but not the same we may fall though not into a Propitiatory yet into a Probatory suffering It is sacriledge to affect the one the other is common to the whole Church When we fall into it if we take Christ for our patterne we shall finde him our patron also we shall finde that his draught hath left little bitternesse in ours and that which is left is much allayed When Christ made this Prayer an Angell from heauen comforted him and if wee conceiue the like prayers the Spirit of Christ will not faile to be a comforter to vs. Onely let vs ex non volito make volitum giue the vpper hand to Grace aboue Nature and we shall finde much ioy in affliction which will be vnto vs the pledge of a greater ioy which after our affliction wee shall enioy in the Kingdome of Heauen THis Grace he giue vnto vs that in this practice hath gone before vs that as his so by his our patient obedience may open vs a way vnto a blessed Inheritance IHS A SERMON PREACHED AT St. PETERS IN OXFORD Vpon EASTER DAY 1 COR. 15.20 Christ is risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that slept ANd these words are a part of that first Hymne wherewith wee solemnize this Feast yea they containe a good and full Commentary vpon this dayes employment For this day is spent in historia Prophetia we therein renue Christs and foretaste our owne Resurrection that in the Seruice and this in the Sacrament These two Resurrections are inseparable therefore St. Paul willing to assure vs of the later doth first establish the Doctrine of the former and he doth it by Witnesses and by Reasons By Witnesses because a matter of fact and by Reasons because this fact is an Article of Faith For Articles of Faith are not only credenda but also credibilia though before they are reuealed we cannot diuine at them yet being reuealed we may argue fairely for them many times out of Nature but out of Scripture alwaies The Reasons here yeelded by the Apostle are of two sorts the first collects the Absurdities that presse all Gaine-sayers the second those Conueniences that must bee acknowledged by true Beleeuers This Scripture stand● in the midst of these Reasons and is compounded of the conclusion of the former and foundation of the later The refutation of the Absurdities warrants this truth Christ is risen from the dead and the proofe of the Conueniences relyes vpon this ground Christ is become the first fruits of them that slept The Resurrection then from the dead is the maine point of this Text and the Text doth occasion vs to consider 1. what it is then how applyed What it is we cannot be ignorant if we know the termes wherein it is exprest these two termes Dead and Resurrection But when we haue found them wee must discreetly apply them for they haue different subiects Christ and those that slept they belong to both but vnto those by him for He is their first fruits These be the contents of this Scripture and of these shall I by Gods assistance and your Christian audience now speake briefly and in their order And first of the termes Death and Resurrection These termes are opposite therefore by the one wee must bee led to know the other and because death is first in nature I beginne at that All death if it bee antecedent to the Resurre ion is eyther in sinne or for sinne Death in sinne is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Orat. 7 as Nyssen defines it an inabilitie to doe good because we haue lost communion with God But communion with God simply wee cannot lose and be for without him nothing can subsist It is then communion in that which is his supreme perfection in wisedome and in holinesse the soule that is destitute of these that soule is dead for it can neyther taste nor see how good the Lord is whom notwithstanding so to know is euerlasting life and if it be so senslesse it must needes be liuelesse It is dead in sinne But as there is death in sinne so is there also for sinne and this is double eyther only the dissolution of soule and body or else a penall condition that followeth thereupon Touching the dissolution we must marke that as
this word imports is That the sinnes which we entertaine for friends shall suddenly turne to be our foes they shall appeare as an Army furnished with the instruments of Death So we learne of St PETER Brethren I beseech you 1 Pet. 2 11. as strangers and pilgrimes abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule We thinke that by them we sight against GOD but GOD is impenitrable the arrowes that we shoot rebound backe and wound our selues And no maruell for sinne is the sting of death and we cannot commit sinne but we receine that sting and when GOD shall come against vs as I●HV against IEZE●EL and call who is on my side who Our owne sinnes 2 King 9. as her Eunuches shall stand out and at his command cast vs downe to be trampled vnder feet and to be made meat for Dogges to be insulted vpon by the Fiends of Hell and to be gnawne on by Death But where shall this martialling be Surely in our owne bosome in our owne conscience that shall then be a true and a cleare glasse representing our sinnes and representing them armed against vs. And this shall adde much to our miserie it shall not be then with vs as it is in this world here we behold our naturall face in a glasse Iames 1. and by and by goe away and forget what manner of person we were but this glasse shall still be before vs and our eye shall still be on it And why It is nothing but the worme that neuer dyeth we can no more be rid of it then we can be rid of our soule the Conscience is an essentiall power of the Soule and this worme by an irreuocable decree is made a perpetuall companion of a guiltie Conscience the wicked shall carrie it with them from the Iudgement-Seat and shall keepe it with them so long as they shall burne in the flames of Hell This is a powerfull Motiue and should worke in you that are guiltie a care to disarme so powerfull an Enemie to plucke out the sting before the wound be vncurable so many sinnes as remaine vnrepented of are as so many treacherous Souldiers howsoeuer they doe now speake friendly to you yet when they are least feared they will giue deadly strokes you shall feare them when you shall haue no remedy against them What I say to you I say vnto all nay GOD himselfe saith it in the close of this Psalme Heare this all ye that forget God Iewes and Gentiles whatsoeuer you be if you be adulterers drunkards vsurers blasphemers any way wicked liuers Consider this saith GOD least I suddenly take you away and there be none to helpe you for if we be guiltie of such sinnes and encourage our selues in them by base conceipts of GOD GOD will not faile to reproue vs and marshall such wickednesse before vs to conuict vs thereof and confound vs therewith God giue vs all timely repentance that we may preuent so fearefull a vengance Amen Πάντοτε δόξα Θηῶ. A SERMON PREACHED AT St ANDREWES IN WELLS A WOMAN DOING PENANCE FOR INCEST GALATH. 6. VERSE 1. Brethren if a man be ouertaken in a fault you which are spirituall restore such a one in the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted WE are all compounded of the Old and New man and euerie one feeles the solicitations of both These solicitations exercise both our head and our heart our head to discerne betweene them our heart to make a good choyce vpon a right iudgement And that we make such a choyce it should appeare in our works they should argue the death of concupiscence and the life of grace in that we beare fruit not to the Flesh but to the Spirit Now the fruit of the Spirit is either pietie or charitie it testifieth that our selues are carefull to be good and being good we are not vnrespectiue of others Not of them that are good for it keeps vs from being ambitiously insolent not of them that are bad for it makes vs compassionately mercifull The exercise of this last branch of charitie the opening of our tender bowels towards such as offend is the Argument of these words which I haue now read vnto you Here we haue Offendors described and Compassion enioyned Offendors not of all sorts but such as ought to be the subiect of Compassion Offendors that are ouertaken in a fault we are enioyned to shew Compassion to these to restore them in the spirit of meekenesse And touching this Compassion we are moreouer taught First who must shew it and secondly what must moue them therunto They that must shew it are here called Brethren and spirituall each name importeth a reference they haue vnto the Offendor the first a reference of their persons they are their Allies and therefore may not shut their bowels against them the second of their guifts the better they are the more good they must doe such are the persons that must shew compassion And they must be moued thereunto out of an apprehension of the common danger danger is common to all Thou mayst likewise be tempted and no man must be vnobseruant hereof he must consider his owne selfe So haue you the contents of this Text which I meane now farther to enlarge as this spectacle doth occasion and shall be most behoofefull for vs all I begin first at the description that is here made of an Offendor where you shall see first his fault and then the cause thereof The fault is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fall a fall taken by stumbling The fall is not corporall but morall yet by a corporall you may vnderstand a morall fall for he that falleth in regard of the sight of his body commeth lower and withall ordinarily taketh a bruise euen so is it in a morall fall GOD by Creation made a man dominum socium If you looke to this visible world he made him dominum as it appeareth Genes 1. where Soueraigntie is giuen ouer the Beasts Birds Fishes and euerie other Creature made for the vse of man But if you looke to the inuisible world then was he to be Socius a confort with the Angels in the blessed state of Heauen Yea in this Microcosme the Fabricke of the nature of man which is as it were an Epitome of these two other worlds the better part had the guidance of and commanded ouer the worse the Soule ruled the Body But so soone as man sinned he came downe domintos became servus and these base creatures began to tyrannize ouer vs who were ordained their Lords hence goods meats drinkes and other corruptible things are become Idols and we fall downe and worship them and what will not a man doe transported by the vanity of this world As for the societie we had with Angels the blessed Angels of Heauen we haue lost that and are become the Serpents brood not onely Beasts but also Diuels Finally Earth hath gotten the vpper hand of Heauen the Body of the
of their profession GODS Name is blasphemed by it And lastly Iosu 7. vengeance by the sinne of one man commeth vpon a whole Church one ACHAN troubleth all Israel Ier. 9. These considerations should draw teares from euerie mans eyes it should make vs wish with IEREMIE that our heads were full of waters and our eyes a fountaine of teares Ps 11 9. Our eyes with DAVIDS should gush out with riuers because men keepe not Gods Lawes Neither should priuate men onely so lament but the whole Church also you haue a patterne in the storie of NABOTH 1 King 21. it was pretended that NABOTH blasphemed GOD and the King and thereupon the whole Citie proclaimed a Fast the like we read Esdras 9 and 10 of a publike lamentation for the sinne of some of the people These reasons and examples must worke in vs and force vs to weep for the grieuous sinne of a brother We must weepe yet here we must not stop not wèeping was the cause of the fault but it was not the fault of the Corinthians their fault was as St PAVL telleth them that they did not put away the incestuous person Christians as they must be sorrowfull to see grieuous offendors so must they be zealous for their chastisement if they haue sufficient power and faire proofe otherwise they make the sinne their owne But if so be the proofe be not full Ambr. or they haue no lawfull authoritie to chastife then it is sufficient for them to mourne I shall fall vpon this point againe when I come to the censure therefore I will say no more of it here Onely I must put you that are the Penitent in mind that if others must be so sorrowfull for you then must you be sorrowfull for your selfe and you must be as carefull to rid your selfe of sinne as we must be to rid the Church of a sinner But let vs come at length to the Censure St PAVL as I told you had a more quicke eare and a more feeling heart then the Corinthians had he proueth it true which else-where he affirmeth of himselfe Who is weake and I am not weake Who is offended and I burne not ● Cor. 11. Yea he seemes to disproue the common Prouerbe Segnius irritant ammos dimissa per aures quam quae sunt oculis commissa fidelibus for what the Corinthians neglected hauing it in their eye with that he was much disquieted though he had notice of it onely by his eare and therefore doth he censure it as appeares in the last part of the Text where you shall see what the censure was and whereunto it serued The censure is Excommunication but it is exprest in verie high and fearfull termes it is called a deliuerie vnto Satan The words imply one thing and expresse another for Excommunication consisteth of two parts a priuatiue and a positiue the priuatiue is that which seperateth from the Communion of Saints and separation presupposeth a former Communion The Article of our Creed teacheth vs that there is a Communion of Saints there is an inward and an outward communion inward by Faith Hope and Charitie outward in the participation of sacred things in the visible assembly From the inward none is separated but by himselfe falling from his Faith Hope and Charitie and so depriuing himselfe of the bond of Vnion which is the Spirit of GOD. From the outward none should be separated except he first doth separate himselfe from the inward and doth also manifest that separation to the scandall of others and dishonor of Religion The man that goeth so farre in separating himselfe by sinne the CHVRCH must separate him by censure Iude 2 Thes 3. 1 Cor. 5. We must hate the garment spotted with the Flesh We must not keepe companie we must not eat with those that are inordinate we must not let the world thinke that Christianity doth allow of such sinnes The Aduersaries are apt enough to traduce vs without a cause how much more if there be a cause The impurities of old Heretickes were layd to the Christians in generall and now the Anabaptists and Familists are made our staines there may be some colour of casting such shame vpon vs if we endure such persons therefore we must put them away from amongst vs they must vndergoe the priuatiue part of Excommunication Besides this priuatiue part which is implyed in the censure because mentioned before there is a positiue part which is here exprest it is the deliuerie vnto Satan The phrase hath in it some thing proper to an Apostle and some thing common to all Bishops It was proper to the Apostles so to deliner vnto Satan as that he should haue power ouer the incestuous persons body to torment him and such power the Apostles not onely had but executed as appeares in the stories of ELYMAS ANANIAS and SAPHIRA They could strike men with death they could possesse them with as well as dispossesse them off foule Spirits And of this power doe many of the Fathers vnderstand these words and the like which we read 1 Tim. 1. But besides this power there is another common to all Bishops with the Apostles which is to expose the Soules of those which are obstinate sinners to the malice of the Prince of Darknesse by suspending them from the preseruatiue against it which is the visible Communion of Saints for the inuisible will not hold long if the visible be iustly with-held because extra Ecclesiam non est salus Satan raigneth and rageth in them and on them that are excluded from the Communion of Saints A word here to you the penitent consider with your selfe how bitter banishment it is to him that dwelleth in a goodly Countrey hath a good house faire possessions and those well stockt and stored yet he must part with all these And hereby guesse you at the euill of the priuatiue part of Excommunication for a Christian within the CHVRCH is in the Kingdome of Heauen he is of the Houshold of GOD he is Owner of those greene pastures and waters of comfort which are mentioned Psal 23. he is prouided plentifully of all ghostly food and rayment If the losse of those corporall things be grieuous how grieuous must the losse of these spirituall be And touching the positiue part of the Excommunication suppose that he that were banished were also put into the hands of a Tyrant and he that hated him should be made Lord ouer him should haue power to vse him as a Slaue and afflict him with tortures you would thinke his case much more miserable and yet is it not so miserable as his which is deliuered ouer to Satan vsed by him onely to serue filthy lusts and daily to breed new matter for the vexation of his owne Soule yet this was to be the case of this incestuous Corinthian And you deserue that it should haue been your case both of you being such impure persons to whom should you be committed but to
vntill the tenth Generation but against Incest he is more seuere Deut. 271 for he would not onely haue a generall curse pronounced against it whereunto he commanded all the people to say Amen but touching the Moabites and Ammonites the first spawne of Incest that we find in the Scripture though they were the posteritie of LOT whom GOD loued for AERAHAM's sake Deut 23. yet doth he command that they shall not enter into the Congregation of Israel for euer Israel is forbidden to seeke their peace at any time RVBEN is a second example marke what his owne Father IACOB said of him when he blest the Patriarkes Ruben thou art my first borne my might Gen. 49. the beginning of my strength the excellencie of digni●●● and the excellencie of power these were the preeminences of his birth-right but he forfeited them all for Incest as appeares in the verie next words of his Father Vnstable as water thou shalt not excell because thou wentest vp to thy Fathers bed then defiledst thou it He went vp into my couch A third example is ABSALON he abused his Fathers Concubines therefore he came to an infamous end he was hanged by the haire of his owne head he dyed childlesse and so his name did rot Leu. 8. The Land of Canaan spued out the old Inhabitants for Incest and GOD threatneth the destruction of Israel for that a man and his sonne would goe in to one maid Amos 2. By GODS Law no lesse then death was the punishment of Incest Leu. 10. The Lawes of the Land are more mercifull vnto you the Penitent that suffer you to breathe and leaue you to the censure of the CHVRCH But if you mind what you haue heard touching that censure and drinke in St AVSTINS conceipt therof you shall find cause enough to feare and freedome from death may seeme vnto you worse then death But yet your case is not desperate for there yet remaines one point in the Text which may yeeld a mitigation to your feares and a consolation to your Soule The censure is not mortall but medicinall as appeares in the end whereunto the censure serues Now a medicine you know doth first paine then it doth ease yea it doth therfore paine that it may ease so doth this ghostly censure it serues for the destruction of the flesh there is the paine but there followeth ease vpon it the spirit sha● be saued First of the paine As the flesh signifieth sometimes the substance sometimes the corruption of the outward man so may the destruction signifie either the mortalitie or the mortification thereof mortalitie if the censure proceed from the power which is proper to an Apostle but if it signifie the power which is common to Bishops with the Apostles it noteth mortification it signifieth the crucifying of the flesh with the lusts thereof the putting off the old man and the dying vnto sinne And indeed this we intend by our Ecclesiasticall censures We intend that you should root out the sinne for which you doe penance and so destroy your flesh This is painfull to flesh and blood but vt valeas multa dolenda feres you must brooke the paine that you may enioy the ease that followeth thereupon the spirit shall be saued The spirit noteth the soule or the grace thereof the sauing of the soule is the preseruing of grace therein if the soule loose grace it looseth it selfe in regard of all well-being and it were much better for it not to be at all then to be without grace so that the saluation of our spirit is no small part of our happinesse Which must the rather be esteemed because if our spirit fare well it will make euen the flesh that is destroyed in regard of the corruption to be farre better in regard of the substance for it shall be purged from dead works to serue the liuing GOD. But when shall we reape this eas● out of paine In the day of our Lord Iesus Christ Though a peniten euen in this life shall find some case in his Conscience yet the full benefit of Ecclesiasticall censure is reserued to the day of the Lord because all this life we must be mortifying our flesh especially enormous sinners must be so imployed the greatest of their ease in this world must haue a mixture of paine but in the day of the Lord they shall haue ease without all delay But what day of the Lord is meant here Euerie mans particular day of death or the generall doomes day An account must be made at both and if we vse the Ecclesiasticall censure well we shall find that this Iudgment preuents that this temporall the eternall For as CHRIST at his first comming came not to destroy but to saue so his Ministers that dispense the Gospel vse their power not to destruction but to edification But I thinke the day of the Lord signifieth properly the last day CHRIST will publikely manifest before the CHVRCH tryumphant the effect of the Keyes which he hath committed to his Ministers to be exercised publikely in the CHVRCH militant he will then reueale how all stand bound in Heauen which were neuer loosed on Earth and all whom the CHVRCH hath loosed in Earth shall then appeare to be loosed in Heauen I end The successe which St PAVL had when he inflicted this sentence was that the Corinthians became verie sensible of their fault and the Incestuous person of his St PAVL himselfe doth witnesse this 2 Cor. 7. where he amplyfieth both their godly sorrowes and his congratulating indulgence towards them both Oh that like successe might blesse my paines that I may giue as good a testimonie to this Congregation for their hatred of sinne as St PAVL gaue to the Corinthians and to this Penitent the like mittigation of his Censure as St PAVL to that Incestuous person So may this penitentiall sheet of his be turned into a white robe of righteousnesse his teares into ioy and all we that are humbled for him in the Church militant be with him exalted in the Church tryumphant Amen A SERMON PREACHED IN THE CATHEDRAL CHVRCH OF WELS AT WHAT TIME TWO DID PENANCE FOR INCEST A MAN AND HIS WIVES DAVGHTER LEVIT 20. VERSE 14. Likewise if a man taketh a wife and her mother this is wickednesse they shall burne him and them with fire and there shall be no wickednesse amongst you NO sooner doe you heare this Text but I am ure you vnderstand this spectacle you vnderstand what sinners these persons are what doome this Law doth passe vpon them And indeed their sinne and Gods doome are the maine parts of my Text. But more distinctly In the sinne we must note first the fact then the haynousnesse thereof The fact is vnnaturall adulterie Adulterie because one man taketh more women then one that is plaine adulterie And this adulterie is vnnaturall because there is the neerest reference betweene the women the one a Mother the other her Daughter to take two
man dyed innocently not the whole Congregation which followed but they which led the Congregation were to be guiltie of his death Secondly The imposing of hands vpon the Malefactor was the making of him as it were a politicke Sacrifice for mundi expiatio est malorum occisio as the Priest so the Prince hath his Sacrifice to offer as the CHVRCH so the Common weale the execution of Malefactors is a propitiating of GOD. And GOD in the Common-weale of Israel in cases wherein he refused the Ceremoniall was well pleased to haue this Sacrifice and to admit it as expiatorie of the Common-weale I told you of the thing before but of the deuoting of the person to pacifie GOD I could not speake till I came to this place You the Penitent may hereby see how zealously the State should be bent against you and how much it concernes vs to see Iustice done vpon you Hauing thus sufficiently opened the punishment I come now to shew you vpon whom it must be executed Quicunque vpon him whosoeuer he be that curseth or blasphemeth here must be no respect of persons high or low rich or poore be he what he may be he is liable to punishment if he curse his God Though it be a false-one yet if it be his the Law saith plainly he shall beare his sinne The words may be vnderstood either as a relation or as a commandement As a relation what other Nations doe how zealous they are for the honour of their Gods In the Storie of the wonders which GOD wrought in deliuering the children of Israel out of Aegypt we find that when Pharaoh would haue the Israelites sacrifice to their GOD in the Land of Aegypt Exod. 8. Loe said Moses shall we sacrifice the abhomination of the Aegyptians before their eyes and will they not stone vs How did Nebuchadnezzar cause the Furnace to be heated to consume those that would not worship his golden Image What a doe kept Demetrius the Siluer-Smith when St Paul was thought to blaspheme Diana Protagoras was banished Socrates was put to death for disgracing the gods of Athens The Mahumetans lay on many stripes vpon them that disgrace their Alearon I will omit the solemne Bellum sacrum of the Graecians Thus the words may be conceiued by way of relation and then see how GOD argues Doe the Heathen punish those who dishonour or curse those that are onely gods in their erroneous reputation Much more then ought he to be punished that blasphemes the true GOD. Thus doth GOD oftentimes shame his owne people for their Impieties by setting before their face the Pietie that is in Infidels Hath a Nation changed their Gods which yet are no Gods Ier. 2. But my people hath changed their glorie for that which doth not profit And againe Mal. 3. Will a man rob God Yet ye haue robbed me So that the punishment cannot be denied to be iust by true Religion which is held most iust by the glimmering light of Reason But the words may haue in them more then a bare Relation they may containe a commandement also a commandement that whosoeuer curseth God though it be but his God that is a false God shall be punished for conscientia erronea ligat so long as any man in his conscience is perswaded that he is the true God he must worship him as if he were such It is true that when he commeth to the knowledge of his error Esay 8. Esay 2. he may then curse his false gods he may cast them to the Bats and to the Moles But so long as his vnderstanding is clouded with error his Reuerence must follow the Rule of his Conscience It is good Diuinitie that is deliuered in the Booke of Wisdome touching Idolatrous periured persons They shall be iustly punished Cap. 14. both because they thought not well of God giuing heed vnto Idols and also vniustly swore in deceit despising holinesse ●or it is not the power of them by whom they sweare but it is the iust vengeance of sinners that punisheth alwayes the offence of the vngodly And no maruell for were it a true GOD they would vse him so their ignorance is not antecedent but concomitant and such ignorance doth not excuse the quantitie much lesse doth it excuse the qualitie of sinne But to leaue his God and come to the Name of the Lord. Here Quicunque must be repeated againe we may lesse admit exception of persons amongst them that blaspheme the Name of the Lord then amongst them that curse their God But here we meet with a markable distribution of quicunque whosoeuer Whether saith the Text he be a Stranger or borne in the Land Though morally all men are bound and may be perswaded by Ministers and others to acknowledge and worship the true GOD yet politickly Infidels cannot be compeld And why It is a worke that needeth the assistance of supernaturall grace which is not annext vnto the Sword Notwithstanding the Ciuill Sword may take vengeance vpon all euen Strangers Infidels that openly blaspheme the Name of the Lord though they may be tollerated in their false yet may they not open their mouthes against the true Religion Quicunque whatsoeuer Stranger doth so he must be stoned And if a Stranger much more he that is borne in the Land for he is tyed to honour GOD by a double obligation a natiue a votiue as a man as a member of the Church Now the more obligations the more guilt the more guilt the more iust the punishment therefore Quicunque whosoeuer borne in the Land blasphemeth the Name of the Lord he must be stoned to death I must carrie Quicunque a little farther the root of Blasphemie may be without vs or within vs Without vs the Diuel who may suggest it and then it is no sinne of ours though a sinne except we consent vnto it and delight in it Within vs it may be three-fold First Ignorance Secondly Infirmitie Thirdly Malice There is great odds betweene these to GOD-ward St Paul blasphemed but he did it ignorantly he did not beleeue that IESVS was the CHRIST St Peter blasphemed but he did it of infirmie he did it being ouertaken with feare of death The Pharisees they also blasphemed but they did it out of malice they did it against their owne conscience Now of these three Rootes the two first leaue place for repentance St Peter and St Paul are ensamples thereof Math. 12. Not so the third it is the sinne against the Holy Ghost not to be forgiuen in this world nor in that which is to come But howsoeuer there is this odds to GOD-ward yet in regard of the Magistrates sword there is no difference Quicunque be the root ignorance be it infirmitie be it malice he must be stoned to death his body must be made an expiatorie Anathema or Sacrifice by the State whose Soule notwithstanding vpon repentance may be saued in the day of the Lord. And verily the Blasphemer
be no worse then this that it is Vanitie that it is a Lie For what doe wee abhorre more in nature then vanitie which is the emptinesse of nature What in good manners more then a Lie which is the counterfeit of good manners We thinke nothing ought more to be endeauoured then sollidnesse in Being and sinceritie in Appearing and abhorre nothing more then the contrarie to them both So that to haue our state not onely paralleld with but to become Vanitie and a Lie we may deeme the greatest debasement that can be thereof And yet it is not the comparison doth vs too much honour we are not worthy to bee matched with these though these bee of so small waight yet they ouer-waigh vs in the scales of God if we both bee waighed our lightnesse will soone discouer the inequalitie And indeed no wonder for vanitie is nothing in comparison of sinne and a naturall Lie in comparison of a morall To be mortall taketh away much of that substance which we had in our Creation but to bee sinfull taketh away much more the Maxime Quod efficit tale illud ipsum est magis tale holdeth most true betweene sinne and vanitie for man becommeth subiect vnto vanitie through sinne and who doth not know how much lower sinne doth carrie vs then doth vanitie Vanitie lodgeth vs in the earth sinne tumbleth vs into hell and that is lightest that carrieth vs lowest the more sollid euery thing is the neerer to God and the farther from God it carrieth vs the lighter it must needs be And behold a Paradoxe Here grauia tendunt sursum and Leuia deorsum so that they that are light in the scales are out of the scales very heauie they sinke downe into Hell and they that are in the scales heauie are out of the scales verie light they so are as high as Heauen But it may be thought if men of low degree bee singled by them selues or men of high degree by themselues their waight is no greater yet if they bee ioyned each will helpe to augment the others waight and what they cannot a part they may doe going together at least counterpoyse if not ouerpoyse Vanitie and a Lie No verily for as a Cipher added to a Cipher maketh but a Cipher so Vanitie is no whit the heauier by the addition of a Lie nor a Lie by the addition of Vanitie Put high men and low men all sorts of men yea all persons into Gods ballance and you shall find that if they haue no other waight then that which is in men they cannot hold waight no not with vanitie it selfe then which you would thinke nothing can haue lesse waight and indeed nothing hath but sinne wherin standeth the chiefe lightnesse of man O Lord thou hast appointed a Day wherein thou wilt waigh all both things and persons and trie how much they haue lost of that sollidnesse which thou hast bestowed vpon them I confesse that I had lost much yea all true sollidnesse I brought none with me out of my mothers wombe but it hath pleased thee againe to repaire it in part and promise it in whole Grant that of whatsoeuer Degree I am I may thinke no better of my nature then it is and may value thy grace according to its worth make me which am a sonne of Adam a child of God and so free me from vanitie And if thou bee pleased to prosper me on earth yet Lord prosper mee much more towards Heauen and free my greatnesse from a Lie So shall I not be light in thy scales with that lightnesse that descends to Hell but heauie with that sollidnesse that ascends to Heauen Amen A Meditation vpon Hebr. 9. VERSE 27. It is appointed for all men once to die and after death commeth Iudgement O My Soule what now thou art thou canst not continue long and what thou shalt bee it is good thou timely doe consider Thou now dwellest in a body made of clay and daily mouldring into dust thou canst haue no surer prognostication that it will haue an end then thy continuall experience that it is mortall Were there nothing but Age that wrought vpon it it would wither but when sicknesse which speedeth sooner and spends faster conspires with Age to ruine thy habitation how canst thou be vnmindful of the fall thereof How canst thou but euery houre expect it But there is a higher remembrancer one of whom thou mayst lesse doubt in this case then of either sicknesse or Age and that is God hee hath decreed it All must die thou art one of that All and of All not one that can exempt himselfe from or except against Gods decree Especially so iust a decree no lesse iust then peremptorie no lesse peremptorie then iust God peremptorily threatned death before thou sinnedst and since thou hast sinned Iustice can doe no lesse then giue sentence against thee the sentence of death The Soule that sinneth must die thou art a sinfull soule and therefore thou must taste of death Thou must not looke that those eyes of thine which haue beene the windowes of lust shall alwayes gaze vpon this besotting world thou must not thinke that those eares of thine by whose gates haue entred so much vanitie shall still be inchaunted with the flatteries of thy deceitfull friends thou must not thinke that this taste of thine importunate sollicitor of thy appetite shall still serue to pamper thy body with delicacies These things haue had their time and it is but a time that is allowed them they were and the more they doe the lesse shall they be able to doe dimnesse casts a vaile vpon thine eyes and deafnesse lockes vp the doores of thy eares and thy taste forgets to discerne thy meates And iustly become they so infeebled that kept no measure in their strength what they should haue done they delighted least to doe though by doing it they might haue lasted long and what they should not haue done in doing that they tooke their greatest solace though in doing of it they wrought their owne decay Had not Eue beheld the forbidden fruit more willingly then God hadshee not listned to the Serpent more attentiuely then to his word had shee not tasted the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Euill more sweetly then the tree of life I had had immortall eyes eares and taste But because shee abused them I must loose the vse of them But why doe I deriue my fault vpon others Why doe I vncouer my Parents nakednesse Are my teeth set on edge onely because they did eate sower Grapes My selfe did eate in them and after them my selfe haue eaten like vnto them I doe not so much resemble them in nature as concupiscence what so euer they planted I haue watered and watered that often which they planted but once And as if I feared that their ill husbandrie would not proue fast enough my selfe haue beene a toylesome Husbandman in cherishing the briers and thornes that haue choked euen all
lift vp mine eies vnto that Hill but from thence commeth my saluation And no maruell that Hill is the Hill of the Lord it is lifted vp aboue all Hils the Hill of Mercie is higher then the Hill of Iudgement there the punishing Angell that with his sword drawne pursueth the sinnes of men is commanded for to sheath it It is Hie●usalem indeed The Vision of Peace there is the Altar there is the Sacrifice whereat God will be worshipped wherewith he will be pacified Yea where Abraham shall haue his Jsaac redeemed and a Father greater then Abraham will giue a Sonne dearer then Isaac that Isaac may liue and indeed to bee an Isaac that is a matter of true gladnesse vnto Abraham There Dauid shall find a truer Dauid Dauid out of loue to his people would haue yeilded his life to end their plagues but he findeth there a Dauid that is more louing and more beloued and which indeed there doth what Dauid was but willing to doe but was willing in vaine for no man can by any meanes redeeme his brother or giue a ransome to God for him No man if he be no more then a man can doe it it is a worke of God of Dauids Lord he it is that is the Resurrection and the Life it is his bloud that speaketh better things then the bloud of Abel Abels bloud called for vengeance euen the vengeance of eternall death and so doth all sinne which shed the bloud of a more righteous one then Abel euen the bloud of Christ himselfe it should call for vengeance vnto God But see how the voice thereof is changed and how Christ excuseth sinne before hee sacrifice for sinne Father forgiue them they know not what they doe euen in the act of his Passion he maketh this intercession when hee felt their wrongs see how he excuseth them to his Father that they may find mercie hee pleadeth for them that they doe it ignorantly How much more did hee in his Oblation for sinne speake for remission of sinnes when in his Passion hee was so indulgent vnto sinners This person doe I find on this Hill and I find him able and readie to calme all the stormes that were raised in me at Mount Sinai The storme of Death the storme of Iudgement for must I die I feare it not I am assured of life Christ is to mee life Is death the gate that leadeth to Iudgement I will enter it it shall turne vnto my gaine for the Tribunall of God is but the Theater whereon I shall bee crowned Yea Christ hath so altered both death and Iudgement that well may I say Perijssem nisi perijssem I had neuer tasted of such a life had I not beene subiected vnto death And how much of my glorie should I haue lost if I should neuer haue beene brought vnto Gods Barre O Iesu● how wonderfull is thy vertue what strange effects proceed from thee The Alchymists boast much of their skill that they can turne baser metals into better lead into silu●r copper into gold but this is their presumption whereupon they build that these baser metals are in their nature in the way to the better and they doe but perfect that which is imperfect and which by the course of nature of imperfect would haue become perfect if they had nouer laboured it But they neuer aduenture to turne drosse into siluer or dirt into gold Thou dost more much more of so base a one as I am for who is more base then a sinner who is indeed seruus seruorum a slaue of slaues for sinne is nothing but seruitude and the Master whom a sinner serueth who is it but the Deuill then whom there is none more slauish of so base a one thou makest a vessell of gold euen where there was no disposition to become such thou hast giuen so excellent a nature and makest death to become life Thou hast quickned me which was dead I that was dead in sinne am quickned by thee the fountaine of grace my vnderstanding liueth my will liueth my affections liue they liue their true life they know God they loue God they long after him they discouer the euill of sinne they hate it because it is euill and what they hate that they abhorre Are not these Euidences of life I cannot be dead so long as I feele these things in mee I feele them in me but I confesse they spring not from mee they haue a better Fountaine that is Christ He is this life of mine it began in him when he became one with mee by his personall Vnion then the Vnderstanding then the Will the Affections of man which had beene long dead began to liue As this began in part when Christ became one with mee by personall vnion so did it streame forth into me when I became one with him by Mysticall Vnion then the beames of his light cleared my darknesse the comfort of his Heate warmed my chilnes then was I quickned by the influence of his life I doe not count that life which I liued before though it goe for such with men and it seemed such to me I thought as the world thinketh that if my soule dwelt in my bodie I was aliue but alas if Christ be from my soule my soule is dead and how can a dead soule quicken my bodie the bodie of a man of such a man as should bee of the same societie with Angels Well may it make my bodie vegetable and so range it with the Planets and yet therein I shall come short of many of them It may doe more my bodie by it may become sensible and I may be of the condition of beasts and yet therein how many of them will ouermatch me Happily or vnhappily rather it may boast of more it may boast that it maketh me reasonable and indeed such faculties haue I but corrupt in that I haue a reasonable soule But this aduanceth me no higher then Deuils and herein the Deuils incomparably surmount me But that life which is the chiefe life the life which is proper to the children of God I liue not except I liue by Christ and if once I liue that life I liue indeed And heare a Paradoxe I desire to die this life maketh mee most desirous of death of any death sauing that which is opposite to this life I would not die the death in sinne but the other death I will die most gladly I would be dissolued I would lay aside this Tabernacle of my bodie Not that grace maketh me vnnaturall to my flesh No it maketh mee loue my flesh the more the more but the more truly I would haue my bodie doe aswell as my soule and therefore I mortifie it that it may bee holy as my soule is holy Flesh and bloud thinketh that fasting and watching and other castigation of the flesh is a hatefull austeritie of the soule but well may the soule replie Castigo non quod odio habeam sed quod amem and though
sweete of our welfare how can we but thinke that so secure a l●fe must needs be a blessed life But if our Spring bee not onely not blasted but also beare all kind of fruit all goe well with vs and we haue the world at will blessed in the field and blessed at home blessed in our cattell and blessed in our corne blessed in all where to we put our hand how can wee but deeme our selues possest of a blessed state But hauing is not enough though we hold all this securely yet is it comfortable vse that is the Soule of sensuall blessednesse if this quicken that bodie then is a man a naturall man then is as blessed as he would be When his eyes can behold the glorie of his wealth his eares be tickled with the flatterie of musicke and the musicke of flatterie his nostrels breath in the fragrancie of his Paradises and perfumes of his precious oyntments while his pallat can taste and distinguish the delicacies of Apicean Cookerie finally while euerie sense is courted with his fawning obiect and nature hath not giuen ouer to delight in such courtings but holds her selfe more blessed in so partaking then in hauing of such worldly goods when such a state is befallen a man then is he● come to the highest degree of that prosperitie which the world can afford And being in it little sense hath he of ought besides it for hardly will it giue leasure to the Soule to thinke that there is any other welfare then that which is enioyed by the dodie And how should it think that this is brickle if it neuer feele it crazed How should it loath that which neuer gaue it any discontent Finally how should it bee willing to bid that farewell wherein all its well-fare doth consist How then should Diues cloathed in purple and fine linnen and faring deliciously euerie day thinke of death and not thinke with horrour that commeth to make so vnwelcome a separation a separation betweene such louing friends that take such mutuall content each in the other and wherof each seemeth with an inuiolable league to haue deuoted it selfe vnto the other P●reant qui inter nos dissidium volunt saith flesh and bloud euill betide them that will breake this true loue knot And who can doe this but death And how should he bee willing to heare of death that knoweth that death will doe this Death will giue the lie vnto our goods and proue they are not substance but a shadow death will turne our calme into a storm and tosse the ship that lay still our wealth which wee haue treasured it will bequeath to others and it will lodge vs in the graue long before we desire to be at our iournies end A natural mā knoweth this is so but yet he taketh no delight to make this the subiect of his thoughts the feeling of this truth when it falleth out is bitter enough Why should hee taste the potion thinketh he before he is sicke And lengthen his miserie by making himselfe miserable before his time The prognostication of such weather doth more afflict then the weather it selfe and feare torments more then paine More is he distressed that forefeeth then he that feeleth miserie for feare and fore-sight are the tortures of the Soule whereas death and the harbingers thereof fasten their afflictions onely vpon the bodie And much more sensible is the soule then the bodie can be Seeing this is the euill of worldly weale and the ease our corrupt nature taketh in it maketh vs more to distaste the loy●●s of heauen mixe I beseech thee O Lord my peace with war●●● let me neuer be a secure Owner of my worldly goods Yea Lord let them appeare as they are transitorie and vncertaine that I may neuer repute them to bee my goods Let theeues strip mee let crosses distresse mee though I lose yet I shall gaine and prosper best when I doe not prosper Death that must come shall neuer bee vnwelcome nay the remembrance of it shall bee my greatest comfort it shall neuer find me but willing to leaue what I neuer did enioy and happie shall I account that hower that shall take mee out of the world when it taketh the world from me because wee neuer were at one and therefore shall not feare to bee at ods the world is crucified to me and I to the world Death shall haue no paines in parting our association which shall find vs before hand parted in affection let death bee bitter vnto others to me it shall be sweete and I will prepare my selfe by timely thinking on it so shall I neuer bee vncomfortably surprised by it FINIS
to cure with his Humility when he stooped vnto the ignominious death of the Crosse But it was not Hysop alone wherewith hee desired to be purged but Hysop dipt in the holy water and this doth intimate yet more fully that the expiation was to be made by Christ for to say nothing that the red Cow slaine whose blood was sprinkled directly before the Tabernacle was as all other sacrifices a Type of Christ those things that are principally to be marked in Christ were most liucly represented in the things that were burnt with the Cowe For there were to bee cast in Cedar wood Hysop and Scarlet The Cedar is the highest of all trees and well representeth the Deity of Christ 〈◊〉 4.33 Hysop in the History of Solomons knowledge in naturall things is opposed vnto the Cedar as the lowest of plants and may well note Christs Manhood the Scarlet is an excellent representation of his bloody death according to that in the Prophet Esay 〈◊〉 63.1 2. who is this that commeth from Edom with died garments from Bozra wherefore art thou red in thy apparell c. And indeed Christs blood is the Bath of purification it clenseth from all our sinnes if wee haue our hearts sprinkled therewith wee shall bee free from euill consciences Heb. 10.22 9 14 Zach. 13.1 our consciences shall bee freed from dead workes to serue the liuing God Finally his Spirit is that fountaine that is opened vnto the house of Israel E●ek 36.25 and the cleane waters that in Ezekiel God promised to poure vpon his Church without Christ the vertue of his death and worke of his Spirit God purifieth no man The Heathen had their Aquam lustralem their holy water and so hath the Church of Rome also but the Heathen holy water had no respect vnto Christs blood the Romish would seeme to haue but sanctifying Ceremonies without Gods warrant are fruitles not only so but spirituall vsurpations If we expect purification from sinne wee must tye our selues vnto Christs death and not looke to partake the benefit of it but by such meanes as are ordained of God Mat. 15 9. for the Spirit breatheth where it will not where wee will so that in vaine shall we serue God if therein wee follow no better guide then the commandements of men And let this suffice touching the Person to whom King Dauid directs his Prayer Hauing thus seuerally considered What King Danid begs and Of whom by ioyning the points together wee must see with what confidence hee expects the successe of his Prayer The first point of confidence is implyed in the words purge wash for the Original hath it thou shalt purge thou shalt wash And indeed such future tenses are Propheticall wishes and why Faith in prayer hath an eye to Gods promise and therefore a hope of his performance 2 ●●moth 2.12 and why God cannot deny himselfe hee euer will be as good as his word Numbers 19 hee commands the carnall purifying and promiseth the successe and shall hee deny successe vnto the spirituall if wee obserue it Certainly hee will not A second branch of Considence appeareth in the resolute affirmations I shall bee cleane I shall bee whiter then snow which import that as God will bee constant in keeping his word so hee will bee powerfull in accomplishing the deed no doubt of the Effect when hee is pleased to bee the Efficient 〈◊〉 19. Vos 1● A cleane person saith the Ceremonie shall purge him that is vncleane and hee shall bee purified And who so cleane as God in comparison of whom the best of his creatures are vncleane If the carnall purification may be expected from a mortall man how much more may we expect the spirituall from our immortall God But marke here is not onely expected a freedome from sinne but also a furniture of grace not only innocency spirituall but Beauty also so saith Dauid I shall be cleane that is innocent yea I shall be white that is beautifull Parum est mundari a sordibus peccatorum Ruffin in hu● locum nisi contingat decorari candore virtutum it is a cold comfort to bee freed from impurity except wee be beautified with sanctitie But where sinne abounded Rom. ● 20 grace abounded much more sinne stripped vs of our originall Righteousnes and wounded vs in our naturall power and grace doth not only heale vs againe but restore vs also to whatsoeuer we lost The same God that in the Law commanded that when a captiue Israelite was set free he should not goe away empty Detr 15.13 ● but be furnished liberally with whatsoeuer God had blest his Master is not fast handed towards vs when hee freeth vs from the death of sinne but adornes vs as beseemes the spouse of Christ White is the colour of Saints Mark 9.3 it appeares in the Transfiguration of Christ and in the apparitions of Angels in the Reuelation of Saint Iohn more then once as likewise in Daniel so that that phrase implyeth that the effect of Christs purifying is not onely Grace but Glory also yea vnspeakable Glory so the comparison will haue vs vnderstand it when Dauid saith that he shall be whiter then s●ow It was a gracious promise that was made Psal 68. though yee haue hen amongst the pots Vers 13. yet shall ye be as the wings of a Doue couered with siluer and her feathers with yellow gold yea when the Almighty scattered Kings for his Church shee was as white as snow in Salmon here Dauid goeth a step farther Vers 14. whiter then snow And indeed well may wee resemble spirituall things by corporall and eternall by temporall for that the one doth somewhat resemble the other but equall them we cannot we may not by reason of the many degrees wherby the corporall is exceeded by the spirituall and the temporall by the eternall I conclude Who can say I haue made my heart cleane I am free from sin Prou. 20. Lib. 1. c. 5. No man for Habet cor vniuscuiusque saith S. Austin in his Confessions quod offendat oculos Dominisscio fateor there is not the best of vs that hath not touched the dead that is not infected with dead works it beseemeth the best of vs to say with S. Austin scio fateor I know I acknowledge it but we must go on with S. Austin quis mundabit who shall make me cleane and resolue with him cui alteri praeter te Domine clamabo ab occultis munda me Domine Psal 19 12. O Lord I haue none to whom I may hopefully call but to thee Lord clense me from my secret faults or in the words of my Text Purge me with Hysop and I shall be cleane wash me and I shall bee whiter then snow AMEN GOd grant we may all so wash our garments white in the blood of the Lamb during these dayes of Grace that we may hereafter walk with him in white robes when we shal