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A01451 Doomes-Day booke: or, An alarum for atheistes, a vvatchword for vvorldlinges, a caueat for Christians. By Samuel Gardnier [sic] Doctor of Diuinitie. The contentes the following page sheweth Gardiner, Samuel, b. 1563 or 4. 1606 (1606) STC 11576; ESTC S102820 100,754 118

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sufferings as the wounds of his hands féete side and other some say is the signe of the crosse But the certainest sence is to take the signe for the signification for those prodigious aspects lately named and for the worldes combus●●n which is the signe of the sonne of mans apparition by S. Peter directly named Wee will giue the vse of this large discourse and so wée will conclude it 1. First these signes serue as wholesome admoni●on to dr●we v● to a godly and holy conuersation It is the Apostle Peters application in the case who after mention made of these ●●full maner of the worldes destruction commeth in with this addition Seeing all thinges must be desolued what maner of men ought wee to be in holy conuersation and godlines The consequence is good for if all earthly creatures must be refined and ren●e● by the fire Much more should the fire of Gods spirite burne in vs which may consume the drosse of our dead workes like s●uble and perfect vs that wee may be wrought as it were in a new ●oulde after the Image of God in righteousnes and holines 2. Secondly wee are taught to gather from hence howe grieuous sinne is which is in the creatures of the worlde thus greiuously punished The leprosie of the Iewes was to all that knew it wonderfull because it not only did infect the whole man but did clea●e to his garments and to the walles of the house But the leprosie of sinne is more to be wondred at that not only polluteth the bodie and soule of man but ble●isheth staineth the worldes glorious eye euen the glorious Sunne in the firmament and subiecteth the Moone and starres vnto vanitie Wretched therefore are wée the whom the dregges of sinne are so frozen and conicalled as wée are become senceles in sinne not onely going vp to the anckles but diuing ouer head and eares in the gulfe of sin Wee endure not to looke vpon the blaines and running sore● of spitlemen but did we beholde the sores of our sinfull soules as they are in their naturall cor●uption which rancle the verie heauens manie thousand miles of from them we would haue in all loathsome detestation their most vgly and fipthie abhomination 3. The third and last consideration we take from hence is the louing kindnes of God and his vnwillingnes in punishing a sinner according to that which Isai saith God worketh a strange worke to bring his owne work to passe Dij immortales nec volunt nec possunt obesse The immortal Gods are neither willing norable to hurt saith Seneca It is his propertie alwaies to haue mercie as it is in the Antheme of the Church And iudgement is a strange work vnto him contrarie to his nature which hée executeth to make vs owners of his mercie which is his owne proper action If God tooke anie pleasure in vndoing the world and worldly men he would not come in this mouing manner to vs causing all the creatures of heauen to put on blacke garments But euen as when the maister of the house dieth saith Chrisostome all the houshould is cladde in mourning wéedes so mankind for which all the parts of the world were made to be seruants to them béeing to be done away all creatures follow their funeralles with lamentations in their kindes the orient Sunne Moone staires doe chaunge colour and are in blacke array A Painter is very loath to marre the whole proportion of the picture for some defection and imperfection that is in it so God is very loath to vndoe al his workmanship in vs for some sinnes and transgressions that are in vs. Many Iudges of Assise are so pittifull as albeit they are to venounce the doome of death against prisoners at the barre as they weepe when they deliuer it so God doth with vs béeing sentenced for our vnrepentant sinnes vnto death So he wept when hée ●rowned the first world so he wept for the destruction of Hierusalem and this affection hée sheweth in this habite of heauenlie creatures which they do on at the worlds dissolution There is many a hangman who though he be neuer so butcherly bent will bemoane the estate of his freind especialli● his kinsman whose hand or eare he is to cut off Therefore God that loueth vs more then the father can the childe or the husband the wife cannot but be resolued into passions for our condemnation This doctrine you haue often heard but yée do but litle heede it happily because yee doe not beleeue it is so at hand But these signes hitherto spoken of maketh it out of doubt The king doth purpose to remooue from one Court to another and when report goeth of it many doubt of it because the prince many times doth delay the time but when the furniture of the Court is taken downe then euery one knoweth that he remoueth out of hand so it hath béene often preached in your eares that the end of the world is at hand that Christ is comming to iudge it and ye arraigne God of slacknes but the remoual of this the worldes furniture this bu●●e dooing which is not in hand flatly sheweth that these thinges are at hand The fift Chapter Of the certaintie of our resurrection THe resurrection of all flesh immediatly with the worlds consummation commeth in place So saith Christ I will raise him vp at the last day The like saith Martha no doubt immitated in the schoole of Christ touching hir brother Lazarus I know that he shal rise again in the resurrection at the last day Wherfore we are to deale with this article in this place There is a double resurrection 1. The one of our bodies 2 The other of our soules Of our soules when we rise from sinne Of our bodies we rise from our sepulchers That of our soules is called the first resurrection The other of our bodies is called the second A double death answereth this double resurrection 1. The first death which is of the vnrepentant soule 2. The second which is euerlasting death the condition of the damned We learne of the Scriptures thus to distinguish of the resurrection For the first and second resurrection The first and second death are mentioned in holy scriptures As by Iohn in the Reuellation Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection For on such the second death hath no power But they shall be the Priests of God and of Christ and shall raigne with him a thousand yeeres Where Iohn by the first resurrection vnderstandeth the resurrection of the minde from sinne to repentance In the Gospell of Iohn both these resurrections are spoken of together The houre shall come and now is when the dead shall heare the voice of the sonne of God These wordes belong to the first resurrection and that doth the course of them declare in that hée saith The hower shall come and nowe is For no man will say
he shall be in his domination not one one kingdome of Egipt as Ioseph but ouer all the kingdomes of the worlde If Esther was cast into a trance and life for a time went out of the gates of her bodie at the fight of king Assuerus in his royaltie If Daniel hauing but séene an Angel was a man for a time out of soule what terror and trepidation shall possesse vs at the appearance of Christ in his maiestie at the sight of his retinue of inumerable Angells If the Warders of the Sepulcher of Christ at the day of his resurrection were so dismaid as they semed like dead men If the Iewes strong by an arme of flesh by seculer Mace and authoritie comming with forcible prouision to attache Christ in the Garden hearing him but speak say I am her fell vpon their backes and their legges could not longer bolde vp their bodies Infinit terrors shall beset the sinfull soule at the ●ight of the cōming of Christ in the cloudes If y● Iewes could not ●u●u●e the Maiestie of the Almightie when he descended vpon Mount Sinai but to deliuer the Lawe how shall they bee able to sustaine his furie when hee commeth to take vengeance of the breakers of the Lawe What breast can beare the arrowes of ●s indignation which hee hath steeped in 〈◊〉 for the reta●●a●●on of incorrigible transgressions of which he himself saith I will make mine arrowes drunken in blood and my sworde shall eate vp their flesh If the holy Citie of Ierusalem sha●l be scorched with lights and bu●●ing ●orches how shall Babylon the place of confusion bee searched This dreadfull maner of Christes comming to 〈◊〉 is so the greater dismayment of the wicked when the King of Kings came to bee married to his Church and came as it were to seas● with vs hee came in apparell suting that purpose and looked louingly and sp●ke peaceablie to the worlde but when hee shall came in b●ght armour with Sworde and Arrowes in his hande hee sheweth by this beha●iour that hee commeth in anger and that there is no talking with him At his nat●●i●e when hee came to bee merrie at a marriage he● thus sweete●● saluted them by his heauenly faintlie Glorie bee to God on high in earth peace and good will towardes men But his second comming as Esaih sheweth is otherwise The Lorde shall goe forth as a Grant hee shall stirre vp his courage like a man of warre The Maiestie of worldly Princes co●isteth in their glorious retinue of all deg●●es of Dukes Earls Lordes Knightes Gentlemen and others of 〈◊〉 state the glorie of our blessed Sauiour shall be shewed in the Clowdes by his royall armie of Saints and Angels The Clowd 〈◊〉 the Session house of the Lord of hostes that place was for good 〈…〉 as being the room●aiest and capable of all 〈…〉 of Angells Apostles Mart●●●●●arkes and 〈◊〉 idea 〈◊〉 Saints as also of all the confused cursed 〈…〉 But he ●en is the onely braue place for 〈…〉 God 〈◊〉 of ●hat because 〈…〉 heaven and it is parcell 〈◊〉 punishment interminatea against the diuel and his angels to be cast out of heauen Herein also God keepeth custome meaning to ceasu●e the delinquent where he s●●ned The Iewes mete out the valley or Iehosaphat for Gods iudgement hall laying the foundation of this their assertion from Ioels prediction I will also gather all nations and will bring them downe into the valley of Iehosaphat and will pleade with them there for my people and for mine heritage Israel and from other such wordes in the middle part of that chapter Let the heathen be weakned and come vp to the valley of Iehosaphat for ther wil I sit to iudge all the heathen round about The Iewes with all pertinacie doe applie this prophesie to temporall things and dote hereupon that the Messias shall preuaile euer the Gentiles in this valley and condemne them and that afterwarde in the resurrection of the righteous he shall sit in the same place vpon their finall sentence and that there he shall kéepe a solemne feast with the godly They giue out also in their head-strong imaginations that an Oxe is staked vp for the purpose created and fatted by God to that vse and that the Leuiathan hath béene slaine long since and laid in the powdring tub and that they shall drinke wine fréely out of Paradice The valley of Iehosaphat is called the valley of iudgement and it may bee true that at Ierusalem there was a place of this name scituated at the East doore of the Temple but that is but the type and shadow of the iudgement place of the Lord to which shall resort a greater assembly then that valley can receiue But we desire to know no more then is meete for vs which God hath reuealed to vs We list not to looke beyond the Moone for mysteries As the time of iudgement is onely knowne to God so God knoweth best what place is fittest and what place he will haue to hold his Assises in The tenth Chapter The persons that are to be iudged CHrist his second comming apperteyning wholie to iudgement where the persons are that are to bee iudged is to be considered All persons are to be iudged without exception which the Scriptures cal and the Article of our Creede calleth the quick the dead Some by the quick vnderstand the righteous by the dead doe vnderstand the wicked So did Diodonis of whome Augustine wrighteth whose e●position he there reprooueth But in the Creede scripture the quick are said to be those whome Christ findeth aliue in bodie at his second comming and the dead whose soules haue left their bodies or are giuing vp the ghost at his second cōming For the Apostle when he saith We shal not al sleep but we shall a●l be changed speaketh of the death of the bodie not of the vniust onely but the iust likewise deade in bodie The trumpet shall blow and the dead shall rise incorruptible Hee setteth against these all that liue in generall both good and bad we shal be changed that is to say all whome Christ shall finde liuing In his letter to the Thessalonians by those that sleepe he simplie vnder standeth the dead in bodie and by the liuing onely those that are in bodily life when he shall come That all shall bee cited to this Court as well good as badde sundrie comparisons doe shewe as of the wise and foolish virgins of the wheate and of the tares of the good and badde fish and of the Shéepe and Goates Likewise many Scripture places doe conclude the same Before him shall be gathered all Nations Hetherto belongeth this saying of our Sauiour indefinitely Whosoeuer shall confesse mee before men him will I confesse also before my Father which is in heauen But whosoeuer shall deny mee before men him will I also denye before
and brought to make an end of sinne and so beginne a new life And therewith 〈…〉 Christ the sole obiect of the eye of the 〈◊〉 thou shalt 〈…〉 death bedde be willing to die and 〈…〉 which saying Possid●nius in the storie of his life 〈…〉 I am not ashamed to liue I doe not feare to die because I haue a good maister whom I serue what extremitie of sollie is it to be thinking of this transitorie world so much and of the eternall world to come so litle wherein wee are like the ●unnell that tunneth in licor into a vessell that deliuereth it selfe of the purer matter but suffereth the concreat and gresser substance to cleaue to the sides of it The iudgement that should purifie vs is out of our sight and the carnall cares of the world like lumpes of mire and clay sticke to our soules The second Chapter Of the maner how the world shall be destroied IT being concluded in the former chapter that the world shall be destroied order would we should set downe how it is to bee destroied which shall bee the subiect argument of this chapter which wee will spend vpon these two parts 1. The first shall determine in what sorte it shall perish 2. The second shall giue decision to this question whether the same in substance or forme shall so perish About the first there is great dispute and difference among Doctors while they denide them selues into contrarie min●es some holding that it shall be destroied by water othersome by fire Of the first rancke are Seneca and his schollers Of the second which are the sounder sort are the Stoicks of whom Cicero and Galen maketh mention Heraclitus the greater part of Philosophers the Mathematicians and Diuines running with the streame of sacred authorities as the other part with the current of their priuate fan●ics For they take their text from Peter who saith But the heauens and earth which are now are kept by the same worde in store and res●rued vnto fier against the day of iudgement and o● t●e dest●●● of vngodly men But yet there is no small 〈…〉 of the Moon to scoure and purifie the other three elements others producing it out of the Sunne beames Peter Lombard saith that th●e fier shall goe before the face of the Lord and shall reduce the whole fashion of the heauens earth to a consumption and he is so curious and fine as to measure out vnto vs the height of the fier su●ing it to the depth of y● waters of Noah which drowned the earth Such thinges deliuereth Austine in his twentieth booke of the Citie of God in the 18. chapter Yet in the 16. chapter of that booke he semeth to denie that a man may haue any certaine knowledge therein but by the especiall certificate of the spirite Wherein hee is in the right and of the surer side for it is safer for vs to hold this modestie then to be ouer busie with the secrets of Gods sanctuary It is enough that we simplie beléeue as Peter teacheth that the worlde shall bee fixed 1. To ventilate and examine of what kind of nature this fire should be 2. From whence it should be brought 3. How the saints shall be preserued in that flame liue as the Salamander in the fire 4. How high this fier shal mount we leaue to the wil prouidēce of God being contented to be wise with sobrietie and not affecting to know more then God wold haue vs or to compel the scriptures that are willing to go part of y● way with vs to go after the vagaries of our idle lusts It serueth to the confirmation of the present cause namly to the illustratiō of the maner of the worlds dissolution that which Math hath in these words At midnight there was a cry made Behold the bridgrome cōmeth The voice of the angell and the trumpet of God is part of that cry The scripture calleth it else where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth the hoarse vociferation of Mariners when they call one vpon another to goe to their tackling for it must needs be a cry out of cry that must waken the dead and raise them from their graues But another part of the cry is the stridor and noise that Peter mentioneth which this fier that shal consume the world shall make saying The heauens shall passe away with a noise and the elements shall melt with heat and the earth with the workes therin s●al be burnt vp Wee heare a terrible noise at the downfal of two or three houses at once therefore that must be a noise with a 〈◊〉 esse which one fire shall make which shalouerchro●●●he heauers the earth the sea all cities towns houses beasts liuing creatures and the whole masse of the world ●ltogither Dauid by an apt similitude teaching the ●●ate and condition of the wicked alludeth hereunto As the fire among the thornes c. Fire among thorns maketh a great noise Wherefore heare we now the crie of his worde at mid-day least we hea●e this fearefull crie at midnight hetherto spoken of and in time let the swéete crie of his mercie charme vs least the direfull and irefull out crie of his iudgements do condemne vs. We come to the second part of this Chapter which answereth the question whether the substance or forme of the worlde shall perish For hereof are two opinions scattered 1 Some are of that minde that in verie substance it shall be turned vpside downe fastning vpon these Scriptures as of that in the Psalme Thou hast aforetime laid the foundation of the earth and the heauens are the workes of thine hands They shall perish but thou shalt indure c. As of that saying of the Prophet Isaiah For loe I will create new heauens and a new earth and the former shall not be remembred nor come into mind as of that which Saint Iohn in his Reuelation saith And I sawe a new heauen and a new earth for the first heauen and the first earth were passed away and there was no more sea Finally in that the Angell sweareth by him that liueth for euer that Time shall be no more Now if time be taken away all motion must be taken away If all motion be taken away there is nothing in the world that can continue 2 But othersome hold that only but some parts of the worlde shall bee ouerturned at the second comming of Christ not altogither raised from their foundation● but so as they shall suffer a singular alteration Ambrose taketh part with this side and setteth his hande to this opinion vrging that which the Apostle Paul saith The fashion of this worlde goeth away prossing the word which he calleth the fashion shadow or forme and not the masse matter substance That authoritie of Peter also fauoureth that part in these wordes Wherefore the worlde that then was perished ouerflowed with the water when
shall not escape Wherefore the vncertaine suddaines of the worldes end is effectuall to dispell desidiousnes and to stirre vs vp to watchfulnes to liue as if the present day were the last and to make our bookes euen as if out of hand God would keepe his Audit among vs and take a streight account of vs. Omnem crede diem tib● diluxisse su●remum Thinke euery day the last that heere abode thou hast A Poet spake it and euery Christian may well repeat it It thou were called to a table furnished with fiftie or thrée score platters of good meate s●uing onely that de●dly poison is in one of those chargers and thou art to●oe so ●●uch before but art ●ot certified in which of them it is Doubtlesse in the tender regarde which thou hast of th● li●● thou wouldest mistrust euerie di●h and forbeare all together least in that which thou tastest thou shouldest be taken It is thus with thee thou hast heere fiftie or thrée sco●e yeares to liue and in one of those death shall certainely seaze on thee and thou knowest not in which of them hee will attach thee wherefore doubt euerie one I aduise thee and looke circumspectly abo●t thee Seeing our pater patria and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are in heauen we are Pilgrims and Trauailers vpon earth as al our Fathers were and we haue a ●ourney to goe namely to Ierusalem a Citie whose builder and workeman is God and a swift Horse wee haue to carrie vs thether let vs gird vp our reynes put our Sandols about our feet and prepare for the voyage What man knowing that hee is to liue in England will purchase and build in Spaine But such fooles are wee looking to liue in heauen wee consume our selues with care how to liue heere in earth I doe not impartinently degresse from the matter in putting two endes together of the world and mans life For the same consideration is to be had of them both there being such a kinde Simpathye and aff●nite betweene them For death in Scripture is called the way of all flesh and the common ineuitable condition of death is imposed vpon all But there is nothing more certaine then the vncertaintie thereof as daily proofe teacheth Iob his Sonnes and Daughters when they were feastinḡ in their elder Brothers house little thought that death was so nie them in a whirl-wind which threwe the foure corners of the house ouer them When Elah was drinking in his Stewards house in his capable Goblets eue● vn●o drunkennes he did not imagine there to be done to death by Zimri Did Babilon was bare the title of the Ladie of the kingdomes and was called Tender and Delicate who presumed of herselfe that shee was like Mount Syon not to be remooued and therefore said I shall bee a Ladie for euer I am and none else I shal not sit as a Widdow neither shall knowe the losse of Children Did she I say that thus swelled with pride dreame that this sentence should so soone haue beene reade ouer he● Thine end is come wherefore to such as say●● Isa●ah Come I wil bring wine we will fill our selues with strong drinke to morrowe shall bee as this day and much more which 〈◊〉 but the merrie madnesse of one houre I●●nes remooueth th●● 〈◊〉 from their eies that blindeth them and lo●teth them see the nice and ●ickle est ate wherein they stand thus censuring their follie Go to now ye that say To day or tomorrow we will goe into such a Citie and continue there a yeare and buy and sell and get gaine and yet cannot tell what shall be tomorrow For what is your life It is euen a vapour that appeareth for a little time and afterward vanisheth away No glasse or pitche● of earth is more brickle then the body o● man as being nothing else but a house of clay whose foundation is the dust For a noysome sauour an infected ayre a day little more then ordinarily hotter some what a larger supper excessiue either sorrow or pleasure is as it were a blowe of a hammer that knocketh the sides of t●is fraile vessell together A little labour cracketh some a little lo●e othersome vnkindnesse is some mans coro●iue and his pleasant wine is his ●o This man complaineth of head-ache with the Sunamites sonne that man hath con●ulsion in his bowels with Antiochus A third man crieth out of the goute in his legges with Asa Some perish through pe●utie as the sonne● of Ierusalem and other some are slaine surfetted through satietie as the Sodom●tes many are dispatched by violent death many kind● of wayes some in their cradle as the Babes of Bethlehem some in their Parlar as Eglon. some in the field as Saul some in their bed as Isbosheth some betweene the Porch and the Altar as Zenacharib some at the very hornes of the Altar as Duke Ioab some by water as Pharaoh and his Princes of Egypt some by fire from heauen as the Co●onels with their fifties some by fi●e from the earth as Z●mri some by y● rupture and opening of the earth as Dathā and his complices some by winde as lobs sonnes and daughters some by dogges as Iesabel some by wormes as Herod some by Lions as the disobedient man of God some by Beares as the gracelesse children that mocked the Prophet some by the Gallowes as Haman some by a G●at as Pope Adrian the fourth some by a haire in their 〈◊〉 as a certaine Ro● an Fabius the Senator some by the stone of a R●●s●n as Anacreon wee come into the world one way but we go out of it by a thousand We maruel not that a clock is soone out of ●elter because it cōsisteth of so many slender peeces our bodies stāding of so many weak iunctures why should we admire the soone decay of it Death knocketh vs on the head like a hammer goeth through the loynes of vs like a sword entangleth euerie one of vs like a snare as a prison keepeth vs forth-comming as a sea ingendreth vs all and it is the tribute money that we must all disburse to nature Wherefore as watchmen are set to those places where they feare the enemie wil come though his comming be vncertaine so because our enemie death will beset our bodies and soules and his comming is dayly to be feared and looked for let vs set good ward and watch about them both that we may be appointed for him when he commeth that wee may not be affraide when wee meete him in the gat● The fourth Chapter Shewing the signes of the worlds end THe saying of the Prophet Amos is verie memorable in these wordes Surely the Lorde God will doe nothing but hee reuealeth his secrets vnto his seruants the Prophets Hee brought the Flood vppon the first worlde but they were tolde of it a hundred yeares before by Noah Sodome and Gomorrha and the neighbour Cities were burnt to
it were if wee compare them to the sorrowes which she 〈◊〉 at the time of her trauaile when she 〈◊〉 the clowdes with her cries and she ●hrobbinges and throwinges of her soule doe ascende vp vnto heauen So the troubles of these times are but tristes to close that shall befall vs in the extremitie of that time 13 The thirteenth Preludium and forewarning of the worldes ende is the raging and roaring of mightie waters The Sea and the Waters shall roare which also hath had his inchoation though not his perfection as manie vnseasonable by past yeares doe witnesse which haue brought forth manie vntimely terrible tempests and mightie inundations To these forespoken signes we must needes adioyne these other two so pregnant and notable 1 The vocation of the Iewes 2 The Reuelation of Antichrist The first is thus pointed at by the Apostle in these wordes I would not that yee should be ignorant of this secret that partly obstinacy is come to Israel vntill the fulnesse of the Gentiles be come in The sense whereof is this That the Iewes shall not alwaies abide in blind●es but that after the number of the Gentiles be collected which is a great and full number signified by these his wordes The fulnesse of the Gentiles they shall come in heapes and 〈◊〉 their names to Christ and bee 〈◊〉 into the church submit the●selues to the obedience of 〈◊〉 by which they shall 〈◊〉 Of these specialties 〈…〉 this calling shall be 〈◊〉 Of the manner how it shall be 〈◊〉 Or of the numb●r of them that shall 〈◊〉 this grace we can say nothing because the 〈…〉 〈…〉 〈…〉 Of 〈…〉 sealed twelue thousand of the 〈…〉 were sealed twelue thousand 〈…〉 〈…〉 shall giue vp the kingdome to 〈…〉 and how he must reigne vntill such time as hee 〈…〉 and put them vnder his 〈…〉 by these 〈…〉 The like he deliu●● 〈…〉 Genuadies amongst others 〈…〉 them all to fauor againe Such as 〈…〉 to expect such 〈…〉 But I 〈…〉 For 〈…〉 of the Church and alwayes withall the 〈◊〉 they coulde did kicke against Christ so among the Iewes there shall be some such humorous fellowes as shall expresse the peruers●●sse of their ancestors Also al Israel is to be taken but for a part of Israel according to the vsual phraise of the scripture For vniuersall propositions in the scriptures are often contracted and implie an vniuersalitie that is definite as in these places All flesh shall see the saluation of God Againe They shal be all taught of God Also God will that all men shall be saued which is to be vnderstood as August saith of all that are saued for they are saued by the will of God But the greatest matter that they haue to oppose against this point is the saying of our Sauiour Do ye thinke that when then sonne of man shall come he shall find faith in earth But say they If there shall bee such a popular conuersion vnto Christ there remaineth much faith vpon earth which Christ shal find at his comming We thus easily dissolue this doubt and reconcile these repugnant places in appearance For Antichrist hath turned al religion vp-side downe insomuch as the principles of their faith no more fit the right faith then the counterfeite that Michell placed vpon the pillow was like vnto Dauid so that if it were possible the elect should be seduced but being smit through by the sworde of the Spirit of Christ The Iewes may well returne and acknowledge their Messiah and confirme and establish the seduced Gentiles wee also answere thus that after this vniuersall conueonrst of the world anew Apostacie and securitie may follow which may quench the fire of the spirit and so they may bee relapsed a fresh into their former filthinesse which shall bee the cause that God shall abridge and shorten the worldes age for his elects happines There is no absurditie or inconuenience in any of these two answers I charge not the Reader with one more then the other but leaue each of them to his choise it being nothing materiall vnto our saluation busily to bolt out which is the best of them 2 The seconde of the last two signes of the worldes ende is the manifestation of Antichrist of which Paul speaketh saying This day of Christ shall not come before there bee a departure first and that man of sinne be disclosed euen the sonne of perdition which is Antichrist This signe is alreadie giuen for the Pope is this huge and absolute Antichrist in the iudgement of Pope For Gregorie the eight of that name Pope of Rome in the yéere of our Lord 602. willed vs to take this for an infallable marke of Anti-christ the name of vniuersall Bishop and whosoeuer shall arrogate that title to himselfe hee concludeth him to be Antichrist But fiue yeeres after Boniface succeeding him was by Phocas the Emperour called Vniuersall Bishop And euer since euerie following Pope continueth the title By consequence then it is manifest that at Rome is the Antichrist who so listeth further to be satisfied in this point let him reade the learned booke of Doctor Whittakers against Sanders sortie demonstrations in this case and a set homelie of Gualters to this purpose and a late booke of Doctor Downams and many others that haue laboured in this busines to assoile at questions and to cleere it of all further contradiction By this which hetherto hath bene declared wee may euidently perceiue if we will not be blind with Balaam with our eyes open and groape with the Sodomites for a wall at noone day that the worldes best daies are spente and that the distruction thereof is at hand There is no greater signe of a dying man then when thou feest him snatch the sheetes and blankets of the bedde and forciblie draw them to himselfe but this wee see euery where in the course of the world wherein euery one catcheth what hee can drawing other● goodes into their handes with cart-ropes of couetousnes wherein they haue their sicophantes at hand to sooth them in their sinne and their oppressing iniquitie Pharaoh had seruants at hand to magnifie Sarahs beauty thereby to sit themselues to the kings fancie Another certaine signe of a perishing bodie is the coldnesse of the bodie Therefore it is said of Dauid when he was towards death that ●e was so cold as no cloathes could heate him and so for want of heate died Wherefore when euery one beginneth to die his féete hands nose and other partes ware cold vpon sight whereof his Phisitions pronounceth him to be a dead man This is the state of the present world wherein charitie is at the coldest and at the last gaspe hauing taken farewell of the world vertue veritie pittie piet●e are so 〈◊〉 practised as they are not spoken of nay scarse thought of Sermons are seldom heard of vs and lesse regarded the shortest are the sweetest vnto vs for out
féete are as it were in the stocks till they be ended wee may take vp the Prophets moane There is no truth or mercie or knowledge of God in the land By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and whoring they breake out and bloud toucheth bloud These carbuncles and putrifying sores we plainly sée to abound in the worlds body whereby we doe determine the s●éedy death of that botle But all these signes hitherto specified do come before the iudgment I●remaineth now that we intreat of those that a●tōpany the 〈◊〉 A● 1. the ●bscuration obfuscation of the 〈◊〉 2. The 〈◊〉 darknes of the moone 3. The fal of heauenly stars 4. The co●●●ction of ecl●stial powers 5. The signe of the Son of man 6. Of the comming of the son of man in the clouds we shal intreat more specially in his proper place I may not curiously 〈◊〉 into 〈◊〉 points portray out vnto you the 〈◊〉 co●ntenance 〈◊〉 aspect of the world which it wil then 〈◊〉 These rather serue as prepara●●es to incite vs to watchfulnes become that we may stand at that day and that wee might consider how dreadfull a thing sinne is which is the procurer of these dreadfull 〈◊〉 For 〈◊〉 it not for our sinnes these creatures should not trauell in th●●●●●rowes For what haue they be serued that they should be so punished But because they looke not Gods parte and rose vp against 〈◊〉 when wee rose against God this cu●se shall light vpon them and wee say the sentence of the Angell in the 〈◊〉 of Deborah vpon them read ouer others in the like case Curse ye Meroz Curse the inhabitants thereof because they came 〈◊〉 helpe the Lord to helpe the Lord against the mightie Because the 〈◊〉 ga●e thee light when thou 〈…〉 in the works of darknesse 〈◊〉 shall ●e 〈…〉 day Because the 〈◊〉 did warmeth●● and did 〈…〉 wickedlie it shall bee 〈…〉 God shall fight against 〈…〉 they would 〈…〉 ●gainst thee when thou 〈…〉 fight against God 〈◊〉 they are rightlie serued For it is 〈…〉 to take 〈…〉 of sinne as of sinne if 〈…〉 by God that when the Israelites should besiedge 〈…〉 their enemies they should lay their woo●es and 〈…〉 And it was a statute in Israell that he that sinned 〈…〉 should die with the beast Now the beast that was to die or the 〈…〉 were net in the sinne but because 〈…〉 was no 〈◊〉 to be shewed 〈…〉 commanded to 〈◊〉 the cattell of 〈…〉 no more then the stone walles of 〈…〉 which Iosua tumbled downe So God brought 〈…〉 vpon the Serpent commaunding him alwaies to goe vppon his 〈…〉 not that the Serpent sinned but 〈…〉 to speake out of him 〈◊〉 was 〈…〉 since 〈…〉 serue onley for the extent 〈…〉 For when the godly see these 〈…〉 vp their 〈◊〉 because their Saluation is at hande 〈…〉 wicked that woulde not stande 〈…〉 confounded at the signes of a God of iudgement When A●solon cou●de not drawe Ioab 〈…〉 vse by 〈…〉 groundes he made him take his part God hath two stri●ges to his bowe if one will not serue another shall I● the 〈…〉 will not conuert vs 〈…〉 of Damascus and there le●● 〈…〉 power 〈…〉 all their come s●●des 〈…〉 came vpon 〈…〉 when 〈…〉 〈…〉 saye when hee shall see these 〈◊〉 If men 〈…〉 darknesse of 〈…〉 〈…〉 sée another or remoou● out of his place If they quake at euerie earthquake If a ra●ling winde goeth to the hart of them If the roaring of the Sea any noice at midnight dismaieth them If the skritchings of Serpents and Dragons cut them to the quicke what heapes of perturbations shall runne vpon the damned sort when these things here spoken of shall play their last acte vpon the fierie stage of this world In the day of Christs passion for mans saluation the Sunne laide downe his light and darkenes ouer-clouded all the face of the earth much more when the righteousnes of the sonne of God shall execute iudgement shall the sunne forbeare to shew himselfe or to runne his course but shall hide himselfe in his chamber that the sinner may tremble at the iudgment of Christ as the Centurion was astonished at these tokens at the suffering of Christ But as all the elements and heast of heauen and frame of the world shall serue as souldiers to fight vnder his banner for the discomfiture and confusion of his aduersaries when he shall come to destroy the world So haue they from the beginning of the same fought his battles against sinners For as the whole world was made for the vse of man and there is no part thereof but is a liuelye image of his goodnesse to those that serue God so when man setteth his face against God and despise his commandements God who is a man of warre whose name is Iehoua calleth out these souldiers into the fielde against him and they are fierce excutioners of his iudgements Examples euerie where are obuious vnto vs and the examples of the Egyptians and Chananites are especially memorable against whom all the elements conspired and put them selues in battell aray against them while the heauens smote their grounds with hot thunderbolts and discharged haileshotte of hailestones to the fearefull slaughter both of man and beast while the ayre mustred swarmes of locustes caterpillers iunumerable which did eate vp all the grasse in their lande and deuoured the fruit of their ground whilest their riuers yéelded frogges which were brought vp to the kings bedde chamber The Sunne and Moone tooke part with Iosua at the appointment of God standing still in Gibea and in the vallie of Aialon and refusing to stirre an y●ch till Iosua had his iust reuenge of his enimies I would that our minds were giuen more to the serious remembrance of these forepassed iudgements then they are that we might applie them to the pre●● vn●aturall yeres that we haue had of late which haue shew 〈◊〉 vs many vnkind parts by verie hurtfull tempests rage and i●●undation of sea and riuers earthquakes provigious birthes ●●luck●e blasing starres whereof I would fame know what age hath séene to many as ours within these last thréescore yeres In which not onely Comets haue béen common but in many places crosses swordes bloodie speares armed souldiers lyons and other such strange sightes full of terror haue verie perspicuously appeared in the ayre Now that God scareth vs not with fraybugges his following iudgements by warres commoti●ns alterations of kingdomes famine plagues mortalitie strange maladies whereby he heaueth vs by the shoulders and setteth vs on our feete doe witnesse well enough But yet these are but petty punishments forerunners and bréeders of a greater mischiefe which when the day commeth must certainly come vpon vs. Among these latter signes giuen vs by Christ of the worlds end the signe of the Son of man is nominated which some say is the bodie of Christ bearing the signes of his
pregnant proofes The Euāgelists are flat for it Christ saith in Math. The Son of man shal come in the glory of his father with his Angels then shal he giue to euery man according to his deeds Againe by the same Euangelist he saith thus They shall see the sonne of man come in the cloudes of heauen with power and great glory c. Also by the same pen-man thus when the Son of man commeth in his glory and all the holly Angells with him then shal he sit vpon the throne of his glory Luke recordeth the like wordes of our Sauiour Then shall they see the Sonne of man come in a cloude with power and great glorie beheaded and Peter to be crucified the Saints of God from time to time by all exquisite torments to be tortured if there were not a reuersion of times wherein they might be glorified Wherfore it was necessarie that a generall assise should bee holden for Gaile deliuerie and the consummation of their endlesse felicitie 3. When should this fore denuntiation of Christ sake effect Nothing is secret that shall not be euident neither anie thing hid that shall not be knowne and come to light As also these like pred●ctions of holie Scripture God shall iudge the secretes of men by Iesus Christ Euerie mans worke shall bee made manifest if our expectation of the iudgement hath not due effect For seeing heere many thinges are smothered which neuer are detected Bee we assured that God keepeth a Kalender of our doings and noteth euerie thing exactly in his Register and that the bookes shall be opened and set before vs the eternall counsaile of God reuealing to euerie one his sinnes in particular 4 Albeit the two edged sword of Gods iustice resteth and rusteth in the Scabbard of his patience because he would haue no man to perish but would all men to come to repentance yet that this conniuencie might not cast vs vpon a bed of securitie he hath made some examples to vs in this life to set vs vpon our feet and to make vs vigilant that we fall not into the iudgement As those whom the Deluge did absorpe and sweepe away wherin all the Inhabitants of the world Noah his famille dedicted the remnant of the olde and the seede of the newe Worlde being destroyed Vnder this iudgement the future finall iudgement wherein onelie a remnant shall be saued euen the little Arke and Barke of Christs Church is luculently portended As also the fearefull conflagration of Sodome giueth faire admonition of a iudging God the breath of Gods anger hauing blowne the fire that will lick vp all the vngodly like stubble and consume them like drosse Heereupon Augustine thus sweetely speaketh Lot a iust man and a good house-keeper in Sodome pure and vndefiled from the filthinesse of the Sodomites was saued from the fire which was the image of hell fire being the type of the bodie of Christ which in all the Saints and now among the wicked wayleth by whose badde conuersation it is not corrupted and from whose consociation it shall bee deliuered in the ende of the worlde those being adindged to Hell fire c. Finally the repudiation of the Iewes the inheritance royall Nation and peculiar people of God is a memorable and dreadfull example of Gods iudgement who for their disobedience to the Lordes Prophets were the declamation and a Prouerbe vnto all the worlde and were pittifully entreated of the Assyrians and Babylonians and lastly by the Romans so spoyled as they were no more a people 5 Our consciences witnesse the certaintie of the iudgement which tremble and quake al the remembrance thereof as Faelix d●d at the Sermon o● Paul dilating vpon these points righteousnesse temperance iudgement to come But for as much as wee are called to reckoning immediately after the Dissolution of our bodies and with our death come in the Tic●ets and Bell of account of the by-past actions of the whole life the vniuersall generall Audit day seemeth needlesse but in a double respect it is more then necessarie First of God second of our selues 1 Of God that he might be iustified in his sayings and cleare when he is iudged God is so good as being infinite and omnipotent and we being little more then nothing hee yeeldeth to a iudiciall hearing that no man may complaine that iustice is not giuen him Therefore that thou mayest not charge him with wrong intended of his side towardes thee thou shalt haue thy open verie honourable tryull 2 In regarde of our selues it is also requisite that our shamelesse sinnes might come to more confusion and our good be●des might the more bee dignifyed Wherefore our prouin●●ll Lawes punish theeues and malefactors openly to adde more shame vnto them If a Magistrate shall in pittie to couer his shame execute a felon closely in the Gaile hee shoulde not doe iustice because hee doth not the plenarie punishment the Lawe awarded him For the disgrace ignominie and reproch that followeth such a iudgement is the greatest part of the iudgement Hence it is that man tendring his credite had rather die then be o●●g●aced Secular Iudges and Ecclesiasticall Officers bring foorth their delinquents to doe their peuance in the Market dayes and Sabaoth that the great apparance of people which such times do giue might inlarge their shame So God reserueth an impenitent sinner to that generall day to adde more affliction to his heauinesse being made as a spectacl● set vppon a stage for all the Worlde to wonder at This is that hee threatneth him by his Prophet Nahum Beholde I will discouer thy ski●s vpon thy face and will shew the nations thy filthinesse and the Kingdoms thy shame And I will cast filth vpon thee and make thee vile and will set thee as a gasing stocke Now what an exquisite iudgement is this consider by this which hath some similitude hereunto Put the case that an honest and shamefast Matrone shoulde bee stripped of her rayment and shewed naked to all that woulde beholde her woulde not this bee as a knife set at the heart or her and woulde shee not die through the anguish of soule for this vnspeakeable shame brought vppon her No question shee would But in what case is a sinner in resp●ct of her who shall haue all his abhominations set before the viewe of the worlde the filthie workes wordes thoughts o● his ●●●de read in the audience of all A thousande to one that ●ehe●●e her nakednesse shall see his filthinesse by infinite degrees ●●ere●ore the vexation of the one shall exceede the veration of the other For he shall call out heauen and earth to record against them as Moses against the people Angels and Diue●s shall goe against them and condemne them and what 〈◊〉 o● the sinnes of the Saints be spoken of Yes doub●●s But rather to dignifie then damnifie them For they shall bee vnto them as rents of Garments
But I imagine how they further ioyne together in petition and say Lord seeing we are cast out of thy presence and accursed yet giue vs some resting place to this he answereth into the fire Yet Lord say they let vs speak once more though we are to 1. Depart 2. Cursed 3. Into fire and all these thinges come vppon vs yet Quousque Domine how long shall these punishments be vpon vs Truely this their end shall bee without end the worme dyeth not and the fire neuer goeth out all the waters of the South cannot quench this fire therefore the nature of this fire is set downe in the soote of the sentence euerlasting fire Yet it were some refection like the droppe of water the Purple Glution called for to coole his flaming tongue that they might haue anye companion to comforte them but they shall haue no better friendes then the Fiendes the black Guard of Deuils their tormentors shall associate them and this is the binding and winding vp of all in these wordes prepared for the Deuill and his Angells Yet further to worke vppon these wordes that they may better worke in our soules wee will diue more deepely into euerie circumstance But to the vnfolding of these misteries to the full we had néede of a damned Doctor out of another world that might speake with a feeling to giue vs more feeling such a one as the Glutton entreated of Abraham might be sent out of Hell to forewarne his Bretheren For albeit the scripture is Schoolemaster sufficient as Abraham tolde Diues saying They haue Moses and the Prophets Yet no Preacher is more pleasing to those that are towards hell then one that commeth from hell according to this surioynder of that damned Epicure Nay father Abraham but if one come vnto them from the dead they will amend their liues How is it possible that a peece of Timber that taketh vp the roome of a whole house should be drawne out of the little wicket and Portall doore of that house Heere are so manie circumstances of wonder in this Iudiciall sentence which so fill all our sences and amaze them as out of the narrow doores of any mans ●●pes they cannot in their full bignesse bee deliuered vnto you For heere the discension 2. Malediction 3. Exustion and 4. their eternall duration are to be spoken of vnto which the damned shall be deliuered vp Oh departure Cursse fire eternall fire formidable to heare but intollerable to indure We will take them as they come to the hand and as the hande of the Scripture layeth them out The first word Depart striketh the hearers dead It is a plague of all plagues and the verie bottome of the ●ioll of gods wrath to be driuen from God Ca●n tooke this inflicted punishmēt so heauily as he thought nothing could be added more vnto it wherefore he said to God Behold thou hast cast me out this day from the earth and from thy face shall I bee hid and shall be a vagabond and runnagate in the earth whose euer findeth me shall slay me that is to say death the vpshot of miserie shall come vpon me Absalon of the two thought it the best choice rather to die then to bee in that disgrace with his Father as not to see his face and so hee tolde Ioab plainelye saying Let mee see the Kinges face and if there bee anye trespasse in mee let him kill mee As in the presence of God as saith the royall Prophet Is the fulnesse of ioy and at his right hand are aboundance of pleasures for euer more So when anye depart from God or God departeth from him all misfortnne and miserie doth fall vpon him If a King keepeth Court in a Countrye Towne all the Countrye is intitched by his comming and empourished againe by his departure So when God is among vs wee are rich and wealthye men and when hée leaueth vs a poore and woefull estate s●ndeth vs. The more the Sunne is with vs there is more plentie among vs and with the absence thereof is pe●●urye therefore the Summer season is the fruitefull season ●euen the Sunne is of moste power and the winter time is the ●●ren and deade time when the Sunne is weakest The more 〈◊〉 Sunne-shine of Gods presence is vppon vs the more fruitfull we are in euerie good worke but when this decayeth all decayeth with it What a hard thing therefore it is for anye to departe from the liuing God from his sweete Sauiour Christ who is the life hope sollace saluation the beginning and end of all thinges in whome are all things But thou for a short sinfull pleasure bringest this horrible euill vpon thee and makest thy selfe an aliant from the Israel of God a stranger and bannished man from the heauenly Hierusalem If the Apostles for that little while that Ch●ist tolde them hée was to bee absent from them they were●o sadde and sorrowful as expouading vnto them these vis wordes A little while and ye shall not see mee and againe A little while and yee shall see me he saide ye shall weepe and lament and measureth their mourning by the mourning of a woman in her trauell In what case shalt thou be thou accursed sinner when not for a white but for all eternitie thou shalt bee sh●t from the sight of God If Peter to whome Christ said If I wash thee not thou shalt haue no part with me was so loath to part with Christ as he saide Lord not my feet onely but also the hāds the head How shall it be with the wicked who shall bee put away from God without hope of seeing his sweete face any more The name of Father in the entrie of the sentence read ouer the godlye omitted in the tenor of Iudgement against the wicked hath good consideration For in the saying to the Godlie Come ye blessed of my Father and absolutely saying to the damned Goe ye curssed It is to insinuate that the blessing of happinesse is his fatherly goodnes and not of mans worthinesse that eternall life is of the father of lightes Of the other side that damnation is not of the Father but of our follie according to this sentence of Oseas Thy destruction O Israel is of thy selfe but thy saluation is of me That the Godly are saued it is of grace that the wicked perrish it is of ●●nne Let no man therefore commence complaint against God that hee is cruell for hee carrieth that which condemneth him about him as naturally sinfull God is the author of all that is good it procee●eth from our corrupt natures whatsoeuer is euill In diuiding this truth aright in this sorte we shall walke with an euen foole neyther giuing to our selues that which is Gods or to God that which is onely ours N●ither is the learning of Gods predestination laide down by 〈◊〉 which te●cheth that God in his free and righteous counsell e●e●●een some
punishment haue the next place noted●n this addition of the sentence Euerlasting fire which by all likelihoode shall not onely be a spiritual but a corporall fire which the verie Scripture language doth insinuate as in these places The chaffe he shal burne vp with vnquenchable fire It is better for thee to goe lame into life then hauing two hands and two feete to goe into hell fire The 〈◊〉 mistances of 1 weeping 2 Gnashing of teeth the forcible effects of that fire doe import so much in so many places of the Gospell inserted So doth the phrase of vtter darknesse and that of the binding of hands and feet 5 With these they shall also haue their tortures in the Iaile The Diuels looke for no lesse as it appeareth by their stomachous words to Christ Comest thou to torment vs before the time This prison is likewise spoken of by Christ in the Parable of the king and his Steward Hee deliuered him to the Iailers till ●e should pay all that was due vnto him 6 It is also grieuous iudgement inflicted vppon the damned to see the righteous translated into the Kingdome of God and themselues excluded Wherfore Christ saith There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and all the Prophets in the kingdome of God and your selues thrust out at doores When the Gluttons eies behelde Lazarus his felicitie it was mightie augmentation of his nuserie then he cried vnto Abraham and saide Oh father Abraham send Lazarus c. Wherefore Adam when he was chased out of a Paradise was placed in a grounde ouer against it that his eye seeing it the heart of him might rue it Now good Christ●an whilest then reade these thinges what thinkest thou of them Howe doe they woorke in thee They are as true as anye thing may bee and as terrible which thou shouldest better perceiue If I had the tongue of the learned which might minister wordes in due time to mooue you But if these thus deliuered doe not touch you you haue no reason in you Wherfore while we haue time and God giueth grace and the church admonisheth and the iudge yet expecteth and calleth and putteth out his hand vnto vs and giueth to euerie one that asketh Let vs lay holde vppon the shield of faith and let vs not suffer such aduantages which make for our saluation to slippe The Sanguinarie Souldior at the preaching of Iudgement was recalled from his bloodie wayes and he came to Iohn to bée lessoned of him in the way that leadeth to a better life what shall wee doe say they And this is the song of the Publicans and Harlots who were battered with the hammer of denounced Iudgement Wherefore it is well saide of Caietan this is the best preseruatius that may bee to keepe vs in Gods feare The 13. Chapter Of the blessed state of the Godly in the life to come ALL the blessings whatsoeuer of eternall life may hee drawne to these two heades 1. To those that belong vnto the minde 2. To those that appertaine vnto the bodie The state of the bodie shall bee such as no labours or sorrowes shall seaze any more vppon it according to that which the spirit in the Reuelation saith God shal wipe away all teares from their eyes and there shall be no more death neyther sorrow neyther crying neither shall there bee anye more paine The heauenlye properties of our bodies are liuelye shadowed and represented vnto vs in the conditions of the bodie of Christ at his resurrection there being nothing to the contrarie but that we should hope that our bodies should be conformable to his bodie and that we his members should bee sutable to him that is our head This is that the Apostle saith Who shal change our vile bodie that it may bee facioned like his glorious bodie 2. The mind and spirit shall then bee endowed with this gift that the slanerie of sinne shall no more take holde of it the flesh the insolent yoak-fellow thereof shal no more ouererowe it it being then at quietnesse with the spirit 2. Wee shall then loue God according to the exigence of his royall law his felicitie shall affect vs as our owne All motions and perturbations of the minde as of enuie selfe-loue and the like shall be voided 3. That which is of moste moment which euerie one that is godly moste of all destreth which is the knowledge of God shall then be in full and perfect manner giuen vnto it Whecefore Paul saith Now wee see through a glasse darkelye but then shall wee see face to face Now I knowe in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowne All vales and curtaines shall then be drawne aside and wee shall see God indeede in his perfect beautie which none heere possiblie could doe and liue according to that which God saith to Moses There shal no man see me liue In this knowledge chiefly eternall life standeth as our Sauiour Christ testifieth saying This is life eternall that they know thee to bee the onely very God whome thou hast sent Iesus Christ To which answereth this other speech of his Abraham reioyced to see my day and hee saw it and was glad And of the like agreement is that which is also spoken by him in another place Blessed are your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare For manye Prophets and righteous men haue desired to see those thinges which yee see and haue not seene them and to heare those thinges which ye heare and haue not heard them By this let euerie man iudge whose happinesse he may hope for when it shall be giuen vs to see him our first borne Brother in the state of his glorie and not him onelye but the eternall Father with him for whome hee keepeth a kingdome purchased by his blo●d A glimmering sight hereof and as it were a shadow of this happines was shewed to Peter on mount Tabor which made him to wish y● he might dwell alwaies there And Paul had some probate thereof when hee was caught vp to the third heauen where hee heard wordes which could not be spoken which were not possible for man to vtter The face of Moses was so bright by his beeing with God as the Israelites could not behold it How glorious thē shall our faces bee when we shall bee made the Sonnes of God and liue for euer with him If when wee reade the Scriptures with any liuelye feeling of Gods spirit if in our feruent payers powred out to God if in the deepe groaninges of our spirits vnto him for the euill that betide vs or at the powerfull operation of Gods worde that is preached in vs wee are much in wardly mooued and the ioy delight and pleasure thereof farre exceede all the delights of the Sonnes of men all which are but as it were the first fruites and beginning