punishment to the ââ¦icked which is their due ââ¦y deseruing but of ââ¦ace giues that to the ââ¦dly which hee is not ââ¦ebt-bound to giue The same tenor of Doââ¦rine is kept by Bernard ãâã many places namely ãâã that notable Treatise â⦠hath of that foure-fold ââ¦bt wherein man stands ââ¦lieged to the Lord. ââ¦rst thou art oblieged ãâã him as vnto thy Creaââ¦r when thou hast giuen him the whole seruice oâ⦠thy soule and body thoâ⦠hast giuen but his dueâ⦠because he created themâ⦠Secondly thou art debter to him as vnto thâ⦠Redeemer who hath redeemed thy life by suffering death for thee wherâ⦠with wilt thou pay thâ⦠debt If thou saist thoâ⦠wilt pay it with good seââ¦uice how can that beâ⦠seeing all thy seruice â⦠not able to pay thy firâ⦠debt Cum Christo donaââ¦ro quicquid sum quioquâ⦠possum nonne istud est sicâ⦠Stella ad Solem gutta â⦠fluuium When I haâ⦠ââ¦iuen vnto Christ all that ââ¦am all that I can al is not ââ¦ke a Starre in compariââ¦n of the Sunne or like ãâã droppe in respect of a ââ¦iuer There is yet a ââ¦ird debt vpon thee Exiââ¦nt à te praeterita peccata ââ¦a futuram vitam tuam ââ¦hy former sinnes reââ¦uires of thee a better ââ¦e in time to come Seeââ¦g thou hast but still one ââ¦ing to pay all thy Creââ¦ters Nunquid vt vulgo ââ¦citur de vna filia duos ââ¦tuisti facere generos ââ¦ilt thou as the Proââ¦erbe is make two sons ãâã law of one daughter Beside these there is â⦠fourth thou desirest tâ⦠possesse that Citie oâ⦠which it is said Glorioâ⦠things are spoken of thee â⦠Citie of our God and tâ⦠haue a roome in theâ⦠heauenly Mansions thâ⦠are in thy Fathers houseâ⦠Nonne ad hoc emendendâ⦠totum te quaecunque â⦠vndecunque contrahere pââ¦ter is dare oportebit Muâ⦠thou not for buying anâ⦠obtayning of this giuâ⦠thy selfe and all thaâ⦠whatsoeuer or howsoeuer thou art able to geâ⦠it and yet when thoâ⦠hast done all The afflictiâ⦠ââ¦ns of this present time are ââ¦ot worthy of that glory to ââ¦e reuealed Wilt thou ââ¦hen be so impudent Vt ââ¦inutum tuum etiam ad hoc ââ¦onquirendum vel ââ¦udeas ââ¦umer are that thou darest ââ¦e bold to lay out thy ââ¦alfe-penny to conquere ââ¦is also seeing it is inââ¦aged by iust debt to so ââ¦any before Quis ergo ââ¦icet se nimium egisse cum ââ¦ec mille simae imo nec miniââ¦ae debitorum suorum parâ⦠valeat respondere Let ââ¦apists blush be ashaââ¦ed to heare this in their ââ¦aine confidence they ââ¦ry out of the fulfilling of the Law of the doinâ⦠of workes of supererogation which is more theâ⦠the Law requires thâ⦠they can merit eternaâ⦠life by the worthinesseâ⦠their workes There â⦠the answere of Bernaâ⦠vnto these men Who ãâã this that dares say he hâ⦠done that which hee shouâ⦠or more then he should sââ¦ing no man is able to ansâ⦠the thousand nay not ãâã least part of that which he debt-bound to doe If it were not so I would haue told you HEre is a confirmation of the first degree ãâã the Comfort It is no ââ¦ine word I haue spoken ãâã you it is true and you ââ¦all finde it so if it were ââ¦t so I would haue told ââ¦u If wee would reape ââ¦e fruit of this Comfort ââ¦ee must consider who ââ¦e is that giues it hee is ââ¦lled the faithful witnesse ââ¦e true one God hath giââ¦n vs a minde to know him ââ¦ho is true What his serââ¦nts spake of our Lord and his glory they spaâ⦠with a warrant Wee fâ⦠lowed no deceiuable faâ⦠when wee opened to youâ⦠power and comming of ãâã Lord Iesus Christ but wâ⦠our eyes wee saw his Mââ¦stie What himselfe spaâ⦠hee spake out of certaiâ⦠knowledge and wâ⦠now hee speaketh in ãâã eares wee shall one ãâã see it with our eyes rael sung it of old As â⦠haue heard so haue we sâ⦠in the Citie of our God aâ⦠so shall we yea wee shâ⦠see much more then eâ⦠we heard for the gloâ⦠of these Mansions ââ¦ngue is able to expresse ââ¦e shall be forced to conââ¦sse with that Queene of ââ¦eba that the halfe of ââ¦e glory of our Salomonââ¦s ââ¦s not told vs in our ââ¦ountry Iamesââ¦d ââ¦d Iohn got but a transiââ¦rie glance of that glory ãâã Mount Tabor if a ââ¦nce of it did so rauish ââ¦em how shall the full ââ¦ht thereof replenish vs ââ¦ely let vs pray with ââ¦t sweet Singer in Isââ¦ll Remember mee O ââ¦rd with the fauour of thy ââ¦ple visit mee with thy ââ¦uation that I may see the ââ¦icitie of thy chosen and reioyce in the ioy of thy people and glory with thine inheritance And here againe is to be obserued the perfection of Christs Propheticall office what he hatâ⦠told vs is true and he hath left nothing vntolâ⦠which is needfull for ãâã to know that wee maâ⦠be saued So witnesseâ⦠S. Iohn Many other sigâ⦠did Iesus in presence of ãâã Disciples which are ãâã written in this Booke ãâã these things are written tâ⦠we might beleeue that Iesâ⦠is the Christ the Sonne God and that in beleeuâ⦠ââ¦ee might haue life through is name With him agrees â⦠Paul who protests hee ââ¦ad deliuered to the Elââ¦ers of Ephesus the whole ââ¦ounsell of God and yet it recorded of him that ââ¦hen he opened his cause ãâã the Iewes and Brethren ââ¦f Rome Hee preached to ââ¦em concerning Iesus out ââ¦f the Law of Moses and of ââ¦e Prophets yet are the ââ¦duersaries so shamelesse ãâã to affirme that though ââ¦ow the Euangelists and ââ¦postles be ioyned with ââ¦oses and the Prophets ââ¦et in all their writings ââ¦e counsell of God concerning our saluation ãâã not to be found But admit it were aâ⦠they say that all thing needfull for vs to know were not told vs by ouâ⦠Lord and his holy Peâ⦠men Who is hee that able to reueale that whiâ⦠the great Angell of tâ⦠Couenant the Doctâ⦠Prophet of his Churâ⦠hath not reuealed Tâ⦠last Booke of holy Scrââ¦ture is the Booke of tâ⦠Reuelation it is come froâ⦠the right hand of that ââ¦ler who sitteth on tâ⦠Throne S. Iohn saw closed with seauen sealâ⦠ââ¦nd he mourned because ââ¦one in heauen nor in ââ¦arth were able to open ââ¦t yet the Lambe opened ââ¦t which if hee had not ââ¦one the Proclamation made by the Angell witââ¦esseth that none was ââ¦ble to haue done it This ââ¦ame may wee say of all ââ¦he remanent Bookes of ââ¦oly Scripture the Lamb ââ¦ath loosed to vs the Seales of them all hee ââ¦nely hath opened and ââ¦euealed them vnto vs. And if any part of the ââ¦ounsell of God needfull ââ¦o be knowne for saluatiââ¦n be yet vnsealed not reuealed to vs I pray them tell vs who is he iâ⦠heauen or in earth wilâ⦠do that which the
high Priest Now albeit the Leuiticall seruice of it ãâã could neyther saue Priest nor people yet so many of them as were spirituall and in vsing of the Typicall sacrifice looked by the eye of faith vnto the true sacrifice beâ⦠leeuing remission of sinâ⦠through the bloud oâ⦠Christ these were saueâ⦠by faith in Christ tâ⦠come no lesse then we are saued by faith in Chrisâ⦠that is come And where the Apostle saith the wayâ⦠to heauen was not open during the time of the first Tabernacle it doth not import that the way to heauen was closed all that time but that it ãâã not manifested then ãâã made so clearly apparenâ⦠as now it is by the comming of Christ for the Apostle vseth not the word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifieth to open that which was closed but hee vseth the word ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã which signifieth to make manifest and cleare a thing which is darke and obscure Now there is a great difference betweene these two to say that the way of heauen was obscured with shadowes couerings which were remoued by Christs comming and the way to ââ¦eauen more clearly manifested and to say that the way and dore of heauen was closed locked vp before til Christ came and opened it and therfore the Iesuites themselues are forced to translate this word as I haue alledged The way of the holiest was not yet manifested They had the same Couenant of Grace that wee haue but they had it infolded couered with figures and shadowes we haue it outfolded and clearely proponed without figure or shadow The Sunne before his rising sends out a light whereby any man that hath eyes may see the way wherein he should walke but when it riseth it brings with it a greater light whereby the way is more clearly manifested The Lord Iesus before his in carnation sent out a light which shewed the way of saluation to so many as were appointed for it and by that light they walked vnto it but much more clearely hath hee manifested it by his owne comming These words are abused when another sense is inforced vpon them When Moses testifieth of Henoch that hee walked with God and hee was no more seene for God tooke him away The Doctors of Rome must make this Commentary vpon it God took him away that is tooke him downe to an house of hell called Limbus Patrum or else they must renounce their opinion and where the Spirit of God saith that Elijah went vp by a whirlewinde into heauen these babling builders of Babell will haue it expounded this way that hee went downe to Limbus When Lazarus dyed his soule was carryed by Angels into Abrahams bosome now say they that the ââ¦lace called Abrahamsââ¦osome ââ¦osome is now in heauen ââ¦ut before Christs death â⦠was a place in hell Limbus Patrum But I pray ââ¦ou what reasonable man ââ¦ill thinke that holy Anââ¦els carry the soules of ââ¦en vnto another place ââ¦en that wherein they ââ¦well themselues Origen ââ¦riting on that place of ââ¦b And naked shall I reââ¦rne saith in this manner I shall returne thither ââ¦here Adam and the rest â⦠mine elders are gone ââ¦here the tabernacles of the ââ¦ghteous are the rest of the faithfull the consolation oâ⦠the godly where Abrahams bosome is and thâ⦠company of Angels the kingdome of Christ where iâ⦠light life and glory and thâ⦠sight of God Darest thoâ⦠say these things are to bâ⦠found in any house oâ⦠hell Fie that they are not ashamed to maintain such false and ridiculouâ⦠fables The third word here is what goes he to prepare A place Not a place oâ⦠punishment but as heâ⦠said before A mansion place a place of euerlasting rest and ioy Still thâ⦠comfort rises by degrees O what a mercy is this ââ¦f a place were assigned to ââ¦s according to our deseruing the earth would ââ¦ot beare vs. It is the ââ¦urse of the wicked when ââ¦hey dye they goe downe â⦠their place so was it with Iudas and when ââ¦entence shall be giuen ââ¦ut against them the ââ¦rth shall open swallow them but the comââ¦assion of the Lord and ââ¦assion of his Christ hath ââ¦eed vs from this miserable condition For our ââ¦nne we were cast out of ââ¦arthly Paradise and yet the Lord out of his loue hath giuen vs a place in the heauenly Paradise The Angels lost the placâ⦠of their habitation there shall neuer recouer it buâ⦠man is raised vp into theiâ⦠roomes to sit with Chrisâ⦠in the heauenly places But the last word compleates the Comfort foâ⦠you I goe to prepare a plaâ⦠for you It were no matter of comfort to heare oâ⦠that place and of thâ⦠great preparation madâ⦠in it if it were not for vs for as wee shewed in thâ⦠beginning our Sauiouâ⦠here vnderstands not thâ⦠twelue Disciples onely when hee saith I goe to prepare a place for you there is one of the twelue ââ¦ath no place there Iudas went to his owne place and many beside the twelue that shal haue place there ââ¦s afterward our Sauiour expounds himself Alway wee see it is not sufficient ââ¦or true consolation to haue a generall sight of eternall life but a particular application of the promises thereof is necessarily required in vs. And this is the very essentiall difference which distinguisheth true iustifying faith from all other kindâ⦠of faith whatsoeuer Thâ⦠Papists mistake it farrâ⦠when they teach there iâ⦠no more in faith then Notitia cum assensu a knowledge with assent For suppose thou knoweâ⦠the promises of eternaâ⦠life and assentest to them also that they are true iâ⦠the generall if thou haâ⦠not the assurance which iustifying Faith renders that they are thine whaâ⦠comfort hast thou Thâ⦠damned Diuels know confesse the Son of God they know his word â⦠true both his promisesâ⦠mercy and threatnings ââ¦f iudgement but they ââ¦re sure that mercy belongs not to them and iudgement cannot goe by them therfore they tremble saith S. Iames where ââ¦f they thought and assented not to the truth of Gods word it would not moue them at all neither would they tremble for ââ¦he iudgement more then they reioyce at the mercie Thus haue these reprobate Spirits an assenââ¦ing knowledge then the which no more is in the Papists faith according to their owne doctrine And thus they mistaking the nature of Faithâ⦠are forced to fall into anâ⦠other in conuenience thaâ⦠in this life no man can bâ⦠sure of saluation vnlesse it be by extraordinary reuelation Indeed for them it is necessary to affirmâ⦠this for it is impossible that their Religion can giue any man assurance of saluation and therefore hath their Counselâ⦠of Trent decreed in this manner Si quis dixerit hââ¦minem renatum teneri exfide ad credendum se certâ⦠esse de numero praedestinatorum anathema sit If any man say that a
the soule and findes by daily experience that the body loseth life when the soule leaueth it yet hath he no care of the soule doth not so much as remember it once in the day And therefore our Sauiour who knoweth our soares better then our selues doe recommends to vs this care Possesse your soules and he teaches ââ¦ow wee may doe it by ââ¦our patience God is the God of Patience keepe ââ¦atience and thou shalt ââ¦eepe the Lord and in ââ¦eeping him shalt keepe ââ¦hine owne soule God ââ¦wels not in perturbatiââ¦ns hee comes to his ââ¦aints as hee came to Eâ⦠not in the mighty ââ¦ind that rent the mounââ¦aines nor in the Earthââ¦uake nor in the fire but ââ¦ee came to him in a soft ââ¦nd still voyce he dwelââ¦eth with the poore and ââ¦im that is of a contrite ââ¦pirit As the soule is the ââ¦ife of the body ita anima animae Deus so God is thâ⦠life of the soule Mors ãâã mae fit cum eam deserit Deus sicut corporis cum id de serit anima ergo vtriusque id est totius hominis morâ⦠est cum anima à Deo deserta deserit corpus ita eniâ⦠nec ex Deo viuit ipsa neâ⦠corpus ex ipsa The death of the soule is when God leaues the soule like aâ⦠the death of the body is when the soule leaues it so the death of both that is of the whole man is when the soule left oâ⦠God leaues the body for oâ⦠neyther hath the soule life from God nor the body life from the soule In all the battels then which Sathan by himselfe or his instruments maketh against vs the quarrell and question is de anima about the Soule It is the soule he pursues it is the soule wee haue to defend if hee crosse thee in thy goods in thy body in thy name hee careth not for these none of these are a morsell for his mouth Animam tuam quaerit it is thy soule he seeks to make it by impatience partaker of his owne condemnation A cleare example of this we haue in Iob Sathan by Gods permission crossed him in his goods by Sabeans Caldeans and by a fire from heauen he crossed him in his children whom he smothered by the ouerthrow of the house wherein they were banquetting he crossed him in his body with sore boyles Et cum aperto certamine superari se vidit de ore coniugis iaculuÌ quasi de insidijs intor sit And when hee perceiued himselfe in open combat to be ouercome hee secretly threw a dart at him out of the mouth of his wife as it were by boutgates to ouerthrow him What hee sought by all this hee declares it himselfe to wit that Iob might blaspheme the Lord to his face and the same is it whereat he aymes in all our outward or inward tentations that he may carry away and captiue our soules by impatience that he may driue vs to grudging murmuring and blaspheming of the Lord our God I am perswaded if our memories were sanctified to remember this wee would not suffer our selues to be so easily perturbed commoued and transported with passions for light offences cast in our way as commonly wee are let vs therefore in all our tentations remember this watchword of our Sauiour Possesse your soules in patience what euer losse wee sustaine of any thing that is ours take heede wee loose not our selues but let vs doe as Ioseph did when the wife of Putiphar caught hold of his garment that she might snare himselfe hee let the garment goe and saued himselfe Such things as God giues power to man to take from ââ¦hee let them goe and possesse thou thy soule in patience But the manner of speech is here to be marââ¦ed seeing by the soule ââ¦ee possesse any thing ââ¦hat wee possesse for by ãâã we thinke wee affect ââ¦ee worke what is this ââ¦hereby wee can possesse ââ¦ur soules For answere ââ¦e must know that in the ââ¦oule of a Christian man ââ¦here are two contrary ââ¦arties one regenerate anââ¦ther vnregenerate light ââ¦race and sanctification in the one darknesse corrupt nature and sinne in the other whereby let no man thinke that the soule is diuided or parted into two halfs for it is a simple and indiuisible essence But as wee see the twilight of the morning it is neyther full darknesse as at midnight nor full light as in the noone-tide of the day yet is it one the same light though it increase by degrees clearer and clearer till the noone then it was in the morning So is it with the soule of a Christian it is not altogether darkenesse as the soule of the wicked and reprobate is whose night is not past yea the darknesse of their midnight wil neuer passe but still it waxeth darker and darker till they come to vtter darknesse Neyther yet is it altogether ââ¦ight as the soules triumphant are who rest and feede with him whom their soule loueth in the ââ¦oone-tide of the day but it is throughout all partly regenerate partly ââ¦nregenerate No faculty of the soule is without the remanents of ignorance and sinfull corruption nor yet without beginnings of knowledge and renouation by grace And these are the two which S. Paul cals The new maâ⦠and the old sinfull corruption is called the old man because it was in vâ⦠before renewing grace ãâã and againe because iâ⦠waxeth weaker and weaker till grace vtterly aâ⦠the length abolish it Thiâ⦠then being the estate oâ⦠our soule the meaning oâ⦠the exhortation is thaâ⦠we should fortifie the ãâã part euer endeuourinâ⦠that light may banisâ⦠darkenesse Grace in thâ⦠ââ¦oule may subdue sinfull ââ¦orruption and the new ââ¦an may ouercome the ââ¦ld man till at length ââ¦hat vsurper Sathan bee ââ¦ully dispossessed and we possesse our soules as a quiet habitation for the God of peace and of paââ¦ience to dwell in Againe seeing the Apostle speaking to Chriââ¦tians saith Ye are not your ââ¦wne yee are bought with ãâã price therefore glorifie God in your body and in ââ¦our spirit for they are Gods how are wee commanded to possesse our soules seeing they are not our owne The answere is easie our immediate superiour and proper possessor of our soules and bodies is the Lord wee hold them of him as tenants at his will not for our selues but for the Lord. As hee is a traitor who renders the Palace or castle of a Prince which hee hath receiued in keeping to the enemie of the Prince so is he who casts open the ports of his soule to euery vncleane spirit giueth the members of his body as weapons of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne Thus then we are but vnder-possessors of our soules and bodies as wee hold them of the Lord so should we hold them for the Lord. Farre be this rebellion from vs to hold the Lords owne house against himselfe Besides this Augustines ââ¦bseruation
TO ââ¦HE RIGHT ââ¦OBLE VERââ¦VOVS AND ââ¦ODLY LADY MARY Countesse of MARRE Right Noble LADY AS Pearles are of greatest price when they are most rare so is ââ¦tie most worthy to bee ââ¦ised when they be but few who practise it Oâ⦠Noah in the old world oâ⦠Lot in Sodome one Iâ⦠among Gentiles one Simââ¦on in Ierusalem one Nââ¦codemus among Pharisiââ¦one Ioseph in the Sanââ¦drim one Esther in ãâã Court one Iudith in ãâã Citie one Abigail in ãâã Familie are of more woâ⦠and waight in the Ballaâ⦠of God then many thousaâ⦠of others I speake not thiâ⦠if our time were reduceâ⦠that scarsitie for of all sâ⦠and sexes of people bleâ⦠be the Lord for it we ãâã many conscionable prâ⦠sers of that word of Gâ⦠ââ¦hereof they are professors ââ¦t in respect of the remââ¦nt of the world are they ãâã few that our fault were ââ¦eat if such as are good ââ¦ere not incouraged to be ââ¦tter by such good as wee ââ¦rough grace may minister ââ¦to them For this cause haue I preââ¦nted this little Treatise to ââ¦ur L as vnto one belonââ¦ng to the generation of ââ¦em that seeke the face ãâã God Wherein I hope not ââ¦ely to be seconded by the ââ¦timonies of all the godly ââ¦at know you but that the ââ¦its of your Faith also ââ¦ene of such as see your selfe shall free me of all iââ¦putation which malignaââ¦murmuring mouthes of aââ¦uer saries can make vnto mâ⦠This threefold tyred Gaâ⦠land of flowres euery one ãâã them transcending aboue ãâã other iustly belongs vâ⦠your L Nobilitie Vertuâ⦠and Piââ¦tie Nobilitie of â⦠high degree as any subieâ⦠of this Land can acclaimâ⦠yet Vertue surpassing Nââ¦bilitie and Pietie supereââ¦nent aboue both These â⦠pray God daily to encreâ⦠in your L that Grace muââ¦plyed vpon you in this liâ⦠may lead you to that proââ¦sed Crowne of glory ãâã ââ¦ared for all Saints in the ââ¦ansions of our Fathers ââ¦ouse whereof now turââ¦ing me to speake I humbly ââ¦ake my leaue And rests Your L in Christ Iesus W. B. of Galloway IOHN 14. 1. 2. 3. And Iesus said to his Discââ¦ples Let not your hearâ⦠be troubled Yee beleeuâ⦠in God beleeue also in mâ⦠2 In my Fathers house arâ⦠many dwelling places iâ⦠it were not so I woulâ⦠haue told you I goe tâ⦠prepare a place for you 3 And though I goe to prepare a place for you I wiâ⦠come againe and receiuâ⦠you vnto my selfe thâ⦠where I am there you maâ⦠be also A TREATISE of the Heauenly MANSIONS My help is in the name of the Lord. IOHN 14. 1. And Iesus said to his Disciples Let not your hearts be troubled Yee beleeue in God beleeue also in mee AT this Chapter begins the Legacie or latter Will of our âord Christ Iesus and âontinues to the eighteene In the entry thereof hee first comforts his Disciples against the fearâ of all euill which may trouble them and next by strong arguments confirmes the Comfort In the Comfort three Circumstances are to be considered First who giues it Christ Iesus Secondly to whom to his Disciples Thirdly the Comfort it selfe Let not youâ heart be troubled proponed as you see by way of Exhortation Out of the first Circumstance appeares thâ superabundant loue oâ Iesus toward his owne He is now entring to his ââ¦loudy Passion which troubled him sore yet he cares not for himselfe all his care is for them that they should not be troubled O what a loue where shall we finde the like of it Many examples of rare loue haue wee in holy Story in the common yea and in nature also but none like this Here is a loue the length the breadth the height the depth whereof none is able to comprehend Iuda offered himselfe a seruant to Ioseph that Beniamin might go free Ionathan perilled his life and quyted his kingdome for loue of Dauid Arsinoe interposed her selfe betweene the murtherers weapons that were sent by Ptolomie her Brother to kill her Children shee embraced them in her armes and turned her body about to receiue the strokes giuen out foâ⦠them and in the midst oâ⦠bloudy wounds shee receiued in their defence she kissed them her loue was great her power small she could not keepe them from cruell death ââ¦he Pellican not onely ââ¦edes her yong with her ââ¦ne bloud but with inââ¦ncible constancy abides ââ¦e flames of fire for their ââ¦eseruation Naturalists ââ¦rite that they who seek ââ¦e Pellican for a prey ââ¦uing found the Nest ââ¦erein her young are ââ¦dle a fire round about ãâã Videt Pellicanus ignem ââ¦us non ignorat vehemenââ¦m audacter accedit arââ¦rem in singula membra ââ¦etrantem sentit neque loco ââ¦ouetur exuritur pene ââ¦a neque tantillum quidem ââ¦sternatur patientissim áââ¦e constantia vigens saluti filioruÌ intenta potius quasuae mortis genere omniuâ⦠atrocissimo conficitur Tâ⦠Pellican sees the firâ⦠knowes very well the vâ⦠hemencie of it yet flyâ⦠boldly vnto it seeking bâ⦠the motion of her winâ⦠to extinguish it she feelâ⦠the burning heate wiâ⦠intollerable pain pierciâ⦠all the parts of her bodâ⦠yet flyes not from it bâ⦠with great patience eââ¦dures it rather mindfâ⦠of the safety of her yonâ⦠then carefull to saue hââ¦selfe from so painefull death These are indeede examples of strong loue in the creature but as I said this loue of Iesus ouercomes them al he came in the shape of a seruant to make vs free-men he was content to be bound that his Beniaminites that is the sonnes of his right hand might be restored to their Father he keeps the kingdome as heire and onely begotten Sonne of the Father and giues the kingdome to vs conqueââ¦ed by him as our Goel ââ¦insman who hath redeemed our inheritance he ââ¦eceiued in his blamelesse ââ¦ody the stripes which were due to our sinnes He hath borne our infirmities and carryed our sorrowes he was wounded foâ⦠our transgressions and broken for our iniquities thâ⦠chastisement of our peacâ⦠was vpon him and with hiâ⦠stripes are we healed Heâ⦠is that Good Shepheard who gaue his life for hiâ⦠Sheep he is that true Pellican who saw the fieriâ⦠wrath of God burning about his young ones anâ⦠cast himself into the middest therof that he might quench it hee knew the terrour thereof yet hee fled it not he longed with great desire to eate that ââ¦t Passeouer albeit hee ââ¦ew it would be a supââ¦r of sowre hearbs vnto ââ¦m for loue of those ââ¦ho are his hee forgot ââ¦mself when Iudas came ãâã betray him and the ââ¦en of war to apprehend ââ¦m he made no shift for ââ¦mselfe If yee be seeking ââ¦us I am hee let these goe ââ¦ir way And here when ââ¦e is to vndergoe his ââ¦ublesome Agonie all ââ¦s care is to comfort ââ¦em that they should ââ¦t be troubled Sure it is we can neuer quite this kindnesse of our Lord yet at least ãâã vs remember it
thou art stillâ⦠same man thou weâ⦠there is no change of tâ⦠manners and art still ãâã eased vnto the death ãâã all those that came Christ in the Gospel noâ⦠went away as they came ââ¦me came blinde and ââ¦ent away seeing some ââ¦me lepers and went aââ¦ay cleansed some paraââ¦ique and went away ââ¦nfirmed some possesââ¦d with euill spirits and ââ¦ent away deliuered ââ¦ou art not as one of ââ¦em thou hast not ââ¦ught him thou hast not ââ¦uched him thou hast ââ¦awne no vertue out of ââ¦m the Physitian hath ââ¦t cured thee how then ââ¦st thou I beleeue in Ieââ¦s thou art not planted him for all that are in ââ¦m get vertue from him which workes in theâ⦠the similitude of his owâ⦠life Here is the miserâ⦠of this age that a couââ¦terfeit Faith is currant ââ¦mong many who coââ¦tent themselues with it ãâã if it were a true faith Verse 2. In my Fathers house are many dwelling places If it were not so I would haue told you I goe to prepare a place for you HItherto haue we been comforted against the feare of ââ¦ne followes now comââ¦t against Death Wherâ⦠the Lord confirmes vs ââ¦ainst the offence wee ââ¦ght conceiue of his ââ¦ath and against the terââ¦rs might arise of our ââ¦ne death and that which may follow it This comfort proceedes by three degrees In the first is proposed meditation of the manâ⦠Mansions which are iâ⦠our Fathers house Thâ⦠comfort meetes our feaâ⦠this way if death afraâ⦠you if the graue seeâ⦠horrible to you if it yerksome to remembâ⦠that which Iob hath Eâ⦠it be long I must make ãâã bed in the darke I will ãâã to corruption thou art ãâã father and to the worââ¦yee are my brethren and ââ¦sters lift vp your minde looke ouer this stream at seemes to carry all ââ¦ay with it cast your ââ¦es vpward to my Faââ¦ers House where many ââ¦ansions are Death ââ¦all not be able to deââ¦ure you the graue shall ââ¦t detaine you from ââ¦ese euerlasting Tabernaâ⦠where the place of ââ¦ur rest and Mansion This is the first degree the Comfort and is ââ¦ntained in these words As Death is the way of flesh so is it the comââ¦nd of all crosses in it ââ¦e soule naturally is ââ¦ubled with feares the ââ¦dy with paines It is the last enemie which gâ⦠thereth all forces miââ¦tant vnder it to the laâ⦠battle It is with vs as was with Israel when thâ⦠came out of Egypt oâ⦠nation of the Egyptiaâ⦠pursued them but whâ⦠they entred into Canaâ⦠seauen nations of Canââ¦nites ioyned their forcâ⦠to hold them out In oâ⦠life euery man hath hâ⦠seuerall crosses and tenttions one hath health ãâã body but wrestleth wiâ⦠pouertie not hauing ãâã feede his body anothâ⦠hath abundance but hatâ⦠not his health to vse iâ⦠some want sight of their eyes but heare well eââ¦ough others see but ââ¦eare not at all one is ââ¦ained in his outward ââ¦lesh another with some ââ¦ntestine disease in one ââ¦here is a whole body but ãâã wounded Spirit If in ââ¦ur life wee gather not ââ¦trength against one crosse or two how shall ââ¦ee endure in death to ââ¦ight with them all Wert ââ¦hou neuer so rich poore ââ¦nd naked thou must goe to the graue arme ââ¦hee against pouertie ââ¦earne to want those things which thou hast before they be taken from thee were thy sight as quicke as the Eagles it shall waxe dimme They shall waxe darke that looke out at the window the strong men shall bowe themselues and the grinders shall cease c. Thy senses shall faile thee yea thy heart also thy beautifull flesh must putrifie rot thou must goe to the house of thine age and all that are thine shall for sake thee In a word armtes of sorrowes feares and terrours as in a solemne day shall be gathered round about thee And therefore great need haue wee to arme our selues aââ¦ainst that day of battel ââ¦nd specially to lay vp in ââ¦ur hearts these consolaââ¦ons of God which our ââ¦auiour here leaues vs in ââ¦is Legacie In this first degree of ââ¦he Comfort foure cirââ¦umstances are to be conââ¦idered first who is this ââ¦e cals his Father secondâ⦠what is his Fathers ââ¦ouse thirdly what are ââ¦hese mansions fourthââ¦y what is meant here by ââ¦any mansions As for the first the ââ¦ame of a Father is either ââ¦ttribute to God indefinitely and so is common to all the three personâ⦠of the blessed Trinitie in which sense among the rest of the stiles giuen vnto Iesus hee is called aâ⦠euerlasting Father anâ⦠then the relation respect eth all his creatures oâ⦠else particularly it is ascribed to the first person and then the relatioâ⦠doth principally respecâ⦠Christ and that in botâ⦠his natures Secondly alâ⦠the children of his good wiâ⦠to whom by grace iâ⦠Christ he is become a father Most comfortable iâ⦠this for vs that he who iâ⦠ââ¦he Father of our Lord ââ¦esus Christ by an vnââ¦eakable generation for ââ¦ho can declare it is also ââ¦ecome our Father in ââ¦im I ascend to my God ââ¦nd your God to my father ââ¦nd to your father And ââ¦hen wee pray hee hath ââ¦ommanded vs to call ââ¦pon God as vpon our ââ¦ther yea he hath sent owne his Spirit into our arts by whose secret inââ¦rmation we are taught ââ¦ith filiall confidence to ââ¦y vnto him Abba Faââ¦er Happy time for vs ââ¦at so wee may call him The second Circumstance leades vs to a consideration of his Fatheâ⦠house The heauen saitâ⦠the Lord is my throne anâ⦠the earth is my foot-stoolâ⦠where then is his house yea as Salomon saith Tâ⦠heauens and the heauens â⦠heauens are not able to coââ¦taine him the Lord is uery where excludâ⦠from no place includâ⦠in none to them in hâ⦠hee shewes his terrour tâ⦠them on earth he shewâ⦠his goodnesse to them iâ⦠heauen hee sheweth hâ⦠glory what then is thâ⦠hee calleth his Fatheâ⦠house This speech â⦠borrowed from the manner of Kings who albeit the whole Kingdome bee theirs yet haue they some place of residence which more properly is called the Kings house euen so by this house which our ââ¦auiour calleth his Fathers house is vnderstood that place of glory wherââ¦n he shewes his secret most familiar presence to his Saints this is the house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens this is the Citie hauing a foundation whose builder and maker is God this is the Citie which needeth not Sun nor Moone This is the Paradise of God the inner Court of the palace of God the heauen of heauens the holy of holiest S. Pauâ⦠calls it the third Heauens hee saw it but could not reueale the glory of it he contents him to tell what it was not but takes not in hand to tell what it was â⦠he describes it negatiue wee shall know it when wee shall see it till then no heart of