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A20270 A lecture or exposition vpon a part of the. v. chapter of the epistle to the Hebrues As it was read in Paules the. 6. day of December. 1572. By Edward Deryng. Prepared and geuen for a new yeres gift to the godly in London and els where, for this yeare. 1573. Dering, Edward, 1540?-1576. 1573 (1573) STC 6691; ESTC S110854 21,886 68

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and was also heard in the things which he feared And being him selfe the sonne yet he learned obedience by the things which he suffered and being consecrate was made the authour of eternall saluation to them that obey hym These wordes my deare brethrē we haue now in hand to search examine what the spirit teacheth vs so much the more carefully to be harkned vnto of vs how much the more plainly it setteth foorth vnto vs the great loue compassion that Christ beareth toward vs Two thinges especially here the Apostle testifieth First the sufferinges of our sauiour Christ then the benefite that we enioy by the same according as hys sufferinges were onely for our sake His sufferinges what they were how great sorow oppressed hym he sheweth by those effectes which his sorowes brought forth that is praiers supplications cryinges teares feare and anguish of spirite whych things waited euer vpon him euen to the accomplishing of all his passions whych was the death of hys crosse The fruite that we do reape of those afflictions whych he suffered is the saluation of our soules eternall life if we wyl obey him In thys description of hys sufferinges though the thynges are set forth which were cōmen and vsuall vnto him al his life yet it appeareth especially the Apostle meaneth that greatest conflict of sorow which he had a litle before his passion described by the Euangelistes in all similitude like vnto this which the Apostle here declareth For as it is here said he made praiers noting by the word that they were many in number so it appeareth in the Gospell that beside other praiers three tymes he repeated thys one Father if it be possible let this cup passe frō me And as it is sayd he made supplications humblyng hym selfe low vnder the hand of hys Father so it is said in the Gospel that thē he kneeled downe fell vpon his face and so prayed vnto God. And as the cause of his praiers is here mencioned to be deliuered frō death so the words of his praier in the Gospel are lyke Father if it be possible let thys cup passe from me meanyng the death of his crosse to which he was condēned And as here is mencioned his great and lowd crying so there the Euangelist sayth he cryed out with a lowde voyce My God my God why hast thou forsakē me And like as here is said he praied with weeping teates so there is witnessed that he was sorowful and greuously troubled that his soule was heauy euen vnto death that in a great agonye hys sweate was lyke vnto drops of bloud A wofull kynde of weeping but such was his compassion that we might haue sure hope And as here is said he was deliuered from his feate so at that tyme when all hys spirites were troubled the Angell came from heauen to bryng him comfort These similitudes they are all so agreable that it is euident the Apostle respected especially aboue other this part of his passiō in which hys perfect loue and vnchaungeable affection towarde vs shined in most fulnes of beuty in that it was so feruent and so deepely rooted that neither feare nor trembling nor anye anguishe of spirite coulde make it shake nor the force of death nor any bloudy sweates could pull it out of his bowels In this one sentence dearely beloued ther is more for vs to learne then either eye hath seene or eare hath heard or all fleshe in this lyfe shall attayne vnto It is the deapth of the gloryous Gospell which the Angels do desire to behold But to note vnto you somethings in which our faith maye be strengthened we haue to learn by the example of our sauiour Christ in this place that in all temptacions we should approche vnto our God and make our complaintes vnto him who is onely able ready for to helpe vs He hath not forgot hys promise that he hath made of old Cal vpon me in the day of thy trouble and I wyll delyuer thee He is a place of refuge and of sure defence a strong tower against al assaultes The ryghteous man that shal hasten vnto him he shal be surely saued The author and finisher of our fayth he is gone before vs we shall be surelye partakers of the same mercy It skilleth not how great our tēptacions ar into whych we are fallē nor how many in number the Lord wyll deliuer vs out of all It skilleth not howe manye one sins are nor how great in our eyes that haue procured out troubles the Lord wyl scatter thē as the cloudes from the heauens and they shal not turne away his louing countenance from vs Let vs looke on thys paterne Iesus Christ that is set before vs It would crush our flesh in peeces to beare with hym the wayght of his afflictiōs from which he was deliuered and it woulde make our teares to bee as drops of bloude to be partakers of so great anguish of spirit as he sustained and yet it was not so great but the comfort of the Angell sent from hys Father was much greater So that by praier he obtained a most excellent victory hath brused the Serpentes head broken all his force And why shuld we then bee discouraged If our syns be as crimosin or if they be red lyke scarlet yet they are the syns of our own bodies but not ours onely but also the synnes of the world they rested all vpon Christ our Sauiour and yet he prayed for delyuerance and hath obtained and therfore we may say with boldnes Forgeue vs our trespasses If the loue of Christ were so great to beare the syns of vs all and of them euery one hath gotten forgeuenes how shuld not we that ar laden with our own syns lift vp our heads into great assurance of hope and heare with ioy fulnes the word of promise I wyll bee mercyfull to their vnryghteousnes and I wil remember their syns and their iniquities no more And what though our afflictions are exceeding many that the whole head be sicke and the whole hart be heauy that frō the sole of our foote vnto our heades there bee nothyng whole in our bodies but al woūdes and swellings and sores full of corruption yet all this is nothing vnto his passions by whole stripes wee are healed And these troubles are nothing vnto his mighty cryinges who was compassed about for our sakes with feares and horrours til his sweate was as drops of bloud and hys bones brused in hys fleshe Then let the whyps and scourges of our chasticement be greuous and let vs yet bee beaten if the wyll of God so be with Scorpions Christ in great compassion suffering wyth our infirmities ▪ hath borne yet a more heauy waight of iniquities hath bene deliuered So that if we obey we are partakers of his mercies we haue ful perswasion that neither death nor lyfe nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor
endured and the causes of his mighty cryinges But thys also dearelye beloued though it were exceding yet it was not all no it was but a taste of griefe in comparison of the rest Behold if you can his person here and see the residue and so you shal know the loue of god His griefe was exceding to see all vertue godlynes so troden vnderfeete and it was yet more infinite to beholde Satan to preuayle against man to his euerlasting condemnation No creature could euer beare such a perct image of a man of sorow But the height and depth of all miseries it was yet behinde the synne that he hated hee must take it vpon his owne body and beare the wrath of his Father that was poured out agaynst it This is the fulnes of all payne that compassed him round about whych no toūg is able to vtter and no hart can conceaue This anger of hys father it burned in him euen vnto the botome of hel of the which anger the Prophet speaketh Who can stande before hys wrath or who can abide the fearcenes of his wrath His wrath is poured out lyke fyre and the rockes are broken before him When the Prophet was not able to conceaue the waight of his anger and his voyce cleaued vnto hys mouth when hee went about to vtter it the hardest of all creatures hee tooke for example that the hard rocke did cleaue asunder at the sound of his words And as is sayd in an other place suche a voyce as maketh the forlorne wildernes to tremble A voyce so ful of terrour in the eares and hartes of the wicked that the sunne shal be darkned at the sound of it the Moone shall not geue her lyght the Stars of the heauen shal fal away and the powers of heauen shall bee shaken No creature at all shal yeld his seruice vnto them the elementes of the world shall seeme to melt away This state of misery Christ entred into and soonke down deepe in this confusion and who can expresse his sorow Beyng full of goodnes he had the reward of euyl Full of obedience he was punished as wycked Ful of faith yet had the reward of a synner Inheritour of al thinges Lord of all yet nothing at all to do him duty The King of Kings and Lord of Lordes yet made an outcast and abiect of the people The ruler of all and God of glory yet compassed wyth shame and great confusion The author of lyfe yet wrapped in the chaines of eternall death The onel●● begotten of his Father hys best beloued yet cast off as a straunger and chasticed as an enemy The brightnes of glorye the beutye of the h●ghest heauens yet crucified in dishonour and throwne downe into hel O picture of perfect wretchednes and image of miserie how iust cause found he to cry out alowde My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Hys whole body and nature like vnto vs altogether broken with the reward of syn his soule poured out into all calamitie the wrath of his father and condemnation resting vpon him How truly may we here say and confesse the article of our faith He descended into hell How liuely do we see it performed that the Prophet speaketh of The snares of death compassed me and the paynes of hel tooke hold vpon me I found trouble and sorow This was the compassion that hee had toward vs by which he suffred with our infirmities more then Aaron or all the Priestes of the lawe could possibly haue done for vs If we could possibly cōsider dearly beloued as we shuld we wold gladly embrace him as the hie Priest for euer of the new testament when we shal be made of one fashion with hym thorow some measure of his afflictions to feele the waight of our own syns then we shall confesse what cause he had of complayning how dearely he hath bought the honour of the hye Priest Mediatour The Lord lighten the eyes of our mynde that with open countenance we may behold hym who for our sakes endured suche a death of the crosse We should not then neede many exhortations the remembraunce of the latter end would keepe vs safe from syn But let vs now see what the Apostle further teacheth vs whyle our sauiour Christ is in these great extremities what fruit of well doing he hath learned by it It followeth And although he were the Sonne yet learned he obedience by the thinges he suffered Loe dearely beloued this was no litle profit of al his troubles He learned therby how what it was to obey his father that when these thinges rested all vpon hym and yet he could say in meekenes of spirit Not my wyl my father but thy wyl be done ▪ he might haue great boldnes that his obedience was perfect The shame of the worlde the a●flictions of the flesh the vexations of the mynde the paynes of hell when these could make him vtter no other wordes but Father as thou wylt so le● it bee done what hope what faith did he surely build on that his obedience was precious in the sight of his father This example is our instruction We know then best howe we loue the Lorde when wee feele by experience what we wyl suffer for his sake It is an easy thing to be valiant before the combate or to dreame of a good courage before the hart be tried but indeede to bee vnshaken in the mydst of the tempest and to stand vpryght when the ground vnder thee doth tremble this is to know assuredlye thou art strong in deede and to say with boldnes thou shalt neuer bee moued This our Sauiour Christ might throughly glory of The heauen earth and elementes they were all his enemies his Father in whō hee trusted shewed hym an angrye countenaunce He that fainteth not but crieth styl Thy wyll be done O Father he may be bold of his obedience there is no creature can make him falsifie his faith If this be the fruite of our afflictions the Apostle speaketh not without great occasiō Accompt it for an exceding ioy whē ye fall into sundrye troubles For what can bee more ioyfull vnto the soule that is oppressed then to haue this in experience the neither heigth nor deapth shall remoue hym from the Lord. The glory of Abraham was exceding great whē he had sealed it with practise that hee would forsake hys country and his kinred and his fathers house at the commaūdement of God to go whether he wold shew him Then he knew by good proofe he was made worthy of Christ whē hee could forsake Father Mother house land and all thinges to come vnto him The patience of Iob was not throughlye knowen tyll all hys goodes were spoyled and he left exceeding ●are in that case when hee spake so boldly Naked came I out of my mothers wombe and naked shal I return againe the Lord hath geuen the Lord hath taken away as the
of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he was greatly afraid all together astonished euē fainting for great anguish of mynde and full pensiue sorowes For his father had broken him with one breaking vpō an other so he kyndled hys wrath against him and accompted hym as one of his enemies The heauy hād of God was so greeuous vpon hym that it brused his verye bones and rent his raines asunder hee coulde finde no health in his flesh but was woūded vnto death as without recouerye The Euangelist hym selfe beareth witnes of this miserye addyng vnto hys lowde crying thys sound of wordes My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Thys sorow because it was not as waged with wordes he cried out alowd because in silence he could finde no case his face was wrinckled wyth weeping and the shadowe of death was vpon his eyes For what griefe coulde be lyke vnto this Or what condemnation coulde be so heauye when there was no wyckednes in his handes and when hys prayer was pure when he was the brightnes of glory and the sunne of ryghteousnes that shined in the worlde yet as it were to see hys daies at an end and his enterprises broken his carefull thoughtes to bee so deepe grauen in his brest that they chaunged euen the daye into nyght vnto him and all light that approched in to darknes thys was a sorrowe aboue all sorrowes When his excellencie was such aboue all creatures that the world was not worthye to geue him breath yet he to bee made a woorme and not a man a shame of men and the contempt of the people all that saw hym to haue him in derision and to shut vp hys lyfe in shame and reproches so vnworthy a reward of so precious a seruaunt how could it but shake all his bones out of ioynt and make hys hart to melt in the myddest of his bowels How could his strēgth not be dryed vp like a potshard and his toūg not cleaue vnto the iawes of his mouth Who hath bene euer so full of wo who hath bene brought so low into the dust of death His vertues wer vnspeakeable and righteous aboue all measure yet was he accompted among the wicked His temperancie in perfect beutye his appetites bridled with all holye moderation yet they sayd of him behold a glutton and a drinker of wyne His behauiour honest without al reproofe and his conuersation vnspotted yet they sclaundred hym as a friende of Publicans and synners and reported him as a companion of theeues He loued the law of his father wyth such fulnes of desire that he would not suffer one iote nor one title vnaccomplished and yet they accused him as an enemye vnto Moyses a breaker of the law a subuerter of the Temple and a teacher of newe doctrines such as were not of god He harkened vnto his Father in all humility loued him with al hys hart and with al his soule so that he was obedient vnto hym vnto death yea euen the death of the crosse yet they sayd of him presumptuously that he blasphemed and robbed God of hys honor He was an enemy of Satan euen vnto death and by death ouer came hym that brought death into the world he hated him with so perfect hatred and held stedfast the enmitie that was betwene them vntyl he had spoyled his principalities and powers and triumphed ouer them in an euerlasting victorye yet horribly they reproched him by the naine of Belzebub sayd he had a deuill and by the power of Satan hee wrought all hys miracles O the depth of all abominations and the bottomles pyt of al vncleanes Who could once haue thought so lothsom a sincke to haue bene couered in the hart of man O God ryghteous in iudgemēt and true in word is this it that the Prophet hath tolde before that the thoughtes of manye hartes should be made open Then create we beseche thee new hartes within vs and take not thy holy spirite for euer from vs. And you dearelye beloued if these were the causes that Christ had to complaine then thinke not that hys cryinges were aboue his sorow to see so nere vnto his hart euen in his own person innocency blamed vertue defaced ryghteousnes troden downe holines prophaned loue despised glory contemned honour reuiled all goodnes shamed faith onpugned and lyfe wounded to death How could he yet abstain frō strong crying and teares when the malice of Satan had gotten so great a conquest If iust Lot dwelling among the Sodomites and seing and hearing such a wicked people vexed frō day to day his righteous soule with their vngodly dedes what shal we thinke of Christ liuing in such a generation But O my brethren beloued of the Lord open the eyes of your fayth and you shal see these thynges they were but the begynnings of sorow What shal we think was his grief of minde for the Iewes his brethren that wer thus poured out vnto wickednes How did hys great loue boyle in sorowes of hart to see their destruction If Moses when he beheld the anger of God against his people in great compassion of their miseries praied earnestly vnto the Lord Forgeue them O God or rase me out of the booke that thou hast wrytten If Ieremye in foreseing the captiuitie of Ierusalē had so great griefe that he cried out O that my head wer ful of waters myne eyes a fountayne of teares that I might weepe day and nyght for the flaine of the daughter of my people If Esay in like aboundance of loue bewayled his brethren that woulde needes perish wyth these words of complaynt Turne away from me I wyll weepe bitterly labour not to comfort me because my people perish If Paule that most excellent Apostle hauyng receiued but his portion of the great loue of Christ called God to witnes that he spake the truth howe he had great heauynes and continuall sorowe of hart for hys brethren and that for their sakes him selfe wished to be separate from Iesu Christ what maner of teares shall wee thinke were those which Christ him selfe poured our whē he wept ouer Ierusalem what sorow of mynde which then interrupted hys speeches made thē vnperfect How deepe was that angry griefe printed in his bowels when he beheld the blindnes of his people and was sorowful for them What maner of affliction was it that in the middest of so great reproches and mockes could neuer bee chaunged but prayed stil Father forgeue them they know not what they do If it bee greeuous vnto vs to lose the thing that is most deare vnto vs in thys earthlye tabernacle howe much more did this sorrowe pearce euen through the bowels of our sauiour Christ to see man taken from him vnto destructiō for whose sake hee would so willynglye sacrifice vp his lyfe This is an other spectacle in which we may behold hys great dolour and anguish to knowe the paynes hee
Lord wyll so is it done the name of the Lord bee praysed for euer Now might Iob be sure of the strong patience which should bryng forth hope that neuer should be confounded Our brethren before vs which so constantly haue holden the professiō of their faith that the flames of fire could not make it wauer they had a good witnes that their election was sure when they might speake by experience that neither life nor death could remoue them from the loue of god Thus the good grounde is knowen what it is when the heate cannot scortch it nor brears and thornes turne the good corne into weedes but through all stormes it wyl geue nourishment to the seede tyl it geue greater encrease to Gods honour and glory The best of vs all let vs thank God for this profitable experience for before it come vnto vs we know not how great the rebellion of the flesh wyl be The Apostels of Christ they bragged not a little that they would neuer forsake their Maister Christ he alone had the words of eternal life and they would not chaūge hym for an other They beleued hym they knewe hym to bee Christ the sonne of the lyuing God and ther was no other Sauiour But when they saw the swordes and staues the rulers offēded the people in an vprore the crosse at hand their courage fell downe they forsooke hym all fled away Peter was not a litle stoute as hym selfe was perswaded hee would neuer forsake Christ though he should dye for hys name and for proofe of his courage he drewe hys sword and stroke so vēterously that he had almost slayne one He seemed to be at a point fully resolued that he would not leaue his Maister tyl the sword should deuide them but alas thys boldnes was but a blast of wordes When there was no remedy but Christ must be had to Caiphas Peter began to faynt and to draw behinde When the peril was more encreased and they began to cry Crucifige Peter was more afraid and began to sweare he knewe hym not So great infirmitie is in mortall flesh experience is the greatest warrant to know what it can beare It is our bounden dutye and the Lord requireth it that we shoulde determine wyth our selues in all thinges to approue our selues the witnesses of his Gospel in pacience in afflictiōs in necessities in stripes in tumultes in labours in watchinges in fastings in honour in dishonour in good report in shame in lyfe in death and our comfort is great when we bee perswaded of these thynges that we would contemne them But how violently the flesh wyll fight agaynst vs we can not well declare tyll we haue made the triall We therefore dearelye beloued whom it hath pleased God so keepe in heauines through many temptations we haue here a salue agaynst the woundes of sorow Our afflictions do teach vs how farre we can obey the lord If in al griefe of body I can say with patiēce I haue held my peace O Lord because thou hast done it then I know that in all sorowes of flesh I haue glorified God and my hart rejoyceth If my mynd be full of anguish and sorow so that al hope be faint within me if I can say yet vnto my soule I wyll wayte patientlye for the Lordes leasure then I knowe assuredlye God hath made me obedient and he wil heare my praier So that this experience hath bred in me the hope that shall neuer be confounded I may speake the wordes which the heauens shal seale vnto wyth everlastyng truth Neither fire nor swoord nor principalities nor powers shal remoue me from the loue where with God hath loued me A sure token of this saluation I haue found in myne afflictions When I traueiled in sorrowe both of bodye and mynde I founde the grace to say O Lord do thy wil. This is no smal cause why we shuld reioyce when God doth make vs worthy to feele the trial of our faith So dearelye beloued faynt not in your mourninges but endure paciently you know not the happynes of that which seemeth your miserye Let thys be the first cause why wee should be glad of temptations And to th end we may help our cōmon infirmities let vs learne yet more why it is good for vs to be brought low A most notable commoditie the Apostle rehearseth where he writeth to the Romanes Those whō God hath foré knowen hee hath also predestinate to be made lyke vnto the image of his sonne Loe my deare brethren theese are the healthfull coūsels of the Lord toward vs that we should bee made lyke vnto hys sonne Christ in manye afflictions that at the last we might be also like him in eternal glory These are the ritches of Gods vnsearchable wisedome Death once raigned through s●n and he hath found a way to rise from it againe into greater glory This victorye because it was to great for Saint or Angel to obtain he hath apointed it to be the worke of his onely begotten Sonne who hath made it perfect in a most excellent conquest He hath taken vpon hym our nature to make it strong in his owne person hee hath filled it with the fulnes of miseries wyth al sorowes of flesh with all anguish of minde with persecutiō with death with synne with hel with condemnation from al these by the mightye power of his Godhead he is rysen againe in our fleshe ascended vp into glory and sytteth on the ryght hand of Maiestie and of power being a mighty Sauiour vnto euerye one that shal follow hym So that this is our glory in al afflictiōs we are fashioned by them into the similitude of Christ we are made lyke vnto him So it pleased God when he would bring many children into glorye to consecrate the Prince of their saluation through afflictions and to make both him that sanctifieth and those that are sanctified all of one that they that suffer wyth hym should also raygne with him they that dye with hym should also lyue with him So we whē we feele many troubles to rest vpon vs we may say now we are lyke vnto Christ especially whē we feele that greatest trouble fullest of bitter sorow that is the mynde oppressed it maketh vs especiallye lyke vnto hym that wee may say with Paule Now we supply in our flesh the remnant of the afflictions of Christ. Let me looke into the whole course of my life and what soeuer pleaseth me best health honour ritches fauour authority frendship wife children in all these thynges I cannot yet behold the liuely image of christ Affliction and trouble a minde broken with remembraunce of synne a troubled spirite these are the beginninges of great reioycinges wyth the horrours of death and a constience burdened wyth the wrath of god Here light shineth out of darknes and hope out of dispaire As I thincke my selfe furthest of from the Lord so in deede I am nearest vnto him And when I thinke
my selfe fullest of confusion then the image of Christ is most lyuelye within me The Lord maye hyde his face for a whyle for a moment in hys anger as he dyd from Christ but he must needes returne vnto me wyth euerlasting mercies for the image of his sonne is cleare within me A blessed sorow and woe ful of happines that fashioneth theese dayes of my vanitie into the similitude of the age of Christ that wyth hym at the last I myght raygne for euer A precious countenaunce it is in the syght of God that seemeth without beuty in the eyes of man and an vnspeakeable treasure of ioy and gladnes engrauen in these vessels that are but earth and ashes When Christ is the paterne whose similitude wee doo beare who can be discouraged vnder the crosse We are afflicted on euery syde but not in such a strayte that we are shut from hope We are in pouertie but not ouercome of pouertie We are persecuted but not forsaken We are cast down but we perishe not We are troubled in all things fightings without and terrors wythin but God that comforteth the abiects he wil comfort vs Vnto thys he hath predestinate vs that we shuld be like vnto his sonne in al afflictions and so bee glorified with him in the day of honor Thus f●rre we haue heard two special causes why wee ought to reioyce in all temptations the one that so wee leayne true obedience the other that by thē we be made lyke vnto christ Adde yet vnto these one sh●ed cause out of the scripture which when you shal haue learned be bold dearly beloued in al the fires of the enemies For beholde in the truth of Iesus I dare be yo●t warrāt the greater are your afflictions the lyket you are vnto Christ yea if it should happen you to fal downe into hel Christ hath descended also you shuld then be most like him in his agonies and bloudy sweates The third cause at this time which I wil touch is this God sendeth vs sundrye chasticementes and especially that which is most greuous of al other the anguish of spirit and affliction of the soule for this purpose that we should bee warned in tyme how to turne vnto him and bee free from the plague when it commeth For the iudgementes of God that are daylye preached vnto vs they pearce deepe into the hartes of the true beleuers the word that they heare it worketh mightely in them more sharpe in their eares then a two edged swoord it entreth thorow them euen to the deuidyng asunder of the soule and of the spirit and of the ioyntes of the marowe and examineth all the thoughtes the ententes of the hurt so that it is vnpossible that anye part of them should be hyd but they are all open vnto iudgemēt and heare the voyce of the lord Then their syn is reuiued in the middest of their bowels their conscience hath no rest they feele death working in their harts and hel is before them They see syn on their right hand and Satan on their left shame vnder their feete an angrye Iudge aboue them the world ful of destruction without a worme gnawing the hart within the poore sinner knoweth not what to do To hide him selfe it is impossible and to appere it is intolerable Then he breaketh out into loud cryings O wretched man that I am who shal delyuer me from the body of this death He geueth no rest vnto his eyes nor sleepe vnto hys eye lyds vntyl he finde hym that is able to saue him frō this wrath In his bed by night he seeketh him whom his soule loueth in the streetes and open places he enquireth after him and after manye dayes in which he can not finde hym Christ sheweth him selfe at the last a perpetual deliuerer a victorious Lion of the tribe of Iuda in whō he hath strong saluation When he hath mourned because of the plague that was before him Christ wyll approch nere and wipe away the teares from his eyes This the Prophet Abacuck setteth forth in hys owne person When I heard saith he the woord of God my bellye trembled my lyps shooke at the voyce rottennes entred into my bones and I trembled in my selfe that I myght haue rest in the day of trouble Euen so dearly beloued it is with vs all The plagues of God because they are pronounced against iniquitie it maketh the Childe of God to feare and tremble that so foreseing the harme hee myght prepare hym helpe and because of the destroyer seeke wythout wearynes vnto the Sauiour Though he hide him self at the first the wounded spirite and troubled hart must needes find him out A great cause of vnspeakeable gladnes though we seeme swalowed vp of pensiue sorow We are full of grief but we are chasticed of the ●ord because we should not be condempned wyth the world We dye with Christ but because we should liue with him We lament weepe but because that Christ might wipe away al teares from our eyes We are delyuered vnto death for Iesus sake but because the lyfe of Iesus shuld be made manifest in our flesh We beare about in our bodyes the mortification of the Lord Iesus but because the life of Iesus myght be manifest also in our bodies We haue anguish of spirit and vexation of mynde such as hath not bene frō the beginning but for this cause y when sudaine destruction shal come vpon the careles world we myght lyft vp our heades and beholde our redemption at hand Let vs then be bolde and in patience possesse our soules For these causes we are now afflicted that we might receiue mercie finde grace to helpe in the time of neede And for this cause we treble and are afrayd that after manye praiers and supplicatiōs we myght be deliuered from the things which we haue feared It foloweth in the Apostle And beyng consecrate hee was made the Author of saluation to all them that obey him In these woordes we are taught what fruit and commodity we haue through these bitter sufferynges of our sauiour Christ and also by what meanes we are made partakers of it The fruit is eternall saluatiō the meanes to go vnto it is obedience In the first we learne that all promise and hope of lyfe is in Christ alone He hath alone the woordes of lyfe he is alone the bread of life the water of lyfe the author of lyfe the word of life the tree of life the onely life He that beleueth in him he hath euerlasting life and he that dwelleth not in hym shall see no lyfe but the wrath of God abideth on him Take hold of Christ and take hold of lyfe Reach foorth thine hand to anye other thyng and thou reachest vnto vanitie which cannot helpe Looke not for lyfe but where it dwelleth in the flesh of Christ alone there it resteth Death hath raygned in al the world beside led euerye creature into bondage If