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A33343 The saints nosegay, or, A posie of 741 spirituall flowers both fragrant and fruitfull, pleasant and profitable / collected and composed by Samuel Clark. Clarke, Samuel, 1599-1682. 1642 (1642) Wing C4555; ESTC R23711 51,972 277

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scourge and a salue a curse and a Saviour is the best way to humble and convert a sinner 37 As a body in the grave is not pained nor dis-affected with the weight and darknesse of the earth the gnawing of wormes the stinke of rottennesse nor any violence of dissolution because the principle of sense is departed So though wicked men lie in rotten and noisome lusts and have the guilt of many millions of sins lying on their soules yet they feele nothing because they have no spirit of life in them 38 If Gods grace prevent sinners before repentance that they may returne shal it not much more preserve repenting sinners that they may not perish 39 As the sweetest wine in an aguish palate tasts of that bitter humour which it finds there So lusts and curses interweaving themselves in a wicked mans hands take away the sence of their simple goodnesse turne their table into a snare and the things which should have bin for their good into an occasion of falling 40 As in vntilled ground there are ill weeds of all sorts yet commonly some one that growes rifer and ranker then all the rest So in the soule of man there are spirituall weeds of all sorts yet usually some one pestilent humour more predominant then all the rest which if once mastered in us the other petty ones will bee the easilier subdued 41 Every one say some hath his owne Balsome in him but it s most sure that every one hath his owne bane in him 42 As the earth though but a Center or point to the heaven yet is a huge body of it selfe So there is no sin though but a mote in comparison of some other yet is a beame in it selfe 43 Though sinne in the Godly bee plucked up by the root yet it s not wholly pulled out though dejected in regard of its regency yet not ejected in regard of its inherence 44 As when wine is poured out of a cup the sides are yet moist but when it s rinsed and wiped there remaines neither tast nor tincture so that glimmering of divine light left in a naturall man is so put out by obstinacy in an evill course that not the least sparkle thereof appeareth 45 As the spider sucks poison out of the most fragrant flowers or as a foule stomacke turns good food into ill nourishment so wicked men make ill conclusions of good promises and perverse application of wholsome precepts 46 All the dirt in the world cannot defile the sun all the clouds that muffle it it dispells them all yet sin hath defiled the soule that as farre passeth the sun in purenesse as the sun doth a clod of earth yea the least sinne defiles it in an instant totally eternally 47 The deluge of waters which overflowed all the world washed away many sinners but not one sin and the world shall be on fire yet all that fire and those flames in hell that follow shall not purge one sin 48 Though the old wals and ruinous palace of the world stand to this day yet the beauty the glosse and glory is soiled and marred with many imperfections cast upon every creature by mans sin 49 All the evills in the world serve but to answer and give names to sin It s called poison and sinners serpents it 's called a vomit and sinners dogs the stench of Graves and they rotten sepulchers sin mire and sinners sows sin darknesse blindnes shame nakednesse folly madnesse death whatsoever is filthy defective infective or painfull 50 By how much the soule exceeds all other creatures in excellency by so much sin which is the corruption poison sicknes and death of it exceedeth all other evils 51 When Eudoxia the Empress threatned Chrysostom goe tell her saith he nil nisi peccatum timeo I feare nothing but sinne 52 As bring one candle into a roome the light spreads all over and then another and the light is all over more increased So every sin in us by a miraculous multiplication inclineth our nature more to sin then it was before 53 All things in the world if they bee great then are but few if many then are but small the world is a big one indeed but yet there is but one the sands are innumerable but yet small but our sins exceed both in number and nature infinite and great 54 Wicked men live upon the creame of sin and having such plenty then picke out none but the sweetest bits to nourish their hearts withall Iames 5.5 55 As the killing of a King is amongst men a crime so hainous that no tortures can exceed the desert of it all torments are too little any death too good for such a crime so sin which is Dei cidium a destroying of God so much as in us lies is so hainous that none but God himselfe can give it a full punishment 56 As a cloth is the same when its white and when died with a scarlet colour yet then it hath a tincture given it that is more worth then the cloth it selfe So when a man sins not knowing the law the sinne is the same for substance it would be if he had knowne it but that knowledge makes it of a scarlet colour and so far greater and deeper in demerit then the sinne it selfe 57 A sinne against knowledge is when knowledge comes and examines a sin in or before the committing of it brings it to the law contests against it cōdemnes it and yet a man approveth and consenteth to it 58 As nature elevated by grace riseth higher then it so being poisoned with sin it is cast below it selfe 59 To sinne against mercy of all other increaseth wrath for such must pay treasures for treasures spent as lavishly they spend riches of mercy so God will recover riches of glory out of them 60 Gods servants are noble and free though fettered in chaines of Iron as the slaves of sinne are base prisoners though frollicking it in chaines of gold 61 Sinne is the spawne of the old Serpent the birth of hell and the vomit of the Devill 62 Sinne is more hatefull to God then the Devill for hee hates the Devill for sinnes sake not sin for the Devils sake 63 Sinne is like a Serpent in our bosoms which cannot live but by sucking out our life blood 64 Hee that is under the dominion of his lusts never yet resolved to part with them 65 One little hole in a ship will sinke it into the botome of the sea and the soule will be strangled by one little coard of vanity as well as with all the cart roaps of iniquity 66 When a man dives under water hee feeleth not the weight of it though there bee many tuns of water over his head whereas halfe a tub of it taken out of its place and set upon his head would bee burthensom so whilst a man is over head and eares in sinne he is not sensible of nor troubled with the weight of it but when hee begins to
darknesse to cause if it were possible blacknesse of darkenesse even utter despaire in them 406 When men goe about to extinguish and darken the light of direction which God hath put into their hearts to guide their paths by hee putteth out the light of comfort and leaves them to darkenesse 407 Other afflictions are but the taking some stars of comfort out of the Firmament when others are left still to shine there but when Gods countenance is hid from the soule the Sun it selfe the Fountaine of light is darkened to such and so a generall darkenesse befals them 408 God in afflicting of his children proportioneth the burthen to the back and the stroke to the strēgth of him that bears it 409 One Sonne God had without sinne but not without sorrow for though Christ his naturall son was sine corruptione without corruption yet not sine correctione without correction though hee was sine flàgitio without crime yet not sine flagello without a scourge 410 As two peices of Iron cannot bee foundly souldred together but by beating and heating them both together in the fire so neither can Christ and his brethren bee so nearly united and fast affected but by fellowship in his sufferings 411 God by affliction separateth the sinne that hee hates from the sonne that hee loves and keepes him by these thornes that hee breake not over into Satans pleasant pastures which would fat him indeed but to the slaughter 412 A Torch burnes after a while the better for beating a young tree grows the faster for shaking Gods vines beare the better for bleeding his spices smell the sweeter for pounding his gold lookes the brighter for scouring God knowes that wee are best when wee are worst and live holiest when wee dye fastest and therefore frames his dealing to our disposition seeking rather to profit then to please us 413 As winds and thunders cleare the ayre so doe afflictions the soule of a Christian 414 Good men are like glow-wormes that shine most in the darke like Iuniper that smels sweetest in the fire like spice which savoureth best when it is beate● like the Pomander which becomes most fragrant by chafing like the Palme tree which proves the better for pressing like Cammomile which the more you tread it the more you spread it and like the Grape which comes not to the proofe till it come to the ●resse 415 Affliction like Lots Angels will soone away when they have done their errand like Plaisters when the sore is once whole they will fall off 416 Hard knots must have hard wedges strong affections must have strong afflictions and great corruptions great crosses to cure them 417 Gods corrections are our instructions his lashes our lessons his scourges our Schoole-masters and his chastisements our advisements Isa. 26.9 418 The Christians under the ten Persecutions lasting about one hundred and 8. yeares had scarce a leape yeare of peace in which some as too ambitious of Martyrdome rather woed then waited for their deaths 419 There is in Christ erected an office of salvation an heavenly Chancery of equity and mercy not onely to moderate the rigour but to reverse and revoke the very acts of the law 420 Though we be still bound to all the law as much as ever under the perill of sin yet not under the paine of death which is the rigour of the law 421 Gods children are as fully bound to the obedience of the law as Adam was though not under danger of incurring death yet under danger of contracting sinne 422 The Law is spirituall therefore it s not a conformity to the letter barely but to the spiritualnesse of the law which makes our actions to be right before God 423 The Law of it selfe is the cord of a Iudge which bindeth hand and foot shackleth unto condemnation but by Christ it s made the cord of a man and the bond of love by which he teacheth us to go even as a Nurse her Infant 424 The Law for the sanction is disjunctive either do this or dye for the injunction its copulative doe both this and that too 425 Gods children are not under the Law for Iustification of their persons as Adam was no● for satisfaction of divine Iustice as those that perish are but they are under it as a document of obedience and a rule of living 426 When the Law was once promulgated to Adam and put into his heart as the common Arke of mankind though the Tables be lost yet our Ignorance doth not make the Law of none effect 427 They who seeke to put out the truth of Gods word by snuffing of it make it burne the brighter 428 All like well to have Gods word their comforter but few take care to make it their counsellor 429 When wee reade the Scriptures if wee cannot sound the bottome we should admire the depth kisse the booke and lay it downe weepe over our ignorance and send one hearty wish to heaven oh when shall I come to know as I am knowne 430 To alledge Scripture in favour of sin is to entitle God to that which he hates worse then the devill and to make him a Patron and Patterne of wickednesse and his Word a sword for Satan his sworn Enemy 431 Plain places of Scripture are for our nourishment Hard places for our exercise these are to bee masticated as meat for men those to be drunke as Milke for Babes by the former our hunger is staid by the latter our loathings 432 As the Lapidary brightens his hard Diamond with the dust shaved from it selfe so must wee cleare hard places of Scripture by parallell texts which like glasses set one against another cast a mutual light 433 When men are sick though they cast up al they eate yet we advise them to take something for something will remaine behind in the stomack to preserve life So we should heare the Word though wee forget almost all wee heare for some secret strength is gotten by it 434 When the body is sick we use to forbeare our appointed food but when the soule is sick there is more need of spirituall food then ever for its both meat and Medicine Food Physick Cordials and all 435 It s better to loose the Sun of the Firmament then the Sunne of the Gospel 436 The glorious Gospel of Iesus Christ the Sonne of Righteousnesse shining upon one that is dead in sinnes causeth him to stinke the more hatefully both before the face of God and man 437 Ministers that have good parts should labour to adorne the same by holinesse of life without which the other are but as pearles in the head of a filthy Toad a Pearle in the head and the body all poyson 438 Some deale with their Ministers as Carriers doe with their horses lay heavy burthens upon them and exact worke enough but afford them but easie commons and then to recompense this they shall have bels hung about their necks they shall bee commended for able