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A17332 The narrovv vvay, and the last iudgement deliuered in two sermons: the first at Pauls Crosse, the other elsewhere, by G.B. preacher of the word at Alphamston in Essex. Bury, George.; Brian, G., attributed name.; C. B., fl. 1607. 1607 (1607) STC 4179.5; ESTC S115853 53,682 90

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death and in our will are most ready to apprehend it yet for want of perseuerance and continuance in so good a course currimus non comprehendimus many of vs indeed do runne but few of vs attaine our iourneys end Of these three therfore in their order And first for the blindnes of our reason which being not able to discerne the way of life from the way of death and by the fall of Adam preuailing ouer all the sonnes of Adam is the first maine let in vs why so few of vs do find out this way of life 1. Blindnesse of reason The time was when in man there were these three things wisedome of heart puritie of life strength of bodie but the soule of man by the suggestion of Sathan by the delectation which the apple promised and by the consent which man yeelded fell from that high and beautifull Trinitie His wisdome was turned into blindnesse of heart his strength was turned into weaknesse of bodie and the puritie of his life was changed into vncleane behauiour so that concerning his strength that is now no better then a broken reed as Rabshakeh spake of Aegypt 2. King 18.21 and therefore Dauid most aduisedly in the 28. Psalme and 7. verse said Thou O Lord art my strength The puritie of his life that Esay 64.6 said Esay is like a stained and polluted cloth and as for our reason and vnderstanding it is cleane decayed in Adam All the knowledge and vnderstanding of man is either morall naturall or logicall all which three in man by sinne are perished For the end of morall knowledge being this to prefer good things before euill things mans reason in this is so corrupted that the euill things of this world which haue but an appearance of good are preferred before good things indeed and the good things indeed they are reiected You shall see this in the example of King Saul 1. Sam. 15.30 for to be honorable in the sight of God being true honour indeed and to be honorable in the sight of men being bonum apparens but an outward shadow or an appearance of true honour the reason of King Saul there is so blinded that he refuseth to be honored in the sight of God and he desireth the Prophet rather to honour him before the people And whereas the end of our naturall knowledge is to preferre those things which are most profitable for the vse of man our reason for the most part is so blinded herein that we preferre in our iudgements the things that are most hurtfull And lastly whereas the end of our logicall or discoursing reason is to discerne truth frō falshood vanitie from lies this likewise is so corrupted in vs that we all as the Prophet Dauid saith Psal 4.2 follow vanitie and seeke after leasing so that man hauing thus wonderfully lost his reason wherein he was created that which God spake in an Ironie concerning man the very beasts of the earth may say and say truly Gen. 3.22 Man is become like one of vs and they haue their warrant for it out of the 49. Psalme and last verse Man being in honour vnderstood not but is like the beasts that perish nay in this he is farre worse then the brute beasts Esay 1.3 for the Oxe knowes his owner and the Asse his masters crib but Israel hath not known my people hath not vnderstood Mans reason without Gods grace is euen as Sampson without his guide when his eyes were out Iudg. 16.26 without whose direction he could not finde the pillars of the house nor can the natural carnal man find any pillar or principle of his faith without Gods grace guiding his steps to it Salomon saith in the fourth of Ecclesiastes and tenth verse Vae soli Wo be vnto him that is alone and in this it is most true for if mans reason be without Gods grace to guide it wo be vnto it it fals down and there is none to helpe it vp and therefore our Sauiour makes a manifest distinction betweene these two Gods grace and mans reason in that speech of his to Peter Math. 16.17 Blessed art thou Symon the sonne of Ionas for flesh and bloud hath not reuealed this vnto thee but my Father which is in heauen It was not flesh and bloud it was not naturall and carnall reason but Gods grace from aboue guiding his reason that made Peter lay hold vpon Christ the way of life and made Christ to pronounce him blessed Therefore a little after when as Gods grace and mans reason were separated and that Peter with carnall perswasions sought to dehort Christ from his passion vers 22. Sir pittie thy selfe this shall not be vnto thee Christ then biddeth him auant not by the name of Peter or the sonne of Ionas or Cephas but of Sathan himself Come behind me Sathan Peters reason was then alone and the light of Gods grace had withdrawne her influence and therefore no maruell if his counsell were such as was both against his owne and against the worlds saluation The Prophet Dauid was well acquainted with this blindnesse of mans reason and therefore he doth vtterly reiect it as his guide in the way of life and betakes himselfe wholy to the guidance of Gods good spirit Psal 143.10 Let thy good Spirit O Lord leade me into the way of righteousnesse and Psal 27. Thou Psal 27.1 O Lord art my light and my saluation my light against ignorance my saluation against impotencie and in the 119. Psalme Giue me vnderstanding O Lord and I shall keepe thy law For as it was not possible for the Israelites to passe through the red sea Exod. 14. if God by a speciall miracle had not prepared their way and made a passage for them Chrysost hom 40. in Math. so for man to passe from the wayes of death vnto the wayes of life from the wayes of sin to the wayes of righteousnes without the speciall mediation and helpe of diuine grace it is not possible This grace is that which is all in all vnto vs and of this may that of our Sauiour be most truly verified Iohn 15.5 Fulgent de praed ad Maxim lib. 1. Without me you can do nothing This is praeueniens cooperans subsequens it preuenteth vs that when we are downe we may rise vp it accompanieth vs to vphold vs in our right course and it must stil follow vs til we come to those eternall beatitudes For can we promise any more to our selues in finding out this way of life then Dauid in the 119. Psalme I will runne O Lord saith he the way of thy commaundements when thou hast set my heart at libertie Can we runne with our feete before our heart be prepared or can we runne with our heart before God had enlarged it Can we runne the way without the way which is Christ Iesus a way which we cannot see till our eyes be enlightened not so
but when as God shall haue opened the eyes of our vnderstanding then with Dauid may we see the wonderfull things of Gods law and then with him may we runne the way of his commandements when as God shall haue set our hearts at libertie But before we do all euen the best of vs lie lame and impotent like the cripple at the poole of Bethesda Iohn 5.5 all the dayes and yeares of our times are spent like his without the case of our infirmities and the vertue of the waters of life like those waters in that poole can neuer comfort vs. Seeing therefore that mans reason since the fall of our first father Adam is so cleane perished and decayed in it selfe that of it selfe it is not able to make choise of that which is good it remaineth for a truth that vnlesse Gods grace do accompanie mans reason as the Angel did Toby do go before it as the starre did before the wise men vnto Christ man shal neuer be able to walke in the way nay he shall neuer be able to find out the way that shold leade him vnto life but he shal go on like a naturall and carnall man in that broade beaten path which leadeth vnto death So that you see mans reason being not able to discerne good from euill the way of life from the way of death and by the fall of Adam preuailing ouer all the sonnes of Adam to be one maine let in vs why so few of vs do find out this way of life 2. Peruersnesse of will But let vs grant that mans reason were such in him and so well rectified as that he could discerne good from euill the way of life from the way of death yet is there a second let impediment in man and that is peruersitas voluntatis the peeuishnesse the peruersnes of his will It was the error of the old Manichees and it is at this day the practise of many prophane Christians euermore to cast their sinnes vpon God excusing themselues and accusing him as the author of their iniquities but the Scriptures are all directly against this for as they make God to be the sole cause and author of all happinesse and good that befalleth man so do they make man the sole cause and author of all euil that betides himselfe It is Gods owne speech in the Prophet Hosea 13.9 Perditio tua ex teô Israel salus ex me O Israel thy saluation is from me but thy destruction and ruine from thy selfe As some locks there are which will lock without a key but without a key they neuer can be opened so without a key I meane without any other meanes then their owne proper sinnes men may shut vp the the gates of Gods kingdome against thēselues but without the key of Gods mercy and gracious goodnesse to them it neuer can be opened And as the Magitians of king Pharaoh had indeed power to bring plagues into the land of Aegypt Exod. 7. but had no power to remoue the plagues thence so men of them selues may be the authors of death vnto themselues but to giue vnto themselues either the life of grace or the life of glory they haue no ability God is so farre from barring vp the gate of his kingdom against any that he setteth it wide open vnto all I will not the death of a sinner but that he liue be saued in the Gospel Come vnto me all yee that labor and are heauy laden Math. 11.28 and I will refresh you but such is the peruersenesse of mans will such the obstinacy and rebellion of his corrupt nature that though God doth offer grace yet mā wil not accept it though he do as it were chalke him out the way that should leade him vnto life yet he will not walke in it yea though he lay before him the crowne of eternall glory as his reward and recompence yet will he take no labour or paine for it If then man by following the sway of his crooked corrupt will and by reiecting the good meanes which God giueth for his saluatiō do eternally perish let him not lay the fault vpon God but vpon his owne peeuish peruerse will You shall see the truth of this by a most familiar example and yet such a one as a whole generall Councell hath thought fit for the illustration of it If two men should fall out of a ship Con Colonien and there were no way to saue them but by casting forth a rope vnto them whereby they might be drawne vp if one of them shall lay holde of it and be drawne vp but the other in the peeuishnes and peruersnes of his will shall refuse the meanes of his deliuerance is it not a cleare case that he which layes hold vpō the rope is saued by the great kindnesse of him that threw it out but the other which obstinatly refuseth it perisheth by his own peruerse will Euen thus and no otherwise doth the case stand with vs for by one mā sin hath entred into the world and we are all cast out as it were from that arke of innocency in which we were created But behold the great mercy of God vnto man he casteth forth if I may so speake a rope to saue vs he hath sent his sonne into the world Iohn 3.16 That whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life If then thou dost lay hold vpon this meanes of thy saluation by the hand of a liuely faith thou must acknowledge God to be the author thereof but if in the peruersnes of thy will thou dost refuse it then thy perishing it proceedeth from thy selfe from thy obstinate and rebellious will This Saint Austin knew to be most true and therefore he was bold to say Non est punitor Deus antequàm peccator homo God neuer doth become a punisher till man first becomes a sinner and we see it to be true in that speech of Samuel vnto Saul 1. Sam. 15.26 thou hast wilfully cast away the Lord and this saith Samuel is the cause of thy reiection why the Lord hath cast away thee This peruersnes of will was that which in the daies of our Sauior kept the people of the Iewes from finding the way of life and this is that which in these dayes of the Gospel keepes many of vs frō finding it As Christ said vnto thē Math. 23.37 so may he not as truly say vnto vs Quoties volui sed noluistis How often wold I but you wold not hath not God to vse that speech in the Gospel piped vnto you by vs and you haue not danced Luke 7.32 hath not he mourned vnto you by vs and you haue not wept 2. King 4.31 haue not we the Prophets by the appointmēt of our maister Christ layed the staffe of Gods iustice and Gods mercy vpon you that are dead in sinne as Gehezi did his maisters staffe on the dead child and like
aspexit Remember Lots wife how she was brought indeed out of Sodome because she beleeued God but was changed by the way into a pillar of salt because she looked backe God hath commaunded vs as he did Lot and his wife that wee should come out of Sodome that is that we should forsake our sinnes and not so much as looke back vnto sinne but runne in hast till we come into heauen which is our Zoar. If therefore with Lots wife we wil looke backe in our way to the pleasantnesse of sinne we shall be sure with her to tast the bitternesse of her punishment for as she vbi respexit Gen. 19.26 ibi remansit where she looked backe there she stood still and came not vnto Zoar where her life should haue bene saued so if once we haue abandoned sinne which is the broade way that leadeth vnto death and haue entred into a holy and religious course which is this narrow way that leadeth vnto life if then with Lots wife we go not forward but looke backward to our former delights of sin it is impossible for vs to come to Zoar that is vnto heauen where our soules and bodies should be saued They are our Sauiour Christ his own words in the ninth of Luke and the last verse No man putting his hand vnto the plough and looking backe is fit for the kingdome of God Exod. 16.26 The Israelites were commanded not once in a moneth nor once in a weeke but euery day to gather Manna except vpon the Sabboth day to teach them and to teach vs that till such time as we come vnto that eternall Sabboth of our euerlasting rest in heauen we must neuer stand still in the way of a godly life but euery day be going forward Apelles posie was Nulla dies sine linea Let no day passe from me without drawing one line at the least and Titus the Emperor was wont to say Sueton. in Tit. Amici diem perdidimus Ezech. 47.4 that he had lost that day in which he did no good As the waters in Ezechiel rose by degrees first to the ankles then vnto the knees then vnto the loines and lastly to the head and as the wheate which Christ speakes of Mark 4.28 grew vp riper and riper first there was a blade then the eare then the full corne and lastly came the haruest so like those waters we must grow higher and higher till we come vnto our head Christ and like that wheate we must grow riper and riper til we come to the haruest which is the end of the world There is in Persia a stone called Selenites Plin. lib. vlt. cuius interior candor cum Luna crescit decrescit whose inward whitenesse increaseth and decreaseth as the Moone The deuotion of Christians must not be like this stone still changing and continuing no longer in one moode then a sparrow lights vpon the ground but we must proceed in the way of righteousnesse euen as Abraham went to Canaan that is we must eundo pergere still be going and as those kine of the Philistines which bare the Arke of God 1. Sam. 6. though they were milch had calues at home yet without turning either to the right or left hand they kept on their way to Bethshemesh so hauing once ioyned ourselues vnto the yoke of Christ and bearing the arke of his law vpon our shoulders in the way of a vertuous life though we haue many allurements to draw vs backe as those kine had their calues yet without turning either to the right or left hand we must keepe our way to Bethshemesh that is vnto the house of the Sunne for so the word signifieth where the Son of God raigneth In the 13. of Saint Matthew the kingdome of God is described in this manner It is as a grain of Musterdseed at first the least of al seeds Math. 13.31 but when a man hath sowne it in his field it becometh first an herbe then the greatest of herbs thirdly a tree lastly the birdes make arbours and shades in the bowes of it Now why should the kingdome of God be compared vnto this seede which is still increasing verily no better reason can be giuen for it then this that we may all learne not to stand still in our Christian growth but to preseuere and go on from grace vnto grace till we become perfect men in Christ Iesus As the star neuer ceased going Math. 2.9 till it came vnto the house where Christ was so if we be once entred into the way of a holy and religious life we must neuer stand still but continue still going till we come vnto heauen where God is If we haue faith we must then go from faith to faith if we haue loue we must continue and abide in loue if we haue zeale we must labor to be consumed with zeale if we giue almes we must go a step further and giue it with chearfulnesse and as God hath continued a chaine of his good graces vnto vs first by predestinating secondly by calling Rom. 8.30 thirdly by iustifying fourthly by glorifying vs so must we continue a chain of our graces towards God by giuing al diligence 2. Pet. 1.5.6 as the Apostle Saint Peter speaketh to ioine vertue with our faith and with our vertue knowledge and with our knowledge tēperance and with our temperance patience and with our patience godlinesse and neuer leaue ioyning the linkes of that golden chaine there ioyned till our bodies and soules come to be disioined But beloued if the want of any vertue is to be lamented in this age it is the want of this vertue of all vertues perseuerance For if we take a view of all estates of men euen from the highest to the lowest shall we not be so far frō finding any increase or growth in Christian duties any going forward in the way of righteousnesse from grace vnto grace Indies deficit in agris agricola Cyp. con Deme. and from strength vnto strength that we shall rather finde an vniuersall falling away and defection in them Is there not now as S. Cyprian iustly complained in his time a daily defectiō in the world both of men and of mens manners Is there not a defection of the husbandman in the field of the marriner at the sea of citizens in townes of townsemen in villages Is there not a defection of innocency in the court of iustice in iudgement of concord in friendship of workmanship in arts of discipline in manners Where is that zeale vnto the word that hunger thirst after the waters of the wel of life that was wont to be amōg vs Do we still thirst after these waters of the well of life 2. Sam. 23. as Dauid for the waters of the well of Bethlem Nay rather are we not come vnto that fulnesse and satietie Numb 11.7 that we euen loath these waters of life as Israel loathed Manna If it were not so
THE NARROW WAY AND THE LAST IVDGEMENT Deliuered in two Sermons the first at Pauls Crosse the other elsewhere by G. B. Preacher of the word at Alphamston in Essex 2. TIM 2.7 Consider what I say and the Lord giue thee vnderstanding in all things LONDON Printed for MATTHEW LOWNES 1607. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVL SIR VVILLIAM VVALGRAVE KNIGHT OF BVERS IN ESSEX RIght Worshipfull the generall report of your worthinesse your peculiar affection to the Author as I vnderstand and the knowne dignitie of this his worke are the onely motiues of this my seeming boldnesse in committing this Sermon to the generall view vnder your countenance and protection which though I confesse I haue done without his leaue as being modestly vnwilling to encounter censure or to oppose himselfe an obiect to enuie yet in that it hath receiued the currant stampe of approbation in the iudgement of the wisest and your self as I haue heard an auricular iudge of the gracefull deliuery I haue in my selfe dissolued doubt and confidently thwart imputation with this assurance that it cannot but be gratefull to the Reader and come no lesse acceptable to you And though my selfe am vtterly vnknowne to you yet as one bound to loue vertue euen in strangers I honour it in you and haue bene so much the rather induced to this dedication by how much I am informed you are truly affected to this my deare friend and a cherisher of his endeuors Sir you cannot lose by it for learning will still be prest to honour her Mecaenas and such as fauour Arts chiefly those that labor in Gods vineyard like lamps consume thēselues to giue light to others I say such goodnes and loue extended to religion and the professors therof is the treasure layd vp in heauen and shall remaine with the world of perpetuall record Thus hauing done as I thinke a thankfull office not greatly fearing the Authors displeasure if you but approue my act I referre you to the ensuing matter resting Yours in deuotion for your vertue-fauouring inclination C. B. MATTH 7.14 And few there be that find it IT is the nature of euery man to affect long life here in this world and this Almightie God knew well and therefore when he commaunded the Israelites that they should honour their parents as a prouocation to the performance of that dutie he proposeth this reward vnto them Exod. 20.12 that their dayes should be long in the land which their Lord their God should giue them But albeit we are desirous to liue long and to see many dayes here in this life yet because reason and experience teacheth vs that though we liue long yet at one time or other we shall be dissolued into our first dust for terraes Gen. 3.19 in terram reuerteris it was God his sentence against all flesh Dust thou art and into dust thou shalt againe returne therefore the desire of mans nature stretcheth it selfe further and not only content with long life here in this world it affecteth a longer life nay it affecteth an eternal life in the world to come S. Pauls earnest desire was this I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ Philip. 1.23 and old Symeon when he had once seene our Sauiour in the flesh he sung this sweete requiem to his owne soule Lord now let thy seruant depart in peace Luke 2.29 Albeit life were no doubt sweete vnto these two Saints of God yet their desires aimed at a better thing they were desirous to change corruption for incorruption mortalitie for immortalitie a life temporall and full of sorrowes for a life eternall and full of comfort Now as this was the desire of these Saints of God so no doubt it is or at least it should be the desire of all the sonnes of men they should not onely content themselues with the present possession of this life temporall but they should hope looke for a life to come which is eternall But in this it fareth with the world as with those old Israelites which came with Moses out of Aegypt for though they were for their number many thousands and all of them had a longing desire to enter into the land of Canaan yet it was only granted but vnto two of them Numb 14.30 vnto Caleb and vnto Iosuah so in the Aegypt of this world in this place of palpable darknesse though the desires of most men be to enter into the kingdome of heauen to raigne with Christ for euer yet this heauenly blessing is not granted to all Math. 20.16 for as Christ himselfe saith Many are called but few are chosen and as the way is broade and the gate wide that leadeth to destruction in the verse going before that is as the way of sin which leadeth men vnto hell is easie and many there be which enter in thereat so in the beginning of this verse straight is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth vnto life that is a holy and a religious conuersation in this world which is the high way to leade men to the kingdome of heauen is full of difficulties and as our Sauiour addeth in the words which I haue read they are but few that find it To shew you how a holy and religious conuersation in this world is that straight gate and that narrow way that leadeth vnto life wold be a discourse both pleasing and profitable but because that lies without the bounds and limits of my text and the drift of my text is onely this that few men and few women doe find out this way of life therefore the summe of my discourse out of these words must be this to examine those lets and hinderances why among so many as seeme to be in the way of a godly life which is the way that leadeth to eternall life so few there be that find it that if we haue not found out this way of life we may now seek after it and find it and if we haue already found it that then we may perseuere and continue in it The lets then and the hinderances why so few there are that do finde the way of life are of two sorts ex parte quaerentis and ex parte retrahentium they either concerne our selues which are to seeke the way or they are such as do allure vs and withdraw vs from the search of it Hinderances in our selues that are to seeke the way are especially these three the first is coecitas rationis the blindnesse of our reason and vnderstanding which is not able of it selfe to discerne good from euill the way of life from the way of death The second is peruersitas voluntatis the peeuishnesse and peruersnesse of our wils which albeit we discerne the way refuseth to walke in it And the third is defectus perseuerantiae a want of perseuerance For although in our reason and vnderstanding we are able to discerne good frō euill the way of life from the way of
then should we not see so many in all places to loue better the thresholds of their doores and their benches in aleboothes then they loue the courts and seates of the Lords temple The time was when with gladnesse we haue receiued this word vpon al occasions and entertained this heauenly food of our soules as Elias foode for his body with all thankfulnesse 1. King 17. euen then when a blacke Rauen hath brought it vnto vs I meane men but meanly qualified But now vnto so low an ebbe is our zeale and deuotion come that though Angels from heauen bring it I meane men excellently qualified and able sufficiently to performe the worke of right faithfull Euangelists yet men reiect it nay which is worse they euen resolue with Ahab not at all to heare Michea 1. King 22. not because Michea prophesieth euill vnto them and not good 2. Kin. 13.14 but because Michea is not a preacher qualified in all points according to their humours But to leaue our loue vnto the word let vs descend vnto our loue to those that labor in the word and for which loue many places in this land haue bene much commended True it is we haue bin as affectionate vnto them as king Ioas was to Elizeus ascribing more vnto them for the good of the whole land then to al our chariots and our horsmen It is true we haue entertained them as the Galathians did Saint Paul not onely as the Angels of God but as Iesus Christ himselfe yea we haue giuen no lesse honour vnto them Gal. 4.13 then the men of Lysia vnto Barnabas Paul freely cōfessing of these as they confessed of them Act. 14.11 that gods were come down vnto vs in the likenesse of men I adde yet more that you may see vnto what a fearefull relapse we are now in this age come Aquin. in hunc locum l●ct 3. that double honor both of countenance and maintenance of countenance for their place of maintenance for their seruice which they that labour in the word are worthy of saith S. Paul 1. Timoth 5.17 this double honour haue we yeelded and offered vnto them as their due in the amplest manner But haue we so continued haue we perseuered in this loue I must be faithful in my maisters house with Moses and speake a truth without flattery I say boldly in the feare of God concerning this as the Angell saith vnto the Church of Ephesus we are become changelings Reuel 2.4 and haue lost our former loue For first for countenance now euery vpstart that hath scraped but a little pelfe together by the patchings of his braine will be deadly opposite vnto no man more then to Gods minister And as for maintenance the time indeed was when with the good Shunamite you haue prouided for Elias a chamber 2. King 4. a stoole a table and a candlesticke and haue come vnto the Prophets as Christ vnto the lame man at the poole of Bethesda Iohn 5.6 Vis sanus fieri wilt thou be maintained wilt thou be beneficed But now so are the times and with the times so are men changed that you take from Elias his chamber his stoole his table and his candlestick You do come vnto the Prophets not as Christ to the man before mentioned Vis sanus fieri wilt thou be beneficed but as Iudas to the high Priest when he sold his master Quid mihi dabitis ego tradam vobis what will you giue me and I will giue you a presentatiō And though the visible iudgment of God be vpon such sacriledge for it thriues with them as the Arke of God among the Philistines 1. Sam. 5.1 and as the flesh which an Eagle sometime caried from an altar to her nest a coale of Gods wrathfull indignation is caried with it which in time consumeth them and their yong though I say this visible iudgement of God be vpon such sacriledge yet the eies in our heads may faile with the expectation of that day when the chambers of the Lord his house which Tobiah the Ammonite hath seized into his hands Nehem. 13. shold be restored againe to their ancient institution for the maintenance of the Leuites What should I speake in particular of that stedfastnesse in faith that modestie in words that vprightnesse in our actions that mercie in our works that discipline in our manners that loue and vnitie among neighbours and brethren which in the Primitiue Church was the glory of the first Christians and in some good measure hath heretofore bin seene among vs Verily our coldnesse in all these as in the former is a plaine demonstration that albeit we haue layed our hands vnto the plough of the best husbandry in the whole world yet we haue looked back and albeit we haue made some small entrance into the way of a vertuous life yet we haue started aside and fallen from it again for want of perseuerance To draw this then to a conclusion If we looke vpon all the sons of Adam who are bound by the commaundement of God to seeke after the way of life and in them if we wel consider first the blindnesse of their reason which is not able of it selfe without Gods assisting grace to discerne the way of life from the way of death secondly the peruersnesse and obstinacie of their wils which albeit they know the way yet refuseth to walk in it and lastly their back-sliding and want of perseuerance when haply they haue begun if I say we consider all these bearing sway for the most part with most of Adams sonnes we may then say and say truly euen as our Sauiour Christ saith in my text They are few yea very few that do find the way of life Now as this is a manifest and certaine truth that there be few that do find the way of life if we consider the hinderances in our selues that seeke the way so in the next place if we shall take a view of those things which do retrahere which do allure vs and withdraw vs from the search of this way it will appeare more plaine vnto vs. The things then which do vsually detaine and keepe vs backe from the search of this way of life are these three old and ancient enemies of man Bern. medit cap. 14. Mundus Caro Diabolus the world the flesh the diuell and these three hauing drawne as many men vnto their part as the Dragon drew the starres of heauen with his taile Reuelat. 12.4 it must needs follow that their number should be very small that go on in the way of life I wil touch them all three in their order and giue you such caueats out of Gods booke against each of them that if we be once entred into the way of a godly life which is the narrow way that must leade vs to eternall life neither the world with his inticemēts nor the flesh with her alluremēts nor the diuell with his suggestions
mortuus sum non sentio non attendo non curo siqua verò sunt Christi haec viuū inueniūt paratū Concerning these earthly and worldly matters I haue no sense or feeling of them by my reason I condemne them and from my heart I abandon them but if there be mention made of Christ and of finding the waies of life then my decaied spirits gather strength then all the powers and faculties of my soule will me to cry with the Prophet Dauid Paratum est cor meum Psal 57.7 Domine My heart is ready ô Lord my heart is ready For otherwise if cleauing by an inordinate affection and loue to this world and the things of it we neglect and reiect the waies of life Deut. 3.27 as Moses from the top of Pisgah might behold with his eyes the land of Canaan but might not enter into it as the Syrians did heare Elisha speake whom they desired to take 2. King 6.29 but could not take him so with the outward eares of our bodies we may heare of the ioyes of another life and with the intellectuall eyes of our minds we may see that great glory which the iust shall haue heareafter but our selues shall neuer come into heauen our selues shall neuer be partakers of it And as Lysimachus king of Lydia hauing yeelded himself into the hands of his enemies for a cup of cold water to quench his thirst cryed out Plutarch O me hominem infoelicem qui tantillae voluptatis gratia tantum amiserim regnum ô miserable and wretched man that I am who for so short a pleasure haue parted with so glorious a kingdome as the kingdome of Lydia so when we shall see in the last day that by yeelding too much vnto this world and the things of it we haue parted with the wayes of life and so consequently haue yeelded vp our selues into the hands of our spirituall enemies we shal mourne and lament we shall sigh and wring our hands and all the dreadfull torments which we shall then suffer shall not wound and vexe vs so sore as this one consideration namely when we shall call to mind that for the momentary and trāsitorie pleasures of this word we haue parted with that same exceeding 2. Cor. 4.17 eternall surpassing weight of glory in the kingdome of heauen And thus much shall serue to haue spoken of the world and of the things of the world which is the first enemie that opposeth himself against man to keepe him from the way of life I com to the second enemy and this is Caro. The carnall lusts and desires of the flesh ●th lib. 10. c. 5 Aristotle disputing of the nature and efficacie of pleasure saith this that a man which taketh greater delight in instrumentall then in vocal musick if he heare the same musitian both to play vpon his instrument and to sing the pleasure and delight which he conceiueth in hearing of the instrument doth so leade away his affections that he hath no care at all of the voice and as this is true in musick so is it true saith he in all other things when we intend two things at once that which breedeth the greater pleasure and delight for the most part doth euermore exclude the lesse There being then in man two kinds of affections carnall and spirituall and all men for the most part taking greater delight in their carnall then in their spirituall affections of necessitie it must come to passe that their carnall affections do swallow vp their spirituall and so consequently they are so farre from finding the waies of life that there is in them no desire no lust at all vnto it The sect and companie of the Epicures who maintained carnal pleasure to be the onely summum bonum of this life did swarme in greater abundance then any other sect did non quòd veri aliquid afferat Lactan. de falsa sap cap. 17. sed quia multos populare nomen voluptatis inuitat not because saith Lactantius there was any truth at all in their doctrine but because the popular name of carnal pleasure is able to draw a world of men to it Saint Paul confesseth of himselfe Rom. 7.18 that in his flesh there dwelt no good thing and that he saw a law in his members rebelling against the law of his mind and not that only vers 23. but that it led him away captiue to the law of sinne insomuch that for very griefe of heart he breaketh out into these words Miser homo vers 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the bodie of this death Saint Hierome writeth of himselfe In Epist ad Eustoch that albeit he led a most strict and austere life in the wildernesse exercising himselfe continually in prayer and bringing his body vnder by long and often abstinence yet notwithstanding that he was vehemently assaulted by the lusts and desires of the flesh euen as Saint Paul was And surely if the mortified flesh of these Saints of God mortified no doubt by prayer and by long and often fasting did notwithstanding as themselues confessed leade away their soules captiue to the law of sinne then may we well conclude that the vntamed flesh of vs vnbridled men will forcibly and with violence misleade our soules from the way of life Our Sauiour Christ speaking of his owne passion is so farre from the feare of death in himselfe that he armeth his disciples against it saying that he would go to prepare a place for them Iohn 14. ● but afterwards when he was to die vnto the world and to go to his father then he seemes to be of another mind then transeat à me Calix Luke 22.42 Father if it be thy will let this cup passe from me And what was the reason of this surely that in the 26. of Mathew and 41. verse The spirit is ready but the flesh is weake The spirit indeed of many men is prone vnto that which is good they desire so to runne the race of a godly life here that hereafter they may receiue a crowne of glory but so it is that mans life is as Iob speaketh Iob 7.1 Gal. 5.17 Militia super terrā a warfare vpon earth the flesh still lusting against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and that which is most to be lamented in most of vs the flesh extinguisheth the spirit Sampson was a strong and valiant man Iudg. 14.6 he encountred a Lion and ouercame him but encountring with the fury of his owne lustful passions he could not master them Messes incendit alienas Iudg. 16.17 Ambros in Apol Dauid vnius ipse mulieris accensus igniculo messem suae virtutis amisit He set fire indeed on the haruests of other men but himself being inflamed with the fire of lust lost the haruest of all his vertues Salomon built a goodly Temple vnto God but in the meane time his
to draw vs vnto brotherly loue and vnity O how good and pleasant a thing it is for brethrē to dwel together in vnity And so the diuel he maketh choise of both these to draw vs to the committing of iniquity sometimes vsing but one of these and sometimes ioyning them both for the strengthning of his temptation In the 22. of Numbers one of these was sufficient to draw Balaam vnto sinne for though he had receiued a commandement from God that he should not go with the princes of Moab to curse the people of Israel yet when he cōsidered that Balacks offers would proue cōmodious to him he resolueth vpon the iourney with them and his Asses thrise reuolt could not stay him But in the third of Genesis there the diuell vseth both and with them both he preuailed against our mother Eue for albeit she knew well that she should dye the death in eating of the forbidden tree yet because she saw that it was good for meat and pleasant to the eyes she tooke thereof and did eate That then these deceitful temptations of the diuel may be reiected first that no commodity do draw thee from the wayes of life to sinne let that saying of our Sauiour Christ be alwaies in thy mind what shal a man get if he win the whole world Math. 16.26 and loose his owne soule what shall a man get if by vsury oppression of the poore extortiō false weights false measures and the like he shall be able to purchase much land Luk. 16.19 and with the rich glutton go in purple and fine linnen and fare deliciously euery day when as these commodious sinnes as he accounteth them shall bring no lesse discommoditie vpon him then hel fire And secondly that no pleasure preuail with thee remēber that sin though it be sweet in the mouth yet it wil be bitter in the belly that though it be pleasāt in the beginning yet it will be painfull in the end that the diuell dealeth herein with vs as vnconscionable Mercers and Drapers deale with their chapmen For as they neuer shew vnto their chapmen the middle part fag end of their wares which perhaps are stark naught but onely the vpper part thereof which commonly is very good so this maister Mercer the diuel he sheweth alwaies to his sinfull chapmen the vpper part of his wares namely the present pleasure delectation and delight of sin but as for the middle part of his wares which is remorse of conscience and the fag end of his wares which is Gods vengeance these he neuer sheweth For beloued if men should see before hand with the spirituall eyes of their soules either the middle part of sinne which is remorse of conscience or the end of sinne which is Gods vengeance either in this life or in the other then out of doubt whē the diuel shal offer his wares vnto the sale as to the couetous man his neighbors vineyard to the adulterer his neighbors wife to the taylour long bils to the retailer false weights and so in the rest they will all answer if there be any sparke of grace or goodnesse in them as the Athenian Orator did vpon the like proffer Non emam tanti poenitere I wil not buy repentance so deare And thus at last haue you seene those impediments and lets why so few do finde the way of life The impediments ex parte quaerentis in our selues that seeke the way are three blindnesse of reason peruersnesse of will and want of perseuerance and the lets ex parte retrahentium are three likewise the world with his inticements the flesh with her allurements and the diuell with his suggestions vnto sinne And now to conclude Hom. 1. ad pop Antioch Saint Chrysostome in his first homily to the people of Antioch doth require a reward for a sermon which he made against the blasphemers of Gods name The onely reward beloued which I wil craue for my sermon is this that it would please Almighty God so to worke in the hearts of all you that haue now bene partakers of it that you may say and say truly of my sermon as Tully in his Academicks saith of Varros bookes Nos in nostra vrbe peregrinantes tanquam hospites tui libri quasi domum deduxerunt We who heretofore in this our city of London by the blindnesse of our reason the peruersnesse of our wils and want of perseuerance haue erred from the wayes of life and by the inticements of the world the allurements of the flesh and the suggestions of the diuell haue wandered vp and downe in the plaines of sinne and in the vallies of iniquitie are thereby now brought home againe vnto the wayes of life and reduced into the number of that little flocke whereof that great Shepheard and Bishop of our soules Christ Iesus is the head The which God the Father grant for his Iesus Christ his sake to whom with the blessed spirit three in Trinitie but one in Vnitie be ascribed all honour and glorie for euermore FINIS THE LAST IVDGEMENT TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL IOHN BREVVSTER ESQVIRE SIR among many patrons of vertue and Theologicall endeuours I presume to rank your name who as I know you not inferiour to the best for a Fautor of learning and a louer of Pietie so I present you here with such a worke best fitting your addiction and most worthie your patronage And howsoeuer I may seeme officiously bold to publish these things without free consent of the Author as I confesse I do yet out of earnest desire to raise him from obscuritie to a deserued eminence in the worlds account and throughly moued with pitie that so heauenly things should perish with the breath they were deliuered as if eternitie should fade with a moment I haue aduentured to giue them longer life seconding my boldnesse with a strong presumption that I shall frustrate needlesse doubts and herein deserue your good opinion And on this hope I rest committing the sequele to your serious view and my attempt in this to your fauourable construction Yours in all affection and dutie C. B. MATTH 25.15 Watch therefore for you know neither the day nor the houre when the Sonne of man will come AS when children hauing ouer-slept themselues and begin to cry as fearing the correction of their seuere maisters their indulgent mothers do commonly comfort them with one of these two things as first that there is no time yet past and secondly that their maister is a gentle man and will forgiue them In the very same manner do the carnall and carelesse worldlings of this age deale with those their acquaintance and friends who haue fetched a long and a deepe sleepe in sinne and securitie For whereas their counsell to them should be that which Saint Paul hath Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp frō the dead and Christ shall giue thee light these men cleane contrary to take away all feare of iudgement to come in
be brought before a Iudge and the iudge shall deliuer thee to a iaylour and the iaylour shall cast thee into prison from whence thou shalt neuer be released And therefore howsoeuer there hath heretofore bene no impression in our hearts of this iudgement to come yet hereafter as Saint Hierom confesseth of himselfe siue comedas siue bibas whether thou eatest or drinkest whether thou wakest or sleepest whether thou walkest abroad or stayest at home let that be euer sounding in thy eares which was euer sounding in his eares Surgite mortui venite ad iudicium Arise ô you dead and come to iudgement Thus much for the first consideration That there will be a comming of the Sonne of man to iudgement I come to the second 2. That this his comming vnto Iudgement will be terrible In the ninth of Esay and sixt verse the Prophet speaking of the coming of our Sauior Christ he saith thus Paruulus natus est nobis A child is borne vnto vs and his name shall be called Wonderful Counseller the euerlasting Father the Prince of peace and in the 21. of Matthew and fift verse there is the prophesie fulfilled Ecce Rex tuus venit tibi mansuetus Tel ye the daughter of Sion Behold thy King commeth vnto thee meek But that setteth out his first coming but now we are to lay opē his second comming Then he came in humilitie but now we are to speake of his comming in glorie Then he came like milde and little Dauid 1. Sam. 17. to free vs from the Diuel that great Goliah but hereafter he wil come like angry and armed Dauid 2. Sam. 25. against ingratefull Nabals Then he came with comforts in his right hand for he came not to call the righteous Math. 9.13 Iohn 5.29 but sinners to repentance but hereafter he shall come with terrour in his left hand for he shall call the vnrepentant sinners vnto iudgement Then that the world might be crucified vnto vs and we vnto the world Christ Iesus vouchsafed to be crucified in the world but hereafter because the preaching of Christ his crosse is accounted foolishnesse by the wicked world therefore Iesus Christ wil come to crucifie the world Then the people shouted Mat. 21.9 Mat. 24.30 and distinctly cried Hosanna for ioy but hereafter the wicked shall yell make a confused noise for feare yea so fearfull wil this his second comming vnto iudgement be that Saint Paul disputing of it before Felix as I now before you it made the very heart of Felix to tremble Act. 24.26 And no maruell for if that first apparition of God was so fearfull and terrible to the people of the Iewes Exodus 20.18 that Moses himselfe said I feare and tremble and the people fled and stood a farre off and sayd to Moses Talke thou with vs and we will heare but let not God talke with vs least we die how fearfull then and terrible will his second comming be For at that first appearing he came onely to giue them lawes but at this second he will come to punish the transgressors of his lawes Hest 15.10 Surely if Hester fell vpon the ground and life for a time went out at the gates of her body when she beheld the maiestie of Assuerus the King Dan. 8.17 if Daniel in the eight chapter of his prophesie at the sight of an Angell trembled and was sore afraid Mat. 28.4 if the keepers of the sepulcher in the day of our Sauiour his resurrection were terrified and became as dead men if the Iewes comming armed into the garden to apprehend Iesus Iohn 18.6 when they heard him but say Ego sum I am the man if they fell backward vpon the ground and became as dead men O then what shall miserable men and women do when they shall see Iesus Christ not yeelding vp his body to be punished by sinners as then but comming in the clouds with power and great glorie to punish sinners Luke 21. ●9 Indeede if there were the same meanes and such hopes of preseruing men frō the iudgement to come as there are of preuenting iudgement and iustice here vpon the earth then the feare thereof were altogether needlesse but you shall see the case is farre different For first here vpon earth when men stand vpon life and death intercession is made by others for the procurement of their deliuery yea oftentimes speeches in commendation of the prisoner are admitted by the bench Plutarch for so was the custome among the Romanes till the law of Pompey tooke it away But in the day of the last iudgement there will be no place for intercession 2. Sam. 14. 1 Sam. 25 there shall then be no Ioab to intreate for Absolom there shall then be no Abigail to speake for Nabal The truth of which doctrine is most euident in the Scriptures for looke into the 22. of Matthew and 13. verse and you shall there see that the partie that had not on a wedding garment was commaunded out of the bride-house and cast into vtter darknesse and no man did once intreate for him Looke into the 25. of Matthew and 28. verse and you shall there likewise see that the seruant which had receiued but one talent and without any employment to his masters aduantage had hid it in the earth had his talent taken from him and was cast into vtter darknesse and no man intreated for him Nay looke but into the verse going next before my text and you shall heare the fiue foolish virgins crying Lord Lord open vnto vs. And receiuing this vncomfortable answer from the mouth of comfort it selfe Ini ●●um Deus scit in examine nescit in amore Greg. in Iob lib. 11 cap 7. Nescio vos I know you not that is I haue reiected you I haue reprobated you and none no not their late familiar friends and companions the other wise virgins requested fauour for them Againe here vpon earth though no man intreate for an offender yet oftentimes the fresh memory of his ancestors good deeds and the good demerits of his friends that be liuing may moue the Iudge to pity and compassion but for a man to trust to this fauour in the day of iudgement were to leane vpon a broken reed for the men that do best fulfill the commandements of God are tearmed in the 17. of Saint Luke and 10. verse Serui inutiles Vnprofitable seruants And then as the fiue wise virgins answered the fiue foolish Mat. 25.9 We cannot giue you of our oile least peraduenture there will not be enough for vs you so the best men that be cannot lend their friends any of their good workes for if they do without all peraduenture they will leaue too few for themselues And thirdly though neither of these two do come to passe yet many times the subtiltie of the offender and his cunning contriued speech do ouer-reach the wisedome of the Iudge but this hope shall faile
a sinner in the day of iudgement Our first mother Eue so much as in her lay she did hide her sin from God and so did Cain the death of Abel and haply saith S. Ambrose Ambros in Psa 118. in affectu habemus abscondere non in effectu we may with them affect the hiding of our sins from God but we neuer can effect it In the 20. of S. Luke and the 20. verse the Scribes and Pharises come with cunning contriued speeches vnto Christ hoping to intrap him but as cunning as they were our Sauiour was too cunning for them for in the 23. verse Quid tentatis hypocritae Why tempt you me ye hypocrites And surely if craft and subtiltie could not ouertake our Sauiour when he came in humilitie much lesse shall he be ouertaken thereby when he shall come in glory And fourthly though neither of these three doe happen in our earthly iudgements yet we see by experience that witnesses are oft kept backe and by that meanes the prisoner is set free but at Christ his comming vnto iudgement there is no such aduantage to be expected For as Saint Bernard well obserues in a mans owne house and in a mans owne family Deuotis medit cap. 13. he shal not faile of his accuser his witnesse and his iudge Accusat conscientia testis est memoria ratio index his conscience that will be his accuser his memory that will be his witnesse and his reason that will be his iudge to condemne him And least it should be obiected that a mans memory may faile and so consequently the witnesse behold then a witnesse whom nothing can cause to faile Because they haue done villany in Israel and committed adultery with their neighbours wiues euen I see it and I testifie it saith the Lord. Ier. 29.23 And fiftly though neither of these fall out yet if a man be nobly borne descend from honorable and princely parents then none almost dare meddle with him or once call his sinnes in question But as Mordocay in the fourth of Ester and 15. verse said vnto the Queene when as the sentence of death was past vpon all the people of the Iewes in the kingdomes of Assuerus thinke not with thy selfe that thou shalt escape in the Kings house more then all the Iewes so at the day of iudgement when all our sins shall be layd open before God men and Angels it is not our noble and honorable bloud it is not a Kings house nor a Kings linage that can exempt vs. But may not mony procure vs fauour with the Iudge and be a meanes to stay the course of iustice Indeed I confesse that mony may do much with earthly Iudges it may turne iudgement into mercy and mercy into iudgement but it is not the multitude of gifts saith Iob in his 36. chap. and 18. verse that can deliuer thee frō the wrath of the Iudge of heauen But say none of all these do preuaile in our earthly iudgements yet either by the conniuencie of the Iailor or the weaknesse of the prison a condemned man may escape but after the sentence is once pronounced in this last iudgement both these comforts will faile a sinner For first the diuell who is Iaylor will be so vigilant as no prisoner committed to his iayle shall haue leaue to depart And for the second which is breaking of prison that is impossible for those who are bound hand and foote and so are sinners bound after iudgement Matth. 22.13 Take him and bind him hand and foote and cast him into vtter darknesse And yet suppose that they could vnloose themselues as some that are bound may do yet is there no hope of euasion for in the 16. of Luke and 26. verse it is Abrahams speech vnto the rich man in hell Betweene you and vs there is a great gulfe so that we cannot come vnto you neither can you come vnto vs. So that hitherto you see this comming of Christ vnto iudgement to be terrible But if we shall now a little farther consider the rigor seueritie of the sentence which shall be thundered from the mouth of the Iudge against the wicked I make no question but the terror thereof wil appeare much greater The sentence is set downe in the 25. of Mathew and 41. verse Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the Diuell and his Angels In which words Poena damni first the punishment of losse as the Diuines terme it contained in these words Depart from me doth declare the seueritie of the sentence For if one day in Gods courts be better then a thousand elsewhere as the Prophet Dauid saith in the 84. Psalme and 10. verse then to be not onely a thousand yeares but for euer elsewhere and not one day in the courts of God it must needs be a grieuous and a great punishment For a man to lose his lands here in this world what a vexation and griefe is it to many men it doth oft times driue men vnto their wits end how then thinke we will sinners be affected and afflicted in mind who when Christ Iesus by his most precious bloud hath purchased for them no worse land then the land of the liuing the kingdome of heauen they by their wilfull rebellion will be the occasion of the losse of it Were not the Israelites grieued thinke you when from a sorrowfull heart they told Moses that he had brought them from a land which flowed with milke and honey into a barren wildernesse to destroy them with famine And will it not be a greater torment to the wicked in the last day when they shall heare and see themselues banished from heauen and the presence of God in whose presence as the Psalmist saith Psal 16. and last verse there is fulnesse of ioy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for euermore and then sent into a place where there is a famine of all good things a famine of ioy a famine of ease a famine of the comfortable presence of God Surely if the Apostles for that litle time that Christ told them he was to be absent from them they were so sorowfull and sad Iohn 16.21 that Christ himselfe measureth their mourning by the mourning of a woman in her trauell And if Peter to whom Christ had said Iohn 13.8 If I wash thee not thou shalt haue no part with me was so loth to part with Christ that he said Lord not my feete onely but my hands and my head also in what case shall miserable and accursed sinners be who not for a time onely but for all eternitie are shut out and banished from the sight of God As then the rigor and seueritie of the Iudiciall sentence appeareth in the punishment of losse so is it greatly amplified by the punishment of sense Poena sensus for they are not only banished by the Iudge from heauen Depart from me but they are sent into a place of
punishment into hell fire The Epicure saith Tertullian doth estimate all sorrow and punishment after this maner Modicus cruciatus est contemptibilis Tertul. aduers Gentes cap. 45. magnus non est diuturnus If the punishment be but small then a man of any spirit will contemne it and if it be great this is the comfort that it cannot last long But saith he the Epicure deceiues himselfe because the lawes of God do promise either an euerlasting reward to the obseruers or a perpetuall punishment to the breakers And therfore the sentence runs not thus Ite in ignem Go into fire though that had bin a great and a grieuous punishment but to make it the more grieuous and the more terrible they are commended in ignem aeternum into euerlasting fire Grieuous were the punishments that were inflicted vpon Adam for his sin Gen. 3. for first he was cast out of Paradise and then he was sent into a place of thornes and thistles there to eate his bread in the sweat of his brow all the dayes of his life but far more grieuous wil be the punishmēt of Adams wicked children at the day of iudgement for first they shall be depriued of heauen a place more beautifull then Paradise and then they shall be cast into a burning lake which is a farre worse place then a place of thornes and thistles And whereas Adam found this comfort in his punishment that there was a donec in terram in it that at last there wold be an end the end of his life was the period of his punishment yet the punishment of his wicked posteritie shall admit no limitation of time but they shall go saith the Iudge into euerlasting fire that is they shall burne for euer and euer in that lake of fire Indeed is were some comfort if they were to suffer this punishment no more thousands of yeares then there be sands on the sea shore or grasse piles vpon the ground or no more millions of ages then there are creatures in heauen in earth and in the sea for then were there some hope that at last there would be an end But to be sent in ignem aeternum into euerlasting fire that is continually to burne and neuer to be burned vp and after infinite millions of ages to be as farre from an end as at the first entrance into this torment this is so seuere and rigorous a doome as neither the tongues of Angels or of men are able to expresse it And as the rigor of the doome appeares first by the punishment of losse in that they are commaunded out of Gods presence Depart from me and secondly by the punishment of sense in that they are sent not onely into fire but into euerlasting fire So to make it euery way complete that nothing more might be added to it vnto the former words of this sentence Depart frō me into euerlasting fire the Iudge doth adioyne these latter which is prepared for the Diuell and his Angels Men that are in misery they are commonly of this mind and nature that they would not haue their friends and acquaintance come into the like misery and therefore the purple glutton Luke 16.27 being in hell maketh this request vnto Abraham Father Abraham send Lazarus I pray thee to my fathers house that he may testifie vnto my fiue brethren least they also come into this place of torment And as men are loth to haue their friends companions in their misery so are they as loth to haue those their companions who wil helpe to augment and increase their miseries but the wicked that their sentence of condemnation might appeare the greater they shal not only alwayes burne but their companions in this fire shall be the Diuell and his Angels When the Iewes sate in iudgement vpon our Sauiour Christ they resolued vpon these three things against him first that he must be taken from among them secondly that he must die the shamefull and ignominious death of the crosse and thirdly to do him the greater disgrace as they thought to vexe him the more he must die in the companie of two theeues And therefore hereafter when Christ shall come in his glory to iudge the sinnes both of Iewes and Gentiles he will resolue vpon three the like for them which they resolued for him For first as they could not abide his presence and therefore they cryed tollite take him away so he will not abide their presence but will say vnto them Discedite a me Depart from me And secondly as they resolued vpon no honorable death for him but such a death as was inflicted vpon vile and ignominious persons so the maner of dying which he allotteth vnto thē is such as belōgeth only vnto people that are cursed And last of all as they which did die with Christ were no better then theeues so their friends in tormēt are the fiends and their companions in fire are the diuell and his angels And therfore for the conclusion of this point remember onely that short but sweete caueat which S. Austin giueth writing vpon the 80. Psalme Si non times mitti quó vide cū quo If thou art not afraid to burn for thy sinnes in hell yet be afraid to burne with such hellish companions as are the diuell and his Angels And thus haue you seene the terror of Christ his cōming vnto iudgement as by other other circumstances so especially by the rigor seuerity of the Iudgement sentence which first depriueth them of heauen Depart from me and thē adiugeth them to hell Go into fire Thirdly there to burne not for a time but for euer into euerlasting fire and that with no better cōpanions then the diuell and his Angels I come now to the third point and this is 3. That the time of this terrible coming vnto iudgment is vncertaine For we know not saith my text either day or houre when it will be In the third verse of the chapter going before the 24. of Mathew the disciples of our Sauiour being desirous to be resolued of a double doubt first at what time the temple of Ierusalem shold be destroyed and secondly when his last coming vnto iudgment should be our Sauiour Christ for their better instruction telleth them that there shall be warres and rumours of warres that nation shall rise against nation and kingdome against kingdome that there shall be pestilence and famine earthquakes in diuers places All which signes with many other in that chapter though some haue restrained to the first question of the destruction of Ierusalem yet according to the iudgement of the most interpreters they containe a mixt answer vnto both and are signes not only of the particular desolation of Ierusalē but also of the finall dissolution of the whole world in the day of iudgemēt And grant this yet no other collectiō can fitly be gathered hence but that which Saint Austin long since obserued Modum patefecit tempus celare voluit He