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A02186 Greenvvoods vvorkes contayned in fiue seueral tractates. 1. Of the day of iudgement. 2. Of the Lords Prayer. 3. Of the race to saluation. 4. Of the torment of Tophet. 5. Of the baptisme of Christ. Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5.; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Treatise of the great and generall daye of judgement. aut; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Race celestiall. aut; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Tormenting Tophet. aut; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Joyfull tractate of the most blessed baptisme. aut 1620 (1620) STC 12329; ESTC S115797 129,145 422

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please the Almighty to blesse protect and defend your Royall Maiesty and all your Royall Issue in this life present and in the life to come crowne you all with the Crowne of immort all Glory and that for Iesus Christs sake our onely Lord and euer-liuing Sauiour AMEN From Hempstead in Essex this 16. of October 1608. Your Maiesties most humble seruant and most loyall Subiect HENRY GREENEWOOD THE RACE CELESTIALL OR Aspeedy course to Saluation 1. Cor. 9. 24. So runne that ye may obtaine BOëtius in his Booke Boëtius De consolatione Philosophiae saith Quòd vnicuique viro bono inserta est quaedam cupiditas boni id est That in euery good man there is inserted a feruent desire of that which is good Now the true and chiefest good thing that may possibly be desired of mortall man in which only the soule of man is fully satisfied is the Lord God according to that of S. Augustine Fecisti August in lib. confess nos Domine ad te inquietum est cor nostrum donec quiescat in te id est Thou hast created vs O Lord for thine owne selfe and our hearts are disquieted vntill they finde a firme rest in thy selfe And as well saith S. Bernard Bernard Illud est verum summum gaudium quod non creatura sed Creatore concipitur id est that is the true and chiefest ioy which is conceiued not of the creature but the Creator Now the Lord that is Omnium summum bonorum Of all good things the chiefest can by no meanes be obtained but by a true and liuely faith in Iesus Christ his welbeloued Son prouing it selfe by good fruits of amendment by whom wee are reconciled againe to the Lord and brought into the ●auour of the most High of which by our sinnes wee haue iustly beene depriued As well saith ●●o 〈…〉 Non dormicntibus peruenit regnum coelo●um nec o●●o nec desidia torpentibus praemium aeternitatis promit●itur sed vigilantibus ben● viue●tibus id est The Kingdome of Heauen falleth not to the Sluggards share neither is eternall blisse promised to idle and euill persons but onely to those that liue by faith and are vigilant in the workes of godlinesse The holy Apostle therefore hauing in the former Chapters of this his first Epistle to the Corinthians carnestly and industriously taught them the true path that leadeth to life hauing also perceiued that they had embraced his doctrine willingly and runne in the same in some measure cheerefully he doth heere in this golden simile that they might haue their portion in the Lord exhort them to perseuerance holding out to the end of their liues knowing that of our Sauiour in the Gospell to bee true Hee that endureth to the end the Mat. 10. 12 same and none but the same shall bee saued In which words the Apostle b●rtoweth a similitude A certami●e cursorio from a terrestriall Race for a temporary Prize for as in that Race many runne but one receiueth the Prize namely he that all the rest out-strippeth and commeth first at the end euen so in the Race of Christianity no man shall be crowned but hee that holdeth out to the end of his life yet notwithstanding there is this difference in this similitude that in the Race terrestriall he is onely guerdoned with reward that toucheth first the But and in this Race Celestiall not onely one but all may be crowned with euerlasting blisse In which excellent Simile the Apostle compareth Cursui vitam Stadio pietatem praemio salutem id est Our life to a Race or running Pietie and Godlinesse to a Race wherein wee must runne and euerlasting blisse to a promised reward So runne that ye may obtaine That Text. is so liue in this life vnder the Gospell of Christ Iesus that yee may obtaine euerlasting life in the life to come In which heauenly exhortation of Paul we may generally obserue these three things First Quid sit currere What is meant by this word Runne Secondly Qualiter currendum how ● wee must runne to obtaine So runne Thirdly Praemium promissum the reward ● promised to all those that runne lawfully First Run By this Race or Running is vnderstood this present life of man The life of man is compared to many things some of the Philosophers haue compared it to a bubble some to a sleepe some to a dreame some to one thing some to another Iob compareth it to a Winde the Iob 7. 7. Psal 109. 23. Iam. 4. 24. 1. Pet. 1. 24 Esay 40. 6. Prophet Dauid compareth it to a shadow Iames to a vapour Peter to a flower Esay to grasse and the Apostle Paul in respect of the celeritiy and swiftnesse thereof compareth it heere to a Race or running Quid aliud saith Augustine S. Augustine est vita nostra nisi quidam cursus ad mortem vita dum crescit decrescit vita mortalis mors vitalis id est What is our life but a certaine running to death Our life while it increaseth decreaseth our life is dying our death is liuing The Traueller she longer he goeth on his iourney the neerer hee is his iourneys end the children of Israel the longer they wandred from Egypt the neerer they were the promised Land so euery mortall man the longer he liueth the neerer hee is his iournies end Death for Time and Tide stay for no man young hayres do soone turne gray and actiue youth is soone metamorphosed into crooked age Cito pede lab●●ur aetas id est The dayes of Poet. ●●id man doe swiftly passe away Temporae labuntur tacitisque senescimus annis ●ug●●nt f●ae●o non remorante dies id est time swiftly passeth and old age soone commeth on no bridle so strong as can keep● in our galloping dayes Hee that runneth in a Race neuer stayeth till bee commeth at the end thereof so euery mortall Wight vole●s ●●l●●s willing ●illing neuer stayeth till d●ath the end of his race stayeth him The picture of Patience Iob by name considering the swift passage of the da●es of man compareth them to the swift Race of a Post saying Dies m●i v●l●ciores sunt cursore Iob 9. 25. id est My dayes are swifter then a Post yea swifter are they then a Weauers Iob 7. 6. shuttle they are as the motion of the swiftest ship in the Sea and as the Eagle Iob 9. 26. Psal 90. 9. that flyeth fast to her prey Our yeeres are spent sayth the Psalmist as a tale that is told yea our life is Psal 90. 10 quickly cut off and wee are soone gone Therefore fitly is our life compared here of S. Paul in regard of the velocitie thereof to a Race or Running From hence euery Christian is to learne this lesson that seeing our life is nothing else but a running to death he redeeme the time make much of it whiles he hath it for the houre spent
same shall appeare before Christes Iudgement seate and giue an account euery one for himselfe to God For It is appointed Heb. 9. 27. vnto men once to dye and after that commeth Iudgement As it is therefore most sure that all men must dye so is it as sure that all men must come to Iudgement This is the seuenth article of our Article 7. faith to beléeue that Christ shall come from heauen to iudge the quicke and the dead by the dead all those are to be vnderstood that shall be found dead at the second comming of Christ by the quicke all those are to bee vnderstood that shall be found liuing at his second comming Augustine in his Augustine Enchiridion to Laurentius Chap. 55 saith that this Article may bee expounded two wayes either by the dean saith hee may bee meant those that shall bee found corporally dead and by the quicke those that shall bee found corporally liuing at Christs comming or saith he by the dead may be meant those that be dead in sinne According to that in the Gospell of S. Mathew Let the dead bury their dead Mat. 8. 22. And by the quicke those that be dead to sinne and liuing to faith according to that of the Prophet Abac●k Hab. ● 4. The Iust shall liue by faith But this exposition is not agreeable to the simplicitie of the Creede Yet notwithstanding true it is that both the godly and the wicked shall come to iudgement for by the power of Christ all men shall bee raised vp The holy Angels with the great sound of a trumpet 〈◊〉 24. 31 shall bee sent forth into all the world and they shall gather together the Elect from the foure quarters of the earth from one end of the heauen to the other Then shall Christ separate the Mat. 13. 4● Elect from the Reprobates the Wheat from the Tares the Corne from the Chaste the Lambs from the Goats the Iust from the Vniust So that you see that the godly and the wicked yea all men whatsoeuer shall appeare before Christs tribunall 〈◊〉 and giue an account of themselues and for themselues to the terrible Iudge Obiect Ob. Some notwithstanding may obiect against this doctrine deliuered and say as it is in Iohn That he that Ioh. ● 18. beleeue him Christ shall not bee iudged or shall not come into iudgement and so by consequence all men shall not be iudged Answ To which I answere that An●… Iudgement in that place of Iohn as in many other places of sacred Scriptures is taken for condemnation in which sence true it is that he that beleeueth in Christ Iesus he that is ingranted into Christ by a true and liuely faith hee that is flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone one with Christ and Christ with him by the spirituall coniunction of the Church with Christ this party shall not come into iudgement s●il condemnationis that is of condemnation in iudgement he shall not be confounded condemned or ouerthrowne but he shall come in iudicium absolutionis that is into the iudgement of absolution In iudgement hee shall stand out hauing on the white robe of Christs righteousnes and being couered with the wedding garment of Regeneration The truth of which doctrine the preacher affirmeth saying God will iudge Eccl. ● 17. he Iust and the vniust the Iust vnto saluation and the vniust to damnation Seeing then that all must bee brought to iudgement let no man thinke with himselfe that it may be possible for him to escape this dreadfull day whither shal he ●lye from the presence of the Lord If he ascendeth Psal 139. ● 8 9. vp to heauen God is there if hee goe downe to hell God is there also if hee take the wings of the morning and fly to the vttermost parts of the Sea God will finde him out there also For God is euery where hee is in heauen by his glory he is vpon the earth by his mercy he is in hell by his iustice God is 〈◊〉 nusquam hee is euery where by his power and wisedome but no where in respect of circumscription of place beeing a Spirit In earthly and terrestriall Courts a man may haue his Proctor but then we must volentes nolentes whether we will or no personally appeare and pleade for our selues In terrestrial Courts bribes many times blind the eyes of the wise and for a little greasing the fist of the Magistrate many times small faults nay by your leaue great and scandalous crimes may bee winked at but at this great Court of Heauen the Iudge will not be partiall to any For Rom ● ●1 God hath no respect of persons Hee will execute iust iudgement vpon all men as the Psalmographer speaketh With righteousnesse will he iudge the Psal 58. 9. world and the people with equitie Bribes Friends intreaties howlings cryes lamentations nothing will then preuaile but a pure heart and a spirit vpright yea the damned in hell confesse the same Quid profu●● nobis superbia quid di●it●arum coput What hath pride profited vs or what hath the pompe of riches done vs good Alas these cannot saue our soules Let the Atheist therefore mocke God neuer so blasphemously let the Sadduce bragge of no Resurrection no Angell no Spirit neuer so Schismatically let the Epicure sing that cursed Epitaph of Sardanapalus neuer so beastly ●de bibe ●ude charum praesentibus exple delicijs animum post mortem nulla voluptas Eat drinke play be merry liue in all kinde of pleasure for after death there is no pleasure Yet notwithstanding let all these miserable wretches know that there will come a day and that a dismall day wherein they shall giue an account of euery idle word Alas lamentable world that men should thus murther their deerest darlings I meane their Soules which Christ hath holden so deare that men should with Esau sell their birth 〈◊〉 and heritage of heauen for a m●●●e of pot●age of worldly pleasure that men should delight in wallowing with the 2. Pet. 2. 2● Sow in the mire of sinne and with the dogge in swallowing the vo●i● of iniquitie and so purchase to their Soules and bodies euerlasting torment in the lake vnquenchable wheras they should aboue all things seeke the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof that they might haue heauenly mansions at the great day of account Let euery Christian therefore bewayle the great wickednesse of this world and lament the soule iniquitie of these dayes lest it be said of vs as of the carelesse and gracelesse Christian Cadit Asina est qui subleuet per●●● anima non est qui reco●it●t If an Asse falleth vnder his burthen there be some that will diligently helpe it vp againe but if a Soule perish no man regardeth it Men are like the Horse Asse and Mule that haue no vnderstanding the more is the good mans griefe Dauid Psal 11● 1 〈…〉 his eyes g●shed
penna leuius quid millio breuius What is lighter then a feather and what is shorter then the ●eed-mill Yet notwithstanding an innumerable company of feathers trussed vp together will breake the Porters back Small were the gnats that troubled Pharaoh yet they being Exod. 8. 24 innumerable ouercame proud Pharaoh and all the power of Egypt An houre is but a short time but Dum hora horae continua successione congeritur While one houre by continuall succession is added to another the whole course of our liues is finished Quid s●xo durius quid aqua liquidius What is harder then a stone and what is softer then the water Yet a Wiseman saith Gutta cauat lapidem con●●m●tur Po●● annulus vsu that is Water by continuall drops doth eate vp the stone and a ring by continuall vse is worne in pieces So an idle word although it bee but a small sinne yet many a little makes a mickle many of them heaped vp together make an intolerable lumpe It hath been is and euer will be the fond nature of man to imagine sin a great deale lesser then indeed it is A man would thinke that Adam through the diuels suggestion and Gen. 3. 6. through the abuse of his owne free will eating of the forbidden fruite had committed but a small trespasse yet ●ee was guilty of euerlasting torment for the same S man would Num. 15. 30 thinke that that poore man had cōmitted but a smal sin in gathering chips of méere necessity on a Sabbath day yet he was by the Law stoned for his labour A man would thinke that Peter had giuen his Master good counsell when as Christ told him that hee must goe to Ierusalem and there suffer many things saying Master fauour Mat. ●● ●● ●● thy selfe and goe not yet he was called Satan for his labour A man would thinke that Ananias and Saphira Acts 5. ● had committed but a smal sinne when as they did detaine part of the Apostles money for feare of after-plays and protested the contrary with a lye yet they dyed both sodainely at the feete of Peter So a man would thinke that an idle word were but a small sinne yet Christ saith here that a great account must bee made for the same For by thy word thou shalt be Mat. 12. 35. iudged and by thy words thou shalt ●e condemned Seeing this is true it behoueth euery man to set a watch before the dore of his lips and to kéep his tongue from idle and euill words that he may obtaine that blessednesse Blessed is hee that hath not falne by the Eccle. 1● 1 words of his mouth 3 We must giue an account of our workes as appeareth to the Corinthians Workes 2. Cor. 5. 10 We must all appeare before the Iudgement seat of Christ and there receiue according to our works Againe the Preacher saith That God will Eccl. 12. 14 bring to Iudgement euery worke with euery secret thing whether it be good or euill Hee that hath liued in sinne shall receiue the reward of sin which is death and damnation and hee that hath liued in faith and amendment of li●e shall receiue a crowne of glory which the Lord will giue him at that day It is the duty therfore of euery Christian to labor and to end●uor with all ●●ligent carefulnesse ●o liue well that at the day of Iudgement he may s●●d well 〈…〉 〈…〉 that is li●e wel should be the delightsome posie sweet perfumed Noseg●● of eu●ry Christian thus line well that that mayst die well after death eternal● speed wel obtaining that blessednes Blessed are they that dye in the Lord 4 We must giue an account of ou● 4 Good temporall goods how we haue gotten them whether iustly or vniustly how wee haue spent them whether wee haue cloathed the naked with them or whether wee haue made naked the cloathed for them how wee haue disposed them lest there hee any debate for them after wee be gone therefore Esay telling Hezekiah that he should not liue but dye saith Dispone domum tuam 〈…〉 Set thine house Esay 38. 1. 〈…〉 in order for thou must not liue but dye How then shall those griping Vultures make an account that haue by oppression vndone their brethren The world is grown so hard-hearted that men will rather suffer their brethren to starue in the streets then to succour or relieue them The dogs shall haue the remnant of the Rich mans table before poore I azarus shall Luk. 16. 21. haue one ●rum that falleth from the same ●ow shall these fiinty hearts ●o●ke for one dram of mercy at the day of Iudgement Let them looke with what measure they haue measured to others it shall bee measured to them againe let them know that if they will stop their eares at the cry of the poore they shall cry themselues and shall not be heard if they will be partakers with the Saints of the ioyes of heauen their brethren must be partakers with them of their wealth on earth For this is to treasure vp treasures in heauen to lay out their treasures on earth Let men therefore so vse their temporall goods and worldly riches as they may at the day of account receiue a Crowne of immortall Glory 5 We must giue an account of the 5 Time time wherein we liue and of our seuerall vocations how we haue employed our selues in the same Saith Bernard Omne tempus ti●i Bernard impensum requiretur à te qualiter fuerit expensum●d est All the time that God hath giuen thee shall be required at thy hands how thou hast spent it Whether in the seruice of God or in the seruice of Satan The Prince must giue an account how he hath gouerned his kingdome whether hee hath as it becommeth Gods Vice-gerent mildely louingly and carefully trained his Subiects vp in the worship of God or as a bloudy Nero and hard-hearted Tyrant cruelly oppressed them The Ministers of the Word of God who haue taken vpon them curum animorum The charge of soules must giue an account how they haue behaued themselues in their Ministery whether they haue preached Christ for Christ that is for the conuersion of sinners to Christ or as hirelings for lucre and gaine of worldly trash whether they haue fed their Flocks carefully or fed vpon their Flocks couetously The Magistrate must giue an account how he hath behaued himselfe in his Magistracy whether ●ee hath sought the maintenance of Vertue and the confusion of Vice or hath his eyes being blinded with siluer scales maintained iniquitie and oppressed the innocent The Householder how he hath gouerned his Family whether in reading of holy Scriptures and Prayer to the praise and glory of God or in reading of foolish fables in gaming dicing playing swearing and such like Yea euery man must giue an account of the time spent in his seuerall calling from the highest to the lowest Let euery Christian
yeeres in the sight of God that is in respect of the eternity euerlastingnesse of God are as a day It is therfore spoken on this maner to expresse the eternity of God as if hee should say A thousand yeeres with m●n in respect of the eternity of God a●● but as a day for as many as are haue bin and euer shall be the dayes of man so many thousand yea so 〈…〉 th●n sand thousands yeeres is the C●●●nitie of God He is Alpha and Omega the First and the La●● before all beginnings and shall neuer haue ending Againe they alleage that place of Genesis In that day that thou eatest Gen. 2. 17. thereof namely of the forbidden fruit thou shalt dye the death Now saith the Heretique that Ob day they dyed not but liued many hundrd yeeres after Therfore by a day is vnderstood many hundred yeeres Ans But I answer that that day wherin ADAM did eate of the forbidden fruit euen that day did hee dye that is that day by sin he was separated from God then the which separation no death is greater for Vt v●●a corporis est anima 〈◊〉 v●●a 〈◊〉 est Deus Augustine tolle animam 〈◊〉 corpus tolle D●●●● m●ritur anima●●d est As the soule is the life of the body so God is 〈◊〉 of the soule take away the soule the body dieth take away God the Soule 〈…〉 So Adam that day dyed in Soule ●eing separated from the Lord yea that day Adam was made subiect to death in this life and in the life to come that day hee had the beginnings of death seazing vpon him for hee was presently cast out of Paradise into the ragged world he was cursed and all his posterity yea hee should haue gone to hell had not the second Adam broken the head of the subtill serpent that inticed him to sinne Yea the Thiefe vpon the Crosse had Paradise that day in his soule in which he suffered in body although hee had it not in so full measure as hee shall at the generall day when his Soule shall take vnto it the body againe Hodie to day thy soule with my soule shall be in Paradise that is in my Fathers Kingdome Where is now the Heretique that confoundeth particular iudgement Where is now the Epicure that thinketh there is no iudgement at all Where is now the ignorant Papist that dreameth of ●u●ga●ory and he that ●ondly thinketh that there is Limbus Patrum and Limbus Puerorum and where are those that imagin of a place of aboad betwéene Heauen and Hell I turne them altogether to the Hebrewes for wisedome in this Heb. 9. 27. point where they shall find that after death the soule of man is iudged Would Paul haue so earnestly desired Phil. 1. 23. to haue béen dissolued if he should not presently haue been with Christ He saith That in this world we see in 1 Cor. 13. 12. a glasse darkely Wée sée but Gods back-part as Moses did that is but a little of the fauor of God But then Ex. 33. 23. that is after this life ended wee shall see God face to face that is wée shall haue the full fruition of him Wée reade of Diues and Lazarus Luk. 19. 22 that after death the one was iudged to heauen the other to hell which is a Parable to signifie the truth of this particular iudgement And to conclude this point wée Eccl. 12. 7. read in Salomon That the dust returneth to the earth from whence it came and the Spirit to God that gaue it So that wée may learne from hence the vncertainty of the day of Iudgement The vse hereof Bernard Well saith Bernard Nihil certius morte hora mortis nihil ●●certius that is Nothing is more certaine then death and there is nothing more vncertaine then the houre of death Let euery Christian therefore that wisheth the saluation of his Soule at the day of death and Iudgement beware of security and carelesse liuing let no man deferre repentance and amendment of life lest death come when hee looketh not for it and so being vnprepared he be cast into hell fire The old world had 120. yeeres to Gen 6. 3. Ionas 1 ● Psa 9. 5 1● repent in Nini●e had 40. dayes to repent in Israel had 40 yéeres to repent in but thou O man knowest not how long thou hast to liue thou hast no lease of thy life thou art here to day gone to morrow when the houres of thy life bee ended and the glasse out-runne thou must away death waiteth for thee in euery place and at all times therefore w●ite thou for it playing the fiue wise Virgins that had the candle of saith burning in the lamps of their hearts nourished with Mat. 25. 4. the oyle of loue and workes Ierusalem because she could not be brought to repentance shee was destroyed many hundred thousands of her children were ●amisht to death and many hundred thousands taken captiue by Titus Vespatian the Roman 〈…〉 Emperour many cast to wilde beasts and deuoured The children of Israel because they were a stiffe-necked people and a froward generation and would not be brought to Repentance how many thousands of men lay slaine in the Wildernesse 600000. Males except Ioshua and Caleb The old world because they would Gen. 7. ●● take no warning and could not bee brought to amendment of life the s●oud drowned them all except faithfull Noah and his godly family And except thou repentest thou likewise shalt perish according to that of Luke Except yee repent yee shall all likewise Luk 13 3 perish Beware therefore and repent betimes F●lix quem ●●ciunt aliena pericula cautum Happy is hee whom other mens harmes doe make to beware Refuse no good motions knocking at the dore of thy heart but entertaine them willingly according to the counsell of Augustine If hee offereth Augustine thee grace to day saith hee take it make much of it for thou knowest not whether hee will offer the same to morrow Make no long tarrying to turne to the Lord and put not off from day to day the longer thou remainest in thy sinne the h●r●er it is for thee to repent for Qui 〈…〉 cra● Poet. minus aptus ●rit If thou b●●●l not fit for amendment to day thou wilt bee lesse fit to morrow Therefore while the Lord speaketh to thee make him answere while he calleth vnto thee let there be an eccho in thi●e heart as was in the heart of Dauid Seeke ye my Psal ●7 ● face thy face Lord will I seeke And while it is said to day harden not your hearts in no case deserve repentance for the day of death and iudgement is vncertaine as saith Chrysostome Poenitenti veniam spospondit sed viuendi in crastinum non spospondit that is The Lord hath promised pardon to him that repenteth but to liue till to morrow he hath not promised Obiect But some there
bee in the world that will say the more it is to bee lamented I am young I will liue a while after my hearts desire and in my old age I will repent mee of my sinnes for God hath promised who will be as good as his word At what Eze. 18. 2● ●2 time soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinnes from the bottome of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance saith the Lord. And will pray to the Lord for forgiuenesse of their sinnes as Augustine Augustine said before his conuersion● Ignosce pater ignosce mihi at noli modò Forgiue mee my sinnes but not now let mee sinne in my youth and pardon me in mine age Thus they would desire to dye the death of the righteous but they would not liue the life of the righteous but let these gracelesse persons that thus defer repentance beware of two things 1 Let them beware of suddaine death let them take héed lest they be cut off in the middest of their sins as Iobs Children in the middest of their Iob 1. 18 banquetting and ryoting were suddainly slain by the fall of a house and as the Floud came vnlooked for and drowned the old world Liuie reporteth a fearefull example 〈…〉 of suddaine death saith hee There were two old men that frequented two Harlots and presently vpon the fact committed they both suddainely dyed the one was thrust thorow with a dagger the other dyed suddainly of an Apoplexy which is a disease ingendred of abundance of grosse humors which doe fill those vessels and receptories of the head from whence commeth feeling and mouing of the bodie as saith Galen and therefore 〈…〉 they that haue this disease are depriued of all sence feeling and moouing Let euery lusty Younke● and desperate russian set this fearefull example before his eyes Againe the young man dyeth as soone as the old the Lambs skin is brought to the Market as well as the old Crones true is the saying of Augustine Vita dum crescit decrescit vita Augustine mortalis mors vitalis id est Life while it increaseth decreaseth life is dying and death is liuing ● Let all men that refuse the mercy of God and deferre their repentance know that repentance is not theirs at command but it is the great mercy of God and it is to bee ●●ared that they that haue refused it offered when they would haue it they shall go without according to that country Prouerbe If you will not when you may when you will you shall haue ●ay And it is commonly seene that Qu 〈…〉 a ●●●●s ita as a man liueth commonly hee dyeth Hee that will liue without repentance must look to dye without repentance 〈◊〉 God spared the Thiefe at the la●● gaspe yet let no man presume of that for that was a medicine against desperation and not a matter of imitation saith one God spared one that no man might despaire hee spared but one that no man might presume Let euery man therefore in the feare of God without all delay seeke for amendment of life let them as Gregory wisheth Plangere plangenda Bewayle their sinnes that ought to bee lamented and as they haue giuen Rom. 6. 13 their members as weapons of vnrighteousnesse to iniquitie so let them now giue them as weapons of righteousnesse to holinesse Repent deare brethren betimes Vi●e Deo gratus toti mundo tumulatus Poet. Crimine mūdatus semper transire paratus That is Liue vnto God a thankefull wight And to the world dye Cleanse thy selfe from wickednesse Alwayes ready hence to flye Play the wise Steward lay vp treasures in heauen for thy soule imitate the Pismire which gathers in Summer whereby shee may liue in Winter Damascene reporteth an excellent Damascene History touching this purpose saith he There was a country where they chose their King of the poorest and basest sort of the people and vpon any dislikement taken they would depose him from his Throne and exile him into an Iland where hee should bee sta●ued to death Now one wise fellow considering hereof sent money before into that Iland into which hee should be banished and when he was banished he was receiued into the Iland with great triumph So against thou be banished by death from this world without penny or farthing for naked thou camest and naked thou must goe thou must prouide w●●le thou art in this life whereby thou mayst liue in Heauen hereafter Let nothing therefore make thée 〈…〉 erre thy amendment but whiles● Christ calleth thee runne vnto him Put on Ieromes resolution who said If my Mother were hanging Ierome about my necke if my brethren were on euery side howling and crying and if my Father were on his bare knees kneeling before mee to detaine mee in their wicked and sinfull course of life what would I doe I would shake off my Mother to the ground I would despise and hate all my kindred and kins-folkes and I would tread and trample my Father vnder my feete thereby to flye to CHRIST when hee calleth mee So shouldest thou resolue the amendment of life The Lord of heauen for his swéet Sonne Christ Iesus his sake grant to thée deare Reader and mee to both of vs his holy Spirit that wee may stand vnblameable before the Iudge at that great and generall day that we being ●l●athed with the long white robes of righteousnesse may bee in the number of those to whom it shall be said then Come yee blessed Children of my Father inherit the Kingdome which was prepared for you from the beginning of the world Grant this deare Father for thy deare Sonnes sake Christ Iesus our only Lord and Sauiour to whom with thee and the holy Spirit wee ascribe all Power Glory and Dominion and sing Halleluiah to thee O blessed Trinity for euer and euer Amen A True and Comfortable Exposition of the Lords PRAYER FOrasmuch as Prayer to the Soule is as necessarie as the ●eele to the Ship the Foundation to the House the moisture to the Tree and the sinewes and ioints to the body and forasmuch also as wee can haue neither grace to beleeue nor grace to obey without feruent and faithfull prayer I haue thought good as briefly as I can for the helping of the Ignorant in the performance of this Christian duety to expound the Prayer of our Lord being the perfect ground of all our prayers that so we praying in wisedome may pray with comfort for alacke thousands it is to be feared that haue this prayer Ad vnguem at their fingers ends are altogether ignorant of the worthy contents of the same Concerning which prayer I obserue these foure things First the occasion hereof and that ● was vpon the complaint and suite of the Disciples who being weake in this gift entreated Christs help saying Master teach vs to pray as Iohn Luk. ●● ● ● also taught his Disciples And hee said
they goe thorow some narrow cranny or other to loosen their skinnes and cast them within foure twenty houres So shouldest thou put off the old man Col. 3. 9. with all his workes And to doe this thou must goe Per strictam rimam poeniten●iae id est Thorow the narrow cranny and straight gate of amendment Meditate therefore with the Iust Psal 1. 2. man in the Law of God day and night Let the candle of faith burne cleere in the lampe of thy heart and nourish it with the oyle of loue and good works Walke not in the counsell of the wicked Psal ● ● stand not in the way of sinners ●it not in the ●ea●e of the scornefull but runne in the Race of 〈…〉 well that liuing well thou maist dye well and after death eternally spéede well obtaining that blessednesse Blessed Apoc. 13. 14. are they that dye in the Lord. So run tha● ye may obtaine Text. And that wee may run in the race of Godlinesse one Caueat is exceeding necessary namely that wee auoid wicked company which will draw away our hearts from this Race Celestiall Qui ●angit picem co●●quinabitur Eccles 13. ab ●a id est Hee that toucheth pitch shall bee defiled therewith Cum sancto san●●us eris cum peruerso peruerter●s id est With the holy thou shalt bee holy and with the ●●●ward thou shalt learne frowardnesse for birds of a feather will flye together It was not lawfull for a lew to conuerse with a S●●ari●ane if an Hebrew did ●a●e with an Egyptian it was counted an abomination so must we ●o●nt it abomination and hold it a point of reprobation to frequent the company of damned hel-hounds and hellish miscreants Let vs therefore flye all occasion and euery apparition of euill let vs delight in the company of those that ●eare the Lord and excell in vertue Well therefore saith Seneca Cum illis versare qui te meliorem S 〈…〉 sunt facturi vel quos meliores ●ffi●er● possis id est Keepe company with those that may make thee better or whom thou maist make better I command you therfore brethren 2. Thes 3. 6 as saith S. Paul in the name of our Lord IESVS CHRIST that ye withdraw your selues from euery brother that walketh inordinately and not after the instruction which yee receiued from me And to conclude this point I giue euery Christian this good counsell with good King Salomon My sonne if Pro. 1. 10 11 1● c sinners doe entice thee consent thou not If they say Come with vs wee will lay wait for bloud wee will swallow vp the Innocent wh●le like a graue wee s●●ll finde all precious ri●he● and ●ill ou● ho●●● wi●h ●poyl● 〈…〉 n thy lo● among ●s we will haue all ●ne pu●se My s●nne w●lke not thou in the way with them refrain● thy foot from their path for their feet runne to euill and make haste to shead Iob. ●9 23. 24. bloud O that these my words were written O that they were written in a booke O that they were written with an iron pen in Lead or in stone for euer O that they were ingrauen in brasse Table of euery young mans heart that so bad company may not be his destruction So run that ye may obtaine Text. Secondly if we will run to obtain we must run Celer●●er seu feslinanter swiftly and speedily Vita breuis vita longa saith S. Bernard Bernard si ●●s ●d metam peruenire incipe celeriter currere id est The liff of man is very short the way to heauen is very long if therefore thou wil● obtaine thou must run exceeding swiftly We sée that those that runne in an earthly race and that but for a mean reward how swiftly doe they straine themselues to runne according to that of the Poet Qui cupit optatā cursu contingere metam Poet. Multa tulit fecitque miser suda●it alsit Id est Hee that desireth first to touch the Marke taketh much paines sweateth abundantly and runneth exceeding swiftly Euen so should we that wee may obtaine an euerlasting reward in heauen runne in the path of Gods Commandements being shod with the shooes of the Gospel of peace like Roes excéeding swiftly The senselesse creatures are a 〈…〉 king-glasse to all Christians in 〈…〉 respect The Sunne as sayth the Psalmist Psal ● like a Gyant reioyceth to run his race that is valiantly and swiftly swift in his motion and speedy in his race for in the space of 24. houres hee compasseth the earth round about that nothing is hidden from him and passeth from the one end of heauen to the other that nothing is wanting in him So the Lord our God hath set euery man his task vpon earth which is To worke out his saluation wi●l feare and trembling A great worke a short time a long way from Egypt to 〈…〉 from the gates of hell to the doores of heauen therefore like Gyants we ●ad need to runne swiftly lest we come too late and bee shut out of heauen like the fiue foolish aforesayd Virgins As the Sun in the heauens is a looking glasse vnto vs in this regard so is also the Son of God Christ ●esus aboue the heauens to be imitated o● vs all in this point Omnis Christi actio 〈…〉 ●●str● deb●t esse instru●●io id est Euery action of Christ ought to be a matter of imitation to vs Christians As hee was I●mensus maiestate in 〈…〉 bilis ●●r 〈…〉 so was hee in 〈…〉 is celer●●●●● id est As hee was ●●●at in Maiestie incomparable in 〈…〉 o was ●e ●lso incomprehen●●●le ●● celeri●●e and swiftnesse Hee 〈…〉 w●ought the wo●ke● of him that ●ent 〈…〉 y without ●●y delay in the world This Bridegroome Christ Iesus ●●●n as the Su●●e went forth out of the Chamber of the highest Heauens from the bosome of the Father and from the inuisibility of the Diuinity and descended downe to the earth and became Man and was like vnto Man in all things sinne onely excepted and valiantly in the Wildernesse pitched a field against Satan that old Serpent and roaring Lyon and ouerthrew him in the Desart breaking his wyly head and ouercomming his chiefest power fulfilled the Law in euery point and tittle satisfied Gods Iustice for vs appeased his wrath against vs purchased celestiall mansions to vs by offering himselfe in Sacrifice to the Lord of H●sts vpon the Crosse at Gol●o●ha for the sinnes of the whole world by his death and passion by vanquishing hell by conquering death by his glorious resurrection and ascension and by sending of the Holy Ghost Hee Io● 16. 28. went from the ●ather and came into the world And in short time yea in the space of 33. yeeres wrought the redemption of all beleeuers And left this world and went againe to his Iob 1● 28. Father The Spouse of Christ considering her Husbands great velocity celeritie Can. 2.
feare spoken of in the Gospell of Matthew Feare him that is able to destroy Mat. 10. 28 both body and soule in hell This terrible report should strike vs into a threefold feare Feare to be depriued of the grace of God Feare to be excluded the louing presence of God Feare to be tormented in the Lake vnquenchable It was the practice of an holy man Exemplum who saith I feare him that is able to damne both body and soule I tremble at Hell I tremble at the Iudges countenance which is able to make all the Angels and powers of Heauen to tremble I tremble at the voyce of the Archangell I tremble at the roaring deuils I am afraid of the gnawing worne the smoke the vapour the brimstone the darknesse the burning Ah wo is me that am the sonne of bitternesse indignation and eternall wéeping This made Paul indeuour to keepe Act. 24. 16. a cleare conscience both towards God and man This made Ierome afraid to offend Whether I eate or drink saith he or whatsoeuer I do else me thinks I heare this saying sounding in mine eares Arise yee dead and come to Iudgement Arise yee dead and come to Iudgement Which when I consider it makes mee quake and shake and not dare to commit sinne which otherwise I should haue committed And what is the cause I pray that wicked wretches runne into all excesse and ryot of sinne as they doe Is it not because they lay not to heart this tormenting Tophet witnesse else the Prophet Amos who saith that they Amos 6 3. put off from them the euill day and boldly approch to the seates of iniquity If putting off the remembrance of the vengeance to come wil make men dissolute and wretchlesse then surely laying to heart the inutterable torments of Tophet will bee a notable meane to reclaime men from all vngodlinesse But if men wil harden their harts aboue the hardnesse of an Adamant and wil not be moued neither by mercies nor iudgement let all such know that Tophet groneth for them where they shall howle and yell in fiery torments for euermore Thus much in a word for the word Tophet The second obseruable for the certainty of this place of torment is the Act or thing done in these words Is Is prepared prepared Parata Tophet non paranda It is not sayd That Tophet shall bee hereafter prepared or it is now preparing but it is already prepared Tophet is prepared The malicious diuell laboureth nothing more then to perswade men that there is no such place of torment that so the more easily hée may leade them thither as the thiefe is led to execution Simile with a vayle before his eyes But for the truth hereof let these things following duely be obserued As a princely magnificence requireth Simile that a King haue a beautifull Palace for the best sort of men and a dismall prison for the rebellious So the King of kings hath a glorious Palace wherein are many mansions for his Saints and a dark and loathsome dungeon for the Diuell and his Angels The law of nations requireth that Malefactors for their offences bée banished for euer so the Lord doth banish from his gracious presence all the vngodly of the earth into the fearfull Iland of hell The Cicilian Aetna called at this Aetna day Gibello Monte where roarings are heard and flames of fire are séene the flashing of Vesuuius the cracking as it were of fire in a Furnace in the Marine Rocke of Barry what doe all these presage but assure all these that feare the Lord besides his counsell reuealed in his word that Tophet is already prepared Againe in all things naturall and supernaturall there is an opposition there is a contrariety there is good there is euill there is light there is darknes there is ioy there is sorrow there is a Heauen and therefore there must be a Hell into which the soules of the reprobate shall bee carried when they dye by the black grifly angels Againe the Scripture speaketh euery where of this place of torment Whosoeuer shall say Foole shall bee Mat. 5. 22. worthy to be punished with hell fire Againe It is better for thee to goe Mar. 9. 43. 35. 47. into the Kingdome of God with one foot with one hand with one eye then hauing two feet two hands and two eyes to be cast into Hell fire But that of the 25. of Mathew is very pregnant for this purpose where the word it selfe is vsed Goe from me Math. 25. yee cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the Diuell and his Angels This doctrine meeteth with all Atheists that say There is no heauen Refut Atheist Psal 14. 1. no hell no God no Diuell As that noted foole that said in his heart There is no God With all Epicures that think there Epicure is neither time nor place either of heauen or hell after death that sung that Esa 22. 13. cursed Epitaph of Sardanapalus Ede bibe lude charum praesentibus exple Poet. Delitij● animum post mortem nulla voluptas Eate drinke and bee merry for after death there is no pleasure They say true for after death they shal find smal pleasure in Tophet This Doctrine conuinceth also all Heretike heretikes that deny both Resurrection and Iudgement nineteene seuerall sorts whereof are reckoned vp together all on a row by that learned writer Danaeus the Appellites Archontikes Danaeus Basilidians Bardesanists Caians Carpocratians Cerdonians Heraclites Hermaines Marcites Marcionites Ophites Proclians Symonians Saturninians Sethians Seuerians Selucians and Valentinians Vse 1 Seeing then that Hell is already prepared and standeth ready to receiue to torment all that worke iniquity séeing there is but a twine thred betwixt the soule of a sinner and this scorching flame O how should this prepare vs for the Kingdome of Heauen Paratis patet ianua imparatis clauditur that is sayd for Heauen The prepared Virgins enter in the imprepared not Imparatis patet ianua paratis clauditur and this is sayd for Hell The imprepared enter the prepared not But alas the presumptuous security of this our age men liue as though there were no Hell or if there be as though it were afarre off and yet notwithstanding it followes them as neere as the shadow doth the body Death and Hell both follow close the R 〈…〉 person of euery sinner Death to deuoure the body and Hell to swallow vp the soule Yet for all this the wicked will sport themselues in their sinnes and ●oniall be in their iniquities but mark the end Nouissima illarum est mors the end of these wayes is death as well noteth that iust and vpright man Iob Iob 21. 12 13. they reioyced in the sound of Organs and in a moment they goe downe into Tophet they say Peace peace when Tophet is prepared to take away their soules O that carelesse people would consider this
Christian helps much profitable to your soules and as he hath abundantly blessed you withoutward honors and dignities externall he would also euen fill your heares and spirits with the inestimable riches of his al-sufficient grace that hauing granted this two-fold blessing to you in this life you may haue the more assured hope of a third in the life to come which is his blessing of glory for all which forenamed blessings your Worships shall haue my best and most deuout prayers continued to the Lord to whose sweetest protection I betake you both with your hopefull sonne this present day and euermore From Hempsted in Essex Ianuary 10. 1620. Your Worships alwaies ready to be commanded in the LORD Henry Greenwood To the CHRISTIAN Reader A Religious and right vertuous Gentlewoman curteous and I. M. Christian Reader much importuning mee for a written Copie of this extant worke vpon good consideration proues the onely occasion of this printed Tractate for things written as they are more tedious so are they lesse profitable but printed Tractates lesse tedious and more profitable I am not borne alone to my selfe my particular friends I loue to satisfie but the generall good still shall be my ayme And that my penne thus happily should turned bee to Presse I am no whit vnwilling both because few haue written vpon this worthy subiect as also for that I see this heauenly Sacrament seldome made right vse of the most contenting themselues with the bare signe very few acquainting themselues with the blessed power of the signified That therefore our profession may not be as in many Antichristian parts of the world in superficiall signe and shew alone but in substance life and power I commend vnto thy view for the better information of thine head and reformation of thine heart this short yet I trust profitable Treatise of that blessed Baptisme of our blessed Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Here Christian friend mayst thou learne a double lesson to liue to dye to dye to that which otherwise must bee thy death to liue that Christian and happy life wherewith who-euer is not acquainted euerlastingly must dye The Lord God from my very soule I heartily desire blesse these my poore paines to the best good of thine owne Soule and worke in thine heart a death to all that is euill and a life to all grace and godlinesse that his glory more and more by thee may be aduanced and thine owne soule more more by him refreshed and that for his owne mercy sake to whose most happy protection I commend thee both in body and Soule in his deare Sonne Christ Iesus and rest Thine euer-louing in the Lord Henry Greenwood CHRISTS BAPTISME Math. 3. 16 17. And Iesus when he was baptised came straight out of the water And loe the heauens were opened vnto him and Iohn saw the Spirit of God descending like a Doue and lighting vpon him Verse 17. And loe a voyce came from heauen saying This is my beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased AS by the disobedience of one man sinne entred Rom. 5. 12 into the World and by sinne death Rom. 5. 12. So by the obedience of one man righteousnesse entred into the world and by righteousnesse life Rom. 5. 18. Rom. 5. 18. For as Adams sinne hath bound vs all to a double misery guilt and punishment So Iesus Christ being made of God to vs Wisedome Righteousnesse 1. Cor. 1. 30. Sanctification and Redemption 1. Cor. 1. 30. hath deliuered vs both from guilt and punishment of all our transgressions The truth of which thrice-blessed report is not onely mentioned in the Gospell of God and therefore called EVAGGELION but confirmed also by sacramentall signes and seales in the first and last Testament In the first against sinnes guilt by circumcision against sinnes punishment by occasion the one a Sacrament cutting the other a Sacrament killing In the last against sinnes guilt the Sacrament of Baptisme against sinnes punishment the Sacrament of his Supper And as Adam sinned in his owne person So the second Adam for his recouery hath performed both the Sacraments and substance of the same in his owne person for hee was circumcised sacrificed baptized to take away the sinnes of the world Circumcised Luke 2. 21. Sacrificed Luk. 2. 21. Heb. 7. 27. Baptized in the words of my Text And when Iesus was baptized c. In which words for methode sake I note in generall thrée First Christs baptisme And when Iesus was baptized Secondly Christs immediate action after baptisme He streight came out of the water Thirdly Gods of Christs miraculous approbation Testified by two By Vision By Voyce By Vision two wayes 1. By the heauens apertion And loe the Heauens were opened vnto him 2. By the Spirits descension And Iohn saw the Spirit of God descending c. By Voice Behold a voyce came from heauen saying c. In which voyce I note also two 1. A double circumstance 2. A singular substance A double circumstance 1. Of the Person God the Father Behold a voyce 2. Of the place supercelestiall Came from Heauen A singular substance This is my beloued Son in whom I am well pleased In Christs Baptisme ● obserue thrée First the Baptist Secondly the Baptized Thirdly the element First the Baptist and that was Iohn as it appeareth in the precedent verses Not Iohn the Euangelist but Iohn the Sonne of Zachary the Priest A worthy instrument nomene numine a gracious name and a gracious person A gracious name whereof Saint Augustine in his second Tractate vpon Iohn sayth Magnum aliquidiste Iohannes ingens meritum magna gratia magna celsitudo A great name is this name of Iohn a name of great grace a name of great valuation Magnus exim erat Iohannes virtute magnus sanctitate magnus officio Great was Iohn in power great was Iohn in sanctity great was Iohns office A gracious person sanctified in his Luk. 1. 15. mothers wombe Luke 1. 15. that which was spoken of Ieremy the Prophet is verified of Iohn the Baptist Priusquam te formarem in vtero nouite antequam illin● exires sanctifica●i te Ieremy 1. 5. Before I formed thee in the wombe I knew thee and before thou camest out of the wombe I sanctified thee At one and the selfe-same time there was in Iohn the Baptist Spiritus vitae Spiritus gratiae the Spirit of Life and the Spirit of Grace as sayth Origen Whose sanctity you may reade at large commended by Iosephus lib. 18. Antiquitatum Yea Christ himselfe sayth thus much in commendation of him that inter natos mulierum mator Iohanne non surrexit Math. 11. 11. Among those that Mat. 11. 11. are borne of women a greater then Iohn arose there not Though Enoch was translated Gen. Gen. 5. 24. 5. 24. yet was hee not greater than Iohn Though Eliah was taken vp to Heauen 2. King 2. 11. yet was hee not greater than Iohn Moses a