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A42584 Gell's remaines, or, Several select scriptures of the New Testament opened and explained wherein Jesus Christ, as yesterday, to day, and the same for ever, is illustrated, in sundry pious and learned notes and observations thereupon, in two volumes / by the learned and judicious Dr. Robert Gell ; collected and set in order by R. Bacon. Gell, Robert, 1595-1665.; Bacon, Robert, b. 1611 or 12. 1676 (1676) Wing G472; ESTC R17300 2,657,678 1,606

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service of other Gods how much better it is to be a prisoner in the prison of the Law or to be prisoner of Jesus Christ than to be a prisoner in the Devil's prison Observ 3. In the way of Life is Freedom Peace Love Delight When we go out of this way into the way of sinners and will by no means agree with our adversary in the way but are delivered unto the Judge from thenceforth we lose all our Freedom Love Peace all things are turned to rigour and austerity This imprisonment wholly unmans the man A man saith Aquinas is Dominus sui Actus he hath power over his own actions as to do or not to do to do this or that is contrary when he is now Satan's Captive all his power is lost he hath no more power of his own actions nor of his own will or affections and therefore is he said to be bound hand and foot actions and affections he hath no more power to do will nor desire to do so and being bound hand and foot he is cast into prison as a thing without any power to move it self as a dead body without a soul so as the Prophet Esay speaks of Shebna Esay 22.18 The Lord will violently toss thee and turn thee like a Ball in a large Countrey Observ 4. Note hence the goodness of God He doth not cast us into inextricable and unavoidable evils all at once but by degrees He is long suffering towards us so that although he might take advantage of us at any time while yet we are under the Law as appears by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet he bears with us and this we shall see in the Son of God who suffers in us See Notes on 2 Pet. 3.15 Repreh The foolish Sons of Epimetheus who have only an after-wit when they have learned misery by their own experience and would no otherwise understand neither by the precepts of the Law nor by the examples of others such as these the Lord sends to the fowls of Heaven Jer. 8.6 7 8 9. I have hearkned and heard but none spake aright He is not his own man but in the power of another quò iste velit as the Drunkard we say is not his own man the same may be said of all Satan's prisoners A prison hath its name from prehension or apprehension laying hold upon one and then he becomes a prisoner according to our Law upon any action civil or criminal Howbeit the Civil Laws moderate prisons according to the causes of imprisonment as that the prison ordained for debtors or such as are detained for further examination more gentle That which is appointed for punishment of exorbitancies as of loose debaucht persons Prodigal men Dicers Carders and the like more severe That which is ordained for the punishment of more grievous crimes as Murder c. that had torment annexed to it Thou shalt be cast into prison With the Ancients is Wisdom Job 12. and that Wisdom both of the Common-wealth on Earth and that in Heaven and the former in order to the later For so we find that the Wise Men who of Old governed God's World they ordered three sorts of Prisons and that three sorts of men should be cast into those prisons 1. The first that whereinto rude and unmannerly persons should be put that in the night time they might be instructed by learned and good men in the precepts of honest Arts and Trades and good manners and so framed and fashioned to live in a Christian Common-wealth 2. The second Prison was that whereinto Debtors were cast that by the tediousness of imprisonment they might be wearied out of that loose and wanton kind of life which commonly brings men into debt and danger 3. The third sort of Prison was that into which enormous persons were cast as guilty of notorious crimes which rendred them unsafe for humane society whence they were shortly to be brought forth to condign punishment and therefore Tully calls Carcerem vindicem nefariorum manifestorum scelerum If the first of these took effect the other two would not be so needful for by seasonable and timely correction and instruction in the first prison men might be so well informed and prevented that they would not be in danger of the other two prisons It was long since observed by a very wise man that the Judicatures of the Magistrates and Judges of the English Nation are very exact and strict in the execution of Justice and Punishment of Malefactors but as for the prevention of evil doing that men might not proceed so far as to be Malefactors and suffer punishment herein they were too remiss and slow that they were wont to punish malefactors when they found them but not take course to hinder them from being such That they were wont to cast men into prisons condemn them to death for Thefts Burglary Murders but not to take course and use means for the preventing such mischiefs as should deserve Bonds Imprisonment and death it self as to take order for the training up of Youth in vertuous principles leading to the fear of God to cause those to whom their Parents leave large portions to learn honest trades The German Noble Men wisely foreseeing the constant inconstancy of all outward things have both themselves learned and caused that their Children should learn some trade or other to keep them busie to prevent idleness which commonly is the bawd to lewdness to restrain prodigal young men from wastful expenses as they give a Governour Curator to mad men I know well what is wont to be alledged in this case what our Lord said may I not do what I will with mine own Mat. 29.15 Yes but this was spoken by our Lord in the person of a wise House-holder not in the person of young men void of understanding who have no guide of their Will no rule of their exorbitant foolish and hurtful lusts which fight against their souls These may not ought not to do whatsoever they will with their own Such as these need a guide of their youth to keep them from Harpies and Birds of prey from Drunkards Gluttons Gamesters Cheaters from Trappans and Hectors Cheaters There 's need of a new Letany to pray against such prodigious Villains as this later age hath brought forth And should it be lawful for young men to spend their estates and their strength among such as these May they do what they will with their own It is a wise provision of our Law Interest Reipublicae ne re sua quis malè utatur It concerns the Common-wealth to provide that none use ill what he hath Take survey of the prisons But happily such discourse as this may better befit the Common-wealth on Earth than that in Heaven It doth so but yet its fit enough in order unto the Common-wealth in Heaven and to prevent betimes and to direct those of the Common-wealth on Earth that they may be fitted for the Common-wealth in Heaven
of bread not in Bethlehem Judah but in Bethlehem in the Tribe of Zebulon Jos 19.15 That is they seek him for their loaves in their own habitation so Zabulon signifieth As the Scribes who told the Wise-men that Christ should be born in Bethlehem They themselves went not out of their own Town to seek him And thus without doubt and question the greatest part of men seek Christ they will not go out of themselves to find him they would have him come to them they will not go to him This is the reason of so much sighing and groaning wherein many men place a great part of their Religion They would find Christ and not forsake their Covetousness their Envy their Hatred c. their Country No no 't is impossible All say we are in our Country But 't is hidden Manna Therefore Bethlehem signifieth the City of War as well as the City of bread and it is called the City of David the Warriour Luke 2. and it signifieth thus much to us that we cannot feed on the bread unless we fight for it It is said of the Inhabitants of the Isles called Baleares that their Children were so brought up that they must not eat except first they shoot down their meat He that will not labour shall not eat the bread of life Labour for the Meat that endures to everlasting life to them that thus labour and travel Christ whom we seek promiseth to manifest himself He that hath my Commandements and keepeth them I will manifest my self unto him John 14.21 To these he promiseth refreshment out of the true Bethlehem To him that overcometh saith he there 's Bethlehem the house of War To him I will give to eat of the hidden Manna there 's Bethlehem the house of bread Revel 2.17 Having thus found Christ in Bethlehem as the Lord instructed the Wise-men so let me advise and remember you By no means tell Herod tell not the Herodians a generation of murderers that crucifie the Lord of life in his Childhood and weakness 2 Cor. 13. Who as Pharaoh gave order that the Children of Israel if Males and likely to prove strong should be put to death Exod. 1. Such Pharaohs such Herods there are I mean Corrupters of Youth who put to death the young Israelites whatsoever good is like to prevail in themselves and others Like Pharaoh's Locusts who devour every green thing the righteousness of Children that they meet withall Exod. 10.15 So Christ the Righteousness calls himself the green tree Luke 23.31 Or if they seem more fitly so to be compared like the wild Asses as the Lord describes them Job 39.8 The rangers and ramblers who search after every green thing O take heed of such wild Asses such Locusts such Pharaohs such Herods Herod put his own Child to death with the rest that so he might be sure he thought of the death of Christ Vide Macrobius libr. 2. Satur. cap. 4. And to avoid them having found Christ return thou as the Wise-men did another way Thou camest perhaps by the way of Envy return by Charity Thou camest by the way of Anger return by Patience and Meekness Thou camest by the way of Covetousness return by the way of Liberality Thou camest by the high-way of Pride return by the lower-way of Humility So shalt thou return unto thy Rest and the Lord shall be with thee and prosper thy Journey To him alone be Glory and Honour for evermore The Ancient Church left out the Venite this Day to signifie their readiness to believe and obey the Gospel without invitation Durand de Festo Epiph. NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW IV. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Then was Jesus led of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil THe last day ye heard John Baptist The voyce of the Lord crying in the Wilderness Now our Evangelist tells us how the Lord himself being baptized of John is led by the Spirit into the Wilderness there to be tempted of the Devil And as this day ye heard a preparation to Battel So these words present us with a preparation to a Combate and that the most notable c. See Notes on Matth. 4.4 In the Words we have these divine Truths 1. Jesus was led by the Spirit into the Wilderness 2. He was led to be tempted of the Devil 3. He was then after his Baptism led Let us here enquire 1. What Wilderness this was 2. And what Spirit he was led by into this Wilderness 1. There were many Wildernesses in the Land of Israel that here mentioned is said to be that between Jerusalem and Jericho which was wont to be infested not only with wild beasts but also was infamous for theevery saith Eusebius whence the place was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the frequent shedding of blood there where was a Garrison kept for defence of Travellers Of this place our Lord makes mention in that Parable or History either we may call it Luke 10.30 In this Wilderness our Lord was with the wilde beasts Mark 1.13 And it is more likely that this was the Wilderness for in it is that Mountain which is called Mons Diaboli as being that exceeding high Mountain whence the Devil shewed our Lord all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them 2. What Spirit was he led by into this Wilderness Answer Surely by the Holy Spirit for so the Syriack Interpreter saith expresly And St. Luke puts it out of question for having spoken of our Lords Baptism and the descent of the Holy Ghost upon him chap. 3.22 after his inserting of our Lords Genealogy chap. 4.1 he continues the History thus Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the Wilderness The end of this our Lord 's leading into the Wilderness we shall find in the following point of which hereafter Mean time we cannot but take notice of the correspondency between the Type and the Truth Israel is Gods Son his first-born Exod. 4.22 and the Scripture was fulfilled in Christ which saith of Israel Hos 11.1 Out of Egypt have I called my Son Matth. 2.15 And as the Lord brought his Son Israel out of Egypt into the Wilderness even so the Spirit here leads his Son the Lord Jesus into the Wilderness Ye know the Scape-Goat was sent into the Wilderness loaden with the sins of all the people Levit. 16.21 22. And the Lord hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all All Christs actions and passions are our instructions Since therefore the first rule our Lord gives us is self-denyal renouncing of our selves he figures out that first rule unto us in his first exercise going into the Wilderness whereby the Ancients understood self-denial and renouncing of the world for what better represents the emptying of our selves than a Wilderness where there is want of all things Such a Wilderness our Lord Jesus was led into by
and Christ stand in opposition one to other so that he who will come unto Christ must deny himself renounce himself take up his cross crucifie his flesh with the affections and lusts for there is no agreement between Christ and Belial 2 Cor. 6. Repreh That dangerous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and disorder in this doctrine concerning self-denial and taking up the Cross and following the Lord Jesus it 's placed in the last place and left to us to do by way of thanksgiving or thankfulness whereas we see our Lord propounds it to the multitude as the first lesson they should learn and practise but the common way is first to know a mans misery secondly his deliverance from it by Christ dying for us whereby he is justified thirdly thanksgiving for that deliverance Self-denial and taking up the Cross and renouncing all ungodliness c. are every where in Scripture so evident that the Devil himself if he would make a body of Divinity he would not leave holiness out but these men have put it in a place that the Devil himself could not have chosen one more to his advantage for when men believe that they are already delivered from their enemies the world the flesh and the Devil and are already justified and saved from their sins will they be forward to repent them of their sins by way of thankfulness will they then think we cut off the offending foot or hand c. such thankfulness so expressed would be very rare but even like unto fidlers and begging strangers that are sometimes but troublesome guests so c. 2. Those hence are to be reproved who think it Religion enough to be Orthodox to hold true Principles and Opinions as if it did suffice herein only to follow our Lord who think the way wherein to follow our Lord consists in tenents without the life 3. They who would pretend to follow the Lord Jesus yet deny not themselves nor take not up their Cross daily Men have soon done with hard duties they take a great deal of pains in self-denial and taking up the Cross and consider not that it 's a daily duty but self-seeking returns the sin returns and oftentimes the latter end is worse than the beginning see examples of this kind some because they have gotten a step or two before others in the way of life Rom. 12.16 become wise in their own conceits the like we read of Vzziah 2 Chron. 26.16 When he was strong his heart was lifted up to his destruction Nay we may say the same of others who have made greater proficiency in Religion than these had done yet self-seeking gets in and endangers the ravelling all they have done Hezechiah when he had attained to so great Grace how was his heart lifted up 2. Exhortation unto that which is our daily duty let it be our argument and subject by our experience in the process of this duty to treat upon it in this our day in this part of the day of our life which yet remains Hitherto I have spoken of this Text or of these words in themselves The words are now to be handled according to their reference unto the former In the 18th verse our Lord requires of his Disciples whom the multitude said he was to which in the 19th verse they answer according to different judgements and in the 20th verse he enquires whom they say he was to whom they answer by St. Peter the Christ of God whom he chargeth to reveil that to no man and gives for reason that the Son of man should be rejected by the Elders and High Priests and Scribes and be killed and the third day to be raised from the dead The reason of this is 1. This he spake to his Disciples for their satisfaction to prevent the scandal and offence which might come upon them by his death 2. And that his hardened and blinded enemies might proceed in their malice and ignorance to do that which God by them had determined to be done for the salvation of men Observ 1. The Lord spake mysteries secrets unto his Disciples which he would not have made known to all men because not qualified but what was of publick concernment and belonged to all men he said unto all If any man will come after me let him deny himself c. whence note we ought to learn to distinguish what and to whom we speak The conjectures of the multitude concerning Christ though otherwise erroneous yet were all honourable some that he was John the Baptist others that he was a Prophet or more than a Prophet or that he was Elias who prefigured the same John the Baptist a zealous Prophet that he was a Prophet of the old ones raised from the dead suppose Elisha who was endued with a double spirit of Elijah and had miraculously fed a multitude as our Lord had done though far short of the Lord Jesus as types alwayes fall short of the truth typified and in all these there was truth for our Lord Jesus was that great Prophet that was to come that great Grace of the Lord which is John that true Elijah God the Lord that true Elisha God the Saviour And so ought we to demean our selves that though we ought to pass through good report and evil report we may gain by our holy conversation a good report among them that are without that they may say no evil of us justly but only good as the multitudes said of our Lord though they knew him not that he was John the Baptist or Elias or one of the old Prophets A word of Consolation to the weak but yet willing follower of Jesus Christ the spirit indeed is willing though the flesh be weak I say persist in that good will 1 Joh. 5.4 For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith But alas I find my self too weak to withstand my lusts to deny them too weak to bear the Cross against so strong temptations pray unto the Lord for Divine Power for Divine Virtue for strength from above for patience that through faith and patience we may inherit the promise Let us be exhorted therefore to come after the Lord Jesus Christ to follow him in his way this is the old way wherein all the holy Men and Saints of God have walked even from the beginning Jeremiah implyes it was hidden and lost in his time and therefore he exhorts the people to seek it Jer. 6. and our Lord tells us that few there are that find it and much fewer that walk in it our Lord saith of Abraham that he would teach it his Children to walk in his wayes to do justice and judgement for our invitation hereunto our Lord will go before us and behind us Isa 51. and 58. follow the example of our Lord Phil. 2. Let the same mind be in us 1 Pet. 4. Forasmuch as Christ hath suffered in the flesh arm your selves
from your sins ye became servants to God or else 2. By righteousness is here understood that which Divines and Philosophers call Universal Righteousness and so that which is here called Righteousness vers 16. is called Obedience Of this Righteousness the Poet speaks in that known Verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In righteousness all virtues are contained which as that river which watered the Paradise of God divides it self into four streams these the Philosophers call the four cardinal Virtues the very same which Solomon summs up Wisd 8.7 Righteousness saith he teacheth temperance and prudence justice and fortitude In a word the Righteousness here meant is either 1. The God of our Righteousness Or 2. The Righteousness of our God Nor is it much material in whether of these two Notions we conceive of Righteousness when the Apostle exhorts us to yield our members servants thereunto since God and Christ cannot be served of us but by our service unto Righteousness and when we serve Righteousness then we serve God and Christ Thus much our Apostle teacheth Chap. 14. of this Epistle He that in these things i. e. in righteousness peace and joy serveth Christ he is accepted of God and approved of men and Zachary in his Hymn That we serve God saith he in holiness and righteousness Yet howsoever we take that phrase it 's but an improper speech for surely a Righteous man cannot properly be called a servant unto Righteousness since a servant is in bondage and obeyeth out of fear Rom. 8.15 Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear and by constraint and compulsion of the Law Gal. 4.3 When we were Children we were in bondage under the rudiments of the world But the Law was not made for a righteous man 1 Tim. 1. and he whom the Son makes free is free indeed So much we confess that his service is perfect freedom And St. Austin Liberalitèr servit qui Domini sui voluntatem libentèr facit therefore the Apostle excuseth this phrase in the beginning of this verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh Such is your weakness you conceive in the beginning of your obedience that to work the works of Righteousness is a kind of servitude and bondage it is not so yet because your obedience comes off with pain and difficulty by reason of your weakness I call it service so Oecumenius and others understand it Unto this service we ought to yield our members The Metaphor I told you was taken from the plyable submission of the Beast the Horse or the Ass unto the rider And there is a double necessity enforceth this duty both 1. Praecepti of Command for 't is Gods command grounded on the right of Creation Preservation first Covenant and second Covenant and Redemption And 2. Necessitas Medii for having as it were cast our rider and said in effect that we will not have him to reign over us and so become like the Horse and Mule without understanding and like the beasts that perish Most necessary then it is that if we would recover our former lost happiness for it is the happiness of a beast to serve saith Aristotle we again submit our selves unto our God and become again unto him as a serviceable beast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like the patient Ass that our Saviour rode upon Such a Beast David professed himself Psal 73.22 I became even as a beast with thee and the New Jerusalem shall be filled with such men and such beasts Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns without walls for the multitude of Men and Cattle This reproves the more than brutish restiveness of disobedient men who rather yield their members servants to uncleanness and iniquity than unto righteousness But this Point is a Theme too large to be fully handled at this time let us therefore use it only as the Apostle hath left it unto us by way of Exhortation unto our selves That we would yield our members servants unto righteousness Nothing hath been hitherto spoken but may serve for a reason inducing to the performance of this Duty whereunto we may add this consideration That since we must needs serve one of these two Masters Uncleanness and Iniquity or Righteousness and Holiness 1. How filthy and abominable how unjust the service of sin is it 's a service to uncleanness and to iniquity 2. It 's a fruitless service how shameful What fruit had ye in those things whereof ye are now ashamed the wise man answers There is no fruit no reward unto the evil man Prov. 24.20 3. What no reward at all the Apostle answers That the wages of sin is death let no man deceive you with vain words calling sin by names of diminution as infirmity frailty weakness tricks of youth for these things the wrath of God comes upon the children of disobedience Ephes 5.6 one such trick of youth cost all the men of Sechem their lives Gen. 34. and may cost us our souls 5. Add to this the Plagium what have we to do with anothers servants our members are not our own for know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ 1 Cor. 6.15 5. The justice and equity in giving God his own our members are his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.1 6. The dignity of his service gloriosum est sequi Deum it is to be truly free without his service all other freedom is slavery 7. The reward of his service it hath the fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Unto which many like motives might be added had we not already yielded our members servants unto righteousness yet seeing our eternal happiness or misery is concerned let us examine whether so or no. A servant is instrumentum and therefore because an instrument he is moved and directed wholly by the will of his Lord his Agent but he is animatum instrumentum a man he is and some active power he hath through God enabling to will or not to will to do or not to do somewhat that 's implyed in that he is exhorted to yield but being not sui juris but subditus alienae voluntati that power he hath of yielding is to be directed by his masters will and what he doth is with an eye to him and for his masters sake So that the obedient servant of Righteousness in all and every act he doth per se obeyes his masters will I say per se for if at any time he do otherwise it 's wholly beside his own will as a knife or axe hath a power to cut and cuts well if being guided by a discreet hand but being not guided by that hand may fall and cut what and how it should not but that is by accident and therefore the falls of the servants of righteousness are called by the names of such actions as argue contingency and such as no man of purpose would willingly do wherein
they are rather passive than active Such are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 3.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 together Gal. 6.1 labi errare to stumble to slip to err which no man in his wits doth but against his will for he wills that and only that which his master wills such is the servant of righteousness if such servants we be happy thrice happy are we Whether we be such servants or no the Apostles character will try us vers 20. When ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness St. Jerome makes the reddition which is plain out of the former part of the Chapter Ità nunc liberi estote ab omni peccato and St. Austin seconds him Ad justè faciendum liber non erit nisi à peccato liberatus esse coeperit justitiae servus So the Apostle We that are dead unto sin how can we live any longer in it vers 2. He who is dead unto sin is freed from sin vers 7. But alas this is an hard saying how can we chuse but yield our members servants unto sin while we wear the mortal garment while we bear about us a body of clay But I beseech ye consider did the Apostle who makes this exhortation suppose that we have an immortal body doth he exhort us as if we were in statu separato and had glorified bodies doth not our God know of what mould we are made doth not our Church teach us to pray twice every day though to our shame we omit it Grant that this day we fall into no sin and vouchsafe O Lord to keep us this day without sin Nay St. Paul as if he intended on purpose to prevent that frivolous objection shews what the profession of a Christian man is to bear about in his body the dying of the Lord Jesus that the life also of Jesus might be represented in his body for we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life of Jesus might be represented in our mortal bodies 2 Cor. 4. yea in this very Chapter Let not sin reign saith he in your mortal body v. 12. Oh but he speaks of peccatum regnans of reigning sin it followeth in the Text that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof then we obey it when we yield our inward or outward members servants thereunto But that we need not at all yield unto sin but may yield our members servants unto righteousness it sufficiently appears both from the nature of this and all other exhortations which suppose a power and ability given us of God to yield unto him and close with the duty exhorted unto Liberam excitat voluntatem saith the Canonist and from the wisdom righteousness and goodness of our God who neither would nor could exhort men to do that which he knows man neither hath nor may have an ability to perform and therefore this exhortation to yield our members servants unto righteousness is directed even to those who are supposed to have yielded or yet to yield their members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity But alas how can we yield our members servants unto righteousness how can we but yield them servants unto uncleanness and to iniquity How deny thine ungodliness and worldly lusts But they are So importunate how can I deny them Thou hast power enough to put off thy poor brother who would borrow of thee in his need How wouldest thou answer an importunate and unmannerly Sutor that should press to lend or give him that which is not thine own but another mans Is' t not reason is' t not a satisfactory answer that which thou desirest of me it 's none of mine own Iniquity desires thy members to lend it an hand a foot an eye hast thou not a sufficient answer for it my body is not mine own what have I to do with it further than to use it for my Masters honour Should I use my Tongue that was to bless and glorifie my God to blaspheme swear curse flatter lye c. God forbid Should I put forth my foot lent me to walk in the ways of my God to shed my Neighbours blood Should I put out my hand lent me to work the works of God to pilfer steal rob do violence unto my Neighbour Should I use mine eyes to gaze upon strange beauty to enflame my lust Should I take the members of Christ they are none of mine and make them the members of an harlot 1 Cor. 6.13 God forbid Yes yes Thus we may reason but who does so where 's the strength and power to do so More do so than thou knowest of or 't is fit thou shouldst know But 't is easie to convince any man that God hath given him strength enough I 'l name but one instance there 's the same reason of it and all Thou sittest perhaps at a well-furnish'd Table thou hast eaten and drunken sufficiently already to refresh nature Caetera vide in notes in Epist in 1 Joh. 5. But the pretence of a mortal body is so far from excusing sin committed in it that our blessed foundress reasoned thus to the contrary Surely he lightly falleth into sin that thinketh not himself mortal c. for to say the truth if men knew themselves to be mortal they should not so offend God by sin They are the words of our blessed Foundress in a Treatise of hers for such a faithful servant of righteousness was the renowned Lady The Lady Margaret Countess of Richmond and Darby that she served it with all her heart with all her soul and with all her mind and with all her strength with an holy exemplary life with her pen with her purse She was the magnificent Foundress of this Colledge which she builded upon the foundation of Gods house erected by another servant of righteousness King Henry the sixth of blessed Memory who endowed it with competent maintenance for a Master three fellows and a proportionable number of schollars which number of fellows our pious foundress encreased to twelve and the schollars to forty three adding liberal maintenance for all Dedicating her Colledge to the name of Christ who is Melchisedeck the King of righteousness To whose bounty and magnificence a third servant of God and his righteousness that hopeful prince King Edward the sixth added the thirteenth fellowship and the three schollarships These though Domini Dominantium though free from all yet after the Lords example made themselves servants unto all As St. Luke saith of David Act. 13. That he served his generation and so did these serve their own generation and ours too Whose Royal Examples many since have followed As 1. Sr. Walter Mildmay founder of the Greek Lecture who gave a yearly exhibition to two Fellows and six to as many Schollars 2. Mr. Wentworth founder of the Hebrew Lecture 3. Mr. Bunting founder of three Schollarships and gave a yearly summ toward the maintenance of fire in the Hall 4. Mr. Rawlings a fellowship