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A09063 A Christian directorie guiding men to their saluation. Deuided into three bookes. The first vvherof apperteining to resolution, is only conteined in this volume, deuided into tvvo partes, and set forth novv againe vvith many corrections, and additions by th'authour him self, vvith reprofe of the corrupt and falsified edition of the same booke lately published by M. Edm. Buny. Ther is added also a methode for the vse of al; with two tables, and a preface to the reader, which is necessarie to be reade.; First booke of the Christian exercise. Parsons, Robert, 1546-1610. 1585 (1585) STC 19354.1; ESTC S114169 529,786 953

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and two thousand after that vnder the Messias Which last two thousand yeares by all computation could not beginne much from the birth of Iesus And the Rabbines a great while gone complained in their Talmud that ther seemed to them in thos dayes seuen hundred fourtiene yeares past since Christ by the scriptures should haue appeared and therefore they doe maruaile whie God so longe deferreth the same Another obseruation they haue vpon the wordes of Esay paruulus natus est nobis a lytle childe is borne vnto vs. In which wordes for that they finde th' Ebrue letter MEM to be shutt in the middest of a worde which is strange in that tongue for that MEM is wont to be open in the middest of wordes and shutt onlie in the ende they gather manie secretes And amonge other that seinge MEM signifieth six hundred years so longe it should be after Esay vntill the tyme of Christe Which accompt of theirs falleth out so iust that if you recone the yeares from Achaz kinge of Iuda in whose tyme Esay spake thes wordes vntil the tyme of king Herode vnder whome Christ was borne you shall perceyue the number to faile in litle or nothing A muche like obseruation hath Rabbi Moses the sonne of Maimon whom the Iewes doe holde in extreme greate reuerence calling hym the doctor of iustice in his epistle to his countrimen of Africa concerning the tyme of Christs appearance Which he thinketh to be past accordinge to the scriptures aboue a thousand yeares in his dayes he lyued about the yeare of Christ. 1140 but that God deferreth his manifestation for their sinnes To which purpose also apperteineth the tradition of one Elias as Rabbi Iosue reporteth it ī the Thalmud that the Messias was to be borne in deede according to the scriptures before the destruction of the second temple for that Esay sayeth of the Synagoge before she vvas vvith child she brought foorth and before the greefe of trauaile came she vvas deliuered of a man child That is saith he before the Synagogue was afflicted and putt to desolation by the Romans she brought forthe the Messias But yet sayeth he this Messias for our sinues doth hyde hym self for a tyme in the sea and other deserte places vntill we be worthie of his comming To the like effect is th' obseruation of the Talmud it self and of diuers Rabbines therin concerning the wicked manners of men that should bee at Christs appearance vpon earth of whom they doe pronounce thes wordes The vvise men in Israel shal be extinguished the learning of our Scribes and Pharisies shal be putrisied the scholles of Diuinitie shal be stevves at that tyme. Which thig Iosephus that liued in the same age with Christ affirmeth to be fulfilled in the time of Herod in so much that if the Romans had not destroyed them without doubt sayeth he either the earth would haue opened and swallowed thē doune or els fire from heauē would haue consumed thē All then runneth to this ende both by scripture tradition obseruation and instincte of God hym self that about Herodes tyme the true Messias should be borne And hereof came that common and publique fame that is recorded by Tacitus Suetonius and Iosephus which was also writen in open sight vpon the chiefest Tower of the Cittie of Ierusalē that out of Iurie should rise a general Lord of th' vniuersal vvorld Which prophetie as the Romans either contemned or turned an other waye applying the same afterwarde to Vespasian so the Iewes vnderstood it of their Messias and Herode feared the matter greatelie and for that was so watchefull to exstinguishe the line of Dauide as hath bene shewed Hereof also it did proceede that the Magi or wise men of the Easte attended so diligentelie about that tyme to expect the Starre that Balaam had promissed at the comming of this kinge Herehence also it was that the whole people of Iurie remained so attent at this tyme more then euer before or sence in expecting the Messias Where vpon as soone as euer they heard of Ihon Baptist in the desert they ranne vnto hym askinge if he were Christ As afterward also they flocked to Iesus demaūding art thou he vvhich is to come or doe vve expect an other Which wordes importe the great expectation wherin that people remained in thos dayes Nether wanted that expectation in the chief gouernours thē selues as may appeare by that speech of theirs to Iesus hovv lōge vvilt thovv kill vs with this expectation if thou he Christ tell vs plainlie Of which fame expectation and greedie desire of the people diuers deceyuers 〈◊〉 occasion to call them selues the Messias in those dayes and the people followed them presentelie which thing had not happened in any age before And among other there is named one Iudas Gaulonites or Galilaeus as S. Luke calleth him and an other Iudas the sonne of Ezeehias both of them verie wicked and licētious felowes One also called Atōges a Shepheard and two other named Theudas and Egyptius most notable deceyuers And aboue all there was one Barcozbam who as the Talmud saith for thirtie years together was receyued for the Messias by the Rabbines them selues vntil at last they slewe hym for that he was not able to deliuer them from the Romans Which facilitie in the people when Herode sawe he caused Nicolaus Damascenꝰ as I noted before to deuise a petigree for hym from the auncient kinges of Iuda And so he as well as other tooke vpō hym to be the Messias whom-diuers carnal Iowes that expected the Messias to be a magnificent king as Herod was would seeme to beleeue diuulgate abrode and therof in the Gospell they are thought to haue bene called Herodiani that is Herodians or followers of Herod who came to tempt Christ with the scribes and pharisees Wherfore to conclude at length this weightie pointe of the tyme of Christs appearing seing that about the birth of Iesus vnder Herodes reigne there cōcurred so many signes argumētes together as the general peace of the Roman Empire the defection of the line and regimēt of Iuda the open decaye of the second temple the iust calculation of Daniels hebdomades the attestation of Oracles th' obseruation of Rabbines the publique fame and expectation of all the Iewes together with the palpable experience of more then fiftien hundreth yeares past since Iesus appeared wherin we see the Iuishe people in vaine to expect an other Messias they being dispersed ouer all the world without temple law sacrifice Prophet or promisse for their redemptiō which neuer happened to them vntill after Iesus death for that in all other their banishementes captiuities and afflictions they had some prophetie consolatiō or promisse for their deliueric Thes thinges all I say considered and putt together we may moste vndoubtedlie and assuredlie conclu le that Iesus was borne
who was chaffe Many lost their soules saith he in this combat many got them eternal crounes The edict was executed with al rigour and fury throughout al Prouinces at once and diuers were the issues of such as came into trial But the infinit glorie of such as conquered surpassed far the infamie of such as fel. And the ennemy in the end being vtterly confounded would gladly haue seemed to haue brought that to passe which he neither did nor could For whē by force he had drawen Christians vnto the tēples of the Idols he would haue had it seeme that they came voluntarily whē men would not sacrifice he was desirous at least-wise that they should permit him to say publish that they had sacrificed others being beaten doune with clubbes vpon their knees were reported to haue kneeled of their owne wils for adoring the Godes wherof some cried opēly notwithstanding that they neither had nor euer would doe so for any torment that could be laid vpon thē But the more resolute sorte they were dealt with in al most cruel and barbarous maner without measure reason or order Wherof you may reade both many and strange examples in the eight and ninth bookes of Eusebius who wrote the things as he saw them passe and when our Sauiour permitted al thes extremities to fal vpon his Church then was the time neerest that he had determined to beautifie her in earth with greatest peace rest riches and glorie euen as he did immediatly after by conuerting Constantine to be so zelous a Christian. AND HERE NOVV doth end the storie of Eusebius which conteinēth the conflictes of the first three hundred yeares after Christes departure But the ecclesiastical writers that doe ensue after him ech man in his age doe declare that after the times of Constantine the Catholique Church inioyed not longe her temporal peace but had her exercise from time to time albeit in an other sorte then before that is to saie not by Pagans but by such as some times had bene her owne childrē a far more lothesome odious cruel and dangerous afflictiō then the former For as soone as Constantine was deade and had left the Romane Empire diuided vnto his sonnes one of them which gouerned al the east being corrupted by his wife became an Arrian By whom and other Princes infected afterward with the same heresies the Church of God susteined incredible distresses for many yeares together And then againe after al the children of Costantine were dead one Iulian that had bene brought vp in Christian religiō came to haue the whole Empire to him self and falling from Christ became an Apostata of whom Ruffinus that liued at the same time writeth thus He was a more conning persecutour then the 〈◊〉 and consequently cruel proceeding not so much by force and tormentes a by rewardes honours flatteries 〈◊〉 and deceit By which meanes he ouerthrew more soules thē if he had proceeded altogether by violence The worthie father S. Gregorie Nazianzenus writeth two large 〈◊〉 this mans doings and sheweth that in his youth both he S. Basile were acquainted with Iulian in the grammer schole At what time he saith they wel fore saw great signes of wickednes in him notwithstánding at that time he seemed verie deuout and for deuotions sake though he were a great Prince he would needes take vpon him the office of lectorship in the Catholique Church and besides that saith S. Gregorie began to build Churches also to christian Martyrs But when he came to be Emperour he washed of his baptisme with bloud and profaned his hands of purpose saith S. Gregorie wher with before he had touched the most pure vnbloudy sacrifice of the aulter by vvhich vve are made partakers of the passion and diuinitie of our Saueour After this he made an edict for the spoiling and profaning saith this Sainct of al Church-stuffe mony sacred ornaments and holy vestements that were to be had for defiling of aulters for deshonoring preestes deacons and Virgins but principally for breaking downe of Martyrs sepulchres and for the distroying their Churches In respect wherof this holy father writeth vnto him thus Thou persecutour after Herod thou traitour after Iudas thou murderer of Christ after Pilat thou ennemy of God after the Iewes dost thou not reuerence those holie sacricrifices slaine for Christ Doest thou not feare those noble champions Iohn Peter Paul and others that past thorough fier sword beastes tyrantes and what other cruelties so euer might be denounced against them with a mery hart Doest thou not feare thē to whom now are assigned so great honours and to whom festiual daies are ordeined vpon earth by whom deuils ar driuen away and disseafes are cured and whose onely bodies ar able to doe the same miracles now which their holy soules did when they were vpon earth Their bodies I say when they are handled by vs honoured yea the only apparitions and predictions the onely dropes of bloud of thes bodies doe as great miracles as the bodies them selues Thes bodies therfore doest thou not worship c Thus far S. Gregorie Naziāzene But now after the death of wicked Iulian albeit some times good Emperors were sent by God yet indured they not long but the Arriā heretiques came in gouernmēt againe so did beare the swaie for diuers ages after afflicting persecuting most extremely the Catholiks as may appeare by al the ecclesiastical writers that are extāt of that time And for a better coniecture what was done and suffered in the whole world abrod I would wish thee gentle reader but to vew that which remaineth writé of one parte only and that for the space of few years I meane of the persecution of the Arrian Vandals in Africa which began not long before S. Augustins death and indured diuers years after and is recorded in three seueral bookes by the holy man Victor bishope of Vtica that was one of the sufferers The storie is strange and most worthie the reading for that it hath very many things which set foorth the perfect forme of times that haue insued since and yet doe indure Possidius that liued with S. Augustin after writ the storie of his life reporteth in the same that when the holy man saw but the beginninges of this persecution he was wonderfully afflicted with compassion in his minde For saieth he he saw now alredy Catholique Churches destitute of their priestes sacred Virgins and others that liued continent to be dissipated and cast out the Hymnes and praises of God to haue ceased in most Churches the buildings of Churches burned the solemne seruice due vnto almightie God to be no more vsed in their proper places the diuine sacrifices and sacramentes either not to be sought for any longer or els that ther were not easily found priestes to minister the same vnto such as sought them Hitherto are the wordes of
not of stone this will moue his affection We reade of Galen a profane and verie irreligious Phisitian who as hymself confesseth in a certaine place taking vpō hym to consider of the partes of mans bodie and fynding much wisdom in the order vse and dispositiō of the same sought first to gyue the praise and glorie therof to nature or to some other cause then to God But I processe of tyme being oppressed as it were with th' ey ceding greate wisdome cunning and prouidēce which he discouered in euerie least parcell and particle of mans bodie wherin nothing was redundāt nothing defectiue nothing possible to be added altered or better deuised he brake foorth into thes wordes Compono hic profecto cāticum in Creatoris nostri laudem quòd vltràres suas ornare voluit melius quia vlla arte possent Here trulie doe I make a song in the praise of our Creator for that of his owne accorde it hath pleased hym to adorne and bewtifie his thinges better then by any arte possible it could be immagined Hereby then doth the Metaphisique gather and conclude most euidentlie that there is a God a Creator a most wise and powerfull artificer that made all thinges Such a one as exceedeth all boundes of nature and of humane habilitie For if all the world should ioyne together they could not make the least creature which we see in this world He concludeth also that the forsight and prouidence of this Creator is infinite for thinges to come in all eternitie finallie that his wisdome and cogitatiōs are inscrutable And albeit some tyme he reueile vnto vs some parte therof yet often againe we erre therin For which cause a wise heathē Platonick concludeth thus after long search aboute thes affaires I will praise God saith he in those thinges I vnderstand and I will admire hym in those which I vnderstande not For I see that my self oftentymes doe thinges wher in my seruantes are blinde and cōceaue no reason As also I haue sene litle children cast into the syar Iewels of greate price and their fathers writinges of greate learning and wisdome for that they were not of capacitie to vnderstāde the valure and worthines of the thing One argument more will I alleage of the Methaphisique grounded vpon th' immortalitie of mans soule which immortalitie is proued with one consent of all learned men as Plato alleageth for that it is a spirite and immaterial substance whose nature dependeth not of the state of our mortal bodie for so by experience we see daylie that in olde mē and withered sicklie bodies the minde and soule is more quicke cleere pregnant and liuelie then it was in youth when the bodie was most lustie The same also is proued by the vnquēcheable desyre which our mynde hath of learning knowledge wisdome other suche spiritual and immaterial thinges wheri her thirst by nature is so greate as it can not be satisfyed in this lýfe nether can the obiectes of sense and bodilie pleasures or any other commoditie or delight of this material world content or satiate the restles desyre of this im naterial crea ture Which is an euident argument to the Philosopher that some other obiect and contentatiō is prepared for her in an other world and that of such excellencie and supereminent perfectiō as it shall haue in it all wisdome all learnig all knowledg all bewtie ' and all other causes of loue ioye and contentation wherin our soule may rest for euer This being so saith the Philosopher that the soule and mynde of mā is immortall of necessitie it mast insue that an immortall Creator sent the same into our bodies and that to hym againe it must returne after her departure from this life here This was the true meaning in deede how soeuer some later interpreters haue misvnderstood the same of that aunciēt doctrine of old philosophers which Plutarche alleagethe out of Pythagoras and Plato afirming that all particuler soules of men came sent from one general and common soule of the whole world as sparcles from the fyar and beames from the common sunne and that after their separatiō from their bodies they shall returne againe to that general soule called Anima mundi the soule of the world for that it gyueth lyfe being to the world and so to remaine with that general soule eternallie This was the doctrine of olde philosophers which seemeth in deede to haue bene nothing els though deliueredi other wordes but that which Salomō hym self affirmeth in plainer spech spiritus redibit ad Deum qui dedit illum and our soule or spirit shall returne to God that gaue it vnto vs. And this may suffice for a taste of that which the Metaphysique or Supernatural philosopher can say for proof that there is a God THERE REMAINETH yet a third parte of humane wisdome or philosophie called Moral whose reasons and arguments for proofe of this veritie I haue of purpose referred to the last place for that they be more plaine and easie thē the former and more sensible to the capacitie of euerie simple and vnlearned reader For first of all he obserueth in the verie naturall inclination of man be his manners otherwise neuer so euel that there is a certaine propension and disposition to confesse some God or Deitie as by example he proueth in all nations were they neuer so fearce or barbarous yet alwayes cōfessed they some God by nature though no man did teach or instruct them therin The same is confirmed by the common vse of all heathens in lifting vp their eyes and handes to heauen in anie suddaine distresse that commeth vpon thē Which importeth that nature her self hath ingrated this feeling that there is a God Yea further he alleageth that by experience of all ages it hath bene proued that Atheistes them selues that is suche men as in their health and prosperitie for more libertie of sinful life would striue against the being of anie God when they came to die or fall into great miserie they of all other men would shew them selues most fearful of this God as Seneca declareth and as Suetonius sheweth in th' exāple of Calligula Whiche is a token that their conscience inforced them to beleeue a Godhead Nay Zeno the Philosopher was wont to saye that it seemed to hym a more substantial proofe of this veritie to heare an Atheist at his dying daye preache God frō a payre of galloes or other such place of miserie when he asketh God and nature forgyuenes thē to heare all the philosophers in the world dispute the poite for that at this instāte of death miserie it is lyke that suche good fellowes doe speake in earnest and sobrietie of spirite who before in their wantonesse impugned God ether of vanitie ambition sensualitie or dissimulation Now then when the Moral Philosopher hath proued by this natural inclination of
man that there is a God whiche hath imprynted in vs such a feelīg of hym self as no conscience can deny hym whē it cometh to speake sincerelie thē steppeth he a degree further and proueth that this god which is acknouledged cā be but one for that if he be God he must be infinite and if he be infinite he can haue no compagnion For that two infinite thinges can not stande together without impeachement th' one of th' others infinitie He proueth the same by the custome of most gentiles who as Lactātius well noteth in his tyme whē they swore or cursed or prayed or wished anie thing hartilie especiallie in affliction that lyghteneth th' vnderstanding then fashion was to say God and not the Godes And for the learnederforte of them how so euer they dissembled and applyed them selues outwardlie to the error of the common people yet in earnest they neuer spake of more thē of one God as Plato signifieth of hym self to Dionysius king of Sicilie in a certaine letter wherin he gaue hym a signe when he spake in earnest and when in iest Hinc disces tu scribamego serio nec ne Cum serio ordior epistolam ab vno Deo cū secus a pluribus By this signe shall ye know whether I wryte in earnest or not For when I write in earnest I beginne my letter with one God and whē I write not in earnest I doe begine my letter ī the name of manie gods Iuliā th' apostata in his three most scornful bookes that he wrot against vs Christians whome contemptuouslie he called Galilaeans endeuoring by all meanes to aduaunce and set foorth the honour of paganisme alleageth this Plato for a cheef pillar and father therof and dareth preferre hym before our Moyses And yet you see what he testifiethe of hymself And that this was his perpetual opinion three of his worthiest schollers I meane three of the most learned that euer professed the Platonique secte Plotinus Porphyrius Proclus al heathens themselues doe testifie and proue in diuers partes of their workes assuring that both they and their master Plato neuer beleeued in deed but onlie one God And as for Socrates that was Platos master and pronounced by th' oracle of Apollo to be the wisestman of all Grece the world knoweth that he was putt to death for iesting at the multitude of godes among the Gentiles Aristotle that ensued after Plato begāne the secte of Peripatetickes and was a man so much gyuen to the search of Nature as in manie thinges he forgate th' authour of nature or at least wise he treated lytle and verie doubtefullie therof yet in his old age when he came to write the booke of the world to king Alexander which book S. Iustine the martire esteemed greatelie and called it th' epitome of all Aristotles true philosophie he resolueth the matter more clearlie saying thus of God he is the father of godes and men he is the maker and conseruer of all thinges that be in the vvorld And he addeth further in the selfe same place that the multitude of manie Godes was inuēted to expresse the power of this one God by the multitude of his ministers so that he maketh all Godes to be seruauntes besides onlie one Which sentēce of their master Theophrastus and Aphrodiseus two prīcipal Peripatetiques doe confirme at large Zeno the chief and father of all the Stoikes was wonte to say as Aristotle reporteth that ether one God or no God Which opiniō is auerred euerie wher by Plutarch Seneca two most excellent writers greate admirers of the Stoicke seueritie And before them by Epictetus a man of singuler accompte in that secte whose wordes were esteemed oracles Dicenaum ante omnia vnum esse Deum omnia regere omnibu● prouidere Before all thinges saith he we must affirme that there is one God and that this God gouerneth all and hath prouidence ouer all As for th' Academikes who made the fowerth diuisiō or secte of Philosophers it is sufficient which I haue mentioned before that Socrates their fownder was causedto dye for his opiniō in this matter albeit it seeme that such as insued in that sect whose profession was to dispute and doubt of euerie thing came at length by their much iangling and disputing to beleeue hold nothīg Wherof Cicero hym self may be an example who in his bookes de Natura deorū followeth so farre th' academical veyne of doubtful disputing to fro about the nature of Godes as he maye seeme and so dyd he to diuers Christians of the primatiue church to be verie irresolute whether there were any God or no. Albeit in th' ende he make shew to conclude very plainlie peremptorilie with the Stoikes All the fower sectes of Philosophers then who in their tymes bare the credit of learning and wisdome made profession of one God when they came to speake as they thought But if we ascēde vp hygher to the dayes before these sectes beganne that is to Pythagoras Archytas Tarētinꝰ before them agayne to Mercurius Trisinegistus that was the first parent of philosophie to th' Egyptians we shall fynde them so resolute and plaine in this pointe as no Christiā can be more Wherof he that desyreth to see innumerable examples as well of thes mens sainges as of other learned heathens of all ages lett hym reade but S. Cyrils first booke against Iulian th' apostata or Lactant us first and seconde bookes agaynst the Gentiles and he shall remaine satisfied This then is the Moral Philosophers first argument th' inclination of all people to beleeue a Godhead the instincte of nature to confesse it the force of mans cōscience to feare it the custome of all natiōs to adore it And finallie the consent and ful agreemēt of all learned and wise men in applying this Godhead not to manie but to one onlie that made this world gouerneth the same Non hominibus non daemonibus non diu ipsis quos non Naturae ratione sed honoris causa Deos nominamus We doe not attribute th' appellation of true God sayeth Trismegistus ether vnto men or vnto diuells or vnto the multitude of other godes themselues For that we call the godes not in respect of their natures but for honours sake That is we call thē godes to honour thē for their famous acts not for that we thinke them in nature true godes Which Cicero confirmeth in thes wordes the life of man and common custome hath novv receaued to lifte vp to heauen by fame and good vvill such men as for their benefites are accompted excellent And herehence it cometh that Hercules Castor Pollux Aesculapius and Liber are novv become godes heauen almost is filled vvith mankynde The second argument of Moral Philosophie is devltimo fine summo hominis bono that is concerning the last ende
slocke nor shall they bee anie longer lest to the spoile c. I vvil raise ouer them ONE PASTOR vvhich shall seede them my seruāt DAVID he shal seede them and he shal be their Shepheard Prince and I vvill be their God and vvil make vvith them a conenant of peace c. In which wordes not onlie we that are Christians but the later Iewes also them selues doe confesse in their Thalmud that Messias is called by the name of Dauid for that he shall descende of the seede of Dauide as by reason also it must needes be so for that king Dauid being dead fower hundred yeares before thes wordes were spoken as hath bene noted could not now come againe to feede gods people or gouerne them hym self Esay the prophet who Iyued about a hundred yeares before Ieremie and Ezechiel had maruelous for knowledge of the Meisias and his affaires and describeth hym verie particulerlie beginning i this maner In the later dayes the HILL of gods house shall be prepared vpon the toppe of mountaines and all Nations or Gentiles shal flovve vnto hym And manie people shal say come and lett vs ascende to the HILL of our Lord he shal teach vs his vvayes and vve shall vvalke in his pathes it shall iudge Nations c. Which verie wordes are also repeated in Micheas the prophet and are applied there as also here vnto the Messias and can haue no other meaning by the iudgement of the Iewes and Hebrues themselues And Esay doth prosecute the same matter afterwardes in diuers chapters As for exāple in the sowerth talking of the same Messias which before he calleth the HILL of Gods hovvse he addeth thes wordes In that daye shall the issue of our Lorde be in 〈◊〉 and glorie and the fruite of the earth in 〈◊〉 and exultation to all such as shal be saued of Israel In which wordes he calleth the Messias both the issue of God and the fruite of the earth for that he should be both God and man And in the nynthe chapter he calleth hym by thes termes Admirable Councelour God Stronge Father of the future vvorld and Prince of Peace In the eleuenth chapter he describeth hym most wonderfullie in thes wordes there shall goe soorth a bransh of the stock of Iesse whiche Iesse was Dauids father and out of the roote of that branche there shall mounte up a flovver and the spirite of our lord shall rest upon hym the spirite of vvisdome and of vnderstanding the spirit of councel and sortitude the spirite of knovvledge and pietie he shall not iudge according to the sight of fleshely eyes nor yet condemne according to the hearing of fleshely eares but he shall iudge poore men in iustice and shall dispute in equitie for the mylde men of the earth He shal strike th' earth vvith the rodde of his mouth and vvith the spirite of his lippes shall he flea the vvicked man Iustice shall be the girdle of his loynes faith shall be the bande of his reines c. Hytherto are the wordes of the Prophet wherin nothing trulie can be more plaine and euident then that by the rodde or branche of Iesse is meant the Virgine Marie who directelie descended of the linage of Iesse and by the flovver ascending from this branche must needes be vnderstoode Christ that was borne of her had all those excellences priuileges aboue other mē which Esay in this place assigneth vnto hym Whose further graces yet and speciall diuine properties the same Prophet expresseth more particulerlie in the chapters following wher he sayeth he shall for euer ouerthrovve and destroye death he shal open the eyes of the blinde and th' eares of the deafe he shal not crie nor cōtēde nor shal he accept the person of any man but in truth shal he bring foorth iudgement He shal not be sorrovvful nor turbulēt c. And finallie in the fortie and ninthe chapter he alleageth the wordes of God the father vnto Christ touching his commission in this sorte it is too litle that thou be to me a seruant to raise vp the tribes of Iacob and to conuert vnto me the dregges of Israel Behold I haue appointed thee also for a light vnto the Gentiles that thou he my saluation vnto the vttermost partes of all th' earth And to conclude this matter without alleaging more propheties for the same which in truth are infinite throughout the Bible Daniel that liued in th' ende of the captiuitie of Babylon a litle before Aggaeus Zacharias and Malachias who were the last Prophetes that euer florished amongest the Iewes almost fiue hūdred years before the natiuity of Christ this Daniel I say reporteth of hym self that being in Babylon and hauing fasted worne heare-cloth and prayed longe vnto God there came the Angel Gabriel vnto hym at the tyme of Euening sacrifice and fortolde hym not onlie of the deliuerance of the people of Israel from the captiuitie of Babylon out of hande for that the seuentie yeares of their punishement fortolde by Ieremie were now expired but also he tolde hym further that the tyme of th' vniuersal deliuerance of mankinde from the bondage and captiuitie of sinne was now shortened that after seuentie hebdomades which as shal be shewed after make vp iust the tyme that passed from the rebuilding of the temple of Ierusalem after their deliuerance from Babylon vnto the birth of Christ there should be borne the Saueour of the world and be putt to death for redemption of mankinde The Angels wordes are thes I am come to shevv vnto thee ô Daniel for that thou art a man of goode desires And therfore doe thou marke my speeche vnderstande this vision The seuētie hebdomades are shortened upon thie people and upon thie holie Cittie to th' ende preuarication may be consumed and sinne receyue an ende to th' ende iniquitie maye be blotted out and eternal iustice brought in her place to th' ende visiōs propheties maye be fulfilled and the SAINCTE OF SAINCTES annointed Knovv thou therfore and marke that from the ende of the speeche for rebuilding of Ierusalem vnto Christ the CAPTAINI there shall chebdomades seuen and hebdomades sixtie tvvo and after sixtie tvvo hebdomades Christ shal be putt to death and the people vvhich shall denie hym shall not be his people I might passe on futher to other Prophetes and propheties and make no ende if I would alleage what might be said in this behalfe for that the whole scripture runneth all to this one pointe to fortell and manifest Christ by signes figures parables and propheties and for this cause was it principallie writē But that which is alredie spoken shall be sufficient for our first consideration wherby is seene that among the Iewes from age to age Christ was prophetied and fortolde together with th' eternite of his kingedome that should be spiritual NOVV FOLLOVVETH there a
will conclude this whole matter with th' expresse wordes of God hym self concerning the ceremonies and preceptes of the olde law Dedreis praecepta non bona iudicia in quibus non viuent I gaue vnto them preceptes that were not good and iudgementes wherin they shall not lyue That is they were not good to continue perpetuallie nor shall they lyue in them for euer but vntill the tyme by me appointed of which tyme he determineth more particulerlie by Ieremie the prophet in thes wordes Beholde the dayes shall come and I vvil make a nevv Couenant or Testament vvith the house of Israel and Iuda not according to that Couenant vvhich I made vvith your fathers vvhēn brought them foorth of the land of Egypt Where you see that at the comming of Christ into this world for of hym and his birth he talketh at large in all this chapter there shal be a new Testament conteining a different law from that of th' old testament which was giuen to the Iewes at their going foorth of Egypt Thus much then hytherto hath bene shewed that Christ in all ages was fortolde promissed that he should be God and that his authoritie should be to chāge the law of Moyses that was gyuen but for a tyme and to establishe a new law and Couenant a new Testament of his owne that should endure and continue for euer AND ALBEIT thes thinges be very wounderfull and sufficient to establishe any mans beliefe in the world whē he shall see them fulfilled which shal be th' argument of my second Section yet resteth not the scripture here but passeth further and fortelleth euerie particuler acte accident and circumstance that shall fall oute of importance aboute the Messias in his comming incarnation birthe life death and resurrection As for example at what particuler tyme and season he should appeare Gen. 49. v 10. Dan. 9. v. 26. That he should be borne of a virgine Esay 7. v. 14. That the place of his birth should be the Toune of Bethleē Mic. 5. v. 1. That at his birth all the infantes rounde about Bethleem should be slaine for his sake Ierem. 31. v. 15. That the kinges of the easte should come and adore hym and offer gold and other giftes vnto hym Psal. 71. v. 10. That he should be presented by his mother in the Temple of Hierusalem Malach 3. v. 1. That he should flee into Egypt and be recalled thence againe Osee 11. v. 2. Esa. 19. v. 1. That Iohn Baptiste should goe before hym and crie in the desert Esa. 40. v. 3. Malach. 3. v. 1. After this that he should beginne his owne preaching with all humilitie quietnes and clemencie of spirit Esa. 42. v. 2. That he should doe straunge miracles and heale all diseases Esa. 29. v. 8. 35. v. 5. 61. v. 1. That he should die for the sinnes of all the world Esa. 53. Dan. 26. That he should be betrayed by his owne disciple Psal. 40. v. 10. 54. v. 14. 108. v. 8. That he should be solde for thirty peeces of siluer Zach. 11. v. 12. That with those thirtie peeces there should be bought afterward a field of Potshards Jerem. 30. That he should ride into Hierusalem vpon an asse before his passion Zacha. 9. v. 9. That the Iewes should beate and buffet his face and defile the same with spitting vpon hym Esa. 50. v. 6. That they should whippe and teare and rent his bodie before they putt hym to death Esa. 53. v. 2. Psal. 37. v. 18. That they should putt hym to death among thieues and male factours Esa. 53. v. 12. That they should gyue hym vineager to drinke deuide his apparel and cast lottes for his vpper garment Psal. 68. v. 22. 21. v. 19. That he should rise againe frō death the third daye Psal. 15. v. 19. Osee. 6. v. 3. That he should ascende to heauen and sitt at the right hande of God his father for euer Psal. 67. v. 19. 109. v. 1. All thes particularites and a number more were reueiled in scripture touching the Messias some fower thousand years some two thousand some a thousand and the last of all aboue fower hūdred yeares before Christ was borne Which if we laye together and doe consider withal how exactelie they were fulfilled afterward in the person of Iesus as in the next section shal be declared if we adde also to this that we haue receyued thes prophesies and predictions from a Nation that most of all other doth hate vs and that the same are to be seene and reade in their Bibles euen worde for word as they are in ours if you holde in memorie also what inuincible proofes were alleaged before in the second chapter for th' infallible truth certaintie of those Hebrue scriptures you shall fynde that hardlie anye thing can be imagined for manifestation of a truth before it come to passe which God hath not obserued in forshewing the Messias AND ALL THES cōsiderations are touchinge the Iewes There remaineth some what to be said of the Gētiles Who albeit they were to receyue their principal knowledge in this affaire from the Iuishe Nation to whom the Messias was first and principallie promissed and from whom the Gentiles had to expecte both their Saue our and his Apostles as also the scriptures for testimonie and witnesse of them both and finally all their certaine knowledge and sounde vnderstanding in the mysteries of Christ Yet had they also among them selues some kynde of notice and forwarning in this matter whiche being ioyned with that whiche I haue set downe before of the Iewes and examined at the light of Gods diuine propheties before alleaged it will make verie muche for confirmation of our Christian veritie And therfore this last consideration shal be of the fore-knowledge of Gentiles in this behalf For better vnderstanding wherof it is to be noted that besides all knowledge of the Messias that diuers Gentiles might haue by the Hebrue scriptures whiche as I haue shewed before were in the Greeke language diuers ages before Christ was borne or by th' instruction conuersation of Iewes with whom manie Pagans did liue familiarlie there remained three wayes peculier to Gentiles wherby they receyued some vnderstanding forwarning of this great mysterie The first was by tradition and writinges of their auncestours The second by propheties of their owne The third by admonishement of their Idoles Oracles especiallie when the tyme of Christes appearance drew neare And for the first way it is euident that as the Iewes receyued diuers thinges by succession from their forfathers they againe from Moyses Moyses from the Patriarches Iacob Isaac and Abraham who was the first man from whom that whole natiō proceeded and in whō they were distinguished from all other people in the world so had the Gētiles other Natiōs their succession also of
finallie we may consider that Constantine was the first publique Christian Emperour and liued within 300. years after Christ whē the recordes of the Romās were yet whole to be seene He was a religious wise and graue Emperour and therfore would neuer haue bestowed so muche labour to confirme suche a thing at such a tyme to such an audiēce had not the matter bene of singuler importance And thus much of the second pointe touchinge prophetes among Gentiles There remaineth onlie a worde or two to be spokē of the thirde which is of the confession of deuils and Oracles concerning Christs comminge especiallie whē the tyme of his appearance drew neare and that they begā to forefeele his power and vertue Wherin as I might alleage diuers examples recorded by the Gentiles them selues so for that I haue bene somewhat longe in the former pointes and shall haue occasion to saye more of this matter in an other place hereafter I will touche onlie here two oracles of Apollo concerninge this matter Th' one wherof was to a priest of his owne that demaunded hym of true religion and of God to whom he answered thus in greeke ô thou unhappie priest vvhy doest thou aske me of God that is the father of all thinges and of this most renoumed kynges deare and onlie sonne and of the spirit that conteineth all c. Alas that spirit vvill inforce me shortelie to leaue this habitation and place of oracles Th' other oracle was to Augustus Gaesar euen about the verie tyme that Christ was redy to appeare in flesh For where as the said Emperour now drawinge into age would needes goe to Delphos and there learne of Apollo who should reigne after hym what should become of thinges whē he was dead Apollo would not answere for a greate space notwithstanding Augustus had bene verie liberal in making the greate sacrifice called Hecatombe But in th' ende when th' Emperour began to iterate his sacrifice againe and to be instant for an answer Apollo as it were inforced vttered thes straunge wordes vnto hym An Hebrue childe that ruleth ouer the blessed Gods commaundeth me to leaue this habitation and oute of hand to gett me to hel But yet doe you'departe in silence from our Aulters Thus much was Apollo inforced to vtter of his owne miserie and of the cōming of th' Ebrue boye that should putt hym to banishment But yet the deceptful spirit to holde still his credire would not haue the matter reueiled to many Wherupon Augustus falling into a greate musinge with hym self what this answer might importe returned to Rome and builded there an Aulter in the Capitole with this latine inscription as Nicephorus affirmeth Ara primogeniti Dei Th' Aulter of Godes first begotten sonne Thus then haue I declared how that the cōming of Gods sōne into the world was for tolde both to Iewe and Gentile by all meanes that possiblie in reason might be deuised that is by propheties signes figures ceremonies tradition and by the confession of deuils them selues Nor onlie that his comming was fortold but also why and for what cause he was to come that is to be a Saueour of the world to die for sinne to ordeine a new law and more perfect common wealth How also he was to come to witt in mans fleshe in likenes of sinne in pouertie humilitie The tyme likewise of his appearance was foresignified together with the maner of his birth life actions death resurrection and ascensiō And finallie nothing can be more desired for the fore knowledge of anie one thing to come then was deliuered vttered cōcernīg the Messias before Christ or Christians were talked of in the world Now thē remaineth it to consider examine whether thes particularities fortolde so lōg agoe of the Messias to come doe agree in Iesus whom we acknowledge for the true Messias And this shall be the subiect argument of all the rest of our speeche in this chapter Hovv the former predictions vvere fulfilled in Iesus at his being vpon earth Sect. 2. ALbeit in the pointes before recited which are to be fulfilled in the Messias at his comming we haue some controuersie and disagreemēt with the Iewe as hath bene shewed yet our principal contention in them all is with the Gentile and heathen that beleeueth no scriptures For that in diuers of the fornamed articles the Iewe standeth with vs and for vs offereth his life in defence therof as farre foorth as if he were a Christiā In so much that the Gētile oftē times is inforced to maruaile when he seeth a people so extremelie bent against an other as the Iewes are against Christiās and yet to stand so peremptorilie in defence of thos verie principles which are the proper causes of their disagreement But hereunto the Iew maketh answer that his disagreement from vs is in th' application of thos principles For that in no wise he will allowe that they were or may bee verified in Iesus And herein he standeth against vs much more obstinatelie then doth the Gentile For that the Gentile as soone as he commeth once to vnderstande and beleeue the propheties of scripture he maketh no doubt or difficultie in th' application thereof for that he seeth the same most euidentelie fulfilled in our Saueour Which is the cause that fewe or no Gentiles since Christs appearance haue come to be Iewes but that presentelie also they passed ouer to be Christians But the Iewe by no meanes wil be moued to yeeld albeit he haue neither scripture nor reason nor probabilitie for his defence Which among other thinges is a verie great argument to proue that Iesus was the true Messias in deed seing that among the markes of the true Messias set downe by Gods Prophetes this was one that he should be refused by the Iuishe Nation Herehence are those wordes of the Holie Ghost so longe before vttered The stone vvhich the builders refused is made the head stone of the corner this is donne by God and is maruailous in our eyes Hence is that great complainte of Esay touching th' incredulitie obstinacie of this people against their Messias at his comming which Moyses also longe before Esay expressed most effectuallie It maketh then not a litle for our cause gentle reader that the Iuishe Nation is so wilfullie bent against vs and that they refused Christ so peremptorilie at his being among them For whom so euer that Nation should receyue and acknowledge it were a great argument by scripture that he were not in deede the true Messias But yet to demonstrate 〈◊〉 worlde how litle shew of reason they haue in standing thus against their owne saluation and in refusing Iesus as they doe I will in as great breuitie as I may runne ouer the chief pointes that passed at his being vpon earth and therby examine by the testimonies of his greatest enimies whether the forsaid propheties and all other
putt to death vpō a Crosse by the Gentiles The testimonie of Iosephus may suffice for all herein whose wordes are that the principal Ievves ofbis countrie hauing accused and deliuered ouer Iesus to Pilat that vvas Gouernour of Iurie for the Roman Emperour he adiudged hym to the Crosse. The same doe all other Iewes Gentiles recorde and in this they take great offence and scandale that we should attribute diuinitie vnto a man that had suffred on the Crosse. But if we shew that this was th' eternal preordination and appointement of God for sauing of mankinde and that the same was fortolde both to Iewe Gentile from the beginning and so vnderstood also by the Iuishe Doctors of elder tymes then euerie reasonnable man I trow will remaine satisfied and preferre Gods diuine wisdome before mās follie First then consider that when Christ had ended his preaching and wrought so manie miracles as seemed sufficient to his eternal wisdome and when the tyme was come preordained for his passion wherof he tolde publiquelie his disciples before he went vp to Hierusalem of purpose to receyue his death and made a solemne entrie into that Citie vpon an asse which was prophetied of hym by Zacharie manie yeares before Reioyce daughter of Sion Bcholde thie I VST KING SAVEOVR shall come vnto thec vpon an asse And after his abode some dayes in that place he was betrayed and solde by his owne disciple as Dauid beforehande in manie places had foretolde should come to passe Then folowed his apprehension and most seruile abusage by the Iewes wher of it was foreprophitied in his person by Esay I gaue my bodie to them that beate it and my cheekes to them that bussited the same I did not turne my self avvay from them that reproched mee nor yet from them that did spitte in my sace After this barbarous intreatie by the Iewes they deliuered hym ouer to Pilat a Gentile and neuer ceased to solicite and pursue their vnquenshable hatred against him vntil they sawe him on the Crosse. Where also he was vsed in the highest degree of spiteful dealīg Wherof the foresaid Dauid made mention longe before in the person of the Messias when he said they pearsed my handes and seete they deuided among them my apparaile and vpon my vpper Garmente they did caste lottes And aganie of another crueltie he cōplaineth saing they gaue me Gaule to eate and in my 〈◊〉 they refreshed me vvith vinegar And finallie that Christ should die for the sinnes of mankind ys a common principle bothe prefygured and foretolde throughout all the olde scripture Prefigured by the sacrifice of Isaac by the raising vp of the Brasen Serpent and by all other sacrifices that were in that lawe Fortolde not onely by the scriptures before aleadged but also must plainely by Daniel who was tolde by an Angel that after a certaine time by him there apointed vngetur sanctus senctorum The Saint of Saintes shal be anointed occidetur Christus this anointed Saint or Christ shal be put to death Zacharie also about the same time doth not onely fortel his death but also the kinde therof and from what people he should receyue the same for thus he saith in the person of Christ him self The inhabitantes of Icrusalem at that daye shal looke vpon me vvhom they haue Crucisied But if ye will reade the whole storie of Christs passion set downe at large 600 yeares before it fel out I referre you to a narration of Esay who to signifie the straungnes of the case begineth with this preface vvho vvill gyue credit to that vve shal reporte c. And then after a litle he goeth on in thes wordes He shall mount vp as a tvvigge from a drie earth He hath no fourme or beautie vpon him VVe beheld him and ther vvas no countenance in him vve savve him the most contemtible and dispised man in the vvorld A man full of paines and experienced in infirmitie His countenance vvas obscure and despicable and vve made no accompt of him Truly he tooke vpon him self our greefes and did beare our paines VVe accompted him as a leaper as a mā stricken and punished by God But he vvas vvounded for our iniquities and crushed in peaces for our vvickednes The discipline or correction of our peace lieth vpon him and by his vvoundes vve are made vvhole VVe haue all erred gone astraye like sheepe euery man after his ovvne vvayes and God hath layde vpon him the iniquitie of vs all He vvas offred vp for vs because he vvould soe he shal be led le to his slaughter as a sheepe and as a Lambe he shal be silent before his Shearours For the sinnes of my people haue I stricke thyn saith God He hath donne no iniquitie neither vvas there decepte founde in his mouth Yet vvould our Lord crush hym in infirmitie But if he shal gyue his life for sinne then shal he see a long seede or generation and the vvill of our Lord shal be derected in his hād And for so much as his soule hath susteined labour it shal see and be filled And this MY IVST SERVANT in his knovvledge shal Iustifie many and beare their iniquities And I vvil allotte vnto hym verie many people and he shal deuide the spoiles of the stoute for that he hath deliuered his soule vnto death and vvas accompted among the vvicked prayed for his transgressours Thus particularlie as ye see was the death and Passion of Christ foretolde by the Prophettes of Israel to that Nation Now heare ye the prophetie of Sibylla if ye please wherin she foreshewed the same to the Gētiles Thes are her wordes set downe by Lactātius He shal appeare miserable Ignominious and descurmed to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may giue hope vnto the miserable Aftervvard he shall come into the handes of most vvicked 〈◊〉 faithlesse men they shal busset hym vvith their sacrilegious fistes and shal spitte vpo hym vvith there vncleane mouthes He shal yeelde his innocent backe to the vvhippe and shal say nothing vvhile he receyueth the stripes to th end he may speake to those that are deade He shal 〈◊〉 Crovvne of thornes and they shal giue hym Gaule to eate and vinegar to drinke And this shal be the hospitalitie he shal finde amonge them What thinge can bee more plainly described then this Neither doe the Auncient Rabbines and teachers among the Iewes dessent from this For that in their Talmud that was gathered aboue 1200. yeares gone the plaine sentēce of diuers are sette downe that their Messias at his comming shal be put to death And as for Rabbi Ionathan Authour of the Chaldaie paraphrase who died a litle before Christ was borne he applieth the whole narration of Esay before recited as needes he must to the murder of the Messias by the Iewe. Whereupon RabbiSimeon that liked the next age after writeth thes
wordes folowing VVee be to the men of Israel 〈◊〉 that they shal slea the Messias God shal send his sonne in mans fleshe to vvashe them and they shal murder hym Wherto agreeth Rabbi Hadarsan and others and doe proue further out of the forealleadged prophetie of Daniel Chap. 9. vers 27. that after Messias shal haue preached halfe seuen yeares he shal be slaine For that Daniel saith in halfe of seuen yeares the Hoste Sacrifice shal cease Vpon which wordes they comment thus three yeares and a halfe shal the presence of God in flesh crie and preach vpon the Mounte Oliuet and then shal he be slaine Which wordes the Iewes ordinarie commentarie vpon the Psalmes doth interpret to be meante of Christs preaching three years a halfe before his passion Which disagreeth verie litle or nothing from the accompte of vs Christians and of our Euangelistes And so we see by all that hitherto hath bene said that the verie particulers of Christes whole death and Passion were foretolde most plainlie both to Iewe and Gentile and acknowledged also by the auncient Doctours of the Iewish nation before th' effectuatiō therof came to passe And Sibylla addeth further two particuler miracles that should fall out in the said Passion of the Messias to witt that the veil of the Ievves Temple should breake in tvvo and that at middaye there should be darkenes for three houres ouer all the vvorld Which thing to haue bene fulfilled at the death of Iesus not onelie S. Mathew doth assure vs in his Gospell but also Eusebius affirmeth that he had reade the same worde for worde recorded in diuers heathē writers And amongest other he citeth one Phlegō an exacte Chronicler that reporteth the same in the 4. yeare of the 202. Olympias which agreeth iust with the 18. yeare of Tyberius reigne wherin our Saueour suffered And he goeth so nighe as to name the very houres of the daye which our Euangelistes doe AEsculus also an olde Astronomer doth confirme the same and prooueth moreouer by the situation and constitution of the Sunne and Moone at that tyme that no Eclipse could then be naturally Which thing in like manner Dionysius Areopagita did obserue in the verie daye of Christs Passion being at that tyme but 25. yeares olde and yet well studdied in Astronomie as hym self testifieth And finallie Lucianus a learned priest of Antioche was accustumed to prouoke the Gentiles to their owne comentaries and stories for recorde and testimony of those thinges Ther ensueth now for ending and confirmation of al that hath bene said and prooued before to adde a worde or two of Iesus Resurrection Which point as of al other it is of most importance so was it most exactly fortolde both to Iewe and Gentile and promised by Christ him self in al his speeches while he was vpon earth And among the Iewes it was assured by al the propheties before recited which do promisse so great aboundāce of glorye ioye and triumphe to Christes church after his passion Which neuer possibly could be fulfilled onles he had risen from dearh againe And therfore the said Resurrectiō was prefigured in Ionas together with the time of his abode in the Sepulcher It was also expressle forshewed by Dauid affirming that God vvould not permit his holy one to see corruption And after him againe more plainely by Osee he shal quicked vs againe after tvvo daies in the third day he shal raise vs and vve shal liue in his sight And to the Gentiles Sibyllaieft writen not farre from the same time he shal ende the necessitie of death by three daies sleepe and then returning from death to light againe he shal be the first that shal shevv the beginning of Resurrection to his chosen for that by conquering death he shal bring vs life Thus much was promissed by Prophets before Christs appearance And Iesus to comfort his Disciples and folowers reiterated this promisse againe of him self in many speeches albeit oftentimes his meaning was not perceaued Which promisse of returne from death if it had bene made for some long time to come as Mahomet promissed his Sarasins after 800. yeares to reuisite them againe albeit the performance were neuer meante yet might the salshode lurke in the length of time But Iesus assuring all men that he would rise againe within three daies it can not be imagined but that he sincerely purposed to performe his promisse for that otherwise the fraude must soone haue bene discouered Now then let vs cōsider what maner of performance Iesus made hereof And first the persōs most interessed in the matter as they whose total hope staye refuge and felicitie depended hereof I meane his appaled dismaied and afflicted disciples doe recount twelue sundrie apparitiōs which Iesus made vnto them in flesh after his resurrectiō The first was to Mary Magdalene aparte when she with Salome and other women went and remained with ointments about the Sepulcher The second was to all the forsaid women together as they returned homewards who also were permitted to embrase his feete The third was to Simon Peter alone The fourth to the two disciples in their iourney to Emaus The fifth was to all the Apostles and other disciples together whē the doores were shut The sixt was to the same company againe after eight daies when Thomas was with them at what time also he did both eate and drincke and suffred his bodie to be handled among them The seuenth was to S. Peter and S. Ihon with fiue other disciples when they were in fishing at what time also he vouchsafed to eate with them The eight was to eleuen disciples at one time vpon the mounte Thabor in Galiley The ninth was to more then fiue hundreth brethern at one time as S. Paule testifieth The tenth was to S. Iames as the same Apostle recordeth The eleuenth was to al his Apostles disciples friends together vpon the mount Oliuet by Ierusalem when in their presence he ascended vp to heauen The twelueth and last was after his Ascension vnto S. Paul as him self beareth witnes Al thes apparitions are recorded in Scripture as made by Iesus after his Resurrection to such as by his eternal wisdome were preordained to be witnesses of so glorious a spectacle To whom as S. Luke affirmeth he shevved him self aliue by many argumentes for the space of 40 dayes together and reasoned vvith them of the kingdome of his father And why any mā should mistrust the testimonie of thes men that sawe him conuersed with him eate with him touched him and heard him speake whos entire estate and welfare depēded wholy of the certaintie hereof I see no reason For what comfort had it bene or consolation to thes men to haue deuised of them selues thes former apparitions What encouragemēt might they haue takē in thos doleful times of
schollers and auditours Papias Ignatius Policarpus al which agree of the foure Ghospels and other writinges left vnto vs in the newe Testament affirming S. Iohn to haue approued the same These men were maisters againe to Iustinus Martyr Irenaeus and other whose writinges remaine vnto vs. And if they did not yet their sayinges and iudgementes touching the Scriptures are recorded vnto vs by Eusebius and other fathers of the next age after and so from hand to hand vntil our dayes So that of this ther can be no more doubt then whether Rome Constantinople Hierusalem and other such renoumed Cities knowen to al the world at this day be the very same wherof Authours haue treated so much in auncient times AND THVS MVCHE of Christs Euangelistes for whose more credit and for confirmation of thinges by them recorded his diuine prouidence preordained that infinite witnesses whom we cal Martyrs should offer vp their blood in the primatiue Churche and after Wheras for no other doctrine profession or religion in the world the like was euer heard of albeit among the Iewes in the tyme of the Machabies and at some other tymes also when that nation for their sinnes were aff●icted by Heathen Princes some fewe were tyrannized and iniuriouslie put to death yet commonly and for the most parte this was rather of barbarous furie in the Paganes for their resistāce thē directly for hatred of Iuishe religiō And for the number ther is no doubt but that more Christians were putt to death within two monethes for their beliefe throughout the world then were of Iewes in two thouland yeares before Christs comming Which is vndoubtedly a matter verie wounderful considering that the Iuishe religion impugned no lesse the Pagan Idolatrie then doth the doctrine of the Christians But this came to passe that Christes wordes might be fulfilled who said I come not to bring peace but the svvorde And againe I sende you forth as sheepe among vvolues That is to saye to be torne and harried and your bloud to be deuoured In which extreme and most incredible sufferinges of Christians thre pointes are worthie of great consideration The first what infinite multitudes of al states conditions sexe qualities and age did suffer dailie fortestimonie of this truth The second What intollerable and vnacustomed tormentes not hard of in the worlde before were deuised by Tyrantes for afflicting this kinde of people The third what inuincible courage and vnspeakable alacritie the Christiās shewed in bearing oute these afflictions which the enimies theselues could not attribute but to some diuine power and supernatural assistance And for this later point of comfort in their sufferings I will alleage onlie this testmonie of Tertuliā against the Gētiles who obiected that wicked men suffered also as wel as Christians Wherto this learned Doctour made answere in these wordes Truth it is that many men are prone to yl and do suffer for the same but yet dare they not defend their euil to be good as Christiās doe their cause For that euery euil thig by nature doth bring with it either feare or shame therfor we see that malefactours albeit they loue euill yet would they not appeare so to the world but desire rather to lie in couert They tremble when they are taken and when they are accused they deny all and do scarse oftentimes cōfesse their doings vpon torments And finally when they are condemned they lament mone and do impute their il fortune to destinie or to the planets But the Christian what doth he like to this Is their any man ashamed or doth any man ' repent him when he is taken except it be for that he was not taken rather If he be noted by the enemy for a Christian he glorieth in the same if he be accused he defendeth not him self if he be asked the question he confesseth it willingly if he be cōdemned he veldeth thankes What euil thē is ther in this Christian cause which lacketh the natural sequele of euil I meane feare shame tergiuersatiō repentance sorowe and deploration what euil I say can this be deemed whose guiltines is ioye whose accusation is desire whose punishment is happines Hitherto are the wordes of learned Tertulian who was an eye-witnes of that he wrote had no smal part in the cause of thos that suffred being him self in that place and state as daily he might expect to taste of the same affliction To which combat how redie he was may appeare by diuers places of this his Apologie wherin he vttereth besides his zeale feruour a most confident securitie and certaine assurance of Iesus assistance by that which he had sene performed to infinite other in their greatest distresses from the same Lord before So that nothing doth more a-certaine vs of the diuine power and omnipotencie of Iesus then the fortitude inuincible which aboue al humane reason force and nature he imparted to his Martyrs AFTER VVHICH consideration there cōmeth to be weighed the fifte point before mentioned which is of the same power and omnipotēcie of Iesus declared and exercised vpon the spirites insernal Which thing partely may appeare by the Oracles alleaged in the ende of the former section wherin thos spirites foretolde that an Hebrew Childe should be borne to the vtter subuersion and ruine of their Tyrānical dominion And much more at large the same might be declared by other answers Oracles vttered after Christes natiuitie and registred in the monumentes euen of the heathens them selues Wherof he that desireth to see more ample mention especially out of Porphyrie who then was liuing let him read Eusebius sixte booke de preparatione Euangelica where he shal finde store and namely that Apollo many times exclamed Hei mihi congemiscite Hei mihi hei mihi Oraculorum defecit me claritas Woe vnto me lament yee with me woe vnto me woe vnto me for that the honour of Oracles hath now foresakē me Which cōplaintes and lamentations are nothinge els but a plaine confession that Iesus was he of whom a prophet said diuers ages before Attenuabit omnes Deos terrae he shal weare-out bring to beggarie al the Godes or Idols of the earth This confessed also the wicked spirites them selues when at Christs appearing ī Iurie they came vnto him at diuers times and besought him not to afflict or torment them nor command them presently to returne to hel but rather to permit them some litle time of entertainment in the sea or mountaines or amōg heardes of swine or the like Which confession they made in the sight of all the world and declared the same afterwardes by their factes and deedes For presently vpon Iesus death vpon the preaching of his name and Ghospel throughout the worlde the Oracles which before were aboundant in euery prouince and countrie were put to silēce Wherof I might alleage the testimonies of verie many Gētiles them selues as that of Iuuenal
which Plutarch in his forenamed booke doth report that in the later yeares of Tyberius raigne a strange voice and exceeding horrible clamour with hideous cries skriches and houlinges were heard by many in the Greciāsea complaining that the great God PAN was now departed And this Plutarch that was a Gētile affirmeth to haue bene alleaged and proued before th' Emperour Tyberius who maruailed greatly could not by al his diuines and South sayers whom he called to that consultation gather out any reasonable meaning of this wonderful accident But we Christians comparing the time wherin it happened vnto the time of Iesus death and passion and finding the same fully to agree may more then probably persuade our selues that by the death of their great God PAN which signifieth all was imported the ruine and vtter ouerthrow of all the wicked spirites and Idoles vpon earth AND THVS HATH the Deitie of Iesus bene declared and proued by his omnipotent power in subduing infernal enimies Now resteth it for vs to make manifest the same by his like power and diuine iustice shewed vpon diuers of his enimies here on earth whos greatest punishment albeit for the most part he reserueth for the life to come yet sometimes for manifestation of his omnipotēcie as especially it was behoueful i thos first daics of his appearāce in the world he chasteneth thē also euen here on earth in the eye and sight of al men So we read of the most in famous and miserable death of Herode the first surnamed Ascolonita who after his persecution of Christ in his infancie and the slaughter of the infantes in Bethleem for his sake was wearied out by a lothsome life in feare and horrour of his owne wife and children whom after he had most cruelly murdered was enforced also by desperation thorough his inspeakable vexations grieues and torments to offer his owne hand to his owne destructiō if he had not bene staied by friends that stood about After him Archelaus his eldest sonne that was a terrour to Iesus at his returne from Egipt fel also by Gods Iustice into maruailous calamities For first being left as king by his father Augustus would not allow or ratefie that successiō but of a king made him a Tetrarch assigning to him onlie the fourth part of that dominion which his father had before And then againe after nine yeares space tooke that away in like maner with the greatest dishonour he could deuise seazing vpon al his treasure and riches by way of confiscation and condemning his person to perpetual banishment wherin he died most miserablie in Vienna in France Not long after this the second sonne of Herode the first named Herode Antipas Tetrarch of Galiley who put S. Ihon Baptist to death and scorned Iesus before his passion wherat both him self and Herodias his concubine were present was deposed also by Caius th' Emperour being accused by Agrippa his nearest kinseman and most contumeliously sent in exile first to Lions in France and after that to the most desert and inhabitable places of Spaine wher he with Herodias wandered vp and doune in extreme calamitie so long as they liued and finally ended their daies abandonned of al men In which miserie also it is recorded that the daunsing daughter of Herodias who had in her Iolitie demaunded Iohn Baptists Head being on a certaine time enforced to passe ouer a frosen riuer the yse brake and she in her fall had her head cut of by the same yse without hurting the rest of her body to the great admiration of al the lookers on The like euent had an other of Herode familie named Herod Agrippa th' acculer of the fornamed Herod the Tetrarch who in his great glorie and triumphe hauing yut to death S. Iames the brother of S. Ihon Euangelist and imprisoned S. Peter was soone after in a publique assemblie of Princes and Nobles at Caesarea striken from heauen with a most horrible disease wherby his bodie putrified and was eaten with vermine as both S. Luke reporteth and Iosephus confirmeth And the same Iosephus with no small maruaile in hym self declareth that at the verie time when he wrote his storie which was aboute 70 yeares after the death of Herod the first the whole progenie and ofspring kinred and familie of the said Herod which he sayeth was exceeding great by reason he had niene wiues together with many children brothers sisters nephews and kinsefolke were all extinguished in most miserable sorte and gaue a testimonie saith Iosephus to the world of the most vaine confidence that men doe put in humane felicitie And as thes punishements lighted openlie vpon Iesus professed enimies in Iurie So escaped not also the Romans their chastissement I meane such as especiallie had their handes in persecution of hym or of his followers after hym For first of Pontius Pilate that gaue sentence of death against hym we reade that after great disgrace receyued in Iurie he was sent home into Italie and ther by manifold disfauours shewed vnto him by the Emperour his maister sel into such desperation as he slewe him self with his owne handes And secondlie of the very Emperours them selues who liued from Tyberius vnder whom Iesus suffred vnto Constātine the great vnder whom Christian religion tooke dominion ouer the world which contained the space of three hūdreth yeares very few or none escaped the manifest scourges of Gods dreadful iustice shewed vpon them at the knitting vp of their daies For examples sake Tyberius that permitted Christians to liue freely and made a lawe against their molestation as before hath bene shewed died peaceably in his bedde But Caligula that folowed him for his contempt shewed against al diuine power in making him self a God was soone after murdered by the cōspiracie of his dearest friendes Nero also who first of al other beganne persecution against the Christians within fewe monethes after he had put S. Peter and S. Paul to death in Rome hauing murdered in like manner his owne mother brother wife maister was vpon the sudaine from his glorious estate and maiestie throwen doune into such horrible distresse and confusion in the sight of al men as being condemned by the Senate to haue his heade thrust into a pillorie and ther most ignominiously to be whipped to death was cōstrained for auoiding th' execution of that terrible sentence to massacre him self with his owne handes by the assistance of such as were dearest vnto him The like might be shewed in the tragical endes of Galba Otho Vitellius Domitian Commodus Pertinax Iulian Macrinus Antoninus Alexander Maximinus Gordianus Aurelianus Decius Gallus Volutianus Aemilianus Valerianus Galienus Caius Carinus Maximianus Maxentius Licinius and others whos miserable deathes a noble man Councellour wel neare a thousand yeares past did gather against Zosimus a heathen writer to shew therby the pouerful hand of
called it AFLIA after th' Emperours name He droue al the progeny and ofspring of the Iewes furth of all thos countries with a perpetual lawe confirmed by the Emperour that they should neuer returne no nor so much as looke backe from any highe or eminent place to that countrie againe And this was done to that Iuishe Natiō by the Roman Emperours for accomplishing that demaund which their prīcipal elders had made not longe before to Pilate the Romau Magistrate concerning Iesus most iniurious death cryinge out with one cōsent and voice to wit Let his blood be vpon vs and vpon our posteritie AND HEERIN ALSO I meane in the most wonderful notorious chastisment or rather reprobation of this Iuishe people which of all the world was Gods peculier before is sett out vnto vs as it were in a glasse the seuenth and last pointe which we mentioned in the beginning of this section to witt the fulfilling of such speeches propheties as Iesus vttered when he was vpon earth as namely at one time after a long and vehement commination made to the Scribes Pharisees and principal men of that Nation in which he repeateth eight seueral times the dreadful threat woe he concludeth finally that al the iust blood iniuriouslie shedde from the first Martyr Abel should be reuenged verie shortelie vpon that generation And in the same place he menaceth the populous Citie of Ierusalē that itshould be made desert And in an other place he assureth thē that one stone should not be left standing therof vpon an other And yet futther he pronounced vpon the same Citie thes words The daies shal come vpon thee and thy enemies shal enuiron thee vvith a vval and shall besiege thee they shall straiten the on euery side and shal beate the to the grounde and thy children in thee And yet more particulerly he foretelleth the verie signes wherby his disciples should perceyue when the time in deed was come vsing this speeche vnto them VVhen you shal see Ierusalem besieged vvith an army then knovve ye that her disolation is at hand for that thes are the daies of reuenge to the ende al may be fulfiled vvhich is vvritten Great distresse shal fal vpon this earth and vengeance vpon this people They shal be slaine by dint of the svvord and shal be led as slaues into al countries And Jerusalem shal be trodden vnder seete by the Gentiles vntil the times of Nations be accomplished This foretold Iesus of the miserie that was to fal vpon Ierusalem and vpon that people by the Romanes and other Gentiles when the Iewes seemed to be in most securitie and greatest amitie with the Romanes as also they were when the same thinges were writē and consequently at that time they might seeme in all humane reason to haue lesse cause thē euer before to misdoubt such calamities And yet how certaine and assured foreknowlege and as it were most sensible forefeeling Iesus had of thes miseries he declared not only by thes expresse words and by their euēt but also by thos pittiful teares he shed vpon sight and consideration of Hierusalem and by the lamentable speeche he vsed to the women of that Citie who wept for him at his Passion persuading them to weepe rather for thē selues and for their children in respect of the miseries to followe then for him Which wordes and predictions of Iesus together with sundrie other his speeches fore shewing so particularlie the imminent calamities of that Nation and that as I haue said at such time when in humane discourse ther could be no probabilitie therof when a certaine heathen Chronicler and Mathematique named Phlegon about an hundreth yeares after Christs departure had diligently considered hauing sene the same also in his dayes most exactelie fulfilled for he was seruant to Adrianus th' Emperour by whos commandement as hath bene said before the final subuersion of the Iuishe nation was brought to passe this Phlegō I say though a Pagan yet vpon consideration of thes euentes and others that he saw as th' extreme persecution of Christians fortold by Christ and the like he pronounced that neuer any man foretold things so certainlie to come or that so preciselie were accomplished as were the predictions and propheties of Iesus And this testimonie of Phlegon was alleaged and vrged for Christians again't one Celsus a heathen Philosopher and Epicure by the famous learned Origen euen the very next age after it was writtē by th' authour so that of the truth of this allegation ther can be no doubt or question at all And now albeit thes predictions and propheties concerning the punishment and reprobation of the Iewes fulfilled so euidently in the sight of al the world might be a sufficient demonstration of Iesus for knowlege in affaires to come yet are ther many other thinges besides foreshewed by him which fel out as exactly as did thes notwithstanding that by no learning mathematical reason or humane cōiecture they were or might be forsene As for example the foretelling of his owne death the maner time and place therof as also the person that should betraie him together with his irrepentantende The flight feare and scandal of his disciples albeit they had promissed protested the contrarie The three seueral denials of Peter The particuler time of his owne resurrection and Ascension The sending of the Holy-Ghost and many other the like predictions propheties promisses which to his Apostles Disciples and folowers that heard them vttered and left them written before they fel out and saw them afterwarde accomplished and who by the falsehood therof should haue receyued greatest dōmage of all other mē if they had not bene true to thes men I saie they were most euident proofes of Iesus diuine prescience in matters that should ensue But yet for that an Infidell with whom onlie I suppose my self to deale in this place may in thes and the like thinges find perhapes some matter of cauillation and saie that thes propheties of Iesus were recorded by our Euangelistes after the particularities therin prophetied were effectuated and not before and consequentlie that they might be forged I wil alleage certaine other euentes both foretolde and registred before they came to passe and diuulged by publique writinges in the face of al the worlde when ther was smal semblance that euer the same should take effect Such were the particuler foretelling of the kinde maner of S. Peters death whiles yet he liued The peculier and differēt maner of S. Iohn th' Euāgelists ending from the rest of the Apostles The prerogatiue giuen to Peter aboue the rest that his Faith and Chaire should neuer faile which we see miraculouslie verefied euen vntil this day the successions of all other Apostles hauing failed and his not The forshewing describinge to his disciples the most extreme and cruel persecutions that should insue vnto Christians for his sake
a thing at that time not probable in reason for that the Romanes permitted the exercise of al kindes of religions And that notwithstanding in all thes pressures and intollerable afflictie is his faithfull followers should not shrincke but holde out and daily encrease in zeale fortitude and number and finallie should atchiue the victorie and conquest of al the world a thīg much more vnlikly at that daye so farre passing al humane probabilitie as no capacitie reason or cōcept of man might reach or attaine the foresight therof And with this wil we cōclude our third and last part of the general diuision set doune in the beginning concerning the groundes and proofes of Christian religion The Conclusion Sect. 4. BY AL that hytherto hath bene saide we haue declared and made manifest vnto the gentle reader three thinges of great importance First that from the beginning and creation of the worlde ther hath bene promised in all times and ages a Messias or Saueour of mankinde in whom and by whom al Nations should be blessed as also that the particuler time maner and circumstance of his cōming together with the qualitie of his person purpose doctrine life death resurrection and Ascension were in like maner by the prophets of God most euidently forshewed Secōdly that the very same particulers and special points that were dessigned and set doune by the said Prophets were also fulfilled most exactly with their circumstances in the person and actions of Iesus our Saueour Thirdly that besides the accomplishment of all the for said propheties there were giuen by Iesus many signes manifestatiōs and most infallible arguments of his Deitie and omnipotēt puissance after his Ascention or departure from al humane and corporal conuersation in this world By al which waies meanes arguments and proofes by ten thousand more which to the tongue or penne of man are inexplicable the Christian minde remaineth setled and most firmely grounded in the vndoubted belief of his religion hauing besides al other thinges euidēces certainties and internal comfortes and assurances which are infinite thes eight demonstratiue reasons and persuasions which ensue for his more ample and aboundant satisfaction therin First that it was impossible that so many thinges should be foretold so precisely with so many particularities in so many ages by so different persons al of sanctitie with so great concorde consent and vnitie and that so long before hand but by the spirite of God alone that only hath foreknowlege of future euents Secondly that it could not possibly be that so many thinges so difficult and strange with al their particularities and circumstances should be so exactly and preciselie fulfilled but in him alone of whom they were truly meant Thirdly that it can no waies be imagined that God would euer haue concurred with Iesus doinges or assisted hym aboue all course of nature with so aboundant miracles as the Gentiles doe confesse that he wrought yf he had bene a Seducer or taken vpon hym to set foorth a false doctrine Fourthly if Iesus had intended to deceaue and seduce the world he would neuer haue proposed a doctrine so difficult and repugnant to al sensualitie but rather would haue taught things pleasant and grateful to mans voluptuous delight as Mahomet did after him Nether could the nature of mā haue euer so affectuously embrased such austeritie without the assistance of some diuine and supernatural power Fistly for that Iesus being poorely borne and vnlettred as by his aduersaries confessiō doth appeare and that in such an age and tyme when all worldly learning was in most florishing estate he could neuer possibly but by diuine power haue attained to such most exquisite knowlege in all kinde of learning as to be able to decide all the doubtes and controuersies of Philosophers before him as he did laving doune more plainly distinctly perspicuously the pithe of all humane and diuine learning within the compasse of three yeares teaching and that to auditours of so great simplicitie then did al the Sages of the world vntil that 〈◊〉 in so much that euen then the most vnlearned Christian of that time could say more in certaintie of truth concerning the knowledge of God the Creation of the world th' ende of man the reward of vertue the punishment of vice th' immortalitie and rest of our soule after this life and in other such highe poinctes and mysteries of true philosophie then could the most famous and learned of al the Gentiles that had for so many ages before beaten their braines in contention about the same Sixtlie if Iesus had not meant plainly and sincerely in al his doinges according as he professed he would neuer haue takē so seuere a course of life to himself neither would he haue refused al temporal dignities and aduancemēts as he did he would neuer haue chosen to die so opprobriously in the sight of al men nor made election of Apostles and Disciples so poore and contemptible in the world nor if he had would euer worldly men haue folowed him in so great multitudes with so great seruour zeale constancy and perseuerāce vnto death Seuenthly we see that the first beginners and founders of Christian religion left by Iesus were a multitude of simple and vnskilful persons vnapt to deceyue or deuise any thing of them selues They beganne against al probabilitie of mans reason they went forward against the streame and strength of al the world they continued and encreased aboue humane possibilitie they perseuered in tormētes and afflictions insufferable they wrought miracles aboue the reache and compasse of mans habilitie they ouerthrew Idolatrie that then possessed the world and confounded al powers infernal by the only name and vertue of their maister They saw the propheties of Iesus fulfilled and al his diuine speeches and predictions come to passe They sawe the punishmēt of their enimies and chief imnugners to fal vpon them in their dayes They sawe euery daie whole Prouinces Countries and kingdomes conuerted to their faith And finally the whole Romane Empire and world besides to subiect it self to the lawe obediēce and Ghospel of their maister Lastly among all other reasons and argumentes this may be one most manifest vnto vs that wheras by many testimonies and expresse propheties of the olde Testament it is affirmed that the people of Israel should abandone persecute and put to death the true Messias at his comming as before hath bene shewed and for that facte should it self be abandoned of God and brought to ruine and dispersion ouer al the world wherin according to the wordes of Osee they shal sitt for a long time vvithout king vvithout prince vvithout sacrifice vvithout Altar vvithout Ephode or images and after this againe shal returne and seeke their God in the last daies we see in this age the verie same particularities fulfilled in that Nation and so to haue continued now for thes fiftiene hundreth yeares that
what maruelous and dreadful maiestie feare terrour thunder and sound of trumpets the ten commandements of God which containe the perfect forme of a vertuous life were pronounced by Angels vnto the people of Israel Which terrour and maiestie S. Paul applieth expressie to this meaning that we should greatly tremble to violate or transgresse this law which was deliuered with such circumstance of dread and horrour seing that the lawes of great princes potentates are exacted commonly and executed vpon the offendours with much more terrour then they were proclaimed Secondly the same in part may be conceyued if we consider what Iudge or Auditour we shal haue in this accompt Which S. Paul declareth plainly in thes words VVe must al be sommoned before the tribunal seate of Christ and euerie man receyue either good or euil according as he hath behaued him self vvbiles he liued vpon earth Which thing Christ hym self confirmeth in diuers parables when he promiseth to take accompt of al his talents lent vnto his seruants in this world And in S. Mathews Ghospel he expresseth the particuler maner of that accompt saing The Sonne of man shal come vvith his Angels in the glorie of his Father to take an accompt and then shal he giue vnto euerie man according to his vvorkes And yet more particularly and seuerely of the same matter and daie I saie vnto you that euerie idle vvord that men shal speake they shal giue accompt therof in the daie of iudgment By which speech of our Saueour we are admonished not only that we shal giue an accompt of our doinges but also that we shal yeeld the same to him self who saieth in an other place Ego sum Iudex testis I am both Iudge and witnes in this accompt We are instructed also that this accompt shal be most exact and exquisite not omitting the least errours and offenses that haue passed in our life That particuler reward or punishment shal be assigned to eche mā cōfourme to the qualitie of his accompt And finally that this accompt or day of reconning for declaration of the terrour maiestie that shal be vsed therin is called here by Christ a iudgment and tribunal wherin sentence of life or death is to be pronounced Of which iudgmente or accompting daye the scripture noteth vnto vs two kindes The first wherof is called a particuler iudgment for that it is exercised vpon euerie soule immediately after her departure from the bodie according to the wordes of holie S. Paul It is appointed for euery man once to die and after that to haue his iudgment The second is called a general iudgment for that it shal be executed vpō al the world together at the last daie when mankinde shal be translated from this terrestrial habitation And of this iudgement are to be vnderstood aswel thos former wordes of Christ touching his cōming in glorie as also infinite other places and passages of Scripture which doe forewarne and admonish vs of this most dreadful daie And albeit in the first particuler iudgment eche soule that departeth hence receyueth an irrevocable sentence either of life or death eternal as may appeare by the examples of Lazarus and of the riche glutton wherof the one was determined to euerlasting repose and the other to eternal torments immediatly vpon their separation from this world yet are ther alleaged by the holie Saintes of God diuers most cleare facile and euident reasons why his diuine wisdome besides that first priuate and particuler daie of trial hath ordained also this second which shal be publicke manifest and vniuersal The first wherof is that the bodie of man rising from his sepulcher at that daie may be partaker of eternal punishment or glorie with the soule euen as in this life it was participant of the vertues or vices which the soule did exercise The second reason is for that as Christ was contemptible in this world and dishonoured publiquily and put to confusion with his Saints after him in the sight of al men so was it conuenient that once in this world he should shewe his power and maiestie and that in the sight of al his creatures together but especially of his wicked enimies who after that daie are neuer to see or beholde him more The third is that both wicked sinners blessed Saītes of God might receyue their rewardes and final paimentes openly in the sight and hearing of eche other to the more hart breake and confusion of the impious and triumphāt ioye of the vertuous who commonly in this world were contemned ouerborne and troden doune by the other The fourth and last is for that men when they die doe not commonly cary with them al the good or euil which they haue wrought hauing left behinde them diuers thinges which may encrease their merite or demerite after their deathes as are their examples their instructions gyuen to other their temporal faculties or abilities bookes preachings exhortatiōs other like meanes wherby good or euil may proceede after their departure The reward wherof can not so conueniently be assigned vnto thē whiles this world endureth for that their ioyes or punishmentes in the places wher they are may daily be augmented by the hurt or good that may be wrought in the world by thos meanes which they left behind them So diuines doe holde for examples sake that the glorie of S. Paul is encreased daily in heauen and shal be vnto the worlds ende by reason of them that daily doe profite by his writing and rare examplar life vpon earth as also on the contrarie part that the tormentes of Arrius Sabellius and other wicked heretiques are continually augmented by the numbers of thē who frō time to time are corrupted with their seditious and pestilent writiges The like they holde of dissolute Poets and other loose writers which haue left behind them lasciuious wantō and carnal deuises as also of negligent parents maisters or teachers who by their rechelesnes and euil examples gaue occasion to corrupte the children cholers or seruants committed to their gouerment and instruction But after this general daie of iudgment once past their shal be no more place of meriting either good or euil for that the world then and ther shal receyue an ende and a final sentence be pronounced of what soeuer hath passed from the first foundation and establishment therof Of this last and general iudgment then which containeth a confirmation or ratefying of the particuler going before as also a final conclusion clearing and knitting vp of al accomptes and reckonings with mākinde for his trafique stewardship in this worldlie pilgrimage The holie Scripture of God amoni heth vs most carefully to haue continual remembrance and consideration as of the greatest and most important busines that euer we shal deale in and as the forceblest means to restraine vs from sinne that possiblie may be deuised among 〈◊〉
infinite and consequently deserueth infinite hatred and infinite punishment at gods handes Hereof foloweth the reason of diuers thinges both sayed and donne by God in the scriptures and taught by diuines towching the punishments of sinne which seeme verie straunge vnto the wisedome of the world and in deede to them scarce credible As first of al the most dreadful punishment of eternal and irreuocable damnation of so manie thowsandes or rather millions of Angels that were created to glorie with almost infinite perfection that for one onlie sinne but once committed and that onlye in thought as diuines are of opinion Secondlie the rigourous punishment of our first parents Adam and Eue and al their posteritie for the eatinge of a seely aple for which fault besides the chastisinge of the offenders themselues and al the creatures of the earth for the same and al their children and ofspring after them both before our redemption and after for albeit we are deliuered frō the guilte of that sinne yet tēporal punishmētes doe remaine vpon vs for the same as hunger thirst cold sicknes death and a thousand other miseries besides also the infinite soules damned for the same before the comming of Christ by the space offower thousand yeres as also since as wel infidels which are not baptized as others besides al this I say which in mās reason maye seeme seuere enough gods wrath and iustice could not be sufficiētly satisfied except his owne onlie sonne had come downe into the worlde takē our flesh vpon him and by his paines death made satisfaction for the same And when he was now come into the world had in our flesh subiected him self vnto his fathers iustice albeit the loue his father bare vnto him were infinite and euery litle paine that he endured for vs or at leastwise euery droppe of bloode which he shed for our cause had ben sufficient for the whole satisfactiō for that his fleshe being vnited to his godhead made euerie such satisfactorie action of his of infinite value and merite and consequently of infinite satisfaction correspondent to the infinitie of our first parents sinne yet to the ende that God might shew the greatnes of his hatred and iustice against the said sinne and al other he neuer ceased to adde affliction to affliction and to heape tormentes vpō the bodie and flesh of this his most deare and blessed sonne for by Esaye he sayeth that him self was the doer therof vntil he had brought him vnto that most rueful plight that his flesh being all mangled and most lamentably torne in peeces retained no one droppe of blood within it He spared him not I saye euen then when he beheld him sorowful vnto death and bathed in that agonie of blood and water when he hard him vtter thos most dolorous and compassionable speeches O my father if it be possible let this cuppe passe from me And after that againe muche more pitifully vpon the Crosse O my God my God vvhy hast thou forsaken me Notwithstanding al which cries and lamentatiōs his most merciful father louing him as he did would not deliuer him but for satisfying of his Iustice laied vpon him stripe vpon stripe paine vpon paine torment after torment vntil he had rendred vp his life soule into his sayed fathers handes which is a wounderful dreadful documēt of godes hatred against sinne I might here mention the sinne of Esau in selling his inheritance for a litle meate of which S. Paule sayeth he founde no place of repentance after though he sought the same vvith teares Also the sinne of Saule whos sinne beinge but one and that onlie of omissiō in not killinge Agag the kinge of Amalech and his cattel as he was willed was notwithstanding vtterlie cast of by God for the same though he were his annointed and chosen seruāt before could neuer get remission therof albeit both he and Samuel Gods holie prophet did greatly lament and bewaile and made intercession in that behalfe In like maner might I alleage the exāple of kinge Dauid whose two sinnes albeit vpon his hartie repentance God forgaue yet notwithstanding the said repentance and sorrow and all the weepinge fastinge watchinge lyinge on the grounde wearinge of sackloth and other bodilie chasticementes which this holie prophet recordeth that him self did put in vre God punished him besides with maruelous seueritie as by the death of his dearlie beloued childe by manie other continual afflictions and temporal punishementes during the rase of his whole life And al this to shew his hatred against sinne thereby to terrifie vs from committinge the same Of this also doe proceede al those harde and seuere speeches of holie write touching sinners which comming from the mouth of the Holie Ghost and therfore no doubt both true and certaine may iustlie yeeld greate cause of feare to al such as liue in sinful state As for example where it is saied death bloode contentiō edge of svvorde oppression hunger contrition and vvhippes all thes thinges are created for vvicked sinners And againe God shal raine snares of fyre vppon sinners brimstone vvith tēpestuous vvindes shal be the portion of their cup. And yet further ī manie other places thes most dreadful speeches and comminations are to be founde God wil be knowen at the day of iudgement vpon the sinner who shal be taken in the workes of his owne handes manie whippes belong vnto a sinner let sinners be turned into hell God shal scatter al sinners and shal dash ther teeth out of their mouthes God shal scoffe at a sinner when he seeth his daye of destructiō cōmeth on the sworde of sinners shall turne into their owne hartes The armes of sinners shal be crushed and broken and they shal wither and dry vp like haye from the face of the earth desire not the glorie and riches of a sinner for thou doest not know the suddaine subuersion which shall come vpon hym for God hath gyuē him riches to deceyue him therwith beholde the daye of our Lord shal come a cruel daye and ful of indignation wrath and furie to make desolate the earth and to crush in peeces her sinners within her Thē shal the iust man reioice seinge this reuenge and shal wash his handes in the blood of sinners Thes loe my deare brother and innumerable other such sentēces of scripture pronounced by the holie spirit of God against sinners maye instruct vs of their pitifull estate of the vnspeakable hatred of his diuine Maiestie against thē so lōg as they persist in their sinful life and cōuersation Of all which considerations the self same holie scriptures doe gather certaine conclusions greatelie to be obserued wherof the first and more general is that sinne bringeth al people to miserie secondlie and more particulerlie that he vvhich loueth sinne bateth his ovvn soule Or as the Angel Raphael
loue and how can I haue the harte to offend thee hereafter seing thou hast preuented me so manie wayes with benefites euen when I demaunded not the same Can I haue hādes euermore to sinne agaīst thee which hast gyuen vp thine owne handes to be nayled on the crosse for me No no it is to great an iniurie agaīst thee ô Lord and woe worth me that haue dōneit so oftē heretofore But by thy holy assistāce I trust not to returne to such iniquitie for the time to come to which I beseeche the for thy mercie sake from thy holie throne of heauen to saye Amen OF WHAT OPINION WE SHAL BE CONCERNING THE MATTERS AFORsaid at the time of our death As also vvhat our state shal be at that passage and hovv different our iudgement from that it is novv CHAPT X. THE holy scriptures doe teach vs and experience maketh it plaine that during the time of this life the commodities prefermentes pleasures of the world doe possesse so stronglie the hartes of manie men and doe hold them chained with so forcible enchauntmentes being forsaken also vpon their iust desertes of the grace of God that saye and threaten what a man can and bring against then all the whole scripture euen from the begynning of Genesis to the end of the Apocalips as in decde it is al against synne and synners yet wil it preuaile nothing with them being in that lamentable case as either they beleeue not or esteeme not what so euer is saide to that purpose against their setled lyfe and resolution to the contrarie Of this we haue infinite examples in scripture as of Sodome and Gomorra with the cities ther about which would not heare the warninges that good I ot gaue vnto thē Of Pharao also and his court whom al that euer Moyses could doe ether by signes or sayinges moued nothing at al. Of Iudas in like maner who by no sweet meanes or sharpe threatninges vsed to him by his maister could be brought to change his wicked resolution But especially the holy Prophets sent by God from tyme to tyme to dissuade the people from their noughtie life and consequentlie to deliuer them from the plagues that hanged ouer them doe gyue abundant testimonie of this matter complaining cuerie where of the hardnes of synners hartes that wold not be moued with al the exhortations preachings promisses allurementes exclamations threatnings and thunderinges that they could vse The Prophet Zacharie shal testifie for all in this behalf who faieth of the people of Israel a litle before their destruction This sayeth the Lord of hostes iudge iustije wherunto presentlie he addeth And they vvould not attende but turning their backes vvent avvaye and stopped their eares to the ende they might not neare and they did obdurate their hartes as an adamant stone to the end they might not heare the lavve and the vvordes vvhich God did send in his spirite by the handes of the former Prophetes vvherby godes great indignatiō vvas stirred vp against them This then is and alwayes hath bene the maner of dissolute worldlinges and reprobare people to harden their hartes as an adamant stone against any thing that can be told them for the amendement of their liues and for the sauing of their soules Whiles they are in health and prosperitie they wil not know God as in an other place himself complaineth But yet as the Prophet saieth God wil haue his daye with thes men also when he wil be knowen And this is cognoscetur Dominus iudicia saciēs God wil be knowen when he begineth to doe iudgmēt which is at the daye of their death being in deed the next dore to their iudgement according as S. Paul testifieth saying it is appointed for al men once to die and after that ensevveth iudgement This I saye is the day of God most terrible sorowful and ful of tribulation to the wicked wherin God wil be knowen to be a righteous God and to restore to euerie man according as he hath donne vvhile he liued or as the Prophet describeth it he vvilbe knovven then to be a terrible God and such as one as taketh avvaye the spirite of princes a terrible God to the kinges of the earth At this daye as there wil be a great change in al other thinges mirth being turned into sorow laughinges into weepinges pleasures into paines stoutnes into feare pride into despaire and the like so especiallie wil there be a strange alteration in the iudgement and opinion of men for that the wisedome of God wherof I haue spoken in the former chapters and which as the scripture saieth is accounted folie by the vvise of this vvorld wil then appeare in her likenes and as it is in verie deede wil be confessed by her greatest enimies to be the onlie true wisedome and al carnal wisdome of worldlinges to be meere folie as God calleth it This the holie scripture setteth downe clerelie when it describeth the verie speeches and lamentations of the wise men of this world at the last daye concerning the state of holy men whom they despised in this life We senseles mē did esteeme their life to be mere madnes their end to be dishonorable but looke how they are now acconnted among the children of God and their portion is with the sainctes We haue erred from the waye of trueth and the light of righteousnes hath not shined before vs nether hath the sunne of vnderstanding appeared vnto vs. We haue weried out our selues in the waye of iniquitie and perdition and we haue walked craggie pathes but the waye of our Lord we haue not knowen Hytherto are the wordes of holie scripture wherby we may perceyue what great change and alteration of iudgement there wil be at the last daye from that which men haue now what consessing of folie what acknowledging of errour what hartie sorow for laboure lost what fruiteles repentance for hauing runne a-wrie O that men would ponder and consider attentiuely these thinges now VVe haue vveried out our selues saye thes miserable men in the vvayes of iniqnitie and perdition and vve haue vvalked craggie pathes What a description is this of lamentable wordlinges who beate their braines dailie and wearie out them selues in the pursute of vanitie and chasse of this worlde for which they suffer notwithstanding more paine often times then doe the iust in purchasing of heauen And when they arriue at the last daie to the gate of death weried and worne out with trouble and toyle they finde that al their labour is lost all their vexation taken in vaine For that the litle pelfe which they haue scraped together in this world for which they haue struggled and drudged so extremely wil auaile thē nothing at that instant but rather encrease exceedingly the burden of their afflictions Which afflictions shal be so manifold greeuous and intollerable in the wicked as no mind created
may perfectly conceyue the same but he that seeleth them albeit in part some smal coniecture may be made therof by thes three general pointes ensuing wherunto the rest may be referred THE FIRST IS THE excessiue paines which commonlie mē suffer in the separation of their soules and bodies which hauing liued so longe time together vnited as two deare frendes in loue and pleasure are now most loth to parte were it not that violently they are enforced therunto This paine may partlie be conceyued if we would driue out life but from the least parte of our bodie as for example out of our litle fingar like as surgeans are wont to doe when they wil mortifie any one place to make it breake What intolerable paine doth a man suffer before this member be dead what raging greefe doth he abyde If then the mortifying of one litle parte onlie doe so much afflict vs Imagine what the violent mortifying of al the partes together wil doe For we see that first the soule is driuen by death to leaue the extreamest partes as the toes feete and fingers then the legges and armes and so consequently one parte dieth after an other vntill life be restrained onlie to the harte which holdeth out longest as the principal part but yet finallie must be also constrained to render it self though with neuer so much paine and resistance Which paine how great and stronge it is may appeare by the breaking in peeces of the verie stringes and holdes wherwith it was enuironed through the excessiue vehemencie of this deadlie torment Neuertheles before it come to this pointe of yelding no man can expresse the cruel conflict that is betwixt death and her and what distresses she abideth in the time of her agonie Imagine that a prince possessed a goodlie citie in al peace wealth and pleasure and greatlie frinded of al his neighbours round about him who promised to assiste him in al his needes and affairs that vpon the sudden his mortal enimie should come and besiege this citie and taking one holde after an other one wall after another one castell after an other should driue this prince onlie to a litle tower and besiege him therin al his other holdes being beaten doune and his men slaine in his sight what feare anguishe and miserie woold this afflicted prīnce be in How often would he looke out at the windowes loope holes of his tower to see whether his friendes and neighboures would come to help him or no And if he saw them all to abandone him and his cruel enemie euen readie to breake in vpon him would he not trow you be in a most pitiful plight Euen so then fareth it with a poore soule at the hower of death The bodie wherin she raigned like a iolie princesse in al pleasure whiles it florished is now battered and ouerthrowen by her enimie which is death the armes legges and other partes wherewith she was fortified as with walles and wardes during time of health are now surprised and beaten to the grounde and she is driuen onlie to the harte as to the last and extremest refuge wherein also she is most fearcelie assayled in such sorte as she can not possiblie hold out longe Her dearest friendes who soothed her in time of prosperitie and promised assistance as youth agilitie strength courage diet phisicke and other humane helpes doe now vtterlie abandone her the enimie wil not be pacified or make any league at al but night and daye assaulteth this Turret wherein she is retired and which now beginneth to shake and shiuer in pecees in such sort as she expecteth hourelie when her enimie in most raging dreadful maner wil burst in vpon her What thinke you is now the state of this afflicted soule It is no maruaile if a wise man become a foole or a stoute worldling most abiect in this instant of extremitie as we often see they doe in such sorte that they can dispose of nothing well either towardes God or the world at this houre The cause wherof is the extremitie of paines oppressing their mindes as S. Austē wel noteth geuing vs ther withal a most excellent fore-warning of this daie if men were so happie as to follow it When you shal be in your last sicknes deare bretheren sayeth he ò how harde and painful a thing wil it be for you to repent of your faultes committed and of good deedes omitted and why is this but onlie for that all the intentiō of your minde wil runne thither where al the force of your paine is Manie impedimentes shall let men at that day As the paine of the bodie the feare of death the sight of children for the which their fathers shall often times thinke thē selues damned the weeping of the wife the flatterie of the world the temptation of the deuil the dissimulation of phisitions for lacre sake and the like And beleeue thou ò man which readest this that thou shalt quickelie proue al this trew vpon thy self and therfore I beseech the that thou wilt doe penance before thou come vnto this last daie Dispose of thy house and make thy testament whyle thou arte whole while thou art wise while thou art thine owne man for if thou tarie vntil the last daie thou shalt be led whether thou wouldest not Hitherto are S. Austens words THE SECONDE THING which shal make death most terrible and grieuous to a worldlie man is the sudaine parting and that for euer and euer from al the thinges which he loued most dearely in this life as from his riches possessiōs honours offices faire buildinges goodlie apparel and rich iewels as also from wife and children kindred and frindes and al other earthly delightes and commodities wherewith in this life he thought him self a most happie man And now to be plucked from thes vpon the sudaine without hope euer to see or vse them againe and that often times when he least doubteth any such matter must needes be a pointe of extreme griefe especiallie if he be in the state which holie Iob describeth when he saith The vvicked man dieth vvhen he is strōge and vvhole of bodie riche happie vvhile his entrals are ful of fatte and vvhiles his bones are vvel vvatred vvith marooe O Iesu what a griping griefe how intollerable a torment vvil this be O how true an oracle is that of God which saieth O mors quam amara est memoria tua homini pacem habenti in substantiis suid O death how bitter is thy memorie vnto a man that hath peace and rest in his substance riches as who would say there is no greater bitternes or greefe in the world to such a man then to remember or only thinke on death but much more to taste and trie it himself yea and that immediately when it shal be saied vnto him as Christ reporteth it was vnto that great wealthie man in the Ghospel which had his barnes ful and was nowe
her wicked deedes shal beginne exceedingly to feare and tremble and would gladlie flie and leaue her deedes behinde her seekinge to entreate the Angels and to request but one hower space of delaye But that wil not be graunted and her euil workes crying out al together shal speake against her and save we wil not staye behinde or parte from the thou hast done vs and we are thy workes and therfore we wil follow the whether soeuer thou goest yea euen vnto the seate of iudgement This loe is the state of a sinners soule which partinge from his bodie with most horrible feare goeth onwardes to iudgemēt loden with sinnes and with infinite confusion Contrariwise the iust mans soule goeth out of his bodie with greate ioye and comforte the good Angels accompaininge her with exultation Wherefore brethren seinge these thinges are so doe you feare this terrible hower of death now to the ende you maye not feare when you come vnto it Foresee it now that then you maye be secure Thus farre S. Augustine And for that this holie father learned Doctour in Christes Church maketh mentiō in this place of good and euil Angels which are redie at the houre of death to receyue the soules of such as depart out of this life it shal not be from our purpose to note that oftentimes God doth permit the apparitions of Angels both good and euil as also of other saintes to some men lyinge on their death beddes for a tast ether of comforte or sorow touchinge that which shal ensue in the world to come And this is also one singuler priuiledge among other belonging to this passage And concerning the iust I haue shewed before an example out of S. Cyprian and S. Augustine touching one to whome Christ appeared at the hower of his death And S. Gregorie the greate hath diuers like narratiōs to that purpose i the fourth booke of his dialogues As for example sake of one Vrsinus to whom the blessed Apostles S. Peter and S. Paule appeared But as concerning euil spirites and wicked Angels which shewed thē selues vnto diuers sinners at the houre of death and denounced vnto them their eternal damnation and horrible tormentes appointed in hel we haue manie and most terrible exāples recorded in many graue aunciēt writers As among other that recorded by S. Gregorie of one Chrisorius a greate riche man but as ful of sinne as of wealth to whome lying on his death-bed the infernal fiendes in most vglie māner appeared shewing how now he was deliuered into their power and therfore would neuer depart from him vntil he dying left his soule vnto thē to be caried to eternal tormentes The like examples doth venerable Bede recount to haue happened in our countrie about his time And among other of a certaine wicked Courtier in great fauour with king Coenride to whom lying in the panges of death and being now a litle recouered both the good and euil Angels appeared visibly the one laying before him a verie smal booke of his good deedes the other a greate huge volume of his enormous crimes Which after they had caused him to reade by the permissiō of the good Angels they seazed vpō him assignig also vnto him the certaine houre of his departure according as both him selfe confessed openlie to al that came to visit him and as by his horrible desperate death ensuinge at the very hower by them appointed he manifestlie confirmed The like storie recordeth he in the chapter folowing of one whom he knew him self and as both he S. Gregorie and S. Cyprian also doe note al these such other visions were permitted for our sake which doe yet liue and maye take commoditie by the same and not for their good that died whom they nothing at al auailed Which being so deare Christian brother that is this passage of death being so terrible so daungerous yet so ineuitable as it is seing so manie mē doe perish and are ouer whelmed daylie in passing ouer this perilous gulfe as both holie scriptures and auncient fathers doe testifie by examples recordes vnto vs what man of discretion would not learne to be wise by other mens dangers or what reasonable creature would not take heede looke aboute him being warned so manifestlie and apparantlie of his owne peril if thou be a Christian and doest belieue in deede the thinges which Christiā faith doth teach the thē doest thou know an I most certainlic belieue also that of what state age strength dignitie or condition so euer thou be now yet must hy self which now in health mirth doest real this point and thinkest the same litle appertainig vnto thee one of these daies and that perhaps very shortlie after the readinge hereof come to proue al these thinge in thine owne person that is thou must with sorow and griefe beenforced to thy bed and there after al straggliges with the dartes of death thou must yelde thy bodie which thou louest now so dearly to be the baite of wormes and thy soule to the trial of iustice for her doinges in this life IMAGINE THEN my friend euē thou I saye which art so fresh and froelicke at this instant that the ten twentie or two yeres or perhaps two monethes or daies which thou hast yet to liue were now come to an ende and that thou were euen at this present stretched out vpon a bed wearied and worne with dolour and paine thy carnal frindes about the weepinge and howlinge and desiring thie goodes the phisitions departed with their fees as hauing gyuen the ouer and thou lyinge there alone mute and dumme in most pitiful agonie expecting from moment to momēt the last stroke of death to be gyuen vnto the. Tel me in this instāt what would al the pleasures and commodities of the whole earth auaile the what comfort or ease would it be vnto the now to haue bene of honour in this world to haue gathered wealth and purchassed much to haue borne office and enioyed the princes fauour to haue left thy children and kinred in aboundance to haue trodden donne thine enimies to haue stirred much and borne greate swaye in this life what pleasure I saye or benefite would it be to the to haue bene beautiful to haue bene gallant in apparel goodlie in personage glittering in golde would not al thes thinges rather afflict then profit thee at this instant No doubt but now thou shouldest wel see throughlie perceaue the vanitie of thes trifles thou shouldest proue true the saying of the wise man non proderūt diuitie in die vltionis riches wil profit nothing in the day of Gods reuēge That most excellent demaunde of holie Iob would oftentimes offer it self vnto thie remembrāce Quid ad cum pertinet de domo sua post se What hath a man to doe with his house familie or kinred after he is gone what good what comfort shal he take therby VVho vvil
haue mercie of the saith God to Ierusalem by his prophet Ieremie or vvho vvil be sorovvful for the at this day vvho vvil goe to intreate for thie peace Thou bast abandoned me saith God thou hast gone from me and novv vvil I strech out my hand and kil the. And yet further by an other prophet he demādeth of wicked men VVhat vvil ye doe in this day of my visitation and of calamitie that commeth vpō you to vvhose helpe vvil ye flie vvher vvil ye leaue your glorie And in an other place expressīg yet more effectuallie their state and miserie he saith they shal crie to the Godes vvhom they serued in this life and they shal not saue them in this time of affliction that is they shal crie cal vpon their frēdes acquaintance wealth honour and other idoles which they serued more then God in this life but they shal receaue no help or comfort from them O deare Christian brother what difference of cogitatiōs what chāge of iudgmentes what discouerie of vanities wil this day bring Thy harte within thee wil now beginne to reason Loe heere is an end now of al my delites and worldlie prosperities Al my ioyes al my pleasures al my mirth al my pastimes are now finished Where are my friendes that were wont to laugh with me my seruātes wont to attende vpon me my children wont to disporte the time with me where are al my coches and horses wherwith I was wont to make so goodlie a shew the cappes and knees of people accustomed to honour me the troupes of suters following me where are al my daliances and trickes of loue al my pleasant musicke al my gorgeous buildinges al my costlie feastes and banquettinges And aboue al other where are now my deare sweete frindes who seemed they would neuer haue forsaken me But alas al are now gone haue left me heere alone to aunswere the reckoninge for al and none of them wil doe so much as to goe with me to iudgement or to speake one worde in my behalfe Woe worthe me that I had not foreseene this daye rather and so haue made better prouision for the same It is now to late and I feare me I haue purchased eternal damnation for a litle pleasure and haue lost vnspeakable glorie for a fleetinge vanitie O how happie and twise fortunate are they whoe so liue as they may not be a fearde of this daye I now see the difference betwixt the endes of good and euil maruaile not though the scriptures saye of the one the death of sainctes are precious And of the other the death of sinners is miserable O that I had liued so vertuouslie as some other haue donne or as I had oftē inspirations from God to doe or that I had done the good deedes I might haue donne how sweete and comfortable woold they be to me now in this my last extremest distresse To thes cogitations and ruful speeches my louing brother shal thie soule be driuen at this last howr of her departure if now thou preuent it not by wisdome and diligence For which preuention the spirit of God hath reueiled vnto vs two principal means the first wherof is the diligent excercise of good workes in this life wherunto Christ him self assureth a good and happie passage at our death For so he pronounced plainlie by a voice from heauen to his deare Apostle S. Iohn they shal novv rest repose from their labours for that their good deedes doe follovv them And holie Dauid the prophet expresseth the maner of a good mans departure more in particuler saying Dominus opem seret illi super lectum doloris cius God shal help and assist him vpon the bed of his sorow that is vpon the bed of his last departure which to a worldlie man may rightlie be called the bed of sorow for that it is nothing els but a collection and heape of al sorowes together The second meane wherby to preuent this sorowful day is continuallie to premeditate and hold in mind the coming therof as holie Iob did who saith of him self al the dayes of my life doe I attend the comming of my change or departure from this vvorld Out of which attētion premeditation doe proceede sundrie most excellent effectes and frutes for preuention of al euil that may insue at that day The first wherof is to stand in continual awe and feare of death as holie Dauid did who confessed of him self that the feare of death vvas fallen vpon him Out of which feare doth proceed a second effect of great weight in mans life named heedfulnes or sollicitude which the blessed mā Iob had by his fornamed meditation of death for so he saith of him self that by consideration he vvas made sollicitous vvith scare and therupon he addeth further that he doubted al his vvorkes In which case S. Paul also signifieth him self to be when he exhorted al men to be careful to doe good vvorkee vvhiles they haue time and for that this time is but short so to vse this present vvorld as though they vsed it not The third effect that followeth by the meditation of death is the vnderstanding of our owne basenes and vilitie wherunto S. Paul exhorted the Corinthians when he said vnto them Except you be reprobates you knovv your selues For he that thinketh often vpon the state of a dead man shal easilie confesse with saint Iames that our life is a vapor and with Esay that al the glorie of man is but as a flovver of the field And wil finallie say to him self with the wise man Quid superbit terra cinis Whie doth earth and dust ware proude and take so much vpon it Thes are three most excellent effectes that doe insue by frequent meditation and consideration of death But besides thes ther followeth also a fowerth which is the casting from vs of al superfluous worldlie cares which are commonlie in them that consider not ther ende according as the wise man warneth vs when he saith God hath giuen or permitted to the sinner affliction and superfluous care to scrape and gather together to leaue it to such as to God it shal best please And out of this effect is ingēdred by litle and litle and by degrees an other more high and excellent thing called the cōtempt of creatures for the loue of their Greator wherunto S. Paul was arriued when he wrote thos finie wordes I doe esteeme al thinges as dunge for the gaining of Christ. And from this proceedeth an other which is the sixt and last called the cōtempt or rather the loue and desire of death Which S. Paul also had attained vnto when he said of him self I doe desire to be dissalued and to be vvith Christ. And the holie prophet Dauid who said in the beginning as you haue heard that the feare of death vvas fallen vpon him came at
other so beholding daily the wounderful examples of godes infinite mercie towardes them that doe repent we may therby conceyue the seueritie of his Iustice towards such as he reserueth to punishment in the life to come and whom for that cause he calleth in holy writ Vasa furoris that is vessels of furie wheron to exercise the rage of his dreadful and most terrible indignation A third consideration to induce vs to the vnderstāding of the greatnes of Gods punishmentes in general may be his maruailous patience and long suffering of sinners in this life As that for example he permitteth diuers mē from sinne to sinne from day to day from yeare to yeare frō age to age to liue continually in the contempt of his Maiestie and transgression of his commaundementes refusing al persuasions allurementes good inspirations or other meanes of grace and fauor that his merciful goodnes can deuise to offer for their amendment And what man in the world could suffer this or what mortal hart were able by inestimable sufferāce for bearing in this life to shew such patience but now if al this should not be requited with seueritie of punishment in the worlde to come it might seeme to be against the law of iustice and equitie and so one arme in God to be longer then the other S. Paule toucheth this reason in his epistle to the Romans where he saith duest thou not knovv that the benignitie of God is vsed to bring thee to repentance and thou by thy bard and impenitent hart doest heape vp vengeace vnto thy self in the day of vvrath and appearance of Gods iust iudgementes vvhich shal restore to euerie mā according to his vvorkes In which sentence S. Paul vseth the phrase of heaping wrath or vēgeāce to signifie therby that like as the couetous man doth laie vp money daily to make his heape encrease so the irrepentant sinner doth heape sinne vpon sinne and God on the contrary side heapeth vengeance to vengeance vntil his measure be ful to restore in the ende measure against measure as the prophet saith and to paye vs home according to the multitude of our ovvne abhominations This was the meaning of almightie God when he said to Abraham that the iniquities of the Amorrheans vvere not yet complet As also in the reuelations vnto S. Ionn Euangelist when he vsed this conclusion of that booke He that doth euil let him doe yet more euil and he that lieth in filth let him yet become more filthie for beholde I come quicklie and my revvard is vvith me to render to euerie man according to his deedes By which wordes God signifieth that his forbearance and tolleration with sinners in this life is an argument of his greater seueritie in the life to come which the prophet Dauid doth insinuate in like maner when talking of a careles sinner he saieth God shal deride him for that he seeth before hand that his daie vvil come Which daie no doubt is to be vnderstoode the daye of account and punishmēt after this life for so doth God more at large declare him self in another place in these wordes And thou sonne of man this saieth thy Lord God the end is come now I save the end is come vpon the. And I wil shew on the my furie and wil iudge the according to thy waies I wil laye against the al thine abominatiōs myn eye shal not spare the nether wil I take anie mercie vpon the but I wil laie thine owae waies vpon the thou shalt know that I am the Lord. Behold affiction commeth on the end is come the end I saie is come it hath watched against the and beholde it is come destruction is now come vpon the the time is come the daie of slaughter is at hand Shortlie wil I power out my wrath vpon the and I wil fil my furic in the and I wil iadge the according to thy waies and I wil lay al thy wickednes vpō the myn eye shal not pitie the nor wil I take any compassion vpon the but I wil lay thy waies vpon the and thy abhominations in the middest of the and thou shalt know that I am the Lord that striketh Hitherto is the speech of almightie God deliuered by the mouth of his holie Prophete SEING THEN we now vnderstand in general that the punishmentes of God in the life to come are most certaine to be greate and seuere to al such as fal into thē for which cause S. Paul affirmeth that it is a horrible thing to fal into the handes of the liuing God Let vs consider some what in particuler what maner of paines and punishmentes they shal be For better conceyuing wherof it is to be noted that there be two sortes of sinners in this worlde the one which die in the guilt of mortal sinne and in the disfauour and hatred of almightie God of whom it is said the portion of vvicked men shal be in the lake burning vvith fire and brimstone vvhich is called the second death The other which haue the guilt of their sinne pardoned by their repentance in this life but yet haue not made that temporal satisfaction to gods iustice nor are so thoroughlie purged in this world as they may passe to heauen without punishmēt and of these it is writen They shal suffer detrimēt but yet they shal be saued as by fire Vpon which wordes of S. Paul the holie father S. Austen writeth thus Because S. Paul sayeth that these mē shal be saued by fire therfore this fire is cōtemned But surely though they shal be saued by it yet is this fire more grieuous then whatsoeuer a man can suffer in this life albeit you know how greate and intollerable thinges men haue or maie suffer The same S. Augustine in an other place expoundeth yet further the words of the said Apostle i this maner They which haue donne thinges worthie of temporal punishment of whom the Apostle saieth they shal be saued by fire must passe through a firie riuer and most horrible shallowes of burning flames signified by the prophet when he saith and a fludd of fire vvent before him and looke how much matter there is in their sinnes so longe must they sticke in passing through how much the fault requireth so much shal the punishment of this fire reuenge And because the word of God doth compare the soule of a sinner to a pot of brasse saying put the pot emptie vpon the coles vntil al the rust be melted of therfore in this fire al idle speeches al filthie cogitations al light sinnes shal boile out and consume which by a shorte waie might haue bene seperated from the soule in this life by almes teares Hitherto S. Augustine And the same holie father in an other place hath these wordes If a sinner by his conuersion escape death and obtaine life yet for al that I can not promise him
according to the infinit varietie of their combates and conquestes One for martirdome or cōfession against the persecutor an other for virginitie or chastitie against the flesh an other for pouertie or humilitie against the world an other for many conquestes together against the deuil There the glorious quiar of Apostles saieth the forsaid holie Cyprian there the number of reioising prophets there the innumerable multitude of holie Martirs shal receaue the crounes of their deathes sufferinges There triumphing virgines which haue ouercome cōcupiscence with the strength of continencie there the good aulmners which haue liberallie fedd the poore and according to our Lordes commandement haue made ouer their earthly riches to the storehouse of heauen shal receaue their due and peculiar reward O how shal vertue shew her self at this day how shal good deedes content their doers And among al other ioyes and contentations this shal not be the least to see the poore soules that come thither at a iumpe either from the paines and miseries of this life or frō the tormēts of the purging fire how they shal be raushed remaine astonished and as it were besides them selues at the suddain mutation and excessiue honour donne vnto them If a poore afflicted man that were out of his way wandering alone in a deepe miric and durtie lane in the middest of a darke and tempestuous night farre from companie destitute of money beatē with raine terrified with thunder stiffe with cold wearied out with labour almost famished with hungre and thirst and neare brought to despare with multitude of miseries should vpō the suddain in the twinkling of an eye be taken out of that affliction and be placed in a goodlie large and tiche palace furnished with al kinde of cleare lightes comfortable fire sweete sauours daintie meates soft beddes pleasant musike delicate apparel and honorable companie al prepared for him alone and al attending his comming to receaue and imbrace him to serue honour him and to annoint and croune him a king for euer what wold this poore mā doe trow you how wold he looke what could he say Surelie I think he would be able to say litle but rather breaking forth into teares would for ioye remaine mute and dumme his hart being not able to containe the suddain exceeding greatnesse of so inestimable comfort Wel then deare brother so shal it be and much more with these twise happie soules that come to heauē from the troubles of this life For neuer was there cold shadow so pleasant in a hoate burning sunnie day nor the welsprig to the poore trauailer in his greatest thirst of the sommer nor the repose of an easy bedde to the wearied seruant after his labour at night as shal be this rest of heauen to an afflicted soule which commeth thither O that we could conceaue this that we could imprint this in our hartes that we had a feeling of this that I say wold we folow vanities as we doe wold we neglect this matter as we doe No doubt but that our coldenes in purchasing these ioyes doth procede of the smal opinion we doe cōceaue of thē For if we made such account and estimate of this Iewel of heauenlie blisse as other marchants before vs more skilful and wiser then our selues haue done we wold bidde for it as they did or at leastwise wold not let it passe so negligentlie which they sought after so carefullie S. Paul saieth of our Saue our proposito sibi gaudio sustinuit crucem He layinge before his eyes the ioyes of heauen susteined the Crosse. A great estimation of the matter which he wold buye at so deare a rate But what counsaile geueth he to other men about the same surelie none other but to goe and sel al they haue to purchase this treasure S. Paul of him self what sayeth he verilie that he esteemed al the vvorld as dung in respect of the purchasing of this Iewel S. Pauls scholar Ignatius what biddeth he heare his own woordes Fire galowes beasts breaking of my bones quartering of my members crushing of my bodie al the tormentes of the denil together let them come vpon me so I may enioye this treasure of heauen S. Augustine that learned father what offereth he you haue now heard that he would be content to suffer tormentes euery day yea the very torments of hel it self to gaine this ioye Good Lord how farre did these holy Saints differ from vs how contrarie were their iudgementes to ours in these affaires who wil now maruaile of the wisdome of the world iudged folie by God and of the wisdome of god iudged foly by the world Oh children of men saieth the prophet vvhy doe ye loue vanitie seeke after a lie why doe you embrace straw and contemne gold straw I say most vile chaffe and such as finally wil set your own houses on fire and be your ruine and eternal perdition BVT NOVV TO draw towardes an end in this matter though there be no end in the thing it self let the careful Christian consider wherunto he is borne and where of he standeth in possibilitie if he wil. He is borne heyre apparent to the kingdome of heauē a kingdome without end a kingdome void of limitatiō a kingdome of eternal blisse the kingdome of almightie God him self he is borne to be ioint-heyre with Iesus Christ the sonne of God to raigne with him to triumph with him to sit in Iudgement of Maiestie with him to iudge the very Angels of heauen with him What more glorie can be imagined except it were to be God him self Al the ioyes al the riches al the glorie that heauen containeth shal be poured forth to make him happie And to make this honour and triumphe yet more the glorious Lambe that sitteth vpon the throne of Maiestie with his eies like fire his feet like burning copper and his face more shining then the pretious diamant from whos seat there procedeth thunder and lightening without end and at whos feet the fower and twentie elders lay doune their crounes this lambe I say this glorious God and man shal rise and honour him with his own seruice Who then would not esteeme of this royal inheritance who would not make greater account therof then we doe especiallie seing the gaining and winning of the same is now by the benefit of our redemptiō and grace purchased vnto vs therin brought to be in our own handes according to the expresse wordes of our Saue our saying The kingdome of heauen doth suffer violence men doe lay hand-fast vpon it by force That is to saye by the force of gods couenant made with Christias that they liuing vertuouslie shal obteine the same whatsoeuer Christian doth perfourme this vertuous life taketh heauen as it were by force and by violence The matter is put in the povver of the doer sayeth S. Augustin for that the kingdome of heauen suffereth violence
geuē vnto vs against the same they crie with S. Paul that they finde a lavv in their members repugning to the lavv of their minde which is the rebellion of concupiscence left in our flesh by original sinne but they confesse not or cōsider not with the same apostle that the grace of God by Iesus Christ shall deliuer them from the same They remember not the comfortable saying of our Saueour vnto S. Paul in the middest of his greatest temptations Sufficie tibi gratia mea My grace is sufficient to strengthen thee against them al. Thes men I say doe as Helizeus his disciple did who casting his eyes onelie vpō the number of his enemies that is vpon the huge armie of Syrians redie to assault him thought hīself lost vtterly vnable to stand in their sight vntil by the prayers of his master the holie Prophet he was permitted by God to see the Angels that stoode there present to fight on his side and then he wel perceaued that his parte was the stronger So fareth it with the weake and distrustful people who feeling and considering onlie the miseries and infirmities of their own nature wherby day lie strong tentations do rise against them doe account the batail painful and the victorie vnpossible hauing not tasted in deed nor euer proued through their own default and negligence the manifold helpes of heauenlie and spiritual succours which almightie God neuer faileth to send vnto such as are content for his sake to take this cōflict in hand S. Paul had wel tasted that ayde who hauing reckned vp al the hardest incounters and impedimentes that might be he adioineth notwithstanding Sed in his omnibus superamus propter cum qui dilexit nos But we ouercome in al these combates by his assistance that loueth vs. And then falleth he to that most wonderful protestation wherof both heauen earth and hel may stand in admiration that nether death nor life nor Angels nor other thing should be able to seperat him from Christ or to make him abandon his seruice and al this vpon the confidence of spiritual ayd frō his said Saueour wherby he sticked not to auouch that he could doe al things The Prophet Dauid also had proued the force of this assistance when he saide I did runne the vvay of thy commaundementes ô Lord vvhen thoudiddest enlarge my hart This enlargement of hart was by spiritual consolation of internal vnction wherby a mans hart drawen together by anguishe and sorow is opened and enlarged at what time Gods holie grace is powred ito it no otherwise then a drie purse is softened and enlarged by annointing it with oyle Of which diuine oyle and heauenlie comfort when this blessed seruant of God had receaued his part he confessed presentlie that he did not onlie walke the wayes of Gods commandementes with ease but also did runne them ouer with exceeding pleasure Euē as a carte wheele which creketh and complaineth vnder a smal burden when it is drie doth runne on merilie and without al noise when a litle oyle is put vnto it Which thing aptlie expresseth our state and condition who without Gods assistance are able to doe nothing but with the ayde thereof are able to conquere and ouercome al things And surelie I would gladlie aske these men that imagine the way of Gods holy law to be so hard and ful of difficultie how the prophet could say who was a man as we are I haue taken pleasure ô Lord in the vvay of thy commaundementes euen as in al the riches of the vvorld And in an other place That the same commandementes vvere more pleasant and more to be desired then any gold or pretious stone and more svveter thē hony or the hony combe By which wordes he yeeldeth to vertuous life not onely due estimation of honour and value aboue al treasures in the world but also of pleasure delite and sweetnes therby to confound al those that abandone forsake the same vpon idle pretensed and feined difficulties And if king Dauid could say thus much in the old testament and of the old law which notwithstanding was infinitlie more hard thē is the new with how much more reason may we speake it now in the time of grace when not onlie the seruice of God in it self is without al comparison more sweet and easie but also the peculier helpes and assistances of almightie God much more effectual and abundant For further declaratiō wherof I would demand of thee thou poore infortunat Christian that deceauest thie self with thes bugges and fancies of imagined difficulties whie Christ our Saueour came into this world whie tooke he our flesh vpon him whie laboured he and tooke so much paines among vs whie shed he his blood whie praied he to his father so often for vs whie appointed he the Sacramentes as conduites to deriue his most holie grace vnto vs whie sent he the Holie Ghost into the world what signifieth Ghospel or good tidings what meaneth the words Grace Mercie brought with him what importeth the comfortable name of IESVS Is not al this to deliuer vs from sinne from sinne past I say by his only death from sinne present and to come by the same death and by the assistance of his holy grace bestowed on vs more abundantlie then before Was not this one of the prīcipal effectes of Christ his comming as the prophet noted that craggie pathes should be made streight and hard vvayes plaine was not this the cause whie he indued his church with the seuen blessed giftes of the Holie Ghost and with the vertues infused to make the yoke of his seruice sweet the exercise of good life easie the walking in his commandemētes pleasant in such sort as men might now sing in tribulations haue confidence in perils securitie in afflictions and assurance of victorie in al temptations is not this the beginning midle and ende of the Ghospel were not thes the promises of the Prophetes the tydinges of the Euangelistes the preachinges of the Apostles the doctrine beleef and practise of al saincts and finallie is not this verbum abbreuiatum The word of God abbreuiated and made short wherin doe consist al the riches and treasures of our Christian profession But for that this matter is of exceeding great weight to the strēgthening of Christians in their vocation against the temptations of pusilanimitie and deiectiō which are verie ordinarie dāgerous to most mē in the world it shal not be amisse perhappes to treate discusse the same more at large in this place laying doune the particuler meanes and helpes which euerie man hath or may haue in this busines if he want not wil to vse and applie the same to his assistance and commoditie And for that the feeld is large the matters are many which doe appertaine vnto this point I haue thought conuenient for more plainesse and perspicuitie
as we reade that the conscience of wicked Cain was after he had slain his own brother and of Antiochus for his wickednesse done to Ierusalem and of Ludas for his treason against his maister as our Saueour also doth signifie generallie of al naughtie men when he saieth that they haue a worme that gnaweth their consciences both day and night The reason wherof the holie scripture openeth in an other place when it saieth al vvickednesse is sul of feare geuing testimonie of damnation against it self and therfore a troubled conscience alvvaies presumeth cruel matters That is to say it presumeth cruel thinges to be imminent ouer itself as it maketh account to haue deser ued But yet further aboue al other holie Iob most liuelie setteth furth this miserable state of wicked mens consciences in thes wordes A vvicked man is proued al the dayes of his life though the time be vncertaine hovv long he shal playe the tyrant The sound of terrour is alvvaies in his eares and although it be in time of peace yet he alvvay suspecteth some treason against him He beleeueth not that he can rise againe from darknesse to light expecting on euery side the svvord to come upon him VVhen he sitteth doune to eate he remembreth that the day of darknesse is redy at hand for him tribulation terrefieth him and anguish of minde enuironeth him euen as a king is enuironed vvith soldiars vvhen he goeth to vvarre Can any thing be expressed more effectuallie louing brother then this matter is here let doune by holie writ it self what creature may be imagined more miserable and pittiful than this man which hath such a boucherie and slaughter house within his owne brest and harte what feares what anguishes what desperatiōs are here declared S. Chrisostome discourseth most excellentlie vpō this point Such is the custome of sinners sayeth he that they suspect al thinges in so much as they doute their owne shadowes they are afeard at euery litle noise and they thinke euery man that cometh towardes them to come against them If men talke together they thinke they speake of their sinnes Such a thing is sinne as it bewrayeth it self though no man accuse it It holdeth alwayes the sinner in extreme feare albeit ther be no appearance of any danger to wardes hi. Heare how notablie holy writ describeth this feare of sianers the iust mās libertie The vvicked man flieth though no man pursue him And whie doeth he flie if no man pursue him for that he hath within his owne conscience an accuser that doth pursue him the which accuser he alwayes carieth aboute with him And as he can not flie from him self so cā he not flie from this accuser that resteth within his conscience but where soeuer he goeth he is pursued beaten and whipped by the same and his wounde is incurable But the iust man is nothing so The iust man saveth Salomon is as consident as a lion Hitherto are the wordes of S. Chrisostome VVHERBY AS also by the scriptures before alleaged we take notice yet of an other prerogatiue of vertuous life which is a most liuelie hope or cōfidence of eternal saluation this being one of the greatest treasures and richest Iewels that Christian men haue left them in this life For by this we passe through al afflictiōs al tribulations and aduersities most ioyfullie By this we say with S. Paul VVe doe glorie in our tribulations knovving that tribulation vvorketh patience and patience proofe proofe hope vvhich consoundeth vs not This is our most strong and mightie comfort this is our sure ankor in al our most tēpestuous times and stormes according as the same holie Apostle auoucheth when he saith that it is a most strong solace and comfort vnto vs when we make our refuge to the hope that is proposed by God that can not lie which hope we hold as the sure infallible anker of our soule This is that noble helmet of saluation as the same Apostle calleth it which beareth of al the blowes that this world can laye vpon vs. And finallie this is the onelie rest set vp in the harte of a vertuous man that come life or come death come health or come sickenesse come wealth or come pouertie come prosperitie or come aduersitie come neuer so violent seas and waues of persecution he fitteth doune quietlie and sayeth calmelie with the Prophet my trust is in God and therfore I feare not vvhat flesh can doe vnto me Nay further with holy Iob amiddest al his miseries he singeth this most confident dittie si occiderit me in ipso sperabo if God should kil me yet would I put my trust in him And this is as the scripture sayed before to be as confident as a Lion whose propertie is to shew most courage when he is in greatest peril and neare vnto most troubles But now as the holy Ghost sayeth non sic impij non sic The wicked can not saie thus they haue no parte in this cōfidence no interest in this consolation Quia spes impiorum peribit sayeth the scripture the hope of wicked men is vaine and shall perish And againe praestolatio impiorum furor the expectation of wicked men is furie And yet further spes impiorum abhominatio animae The hope of wicked men is abhomination and not a comfort vnto their soule And the reason hereof is double First for that in verie deed though they say the contrarie in wordes wicked mē doe not put their hope and confidence in God but in the world in their riches in their strength friendes and authoritie finallie in the deceauing arme of man euen as the prophet expresseth in their persone when he sayeth VVe haue put a lye for our hope That is we haue put our hope in thinges transitorie which haue deceaued vs. And this is yet more expressed by the scripture saying the hope of vvicked men is as chasse vvhich the vvinde blovveth avvay and as a buble of vvater vvhich a storme disperseth and as the smoke vvhich the vvinde blovveth abrode and as the remembrance of a guest that stayeth but one day in his inne By al which metaphores the Holie Ghost expresseth vnto vs both the vanitie of the thinges wherein in deed the wicked doe put their trust and how the same faileth them after a litle time vpon euery smal occasion of aduersitie that falleth out This is that also which God meaneth when he so stormeth thundreth against those which goe into Egypt for helpe doe put their confidence in the strength of Pharao accurfing them for the same promising that it shal turne to their owne confusion which is properlie to be vnderstoode of all those which put their cheef confidence in worldlie helpes as al wicked men doe whatsoeuer they say or dissemble to the contrarie For which cause also of dissimulation they are called hypocrites by Iob
which should haue many children crying to her at once for meate she hauing no bread at al or not sufficient to breake vnto them so the wicked man being greedilie called vpon without ceasing by almost infinit passions to yeld vnto their desires must needes be vexed and pitifullie tormēted especiallie being not able to satisfie any one of the least of their petitions An other cause of vexation in thes mē is for that thes passions of disordinate concupiscence be oftentimes contrarie the one to the other and doe demāde most opposite and contrarie thinges representing vnto vs most liuelie the confusion of Babel where one tongue spake against an other and that in diuerse and contrarie languages So we see oftentimes that the desire of honour saieth to his maister spend here but the passion of auarice saieth hold thy handes Lecherie saieth venture here But pride saieth No it may turne thee to dishonour Anger saieth reuenge thy self here but ambition saieth it is better to dissemble And finallie here is fulfilled that which the prophet saieth vidi iniquitatem contradictionem in ciuitate I haue seene iniquitie and contradictiō in the self same citie Iniquitie for that al the demandes of thes passions are most vniust for so much as they are against reason her self Contradictiō for that one contradicteth the other in their demandes From al which miseries God hath deliuered the iuste by geuing them his peace vvhich passeth al vnderstanding as the Apostle saieth and which the world can nether geue nor taste of as Christ hym self affirmeth And thus many causes may be alleaged now besides many other which I passe ouer to iustifie the veritie of our Saue ours wordes affirming that his yoke is svveet and easie to wit the assistance of grace the loue of God the light of vnderstanding the internal consolation the quiet of cōscience the confidēce therof proceeding the libertie of soule and bodie with the sweet rest and peace of our spirites both towardes God our neighbours and our selues By al which meanes helpes priuileges and singuler benefites the vertuous are assisted aboue the wicked as hath bene shewed and their way made easie light and pleasant TO AL VVHICH yet we may adioine one other great priuilege as the last but not the least comfort to them that walke vnder the yoke of Christs seruice and this is the promise and most assured expectation of reward to wit of eternal glorie and felicitie to the good and of euerlasting damnation and tormētes vnto the wicked O good God what a matter is this to comfort the one if their life were paineful and to afflict the other amiddest their greatest pleasures and swetest delectations The labourer when he thinketh of his good paye at night is encouraged to goe thorough with the heat of the day though it be painful vnto hym Two that should passe together towardes their countrie the one to receaue honour for good seruice done abrod th' other as prisoner to be arraigned of treasons committed in forraine dominions against his Soueraigne could not be alike merie in their inne vpon the way For albeit he that stood in danger should sing or make shew of courage and comfort and set a good face vpon the matter yet th' other might wel thinke that his hart had many a cold pul within hym as no doubt but al wicked men haue when they think with themselues of the life to come If Ioseph and Pharaos baker had knowē both their distinct lottes in prison to wit that on such a day one should be called furth to be made Lord of Egypt and th' other to be hanged vpon a paire of new gallowes they could hardly haue bene alike merie whiles they liued together in the time of their imprisonmēt The like may be sayed and much more truely of vertuous and wicked men in this world For when the one sorte doe but thinke vpon the day of death which to thē is to be the day of their deliuerance from this prison their hartes can not but leape for verie ioye considering what is her after to ensew vnto thē But th' other are afflicted and doe fal into melancholie and extreme desolation as oftē as mention or remembrāce of death is offered for that they are sure that it bringeth with it their eternal bane according as holy scripture saieth The vvicked mā being dead there remaineth no more hope vnto hym Wel then deare Christian brother if al thes thinges be so what should stay thee now at length to make this resolution wherunto I exhort thee wilt thou yet say notwithstanding al this that the matter is hard and the way vnpleasant or wilt thou beleeue others that tel the so albeit they know lesse of the matter then thy self Beleeue rather the word and promisse of thy Sauiour Christ which assureth thee the contrarie Beleeue the reasons before alleaged which doe proue it most euidentlie Beleeue the testimonies of them which haue experienced the matter in them selues as king Dauid S. Paul S. Iohn Euangelist and others whos testimonies I haue alleaged before cōcerning their owne proofe Beleeue many hundredes which by the holy grace of God are conuerted day lie in Christendome frō vicious life to the perfect seruice of their Lord al which doe protest that them selues haue found much more facilitie and comfort thē ether I haue said in this place or can say in the matter And for that perhaps thou mayest replie that such men as haue experiēced this in them selues are not now liuing in the place wher thou art to geue this testimonie of their owne experience I can and doe assure thee vpon my consciēce before almightie God that I haue had conserēce with no smal number of such persons my self and that to my singuler comfort in beholding the strong hand and exceeding bountifulnesse of Gods sweetnes towards them in this case Oh deare brother no tongue can expresse what I haue seene herin and yet sawe I not the least part of that which they inwardly felte But yet this may I say that they that attend in the Catholique Church to deale with soules in the holy sacrament of Confession are in deed thos of whom the prophet saieth that they vvorke in multitudes of vvaters and doe see the maruailes of God in the depth In the depth I say of mens conscieuces vttered with infinit multitudes of teares whē God toucheth the same with his holy grace Beleeue me good reader for I speake in truth before our Lord IESVS I haue seene so great and exceeding consolations in diuers great sinners after their conuersion as no hart can almost cōceaue and the hartes which receaued thē were hardlie able to-containe the same so abundātlie distilled doune that heauēlie dewe from the most liberal and bounteful hand of God And that this may not seme strange vnto thee thou must know that it is recorded of one holy man called
wrake A day and a night was I in the bottome of the sea oftentimes in iourneys in dangers of fluddes in dāgers of theeues in dangers of Iewes in dāgers of Gentiles in dangers of the citie in dāgers of wildernes in dangers of sea in dangers of false brethren in labour and trauaile in much watching in hungar and thirst in much fasting in cold and lack of clothes and besides al thes external thinges the matters that dailie doe depēd vpō me for my vniuersal care of al Churches By this we may see now whether Christs holy Apostles taught vs more by wordes then they shewed by their owne examples about the necessitie of suffering in this life Christ might haue prouided for them if he would at leastwise thinges necessarie to their bodies and not haue suffered them to come into thes great extremities of lacking clothes to their backes meate to their mouthes and houses to pat their heades in He that gaue thē authoritie to doe so manie other miracles might haue suffered them also to haue procured sufficient maintenance for their bodies which should be the first miracle that worldly men would worke if they had such authoritie Christ might haue saied to Peter when he sent him to take his tribut from out of the fishes mouth take so much more as wil suffice for your necessary expēces when you trauaile ouer foraine countries But he woulde not nor yet diminish the great afflictions which I haue shewed before though he loued them as dearely as euer he loued his owne soule Al which was done as S. Peter interpreteth to geue vs example what to folow what to looke for what to desire what to comsort our selues in amiddest the greatest of al our tribulatiōs Saint Paul vseth this as a principal consideration when he writeth thus to the Hebrewes vpon the recital of the sufferinges of other saintes before thē Wherfore we also brethren saieth he hauing so great a multitude of witnesses that haue suffered before vs let vs lay of al burdens of sinne hanging vpon vs and let vs runne by patience vnto the battaile offered vs fixing our eyes vpon the authour of our saith and fulfiller of the same IESVS who putting the ioyes of heauen before his eyes sustained patiētly the Crosse contemning the shame and confusion therof and therfore now sitteth at the right hand of the seate of God Thinke vpon him I say which sustained such a contradictiō against him self at the hādes of sinners be not wearie nether faint yee in courage For you haue not yet resisted against sinne vnto blood and you haue for gotten perhaps that comfortable saying which speaketh vnto you as vnto children My sonne doe not contemne the discipline of our Lord and be not vvearie vvhee thou art chastised of him For whom God loueth he chastiseth and he whippeth euery sonne whom he receaueth Perseuer therfore in the correctiō laied vpon you God offereth him self to you as to his children For what child is there whom the father correcteth not if you be out of correction wherof al his children are made partakers then are you bastardes not children Al correction for the present time when it is suffered seemeth vnpleasant and sorowful but yet after it bringeth foorth most quiet fruite of iustice vnto them that are exercised by it Wherfore strengthen vp your wearie handes and loosed knees make way to your feete c. That is take courage vnto you and goe forward valiantly vnder the Crosse laied vpon you This was the exhortation of this holy captaine vnto his countrie man souldiers of IESVS Christ the Iewes Saint Iames the brother of our Lord vseth an other exhortation in his Catholike epistle to al Catholikes not much different from this Be you therfore patient my brethren saith he vntil the cōming of our Lord. Beholde the husbandman expecteth for a time the fruite of the earth so pretious vnto him bearing patientlie vntil he may receaue the same in his season be you therfore patient and comfort your hartes for that the cōming of our Lord wil shortlie draw neere Be not sadde and complaine not one of an other Beholde the Iudge is euen at the gate Take the prophetes for an example of labour and patience who spake vnto vs in the name of God Beholde we account them blessed which haue suffered You haue heard of the sufferance of Iob and you haue seene Isa e that our Lord is merciful and ful of compassion I might here alleage many things more out of the scripture to this purpose for that the scripture is moste copious herein and in verie deed if it should al be melted and poured out it would yeld vs nothing els almost but touching the crosse and patient bearing of tribulatiō in this life But I must end for that this chapter groweth to long as the other did before And therfore I wil onelie for my conclusion set down the confession and most excellent exhortation of olde Mathathias in the time of the cruel persecution of Antiochus against the Iewes The storie is thus reported in the scripture At that time the officers of Antiochus said vnto Mathathias thou art a prince of greatest estate in this citie adorned with children and brethern come thou therfore first and doe the kinges commādement as other men haue done in Iuda and Ierusalem and thou and thy children shal be the kings freends and enriched with gold and siluer and many giftes frō him Wherto Mathathias answered with a loude voice if al nations should obey Antiochus to depart from the obedience of the lawes of their auncestours yet I my children and brethern wil folow the lawes of our fathers Let God be merciful vnto vs at his pleasure c. And the daies came of Mathathias his death and then he saied vnto his children Now is the time that pride is in her strength Now is the time of chastisemēt towardes vs the time of euersion indignation is come Now therfore ô Children be you zelous in the lawe of God yeld vp your liues for the testament of your fathers remember the workes of your auncestours what they haue done in their generations and so shal you receaue great glorie and eternal name Was not Abraham found faithful in time of temptation and it was reputed vnto him for iustice Ioseph in time of his distresse kept Gods commandementes and was made Lord ouer al Egypt Phinees our Father for his zeale towardes the lawe of God receaued the testament of an euerlasting presthode Iosue for that he fulfilled Gods word was made a captaine ouer al Israel Caleb for that he testified in the Church receaued an inheritance Dauid for his mercie obteined the seat of an eternal kingdome Elias for that he was zealous in zeale of the lawe was taken vp to heauen Ananias Azarias and Misael through their beleefe were deliuered from the flame of the fire Daniel for
we wolde exercise our selues in these maner of cogitations we might easilie keepe our hartes pure and vnspotted before God in beholding the beautie of his creatures But for that we vse not this passage from the creature to the creator but doe rest onely in the external appearance of a deceatful face letting goe the bridle to our foule cogitations and setting wilfully on fire our own concupiscences hence it is that infinite men doe perish day lie by occasion of this fond vanitie I cal it fond for that euerie childe may discrie the deceate and vanitie therof For take the fairest face in the world wherwith infinite folish men fal in loue vpon the sight therof and rase it ouer but with a litle scrach and al the matter of loue is gone let there come but an Ague for foure daies and al this goodly beautie is distroyed let the soule depart but one halfe hower from the bodie and this louing face is vglie to looke on let it lie but two daies in the graue and those who were so hote in loue with it before wil skarse abyde to beholde it or come neare it And if none of those things happen vnto it yet quicklie cometh on olde age which riueleth the skinne draweth in the eies setteth-owt the teeth and so disfigureth the whole visage as it becometh more contemptible and horrible now then euer it was beautiful and alluring before And what then can be more vanitie then this What more madnesse then ether to take a pride therof if we haue it our selues or to indanger our soules for the same if we behould it in others THE SIXT vanitie belonging to pride of life is the glorie of fine apparel against which the scripture saith In vestitu ne gloriaris vnquam See thou neuer take glorie in apparel Of al vanities this is the greatest which yet we see so common among men of this world If Adam had neuer sallen we had neuer vsed apparel For that apparel was deuised to couer our shame of nakednes and other infirmites contracted by that fal Wherfore we that take pride and glorie in apparel doe as much as if beggar should glorie take pride of the olde cloutes that do couer his sores S. Paul said vnto a bishop If vve haue vvhervvithal to couer our selues let vs be content And Christ touched deeplie the daunger of nice apparel when he cōmended so much S. Iohn Baptist for his austere attire adding for the contradictorie Qui moliibus vestiuntur in domibus regum sunt They which are clothed in soft and delicate apparel are in kinges courtes that is in kinges courtes of this world but not in the kinges court of heauen For which cause in the descriptiō of the riche man damned this is not omitted by our Sauiour That he vvas apparelled in purple and silke It is a wounderful thing to consider the different proceeding of God and the world herin God him self was the first tailer that euermade apparel i this world and he made it for the most noble of al our auncestous in paradise yet he made it but of beasts skinnes And S. Paul testifieth of the noblest saintes of the olde testament that they were couered onelie with goates skinnes and with the heares of Cameles What vanitie is it then for vs to be so curious in apparel and to take such pride therin as we doe we robbe spoile al creatures in the world to couer our backes and adorne our bodies From one we take his wolle from an other his skinne from an other his furre and from some other their verie excrementes as the silk which is nothing els but the excrementes of wormes Nor yet content with this we come to fishes and doe begge of them certaine pearles to hang about vs. We goe doune into the grounde for gold and siluer and turne vp the sandes of the sea for pretious stones and hauing borowed al this of other creatnres we iette vp doune prouoking men to looke vpō vs as if al this now were our own When the stone shineth vpon our fingar we wil seeme forsooth therby to shine When the siluer and silkes doe glister on our backes we looke bigge as if al that beautic came from vs. And so as the prophet saith we passe ouer our daies in vanitie and doe not perceaue our owne extreme folie AND THVS much now may suffice for declaration of the first general head of worldlie vanities termed by S. Iohu Pride of life Ther followeth the seconde which he calleth Concupiscence of the eyes wherunto the auncient fathers haue referred al vanities of riches and wealth of this world Of this S. Paul writeth to Timothie Geue commandement to rich men of this vvorld not to be high minded nor to put confidence in the vncertaintie of their riches The reason of which speech is vttered by the scripture in an other place when it saieth Riches shal not profit a man in the daie of reuēge That is at the daie of death and iudgement Which thing the rich men of this world doe confesse them selues though to late now being in tormentes diuitiarum iactantia quid nobis contulit what hath the brauerie of our riches profited vs Al which doth euidentlie declare the great vanitie of worldlie riches which can doe the possessour no good at al whē he hath most need of their help Riche men haue slept their sleepe saith the prophet and haue found nothing in their handes that is riche mē haue passed ouer this life as mē doe passe ouer a slepe imagining them selues to haue goldē mountaines and treasures wher with to help them selues in al needes that shal occurre when they a wake at the daie of their death they finde themselues to haue nothing in their hādes that can doe thē good In respect wherof the prophet Baruch asketh this question VVhere are they novv vvhich heaped together gold siluer vvhich made no end of their scraping together And he answereth him self immediatlie Exterminati sunt ad inferos descenderunt They are now rooted owt and are gone down vnto hel To like effect saith S. Iames Novvye riche mco doe ye vveepe and vvaile and houle in your miseries that come vpon you your riches are rotten and your gold and siluer is rustie and the rust therof shal be in testimonie against you it shal seede vpon your one flash as if it vvere fire you haue hoarded vp vvrath to your ovvn selues in the last daie If wealth of this world be not onelie so vaine but also so perilous as here is affirmed what vanitie then is it formen to set their mindes so vpon it as they doe S. Paul saieth of him self that he esteemed al but as dung of the earth And he had great reasō surely to say so seing in deed riches are no better then the verie excrements of the earth and fownde onelie in
I haue or receaue seing I sit here in darknes speaking litterallie of his corporal blindnes but yet leauing it also to be vnderstood of spiritual and internal darknes Thes are then the causes beside external affliction which God often sendeth why the godly doe liue more graue sadde and feareful in this life then wicked men doe according to the counsaile of S. Paul and why also they sigh often and weepe as Iob and Christ doe affirme to wit for that they remember oftentimes the seuere Iustice of almightie God their owne frailtie in sinning the secret iudgement of his predestination vncertaine to vs the vale of misery and desolation wherein they liue here which made euen the very Apostles them selues to grone as S. Paul affirmeth albeit they had much lesse cause then we haue In respect wherof we are willed to passe ouer this life in carefulnes watchfulnes feare and trembling In regard wherof also the wiseman saith It is better to goe to the house of sorovv then to the house of feasting And againe VVhere sadnes is there is the hart of vvisomē but vvhere mirth is there is the hart of fooles Finally inconsideration of thes things the scripture saiths Beatus homo qui semper est pauidus Happie is the man which alwaies is feareful Which is nothing els but that which the holy Ghost commaundeth euery man by Micheas the Prophet solicitum ambulare cū Deo To walke carefully and diligently with God thinking vpō his commaundementes how we keepe and obserue the same how we resist mortifie our members vpon earth how we bestowe our time talents and riches lent vnto vs how we labour in good workes for the gaining of heauen what accompt we could yeeld if presently we were to die c. which cogitations if they might haue place with vs would cut of a great many of thos worldly pastimes wherwith the careles sort of sinners are ouerwhelmed I meane of thos good feloushippes in eating drinking laughing singing disputing and other such vanities that distract vs most Hereof Christ gaue vs a most notable aduertisemēt in that he wept often times as for example at his natiuitie at the resuscitation of Lazarus vpon Ierusalem vpon the Crosse. But he is neuer redde to haue laught in al his life Her of also is cch mans own natiuitie and death a signification and figure which two extremities I meane our beginning ending being reserued by God in his own handes to dispose are appointed vnto vs in sorow greef and weeping as we see and feele But the midle parte therof which is our life being left by God in our own hādes we passe it ouer with vaine delites neuer thinking whence we came nor whether we goe A wise trauailer passing by his Inne albeit he see pleasāt meates set before him to banquet at his pleasure yet he for beareth and restraineth his appetite vpon cōsideration of the price and of the iourney he hath to make and taketh nothing but so much as he knoweth wel how to discharge the next mornig at his departure But a foole layeth handes on euerie delicate bayt that is presented to his sight and playeth the prince for a night or two But the next morning when it cometh to the reckning he wisheth that he had liued onelie with bread drinke rather then to be so troubled as he is for the paiment The custome of Gods Church is to fast the euen of euerie feast and then to make merie the next daye following which is the festiual it self And this representeth the abstinent life of goodmen in this world therby to be merie in the world to come But the fashion of the world is contrarie that is to eate and drincke merilie first at the tauerne and after to let the host bring in his reckning They eate drinke and laugh and the host he skoreth vp al in the meane space And when the time cometh that they must paye many a hart is sadde that was pleasant before This very self thing holy scripture affirmeth also of the pleasures of this world Risus dolore miscebitur extrema gaudij luctus occupat Laughter shal be mingled with sorow mourning shal ensue at the hinder end of mirthe The deuil that plaieth the hoste in this world and wil serue you at an inche with what delite or pleasure you desire writeth vp al in his booke and at the daie of your departure which is at your death he wil bring in the whole reckoning charge you with it al and then shal folow that which God promiseth to worldlinges by the prophet Amos Your mirth shal be turned into morning and lamentation Yea and more then this if you be not able to discharge the rekoning you may chaunce to heare that other dreadful sentence of Christ in the Apocalips quantum in delitiis fuit tantum date illi tormentum Looke how much he hath taken of his delites so much torment doe you lay vpon him Wherfore to conclude this point and therwithal this first parte of the parable touching vanities truelie may we saie with the prophet Dauid of a worldlie minded man Vniuersa vanitas omnis homo viuens The life of such men conteineth al kind of vanitie That is to saie both vanitie in ambition vanitie in riches vanitie in pleasures vanitie in al things which they most esteeme And therfore I may wel end with the wordes of almightie God by the prophet Esay vaevobis qui trahitis iniquitatem in funiculis vanitatis Wo be vnto you which doe draw wickednes in the ropes of vanitie These ropes are those vanities of vainglorie promotion dignitie nobilitie beautie riches delites and other such like before touched which alwaies draw with them some iniquitie sinne For which cause holie Dauid saith vnto his Lord Thovvhatest ô Lord obseruers of super fluous vanities And the scripture reporting the cause why God destroied vtterlie the familie and linage of Baasa king of Israel saith it was For that they had prouoked God in their vanities And lastlie for this cause the holy Ghostpronounceth generallie of al men Beatus vir qui non respexit in vanitates insanias falsas Blessed is that man which hath not respected vanities and the false madnes of this world The second point of the parable NOVV COME I to the second part proposed in this chapter which was also the second point contained in Christes parable to shew how this world with the commodities therof are not onelie vanities but also deceites for that in deed they performe not vnto their folowers thos idle vanities trifles which they doe promise Wherin the world may be compared to that wretched and vngrateful deceiuer Labā who made poore Iacob to serue him seauen yeeres for faire Rachel and in the end deceiued him with foule Lia. What false promises doth the world make daily To one it pmiseth
pleasures of this world are ī deede deceitful thornes and wil proue in the end most bitter and daungerous The 4. point of the parable THE FOVRTH point that we haue to consider is how this word aerumna that is miserie and calamitie may be verified of the world and of the felicitie therof Which thing albeit it may appeare sufficientlie by that which hath bene said before yet wil I for promise sake discusse it a litle further in this place by some particulars And among many miseries which I might here recount the first and one of the greatest is the breuitie and vncertaintie of al worldlie prosperitie O how great a miserie is this vnto a worldlie man that would haue his pleasures cōstant and perpetual O death hovv bitter is thy remembrance saieth the scripture vnto a ma that hath peace in his riches we haue seene many men aduanced not endured two monethes in their prosperitie we haue heard of diuers maried in great ioye and not to haue liued six daies in their selicitie we haue read of straunge matters happened out in thes kindes and we see with our eyes no few exāples dailie What a greefe was it thinke you to Alexander the great that hauīg subdewed in twelue yeres the most part of al the world should be then enforced to die when he was most desirous to liue and when he was to take most ioye and comsort of his victories What a sorow was it to the riche mā in the gospel to heare vpon the suddaine hac nocte euen this night thou must die What a misery wil this be to many wordlings when it commeth who now build palaces purchasse lāds heape riches procure dignities make mariages ioyne kinredes as though there were neuer any end of al thes matters What a dolful day wil this be to them I saie when they must be turned of no otherwise then princes mules are wont to be at the end of a iourney that is their treasure taken frō them and their gauld backes onelie left vnto them selues For as we see thes mules of princes goe al the daie long loaden with treasure and couered with faire clothes but at night shaken of into some sorie stable much brused and gauled with the cariage of those treasures so riche men that passe through this world lodened with gold and siluer and doe gaule greatlie their soulesi cariage therof are despoiled of their burden at the daie of death and are turned of with their wounded cōsciēces to the lothesome stable of hel and damuation An other miserie ioined to the prosperitie of this world is the greuous counterpeare of discontentemētes that euerie worldlie pleasure hath with it Runne ouer euerie delite and solace in this life and see what sauce it hath adioined Aske them that haue had most proofe therof whether they remaine contented or no The possession of riches is accompanied with so many feares and cares as hath bene shewed The aduācemēt of honours is subiect to al miserable scruitude that may be deuised The pleasure of the flesh though it be lauful and honest yet is it accompanied as S. Paul saith vvith tribulation of the flesh But if it be with sinne tēne thou and times more is it enuironed with al kind of miseries Who can recken vp the calamities of our bodie so many diseases so manie infirmities so many mischances so many dangers who can tel the passions of our minde that doe afflict vs now with sorowe now with enuie now with furie who can recount the aduersities and misfortunes that come by our goodes who can number the hurtes and discontentations that dailie ensewe vpon vs frō our neighbours one calleth vs into law for our goods an other pursueth vs for our life a third by slaunder impugneth our good name One afflicteth vs by hatred an other by enuie an other by flatterie an other by deceite an other by reuenge an other by false witnes an other by opē armes There are not so many daies nor houres in our liues as there are miseries and contrarieties in the same And further thē this the euil hath this prerogatiue aboue the good in our life that one defect onelie ouerwhelmeth and drowneth a great nūber of pleasures together As if a man had al the felicities heaped together which this world could yeld and yet had but one toothe out of tune al th' other pleasures would not make him merie Herof you haue a cleare example in Amā cheefe counsailer of king Assuerus who for that Mardochaeus the Iew did not rise to him when he went by nor did honour him as other men did he said to his wife freēdes that al his other felicities were nothing in respect of this one affliction Adde now to this the miserie of darknes and blindnes wherin wordlie men liue as in parte I haue touched before most fitlie prefigured by the palpable darknes of Egypte wherin no man could see his neighbour no man could see his worke no man could see his way such is the darknes wherin woridlie men walke They haue eyes but they see not saith Christ that is though they haue eyes to see the matters of this world yet they are blinde for that they see not the thigs they should see in deed The children of this world are wiser in their generation then the children of light But that is onelie in matters of this world in matters of darknes not in matters of light wherof they are no children for that the carnal man vnderstandeth not the things which are of God Walke ouer the world and you shal finde men as sharp eyed as Egles in things of earth but the same men as blind as beetles in matters of heauen Her of ensue thos lamentable effects that we see daily of mans lawes so carefully respected and Gods commaundemétes so cōtemptuously reiected of earthly goods sought for and heauenly goods not thought vpon of so much trauaile taken for the body and so litle care vsed for the soule Finally if you wil see in what great blindnes the world doth liue remember that S. Paul comming from a worldling to be a good Christian had skales takē from his eyes by Ananias which couered his sight before when he was in his pride and ruffe of the world Besides al thes miseries there is yet an other miserie greater in some respect thē the former and that is the infinit number of temptations of snares of intisementes in the world wherby men are drawen to perdition daily Athanasius writeth of S. Anthonie the heremite that God reuealed vnto him one day the state of the world and he sawe it al hanged ful of nettes in euery corner and deuilles fitting by to watch the same The prophet Dauid to signifie the verie same thing that is the infinit multitude of snares in this world saieth God shal raine snares vpon sinful
by name from his mercie Oh that worldlie men would consider but this one point onelie they would not I think liue so voide of feare as they doe Can any man maruaile now why S. Paul crieth so carefully vnto vs nolite conformari huic saeculo cōforme not your selues to this world againe that we should renounce vtterly al secular desires Can any man maruaile why S. Iohn which was most priuie aboue al others to Christs holy meaning herein saieth to vs in such earnest sorte Nolite diligere mundum nequè ea quae in mundo sunt doe not loue the world nor any thing that is in the world If we may nether loue it nor so much as conforme our selues vnto it vnder so great paines as are before rehearsed of the enimitie of God and of our eternal damnation what shal become of thos mē that doe not onely cōforme them selues vnto it and to the vanities therof but also doe folowe it seeke after it rest in it and doe bestow al their labours and trauailes vpon it If you aske me the cause why Christ so hateth and abhorreth this world Saint Iohn telleth you Quia mundus totus in maligno positus est for that al the whole world is set on noughtines for that it hath a spirite contrarie to the spirite of Christ as hath bene shewed for that it teacheth pride vainglorie ambition enuie reuēge malice with pleasures of the flesh and al kinde of vanities And Christ on the contrarie side preacheth al humilitie meekenes perdoning of enemies abstinence chastitie sufferance mortification bearing the Crosse with cōtempt of al earthlie pleasures for the kingdome of heauen Christ hateth it for that it persecuteth the good aduanceth the euil for that it rooteth out vertue and planteth al vice And finalie for that it shutteth the doores against Christ when he knocketh and strangleth the hart that once it possesseth Wherfore to conclude this part seing this world is such a thing as it is so vaine so deceitful so troublesome so dangerous seing it is a professed enemie to Christ excommmunicated and damned to the pit of hel seing it is as one father saieth an arcke of trauaile a schole of vanities a marcket of deceite a laberinthe of errour seing it is nothing els but a barraine wildernes a stonie field a dirtie stie a tempestuous sea seing it is a groue ful of thornes a medowe ful of scorpions a flourishing garden without fruite a caue ful of poisoned and deadlie basiliskes seing it is finallie as I haue shewed a fountaine of miseries a riuer of teares a faigned fable a delectable frensie seing as Saint Austen saieth the ioy of this world hath nothing els but false delite true asperitie certaine sorowe vncertaine pleasure trauailsome labour fearful rest greeuous miserie vaine hope of felicitie seing it hath nothing in it as S. Chrisostome saith but teares shame repentāce reproche sadnes negligences labours terrours sicknes sinne and death it self seing the worlds repose is ful of anguish his securitie without foundation his feare without cause his trauailes without fruite his sorowe without profit his desires without successe his hope without rewarde his mirthe without continuance his miseries without remedies seing thes and a thousande euils more are in it no one good thing can be had from it who wil be deceiued with this visard or allured with this vanitie hereafter who wil be staied from the noble seruice of God by the loue of so fond a trifle as is this world And this to a reasonable man may be sufficiēt to declare the insufficiencie of this third impediment The. 6. point of this chapter BVT YET NOVV for satisfying my promisse in the beginuing of this chapter I haue to adde a word or two in this place how we may auoide the foresaid daungers of this world as also vse it vnto our gaine and commoditie And for the first to auoide the daungers seing there are so many snares and trappes as hath bene declared there is no other waie but onelie to vse the refuge of birdes in auoiding the dangerous snares of fowlers that is to mounte vp into the ayer and so to flie ouer them al. Frustra tacitur rete ante oculos pennatorum saith the wise man that is the net is laide in vaine before the eies of such as haue winges and can flie The spies of Hierico though many snares were laide for them by their enemies yet they escaped al for that they walked by hilles saieth the scripture Which place Origen expounding saieth that there is no waye to auoide the daungers of this world but to walke vpon hilles and to imitate Dauid that saied Leuaui oculos meos ad montes vnde ve 〈◊〉 auxiliū mihi I lifted vp mine eies vnto the hilles frō whence al mine aide and assistāce came for auoiding the snares of this world And then shal we saie with the same Dauid Anima nostra sieut passer erepta est de laqueo venantium Our soule is deliuered as a sparo we from the snare of the fowlers We must saie with S. Paul Our conuersation is in heauen and then shal we litle feare al thes deceites and daungers vpon earth For as the fouler hath no hope to catch the birde except he can allure her to pitch and to come doune by some meanes so hath the deuil no way to entangle vs but to say as he did to Christ mitte te deorsum throw thy self doune that is pitch doune vpon the baites which I haue laid eate and deuour them enamour thy self with them tie thine appetite vnto them and the like Which grosse and open temptation he that wil auoide by contemning the alluremēt of thes baites by flying ouer them by placing his loue and cogitations in the mountaines of heauenly ioyes eternitie he shal easily escape al daungers and perils King Dauid was past them al when he saied to God VVhat is there for me in heauen or vvhat doe I desire besides thee vpon earth my flesh and my harte haue fainted for desire of thee Thou art the God of my hart and my portion ô Lord for euer Saint Paul also was past ouer thes daungers when he saied that now he was crucified to the world and the world vnto him and that he esteemed al the wealth of this world as meere dung and that albeit he liued in flesh yet liued he not according to the flesh Which glorious example if wee would folow in contemning and despising the vanities of this world and fixing our mindes on the noble riches of Gods eternal kingdome to come the snares of the deuil would preuaile nothing at al against vs in this life Touching the second point how to vse the riches and commodities of this world to our aduantage Christ hath laied doune plainly the meanes Facite vobis amicos de Māmonainiquitatis Make vnto you freendes of
their maister and to stir vs vp to folowe their examples Which thing the learned and deuout Father S. Iohn Chrysostome considering when he treated of the deedes of S. Peter and S. Paul in particuler breaketh furth into this speech folowing O holie and blessed Apostles of my Sauiour what thankes shal we yeld vnto you for al the labours and toiles that you haue taken for vs When I thinke of thee O Peter I fal into admiration and when I remember thee O Paul I fal besides my self and am oppressed with teares For what shal I say or what shal I think whē I behould the afflictions that you haue suffered How many prisons haue you two sanctified how many chaines haue you adorned how many torments haue you ●usteined how many reproches haue you receaued O blessed bee those tongues of yours that haue bene such instruments of the holie Ghost and blessed be your members inbrued with blood for the loue of Christes Church You haue trulie followed your maister in al things c. Reioyce therfore thou Peter to whom it was giuen to die vpon the crosse therby to imitate thy Sauiour and triumphe thou Paul whose head was cut of with the sword for the same cause O this sword shal be to me in steade of a crowne and the nailes wherwith S. Peter was crucified shal be most pretious stones in my Diademe Thus much many things more vttereth this holie father with great feruour in admiration of the sufferings of thes blessed Apostles whose labours how much he indeuored to put in execution in his own life and how far he was made partaker of like afflictions it may appeare to him that wil reade the Ecclesiastical historie which declareth how he both liued and died in continual tribulation O deare christian brother if we had so tender harts in contemplation of thes affaires as had this holie man of God we would be of other iudgment in many things then we are We see that S. Chrysostome was thus moued with the consideration onelie of thes two Apostles trauails But how much might be said of al the rest in like maner Of S. Iames that was called the brother of IESVS and was left by him as the first bishope of Hierusalem it is writen by Egesippus that liued immediatly after his time that he being in singuler auctoritie credit for his holines and wisdome not only among al Christians but also among the whole nation of Iewes for which he was called by the name of Iames the Iust as Iosephus the Iew reporteth yet chose he a most austere and sharpe life neuer testing either wine or flesh or anointig his body with oile according to the fashion of the countrie He was so diligent and painful in continual praying vpon his knees that the skinne therof was as hard as the brayne of a camels knee And being broght forth one daie and placed vpon a pinnacle of the temple of Hierusalem in the presence of in inic people for it was on the highe feast of Easter and ther intreated by al the nobles and Magistrates of Iurie to speake some word in derogation of Christian religion with promisse of infinite honour for the same if he would yeld the runto he made choise not only to lacke that honour but also to be reuiled by the people to be throwen downe from the pinnacle wher he stood and to haue his head cleft in sunder with a staffe or instrument that diars of cloth doe vse rather then to relent one iote in professing that thing which he knew to be true This was the smal accompte that thos men made of worldly dignities and promotions when they broght with them any let or hinderance to Gods perfect seruice And this was the redy desire they haue to suffer in euery least occasion offered for their Masters honour O gentle reader how worthely said our Samour Iesvs of thes mē you are they vvho baue stood vvith me in my temptations and therfore I prepare for you a kingdome and how iustely may it be verified of vs that which the same our Sauiour in another place saith in tempore tentationis accedunt they abandone me in time of tentation BVT LET VS see now further how thes which insued and liued after the Apostles behaued themselues in this behalfe For better conceauing wherof thou hast to remember louing brother that for the space of three hundred years together after Christs departure out of this world he sent almost continual temptations that is to say continual tribulatiōs afflictions persecutiōs vnto his Church vpon earth except only certaine short times or breathing wherin he ment to make euident proofe of his seruantes patience and of his owne power against his enimies And wheras a litle before his departure he forwarned his disciples of thes things to come assuring them that they should haue pressures and that he sent thē forth as lambes among wolues he perfourmed the same in such sorte not long after as it may seeme that he brake open al the gates and barres of hel at once as els wher I haue noted and turned forth al the legions of suries therin conteined as most rauenous beares and lions vpon thes his lambes For in ten general most deadful persecutions which in this time by publique authoritie cōmādemēt were excercised it is impossible for man to recounte either the tyrannie and iniquitie of the lawes or the barbarous crueltie of the executors or the infinite multitude of the sufferers or the strange inuentions of the tormentours And albeit in thes times of trial as alwaies it falleth out ther wanted not diuers Christians as Eusebius wel noteth that writeth the storie who for loue of their own ease made shipwrak of their saluation yet without number were thos also that by contempt of the world did beare out the storme and perseuered faithful Of whom for our instruction comfort in like occurrētes some sew shal be noted in this discourse following After the death of S. Iames before mentioned the destruction of Hierusalem which was especially hastened by God for punishement of that murder as Iosephus the Iewe was of opinion Ege sippus and Eusebius doe reporte that so many of the Apostles and disciples of Christ as were then aliue gathered them selues together and ordeined bishop of Hieruialē in place of S. Iames one Simeon the soune of Cleophas which Cleophas S. Luke nameth for one of the two disciples that went to Emaus together and talked with Christ vpon the way after his resurrection S. Matthew also and S. Iohn doe make mention of MARY the wife of Cleophas which was continually in the company of the blessed Virgin-mother of our Saue our at his Passiō which MARY being mother to this Simeon and her husband Cleophas being brother to Ioseph as Egesippus holdeth Simeō was accompted as cosine german to our Sauiour IESVS and by al
probabilite had bothe sene him and heard him in his life This man then hauing liued verie long in this his charge of bishoprike being now a hundred and twentie yeares olde was in the time of Traian the Emperor S. Iohn the Euangelist being dead a litle before accused by certaine heretiques who then first as Egisippus saith who liued in the same time beganne to shew them selues openly in the world hauing liued secretly in corners before for that al the holy Apostles and others which had heard our Sauiour speake were now dead and therfore thes heretiques deuised now what new expositions vpon scriptures liked them best And for that this man was the only or cheefe piller that stood against them for defence of the Catholique faith and apostolical traditiō at that daie they caused him coningly to be apprehended and presented before Atticus then gouern our of Iurie for the Emperour Who after many allurementes and threates vsed vnto him when by no me ās he could moue him to relent from his cōstancie in Christes seruice he caused him to be beaten with whippes and to be tormented many daies together which the old man indured with most wonderful corage in so much that Atticus being astonied saith our author that one of six skore years of age could beare so many torments commanded him finally to be nailed on a crosse as his master Christ was and so he died At the very same time liued therin Asia a man of singuler name for his holines called Ignatius disciple to the apostles by them or deined bishop of Antioche after that S. Peter had lest the same This mā being accused for his faith to the gouernour of Syria and standing constant in the confession therof was condemned by him to be torne in peeces of wild beastes But for that he was a person of great marke he was sent prisoner to Rome vnder the custodie of ten soldiars to suffer ther. And albeit thes soldiars vpon the way vsed him very discurteously and kept him straite yet founde he meanes either by speech or letters to comfort al Christians as he passed by them But especially as Eusebius noteth he inculcated two pointes to be remembred of them Primum vt haereses quae tum primò emergere caeperunt maxime praecaue ēt deinde vt apostolorū traditioni 〈◊〉 adhaerescerēt first that they should aboue al other things take heed of new opinions and heresies which then first began to creepe abroad and secōdly that they should sticke and cleane most firmely to the tradition of th' Apostles for the true vnderstanding and interpretation of scriptures that is to say they should admit no other interpretation but that which al churches by general and vniforme consent had receaued from th' apostles insinuating hereby that this should be an infallible rule to guide men by vnto the worlds ende Besides this the good man got time also and opportunitie in his iourney to write diuers epistles to sandry churches which Eusebius in his storie setteth downe And among other things either he being informed or fearing of him self that the Christians in Rome hearing of his comming would make means to the Emperour to get pardon for his life and so depriue him of martyrdome he write a most earnest letter vnto them beseeching them not to doe so Out of which letter both Eusebius and S. Hieron doe cite thes most excellent words following In this my iourny saieth he from Syria to Rome I am inforced to fight day and night with ten leopards that is with ten soldiars sent to keepe me Who the more benifites I doe bestow vpon them the worse and the more cruel they are towards me But their iniquitie is my instruction and yet hereby I am not iustified Would God I were once come to inioy thos beastes that are appointed to deuoure me I desire greatly that it may be hortly that they may be stirred vp to eate me quickly least perhapes they abstaine to touch me as they haue done from the bodies of other martyrs But if they should refuse to set vpon me I wil intise them on my self Pardon me my children for I know what is good for me Now I begine to be Christs true disciple desiring nothing that is sene in this world with mans eyes but only IESVS Christ my Sauiour Fire crosse beastes breaking of my bones quartering of my members tearing and renting of my body and al th' other tormentes that the diuel can inuent let them al come vpon me only that I may inioy my IESVS Thus far doth Eusebius cite the words of his own epistle which yet is exstant And S. Irenaeus S. Ierom doe 〈◊〉 yet further that when he came to suffer and heard the roringes of the lions redy to come forth vpon him he vsed thes words I am Gods corne and the teeth of thes wild beastes must grinde me to the ende I may be pure and good bread for Christs table He suffered saith S. Ierome in th' eleuenth yeare of Traians reigne and his reliques were carried backe againe by Christians from Rome to Antioche and ther are kept without the gate called Daphnitica Here we see the feruour of this seruant of God we see his constancie his corage his comfort in suffering And how came he deare brother to this most happie and blessed estate We heare him say of him self that novv he began to be Christes true disciple vvhen he desired nothing that mans eye can behold but only his Lord and Sauiour IESVS Christ. This burning loue then of IESVS did consume in him al other loue and affection that stayeth worldly men from like resolution He was no frende or louer of this world Heare the saying of an other light and lanterne of Gods church which liued at the very same time and suffered so one after him for the same cause and spake with him in his iourney toward Rome I meane S. Policarpus who wrote thus of Ignatius presently after his martyrdome vnto the Philippenses I beseech you brethren to yeld al obedience wher it is due and to vse al patience in your afflictions according to the example which you haue seene in Ignatius and other martyrs as also in S. Paul and the rest of the Apostles assuring your selues that thos men ranne not in vaine but in faith and iustice and therfore are gone to the place which was due vnto them being now with their Lord of whos afflictions they were made partakers in this life They were no louers of this world but they loued their maister who suffered death for our loue and rose againe for our glorification Thus far Policarpus And for that we are fallen into the mention of this rare and worthie man Policarp who albeit he sawe not Christ hī self in flesh yet did he liue most familiarly with diuers of the Apostles especially with S. Iohn Euāgelist whose domestical disciple he
of a Leuit God punished the whole tribe in this order as holy scripture recounteth He caused al the other eleuen tribes to rise against them first to come to the house of God in Silo to aske his aduise and to folow his direction in this warre against their brethren And thence hauing by Godes appointement ioined battaile twise with the tribe of Beniamin the third daie God gaue them so great a victorie as they slew al the liuing creatures within the compasse of that tribe except onelie six hundred men that escaped awaie into the desert the rest were slaine both man woman children and infantes together with al the beastes and cattel al the cities villages and howses burnt with fire And al this for one sinne committed onelie at one time with one woman And who then deare Christian brother wil not confesse with Moyses that God is a iust God a great God and a terrible God Who wil not confesse with S. Paul that it is horrible to fal into the handes of the liuing God Who wil not say with holy Dauid A Iudicijs tuis timui I haue feared at the remembrance of thy iudgementes If God would not spare the destroying of a whole tribe for one sinne onely if he would not perdon Chore Dathan and Abiron for once the sonnes of Aaron for once Ananias Saphira for once if he would not forgiue Esau though he demaunded it with teares as S. Paul saieth if he would not remit the punishment of one fault to Moyses Aaron albeit they asked it with great instance if he would not forgiue one proude cogitation vnto the Angels nor the eating of one apple vnto Adā without infinite punishment nor would passe ouer the cuppe of affliction from his own deare sonne though he required the same thrise vpō his verie knees with the sweate of blood and water in his presence what reason hast thou my brother to thike that he wil let passe so many sinnes of thine vnpunished what cause hast thou to induce thy imagination that he wil deale extraordinarilie with thee breake the course of his iustice for thy sake Art thou better then thos whom I haue named or hast thou any priuilege from his Maiestie aboue them If thou wouldest consider the great and strange effectes of his iustice which we see dailie executed in the world thou shouldest haue litle cause to persuade thy self so fauorablie or rather to flatter thy self so daungerously as thou doest We see that notwithstanding Godes mercie yea after the death and passion of Christ our Sauiour for sauing of the whole world yet so many infinite millions be damned daily by the iustice of almightie God so many insideles heathens Iewes and Turkes that remaine in the darknes of their owne ignorance and among Christīans so many heretiques and misbeleuers and among Catholiques so many euel liuers as Christ truely said that few were they which should be saued albeit his death was paid for al if by their own wickednes they made them selues not vnworthie therof And before the comming of our Sauiour much more we see that al the world went awrie to damnatió for many thousand yeres together excepting a few Iewes which were the people of God And yet among them also the greater part perhappes were not saued as may be cōiectured by the speeches of the prophetes from time to time and specially by the sayings of Christ to the harisees and other rulers therof Now then if God for the satisfying of his justice could let so many millions perish through their own sinnes as he doth also now daily permit without any preiudice or impechement to his infinit mercie why may not he also damne thee forthy sinnes notwithstanding his mercie seing thou doest not onely commit them without feare but also doest confidently persist in the same The 2. part of the chapter BVT HERE now perhappes some man may say if this be so that God is so seuere in punishment of euery sinne and that he damneth so many thousandes for one that he saueth how is it true that the mercies of God are aboue al his other vvorkes as holy scripture affirmeth and that it passeth and exalteth it self aboue his iudgement For if the number of the damned doe exceede so much the number of thos which are saued it seemeth that the worke of iustice doth passe the worke of mercie To which I answere that touching the smal number of them that are saued as also of th' infinit quantitie of such as are damned we may in no wise doute for that besides al other prophetes Christ our Sauiour hath made the matter certaine and out of question We haue to see therfore how notwithstāding al this the mercie of God doth exceede his other workes And first his mercie may be said to exceede for that al our saluation is of his mercie and our damnation from our selues only as from the first and principal causes therof according to the saying of God by the prophet Perditio tua Israel tantummodò in me auxilium tuum Thy perdition is onely from thy self ô Israel and thy assistance to doe good is onely from me So that as we must acknowledge Gods grace and mercie for th' author of euerie good thought and acte that we doe and consequently ascribe al our saluatiō vnto him so none of our euil actes for which we are damned doe proceede from him but onely from our selues and so he is no cause at al of our damnation and in this doth his mercie exceede his iustice Secondlie his mercie doth exceede in that he desireth al men to be saued as S. Paul teacheth and him self protesteth when he saieth I vvil not the death of a sinner but rather that he turne from his vvikednes and liue And againe by the prophet Ieremie he complaineth greeuouslie that men wil not accept of his mercie offered Turne from your vvicked vvaies saith he vvhy vvil ye die a you house of Israel By which appeareth that he offereth his mercie most willinglie and freelie to al but vseth his iustice onelie vpon necessitie as it were cōstrained therunto by our obstinate behauiour This our Sauiour Christ signifieth more plainlie when he saith to Ierusalem O Ierusalem which killest the prophetes and stonest them to death that are sent vnto thee how oftē wold I haue gathered thy children together as the henne clocketh her chickins vnderneth her winges but thou woldest not behold thy house for this cause shal be made desert and left without children Here you see thee mercie of God often offered vnto the Iewes but for that they refused it he was enforced in a certaine maner to pronounce this heauie sentence of destruction and desolatiō vpon them which he fulfilled within fortie or fiftie yeares after by the handes of Titus and Vespasian Emperours of Rome who vtterlie ouerthrewe the citie of Ierusalem and the whole nation
treate and to remoue al impedimentes that offer them selues against the same But yet for that as the wiseman saieth he which is once minded to breake with his frind seeketh occasiōs how to doe it with some colour and shew there be many in the world who hauing no other excuse of their breaking houlding of from God doe seeke to couer it with this pretense that they meane by his grace to amend al in time And this time is driuen of from day to day vntil almightie God in whos handes onely the momentes of time are doe shut them out of al time and doe send them to paines eternal without time for that they abused the singular benefite of time in this world This is one of the greatest most dangerous deceites and yet the most ordinary and vniuersal that the enemie of mankind doth vse towardes the children of Adam And I dare say boldlie that more doe perish by this deceite among Christians thē by al his other guiles and subtilities that he vseth besides He wel knoweth the force of this snare aboue al others and therfore vrgeth it so much vnto euerie man He considereth better then we doe the importance of delay in a matter so weightie as is our conuersion and saluation He is not ignorant how one sinne draweth on an other how he that is not fit to day wil be lesse fit to morow how custome groweth into nature how old diseases are hardly cured how God withdraweth his grace how his iustice is redie to punish euery sinne and how by delay we exasperate the same and heape vengeance on our owne heades as S. Paul saieth He is priuie to the vncertaintie and perils of our life to the dangerous chaunces we passe through to the impedimentes that wil come daily more and more to let our conuersiō Al this he knoweth and wel considereth and for that cause persuadeth so many to delay as he doeth For being not able any longer to blind the vnderstāding of many Christians but that they must needes see clearlie the necessitie and vtilitie of this resolution and that al impedimentes in the world are but trifles mere deceites which diuert them from the same he runneth to this onely refuge that is to persuade men that they deferre a litle and that in time to come they shal haue better occasion and opportunitie to doe it then presentely they haue This S. Augustine proued in his conuersion as him self writeth For that after he was persuaded that no saluation could be vnto him but by change and amendement of his life yet the enemie held him for a time in delaie saying vnto him staye yet a litle yet deserre for a time Therby as he saith to binde him more fast in the custome of sinne vntil by the omnipotent power of Gods grace and his owne most earnest endeuour he brake violentlie from him crying to God vvhie shal I longer saye to morovv to morovv vvhy shal I not doe it euen at this instant And so he did euen in his verie youth liuing afterward a most holie and seuere Christian life But if we wil discouer yet further the greatnes and peril of this deceit let vs consider the causes that may let our resolution and conuersion at this present and we shal see them al increased and strengthened by delaie and consequentlie the matter made more hard and difficult for the time to come then now it is For first as I haue said the continuance of sinne bringeth custome which once hauing gotten prescription vpon vs is so hard to remoue as by experience we proue daily in al habites that haue taken roote within vs. Who can remoue for examples sake without great difficultie a longe custome of dronkennes of swearing or of any other euil habite once setled vpon vs Secondlie the longer we persist in our sinful life the more God plucketh his grace and assistance from vs which is the onelie meanes that maketh the waie of vertue easie vnto men and their conuersion possible Thirdlie the power and kingdome of the deuil is more established confirmed in vs by continuance and so the more hardely to be remoued Fourthlie the libertie of our free wil is more more weakened and daunted by frequentation of sinne though not extinguished Fiftlie the faculties of our mind are more corrupted as the vnderstanding is more darkened the wil more peruerted the appetite more disordered Sixtlie and lastlie our inferiour partes and passions are more stirred vp and strengthened against the rule of reason and harder to be repressed by continuance of time then they were before Wel then deare Christian brother put al this together and consider indifferentlie with thy self whether it be more likelie that thou shalt rather make this resolution hereafter thē now Hereafter I say when by longer custome of sinne the habite shal be more deeply rooted in thee the deuil in more firme possession of the Gods helpe further of frō thee thy minde more infected thy iudgement more weakened thy good desires extinguished thy passions confirmed thy bodie corrupted thy strength diminished and al thy whole common wealth more peruerted We see by experiēce that a ship which leaketh is more easily emptied at the beginning then afterward We see that a ruinous palace the longer it is let runne the more charge and labour it wil require in the repairing We see that if a mā driue in a naile with a hammer the more blowes he geueth vpon it the more harde it is to plucke out againe How then thinkest thou to commit sinne vpon sinne and by perseuerance therin to finde the redresse more easie hereafter then now It is writen among the liues of old heremites how that on a time an Angel shewed to one of them in the wildernes a certaine good felow that hewed doune wood who hauing made to him self a great burden to carie thence laied it on his backe and for that it was vneasie and pressed him much he cast it doune againe and put a great deale more vnto it and thē beganne to lift at it a new But when he felt it more heauie then before he fel into a great rage and added twise as much more vnto it therby to make it lighter Whereat when this holy mā mused much the Angel told him that this was a figure of them in the world who finding it some-what vnpleasant to resist one or two vices at the beginning doe deferre their conuersion and doe adde twentie or fortie more vnto them thinking to finde the matter more easie afterward Saint Austen expounding the miracle of our Sauiour in raising Lazarus from death to life which had bene dead now fower daies as th' Euangelist saieth examineth the cause why Christ wept cried out and troubled him self in spirit before the doing of this acte where as he raised others with greater facilitie And he concludeth the mysterie to haue bene for that Lazarus was
Dan. 8. The fortelling of great Alexander Ioseph l. 1. de antiq Iudaic. 〈◊〉 VVhat maner of persons our prophetes vvere Ptolo. in l. de fructu Moses Narbon in lib. Abubacher 〈◊〉 Roger. Baco l. de sex sciēt experimentalib Amos 1. Exod. 15. Iudic. 5. 1. Reg. 2. Luc. 1. c 2. Act. 21. THE. 8. proofe of scripturs Approbatiō of heathen vvriters I. The creation of the vvorlde Gen. 1. 2. 2. The slud of Noe. Gen. 6 7. 8. Iosep. lib. 1. antiq Iudaie Euseb. li. 9. de prap Euāg ca. 4. 3. The longe life of the first fathers Gen. 5. 10. 11. 4. The Toure of Babylon Gen. 11. Enseb. li. 9. de praepar cap 4. Marke this reason 5. Of Abraham Gen. 11. 12. 13. 14. c. Alex. Polyhist lib. de Iudaica historia Melo li. de fraudibus Iudaeorum Artaban in Iudaeorumhist Gal. de simplic pausan in Eliae Solin in Poli. hist. Tacit. li. vlt. hist. 6. Of Isaac Iacob Iob Ioseph c. Gen. 15. 16. 17. 18. c. Aristaeus li de Iob. 7. Of Moyses Exo. 2. 3. 4. 5. c. The discription of Moyses person out of heathen vvriters 8. The storie of Iosue the Iudges and the kinges Iosep. lib. 8. de antiq cap. 2. The treasures hiddē in the sepulcher of Dauid Ioseph l. 13 de antiq cap. 16. * The same thing attempted Herode in his time as Iosephus saith l. 18. antiq 9. The things that ensued after Salomons dayes Iere. 37. 4. Reg. 4 Os Senacherib Esa. 31. 33. 36. 4. Reg. 9. Hero l. 2. Dan. 16. Ioseph l. 1. de Antiq. Iudaica No excuse of the ignorance of God The errour of the olde Philosophers Rom. 1. 2. Rom. 1. Rom. 1. v. 28. Rom. 1. E v. 32. A general sentēce pronounced by S. Paul Rom. I. V. 18. Th' application to our selues Rom. 1. v. 20. Luc. 12. A necessarie Consideration Prou. 16. Man made to serue God Iob. 11. Sap. 15. Pro. 15. Eccle. 11. 12. Mat. 12. Accompt to be rēdered Psal. 9. 43 141. Profitable 〈◊〉 and considerations Gen. 14 Deut. Luc. 1. The. 1. consequence upon due consideration of our ende The 2. consequēce Hovv eche 〈◊〉 may take a scāteling of his estate A right course Philip. 2. A vvrong and dangerous course The reason vvhie so fevv are saued Mat. 7. 20 22. Lut. 13. Iacob 4. Mat. 19. Marc. 10. Luc. 19. A perfect example of a good conuersion Mat. 19. Marc. 10. The vvrōg course of the vvorld A Cōparison expressing theranitie of our occupatiōs Math. 16. Psal. 4. Hiere 2. A Comparison 8. Cor. 9. Sap. 5. The complainte of vvorldlīgs in th' ende of their life The fondé iudgemēt off the vvorld Sap. 5. Psal. 10 Gal 6. A comparyson expressing our gryese in th' ende for our running a vvronge course The miserie of a soule that hath gone avvrie at the last day Sap. 5. Alexāders death Iul. Caesar death Tvvo rare examples Ioseph l. 14 15. 18 de antiq Iudaica de bell Iud. l. 2 * For enuie onlie of Agrippa his fortune Herodias did ruine her self and her husband as Ioseph saith l. 18. antiq cap. 8. 9. 15. Her husband vvas Herod An tipas that slevv S. Iohn Baptiste and vvas sonne to Herode the first Luc. 3. Mat. 14. Herodes death Iosep. l. 15. antiq * This Herod vvas called Ascolonita slevv th' infantes in Bethlem Matth 2. The death of Agrippa Iosep. l. 19. cap. 7. * S. Luke saith he vvas stroké by Gods Angel Act. 12. And cōsider hovv Ioseph'agreeth vvith that Narration Euseb. l. 2. hist. cap. 9. Sincere and profitable counsaile Eccle. 4. Ioh. 9. Deut. 32. Eccle. 37. Eccle. 24. Great follie and errous Esa. 55. Ephe. 1. 1. Thes. 2. 2. Pet. 1. Luc. 15. Sap 4. Errour in cur course of life is not pardoned Ose. 4. Esa. 28. A profitable forevvarning Math. 25. Luc. 16. A rare chance that happened to Balsasar K. of Babylon Dan. 5. If God examine straitlie th' actiōs of infidells much more of Christiās is they be careles Dan. 5. Sopho. 1. A dreadful diuision Math. 24. The cōclusion Rom. 12. Pro. 5. Eccle. 12. Of religion See S. Tho. 2. 22. quest 81. 82. 83. Pietie Obseruāce Malac. 1. The actis and operations of Religion Iacob 1. August lib. 10. de ciuit cap. 1. Hovv much it importeth to be religions The necessitie of Chri stiā religiō Act. 4. Hovv men vvere saued in olde time vvithout Christiā religiō Gal. 3. 4 Ephes. 3. Colos. 1. See S. Angust li. 19. cont Fanst. cap. 14. All olde Sainctes beleeued in Christ and vvere saued by Irym Gen. 3. v. 15. Apoc. 13. Act. 15. v. 11. Rom. 5. Ephe. 8. * Reade S. Thom in 1. 2. qu est 103. art 4. August l. 18. de ciu c. 47. ep 49. 157. tract 45. in Ioh. Cle. Alex. lib. 6. strom Hieron in cap. 3. ad Gal. The differences betvvene our beleefe and th' old fathers Esay 7. Gen. 49. * 〈…〉 The causes of this Chapter Heb. 11. Act. 14. The diuers testimonies from God of the thinges that vve belieue The vndoubted vvitnesses to be alleageà in this chapter The drifte of this chapter The principal heades The Ievve and Gētile Ephes. 1. 1. Tim. 2. Tit. 1. 1. Pet. 1. Esa. 2. 11. 19. Icrem 9. 12. 16. THE. 1. consideration THE Messias promissed 1. The first couenant to Adam Gen. 2. Gen. 3. * Rabbi Mose Ben maimon in hunc locū Tharg Hie. ros in Gen. 3. To Abraham and Isaac Gen. 12. 18. 22. 3. Jacobs prophetie of Christ. Gen. 49. Tharg Hie ros Onkelos in hunc locū The Messias must be a spiritual not a temporal king The tradition of the Ievves in Misdrasch Thehilim See the titles of thes psalmes 41. 44 45. 46. 47 48. 82. 84 86. 87. 5. Moyses prophetie of Christ. Deut. 13. Deut. 34 6. Dauids propheties of Christ. Psal. 88. 2. Reg. 7. 1. Para. 22 Psal. Reg. 5. 1. Para. 22 3. Reg. 12 Psal. 2. 45. 47. 67. 72. Psal. y 1. 7. Ieremies prophetie touching Christ. Ierem. 23 33. 8. Ezechiels prophetie of Christ. Ezec. 34. Christ is called Dauid Thalm. tract Sanh ca. helec The propheties of Esay touchīg Christ. Esa. 2. Mich. 4. Esay 4. v. 2. Esa. 9. v. 6. Esa. 11. v. 1. Psal. 71. Ecclc. 45. VVōnderful properties of Christ. Math. 1. Luc. 3. Act. 13. Rom. 15. Other properties of Christ. Esa. 25. v. 8. Esa. 35. v. 5. Esa. 42. v. 2. Esa. 49. v. 6. Act. 13. 47. The commission of Christ. 10. The prophetie of Daniel touchinge Christ. Dan. 9. v. 23. The Butt of all scripture THE. 2. Consideration THAT Christe should be God and man The custome of Heretikes That Christ must bee both God and man Gen. 3. r. 15. The. 1. proofe Esa. 4. v. 2. Esa. 9. Psal. 71. Psal. 109. Esa. 53. Psal. 96. Heb. 1. Psal. 110. Math. 2. Marc. 12. Luc. 20. * Iehoua in Hebrne
Note Gen. 12. Gen. 41. Num. 25 Iosue 1. Iud. 14. 2. Re. 2. 4. Re. 2. Dan. 3. Dan. 9. A vvorthie saying The vvorld the ground of al other impedimentes Ioh. 12. 2. Ti. 4. Mat. 13. Marc. 4. Luc. 8. The exposuion of the parable of she seed The importance of this varable Mat. 13. Six partes of this chap. 1. THE first parte hovv al the vvorld is vanitie 2. Par. 9. The vvorld lie prosperitie of king Salomon 3. Re. 4. 30. cori similae 60. cori farinae euery corus is 21. quarters 〈◊〉 3. Re. 11. Eccl. 1. In cap. 1. ecclesia Salomons saying of him self Eccl. 1. Cap. 2. The testimony of S. Iohn 1. Ioan. 2. The general brāches of vvorldly vanities Three principal vanities 1. VAINglorie Mat. 27. Ioh. 8. Ioh. 9. Mat. 21. Mar. 11. Mat. 27. Luc. 23. The miseroy of depēding on other mens mouthes 1. Cor. 4. Luc. 18. Dan. 3. Pro. 27. A fit similitude Psal. 9. Psa. 140. Psal. 39. Apoc. 〈◊〉 Psa. 143. Eccl. 23. 2. VVORLDly honour and promotion Ioh. 11. Ioh. 19. Act. 26. 1. Co. 14. The vanity of vvorldly honour Philip. 3. 3. THE vanitie of vvorldly nobilitie Iob. 17. Cic. 9. Math. 8. 20. 24. 26. Ioh. 10. 1. Re. 9. 1. Re. 16. Mat. 4. Psal. 44. 1. Cor. 1. 4. THE vani tie of vvorldly vvisdome 1. Cor. 3. 1. Re. 9. 2. Re. 16. Ioan. 12. Luc. 9. 1. Cor. 1. Act. 26. Sap. 5. 1. Cor. 1. 1. Cor. 3. 5. THE vanitie of beautie Pro. 31. Psa. 118. Psal. 4. A lesson to be read in the beautie of al creatures Hovv quickly beautie is destroied 6. THE vanitie of apparel Eccl. 11. 1. Ti. 6. Ma. 3. 11. Luc. 7. Luc. 16. Gen. 3. Heb. 12. The extreme vanitie and pouertie of man Psal. 77. THE 2. head of vvorldiy vanities Concupiscence of the eyes 1. Ti. 6. Prou. 11. Sap. 5. Psal. 75. Cap. 3. Iac. 5. VVealth not only raine but also perilous Phil. 3. Iob. 28. Leui. 11. Cap. 1. Iob. 27. A comparison Psal. 61. Eccl. 31. Cap. 1. Mat. 19. Luc. 6. 1. Ti. 6. The pretēce of vvife and childrē refuted THE 3. head of vvorldly vanities Ioh. 16. Ioh. 16. Iob. 21. Iob. 3. Iob. 9. Eccl. 9. Tob. 5. VVhy good me are sad in this life 1. Co. 2. 2. Co. 7. Philip. 2. Iob. 3. Ioh. 16. Rom. 8. Ephe. 4. Mac. 24. 2. Cor. 5. 7. Eccl. 7. Tro. 28. Mich. 6. Ioh. 10. Luc. 19. A similitude Pro. 14. Amos. 2. Tob. 2. Apo. 18. The cōclusion of the 1. point Psal. 38. Esa. 59. The ropes of vanitie Psal. 3. 4. Re. 17. Psal. 39. Hovv vvorldly vanities are also deceites Mat. 13. Gen. 29. False promises of the vvorld The salse promises of renoune Psal. 9. Iob. 13. Psal. 1. * This example Bunnie thrusteth out in despit of heremites A comparison VVhat the deceites of the vvorld are Aug. in medit A fimilitude The practice of the vvorld Math. 4. 3. Re. 22. Apo. 17. Iudic. 4. 〈◊〉 20. Luc. 22. The true figure of the vvorld 1. Re. 25. Psal. 4. Hovv pleasures of the vvorld are thornes Mat. 13. Hom 15 in Euang. Eccle. 1. 2. 3. 4. Phil. 4. A comparison Exod. 8. The termēt of riche mē in their riches Iere. 16. Esa. 59. The explicatiō of the vvordes of Esay Tvvo significant similitudes Luc. 12. Deut. 32. Hovv the vvorld is miserie 1. Breuitie Eccl. 41. 1. Mac. 2. Luc. 12. A comparison 2. Discontentement 1. Cor. 7. 3. Miseries of bodie Of minde Of goodes Of neighbours Hest. 5. 4. The misery of blindnes Exo. 10. Mat. 13. Luc. 16. 1. Cor. 2. Act. 9. 5. Temptations and dangers Athan. in vita Antonii Psal. 10. 6. Facilitie of sinners Pro. 14. Iob. 15. The sinful state of the vvorld Hovv the vvorld strāgleth Rem 8. Gal. 5. The effects of the spirit of Christ. Gal. 5. The effectes of the spirit of this vvorld Tvvo rules of S. Paul to knovvour spirit Gal. 5. Christ and the vvorld enemies Ioh. 14. Ioh. 15. 17. Ioh. 17. Ioh. 2. Iac. 4. 1. Co. 11. Ioh. 12. Ioh. 17. Ioh. 1. Luc. 13. Rom. 12. Tit. 2. 1. Ioh. 2. VVhy Christ hateth the vvorld 1. Io. 5. Apoc. 3. A description of the vvorld Au. ep 39. Hom. 22. ad pop Antiochenum Hovv vve may auoid the euil of the vvorld Pro. 1. He. 1. in Iosue Psa. 120. Psa. 123. Phil. 3. Mat. 4. Psal. 72. Gal. 6. Phil. 3. 2. Co. 10. Hovv to vse vvorldly vvealth to our aduantage Luc. 16. Luc. 16. Gal. 4. 2. Cor. 9. Mat. 25. Iac. 5. Dam. in hist. Barlaā Iosaphat cap. 14. A parable Th' application of this parable Luc. 12. Apo. 14. Mat. 25. Mat. 25. The reason of this chapter VVhat hath bene handled before The firme resolutiō of th' apostles The speach of S. Chrysostom ser. 32. in mor. exhort * Vide hist. Secrat li. 6. Of S. Iames Egesip lib. 5. hist. apud Euseb. li. 2. cap. 22. Luc. 22. Luc. 8. THE manifold tentations of the primatiue church Mat. 10. Euseb. li. 8. hist. cap. 2. Th' exāple of Simeon Ioseph apud Euse. lib. 1. c. 22. Apud Euse. l. 3. c. 10. 26. Luc. 24. Mat. 27. Ioh. 19. Egesip apud Euse. li. 3. cap. 26. The publique beginning of heretiques The death of Simeon The storie of S. Ignatius Fusch li 3. cap 30. Ignatius his rule to discerne truth Easeb. li. 3. cap. 20. Hieron in catal The Zelous vvords of S. Ignatius at his death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hieron in catal S. Ignatius reliques Hovv old Christians came to their constancie S. Policarp his speach of S. Ignatius Euseb. li. 3. cap. 30. The storie of S. Polycarp Euseb. l. 4. c. 13. 14. Dangerous for any mā to offer him self to persecutours Policarpus greatest care for the Churches vnitie Policarpe apprehended Policarpus his cariage to Smirna The maner of persecutours speeches Policarpus confession before the multitude Vnruly behaueour of a multitude The martyrdome of S. Policarp Euseb. li. 4. ca. 14. Niceph. li. 3. ca. 35. S. Policarpus his reliques To be noted in S. Policarp Iren. lib. 3. cap. 3. apud Euseb. lib. 4. c. 13. Irenaeus his testimony of Policarpus doctrine S. Iohns hatred against heretiques Tit. 3. Iren. ep ad ' stor Euseb lib 5. cap. 19. The doings and sayings of S. Polycarp Mark this protestatiō ANNOtatiōs vpō the premisses touchig the danger of nevv opinions The nature and 〈◊〉 of tradition Apollinar hiera apud Niceph. li. 4. c. 23. The martyrdome of Irenaeus The letters of Christiās suffering persecution in France Apud Evse. lib. 5. c. 1. * This vvas a commi accusation of Christiās in thos dayes in respect of the B. Sacrament vvhich then vvas holden to be Christs flesh VVonderful constantie of diuers martyrs Pothenus Blandina The corage of Attalus the martyr Great crueltie Spite of Infidels against reliques Euseb. li. 6. c. 32. 33. lib. 7. c. 10. A most cruel persecution on Alexandria Mat. 24. The