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A09054 Dorcas: or, A perfect patterne of a true disciple A sermon preached by Bartholomew Parsons B. of Divinity and rector of Ludgershall in the country of Wilts. Parsons, Bartholomew, 1574-1642. 1631 (1631) STC 19346; ESTC S105866 13,782 45

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aske here what good workes are Good workes then as I haue learned at the feete of a Gamaliel of ours Zanchy on the 1. chap. of the Philip. verse 11. are workes and actions aswell inward as outward whether they be thoughts in the minde and elections in the will or words vttered by the tongue or deedes which may be done by a righteous man as he is righteous in any part of his soule or body For as an actuall sinne is any thing sayd or done or thought against the law of God so a good worke and as St Iohn calleth it in his 1. epist cap. 3. righteousnesse is any thing spoken or thought or done according to the Law of God The holy Ghost for our better direction and for distinction doth sometimes tripartite good workes into 1. sobriety in the vse of outward things as meate drinke apparell and the like 2. righteousnesse in our dealings with men 3. Godlinesse in our duties to God that we should liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world Tit. 2.12 sometimes hee doth more briefely bipartite them into holinesse in the duties of the first table that concerne Gods worship and righteousnesse in the duties of the second Table that respect our neighbours good that wee might serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Luke 2.75 And so doth our Saviour into the first and great commandement which is Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy minde and the second is like to it which is Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Matt. 22.37.38.39.40 Now this being written for our learning we must learne of this Disciple this learner in in Christs schoole to joyne with our profession practice with our hearing doing with our faith vertue 2. Pet. 1.5 with our shew of godlinesse the power of it in our liues 2. Tim. 3.5 with our knowledge of God the service of him 1. Chr. 28 9. with our professing to know God a manifesting of it in our workes 2. Tim. 3.5 with our calling of Abrahā father a doing of the workes of Abraham Iohn 8.39 The professours of the Gospell must haue their conversation as becometh the Gospell of Christ Phil. 1.27 VValke worthy of the vocation wherewith they are called Ephes 4.1 worthy of the Lord vnto all pleasing Col. 1.10 adorne themselues with good works 1. Tim. 2.10 This is a faithfull saying and these things I will that thou affirme constantly that they which haue beleeued in God might be carefull to maintaine good workes Tit. 3.8 Men learne the trades of this world to practise them and the mysteries of godlinesse are taught vs that wee may turne wordes into workes as Bernard sayth in his tract of ordering our liues It profiteth not to haue learned what wee should doe and not to doe it saith Hierome in an epistle it is better not to know a thing then to learne it with danger and Augustine and in his 2. homily on the revelation As it booteth not for a great tree to be greene and yeeld no fruit so it profiteth not to be called a Christian and not to haue Christian workes and the same father in his booke of 83 questions and 76 question sayth that the words of the Apostle I suppose that a man is justified by faith without the workes of the law are not so to be vnderstood that when a man hath receiued faith we should call him just though hee liue ill But in this point wee that glory in God Rom. 2.17 and are called Christians are so bad schollers that if my head were waters and mine eyes a fountaine of teares I could not sufficiently bewaile our wants of fruites answerable to our profession wee make our boast of Gods law amongst vs but through our breaking of it we dishonour God and cause his name to be blaspheemed Rom. 2.23.24 with the Iewes Ier. 7. wee cry templum Domini the Temple of the Lord God is amongst vs and wee are his temple but we amend not our wayes we come and stand before God in his house as a nation that would do righteously but when we are gone wee doe all abominations steale murther committe adultery sweare rashly and falsely drinke till wee are drunke giue others drinke till they are drunke also and runne to all excesse of riot Wee are indeed baptized vnto Moses Gods Ministers whom he hath sent to baptize and eate the same spirituall meate and drinke the same spirituall drinke but please not God in our liues and conversations 1. Cor. 10.2.3.4.5 with Simon Magus wee haue a kinde of temporary beliefe but our hearts are not right in the sight of God but wee are in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquity Act. 8.13.21.23 we haue Iacobs voyce smooth and blessed words but Esaus hands rough and cursed deedes with the figge tree we haue the leaues of an outward profession but want the fruits of an holy conversation with Iudas vve are numbred amongst Christs Disciples sit at table vvith him but betray him assoone as vvee are gone out vvee heare but vvee do not vvith out mouthes and bodily presence vvee shevve much loue but our hearts runne after covetousnesse Ezec. 33.31 and all kinde of vvickednes In a vvord vve haue much knovvledge no charity a dead faith a faith of Devils but no workes Christs greatest friends and they of his owne houshold are his greatest enemies being as Bernard complaines in his time all friends and all enemies all necessaries and all adversaries all neere and yet all such as seeke their owne Videtur bone Iesu as Hugo complaineth in his time O good Iesu the whole company of Christians seemeth to haue conspired against thee and they which are first in thy Church are first in persecuting of thee Woe woe vnto vs for our ill liues shall our outward profession our dead and devillish faith saue vs without good workes Marke wee that faithfull saying of St Austine in his booke of faith to Peter the Deacon cap. 40. Beleeue it for a truth and doubt not of it that not all which are baptized within the Catholicke Church shall receiue eternall life but they who after baptisme receiued liue well for as infidels heretickes and schismatickes shall not haue the kingdome of heaven so vitious Catholickes shall not possesse it Next wee haue her good workes amplified by the extent Full of good worke she was filled with the fruits of righteousnesse Phil. 1.11 like those water pottes at the wedding that were full to the brimme Ioh. 2. and shee gaue to God and man good measure pressed downe shaken together and running over Luke 8.36 what we heare then and see in her we must doe we must be ready to every good worke Tit. 3. fruitfull in every good worke Col. 1.10 walking with Zachary and Elizabeth in all the commandements of God without reproofe Luke 1. and abounding alwayes in the worke of the
which by interpretation is called Dorcas Names in Scriptures are imposed either vpon some speciall accident or intent and purpose Vpon some speciall accident as Isaacks name of laughter because Sarah laughed at the promised of him Gen. 18.13 Iacobs of supplanting because he tooke his brother by the heele in the birth of them Gen. 25 26. and Pharez his name signifying breach or division because he made a breach in the birth comming forth before his brother that offered first Gen. 38.29 Vpon some speciall intent either for memoriall of benefits receiued as Ishmaell the hearing of God because God heard Abrahams prayer for a sonne Gen. 16.15 as Solomon Iedidiah loued of the Lord because God loued him 2. Sam. 12.24 Or of some duties to be done as Iudah hath his name of prayses because the Lord was to be praysed for him Gen. 29.35 as Iames and Iohn called by Christ Boanerges sonnes of thunder because they should thunder in their doctrine and lighten in their liues Marke 3.17 and that name aboue all names Iesus a Saviour because he should saue his people from their sins Matt. 1.25 And here happily the name Tabitha in Syriacke and in the Hebrew Tsibjah or as some will haue it Thabia Bullinger in locum arising of roote nabat signifying to see as in the interpretation of it in the Greeke Dorcas is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of seing was giuen her accidentally of the sharpenesse of her sight wherein the Roe-bucke excelleth as Pliny saith and of which St Hierome hath a saying oculos caprearum talpa contemnit the blind moule despiseth the eyes of the Roe-bucke Sure I am that she was sharpe sighted in looking on things eternall 2. Cor. 4.18 that the eyes of the mind were enlightned to know what was the hope of her calling and what the riches of the glory of Gods inheritance in the Saints Ephes 1.18 that with Simeon the eyes of her inward man saw the Lords Christ Luke 2.16 that they were happy in seing his day Luke 10. Now in that Spirit speaking here to the Churches would interpret this Hebrew or Syriacke name in the Greeke tongue wherein it writeth Tabitha by Dorcas or Roe-bucke our learning herein is that all things in the Church must be done to edification 1 Cor 14.26 and that whatsoever is spoken in a strange tongue must be interpreted that the Church may receiue edifying 1. Cor. 14.5 and this is the way of God in the sanctuary Emanuell a strange word in the greeke tongue is interpreted God with vs Matt. 1. So Rabbi is interpreted Master Messias the Christ Cephas a stone all one chapter Iob. 1. so Boanerges the sonnes of thunder Mar. 3.17 Barnabas tke sonne of consolation Actes 4. Abba Father Rom. 8.15 Now if the wisedome of the spirit would interpret names to vs whereof wee may be ignorant without forfetting the freehold of eternall life much more would it haue the whole Scriptures which were written for our learning Rom. 15.4 and are able to make vs wise vnto salvation 2. Tim. 3.16 interpreted and expounded vnto vs in a knowne tongue for edification exhortation and comfort Qui in modico fidelis in majori fidelis He that is faithfull in a little matter will be faithfull in a greater Luke 16.10 If a name must be spoken to vs in our owne tongue much more must the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 2.11 the great mysteries of godlinesse in a language that we vnderstand And of that I dare be bold to say that from the beginning it was so The doctrine of S. Iohn did not so vanish away as the Philosophers did saith Chrysostome in 1. Homily on Iohn but the Syrians Aegyptians Indians Persians Aethiopians and innumerable other nations translating them into their language of barbarous men learned the heavenly Philosophy So Augustine in his 2. booke of Christian doctrine chap. 5. saith that the divine Scripture proceeding from one language being spread abroad farre and wide by the diverse tongues of Interpreters was made knowne to the Gentiles for their salvation And Theodoret most plainly in his first booke of curing the maladies of the Grecians The Hebrew bookes were not only turned into the Greeke language but also into the Roman Egyptian Persian Indian Armenian Scythian and even the Gothicke language and that I may speake once for all into all the languages which the Gentiles vse vnto this day Can wee praise the Papists then in condemning and abhorring as impossible and vnprofitable the turning of the divine oracles into our mother tongue which was their old Tenent or if they be interpreted and translated either in their forbidding that in the publique and common vse of the Church they should be read or sung in the vulgar tongues so doth the Counsell of Trent in the 22. Session chapt 8. and the 9. Canon or else in affecting such obscurity and filling their translation with so many words borrowed from the Hebrew Syriacke Greeke Latine that it may be sayd of their translation as the Philosopher sayd of his bookes that they were edita non edita published and not published Of this kinde are their Archisynagogue azimes depositum dydrachme dominicall evangelize holocausts hostes Neophyte paraclete parasceve prepuce repropitiate resuscitate sabbatisme and such like whereof an English man may cry out how can I vnderstand vnlesse I had the gift of tongues If I know not the meaning of the voyce I shall be vnto him that speaketh Barbarian and hee shall be a Barbarian to mee 1. Cor. 14 11. But here is not my rest I passe therefore from her civill state and condition to her religious disposition first in her profession being a Disciple A certaine Disciple The originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 feminine according to her sexe a Disciplesse a shee Disciple as Anna is called a Prophetesse Luke 2.36 Excellent and honourable are the stiles and titles giuen in holy writ to the professours of religion importing the dignity and duty of their calling They are named the Church the elect of God of their calling chooing out of the world Saints of their sanctification sonnes of God of their adoption vessels of mercy and honour of their present forgiuenesse of their sinnes and future glory believers faithfull men of their faith and profession brethren houshold of faith of their vnion and society amongst themselues devout men of their religion Disciples of Christ Iesus the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 But the name Disciple is the most auncient the most frequent in the new Testament given to all the faithfull the Apostles not excepted who are called the twelue Disciples Matt. 10.2 Now the Scripture in the Evangelist doth not onely call those twelue his Disciples but all those that beleeving in him were by his teaching instructed to the kingdome of heaven saith Augustine in his 2. booke of the consent of the Evangelists Chap. 17. To be a Disciple then is to heare learne of God by