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A01956 The happines of the church, or, A description of those spirituall prerogatiues vvherewith Christ hath endowed her considered in some contemplations vpon part of the 12. chapter of the Hebrewes : together with certain other meditations and discourses vpon other portions of Holy Scriptures, the titles wherof immediately precede the booke : being the summe of diuerse sermons preached in S. Gregories London / by Thomas Adams ... Adams, Thomas, fl. 1612-1653. 1619 (1619) STC 121; ESTC S100417 558,918 846

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thy robes of glory but not thy rags of pouertie They loue him whiles the people cry Hosanna but shrinke backe when they cry Crucifie him All pleaseth them but the Crosse all the faire way of delights they will accompany him but at the Crosse they part They would share with him in his kingdome but they will none of his vassalage The Lyon in a Fable had many attendants and he prouided for them good cheare They like well of this and are proud of their master to whom all the other beastes gaue awe and obedience But it chanced that the Lyon fell into the daunger of the Dragon who had got him downe readie to deuoure him His followers seeing this quickly betake them to their heeles and fell euery beast to his old trade of rapine Onely the poore Lambe stood bleating by and though hee coulde not helpe would not forsake his Lord At last the Lyon gets the victory and treads the Dragon vnder his feet to death Then he punisheth those revolting traytors with deserued destruction and sets the Lambe by his owne side The great Lyon of Iudah feeds many of the Iewes and at this day profane wretches whilest his bountie lasts Christ and none but Christ. But when the Red Dragon hath got him vnder nailed him to the crosse Crucified him dead away goe these runnagates no more peny no more Paternoster If affliction come for Christ his cause they know where to find a kinder Master Backe to the world one to his fraud and hee will ouer-reach others with the sinne of deceitfulnesse though himselfe be ouer-reached with the deceitfulnesse of sinne Another to his vsurie and hee chymically proiects money out of the poores bowels A third to his couetousnesse and hee had rather that the very frame of the world should fall then the price of corne A fourth to his Idols and hee hopes for cakes from the Queene of heauen as if the King of heauen was not able to giue bread If the Lord pinch them with distresse they runne to Rome for succour expecting that from a blocke which they would not tarry to obtaine from the God of mercie Then they cry like the Israelites Vp make vs gods to goe before vs for as for this Moses wee know not what is become of him But at last this Lyon conquers the Dragon ouercomes Sathan his damnation what shall he then say to those Rebelles that would not haue him raigne ouer them But Bring those mine enemies and slay them before me But the poore and pure innocent Lambs that suffer with him shall raigne with him Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen 〈◊〉 The other vse is St. Pauls Let the same minde be in you which was in Christ Iesus What mind is that Humilitie Ver. 7. He that thought it no robberie to bee equall with God humbled himselfe to become Man we should haue found it no robberie to be equall with Deuils and shall we be proud What an intolerable disproportion is this to behold Humilem Deum superbum hominem an humble God and a proud man Who can indure to see a Prince on foot his vassall mounted Shall the Sonne of God be thus humble for vs shall not we be humble for our selues For our selues I say that deserue to be cast downe among the lowest for our selues that we may be exalted He that here cals himselfe the Sonne of man is now glorified they that humbly acknowledge themselues to be the Sonnes of men that is mortall shal be made the Sonnes of God that is immortall In the first of King 19. There was a mightie strong winde that rent the mountaines and brake the rockes but God was not in the Wind the Lord will not rest in the turbulent spirit puffed vp with the wind of vaine-glory There was an earth-quake but God was not in the earth-quake He will not dwell in a couetous heart buryed in the furrowes of the earth and cares of the world There was a Fire but the Lord was not in the fire Hee will not rest in a cholericke angry soule full of combustion and furious heate There was a still soft voyce and the Lord came with it In a milde and humble spirit the God of heauen and earth will dwell The high and loftie One that inhabiteth eternitie will dwell in the contrite and humble soule It is a sweet mixture of Greatnesse and Goodnesse Vt dum nihil in honore sublimius nihil in humilitate submissius When the highest in dignitie are the lowest in courtesie Augustine called himselfe Minimum non solùm omnium Apostolorum sed etiam Episcoporum the least not onely of all the Apostles but of all the Bishops wheras he was the most illuminate doctor and best Bishop of his times Paul thought himselfe not worthy to be called an Apostle and behold he is called The Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not Paul but The Apostle Abraham that esteemed himselfe dust and ashes is honoured to bee the Father of all them that beleeue Dauid sits content at his sheepe-folds the Lord makes him King ouer his Israell But as Humilitie like the Bee gathers Honey out of ranke Weeds very sinnes mouing to repentance So Pride like the Spider suckes poyson out of the fairest flowers the best graces and is corrupted with insolence Vna superbia destruit omnia Onely Pride ouerthrowes all It thrust proud Nabuchadnezzar out of mens societie proud Saul out of his kingdome proud Adam out of Paradise proud Haman out of the Court proud Lucifer out of heauen Pride had her beginning among the Angels that fell her continuance in earth her end in hell Poore man how ill it becomes thee to be proud when God himselfe is humble Is come We vnderstand the person let vs come to his Comming And herein Ecce veritatem behold his Truth Did God promise a Sonne of a virgin Emanuell a Sauiour He is as good as his word Venit he is come Did the sacrificed bloud of so many Buls Goates and Lambes prefigure the expiatory bloud of the Lambe of God to be shed Ecce agnus Dei Behold that Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Is the Seed of the woman promised to breake the head of the serpent Behold he breakes the heauens and comes downe to doe it For this purpose the Sonne of God was manifested that he might destroy the workes of the Deuill Did God ingage his word for a Redeemer to purge our sinnes Call his name Iesus for he shall saue his people from their sinnes Against vnbeleeuing Atheists and mis-beleeuing Iewes here is sufficient conviction But I speake to Christians that beleeue he is come Hac fide credite venturum esse qua creditis venisse Beleeue that he will come againe with the same faith wherewith you beleeue he is come alreadie Doe not curtall Gods
sayth Christ my workes beare witnesse of me We may thus vnderstand God ex operibus his actions preach his will 3. God speakes by his Sonne Hebr. 1. God who at sundry times and in diuers manners spake in t●…me past vnto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last daves spoken vnto vs by his Sonne Hee is therefore called the Word Ioh. 1 The sacred Scriptures and sayings of the Prophets giuen by the inspiration of God for no prophecie is of private interpretation it came not by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost are called Verbum Domini the word of the Lord. But to distinguish God the Sonne from those words he is after an eminent sort called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word or That excellent word As also hee is called not a light but That light not a lambe but ●…hat lambe Not a vocall word formed by the tongue beating the aire for hee was before eyther sound or aire But the mentall and substantiall word of his Father but Ipse Pater●… 〈◊〉 effigies lumenque a lumine vero According to that of Paul The brightnesse of his glory and expresse image of his person 4. GOD speakes by his Scriptures Whatsoever things were writen aforetime are written for our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope Scripta sunt they are written Things that go onely by take or tradition meete with such variations augmentations abbreuiations corruptions false glosses that as in a Lawyers pleading Truth is lost in the Quaere for her Related thinges wee are long in getting quicke in forgetting Therefore God commanded his law should be written Litera scripta manet Thus God doth effectually speake to vs. Many good wholesome instructions haue drop'd from humane pennes to lesson and direct man in goodnesse But there is no promise giuen to any word to conuert the soule but to Gods word Without this Antiquitie is noueltie Noueltie subtletie Subtletie death Theologia Scholastica multis modis sophistica Schoole Diuinitie is little better then meere Sophistrie Plus argutiarum quam doctrine plus doctrina quàm vsus It hath more quicknesse then soundnesse more fauce then meate more difficultie then doctrine more doctrine then vse This Scripture is the Perfect and Absolute rule Bellarmine acknowledgeth two thinges requireable in a Perfect Rule Certaintie and Evidence If it bee not certaine it is no Rule if it bee not euident it is no rule to vs. Onely the Scripture is both in truth and euidence a perfect rule Other writings may haue canonicall veritie the Scripture onely hath canonicall authoritie Others like oile may make cheerefull mans countenance but this like Bread strengthens his heart This is the absolute Rule And as many as walke according to this Rule peace be on them and mercie and vppon the Israel of God O that wee had hearts to blesse GOD for this mercie that the Scriptures are among vs and that not sealed vp vnder an vnknowne tongue The time was when a deuout Father was glad of a piece of the new Testament in English when he tooke his little Sonne into a corner and with ioy of soule heard him reade a chapter so that euen Children became Fathers to their Fathers and begate them to CHRIST Now as if the commonnesse had abated the worth our Bibles lie dusty in the windowes it is all if a Sunday-handling quite them from perpetuall obliuion Few can read fewer do reade fewest of all read as they should God of his infinite mercie lay not to our charge this neglect 5. GOD speakes by his Ministers expounding and opening to vs those Scriptures These are Legati a latere dispencers of the mysteries of heauen Ambassadors for CHRIST as if God did beseech you through vs so wee pray you in Christs stead that you would be reconciled to God This voice is continually sounding in our Churches beating vpon our eares I would it could pierce our consciences and that our liues would eccho to it in an answerable obedience How great should be our thankfullnesse God hath delt with vs as hee did with Eliah The Lord passed by and a great strong wind rent the mountaines and brake in pieces the rockes before the Lord but the Lord was not in the wind After the wind came an earthquake but the Lord was not in the earthquake After the earthquake a fire but the Lord was not in the fire And after the fire a still voyce and the Lord came with that voyce After the same manner hath God done to this Land In the time of K. Henry 8. there came a great and mightie Wind that rent downe Churches ouerthrew Altarages impropriated from Ministers their liuings that made Lay-men substantiall Parsons and Clergie men their vicar-shadowes It blew away the rights of Leui into the lappe of Issachar a violent wind but God was not in that wind In the dayes of King Edward the sixt there came a terrible Earthquake hideous vapours of Treasons and conspiracies rumbling from Rome to shake the foundations of that Church which had now left off louing the Whore and turned Antichrist quite out of his saddle Excommunications of Prince and people execrations and curses in their tetricall formes with Bell Booke and Candle Indulgences Bulls Pardons promises of heauen to all traytors that would ext●…rpate such a King and kingdome a Monstrous earthquake but GOD was not in the Earthquake In the dayes of Queene Mary came the Fire an vnmercifull fire such a one as was neuer before kindled in England and wee trust in Iesus Christ neuer shall be againe It raged against all that professed the Gospell of Christ made bonefires of silly women for not vnderstanding that their ineffable mysterie of Transubstantiation burnt the mother with the child Boner and Gardiner those hellish bellowes that set it on flaming A raging and insatiable fire but God was not in that fire In the dayes of Queene Elizabeth of blessed memorie came the still voyce saluting vs with the songs of Sion and speaking the comfortable things of Iesus Christ and GOD came with his voyce This sweete and blessed voyce is still continued by our Gracious Soueraigne GOD long preserued him with it and it with him and vs all with them both Let vs not say of this blessing as Lot of Zoar Is it not a litle one nor bee weary of Manna with Israel lest GODS voyce grow dumbe vnto vs and to our woe wee heare it speake no more No rather let our hearts answere with Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruants heare If wee will not heare him say to our soules I am your saluation wee shall heare him say Depart from mee I know you not So sayth wisedome Because I haue called and yee refused I will therefore laugh at your calamitie and mocke when your feare commeth The gallant promiseth himselfe many yeares and in them all to reioyce
no peace to thy selfe till thou haue peace with GOD. Quamdiù imp●…nitentia manet maledictio imminet So long as vnrepentance abides in vs Cursednesse hangs ouer vs. He that wilfully goes on in knowne wickednesse hazards himselfe to ineuitable cursednesse Goe ye cursed 4. The horrour of the paines Into euerlasting fire Fire of all elements the most violent therefore fittest to describe those pangs The pile thereof is ●…ire and much wood the breath of the Lord like a riuer of bri●…stone doth kindle it Euerlasting the torments thereof are euer frying neuer dying Where the worme dieth not and the fire is not quenched Aug. Vermis corrodet conscientiam ignis comburet carnem quia corde corpore deliquerunt The fire shall torture their flesh the worme their spirit because both in flesh and spirit they haue sinned The reprobates shall be packed and crowded together like ●…rickes in a fiery furnace hauing not so much as a chinke where any winde may enter in to coole them 5. The preordinance of their torments Prepared for the Deuill and his Angels ordained before-hand Origen held that the Deuill and his angels should one day be released from their tortures and that these words of Christ vvere spoken Minaciter potiùs quàm veraciter rather by way of threatning then true meaning But Augustine answers that the Scripture hath confuted him plenissime ac planissimè For the fire prepared for Satan is not temporarie but euerlasting vvhere though flouds of teares bee continually raining vpon it yet can it not bee put out Prepared to the terror of vvicked men that couenant with hell alas they are deceiued it vvas made for some purpose That fire vvas prepared for some and some haue prepared themselues for it Burning in lusts in malice in reuenge vntill themselues their lusts malice and reuenge and all burne in hell The Deuill was crafty yet he could not scape hell be as vvily as you can yet beware hell It is not policy but piety that must escape this fire Now as this brings to the vvicked much terror so it helpes to preserue the godly against error And this vvas one principall cause of the penning this sentence The vvise master of the family vvill chide his seruants vea and vpon desert correct them in the presence of his child that he may learne by it to stand in awe of his Father So deales God Minatur quod faciet improbis ne faciat quod minatur sanctis He threatens the vvicked vvhat he vvill doe to their sinnes that the godly may auoid vvhat hee threatens for sinnes Omnis minatio amica monitio euery threatning is a faire vvarning The Lord giue vs mutare sententiam nostram vt ipse mutet sententiam suam to change our minde that God may change his menace Let vs now come humbly to him in repentance that vve may neuer depart from him into vengeance The other circumstances I will but touch 2. The reason of this reiection Mat. 25. 42. For I was hungry and ye gaue mee no no meate I was thirsty and yee gaue me no drinke They are not iudged Ex malis commissis sedex bonis omissis not by the euill deedes they haue done but by the good things they haue not done Christ saies not Yee tooke away my meat vvhen I vvas hungry but you gaue me not your meate You did not strip mee of the clothes I had but you gaue me no clothes vvhen I had not The axe cuts vp the tree which brought not forth good fruit though it bee not accused for bringing foorth bad fruit Innocency is good but not enough vve see that not to haue relieued is an vnanswerable inditement at that day How heauy vvill this sentence fall vpon many among vs What heapes haue many in this City perhaps some got vvithout a tenter'd conscience yeeld it no worse yet vvould to God it vvere so vvell for it is hard Bonum cito ●…uadere diuitem for an honest man to become rich on the sodaine They haue it and now may they not keepe it is it not their owne But O it is fearefull vvhen for this keeping they shall be condemned It is not a groat weekely or monethly to the poore and a small pension to the much-robbed Church that can discharge you but you must giue proportionably Pleade what you can to the poore Christ vvill not be so answered Who can force me to giue none but because thou wilt not giue vnforced thou shalt iustly be condemned 3. The obiection against this reason Math. 25. 44. Lord when saw wee thee an hungred or athi●…st c. and did not minister vnto thee They haue a kinde of impudence still adhering to their foreheads they would seeme to iustifie themselues though they bee deseruedly punished When did we see thee Often When this poore widow hath departed without thy mercy that orphan vvithout thy helpe that blinde or lame vvithout thy almes When when not euery occasion shall be a bill of enditement against thee Who will wonder to see a Romish Pharise sooth and flatter himselfe on earth when hee is not ashamed to doe it in iudgement ●…efore the Lord Iesus Christ Sed nulla defensio absoluet reum nulla infensio dissoluet iudicium Plead they whether subtilly or angrily as if some vvrong vvere done them it is Equity it selfe that doth sentence them 4. The confutation of their obiection Math. 25. 45. Insomuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me This one distinction takes away all their arguments here is a full answer to their Quando a declaration of their death-deseruing wickednesse that would haue no pitty on the Lord Iesus Iudgement mercilesse shall be giuen to them that shew no mercy you know this Diues was denied a drop because he would not giue a crumme you know this Hee that stoppeth his eare at the cry of the poore shall cry himselfe and not be heard Did not I tell you thus The poore you had euer this mercy you shewed neuer therefore Goe ye cursed 5. Lastly the Retribution this is set downe in briefe but the matter it containes is long and euerlasting All shall come forth they that haue done good to the resurrection of life they that haue done euil to the resurrection of condemnation These shall goe away into euerlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternall An estate soone versed neuer to bee reuersed The voice of Christ shall speake it and the power of Christ shall effect it No Angell shall speake against it no deuill shall withstand it How should this teach Saint Pauls vse who considering that there shall be a resurrectian of the dead both of the iust and vniust resolued with himselfe to haue alwaies a good conscience void of offence toward God and toward man Let it instruct vs al to watch for this day a decaied charge then which nothing was more current in the
is the root of pride Diuitiarum vermis superbia saith S. Augustine When the summe of prosperity heates the dunghill of riches there is engendred the snake of pride Wealth is but a quill to blow vp the bladder of high-mindednesse Saint Paul knew this inseparable consequence when hee charged Timothy to Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high-minded And doe we thinke that the heat of malice will be slaked by riches no it is fired rather into combustion and now bursts forth into a flame what before was forced to lye suppressed in the embers of t●…e heart Is any man the more continent for his abundance No. Stat quaeuis multo meretrix mercabilis auro whores are led to hell with golden threds Riches is a warm nest where lust securely sits to hatch all her vncleane brood From fulnesse of bread the Sodomites fall to vnnaturall wantonnesse Ceres et Liber pinguescunt Venerem Oppression is not abated by multiplication of riches but rather Longiorem magis strenuam reddit manum giues it a longer and stronger arme For as the poore cannot withstand so the rich will not restraine the tyranny of great oppressors They couet fields and take them by violence how Because their hand hath power For Punishment what security is in money Doth the Deuill balke a Lorldly house as if hee were afraid to come in Dares he not tempt a rich man to lewdnes Let experience witnes whether he dare not bring the highest Gallant both to sin shame Let his food be neuer so delicate he will be a guest at his table and perhaps thrust in one dish to his feast drunkennes Be his attendance neuer so complete yet Satan will waite on him too Wealth is no charme to coniure away the Deuill such an amulet the Popes holy-water are both of a force Inward vexations forbeare not their stings in awe of riches An euill conscience dares perplexe a Saul in his Throne and a Iudas vvith his purse full of money Can a silken sleeue keepe a broken arme from aking Then may full Barnes keepe an euill conscience from vexing And doth hell fire fauour the Rich mans limbes more then the poores Hath hee any seruant there to fanne cold ayre vpon his tormented ioynts Nay the namelesse Diues goes from soft linen to sheetes of fire from purple robes to flames of the same colour purple flames from delicate morsels to want a droppe of water Herod though a King on earth when he comes to that smokie vault hath not a cushion to sitte on more then the meanest Parasite in his Court. So poore a defence are they for an oppressed Soule 2. Nor from the body can riches remoue any plague The lightning from heauen may consume vs though we be clad in gold the vapours of earth choke vs though perfumes are still in our nostrills and poison burst vs though we haue the most virtuall Antidotes What iudgement is the poore subiect to from which the rich is exempted Their feet do as soone stumble and their bones are as quickly broken Consumptions Feuers Gowtes Dropsyes Pleurisies Palseys Surfets are houshold guests in rich mens families and but meere strangers in cottages They are the effects of superfluous fare and idlenes and keepe their Ordinary at rich mens tables Anguish lies oftner on a Downe-bed then on a pallet diseases waite vpon luxurie as close as luxurie vpon wealth These frogs dare leape into King Pharaohs chamber and forbeare not the most sumptuous pallace But money can buy medicines yet what sicke man would not wish that hee had no money on condition that he had no maladie Labour and moderate diet are the poore mans friends preserue him from the acquaintance of Master Doctor or the surfeted bills of his Apothecarie Though our worldling heere promiseth out of his abundance meat drinke and mirth yet his bodie growes sicke and his soule sadde he was before carelesse and hee is now curelesse all his vvealth cannot retaine his health when God will take it away 3. But what shall we say to the Estate Euills to that are pouertie hunger thirst wearinesse seruillitie Wee hope wealth can stop the invasion of these miseries Nothing lesse it rather mounts a man as a Wrastler does his combatant that it may giue him the greater fall Riches are but a sheeld of Waxe against a sword of power The larger state the fairest marke for misfortune to shoote at Eagles catch not after flies nor will the Hercules of ambition lift vp his clubbe but against these Giants There is not in pouertie that matter for a Great mans couetous fire to worke vpon If Naboth had had no Vineyard to preiudice the command of Ahabs Lordship hee had saued both his peace and life Violent winds blow through a hollow willow or ouer a poore shrubbe and let them stand whiles they rend a peeces Oaks and great Cedars that oppose their great bodies to the furious blasts The tempests of oppressing power meddle not with the contemptible quiet of poore Labourers but shake vp rich men by the very rootes that their blasted fortunes may be fit timber for their owne building Who stands so like an eye-sore in the tyrannous ●…ight of Ambition as the wealthy Imprisonment restraint banishment confiscation fining and confining are Greatnesses Intelligencers instruments and staires to climbe vp by into rich mens possessions Wealth hath foure hindrances from dooing good to the State 1. God vsually punisheth our ouer-louing of riches with their losse He thinks them vnworthy to be riualls with himselfe for all height and strength of loue is his due So that the ready way to lose wealth is to loue it Et delectatio perdet 2. The greatnesse of state or of affection to it opens the way to ruine A full and large saile giues vantage to a Tempest this pulled downe the danger of the gust and of shipwracke by it is eluded and it passeth by vvith onely waues roring as if it was angry for being thus preuented He that walks on plaine ground either doth not fall or riseth againe with little hurt He that climbes high towres is in more danger of falling and if he fall of breaking his necke 3. We see the most rich Worldlings liue the most miserably slaued to that vvealth whereof they keepe the key vnder their girdles Esuriunt in popina as we say they starue in a Cookes shoppe A man would thinke that if wealth could doe any good it could surely do this good keepe the owner from want hunger sorow care No euen these euills riches doe not auoide but rather force on him Whereof is a man couetous but of riches when these riches come you thinke he is cured of his couetousnesse no he is more couetous Though he hath receiued desiderium animi yet he keeps still animum desiderij The desires of his mind granted abolish not his mind of desires So a man might striue to extinguish the Lampe by
euill will persecute the good and the good may not partake of the vices of the bad What agreement hath the temple of God with Idols Wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord and touch not the vncleane thing and I will receiue you Out of the Egypt of this world hath God called his Sonnes We are forbidden all fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of of darkenes not altogether with the workers For then wee must needs goe out of the world It is commanded Ierem 15. that the precious be separated from the vile yet so that they may returne to the good though the good may not turne to them It is good for the good to sunder themselues from the incorrigible wicked as being the first stayre of the ladder that leaues the earth and sets the first step of our iourney to heauen God in his eternall decree separated the elect from the Reprobate in his Vocation he sequesters them from nature and sinne When hee executes particular iudgement hee takes Israell from the Tabernacles of Corah when he will giue the generall he will seuer the Sheepe from the Goates Christ then who is the Prince of Peace causeth not quarrels betweene man and man as they are creatures but betwixt goodnesse and euill as they are contrarie natures That the sonnes of Beliall hate the sonnes of God Christ is not the cause but the occasion For when the Gospell separates vs from the world the world then bends his malicious forces against vs. So that Peace in sinne Ver. 51. Christ came not to send but Peace of conscience Phil. 4. The peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding c. Which because the wicked will not embrace therfore Fiue in one house shall be diuided the Father against the Sonne and the S●…nne against the Father c. The Gospell doth not otherwise worke this diuision then the Law is sayd to make sinne because it made sinne knowne Or the Sunne is sayd to cause mothes because it causeth their appearance Let Paul continue a Pharise and the Pharises will loue him conuert he to a Christian and they will hate him Whiles we liue after the world we haue peace with the world none with God when we are turned to Christ we haue peace with God none with the world This ground laid we will consider for the better exposition of the words fiue circumstances The Fire Fewell Kindlers Smoake Bellowes Wherein we shall find Christs willing and the fires kindling Who wils goodnesse to his chosen which he is sure will enrage the wicked to their persecution The cause thus giuen the fire is left to be kindled by others For though Non sine Deo patimur yet non a Deo petimur The instruments of our afflictiō will be found vngodly who though they plead we haue done the will of the Lord shall goe to hell for their labour The Fire Is discord debate contention anger and hatred against the godly Euery man is composed of foure elementall humours whereof one is Choler resembled to Fire In whom this Choler is most adust puissant they are vsually most hote furious fiery But I speake here of nature for grace can alter nature and purge this corruption Regeneration is the best physicke to purge Choler Many medicines hath Philosophie prescribed against this spirituall disease but in vaine The Philosophers seruant could scoffe his Maister He inueighes against anger writes volumes against it ipse mihi irascitur and yet he is angry with me Onely grace can more then giue rules giue power to master this madnesse Fire and Contention haue some resemblances 1. Debate is like Fire for as that of all elements so this of all passions is most violent The earth is huge yet we walke quietly on it it suffers our ploughes to rend vp the entrals of it to teach vs patience The aire is copious yet admits our respiration The waters boystrous yet sayle we vpon them against them But Fire especially getting the vpper hand is vnmercifully raging it left nothing behind to witnesse the former happynes of Sodome The worlds last destruction shall be by Fire and God vseth that of all elements to expresse the very torments of hell adding Brimstone to it To this is the anger of God likened Our God is euen a consuming fire So doth debate exceede all passions flouds of correction can quench the turbulent an fiery spitit which is set on fire of hell Onely one extreame may driue out another as we hold our burnt finger to the fire by a new heat to extract the former So the fire of grace onely must draw out the Fire of debate or send it to the euerlasting fire to purge it 2. Contention is like Fire for both burne so long as there is any exustible matter to contend against Only herein it transcends fire for fire begets not matter but consumes it debate begets matter but not consumes it For the wicked study cause of contention as Benhadad against Ahab 1. king 20. So when the Pope could find no iust exception against Fredericke the Emperour he quarrell'd with him for holding the wrong stirrop when the great Prelate should mount his palfrey and thought he might easily mistake for Emperours are not vsed to hold stirrops yet hee was persecuted almost to excommunication for it It is wofull dwelling amongst debatefull men whose soules hate peace that are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without naturall affection which Paul makes a reprobates marke striking all that stand in their way and not ceasing to burne till all matter cease to feede them Salomon discribes such with a firie comparison First ver 17. he cals him a Busi-body he passeth by and meddleth with strife belonging not to him he thrusts himselfe into impertinent busines and is like one that taketh a dog by the eares which hee can neither hold nor well let goe ver 18. He notes his politicke villanie As a mad-man who casteth firebrands arrowes and death and saith Am I not insport he scattereth abroad mortall mischiefes vnder the colour of iest And ver 20. lest the fire should goe out hee administers fewell himselfe Where no wood is there the fire goeth out ver 21. when he hath kindled this flame hee striues to spread and disperse it and is as coales to burning coales and wood to the fire The words of a tale-bearer are wounds and they goe downe into the innermost parts of the belly They penetrate and cruciate the most tender and sensible places 3. As a litle sparke growes to a great flame so a small debate often proues a great rent Behold how great a matter a litle fire kindleth The wind at first a small vapour yet gets such strength in going that it ouer-turnes trees and towers A back-biting tongue hath pulled downe strong citties and ouerthrowne the houses of great men Warre is compared to fire
Court who often fed vs in the countrey Or if wee vouchsafe to acknowledge them as friends we will not as Sutors Hereon was the verse made Quisquis in hoc mundo cunctis vult gratus haberi Det Capiat Quaerat Plurima Pauca Nihil He that would be of worldly men well thought Must alwayes Giue Take Beg Much Litle Nought Men cannot brooke poore friends This inconstant charitie is hatefull as our English phrase premonisheth Loue me Little and Loue me Long. 3. This Sicut Refines Our loue Walke in loue as Christ loued vs. Where As is not onely similitudinary but causall Loue because Christ loued vs for this cause as after this maner Which serues to putrifie our loue to purge it from corruption and to make it perfect Dilectio Dei nosfacit diligibiles diligentes both such as God can loue and such as can loue God For it is the loue of Christ to vs that works a loue to Christ in vs. A man will euer loue that medicine that hath freed him from some desperate disease Christs Loue hath healed vs of all our sores and sinnes let vs honour and loue this medicine compounded of so precious simples water and bloud And let vs not onely affectionately embrace it our selues but let vs inuite others to it Come and harken all ye that feare God and I will declare what he hath done for my soule Christ. I haue beene so punctuall in this word of Qualitie that I can but mention the rest The word of Maiestie is Christ who being almightie God coequall and coeternall with the Father and the Spirit tooke on him our nature and was factus homo vt pro homine pacaret Deum God was made man that for man he might appease God Thus did so great a maiestie stoupe low for our loue Non exuendo quod habuit sed induendo quod non habuit not by loosing what he had but by accepting what he had not our miserable nature Ipse dilexit nos Tantus tantum gratis tantillos tales Hee that was so great loued so greatly vs that were so poore and vnworthy freely Loued Is that word of Mercy that reconciles so glorious a God to so vngracious sinners The cause which moued Christ to vndertake for vs was no merite in vs but meere mercy inhim He Loued vs because he loued vs in our Creation when we could not loue him in our Redēption when we would not loue him Loued vs notbutthat he loueth vs stil. But the Apostle speaks in this time to distinguish the loue wherewith he now loueth vs from that whereby he once Loued vs. For if when wee were enemies we were reconciled to God by his death much more being reconciled we shall be saued by his life Though it be also true that from euerlasting he Loued vs. Vs Is the word of Miserie Vs hee loued that were so wretched The word is indefinite Us all vs. Vs be wee neuer so vnworthy All vs be wee neuer so many 1. Vs that were vnworthy of his loue from whom he expected no correspondence That hee loued the blessed Angels was no wonder because they with winged obedience execute his hests and doe his word Yea that he loued his very reason-lesse and insensible creatures is not strange for fire and haile snow and vapour stormy wind and tempest fulfill his word But to loue vs that were weake vngodly sinners enemies Rom. 5 weake no strength to deserue vngodly no pietie to procure sinners no righteousnes to satisfie enemies no peace to atone for wee hated him and all his yee shall be hated of all men for my names sake To loue such vs was an vnexpectable a most mercifull Loue. Hee that wanted nothing loued vs that had nothing Immortall eternitie loued mortall dust and ashes O if a man had Ora mille fluentia melle yea the tongues of Angels he could not sufficiently expresse this loue So God loued the world Mundum immundum the vncleane world that not onely not receiued him but euen crucified and killed him 2 All of vs without acception of persons This is the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world The Gospell proclaimes an vniuersall Si quis Whosoeuer beleeues and is baptised shall be saued Qui seipsum excipi●… se ipsum decipit He that excepts himselfe beguiles his owne soule Hence I find three inferences obseruable which I will commend to your consciences and your consciences to God Dilecti diligamus Dilectos Diligentes 1. We are loued our selues therefore let vs loue He that bids vs loue loued vs first This is my Commandement that yee loue one another Why As I loued you Non aliud iussit quam gessit he chargeth vs with nothing in precept which he performed not in practise Therefore Si tardi su●…us ad ●…andum non tardi simus ad redamandum Though we haue not beene forward to loue first let vs not be backward to returne loue Dilecti diligite If God so loued vs we ought also to loue one another Magnes amoris amor and the sole requitall which God requires for his rich loue is our poore loue that onely may loue him but haue nothing to giue him that is not his 2. They are beloued whom thou art charged to loue He that bids vs loue others loues them himselfe It is fit we should loue those whom Christ loues If thou loue Christ thou art bound to loue others because he loues them yea with that very same loue wherewith he loues thee Therefore Dilectos diligamus 3. They also loue God whom God commands thee to loue The loue of Christ is so shed abroad into all Christian hartes that they vnfainedly affect Iesus their Sauiour They loue him whom thou louest therefore loue them It is fit we should loue them highly that loue God heartily Therefore Diligentes diligamus Thus you haue heard Loues Walke or Race now then sayth Paul So runne that you may obtaine I will end with an Apologue an Epilogue a Parable Charitie and certaine other her riualls or indeed enemies would runne a race together The Prize they all ranne for was Felicitie which was held vp at the Gaoles end by a bountifull Lady called Eternitie The runners were Pride Prodigalitie Enuie Couetousnes Lust Hypocrisie and Loue. All the rest were either diuerse or aduerse neighbours or enemies to Charitie I will Herald-like shew you their seuerall equipage how they begin the Race and end it 1. Pride you know must be formost and that comes out like a Spanyard with daring lookes and a tongue thundring out braues mounted on a spritely Iennet named Insolence His Plumes and Perfumes amaze the beholders eyes and nosthrils He runnes as if he would ouerthrow Gyants and Dragons yea euen the great Red-Dragon if he encountred him and with his lance burst open heauen gates But his Iennet stumbles and downe comes Pride You know
of the earth but they conceale the true cause whereof their owne soules are conscious their vncharitablenesse The earth hath neuer been so frozen as their consciences nor is the ground so fruitlesse of plenty as they of pitie This is not mala terra bona gens but mala gens bona terra vve haue bad minds good materialls The earth hath not scanted her fruits but our concealings haue beene close our enhancings rauenous our transportations lauish The Lord sends graine and the diuell sends garners The imprecations of the poore shall follow these ●…iders and the eares of God shall attend their cries There is the proud Gallant that comes foorth like a May-morning decked with all the glory of Art and his adorned Lady in her owne imagination a second Flora and these are Riders too but closer riders the world with them runnes vpon wheeles and they hastning to ouertake it out-runne it Their great reuenues will not hold out with the yeere the furniture on their backs exceedes their rent-day Hence they are faine to wring the poore spundges of the Country to quench the burning heat of the City Therefore say the Countrey-men that their Carts are neuer worse employed then when they do seruice to Coaches There is the fraudulent Tradesman that rides no further then betweene the Bursse and the shop on the backe of a quick-spirited hobby call'd Cheating and whereas greatnesse presseth the poore to death with their weight this man trips vp their heels with his cunning They haue one God at the Church another at their shops and they will fill their coffers though they fester their consciences This Rider laughes men in the face whiles he treads on their hearts his tongue knowes no other pace but a false gallop The bribe-groping Officer in what Court soeuer his dition lies is an oppressing Rider they that would haue their suites granted must subiect their necks to his feete and let him ride ouer them He confutes the old allegory of Iustice that is vsually drawne blind for he will see to doe a Petitioner ease by the light of his angels Nothing can vnlocke his lips but a golden key This Riders horse like that proud Emperors must be shod with siluer and the poore man must buy of him and that at a deare rate his owne treading on I come to him last whom I haue not least cause to think vpon the Church-defrauder that rides vpon a vvinged horse as if he would flie to the diuell called Sacriledge He may appeare in the shape of a Protestant but he is the most absolute Recusant for he refuseth to pay God his owne He weares the Name of Christ for the same purpose the Papists weare the Crosse onely for a charme These are the Merchants of soules the Pyrats of Gods Ship the Church the vnderminers of Religion that are still practising traines to blow it vp They will not pay their Leuites their Leuites must pay them They will not part with their Cures whereof they haue the donation but vpon purchase But it is no wonder if they sell the Cures that haue first sold their soules The charitable man dreames of building Churches but starts to thinke that these men will pull them downe againe There is yet one other Rid●…r though he spurres post must not passe by me vn-noted the Truth-hating Iesuite that comes trotting into England on a redde horse like Murder dyp't and dy'd in the bloud of soules and if he can reach it in the bloud of bodies too Neither doth he thirst so much after ordinary bloud that runnes in common veines as after the bloud-Royall There is no discase saith one that may so properly be called the Kings-euill He is the diuells make-bate and his cheefe Officer to set Princes together by the eares He sittes like the Rauen on a dead bough and when the Lyon and Leopard come forth to fight he sounds out a poynt of wa●…re hoping which soeuer falls his carkase shall serue him for a prey to feed on His maine study is to fill the Schooles with clamours the Church with errors the Churchyard with corpses and all Christan states with Tragedies The Seminaries were once like that strange weed Tobaccho at the first comming vp but here and there one entertain'd in some Great mans house now you may find them smoking in euery cottage The haue deseruingly encreased the disgrace of that Religion so that now in the common censure A Papist is but a new word for a Traytor They receiued their errand at Tyber and they deliuer it at Tyburne There are many other Riders so properly ranking thēselues in this number and assuming this name which for modesties sake I bury in silence Considering that Quaedam vitia nominata d●…centur some sinnes are taught by reprouing their names But I perceiue a preuention I haue not time enough to end our miserie much lesse to enter the speech of our mercy The iourney they make vs take through fire and vvater requires a more punctuall tractation then your patience will now admit Two short vses shall send away our Oppressors with feare our selues with ioy 1. For them let all these tyrannous Riders know that there is one rides after them a great one a iust one euen he that rides on the vvings of the wind and the cloudes are the dust of his feete He that hath a bridle for these Senacheribs and strikes a s●…affle through their iawes and turnes their violence with more ease then the wind doth a fane on the house-top Then a horse shall be but a vaine thing to saue a man saith the Psalmist Horse and Master shall fall together Then the couetous Nimrod that rode on the blacke beast Oppression shal be thundred down from his proud height and the Iade that carried him shall dash out his braines and lye heauier then a thousand talents of lead on his conscience His oppression shall damne himselfe as before it did damnifie others It was to them a momentany vexation it shall be to him an eternall pressure of torment Then the bloud-drawing Vsurer that rode so furiously on his Iade Extortion shall if timely deprecation and restitution stay him not runne full butt against the gates of hell and breake his necke And hee that at the barres of temporall Iudgements cryed out for nothing but Iustice Iustice and had it shall now cry lowder for mercy mercy and goe without it And let the Cormorant that rides euer on the back of Engrossing whose soule is like Erisicthons bowels in the Poet Quodque vrbibus esse Quodque satis poterat populo non sufficit vni that starues men to feed vermine know that there is a Pursuiuant flies after him that shall giue him an eternall arrest and make him leaue both Horreum and hordeum his barne and his barley to goe to a place where is no food but fire and anguish And the lofty Gallant that rides ouer the poore vvith his Coaches and Caroches drawn by two wilde horses Pride
and Luxurie let him take heed lest he meet with a wind that shall take off his Charriot-wheeles as Pharaoh was punished drowne horses and chariots Riders not in the Red-Sea but in that infernall Lake vvhence there is no redemption Let all these Riders beware lest hee that rides on the wings of vengeance with a sword drawne in his hand that will eate flesh and drinke bloud that will make such haste in the pursute of his enemies that he will not bait or refresh himselfe by the way lest this God before they haue repented ouertake them Gird thy sword vpon thy thigh O most mighty and in thy maiestie ride prosperously c. and thy right hand shall teach thee terrible things Then shall the Lord remember the children of Edom in the day of Ierusalem and reward them as they serued vs. Loe now the end of these Riders There are the workers of iniquitie fallen they are cast downe and shall not be able to rise Zach. 10. The riders on horses shall be confounded 2. For vs though passion possesse our bodies let patience possesse our soules The law of our Profession bindes vs to a warfare patiendo vincimus our troubles shall end our victory is eternall Heare Dauids triumph Psalm 18. I haue wounded them that they were not able to rise they are fallen vnder my feete Thou hast subdued vnder mee those that rose vp against mee Thou hast also giuen me the neck of mine enemies c. They haue wounds for their woundes and the treaders downe of the poore are troden down by the poore The Lord will subdue those to vs that would haue subdued vs to themselues and though for a short time they rode ouer our heads yet now at last wee shall euerlastingly tread vpon their necks Loe then the reward of humble patience and confident hope Speramus et Superamus Our God is not as their God euen our enemies beeing iudges Psal. 20. Some put their trust in Chariots and some in horses But no Chariot hath strength to oppose nor horse swiftnesse to escape when God pursues They are brought downe and fallen we are risen stand vpright Their trust hath deceiued them downe they fall and neuer to rise Our God hath helped vs wee are risen not for a breathing space but to stand vpright for euer Tentations persecutions oppressions crosses infamies bondage death are but the way wherein our blessed Sauiour went before vs and many Saints followed him Behold them with the eyes of faith now mounted aboue the clowds trampling all the vanities of this world vnder their glorified feet standing on the battlements of heauen and wafting vs to them with the hands of encouragement They bid vs fight and wee shall conquer suffer and we shall raigne And as the Lord Iesus that once suffered a reprochfull death at the hands of his enemies now sits at the right hand of the Maiestie in the highest places farre aboue all Principalities and Powers Thrones and Dominations till his enemies bee made his footestoole So one day they that in their haughty pride mercilesse oppressions rode ouer our heads shall then lie vnder our feete Through thee will wee push downe our enemies through thy Name will wee tread them vnder that rise vp against vs. At what time yonder glorious skie Coelum stellatum which is now our seeling ouer our heads shall be but a pauement vnder our feet To which glory he that made vs by his Word and bought vs by the bloud of his Sonne seale vs vp by his blessed Spirit Amen THE VICTORIE OF PATIENCE With the expiration of Malice PSALME 66. 12. VVe went through fire and through water but thou broughtest vs out into a wealthy place I DID not in the former Sermon draw out the oppressing cruelty of these Persecutours to the vtmost scope and period of their malice nor extend their impium imperium to the furthest limit and determination therof There is yet one glimpse of their stinking candle before the snuffe goes out one groane ere their malice expire We went through fire and water The Papists when they heare these words went through fire and water startle and cry out Purgatory direct proofes for Purgatory With as good reason as Sedulius on that dreame of Pharaohs Officer Gen. 40. 10. A vine was before me and in the vine were three branches sayes that the Vine signifies St. Francis and the three branches the three Orders deriued from him And as a Pope on that of Samuel Behold to obey is better th●…n sacrifice and stubbornnesse is as Idolatry inferres that not to obey the Apostolike See of Rome was Idolatry by the witnesse of Samuel Or as one writes of St. Fra●…cis that because it is said Vnlesse you become as little children you cannot enter into the kingdom of heauen he commanded one Massaeus to tumble round like a little childe that he might enter Or as when the contention was betwixt the Seruices of Am●…se and Gregorie which should take place by the common consent both the Masse-bookes were layd on the Altar of S. Peter expecting some decision of that doubt by reuelation The Church dores being opened in the morning Gregories Missal-booke was rent and torne into many pieces but Ambroses lay whole and open vpon the Altar Which euent in a sober exposition would haue signified the Masse of Gregory cancelled and abolished and that of Ambrose authenticall and allowed But the wise Pope Adrian expounds it thus that the renting and scattering of Gregories Missall intended that it should be dispersed ouer all the Christian world and onely receiued as Canonical Or as that simple Fryer that finding Maria in the Scripture vsed plurally for Seas cryed out in the ostentation of his lucky witte that he had found in the olde Testament the name of Maria for the Virgin Mary But I purpose not to waste time in this place and among such hearers in the confutation of this ridiculous folly Resting my selfe on the iudgement of a vvorthie learned man in our Church that Purgatory is nothing else but a Mythologie a morall vse of strange fables As when Pius the second had fent abroad his Indulgencies to all that would take Armes against the Turke the Turke wrote to him to call in his Epigrams againe Or as Bellarmine excused Prudentiu●… when hee appoints certaine holy-dayes in hell that hee did but poetize So all their fabulous discourse of Purgatory is but Epigrams poetry a more serious kinde of iest Wherein they laugh among themselues how they couzen the world and fill the Popes coffers Who for his aduantage Ens non esse facit non ens fore So that if Roffensis gather out of this place that in Purgatory there is great store of water Wee went through fire and water We may oppose against him Sir Thomas More who proues from Zachary 9. that there is no water at all I haue sent forth