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A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

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with God not in that he had a large and spatious body but for that God did love and favour him So there is alia gloria Solis alia Lunae alia Stellarum for one starre differeth from another in glorie 1 Cor. 15. 41. Here he speaketh of the lights not of the celestiall bodies wherein he sheweth himself skilfull in the Mathematicks He was learned in all the wisdome of the Egyptians Acts 7. 22. so that he could have discoursed among the Astrologers of the quantities of the celestiall bodies but here by naming the greater and lesser light he doth instruct the very simple The light must be great for the house wherein it must hang is the whole world There must be two because they must serve for two seasions they are lumine impares because they are usu impares There is luminare majus and luminare minus The Sunne The greater is the Sunne which is the President of the day the Persians say that it is the lightner of all other lights luminare omnium luminum and that it is the Prince and Governour of light The starres doe get up to the top of the Epicycle in his absence they doe mourn and meet him again with joy in their Epicycle for they doe owe allegiance to the Sunne It hath two qualities light to direct and heat to cherish He is like a Bridegrome and like a Giant saith David Pulchritudinem sponsi videmus per lucem vim gigantis per calorem saith Austin upon the 19. Psalm 5. The Moon The lesser is to rule the night At the rule of the Moon the Sunne doth not murmur but it doth give place unto the Moon being inferior Here is greater obedience and humili y used then men doe use in this age there is no obedience in the inferior to the superior but murmurring and desire of equality The Sunne hath the rule of the day the Moon the dominion of the night both are content In Lordship there is no fellowship The three first nights without light Before this fourth night the three nights had no light but were meerly dark The Moon now shineth in the night it is the Sunnes deputy In the night it is comfortable in the Sea by navigation on the land by journey The Moon by some is called nocturnus Sol It is cold and moist My head O my sister is full of dew and my locks with the drops of the night Cant. 5. 12. In the time of her rule is the time of ease and of silence She hath a milde light she shineth lumine repercusso with a borrowed light The day by the Sunne is hot the night by the Moon is moist The Sunne is in the world as the heart in the body and the Moon as the liver The Sunne draweth up and the Moon dissolves The Starrs Now of the Starres which God made He maketh the Pleides and Orion Amos 5. 8. they are the attendants of the Moon Praise yee saith David the Lord which made great lights as the Sunne to rule the day the Moon and the Starres to govern the night Psal. 336. In the Heavens hath he put a Tabernacle for the Sunne Psal. 19. 4. The starres fixed have their tabernacles God that made the world and all things that therein is He is the Lord of Heaven and of Earth he dwelleth not in Temples made with hands Acts 17. 24. The Israelites took up the Tabernacle of Moloch and the Starre of their God Remphan figures which they made to worship Acts 7. 43. There are stellae erraticae the Planets and stellae fixae the other six Planets have their light from the Sunne Six branches came out of the golden candlestick in the temple Exod. 25. 32. They had not only many Idols but they had starres of their Gods Amos 5. 26. Siccuth and Chiun their images in that chapter and 26. verse are Mars and Saturne They called Barnabas Jupiter and Paul Mercurie Acts 14. 12. They have for saken the Lord and forgotten his holy mountain Esay 65. 11. Yea Lucifer hath said in his heart I will ascend into Heaven Oh Lucifer how art thou fallen which art the Sunne of the morning Esay 14. 12. Venus is the morning Starre the evening starre is the Mace-bearer to the Moon and the morning starre to the Sunne As touching the fixed starres God saith to Job in his 38. chapter 32. Canst thou bring forth Mazaroth in their time This Mazaroth is taken for the Zodiack Canst thou guide Arcturus with his Sonnes The starre Arcturus is the Northern Pole in the tayle of Ursamajor in the Zodiack are the twelve signes whereof one containeth many starres from thence there is a correspondencie in Aarons garment and in the Temple It is the hand of God that hath framed serpentem incurvum the crooked Zodiack Job 26. 13. Galaxia or Via lactea is held by some to be the passage of the Sunne by others the meeting of the radiations of many starres from thence is moisture There is mention of Orion and the Pleiades Job 38 31. Orion when it appeareth bringeth in Winter sweet are the influence of the Pleiades delitiae sunt Pleiadum When those seven starres appear the same being in Taurus they bring in the spring and pleasant flowers It is even God saith Job the 9. chap. 11. verse that maketh the starres Arcturus Orion and Pleiades And Amos 5 8. In the dogge dayes the starres of the nature of a dogge doe rule Arcturus as I said before is the Northern Pole this starre especially hath a principall use for direction to Mariners where ever they goe for Arcturus and his sonnes is their chief mark the load stone will ever look toward that They have an use in their influence which is especially in the night By Gods mercy the Mariner by means of the loadstone shall know which way to sayle which starre Arcturus with his sonnes the Lord doth guide Job 38. 32. As for the influence Sweet is the increase of the Sunne and of the Moon Deut. 33. 14. Regard yee mee not because I am black the Sunne hath looked upon me Cant. 1. 5. Solardet The Sunne burned up Jonahs gourd Jonas 4. 8. So the Sunne is for Gods justice as well as for his mercy there is a pleasant dew and a mildewalso Be thou faithfull then shall not the Sunne smite thee by day nor the Moon by night the Lord shall preservethee from all evill Psal. 121. 6. And as the influences of the starres are sweet in his mercy so they are also the ministers of his Justice The starres in their courses did fight against Sisera Judges 5. 20. 17 Vers. posuit stellas Now of the posuit stellas and as some say dedit stellas God say some did give the starres in way of dowry or a joynture But the better sort doc say posuit stellas that is he set them in order He hath nor set them tanquam in centro but tanquam in circulo
terram Great then is their humilitie to us which are subject to corruption whose brothers and sisters are the very worms So that the Sunne in his very name in Hebrew doth import that it is not Deus but servus hominum At Joshua's commandement the Sunne stayed in Gibeon and the Moon in the valley of Aielon Joshua 10. 12. Isaiah showed this sign that Hezechiah should restore his health he brought the Sunne back again ten degrees God then sheweth great favour unto man that can make the Sunne to stand still and retire back again 2 Kings 20. 9. These Lights then were assigned to divide the day from the night their Function is for the inferior Earth and the superior Heaven they were ordained for the decking of the Celestiall part and for the use of man and lastly for the glory of God They doe serve for the Earth and they doe shew forth Gods praise yea the starres of the morning praise God together Job 38. 7. The Sunne and the Moon and all the bright Starres shall praise him Psal. 148. 3. Et fuit ita Fecit enim Deus duo illa luminaria magna luminare majus ad praefecturam diei luminare minus ad praefecturam noctis atque stellas Et collocavit ea Deus in expanso coeli ad afferendum lucem super terram Et ad praesidendum diei ac nocti ad distinctionem faciendum inter lucem hanc tenebras viditque Deus id esse bonum Sic fuit vespera fuit mane diei quarti Gen. 1. 15,16,17,18,19 BEFORE we have spoken of the Decree now of the execution and of the return of the censure or approbation and so we will end the fourth day Of them in order and it was so some say fecit others posuit all the six dayes work stand upon these three joynts creavit fecit and sint It was so It was so This is the return and execution of Gods Decree it is the usuall eccho of Gods word it is the Amen of that which proceedeth from his mouth herein is the verifying of his edict the power of his word and the expedition of that he commandeth Herein is the conformity of the return and the commandement and the continnance of that is commanded Let this suffice for and it was so For the continuance God promiseth to David I will stablish thy seed for ever and thy throne from generation to generation Psal. 89. 4. These lights are placed in the Heavens where is no error by his power they were made he bringeth forth the innumerable hoste of starres by his word the Lord biddeth Abraham to look up unto Heaven he biddeth him tell the starres if he be able to number them and he said unto him So shall thy seed be chap. 15. 5. For the expedition The Sunne rejoyceth like a mighty man to run his race Psal. 19. 5. He runneth a long race in a short space For the conformity in the Heavens we doe daily pray sicut in Coelo in Terra that Gods will may be done in Earth as it is in Heaven As for the constancy of the Heavens it is circular regular and certain God did swear by his holinesse that he would not fail David saying His seed shall endure for ever and his throne shall be as the Sunne before me Psal. 89. 36. Thus saith the Lord Jer. 33. 20. If you can break my covenant of the day and of the night that there should not be day nor night in their seasons then may my covenant be broken with David my servant that he should not have a sonne to sit upon his throne But as the armie of Heaven cannot be numbred neither the sand of the Sea be measured so will I multiply the seed of David And it was so Eclipses and Conjunctions are by their certainty oh wonderfull is their immutability in their continuall mutability by them is the differences of all times of all seasons It was so even by the hand of God by his hand they were made they were placed Every good and perfect gift is from above and commeth from the father of lights with whom is no variablenesse James 1. 17. The Earth is immovable yet subject to alteration the Starres are in their motion immutable they were made to lighten the Earth to rule the day and the night they were not made to be adored Austin maketh this dialogue between these lights and man Creator est supra me te qui fecit me te me prote te pro se this is spoken by the Sunne God made these lights for man he made man for himself David in the 8. Psalme 3. saith When I behold thine Heavens and the works of thy fingers the Moon and the Starres which thou hast ordeyned What is man say I then that thou art mindfull of him or the sonne of man that thou regardest him Thou hast made him little lower than God and hast crowned him with glory and worship thou hast given him dominion over the works of thine hands yet is he by Abrahams confession but dust The worms are his kinsfolk saith Job The words of his mouth are iniquitie and deceit saith David Psal. 36. 3. Creata sunt omnia per Deum Patrem ordinata sunt per Verbum ornata per Spiritum His spirit hath garnished the Heavens Job 26. 13. Let all the Kings of the Earth sing the praises due unto the Lord Psal. 138. 5. Austin saith well What greater obedience can there be dixit and facta sunt What greater love can there be then quod pro nobis facta sunt Oh therefore let all the Nations of the Earth be thankfull to the Lord who hath made us and them and them for us Of what are they made surely of somthing sit lux that was of nothing fecit stellas that was of somthing He created the form and formed the matter fecit and fuit is not all one the matter is the light the Heavens is the form God hath stretched out the Heavens which are strong as a moulten glasse Job 37. 18. They are made by the best opinion of water and light The Sunne and the Moon Now what is made Two great lights the Sunne and the Moon which are as a great fire and the Starres are as little sparkles as two great torches and as many little wax candles The Moon is lesser than many starres according to Astrologie which Moses doth not impugne though it be a lesser body yet is a greater light in respect of the starres and a lesser in regard of the Sunne and so saith Moses Moses was very great in the land of Egypt not great of personage but great in favour Exod. 11. 3. The greatest Apostle is not taken in the quantity but in the quality the great men are said men of dignity of account that are in much favour Paul counteth himself the least of the Apostles not as one of lowest stature but of least desert David was great
heat nor the cold but after the fall they were passible and then they made them garments Nakednesse opposite to Ornamentum Again Nakednesse is taken against ornament with costly apparel which is to please the eye as it is a● large described in Esay 3. 18 c. But Adam and Eve needed not the beauty of apparel they needed not the silk of the silk-worm nor the wool of Sheep not the skins of rare beasts nor any cloth of gold nor any needle work the softest raiment and the richest apparel would have been no grace but a disgrace to Adam in Paradise he was naked and yet the robe of righteousnesse was his attire when Christ was transfigured upon the mount Thabor his face did shine as the Sunne and his clothes were white as the light Matthew 17. 2. Christ was bright as the Sunne For that Adam and Eve were conversant with God they had that brightnesse which passed the glorie of the richest apparel their brightnesse was like the shining of the Sunne if the Sunne were covered with velvet it were no grace but a blemish to the Sunne and if Adam had been adorned in rich attire it would have disgraced the bright shining beams of his innocence And though that Adam by his disobedience lost this his brightnesse and we also lost it by his transgression innocencie and the robe of righteousnesse was their garment but after they were apparelled with shame But by Christ Jesus we look to be restored to the first state of Paradise to be covered with the robe of righteousnesse Esay 61. 10. then this corruptible body shall put on incorruption and this mortall shall put on immortality 1 Cor. 15. 53. then shall the just men shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father Matthew 13. 43. then shall our beauty be without blemish our minde shall be upright our glorie unspeakable Then as it in Esay 24. 23. the Moon shall be abashed and the Sunne ashamed when God shall reign in Sion and glorie shall be before his Saints Why Man created naked For what cause they were created naked and were not clothed The Fathers answer that there is a resemblance between nakednesse and innocencie Nakednesse is to be bare from outward clothing Innocencie is to be bare from inward naughtinesse and there is a resemblance between deceit and a covering or mask there be those that have a shew of Godlinesse yet have they denied the power thereof 2 Tim. 3. 5. there be those that cover their deceit with the hood of 〈◊〉 as Peter speaketh and with the cloak of shame as Paul speaketh in 2 Cor. 4. 2. they cover their craftinesse Let then our minds and thoughts be innocent let them be naked from all kinde of wickednesse for as Paul speaketh in Hebrews 4. 13. God discerneth the thoughts and intents of the heart neither is there any Creature which is not manifest in his sight all things are naked and open to his eyes Innocencie to Adam and Eve was a glorious garment the robe of righteousnesse was their attire the man that went down from Jerusalem to Jericho in Luke 10. 30. and fell among theeves was robbed of rayment and was wounded to death which is the case of Mankinde after the fall was restored by the tender compassion of Christ the true Samaritane to be apparelled in the glorie and rayment of righteousnesse They were not 〈◊〉 The second thing is the state of the soul they were not ashamed they were not confounded their soul was not troubled In Revel 19. 8. the wite of the Lamb which is the Church shall be arrayed in pure fine limaen and the fine linnen is the righteousnesse of the Saints their thoughts were honest their soul at rest but the disquiet of the soul is by passions and perturbations Yet God at the first did create in Adam and Eve affections as in 〈◊〉 5. 22. Love joy peace long suffering gentlenesse meeknesse temperance which are the fruits of the spirit Adam had joy and love which were his 〈◊〉 affections and as the train to wait upon his original righteousnesse but the corosive affections which are in Man is shame grief 〈◊〉 c. which are the fruits of the Divell and of the flesh these 〈◊〉 the Divels Sergeants to arrest Man God himself after the 〈◊〉 would have these to be in us to punish us and to tyrannize over us As the Jebusites which were in Jerusalem as a scourge to them the which was called the Citie of the Jebusites Joshah 23. 7. and 18. 28. shame and sinne doe scourge us with whips not heard their stripes are worse than of an iron scourge as a Father saith well peccata nos surdo vulnere verberant The original hath and they were not confounded So long as sinne hath shame in his cheeks 〈◊〉 is counted a virtue to be 〈◊〉 in Paradise was accounted to be an evill and the least evill it is now If this small blemish shame were not to be found in Paradise then greater offences were not for shame is called primitiae peccati the first fruit of sinne and after shame came fear as it is in chap. 3. 8. and after fear sorrow seized upon Man This word of confounding is taken from a troubled vessel where the lees being stirred doe 〈◊〉 up to the top and shame we see bringeth a great part of the blood of the heart to the face When Adam and Eve had transgressed they then were ashamed and covered their shame chap. 3. 7. and men cover their faces that are ashamed after shame seized upon man his peace was dishonored his bleslednesse was taken away if a man now be innocent we doe say he is not ashamed and thus and that very well the School-men doe reason If the steps of sinne as shame be not found in man then the fruits of sinne are not in him the fruit of sinne is shame and the end thereof is death as it is in Romans 6. 21. see Proverbs 28. 14. that after shame a man hardneth his heart and becommeth shamelesse but after that comes punishment Esay 24. Shame fear sorrow are the Divels Livery it is the Divell that doth cloath Man with shame as with a garment But innocencie and righteousnesse are Gods plants God made Man without sinne without shame Now of these two joyntly They were naked and yet they were not ashamed They wanted shame he saith not and he felt no want of apparel And Austin saith well upon these words of Moses Non laudat 〈◊〉 sed innocentiam mentis for in that he was not ashamed he was innocent and he that sinneth not hath noe cause to be ashamed and now if a man have committed a fault and shameth not we call him impudent But if he be innocent and shameth not we say not that he is impudent but that he is couragious and confident for the wicked flyeth when none pursueth but the righteous are bold and confident as a Lyon Proverbs 28. 1.
her foot Every one cannot spy Sathan when he appeareth as a friend When Christ would have gone to suffer at Jerusalem Peter as a friend in words of compassion saith to him 〈◊〉 thy selfe this shall not be 〈◊〉 thee Christ he perceived friendly Sathan in Peter Matt. 16. 23. But in the grosse sinne of Idolatry 〈◊〉 downe and worship mee and in this notorious sinne of 〈◊〉 you shall not die at all any man may easily discover Sathan But Eve shee was not moved at the report of an Angell of light but at the words of a base Serpent or buggish worme shee was not only content to hear his needlesse questions his reproaches to Gods word and his blasphemous termes against God himselfe but which is more she heard him willingly shee beleeved him and shee was very forward to doe as the 〈◊〉 perswaded her Aspiceret 〈◊〉 timentibus oculis shee should have beheld the Tree with twinckling eyes as it is 〈◊〉 1 Sam. 3. 11. with tingling eares she should not have striven about words which were to no profit but to the perverting of the hearers yet heare you that Eve giveth her eyes to behold the Tree her eares to hear blasphemous words she giveth her hands to take of the fruit she giveth her mouth and bellie yea all her bodie unto the 〈◊〉 But it is not good to eat much honie nor to seek glorie by the sense When that she could not refrain her appetire she was like a 〈◊〉 which is 〈…〉 and without walls Proverbs 25. 28. and her inward parts were battered We finde in the outside three things vidit tulit comedit she saw she took and she did eate The first was the concupiscence of the eye The second the stretching out the arme to take of the fruit was the attempt The last was the actuall sinne and the 〈◊〉 The ancient Divines doe call the first desiderium the second conatum the endeavor the last actum the accomplishment The The desire of the eye and the endeavor of the hand doe argue a consent and by the assent of reason she yeeldeth to eate Seven degrees in every sinne The ancient Fathers doe make seven degrees in every sin out of this very first sin of Eve But five of these degrees are past before we come to tulit and the other two last one concerneth the taking the other the act 1. Suggestion The first of these degrees they call a suggestion 2. 〈◊〉 the second they call the invading of the consent 3. Consent to delight the third they call consensum in delectatione a consent to sinne with delight 4. Lingring the fourth they call moram a lingring and stay in the delight 5. Consent to sinne the fift they 〈◊〉 call 〈◊〉 in actum a consent to the very practise of sinne 6. Taking Then after these five degrees commeth the 〈◊〉 which is tulit the taking the fruit 7. Eating and the seventh which is comedit the very act of sinne These seven degrees are seven several motions and distinct as you may easily see in this sinne and disobedience of Eve The first suggestion in Eve to disobedience was wrought by the Serpent but now the suggestion in our mindes is by our selves Here the Serpent made question of Gods goodnesse now the corruption of our own nature maketh many needlesse questions Sathan hath two wayes to convey concupiscence either by his Pipes to play unto us pleasant notes or by his Glasse therein to shew us many allurements But after the Fall the Devill needed not to use his suggestion for behold all the imaginations of the thoughts of mans heart were only evill chap. 6. 5. Christ calleth these suggestions cogitationes ascendentes mounting and ambitious thoughts She saw three things which are three degrees and all the three are the second general degree The first degree of the seeing they doe call allubescentiam an entertaining of the luggestion and we call it here aspectum intuitum arboris the beholding of the outward shew of the tree The second degree of seeing is by beholding it to withdraw our asfection from the fear of God which we call 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 our turning our selves from God 3. Cons●… sua cum delectatione The third degree I told you was called a consent with delight which is a further bair not only willingly but even wishly to behold the fruit and to look into the nature of the fruit This degree they call inspectum and contuitum vidit quod delectabile she seeth that which is delightfull to the sight and this is consensus intellectus a consent of the understanding as it is in Job 20. 13. when wickednesse was sweet in her mouth she hid it under her tongue and favoured it and would not for sake it but keep it close in her mouth 4. Morosa delectatio The fourth degree is beyond the third it is mora and morosa delectatio a lingring of the del ght this makes her dote on every circumstance on the beautie on the virtue of this tree Hereby when we have removed from us the thoughts of sinne sinne is resumed this is non inspectio sed introspectio she seeth knowledge not to be seen Hereby she seeth quod concupiscendum this degree is the hunger and thirst of sinne a burning desire to sinne wherein she seeth lignum delectabile and desiderabile that the tree is pleasant and to be desired to get knowledge 5. Consensus in actum The fift degree as I told you is called consensus in actum the consent to the act it self thinking with themselves If the beholding this tree be so pleasant having in it to the eye all varietie of pleasure what and how wonderfull delightfull will the taste thereof be surely it will be full of all pleasure and therefore I think it expedient to take thereof and I doe long to eat of the same this is the consent of reason ad opus malum to work wickednesse even with greedinesse and they doe call this last degree of sinne vidit aberrationem cordis a wandring astray of the heart See Prov. 20. 1. 6. Conatus In the sixt place comes the sixt degree which is conatus the endeavor to streatch our the hand and to apply our hand to the pulling of the fruit from the forbidden tree 7. Actus peccati In the seventh place comes the last degree which is the eating of the fruit the consummation of all even the sinne it self These seven degrees are compared to the seven degrees of 〈…〉 of a childe in the mothers bellie by the ancient Divines and that out of James 1. 15. where the Apostle saith When last hath conceived it briugeth forth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death And indeed Eve by seeing was brought to bed of sin which was the first begotten of Sathan The Cavilists doe say of suggestion here of Sathan by his question that the suggestion is as
fruit which would make us as Gods when he knew that it would be as poison to our bodies and make us damned Devils Now this following of the Devills counsell and advise in this place is so much the worse in Adam and so much the more to be condemned because twice before he had followed it with ill success and saw he was deceived which might have been a double caveat and fair warning to him now to beware but as he had followed the Devils counsell twice before in practise and deed so we shall see him to follow it twice hereafter in word For first of all touching his word and speech the Devill teacheth him a peece of his Sophistry teaching him that he must needs answer to put non causam pro causa And secondly in the other place he teacheth him a peece also of the Devils Rhetorick which is called translatio criminis a laying the fault upon another and so shifting it from himself outward covering and inward dissembling hath a very good correspondence and therefore hypocrisie is compared to a Cloak or masking Hood Job saith 31. 33. If I hide my sinne as Adam did concealing my sinne in my bosom will not God finde it out and punish it But Adam being bewitched and infatuated by the Devill that spirit of error had learned to make choice rather to strive with Gods justice than to appeal to his mercy for favour and grace whereas by confessing he might have had pardon he by defending it brought himself the more deeply into judgment and his sin the more into question and triall By confessing his sinne Christ would have been his advocate to plead for his pardon but by defending and justifying it he made him to be a Proctor to plead against him and Judge to give sentence against him whereas by confessing his disease God would have been his Physitian to heal him he è contra by taking on himself to heal his own sickness made himself and his disease more grievous and more desparare But let us come to see how he seeketh a quia and an ergo that is a good reason and argument to defend and justific his deed Let us I say come to the particulars of his answer and see the strength and validitie of his reasons for if it be good and justifiable it will hold the proof and the examination will doe it no hurt Concerning which first we know it in corrupt policy that it is good alwayes to begin a lye with a truth or at least with great likelyhood of verity that so the lye may after run more currant and goe more roundly away therefore at the first in the forefront of his answer he places indeed a manifest and known truth that he heard Gods voice and the second also is truly said that nothing might be suspected namely that he was afraid In which two truths confessed the Fathers doe say are contained the first and second degrees which by Gods Decree should have been the two chief inducements to move men to repentance and therefore in that he was not moved to submission and confession of his fault thereby they gather that this part of his confession also is against himself therefore these two evasions are nothing but to make against his cause The second excuse is of decencie and 〈◊〉 or comelinesse as who should say I saw it a shamefull thing and very unmeet and undecent to appear before thee being naked and therefore I hid my self in which he doth make his thought and imagination a rule to measure Gods estimation and judgement by as if that which he thinketh inconvenient and uncomely God must think and esteem to be unseemly and unmeet also The Prophet Samuell saith 16. 7. 1 Sam. 16. 7. That God seeth not as man seeth neither are our thoughts his thoughts he is not moved with the like passions that we are for Job in sterquilinio was more pretious and amiable in the eyes of God and more acceptable to his minde quàm Heredes in solio as a Father saith and the reason is because he looketh to that holiness which is within and accepteth a man thereafter and regardeth not the outward estate of the body whether he be 〈◊〉 or in poor aparrel as men of corrupt judgment doe Jam 2. 3. 4. therefore Adams thought and conceit of his bodily nakedness which seemed unseemly to him ought not to be taken as a rule to measure Gods thoughts and to prove and determine what is undecent and unreverent in the eyes and judgment of God touching the outward things for seeing that nakedness is factum dei it cannot simply displease him or be detestable in his sight for he saw all that he had made was passing good nothing to be ashamed of as undecent therefore it is certain that if this had been all the matter which he pretendeth he might have boldly for all his nakedness have presented himself without shame or fear before God for as I have shewed that nakedness of their bodies in which they were made and which they enjoyed being innocent was no matter of blushing but of beauty no blemish or undecencie but an ornament glory to them as the nakedness of the Sun and Moon is such a glory and beauty to them that if any should put upon these glorious bodies a Cloak of velvet or Cloth of gold it would be so farre from beautifying them that it were a blemish and disgrace undecent for them and this is the hope and expectation of the Sonnes of God one day to enjoy that happy estate again in which they shall want no bodily garments to cover them but shall all shine in glory as the Sun in the skie Thus we see that this quia and ergo will not stand it is not Gods art or workmanship nor his voice that made him feare flie or hide but somewhat else which he had done and committed whatsoever it be which God will bring to light and make apparent hereafter Now let us come to the consequence here set down ergo abdidi for which we shall perceive that this is no good or right reason or consequence which he should have inferred uppon the premisses for thus he should have concluded I was afraid and naked and fled for conscience of my sinne therefore I confess humbly my sinnes before thee and doe crave pardon for them Thou diddest open mine eyes that I saw my sinne and thou openedst mine eares by feare that I knew thy judgment ergo now also open my mouth that I may confess humbly and open my heart that I may repent truly for it thus he should have made his consequence I heard thy presence with majesty comming ergo I prepared my self to meet my Lord right humbly confessing my finnes that I might have found pardon this was Jacobs resolution and conclusion in policie Gen. 32. 7. when he heard that Esau came against him he feared and was troubled and therefore used all means preparing
nineteenth They that live in ease are weary of it Salomon in the first of the Kings the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse died in his age Abraham in the twenty fifth of Genesis and the eighth yeelded the spirit and died a good age Death is a resting from Labour and from sinne and death is not only a resting from labour but from sinne also Paul in the seventh to the Romans and the twenty fourth desireth to be delivered from the body of sinne which he calleth the body of death The holy Fathers on that place but this difference that the Martyrs desire to die that they might not sinne the Malefactors because they have sinned A delaying of the punishment The other part of the delay is the chiefest which is the consideration that there is an exemption of death from the best part of man a qualifying of the punishment A bodily punishment for the soul and body both offended but the body only is punished the soul mans better part is free that is not touched He saith not here thou shalt die the death but thou shalt return to dust for as it is in the third of the Preacher and the twentieth all 〈◊〉 of the dust and all shall return to dust It is the body only that returneth to dust but the soul returneth to God that gave it Mans heavenly part shall be free from this sentence The Soul immortall the head of man his soul which is neerest God shall be safe though his heel be bruised The earthly part shall return to that it was but the heavenly 〈…〉 still the immortality If Christ be in us the body is dead because of sinne but the spirit is life for righteousness sake the eighth of the Romans and the tenth This then giveth comfort in death that though the body die the soul shall live for ever This gave comfort to Adam that he had thus well escaped Hevah the Mother of the living that in the very next verse he calleth his Wife with joy Hevah which is the Mother not of the dead but of the living for Hevah is mater viventium In the twentieth of Luke the thirty seventh and thirty eighth verses The Lord is Deus viventium The Lord is called the God of Abraham of Isaac and of Jacob yet is he not the God of the dead but of the living for all live unto him yet then the Patriarchs were dead but though the Grave had their body God had their soul the Patriarchs died their soul lives the third of Exodus the sixth to be compared with the former place for after death they were not dead but removed to another state of life God will bring his again from the depth of the Sea Psalme the sixty eight and the twenty second The first death so the godly shall suffer the first death Revelations the twenty first and the eighth expoundeth that place But the wicked and the accursed shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death The second death the first death is the death of all the first death only is the death of Saints but the second death is the death of sinners Davids soul is delivered from the sword Psalme the twenty second and the twenty first but death seedeth 〈◊〉 upon the wicked as sheep feed upon a Common and as their life was without repentance so their death shall be without end the godly wish for death to rest from their labours the wicked wish for death that live in torment which is great Revelations 9. 6. The gates of death are mentioned in the Psalmes and in the seventh of the Proverbs and the twenty seventh Penetralia mortis the Chambers of death The wicked live not only in the Gates in the Courts in the Chambers of death but even in the Dungeon of death in the twenty third Psalme and the fourth verse and in the seventh of the Romans the twenty fourth are to be delayed in the one is mention of umbra mortis in the other corpus mortis they are to be delayed with the 9. of Marke the 1. where it is said that some there are that shall not taste of death till they have seen the Kingdome of God come with power So that the first death takes hold of the gody but the second death toucheth them not For they that be faithfull unto death shall be crowned with a crown of life Revel 2. 10. and in the 11. verse the godly that overcome shall not be hurt of the second death Isaiah 26. 19. Death naturall and eternall they are subject to the naturall death but free from the eternall death This is their comfort in the first death to have deliverie from the second death Resurrection By the resurrection of the dead to life is a second return for by the first return the body returneth from dust to dust but the second is from dust to glorie Return which is a return not of the soul but of the body also according to that of Job This body of flesh shall be covered with immortalitie and according to that of Hosea the 13. Chapter and the 14. verse The godly shall be redeemed from the power of the grave and death and according to that place of the Prophecie Christ will be the death of death it self but most plain of all is that of the 1. of the Revelations the 18. spoken of Christ That he is alive but was dead but now he is alive for evermore and he hath the keyes of hell and of death This then doth alay and qualifie the bitterness of this sentence The use hereof is diverse to learn Hence now may we gather use to our selves in these five things 1. Humility The first is though it be bitter yet it is wholsome the first use is taken out of pulvis es Learn hence unde es from whence thou art thou art but of a clod be not proud thou treadest upon that thou art made let that put thee in minde of humilitie boast not of thy honour for thy honour is in the dust There is nothing in the grave whither thou goest Preacher 9. 11. Quid ergo attollis cervicem in pulverem reversuram this is a means to learn humility learn of your selves what you are and then be humble Austin saith that the time will come to give an account to God of thy doings remember thy own frailty and be not proud for God knoweth whereof we be made he remembreth we are but dust Psal. 103. 14. 2. To regard things of this life as dust The second use is out of pulvis in pulverem dust to dust We must remember whither we are to goe we are now dust but sub alienâ formâ in the likeness of flesh but we shall be dust in the likeness of dust it self our flesh of dust shall be turned into dust and according to that of
the 14. of the 11. Thy pompe and pleasure is brought down to the grave the worms shall cover thee then with Job 17. 14. 〈◊〉 maist say to corruption thou art my Father and to the worm thou art my Mother and Sister and as it is in the 26. of Isaiah and the 19. the dust must be our dwelling joy not then in the joyes of this world which are but dust and corruptible they are as Austin saith gaudia privanda but sorrow for gaudia aeterna privanda sorrow lest 〈◊〉 be deprived of eternall joyes 3. Our life unconstant or death uncertain The third use for instruction is out of 〈◊〉 〈…〉 The state of our life is alwaies in motion and in revolving like a Ship a sailing Job in his 14. chapter and 14. verse called the resurrection after death a changing it is like a shadow it is still turning and returning Paul saith in the thirteenth to the Hebrews the fourteenth verse Wee have here no continuing City but wee looke hereafter for one our life is unconstant our death uncertain alwaies changing this the inconstancie of mans life is the motive to good as the other is the retentive from evill Paul saith hee dieth daily from sin here on the earth wee must not seeke for the hill of certain repose but look in heaven for a perpetuall City The Tents and Tabernacle are taken away therefore with Abraham Wee must looke for a City having a foundation whose builder and maker is God the eleventh of the Hebrews and the tenth verse 4. A time to return The fourth use is out of donec revertêris untill thou returne a time of returning where wee must learne to returne by repentance unto God before wee returne to dust that so wee may returne againe from dust 〈◊〉 God let men bee alwaies ready spend not thy daies with the wicked that goe suddenly down to the grave the twenty first of Job and the thirteenth the fourty fifth of I saiah and the eighth And as they live so they die like beasts the third of the Preacher and the ninteenth 5. We must return to God The fifth and last is that we must return to God For shall the dust give thanks unto thee the thirtieth I salme and the ninth verse The godly shall be delivered out of temptation though the unjust be reserved to judgement the second of Peter the second and the ninth We must return to God per poenitentiam Let it not be thought incredible that God should raise again the dead the twenty sixth of the Acts and the eighth the first of Jea and the eighth So a man shall return to God very well by due consideration of these things from the first pulvis es thou art dust to return to God by humility by the second not to joy in this world but in God by the third to rest our turning and returning in God and by the fourth to comfort our selves that out of the grave we shall rise to live with God Abraham addeth ashes to dust But what made Abraham to add ashes to dust the eighteenth of this Book and the twenty seventh he saith I am O Lord but dust and ashes The Fathers upon this place say that dust is our beginning and if we doe not obey God by fire we shall be turned into ashes ashes will be our ending We are all naturally dust and we are all by desert also but ashes and although by no means you cannot avoid to be dust yet by an upright life you may avoid to be ashes though we cannot but incurre the first death let not the second death take hold of us Though the grave inclose us let not hell swallow us All we eat all that we care for in this world is but for dust and for that will turn to dust If we be nothing but dust if we hope for nothing but dust if we care for nothing but dust we shall be swallowed up in dust Let us remember we are clay but God is the Potter Isaiah 64. 8. Above all regard thy soul. Above all regard thy soul then shall thy body of dust return to dust and from dust shall return again to God that made it and thee thou and thy body shall return to glory Vocavit autem Adam nomen uxoris suae Chavvam eò quòd ipsa mater sit omnium hominum viventium Gen 3. 20. December 10. 1598. ADam here calleth his Wife by a new name not by the former name in the 23. of the former which was Woman The mysterie of this name compared with the former Sentence is great she is called here Hevah she hath no name of dejection and despair but of life and of comfort Hereby is to be gathered that notwistanding the sinne committed and sentence pronounced yet there was in Adam some matter of hope for he beleeved the promise made in the 15. verse before that the seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head This was as it is in the 〈◊〉 to the Corinthians 2. 16. The savour of life unto life Abraham beleeved in Gods promise the 15. of this book the 6. by this Scripture Adam left a Monument of his beliefe as in the other Abraham left a Monument of his faith The seed of Abram in his age was promised to be in the 5. verse of that chapter as the starres of heaven Abraham desired to see the day of Christ and he saw it by faith Herein we will consider these two things first the imposition of a name and then of this name For the first the imposing of names is an argument of superiority and power in the 19. of the former chapter it is shewed in the naming of all the Creatures by man which names were properly given by him In the thirty fifth chapter and the eighteenth verse Jacobs Wife before her death called her sonnes name Ben-oni but his Father changed that name and called him Benjamin from the sonne of sorrow to the sonne of 〈◊〉 Jacob was after called Israel the tenth of the same chapter the name of Sarai was turned to Sarah the seventeenth of Genesis and the fifteenth verse as of Jacob by the Angell into Israel the two and thirtith chapter and the twenty eighth verse and out of these new names is taken matter of great mystery And Adam before called her Ishah woman as another from man but here hee changeth that to Hevah which is a name of life to others Now then touching the imposition of this name wherein wee will consider the signification of this name and then the qualitie thereof In the seventh of the former chapter God 〈◊〉 into man the breath of life and man was a living soule and here her name is a name of life now life is two fold either for a time or for ever shee is a mother of life in regard of this life for that her birth is not of an abortive it is a blessednesse production and education are in
biting speech Behold they are as God they would have a quaternity instead of a trinity they know both good and evill in the first of the Kings the eighteenth and the twenty seventh Eliah mocketh the Priests of Baal saying Cry aloud for he is a God it may be he sleepeth and must be awaked surely this was a scoffing speech Hitherto apply the first to the Corinthians the twelfth chapter the thirty first verse Salomon in the first of his Proverbs the twenty second verse saith the Scorner taketh pleasure in scorning so doth not God yet in the twenty sixt verse of the same chapter Because you have despised my counsell and not regarded my correction I will laugh at your destruction and mock when your fear commeth and yet surely this speech is not altogether without an Ironie though it be not altogether Ironicall for according to that of the Proverbs before cited God scorneth them that scorne and despise him but it is unusual and not to be shewed in any one part of the Scriptures that God useth scorning to the penitent sinner though to the obstinate whom neither love of mercy nor fear of punishment can draw to repentance So then this speech is not a triumphing over them in miserie or a derision of their simplicitie but rather a publishing or laying open of their sinne by Ecce behold Jacob in the thirty second of Genesis the thirty second verse though he wrestled with the Angell and had a blessing yet the sinew of Jacobs thigh shrank A speech of affection This speech of God here is with an affection it is the speech of affection an unperfect speech without a period it breaketh off before it be full like that speech of our Saviour Christ the nineteenth of Luke the fourty second verse Oh if thou haddest known at the least in this thy day those things which belong unto thy peace but now are they hid from thee affection stayeth the course of the speech it is a speech of commiseration ecce homo pitie breaketh off the period In the nineteenth of John the fist verse when Christ was shewed to the People crowned with a crown of thornes Pilate said Ecce homo Behold the man And Austin upon that place saith they are words of commiseration and why are not the very same words here also So much for the character or form of the words The matter in them Now of the matter of the same It was concupiscence desire of honor beleef of error that they should be as God that made them sinne The Serpent promised them that they should not dye at all and that they should be as Gods eritis sicut Dei they heard the voice of the Devill and obeyed him Now remember that promise of the Devill is false hereafter beleeve me and be not deluded by the Devil So that God giveth them an audible word to ring in their eares in this and a lesson to continue in their heart for ever that so he may say with David Psalm 43. Deliver me O God from the 〈◊〉 and wicked man for he lyeth in wait for blood and lurketh for their lives the first of the Proverbs the eighteenth verse and so detest him that mislead them from life to death from the sight of God to the heavie indignation of the Lord. This must work compunction to see the losse of Paradise and the separation from Gods presence and that through the illusion of Satan they had fallen from so great blessednesse to so great miserie So much shall suffice for the matter of the publication of his fall The Divills promise The Serpent as you remember in the chapter before made them two promises the one eritis tanquam Dei the other 〈◊〉 mini God here in his Sentence sheweth that they have found the contrary of both Falsified for he saith Pulvis es in pulverē 〈◊〉 that is a bar to their immortalitie and in labore 〈◊〉 comedes 〈…〉 tuae So they shall neither be Gods nor immortall The tree of life was the ordinarie means to maintain him in time of innocencie but here God deprives him of that means he was placed in Paradise where was the tree of life he is deprived both of the tree and of Paradise it self privatur loco indumento He must labor and clothe himselfe or 〈◊〉 and die The tree of life as the ancient Fathers say well was symbolum or tessera vitae a seale or token whereby life was warranted them for God gave them life and not the tree of life and they were excommunicated from this seal and banished from this place of Paradise Deus est vita God was their life and being severed from God so they were severed from life Adams banishment This was the very first patern of civill banishment He would needs tast of the tree which was to him the tree of death and would not keep the Commandement nor the Law of Paradise wherein he was and wheresoever one liveth under a Law and breaketh the Law where he liveth deserveth punishment the reason why he should be banished lest he put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life And this we see to be the general desire of all men that they are willing to prolong their life even in miserie rather then he would die he would take of this tree and live in miserie eternally for saith a Father well Cupidiores homines vitae producendae quàm terminandae men doat more upon the prolonging than upon ending their life God saw that this desire was inconvenient to live for ever Christ himself died but now being risen from the dead jam non moritur mors illi ultrà non dominabitur the sixt to the Romans the 〈◊〉 verse Christ hath triumphed over death but Adam after his fall had lived if he had had his own desire in misery perpetuall an evil eternal Our labour and pain is but temporall till thou return to dust but the Devils shall be perpetual God turned the desire of Adam of evill eternall to an evill temporal with a donec This also is another reason why it is not expedient that he should have his desire God before hath promised life in the very promise of the seed of the Woman If God have promised a better life by another means than Adam desired or the tree of life yeelded that is in his Sonne our Saviour to live a Heavenly life in eternitie both in soul and bodie for he changeth the terrestrial life of the bodie subject to pain and misery which he desired to a heavenly life full of joy and endlesse glorie So that in that God debarred him to put forth his hand to the tree of life was mercie even in judgement St. Gregorie upon this place saith well Materia est misericordiae in providentia divina God by his providence sheweth great mercy even in Judgment it was just that he should die but if you consider it well in
separation from the Temple which was but a type of that place was so grievous to Davids soul as he had no rest in his spirit and thought himself in worse state than the Sparrow till he had accesse to the Citie of God Psalm the eighty fourth Much more grievous is it to be separated from heaven If of the Church on earth it is said there are gloriosa dict a de te Psalm the eighty seventh Much more glorious things are spoken of Heaven whereof to be deprived will be a great grief for this place hath all things which may commend any place Of light it is said Lumen dilexit oculus but this place hath no night but continual light from the Lord himself Apocalyps the twenty first chapter If society doe commend a place then this place is commendable quia janua ibi aperta If immunity from pain there is neither hunger nor thirst nor cold If joy then there the elders sing continually the praises of God Apocalyps the twenty first chapter Therefore to be excluded from this place which is so to be desired is a great punishment Again To be separated not only from so good a place but from such company not only of holy Angels where if it were a great blessing to lodge while they were clothed with mortality Hebrews the thirteenth chapter then it is a greater blessing to dwell with them in this perfect 〈◊〉 None of the saints who albeit on earth they be despised and called fools Wisdome the fift chapter yet shall be glorious in heaven and not only their souls but their bodies made like the glorious body of Christ Philippians the third chapter and the twenty first verse of whose company to be deprived will be a grief but to be cast out of the company of Jesus Christ who when he did give but a taste of his glory it was so glorious 〈◊〉 his Disciples Matthew the seventeenth chapter so as they said 〈◊〉 est nobis hic offici will be a great grief for there he shall be in perfect glory at the right hand of God where he now 〈◊〉 which shall much more rejoyce us than these drops Lastly If the comfort of Gods 〈◊〉 in earth where the light of it is greatly eclipsed and darkned doe afford more comfort than 〈◊〉 of corne and oyle Psalm the fourth then what a discomfort will it be to be separated from the light of it when God shall shew the brightnesse of 〈◊〉 but even then shall the unprofitable servant be cast out from beholding the same Secondly That which doth aggravate his punishment is that this separation shall be done with violence cast him out not bid him goe out or lead him out The separations that are made from the Church militant are not done without great difficulty no man would willingly be 〈◊〉 But it will be a farre greater grief to be separated from the Church triumphant but howsoever they be unwilling yet they shall be separated violently no man will willingly come to judgment at the last day but God will bring every thing to judgment Ecclesiastes the twelfth chapter He that doth evil hates the light John the third chapter but we shall be brought to light whether we will or no and death which is a preparation to the last judgment is fearfull So as no man willingly dyeth nay we make many pleas becaule we would not be separated we say Lord have not we prophecied and yet Christ tells all will not serve the turne Matthew the seventh chapter Not every one that saith Lord Matthew the twenty fift chapter When did we see the hungry or naked c. But Christ for all that we are so unwilling to be cast out tells us In as much as you did it not c. So that albeit man will not goe out of himself yet he shall be cast out with violence which makes his punishment more grievous Thirdly This separation shall be with contumely and disgrace to be thrown out of the company of the Angels is a disgracefull separation Many times Malefactors though they suffer for their offences yet have no disgrace offered them But the unprofitable servant shall not only be punished with the losse of this heavenly place but shall be cast out to his shame for he that dishonoureth God by burying his talent bestowed upon him God will punish him with dishonour and disgrace Them that hate me I will hate the first book of Samuel the second chapter Secondly The place into which he shall be cast is utter darknesse The Apostle when he saith Ad quem ibimus 〈◊〉 habes verba aternae vitae John the sixt chapter and the sixty eighth verse tells us It is an excellent thing to be in presence of them that have the words of eternall life but it is farre more excellent to be present with eternal life it self but not only to be deprived of his presence but to be cast into utter darkness is extreme misery If we might be choosers for our selves as the Devils choesed to goe into the hoggs 〈◊〉 the eighth chapter and the thirty first verse So if we might choose some place if it were but to return to the world again it were some mitigation but when we have not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is greater cause of misery we are not only deprived of light but cast into a place of darknesse And this punishment is very just that the unprofitable servant should be cast into darknesse which did darken his talent and hid it as the Prophet speaks of cursing Psalm the hundred and ninth He loved not blessing then let it be farre from him So quia non dilexit lucem non veniat ei lux extinguit scintilla gratiae ne videat lumen gloriae Which punishment how grievous it is appears for that the beholding of light as the Preacher saith Ecclesiastes the eleventh chapter is so comfortable to the eyes As Paul was out of hope of recovery when he and the rest could see nothing but darknesse Acts the twenty seventh chapter And God plagued the Egyptians with darknesse as the greatest plague he could lay upon them And the Apostle to shew the grievous punishment of the evil Angels saith They are reserved under darknesse the second epistle of Peter the second chapter for tenebrae formidolosae Again He is punished not only with darknesse but also with weeping and gnashing of teeth A man may have some comfort in darknesse it is the best time to sleep and meditate but the unprofitable servants being cast into darknesse shall have neither of these comforts to mitigate his punishment For there he shall feel the worm of conscience gnawing him which shall never dye and be tormented with the fire that never goeth out Mark the ninth chapter He shall have all things that may continue and increase his weeping But in these words the Holy-Ghost pointeth out two things The certainty and the measure of weeping in
which inward desire of revenge must likewise be overcome as the Apostle willeth Romans the twelfth chapter Avenge not your selves sed vince malum bono we must overcome the evil of our fleshly lusts and desires of revenge with the grace of mortification and patience 2. Extra Secondly The seed of the Serpent is without us for there are filii Belial of whom were those to whom Christ said John the eight chapter You are of your Father the Devil Such as will doe mischief for doing well such enemies are men of corrupt mindes and understandings that are destitute of the truth and are bold to say that gain is godlinesse from which we must separate our selves the first epistle to Timothy the sixt chapter and the fift verse And if we overcome in this warre then we shall be partakers of this promise But who overcommeth in this warre and who can say he is a conqueror in this battall The Apostle saith That he that sinneth is overcome of sinne and brought into bondage of the sinne the second epistle of Peter the second chapter and the nineteenth verse Therefore where the promise is here made only to him that overcommeth we must see if the Scripture offereth more graces James the fourth chapter and the sixt verse And if we look into Apocalyps the second chapter and the fift verse we shall finde there he that makes this promise offers more graces that is Remember from whence thou art fallen and repent and doe thy first works D●… victoria So there are two victories the first is continere a peccato the other is paenitere de peccato If we cannot get this victory over the Serpent that he doe not cause us to sinne at all yet if we so farre overcome him that sinne reign not in our mortal bodies Romans the sixt chapter and the twelfth verse if we wound his head which was promised Genesis the third chapter and the fifteenth verse so as though he cause us to sinne yet he get not the head or set up his throne in our hearts then we are to hope that we shall be 〈◊〉 of this promise if we return from whence we are fallen and repent us of the sinnes we have committed and doe the first works then no doubt we shall be restored to our first estate and Christ shall give us a new right in the tree of life But he that either fighteth not at all but is at a league with Hell and hath made a Covenant with death Isaiah the twenty eighth chapter he that will deny sinne nothing but will fulfill the lusts of the flesh or if he fight yet he fight not lawfully nor strive to overcome but is content to follow every temptation as an oxe led to the slaughter Proverbs the seventh chapter and not only so but put stumbling blocks before himself which may make him fall Ezekiel the fourteenth chapter and use all means that he may be overcome And if having fallen they labour not to get the victory after by repenting of his former sinnes and doing the first works then they have no part in this first promise Men may draw neer to the holy mysterie of Christs body and blood and snatch at the tree of life but Christ gives it not except they be such as overcome either by the grace of abstinencie from sinne or of repentance and sorrow for sinne They may be partakers of the tree of life de 〈◊〉 but not de jure The bread of life is to them as the bread of wrong Proverbs the fourth chapter and the seventeenth verse and the bread of deceit which shall in the end fill their mouths with gravell Proverbs the twentieth chapter So both the promise and condition are touched But the question is How we shall overcome that we learn Apocalyps the twelfth chapter where the Saints are said to overcome the great dragon the old Serpent with the blood of the Lambe Which blood hath two uses First that which the Apostle calls the sprinkling of the blood of 〈◊〉 Christ the first epistle of Peter the first chapter and the second verse Secondly That by receiving the cup of blessing we are partakers of the blood of Christ the first epistle to the Corinthians the tenth chapter and the sixteenth verse So that in these words is a reciprocation vincenti ut comedat comedenti ut vincat dabo edere the body and blood of Christ is the fruit of that tree of life which the Apostle speaks of the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and the twenty fourth verse That he bare our sinnes in his body upon the tree Of which fruit whosoever are partakers in the Sacrament when it is ministred to them doe receive power to overcome that so they may eate of the tree of eternal life For in this Sacrament we have both a means of victory and a pledge of our reward that is the life of grace begun in us here to assure us of a glorious life in the world to come Every tree must have a root and the root of that tree which Christ speaks of is here in this Sacrament for in it is sown in the hearts of the receivers as it were a kernel which in time shoots forth and becomes a tree for as there was a death of the soul by sinne before God inflicted a death of the body so answerable to that first death of sinne there must be in us a life of grace which is the root of that tree from whence we shall in due time receive the life of glory In this sacrament the tree of the life of Grace is town in us that is a measure of grace wrought in our hearts by the power of Gods spirit by which we shall at length attain to eate of that tree which shall convey unto us the life of glory As there are two trees of life so we must have a double Paradise We must have liberty to be of the Paradise on earth that is the Church Militant which is called hortus conclusus Canticles the second chapter before we can be received into the heavenly Paradise that is the Church Triumphant So there is a plain analogie between those As when we are dead in sinnes and in the uncircumcision of the flesh Colossians the second chapter and the thirteenth verse we receive the life of grace by the sprinkling of the blood of Christ in baptism so when we are fallen from the life of grace and are restrained from the life of God Ephesians the fourth chapter and eighteenth verse and dead in trespasses and sinnes Ephesians the second chapter then we obtain victory against sinne and death by the blood of the Lamb being drunk in the Sacrament Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the eleventh verse For if the material tree of life in Paradise received such influence from God Genesis the third chapter that being dead in it felse it had power to convey the natural life of our Parents while they eat of
the fruit thereof then is God able as well to give such a power to the Creatures of Bread and Wine in the Sacrament that albeit they are dead of themselves to convey into us the life of grace even as the tree of life did prolong natural life for so saith Christ John the sixth chapter and the fifty third verse Except ye eat the flesh of the sonne of man and drink his blood ye have no lifein you Whoso eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life he that eateth me shall live by me And he that 〈◊〉 of his body shall live for ever There is no life but in God first 〈…〉 the thirtieth chapter ipse enim est vita mea and he committeth life to the sonne Therefore it is said There is a River of water of life proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb Apocalyps the 〈◊〉 second chapter and the first verse And as the Father hath life in himself so he hath given to the Sonne to have life in himself John the fift chapter and the twenty sixt verse And as the Father raiseth up the dead and quickneth them so the sonne quickneth whom he will John the fift chapter and the twenty first verse God being the fountain of life draws life to his sonne as into a Cistern from whence we draw life therefore it is said of the wisdome of God that is Christ that he is a tree of life Proverbs the third chapter and the eighteenth verse of whom it is now said in ipso er at vita John the fourteenth chapter and therefore he calls himself this life John the fourteenth chapter This is the Cistern of life to give life to them that are dead in original sinne by the sprinkling of his blood in 〈◊〉 And when they are dead in actual sinnes he gives new life to them that are 〈◊〉 of his body and blood in the Sacrament of the Supper In this Sacrament Christ hath provided a tree of life of graces against the death of sinne whereof they must be partakers that will eat of the tree of life which Christ here promiseth So that whereas the Wiseman saith Fructus justi est lignum vitae Proverbs the eleventh chapter and the thirtieth verse The seed of this tree is here sown and bringeth forth the root of a better tree for as grace is the root of glory so glory is the fruit of grace Here in this life the root of grace is planted in us and brings forth the fruits of righteousnesse that in the life to come it may make us partakers of the tree of glory and to assure us of this life we are sealed with the holy spirit of promise as the earnest of our inheritance Ephesians the first chapter and the thirteenth verse and the second epistle to the Corinthians the first chapter and the twenty second verse That albeit we are fallen and can be overcome of finne yet if we fight better and doe the first works we shall be partakers of the life of glory The kernel of grace is planted in us by the participation of the body and blood of Christ of which kernel commeth a tree which bringeth forth the fruits of holinesse and righteousnes in our whole life Which God will in due time reward with the Crown of life and glory in the world to come Cupimus autem ut unusquisque vestrûm idem studium ad finem usque ostendat ad certam spei persuasionem Hebr. 6. 11. August 24. 1599. AS in the old testament the Prophetisse Deborah in the service of the Children of Isha against Jabin doth specially praise God for the willingnesse of the people Judges the fift chapter so here the Apostle commendeth the Hebrews for the work and labour of their love in that they spared no cost in shewing themselves good Christians Now the crown of our rejoycing is the summe of our desire and therefore as there Deborah desireth to have the promptnesse and readinesse continued in the people so the Apostle wisheth that all the Hebrews as they have been carefull to practise the fruits of faith so should they still shew further diligence in that behalf The special drift of the Apostle is to shew that the Christians comfort standeth in the perfection of their hope The Apostle Hebrews the eleventh chapter and the first verse maketh their hope for to be the definition of faith For though matters Historical and Dogmatical pertain to faith yet chiefly faith hath hope for its object for as Augustine Credimus non ut credamus sed 〈◊〉 speremus therefore the Apostle saith the end of all Scripture is that we may have hope Romans the fifteenth chapter and the fourth verse and that which he affirmeth in the first epistle to the Corinthians the ninth chapter That he which planteth planteth in hope is as much true in all actions the ground whereof is the hope we conceive of some benefit for he that soweth soweth in hope he that saileth saileth in hope and he that marrieth doth it in hope that his estate will be bettered thereby For sure it is that it is but a comfortlesse thing to beleeve that there is everlasting joy and glory laid up in Heaven except a man be perswaded that he shall be partaker of it Exanguis res fides sine spe quia spes fidei exanguis est Amb. And as hope is the blood of faith as the Prophet saith Isaiah the thirtieth chapter and the fifteenth verse In quietnesse and in confidence shall be your strength so hope is that which whets diligence and therefore the Prophet saith in the second book of the Chronicles the fifteenth chapter and the seventeenth verse Be strong and let not your hands be weak for your work shall have an end And in the new Testament the Apostle saith Be stedfast and immovable knowing that your labor is not in vain in the Lord Quod labor vester non erit inanis in Domino the first epistle to the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter and the fifty eighth verse So nothing is more to be desired than to have hope in the evil day and the means of this hope is to shew forth diligence But for the easier intreatie of the contents of this verse the points which the Apostle holdeth are first That we are not only to beleeve but also to hope Secondly Not with a feeble or faint hope but with the fulnesse of hope Thirdly This hope must not be for an hour as Christ speaketh of St. John John the fift chapter but continuing to the end Then for the means of this hope his request is First That Diligence be used Secondly This Diligence must be shewed forth For the first point the Apostles desire is That they should hope for that which they beleeve wherein standeth the real difference that is between the faith of the Devils and men reprobate and the faith of the Children of God for even to the Devils the Apostle ascribes