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A19987 Doomes-Day: or, A treatise of the resurrection of the body Delivered in 22. sermons on 1. Cor. 15. Whereunto are added 7. other sermons, on 1. Cor. 16. By the late learned and iudicious divine, Martin Day ...; Doomes-Day Day, Martin, d. 1629. 1636 (1636) STC 6427; ESTC S109431 470,699 792

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it is impossible for the body shall never grow worse and worse by degeneration but it shall bee brought by the power of God to that high perfection that it shall still be infinitely better and yet still it selfe it shall still be the selfe same in essence though not in qualities It shall be the same in substance and nature but not the same in eminencie of grace and glory It shall be the same in being but not the same in seeming or in circumstance And so Saint Chrysostome saith It is the same and not the same it is the same as touching the fundamentall essence of it and it is not the same concerning the augmentation and the rare qualities that God shall impose upon it and invest it withall And so I say it is that comfortable doctrine to this flesh of ours that there shall not be any other flesh glorified for it but that this flesh that hath suffered martyrdome this flesh that hath suffered hunger and thirst sicknesse and persecution in the world this flesh that hath suffered for Christ this flesh and no other but this shall receive the crowne of glory according to the manifold evils it hath indured Otherwise there could be no true consolation in this life seeing the spirit also shall have larger indowments The soule of man the wit shall be greater and the memory greater and all the parts and faculties shall be more excellent in the soule Now these being not visible parts therefore they are not that which shall rise For it is that which is visible which belongs to the Resurrection the glory of the soule cannot be manifest it is still hidden and inherent in the inner-man But this glory that shall be at the Resurrection it shall be manifest and there is no manifestation made but to the eye and the outward sences Therefore here comes the comfort to every poore distressed body that the same that suffers and is miserable afflicted and tormented in this world the very same body shall receive abundance of joy and comfort and glory and beautie in the day of the Lord. The poore creple that goes double that moves every mans heart to pittie to see him in the streets he shall rise with a glorious and goodly body being incorporate into Christ by faith he shall receive a body full of ample complements and blessed perfections To every seed his owne body If it be the same body how then is it a new body Ob. and how then in the Scripture is it called a glorious body which makes it different This I told you shall be by addition of certaine accidents of glory that shall acrew unto it Ans which cannot be separated as accidents may be from their subject but they indure with it continually And that consists 1. Partly in that goodly proportion that I spake of before wherein all men shall be raised in one size Not as they are now where there is great difference but all shall be of one stature and perfection And therein they shall more resemble the Image of God then if they should be made in greater variety 2. Secondly another qualitie wherewith they shall be indowed is the clearnesse and brightnesse of those bodies For although they shall not be transparent and translucent which is no property of a true body yet they shall be so full of light and gloriousnesse as the Lord Iesus his body were when he was transfigured in mount Tabor his garments did so shine that no Dyer or Fuller in the earth was able to make such a tincture or to give such a colour and glosse Mat. 17. as the garments of our Lord had Much more then was his countenance glorious and shining And if in the old Law Exod. 34.30.33 the glory of Moses face were so great that the Iewes could not endure to looke upon him but he was faine to take a veile and cover his face when hee read the Law that so they might heare what he spake without astonishment much more shall the glory of the bodies of the Saints be at that day They shall be all lightsome they shall shine like the starres in the firmament they being often compared in the Scriptures to the starres which cannot be numbred Thirdly another qualitie wherein they shall be like unto the corne The corne that seemed to bee a dead graine yet after comes to have an excellent greene colour and live so these bodies shall exceed in proportion of beauty There is great difference now some are faire and some are foule creatures and those that are the faire ones of the world they thinke themselves onely happie and those that are deformed they thinke they had better beene unborne then to live in the world Indeed it is a matter of great dejection and scorne to a naturall man to have a poore deformed body Therefore the Lord shall so alter all things in that day that every man shall have equall beauty The glorious Saints in heaven their perfection is one and the same perfection they shall have a common perfection like the Angels that waite before the Lord and the Seraphins that have the selfe same perfection and beautie shining upon them all although it be not sensible to us but is seene onely among themselves Fourthly all this glosse stature and goodlinesse that they shall have except it have also strength and vigour it is little worth Therefore God shall give them that too That as the corne riseth with an high stalke to a goodly stemme and hath knops to underproppe and support and keepe it up whereupon it is builded so the Lord saith Rev. 3.12 he that heares the word of God he will make him a pillar in the house of his Father that is he shall have the strength and glory and the fortitude of the great men of God that hee shall be able to do any thing that God shall assigne him to with great dexterity And all this with a further grace of incorruption for the seed that is sowne although it come up with a faire glosse for a time yet it presently corrupts and is brought unto a drie straw and stubble and that which is greene now to morrow it is cast into the fire But the Lord shall give unto this glorious glosse whereunto he shall bring the bodies of his Saints he shall give them an incorruptible crowne 1. Pet. 1.18 It is a crowne that is incorruptible an inheritance immortall that never hath any change The best beauty in this worldly glory a fit of an Ague will change it and long sicknesse will turne the fairest rose into an ashy coale there is nothing so subject to change and alteration as the glosse of beauty But that strength and beauty and goodlinesse of the creature after the resurrection shall be supported by that ever mighty power of Almighty God so that there shall bee no old age to draw wrinckles in the face of his Saints there shall be no sicknesse to
there is a spirituall body all the rest are included in this It is sowne in corruption it is raised in incorruption It is true if it be spirituall it must needs be incorrupt so It is sown in dishonour it is raised in honour It is certaine if it be raised a spirituall body And so for strength if it be spirituall it must needs be strong Therefore the Apostle concludes all in this It shall be raised a spirituall body But how a spirituall body Marke he saith not that the flesh of Gods Saints the bodies that shall be raised that they shall be spirits but spirituall bodies Still it shall be a body So that there is no change in the substance but onely in the qualities and properties Tertull. Saith Tertullian the Apostle doth not speak of any change of the substance of nature but of the glorious qualities that shall come unto it Surely saith hee there is nothing that riseth againe but that which was sowne and there is nothing sowne but that which is dissolved and rotten in the earth and there is nothing lies rotting in the earth but flesh therefore nothing shall rise again but the flesh For there was nothing that the sentence of God went upon but the flesh of Adam Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt returne So St. Austin expounding the words In Tom. 5. Aug. Lib. 13. How shall they be spirituall Not because they shall cease to be bodies they are not therefore called spirituall as though they were turned spirits and ceased to be bodies but because they shall subsist with a living and quickning spirit and because they shall be made indwellers and inhabitants of heaven which is the place of spirits it shall then be the place for the bodies of men For now it is a strange paradoxe to say the body of a man should dwell in heaven and though we know that Christ hath it by a speciall priviledge yet there is no man can imagine how the bodie of a man should dwell in heaven in those pure skies in those bright regions and that the heavinesse of the body should not praecipitate it downe to the earth and cast it into the fire and to dismall events that should consume it But when the Lord shall change this corruption into incorruption the bodies of the Saints shall be the onely fit inhabitants of heaven therefore it is called spirituall because it shall dwell in heaven which is the place of spirits the body shall then be able to inhabit there therefore it is called spirituall as being fit to possesse those mansions that are destinated properly for spirits But Chrysostome makes a question here Saith he Chrysost What is this that thou sayest here blessed Apostle Dost thou say that the bodies of the children of God are not spirituall now are they all meerly animal now are they not spirituall how is it said that they are Temples of the holy Ghost if the holy Ghost dwell in them he makes them spirituall they are called spirituall men all the children of God and if they be spirituall men then they have spirituall bodies But the Father answers himselfe again It is true these bodies we carry about us now by the power of the holy Ghost are after a sort spirituall but that body which shall be then which he here speaks of shall be infinitely far more spirituall This is onely in inchoation in beginning in the first fruits that shall be in the summe and substance and fulnesse of perfection And St. Bernard If thou sayest our bodies shall rise againe thy meaning is not to take away the being of the body but to give it a new lustre as the face of Moses and as in the transfiguration of Iesus Exod. 34. For as Moses when God put that brightnesse upon his face that the people could not look upon it but he was faine to haye a vaile on his face his face was still the same but yet there was a change of glory there was an accession of brightness whereby it seemed a spirit rather then a common ordinary visage so the bodies of men that shall be raised there shall be such an accession and augmentation of glory and beauty and brightnesse that it shall rather seeme spirituall then otherwise And as it was in the Transfiguration of Christ Mar. 17. his garments shone that no Dier in the earth could make the like and his face shone as the sunne in his strength the face of Christ was all one his garments were the same he had the same physiognomie but onely there was a new accession of glory that came unto it So the bodies of the Saints they shall be all one the very same body shall be revived which hath suffered misery here and shall have a new glory put upon it and that very body shall have strength that here was weak and subject to death The Lord shall then cloathe it with glory and although it shall rise a spirituall body it is not in respect of the change of the substance but in regard of the augmentation of glory which shall accrew unto it It is raised a spirituall body So much of those two Attributes of the change from weaknesse to strength and from naturall to spirituall Now in the words following the Apostle comes to prove that such a thing there is as a naturall body and a spirituall body And this he doth to prevent objections partly lest men should think that he coyned new distinctions and divisions which is a thing faulty in the Church and partly lest men should be drowned in error by misconceiving his doctrine For the first If a man should have said unto him Where doe you learne this did you ever heare any man speak such a thing that there is a spirituall body Yes saith the Apostle there is both there is a naturall body and there is a spirituall body I will make the distinction good and prove it This teacheth us Vse that men ought to be carefull what distinctions they bring into the Church of God For as the Apostle saith to Timothy 1 Tim. 6.21 and to Titus Shun novelty of words and inventions shun them they are not to be admitted they destroy the faith and puzzle the understandings of all Gods children Vincentius Lirinensis Vincentius Lirinensis saith That although men ought to speak many things in the Church of God after a new fashion yet they ought to speak no new thing at all Therefore lest they should be offended with this distinction as though the Apostle had brought it out of his owne braine as though it were a new device of his owne hatching he is forced to make it good and to prove that there is such a thing because hee would not be thought an Inventer of new devices and a maker of new distinctions which is a plague in the Church of God throughout all ages Secondly another reason was this because hee would not suffer them to
our heads Psal 104.1 God hath drawn out the heavens as a curtaine that it might be full of glorious starres and every starre gives a certaine document and lesson of this that he treats of the certaintie of the Resurrection So that there is no part of nature voyde but all proclaime this doctrine of the Resurrection And he proves that look what difference there is betweene the bodies that bee in heaven and those bodies that be here in earth the same difference there shall be betweene the bodies that shall be then and the bodies that are now And although there bee in some bodies that are in this world as in the bodies of Princes and the bodies of beautifull men and women a rare luster and a goodly glory a marvellous feature and a stampe of Gods Image incomparable yet in comparison of that which shall be it is nothing That body that shall be in the world to come doth as farre surpasse this whatsoever it bee suppose it the fairest and most delicate bodie in the world as the lightsome starres do passe the poorest stones on the earth or any common forme and figure in the earth is not so much transcended by the glory of the starres as the bodies in the Resurrection do transcend and surmount the glory of any thing that is seene here below This is the summe of the words Now that we may proceed in order First we are to consider Division into 2. comparisons how he draws this Argument from heavenly bodies and compares them with earthly bodies wherein he gives the preferment to the heavenly bodies in these words where he saith There is not the same glory to the one as to the other There is one glory of the heavenly and another of the earthly That is there is a farre inferiour glory of the earthly in comparison of that which is heavenly Then secondly he makes a comparison of the heavenly bodies among themselves that as there is great difference betweene the starres of heaven and the stones upon the earth so there is great difference betweene the starres of heaven one with another not onely being referred to the earth which can make no comparison with them but in comparison one with another as they are in heaven some of them being of one magnitude and some of another some of them being of one lustre and some of another there is great difference there also Some of the Fathers have understood this of the different state of glory that shall be in heaven In the first similitude they say the glory that shall be revealed upon the sonnes of God shall be as infinitely beyond all the glory that is now as the glory of the starres in heaven excels the glory here on earth And for the other point of difference in the starres themselves thereby is signified that the just shall all shine in heaven as starres but in a different manner as the starres do now One starre differeth from another in glory And so he concludes all this parable and similitude So is the resurrection of the dead That is even as we see these earthly things to be farre exceeded by the heavenly in all kinde of beautie in all kinde of glory in all kinde of durabilitie and in all kinde of qualities which are commendable so the Resurrection shall be That is the bodies that shall rise then shall farre exceed these that are now as farre as heavenly things exceed earthly things And even as now there is a difference betweene starres that all are not alike in glory and all have not a like lustre nor like power and influence so then in the Resurrection there shall be difference and degrees every man shall have enough yet notwithstanding every man shall not have the same Of these things briefly and in order as it shall please the Lord to give assistance And first concerning the nature of the Apostles Argument 1. Part or comparison hee takes it now from heavenly bodies The higher a man goes in the body of Nature the more he learnes and the better he seeth the worke of him that is the Author of nature the Creator himselfe There is a great mysterie great power of instruction in the works of God Rom. 1. The wisedome and majestie of God is seene in his works But then is he best seene when a man doth ascend and rise up the skale and proceed from lower works to higher For even as he that climbeth to the highest top of an hill may see the furthest off so hee that ascends in the works of God in the disposing of the world the more he advanceth the more clearly hee seeth and the greater revelation is made unto him All the works of God they are great masters and teachers unto us if we will learne any thing There is nothing so dull there is nothing so poore but it is able to teach us But yet among the rest there is nothing comparable to the heavens being the fairest booke and the goodliest volume wherein the glory of God is expressed above all other things As the Psalmist saith Psal 19.3 The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament shew his handy worke There is no voyce nor language in the earth wherein the speech of heaven is not heard As there is no angle nor corner that is hidde from the light of the Sunne Vers 6. and from the heat and power of the Sunne but he searcheth it out so there is no man that is indewed with any sence but he is taught by that heat and light the greatnesse of the Almighty which these earthly things cannot attaine unto For they be restive and they be dull they be contained in their places they have not that diffused power and operation that the Sunne and the starres have to worke every where Therefore there is no worke of God more teaching and instructing then the booke of the heavens And therefore Saint Paul now makes his argument from the stronger that if our gardens could teach us and if our seeds could teach us if our fields could teach us and if our flesh can teach us even this flesh that we carry about us if these could teach us these things that are elementarie and sublunarie if these have a power of instruction no doubt then that golden booke that rare-volumne that is above that is written with so many starres as so many golden letters and so fairely written Hab. 2.2 that he that runnes may reade it no doubt I say but this is fuller of discipline and can much more easily draw the Schollar as containing in it more familiar precepts and more moving examples to winne us unto God His comparison here is taken in the name of bodies heavenly bodies and earthly bodies By heavenly bodies is meant the starres because they are created substances and not imaginarie things as the Philosophers would have them in their flattery and foolery they thought that the great men that
deserved well in this world were turned into starres and so they imagined Hercules and Antonius and Arctophilax and a great number of toyes and trifles that they devised as though the starres were the bodies of men or that they were persons of a spirituall substance But the Lord teacheth us that they are no earthly bodies they are things that were created in the first beginning and they are bodies which notwithstanding seeme to be nothing lesse then bodies they seeme to be spirituall things to be spirits rather then bodies being of such a swiftnesse and of that rare operation and brightnesse Yet the Lord tels us that they are bodies that is that they have a kind of earthlinesse in them they have a kinde of matter in them For although they be farre different from these inferiour things from these inferiour bodies yet in respect of the first Creator they are but bodies For there is but one spirit there is but one pure Spirit which is God himselfe All things else have a kinde of dreggie matter in them which makes them bodies the bodies which are heavenly that is the starres are bodies because they are visible because they are circumscribed because they have figure and proportion and they are bodies because they are kept within a certaine compasse and limit Whence it follows that seeing they are bodies therefore they are not to be worshipped as the Heathens used to do and as the Indian people at this day worship them but hence we see they ought not to bee worshipped Why even because they are but bodies nay they are insensible bodies they have not sence to guide them So that for all their puritie and the use they are of to the world yet in the perfection of life they are not comparable unto the beasts of the field for the beasts of the field that have sence are more perfect in their kinde then the Sunne in the firmament Eatenus because to have life and sence is a better kinde of being then to be without it The starres are bodies without sence they are bodies without soules and they are over-ruled by other things or else as they bee bodies they could not possible rule themselves Now these goodly bodies how they should bee carried up and downe every 24. houres after what manner whether they flye as the birds in the ayre so they in their spheares and orbes or whether they swimme as the fishes in the sea as divers men have imagined a man would thinke that one of those wayes they must needs be moved but it is certaine they do neither of them For they have a mighty power that God hath given them and the Angels execute this power and they turne the whole globe over Psal 104.2 as the Psalmist saith where he cals it the curtaine of heaven which is bespangled with stars and the whole curtaine is turned over together as an Ancient or Flagge displayed that is imbossed with gold all the whole compasse and circumference is moved together or as a woman when she turnes the rimme of a wheele about both the circle and the center are moved together and so all the wheele moveth round together so the power of the Angels move the celestiall bodies by the appointment of God that in twenty foure houres they compasse the whole earth which is as much in effect as if a bird should flye fifty times the space of the world in halfe a quarter of an houre The rarenesse therefore of this motion and the strangenesse of it argueth that God hath set over them some spirituall mover which wee call their standings and their Intelligences which move them to and fro in an unspeakable manner And for the manner of it that it should be in such a contrary course that never a starre should rise to morrow in the same manner as it doth to day and that the Sunne should never rise at one and the same point twice in the yeare but still varie and by varying make the compasse of the yeare as the Moone makes the compasse of the moneth For the Sunne hath one motion whereby hee makes the day and the Moone another motion whereby shee makes the night Againe there is another motion of the Sunne whereby hee makes the yeare and the Moone hath another motion whereby she makes a moneth And so for the rest of these heavenly bodies some of them fulfill their course and period in twelve yeares some in five yeares some in thirty some in a hundred yeares the Lord having set such a rare guidance in these things that there is nothing but a man may know it before hand a man may tell fifty yeares yea an hundred yeares before hand when there shall be an eclipse and the presages of these things are certainly knowne This argues that these bodies celestiall are moved by spirits celestiall For of themselves being but bodies they could not possible do thus they could not keepe this exact and swift motion nor they could not rowle over of themselves it is impossible being but bodies that they should do these things Now I come to the second point 2. Part or comparison wherein the Apostle compares these bodies together in respect of their glory There is a great glory indeed in terrestriall bodies there is a great glory in gold and silver and many men esteeme them more then the starres of heaven There is a great glory and lustre in jewels and precious stones there is a goodly transparent beauty in them in the lustre that they give There is a great glory in the beauteous faces of Gods Saints and in the gorgeous and pompous out-settings of Kings and Princes in their Courts of state There is great glory in every part of humane felicitie but being compared to this glory of the heavenly bodies they are meere foyles to that For saith the Apostle there is one glory of the heavenly and another glory of the earthly That is there is a farre greater glory of the heavenly then can bee supposed to bee in the earthly For first of all the glory in the heavenly bodies is pure but the glory in the earthly is mixed the purer the glory is and the more it is separate the more singular and excellent it is Now the glory which is in the stars above is pure in comparison of these earthly things And although they bee speckled and spotted in respect of God and be full of dregges in comparison with the Angels yet in relation to earthly things they are most pure even puritie it selfe All these inferiour things in their glory they have a mixture They are mingled of foure things there is nothing so glorious but it is composed of the foure elements even of Earth Water Fire and Ayre and these elements are never so well glued together but they will worke themselves asunder i● time whereas that celestiall beauty is pure without mixture it is an Essence that is elaborate to the full God hath brought
it to that high perfection that there is in it no contradiction In these things that are here below one Element fighteth against another untill they all come to destruction the best beauty in the world at the last the earth works all the other elements out and by a melancholy adust humour it brings the highest spirits the mightiest strength and noblest resolution it dissolves it and so brings it to its foot that earth it must be It turnes all to earth and ashes yea the very gold that seemes to out-vie time and to last alwayes yet it comes at last to be consumed by rust As one said of him that made his gold his god what a miserable God saith hee is that which cannot defend himselfe from rust and although it weare long and is the most compact thing in nature and though it can indure the fire and be never the worse yet it is subject to something which in time will consume and devoure it by reason of the mixture of it For it is made of the foure Elements and they have that discordance among themselves that at the last one workes out another But in the starres and the glory that is above there is no enemy no adversary but it is a pure glory of it selfe without any mixture so farre it doth transcend and exceed all the glory that is in the earth Againe it is more excellent in respect of duration For the glory that is in the earth is but a blast but the glory of heavenly things is the same alway In these earthly things there is a change God changeth them as a garment but the heavenly things they continue still and although they also shall be changed and the Lord shall fold them up Heb. 1.12 because hee onely remaines forever Yet for any thing that we see there is no change in them but they are still as they were before For in pretious stones and pearles which I thinke the Apostle hath some reference unto in this place he compares the starres to pretious stones which are the most goodly things in the earth and those things wherein God hath set an embleme of the starres and drawne the picture of heaven although there be much glory in them yet some of them are so darke of themselves that their glory comes unto them by accident as the Diamond which of it selfe is blacke and except by cutting the angles the lines reflect one upon another and be multiplied there is no glory in it So the light and glory of the Diamond is not of it selfe but from the light that is above and is onely by accident because of the cutting and proportion of one part with another And so in the rest of these pretious Iewels and orient pearles in the world their light is from that light which is above and onely in reflection of that light And for their duration they cannot hold and keepe time with that glory which is in the heavenly bodies For the light and brightnesse which is in Iewels hath an old age a time of fading therefore the Philosopher speakes of an old age of Iewels and pearles and the reason is because the naturall power is exhaled by a certaine force or else rather I thinke because that the outward ayre brings a kinde of slough upon it that duls the Iewell and makes it that it cannot shew so bright as it was before And chiefly because the vertue and power of it as in other things growes to the Center As wee see in an apple which is full when it is greene but when it is kept long then the pulpe or the flesh of it goes to the core and leaves the skin withered and wrinckled and destitute So it is in Iemmes and Iewels the power of it inclines inward As Scaliger Scaliger saith that he had a load-stone and other stones that had so lost the power attractive that it could not draw untill he brake it in the midst and then that part which was inward had the attractive power which it had before but the out-side was dulled But now the glory that is above in the starres that is not dulled by any of these contraries or adversaries but it still shines in its own brightnesse and clearenesse it is not the worse for wearing Therefore this glory it is more excellent because it is more durable it is more transcendent There is one glory of the heavenly and another of the earthly And lastly the glory of things that are in heaven is that they are full of action full of life and operation but these earthly things are nothing but very idlenesse as it were a non-agency they doe nothing but are meerely restive not having power to stirre The glory of men and women if they stir and move they move to their owne destruction and they are every day more subject to decadency As for the glory of pearles and Iewels it must rest in a place unlesse it be carried it cannot carry and helpe it selfe nor worke its operation therefore men must carry them As the Prophet saith of Idols that they cannot stir till the Idolaters carry them so those Idolaters that worship their gold they must carry it or else it cannot stir of it selfe But the glorious bodies that are above they move in an infinite strange variety and are of wondrous operation so that when they meete together in some poynts they governe the whole world It is a strange and terrible thing to imagine what may be prognosticated and truely foretold by the meeting and by the constellation of the starres There is no great meeting in the world no great warre no deluge or inundation of waters but a wise man may without any medling with the divell by the meeting and constellation of the starres tell when it shall be So the Lord hath set an infinite glory in these heavenly bodies he hath given them a perpetuall motion that they never rest but they whirle about the earth in an indefatigable course they are alway quiet and yet they never rest their circular motion being their joy and all their rest being in their moving and stirring So that in these regards the Apostle saith There is one glory of the heavenly and another glory of the earthly And now he comes and expresseth himselfe what he meanes by this and speakes to our capacity more plainely then he did before For saith hee there is one glory of the Sunne and another glory of the Moone and another glory of the Starres For one Starre differeth from another in glory This now is the second part of the comparison wherein he leaves the earthly things and medleth no more with them every man knowes what infinite difference there is there but now he wisheth us to consider what great difference there is in the heavenly things that seeing God hath made every where a variety therefore we should not thinke it much that God should doe so also at the Resurrectiō For we must not
the earth although in other respects it be the weakest and poorest of all the planets Lastly there is another glory of the Starres The stars are not comparable eyther to the Sunne or to the Moone Gen. 1.16 therefore it is said God made two great lights the one to rule the day and the other to rule the night The meaning is not because the Moone is greater than any of the starres of heaven for that it is not but it is spoken according to the opinion of men because it seemes to be greater to be the second to the sunne and almost as bigge as it therefore it is called a great light and because of the great office she hath in guiding the night and likewise in respect of her use the benefit of her in the growth of all things being great and her guydance also in the humours of mens bodies The starres therefore are innumerably different and for their number numberlesse And although the Mathematicians describe them to be no more but a thousand thousand and two and twenty starres according to the 48. Images which they describe in the firmament yet it is certaine that there be other starres that are not discerned which passe all number All these starres are sorted out into six magnitudes even into six differences not to stand now upon them In the first magnitude or difference there are but fifteene starres seven of them are in the South and three of them in the North and five in the Zodiaque And these are goodly starres that Navigators commend and say that the starres toward the South pole are more glorious then these which we see because of their double number The sixth magnitude is the least of all and yet the least starre that is in the heavens is so great that it exceeds the earth eighteene times over yet is it a wondrous thing that God hath made all these starres to draw their light from the Sunne For although they have a proper light of their owne yet it is so rustie that it hath no cleare explication of it selfe till it be enlivened by the light of the Sunne The starres therefore are never eclipsed because they alway see the Sunne the Moone is sometime eclipsed it doth not alway see the Sunne there is an interposition of the shadow of the earth that comes betweene her and him and that interposition makes her eclipse and lose her light But where the Apostle saith here that one starre differeth from another in glory his meaning is that one starre is of one magnitude and another of another and according to their bignesse is their glory their shining and their brightnesse Vse To teach all men that they should carry themselves according to their magnitude in the world He that is in the first magnitude to carry himselfe in a more glorious and brighter lustre then he that is in the second and the second then the third every man should keepe his magnitude here upon the earth for God hath appointed that the greatest magnitudes should serve for the greatest purposes in this world One starre differeth from another in glory that is as in bignesse and greatnesse so in use too Thus much of the bodies that he nameth Now we come to the hypothesis So is it in the resurrection of the dead This is that which the Apostle intends to proove first comparatively with these earthly bodies Secondly comparatively with the bodies that are glorious among themselves In the first sence he meanes thus As the Lord hath made severall magnitudes and great disproportion among the starres so that one differeth from another in glory even so as they differ in their bignesses so do the bodies at the Resurrection as they shall bee great and goodlie bigger then these so they shall be fuller of glory and excellencie The Lord shall make this earth to be heaven he shall so translate the properties of things he shall so amplifie and augment things farre surpassing the minde of man to imagine or to comprehend that wondrous picture that God shall draw upon this poore carkasse which now languisheth in this world that looke what difference there is betweene the creeping on the earth looke what difference there is betweene a worme and an Angell betweene the pebble stones upon the earth and the starres in heaven the Lord shall make the same difference above our expectation according to his promise in the bodies that he shall restore againe at the Resurrection Therefore his meaning is do not aske how they shall rise do not aske with what bodies they shall come For still the Apostle answers that question For they might object If the body that shall be raised shall be glorious then it shall not be the same and if it shall be of a spirituall nature the body shall be destroyed and shall not be the same Yes saith the Apostle it is the same even as all earthly bodies are the same among themselves in the generall element and the heavenly bodies as the starres are all celestiall bodies and yet there is a difference and one is more glorious then another So it shall be in the day of the Resurrection And for that point which our Divines and which the Fathers stand so much on indeed it is not safe for us to venture too much into it For although it be likely and true as Luther Luther saith that Saint Paul shall have more honour in heaven then a thousand other Christians he shall perhaps have more honour then all his persecutors that were converted by him he shall have more honour then all his schollars that followed him yet these things are spoken but by way of humane conjecture and cannot bee proved directly by the holy Scriptures How be it because it is the common tenent of the Fathers wee ought not to finde fault with them Pro. 22.28 nor to remove the ancient bounds and limits but to follow them in the doctrine they have taught us Therefore these things may assure us that as Saint Paul saith here one starre differs from another in glory so wee must extend it to this sence That in the day of the Resurrection the sonnes and daughters of God shall shine in the firmament as starres they shall all be starres but yet not of the same magnitude not of the same beautie and proportion not of the same excellencie And to this purpose the Schoole men have devised a distinction in the lawrell crownes that the Saints of God shall have and they say the joy in heaven is either substantiall or accidentall 1 Mat. 20 9. The substantiall joy that is all alike in every man for when they went into the vineyard the Lord gave unto every man a penie and no more The comfortable vision of God almightie the fruition of Christ and all his Saints that is the substantiall joy that is the penie There is another joy which is accidentall which is according to the labours of men according as they
have imployed themselves in this world And there are divers similitudes that set out this in the Gospell Mat. 25. As of him that received ten talents and was made Lord of ten Cities Mat. 19.29 Of him that sowes plenteously and reapes plenteously whereas another soweth sparingly Of him that offers his bloud for the Lord Iesus Christ and receives an hundred-fold for it Of the D●sc●ples that shall be chiefe and prime in the kingdome of heaven Mat. 19.28 and sit upon twelve thrones to judge the twelve Tribes of Israel Luk 6.23 and that promise that the Lord makes Great shall your reward be in heaven There shall be a great reward for you therefore it seemes there shall not be so great a reward for other men as for the Apostles This joy is accidentall it happens to them because they have wrought in their callings because they have beene diligent in their places So the Schooles say a man of learning which is an accidentall thing for learning comes accidentally it is not a thing that is substantiall a man is ●ot borne with learning therefore they say according to the wisedome which a man hath used wel in this world hee shall be rewarded in heaven in a greater measure In respect of the substantiall joy he shall have all one penie with the rest but in respect of his accidentall joy honour for his wisedome and learning and for his almes-deeds which is by way of accident and so according to his workes he shall have a reward according to a mans works so shall his reward be This I take to be very true although I cannot well see how it should bee an infallible ground But we follow the Fathers direction Saint Austin speaking of the puritie of virginity Aug. of the professed virgins of his time well saith he those that shall come to the common immortalitie hereafter they shall have a great reward above the rest because they had something in the flesh which was not of the flesh they had something in the flesh which had no use or benefit of the flesh And in his 146. Epistle saith he If God have made all bodies visible and these visible bodies be so different each from other in distance of place in operation and power and in evidence much more must wee thinke he will make a difference at the day of the Resurrection And although all shall be as starres that shall shine in the firmament yet all shall not have one kinde of glory and of lustre Tertull. And Tertullian How shall there be many mansions in Gods house How doth Christ say In my Fathers house are many mansions Iob. 14.2 except it bee for the varietie of mens merits You must not be offended for this word merit for the Fathers in old time tooke it not in a proud sence but for the deeds done in the flesh whether good or evill So men should be rewarded according to their works or fruits they had done the Saints shall differ as one hath had greater works then another and greater deeds And Chrysostome brings this argument that unlesse this be granted that the Saints of God shall have a different portion of glory in the world to come and not be all alike it would make men that beleeve the Resurrection to be carelesse how they lived in good works or at least how they abounded in good works Because when a man once seeth salvation that it is common and that every man shall have as good a share in it as he he will not seek to be better then his fellow and so good works and almes-deeds would grow faint Therefore it is the best way to incourage them and to make them open and inlarge themselves to make them as capable as they can that God may fill them To this purpose the Fathers have a comparison of divers vessels that are cast into the water and all are filled a pottle is filled and a pint is filled and yet there is great difference every one hath as much as it can conteine but yet the pinte hath not so much as the pottle so the Saints of God they shall all be full of joy and full of glory but according to their capacitie the Lord shall fill them Therefore wee should make our selves large unto God that God may fill us to be large handed and large minded and large hearted to God this brings largenesse of glory and beauty and makes men principall starres in the firmament Theophilact brings another reason Theoph. which presseth better and urgeth further then this If we marke it saith he we see the damned in hell have a different torment therefore the Saints in heaven shall have a different glory The other is plaine by that saying where our Lord saith Matth. 11. It shall be easier for Sodome and Gommorrah then for that Citie which would not receive the Apostles and it should be easier for Tyre and Sydon then for Chorazin and Bethsaida they should have easier torment then those that despised the Gospell And therefore seeing there shall be an inequalitie of torment and that those that are cast away from the sight of God shall have a divers deformitie they shall all be deformed but some more then other there is more unworthinesse in some bodies according to the qualitie of their sinnes And so it follows on the contrary that the mercie of God shall bee opened and manifested in a greater measure upon one man then upon another according to the qualitie of their good conversation repentance and the good deeds that they have done in the flesh Saint Ambrose Ambrose also discoursing upon this argument Even as saith he out of one lumpe out of one piece and clod of clay God hath made all things but yet in a wondrous varietie For out of the water he hath taken all the brightnesse that is in this world the starres of heaven are bright because they are taken out of the water and the brightnesse of jemmes and pearles is out of the water mingled with earth and out of the earth comes all things that are obscure and darke so the Lord shall make out of this body out of one lumpe and masse a wondrous varietie At that day he shall make some as those that bring forth thirty fold others as those that bring forth sixtie and some as those that bring forth an hundred fold in an admirable difference and yet all shall have glory sufficient and in contentment and be full of glory The glory shall be full in it selfe although it shall not be so great as others And Saint Anselme Anselme saith clearly that there shall be one way for chastitie and puritie to shine for them that have lived chaste in wedlocke and another way for virginitie there shall bee one way for a man that gives little out of much and another way for him that like the poore widdow give as it were all that they have
to its owne condition and so it comes from better to worse and from thence to nothing at all to dust and ashes But there by reason that the Lord shall shew his mercy and by reason of the infinite delight that man shall take in God againe there shall be a continuall application of God to man by a continuall influence as the Schools speak So as it is impossible to think of any entrance of corruption as that place where the Sun shines continually can never be darke and that plot of ground which hath a sweet well ever pouring into it can never be dry nor thirsty So it must needs be where God is alwaies slowing in his light and love and grace it is impossible there should be any pressing in or any suspition of corruption to come againe Therefore concerning these things the Scripture tells us Psal 36. Psal 36 9. With thee saith the Prophet is the well of life As if he should have said thy waters run alway sweet Psal 87.7 and abundantly all fresh springs are in thee Psal 23.1 therefore we shall not lack nor die for thirst because we shall have the well of life Psal 36.8 And Psal 36. Thou feedest them with the fulnesse of thy house and thou givest them pleasures as out of a river And for this purpose also even for that we should be assured of this the Scripture tels us that we shall have in stead of sorrow fulnesse of joy in stead of darknesse in this life we shall have eternall light in stead of sicknesse we shall have his saving health in stead of death we shall have life everlasting And so wee see what this incorruptibility is it consists in impassibility that the body shall not be able to suffer from any thing because God shall be alway flowing into it his goodnesse and love in Christ Iesus It shall not be able to suffer from a tempting devill it shall not suffer from it selfe nor from any other created nature it shall not suffer from sicknesse nor from time the teeth of time which devoureth all things shall not be able to set its fangs upon the bodies of the children of God They shall not suffer from hell nor from death there shall be no matter of feare in any thing they shall not suffer from the flames of fire it shall not be able to consume those glorious bodies nor the sharpest sword shall not pierce the least haire of them but as we see God preserved the three children in the fiery furnace Dan. 3.27 when it was extraordinary hot that there was not so much as the smell of the singeing of the fire upon their garments The blessed God that is able to doe this in these corrupt bodies much more will hee doe it in that incorruptible condition when hee shall advance them to that glory which himselfe will give them who is the prime author and patterne of impassibility And if the Lions were not able with their teeth when they were so famished Dan. 6. to seize upon the body of Daniel when hee was cast into the dungeon much lesse shall infirmities have power or any other violence be able to touch the bodies of those that shal be glorified in the day of Iesus Christ It shall rise in incorruption I see the time is past I will but touch the next point and leave the rest It is sowne in dishonour it is raised againe in honour The greatest griefe that a man conceives in his death is the dishonorable condition that doth accompany him that though he were never so beautifull and beloved before yet his best and dearest friends will be readie to quit him now yea they cannot indure his company so that he must be removed out of sight as being an odious spectacle to looke upon as an intolerable neighbour that is not to be come neere as one that will infect all the society where he is as a pestilent creature that must be shunned and avoided that must be shut up close within the ground where hee may doe no harme nor be noysome and offensive to those that are above ground This is the strange dishonour to our nature that the great Lords and Ladies which have slept before upon their beds of Ivorie Amos 6.4 which had their goodly Curtaines and Canopies and singular arts to give them pleasure and contentment now being dead they must be outted from their palaces and their goodly-roomes and be thrust in the bowels of the earth they must be accounted such kinde of creatures as with whom there is no cohabitation Even Abraham himselfe although he loved Sarah dearly as his owne heart yet he could not endure her when she was dead but after a certaine season when he had mourned for her he was faine to be a sutor to the sonnes of Heth to sell him as much ground as to bury his dead in Gen. 23.4 to remove her out of his sight The best and the mightiest Monarchs in the world cannot secure themselves from this dishonour If they die on the sea they must be cast over-board or if they die on land they must suffer themselves to enter into this common misfortune and although art and imbalming and curiosity may doe much yet divers parts of them must of necessity be taken committed to the ground lest all about them be pestred by them This is the wofull stroak of nature the dishonour and deformity the beastly-figure of death which makes a man terrible to all the beholders so that that goodly countenance should be turned to a gastly skeleton that those faire cheeks should come to be pale ashes or as a black charcoale that those sparkling blazing eyes should become nothing but as a dim and dark peble and that which is the most fragrant piece of all the mouth to become the most ugly and odious of all The Lord hath drawne the pattern of sin in the face of a dead man and hath made it more sinfull and more ugly in that one spectacle then in any thing in the world besides Thus he that would not rest in the beauty of his creation that would not maintain the glory of his countenance and the image of God that hee had imprinted upon him hee shall now undergoe the most foule image and figure that could be devised There being no beast no creature that is halfe so ugly nothing falling so from it self nothing so unlike it selfe there being nothing traversed with such contrary passions and with such figures and lines of misery as the face of a dead man It is so with all men and although it appeare lesse in some then in others yet leave them a certaine time and they all at the last become so gastly that a man that hath a constant minde and can indure many things yet he loathes to behold a dead man This is the dishonour of sinfull flesh such a basenesse and contempt that a mans best friends shall run