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A00593 Clavis mystica a key opening divers difficult and mysterious texts of Holy Scripture; handled in seventy sermons, preached at solemn and most celebrious assemblies, upon speciall occasions, in England and France. By Daniel Featley, D.D. Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1636 (1636) STC 10730; ESTC S121363 1,100,105 949

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gente Antei cuiusdam in stagnum quoddam regionis ejus duci vestituque in qu●rcu suspenso … nare abire in desertum transfiguratique in lupos Pliny writeth of certaine people of the family of Anteus in Arcadia who having put off their clothes and swom over a deep standing poole wander in the wildernesse runne among Wolves and are transformed into their shape and after returne backe and doe great mischiefe in their owne countrey I beleeve not that there is any such family in Arcadia but I am sure wee have a sort of men in England who putting off the habit of English men and Scholars crosse the narrow Seas converse with Romish Wolves and degenerate into their nature and after they returne backe into their owne countrey make havocke of Christs flocke Here I cannot but cry aloud with zealous Bullenger t In Apoc. c. 2. Quae quaeso clementia est crudelissimis lupis blandiri ut oves innocentes Christi sanguine redemptas impunè dil●nient quae haec patientia sinere vineam Domini ab immanissimis monstris devastati What clemency call you this to suffer the Lords Vineyard to bee spoiled and laid waste by cruell Monsters What mercy to spare the Wolves which spare not Christs sheep redeemed with his precious bloud who plot treason against their naturall Prince scandalize the State and staine with impure breath the gold and silver vessels of the Sanctuary who turne religion into Statisme or rather into Atheisme Let it bee accounted mercy not to execute the rigour of penall Statutes upon silly seduced sheep certainly it is cruelty to spare the Wolves which worry them If any pricked at the heart at the consideration of these things say with the Jewes in the Acts y Acts 2.37 Quid faciemus What shall wee doe Wee have used all diligence to find out these Romish Wolves and those that come within our reach wee smite at the rest we set our strongest Mastives and fray them out of our coasts I answer If this were sincerely done of all hands if some shepheards were not seen by the Wolves before they spie them and thereby lost their voices according to the Proverb Lupi videre priores I say if the shepheards and the dogges bestirred themselves as they should yet the wise man in Livie will tell them All will be to no great purpose till the woods and thickets be cut down to which they flie there hide themselves Nunquam defuturi sunt lupi donec sylvae exscindantur you shall never be rid of these Romish wolves so long as in all quarters of this Kingdome they have so many places of shelter to lurke in I had almost sayd Sanctuaries of defence I am now come home to the point I first thought upon when I was sommoned to speake to this honourable assembly This Sermon was preached during the Parliament whereof many were present consisting of so many noble and worthy members of the high Court of Parliament and therefore here I will land my discourse after I have given you but one memento out of the Psalmist Remember the children of Edom in the day of Jerusalem how they sayd Downe with it downe with it even to the ground or rather Up with it up with it to the trembling ayre Blow up King Queene Prince Parliament Clergie Laitie Nobilitie Gentrie Commons Lawes Statutes Charters Records all in a cloud of fire that there remaine not so much as any cinders of them upon the earth lest perhaps the Phoenix might revive out of her owne ashes But praysed be the God of heaven who discovered and defeated that plot of hell our soule is escaped as a bird out of the snare the snare is broken and we are delivered I will close up all with those sweet straines of the hundred forty ninth Psalme O sing unto the Lord a new song let his praise be heard in the great congregation let Israel rejoyce in him that made him and let the children of Sion be joyfull in their King for the Lord hath pleasure in his people and will make the meeke glorious by deliverance let the Saints be joyfull with glory let them rejoyce in their beds let the high Acts of the Lord be in their mouthes and a two-edged sword in their hands to execute vengeance upon the Romish Jezebel and rebuke her proselites to bind her Priests in chaines and her Chemarims with linkes of iron that they may be avenged of them as it is written Such honour have all his Saints To whom c. JEZEBEL SET OUT IN HER COLOURS A Sermon preached in Saint Pauls Church Novemb. 20. Anno 1614. THE XXXIV SERMON REVEL 2.20 Notwithstanding I have a few things against thee because thou sufferest that woman Jezebel which calleth her selfe a Prophetesse to teach and seduce my servants to commit fornication and to eate things sacrificed unto Idols Right Honourable Right Worshipfull c. IN this letter indited by the Spirit and penned by St. John I observed heretofore 1 Superscription and therein 1 The party from whom with his eminent quality the Sonne of God c. 2 The partie to whom it was sent with the title of his dignity the Angel of Thyatira 2 The contents which are so manifold and of such importance that if I had the tongue of an Angel I could hardly deliver them all in particular I have heretofore presented you with twelve sorts of fruits answerable to the fruits of the tree of life a Apoc. 22. described all growing upon the two former branches of this Scripture and this of my text and yet I have not gathered the halfe It resembleth that wonderfull tree which Pliny saw at b Lib. 17. c. 16. nat hist Arborem vidimus ●uxta Tiburtes Tulias omni genere pomorum onustam alio ramo nucibus alio baccis aliunde vite ficis pyris punicis malorumque generibus Tiburts which bare all kind of delicious and wholesome fruits Seneca his observation is true that c Sen ep 23. ad Lucil. Levium metallorum fructus in summo est illa opulentissima sunt quorum in al●o latet vena assidoè plenius responsura fodienti baser metals are found neere the top but the richer lie deep in the earth affording great store of precious oare Such is the Mine I have discovered in this passage of Scripture into which that you may search deeper with more profit and lesse danger I will beare before you a cleere light made of all the expositions of the best learned Scribes in the house of God who to enrich our faith bring forth out of their treasuries new things and old And to the Angel that is the Bishop or chiefe Pastour as heretofore I proved at large unto you In the Old Testament we reade of the ministery of Angels but here we finde Angels of the ministery to whom the Sonne of God himselfe kindly and familiarly writeth Our usuall forme of sommoning your attention is Hearken unto the
saith he is not of those that take up their mansion or long home but of sojourners and factours who continue for a while in forraine countries till they have dispatched their affaires Adde lastly to all these the map of the whole earth in every leafe of grasse describing the truth of this doctrine inscripti nomine vitae nascuntur flores with those insufferable passions pangs and angariations which the common mother to us all is put unto till shee be rid of us as the Whale of Jonas A word of application and it shall be the explication which some very learned Expositors give upon cadaver meum Wee have hitherto taken it to be the word of Christ to his Father they say rather it is the word of the Prophet to his brethren as if in effect hee had said I preach to you no other doctrine than that I beleeve my selfe I teach that the dead shall live and I am assured that with my body shall they rise In which sense it is a parallel to that Magna Charta that great and memorable record which Job transmitteth to all posterity I know my Redeemer liveth and I my selfe shall see him with these eyes and no other concionantur profani homines the fashion of these worldly men is to prate of the life of the righteous as Balaam of their death like men in a trance without sense or affection after it The food of the soule is unto them as Barzillai his bodily food was unto him they eate it without any appetite or rellish Hath thy servant any taste in that he eateth saith he to David and the comforts of the Gospel to them as musicke to him Can I heare the voice of singing men or women They behold Canaan from the Mount and the goodnesse of God afarre off my meaning is they can talke of cadavera aliorum but minde not or at least hope not for cadaver meum Odi sapientem qui sibi non sapit qui sibi nequam cui bonus Nequam saith Saint Bernard is as much as nequaquam all that this man knoweth or doth is as much as nothing sith it availeth not himselfe his case is like that of Tantalus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Plato saith who hath apples at his lips and water at his chinne and yet pines for want O unhappy man goe to the prodigall childe he came to his father with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to that childe of the world who came to our Saviour Magister dic fratri ut dividat mecum haereditatem that is suffer not a goodly inheritance of a joyfull resurrection to be taken away by the violent but thrust thou in for thy part among them and when they shall say corpora nostra our bodies shall rise say thou with a fiduciall faith cadaver meum so shall my body rise and let every one that heareth mee this day say with the Prophet Remember mee O Lord with the favour of thy people and visit mee with thy salvation that I may see the felicity of thy chosen and rejoyce in the joy of thy people and glory with thine inheritance THE THIRD ROW And in the third row a Turkeys an Agate and an Amethyst FEw there are but know the Turkeys tanquam ungues digitosque suos wearing it usually in the pale of their rings An excellent property it is said to have of changing colour with the sick party that weareth it and thereby expressing a kinde of sympathy Rueus a great Lapidary averres upon his owne knowledge as much I was acquainted saith hee with a man whose Turkeys suddenly upon his death changed colour Rueus de gem Ego novi quendam quo mortuo Turcois apparuit obscurior and fell in the price The Agate is a gemme of divers colours spots and lines the concurse whereof is sometimes so happy that it representeth the lineaments of men beasts and other naturall bodies Nunc formas rerum dans nunc simulachra deorum Of all that of Pyrrhus was held by him in greatest estimation of others in admiration wherein the lines and spots were so drawne by nature Plin. l. 37. c. 1. In Pyrrhi Achate novem Musae Apollo citharam tenens spectabantur non arte sed sponte naturae ita discurrentibus maculis ut Mulis quoque singulis sua redderentur insignia that Apollo with the nine Muses and their severall instruments were conspicuous in it As for the Amethyst it is a gemme of a middle colour between wine and violets so named either because applyed to the navell it is a remedy against drunkennesse ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 steretico 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as saith Pliny quod ad vini colorem accedens priusquam degustet in violam desinat Of this third ranke of stones this may suffice for the application to the third Speaker and his doctrine himself touching the infirmities of the Clergy Laity so feelingly resembled the Turkeys which the Jewelists make the emblem of compassion His Sermon for the variety of good learning in it was a curious Agat most like that of Pyrrhus above mentioned wherein the nine Muses were pourtrayed the parts thereof were like the Amethyst parti-coloured partly like wine partly like violets like wine in his matter of confutation strong and searching like violets in his exhortation sweet and comfortable His description of Christs bloudy death was like wine the bloud of the grape but of the resurrection like violets the first-fruits of the Spring The embossment of gold wherein these gemmes of divine doctrine were set was his Text taken out of A Sermon preached on Easter Monday by Master Dunster fellow of Magdalen Colledge and Proctor of the University of Oxford APOC. 1.18 I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and have the keyes of hell and of death THese words are a parcell of that booke the reading whereof the ancient Church esteemed so profitable and needfull that they enjoyned all upon paine of excommunication to reade it once a yeere between Easter and Whitsontide Qui eam à Paschate ad Pentecosten non legerit excommunicationis sententiam habeat The words of my Text in speciall are verba pronuntiata verbi annuntiati the words spoken of the word fore-spoken the Sonne of God who is so carefull not to breake the bruised reed that hee seeketh to expectorate all feare out of the mindes of all true beleevers by the force of many arguments The first is drawne à potentiâ Dei I am the Creatour and Judge of your persecuters therefore feare them not The second à praerogativâ Christi I am the first and the last and will take notice of every one that hath been unjustly put to death and make inquisition of bloud from the bloud of the righteous Abel to the bloud of the last Martyr that shall bee shed upon the earth and will require it of them that have spilt it I am the first for
idlenesse and vanity youth to lust perfect age and strength to violence and audacious attempts old age to covetousnesse and every one to the sinnes of the time but making use of the present opportunity to thrust a man suddenly into the next sinne When he had got Christ upon the pinacle of the Temple he tempteth him to cast himselfe downe from it to make experience of the Angels care and diligence in waiting on him and q Mat. 4.6 bearing him in their hands that hee dash not his foot against a stone As soone as David had spied faire Bathsheba bathing her selfe he cast a fiery dart of lust at him and wounded him at the heart Achans eyes were no sooner dazled with the lustre of the rich Babylonish garment but Satan closeth with him And as by taking advantage of the present occasion hee made Achan a theefe so Gyges an adulterer Ananias and Sapphira lyers to the holy Ghost Judas a murderer of himselfe If ever a Christian is like to be in any great distresse and trouble in minde it is either in the travels of his new birth or when hee laboureth for life at his last gaspe therefore Satan at these times is most busie In the beginning of our conversion nature is strong and grace is weake and the practise of religious duties is uncouth unto us then therefore Satan sets upon us and presents to us all our former pleasures and amplifieth upon the austerity of a Christian course of life At the houre of death hee doubleth his files not onely because hee is streightned in time and knoweth that either then hee is to prevaile or never but because many things helpe his temptation viz. the extremity of pain the naturall terrour of death and apprehension of Christs dreadfull tribunall before which the sicke party is presently to appeare Now therefore hee sets upon a man in his greatest weaknesse of body and consternation of minde he chargeth him with all his sinnes secret and open hee exaggerateth the strictnesse of Gods justice and the unsufferable torments of hell and if the dying man hath not prepared himselfe for this last conflict or hath not on the whole armour of God or cannot weild his buckler of faith to quench all the fiery darts of the Devill it is great ods that hee wi l get the upper hand of him and bring him if not to dye desperately yet most uncomfortably To launch out of these deepes of Satan and steere towards the haven Conclus applicat The knowledge of evill is good of fraud is honest of errors is true of things that are most noxious wholesome and therefore Logicians discourse accurately of fallacies Physitians of poysons morall Philosophers of vices and Divines of heresies not that wee should use the first or take the second or practise the third or professe the fourth but that wee be not deceived by the first annoied by the second infected by the third seduced by the fourth And this was my first aime in laying before you these stratagems policies and devices of our ghostly enemie to forewarne you of them that you bee not taken or hurt by them But my chiefe was to instruct you how to employ his owne engines and turne his owne ordnance upon himselfe to make treacle of his poyson and use of serpentine wisedome against the serpent after this manner 1. First doth Satan play the Physiognomer and observing our naturall temper fit his temptations thereunto let us also make use of Physiognomy and take advantage of our naturall inclinations to further the worke of grace in us If wee finde our selves by nature timorous let us endevour to improve this feare into awfull reverence if audacious to improve this boldnesse into spirituall confidence if gladsom and merry to improve our mirth into joy in the holy Ghost if cholericke to improve our wrath into zeale if melancholy to improve our pensivenesse into godly sorrow 2. Secondly doth Satan play the Poet and fit every Player with a part that hee is best able to act let us also make use of Poetry and observing our naturall abilities of minde and body to fit our spirituall exercises accordingly If wee are endued with pregnancy of wit to employ it in the study of heavenly mysteries if with maturity of judgement employ it in discerning betweene the true and false Religion and resolving intricate cases of consciences if with felicity of memory employ it in treasuring up pretious doctrines if with liberty of speech employ it in prayer prayses and godly exhortations if with strength of body and courage of minde employ them in fighting the Lords battels if with wisdome in prudently governing the affaires in Church and Commonwealth 3. Thirdly doth Satan play the Politician and enquire into every mans estate condition of life and accommodate his temptations thereunto let us also make use of policy and by our outward estate better our inward labouring for those graces which are most proper for our place and condition If wee are in authority let us strive for gravity and integrity if under the command of others for obedience and faithfulnesse if in an eminent condition for magnanimity and magnificence if in a low for modesty and humility if in abundance for charity and thankfulnesse if in want for frugality and contentednesse if in prosperity for temperance if in adversity for patience 4. Fourthly doth Satan play the Logician and tempt us by method let us also make use of Logicke and observe method in the science of salvation let us first acquaint our selves with the Catechisme and afterwith profounder mysteries in Divinity let us first practise easier and after more difficult duties of Christianity first accustome our selves to beare lighter and after heavier crosses with patience above all things to kill the cockatrice in the shell nip sinnes in the bud to resist evill motions in the beginning to make a stop at every step by which Satan leads us not easily to bee brought to venture upon any doubtfull or questionable actions if wee have ventured upon any by no meanes to give consent to commit the least sinne if wee have beene overtaken in the act of any sinne let us take speciall care wee breake it off by speedy repentance and make no custome of it if through carelesnesse or conversation with wicked men wee have gotten an ill custome let Satan never so farre prevaile with us as to stand in defence and justification thereof much lesse to glory in our evill courses but let our heart smite us for them and let us never bee at peace with our selves till wee have driven out an iron nayle with a golden an evill custome with a good 5. Fiftly doth Satan play the false Pilot and by perswading us to decline from a rocke on the right hand carry us so farre the contrary way that we split our ship upon a rocke on the left hand let us also make use of the art of navigation in our course to the
1. Lightsome knowledge 2. Perfect holinesse 3. In regard of the rule that God gave him over all creatures So St. Basil expoundeth those words Let us make man after our image adding imperiale animal es O homo quid servis affectibus to whom Chrysostome Athanasius Aquinas and all the Schoole-men assent And let this suffice to bee spoken of the man in the third place followeth Put him into the Garden of Eden 3. What he did with him Of this Garden two questions are disputed on by Divines 1. Whether this Garden were a reall place in the earth 2. Whether Paradise yet remaine To the first I answer that questionlesse Paradise was a true and reall Garden as S. Jerome and Chrysostome affirme against Origen Origines sic allegorizat ut historiae tollit veritatem non licet nobis ita nugari simpliciorum auribus imponere dicendo nullum fuisse in terris hor tum quem vocant Paradisum and Bellarmine proves it sufficiently against the fancy of Franciscus Georgius To the second I answer That the place of the earth remaineth in substance though it is not now a Paradise or hortus deliciarum for the beauty of it is gone The curse of the whole earth to beare thornes and thistles is come upon it As for the Paradise mentioned in Saint d Luk. 23.43 Luke and in the e Apoc. 2.7 Apocalypse it was celestiall and Saint f 2 Cor. 12.4 Paul maketh it plaine where having said hee was rapt up into the third heaven by and by hee nameth the place Paradise Upon which words Saint Ambrose thus commenteth Paradisum intelligit coelestem de quo Dominus dixit latroni hodiè mecum eris in Paradiso You have heard where the Lord placed him it remaineth that we enquire in the fourth place 4. To what end God placed him there To dresse and keepe the garden God had not yet cursed the earth neither were the wholsome hearbes degenerated into weeds Every plant and hearbe brought forth fruit according to their kind God that made them good could have preserved them in that state of goodnesse but man had need of some imployment and therefore God injoyned him to dresse this garden of pleasure in this place to make use of his gifts and by his reason and industry to modell it into some delightfull forme yet was his labour without all pain nay it was full of pleasure But why is it added to keepe it Surely saith St. Austine no invading neighbour was feared to put him out of possession nor thiefe to rob him of his choicest plants but God would have him therefore to keepe it to himselfe ne inde projiciatur This is wittily inferred by him but it seemes the naturall meaning of the place is this that he should not onely dresse it as at the first but with continuall care keepe it God would not have man idle no not in Paradise Thus briefly of his dressing and keeping now we are to consider in the fift place 5. Gods large permission That he might eat of every tree in the Garden Behold Gods bounty there was not onely the delicacy of all fruits but variety and Adam was not limited to some few he might eat of every tree neither was he for a short time to have enjoyed this if he had harkened to the command of his Lord. For in the midst grew the tree of life of which he might eat at his pleasure the other trees saith S. f Lib. 13. è Civit Dei Austine were given to him to satisfie his hunger and thirst but this to give vigour to him and keep him from infirmity age and death yet this grant was not so generall but that it had annexed unto it a restraint which we are to consider of in the sixt place 6. His restraint From the t●ee of knowledge It was not so called as g Antiq. ●uda●● l. 3. c. 9. Josephus dreamed because it had a vertue in it to sharpen the understanding that man might know God the better For it was as the other trees of the Garden without sense or knowledge but it was intituled so in a double respect 1. Because joyned to the commandement it was an outward sign shewing what was good viz. what God commanded and what was evill viz. what God forbad 2. In respect of the event As the waters of Meribah or strife were so called because Israel there contended so was this tree called the tree of knowledge of good and evill because hereby Adam knew experimentally what good there was in obeying and what evill in disobeying what good in innocency and what evill in iniquity what good within the bounds of Paradise and what evill in the accursed world St. h Serm. 14. de ver● Dom. Austine thus openeth the matter Doe not touch this tree Why What is this tree If it be good why should I not touch it If it be evill what maketh it in Paradise Doubtlesse it was good why then may be not touch it That father answereth sweetly quia obedientem te volo non contradicentem serve prius audi domini jussum tunc jubentis disce consilium God like a good Physician shewed Adam what was hurtfull Adam like an intemperate patient would not refraine it 7. Hi● punishment if he restraine it not In the day that thou eatest thou shalt dye The same day thou forsakest mee in thy disobedience I will forsake thee in my justice thou shalt dye first the death of the body and after the death of the soule if thou beleeve not in the promised seed and not thou onely in thy person but all thy children stand and fall in thee they stand in thy obedience and in thy disobedience they fall and in the truth of this let all confesse to the glorie of God Iniquum est ut bene sit desertori boni it was sinne in Adam to forsake his Maker it was justice in God to punish him that in this manner had forsaken him Thus much for the opening of the Text. Let us now apply it to this honourable assembly 1 This Garden of Eden may well be compared to our mother the Church 2 This man to our spirituall and temporall Rulers 3 This placing man in Paradise to their calling that is of God 4 This dressing and keeping it to their labours in their charge 5 The eating of every tree to their reward 6 Their restraint from the tree of knowledg to that which is forbidden them 7 This threatned death to the punishment of all transgressours 1 Touching our Church and her resemblances to Paradise 1 As Paradise was separated from other parts of the earth so this Land the Poet calleth us Toto divisos orbe Britannos 2 As Paradise was beautified with the lights of nature so our Church with gifts of grace above nature 3 As Paradise was beset with faire trees that hare pleasant fruits so our Church with many Pastours whose lives are
bring us for his Son Jesus Christ his sake Cui c. THE VINE OF SODOME THE XLI SERMON ROM 6.21 What fruit had yee then in those things c. Right Honourable c. ALL the advised thoughts and purposes of men that are not elevated above the levell of earthly desires to a higher marke than the top of worldly happinesse fall and fasten themselves upon such things as most neerly concerne either life it selfe and the commodities or necessities of life or their credit and reputation among those with whom they live These three life estate estimation are their portion in this life and therefore the maintenance of them their chiefe care The world hath nothing besides these to allure and draw on the love of her darlings for the pleasures that are spring out of these and are either their fruits or their blossomes honour is the pleasure of the ambitious wealth of the covetous and the pride of life of all As for those sensuall delights which now I know not how have engrossed the name of pleasures to themselves they receive their birth from youth the spring of our age their nourishment and maintenance from wealth and prosperity So that the former limits within which I have confined the aime and desires of the naturall man stand sure and immoveable Of all things in this life or rather of this life nothing is so deare and precious as life it selfe for without it neither honour nor riches nor pleasures can bring forth any fruit because they can have no root life oftentimes surviveth them they never survive it Howbeit because a miserable and painfull life is a kind of sensible death and to live and not to be reputed of is in effect to be reputed not to be infamy and obscurity being the death of our name and oblivion the buriall of our best parts hence it commeth to passe that the restlesse desires and endeavours of men for riches and honour especially if they be pricked on forward by covetousnesse and ambition are not much lesse eager and violent than is the striving and strugling for life it selfe The pursuit of these is the highest flight of the naturall man but the regenerate Christian who is of a nobler breed soareth farre higher in his desires and affections the life he pursueth is immortality the riches hee esteemeth of are celestiall graces the honour he aspireth unto is a crowne of glory Now the meanes to attaine the ends of both viz. temporall happinesse and happy eternity the glory of the Kingdomes of the earth and a Kingdome of glory in heaven is one and the selfe same the religious service of the onely true God in whose gift they are for a 1 Tim. 6.6 c. 4.8 godlinesse is great gaine and hath the promises of this life and the life to come therefore by the law of contraries ungodly and sinfull courses must needs bee incommodious and to our greatest losse as having the curses of this life and the life to come Whereby as by many other things else we may perceive the folly and blindnesse of the naturall man who taketh a wrong course to compasse his ends for his way lyeth in the straight pathes of Gods Commandements but he taketh by-pathes laid out by Sathan and treadeth endlesse mazes As the b Eras Apoph Athenians against whom Diogenes whet his cynick tooth in the feasts of Aesculapius even when they sacrificed to health banqueted riotously against health so the worldly wise man by inordinately desiring and craftily pursuing and immoderately affecting the blessings of this life loseth them and his life too for these his desires and pursuits are sinnes and by sinne all the promises and covenants of God which are the onely deeds by which wee hold our estate in the blessings of this life are forfeited Good God how doth the god of this world delude the children of the world whom he perswadeth that the ready way to purchase all the comforts and contentments of this life is to fall downe and worship him and to sell themselves with Ahab to worke wickednesse against God whereas sinne unrepented of not onely depriveth them of all hope of a better life hereafter but of all the joy of a good life here For it consumeth their substance it blasteth all the fruits of their labours it disableth and wasteth their body miserably troubleth their consciences staineth their name and shorteneth the dayes of their life I feare there are too many in the world who have no mind of because no knowledge of spirituall riches and celestiall joyes yet there is no man in his right senses who regardeth not either his estate or his credit or his life here The ambitious man little esteemeth worldly gaine because Chamelion-like hee feedeth upon the ayre and breath of mens commendations Againe the covetous man setteth light by praises and honour because he like the worme feedeth upon the earth The voluptuous man careth not much for honour or wealth because like the Beetle hee feedeth upon the doung of unsavoury pleasures yet there is none of all three but tender their life and therefore none who can be unsensible of the Apostles incision in my Text. Doth any desire the commodities of this life let them flye sin for sin bringeth no fruit at all What fruit c. Doe any desire glory and honour they must eschue sinne for sinne bringeth shame Whereof yee are now ashamed Doe any desire continuance of life they must abhorre sinne for sinne bringeth death the end of these things is death Sinne is altogether sterill and unfruitfull and therefore to be set at nought it is shamefull and therefore to bee loathed it is deadly and therefore to be fled from as from a Serpent Here we have three peculiar adjuncts of sinne sinne is unfruitfull for the time past shamefull for the present and deadly for the time to come the first adjunct the unfruitfulnesse of it is so fruitfull of observations that this houre may be fruitfully spent in gathering them What fruit had yee It was the usuall demand of one of the wisest among the c Cic. in Verr. Romane Judges Cassius surnamed the Severe in all cases of doubt in matter of fact about the person of the delinquent Cui bono who gained by the bargaine on whose side lay the advantage assuring himselfe that no man of understanding would put himselfe into any dishonest or dangerous action without hope of reaping some fruit by it as also that there can be no enterprise so beset with difficulties and dangers which some men for apparent hope of great gaine and profit would not goe thorow with no arguments conclude so necessarily in the opinion of the greater part of men as those that are drawne ab d Demost Olynth 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 utili This topick place the Divell made choice of above all other Haec omnia tibi dabo in tempting our Saviour and though this his sharpest dart could not enter into
and all the ingredients of that bitter cup which our Saviour prayed thrice that it o Mat. 26.44 might passe from him We have viewed the root and the branches let us now gather some of the fruit of the tree of the crosse Christs passion may be considered two maner of wayes 1. Either as a story simply 2. Or as Gospel The former consideration cannot but breed in us griefe hatred griefe for Christ his sufferings and hatred of all that had their hand in his bloud the latter will produce contrary aff●ctions joy for our salvation and love of our Saviour For to consider and meditate upon our Saviours passion as Gospel is to conceive and by a speciall faith to beleeve that his prayers and strong cries are intercessions for us his obedience our merit his sufferings our satisfactions that we are purged by his sweat quit by his taking clothed by his stripping healed by his stripes justified by his accusations absolved by his condemnation ransomed by his bloud and saved by his crosse These unspeakable benefits which ye have conceived by the Word ye are now to receive by the Sacrament if ye come prepared thereunto for they who come prepared to participate of these holy mysteries receive with them and by them though not in them the body and bloud of our Lord and Saviour and thereby shall I say they become flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone nay rather he becommeth flesh of their flesh and bone of their bone The spirit which raised him quickneth them and preserveth in them the life of grace and them to the life of glory Howbeit as the sweetest meats turne into p Cal. l. 4. instit c. 14. sec 40. Quemadmodum sacrum hunc panem coenae Domini spiritualem esse cibum videmus suavem delicatum non minus quàm salutiferum piis Dei cultoribus cujus gustu sentiunt Christum esse suam vitam quos ad gratiarum actionem erigit quibus ad mutuam inter se charitatem exhortatio est ita rursus in nocentissimum venenum omnibus vertitur quorum fidem non alit non aliter ac cibus corporalis ubi ventrem offendit vitiosis humoribus occupatum ipse quoque vitiosus corruptus nocet magis quàm nutrit choler in a distempered stomach so this heavenly Manna this food of Angels nay this food which Angels never tasted proves no better than poyson to them whose hearts are not purified by faith nor their consciences purged by true repentance and charity from uncleannesse worldlinesse envie malice ranckour and the like corrupt affections If a Noble man came to visit us how would we cleanse and perfume our houses what care would we take to have all the roomes swept hung and dressed up in the best manner Beloved Christians we are even now to receive and entertaine the Prince of Heaven and the Son of God let us therefore cleanse the inward roomes of our soules by examination of our whole life wash them with the water of our penitent teares dresse them up with divine graces which are the sweetest flowers of Paradise perfume them with most fragrant spices and aromaticall odours which are our servent prayers zealous meditations and elevated affectious tuned to that high straine of the sweet Singer of Israel Lift ye up ye gates and be ye q Psal 24.9 lift up ye everlasting doores and the King of glory shall come in Cui c. THE REWARD OF PATIENCE THE LII SERMON PHILIP 2.9 Wherefore God hath also highly exalted him Right Honourable c. THe drift of the blessed Apostle in the former part of this chapter to which my Text cohereth is to quench the fire-bals of contention cast among the Philippians by proud and ambitious spirits who preached the Gospel of truth not in truth and sincerity but in faction and through emulation Phil. 1.15 Some indeed preach Christ out of envie and strife This fire kindled more and more by the breath of contradiction and nourished by the ambition of the teachers and factious partaking of the hearers Saint Paul seeketh to lave out partly with his owne teares partly with Christs bloud both which he mingleth in a passionate exhortation at the entrance of this chapter If there be therefore any consolation in Christ if any comfort of love if any fellowship of the spirit if any bowels of mercies fulfill yee my joy bee yee like minded having the same love being of one accord of one mind Let nothing be done through strife or vaine glory Look not every man to his owne things but every man also to the things of others Let the same mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus who being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God But made himselfe of no reputation c. In this context all other parts are curiously woven one in the other only there is a bracke at the fifth verse which seemes to have no connexion at all with the former for the former were part of a zealous admonition to brotherly love and christian reconciliation add this to voluntary obedience and humiliation in those he perswaded them to goe together as friends in this to give place one to the other in those he earnestly beseecheth them to be of one mind among themselves in this to be of the same mind with Christ Jesus Now peace and obedience love and humility seeme to have no great affinity one with the other for though their natures be not adverse yet they are very divers Howbeit if ye look neerer to the texture of this sacred discourse ye shall find it all closely wrought and that this exhortation to humility to which my Text belongeth hath good coherence with the former and is pertinent to the maine scope of the Apostle which was to re-unite the severed affections and reconcile the different opinions of the faithfull among the Philippians that they might all both agree in the love of the same truth and seeke that truth in love This his holy desire he could not effect nor bring about his godly purpose before he had beat down the partition wall that was betwixt them which because it was erected by pride could be no otherwise demolished than by humility The contentions among the people grew from emulation among the Pastors and that from vaine glory As sparkes are kindled by ascending of the smoake so all quarrels and contentions by ambitious spirits the a Judg. 5.16 divisions of Reuben are haughty thoughts of heart A high conceit of their owne and a low value and under rate of the gifts of others usually keep men from yeelding one to the other upon good termes of Christian charity Wherefore the Apostle like a wise Physician applyeth his spirituall remedy not so much parti laesae to the part where the malady brake forth as to the cause the vanitie of the Preachers and pride of the hearers after this manner Christ
humbled himselfe and became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse therefore they who desire to be affected and liked of him must be like affected to him and not exalt themselves above others in pride but rather abase themselves below them in humility not behave themselves as lords over the faith of others but rather demeane themselves as servants for Christs sake not pursue ambitiously the glory of this world but account it the greatest glory to partake with Christ in the infamy of the Crosse How unfit and incongruous a thing is it in contention to preach the Gospel of peace in rage and choler to treat of meeknesse in malice and hatred to exhort to Christian love and reconciliation in pride to commend humility in vaine glory to erect the Crosse of Christ that is to deny the power of it in so declaring it Yet if they will needs bee ambitious if their affections are so set upon glory and honour that nothing can take them off let them take the readiest course to compasse their desire which lyeth not in the higher way they have chosen by advancing themselves but in the lower way which Christ took by abasing himselfe For glory is of the nature of a Crocodile which flyeth from them that pursue it and pursueth them that flie it as S. b Hom. 7. ad Philip. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Chrysostome excellently declareth it Glory saith he cannot be attained but by eschuing it if thou makest after it it maketh away from thee if thou flyest from it it followeth thee if thou desirest to be glorious be not ambitious for all truly honour them who affect not honour as on the contrary they hold a base opinion of such as are ever aspiring to honour and that for the most part without desert Two weighty reasons wee have in this verse to incline all Christian minds to obedient humility or humble obedience a patterne of it and the reward thereof he humbled himse●fe so low therefore God exalted him so high Of the patterne most lively drawne in the life and especially the death of our Saviour I have said something already and shall more hereafter yet can never say all As Socrates spake of Philosophy that it was nothing but meditatio mortis a meditation upon death we may of Divinity that it is in a manner nothing else but meditatio mortis Christi a meditation on Christs death for the learnedest of all the Apostles would be knowne of no other knowledge that he had or much esteemed but this I c 1 Cor. 2.2 desire saith he to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified d Lib. 7. nat hist c. 2. Gen● Astoma radices florum secum portat long●ore itinere ne desit olfactus Pliny describeth unto us a strange kind of people in Africa that had no mouthes but received all their nourishment at their nostrils which is nothing else but sweet smells and fragrant odours who if they are to take any long journey provide themselves of great store of flowers and sweet wood and aromaticall spices lest they starve by the way I will not warrant the narration because I know it is a case over-ruled in Aristotles philosophy that smells nourish not but the application I can make good out of the Apostle who calleth the Gospel and the Preachers thereof odorem vitae ad vi●am a savour of e 2 Cor. 2.16 life unto life Though the naturall life be not yet the spirituall is nourished by odours savours And howsoever we are not in our bodies yet in our soules we are Astomi and like those people of Africa rec●ive nourishment from sweet trees and roots The sweet root we are alwayes to carry about us is the root of the flower of Jesse the savoury wood we are to smell unto is the wood of the Crosse that is the tree of life in the midst of our Paradise It is the ladder of Jacob whereby we ascend into heaven it is the rod of Aaron that continually buddeth in the Church it is the Juniper tree whose shade killeth the Serpent it is the tree which was cast into the waters of Marah and made them sweet no water so bitter no affliction so brackish to which the Crosse of Christ giveth not a sweet rellish But to proceed from the eff●ct of Christs passion in us our comfort and salvation to the effect of it in himselfe his glory and ex●ltation expressed in the letter of my Text Wherefore God hath also highly exalted him Wherefore Although there can be no cause given of Gods will which is the cause of all causes yet as Aquinas teacheth us to distinguish there may be ratio rei volitae a reason of the thing willed by God for God according to the counsell of his owne will setteth divers things in such an order that the former is the cause of the latter yet none of them a cause but an effect of his will For example in that golden chaine drawne by the Apostle Whom he hath f Rom. 8.29 predestinated those he hath called whom he hath called he hath justified whom he hath justified he hath glorified predestination is a cause of vocation vocation of justification justification of glorification yet all of these depend upon Gods will and his will upon none of them In like manner God hath so disposed the causes of our salvation that Christs incarnation and humiliation should goe before his glory and exaltation the one bee the meritorious cause of the other yet neither of them is causa voluntatis divinae exaltantis but ratio exaltationis volitae neither of them a cause of Gods will exalting but the former the reason of Christs exaltation as willed by God God Though Christ rose of himselfe and as himselfe speaketh reared up the temple of his body after it was destroyed ratione suppositi yet ratione principii it is most true God raised him up and therefore the Apostle saith else-where that he was g John 2.19 raised by the right hand of God that is divine power but because this divine power was his owne and essentiall to him as God he may be truly said also to have raised himselfe Hath highly exalted Above the grave in his resurrection above the earth in his ascension above the heaven in his session at the right hand of his Father In the words highly exalted there is no tautologie but an emphasis which is all one as if he had said Super omnem altitudinem exaltavit super omnem potestatem evexit he exalted him above all highnesse he gave him a power above all powers and a name above all names Him It is desputed among Divines whether this him hath reference to Christ considered as God or man that is to say whether he was exalted according to his humane nature only or according to the divine also Some later Expositors of good note and by name Mr. Perkins on the Creed resolve that Christ
double with God and are of a changeable religion to have no faithfulnesse or honestie By how much the graces and perfections of the mind exceed those of the body by so much the imperfections and deformities of the one surpasse the other what may wee then judge of wavering inconstancie which is compared to a spirituall palsey or an halting in the mind Halt yee Though the metaphor of halting used in my text might signifie either a slacknesse or slownesse in the way of godlinesse or a maime in some member or article of their faith yet according to the scope of the place and consent of the best Expositors I interpret it unsettled wavering and inconstancie For he that halteth is like a man of a giddie braine in a cock-boat or wherrie who turneth the boat sometimes this way sometimes that way not knowing where to set sure footing The opposite vertue to this vice is a stedfast standing in the true faith whereto S. Paul exhorteth the Corinthians i Cor. 15.58 Therefore my beloved brethren be ye stedfast unmoveable alwayes abounding in the worke of the Lord for as much as you know that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. And the Colossians If yee continue in the faith k Chap. 1.23 grounded and settled and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospell and for it he heartily prayeth For this cause I bow l Ephes 3.14 16 17 18 19. my knees to the father of our Lord Jesus Christ that hee would grant you according to the riches of his glorie to be strengthened with might by his spirit in the inner man that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith that yee being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the bredth length depth height to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that ye might be filled with all the fulnes of God The Pythagorians who delighted to represent morall truths by mathematicall figures described a good man by a cube whence grew the proverb Homo undique quadratus A perfect square man everie way The reason of this embleme is taken from the uniformitie stabilitie of this figure which consisteth of six sides exactly equall on which soever it falleth it lies stedfast As the needle in the mariners compasse while it waggleth to fro till it be settled fixed to the North-point giveth no direction no more doth our faith till it be settled unmoveably pointeth directly to the true religion which is the only Cynosure to guide our brittle barks to the faire havens where we would be Between two opinions It is bad to halt but worse as I shewed before to halt betweene two opinions which may be done two manner of wayes 1. Either by leaving both keeping a kind of middle way betwixt them 2. Or by often crossing from one to the other and sometimes going or rather limping in the one and sometimes in the other The former is their hainous sinne who in diversitie of religions are of none the latter of them who are of all The former S. m Confess l. 6. c. 1. Cum ma●● indicassem non me quidem j●● esse Mani●●ae●m sed nec Catholicum Christianum Austine confesseth with teares to have beene his piteous case when being reclaimed from the heresie of the Manichees and yet not fully perswaded of the truth of the Catholique cause he was for the time neither Catholique nor Manichee Which estate of his soule he fitly compareth to their bodily malady who after a long and grievous disease at the criticall houres as they call them feele suddenly a release of paine yet no increase of strength or amendment at which time they are in greater danger than when they had their extreme fits on them because if they mend not speedily they end For there can be no stay in this middle estate betweene sicknesse and health The wise Law-giver of Athens Solon outlawed and banished all those who in civill contentions joyned not themselves to one part How just this Law may be in Common wealths on earth I dispute not this I am sure of that our heavenly Law-giver will banish all such out of his Kingdome who in the Church civill warres with Heretiques joyne not themselves to one part I meane the Catholique and Orthodox The Praetor of the Samnites spake to good purpose in their Senate when the matter was debated whether they should take part with the Romans against other Greekes or carrie themselves as neuters n Media via neque amicos patit neque ini●icos tolli● This middle way saith hee which some would have us take as the safest for us because thereby we shall provoke neither partie as bolding faire quarter with both is the unsafest way of all for it will neither procure us friends nor take away our enemies Of the same minde was the great Statesman Aristenus who after hee had weighed reasons on all sides o Romanos aut socios habere aut hostes oportere mediam viam nullam esse Liv. Dec. 4. l. 1. Macedonum legati Aetolis s●●ò ac nequi●qu●m cum Do●inum Romanum habebitis socium Philippum quaeretis resolved that the Romans so peremptorily demanding aid of them as they did they must of necessitie either enter into confederacie strict league with them or be at deadly fewd that middle way there was none Apply you this to the Roman faith and it is a theologicall veritie upon necessitie wee must either hold communion with the Roman Church or professedly impugne her and her errours God cursed q ●udg 5.23 Meros for not taking part with the Israelites against their and Gods enemies and Christ in the Gospel openly professeth r Matt 12.30 He that is not with me is against me Media ergo via nulla est The second kinde of halting betweene two opinions may be observed in those who are sometimes of one and sometimes of another Men of this temper though they seeme to be neerer health than others yet indeed they are in more danger as the Angell of ſ Apoc. 3.16 Laodicea his censure maketh it a cleare case For though they may seem to be more religious than they who professe no religion yet sith it is impossible that truth falshood should stand together all their religion will be found to be nothing else but dissimulation and so worse than professed irreligion Here that speech of Philip concerning his two sons u Plut. Apoph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hecaterus and Amphoterus may have place Hecaterus is Amphoterus and Amphoterus is Udeterus that is hee whose name is Either of the two is worth Both but he whose name is Both is neither The Nazarean Heretiques saith S. Austine while they will be both z Aug. de haer Ad quod vult Deum 2 Kings 17. 29 30 33. Jewes and Christians prove neither one nor the other Doth