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A93050 A broken heart, or The grand sacrifice. As it was laid out in a sermon preached at St. Maries in Beverley, in the East-riding of the county of Yorke, upon the monthly fast-day in Christmas-weeke, being Decemb. 28. 1642. By John Shawe, pastor of the church at Rotherham in the same county. Shawe, John, 1608-1672. 1643 (1643) Wing S3027; Thomason E95_13; ESTC R12113 25,506 45

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to sin that unpardonable sin against Holy Ghost Matth. 12. 31 32. 1 Iohn 5. 16. Or 2. that God sweare against us in his wrath and give us up to our owne hearts lusts Rom. 1. Psal 81. 12. Ioh. 12. 40. If God say let never grace grow on thee while world lasteth as Mark. 11. 14. Or 3. If death any one way of a thousand quolibet momento mille moriendi modi come and seize on thee thou art eternally undone thou hast supped sure Farewel God Heaven hope for ever and for want of hope thy heart may breake Let this danger worke upon thee ex hoc momento pendet aeternitas Thus the Law will be a means to break our hard hearts Thirdly A third means is melting Gospel the consideration what Christ hath done and suffered for thee so vile a wretch tendred to thee so unworthy a worme this Feather bed breakes some flints more then hammer of Law thus did it to the prodigall Luk. 15. I remember a Story in our Chronicles the place I cannot cite not having bookes of a poore Cobler that sometimes lived in London neere a very rich honest Merchant the Merchant was so exceeding kind to the Cobler that he wanted neither money gold cloths meate any thing but the Merchant helped him told him that he should never want any thing which he had ere long dayes of persecution for the Gospel came on and who was the main man to accuse and persecute the rich Merchant endanger both his life and fortune but this Cobler yet so it pleased God the Merchant escaped afterwards the Cobler would never meet the Merchant but ran to the other side of street or turnd back whē he came neere him but in a strait lane one day the Merchant purposely met him and sayes I freely forgive thee all the wrong you have done me I will never thinke worse of thee come to me at any time and I will afford thee any help or meanes I can at which kindnesse the Cobler falls downe almost baptized againe in his owne teares was so overcome with this free mercy that it broke and melted him into as loving and dutifull a poore Neighbour as lived Oh! Jesus Christ hath laid downe his life for us wretches Tendred to us Gospell Heaven c. Yet we by our sinnes shew this Christ brought upon him unspeakable sufferings persecuted him in his members proved false with him in the covenant c. Yet he followes us to our doores consciences with free mercy promising both to forgive Exodus 34. 7. And to forget what hath beene amisse Ier. 31. 34. And Mica 7. 18. And to helpe us for this life for next for body soule grace and glory Oh let all this kindnesse melt us let all this goodnesse winne us to Repentance Rom. 2. 4. As Jer. 3. 22. When the Jewes had fouly fallen and againe back sliden and still God calls and runs after them with mercy Oh this melts them and they cry out Oh Lord behold we come to thee for thou art the Lord our God Such a melting glory Ruffin tells of Saint Iohn the Evangelist towards a yong man fallen away but I hasten c. Goates Milke breakes this Adamant c. Fourthly meanes to breake our hearts is the consideration of Gods Workes even these may helpe us this way 2 Chron. 33. 12. Psalme 119. 71. Luke 15. 16 17. And because this is Verbum diei most suitable to the present times lend me somuch patience as a little to enlarge it in some particular considerations relating to our owne case and here consider 1. What great mercies England hath had mercies positive great peace great plenty great store of Gospell comparative mercies give mee leave so to speake great peace Gospel and plenty then any other Nation in the World since the first light darted from above Before the fall of Adam he had never that great mercy of Christ to dye c. having no sinne needed no Saviour he had a covenant of workes we of grace he as the Angels now justified by inherent righteousnesse though then no merit we by the Righteousnesse of another impured 2. From the fall of Adam till Christ the Church was in its swadling cloths under darke types and shadowes Moses's padagogie but now the Vaile is rent Types fulfilled Christ is come and all things cleared 3. After Christ during Primitive times what raging ten Persecutions many hundred Christians sluine every day in the yeare save the first day of Ianuary And what hellish heresies did the Dragon belch up Especially foure that occasioned foure generall Councells 4. Since then how hath God cleared up the Gospell in these parts and for peace admirable It s thought worthy the Registring in Scripture that twice the I●wes had peace and rest forty yeares Iudg. 3. 11. 5. 31. But once for a wonder it s Chronicled that Gods Church had peace eighty yeares together Iudg 3. 30 But we beyond them above eighty yeares peace our fore-fathers would have given whole Cart-leads of Hay and Corne in King Henry the eighth his time for a few Chapters of St. Matthews Gospel or St. Iames's Epistle yea Bibles in English not permitted yea latter in the beginning of that Virgin Queene Elizabeths Raigne we have heard such a man was one of the third or fourth Preachers in the shire now more good Sermons in one City in a moneth then was in all England in a yeare and for plenty admired by our friends envied by our enemies tell me of any Nation in all points the like Et eris mihi magnus Apollo Nay let me adde superlative mercies above all mens expectation who would have said Gen. 21. 7. That Sarah should give suck so who would have said three yeares agoe that we should have a Parliament a trienniall Parliament and that not to be broken up without mutual consent c. Who would have said such great things should be done or endeavoured thereby Nay mercies above the ordinary course of Gods providence and dealing with others a promise in the Bible we have such naturall sinnes for which God plagued and threatned other Nations yet we exempted by speciall prerogative as a godly Divine said well Nay mercies above all the plots of devill and devillish men have wee not had formerly and lately against us French plots Spanish plots Irish plots English plots and a plot a plot a plot and still a plot yet God hath soared us above all as on Eagles wings Adde to these also privative mercies hath not God delivered us from heathenisme when this poore Iland worshipped every severall day a severall God the Moone on Munday Tuisco on Tuesday c. But God delivered us after this came Egyptian darknesse of Popery but God gave the beast a blow in King Henry the eighth his time brought him on all foure in King Edward the sixth time gave him a deadly blow in famous Queene Elizabeths dayes and still more and more doth and I