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A03949 Bromelion A discourse of the most substantial points of diuinitie, handled by diuers common places: vvith great studie, sinceritie, and perspicuitie. Whose titles you haue in the next page following. S. I., fl. 1595.; Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605. Summa totius Christianismi. English. 1595 (1595) STC 14057; ESTC S107410 412,250 588

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ioy and to her crowne who was ful néere her death The greatnesse of our peril can be no stop to our deliuerance because the power of our deliuerer is infinit Indéed we sée that men are altogither amazed and in a manner berest of wit and vnderstanding when they féele themselues daungerously tossed too and fro But do we not also sée that when they crie vnto the Lord in their trouble he bringeth them out of distresse hee turneth the storme to calme so that the waues thereof are still Do we not sée how that they passe through tribulations to the kingdome of heauen and through stormie tempests are brought to the hauen where they would be This the Lord doth that we might confesse his louing kindnesse before him and his wonderfull workes before the sonnes of men God for diuers secret causes leadeth his church through many bitter afflictions as it were to no other purpose then by trying them by the crosse to make them true to his crowne and then either in death doth giue them patience and constancie or by deliuerance doth send them ease and libertie Psal 38. 19. Many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth him out of them all It is euen the time of Iacobs trouble saith the Lord yet shall he be deliuered from it and shall be in rest and prosperitie and none shall make him afraid And there shall be a day Zacha. 14. 7. it is knowne to the Lord neither day nor night but about the euening time it shall be light And loe in the euening there is trouble but afore the morning it is gone Esay 17. 14. The wrath of the Lord endureth but the twinkling of an eie and his pleasure is life heauinesse may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning Ps 30. 5. The thoughts of the Lord are thoughts of peace and not of trouble to giue you an ende and your hope Ieremy 29. 10. Then shall ye cry vnto me and I will heare you ye shall seeke me and find me because ye shall seeke me with all your heart And if hee come out presently at our call it is most méete and conuenient that wée should waite his pleasure Knowest thou not or hast thou not heard that the euerlasting God the Lord hath created the ends of the earth neither fainteth nor is weary there is no searching of his vnderstanding But he giueth strength to him that fainteth and vnto him that hath no strength he increaseth power Euen the yong men shall faint and be weary and they shall stumble and fall Eut they that wait vpon the Lord shall renue their strength they shall lift vp theire winges as the eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not faint Somtimes it pleaseth God to send his people deliuerāce by turning the hearts of the percecutors So was the firie and fierce wrath of Nabuchodonozor turned to great good will toward Shadrake Meshake and Abednago Saul breathing out threatenings and slaughter against the saints of God was conuerted miraculously and Saule a persecutor became Paule the professor and then had the churches rest in those daies King Agrippa beganne to yéeld and from iudging was readie to defend Paule Pontius Pilate spake for Christ when all the Iewes were against him saying I finde no fault in him at all Sometimes by sending danger and trouble to the persecutors Themselues in danger themselues As when Dauid was almost taken and like to come into the hands of Saul his enemy then he heard that the Philistines had inuaded his land Lastly God sendeth comfort and ioy by powring foorth Gods ven g●ance being powred out his vengeance on their enimies Vengeance is mine I will repay faith the Lord. God in time will reuenge our cause According to that we reade in the prophet Ieremie against king Nabuchodonozor and his land Iere. 50. 22. Acrie of Eze. 25. 17. 26. 5. 28. 22. 23. battell is in the land and of great destruction How is the hammer of the whole world destroied and broken how is Babel become desolate among the nations At the noise of the winning of Babel the earth is mooued mooued and the cry is heard among the nations Make bright the arrowes gather the shields the Lord hath raised vp the spirit of the king of Medes For his purpose is against Babel to destroy it because it is the vengeance of the Lord and the vengeance of his temple Iere. 5. 11. Re. 16. 19. Great Babylon came in remembrance before God to giue vnto her the cup of the wine of the fiercenesse of his wrath 18. 20. Oheauen reioyce of her and ye holy Apostles and Prophets For God hath giuen your iudgement on her and reuenged your cause in punishing her and in one houre shee is made desolate But let vs come a little néerer and behold Gods iudgementes vpon persecutors and the ouerthrow not of the And his iudgmentes being put in execution meanest but of the greatest and mightiest in the world kinges and emperours Ioas slaine of his seruauntes after he had caused Zachariah to be put to death by stoning Senacharib murthered by two of his owne sonnes after that he Eze. 28. 26. 35. 11. ca. 39. 21. 22. had blasphemed God and done his worst against godly Ezekiah Antiochus perished by grieuous tormentes in the bowels so that wormes came out of his bodie in aboundance and being aliue his flesh fell from him for paine and torment and all his armie was gréeued at his smell yea and he himselfe might not abide his owne stinke When Nero one of the Emperours of Rome went about by all meanes to extinguish and blot out for euer the religion of Christ and had caused both Paul and Peter and many holy martyrs to be murdered at length he also receiued reward according to his crueltie For being left of all his prouinces souldiers and acquaintance being iudged of the Romaine Senate an ennemie and condemned by most ignominious death to suffer flying at midnight with Sporus his page there fell before bis féete a thunderbolt whereat afraid and hiding himselfe and falling into vtter dispaire he vttered these words Filthily haue I liued and worse shall I die and so taking his dagger with the helpe of Sporus he cut his owne throate and perished What punishments Domitian Traiane Antoninus Verus Seuerus Maximinus Decius Valerianus Emperours yet bloodie and cruell persecutors of Gods church haue suffered time would faile to declare vnto you Most euident it is that Aurelian for his crueltie against the Saints was slaine of his seruaunts that Dioclesian after he had shead much Christian blood druncke poyson in extreame desperation and so perished that Maximian was hanged at Massilia by Constantine and Maximine strooken for his crueltie with Antiochus his disease wormes growing in bodie and deuouring him vp Infinite the like examples might be alledged of the iust iudgements of almightie God vpon such as
seeth them shal laugh them to scorne And all men that sée it shall say This hath god done for they shall perceiue that it is his worke Againe the tongues of the godly God directeth as shall be best for their behoofe The nature of man is fearefull how to answere being called before mightie men But to the comfort of them that feare God it is written Mat. 10. 17. Ye shal be brought to the gouernors and kings for my sake in witnesse to them to the gentiles But when they deliuer you vp take no thought how or what ye shall speake For it shall be giuen you in that houre what ye shall say For it is not ye that speake but the spirite of your father which speaketh in you Concernining other parts of the bodie As the Prophet praieth that God would open his eyes to sée the wonders of his lawe so also he praieth that he would turne away his eyes that they should not behold vanitie The disciples that iournied to Emaus their eyes were holden that they could not know Christ The eyes are shut and somtimes also the eares are dull and closed vp Act. 28. 27. King Saul had a speare in his hand to throw at Dauid but his hand was restrained The heart the affections the tongue the eyes eares and hands yea the whole body God ruleth as is manifest in the example of Saul the persecutor who after became Paul a blessed Apostle Yet before his conuersion and happie change he breathed out threatnings and slaughter and made hast to procure trouble to the godly But as he iournied it came to passe that he fell from his horse by a miracle from heauen was striken blind and cast into a great feare and trembling I haue bene hitherto tedious because the treatise is so comfortable in the rest I purpose to be briefe to satisfie thy minde The maruellous prouidence of God and his most secret handy worke being now declared concerning the affaires of men as also men themselues there remaineth behinde a matter as waightie as the rest and that is this That if all things be ruled by Gods prouidence and by an euen and vpright hand First how falleth it out that such mischieuous and wicked déeds are committed in the world as we daily sée Secondly why do the wicked and vngodly flourish when as they that serue God most are put to the worst and that they finde their affaires to goe crosse and ourethwart Which matters although they be so waighty I cannot now stand vpon but must referre the handling of them vntill some other time onely at this time I minde God willing to touch them and briefly to set downe the resolution God hath so created the world that he is still gouernour thereof in such sort that nothing is done or can come to passe but by his counsell and prouidence And albeit the diuel and the reprobate labour by their wickednesse and mischiefes to bring all things to confusion yea and the faithfull by the faults that they commit peruert good order and iustice yet God hath the chiefe superioritie aboue all and turneth the euill into good And howsoeuer it be he disposeth and gouerneth all with a secret bridle and after so wonderfull a fashion that we must reuerence it with all humilitie because we are not able to comprehend it Vaine therefore are their spéeches and most vngodly which séeme to defend their wicked déeds by gods prouidence and making the diuine maiestie which is nothing but holinesse it selfe in a maner culpable with them Whose spéeches are after this sort Some desperate ru●●ian hath slaine a good citizen he hath performed say they gods counsell an other hath stolen or committed adultery he hath done that which God hath suffred an vngodly and carelesse childe lets his father die and neuer séekes for remedie and helpe he could not resist God which had so ordeined from the beginning And thus they shroud their hainous sinnes vnder gods prouidence and thinke they deserue no otherwise but well They thinke they did performe gods will but they followed their owne wicked will Gods commaundements are to the contrary whereunto we ought to haue respect And if any thing be committed otherwise then may stand with the same it cannot be without offence much more will the sin abound if it be expresly and purposely against gods will and commandement God bringeth about his purpose and decrée diuers waies according to his infinit wisedome which herein sheweth it selfe so much the more that he can vse the workes of the wicked well though the wicked be fouly in fault Théeues and murtherers and such malefactors are often instruments of gods iustice vnawares to them yet neuerthelesse there can be no lawfull excuse for their notorious mischiefes For if the lawe of God be not sufficient their owne conscience will reprooue them and cry vengeance against them In God there is no euill in men there is nothing but euil The Sunne by his heate causeth a stinking smell to come forth of a carkasse when as there is no such thing in the Sunne but in the carkasse So God vseth the mischieuous déeds of the wicked as may stand most with his glory though it tende to their great condemnation vnlesse the mercy of god bee the greater It lieth in Gods power to restraine them but oftentimes he giueth them vp to themselues As our Sauiour Christ confessed when he was taken of his malicious and cruell enemies This is your very houre saith he and the power of darkenesse For then God gaue libertie to Sathan and his ministers to execute their rage In their mindes was malice mischiefe and crueltie but the glorious purpose of God was to giue his onely sonne for the redemption of the world God detesteth sinne but yet turneth the wickednesse of sinners as séemeth best to him oftentimes to the confusion of themselues to make his iustice more famous The wicked cannot choose but doo ill God is not the authour of their wickednesse but at what time or against whome their mischiefe shall breake foorth and take place that is in Gods hand and in his most mightie power As for the other matter in question why the wicked flourish and the godly are oppressed Although it be so let vs not therefore deny Gods prouidence Many tyraunts there are and wicked men in the world and as Iob saith the tabernacles of robbers doo prosper and they are in safetie that prouoke God They raigne and rage and their power is great yet who knoweth what God mindeth to worke by them Amongst the rest this séemeth to be one cause that the minds of the godly might be proued There are many excellent vertues which lie hid in them which without this meanes cannot be knowne Especially in the time of martirdom and persecution when they shal be tried and put to death by tyrants for the profession of gods truth And although otherwise also they suffer many mischiefs wrongs by the hands of
According to that of the Apostle S. Paul Philip. 1. 12. I would you vnderstood brethren that the things which haue come vnto me are turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell So that my bands in Christ are famous throughout all the iudgement hall and in all other places In so much that many of the brethren in the Lord are boldned through my bands and dare more franckly speake the word Yea the aduersary king Agrippa himself was almost become a Christian Fiftly our constancy and courage shal be a cause of greater condemnation to our enemies whose consciences are by this means made without excuse As the same Apostle in the chapter recited saith In nothing feare your aduersaries enemies which is a token to them of perdition and destruction and to you a token of saluation and that of God For vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not only ye should beléeue in him but also suffer for his sake Sixtly and lastly we shall confound the kingdome of the diuel which is only established by lies and vntruth All which perswasions are forcible in●ugh to prepare vs Not to be ouer rash to make vs offer our selues as Peter did and me thinks I heare euery one say They are ready Mat. 20. 31. Christ said vnto his Disciples All ye shal be offended by me this night but Peter answered and said vnto him though all men should bee offended by thée yet will I neuer bee offended Iesus saide vnto him Verily I say vnto thée that this night before the Cocke crowe thou shalt denie me thrice Peter said vnto him though I should die with thée yet will I not deny thée Likewise also saide they all Yet for all that all of them were either offended or they denied or were scattered and Peter the foremost man denied and fors●ore Christ Sée the euent of foolish rashnesse and vndiscréete boldnesse Go to now ye that are so hastie and so hardie and so ready All such boasting is in vaine For that ye ought to say if the Lord will and if the Lord giue strength we will do so Know ye not that your wils are wauering and flesh is fraile and sathan is subtile and the world is tyrannous and cruell and againe ye know not how all things wil fall out Promise nothing before the time but pray to God to make thée able Sit down first and cast thy accounts bethinke thy selfe of the force of thy enemies the diuels potentates of thy weakenesse which of it self cannot stand and many the like matters This wil aske a long time to consult and deliberate with thy selfe Who seeth not that they that are most cowardly in the battel are most valiant before they come to the field Great boasters may well be compared to barking dogs which haue no courage to fight when they be set vpon Our sauior Christ moueth vs to great wisedom in this matter for he knew what was in man how that the boldest would be readie inough to draw backward For after that he had exhorted to the bearing of his crosse and the enduring of persecution he put forth a parable to make euery one fully to bethinke themselues lest they should reuolt after they were resolued Luke 14. Which of you saith he minding to build a tower sitteth not downe before and counteth the cost whether we haue sufficient to performe it lest that after he hath laid the foundation and is not able to performe it all that behold him begin to mocke at him saying This man beganne to build and was not able to make an end Be not rash without wisedome and ●ast with thy selfe what may fall out If thou be couragious and venterous then behold flattery faire meanes and sugred promises As King Antiochus went about to perswade the poungest of the seuen brethren not only with words but swore also vnto him by an oath that he would make him rich and wealthie if he would forsake the lawes of his fathers and that he would take him as a friend and giue him offices If there bee any shewe of faintnesse to bee perceiued in thée then come thundring threatnings like thunderbolts to cast thée downe Besides although thou be neuer so innocent and guiltlesse and without fault yet be sure thou shalt haue false reports raised vp mischéeuous accusations intollerable and diuellish slaunders deuised against thée and laide to thy charge These are they which subuert the state of the world and heere they are they obserue not the kings lawes therefore it is not the kings profit to suffer them When the Iewes led Christ to Pilate they did accuse him but falsly and vndeseruedly saying We haue found this man peruerting the people and forbidding to paie tribute to Cesar saying that he is Christ a king The malicious Iewes laid hands on the Apostle Saint Paul and mooued the people Crying Men of Israel helpe this is the man that teacheth all men euerie where against the people and the lawe and this place Certainly saith Tertullus the Orator accusing the Apostle before Felix the Gouernour we haue founde this man a pestilent fellowe and a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes throughout the worlde Looke to these matters cast thy count prepare thy minde least after thou hast appointed with thy selfe to be constant thou become wauering Many feares to hold vs back flesh and blood loth to depart from worldly comforts life swéete death bitter Thy enemies shal be they of thine owne houshold and of thy own kindred no trust in the world no comfort in the earth Be not too bold of thy owne strength mightie pillers haue fallen downe Peter an Apostle and one of the chiefest and most bold and venterous yet in time of triall was found nothing so but rather weake and childish Shall I present vnto you a domesticall example of one of our owne nation being had in reuerent regard and renoume of the enemy himselfe Doctor Cranmer archbishop of Canterbury and in high office and estimation with king Henry the eight of famous memorie dearely beloued of the king although he did contrary his procéedinges in many matters Who was so constant in the profession of Christ his trueth and christian religien that no threatninges could quaile him no torments feare him Yet marke and perceiue how flattery and faire meanes and swéete promises for the time ouercame him vntill God by his grace did lift him vp after his fall According to the swéet saying of the Prophet Dauid Psal 37. 32. The wicked watcheth the righteous and seeketh occasion to slay him but the Lord will not leaue him in his hand nor condemne him when he is iudged It may be thought a néedlesse worke to set downe word by word the Syren song and eloquent and forcible perswasion that made so excellent a member so constant a martyr to fall Againe if I should referre the Reader to the booke either the booke may not be in place because it is not of so easie
put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortalitie and then shall death bee swallowed vp in victorie death shall bee vtterly vanquished neither shall it haue any further power Two men we reade of in the scriptures that were partakers of this benefit of immortalitie and fréedome from death and these two were taken from the earth into heauen without any seperation of soule bodie neither did they suffer death according to the vsuall course of men The names of these men were Enoch and Eliah Of Enoch we reade Gen. 5. 24. And Enoch walked with God that is he pleased God and he was no more séene for god tooke him away and he was translated and carried vp into heauen Eccle. 44. 14. Vpon the earth was no man like Enoch and therefore was he taken vp from the earth for an example chap. 4. 16. to the generations of men that shall come Yet we may reade of him more plainly Hebr. 11. 5. By faith was Enoch taken away that he should not sée death neither was he founde for God had taken him away For before hée was taken away he was reported of that he had pleased god Of Eliah we shall reade 2. Kin. 2. 11. And as Eliah and Elisha went walking and talking togither behold there appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire and did seperate them twaine So Eliah went vp by a whirle winde into heauen And for the better proofe hereof it followeth in the same Chapter that certain children of the Prophets which were at Iericho desired of Elisha that they might send to finde him out And said vnto him Beholde now there be with thy seruaunts fiftie strong men let them goe wee pray thee and seeke thy maister if so bee the spirite of the Lorde hath taken him vp and cast him vppon some mountaine or into some valley But he answered them yée shall not send yet they were instant vpon him till he was ashamed wherefore he saide Sende So they sent fiftie men whiche sought thrée daies but founde him not Which two examples doo sufficienly declare in what estate man had bene being frée from death if he had pleased God For as among men they were the most righteous so passed they into heauen after an extraordinary and most happie sort to shewe there was a better life prepared and also to bee a testimony of the immortalitie of soules and bodies Who were taken from the earth into the heauen that after this life they might liue with God enioying all happinesse How mankinde was created immortall and frée from Gouernment ouer all Gods creatures death ye haue heard and now it remaineth that I should shewe vnto you what authoritie and priuiledge in respect of the gouernment of beastes God gaue vnto man and in what sort After that God had made all his creatures he brought them vnto man to sée how he would call them and as he called them so were their names Furthermore God had planted in the beastes a kinde of reuerent feare and dutifull seruice toward man In respect whereof the Prophet Dauid doth greatly extoll Gods goodnesse in that he did not only indue the soule of man with heauenly qualities but also in that he gaue him the dominion ouer al the workes of his hands Psal 8. What is man saith he that thou art mindfull of him and the sonne of man that thou visitest him Thou madest him a little lower then the Angels to crowne him with glory and worship Thou madest him to haue dominion of the workes of thy hands and thou hast put all things in subiection vnder his feet All sheep oxen yea and the beasts of the field the soules of the aire and the fishes of the sea and whatsoeuer walketh through the pathes of the seas Among the rest of the fishes of the sea I reade this of the Dolphine Fishes according to their first creation saith the Authour at the sight of man acknowledge his dominion ouer them And the Dolphine though he be a most regall and princely fish yet when he seeth man come neare him he sheweth reuerence as to his Lord. But as after mans fall and his disobedience to God the earth became vnfrutefull for mans cause so also are all other creatures disobient to man euen to this day Yet as they of all others are partakers of immortalitie that come nearest to the Image of God in all true holinesse and vnfeined righteousnesse so especially vnto them is the rule and gouernment graunted ouer beastes But they that are quite contrarie disposed and enemies vnto God in their sinfull liues and behauiour the beastes and all other creatures haue rather rule and gouernment ouer them and as it were a power to set themselues against them and to ouermaster them For God doth sometimes punish men by the rage of beastes who herein are at Gods commandement and are readie to execute his will and pleasure The fiercest and cruellest creatures that euer god made haue had no power ouer the godly as we may reade in the histories of the bible but rather they haue had a reuerent estimation of them as it were acknowledging the image of god in them No beast so fierce as a lion to deuour a man and therefore in the Epistle of S. Peter the diuell is fitly compared vnto a roaring lion séeking whome he may deuoure Yet Daniel being cast into the lions denne they doo not only not offer to touche him but also sit by him as though they had him in reuerence and were set to guard and kéepe him A Viper is a moste hurtfull venemous and deadly Worme muche after the order of blind wormes stinging adders and where the worme lieth it procureth death Yet we reade Act. 28. that when the Apostle S. Paul and his company were greatly refreshed of the Barbarians at Melita and S. Paul had gathered a nomber of sticks and laid them on the fire there came a viper out of the heate and leapt on his hand Now when the Barbarians sawe the worme hang on his hand they said among themselues Surely this man is a murtherer whom though he hath escaped the sea yet vengeance hath not suffered to liue But he shooke off the worme into the fire and felt no harme Howbeit they waited when hee should haue swolne or falne downe dead sodainly But after they had looked a great while and sawe no inconuenience come vnto him they chaunged their mindes and said That he was a god This holy and godly man shooke off the worme into the fire and felt no harme Wis 16. 10. The téeth of the venemous dragons could not ouercome them that feared god among the children of Israel For gods mercy came to helpe them and healed them It was neither hearbe nor plaister saith the wise man that healed them but thy word O Lord which healeth all things According as Christ promised to his Disciples Mat. 16. that they should haue power not only ouer venemous beasts but ouer
Achab did that wicked King of Israel Some will say it is an eafie matter for a man to ouercome his sinfull affections and wee may doo well if wee will But I aske them who was more able and better furnished then the blessed Apostle S. Paul yet he findeth the matter so hard to performe that he confesseth it to the whole world Rom. 11. 22. I delight in the law of God concerning the inner man but I see an other lawe in my members rebelling against the lawe of my minde and leading me captiue vnto the lawe of sinne which is in my members that is in all the sences and in all the parts of my bodie Yea he seeth it to be a matter so impossible that he is faine to crie out O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me And seeth no other meane of deliueraunce but only praier for Gods helpe that it would please God to beate downe the power of sinne in him I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me And answere was made My grace is sufficient for thee and my power is made perfect through thy weaknesse For that which is impossible to man is most easie for God to bring to passe Most truly therefore might he say Very gladly will I reioyce rather in mine infirmities that the power of Christ may dwell in me and master and mortifie sinne which would full faine haue the better hand ouer me Many will not be knowne of their sinnes when they be admonished of them because they are loth to leaue them yet some of a better minde and more tractable will acknowledge them and in their minde will mislike them and also will not sticke to confesse that they would faine leaue them and would thinke themselues happie if they might be rid of them yet find in themselues no power at all to forgo them No maruell then though the Apostle Heb. 12. perswadeth vs to cast off sinne which cleaneth vnto vs and hangeth on so fast But how may we forgo them how may we be rid of them we cannot it is impossible to vs. Craue it and beg it as the apostle did once twice thrice yea often euer at the hands of God in earnest and humble praier and he will performe it vnto thée and after a while thou shalt perceiue how weake the power of sin will begin to be in thée So that thou shalt be daily lesse proude lesse giuen to drunkennesse to theft to whoredome and the like till thou growest at the last to hate that sin that troubled thy soule so much till in time thou hast gathered that strength that thou maiest dispossesse and throwe out that strong man Behold then how great cause the godly haue to reioyce at their infirmities in that not only the power of their ruling sinnes is abated but also by the power of Gods good spirit and by the grace of Christ who dwelleth in the harts of the godly they are quite ouercome and ouerthrowne Whereby we may gather these two comforts First that this is a sure token vnto vs that we appertaine vnto God and secondly that the diuel shall haue no power to destroy vs séeing that we haue escaped his snares and that his bands that held vs in so fast are loosed burst and broken I will adde but one ioy more which is most pertinent To do good for euill and for the present purpose And that is that the godly reioyce to do the wicked good as the wicked reioyce to hurt them and sport and solace themselues in their sorrowes At the conuertion of the sinner and wicked the Angels in heauen reioyce and it is not to be doubted but that the godly beare them company heerein and are as greatly ioyfull The enemy of the Prophet Eliseus sought his death but he set bread water before them and sent them away in peace when they were al in his hand and at his word they might haue bene put to death When Dauid might haue saline Saul yet he reioyced in preseruing his life The Prophet Ieremy counselled the Israelies to pray for the life of King Nabuchodonosor who held them in captiuitie although he were a wicked and an idolatrous King Our Sauiour Christ praied for the life of his persecutors O Lord laie not this sinne to their charge for they know not what they do So did the blessed Martyr S. Stenen when the stones flue thicke about his eares Thus doo they pray for them that persecute them that God would turn his wrath from them and that in mercy he would call them as the Apostle Saint Paul was called from persecution to profession thus doo they speake well of them that hate them blesse them that curse them thus do they good for euil and séeke the preseruation of their liues who gréedily hunt after their ouerthrow death According to the examples of the Apostles 1. Cor. 4. 12. We are reuiled and yet we blesse we are persecuted and suffer it we are euill spoken of and we pray I say the truth in Christ saith S. Paul Rom. 9. 1. I lie not my conscience bearing mee witnesse in the holie Ghost that I haue great heauinesse and continual sorrow in my heart For I would wish my self to be seperate from Christ for my brethren that are my kinsmen according to the flesh but his professed and vtter enemies by persecution Yet he calleth them brethren Brethren my hearts desire and praier to God for Israel is that they might bee saued Accounting the good and welfare of his enemies the greatest ioy that might befall him More might be said but I haue stood vpon this point of the ioy of the godly somewhat too long Wherefore as a matter more proper to the godly I will The sorrow of the godly returne vnto the words of my text and intreat once againe of their sorrow The world shall reioyce and ye shall sorrow as if they were both borne and bred to it and should end their liues in the same For as the oxen appointed to the slaughter are let runne a fatting at their pleasure and other oxen kept vnder daily labour of the yoke so fareth it with the godly that are exercised with trouble all the daies of their life while the wicked escape run at randam gathering fat and growing grosse dying shortly nay more then that eternally If the godly haue any comfort in this world it continueth not long and therefore their life may well be said to be a mixture of swéet soure and a continual interchange of sorrow comfort comfort sorrow Which if they consider wel is a benefit vnto them so far forth as to draw their minds frō earth to heauen from y● world to God Wherunto they are the more moued bicause the world maketh a wonder of them a gazing stock a matter of contempt and derision As the Apostle 1. Cor. 4. 13. hath foretold We are counted as the filth of the worlde and the