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A01804 The succession of the bishops of England since the first planting of Christian religion in this island together with the historie of their liues and memorable actions faithfully gathered out of the monuments of antiquity. VVhereunto is prefixed a discourse concerning the first conuersion of our Britaine vnto Christian religion. By Francis Godwin now Bishop of Hereford.; Catalogue of the bishops of England Godwin, Francis, 1562-1633. 1625 (1625) STC 11939; ESTC S105686 74,779 749

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could not enjoy his Paramore All these as they live in their sins here and so are dead whilest they live and so are miserable making the greatest evill their chiefest good so when they come to die as we all must doe one day and how soone and how suddenly we know not wee carry our soules our precious soules as precious water in a brittle glasse soone cracked and then we are spilt like water which none can gather up againe or but as a candle in a paper lanthorne in clay walls full of cranyes often but a little cold comes in and blowes the candle out and then without a through change of heart before wrought from all sinne to all godlinesse they will die in their sinnes And all and the utmost of all miseries is spoken in that one word and therefore Christ when he would summe up all miseries in one expression tells the Pharisees they should die in their sins Iohn 8. 28. Vse 2. ANd let us consider further that if sin be thus above measure sinfull that Hell that followeth death is then likewise above measure fearful And so it is intimated to be a punishment without measure Ier. 30. 11. compared with Isa 27. Punish them as I punish thee sayes God to his owne but I will punish thee in measure And indeed sinne being committed against God the King of Kings it can never be punished enough But as the killing of a King is amongst men a crime so hainous that no tortures can exceed the desert of it we use to say all torments are too little any death too good for such a crime Now peccatum est Dei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I said before a destroying God as much as in us lies and therefore none but God himselfe can give it a full punishment therefore it is called a falling into Gods hands Heb. 10. 31. which as he sayes there is fearfull For if his breath blowes us to destruction Iob 4. 9. for we are but dust heaps yea his nod he nods to destruction Psal 80. 16. then what is the weight of his hands even of those hands which span the heavens and hold the earth in the hollow of them and if God take it into his hands to punish he will be sure to doe unto the full Sinne is mans worke and punishment is Gods and God will shew himselfe as perfect in his worke as man in his If sinne be malum catholicum as hath been said that containes all evils in it then the punishment God will inflict shall be malum catholicum also containing in it all miseries it is a cup full of mixture so called Psal 75. 8. as into which God hath strained the quintessence of all miseries and the wicked of the earth must drink the dregges of it though it be eternity unto the bottome And if one sin deserves a hell a punishment above measure what will millions of millions doe And we reade that every sinne shall receive a just recompence Heb. 2. 3. oh let us then take heed of dying in our sinnes and therefore of living in them for we shall lie in prison till we have paid the very utmost farthing And therefore if all this that I have said of it wil not engender answerable apprehensions of it in you this being but painting the toad which you can look upon and handle without affrightment I wish that if without danger you could but lay your eares to hell that standing as it were behind the skreene you might heare sinne spoken of in its owne dialect by the oldest sonnes of perdition there to heare what Cain sayes of murthering his brother Abel what Saul of his persecuting David and the Priests of Iehovah what Balaam and Achitophel say of their cursed counsels and policies what Ahab sayes of his oppression of Naboth what Iudas of treason and heare what expressions they have with what horrors yellings groanes distractions the least sin is there spoken of If God should take any mans soule here and as he rapt His into the third heavens where he saw grace in its fullest brightnesse so carry any ones soule into those chambers of death as Solomon calls them and leading him through all from chamber to chamber shew him the visions of darknesse and hee there heare all those bedlames cry out one of this sinne another of that and see sinne as it lookes in hell But there is one aggravation more of the evill and misery sinne brings upon men I have not spoken of yet that it blinds their eyes and hardens their hearts that they doe not see nor lament their misery till they be in hell and then it is too late Vse 3. BUt what doth sin so exceed in sinfulnesse and is the venome of it boyled up to such a height of mischiefe that there should be no name in heaven and earth able to grapple with it and destroy it Is there no antidote no balme in Gilead more soveraigne than it is deadly Surely yes God would never have suffered so potent and malicious an enemy to have set foot in his dominions but that he knew how to conquer it and that not by punishing of it onely in hell but by destroying it onely it is too potent for all the creatures to encounter with This victory is alone reserved for Christ it can die by no other hand that he may have the glory of it which therefore is the top of his glory as mediator and his highest title the memory of which he beares written in his name JESUS for he shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 1. 21. And therefore the Apostle Paul his chiefest Herauld proclaimes this victory with a world of solemnity and triumph 1 Cor. 15. 36. Oh death where is thy sting oh grave where is thy victory the sting of death is sinne the strength of sinne is the Law but thankes be to God that gives us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ which yet again addes to the Demonstration of the sinfulnesse of it for the strength of sinne was such that like Goliah it would have defied the whole host of heaven and earth It was not possible the blood of Bulls and goats should take away sinne Heb. 10. 4. nor would the riches of the world or the blood of men have beene a sufficient ransome Will the Lord be pleased with rivers of oyle shall I give my first borne for my transgression No sayes he there is no proportion for thy first borne is but the fruit of thy body and sinne is the sinne of thy soule Mich. 6. 7. it must cost more to redeeme a soule than so Psal 49. 9. No couldest thou bring rivers of teares in stead of rivers of oyle which if any thing were like to pacifie God yet are they but the excrements of thy braines but sinne is the sinne of thy heart yea all the righteousnesse that we could ever do cannot make amends for one sinne for suppose it perfect when as yet it is but
2 Sam. 1. 26. Thou wert pleasant to me it is God who gives favour in mens eyes So hee did Ioseph Gen. 39. 21. If any man or creature doth thee a kindnesse he toucheth their hearts as it is said of the men who clave to Saul and visits for thee He made the Aegyptians beyond all reason the Israelites friends gave them favour in their eyes as the text tells us And hence Gen. 33. 10. Iacob sayes He saw the face of God in reconciled Esaus face for Gods favour appeared in his looke He put you into your callings ranks and stations gives you all your skill successe in them The meanest of trades to sow and plough and thresh they are from the Lord who is wonderfull in working Esay 28. from the 23. to the end even as well as the skill of the most curious Ingraver Limbner or Embroyderer as of Bezaleel the Scripture sayes God was his Master taught him Hast thou enlarged parts and gifts for higher imployments it is not thy birth or age hath acquired them unto thee Iob 32. 8 9. Great men are not alwaies wise therefore it goes not by birth nor have the aged alwaies understanding it goes not onely by experience but it is the inspiration of the Almighty And hast a calling answerable to thy parts to be a Scholler and have thy minde enriched and ennobled with the best and choisest jewell the world hath wisdome and knowledge whereby the minde is elevated as much above other mens as they are above beasts God hath beene thy great Tutor The mind of man is Gods Candle and hee maketh wiser than a mans teachers as he did Moses in Egyptian learning Daniel David To conclude hast thou comfort in all these in riches learning credit wife children meat drink c. Hee puts in all the sugar delight and pleasure that especially depends on him even to fashion the heart to all these As ayre lights not without the Sunne nor wood heats not without fire so neither doth thy condition comfort thee without God And therefore Acts 14. 17. it is said He filled their hearts as with food so with gladnesse And besides all these consider the many peculiar passages and turnings of his providence towards thee for thy good the working of things together ever and anon to doe thee a good turne the packing and plotting all for thee better than thou couldst have plotted for thy selfe as thy reliefe in many streights successe in many businesses He workes all our works in us and for us as Esay speaks Esay 26. hath he not taken such speciall care and providence of thee as if hee had regarded no man else in the world And now when thou hast considered all bethinke thy selfe withall a little of thy dealings towards him what have beene the effects and fruits of all this goodnesse hold up thy head man looke God in the face It is well yet that shame begins to cover thee How hath that his patience and long suffering vouchsafing thee space to repent wrought with thee how nigh to repentance hath it brought thee Such is the perversenesse of mans nature as Solomon tells us Eccles 8. 11. that because sentence against an evill worke is not presently executed therefore the hearts of the sonnes of men are fully set to doe evill Because God defers punishing they defer repenting thou thinkest to spend the most precious of thy time and strength in sinning and give God the dreggs the bottome the last sands thy dotage which thy very selfe and friends are weary of and all these blessings and comforts which God hath vouchsafed thee how hast thou used them against him This oyle which should have beene fuell to thy thankfulnesse hath encreased the fire of thy lusts and thy lusts have consumed them all Iames 4. The riches hee hath given thou hast made Idols of and sacrificed thy dearest morning daily thoughts and affections unto as God complaines Ezek. 16. from the 15. and so on His meat as at the 29. ver he calls it thou sacrificedst to thy belly which thou hast made thy God thy strength to women the wealth hee hath given you you have made use of but to live at a high rate of sinning and to procure the sweetest bits the daintiest and most costly sinnes The edge of that sword of power God hath put into thy hand thou hast turned against him and his haply both his Children and Ministers so that God by giving thee all these hath but made thee more able to offend him and hath strengthned an enemy and by sparing thee thus long hath but made thee more bold to doe it all his mercyes have but fortifyed thy heart against him Doe ye requite the Lord thus ye foolish people and unkind as Moses expostulates the case Deut. 32. 6. as Christ said to the Jewes For which of all my good workes doe yee stone me So say I to you for which of all his mercies is it ye sinne against him what to fight against him with his owne weapons to betray all he gives you into the devills his enemies hands What iniquity did you ever finde in him thus to deale God will one day thus expostulate his cause with you and heape coales of fire upon all your heads if that you turne not because you have rendred him evill for good and all these mercies thus abused will be as so many coales to make hell fire the hotter And to reason this point yet further with you out of the Text and what arguments it will afford to work upon you Consider first what it is thou doest whilest thus thou goest on thou art a Despiser of the Riches of his goodnesse that which is opposite to goodnesse must needs be transcendently evill What art thou evill because God is good and so much the more evill by how much the more he is good surely there must needs be an unexhausted treasure of wickednesse in thee which will also cause in the end a treasure of wrath in him what and sinne against mercy patience long suffering added to goodnesse of all attributes as the richest to the most glorious for it is that he glories in in the abusing of which therefore he thinkes himselfe most debased of all attributes the tenderest what kick against his bowels so are his mercies called canst hit him no where else but there to despise a mans wisdome power learning is not so much as to despise his love what canst thou imagine will become of thee when thou commest to dye what is it thou wilt then come to plead and cry for O mercy mercy why wretch that thou art it is mercy thou hast sinned against Riches of mercy and patience abused turnes into fury I may allude to that speech 1 Sam. 2. 25. If a man sinne against his brother the Iudge shall judge him but if against God who shall plead for him So hadst thou sinned against any other attribute Mercy might have
able to hold weight in the ballance Dan. 5. 22. what puts he into the other scale against him to weigh him up and to shew he was too light ver 21 22 he tells him how his father knew the God of heaven and how that his knowledge cost him seven yeares the learning among wild beasts and thou sayes he his sonne knewest all this and yet didst not humble thy selfe Here is the aggravation weighs downe all he knew the God of heaven against whom he sinned and that judgement on his Father for his pride and then withall he tels him that this God in whose hands is thy breath and all thy wayes thou hast not glorified I name this place among many others because it is parallel with this in the text I le name no more but give reasons and demonstrations for it First Demonstrations The greatnesse of this kind of sinning might many wayes be made appeare we will demonstrate it onely by comparing it with other kinds of sinning To sinne though out of simple ignorance when that ignorance is but the causa sine qua non of sinning that is so as if a man had knowne it a sinne he had not done it doth not yet make the fact not to be a sinne though it lesseneth it For Luke 12. 48. He that did not know his Masters will was beaten when the thing committed was worthy of stripes though he did not know so much because the thing deserves it And the reason is because the Law being once promulged as 1. to Adam it was and put into his heart as the common ark of mankinde though the tables be lost yet our ignorance doth not make the Law of none effect For the Law of nature for ever binds that is all that was written in Adams heart because it was thereby then published in him and to him for us But positive lawes as I may call them as to beleeve in Christ c. anew delivered bind not but where they are publisht Iosiah rent his clothes when the booke of the Law was found because the ordinances were not kept although they had not knowne the Law of many yeares yet because they ought to have knowne it therefore for all their ignorance he feared wrath would come upon all Israel So also Lev. 5. 17. sinnes of ignorance were to be sacrificed for yet however it lesseneth the sin therefore he shall be beaten with few stripes And sure if ignorance lesseneth them knowledge aggravates for contrariorum eadem est ratio therefore he that knowes shall be beaten with many stripes Yea such difference is there that God is said to wink at sins of ignorance Acts 17. 30. The time of this ignorance God winks at Whiles they had no knowledge God tooke no notice yea and he abates something for such sinnes because the creature hath a cloake hath something to say for its selfe as Christ sayes Iohn 15. 22. but when against knowledge they have no cloak Yea farther Christ makes a sinne of ignorance to be no sinne in comparison So there If I had not spoken and done those workes never man did they had had no sinne That is none in comparison but now they have no cloak no shelter to award the stripes or plea to abate of them And that you may see the ground of this vast difference betweene sinnes of ignorance and against knowledge consider first that if a man sin suppose the act the same out of ignorance meerly there may be a supposition that if hee had knowne it he would not have done it and that as soone as he doth know it he would or might repent of it So 1 Cor. 2. 8. If they had knowne they had not crucified the Lord of Glory The like sayes Christ of Tyre Sidon and Gomorrha that if the same things had beene done in them they would have repented But now when a man knowes it afore and also considers it in the very committing it and yet doth it then there is no roome for such a supposition and lesse hope For what is it that should reduce this man to repentance is it not his knowledge now if that had no power to keepe him from his sinne then it may be judged that it will not be of force to bring him to repentance for it for by sinning the heart is made more hard and the knowledge and the authority of it weakned and lessened as all power is when contemned and resisted Rom. 1. 21. their foolish heart becomes darker Aristotle himselfe hath a touch of this notion in the third of his Ethicks that if a man sinne out of ignorance when he knowes it he repents of it if out of passion when the passion is over he is sorry for what he hath done but when a man sinnes deliberately and out of knowledge it is a signe he is fixed and set in mischiefe and therefore it is counted wickednesse and malice And hence it is that those that have beene enlightned with the highest kind of light but that of saving grace Heb. 6. 4 5. and Heb. 10. If they sinne wilfully after such a knowledge of the truth God lookes on them as those that will never repent And therefore likewise the schoole gives this as the reason why the Devills sinne obstinately and cannot repent because of their full knowledge they sinne with they know all in the full latitude that it may be knowne and yet goe on Secondly the vast difference that in Gods account is put betweene sinnes of knowledge and of ignorance will appeare by the different respect and regard that God hath to them in the repentance he requires and accepts for them and that both in the acts of repentance and also in the state of grace and repentance upon which God accepts a man or for want of which he rejecteth him First when a man comes to performe the acts of repentance and to humble himselfe for sinne and to turne from it God exacteth not that sins of ignorance should particularly be repented of But if they be repented of but in the general in the lumpe be they never so great God accepts it This is intimated Psal 19. 12. Who can understand his errour cleanse me from my secret sinnes that was confession enough But sinnes of knowledge must be particularly repented of and confessed and that againe and againe as David was forced to doe for his murder and adultery or a man shall never have pardon Yea farther greater difference will appeare in regard of the state of grace and repentance for a man may lye in a sinne he doth not know to be a sinne and yet be in the state of Grace as the Patriarchs in Poligamie and in divorcing their wives but to lye in a sinne of knowledge is not compatible with grace but unlesse a man maintaineth a constant fight against it hateth it confesseth it forsaketh it hee cannot have mercy This cannot stand with uprightnesse of heart A friend may keepe
Therefore Eph. 4. 18 19. the Apostle speaking of them sayes that through their ignorance and darknesse and want of feeling they committed sin with greedinesse and so with more pleasure they not having knowledge or hearts sensible of the evils that attend upon their courses Secondly thou wilt in sinning against knowledg be given up to greater hardnesse If the light that is in thee be darknesse sayes Christ how great is that darknesse therefore the more light a man hath and yet goes on in works of darknesse the more darknesse that man will be left unto even to a reprobate mind in the end Thirdly it will procure thee to be given up to the worst of sins more than another man for God when he leaves men makes one sin the punishment of another reserves the worst for sinners against knowledge These Gentiles when they knew God they worshipped him not God gave them up to the worst of sinnes whereof they were capable as unnaturall uncleannesse c. But these are not sinnes great enough for thee that art a sinner of the Christians to be given up to drunkennesse or adultery c. otherwise than to discover thy rottennesse these are too small sins but thou shalt be given up to inward profanenesse of heart as Esau was having been brought up in a good family so as not to neglect holy duties onely but to despise them to despise the good word of God and his Saints and to hate godlinesse and the appearance of it thou shalt be given up to contemne God and his judgements to trample under foot the blood of the covenant or else unto devilish opinions those other are too small to be punishments of thy sinne For stil the end of such an one must be seven times worse than the beginning as Christ sayes it shall if thou wert a drunkard a swearer or an uncleane person before and thy knowledge wrought some alteration in thee thou shalt not haply be so now at thy fal but seven times worse profane injurious to Saints a blasphemer or derider of Gods wayes and ordinances Fourthly when thou commost to lay hold on mercy at death thy knowledge will give thee up to more despaire than another man Knowledge though when it is but newly revealed it is an help yet not made use of turns against the soul to wound it and to work despaire and this both because we have sinned against the meanes that should have saved us as also because such as sinne against knowledge sin with more presumption and the more presumption in thy life the more despaire thou art apt to fall into at death Therefore Esay 59. 11 12. what brought such trouble and roarings like Beares upon these Jewes and that when salvation was looked for that yet it was so far off from them in their apprehensions our iniquities say they testifie to our face and we know them Now then sins testifie to our face when our conscience tooke notice of them even to our faces when we were committing them and then also the same sins themselves will againe testifie to our faces when we have recourse for the pardon of them Therefore thou wilt lye roaring on thy death bed and that thou knowest them will come as an argument that thou shalt not have mercie As ignorance is a plea for mercie I did it ignorantly therefore I obtained mercie so I did it knowingly will come in as a bar and a plea against thee therefore I shall not have mercie Fiftly both here and in Hell it is the greatest executioner and tormenter In this sense it may be said Qui auget scientiam auget dolorem He that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow as Solomon speaks for knowledge enlargeth our apprehension of our guilt and that brings more feare and torment Have they no knowledge who eate up my people Yes there is their feare sayes David Therefore Heb. 10. 28. after sinning after knowledge there remaines not onely a more fearfull punishment but a more fearfull expectation in the parties consciences And this is the worme in hell that gnawes for ever Light breeds these wormes But then you will say it is best for us to be ignorant and to keep our selves so I answer no For to refuse knowledge will damn as much as abusing it This you may see in Prov. 1. 23. Ye fooles sayes wisedome you that hate knowledge Turne and I will poure my spirit upon you and make known my words to you Well ver 24. they refused and would none of his reproof Therefore sayes God I will laugh at your calamitie that is I will have no pitty but instead of pitty God will laugh at you and when your feare comes I will not answer because ye hated knowledge ver 29. so as this is as bad There remaines therefore no middle way of refuge to extricate thy selfe at and avoid all this no remedy but turning unto God otherwise thou canst not but be more miserable than other men yea and this must be done speedily also For thou having knowledge God is quicker in denying thee grace and in giving thee up to a reprobate mind than another man who is ignorant He will wait upon another that knows not his will waies twenty thirty forty yeares as he did upon the children of the Israelites that were borne in the wildernesse and had not seene his wonders in Egypt and at the red sea but those that had he soone sware against many of them that they should never enter into his rest Christ comes as a swift witnesse against those to whom the Gospell is preached Mal. 3. 5. he makes quick dispatch of the treaty of grace with them Therefore few that have knowledge are converted when they are old or that lived long under the meanes And therefore you that have knowledge are engaged to repent and to turn to God and to bring your hearts to your knowledge and that speedily also or else your damnation will not only be more intolerable than others but the sentence of it passe out more quickly against you Therefore as Christ sayes Ioh. 12. 36. Whilst you have the light walk in it For that day of Grace which is very clear and bright is usually a short one And though men may live many naturall dayes after and enjoy the common light of the sunne yet the day of grace and of gracious excitements to repent may be but a short one FINIS AGGRAVATION OF SINNING AGAINST MERCIE By exaggerating the Riches of common Mercies men sinne against BY THO GOODWIN B. D. LONDON Printed by M. F. for R. Dawlman at the brazen Serpent in Pauls Church-yard MCD XXXVII THE TABLE THe first generall Head What goodnesse or bounty patience and long suffering are in God page 3. Bounty in God described ibid. 1. He must be a giver 4 2. What he gives must be his owne ibid. 3. He must give largely 5 4. He must give all he gives freely 6 5. He looks for no
run through to have it set apart for ease and to be void of torment if the rich man in hell made it such a great suit and counted it so great a favour to have but one drop of water which could but for a little while scarce more than a moment have cooled and eased not his whole body but the tip of his tongue only how much more would he have thought it mercy to have lived so many yeares againe as he had done free from torment what is it then for thee to live so many yeares free from the falling of the least drop of that wrath whereof the full vialls should have been poured out many yeares agoe The same Law was out against us which was out against the Angels That day thou eatest thou shalt dye the death what put the difference the Apostle tells us his long suffering to us ward not to them for in Chap. 2. 4. he had told us that hee spared not the Angels which fell but posted and threw them into hell as soone as they had sinned Sixtly But further in the 6. place Is this all hath it beene barely a time of ease given thee a time of reprivall No it hath beene more space to repent and so to obtaine thy pardon in Rev. 2. 21. And as it hath beene more than ease of torment unto thee so also consider it hath beene more than slacknesse in him that hath afforded it to thee as the Apostle there doth tell us It is not that he hath tooke no notice of thy offending him but he is sensible of every idle thought of every oath vaine word and as the Scripture tels us he is pained at the very heart in so much as he repents that ever he made thee he is angry with thee every day thou risest every time hee lookes on thee when ever he meets thee going into the Taverne to be drunk the whorehouse to be uncleane when he meets thee reeling in the streets he hath much adoe to forbeare killing thee as he had to forbeare Moses when he met him in the Inne He is ready to have a blow at thee and it should not need be any great stroake or fetching his arme about if he did but blow on thee thou wert consumed To suffer thee to live doth therefore cost him much riches of patience but to cut thee off need cost him nothing hee can doe that with ease But further all is joyned with a willingnesse that thou shouldst repent and not perish as that place tells thee It were much mercy for a Traytor to be reprived to have a lease of his life for twenty yeeres though there were no hope nor meanes of obtaining his finall pardon after that time spent and this also though moneth a yeere what others who have laine gasping would have given a world for time againe as I have heard one crying day and night call time againe or if not then oh what in Hell The third thing I am to shew is that all this goodnesse patience and forbearance is afforded towards you as a meanes and helpes to bring you to repentance Acts 17. 26 27 28. God sayes the Apostle there hath allotted to men both their times to live in and also their places of abode and habitations all richly furnished with blessings to uphold their lives beings And to what end are both these thus afforded That they might seek the Lord if by groping after him even as men in the darke they might haply finde him But men being in the darke and destitute of guides to bring thē unto God may yet be as far of finding him as ever Therefore adde but the words of my text to what the Apostle sayes there and we see that this goodnesse of God takes us by the hand and leads us to repentance to turne from sinne unto God and so to finde him And thus lead are you unto God by the help of three severall guides which each after other sweetly leade you and point you out to this First all this goodnesse beares witnesse to your hearts of a gracious hand that extends it self in all these therefore in that 17. of the Acts he subjoynes God is not far off any of us That there is a good God bestowes all things on you is a thought lyes at next doore of all his blessings not far off Yea they all sayes the Apostle to the same Gentiles Acts 14. 16. doe beare witnesse of him though they went on in their owne wayes yet sayes he there God left not himselfe without witnesse that is an impression on their hearts that his good hand bestowed all on them when he filled their hearts with foode and gladnesse Secondly His goodnesse having brought thus God to mens thoughts then your owne consciences take you and leade you downe into your selves and beare witnesse that you by walking in your owne wayes doe nothing but provoke and offend this good God So Rom. 2. 15. And then thirdly there is an indelible principle common to all men to love those who love them which after the two former have brought you hitherto point you to Repentance as the conclusion Shall we goe on to sinne against this good so good returne evill for good Is not this a naturall necessary consequent out of all these to say as they Let us therefore feare the Lord who giveth us the early and the latter raine as it is Ier. 5. 26 27 And though men are said not to know this in the text yet the meaning is they doe not throughly and effectually consider thus much so as thereby to be brought to Repentance yet however there is such a witnesse of all this in all mens hearts and thus are they led on unto Repentance would they see their way and follow their guide The use shall be an use of expostulation as here the Apostle carryes it with men sinfull and impenitent for going on to sinne against all this mercy together with an aggravation of their sinfulnesse hereby Men if young doe usually take the advantage of this their precious time which out of so much long suffering is vouchsafed them and of all those precious opportunities and blessings they enjoy to improve them onely in reaping and gathering in to themselves the pleasures of sinne making the time of youth their harvest of sinning and yet thinke to escape by repenting afterwards and then when old after they have already enjoyed a long and a faire Sunshine day to turne to God in and to have sowne much seed to the Spirit the comfort whereof they might now have reaped yet as they have altogether neglected so to doe all their youth so they goe on to doe so still whilst they see they have any day left be it never so neare the setting and doe choose rather desperately to venture their estate in the world to come upon the riches of his mercy pardoning though without all care and endeavour to change their
hearts or lives upon the experience they have had of the riches of his mercy forbearing them in this world thinking to finde him the same in both With all such let me reason a little and from the riches of Gods goodnesse patience c. spent upon them at once expostulate with them for their impenitency and aggravate to them their sinfulnesse and also if possible prevail with them to goe on to despise it thus no longer And if there be any principle of common ingenuity any sparke I doe not say of grace but of goodnesse of nature left unextinguisht me thinkes it should affect you and doe some good on youere I have done And to that end consider a little and compare together Gods loving kindnesses towards you and your unkind dealings towards him To begin at the very beginning of thy being how much riches of goodnesse were there laid and buried in thy foundation when the first corner stone was laid when thou wert made a man besides the cost which hath beene spent upon this building since and cursed as thou art even that very foundation was laid in bloody iniquities in which thou wert conceived and the very materialls of soule and body thou consistest of being tempered with sinne like the stone in the wall and beame out of the timber cry out every moment to God against thee as Edom did Rase it rase it even to the very ground Consider how but the other day thou were meere nothing and when an infinite number that never were nor shall be were in as great a possibility of being as thou for when he made this world he could have laid it aside wholly and created millions of otherworlds yet he chose thee to have a roome in this but one world for he means to make no more and this world could have stood without thee and did before thou wert and shall doe when thou art gone yet he called thee forth out of nothing and by his Almighty power bade thee stand forth when there was no need of thee I say he chose thee to have a being for as there is an election of things that are to salvation so out of things that were not unto being And wretch that thou art if thou repentest not thou destroyest what God hath made and hadst better have kept nothing still and never have peept out or else to skulk into thy first nothing againe for thou art lost better never to have beene borne Secondly Consider yet more goodnesse Thou mightest have beene admitted into the lowest forme of creatures have beene a worme a flea a flye which we men fillip and crush to death at pleasure but to be made a Man created one of the States Barons Lords of the world the first houre admitted into the highest order crowned a King in the wombe as David sayes of man Psal 8. 5. made a little lower than the Angels but crowned with glory and honour made to have dominion over all the works of his hands The one halfe of thee is more worth than a whole world thy soule as Christ sayes that went to the price of soules upon which God hath bestowed an eternity of being and made it the picture of his face his Image when other creatures do weare but his footsteps And thy body the other peece and indeed but the Case the Sheath as Daniels phrase and the Chaldee hath it Dan. 7. 15. of thee what a curious workmanship is it wonderfully and fearfully made as David sayes Psalm 139. 15. curiously wrought in the lower parts of the earth So there he calls the womb because as curious workmen when they have some choice piece in hand perfect it in private and then bring it forth to light for men to gaze at So God out of a teare a drop he hath limmed out the Epitome of the whole world the Index of all the creatures Sunne moone starres are to be found in thee And yet wretch as thou art thou art withall the Epitome of hell and broughtest into the world with thee the seeds and principles of all the villanies that have beene acted in the world and if thou repentest not thou hadst better have beene a toad or serpent the hatefullest of creatures and wouldst change thy condition with them one day Thirdly being a man hast thou all thy members that belong unto a man it is because hee wrote them all in his booke Psal 139. 16. if he had left out an eye in his common-place booke thou hadst wanted it is not that a mercy aske the blinde If thou hadst wanted those windows to looke out at thy body would have beene a dungeon the world a prison If a Tongue which is thy glory or an eare thou hadst lived among men as a beast among men And yet when God gave thee all these what did he but put weapons into an enemies hand for hast thou not used all these as weapons of unrighteousnesse Insomuch as the tongue but one member is called a world of iniquity by the Apostle and if thou repentest not thou hadst better as Christ sayes have entred into the world without an eye an care a tongue than with these goe for ever into hell Fourthly when thou wert taken out of the wombe where thou didst remaine but whilest thou wert a framing what a stately palace hath he brought thee into the world which thou findest prepared and ready furnisht with all things for thy maintenance as Canaan was to the Children of Israel a stately house thou buildest not trees thou plantedst not a rich Canopy spangled spread as a Curtaine over thy head he sets up a Taper for thee to work by the Sun till thou art weary Psal 104. 23. and then it goes down without thy bidding for it knows its going downe ver 19. and then he drawes a curtain over halfe the world that men may goe to rest thou causest darknesse and it is night ver 20. An house this world is so curiously contrived that to every roome of it even to every poore village springs doe comes as pipes to finde thee water So Psal 104. 10 11. The pavement of which house thou treadest on brings forth thy food ver 14. Bread for strength wine to cheere thy heart oyle to make thy face to shine ver 15. Which three are there synecdochically put for all things needfull to strength ornament and delight The very chambers of that house as David calls them drop fatnesse and water the earth ver 13. Hee wheeles the heavens about and so spins out time for thee every moment of which time brings forth some blessing or other and no one is barren Therefore Psal 65. 11. the yeere is said to be crowned with goodnesse a diadem of goodnesse encircles it round and yet thou hast filled this world thou thus art brought into with nothing but rebellions as hee hath done with blessings and hast piled up sins to heaven and thou hast pressed all
pleaded for thee but if against Mercy it selfe who shall Well if thou goest on thus to doe so still thou hast a hard heart it argues the greatest hardnesse of all other that is the second You use not however it comes to passe to deale thus with the worst of men sinner like to your selves but to them that love you you tender love againe Luke 6. 33. and will you deale so with God Is it a small thing to weary men but you must weary God also sayes Esay 7. 13. Hee thought it infinitely lesse to abuse men than God but you carry your selves as men to men but as devills towards God herein ye have not the hearts of men in you not principles of common humanity whereby ye differ from beasts The cords of love are called the cords of a man Hos 11. 6. the spirit of man breakes melts under kindnesse beasts indeed yee use to prick with goades but the cords of a man are the cords of love no principle being more deepely engraven in mens hearts than this to doe good to those who doe good to you Mat. 5. 46. Nay would ye had herein yet the hearts of beasts The Oxe knowes his owner the Asse his masters cribb but my people have rebelled against mee A sinne so much against nature that he calls upon those creatures who have no more than meere nature in them viz. the heavens to stand astonisht at it But as nature elevated by grace riseth higher than it self so being poysoned with sinne it is cast below it selfe sins against it self and the principles which are begotten in and with it selfe if it were not so how were it possible thou shouldst hate him who never did thee hurt and goe on to wound him who weepeth overthee and despise that in him most which seekes to save thee and load him with sins Amos 2. 13. who loades thee daily with his mercies Psal 68. 19. There is a third consideration the text suggests to shew the fearfulnesse of thy sin in this respect and that is that thou goest on every minute sinning and in impenitency by despising his goodnesse to treasure up wrath against the day of wrath to sin against mercy of all other encreaseth wrath thou must pay treasures for treasures spent As thou lavishly spendest riches of mercy so God will recover riches of glory out of thee God will not lose by thee but will reckon with thee in wrath for every offer of patience spent for every sand of long suffering that runs out hee drops in a drop of wrath into his Vialls and it will prove a treasure such a treasure as shall bring in an eternall revenue of glory unto God of all his glory lost and riches spent with advantage such a treasure as will aske an eternity of time to be spent upon thee and yet be never emptied or made lesse and the longer thou goest on the greater heap it will swell unto And dost thou know and consider how fast this treasure fills and how much the longer thou goest on to adde to it still the more thou addest still the last yeere more than all the yeeres before every minutes impenitency adding to this heape and summe as new figures added in a summe use to doe the first is but one the second makes it ten the third an hundred the fourth a thousand and what a summe will this grow to Ay but thou wilt say Tush I am in prosperity in health wealth and ease and to day shall be as to morrow and much more abundant Esay 56. 12. Well but fourthly consider out of the text that there will come a day at last the morrow whereof will be a day of wrath It is treasuring up now but is not brought forth till the day of wrath till which day thou mayest goe on and prosper as Iob giving us the reason why wicked men prosper here sayes Chap. 21. They are reserved to the day of wraths in the plurall because treasures are laid up against then thou art yet spared because thy sins are not yet full and that Treasure is not full as the sins of the Amorites were not and all this thy present prosperity fits thee but for hell So Rom. 9. 22. they are said to be vessells fitted for destruction by long suffering And so Nahum tells us they are but as stubble laid out in the Sunne a drying till it be fully dry Nahum 1. 10. that it may burne the better and like grapes that are let to hang in the Sunshine till they be ripe Revel 15. 16. and so thou for the winepresse of Gods wrath But thy senselesse heart may hap to say I see no such thing and these are but threats I thinke so therefore it is said in the Text that it is a Treasure which as Treasures use to be is hid till that day comes then revealed as the words have it For though thou seest not this day a comming yet God who sits in heaven sees thy day a comming as David sayes Psal 37. 13. who is therefore said to see it because himselfe sees it not and it is a comming faster than thou art aware of it 2 Pet. 2. 3. Damnation slumbereth not though thou dreamest not of it lingreth not as an hue and cry it is sent out and is on its course and will in the end overtake thee and that when thou least thinkest of it as a theefe in the night when thou art asleepe yet dreamest not of it 2 Thes 5. when thou art least prepared for it as in the old world when they were eating and drinking as God watcheth when his child is at the best and ripest and then takes him so he will watch thee to take thee for thy neglect at thy worst and give thee haply no time to prepare they goe downe to hell in a moment Psal 73 9. FINIS IMPRIMATUR THO WEEKES R. P. Ep o Lond. Cap. Domest Gen. 2. Heb. 1. 2. Rom. 1. 2 Sam. 14. 14. Isa 40. Rom. 6. 1 Pet. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doct. To sin against knowledge is the highest aggravation of sinning Demonstratiōs of the point by comparing it vvith other kinds of sinning How much sinnes against knowledge doe transcend sins of ignorance In sins of ignorance there may be a supposition if he had known it he would not have done it but not so in these The vast difference between them appears in the repentance God accepts for each A generall repentance for the one not so for the other Some kinds of sinning against knowledge exclude frō mercy which done ignorantly leave a capacity of it Sinning against knowledge is the highest to sinning against the holy Ghost Secondly Reasons which are 6. 1. Because knowledge is the greatest 〈◊〉 2. Reason Knowledge is the immediate guide of men in all their wayes A man sins against his Guide That knowledge is so proved in that an erroneous conscience bindeth Knowledg layeth a further obligation as obedience