Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n evil_a speak_v treasure_n 3,744 5 10.2424 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14032 An exposition vpon the canonicall Epistle of Saint Iames with the tables, analysis, and resolution, both of the whole epistle, and euerie chapter thereof: with the particular resolution of euerie singular place. Diuided into 28. lectures or sermons, made by Richard Turnbull, sometimes fellow of Corpus Christie Colledge in Oxford· now preacher and minister of the word of God and the holy Sacraments, in the citie of London. Turnbull, Richard, d. 1593. 1591 (1591) STC 24339; ESTC S118931 472,056 683

There are 24 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

which is in men which I call concupiscence remayning euen in the regenerate by the name of euill and how it is euill he expoundeth against Iulian. In the same worke he saith that lust is not only the euill of Contra Iul. lib. 6. c. 2. lib. 5. c. 4. c. 5. punishment but of fault also Finally he saith it is a vice against which wee must striue by vertue Wherefore if either in holy Scripture as we neuer doe directly but by consequent as here wee heare concupiscence is cause of sinne therefore not sinne or in the fathers as in Saint Augustine who in some places calleth not this naturall corruption remaining in the Saintes by the name of sinne but disputeth the contrarie 13. that it is not sinne in them Wee must distinguish of sinne there is sinne raigning there is sinne dwelling in men it is not sinne reigning but it is sinne dwelling in our mortall bodies There is sinne mortall and sinne veniall it is not sinne mortall but veniall because in the Saints it is not imputed There is sinne actuall there is finne in heart and will not effected nor done it is not sin actuall but it is sinne in heart conceiued and consented vnto which before God is sinne When Saint Iames here saith Lust when it hath conceaued bringeth foorth sinne he speaketh of sinne after the phrase of Scripture commonly vsed taking sinne for sinne committed sinne actuall not denying either the cōsenting vnto sinne which is the conception of lust neither lust it selfe which is as it were the seede the sountain the matter of mischiefe to be sinnes in their kindes albeit not actuall and committed being as yet suppressed and kept downe in the heart and will of man Neither doeth Iames here curiously dispute when sin is in it selfe and before God when it first springeth and beginneth in the account and iudgement of God but he speaketh of sinne as it is knowen to be sinne before men Sinne conceaued in heart before God is sinne All euill motions cogitations affections of the minde by God are condemned as sinnes but actions and deedes done are knowen onely to men who pearce not into the heart or cogitation Wherefore when a thing is in acte then onely with men it is accounted Seeing then that sinne is not seene and knowen for sinne with men but then when it is in acte and done or doing which is actuall sinne The Apostle in this sense speaking of sinne saith Lust when it hath conceaued bringeth foorth sinne Wherence it followeth not that because lust bringeth foorth sinne therefore it is not sinne For albeit it be not seen for sinne with men who iudge onely by the action of men yet is it sinne 1 Kings 16. with God who knoweth the very heart and first motions Albeit it be not reigning sinne yet is it sinne dwelling albeit it be not mortall sinne in the Saints yet is it veniall sinne in them also washed away and cleansed by baptisme The first birth and first fruite of lust to our knowledge and brought into act is sinne wherof S. James saith Lust when it hath conceaued bringeth foorth sinne The seconde and latter birth of lust is death For lust bringeth foorth sinne and sinne bringeth foorth death death riseth and groweth out of sinne being perfected Rom. 6. 8. 1. Peter 2. and committed sinne being finished bringeth forth death Sinne is then said to be finished or made perfect when we geue consent to it when we yealde our selues thereunto when we suffer it to rule and raigne ouer vs as bearing chiefe sway and swindge in our life Sinne being Rom. 6. Rom. 8. thus perfected bringeth foorth death Wherein he sheweth what effect followeth the carnall life of man agreeable vnto that of Saint Paul The wages or recompence of sinne is death but eternall life is the gift of God through Iesus Christ our Lord. And not long after If ye walke after the flesh ye shall die in as much as sinne bringeth foorth and purchaseth death vnto men This may appeare manifest by one onely example Iudas the traitor was first tempted by couetous motions this temptation Mat. 26. Iohn 18. he withstoode not but consented and followed the motion and so was drawen away from duetie to Christ by his desire so lust conceaued lust hauing now consent of his will broake foorth into treason and so sinne was brought foorth euen the sinne of treason whereby Christ was sold and betrayed to the people and priestes of the Iewes This treason committed and sinne perfected purchased death for thereby he procured and purchased vnto himselfe eternall destruction which followeth sinne as the hire the labour the wages the trauell the crowne the 1. Acts 18. workes of men Men therefore being tempted and entised by their owne lust to committe sinne by committing of sinne procure death because sinne being done indeede bringeth foorth death Death is due to euery sinne which men committe so that no sinne committed considered in it selfe is so little but deserueth death But seeing the sinnes of the Saints are washed away by the fountaine of regeneration through faith in Christ therefore their sinnes which through infirmitie they committe to them procure not death as they do to the wicked But the sinnefull liues of men who tempted to euil by their owne luste and desires and caried away therby to commit sinne procure to them death according to the doctrine of the Apostle sinne whē it is finished bringeth forth death This did almighty God intimate nay rather plainely protest to Adam telling Gane 2. him that at what time so euer he eate of the forbidden fruite he should die he finished sinne he eate of the apple by him therefore sinne came vpon him selfe and vpon all his posteritie The prophet Moyses teacheth Israel Ron. 5. 1. Cor. 15. Deut. 30. Ezeciel 18. Pro. 11. 13. 1. Pet. 2. 1. Cor. 6. 3. Col Eph. 5. Reuel 21. that their sinnes and breaches of the law of God should bring vnto them death the prophet Ezechiell from the mouth of God him selfe protesteth that euerie soule that sinneth should die hereunto Saint Peter subscribeth dissuading men from walking after the lust of their flesh because they fight gainst the soule they procure the death and destruction thereof which is that which Saint Paul in soundrie places threatneth to sundrie that they thruste vs out and disinherite vs of the kingdom of God and this death is not the death of the bodie which is naturall and common to all men but the death of bodie and soule for euer which is the seconde death this is due to the committing and finishing of sinne in all men vnlesse there come betwixt our sinne and death the remedy which God for the Saintes hath prepared by Iesus Christ euen his ●eath passion intercession to die for euer To be vnder ●ondemnatiō to be thrust out from the presence and face ●f God to be in perperuall darkenes to haue a worme
with lying and cogging it beguileth with false reportes it slaieth with slaunders it defameth with vain swearing it blasphemeth with inticing it inueigleth with smoothnes of talke it inforceth yea almost euery wickednes among the children Ecclus. 28. of men is either determined attempted executed or finished by the tongue Insomuch that Sirach hauing great experience falleth into a large discourse of those euils which come of the wicked tongue as that it hath destroied many which were at peace that it hath disquieted many and driuen them from nation to nation that it hath broaken downe strong cities and ouerthrowen the houses of great men abated the strength of the people and beene the decaye of mightie nations that it hath caste downe many vertuous women and robbed them of their labours that it causeth that such as hearken vnto it shall neuer rest and liue quietly that it striketh deeper then any rodde and deuoureth more then the sworde of the enemie and such like All which and the like mischiefes the Apostle in generall speech conteining calleth it a world of wickednes And thus by these two comparisons the apostle sheweth the great discommodities of tongues vnbrideled in generall Now as generally the vnbrideled tongue causeth great euils and ministreth matter of great mischiefe among men So particularly the discommodities of vntamed tongues are three 1 The euill tongue defileth the whole bodie 2 It is vntameable 3 It is geuen to slaunder and reproach of the brethren Which are three great euils 1 It is said to be so set among the members that it defileth the whole body and setteth on fire the course of nature and is sette on fire of hell How great an euill is this That it defileth the whole bodie it appeareth Our Mat. 15. Sauiour Christ disputing against the curious Scribes and Pharisies who in greater curiousnes and superstitious obseruation of ceremonies then for any sounde godlinesse sound fault with the disciples for not washing their hands before meate according to the traditions of the Elders testifieth vnto them that the meates which they eat with vnwashed hands corrupted and defiled them not but the things which came out of their mouthes as false testimonies slaunders and such like Things therefore framed in the heart and vttered by the tongue defile the liues of men Saint Paul condescendeth hereunto when he affirmeth that euill words corrupt good manners Neither are 1. Cor. 15. euill speeches and tongues the waies and meanes only to corrupt the whole life of man but also they witnesse the corruption of the heart which is the fountaine of all our actions For the tongue speaketh from the hart and by our talke our heartes are discerned insomuch that wee Mat. 12. shal be either iustified or condemned by our wordes and speeches Saint Augustine to the brethren in the wildernes confesseth 3. Ad fratres in erimo the same auouching that what manner of man one is in his hart such speech he hath in his mouth Saint Ambrose vpon the words of Paul Let no corrupt speache Vpō 4. Ephes proceede from you writeth thus What profiteth it a man to haue a cleane life and a filthie mouth seeing our Sauiour saith By our wordes wee shal be saued and by our words we shal be condemned Neither is it credible that he liueth well which speaketh wickedly insinuating that the filthie tongue doeth defile the whole life of man and so no doubt defileth the whole bodie It filleth our liues with lyings slaunders and blasphemie it pricketh vs forward to adulteries murther and all wickednes it stirreth vs vp to all mischiefe so that it is true which Salomon affirmeth Pro. 10. In many words there cannot bee wanting wickednes and he that keepeth his tongue is wise Hereby the whole life of man is corrupted and the wicked tongue leadeth vnto mischiefe and the lewde speaches of wicked and vngodly persons drawe men forwarde to manifolde finnes whereby their whole liues are polluted and defiled Neither that onely but it setteth on fire the course of nature able to peruert the order of things enough to set the whole world a burning sufficient to staine the whole conuersation of man by the wickednes thereof then the which there is neither any thing sharper to pearce neither any thing hotter to burne or set on fire then a venemous and wicked tongue Therfore the princely prophet Psal 120. Dauid speaking of the ineuitable and incurable mischiefe of the euill tongue saith It is as the sharpe arrowes of a mightie man and as the coales of iuniper Where the man of God compareth the tongue to dartes cast or to arrowes shotte of men most mightie which stick deeper and to the coales of iuniper which both burne soner and keepe fire longer Such is the force of the viperous tongue as it setteth on fire the course of nature and it selfe is set on fire of hell the deuill himselfe kindleth it Sathan himselfe for whom hell fire is prepared beeing both a lyer and a slaunderer from the beginning vseth the tongue oftentimes as his instrument and blowing it with the bellowes of all mischiefe sendeth flame thereinto whereby it burneth to great destruction as he set on fire the tongue of the serpent to deceiue the woman then Mat. 25. the womans tongue to deceiue the man so setteth he on fire the tongues of al wicked persons whereby great coles of wickednes are kindled And this is the first particular euill which is of the tongue 2 As the tongue defileth the whole bodie and setteth on fire the course of nature it selfe set on fire of hell So is it a thing vntameable and vntractable For whereas the whole nature of beastes and of birdes and of creeping things and things of the sea is tamed of the nature of man yet the tongue cannot be tamed It is an vnruly thing full of deadly poyson more vnruly then the beasts of the field more vntameable then the birdes of the aier more vntractable then the venemous serpents more slipperie and more suddenly gone then the fishes of the seas and waters more hardlie gouerned then any other creature for all these are tamed and made milde and meeke by mans wisdome practise diligence vse and labour But of al creatures the tongue is most disordered and vntameable And for beastes though they be most cruell sauage and vntractable by nature yet by practise vse industrie labour are they tamed Beares Panthers Leopardes Woolues Tygers and Lions insomuch that some of the Romane Emperors haue had of these beastes to run and drawe in their chariots and coaches Other princes haue Lions made so tame that they might play with them as with spaniels whelpes or beagels The Tyger which was sent from India to Anastasius the Prince was made meek and tame in like manner Birdes and Foules of the aier are made tame by like manner The crowe the rauen the hauke the fesant the eagle the vulture the parrat the
discomfited Thus the saints and church of Christ for Peters deliuerance drewe neare Acts 16. vnto god by praier Thus Paul Silas drew neare to god when at their praier ihe very foundations of the earth shooke and trembled Thus the praiers of gods Saints shake heauen and earth and make away for vs wherby we draw neare vnto God Thus flie we to God in our needes thus drawe we neare vnto him thus are we ioined vnto god to whom we draw neare by praier which leadeth vs to the presence of god and of Christ 4 Neither do men draw neare to god by praier only Sophon 3. 2. Zacha. 1. but also by repentance which is a returning again to god vvhom through the sinnes and iniquities of our liues we had left and forsaken Thereof thus saith the Lord by his prophet turne againe vnto me and I will turne vnto you saith the lord of hosts In another of his Prophets the lord speaketh in like maner of drawing nere to god by repentance O Israel if thou returne returne vnto me saith the Iere. 4. lord Thus did Dauid draw nere to the lord when after his horrible sinnes he repented was reconciled vnto god 2. King 12. Psal 51. Thus Manasses the king falling away from god by shamefull idolatrie and wilfull obstinacie by his repentaunce in prison returned and drewe neare to God Marie Magdalen running away from god by loose life drewe neare vnto him by repentaunce VVhen the prodigall childe by his doting follie had forsaken his father yet by confession Luke 15. and earnest repentaunce hee drewe neare vnto him So when wee our selues by the transgression of our liues sequester and separate our selues from god by our vnfeined repentaunce and sorrowe of our hearts vve returne and dravve neare vnto him This thing is greatly neglected of vs men and vomen chuse rather to run and raunge further further from god by levvdnes loosnes of their liues then by sorow of hart remorse of conscience repētance for their sins to returne dravv nere vnto him surely this is a most necessary approching dravving nere vnto god then which there is nothing more expedient in the vvhole life of man For seeing the iust man falleth Prou. 24. seuen times a day frō god euery man so long as he liueth by his iniquitie he seperated himselfe frō the Lord dayly neither is there any bord left for vs to swim out by but this of repentance wherby we grow in fauour a fresh and drawe neare vnto God then must repentaunce needs be a necessary thing in the life of man for which cause it is so often and so highly commended vnto vs. 5. Men are said more ouer to drawe neare to God when they seeke to his holy arke when they runne to his Leuit. 24. 13. 14. Num. 9. 8. Nu. 15. 33. 27. v. 15. ● Kings 14 word to aske counsell As Moses oftentimes in matters which were hard and difficult or whereof he had not manifest cōmission from God drew neare to God by asking counsell from him When Saul was to follow the Philistians the priest willed that they might draw neare vnto God whereby was meant the asking of counsell at the mouth of God and of his word Thus such as in matters wherof they are ignorant seeke counsell from the mouth and word of God in his preachers and prophets drawe neare vnto God 6. By reposing all trust and confidence in God and cleauing constantly vnto him wherof Psal 73. 28. 7. Of none of all these the Apostle here seemeth to speak properly but of an other drawing neare which is by puritie sincerenes of life wherof chiefly in this place he speaketh which he commendeth vnto vs in these words cleanse your hands your sinners and purge your harts you double minded Which I take not for a new precept but with Bede others as the meane māner of performing ● Bede that which here now is enioyned that we drawe neare to God in puritie and sinceritie of life which consisteth in the cleansing of our hands and purging of our hearts before the Lord. Let vs then cōsider the place 1. In calling them sinners Sinners he meaneth not them which are subiect by naturall infirmitie to the committing of sinne as all men are so long as they rest remaine vpon the face of the earth but hereby he noteth their hainous and hornble iniquities 1. Tim. 1. 9 whereunto they were giuen 2. By wauering or double minded he noteth the shamefull hipocrisie which vvas crept in euen into their liues vvhich made some shewe of religion and had a pretence of godlines such as in outward shevv seemed deuout religious righteous holy but in their harts vvere full of vngodlinesse and impietie thus they seeme outvvardly one invvardly another in vvorde one in vvorke another one in talke another in truth therfore are they called double minded Like Ianus whom some take for Iapheth one of the sonnes of Noe others for Saturne whom the Heathen paint double faced These the prophet Dauid often sharply reproueth for that Psa 12. ●1 55. c. they speake with a double heart hauing one thing prōpt in their mouthes another couered in their minds a sinne euill and odious before God and man Therfore if we will draw neare to God our double harts must be purged that we may be such indeed as we pretende to be in shew least we heare with our great shame blush you not at it that when as in shew you beare the person of noble Agamemnon in deed you play the parte of cruell and deformed Thersites in being one in shew and another in deed If this holy Apostle did so earnestly call vpon them for reformatiō of their liues which were double minded what shall wee do to such as are triple quadruple three minded foure minded yea of hundreth minds what voice shall we sounde what speach shall we vtter what mouth shall we open against such Who with the Camelion can turne themselues into all shapes who are now hote now colde in religion now professours now Romanish Catholikes now thus now otherwise minded and affected to bleare the eyes of the simple is it not high time that we call out a lowde to them to be cleansed and with open mouth crie to them to be purged 3. The wordes bearing this signification the matter followeth that men in puritie sinceritie of their liues draw neare vnto God which cōsisteth in two things 1. In cleansing of their hands 2. In purging of their hartes before God Cleansing of the handes noteth the redresse and reformation What meaneth the cleansing of hands of all the outward life of man the correcting of all his actions and deedes of all which though it bee not yet of most of them the hande is the instrument wherefore the outward workes of men are vsually called the works of mens hands because most of them haue the
of pride by the Apostle principally intended and spoken agaynst in this part of Scripture This mischiefe hath beene in all times and men there haue bene alwayes who through the pride of their hearts woulde haue brought the whole worlde to liue at their pleasure and to come to their call and lure in the which their conceiued imagination if any resisted withstoode and refused they censured they iudged they spoke euill of and condemned them Were there not thinke you in the time of the prophets men puffed vp with this pride of spirite who condemned arrogantly censured foolishly slaundered wrongfully the holy Prophets and people of God for that they would not liue after their pleasures Did not the proude Mat. 9. 12. 15. c. Scribes Pharisies Priests and Princes of the people condemne and speake euill of Christ and his Disciples because they woulde not bee in all things conformable vnto them Did not the wicked in the dayes of Saint Peter speake euill of the Saintes and the elect seruants of God because they woulde not liue according to 1. Peter 4. their line and rule and run on with them the same race of riot Are their heartes otherwise affected and not rather swelled and blowen vp with like pride who chalenge to themselues wisedome zeale godlinesse aboue their brethren and both in the common wealth and in the church of Christ would haue all things done said and ordered at their pleasure and speake euill of all men that doe not there after Are there not many of our owne coates and callings the Ministers of Christ Iesus who because they can not haue all men to bee as themselues are and thinges in the Church at their pleasures ordered and all things done as they woulde haue them speake euill of them which excell in authoritie Priuily refourme and talke with the Parishioners agaynst their Pastours Not subiect to the lawe of their imagination VVich vncharitablie vnchristianly vnbrotherly nay Iudasly betray their brethren and bring by their libels spredde abroade the good names of such their fellowe Ministers as neuer haue beene detected of anie notorious crime into question and by their slaunderous and malicious speaches haue greatly diminished their credites empeached their estimation wherein before they haue beene and bring them into contempt with men Is not this the mischiefe of pride which maketh them to condemne and speake euill of euerie thing and person whosoeuer pleaseth not them and is not according to their mindes VVherefore let mee exhort all such in the feare of God to examine their owne affections to enter into the closet of their owne thoughts to cast downe their presumptuous and peremptorie iudgements to leaue the stealing away of the hearts of the people from their ordinarie Pastours by mislyking of their lawfull and tollerable doings and let me in the bowels of Iesus Christ beseech them and by the mercies of God entreate them that when things are not to their mindes yea if there be blemishes spottes and wrinckles in the face of the Church as there shal be to the ende that with pacience they woulde beare them as becommeth Saintes with prayer they would seeke to redresse them that they speake not euill against such as in opinions varie from them that they powre not out the poyson venome and rancour of their hearts by condemning their brethren that they teare not in sunder the vnseamed coate of Iesus Christ by their bitter contending vvith backbiting and discrediting of their fellowe labourers and worke fellowes in the Lordes haruest but that they take singular heede and haue speciall care to abandon and abolish this mischiefe of pride and to holde fast this exhortation of the Apostle Speake not euil one of another brethren Reasons of the precept 1 And this euill hee disswadeth by foure reasons 1 From the violating of Gods lawe which is broken and violated of vs when in the pride of our minde we condemne and speake euill of our brethren thereof Saint James speaketh in this wise hee that speaketh euill of his brother or condemneth his brother speaketh euill of the lawe and condemneth the law Thus when we speake euill of our brethren and condemne them because they walke not after our willes neither liue according to our pleasures we are not onely iniurious to our brethren but we are iniurious to the law of God wherof we speake euill and which wee condemne in speaking euill and condemning our brethren to speake euill of the law and to condemne it is a great sinne and great euil Therefore must wee not speake euill or condemne our brethren because thereby the lawe is euill spoken of and condemned by vs. How doth the law sustaine iniurie in thus iniurying How speake we euil of the lawe when we speake euil of the brethren of our brethren howe is it violated howe is it euill spoken of and condemned when our brethren are euill spoken of and condemned by vs Gods lawe teacheth vs not to condemne not to speake euil of the brethren When notwithstanding this lawe we doe and will speake euill and condemne our brethren then wee speake euill of the lawe and condemne it in effect because wee will not bee brideled thereby when wee will not bee restrayned from proude and arrogant condemning nor withhelde from speaking euill of our brethren by this lawe of God When we violate and breake this lawe and doe contrarie therevnto our deedes speake euen as it were of the lawe that it is not worthie that it is not good inough to bee the bridle and rule of our life VVhen this law saith thou shalt not slaunder or speake euill of thy neighbour Leuit. 19. Matth. 7. when this lawe sayeth Iudge not least you be iudged condemne not least you be condemned and yet we will speake euill of our brethren and condemne them do we not say as it were by deedes which in this matter speake for vs that this lawe shal not teach vs it shal not bridle our tongues we will not thereby bee restrained Thus in effect we speake euill of the lawe and condemne it as vnsufficient vnperfect vnworthie to teach vs thus in our actions and by our deedes we speake euill of the law and condemne it as not wise inough as not good inough as not circumspect inough thus wee finde fault with the law as if it did not wel in forbidding vs to speake euill one of another and thus in the actions and practise of our liues we speake euill of the lawe and condemne it when wee speake euill of our brethren and condemne them which thing the law forbiddeth Wherein it fareth with the lawe of God as it often fareth vvith the positiue lavves of Princes For when positiue and ciuill lavves and statutes are made by Princes in their common vvealthes for the gouernment and ordering of the manners of men and men infringe breake and violate them neither vvill resour me their manners according to the prescript thereof doe not they
thereby shevv that they like not such lavves that those lavves are not worthie to be the bridle of their liues and thus in effect speake euill and condemne them euen so vvhen Almightie God hath established a lavve that no man shall speake euill of his brother nor rashly condemne him at his pleasure vvhen obstinately and stubbornly vve vvithstand this and vvill not be restrained and brideled from speaking euill of and condemning our brethren vvhat doe vve else but in effect speake euill of it and condemne it as not vvorthy to be our teacher and informer And thus by speaking euill of our brother and condemning him vve speake euill of that lavve and condemne it vvhich saith Thou shalt not speake euill of or condemne thy brother Novv vvho so speaketh euil and condemneth any lavv speaketh euill and condemneth him vvhose lavv it is proud and vvicked men speaking euill of the lavv of God and condemning it speake thereby euill of God and condemne him by vvhose finger this lavv vvas vvritten and to finde fault vvith the vvisedome of God and to speake euill of his eternall spirite and the vnsearchable councels of his heart to take vpon vs to controul and correct his lavves statutes and ordinances vvhat intollerable impietie vvhat desperate iniquitie vvhat singular vngodlinesse vvere it Hovv great is the vvickednes then of men vvho by speaking euill of and condemning their brethren speake euil of and condemne the lavv whereby they speake euill also and condemne God himselfe by vvhose finger it vvas vvritten This the Apostle confidering draweth his argument from the breach of Gods lawe and the iniurie thereunto done when we speake euill of the brethren and dissuadeth vs there from by this argument in speaking euil of the brethren and condemning them we speake euill of the lawe and condemne it therefore must we not speake euill of the brethren for he that speaketh euill of his brother and he that condemneth his brother speaketh euill of the lawe and condemneth the lawe Which reason of the Apostle holdeth not onely in this perticular whereunto it is applied but it is generally true in the whole lawe of God and euery parte and member thereof that when we breake it eyther in whole or in parte thereby we speake euill and condemne it eyther in whole or in parte likewise 1. When the law therefore saith Thou shalt haue no other God but one notwithstanding to make many Gods as the idols of the Heathen the workes of our owne hands the righteousnes which our selues haue wrought the Saints in heauen as many we do to make our gold our God as the couetous to make our bellies our Gods as the Epicures to make our backes our Gods as prowde persons doe this is to speake euill of the lawe and condemne it 2. When the lawe saith Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image of any likenes whatsoeuer to worship it notwithstanding to make the image of the father sonne or holy ghost to expresse the diuine maiestie thereby to worship God to make the image of Marie Peter John Iames Paul or any other man or woman in our temples to erect them do worship vnto them is to speak euill of the law to condemne it 3. When the law saith Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine notwithstanding this to name God vnreuerently to professe him coūterfetly to cal vpon him deceitfully to sweare by him falsly or vainely is to speake euill of the lawe and to condemne it 4. When the law saith Remember to keepe holy the Saboth day yet not regarding that law to profane the Lordes day in banquetting in surfetting in dicing in dauncing in enterluding in play following in bearbaiting bulbaiting in going gadding abroad in sleeping in idlenesse in other lewdenesse or loosenes whatsoeuer what is this but to speake euill of the lawe and condemne it 5. When the lawe saith Honour thy father and mother notwithstanding this to denie dutie to our parents in not reuerencing them as becōmeth vs is not relieuing them in extreame age pouertie to be disobedient to the fathers of our countries princes and magistrates to neglect our spirituall fathers our ministers and pastours which begitte vs daily through the ministerie 1. Cor. 4. Gal. 4. of the gospell not to giue duetifull seruice to such as are our maisters after the fleshe and for the time in steede of our parents not to performe that reuerence to all our elders and betters as by due belongeth vnto them is to speake euill of the lawe and to condemne it 6. When the law saith Thou shalt not kill yet eyther in heart by hatred or in tongue by slaunder or in hande by violence to murther eyther our selues or others is it not to speake euill of the lawe and condemne it 7. When the lawe saith Thou shalt not commit adulterie yet to hunte after straunge flesh in thy heart to desire any other besides thy married and lawfull wife in sight in shewe in signe to pretende carnall loosenesse to ioyne thy selfe vnlawfully by fleshly coniunction to any other then thy yoke fellow appointed by God is to speake euill of the lawe and condemne it 8. When the lavve saith Thou shalt not steale yet to robbe to spoile by sea by lande to oppresse by violence to retayne by force the goods of our brethren to deceyue by fraude the simple of his right to picke to steale to pilfer or by any sinister way to possesse that is not thine owne what is this but the speaking euill of the lawe and the condemning thereof 9. When the lawe saith Thou shalte not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour notwithstanding to testifie and witnesse a false matter to lie and speake vntruly of and to our brethren to vse disceit or forged cauillation in our tongues to counterfet to dislemble to glose with our lippes or any like way here against to offend is to speake euill of the lawe and to condemne it 10. When the lawe saith Thou shall not couet though we abstaine from the outward action and doing of euill yet burne inwardly in vnlawfull lust of any thing which is not ours what is this but to speake euill of the lawe and to condemne it Finally whatsoeuer the law enioyneth therein not to be obedient what is it but in effect to speake euill of the law and condemne it Which we then speake euil of and condemne when therevnto we will not be obedient Thus then the lawe of God violently brokē wilfully withstood voluntarily resisted of men is euil spoken of condemned for that they shew in effect that they mislike it as not worthy to direct leade them in the race of their liues and this is the first reason why we may not speake euil of our brethren nor condēne them rashly because thereby we speake euill of the lawe and condemne it which teacheth vs not to speake euill of or condemne our brethren A second reason
treatise touching outwarde temptations he now proceedeth to the third place in this first Chapter handled which is concerning internall and inwarde temptations of the mind whereby men are pricked forward and mooued to euill proceeding from Satan who by our owne concupiscense and carnall desires solliciteth vs to mischiefe wickednesse The summe whereof is this men may not impute their euill temptations to God neither make him the authour thereof seeing our owne desires do tempt vs and carie vs away to wickednesse and we beare about in our owne bosomes naturall corruption which snatcheth and catcheth euery occasion of comitting euil wherehence all sinne groweth and buddeth as from a stocke and roote and death ensueth and followeth sinne at the heeles as the reward and wages Rom. 6. thereof 1 The first thing in these wordes and this discourse is the proposition of the place whereby their errour is confuted and condemned who hold and affirme that when they are prouoked pricked to euill they are thereunto prouoked and tempted by God which lay the cause of euill concupiscense corrupt affections wicked temptations yea and of sinne it selfe vpon God and say God prouoked and stirred me vp to this euil God seduced and led me into this temptation God mooued and sollicited me to this sinne This the Apostle remouing as an horrible errour from the hearts and mindes of men giueth them this aduice in this present proposition Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God When pleasure prouoketh when pride pricketh whē malice boileth when couetousnesse assaulteth when reuenge kindleth when feare discourageth or any other thing tempteth vs to euil we may not impute this to God and therby thinke our selues excused Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God is not the cause of this temptation neither may our sinnes be referred vnto him The trueth of this proposition shall the better be vnderstood and knowen if we consider that there are specially three kindes of temptations in holy Scripture mentioned thus distinguished in the regard of the ends of euery one of them 1 One temptation is called the temptation of proof because the ende thereof is the proofe of men that thereby there may be had a triall of our faith patience constancie with other vertues in vs whatsoeuer And it is thē when either some worke is commanded vs of God which is harde and grieuous vnto the flesh as was that temptation of Abraham who from God was willed to offer and sacrifice Gen. 22. vp his onely and deare sonne Isaac whom he had begotten in his olde age in whom onely was the hope of the accomplishment of all Gods promises vnto him the heire of his goods the seede of his posteritie the very ioy of his heart which thing was commanded for the triall of his faith patience and obedience that he thus tried might be knowen and manifested to the world and his vertue and obedience an example and patterne to all posteritie to imitate and follow for euer Or els when some heauie crosse great miserie strange affliction is laide vpon vs for the triall of our hearts whether from an vnfeyned faith we loue God or no as was the temptation of Iob Job 1. 2. ● whose crosse was heauie whose miserie was great whose afflictions strange that thereby his patience being tryed he might be thereof an example to all the Saints Thus was he tempted his children destroyed sodenly his goods taken from him violently his body diseased strangely his wife vpbrayding him wickedly his friends rebuking him sharpely What greater crosse could bee laid vpon man bereft of children spoiled of goods abused by his wife cōdemned by his friends sore in body sick in minde what miserie herewith is to be compared yet al to prooue him Like temptation was that of Tobias who sleeping vnder Tob. 2. the wall of his house his face vncouered the dongue of Swallowes fell into his eies and he lost his sight therewith tempted for triall God saith Moses tempted his people fortie yeares leading them vp and downe the wildernes Deut. 8. to humble their hearts to trie their faith to prooue their patience and so make triall of them whether they loued the Lord their God or no. Or finally this temptation is when God sendeth heresies false doctrines errors among men thereby to trie the true Saints of God and the vnfeyned seruants of Iesus Christ This end almightie God respected in the temptation of Israel vnto whom hee sent false Prophets working miracles and shewing also wonders among men thereby to trie his people To which Deut. 13. purpose the holy Apostle affirmeth that therefore heresies 1. Cor. 11. must needes bee among men that they which are proued might be knowen Thus the Church of Christ hath alwaies been tempted In the time of the Apostles many false teachers and sundrie damnable heresies were sproong vp among them as both Paul in sundrie his Epistles and Peter in like maner 1. Cor. 15. 1. Tim. 4. 2. Pet. 2. aboundantly doe testifie After the time of the Apostles in the succeeding ages how many heresies sproong vp whereby the Church was tempted and tried who is conuersant in the writings of the auncient Fathers who is occupied in the turning ouer of Ecclesiasticall stories who is seene in the Chronicles of all times which knoweth not Our time not voide of like temptations for now the Libertines are reuiued the Anabaptists are raked out of hell againe the familie of loue a masse of all mischiefe a world of all wickednes a confusion of heresies is fresh in our daies Papists Seminaries Iesuites newe sectes of popish heresie swarme in euery corner of our Countrey euen among our selues and as it were out of the bosome of the churchmen arise speaking peruerse things drawing Acts. 20. vnder colour of religion and godlines many Disciples after them wherby the peace of Hierusalem is disturbed which to vs also as to other commeth to passe for the triall of the Saints and the proofe of the godly God then sēding these or like things vnto men doth it not to solicite stir or moue them to any euil defectiō or falling from the faith but to trie them to make them know them selues to exercise their vertues to cause them more immouably to cleaue vnto him that they being constant and patient vnder all manner temptations may finally attaine to eternall saluation In which temptations how so euer the instruments thereunto vsed by God be wickedly affected yet in all thinges respecteth he that which tendeth most vnto his owne glorie and the benefite of his Church and so is he neuer to bee charged as the cause of wickednesse among men 2 Beside the temptation to proue there is a temptation also of presumption whereby men are moued to Rom. 2. tempt God too much presuming of his goodnes abusing his patience despising the mercie and long suffering of God flattering
finally and deceauing themselues in the power and prouidence of God towards the sonnes of mē Such a temptation is it when men continue in sinne wallow Ephes 4. and welter in iniquitie committing wickednes with greedines presuming vpon the mercie of God and say with themselues Haue not I sinned and what euill hath come vnto me The greater my sinne is the greater shall Ecclus. 5. his mercie be in forgeuing me the Lord hath mercie in store for vs all be we neuer so wicked In the last houre I will returne vnto him and I shal be receaued This is a temptation tending to presumption abusing the mercie and goodnes of the Lord. Such is that temptation whereby wee are sollicited to say I know the goodnesse of the Lord is great ouer all his creatures I know he hath a fatherly and prouident care ouer me and he will not see the worke of his owne hande to perish for lacke of sustinance God that giueth clothing Mat. 6. Psal 147. to the floures and lillies of the field and feedeth the yoong rauens that call vpon him will cloth me and feede me also what need I to wearie or waste my selfe with toilesome and troublesome labour I will rest vpon his prouidence such is the temptation of witlesse persons and very harebraines who say I know there shall not one haire of my head fall away without the knowledge of God I know that he is alwaies at hand present to helpe and succour at time of neede I will feare nothing therefore I vvill runne through fire and vvater I vvill not be terrified by the glittering and glistring svvorde or sheild I vvill passe through the pikes by svvord and famine cold and nakednesse perill and pestilence come on it vvhat vvill those are sollicited by satan to presume of Gods mercy povver prouidence and goodnesse Satan assailed Christ himselfe in this kinde solliciting him to cast himselfe Mat. 4. dovvne from the pinacle of the temple because God had giuen his Angels charge ouer him that he should not hurt his foote against a stone To sinne then because God is mercifull to loyter and be idle because God is liberall to cast our selues into present daunger rashly because he is able to deliuer vs to lie still in the ditch and not to helpe Psal 91. our selues because he is of povver and can rayse vs is a temptation and suggestion of satan vvhereby he mooueth vs to presumption 3 There is finally a temptation which is to deceiue and seduce men drawing them into error mouing them to euil stirring them forward to iniquitie and vngodlines aduenturing and enterprising any thing repugnant to the law and will of God Of this there are two kindes also 1 Temptation to deceiue externall 2 Temptation to deceiue internall Externall temptation whereby wee are drawen into any sinne is that temptation whose cause is externall and outward and the beginning therof without vs as when by Sathan by the world and the thinges which here compasse vs about though in some sence they are inward because they moue our hearts and inwarde parts yet in as much as the causes are without and the beginning of these temptatiōs from others then our selues they may be called outward Sathan tempteth vs by false doctrine which he moueth by offence which he causeth by occasiōs and allurements to euill which he ministreth and otherwise The cause of which temptations and the instrument also being without the temptation is called externall The world to deceiue vs tempteth by vanitie thereof by improbitie therein the vaine pompe of the world tickleth vs the corruptions therein inuade and assault vs with the examples of wickednesse dayly seene of vs these things often seduce deceiue and the temptation is outward The things wherewith we be compassed tempt men manifoldly power honour ambition pleasure on the one side feare daunger and perill famine nakednesse pouertie death on the other thus are men also outwardly tempted and drawen into the errours and corruptions of our common life and thereby deceiued and led into euill The temptations which seduce men and are internall are such whose immediate and next cause is in our selues as man is tempted to commit euill by his owne corruption and concupiscense mooued by his owne disordered appetite to commit sinne Thus haue we in our bosoms a domesticall tyrant originall sinne and natural corruption from Adam pulling haling drawing vs dayly to euill that sinne in all things might exercise power ouer vs. Hereunto though Satan helpe yet the cause is in our selues in as much as by him wee are not constrained but come and follow freely deceiued and seduced by our own concupiscense And of this kinde of temptation the Apostle chiefly speaketh when he saith If any man be tempted let him not say I am tempted of God God to proue men tempteth his seruāts but to cause them to presume or to deceiue and draw them to euil he doth not So that he is not the cause of such temptations neither may wee referre these euil temptations vnto him And this the proposition of this place teacheth vs Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God If God tempt no man to euill why saith the Scripture that he hardeneth the heart of Pharao that he blindeth Exod. 4. 7. 10. 11. Esai 14. Psal 81. man and giueth him ouer into a reprobate minde As of Pharao in the booke of Exodus in many places and chapters is recorded of Israel the people of God as in Isai in Dauid and other Prophets is mencioned of the Gentiles thrise in the first chapter to the Romans is confessed of others in other places in like maner Hereunto it may bee answered first that God in his iudgements which are sometimes open sometimes secret but alwayes iust moueth and inclineth mens willes whither him lusteth wherein hee either with the latter sinne of man punisheth the former or else hee taketh away his grace from men whereof destitute they runne headlong into their owne destruction by committing sinne with greedinesse or finally hee bringeth to passe Ephes 4. his purpose by the wickednesse either of Satan or men as able to worke out that which is good by the iniquitie of men and thus he is alwayes iust So that we may say with the Apostle that hee is not the cause of our euill temptations Let no man say that when hee is tempted he is tempted of God God mooueth not men to euill hee driueth not men to euill affections hee instilleth wickednesse into no mans heart but partly in taking away his spirite from them partly in punishing one sinne with another partly by bringing to light the sinnes of men which before were couered partly in accomplishing his owne will and bringing to passe his determinate counsailes and purposes euen by euill meanes and instruments as ruling all thinges after his will he is saide to indurate and harden the hearts of men and to giue
wife his house his manseruant his maidseruant his oxe his asse or any thing that is his Thereupon our blessed Sauiour in the Mat. 5. Gospell condemneth not onely for adulterie the vsing of other women besides our owne wiues but also the very desiring and lusting after them in our hearts therefore as the true expositor of the lawe of God corrupted most shamefully and horribly depraued by the Scribes Pharisies who condemned outward actions onely for sinne he saith I say vnto you whosoeuer looketh vpon a woman to lust after her hath committed adulterie already with her in his heart The holy Apostle Saint Paul disputing of the effectes of the lawe hee reckoneth this one among others that therby wee come to the knowledge Rom. 7. of sinne condemning there concupiscense for sinne saith I knew not that to lust had been sinne if the law had not said thou shalt not lust Wherein the Apostle not only confesseth lust to be sin but to be sin in the law forbidden Now least wee shoulde thinke that the Apostle had spoken it vnawares or that that speach had slipt out of his mouth before he wist it is vsuall with him to condemne lust and that fountaine of al other sinne for sin wherefore in the sixt Chapter at the least fiue times he calleth that corruption which is in man albeit it raigne not in the Saints by actually committing any thing by the name Rom. 6. Rom. 7. of sinne lust which is the fountaine of all actuall euill is in like manner in the next Chapter at the least sixe times Rom. 8. called sinne In the eight Chapter about thrise the lust and concupiscence the inward affection and inclination Heb. 13. to sinne indeede is called sinne The Authour to the Hebrewes calleth it sinne which hangeth on and compasseth about Finally Saint Peter reputeth lust for sinne when he 1. Pet. 2. exhorteth men to absteine from fleshly lust not only from grosse sinnes actually committed but euen from corrupt affections and euill motions of the heart from whence all actuall sinne springeth Seeing then concupiscence and Mat. 16. lust is forbidden and condemned both in the law and also in the Gospell how may any man denie it to bee finne 2 Againe Whatsoeuer is repugnant to the lawe of God and his will is sinne Lust and concupiscence is repugnant to the law and will of God it is sinne therefore Sinne is a rebellion and repugnancie to the will of God and a transgressing of his commaundements wherefore Saint Iohn the Apostle defining sinne saith Sinne is the transgression of the law but lust and concupiscence not 1. Iohn 3. onely in the wicked but in the regenerate opposeth it selfe to the law of God and draweth men into the transgression of his will which Saint Paul affirmeth when hee crieth out that he saw a law in his members repugning Rom. 7. and withstanding the law of his minde and leading him captiue vnto sinne And that by the law of his minde against which lust being the law of his members fighteth the law of God is vnderstood he sheweth in his cōclutiō Thē I my selfe in my minde serue the law of God but in my flesh the law of sinne In which place what before he called the lawe of his minde here he calleth the law of God and what before the law of his members here he calleth the lawe of sinne If thē lust and concupiscence euen in the regenerate be contrarie and rebellious vnto the lawe of God then must it needes be euill and sinne For whatsoeuer is contrarie to Gods law is sinne 3 Moreouer concupiscence is from the flesh and not from the spirite That which commeth from the flesh is altogether euill not good therefore lust proceeding from the fleshly part of man is euill and sinne not pure and good The flesh and whatsoeuer is thereof is nothing els but euill and sinne euer striuing euer strugling against the Spirite Wherefore Saint Paul saith I knowe that in Rom. 7. Gal. 5. me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good Who setting downe the conflict and striuing of the flesh and Spirite affirmeth that the flesh coueteth and lusteth against the Spirite and the Spirite against the flesh so that the very Saints of God cannot doe the thinges which they woulde doe In the same place a little after discouering and describing Verse 9. the works of the flesh he reckoneth vp nothing that thereof commeth but sinne and wickednes The workes saith he of the flesh are manifest which are whordome enuie idolatrie wantonnes vncleannes crafte debate emulation c. There is then in the flesh nothing but sin nothing but rebelling against the Spirite nothing but euil and iniquitie Lust therefore being from the flesh cannot be but fleshly For all that is borne of the flesh is fleshly as saith our Sauiour Christ in the Gospell Hereupon then it Iohn 3. must needes follow as a resolute conclusion that seeing lust is from the flesh therefore it is sinne 4 Finally euen this place conuinceth luste and concupiscence to be euill For whatsoeuer is the proper cause and prouoker vnto sinne that same is euill and wicked But euery sinne proceedeth from the lust and concupiscence of the heart from the euill motions and corrupt affections in men which if they be not stayed euen in the Saintes of God but let raigne in our mortall members then forthwith as time place and other circumstances will suffer they bring foorth the very sinne in acte whereof the Apostle here speaketh Lust when it hath cōceaued bringeth foorth sinne Seeing all sinne and wickednes among men procedeth from lust it cannot be but it must bee euill for an euill tree cannot bring foorth good fruite nor a good tree euil fruite but as is the fruite Mat. 7. such is the tree as is the effect such is the cause as is the birth such is the conception as sinne is in nature such is lust and concupiscence from which it proceedeth For it is the euill motion and affection of the heart it is the wicked thought that riseth in our mindes it is concupiscēce and lust in our members which kindleth the flaming fire of all vngodlines and pricketh and tickleth the hearts of men to entise them to sinne Concupiscence and lust therefore is not onely the cause of sinne but euil and sinne it selfe The fathers hereunto subscribe Saint Ambrose calleth it iniquitie and affirmeth that there is a certaine delectation pleasure or desire in man repugnant to the will of God of which saith he Saint Paul speaketh I see a law in my members resisting Rom. 7. the law of my minde Saint Hillarie calleth the euils which are in vs maliciousnes by reason of the condition of originall sinne Saint Hierome saith that those first motions whereby men are solicited and moued be such as Vpon Mat. chap. 7. want not fault Saint Augustine in many places calleth the naturall lust
Aristotle the Philosopher and heathen sending Calisthenes the Philosopher to Alexander the great king of Macedonia Aristotle oftentimes admonished and commaunded him to speake more rarely and most pleasantly to the King because he carried life and death in his tongue The which the wiseman foreseeing saith He that keepeth his mouth Pro. 21. and his tongue keepeth his soule from trouble And in another place comparing a man whose tongue is vnbrideled to a City vnwalled affirmeth As a citie lying open Pro. 25. and vncompassed with walles euen so is a man that cannot refraine his tongue Which when holy Dauid rightly weyed and aduisedly Psal 141. considered he praieth the Lord to set a watch before his mouth and to keep the dore of his lippes And the sonne of Sirach to the like purpose crieth out Who shall Ecclus. 22. set a watch before my mouth and a seale of wisdome before my lips that I fall not sodenly by them and that my tongue destroy me not Thus men thinking themselues to haue an absolute libertie to prate and prattle what they lust without hurt or danger by their saucie pratling and brabling by the euill of their tongues they greatly endanger themselues and so deceiue their owne hearts Neither that onely but by much talke they thinke to attain to the opinion of wisdome with men who onely speaking would be thought to haue all knowledge but hereby they shewe their greater follie and so deceiue their owne hearts The wise man shewing that it is great follie not to bridle and moderate the tongue saith That the voice of a foole is in the multitude of words and elswhere to like Eccles. 5. purpose A wise man concealeth knowledge but the harts of fooles publish foolishnes The same writeth that wise Pro. 12. men vse fewe words then it followeth that such as vse many words are fooles Wherefore when by much talking Pro. 17. we thinke to obteine opinion of wisdome then most of all we descrie our owne follie and thereby we deceiue our own hearts and therefore we ought to refraine our tongues Finally we thinke our tongues to be geuen vs to prattle at our owne pleasures but they are geuen as instruments to set foorth the mightie and manifolde power of God his miracles and wonderous works which he doth towards the children of men abusing then our toungs at our own pleasure we deceue our own harts Seeing therefore by not moderating our tongues we thus deceiue our selues and our owne hearts we ought with all carefulnes to bridle moderate our tongues by the word of trueth As not moderating our tongues we deceiue our own hearts so we descrie our hypoctisie we corrupt and defile our religiō and make it vaine before God therfore ought we to moderate and refraine our tongues whose speach is not good their religion cannot be acceptable Wherefore vnlesse we refraine our tongues our religion is frustrate and in vaine Now the euils and faults of our tongues frō which they not refrained deceiue our heartes and make our religion vaine are sundrie 1 Vaine talke idle friuolous seruing to no profit to no purpose prating and pratling where there is no neede Mat. 12. for which we shall geue account to God as Christ witnesseth protesting that we shall geue accounts vnto GOD Ephes 5. for euery vaine and idle word proceeding from vs. Saint Paul exhorteth the Saints to put from them all vaine and foolish talke as a thing not becomming them From this euill if we refrain not our tongues our religion is in vain For if any man among you seem religious and refraineth not from this this mans religion is in vaine 2 Another euil to be restrained in men is when we talk of god of his word of his law religion not desirous to reforme our liues according vnto his cōmandements This is a great euil and point of halting hypocrifie wherby our religion is frustrate and in vaine For to talke of Gods word and not to walke in his will profiteth or preuayleth nothing to religion therefore almighty GOD shewing their religion to be but in vaine which talked of him in their mouthes but folowed him not in their harts crieth out This people draweth neare vnto me with their lips but their hearts are farre from me worshipping me in vaine teaching doctrines precepts of men Dauid in Gods person telling the hypocrites that their talking of his couenants was in vaine in as much as Psal 50. they would not be reformed in their conuersations saith What hast thou to doe to declare my ordinances and to take my couenants in thy mouth seeing thou hatest to be reformed and castest my words behind thee Our blessed Sauiour intimateth and witnesseth vnto men that to Mat. 7. call vpon him in their wordes maketh them but hypocrites and sheweth their religion to be vaine when they doe not that which he commaundeth therefore he saith that not euery one that saith vnto him Lord Lord shall therefore enter into his kingdome but such as did the will of his father Finally Saint Paul accounting their religion as 1. Tit. vaine which talke of God in their mouthes but obey him not in their deedes condemneth them as hypocrites who say they know God in word but deny him in deedes being abhominable disobedient and to euery good worke reprobate From this vanitie and foolish prating if wee refraine not our tongues though we seeme neuer so religious yet deceaue wee our selues and our religion is in vaine And yet this is our religion in these daies consisting in lip-labour and talking of God and his commandements but not liuing according as in his lawes he chargeth vs and therefore are we not better then very hypocrites For if any man among vs seem religious refraineth not his tongue from this vanity also surely this mans religion is in vaine 3 As from these euils our tongues must be refrayned so from rash iudgement of our brethren when vpon surmised suspitions we condemne them for this also maketh Mat. 9. our religion vaine Therefore our Sauiour to remoue it farre from the Saints his Church forewarneth them not to iudge least they be iudged not to condēne least they be condemned To whom the Apostle agreeth Iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who 1. Cor. 4. shall lighten things that are in darkenes and make the counsels of the heart manifest In which kinde they sinne which by euentes iudge and condemne their brethren accounting them for most wicked vppon whom the hand of the Lords chastisement lighteth The wicked iudged Christ condemned of God Isai 53. Wisd 3 5. chap. Job 4. Psal 41. 8. because he was chastened of the Father The vngodly condemned the Saints for despised because they were subiect to affliction in the world The frends of Job iudged Iob wicked because hee was so many waies plagued of God The people condemned the Galileans those
vpō whom the tower of Siloe fell for great sinners because of Luke 13. Acts 28. the heauy hand of God vpon them whose iudgement our Sauiour condēneth The Barbarians at Melta now called Malta seing a viper spring out of the fire light hang on Pauls hand iudged him a murtherer because of the sight of the viper which they thought to haue been sent of God as against a murtherer of men or some most wicked person Of this euill they are also guiltie who with their mouth●● condemne iudge others vpon external shew outward tokēs Such as condēne those for hypocrites who stoupe in their going those for arrogant and proud which goe vpright those for solemne which are addicted to silence those for wanton and light of life which are pleasant in talke those that are spary in their liues for misers such as are comely apparrelled for lasciuious as his aduersaries did iudge Gneus Pompeius for effeminate because he scratched his head with one finger and the Romans iudged Fabius for slouthfull because in al things he lingered and delaied on till by his lingering he had preserued the weale publike Such as familiarly apply thēselues to men they iudge as flatterers whom they see graue they condēne for Stoicall those that bear iniuries they hold as malicious dissēblers they which in case resist authours of seditiō raisers of tragicall disturbance in common weales whom they see religious aboue others thē they haue as superstitious such as are not come on so farre as themselues they iudge as temporizers and carnall professours This euill of tongue must be restrained otherwise wee iudging after outward appearance which Christ forbiddeth chalenge that to our selues which is Iohn 7. John 5. 2. Cor. 5. James 4. proper to Christ to whom all iudgement is committed Finally condemning and iudging the law which we doe when we iudge our brethren and in so doing are not doers of the law but iudges we make our religiō vaine so if any man seeme religious and refraineth not his tongue from rashly iudging the brethren this mans religion is in vaine 4 Another euill is flatterie a speach and report of false and vaine praise geuen to a man when we speake things that are false to please men feed their humors when we say what they say deny what they deny when to sooth men vp we call day night light darkenes sweet sower good euill And cōtrariwise I say whether in manners or in doctrine this is an euill of the tōgue frō which who so refraineth not his religion is vaine Such are Parasites and flatterers whose mouthes are instruments of false praise Such are false Prophets false teachers false pastors which for feare of men or for their fauour either suppresse the trueth and speake it not or els conceiue lies and vtter them This is pernitious in the Church and in the Commonweale in societies and in priuate families in all states and degrees of men into whose handes it is more dangerous to fall then into the handes of Rauens as Diogenes affirmeth For Rauens eate mens bodies dead but flatterers deuoure them and feede on them liuing Wherefore as of wilde beastes tyrantes are worst so of tame beastes flatterers Which thing is so odious vnto God who is the God of trueth as that they which flatter in their lippes make their religion vaine before him Wherefore if any man among you seem religious and refraineth not his tongue from flattering also this mans religion is in vaine 5 Dissimulatiō whē we pretend one thing in our words and speaches and haue another thing in our heartes whether it be to God as hypocrites or to men as counterfets maketh also our religion vaine Vaine therefore was the religion of the Israelites who promised their Exod. 19 Psal 8 Iosua 24 Psal 12 Mat. 22 faithfull seruice vnto God yet their heartes were turned after wicked waies starting aside like a broaken bowe the religion of Saul and those wicked ones which dissembled with Dauid the religion of the Pharisies and Herodians which glosed with Christ in the gospell the religion of euery man and woman which hath one thing readie in mouth another couered in their hearts and so dissemble in their false tongues is in vaine and odious before GOD for if any man seeme religious and refrayneth not his tongue from this euill also this mans religion is in vaine 6 The sixt euill from which we must refraine is lyeng which is a false signification of speach or voice with intention to deceiue This God to abandon from his people willed them they shoulde not lie one to another Which the Prophet expounding exhorteth the people Leuit. 25 Zach. 8. Ephes 4. to speake the trueth one vnto another and not to lie The Apostle remouing all the workes of the old man corrupted with deceaueable lustes of the fleshe from the true professors of religion and such as were regenerate by the gospell whose religion it marreth exhorteth in this wife Wherefore put away all lying from you and speake the trueth one to another for you are members one of another This euil reigneth in the tongues of many euen professing religion and the Gospell whose houses are vpholden whose riches are increased whose families are mainteyned whose children are aduaunced whose sonnes are made Gentlemen by the lies their fathers and their seruants in their shoppes in their warehouses and in other places haue made for aduauntage But haue we thus learned Christ Is not all our profession and religion in vaine by the falshood of our tongues that wee may also with the Apostle conclude that if any man or woman among vs seeme religious deuout and holy yet refraineth not his tongue from lies but vseth deceit in his lips euen this mans religion is in vaine as the Apostle auoucheth 7 The next euill which corrupteth our religion and maketh it vaine before God is filthie speach whereby not onely our liues are descried to be euill but our hearts to be wicked and our religion counterfette This I would men professing godlines would remember whose mouthes are open oftentimes to great filthinesse as if thereby their religion were not defiled But as Diogenes seeing a faire yong man speaking filthily said art thou not ashamed to dravve a leaden svvorde out of an yuiry scabberd so may vvee say to such as vvhose profession is fayre but their communication filthy are you not ashamed to dravve such filthinesse ou● of so holy and precious a calling and against them also conclude vvith this Apostle if any man among you seem religious and here from refraineth not his tongue this mans religion is vaine 8 Another is slaunder vvhereof chapt 4. verse 11. 9 Another cursing and execration chapt 3. v. 9. 1. Pet. 3. v. 9. 10 A tenth euill is blasphemy and svvearing spoken of chapt 5. verse 12. Of all these and euery one of them vvith such like may vvee vvorthily say vvith the Apostle if any man among
witchcraft hatred debate emulations wrath contentions seditions heresies enuie murthers c. In another place exhorting Rom. 13. the Saints to walke vprightly the Apostle setteth downe certaine couples of vices as enimies and hinderers of the honest conuersation of the Saints In which number enuy is reckoned Therfore saith he walke honestly as in the day time not in dronkennes and surfetting nor in chambering and wantonnes neither in strife and enuying 1. Pet. 2. Finally S. Peter informing those that were regenerate and borne againe not of mortall but of immortall seed of 1. Pet. 1. the word of god to cast from them the works of their former conuersation to embrace those things which were according vnto godlines geueth them this exhortation Wherfore laying aside all maliciousnes al guile dissimulation enuie and euil speaking as new borne babes desire that sincere milke of the word that you may growe thereby Infinite are the testimonies of holy Scripture whereby this euill is condemned To the originall and beginning whereof if wee look it is from Sathan the deuill who enuying the prosperitie of man in the beginning not onely to sequester them from their pleasant aboade in Paradise but to alienate them from the fauour of God and expell them from all happines tempted to tast of the forbidden fruite contrarie Gen. 3. to the commaundement whereby hee plunged both himselfe and his posteritie into perdition Gen. 4. Whose eldest sonne Cain the runnagate and reprobate by the example of the deuil his father enuied his brother Abell for that God accepted the sacrifice of his brother proceeding from a sincere affection but not his proceeding from a double and dissembling minde with GOD through which enuy he followed him neuer leauing him he had laied his cruell clubbe vpon the innocent head of his brother Children of the same father were the Philistims Gen. 26. enuying the flocks of sheepe and heads or heards of cattle whereby Isaac was enriched by sundrie waies from time to time molested crossed and ouerthwarted the holy Patriarke Saul a twigge of the same tree a brāch of the same roote a childe of the same parent enuied the 1. Kings 18. vertue and glorie of Dauid who for slaying the Philistim Goliah hauing farre greater praise then Saul Saul hath slaine his thousand but Dauid his tenne thousande was therefore all the daies of Sauls life enuied and sought to haue beene destroied The Scribes and Pharisies and Elders of the people of the Iewes pursuing our blessed Sauiour Mat. 26. 27. with like hatred and enuie for the wonderful miracles and works he shewed among the people neuer lefte him before they had suborned false witnesses to accuse him a corrupt iudge to condemne him and cruel persons to crucifie him Such are finally in our daies such as grieue at enuie and sorowe at the riches honour estimation welfare and euery good thing in their brethren of which wickednes if they repent not they shall shewe themselues the sonnes of Sathan the slaues of sinne the children of perdition the heires of death and endlesse damnation Of which euill least the Saints should be partakers Saint Iames forewarneth them setteth it against meeknes of wisdome a speciall ornament in the chosen of God And this enuie hath this epithite or addition bitter because the heart of man therewith once infected turneth all things into bitternesse Nowe as enuie is opposite to meekenesse so is strife Strife and contention Strife or contention is stirred vp when men are addicted to themselues defending their owne opinions and actions not onely stoutly but stubbornely in nothing submitting themselues to the authoritie of others but as wise aboue all others they will censure and iudge all but bee iudged of none wherehence great disdaine discorde and disturbaunce ariseth among men both in the common wealth and in the Church of God VVhich the holy Apostle carefully considering hath disswaded it as a thing pernicious and daungerous in the Rom. 13. Saintes and seruaunts of GOD. This is in those couples which are enemies to holy conuersation mencioned before Walke honestly as in the day time not in drunkennesse and surfetting not in chambering and wantonnesse not in strife and enuying This Saint Paul 1. Cor. 3. condemned as a token of carnally minded men when he sayeth to the Corinthians Where as there is among you enuying and strife and diuisions are you not carnall and walke after the flesh And admonisheth the Philippians Philip. 2. that they doe nothing through contention or vaine-glorie but that in meekenesse of minde euerie Rom. 1. one esteeme another better then himselfe This is reckened for one of the workes wherewith the wicked Gentiles were infected This is a woorke of the flesh Gal. 5. whereby the life of man is corrupted This is a mischiefe which bringeth great miserie to the Church common weale of Christians The contention betwixt Haimo and Haniball the Carthagenians was the ouerthrow of their famous Citie The contention and strife betwixt Lacedemon and Athens the two lights of Grecia was the ruine of their whole countrie The cōtention betwixt the Numantians was the onely cause they were ouercome by Scipio who asking Tyretius the captaine general what was the reason that in former times it was inexpugnable thē ouercom vāquished was answered that their cōcord caused their continuance their contention bred their destruction The contention betwixt Anthonie and Augustus burst into open warres to the great damage of the Romanes Betwixt Caesar and Pompei Silla and Marius and other the Romanes was cause of great hurt to the state of Italie The contentions in our owne countrey betwixt men of the noblest houses what hurt it caused who was so blind that sawe not who was so malicious that lamented not who was so happie that rued not In priuate families contentions betwixt father and childe mother and daughter maister and seruaunt husband and wife cause both continuall disquietnesse and dayly sorrowe and decrease of state and many mischiefs besides as experience in manie too euidently doth teach vs so that there is not a more pernicious thing either in the common wealth or in priuate estates then is strife and contention among men In the Church it is no lesse pestilent and pernicious The contention and strife betwixt Eusebius the Bishop of Caesarea and Basill the great betwixt Arius after his repulse concerning the Bishoprike of Alexandria and others in the Church haue done much hurt contentions striuings and brawlings in our times about white or blacke rounde or square and the like things of no weight haue and doe cause great hurt in the Church of Christ as wofull and lamentable experience teacheth So that in the common wealth in priuate states in the Church it selfe great hurt commeth through contention Wherefore with all carefulnesse it ought to bee shunned of the Saints of God VVherein wee must beware least through flying of contention
this proceedeth from those who beeing sensuall and carnall men men naturall not regenerate perceyue not the things of GOD neither can they vnderstand them because they are spirituallie discerned This is a part of Rom. 8. the wisedome of the flesh which is enmitie with God and neither is neither can bee subiect to him This Isai 5. is a poynt of selfe-wisedome where against the Prophet denounceth vengeaunce wo to them which seeme wise in their owne eyes and prudent in their owne sight Thus to doe wee haue of our mother witte and fathers wisedome euen from our prime parents and first fathers from whome wee drawe all maliciousnesse enuie and iniquitie Hereunto our owne sense mooueth our owne desire leadeth our owne nature pricketh which wee haue sucked with our conception from Adam and Eue and is altogether sensuall and naturall To giue our selues then to bitter enuie to brawling contention to strife and emulation to trust in our owne wits to flatter our selues in our owne conceit to stand too much vpon our pantiples to be quarrelous through pride to chalenge authoritie ouer other men and not to abide the checke of anie to striue and contend with euery one is wisedome in a false perswasion of men but wisedome worldly and wicked VVherewith who so are indued are carnall not spirituall sensuall not regenerate hauing not the spirit but led with their owne sensualitie as beasts in whom is no reason this the Apostle to intimate telleth vs that this wisdome is sensuall also 3 Finally and thirdly it is diuelish The originall of enuie and contention wherein the wicked worldlings repose wisedome is from Satan himselfe the authour the fountaine the well-heade of maliciousnesse enuie contention debate and sed●tion among men whereunto onely through him are men mooued Therefore the Apostle calleth this wisedome diuelish because it is not inspired by God but suggested by Satan not infused from heauen but powred into vs from beneath not instilled from the father of light but ministred vnto vs by the prince of the darkenesse of this world and therefore called diuelish Satan was contentious from the beginning lifting vp himselfe euen against God through the insolencie of his minde for which hee was cast downe from heauen Jude v. 6. and is reserued in euerlasting darknesse to the iudgement of the great day He was a murtherer from the beginning Iohn 8. as Christ witnesseth from whome all enuie hatred malice debate and contention aryseth He is therefore called the enuious man who soweth tares among the corne Matt. 13. of the husbande man euen the seede of hatred sedition debate and contention in the Church of Christ and in the common wealth also By him was the sedicious contention of Core Dathan and Abiram caused by him were Jannes and Iambres stirred vp to withstand Moises Num. 16. Exod. 7. 11. 2. Tim. 3. 8. by him the bellowes of all brawlings were blowne in the Pharisies and Scribes to contend and striue agaynst the open truth of Iesus Christ by him were the malicious Iewes pricked forwarde to withstande and contende agaynst the Apostles and preachers of the Gospell by him were the heretiques hatched who contended against the Catholike fathers in the primitiue Church by him were the proude Popes and prelates of Rome raysed vp to sowe the seede of sedition in all the Churches of Christendome by him are now contentious persons stirred vp to disturbe the peace of Hierusalem by him rebels rise vp against lawfull Princes princes are stirred vp one against another for couetous desire and ambition of minde each to seeke the casting downe of each others crowne and kingdome by him are priuate men set at deadly variance and prouoked often to the shedding of the blood of their brethren by him all contention and sedition all brawlings and brabblements all fallings out and quarrels in priuate states are caused so that we may right well conclude with the Apostle that wisedome to contention strife and debate in whatsoeuer kinde it be is from the diuell and therefore diuelish and these are the qualities and properties wherby it is described Nowe as the worldly and wicked wisedome is by properties noted so is it also set downe by effects which follow contention and strife Whereof Saint Same 's sayth where enuying and strife is there is sedition and all maner of euill workes Whereby he teacheth that sedition and all maner of euill workes ensue and follow contention and strife among men and therefore ought it with all carefulnesse and diligence be auoided That sedition and all maner of euill workes proceed from enuious aed contentious wisedome in few wordes it appeareth out of Salomon who witnessing that when Prou. 13. euery man contendeth striueth for the preheminence and will not giue place to another much mischiefe great disturbaunce disquietnesse and disdaine to ensue sayth Onely by pride doth man make contention and of contention all euill as experience proueth followeth Pride is cause of contention contention of sedition tumults rebellions vprores in cōmon wealths Salomon not in the former place only but elswhere also cōsumeth the first he Prou. 28. that is of a proud heart stirreth vp strife the example of Corah Dathan Abiram cōfirmeth the second for their Num. 16. contentiousnes caused them seditiously to rise vp against Moses Absolom of a contentious spirit couering his aspiring minde with sugered flatterie fell from contention 2. Kings 15. with Ioab to rebellion and sedition against Dauid his owne father The proud and contentious spirite of Ieroboam sonne of Nebat moued him to lift vp his hand against Salomon the king his master and openly to rebel against Rehoboam his sonne for euer Zimrie in like manner 3. Kings 11. 12. through pride became contentious and of contentious seditious and rebellious So that he being Captaine of halfe the hoast of Basha rose vp against Basha his sonne 3. Kings 16. the king and slewe him and raigned in his stead The contentiō of Lacedemō Athens ended in sedition Themistocles enuious contentiō against Aristides raised sparks of sedition among the people Silla Marius contention ended in ciuil dissention The like may be saide of Caesar and Pompey Anthonie and Augustus and infinite the like whose contentions and enuie hath ended in sedition This is true in the Commonwealth This is true in priuate states of men This is true in the Church of Christ This is true in all states and degrees so that Saint Iames saith truely that where enuie and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes Seeing then contention enuy strife causeth sedition and all manner of euill works The wisdome which vpholdeth contention strife and enuie may worthely bee condemned which Saint Iames doeth both in describing the qualities and setting downe the effectes If you haue bitter enuying and strife among your selues reioyce not neither be liers against the trueth This wisdome discendeth
vs that whosoeuer will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemie of God Seeing then there is such contrarietie betwixt the loue of God and of the world as who so making friendship with the world procureth hatred with God it is meete therefore that all professed Christians should addresse themselues to the renouncing of worldly loue and seeke to holde fast the knotte of Gods loue without wauering that we may remaine his friends for euer The case therefore thus standing with men that who so seeketh the friendship of the world therby professeth hatred against God it appeareth manifestly that many men and women which professe christian religion are notwithstanding enemies vnto God For whosoeuer maketh himselfe the friende of this worlde thereby professeth himselfe or at least maketh himselfe in deed the enemie of God and most men and women seeke dayly the friendship of this world as the couetous prowde wanton persons ambitious men adulterers fornicatours vncleane persons vserers extortioners oppressours dronkards surfetters liers blasphemers slaunderers and the rest Isai 29. Iere. 12. v. 2. of the wicked route in whose mouthes God is often but he is farre from their hearts and raines Then is it euident that many euen professing godlines make themselues the enemies of God in that they strike hands and enter league with this wicked world Whom the holy Apostle therefore reproueth Ye adulterers adultresses know you not that the amitie of the world is enmitie with God Whosoeuer therefore will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemie of God This is the voice of God therefore must wee heare it it is the sonnde of the spirite of trueth therefore must we obey it it is Christ Iesus which thus reprooueth in his seruants therefore must we beleeue him And this is the reproofe of these desires and the reason wherefore they must bee auoided of the children of men because they purchase hatred with God 3. The last and thirde thing in this fourth braunch of the first part of this Chapter is a preuenting of an obiection in the fifth and sixt verses contained They might haue sayde to Saint Iames O blessed Apostle howe is it that thou in heighest against these desires so sharpely as to repute them for wicked adulterers and adultresses which seeke and followe after them are not these such as nature hath engraffed Being therefore naturall they ought not with such sharpenesse such bitternesse such vehemenice to be reproued Hereunto the Apostle answereth doe you thinke that the Scripture sayeth in vaine The spirite that dwelleth in vs lusteth after enuie But the Scripture offereth more grace and therefore sayth God resisteth the proud but giueth grace vnto the humble As who shoulde say True it is that we are giuen to these vices naturally and the Scripture confirmeth the same yet doth not this excuse vs but rather howe much more vehemently wee are by corruption of nature caried away with these things so much more diligently must wee beware of them Neither shall our labour therein be in vaine but shall receyue a full rewarde in as much as GOD resisteth the proude ambicious couetous which hunt after these desires and leaue him and also ministreth grace sendeth helpe giueth ayde to such as are humble and in true lowlinesse of minde cleaue inseparably to him Let vs a little vnfolde and rippe open the wordes where he sayeth Thinke you that the Scripture sayeth in vaine VVhat meaneth the Apostle here by the worde Scripture Surely hee may thereby meane and vnderstande some place either of the olde or of the newe Testament though the place bee not manifest neither this sentence verbatim worde for worde as it lyeth here there to bee founde so that this meaning may bee well gathered out of any place as no doubt it might Albeit then this Scripture it selfe can no where be found in holy Scripture yet seeing it may therhence be gathered it is inough and therefore he calleth it Scripture The Apostles had this libertie not only to giue out the plaine place of any Prophet or of Christ himselfe for Scripture but also that which might bee gathered out of such places they haue in their writings tendered for Scripture Acts 20. Iohn 7. 38. vnto posteritie As Saint Paul to the Ephesians at Miletum alledgeth for Christs saying this It is a blessed thing to giue rather then to receyue VVhich Scripture is not orderly written nor spoken by Christ in any place yet may it bee gathered out of diuerse places of the Scripture in effect and therefore as Scripture he alledgeth it In like maner in the Epistle to the same Church and congregation faith Saint Paul after many exhortations Ephe. 5. and arguments to perswade them to holinesse and sanctification of life therefore he saith awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue you light This Scripture worde for worde is no where to be founde in any place of holy Scripture yet because it may bee gathered out of diuerse places of Jsai as out of the 9. Chapter 2. verse 26 chap. ver 19. 60 chap. ver 1. or the like either in him or other as sundrie are of sundrie opinions thereaboutes therefore hee alledgeth it for Scripture Saint James in like maner gathering this Sentence out of the Scripture though worde for worde it bee not there to bee founde alledgeth it for Scripture and so calleth it Doe you thinke that the Scripture sayeth in vaine the Spirite that dwelleth in vs lusteth after enuie This place may be gathered out of diuerse testimonies of Scriptures For it may be gathered out of Moises his booke of Genesis where it is thus written that God sawe that the wickednesse of the earth or man vpon the earth was great and the imaginations of his heart onely Gene. 6. euill continually VVhere the Prophet teacheth that man naturally is wicked and all his imaginations of heart euil therehence Iames might gather that naturally our spirite lusteth after enuie after euill things seeing the imaginations of mans heart are all euill continually It might bee gathered also out of that which after the deluge and floud God saide in his heart I will no more curse the ground for mans sake for the imagination Gene. 8. of mans heart is euill euen from his youth this also intimateth that man naturally is giuen to corrupt lusts and euill desires that therehence Saint James might say Thinke you that the Scripture sayth in vaine the spirite that dwelleth in vs lusteth after enuie Or else it may bee gathered out of Ieremie when hee sayeth The heart Iere. 17. is deceytfull aboue all things who can knowe it This in effect importeth thus much that naturally wee lust after enuie and euill things For hereby and by other testimonies is auouched that men not regenerate are caryed naturally with all force to euill Thus therefore hee answereth their obiection though these lustes bee naturall yet ought they to
bee ouyded for the Scripture teacheth vs that naturally we lust after enuie and desire euill things Thus the Scripture here signifieth that which out of the Scripture is gathered Nowe hee sayeth that the Scripture sayeth that the spirite which dwelleth in vs lusteth after enuie By the Spirite here the corrupt affection and heart of man is vnderstoode the crooked crabbed and corrupt disposition of nature the fancie the inclination of Ezech. 13. our hearts naturally In which sense and signification the Prophet vseth the worde Spirite when God willed him to say to those Prophets which prophecied out of their owne hearts He are the worde of the Lorde Thus sayeth the Lorde GOD Wo vnto the foolish prophets that followe their owne spirite and haue seene nothing The Prophet Daniel speaking of King Belshazzar sayeth that when his heart was puft vp and his Dan 5. Spirit hardened in pride then was hee deposed from his kingdome and they tooke his honour from him In which places and the like the Spirite is taken for the heart minde and corrupt affection of man The meaning then of this place is that it is manifest by testimonies of Scripture tending thereunto that the heart spirit and minde of man is naturally set vpon enuie euill wickednesse neither dooth the Scriptures speake in vaine thereof for we are giuen in deede to lust to enuie to desire to quarrell to contende either for encrease of wealth or of honour among men Therefore the Scripture sayeth not in vaine for it is too sure and certaine that the spirite which dwelleth in vs naturall corruption which possesseth the seate of our hearts lusteth after enuie Some by spirite here vnderstande the Spirit of God and reade the whole sentence interrogatiuely thinke you that the Scripture sayeth in vaine the spirite that dwelleth in you lusteth after enuie Making this the meaning dooth the Scripture teach that Gods spirite moueth vs to enuie debate lust and such like No it is not Gods Spirit that moueth men therunto wherwith we are not guided when we are quarrellous and contentious But how those words then thinke you that the Scripture saith in vaine may be vnderstood I see not Therefore I retaine the former sence as môst naturall The other part of this answere is but the Scripture offereth more grace and therefore saith God resisteth the proude but giueth grace to the humble Whereas naturally wee are giuen to euill and lust after enuie the Scripture offereth more grace and giueth vs better counsell then to giue our selues to these quarrels and to be caried away with such desires therefore it sayth God resisteth the proude but giueth grace to the humble By the Scripture here hee vnderstandeth euident testimonies for this thing is in sundrie places recited By the proude hee vnderstandeth such as in following their owne desires and lusts rebell agaynst God By the humble he meaneth such as in meekenesse of spirite and humilitie of minde submit themselues to God with reuerence and endeuour to suppresse their euill affections in themselues whose endeuour God fauoureth and furthereth giuing his grace vnto them which is farre better then all worldly riches wealth honour whatsoeuer or delights and pleasures most precious among the sonnes of men This saying God resisteth the proude but giueth grace vnto the humble eyther in the verie same woordes or in woordes of the same sense is often repeated and it consisteth of two members 1 That God resisteth the proude 2 That he giueth grace to the humble For the first God resisteth the proude Dauid the princely Prophet auoucheth the same God sayth he wil Psal 18. saue the poore people but will cast downe the proude lookes Which thing Almightie God also rhreatneth against the obstinate and rebellious people by his Prophet the high looke of man shall be humbled and the Isai 2. Iere. 49. 16. 50. 24. 30. Ezec. 17. loftinesse of man shall be abased and the Lord onely shall be exalted in that day Ezechiel setting downe the Parable of the two Eagles whereby Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon and Iochoniah the king of Israel were ment which Nabuchodonosor abounding in power riches and a mightie kingdome should carie the other into captiuitie and afterwarde shoulde bee plagued for his oppression of the Church and people of God comforting the Saints the Prophet telleth them that God would beate downe the proude enemies of the Church and exalt her which was low and despised and saith All the trees of the field shall knowe that I the Lorde haue brought downe the high tree and exalted the lowe tree that I haue dried vp the greene tree and made the drie tree to flourish I the Lorde haue spoken it and done it In like manner entreating of the fall of Zedechiah and the captiuitie of Iehozadecke the Priest in the person Ezec. 21. of GOD the Prophet speaketh thus sayeth the Lorde God I will take away the Diademe and take away the crowne whereof the one might concerne the priest the other the Prince I wil take away the diademe and take of the crowne they shal be nomore the same I will exalte the base or humble abase him that is high And cōparing Pharao with the king of Assiriah for prosperitie Ezech. 31. prophesying like destruction to them both witnesseth that God would abate both their prides and resist the insolencie of their spirites Nabuchodonosor being cast downe by God and afterwarde exalted againe Daniel 4. breaketh forth into these wordes in Daniel the Prophete Now therefore I Nabuchodonosor prayse and extoll and magnifie the King of heauen whose workes are all truth and his wayes iudgements and those that walke in pride he is able to abate The whole 10. chapter of Sirach tendeth Ecclus. 10. almost to no other purpose but to teach that God resisteth the proude Salomon the wise king ouer Israell auoucheth the same truth and saith the pride of a man Prou. 29. shall bring him lowe because God euermore resisteth the proude as the Apostle teacheth Saint Peter hath the very same sentence decke your selues with lowlinesse of 1. Pet. 5. minde for God resisteth the proude and giueth grace to the humble The blessed virgin Marie in her song Luke 1. singeth prayse vnto God who had put downe the mighty from their seate and exalted the humble and meeke Our Sauiour Christ saith that such as exalt themselues Luke 14. in their owne pride shal be abated and brought low And the heathenish Megera in Seneca saith to Lycus rule being proude in minde and beare a lofty and high stomacke Seneca in his traged for God followeth at the backe the proude to punish them and resist them Who so through worldly desires therefore shall lift vp themselues against God must looke to haue God to resist them as an enemie and with his mighty power to withstande them for the Scripture teacheth that God resisteth the proude See Cyprian 1. lib. epist 3. fol. 7.
Seing then this is true let vs cast downe our proud lookes and hornes which are set vp on high and let vs with all humble reuerēce cleaue vnto the Lord that he may increase his heauenly graces in vs for he resisteth the proud but giueth grace vnto the humble And this I take to be the plaine meaning of the Apostle in these two verses Notwithstanding if any be of an other opinion I contend not Euery one may abound in his owne sence to edification For some expound it as I haue saide thus Thinke you that the Scripture saith in vaine the Spirite that dwelleth in you lusteth after enuie doe you thinke that the Scripture teacheth that wee are stirred vp to enuie by Gods spirite is his spirit a spirit of enuie of quarrelling of contention The spirite of God which dwelleth in you and whereby you are sealed vp to the day of redemption Ephes 4 moueth you not thereunto but rather the spirit of Sathan which was a murtherer from the beginning who is also that enuious man which soweth sedition debates Iohn 8. contentions braules and broiles hartburning and all mischiefe in the hearts of men If you thinke thus you Mat. 13. are deceaued for the Scripture offereth more grace and therefore saith God resisteth the proud c. Whereby as by a reason of contraries he proueth that Gods spirite is not cause of contentions which come of pride because he resisteth the proud and contentious and geueth grace to the humble Some others expound it in this wise Think you that the Scripture saith in vaine The spirite that dwelleth in you lusteth after enuie Thinke you that the Scripture saith in vaine That Gods spirite in you is iealous that it enuyeth that you should loue any other that you should geue your selues to the loue of the world Nay the Scripture saith not that in vaine For the Spirite of God is a ielous Spirite and taketh in euill parte that you shoulde forsake him to loue the world he enuieth that any part of your loue should be deriued from him to creatures seing-you are commanded to loue him with all your harts strength power might and all that is in you And if you say it is hard not at all to desire worldlie things and cleaue wholly to God I denie it not yet God geueth more grace vnto you whereby you shal be able to doe this They which thus expound it as many doe leaue out this whole sentence God resisteth the proude and geueth grace to the humble These being the common expositions and fathered vpon the best Authours thereof that which most agreeth with the circumstance of the place as me thinketh the first doeth let it runne for the most currante And thus much touching these verses the first part of this Chapter Now let vs pray c. Iames Chap. 4. verses 7. 8. Sermon 19. Verse 7 Submitte your selues to God resist the deuill and hee will flye from you 8 Drawe neere to God and he wil drawe neere to you cleanse your hands ye sinners and purge your heartes yee double minded These wordes conteine the secōd thing in this Chapter touching our duetie to God Which cōsisteth of 2. things 1. Submissiō to god wherein three things are noted Namely 1 What be commaundeth to The second place or part of the Chapter submit our selues to God 2. The contrarie to resiste the deuill 3. The reason why that hee might flie from vs. 2. Approching drawing nere to God wherein three thinges are to be considered Namely 1. What he commaundeth to drawe neere to God 2. What he promiseth to such as doe so that god wil draw neere to them 3. How it is done 1. By cleansing of hands 2. By purging of hearts THe holy Apostle James hauing now ended the first part of the Chapter concerning contention which in the ende of the former he had spoaken of and set downe the causes of contentions the lustes and desires of men fighting in their members and rendered the reasons and causes why mens desires are oftentimes without effect and finally answered the obiection which might haue concerning that matter beene made against him In the second place hee commeth to our duetie to God warde which thing the Apostle opposeth to the other vices before mencioned shewing that as in contention enuie ambitious and fleshly desires men follow the suggestions of Satan so ought they nowe to obey God and resist Satan the generall enemie of all mankinde and that with sure and certaine hope of victorie and finally to draw neere vnto God in integritie innocencie and puritie of their life Whereunto these two verses serue Now our dutie to God is here set downe in two thinges in submitting our selues to God and drawing Submission to God neere vnto him Concerning submission to God therin three things are to be noted 1. what is inioyned 2. the contrarie 3. the reason 1. The thing inioyned is submission to God then which nothing is or can be more acceptable or pleasant vnto him nothing more commendable among men For what doth God better accept of then of our holy obedience vnto him this is more acceptable to God then sacrifice this is more pleasant then the fatte of rammes This 1. Kings 15. duetie men are necessarilie to perfourme vnto God and vnto his sonne Iesus Christ to whom they are betrothed as to an husband God witnesseth by Ose his Prophet that he had maried the Saints vnto himselfe in the words which he vttered vnto his chosen people I haue maried thee vnto my Ose 2. Isai 54. 5. Ier. 31. 32. 2. Cor. 21. selfe in faithfulnes and thou shalt know the Lord. The Church is espoused vnto Iesus Christ therfore saint Paul saith I haue prepared you for one husbād to present you as a pure virgin vnto Christ Therefore as the Spouse and maried wife oweth her subiection submission and obedience vnto him whose wife she is and in all honestie duetifulnesse ought to applie her selfe to the will of her husbande euen so ought the Church and Saintes of God in all duetifull obedience to submit themselues to God and his sonne Iesus Christ For this cause Saint Ephe. 5. Paul instituteth and maketh a large comparison betwixt the wife and the Church Christ and the husbande that by the mutuall collation of the Church and the maried wife and the anologicall proportion betwixt them both the wife might learne obedience to her husband and the Church and Saints their subiection to God Whose onely worde must be the rule of our whole life whose will in al things we must obey To whose commandement we must be applyable which is our reuerende submission vnto God Laying therefore aside all enuie malice contention wrath indignation fighting quarrelling Whereunto wee are mooued by the contentious spirite of Satan wee must in all humilitie of our mindes submit our selues vnto God as the Apostle exhorteth Submit your selues to God Men submit themselues vnto
it his comming vnto them because by the giftes and graces thereof hee draweth neare vnto Mat. 28. ●0 the Saintes I will not leaue you comfortlesse but I will come vnto you not by bodily presence before the iudgement but by the graces of his spirite whereby he draweth neare dayly to his Church Thus hee drewe neare vnto the Apostles when in the day of Pentecost Acts 2. hee sent his Spirite in visible manner and fourme vnto them 4 God draweth neare to men by powring out his temporall benefites vppon them health wealth honour and sending them deliueraunce out of their trouble Thus he drewe neare to Israell whereof Moises speaketh What nation is so great whome the gods come Deut 4. Phil. 4. 5. Psal 69. 18 s Psal 119. 151 34. 13. 46. 1. so neare vnto them as the Lorde our God is neare vs in all that we call vnto him for Thus he drew neare to Moises Israel Dauid Hezekiah and the like 5 God draweth neare vnto man in offering his mercie shewing his fauour assisting with his helpe multiplying his louing kindnesse vnto them 6 God finally draweth neare vnto vs in a spirituall vnion with man through the incarnation of Iesus Christ whereby God is vnited vnto vs and wee to him in the vnion of the two natures in the person of Iesus Christ by which meane God dwelleth among vs and is Iohn 1. 1. Tim. 3. made manifest in the flesh as Saint Iohn and Saint Paul speake And therefore Christ Emmanuel Where then the Apostle sayth drawe neare to God and he will drawe neare to you he speaketh chiefly of Mat. 1. drawing neare by his grace fauour mercie who enlargeth his louing kindnesse towards all those which with reuerence and feare draw neare vnto him 3 These things thus set downe in the last place we are taught howe wee should drawe neare to God which the Apostle expresseth in these wordes Clense your Howe man draweth neere to God handes you sinners and pourge your heartes you double minded Which woordes howsoeuer they may seeme to others a newe or another exhortation yet to me they seeme orderly to follovv as the manner how we should drawe neare vnto God namely in puritie and sincerenesse of life To enlarge this circumstance a little we may consider that as God by many wayes draweth neare vnto vs so we by no lesse draw neare vnto him 1 Men draw neare to God by outward profession though it be not alwayes in sinceritie of heart thus did the people of Israel in outwarde profession and with their mouthes drawe neare to God which as a token Isai 29. 58. 2. 3. of hypocrisie is condemned God therefore speaking there-against sayeth This people commeth neare vnto mee with their mouth and honour mee with their lippes but their hearts haue they remooued farre from mee Against which Jeremie breaketh out thou hast Iere. 12. planted them and they haue taken roote they growe and bring foorth fruite thou art neare in their mouth and farre from their reynes Thus inueyed hee against such as in mouth professed God but denyed him in heart which hee meaneth by reynes This is that hypocrysie worthily condemned by Paul in wordes they Tit. 1. professe they knowe God but haue denied him in deed beeing abhominable disobedient and to euerie good worke reprobate Thus men in the outward profession of the Gospell though sometimes it bee in hypocrisie are said to draw neare to God as now most men doe 2 Men also drawe neare to God by fayth in Iesus Christ whereby they haue enteraunce vnto God Of which kinde the holy Apostle Saint Paul speaketh being iustified by faith wee haue peace with God through Rom. 5. our Lorde Iesus Christ by whome we haue also accesse through faith vnto this grace wherein we stande Which grace is to be reconciled vnto GOD and knitte in a Ephes 2. moste holie league of heauenly and spirituall fellovvship vvith him This in another place is also mencioned vvhere to the Church of Ephesus he auoucheth that by faith both Ievve and Gentile haue accesse and entraunce to the father by one Spirite A little after in like manner sayeth Saint Paul by our Lorde Iesus Christ haue vvee boldnesse and entraunce vvith confidence by faith in him Ephes 3. By fayth in the mediation of Christ vve come boldly Heb. 4. vnto god vvhereunto the Authour to the Hebrues exhorteth VVe haue not an high priest vvhich cannot bee touched vvith the feeling of our infirmities but vvas in all things tempted in like sort yet vvithout sinne Let vs therefore go boldely vnto throne of grace that Heb. 10. vvee may receyue mercie and finde grace to helpe in time of neede In another place the same authour speaking of this drawing neare to God writeth and exhorteth in this wise Seeing we haue an high Priest which is ouer the house of God let vs drawe neare with a true heart in assuraunce of faith sptinckled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Let vs sayeth he draw neare with a true heart in assurance of faith Finally shewing the verie high way which leadeth vnto God and whereby wee draw neare and come vnto him hee maketh that to bee faith whereby the holy fathers haue approched and drawne neare vnto him whereof hee thus concludeth withour fayth it is impossible to please God For hee which commeth to Heb. 11. God must beleeue that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that seeke him VVherefore as through infidelitie we were estraunged from God so by faith are wee reconciled vnto him and knit into a misticall coniunction with God whereby we drawe neare vnto him To trust therefore perfectly in the grace of God by Iesus Christ assuredly to beleeue the promises of God made vnto vs in his beloued to repose all our hope of happinesse vpon God through the mediation and merits of Christ crucified to looke for eternall saluation from God by fayth in the onely passion of our blessed Sauiour and so in our consciences to haue peace with God and bee reconciled vnto him is another and second way whereby we drawe neare vnto God 3 Men drawe neare to God also by prayer wherby we ascend as it were to heauen and approch neare to the presence of God which is as it were a paire of wings to carie vs to him whereby as by a key saith Saint Augustine 226. Serm. de tempo Ecclus. 35. 15 the doore of heauen is opened and our praier ascendeth to him the mercie of God descendeth to vs. Thus the Patriarchs had their passage and entraunce to God Thus the Prophet Moises in the departing out of Aegypt and in the encountering in battle with the Amalakites drew neare to God Thus Iosua drew neare to him when Exo. 14. 17 by his praier the Sunne stoode still for the space of two Acts 12. dayes vntill his enimies were
Ps 90. 17. Ier. 25. 14. Lamentat 3. 64. helpe of the hande as the instrument to bring them to passe as robberies theft picking stealing murther oppression beating bribery corruption such like Vnder the word hand S. Iames comprising the whole life of man all his outward actions requireth such as would draw neare to God to cleanse their hands cleanse your hands you sinners Which in effect is the same which the Prophet Isai 1. exhorted the people of Israell vnto who teaching them information of their liues exhorteth them to vvash themselues and make themselues cleane to take away the euill of their workes from before the eyes of the Lorde The princely Prophete in like manner shewing who they Psalm 24. were which by entring into the Lordes sanctuary drawe neare vnto God saith they were such as were purged from the filthie soile of this world whose hands were innocent and whose hearts pure He that hath innocent hands saith he and a pure heart and hath not lift vp his minde to vanitie nor sworne to deceaue his neighbour he shall receiue a blessing from the Lord and righteousnes from the God of his saluation Cleansing and washing of handes signifieth the innocencie of our outwarde life therefore Mat. 27. when the Iewes besought Pilate to put Iesus to death to shew himself guiltlesse and innocent therein he called for water and washed his hand before them and said I am guiltlesse of this mans bloud looke you vnto it To which sence this of James soundeth clense your handes you sinners But least we should thinke it enough outwardly to be clensed as hypocrites do albeit out harts remayne full of all corruption and filthines therefore to the cleansing of the handes which containeth the reformation of our outward life the Apostle ioyneth the purging of their hearts as an inward reformation in all such as by puritie Purging of heart and sincerenes of life will draw neare to God Which thing he doth most necessarily For the heart Mat. 15. is the fountaine of all our actions from whence all wickednesse euill proceedeth as to the Iewes our Sauiour auouched Which when holy Dauid perceaued he desirous Psal 51. to reforme his life acceptably to God desireth that he might haue a new heart and a right spirite with in him And to this purpose almighty God himselfe in the people of Israell requireth not onely the puritie of the outward workes but the innocencie of their hearts also and Deut. 10. Ierem. 4. therefore willeth them to circumcise the foreskinne of their hearts And generally in his prophetes he requireth the purging of their hearts that their consciences mindes and inward partes might be purged from euill workes that in bodie and soule in life and heart they might serue him and glorifie his name Saint Paul seeing that true innocencie and puritie Rom. 12. must be first grounded in the hearts without reformation wherof al is hypocrisie both to the church of Rome Ephes 4. and of Ephesus also entreating of true reformation and sanctification willeth that they be renewed in the spirite of their mindes Lactantius in many wordes shewing Lib. 6. c. 23. that the heart and minde is the fountaine of all wickednes and that thereis no puritie or chastitie when the hart is not purged saith Howbeit the body be stained and defiled with no euill yet is there not therefore perfect chastitie if the minde be incestious neither may that be counted vndefiled chastitie when lust hath defiled the cōscience Wherefore as in perticular there is no pure chastitie though our outward man be cleane vnlesse our affections of heart be pure in like manner euen so generally there is no true innocencie though the outward man be reformed vnlesse the hart be also purged before God Saint Iames to remoue all hypocrisie from men requireth in such as will drawe neare to GOD in puritie of life not onely that their handes bee cleansed but also their heartes purged that both inwardly and outwardly they might bee holy Now that S. Iames exhorteth men to cleanse their hands and purge their heartes as other Scriptures also speake we may not take him as if this cleansing and purging were in our selues or of our selues for there is no 2. Cor. 3. motion or inclination naturally in our selues to any thing that is good for of our selues as of our selues we are not able to thinke a good thought much lesse to performe a good action pleasant and acceptable to God Yea all our sufficiencie is from God who worketh in vs both to will and also to performe according to his good pleasure Philip. 2. And the Lord God is saide in Moses to purge all our euill and wicked affections to circumcise and purge the heart Deut. 30. of his people Which is the truth of Gods promise who promised by the mouth of his seruaunt Ezechiell to giue Ezech. 11. 36. them new harts to take their harde stonie hearts from them and giue them hearts of flesh which might be reformed Wherefore when Israel and Ephraim the people Jerem 31. of God saw that it was not in themselues to returne repent and draw neare to God they desire to haue repenting hearts and relenting mindes from him and therefore pray in this wise to God Turne thou me ô Lord and I shal be turned conuert thou me and I shal be conuerted for thou art the Lord my God In like manner in the Lamentations the saints church say to God Turne thou Lament 5. psal 8. 7. vs vnto thee and we shal be turned Which Dauid wisely considered when he desired reformation and correction of his heart from God Purge me saith he to God with Psal 51. Isope and I shal be cleane wash mee and I shal be vvhither then snovve And a little after Create in me a cleane verse 10. heart ô God and renevv a right spirite in mee So that the cleansing of our handes and purging of our hea●ts are not in our ovvne povver but are vvrought by God in the Saints Why do the Prophets thē vvill vs to do these things Why doth Saint James here vvill sinners to cleanse their handes and double minded persons to purge their heartes Surely to teach vs that when God by his Spirite goeth about to reforme vs we must not drawe backward but in all things geue token of true repentance continually shewe foorth the fruites of the spirite in the whole course but especially in the reformation of our liues And this is the meane or maner how we may draw neere vnto God euen by cleansing our hands and purging our hearts before him These things being so if then we submit our selues to God if we resist the deuill if we drawe neere to God in puritie of our liues if with open eyes we embrace light flie darkenes then shal the sunne of righteousnes shine in our heartes then shall Christ Iesus
Diabolus a slaunderer an accuser This father and patrone of all euill speach spared Gen. 3. not God himselfe but spake euill of him to Adam and Euah in paradise hath God saith he said you shal die nay but you shall not die for God knoweth that at what time you eate your eyes shal be opened and yee shal be as Gods knowing good and euill Thus he sought to haue falsified the truth of God thus he brought vp an euill reporte of God himselfe as inuying the state of Adam thus he shronke not ne sticked to speake euil of God who Psal 31. Psal 145. is the God of truth and in whom there is no vnrighteousnesse at all who is faithfull in all his sayings and holy in all his workes as the Scripture teacheth This enemie of God and man with like malice set Iob 1. vpon holy Iob the righteous person accusing him as a temporizer and seruer of time a counterfait and hypocrite in hearte and such a one as serued God for profite onely Wherefore of him thus speaketh satan to God what doth Iob serue thee for naught haste thou not hemmed and hedged him in on euery side haste thou not blessed the workes of his handes and his substaunce is increased in the lande but stretch out thine hande and touch all that he hath and he will blaspheme thee to thy face thus he sought to bring Iob into dislike and disfauour with God thus hee brought vp an euill reporte of the most holy patriarke thus he accused him of hypocrisie who serued the Lorde vnfainedly from his heart thus he impeached his credite like whom there was none vpō the earth a iust man and vpright fearing God eschewing euill This is he that begitteth all slaunderous reprochfull persons all euill speakers and backbiters of their brethren he it is who rayseth these motions in our heartes and bloweth the flame of these affections in the mindes of the wicked in whose steps who so treadeth whose example who so followeth whose practise who so expresseth whose suggestion who so obeyeth therein may not be reputed as the seruant of Christ but the slaue of satan not the childe of God but the sonne of the deuill not the heire of life but the firebrande of hell there to suffer torments with their ghostly father the slaunderer of the brethren for euer vnlesse they heartely repent themselues of the sinne and leaue the iniquitie wherunto they are giuen This is that poison of Aspis the venemous serpent Psal 140. which lieth and lurketh vnder the lippes of the reprochfull slaunderer this is that deadly poison wherewith the Apostle saith the tongues of men are infected these are Iames 3. those biting and cruell beastes who slay many with the venim of their lippes of whom Diogenes the philosopher Diogenes speaketh who being demanded what beasts did bite most daungerously answered of tame beastes the flatterer of wild beastes the slaunderer biteth soorest These wound and slay at hande and farre of at home and abroad the quicke the dead these spare neither prince nor people neither priest nor prelate neither friend nor foe rich nor poore base nor honorable man nor woman one nor another these destroy whole houses and families as Doeg 1. Kings 22. by his slaunder caused the familie of the priestes at Nob to be destroyed Haman his slaunder caused sentence of condemnation Hester 3. to goe out against the whole familie of the Ecclus. 28. Iewes these haue destroied such as haue bene at peace among themselues Therfore Sirach exhorteth men to abhorre the slaunderer and double tongued for as much as such haue destroied many that were at peace and vnitie among themselues This hath disquieted many and driuen them from nation to nation cast downe strong cities and ouer throwen the houses of mighty men and brought downe the strength of mighty people bene the decay of many nations this is that setteth princes at variance and armed mighty men one against another for the froward person soweth strife and a tale bearer maketh diuision Prou. 16. among Princes saith Salomon See more 3. chapt James v. 8. How great then is the sinne which God condemneth Dauid excludeth from the tabernacle of God our Sauiour counteth for cruell murther Saint Paul shutteth out from the presence of God in his kingdome S. Peter reproueth and which worketh so great euill to the children of men The common causes for which men speake euill Causes of euil speach one of another are chiefly these 1. Men slaunder speake euill thereby to be reue●ned of ●uch as eyther haue done them hurte or else are thought to haue done them iniurie Thus men and women not able with violence to make their parte a good vse their slaunderous tongues as instruments and weapons of their reuenge thus the desire of reuenge which burneth boileth in our breasts stirreth vs vp to speake euil and to slander those on whom wee would be auenged Here hence it is that hauing sustained iniurie at the handes of men and otherwise not able to be reuenged wee to reuenge our quarrels and repay the iniurie giue ouer our tongues to reuile to slaunder misreporte backbite and speake euil of them by whome the iniuries are done and committed and how commonly this cause moueth vs hereunto our selues are better then all witnesses and dayly experience sheweth more plainely then that wee ought in any wise to doubte thereof 2. As desire to be auenged pricketh men forward to this mischiefe so also desire of gaine moueth men therevnto for we see sometimes that the bringing of others by slaunder into contempt may breed our cōmoditie wherewith all we moued giue ouer our tongues as weapons instruments of slaunder and this thing maketh men not only to speake euil of others before priuate persons but also in the presence of princes Doeg might seeme to haue 1. Kings 22. respected this matter in his slaunderous accusation of Dauid and Achimclech with the Priestes of Nob to Saul the king from whom he expected not onely greate fauour but great profit also at the kings hands by this accusatiō But without peraduenture Siba the seruaunt of Mephibosecke 2. Kings 16. had regard in his slaunder to his gaine and commoditie when he tolde Dauid the king that Mephiboseck the son of Ionathan in Dauids persequutiō by Absolon his son had said that that day the house of Israel would restore to him the kingdome of his father This cause moued Ptolomeus 1. Machab. 11. chap. the king of Egipt to forge and frame a foolish accusation to Demetrius against Alexander that he sought his death would haue slain him that thus by bringing him into discredite he might the better inuade his kingdom the desire wherof moued him to slaunder being the onely thing he aimed at shotte at and looked vnto as the thing sheweth In Princes courtes nothing is more cōmon or customable then for men cleer
of another when to defame and discredite one another we forge we faine we frame and deuise false things against our brethren to bring thē into hatred that we only might be accounted of Wherein wee play the partes of malicious persons who bedaube and bedashe with dirte the faces of other folke that we might seeme the fairer and soyle slurrie file the garmentes of our neighboures that ours might seeme the gayer and gallanter Thus by false reports and slaunderous speeches thus by reproachfull contumelie and backbiting men defile the name fame and credit of men and impeach their estimation that themselues may appeare and seeme the wiser iuster honester worthier in all things And thus by reporting false thinges of our brethren to discredite them we speake euill of them 2 Neither thus onely speake men euill one of another but also when they amplifie exaggerate aggrauate and make the infirmities and faults of men farre greater by their reports then indeede they be to make them odious in the sight of men as when our neighbour is something choloricke and hastie to report him to bee so madde furious and headstrong that none can abide it If a man onely salute a woman by the way to say hee talked with her of adulterie If our btother smite in anger to say he would haue slaine and murthered When by our report we make the infirmities of men greater and farre more hainous then they be indeede this is euill speaking and worthely to be condemned And it is vsuall among men now to discredite and make other folke odious in the sight and hearing of others to amplifie their faultes and make them farre greater then they are indeede this is also slaunder this is euill speach against our neighbour Thus doe eloquent Sycophants thus doe rethoricall slaunderers thus doe backebiting whisperers thus doe false accusers of their neighbours who make euery thing worse then it is in deede and by reporting increase their crimes this ought also to be auoyded of the Saints of God who ought not so much as in this wise to speake euill of their brethren 3 Besides this men speake euill of their breathren when they blase abroade the secrete sinnes and infirmities of their brethren when they shoulde haue couered them in loue onely to discredite and defame the offenders Salomon making the detecting and reuealing of the Pro. 11. 20. c. v. 1 secreate sinnes of their brethren a parte and branch of euill speach and slaunder saith that hee that goeth about as a slanderer discouereth a secrete but hee that is of a faithfull heart concealeth a matter Wherence it appeareth that to detect open and make knowen the secrete sinnes of our brethren which in loue wee should couer is the point of a backbiter and slaunderer and one that speaketh euill of his neighbour to discouer secret sinnes when he needeth not to publish priuie infirmities when he should hide them through loue to blaze abroade the vnknowen offences of men when he is not thereunto in any wise enforced and that to the ende hee may thereby diffame them and discredite them among men What els 4 Againe men sinne by speaking euill of their brethren when they depraue the good deedes and well doings of them when they extenuate and make lesse then in deede they be the good qualities in men or call their vertues by the names of the vices neer thereunto In this manner men sinne when of the good deedes of men they say they were done to euil end vpon euill intent by vnlawfull meanes not in sinceritie and loue to vertue but in colourable manner and in fraudulent and deceitfull hypocrisie Thus did Sathan by deprauing the seruice of God in Job speake euill of him to God when he saide that Iob serued God for gaine not sincerly Thus the discōtented 1. Iob. Momy of the world and finders of faults with euery thing which them sealues do not speake euill who calumniate and depraue euery thing be it neuer so wel don of vs. If there be any thing done well to the countrie and common wealth they depraue it and say it was done not for loue of countrie but for praises and fauour of the people if any exployte be done in ware they say it was not for loue to peace but for desire of renowne among men if when men labour faithfully in the Church men say it is for their owne glorie and not for the glorie of God if when men be deuoute we should say it is for a fashion not in sinceritie when men call the valiant man bolde the iust rigorous seuere the prudent craftie the wary suttle the liberal nottuous and prodigal he that speaketh in defence of right inprudente and licentious Hee that calleth the sparie miserable or the temperate wretched the peaceable doltish or the patient cowardly slaundereth in like manner Not thus only but also when men excel in learning be singulare for vertue renowmed for faith or any such gifte and grace of Gods spirites To deminish and extenuate these things and make them by our enuious reportes far lesse then in deede they are what is this then but euil speache here condemned wherefore as to exaggerate and amplifie the vices so to extenuate the vertues and good gifts in the Saints is slaunder and euill speach also 5 Moreouer men speake euill though they speake that which is true touching the sinnes and infirmities of their brethren when they speake those things not for loue of the truth but for the slaundering of the person which hath offended Fot as that Iudge which pronounceth sentence of iudgement and condemnation agaynst Basil reg●l●● Monacho cap. 33. a malefactour yet not for loue of iustice but for an olde grudge agaynst the man is therein no iust iudge but a murtherer before God albeit he do that which iustice prescribeth and requireth also euen so when men report euen true things of their brethrē not for hatred of the sinne and loue they beare to the truth but for the malice they haue to the men and to the ende thereby they may discredite them are not therein to be counted tellers of a trueth but rather bitter backebiters slaunderers and euill speakers though they report no more then is true because they doe it not for the loue of the trueth but to the slaunder and defaming of the persons of their brethren 6 Finally this euill is committed vvhen in the pride of our heartes vvee vvoulde haue all men liue according to our pleasure and will which when they doe not wee arrogantly condemne them we slaunderously reporte of them wee maliciously censure them wee rashly iudge them in which sense and of which kinde our Apostle chiefly here speaketh To condemne those vvhich daunce not after our Pype to speake euill of such as will not bee ledde at our pleasures to reporte otherwise then vvell of such as will not liue and doe in all thinges as vvee vvoulde haue them this is the mischiefe
acceptable sacrifices vnto him whom they serue in holines John 4. Rom. 12. Luck 1. and righteuousnes al the dayes of their life do not alwaies vse it in vvord of mouth but giue the consent of their hearts there vnto And in all things and at all times to repeate the vvordes might seeme vaine superstition and babling follie But the spirite of God in this place is vehemently caried avvay vvith iuste condemnation against such as vvith out regard had to the good pleasure of God or respect had to the mortalytie of our nature vvould haue all times seasons things and euents to serue them at their wills for which cause in the pride of their hartes they determine presumtuously of things to come and say in their vaine confidence to day or to morow will we go into such a cittie and there continue a yeare by and sell and gaine which thing the Apostle condemneth and correcteth and in stead thereof teacheth vs to say If the Lord will and if we liue we will doe this thing or that thing 4 The Apostle hauing thus reproued the sinne and corrected this euil among mē in the fourth place he repeateth the same vice and mischiefe with reprehension although in other words yet to like purpose and therefore saith You reioyce in your boasting all such reioycing is euill you doe not onely conceaue such vaine confidence in your heartes but you also vtter it in your wordes neither doe you only vtter it in wordes and in your speaches but also you boast of your sayings you reioyce in your boastings all such reioycing is euill In presuming thus of your selues in the vaine confidence of your owne heartes in the lewde libertie of your tongues wherby you derogate from Gods prouidence and arrogate to your selues you reioyce but all such reioycing is euill And in that he saith not all reioycing is euill but all such reioycing is euill it is apparant that he condemneth not all reioycing but onely vaine reioycing conceaued of the trust and confidence we haue in worldly thinges For otherwise God permitted yea willed and commaunded Deut. 12. his people to reioyce as the Scripture teacheth vs. By his seruant Moses he charged Israel his people that they should not eate their offeringes within their owne gates but in the place where the Lorde had appointed they their children their seruantes and the Leuite that was within their gates and so to reioyce before the Lord Deut. 16. their God in all they put their hands vnto To which end and purpose they were commanded to keepe the feast of weekes which was Whitsontide and therein also to reioice before the Lord through the viewe of the plentifull encrease which the Lorde God had geuen vnto the earth Other Feasts also as the Feast of vnleauēed bread the Feast of Tabernacles at the gathering in of their haruest wherein it was alowable and permitted them to reioyce Exod. 23. The Prophet Dauid often exhorteth to reioicing therfore he aduiseth the people to sing ioyfully vnto the Lord Psal 81. their strength and to sing laud vnto the God of Iacob to take the song to bring foorth the timbrell the pleasaunt Psal 122. harpe with the lute or viole Dauid himselfe was not void of this affection but rather therewithall rauished hee breaketh out I reioyced when the people said we wil go into the house of the Lord. To which affection as in some respects lawfull he stirreth vp his people and godly Subiects O come let vs sing vnto the Lord let vs heartelie Psal 95. reioyce in God the strength of our saluation The Sauiour of the world euen Iesus Christ the righteous commendeth Mat. 5. reioycing vnto his in miserie and exhorteth thē in the midst and among their greatest afflictions persecutions to reioyce Whose example the elect vessell of God Saint Paul imitating aduiseth the elect seruants of Christ in their Rom. 12. troubles to reioyce Which thing of himselfe and the rest of his brethren he freely and liberally confesseth When Rom. 5. 1. Cor. 4 Ephes 5 he speaketh vnto the Church and Saintes of Ephesus exhorting them to be filled with the spirite and to sing to themselues in psalmes hymnes and spirituall songs making melodie in their hearts vnto God Doeth he not cōmend vnto them the affection of reioysing When hee willeth the Saints of Philippi to reioyce in the Lord alwaies what els commendeth he then the affection of reioycing Philip. 4. What that the Prophet willeth that neither the wise man Ierem. 9. glorie and vainly reioyce in his wisdome neither the rich man in his riches nor the strong man in his strength but that he that reioyceth should reioyce and glorie in the Lord Doeth he not condemne one and commend another kinde of reioycing What that Christ willeth his not to reioyce that the deuils were subiecte vnto them but Luke 10. that they should reioyce that their names were written in the booke of life What that hee exhorteth the Church against the day of iudgement to lift vp their heads and to reioyce because their redemption approacheth Doeth he not commend the affection of ioy as lawfull in some Luke 11. measure in the Saints of God What that Paul beseacheth Philip. 2 the Saints of Philippi in Macedonia by their vnitie and religious consent to fulfill his ioy What that S. Iohn reioiceth Iohn 2. 3. Epist ouer the saints because they walked in the trueth argueth it not that there is a ioy and reioycing lawfull in the people of God To reioyce therefore in the aide and helpe of Gods spirite and in the presence of his power to reioyce in his gifts and graces either vpon our soules or bodies plentitifully poured moderately to reioice in our publicke peace and priuate quietnes in our obedient wiues and tractable children in our trustie seruants and faithfull friendes or the like tokens of Gods fauour towardes vs so that all confidence be wholy reposed in him that is the authour and fountaine of all graces and goodnes is not forbidden the mirth of their hearts proceading from a good conscience in the holy Ghost the ioy of their mindes lightened by assurance of the mercies of God in Iesus Christ the affection of reioycing stirred vp raysed in the inward parts of man through duetifull vew and thankfull remembrance of the blessings of God towardes vs as tokens of his loue is not condemned by S. Iames nor heere forbidden the Saints of God Which the very circumstance of the place doeth teach vs for inueying against the vaine confidence of proud persons who without regard had to the will of God and the shortnesse of their owne liues say within themselues and sometimes vtter their speaches vnto other To morrow we will goe to such a Citie and there continue a yeare and by and sell and gaine he inferreth this speach now you reioyce in your boasting all such reioycing is euill
they shal be deuoured of hellish torments So that both here and there their owne consciences shall feede and gnaw vpon them and the recordation and remembraunce of these corruptible vanities wherein they onely trusted shall as it were continually eate them vp and consume them And this is no small parte of their miserie and finall destruction which he denounceth against them for the which in despayre and without hope they must weepe howle as they are foretolde by the holy and blessed Apostle The third and last thing wherin their miserable destruction 3. Thing wherin their destruction calamitie standeth and finall calamitie consisteth is that they haue heaped vp treasure for the last dayes These are the treasures of the wicked which shall not helpe but hurte them in the daie of the Lord. For thus prophane rich mē hourd and heape vp treasure of Gods iuste wrath heauy displeasure and deserued indignation against themselues in 2. Cor. 5. the daie of vvrath and indignation vvhen all men shall stande before the throne of Iesus Christe to giue an accompte Rom. 2. of their vvorkes and to receaue according to that they haue done in their bodies bee it good or euill Then shall they lye open on euery side to the iuste iudgements of God and wil they nill they they shal heare the fearefull sentence of destruction against them Then shall their sinnes be reuiued in the midst of their bowels then shall their consciences finde no reste then shall they day and night feele death working in their hearts and hell shall stande before their eyes yea sinne shal be at their right hande and satan at their lefte destruction shal be without to consume them and the immortall worme of conscience within their soule to gnawe them God aboue to condemne them the deuill beneath to take and carie them to fire and brimstone in that bottomlesse lake that burneth for euer wherein their fire faileth not and Isay 66. their vvorme dieth not This is the treasure which prophane riche men lay vp for themselues against the latter dayes Some expound these wordes otherwise you haue heaped vp treasure against the latter day that is in these latter daies wherein you should watch and pray continually that you might be thought worthy to escape the Luk. 21. wrath to come when you should seriously expect and looke for the appearing and comming of Christ in glorie to giue iudgement against all men and to rebuke all Jude 14. 15. the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes which they haue vngodly committed and all their cruell speaking which vvicked sinners haue spoken against him you giue your selues to heaping hourding vp of riches as if there should be no end eyther of your life or of the world it selfe and the nearer you grovve to the end of the vvorld the more couetous you are you heape vp treasure for your selues against the latter dayes what wickednesse is this Couetousnes ought alvvaies and at all times to be auoided as the roote and mother of all wickednesse but 1. Tim. 6. most especially towards the cōming of Iesus Christ least by worldly carefulnes vve become forgetfull of his comming therfore our Sauiour Christ preparing his disciples against his comming in glorious maiestie to sit in iudgement and to pronounce sentence against all the worlde Luc. 21. aduiseth them aboue other thinges that their heartes be not ouercome and oppressed with dronkennes surfetting and the cares of this world least he come vpon them vnawares notwithstanding euen against this time to be dronken and drowned in couetous desires is great vngodlines And thus doe men heape vp treasure for the last daies Some hereof make this sence Goe to now you rich men you thinke to heape vp riches enough to serue you vnto the last day and to the very ende of the world and therein shewe your extreame couetousnes and vngodlines For what a sinne is this that men shoulde thinke themselues able by themselues to heape and boarde vp enough to serue vnto the last dayes and to the end of the world But to augment and increase their miserie and to paint out their destruction in more liuely and in more fresh colours the Apostle may seeme to haue meant of the heaping vp of the treasures of Gods vengeance and iudgements against them in the latter daies in the day of iudgement And these are the particular circumstances which out of this place in my iudgement may bee gathered whereof thus saith our Apostle Go to now you rich men weepe and howle for the miseries which shall come vpon you your riches are corrupt your garments are moath-eaten your siluer and golde is cankred and the rust therof witnesseth against you and shall eate your flesh as it were fire ye haue heaped vp treasure for the last dayes God for his mercies sake graunt vnto vs such grace from his holy Spirite that wee thereby first seeking the kingdome of heauen and the righteousnes thereof may according to his mercifull promise obtaine all other things necessarie for this present life and that we throgh his speciall grace being risen in all fruites of righteousnes and workes of true sanctification with Christ may seeke the things which are aboue where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God and effectually setting our affections vpon heauenly things and not vpon thinges vpon the earth may also so put our trust and confidence in the Lord that if riches increase and multiplie vnto vs by his goodnes yet we may not set our hearts vpon them but that euen in this life we may with all our might maine lay vp for our selues treasures in heauen where neither rust nor moath doeth corrupt and where theeues breake not in and steale least that we setting our affections with prophane persons vpon vncertaine riches thereby wee treasure and heape vp for our selues treasure of Gods iust iudgements and wrathfull displeasure and so be subiect to this sharpe commination and threatening of finall destruction From which he deliuer vs that suffered bitter death vpō the crosse for vs euen Iesus Christ our Sauiour To whom with the father the holy ghost be praise in the great congregation of the saints now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter 5. verses 4. 5. 6. Sermon 24. Verse 4 Behold the hire of the Labourers which haue reaped your fieldes which is of you kept back by fraud crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lorde of hostes 5 Ye haue liued in pleasure on the earth in wantonnes yee haue nourished your hearts as in the day of slaughter 6 You haue condemned killed the iust and he hath not resisted you IN these wordes are reckoned vp the sinnes and euils of prophane rich men for which this so dreadful a destruction is denounced against them And it is the second branch of the first part of this Chap. in particular The euils and
giuen vnto the Lord that he is the Lord of hostes as 1. c. v. 6. 8. 9. 10. 11. 14 2. c. v. 2. 4. 7. 8 ch 3. v. 1. 5. 7. 10. 11. 14. 17 c. 4. v. 1. 3. And innumerable the like places in holy Scriptures Whereunto our Apostle according to the phrase of Scripture respecting to note the power of God and his hablenes to bring destruction vpō the prophane rich men of the world for detaining holding backe the wages of the hireling affirmeth that the voice of the detained wages crieth and is gone vp into the eares of the Lord of hosts Which place containeth no small comfort vnto the poore afflicted saints of God in that the Lord is called the Lord of hostes who being mighty in power hauing all the creatures in heauen earth at a bay and vseth them at his will as his hoste armie protesteth professeth himselfe to be the protectour and defence of his seruaunts S. Iames therfore partly for the terrour of the wicked who in due time shall feele the waight of his reuenging hand and partly for the comforte of his afflicted seruaunts whose wages wicked men holde backe by fraude calleth almighty God the Lord of hostes as hauing a power alwaies prepared and an armie euermore in a readinesse to fight against his enemies Now if the cries of their detained wages which worke in our bodily and earthly haruest be entred into the eares of the Lord of hostes which of wicked persons is helde backe by fraude and therefore heare so heauie a sentence of endlesse destruction against them how much more fearefull iudgement shal be pronounced against them vnder how wofull wretched condition are they who by fraude or by force detaine withhold and keepe backe the hyre and wages of them that labour in the heauenly Mat. 9. Mat. 10. Mat. 20. and spirituall haruest of the Lord who sowe the forrowes of your heartes with the diuine seede of the worde of truth and should reape the encrease of their laboures with great ioyfulnes which are Gods labourers sent into Heb. 13. the haruest of the worlde to gather in many soules into the Lordes barnes and to fill his garners with the spirites of the Saints This mē care not for in these daies who do not only withhold from the ministers and preachers of the word of God which labour in the spiritual haruest of the Lord those wages that hire which by them is due vnto them but also endeuour by all meanes to take that hire from them which many yeares past for this end hath beene giuen that there being no hire no reward no wages or at the least very little proposed they might discourage all from labouring in the Lords vineyard might bring in barbarisme darke ignorance into the church of Christ And I would to God they did not tempt this matter who would otherwise seeme most zealous to Gods glorie and as it were chiefe men in the Church of Christ God for Christes sake graunt that the venim of this poyson sinke not into the heartes of princes and men in authoritie for then shall there be nothing to be looked for but desolation miserie wretchednes extreame contempt and vtter subuertion of the glorious gospell which euill be farre from vs and our posteritie now and for euer Amen The first euill then in this place condemned and for which this sentence of iudgement is gone out against the prophane riche men of the worlde is their fraudulent detaining and withholding of their labourers wages the crie whereof entred into the eares of the Lorde of hosts This seconde euill and sinne for which the Apostle 2. Euill or sinne in the wicked threateneth their destruction to the wicked is their sensualitie and carnall life which consisteth briefly in three things 1. Pleasure 2. Wantonnesse 3. Riotousnes and excessiue banquetting you haue liued in pleasure on the earth and in wantonnesse you haue nourished your harts as in a day of slaughter Pleasure heere signifieth the deliciousnesse of men in this life whereunto they giue themselues that they faring deliciously euerie daie may spende their time and life in pleasure like Epicures by the which they are not onely condemned as iniurious vnto others but also are accused as mispending that which they detaine from their workemen vpon their owne pleasure and delights Such pleasure the men of the first world gaue thēselues vnto such was the pleasure and delicacie of the Sodomites Mat. 24. Ezech. 16. for these gaue themselues to eating to drinking to pleasure and daintinesse of their liues and so liued in pleasure vpon the earth Which is that euill condēned by Salomon Eccles. 2. when men withhold nothing from their soules but giue them whatsoeuer their hearts or eies desire withdrawing themselues from no ioy nor pleasure Who encourage one another to the fulfilling of their lustes Come let vs Wised 2. inioy the pleasures that are present let vs cheerefully vse the creatures as in youth lette vs fill our selues with costly wine and oyntments let not the flower of life passe by vs let vs crowne our selues with rose buddes before they be weathered let vs be partakers of our wantonnesse let vs leaue some token of our pleasures in euery place where we come for this is our portion and our lot These are such as S. Paul mencioneth whose belly is their God Philip. 3. whose glory is to their shame being carnally minded who imitate follow the exāple of the rich glutton who Luc. 16. fared deliciously euery day they eat they drinke they rest they sleepe they giue thēselues to idlenes in all things take their pleasure wherin their sensualitie appeareth Thē which there is nothing more dangerous or pernicious in men in so much that the very heathen folke and philosophers haue said that it is not onely dangerous but altogether vnworthy the excellencie of man The Saints of God ought to remēber with themselues how far it is frō duty thereby the holy garmēt which we haue put on in the day of baptisme is stained thereby the tēple of the holy ghost which are the bodies of Christians is polluted defiled with the filthines of satan in thē faith patience tēperance modesty iustice all the rest of christian vertues should appeare all which that filthy strumpet pleasure putteth out of place whereunto rich men for the most parte giue themselues and therefore are condemned by the Apostle 2. Their sensualitie also sheweth it selfe in the wantonnes of their liues wherby carnal vncleanes is vnderstood as S. Paul to the Romanes walke honestly as in the day Rom. 13. time not in drunkennesse and surfetting not in chambering and wantonnes wher by chambering and wantonnes is vnderstood that effect which riseth of chambering and wantonnes as venerie fleshly vncleannes therunto also most rich mē are giuē For riches minister matter of liuing deliciously delicious liuing pricketh forward
his will but by voluntarie offering of himselfe because his time was then come and standing in the iudgement hall examined and apposed concerning his doctrine by the high priest whom he willed to aske such as had heard him speake and preach for which answere hee was smitten of a seruant of the high priests though in minde he put vp the iniurie and in bodie was now at their pleasures yet in speach and worde hee withstoode the iniurie when hee saide to his smiter If I haue spoken euill beare witnesse of euill If well why smitest thou me Saint Paul beeing smitten on the face at the vniust commaundement of the Acts 23. high priest Ananias resisted in wordes that iniurie aud vniust fact and sayde the Lorde shall strike thee thou painted wall fittest thou here to iudge me according to the law and commaundest thou me contrarie to the law to be smitten Saint Augustine writing to Marcellinus diligently Epistol S. Mercel weighing the precept of Christ and of Paul and carefully comparing their examples with their doctrine witnesseth that the precepts of our Sauiour and the Apostle ought rather to be referred to the pacience and quietnesse of our hearts in the bearing of iniuries then to our outward actions and behauiour affirming that in these cases outwardly wee ought to haue greater care of our oppressours profite then of their willes and pleasures concluding that by the precept of not resisting euill in holy Scripture contained wee are prepared in minde and heart euermore to more and more iniuries but outwardly that it is lawfull either to doe or to say that which may most profite the oppressour and best keepe him from doing further iniurie As Christ and Paul his Apostle in minde and heart prepared to death it selfe yet outwardly did and spoke that which might best represse and restraine the aduersarie VVherehence it followeth when by bearing and suffering of men we make them woorse rather then by our pacience winne and gaine them then is it our dutie in minde to prepare our selues still to beare but in our outwarde action speach and behauiour to do that which may moste profite the oppressour and withholde the enemie from further iniurie and in this wise also is it permitted the Saintes of GOD to make resistaunce not repugnant to this or anie like place of holy Scripture 3 Finally there are times and seasons when by repelling force by force it is lawfull to resist also When Christians are so narrowly besteed and so straitly beset with their enemies as that they cannot haue the ayde of ciuill powers and lawfull magistrates of the common wealth but must either resist by force or bee in daunger of the losse of their liues and goods without all recouerie or recompence in such a case to resist I holde it lawfull altogether so that it bee done in a moderate defence of our selues without priuate malice or desire of shedding of blood If a man in a house be beset with wicked persons so that he can not haue aide of ciuill power for the present instant neither hath hope of recouering the damage which he may sustaine either of goodes or of life to resist with all strength power and courage and to fight for our goodes liues and bodily safegarde is not forbidden If in the high way we bee inwrapped in daunger where no Magistrates are to succour wee are as extraordinarie Magistrates to our selues to withstande force by force violence by violence might by might VVhich properly is not violence or iniurie but lawfull defence which nature it selfe hath imprinted and impressed in the hearts of men Thereof the heathen Oratour Tullie speaketh it is For Mil● sayeth hee a lawe not written but borne with vs which wee haue not receyued learned nor read but drawen and sucked from Nature her selfe vnto which wee are not taught but made not infourmed but inured that if our life fall into snares force ot dartes of our enemies or robbers wee should seeke all honest meanes of preseruing our safegard and health And our blessed Sauiour Christ permitted his Disciples Luke 22. to carrie and weare swoordes about them for their owne defence when they coulde not haue the lawfull ayde of princes and Magistrates So that albeit hee reprooued Peter for smiting with the swoorde and cutting off the eare of Malchus for that then the magistrate and ciuill officer was at hande and shoulde haue defended his innocencie yet at other times and when they went abroade he permitted them to weare weapons Hereunto the customes of Countreyes and Nations yeelde which permit it as lawfull in iourneyes and trauailes and the like opportunities to weare and carrie weapons for their honest defence about them And by these meanes is it not forbidden the iust men to resist the wicked Nowe as in some cases it is lawfull to make priuate resistance to priuate men howsoeuer blockish Anabaptists chatte chirpe or chatter to the contrarie so may it be demaunded whether it may stand with a righteous and iust mans dutie to make publike resistance by warre and publike reuengement I answere that these places doe not forbidde lawful warres Which to bee a thing lawfull in the Saintes of God it may manie wayes appeare euidently the olde and the newe Testament confirmeth it the examples of renowmed men highly euen therefore commended approue it Saint Augustine wryteth that the Manichies for this Contra Faust Manich. lib. 22. cap. 73. cause found fault with Moises because he was a man of warre and such a prince as armed the people of God agaynst manie Nations and slue mightie princes and shed much bloud The like fault the Anabaptists finde nowe with Christians whose opinions as they are not soundly grounded vpon the worde of God nor the examples of the Saints so neither is there any substanciall Why warres are lawfull reasō to approue thē but manifoldly may they be refuted 1 And first of all it may appeare that some warres be lawfull in that Almightie God himselfe teacheth Dent. 20. what in warres by his people ought to be obserued as first to offer them conditions of peace and other things in the lawe expressed Moises promiseth the people that the Lord should be their captaine to destroy the nations and Deut. 31. by warres subdue them to the people The Lorde armed the people in sundrie cases and commaunded them Deut. 13. with the sworde and by force of warres to subdue the idolaters of the lande For which cause hee also willed Num. 10. Moises to prepare him Trumpettes and other warlike instruments for the people The Lorde God spoke in an other place to Moises and willed him to auenge the iniuries Num. 31. Exod. 17. done by the Madianites against his people and against the Amalakites in another place in like manner whome the Lorde by dint of the sworde of Israel mightily destroyed By God was Iosua set a worke in all Iosua 1. c. his warres
headlong in their shamefull pride and by committing al manner sinne and iniquitie to rush into finall destruction Thus haue we forgotten the exhortation of the Apostle but let all such as feare God learne a better profession by brotherly admonition reprehension and correction to seeke the cōuersion of their brethren as the Apostle teacheth 3. Neither thus only but by exhortation men conuert sinners from going astray out of the way For what way can men be sooner conuerted from errour then by dissuading from vice persuading to vertue wherin exhortation consisteth When Isai the Prophet of God sought Isai 1. the conuersion of the people frō their errour in idolatrie iniquitie and wickednes wherein a long time they had wallowed he seeketh it by exhortation persuading them to vertue dissuading them from vice To which purpose that exhortation serueth wash you make you cleane put away the euill of your hands from before my eies cease to do euill learne to do good seeke iudgement relieue the oppressed iudge the fatherlesse defend the widow To this purpose the Apostle to the Hebrnes exhorteth men Heb. 3. 1. Thess 5. 11. professing godlines to stirre vp one another and to seeke their conuersion which were departed from the liuing God and to preuent the fall of others by exhortation therefore he saith takeheed my brethren least there be at any time in any of you an euill heart and vnfaithfull to depart from the liuing God but exhort one another daily while it is called to day least any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sinne This meanes vsed Paul and the holy Apostles to conue●t and call away men from their errours in the time of their ignoraunce and to bring them to the true knowledge of the gospell Neither is there any way whereby we more reclaime conuert our sinning brethren from going astray out of their way then by daily exhortation and therefore especially is it needfull and necessarie that we exhort one another daily if wee haue any care of winning the soules of our breth●en and sisters and of bringing them to the knowledge of godlinesse And this meane is common to all Christians thus must the magistrate thus must the minister thus must the parents thus must the maisters thus must the scholemaisters thus must the neighbour thus must euery man seeke to conuert euery one that erreth by exhortation to turne him from going astray out of his way 4. We seeke more ouer the conuersion of our brethren out of their errours when we conferre with them gently and courteously concerning the causes of their errours Wherefore to vnfold such places as may seeme to bolster vp the erring brethren in falshood of opinion and to remoue such offences as whereby they are wrapped in errour of their liues by conference with them in brotherly manner this is also away to conuerte them 5. Finally we conuert the erring and wandring brethren by our good and godly example of holy life For men erring either in manners or in opinion seing the example of all vertue and godlines in the Saints their faith flourishing their patience abounding their humilitie singular ● Pet. 2. 12 their modestie rare their obedience excellent and all manner of vertue in perfect beautie thereby are oftētimes forced to confesse the truth of their religion which are thus renowmed for vertue and by their godly demeanour to acknowledge their owne corruption so be conuerted It standeth vs therfore greatly vpon to beware least in this respect we be carelesse and negligent and so loose by euill example whom we might by good haue wonne to Iesus Christ and his gospell And for asmuch as the liues and examples of Gods Examples preuaile much Saints preuaile greatly either to vertue or to vice and either persuade to or dissuade from our errours in both kinds from whence as from a perpetuall well spring the floud of all that is good or euill floweth it is our bounden dutie which feare God euery one to watch ouer his brother that by all good example we may call them from their errours and conuert them as here we are exhorted 6. To conclude we seeke the conuersion of our brethren by sharpe chastening out of the word of God For where gentle ●enitiues will not serue there sharpe corsies must be vsed and when milde preparatiues preuaile nothing then must scowring and searching purgations be applied Thus did the Prophets thus did our Sauiour Christ thus did the Apostles seeke their cōuersion whom by other means they could not reclaime nor bring from errour Seeing the case thus standeth with vs so great necessitie constraineth and is layed vpon vs for the conuersion of our brethren then wo to them who then subuert when they should conuert the brethren which hinder whē they should helpe their conuersion whose saluation God hath as it were put into their handes Wo to the carnall professours of the gospell whose wicked examples encourage the erring brethren and persons to continue in their errour Wo to the contentious and waywarde vntractable and disobedient of our time who with their quarrell picking and bitter striuings about things oftentimes friuolous and not weightie and other grieuous debates make diuision and cause schisme in the church wherby the Papistes Iesuites and other erroneous persons are fleshed in their errours Wo to al men women by whom the conuersion of soules shal be in aniwise hindered seing we are so necessarily inioyned the care of their conuersion This is the councel of the Apostle this is the remedie against inward infirmities and diseases of our minds this is the labour and trauell of the Saints of God by al meanes to seeke the conuersion of such as doe wander erre out of the way The double profite of this care 2 The next and second thing is the profitte which redoundeth and the reward which is geuen them that are carefull to conuert such as erre let him know that he that cōuerteth a sinner from going astray out of his way shall saue a soule from death and couer a multitude of sinnes Cor. 7. 6. 1. He that thus endeuoureth the cōuersion of other and turneth a sinner from going astray from out of his way saueth his soule that is conuerted whom he reclayming deliuereth from death and damnation wherin thorow error he was intrapped Now to procure the saluation of any one soule is a worke both more excellēt more difficult more harde and more victorious then the subduing of Countries kingdomes by dint of sword or atchieuing glorious conquests by force of armes ouer our enemies This is a seruice and sacrifice more pleasant vnto God to sacrifice vp one soule to saluation then the slaying of all the bulles and oxen vpon a thousand hilles and to offer them in sacrifice to God Ezech. 18. 33. Hereof God himselfe reioyceth as it were whofe delight is not in the death of a sinner but rather that he should repent