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A43515 A century of sermons upon several remarkable subjects preached by the Right Reverend Father in God, John Hacket, late Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry ; published by Thomas Plume ... Hacket, John, 1592-1670.; Plume, Thomas, 1630-1704. 1675 (1675) Wing H169; ESTC R315 1,764,963 1,090

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is the brightness of his Fathers glory and the express image of his person Upon those words of the Apostle Col. iv 18. the salutation of me Paul with my own hand says S. Chrysostom it was great comfort to the brethren to see salutations and greetings and wishes under Pauls own hand Some comfort it might be but far short of this to see not only the word of salutation but the word of salvation dwell among us the only begotten of the Father full of grace and truth As Pliny said to Trajan of his virtuous Wife Nihil sibi ex fortuna tua nisi gaudium vendicat she desired no further interest in his good fortune but to rejoyce and to be glad at his felicity so the righteous man leaves the wide world for the children of the world to share it among them Nihil sibi nisi gaudium vendicat all that he challengeth for his own is the Blessed Virgins solace and My spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour O my beloved it cannot be uttered what tranquility and joy is in that heart which seriously apprehends those evident signs that God is reconciled unto us Those heavens which Pythagoras spoke of that they were never without concent and harmony that Fable being moralized is agreeable to nothing but to that soul which is comforted in the mercies of Christ Semper illic serenum est it is like the state of the world above the Moon it is ever fair and clear in that place without any storm or tempest it is like the tribe of Zabylon situated in a safe harbour close unto the tumultuous Seas Aliorum videt naufragia sed ipse salvus est it looks forth upon the Seas and sees how some are tost in perilous waters how some are shipwrackt and cast away but it self is safe under the shadow of Christ and in no such terror or calamity The ordinary comforts of this world which concur to the being and to the well-being of nature may be wanting perchance to a true servant of God these may a little abate the courage perhaps it makes us appear says St. Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as sorrowful 't is but as if it were so Tanquam lugentes as sorrowful but always rejoycing The tongues of men and Angels are not able to devise a message of joy more sweet and allective than this that our severe Judge hath sent his Son to be our Mediator and that Mediator to be our Judge and that Judge to be our Brother for so he calls us by that term of intimate affection This is such a demulcing comfort to a sin-wounded conscience that it leaves our heart in St. Austins phrase to be Thalamus Dei palatium Christi habitaculum Spiritus sancti the marriage-chamber of God the courtly Palace of Christ and the habitation of the Holy Ghost This is the proper joy of Christs Birth with which the Angel did accost the Shepherds the delight and serenity of a good Conscience It is agreeing to the solemnity of this time to speak also of the other branch of joy which is sufferable and may be warranted which is called Risus ad naturae recreationem pastimes and delightful exercises to refresh the sadness of the heart And if there be any man whose strictness will allow of no sports or pleasurable jocundities at this season of our Saviours Nativity let me tell him that such austerity is groundless and hath no foundation in the Word of God and to censure all innocent relaxation of mirth because with some men and in some places it is done with excessive vanity and riot he wants a grain of Charity Shall we build no houses to put our head in because fools built a Babel shall we plant no Vineyards because Noah was overseen shall we forswear courtesie because Absalom's kindness was full of flattery what is another mans sin to my harmless mirth Joy is in the Text and if there be harmless joy in the time no judicious man will disallow it But why do sickly men imagine that all meats taste rank and unsavory it is the ill affection of their own palat Why do Boat-men think that the shore goes from them because they go from the shore So the heart of churlish men is undelightsome and that makes them to think all delight is vicious There is a time to weep and a time to laugh says the Wise man Eccles iii. 4. And what time more convenient for rejoycing than this when Solomon dedicated his Temple to the Lord first he magnified God in a solemn prayer then all Israel kept a Feast and a joyful holy day This Temple was but a figure of Christ the everlasting Priest these are the days wherein we celebrate the dedication of this Temple and after we have magnified Gods name in solemn Prayer for his mighty work we may chear and refresh our selves with joy in a lawful measure of innocency and sobriety Why should we lowre and look sad like those hypocrites the Pharisees who had nothing in them but a form of outward austerity True joy cannot contein it self in a contemplative meditation it will exult it will break forth like John Baptist in his Mothers womb who rejoyced in the Spirit that Mary had conceived the Messias in her Womb. Nor was that all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Babe sprang and leapt for gladness Whatsoever mirth is honest and lawful whether spiritual or civil joy the Angel gives liberty to the Shepherds to use it Behold I bring you tidings of great joy The spiritual and the innocent civil joy are both native and proper to these festival days of the Birth of Christ but by our abuse that which is most frequent and common is the third member of the distinction which is sinful Risus ex immoderata turpi laetitia a mirth bestain'd with riot and all kind of offensiveness It is time to cry down the noise of all immoderate and wicked pleasures with an heavenly song How different are our tunes of beastliness from that which the children of Jerusalem did sing upon the Advent of Christ Hosanna to the Son of David Hosanna in the highest How different were their modest garments from that pomp and pride which divers of us do bear upon our backs they spread their garments in the way to entertain the King of Glory Christ would not have honour'd yours with his feet he would not have trod upon your Peacock attire which is so vain and alterable O beloved what an incongruity is this Christ came down from Heaven to dwell among us and you rake Hell for merriment to make him welcome If a Jubilee come once a year wherein you have indulgence for a sweet relaxation in Sports and Festivals must you needs lose your wits exeat Cato as if no sober man all that while were fit for our company If you will spend a few days of solace and recreation so wickedly so untowardly do you not deserve that God should turn your Feasts
Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps whcih thou hast sucked But he said Yea rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it THis is the Sons day and not the Mothers This is Christs own day and not Maries Therefore it is not for the Wombs sake but for the Fruit of the Womb not for the Paps of a mortal woman but for the Infants sake an immortal God that I have chosen this Text. A good Israelitess she was that magnified Christ on this manner though she was not spoken to yet her heart was full and she must speak for her joy would have stifled her if she had not uttered it If you mark the Context of the Chapter immediately before these words our Saviour had taught his Disciples to pray most divinely he had cast out devils most triumphantly he had answered the Calumniations of the Pharisees most rationally he had put on glorious apparel as the Psalmist says and girded himself with strength While these wonderful works were fresh in memory the Lord from on high could have sent Legions of Angels to magnifie his Son and to praise him with celestial Canticles But to strike the greater shame into the Pharisees that had blasphemed him he stirs up a woman a nameless one a poor Plebeian one not admitted near him she stood afar off and was fain to speak aloud to be heard Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps which thou hast sucked It was a free acclamation a sudden start a passion that came from her spirit ex tempore and that I may give Christ his full honour and attribute no more to the woman than is truth she prophesied in this saying of greater things than at that time she understood The Holy Ghost gave her the priviledge to be the tongue that delivered this Congratulation but it remains to us to lend it an heart that we may truly conceive it For the inward sense of it is the gladsom contents of this day blessed be the Father of all mercies for the Incarnation of his Son that he was made of a woman for our sakes and blessed are all mankind that he hath taken flesh of our flesh and that he is made partaker of our humane nature But because it would not prove our benefit that he was born for us unless he be born in us likewise by faith and obedience it follows to make our joy and crown complete yea rather blessed are they that hear c. The parts are as manifestly two as the two hands wherewith we handle First Blessedness offered to us in Christs Incarnation Secondly Blessedness made complete in our own application The woman begins the Text in the first part Christ finished in the second She said well for his Incarnation Blessed is the Womb that bare thee He makes it much better by stirrig us up to the use and fruit of it yea rather c. She blesseth Christ and Christ blesseth us she would have all felicity to rest in him he would have a share of felicity to be derived to us A pretty strife between a devout Creature and a merciful Creator between an humble Servant and a bountiful Master between a true faith that heaps all honour upon God and between a gracious God that heaps the treasures of his riches upon a true faith To begin with that which the woman said it must be considered two ways in a Litteral sense such as flesh and bloud revealed to her And in a Prophetical sense above her understanding such as the Spirit of God hath revealed to us Blessed is the Womb that bare thee And so it was indeed according to the Latitude of this womans natural understanding For first she knew at large that it was a blessed thing to be an Instrument or conveyance of any great good unto others Blessed above women shall Jael the wife of Heber be blessed shall she be above women in the Tent Judg. v. 24. Shee had done her part to work deliverance for Israel And when Judith had sped in her adventure to cut off the head of Holofernes says Oziah Blessed art thou of the most high God above all the women upon earth Judith xiii 18. A good Messenger is called an happy and the feet of those are pronounced beautiful that bring glad tidings of peace It is a narrow and an abject conceit of some that think themselves fortunate and at the best when they receive and take in all that can be heapt upon them These men measure felicity backward for beatius est dare quam accipere it is more blessed to give than to receive Though that Maxim be not extant in any of the Evangelists St. Paul tells us upon his credit it was our Saviours The souls of them that are converted to true holiness shall bless the lips of the Priest the poor shall bless the liberal after Ages shall bless publick Spirits that do famous things and are provident for Posterity A Cistern that contains the waters poured into it is much inferiour to a Fountain that sends them forth It is nothing so laudible to be wrought upon as to work that which is honourable Even the Parents that have enricht the world with such as are ornaments unto it benediction reflects upon them for it because they are Conduit pipes of publick felicity Yet all those that have made others happy by their gifts and qualities had been for ever unhappy themselves if the Child that was born this day had not suckt the breasts of a Virgin O happy Parent whose Womb contained all the treasure that maintains the whole earth Somewhat she collineated at this meaning that said unto our Saviour Blessed c. And each Parent partakes in this reason that it is joy and honour to them to have a renowned Son and it may be this woman was partial to her own Sex that contented her self to speak of no more than the womb of the Mother In strict Divinity indeed her words are admirable for Christ had no Father according to the flesh but that is more than I collect out of St. Luke that she mentioned not his Father for that reason But in all humane births that prove successful and glorious the loyns of the Father are blessed as well as the womb of the Mother and the glory of children are their Fathers Prov. xvii 6. Yet in the next construction of mere natural capacity it was proper to say for his sake blessed is the womb because barrenness was a curse and fruitfulness of children a blessing They that propagate a faithful seed upon earth give the means to replenish heaven with Saints it is that wherein we exceed Angels to beget Sons and Daughters in our own likeness and to continue a Generation like our selves makes mankind by succession as incorruptible as the Angels God blessed all living Creatures mark that God blessed them and said unto them be fruitful and multiply Gen. i. 28. Though the Lord said
a Lord as if his soul did divine there was a greater upon earth The Reed put into Christs hand the Crown upon his head the bowing of the Knee the Title upon the Cross these were calumnies and revilings on the Jews part but on Gods part secret mysteries of his Spirit to make his enemies afford him the Ensigns of a Kingdom Nay ipsa crux tribunal fi●it says Origen Upon his very Cross whereon he hanged he stood like a Judge between the nocent and the innocent All this was nothing to Caesar to challenge the chief place among malefactors One thing is worth your adnotation that because Pilate and the Roman Empire did give wrong sentence of death against Christ who did not make himself a King therefore the self same Roman Empire doth endure this malediction from God that it should endure the pride of a Bishop unto this day who calls himself the Vicar of Christ and sets himself in a Throne above their Emperour The fault was cast upon Christ but the Pope commits it To end this Point If the Jews thought him worthy of death who made himself a King they that have a Doctrine to unmake a King as they please to sport with their Crowns what do they deserve And let the Jews be Judge and not the Jesuits Callisthenes was asked how a man might be most famous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him kill the most famous A fit answer for our Roman Parricides who above other Christians are rebaptized in baptismo sanguinis in the bloud of Princes Speak Pilate and you outragious murderers of the Jews do they not deserve to be crucified So now to recapitulate these false crimes objected the Temple was unviolate for any thing Christ had done the people unperverted Tribute granted Caesar honoured Venit Princeps mundi in me non habet quicquam let Pilate speak if he were not a just person How should a man be avenged of his enemies Plutarch answers by being so good that they cannot reproach his honest conversation So did our Saviour and surely it would pity any heart in the world that such a Saviour such an innocent Lamb should be slain But such a Sacrifice it behoved us to have which was holy unblameable and undefiled And to conclude this second general part of my Text be careful my brethren to keep a good conscience that when you shall crucifie this mortal body and the affections thereof as you must do daily you may endeavour to be a just person to walk in all the Statutes of the Lord that you may offer up a clean Sacrifice to God your Creator and Redeemer And so much for Pilat's true Testimony that Jesus was a just person I am innocent c. And now I betake my meditations to the last Point of all Vos videbitis you shall see to it The depravation of his own nature made him forge a lie in the first words I am innocent Conscience extorted truth in the second that his Prisoner was a just person A strange instinct brings forth this last part Vos videbitis you shall see to it Marvel no more at Caiaphas that he could Prophesie One man must die for all the people but rather marvel how Pilate should Prophesie that all the people must die for the bloud of one man As Salust said of the desperate times of Rome that men were so ill affected Vt intenta mala quasi fulmen optarent se quisque ne attingat That they wished mischiefs might fall down like a thunderbolt only every man was so careful as to pray for his own head So Pilate calls for a curse upon all Jury but first he shields his own head he is innocent You never knew a Fortune-teller skilful either in Palmistry curious Metaposcopie or of the Devils secret counsel in judicious Astrology that could read ought in his own destiny as Seneca said of the Soothsayers of Rome that undertook to tell Prodigies by the entrails of beasts Plus sapiunt in alieno jecore quam in suo That they had a better insight into the entrails of other things than into their own So we are all very cunning in vos videbitis to denounce those judgments which will befall other men but we ever misinterpret what will betide our selves Harsh judges we are of other mens faults for the most part but worse Prophets not so charitable as Elizaeus his bones to bring the dead unto life but like Micaiah unto Ahab always portending some disastrous thing to come to bring the living unto death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Grecian General said to Chryses when will we leave this ominous Prediction to be chanting some deadly Prophesie against our brethren Like Pilate against the Jews Vos videbitis You shall see to it Many Jews had Prophesied against the Abominations and Idolatry of the Gentiles Pilate is the first Gentile in Scripture that Prophesied against the Jews Alas then if the wrath of God be kindled yea but a little what is it that can save us from indignation Vos videbitis shall Israel be lost Shall Judah the first-born of God be wiped out of his mercies Is there no title for the protection of a sinner Joab is fled to the Altar what shall become of him Ask Benaiah when he cuts his thred The Altar yet is an eternal refuge for others Shall it not stand for ever Ask the Prophet who made it shake with fear as with an Earthquake that it should be thrown down The Temple is an everlasting habitation shall it not last as long as the Sun and Moon endureth Ask our Saviour if one stone shall be left upon another The people of the Land are the Sons of Abraham and Isaac is not their Covenant to endure for ever Ask St. Paul if the natural branches be not cut off and withered The Land howsoever is that plentiful Canaan fruitful by the report of Caleb and Joshuah more fruitful than report could make it Shall it not always be the Lady of the earth Ask Titus and the Romans if it be not a nest for Screech-owls and an hissing to all that shall live in the world How is the destiny of all things turned about Neither security remaining to fly unto the Altar nor the Altar remaining in the Temple nor the Temple in the City nor Inhabitants remaining in the Country but City and Country defaced unto all Posterity See Beloved how no priviledge upon earth will keep conditions with us except we keep conditions with heaven As Tertullian said of the Devils Pluvias quas jam sentiunt repromittunt When they perceive much moisture in the Air by their natural sagacity then the Soothsayers tell us we shall have rain so Satan knowing that judgment was begun already in Judaea Pilate begins to Prophesie Vos c. The murder of our Saviour should be their endless calamity The Passions of Christ were so innumerous so spiteful that to draw them unto certain heads if all were reckoned up
not be avoided when his own familiar friend did lift up his heel against him Such friends as Achitophel was our unworthy Age is packt with great observers in the time of our dignity devoted to our good fortunes shadows of our prosperity but if Absalon the Usurper thrive then they shrink like Sheba we have no part in David they are gone like the fishes in the small Rivers that come up into the Brooks at full tide and return into the Sea at ebbing waters Fugiunt amici cum probari debuerint says Seneca 't is a hard case friendship is but a mere name before distress come to try it what it is and when you come to catch hold of the succour of faithless men you grasp water and the rule is infallible cui placet pretium in amicitiâ placebit pretium contra amicitiam they that love to taste some benefit in their friendship may be induc'd to like a benefit so well as to betray friendship to obtain it Aelian and some other such scatter-stories as himself do make more reports of Dogs and Elephants of Birds and Horses and some other unreasonable creatures that they did either compassionate or relieve if they were able the miseries of those Masters whom they had long attended than of reasonable men What have we lost both nature and good nurture and have the beasts found it This made the Prophet complain Psal xii They speak vanity to their neighbour and flatter with their double heart This made Obadiah tell Hierusalem that the men of her peace and those that eat of her bread deceived her This made Jeremy advise the Jews Jer. 9. Take ye heed every one of his Neighbour and trust not in a Brother for every Brother will utterly supplant This made our Saviour protest that a mans Enemies were those of his own House this made King David decipher Achitophel in my Text Yea mine own c. Secondly I proceed to consider in this complaint how hateful a thing it is to wrong the trust which is reposed in us My friend in whom I trusted I cannot but break out abruptly with the Psalmist I have hated the sins of unfaithfulness and as the old Patriarch said of his Sons Simeon and Levi that drew from the Sichemites the holy bloud of Circumcision that they might the sooner spill their lifes bloud upon the ground O my soul come not thou into their secret into their assembly mine honour be not thou united Let us instance in some points of trust To betray a secret is fit for none but Doeg the Edomite a Beast set to keep the Beasts of Saul The Lacedaemonians sitting in counsel had a Ceremony to charm their doors as if no secret should get out of that circle and Alexander says Plutarch was wont to set his Seal upon their lips to whom he had committed his affairs of trust Tertullian reports of the fidelity of an Athenian Woman who was made privy to the counsels of Harmodius and Aristogiton and being brought before a Tyrant that urged confession from her rather than she would do it she spat her tongue in his face In matters of greater trust if greater may be than silence the old Roman Laws urged men to perform such faithfulness that an orphan Child committed to the pupillage of a friend lay upon his charge to look unto it next to his own Parents next to the Orphan the Client that had committed his Cause to his Patrons protection was to be respected and both these before their own Brethren Gellius abounds with testimonies to prove it primum locum juxta parentes tenere pupillos proximum locum clientes says the Author And the Poet Virgil in the detestation of that wicked Guardian which slue young Polydor for his Portions sake makes the very trees to drop bloud that grew in the place where the child was buried Did I say before that Simeon and Levi broke fealty with the Sichemites Did they deal any better with their own Father Jacob put two things into their charge his Flocks and their Brother Joseph 't is true they did tend their Flocks but you know their usage to their Brother O ye fools says St. Basil if dreams be vain why do you vex him for a dreams sake if dreams be true and infallible why do you think to thwart and hinder the Divine Providence If infidelity did only breed an ill opinion in that one disloyal party which commits it the matter were not great but for one Achitophels sake jealousies evil suspicions wrong surmises are counted the wise mans character in this subtle generation Epicharmus his saying went current with Tully for a most sage dictate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is the very strength and sinews of prudence to distrust and be circumspectious Thus Sycophants and Impostors have changed the face of the world and the innocency of the Dove is nothing so much respected as the wiliness of the Serpent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let them that dare trust that man who is too much mistrustful Have you been deceived says St. Ambrose do not dislike your self for that So was our Saviour in his Apostle Judas ut nemo aegre ferat erasse judicium pertisse beneficium and I see no reason why he that is a wise man should seem a fool because he that seemed an honest man is proved a knave Simonides was conceited of the Thessalians that no man could over-reach them but did he commend them for this Take his reason with you and you will say no. Stolidiores esse quàm ut possint decipi They were such gross Idiots that no man knew their disposition how to practise upon them I did ever think meanly of the wits of Sycophants all the glory that they reap is this the Impostor had no faith and he that trusted in such men had too much charity If the portion of the Fatherless be made over to thy custody remember old Tobies friend Gabael of Media who delivered up to Tobias the Talents sealed In the cause of the distressed Client be as trusty as Solomon was to the Harlot and let her have her own If thou hast betroathed a Virgin remember what Jacob endured with what constancy he persevered in the love of Rachel Lastly There is not a greater trust in the world than to be deputed a shepherd over the flock of Christ O be faithful and vigilant break the bread of life which Christ hath bequeathed But if the Portions of Orphans cleave fast to your hands how can you hold them up to that Saviour who committed himself to Josephs trust when he was a Babe and was not deceived If the cause of an abused Client rattle in your mouth how can you plead for mercy to him who did plead so well for the woman taken in Adultery and she was acquitted If the faith of some poor betroathed Virgin whom you have wronged cry for vengeance how can Christ the faithful Spouse of the Church attend to your supplication If
people was and we seek a Country in the heavens What are five Loaves and two Fishes the poor pittances of Nature to procure us felicity Some say send them to the next Village for succour to the intercession of Saints and Angels No sweet Saviour but as the eyes of a servant look unto the hands of his Master so our soul waits upon thee until thou have mercy upon us Nor did our Saviour distribute his Largess only to stop the gap of necessity For had they been runnagates David doth award them to be unpitied Let them continue in scarceness but flagrante ptetate when their hearts were set upon zeal and their ears attentive by the space of an whole day to hear the Doctrine of the Kingdom of Heaven then this Miracle falls out as a reward of their Piety For even as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Feasts of Charity were wont to be celebrated among the Christians in the Primitive Church immediately after the divine Mysteries had been solemnized So when these Jews had lent their patience to a good Sermon I am sure for never man spake like him by his enemies confession the close of it was that they eat bread together joyfully with singleness of heart And I do not amiss to say that this diligence to hear and learn did attract his love to do this for them for did they importune him by Prayer Did any one among so many beseech him to shew his power and pity them no but they had done enough to open his bowels though they held their peace for first seek the Kingdom of Heaven and the righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added unto you Hallow his name advance his Kingdom and do his will and that which follows comes in by course you cannot fail of your daily bread In this Assembly that sanctified the whole day in the Desart to wait on Christ you may imagine there were sundry of them that lived by their sweat and labour from hand to mouth Will not these be much damnified by their godliness The night was come they had earned nothing by their labour they may go home and starve yea nothing less they that had committed themselves to his providence like the fowls of the air shall fair as well as the fowls of the air For the Lions do lack and suffer hunger but they that fear the Lord do want no good thing Psal xxxiv 10. The Apostles not long before this accident in my Text were sent abroad without Scrip without provision without change of raiment Lacked you any thing says our Saviour the Heathen could not say that the Christians were the poorer for not working the seventh day your Trade is increasing while your shop is shut up on Holidays if you serve the Lord. Godliness is profitable unto all things having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. iv 8. We had Brethren in diebus illis in those noble times that came near to the Apostles who durst urge the Lord upon his word in the face of Infidels that the soul of the righteous should not famish In the year 176 Marcus Aurelius was ready to give battel to the Marcomans but the day was so hot and the drought so sore that his Army fainted and could not strike a stroke The Christians that served under him to shew the glory of their great Master Jesus the Son of God joyned their Prayers together and instantly obtained so much rain as refreshed all the Roman Legions and so much thunder as consumed the Marcomans with fire and lightening I make not the Doctors of the Church my Authors for it but Dion Cassius an Heathen confesseth the accident and Xiphiline another of the same ascribes it to the Christians and that Legion which consisted of Christians was called from hence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the thundring Legion long after The blessings of the Lord they are not viscata beneficia they do not hang in his fingers like birdlime when his Children need them but they drop like an Honeycomb without straining But men are so apt to object against this as if they stretcht their wits to make God a liar they will tell you that they have known and heard of righteous men that have been forsaken and destitute Digito terebrare Salinum contentus perages si cum Jove vivere tentas Poverty ever was and will be the obloquy of honesty Neither is bread to the wise nor riches to men of understanding nor favour to men of skill Eccles ix 11. Well the knot is soon untied if you do not over-reckon with God and extend his word to a greater proportion of temporal blessings than he hath promised There is a Son that grudged at his Father Luke xv quia nusquam haedum dedisset he had never given him a Kid to make merry with his friends Must every one that is a Son look for a Kid and for enough wherewith he may be merry and voluptuous no no if you have pabulum latibulum any thing to stay hunger and a Cave to put your head in God is not in your debt and you may do as well as they that have the Kid for life is oftner lost by surfeiting than by starving Every Levite that serves faithfully at the Altar must not think to wear a Mitre like Aaron as St. Hierom speaks of Praetextatus that would be baptized and become a Christian if he might be Bishop of Rome All men must not look to be requited like Valentinian that refused the Tribune-ship of Julian upon condition of Idolatry and became an Emperor They that gape for so much tenter Gods promise to the stretch of their own greediness First They seek dominion and wealth and think the Kingdom of Heaven will come into the vantage Miserable souls that do not fear lest their dignity should be their total recompence and all that ever they shall have for their service They that put themselves upon Gods providence as these men did in the Desart they shall not want but remember then that they must accept of barley loaves for current payment Peter and John had neither silver nor gold yet they had food and raiment and for the most part the most fortunate are they that be no such Camels but they may pass through the eye of the needle I will work out of the point but this little more these five hundred men that waited upon Christ had kept their Fast to the full Canonical time they had eat nothing until night therefore he distributes the loaves dissolves their fast and would not suffer them to continue it any longer than might do them good A man in the fervour of his desire will pursue that he desires so hard as he will quite forget his meat so Esau felt no hunger when he was in the chase a hunting but as soon as that was over he longed for meat upon any terms so during the whole day that our Saviour
righteousness Such a one would do no unjust thing though he saw his Pardon sealed with his fleshly eyes and were as surely confirmed in state of Salvation as an Angel of light Justus non est sub lege sed voluntas ejus est in lege says St. Austin He alludes to the Latine reading of the first Psalm a just man is not under the Law that is a strein of servitude but his will is in the Law there he finds equity and sincerity he loves them for themselves The minacles and castigations of it are without Law of which he takes no notice because his will is within Vopiscus says that after the death of Aurelian for six months there was an Interregnum no new Elect was agreed upon the People had no Prince to curb them no Tribune of whom they stood in awe yet there was no outrage committed Nam quod est in vit â optimum se quisque timebat Every man was afraid to offend himself and his own conscience These are voces libero homine dignae these are the Praises of more ingenuous men than ever Heathens could be It may be an Impreza for a perfect Christian he doth no evil out of this generous resolution for that he loves God within him not because he fears the world without him Out of Evangelical assurance though the second coming of Christ shall be with such a strange concussion that Heaven and Earth will stagger and burn for it yet a well-armed Christian hath digested the dread and wisheth for that day when the whole Creature shall be delivered from bondage it is his Exclamation Come Lord Jesus come quickly Consider in what an agony the whole Camp of the Israelites was when the Law was proclaimed with Thunder and Tempests upon Mount Sinah it will be strange to one of those to hear a good Disciple call earnestly for that day which will be so full of darkness and gloominess This is indeed the principal Crisis that we have shaken off the Spirit of bondage Non probatur perfecta caritas nisi cum ceperit ille dies desiderari There is no perfect love and by consequent no plenary excussion of servitude till we are earnest in that wish that the day of Christ were near at hand If not that terrour no not that doth pinch us then Jerusalem above is free Yet stay for one qualification more which will make the Angels to congratulate us our freedom if we observe that Proviso in our Charter nay which will please God so well that he will not only make us Citizens who were Bondmen before but Rulers over ten Cities as it is in the Parable that is account not of the good of this world as the Jew did but commit your Heart and your Treasure to the Inheritance which is above They that run far into the thought to prosper in the increment of this earth they cannot decline from being servants to the times to occasions to ignobleness to the manners of iniquity Lift up your hearts unto the Lord with an evangelical abrenunciation of the world and fling these fetters away for there is no such thraldom as that of base affections To serve a sin is worse than to serve a man by how much a man is better than a sin There are some of our Interpreters who have stated this Point not without injury to the Synagogue and the modern Jews have cause to disavow the imputation of mere carnal men as if God did set before them no more than the recompence of this lifes prosperity The Anabaptists teach that the Faithful before Christ did only taste of the sweetness of temporal blessings without any hope of eternal happiness a Censure fitter for beasts that are well pastured than for a man whose soul doth naturally heave him up to immortality chiefly it is an opinion most derogatory to such men whose Fathers did talk with God face to face Besides these Aquinas and his Scholars methinks lay out our difference but rudely Temporalia promittuntur in Veteri Testamento spiritualia in Novo The Old Testament proffers Temporal blessings and the New Testament Spiritual That were I confess the right livery at which a Bondman did stand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says the heathen Proverb Give the Servant that grinds at the Mill an allowance of food to sustain him and you owe him no more But if the Text of the Old Testament do move only in the circumference of this world and of this life it would scarce make good Philosophy how much less would it never pass for the Touchstone of pure Divinity Therefore without scandal to the old Jerusalem or partiality to the New the odds between us are these The Commonwealth of Israel had the sure promise made unto them of heavenly joy together with a pleasant portion upon earth if they served the Lord. The same Kingdom of heaven is more clearly promised to us but with afflictions and persecutions upon earth Their Jerusalem was in bondage because it kept the Law upon carnal Articles that it might flourish and be free Our Jerusalem is free because it will confess Christ though the more it confess him the more it should be in danger of bondage and imprisonment They were for present delight and heaven hereafter we are for present misery and heaven for ever The Apostles found it an hard matter to send the Church of Christ from Jewish Ceremonies they could not make a bank in their days but that some broke over as in the Church of Galatia No marvel since the dregs thereof are not purged out to this day Circumcision is still reteined among the Abyssines says Damianus Goez Aarons supreme Pontifical Authority is but transmigrated into the Papacy Some have been scrupulous in choice of meats but lately as if Moses did yet predominate Many are more strict than wise in numbring and keeping the hours of Sabbatical rest We that are here I hope are all very ready to condemn this Judaism and yet God knows the most of us are Jews in a greater concernment than we are aware of If we serve for heaven it is well but I am sure we are the more servile that it may be well with us upon earth We ask for the dew of heaven but we make earnest postulations for the fatness of the earth we are content to be shod with the preparation of the Gospel but not so well contented as if it be our fortune to wear the spurs of dignity These are the tricks of a Jew of an uncircumcised Jew his heart is not circumcised from ambition and vanity This is Gehazi's Leprosie which cleaves to base minds my Master is in heavenly raptures and contemns riches As the Lord lives I will run after him and take somewhat Run and let the Devil scorn you for your pains Doth Job serve God for nought To be Sanctified to be Justified to have the gifts of the Holy Ghost to receive spiritual Consolation to be the friends of God this
earthen pitcher if martyrdom burn in it like a lamp and the pitcher be broken to pieces then we shall have victory against our spiritual enemies and peace with God Fourthly Let us make that use of our Saviours first coming into the world in flesh which St. Paul doth of his second coming in glory 1 Cor. 4.5 The Lord cometh who will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and will make manifest the counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God The most obscure things shall be made manifest unto his light and the thoughts of all hearts shall be revealed unto him The righteous Lord trieth the very hearts and reins Psal 7.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to try the heart is verbum forense as when Magistrates examine the truth not by questions only but by rack and torments they will have all out in confession so God is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to draw out all secrets from our inward breast And it is impossible to keep the subtilest thred of iniquity concealed When he came to judgment against Egypt and sent his Angel to kill their first-born yet at midnight he knew which was an Egyptian and which was an Israelite so though we carry our sins with a demure countenance and smooth it with subtile hypocrisie yet his knowledge shineth in the darkness of our hearts as if it were light and he can distinguish between our inward affections our thoughts our fancies our sighs and yearnings that this is an Israelite born of the will of God and this an Egyptian born of the will of flesh Laban could not find his Idols because Rachael had laid them privily in her stuff but the Lord can detect that Idolatry which we keep close in our hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says the Grammarian the Greeks denominate God from penetrating all things with his eye and when Christ could see into the profoundness of Nathanaels thoughts behold an Israelite indeed in whom is no guile Nathanael instantly confest Thou art the Son of God thou art the King of Israel Alas that we go on still in darkness and do not understand are you in your wits that think iniquity is farther from judgment because it is farther from appearance do you forget the discoverie of Achans wedge and Gehazi's briberie do you not recal how the Priests of Bel were detected for gluttons and impostors creeping in at secret doors to gurmandize the junkets prepared for the Idol deal squarely and without dissimulation for you think it is night and no man sees but the glory of the Lord is round about you Fifthly No sooner was the world blest with the Birth of this holy Child God and Man but the Angels put on white apparel the air grows clear and bright darkness is dispell'd therefore let us cast off the works of darkness and walk as children of the light the earth should be more innocently walkt on too and fro because Christ hath trod upon it our bodies kept clean in chastity because he hath assum'd our nature and blest it Gods word should be heard more respectfully because he hath preacht it finally our conversation should be honest as in the day because the day-spring from on high hath visited us Wicked men are groping like the Sodomites to find out mischief though God have hid it out of the way The Saints and Angels are in a state of light wherein they know as they are known perfectly partaking of the beatifical vision between these two there is a middle condition of godly men who see into the way of righteousness though it be darkly as in a glass but they that dress them by a glass can discern how to mend any thing that mis-becomes them So the Gospel of Grace is a mirror of the light of Glory it is not the fault of the Gospel but of our own darkness if we learn not of it to put on the true wedding garment The Apostle calls it the putting on of the Lord Jesus Christ Vbi animus tenebrescere tentationum caligine coeperit ad lucem gratiae reformatur When the conscience is overcast with the darkness of temptation it flies to the looking-glass of Grace and reforms it self by looking into it This is to vindicate our selves from the powers of darkness and to walk decently as in the day Works of lewdness come from the darkness of our understanding they love to be done in privacy and not before the eyes of men abjiciamus says St. Paul as if he would have you fling them away to the Devil and bid him take his own As a wise servant would not be found with folly in his hand if he knew his Master were near so because our salvation is come as this day in humility and we know not how little he will defer to come in Majesty therefore abjiciamus throw away his filthiness from you lest Christ should come and find profanation in your mouth oppression in your purse false tinctures of art and pride in your face and disobedience in your heart Every child of light will have his lamp burning in his hand and by this he will know you whether you be his Disciple if you speak the truth and come to the light as if the glory of the Lord were round about you Lastly A glimpse of some celestial light did sparkle at his Birth to set our teeth on edge to enjoy him who is light of lights very God of very God and to dwell with him in that City which hath no need of the Sun neither of the Moon to shine in it for the Glory of God did enlighten it and the Lamb is the light thereof I conclude with St. Paul Col. 1.12 Let us give thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light who hath delivered us from the power of darkness and hath translated us into the Kingdom of his dear Son Amen THE FOURTH SERMON UPON THE INCARNATION LUKE ii 10. And the Angel said unto them Fear not for behold I bring yon good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people THat which is every mans salutation wherewith he greets his neighbour at this time of the year is the subject of my Text a merry Christmas it is it which we wish one to another among our friends and familiers and it is it which the Angel in my Text wisheth to all kindreds of the world as if we were all become his friends and familiers good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people And surely were it not that the Birth of Jesus made us merry at this season and put gladness into our hearts all the year beside would be louring and lumpish without all manner of consolation Until God sent forth his Son made of a woman we might not receive the adoption of Sons Without adoption we had no part in the inheritance without hope of the inheritance what
life of Christ and so forth we go on with chearfulness to abandon fear The Fathers note it in the Cratch of the Manger where he was laid a place made unclean with the dung of beasts but ipsa stercora mundefecit As his presence did purifie the room albeit the filthiness of the dung so his Nativity hath cleansed as many as believed in him albeit the loathsomness of their iniquities I have but one thing to say more to this point noted as I remember by Gregory out of the Genealogy of his birth Mat. i. thrice fourteen Generations are reckoned up and but four women incidentarily put into the Catalogue Judah begat Pharez of Thamar Salmon begat Booz of Rahab and Booz begat Obed of Ruth and David begat Solomon of her that had been the Wife of Vriah No women cited in the Chapter but these four three of which had been unchast ones very Strumpets to chear up the penitent sinner that their sins and his and the sins of all that believe are done away by him by him that is above all names the Son of God who came into the world to purge us of our filthiness therefore the true mirth of Christmas is to say with David Psal xxiii 4. Though I walk through the valley of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me to save me from destruction Thus far I have enlarged the Angels comfortable Preface to the Shepherds Fear not that they should not be dismayed either at the light of glory which shined about them or at their own unworthiness which was a darkness within them or at the malediction of the Law which pleaded condemnation against them for the Birth of Christ as I have shewed was a remedy to take all malignity from them Perchance if the Angel should come amongst us in these days of slumber and security he might spare that part of his Message For where 's the man that humbles himself as he ought as if there were any evil to come We are all confident and void enough from fear if that be good Therefore I come now to lay the second part of my Text to the former how we should not be afraid not with an immoderate fear not with a desperate damning fear which dogs a sullen unrepentant sinner up and down but there is a pious reverential fear which well becomes the Saints and now I proceed to speak of those particulars The Schoolmen very rightly consider fear two ways Quà donum quà passio gift of the good Spirit of God one way and another way as it is meerly a natural passion And first I will speak of it as it is a gift of the Holy Spirit Primus in orbe Deos fecit timor says Statius not so soundly that fear was the first thing in the world that made a God But I am sure that want of filial and awful fear is the first thing that will make an Atheist and perswade a man there is no God The Prophet Isaiah could say no worse of the Idols made of stocks and stones but that we should not be dismayed at their Godship they could neither do good nor hurt But if we will revereri we must vereri there can be no true worship of God without a sollicitous and most anxious care not to displease his Majesty He that is not conscientiously afraid to offend doth most of all offend When Zacharies mouth was opened and began to divine of this day Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for he hath visited his people fear fell upon all that were round about him Luke i. 65. it fell upon them indeed even as the Holy Ghost fell upon the Apostles at Whitsontide Acts ii In like manner when the Widows Son of Naim was raised from the dead by the word which Christ spake Fear came upon all that were there and they glorified God Luke xvii 16. Surely they had not glorified God as they ought if that fear had not come upon them One instance more 1 Kings iii. 28. All Israel feared Solomon when they saw the judgment of God was in him And shall not all the World bow down with reverence and astonishment when they know that the power of all judgment is in God himself But as for this filial devout fear perhaps we love to hear of it for the Angels themselves cover their faces with their wings standing before the throne of the most high Isa vi as if the Majesty of God were awful and dreadful unto them And indeed a sollicitousness to do the will of God because he is good and gracious the study of the heart which is wary and circumspect not to decline from his Law if you will call this fillial fear it may become an Angel for David speaks of it as if it should endure in heaven Psal xix 9. The fear of the Lord is clean and endureth for ever This is it to whose perfection we must aspire to live justly and soberly though there were no Hell at all but purely out of the principle of love and zeal to the honour of our heavenly Father and what a becoming thing it is unto Religion to approach to divine Prayers especially to the Table of the Lord with an awful duty as if we were afraid to speak to God or to touch the crums of his heavenly banquet Is not this better than to thrust our selves into such coelestial actions with a sawcy familiarity without fear or wit What is more comfortable than to taste of that Cup which betokens the precious bloud that was shed for our sins And yet the Greek Fathers term it usually 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tremendum mysterium a mystery to be trembled at when we partake thereof Assuredly we may presuppose that when Mary took the clouts into her hand to wrap about her Infant when Joseph did assist as it were in the office of a Father when the Wisemen offered their gifts when the Shepherds came out of the fields into Bethlem and peept in where Christ was laid to see what was done every action of theirs was mixt with reverent fear and joy they stood amazed they prostrated themselves there was no more spirit left in them as it is said of the Queen of Sheba when she beheld the royalty of Solomon therefore the Angel forbids not but after this sort they should dread the Lord with a filial and reverential fear Nay I go further the Angel would not disapprove of that fear which trembles at the wrath to come and endeavours to live unblameable because God is an avenger of unrighteousness for to discredit this fear by calling it fervile and to dehort Christians from it against which stone some I know do stumble it shall not be my Doctrine I hold it not safe and warrantable If they take fervile fear in that notion in which the Sententiaries do take Attrition that is to be displeased at our sins only because judgment will follow but neither sorrowing that God is
brought with him lookt another way Titus ii 14. Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity Some few persons are culled out here for all that shall be shielded under the buckler of this Saviour unto you a Saviour is born says the Angel speaking only to the Shepherds that 's because no more were in the way But to as many as read these words and mark them the word speaks continually and is never silent the message is as properly brought to you as ever it was to the Shepherds to you a Saviour is born The Prophet Isaiah allows him to all the Sons of Adam that will lay claim unto him unto us a Child it born and unto us a Son is given Isa ix 6. 'T is a kind expression to rejoyce at the good news of another mans prosperity 't is incident to a sweet nature to do so And indeed if Angels were so enlightned with the gladsomness of our benefit that when they had said it over they could not choose but sing it also in the verses after my Text Cum de aliena gratia Angeli exultent quae nostra est stupiditas If the blessed Cherubims exult for the grace that we find in Gods eyes what stupidness is in us if our hearts do not triumph for gladness for the benefit flows unto us and not unto the Angels The Devils fretted and roared out against Christ because he came into the world for mans sake and not for their deliverance Quid nobis tibi What have we to do with thee Jesus thou Son of God we renounce thee Mat. viii 29. The evil spirits rage that he is not theirs the good Spirits of God rejoyce that his Father hath made him all ours being secure of their own glorious estate they triumph that we shall be exalted to the fellowship of their happiness Well then to you he is born not only to the Shepherds but inclusive to all men so you have heard in the former verse his birth was gaudium omni populo joy to all people only they are excluded that exclude themselves by infidelity Facit multorum infidelitas ut non omnibus nasceretur qui omnibus natus est says St. Ambrose the infidelity of many now infidelity is properly imputed to those within the Church who had the means to believe and did not the infidelity of many is a bar that the Incarnation of Christ pertains not to all men although he was born for all men Every man therefore must strive so to love Christ and to keep his Commandements that he may feel the joy of this day particularly enter into his heart and the Spirit testifying to his spirit unto me a Saviour is born 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 say the Greeks it comes of the possessive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tuus a Saviour restoreth every man to himself for a sinner is lost not only to God and the inheritance of the Kingdom of Heaven but he is lost to himself and to the comfort of a good conscience until Christ restore him again to joy and peace within his own heart that he may say to himself as Philip did to Nathanael I have found him of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write Jesus of Nazareth c. Oportet uti nostro in utilitatem nostram de servatore salutem operari says Bernard Let us make our profit from that which is our own and let every man collect his own salvation from his own Saviour To you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings Mal. iv 2. The Sun enlightens half the world at once yet none discern colours by the light but they that open their eyes and a Saviour is born unto us all which is Christ the Lord but enclasp him in thine heart as old Simeon did in his arms and then thou mayst sing his Nunc Dimittis or Mary's Magnificat My spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour The fourth thing to be consider'd is what early tidings the Shepherds had of our Saviours birth hodie natus I do not tell it to you says the Angel after a month or after a week go to Bethlehem and search and ye shall find this is the first day that his Mother bore him This day is born unto you in the City of David c. Before the blessed seed was promised for a long while ye have had a state in reversion that Christ should come in the flesh to save his people from their sins now the act is accomplished ye have a state in being enter upon your happiness and possess it reckon from henceforth that you have your joy in hand this day the great deliverer hath taken up a poor Palace in the City of David According to a natural computation of days we forget the nights though an Infant be brought forth in the still hours of darkness yet from thenceforth we call it the Birth-day and not the birth-night of such an Infant In such accompts I know not how we speak of nothing but day for that 's the Dialect of the Kingdom of Heaven where there is day for ever and no darkness So the Shepherds kept watch over their flocks by night and after the first hour the morning began as the general conjecture runs our Saviour was born yet since a natural day comprehends darkness as well as light the Angel was pleas'd to say This day he is born This is literal and to the plain meaning yet I refrain not their allusions altogether that say the darkness was remov'd away by that radiant glory which shone round about the Angels and that the night was as clear in those parts as if the Sun had risen upon the earth therefore upon the comfort of that miraculous illumination the messenger says This day is born unto you And David by some men is made to speak to this allusion Psal cxxxviii The night is as clear as the day which was true say they at our Saviours Incarnation Others take their liberty to guess that good tidings make the night be called day and sad tidings make the day be called night Heavy misfortunes indeed have fallen out in the night for the most part Sennacheribi great host slain in the night Thou fool this night thy soul shall be taken from thee a threatning to the rich Epicure yet it holds not always But if Christ be the day-star and his Birth turns night into day it will become us as the Apostle says to walk as children of the light Curiosity hath gone too far in one question touching this part of my Text why this late day was esteemed most expedient in Gods wisdom to send his Son in the flesh four thousand years had almost expir'd since the seed of the Woman was promised to bruise the Serpents head and yet no sooner then hodie say they that will search in to all causes the Angel said to day but why he came punctually on that
day or in that year he did not learn the Shepherds nay I speak it with modesty I do not think he could teach himself Therefore I recoil back from that nicety and lay down my doctrine in this large lesson it was expedient that many revolutions of years should run out from the promise of Christs Birth unto the actual accomplishment 1. So great a matter was worthy much expectation and many predictions of the Prophets So St. Austin Quanto major Judex veniebat tanto praeconum series longior praecedere debebat the greater the Judge that was to come the greater troop of Harbingers and Apparitors should go before him 2. His Incarnation is fitted to the fulness of time because it falls out equally to try their Faith that should believe in Christ to come and to try their Faith who ought to believe that he is come that he is dead and risen again and ascended into glory 3. Between the time of Adams disobedience and the Birth of the Lamb of God a long space of years doth interlope that man might have time enough to see and feel his misery before the medicine was made to apply unto his sore 4. God is pleas'd to confer great honour upon our humane nature at three extreme distances in the beginning of the world toward the midst of it and in the end of all things In the first creation God made man after his own Image so began our excellencies then he made his own Son in the similitude of man a long distance went between these two Hereafter at the period of all things we are sure to have a glorified body and that our mortal shall put on immortality Now Christs Incarnation comes in the midst because he is the center of all Gods mercies towards us 5. The Jews whom Christ above all others calls his own He came unto his own c. they did sustain at this time and for some years had sustain'd a bondage under the Roman Conquest perhaps it is our Saviours pleasure that a great part of the Church shall be under a Romish thraldom against his second coming But this bondage was bitter to the Jews even at this day when Christ was born Caesars taxes were very grievous for Mary being ready to lie down was compell'd to come to Bethlehem to be taxed now in this day of oppression when the Jews I believe thought the yoke of captivity to be more intolerable than their sins and that they wisht for a victorious champion to fight for them then did God send them a greater Saviour than they wisht or lookt for not to acquit them from the Roman Dominion but from the pit of Hell And this is all that can be modestly conjectured about the opportunity of time c. This day is born unto you and as near as we can observe the course of the year by Astronomical skill this was the very day yet it is not that hodie of which the Angel spake unto the Shepherds then is not this part of the Text utterly unappliable to us no beloved but appliable to us also in the nearest degree for as we say of the sin of Adam Actu transiit manet reatus the act past away at the first but the guilt remains upon his posterity so our Saviour was born upon one particular day which is past but the merit and virtue of it is never past but abides for ever Wherefore to them that make the right use of this blessing St. Paul says it is out of date at no time but now is the acceptable time now when you will your self now is the day of salvation The Prophet Isaiah says the joy of this birth it like the joy of men in harvest that 's for the universality of all those that belong unto the field but for the extension of time it is not for the season of harvest alone but for all the year not gaudium in annum but gaudium in sempiternum Not an harvest joy for the plenty of one year but this is the bread of life whose plenty rejoyceth the eartn unto all ages It is as good news upon any day as it was upon one day says Bernard that Christ is born That day comes always anew to them that are renewed in the spirit of their mind and he is born every day to them in whose hearts he lives by Faith I must here cut off the circumstance of time and because the Sacrament must have a time to be celebrated I will speak but a few words upon the place and conclude The Angel directs the Shepherds to the City of David and thither did all the Scribes and High Priests direct Herod with full consent Bethlehem of Judea was the place where Christ must be born for so it was spoken by the Prophet Now Bethlehem is that City of David I know in the Old Testament the Tower of Sion is sometimes called the City of David a strong fortress in Jerusalem which David built to curb the Jebusites but that famous Metropolis of Jerusalem had nothing to do with this birth Little Bethlehem is here called the City of David where David was born Take notice I pray you that the Angel could have call'd it Bethlehem to take away all mistaking but it makes more to the matter to shew that Christ came of the house and lineage of David which was foretold Psal cxxxi Of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy seat And mark how it falls out agreeably that Joseph and Mary came to no other Town but this to pay Tribute unto Caesar Had they been only of the Tribe of Judah as David was no nearer allied unto him they might have gone up to many other Cities much more famous than this to be taxed but being of the stock of David and indeed the nearest living in blood unto him therefore they go up to no City but to Bethlehem the City of David And thus you see the Angel conferr'd with the Shepherds in such words as were very proper they knew the place it was the next at hand they knew it belong'd to him that should be the Saviour of his people who according to the Scriptures belong'd to David by blood and to the City of David for his Country A poor caskenet to contain so great a Jewel Thou Bethlehem says the Prophet Micaiah the least among the Princes of Judah yet big enough to contain the Prince of Heaven and Earth Little Zoar says Lot and yet Zoar was big enough to receive him and his Children safe out of the fire of Sodom Poor Bethlehem which had but one Inn for strangers in it all it seems and that of small capacity which had no room no by-corner for a woman to be delivered in but only the manger of the stable Mean Bethlehem unless the Angel had spoke it the Prophet foretold it and the Star had shewed it to the Wise men who would not have gainsaid that the Saviour of all men could be
Christ Here are species praeliantium voces cantantium the habit of War and the Song of Peace Their habit shews what was before war and enmity against the earth their Song shews what shall be hereafter confidence and courage against our spiritual foes and assurance to get the mastery and so to have joy and peace in the Holy Ghost If Herod and all his partizans were troubled to hear the wisemen ask Where is he that is born King of the Jews what concussion of fear would have been among them to have heard that he brought a multitude of heavenly Souldiers with him into the world they are a defensive guard unto his little flock and though Tyrants rage though Inquisitions be advanced though Leagues be sworn though Armadoes fill the Seas and the Air with their Ships and Sails though the Rulers of the earth take counsel against the Lord and against his Christ yet there is an Army always ready prest in the Air the mighty one hath girt his Sword upon his thigh to deliver his Church in the time of need and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it Therefore Solomon says of it thou art comely as Jerusalem and terrible as an Army with banners Cant. vi 4. Some of little Faith may look upon Christ newly born with fleshly eyes and may doubtingly say Nunquid isle salvare potest Israelem Can this Infant restore Israel can this sucking babe lead forth our Armies to vanquish our enemies O see how many legions he can command from Heaven and then say it is a vain thing to trust in the forces of man it is the Lord that hath powers and principalities in store to awe the world loe he cometh with a multitude of the heavenly host Thus much of the Choiristers I have now to speak of the preparation to their musick which is two-fold for it was with much speediness and with much chearfulness with much speediness for suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the heavenly host The Choire was not long a tuning but the Hymn was sung immediately after the Sermon was ended like a chime that follows a Clock without distinction of a minute one good work follows another incontinently without any tedious pause or lingring respite as Pliny said of the Emperour Trajan in his Panegyrick that the people did often give him extemporary applauses and those sudden acclamations were a sign of their true hearty liking of his government Quae fingendi non habent tempus for being done of a sudden they had no leasure to think how to dissemble or flatter him so it is a sign our heart is right with the Lord when we break out into sudden praises of his goodness upon all occasional meditations When we have received any favour or when the merciful kindness of the Lord comes into our remembrance why do we not break forth into a speedy benediction and thanksgiving at what should we stick certainly every hesitation is a sin every moment of delay is ingratitude it was a Prophetical motion in John the Baptist before he was born as soon as the voice of the salutation of the Blessed Virgin sounded in Elizabeths ears the babe leaped in her womb for joy Quick motions of zeal and devotion are ever most acceptable Procrastinating of time is the ready way to be taken tardy like the foolish Virgins When Abraham entertain'd Angels Gen. xviii he gave them welcome as I may say with Angelical celerity Abraham hastned into the Tent to Sarah Sarah made ready quickly three measures of fine meal Abraham ran into the herd for a tender Calf and gave it to a young man and he hasted to dress it See what an active family here was all upon the speed to do good Nemo piger est in domo charitatis a charitable house had not one sluggish person in it The Cherubims are graven with wings to put wings to our slothfulness our heart should fly as fast to all good works as an arrow out of a well drawn bow The faithful among the Jews had long waited for the joy of their eyes the promised Messias day by day they did expect his appearance and one of their own says it was a chief part of the service and Prayers in the Synagogues to beseech God that his Anointed his Christ would come into the world After this earnest expectation he comes with as much haste and expedition as heart could wish messenger upon messenger one Angel after another and a third telling his errand almost before the second had done And because all the Angels equally wish our salvation one as much as another the whole multitude of them with the same nimble dispatch at the same instant proclaim it That the day-spring from on high hath visited us Yet before I end this point understand the case right the heavenly host did publish these glad tidings suddainly that God should be glorified the earth should have peace and good will should be imparted to sinners not that suddainly and immediately from that moment it should so come to pass Joseph had a dream sent him from God that his Father and his Brethren should bend unto him and he should be possest of great command and so it came to pass but after long imprisonment and much tribulation The Angel Gabriel greeted Mary that she was highly favoured of God the Shepherds honour'd her the Wise men visited her Simeon blest her yet the same Simeon tells her that before her blessedness should be accomplisht a Sword should pierce her own soul So the Angels give suddain intelligence of glad tidings and suddain joy makes the passion the stronger but many years were to turn about before the effects of their message should be fulfilled that is the earth enjoy her peace and God his glory For the speediness of the coming of the heavenly host let this suffice the other circumstance which concurs with the delivery of their message is their chearfulness and alacrity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they praised God with a merry noise and I must say it since all Expositors have said as much before me they sang chearfully to the God of Jacob They that offer him praise do honour him Psal l. 23. Now after the honouring of God for his own being for the eternal generation of the word for the proceeding of the Holy Ghost the supreme most excellent most glorious work is the Incarnation of Christ This is that noble act for whose sake all voices that have utterance shall magnifie him for evermore Therefore the usual Evening Anthem in Cathedrals I and the Psalms sung in private Parishes I am sure my observation deceives not was wont to be Psal cxlviii Praise ye the Lord from the heavens praise ye him all his Angels praise him all the host praise ye him Sun and Moon praise him all ye stars of light c. And the first Psalm among those proper ones appointed for morning Prayer begins The heavens declare the
glory of God and the firmament shews his handy work About beatitude or final felicity there have been great disputes whether it should consist in action or in contemplation but the best resolution of the problem is that praise consisting partly in contemplating the great goodness of the object to be praised partly in the fruit of the lips which sends forth that honour our blessedness shall consist in giving land to the Holy Trinity and unto the Lamb that sits upon the Throne for evermore Vidisti vilia audi mirifica says St. Ambrose upon these words that which the Shepherds saw with their eyes was a little Infant poorly brought forth into the world and cast aside neglectfully in a corner of a stable but that which they heard with their ears was strange and admirable both that all the tongues of men should glorifie this child and that the Angels who by nature had no tongues assumed bodies for that hour that they might speak with such a mouth with such a voice with such a dialect and language as men use to do and fill the world with praises of his name who made himself an improperium a derision and scorn unto many to take away our infamy and therefore worthy to be praised The Devil feigned the tongue of man to delude our first Parents that they should be made like unto God the good Angels also frame a voice in the air like unto the tongue of man to dissolve the works of the Devil and to teach us that God is made like unto us Let the Serpent hiss at it this heavenly host which consists of our friends and protectors doth sing it out and warble it Coelesti quadam ineffabili modulatione says the ordinary gloss with a celestial harmony far transcending all humane musick and above all possible Relation A Nurses lullaby will sing a Child out of crying and frowardness and make it still but it had need be a singing Angel nay the concent and harmony of all the Angels that should chear up our hearts with the gladness of a Saviour and wipe away all tears from our eyes when before we knew our selves dead in sins and trespasses And it is good to take it at the best sense great comfort it is that these holy Ministers of Heaven came with singing and exultation It was a sign that there was a great change wrought in the world and favour and propitiation come about to the full desire of our heart Angels have been sent with fire and brimstome as against Sodom and Gomorrah with wrath and reproof to make all the children of Israel to weep Judg. ii with a Sword and with the noisom Pestilence when David had sinned in numbring the people but all this horror and dreriment is cast aside by the birth of Christ says St. Chrysostom and Angels come with Anthems and Carols of praise Thus the Lord hath put a song of thanksgiving into our mouth for he hath done marvellous things If Asaph and that Choire did lift up their note with all sorts of musical instruments in the Old Law while the Sacrifice was burning upon the Altar I am sure we have much more cause not in imitation of Asaph but of the Angels to praise the Lord with Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs Luther I know not upon what reason unless it were because the Angels in my Text did begin the Gospel with melody he makes Psalmody to be one of the notes of the Orthodox Church of Christ The voice of man certainly is to praise God in its best tunes and elegancies and the reasons why musical notes are most fit and necessary amidst our Christian Prayers are these four 1. Rules of piety steal into our mind with the delight of the harmony The Agathyrsians even to Plato's days were wont to sing their Laws and put them in tune that men might repeat them in their Recreations 2. It kindles Devotion and fills the soul with more loving affections Make a chearful noise to the God of Jacob says David As the noise of Flutes and of Trumpets inspire a courage into Souldiers and enflame them to be victorious so the Psalms of the Church raise up the heart and make it leap to be with God as if our soul were upon our lips and would fly away to heaven 3. An heavy spirit oppresseth zeal and that service of God is twice done which is done with alacrity and our Christian merriment by St. James his rule is singing and making melody to the Lord. When our Saviour and his company were sad the night before his Passion to put away that heaviness they sung an Hymn when they went to Mount Olivet 4. To sing some part of Divine Doctrine is very profitable because that which is sung is most treatibly pronounced the understanding stays long upon it and nails it the faster to the memory It was a Law of Numa among the Romans Nihil oportet in transcursu à diis petere sed ubi vacat est otium we must ask nothing of God by snatches but with sober deliberation And as our Parochial singing of Psalms is very sweet and requisite wherein all or most of the Congregation bear a part so it doth well become Princes Courts and Episcopal Churches to have more curious and sumptuous musick of several Instruments and a skilful Choire appointed to execute it It is semblable to that of my Text where the Angels sung the Service and the Shepherds gave them audience If some wayward humors say this Choiral Musick hath no relish with them it doth not help them in the practice of Religion they understand it not I answer they accuse themselves of many faults in their own complaint 1. That they understand not that which they have by roat if they would mark it 2. They are malicious that would deprive them of that sweetness who are much affected with it 3. It is arrogancy in a high nature to wish that their own ignorant immusical unfashion'd humour should be a prescription to a whole Church To conclude all I come from publick Church Musick to our private delight in holy Songs S. Hierom testifies that in his days as they walkt about the Market as they sailed in Ships as they were busie at Work they sung some holy Ditties It is our solace at home our recreation abroad says St. Basil Neither is it irksome to any but to the evil spirit for the evil spirit went out of Saul when David played upon his Harp and David was no profane Minstrel but a Divine Singer But I read of two sorts of Hereticks that quarrel'd it the Arrians dislik'd singing of Psalms because the Orthodox Christians did use it and the Manicheans because they condemn'd the whole Old Testament Insani sunt adversus medicamentum quo sani esse potuissent They are furious to find fault with that which would have healed their fury But we have learn'd to praise the Lord with our best skill with our
my station before this day came my soul had been in bitterness and I had been gathered to my Fathers in sorrow but now my Pilgrimage hath been prolonged till I am full of happiness now I am fledg'd with all my feathers to fly away for what will satisfie him upon earth whom the sight of a Saviour will not satisfie This Nunc this welcom instant it is circumstanced with two things especially to be observed the old age of Simeon and the miseries of those times wherin he lived The context of the Scripture hath not expresly described him by old age yet that 's collected out of the words that he should not see death till he had seen the Lords Christ meaning sure that he was far stricken in years and yet not mellow enough to drop off from the tree till the Nativity of Jesus was fulfilled and he a witness of it neither would it sound well out of the mouth of any that were not rich in silver hairs Let me now depart in peace Observe therefore that he had waited long before the time came that Christ appeared he might say with David Expectando expectavi He lookt many a long look before he beheld his Saviour And this is the nature of Gods Promises they are seldom accomplished till his faith hath been throughly tried to whom they are made and that he doth even languish with expectation Some will say perhaps O I have waited long this will never fall out as God hath promised Nay the more like to be because you have waited every long put off will have his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and you shall say at last though I was a murmurer and repined yet now I see that the Lord is faithful and will not deceive his servants the glass of Simeons life was almost run out to the last sand before the Virgin brought forth her Son but days were added to his days that the words of the Psalmist might be verified in him With long life will I satisfie him and shew him my salvation Secondly Simeon reserved himself for joyful days to see the glory and the salvation of Israel but even to this now whereof he spake in my Text he had seen as much misery and infelicity as ever had befaln any poor Kingdom in the world But though he saw all things most contrary to the Promises of God still he trusted to see the day star shine and those clouds to be blown over and having a stedfast hope even against hope the most high came down from above and comforted his people Who would not have been weary before this time of the former days Their Kingdom was given to strangers and the Romans that hated them were Lords over them their Scepter was departed to Herod an Idumean their Tributes were so grievous that the poor Virgin Mother being ready to lie down was compelled to take a journey to be taxed their Religion was so prophaned that the Pharisees made the Commandments of God in vain through their Traditions the High Priesthood which had been so admirable in the sight of God and man was conferr'd by favour and corruption upon the basest of the people The Temple was defiled with Images contrary to the Law and such as resisted it their bloud was shed like water on every side of Jerusalem Notwithstanding these dismal days this reverend Sire was contented to live in all this affliction he did patiently bear the calamities of the Church and Kingdom and staid the good time when Christ should come to help all This was the season he knew it according to the Prophets and seeing so prosperous a sign arise which assured that the happiness which had befaln his Nation did far exceed their precedent miseries he was willing now to bring his weather-beaten Vessel into the Haven I know what the conceit of the most will be upon it that when troubles were past and consolation newly manifesting it self in his Horizon it were more proper to say Vah vivere etiam nunc lubet O let me live and add many years unto me for mine eyes have seen thy salvation but was this a time to bid the world farewel and to say now let me depart Indeed this were a strong objection if he had been obnoxious to self-love But allowing that which must be granted that a good man judgeth himself most fortunate in the publick happiness of others no wonder if Simeons desires were crowned with all that his heart could wish and was content to make a full stop there when he saw that all Jerusalem and all his kindred and posterity were in the ready way to be filled with the salvation of the Lord. I have no approved Author whom I dare cite unto you how long this aged Israelite did live after our Saviour was born and presented in the Temple Nicephorus says he went immediately from that place to his own home and took his rest for ever but this I gather from it a devout man is or should be always at these terms with God Nunc dimittis I am not fastned to this world with the love of it I have set my house in order I have thrown away the superfluity of my sins I am ready to give up my Stewardship when my Master will take my accounts I have bid adieu to all impediments Lord receive me when it is thy will and pleasure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythagoras his Symbole to have our fardles ready trust up to be gone Again reason good he should ask of God to close his eyes for they could never do him such good service any more as they did at that instant when they saw that mighty God in the visible form of a little Infant The superstition and the barbarisms of the Turks being so well known I do assent to some stories reported of them which may seem incredible to civil Nations I instance in this particular that when some of their Zealots have made a Pilgrimage to Mecha to do their Adorations to the Tomb of Mahomet they presently draw hot burning steel before their eyes to put them out that they may never see any other spectacle after they have been honoured to see that Monument of their Prophet Far better a gread deal and without superstition might Simeon say mine eyes have seen thy salvation O Jehovah now draw their curtains before them that they may never hereafter see the iniquities of men To touch the point yet more to the quick there were some things to come to pass which Simeon foresaw in his Prophetical spirit and he chose rather to die than to be present at them God himself I may say it with humility could do no greater favour to the world than to send us his Son and to give him a body The world on the contrary I speak it with horror could offer no greater despight to God than to reproach his Son and to crucifie him Therefore this Saint begs that since he had seen Jesus in the bosom of his
Mother and in his own arms he might not live to see him hanging between two Thieves as if he had said O let me not survive to see the infidelity of mine own Nation O let me not live to see him crown'd with thorns Lastly A mans native Country can never deserve so ill but he will wish it subsistence that it may not utterly be ruined and albeit the sins of Jerusalem would call for vengeance and desolation upon it this loving Patriot desired to be called out of the way that he might not see her made an heap of stones As the Historian says that Anastasius a good Bishop of Rome gave up his breath with a broken heart immediately before the Goths had sackt that imperial City Ne orbis caput sub tali Episcopo truncaretur So Simeon saw that the sins of the Jews were not yet come to the worst but that their hardness of heart rejecting Christ would draw more grievous judgments upon them therefore he desired while matters were not yet come to their extremity now he might depart in peace I know 't is trivial with every rash spirit that is discontented with his fortune to say emori cupio like Clitipho in the Scene I would I were out of the world but it is a good corrective speech of the old mans Prius quaeso disce quid sit vivere learn first to live as you ought and so had Simeon done for in the fourth part of my Text he pleads that he was prepared to die in peace Lord now c. It cannot be conceiv'd of him since we must allow the best men some grains of infirmity but that his heart had been oppressed with many recurrent thoughts between that long space that God did first make the promise unto him unto the actual birth of Christ never did any Father expect the return of his only Son after twice seven years travail from month to month from day to day as he did watch the advent of the Lord continually when he should be presented in the Temple and surely it is likely that Hanna and divers more had heard from Simeons mouth what the Lord had revealed unto him and that his credit suffered a little with good people as if he had deluded them for the riff raff if such a thing were come to their ear no marvail if they taunted him that he was a lying Prophet and that he was possessed with a spirit of wicked divination These assaults from without and the revolvings of his heart from within did make his conscience boil like a troubled Sea because that gracious Oracle which he had received was not yet to come to pass nor like to be fulfilled in the short remainder of his days since his candle was burnt to the socket wherefore at the first glimpse that he viewed the holy one of God in swadling clouts this ejaculation starts from him as if his joy had burst the vessel like new liquors that swell'd within it as who should say I began to be troubled I began to distrust I was afraid that thy promises would fail and by so much the more I was afraid of death now come what will come I am secure and confirm'd my heart is quiet my Faith is built upon a rock Lord now c. just as old Jacob was ready to die for gladness when he saw that Joseph was alive says he now let me die since I have seen thy face because thou art yet alive Gen. xlvi 30. And the content which this holy Prophet took in embracing the Messias who had been so long waited for could not be better exprest than thus that his soul was ready to take leave of the world in peace for as bread imports all manner of sustenance in the phrase of the Hebrews so peace in their signification imports all manner of good that is desirable health plenty honour safety tranquility of conscience comfort in the Holy Ghost all sorts of prosperity heavenly and earthly are no more but peace in their acception therefore the interpretations what Simeon would have are many and all agreeable to pious analogy First Euthymius expounds it of the peace of his thoughts that he did fluctuate before and hang in suspence what God would do but when Christ was born he was resolv'd against all the slights and cavillations of Satan that the Lord was just in all his sayings and holy in all his works There may be security in a bad man I will not deny him that carnal priviledge who refresheth himself with the comforts of this life but there can be no stability in him no setledness against distraction and fluctuation unless by much meditation he do set Christ before his eyes as if he were born in him and endeavour to Incarnate the promises of the word in his soul by Faith as the blessed Virgin gave flesh to the eternal word by bearing him in her womb Secondly Others interpret this peace de pace intrepiditatis he did not fear to be dissolved though his decayed body lay even under the stroke of death he saw nothing why he should flinch but that he might say with David I will lay me down in peace and take my rest Before a Saviour was granted to mankind death was death and Hell to boot now it is but a sleep without all disturbance a repose without all annoyance a releasement out of bonds a transmigration to felicity He therefore that will not die in peace knowing that Christ stands at the right hand of God to make intercession for him and to purchase in his behalf instead of a transitory estate a far abundant exceeding weight of glory the fault is his own Vitam in manibus fero mori non timeo A strange darkness is before the eyes of unbelieving impenitent men at their last gasp their conscience knows not how to answer that objection which it makes to it self Quae nunc abibis in loca My soul whither art thou going in what woe or sorrow shalt thou be entertained hereafter Thus Cain was dejected Every one that findeth me will slay me Gen. iv 14. Thus Nabals dastardly spirit fainted and nothing brought him to death but the fear of death His sordid churlish inhospitable life here and the rest of his undeservings represented nothing but horrors to entertain him in the life to come Sed quis est iste qui de hoc seculo recedit in pace nisi is qui intelligit Deus erat in Christo mundum reconcilians sibi says St. Austin But who is the man that gathers up his feet into his bed sweet and placidly as old Jacob did and dies in peace but he that felt the consolation within him that God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself Thirdly The sense holds very well to interpret it de pace gaudii he should be gathered to the dead in great joy because the troubles and thraldoms of his Nation should no more disquiet him For who could doubt of
be in the strict Grammatical sense to forbid according to the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to thrust back with the hand as I would derive it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to push away with the arm or some member of the body But I cannot I must not suspect John of such rudeness I incline much rather to the moderation of the gloss Non negat simpliciter sed deprecatur He did not stubbornly deny his Master what he bad him do but fearfully and with reverence declined him In the story of the old Church we find that some renowned men being called to the Office of a Bishop hid themselves out of the way some debased themselves in writing as most unfit for such a calling nay some disfigured certain parts of their body whereas the ancient Canons admitted none to that place but such as had perfect limbs and straight proportion yet they were not accused for this that they contemned the authority of the Emperour but they were rather noted for a great deal of modesty that they set themselves far under that esteem which the world had of them So this unwillingness in John to baptize our Saviour was not a countermand against his offer but a pleading with God that his Ministry deserved not to be so highly exalted You may parallel this action with Moses when he excused himself that he was not eloquent enough to speak to Pharaoh with Jeremy when he laid open his own imperfections that he had not the graces of a Prophet Ah Lord behold I cannot speak for I am a child With the Centurion that laid a bar in Christs way when he was coming to his house I am not worthy thou shouldst come under my roof Finally with Peter Luk. v. who thought such company as himself not to be meet for the Son of God Depart from me Lord for I am a sinful man One comparison more with St. Peter in another place will fit our turn exactly Joh. xiii 6. Lord says he dost thou wash my feet No thou shalt never wash my feet This were very audacious to oppose his own will against our Saviours but that no man knows how bold humility may be with God and give no offence Upon this very instance S. Ambrose excuseth both John and Peter for their meaning was not pertinacious to remove Christ from his intended purpose but to withdraw themselves because of their own unworthiness And I had much rather take this distinction than be their accuser Non crat inobedientia sed humilitatis pavor It proceeded not from disobedience but from the abashment of humility Michol was ashamed of Davids dancing that man should humble himself so much before God Now the opposite to her scorhful folly must be very good in John who is ashamed that God should humble himself so much before man Shall the Clay say unto the Potter What is it that thou hast made me thus No that were presumption But may not the Clay say unto the Potter Why hast thou made thy self thus Yes that is reverence and humility Therefore Peter pluckt away his feet from his Master as who should say Dost thou stoop to wash my feet to whom all things in heaven and in earth do bow and obey It was fit for an honest servant to have such a consideration Therefore John Baptist likewise trembled to dip his hands in water and to sprinkle it upon the Lamb of God As who should say in St. Ambrose words Tu venis ad me peccatorem Dost thou come to me a sinful man as if thou wouldst lay down thy sins and knowst no sin Did it not become a Prophet to make a scruple before he entred into such an action It is an excellent judgment that St. Bernard gives on both parts Magna utringue humilitas sed nulla comparatio quomodo enim non humiliaretur homo coram humili Deo A great vie of humility on both sides between Christ and John Yet both being truly censured John is no way comparable with Christ for it is not strange to see a creature cast himself down before his God when God did first drink of that cup and began to cast himself down before man The emulations of men are foolish and we contend for the most part who shall exceed another in vanity and of many of us it may be said as once it was of two great Roman Lad●●● Non minùs vitiis quam aliae virtutibus emulabantur They strived as much which should be most vitious as other chaste ones did which should be most vertuous Not so this excellent Prophet who did aspire to imitate the Son of God in humility and thought it the best part of Religion to be fearful of presumption As Tertullian spake what a strict care he had not to offend Timeo ab omnibus indulgentiis Domini mei I am afraid to accept of all that licence which God hath given me So John Baptist was so afraid le●t he should be exalted above measure that he thrust back that honour which the Lord himself imposed upon him He that will strive with God that he may not be too much lifted up I believe such a one would be easily perswaded to make no dissention in the Church for the defence of his own meritorious righteousness Nay if God himself shall speak to his praise I do not say to attribute strict merit to his work but if God shall give him testimony I was hungry and thou gavest me meat I was naked and thou didst cloath me in this the Lord pardon him if he deny it modestly When did I see thee hungry Or when did I see thee naked I must not omit to give you this observation into the reckoning John had pass'd the whole course of his life with an even obedience stuck at nothing though never so hard and austere this one instance in my Text excepted wherein he was loath to yield He was content to converse with beasts in the solitary Wilderness he thought he had enough when he made his meal of Locusts and wild honey His rough hairy garments were fit enough and fine enough in his opinion Imprisonment and death in a good cause were as welcom to his heart as life and liberty He that was obedient and pleased in all this can there be any thing so much against his mind that God should ask him twice to do it Yes he knew not what to make of our Saviours offer to come to him to be baptized for doubtless the lesser is blessed by the greater in this he was scrupulous And he that never flincht for abundance of misery there can be hurt in that knew not how to entertain this glory which was put upon him there may be danger in that and it could not displease that he was jealous for Gods honour but he forbad him saying I have need c. The zeal which we have seen in John that Gods excellency be not diminished leads us to the consideration
Ordination shall be necessary for us for nothing is necessary in it self but as the Lord hath decreed and made it so Wherefore this is my first Proposition That the use of Baptism is simply necessary to a true Church and where it is not in use as among Jews and Mahometans that alone is enough to defie them that they are not members of that body whereof Christ is the head It is not to be opposed that the due administration of the Sacraments is an inseparable note of the Church For the Church being an outward company of Professors that depend upon the grace of God How can it outwardly be discerned that we depend upon him unless we accustom our selves to the outward means that seal and assure his blessings unto us Touching Baptism therefore it is necessary to a company of Believers who make a Church it is so necessary that they could give no evident token of their Christianity to men if that mark of our initiation into the visible Church were omitted Though Baptism as I will shew instantly is not simply necessary for the invisible incorporation of Infants in to Christ yet it is certain that the sprinkling of water gives them that visible incition whereby they are ingrafted into him That must be our ordinary practice or else we are none of his flock he is none of our Shepherd In the description of Paradise we read of two things that were in it Pleasant Rivers of waters and Trees which did abound with fruit for sustenance So the Church in whose blessings Paradise is restored unto us hath spiritual sustenance for life in the Lords Supper and water of Regeneration in the other Sacrament Without these two it is no more it self and therefore the Church of God in general may say I have need to be baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is a necessity laid upon me My next Proposition consists of these terms Suppose that there are some grown to years of knowledge able to discern between good and evil who from their birth were Paynims Mahometans altogether ignorant in the truth of Salvation but at last the light of heaven hath shined upon them and by the preaching of the Word hath wrought upon their hearts to believe such Converts must desire to be wash'd in the Sacrament of water and confess that they have need and that they would be baptized First I say they must desire it cordially and with all the affection of their mind If it be not the only Lesson of the Gospel yet I am sure it is the main drift of Christ and his Apostles to teach all men to attain to Salvation by humility Therefore to pluck down our high imaginations see the admirable wisdom of Gods Dispensations he hath made man subject to those creatures which are much beneath himself that they should be the sanctified instruments to make him partaker of everlasting life Naaman the Syrian thought great scorn at first to make use of an whole River to recover his Leprosie Now le●t any man should have such insolent thoughts that he would not be beholding to small things for his salvation they that will be heirs of heaven must come to a Font and be glad of a little sprinkling in token that Christs bloud will cleanse them from their sins They must kneel and fall down likewise at Gods Table to pick up the crumbs and to taste a little of his banquet of bread and wine And he that despiseth these Elements as poor rubbish for so great a purpose he despiseth God himself and his heart is not right with the Lord. It is an essential propriety of faith to long for the Sacraments even as the Hart thirsteth after the Rivers of waters And he that sets those Mysteries at a low price as if it were not material to his souls benefit whether he used them or no the Devil hath pust him up to destroy him he wants the true life of Faith and is given over to the captivity of Satan I say no more than God hath denounced against the uncircumcised Gen. xvii 13. My Covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting Covenant the uncircumcised man-child shall be cut off from his people he hath broken my Covenant Beloved if an Israelites child died before the eighth day which the Lord appointed for Circumcision that did not offend the Lord neither was the child accounted out of the Covenant but if an Israelite of ripe years or a stranger within his gates did despise Circumcision that soul was cut off in the anger of the Lord. My third Proposition touching Converts of ripe age is this that if they desired Baptism and were prevented by the suddenness of death the Lord will accept the desire of their Faith and their soul shall not suffer for the want of Baptism Two Texts in the New Testament imply a strict command that we must all be baptized if we desire to be entred into the Covenant of grace yet I will draw from them that they are not altogether without limits and mitigation Mar. xvi 16. They are our Saviours words He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved but he that believeth not shall be damned Mark with what wariness the words are repeated not thus he that is not baptized shall perish only the other member is taken into the threatning He that believeth not shall be damned To be an unbeliever to avoid the Sacrament out of disdain and not to be prevented by necessity that is the crime which according to our Saviours words shall not be unrevenged Hear in another place what he presseth more strictly upon Nicodemus Joh. iii. 5. Vnless a man be born again of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God Here is no time limited but it is spoken as if instantly the institution of Baptism were in force and that from thenceforth no man could plead his right to the Kingdom of heaven without it Yet we know the soonest that it took place was not till anon after his Resurrection when the Disciples had the word given Go and baptize all Nations c. For as he said elsewhere Joh. vi 53. Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his bloud ye have no life in you the words run in the Present tense yet he did not perfectly declare what he meant nor put in force till he eat his last Supper with his Disciples So it appears that Text before cited Vnless a man be born again of water and of the Spirit is not without limitation and the next verse clears the matter on this sort That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit where we see the Spirit alone is able to regenerate a man and not always necessarily both water and the Spirit Bernard in his 77 Epistle to Hugo writes more diligently I think than any before him in this argument He proves from the confession of the
and fell to them again seven times and no less and never made an end till his Servant told him he saw a little cloud rising out of the sea He that will give over for seven times seven repulses and will not be importunate with the Lord it were pity his desires should be successful Such constant such contrite devotion how can it choose but pierce the clouds The High Priest went once a year into the Holy of Holies with the perfume of Incense What is Incense but Prayer What is the Holy of Holies but the Kingdom of heaven O that you would believe which I am sure you ought to do that no part of Piety is so beneficial to the soul as Prayer You will remember my saying perhaps when you are upon the bed of your last sickness that Prayer is the Key to open the gate of heaven that Prayer is that address of the soul with which God appointed we should draw near unto him Now I know the most of you had rather spend your pains another way but at that last hour of anxiety unless God forsake you for your sins your heart will be intent upon nothing but upon zealous Prayer It is but a circumstance drawn into my Text from another Evangelist therefore I will pass it by with Bedes observation that Prayer is an active and a passive Benediction it draws God to us and by the same motion draws us to God as if a ship lay at Anchor tost upon the waves you may pluck the Cable with your hands and think to hale the ship to you but the Cable being of stronger tack will pluck you to the Ship The Prophet Isaiah in his Prayers was confident he could not be denied therefore he cries out O that thou wouldst burst the heavens O Lord and come down Our High-Priest Jesus offered the sweet odours of his Prayers unto his Father and loe the heavens were opened unto him The second consideration of the first Point is ended but I would you would diligently begin to practise it Thirdly I shall recite it before you how this Miracle fell out to glorifie Christ Therefore the Text says Loe the heavens were opened to him opened manifestly for the view of all beholders that were present but opened unto him because it was meant for his inauguration to honour his Mediatorship who came to redeem mankind from the curse of endless death and captivity Therefore imagine not as if the whole heavens did seem unveiled to discover all their glory but only so much of the Firmament did spangle like a Canopy advanced in state over our Saviours head as might betoken his Celestial Dignity The Father at this Baptism proclaimed him from above to be his well beloved Son and to make us understand that his love where it lights consists not in sweet words of affection only he did attire the Air in most Princely beauty to honour his well-beloved in whom he was well pleased Contrariwise at the Passion of Christ the Sun denied his light to the earth and the Regions above did never look so terrible as then with black clouds and darkness for he carried the malediction of us all upon him and it was a day of wrath and vengeance when God took punishment upon all iniquity We read of no Angel that was near to behold him at that dolorous hour upon the Cross belike it was a sight so ingrate and pitiful to behold that they withdrew themselves but at the triumph of his Baptism it is not mine but St. Austins opinion that the heavens which reach as far as the habitation of all blessed spirits were opened Vt in coelestibus esset miraculum de his quae agebantur in terris that the Angels might take this amiable spectacle into their view of those things that were done upon earth for would it not ravish the Powers of Heaven to peep into this Mystery that the Son of God should stoop so low in the River Jordan That a mortal man should hold up his hand above his head to baptize him When Israel came out of Egypt and the house of Jacob from the Babylonish bondage the deliverance was so gladsom to the Land of Canaan to receive her ancient Inhabitants again that the Mountains skipped like Rams and the little Hills like young Sheep When the Apostles prayed among them that were converted and had received the Holy Ghost the place was shaken where they were assembled as if the ground could have cleft for joy Acts iv 31. Then could the Heavens contain to burst themselves for joy when Christ was initiated into his Royal Office The Earth was obsequious to the honour of such as were earthly the Heavens did honour Christ at his Baptism for the second man was from the heaven heavenly Now I come to fill up the last thing considerable in this Miracle what joy and comfort the opening of the heavens affords to all them that believe in Jesus The heavens were opened the Dove descended a voice from above proclaimed the good will of the Father to rejoyce our hearts that the immortal Laver of Baptism is able to cast all those blessings upon us not that all those were not in Christ and due to him before the Sacrament For did he then begin to have the Spirit rest upon him who is of the same eternal substance with the Spirit Or was that the first time when the heavens were opened to him of whom it is said of old Heaven is my seat and Earth is my foot stool Nor did his Father then begin to call him Son for we read in the book of the Psalms Thou art my Son this day that is from all eternity I have begotten thee When God spake and answered our Saviours Prayer from Heaven Christ turns to the Jews saying This voice came not for me but for your sakes Joh. xii 30. Likewise he might expound upon the opening of the heaven this was not for me but for your sakes Restincta est aquis baptismi romphaea flammatilis quae claudit paradisum says Ratbertus A fiery flaming Sword debarr'd the way into Paradise by Gods appointment which flame is mystically quenched in the Baptism of our blessed Mediator and now as if the Angel had said I will stop the way into Paradise no more the Heavens were opened And if Marriage be called honourable inasmuch as he vouchsafed his Presence at a Marriage at Cana in Galilee then Baptism is most honourable and blessed because he was more than present at it He came in his own person from Galilee to Jordan to be baptized To what purpose should this Scripture say Loe or behold the heavens were opened Unless it were a continual opening from that time to this how could we behold it If open and immediately shut again it were not so proper to say unto us behold But if they always stand open by the meritorious Redemption of Christ then it is an apt Phrase to say Behold the Heavens were opened
Saints but would not have them forget Zeal Ne dolum habeas in columba demonstratum est ne simplicitas frigida remaneat in igne demonstratum est Guile and circumvention are to be banisht from Christianity if the Dove sit upon your head it will instill simplicity but simplicity may be chil and faint in a good cause therefore if a Pillar of fire sit upon your head it will infuse fervency There was no fire wanting in Stephen the Martyr when he did asperse the Jews with all manner of disdainful reproaches because they were stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart There was no Dove-like simplicity wanting because he prayed for them that stoned him And so far of the second point how aptly the Spirit came like a Dove upon Christ at his Baptism in cloven tongues and in fire upon the Apostles at the Feast of Whitsontide The conclusion of the Text rests now upon this Point that the figure of the Dove sweetly doth admonish us concerning many properties of the Holy Ghost It sate upon Christs head not to enrich him with any heavenly treasure which he wanted before but to derive the manifold issues of sanctification into our heart Solus injuriis se subdidit Dominus sed solus gratiam non quaesivit says St. Ambrose all manner of ignominies and buffetings all manner of injuries upon the Cross our Lord and Saviour took them to himself alone but the coming down of the Spirit that he took not to himself alone I will pray unto the Father and he will send you another Comforter Open your heart wide therefore and this Dove will fill it A dumb creature ye know and may signifie many things and because I am perswaded the Holy Ghost came down in that shape which had the largest number of significations for the advancement of piety therefore I will hold me to my task to collect all that are profitable and omit none And because it bears a similitude which will increase into many applications I will enter upon that occasion first therefore it is animal foecundum it is a bird of a most teaming fertility and whether any bird that flies doth breed oftner I am not certain I believe not many such fecundity there is always in a lively faith Like the trees of Eden always bearing fruit never without some good work either the tongue is praying or the ear is hearing or the heart is meditating or the eye is weeping or the hand is giving or the soul is thirsting for remission of sins and every pious action is like a Pomgranate in Aarons garment full of kernels to betoken it will seed farther and spread in infinitum This is faiths fertility therefore the Spirit harboured himself in the shape of a Dove Secondly The Gall is the drought of cholerical matter in mans body out of that distemper proceed anger revenge and malice but the Dove hath no gall or if Aristotle hath observed it better than others so small a one that it can scarce be perceived So the Spirit loves to inhabit in a mild and gentle soul without wrath and fury The wrath of man worketh not the will of God for his will is mercy and forgiveness The Dove will intreat for Miriam as Moses did and sheild off the revenge of David from Nabals folly as Abigail did and crave pardon of Philemon for his fugitive servant Onesiphorus as Paul did The bruised reed shall not be broken and the smoaking flax shall not be quenched therefore when James and John called for fire from heaven upon the Samaratans their check was Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of as who should say ye have forgot the coming down of the Dove Thirdly The harmlesness of that bird is notable it hath neither beak nor talons to tyrannize over smaller Creatures Sine armis extra sine felle intus the smallest flies or gnats may hum about it and take no harm for it devours nothing wherein there is life There is not I dare pronounce it a more Saint-like ornament in any Christian than a Dove-like innocency Devour not one another by greedy gaining by racking oppression by strict advantages by extortion by treacherous blind informations He that wrongfully fleeceth his neighbour of all his substance to increase his own store would eat the flesh likewise from his brothers arm like a savage Cannibal if he wanted sustenance The spoyls which you have robb'd from others perhaps they shall be found upon thy back at the dreadful hour of judgment but wil our Saviour say thou didst not learn this thou extortioner from the Dove that sate upon me Fourthly The Dove feeds cleanly not upon Carrion like Vultures Corvi de morte pascuntur Crows peck upon dead carkasses but it picks up grains of corn and the purest fruits of the field Me thinks in this propertie I see the Spirit invite us to the Table of the Lord What corn-food so pure as that which our Saviour brake and gave to his Disciples saying Take eat this is my body Non hoc corpus quod crucifigetur c. not as St. Austin glosseth my very body which shall be crucified and my very bloud which shall be spilt that was the gross understanding of the sapernaits to think our Saviour meant his fleshly body The Dove is no devourer of that fleshly body of Christ which he assumed from the Virgin Mary but it satisfies its spiritual hunger with those pure crums of bread which are the Sacrament of his body Fifthly It is impossible to teach a Dove to sing a chearful tune for nature hath ingrafted in it a solemn mourning Gemitus pro cantu and it is the Spirit that puts compunction into our spirit with groans unutterable Sometime hang up the Harps of mirth and sit down and weep You never read that God will honour your joy in his eternal remembrance you are sure he will not forget your mourning says David Psal lvi 8. Thou tellest my slittings put my tears into thy bottle are not these things noted in thy book Yea not only doth he bear them in mind and keep them in register but if some Interpreters erre not he wears them upon his head Cant. v. 2 My head is filled with dew says Christ and my locks with the drops of the night as if he wore our tears says the Paraphrast like drops of Pearl upon his head Dry eyes and unrelenting hearts are the curse of God Ezek. xxiv 23. Ye shall not mourn nor weep but ye shall pine away for your iniquities Sixthly The Holy Ghost useth the wings of Angels the wings of the wind the wings of the Dove a bird of strong flight for the Spirit is swift in operation what he doth he doth it quickly Nescit tarda molimina Abraham ran forth to meet the Angels that drew to his Tent Sarah made ready quickly three measures of fine meal Abrahams young man ran to the Herd to fetch a Calf tender and good Nemo piger est
own Land without drawing bloud from Judah So this ghostly enemy hath not prevailed so far as to win the out-works of your innocency Such a tentation is but an Antiperistasis that augments the heat of vertue As St. Ambrose gives Joseph this Encomiastick Nonne tentatio Joseph virtutis est consecratio Nonne injuria carceris corona est castitatis That unchaste offer which Josephs Mistris offered unto him it did consecrate it did deifie his chastity Jonathans Arrows were either on this side his Lad whom he sent out into the field or else shot beyond him So the darts of Lust were either wide of Joseph or shot over his head an impregnable chastity is not so much as scratcht with these shafts of love Bring the case of such a one before Bernard and he doth excuse him from all guiltiness Non nocet sensus ubi non est consensus imò quod resistentem fatigat vincentem coronat This would Satan have that is no blame of mine unless my consent yield and say this would I have But more of this by and by where I will shew that Satans sinful Propositions were no way sinful to Christ that rejected them But I speak of that which I confess is very unusual a tentation repulsed and no part of the Commandment broken he that toucheth pitch shall be defiled Few are like those three servants of God to be cast into the Furnace and not to have the smell of fire about them But what if it please the Lord to have us exercised with the assault of some infirmities so that our conscience doth witness against us it is taken in the snares of sin Far be it from us to think that the Lord doth permit it to our condemnation and not rather to better us in obedience As a little wedge is beaten in sometimes to drive out a greater so a little tentation is suffered to creep in that a bigger mischief may not enter The falling into some sins in the best of Gods Servants is an anticipation against pride that they may not be puft up with their own righteousness Animam oportet assiduis saliri tentationibus says St. Ambrose Some errors and offences do rub salt upon a good mans integrity that it may not putrifie with presumption And whosoever is molested in heart because the enemy doth not cease to pollute him with evil desires and bad cogitations let him hope that God doth sift him as he did his great Servant St. Paul 2 Cor. xii 7. Lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of revelations there was given me a thorn in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me To spend no time about the diversity of Interpretations what this Messenger of Satan should be I give my voice on their side that assign it to be carnal concupiscence for whose sake the Apostle says 1 Cor. ix 27. I bring under my body and keep it in subjection and against which he complains Rom. vii 23. I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the Law of sin This spawn of depravation whatsoever it was did produce a good effect that he who was dignified with many revelations might consider he was a frail man for all that because of his inward rebellion in the flesh and his often imperfections Stimuli carnis sunt stimuli orationis Those thorns in the flesh did prick him on to continual prayer O blessed fruits of regeneration when our very sins shall make us serve the Lord with the better appetite And now I conclude the first general part of the Text for I think all other reasons may be easily reduced to these six which I have run over why Christ was tempted of the Devil In the second general part of the Text this Tentation hath an Author whose name is derived from calumniation and reviling that evil Angel to be known of all men because he is to be shunned of all men one often to be remembred and ever to be detested of much fame in the Gospel as Pilate is in the Creed because his malice is outragious against the Church both in heaven and earth of many titles for he is a great Prince over the children of disobedience none worse than that which is his common denomination 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the reviler or the Devil The first accusation which he invented was against God himself whom he traduced for interdicting the fruit of one tree to our first Parents although their allowance was all things beside which the earth brought forth in great abundance And if God himself were not free from his slanderous impeachments they that are devoted to Gods honour must needs be obnoxious to his manifold calumniations And because he doth commence new matter of reviling before the audience of God continually St. John calls him the accuser who doth accuse our brethren before God day and night Rev. xii 10. Let every sin reduce it self to the head and fountain and the slanderer will be more ashamed of his chief than any Gluttony is first known in Esau Drunkenness in Noah Tyranny in Nimrod Polygamy in Lamech Murder in Cain but reviling in the Devil Nor is reviling only the murdering of a mans good name but directly it is a sin that is guilty of more bloud than any other iniquity And therefore the Devil whose mouth is the great bellows that blows defamation abroad Christ gives him his due when he says he was Homicida ab initio A murderer from the beginning Joh. viii 44. All the miseries which did befall the Martyrs and holy men began in slander and ended in slaughter Naboth first accused wrongfully for blaspheming God and the King and so put to death The Elders stirred up false witnesses that said they heard Stephen speak blasphemous words against Moses and the holy place the next news you here he is cast out of the City and stoned Our blessed Saviour was first wrongfully cried out upon that he made himself a King then led away to Pilate to be Crucified Is not this the fruit then of this Divinity Beware of slandering and evil speaking it is Peccatum sanguinum peccatum daemonum The sin of bloudshed and the sin of Devils The very Prince of Devils is characterized by being an accuser not because a man may not sometimes accuse and yet be a charitable Christian but because the more he accuseth the Elect of God the more it tickleth and delights his envie says St. Austin To this of St. Austin Lactantius hath added another reason Nos criminatorem vocamus quod crimina in quae ipse illicit ad Deum deferat We call our great Adversary a Devil or Calumniator because he delates and reports our faults to God to which his own wiliness did entice us First he empoysons us with bad suggestions and makes us guilty and then discovers us The reason why he tempts is to gather proofs of accusation against
you Without me you can do nothing so our Saviour Had he said without me you can do little or without me you can do no excellent thing or without me it will be hard and difficult for you or without me you can perfect no good work then there had been some evasion for a man to trust in his own abilities but to say without me you can do neither much nor little greater things nor inferiour things with ease or with difficulty neither finish nor begin this chops off all boasting in the powers and industries of the natural man Without me ye can do nothing The Eunuch plainly felt this impotency and when Philip askt him Vnderstandest thou what thou readest Says he How can I unless some man should guide me As the sick person complained at the Pool of Bethesda he wanted some man to put him in when the water was troubled Verè homo fuit illi necessarius sed homo ille qui Deus est Says St. Austin He wanted a man indeed to cure him but no other than he that is God and man Jesus Christ So the Eunuch wanted no other man to guide him but he that was made the Son of man that we might be made the Sons of God And upon those words of the Eunuch thus St. Hierom. We come not to walk in the paths of life Sine praevio monstrante semitam Without celestial aid to prepare the way and go before us Let me strike these two strokes more upon this point and I have done with it first when I say nature is so unfit to produce any good so indisposable to attain the Kingdom of heaven let no man say Why should I strive then against the stream of my inbred corruptions I will give my self over to work all filthiness with greediness This is a devillish resolution But rather say I will be very instant in prayer with my God that he will take away this heart of stone and give me an heart of flesh For in the like case the Tongue can no man tame it is an unruly evil full of deadly poyson Jam. iii. 8. So St. James It is not his meaning that we should suffer this unruly evil to do what it list and permit it without any manner of reformation but with all contention of heart to implore the divine assistance that this member of unrighteousness may become an instrument to serve the Lord. Secondly Those Nations whom we perceive to be led by the viciousness of their own nature and not to be led by the spirit we cannot say without great error and obstinacy that these are appointed to everlasting life if the heathen had sufficient means of salvation what priviledge had we in the Church who have the Word and Sacraments and the infusions of sanctification to make them profitable Thou knowst Lord why these do sit in darkness and in the shadow of death Bonus es in beneficio certorum justus in supplicio ceterorum says St. Austin Thou art very good to those to whom thou art gracious thou art very just to those that are punished This is St. Pauls doctrine up and down Eph. ii 12. It cannot be controuled He describes the wretched estate of the Gentiles before salvation appeared unto them We were aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel and strangers from the Covenants of promise having no hope and without God in the world How can it be affirmed that they want not help to bring them out of this captivity of sin When St. Paul says Spem non habentes they have no hope This is the condition of nature which is not aided by the Spirit 2. Now I will unfold how we are led by initiating or preventing grace when we are first made partakers to taste of the hope of a better life In this Point I will annex the explication of two things First That there is such an initial preparatory grace in them that are not yet justified and converted 2. That in the first entrance of it the Spirit doth produce it in us solely and entirely the will of man conferring no strength at all Concerning the former of these two conclusions I say there are many good internal effects wrought by the power of the Word and the illumination of the Holy Ghost which enter into the hearts of them that are not yet converted as some knowledge of the divine will sense of sin fear of punishment grudgings of sorrow some earnings to be delivered some hope of favour This is a middle state between natural corruption which is altogether enmity with God and between perfect regeneration when we are called to adoption of Sons I marvel this should not be easily admitted for these reasons The Philippians had fellowship in the Gospel St. Paul calls this the beginning of a good work in them and he trusts God would perform and finish it Phil. i. 6. Yet more clearly Heb. vi 4. he shews there are antecedent portions of grace in many before they are converted and made heirs with Christ yea in such as never were ingrafted lively in Christ he calls it thereby the name of illumination tasting of the heavenly gift tasting of the power of God tastings of the Word of God and in some wise being made partakers of the Holy Ghost Yet these having but these first preparations of grace may backslide crucifie the Lord of life and put him to an open shame The similitudes which are used to shew how grace doth possess the soul do plainly shew as much 1. As in natural generation there are many previous dispositions which go before the introduction of the soul into the matter So there must be many antecedent preparations of the divine blessing before our spiritual regeneration that we be born again and become the Sons of God 2. Gratia se habet ad animum sicut sanitas ad corpus Grace doth raise up the soul from sin as health doth affect the body and bring it out of sickness but there is a middle state of recovery before health be perfectly regained so there is a previous illumination and good direction in the mind and will which go before our conversion that we be actually made the living members of Christ Some are afraid to call this grace and yet they cannot avoid it for they are compelled to call it auxilium Dei a special help of God flowing from his providence Sometimes they abhor not the name but say it is gratia reprimens an assistance of God whereby such as are not converted may repress the occasions or commissions of some heinous sins Either they allow it to be as much as true grace or no better than nature for many evils may be avoided and repress'd by nature no good thing can be done without grace It is therefore that internal calling wherewith God doth seriously invite those to repentance and belief in Christ who have the tidings of salvation brought unto their ears I say I speak of those only who are
nature Non agunt sed aguntur So in the act of renovation we are not fellow-workers but are led and carried whither the Spirit will And as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sons of God Rom. viii 14. 4. We know divine mysteries best by negative expressions and therefore I go on fourthly that this immission of efficacious grace is no violent compulsion upon the will Compulsion I said was a word of hostility and not of favour When God doth his work in us throughly energetically that it shall not fail by a Catachresis it is called a coaction So it is said in the Parable to them that were sent to bring in the blind and the lame Cogite intrare compel them to come in I say this is a Catachresis so Prosper the great director of this way that I take Hanc abundantiorem gratiam ita credimus potentem ut negemus violentam We believe this eminent abundant grace worketh with great power but not with violent compulsion For because of those previous preparations I spake of which make us know and have some desire of heavenly things God saves no man against his will therefore it is no violent attraction for no man is ordinarily saved that hath positive repugnancy though in the momentary act of conversion he doth add no auxiliary co-operancy Nay so far is this most abundant benediction of the Spirit from offering coaction and force to the will that the will of a regenerate man doth instantly shew its complacency and turn it self to God This efficacious motion is infused from God and in the same moment exercised and put into act by man for to that end it was inspired by God that man should produce the act of believing and adhering to Christ This is an Altitude for faith to look upon Voluntas est subjectum istius volitionis causa suae volitionis in eodem instanti I think verily the not marking of this hath caused much debate that the will of man in the act of conversion is the subject upon which God works faith and it self the cause which doth produce the act of faith in the same instant They have my suffrage that say how these two cannot well be divided in time one from another Gods operation converting a sinner to be his Son and the act of believing in that man converting himself to God no object can be for a moment in the will but it must affect it one way or other but in order of nature Gods inspiration is first to be conceived and then mans embracing and assent Thus it appears the agitation of this divine motion is not by force and compulsion but with a sweet and fatherly attraction and the effect is no way rough and against nature but above it For to limit and determine the indifferency of the will is not the destruction of free will but the perfection witness the Saints and Angels who are confirmed in grace that they cannot sin If the Son make you free then are ye free indeed which is thus expounded by the Apostle Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 2 Cor. iii. 17. Fifthly I annex that the powerfulness of this converting grace is not well expressed when it is entitled but a moral perswasion The hearts of Kings and surely of all other men whose power is less free are in the hand of God and he inclineth them which way he will perswasions may labour upon the affections it is the scope of an Orator but the most flexanimous Rhetorician that ever spake cannot be said to have the hearts of his Auditors in his hands that is a phrase out of humane capacity What moral perswasion was there in this Christ called Peter and Andrew James and John and Mathew from the receit of custom and they left all and followed him Shew me any ground here for moral perswasion that is probable allegation of reason Not a word more spoken than follow me or perhaps I will make you fishers of men few words God knows But a mighty efficacious impression was secretly instilled into the heart there it was it must needs be that celestial irradiation which made them leave all to follow Christ whose outward appearance was most contemptible and his society according to the wisdom of the world most dangerous Perswasion can but propound an end and as every man is affected so he likes the end which is offered We that disperse the Word have the Office to perswade you to the Kingdom of heaven but God forbid he should bring us no further The Devil can suggest and perswade likewise and prevail above his Makers perswasions as it appears Gen. iii. therefore ascribe the honour due unto the Lord that his Spirit is more efficacious to produce good than Satan to produce evil therefore his work consists not in perswading but in governing and inclining the heart Finally To dispatch this Point I said this potent and infallible assistance of converting grace doth well consist with the Promises and Threatnings and Exhortations of holy Scripture There are other matters objected against this but at the last you will find all sticks at this knot For after some wrangling in the end it is confest God can restrain the liberty and indifferency of the will and make it bring forth what act he please and it must be allowed that the taking away that liberty to work either good or evil is not the destruction but the perfection of the will The angry question is Whether the removing away that liberty and indifferency from the will in the act of conversion can consist with this order that a man shall be commanded to convert himself to God upon the condition of eternal life and upon the commination of Hell fire Now I must tell you this was the very thing that Pelagius quarrelled St. Austin for saying Da Domine quod jubes jube quod vis Give me to do what thou commandest O Lord and then command what thou pleasest But take all my answers like grapes upon a cluster 1. They that make this objection know we are commanded to have the first grace of illumination and they acknowledge it is freely and merely wrought by God Why then do they stumble at converting grace that conversion should be commanded us and God altogether cause it and yet allow it in preparatory grace 2. Doth not the Scripture frame our tongue to speak thus Make you a new heart and a new spirit Ezek. xviii 31. there is a command I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you Ezek. xxxvi 26. there he doth execute in us what himself commanded It is to be magnified and admired not to be disputed of when God will work that good by his Spirit within us which he might in rigour without that extraordinary help exact of us 3. Whither will Divinity be tost about if this be not certain That our just and omnipotent Lord commands
such excellent things which we cannot attain to perform that we may be excited to pray unto him for succour with a vehement and a flagrant devotion 4. He commands and he fulfils and he rewards crowning his own gifts and no works of ours that glory may be ascribed to his name for evermore The Synodal Epistle of all the Affrican Bishops St. Austin being one of the Society encourages me that these answers are far more reasonable than the objection Jubet Deus homini ut velit sed Dominus in homine operatur velle jubet ut facias sed operatur facere He hath charged us to will that which is good but he effecteth that willingness in man he says Do and thou shalt live his grace enables thee to do and thou shalt live for ever Let this suffice to teach you how we are led by the Holy Spirit in converting grace and I think it most comfortable to put our hope in God and not in our selves Cursed is every one that putteth his trust in man Jer. xvii 5. To dispach all I will be brief in the fifth Point how we are led by subsequent grace and sanctification which co-operates and assists us after our conversion this is that truth wherein all dissensious parts conjoyn and accord That Voluntas liberata concurrit ad bonum opus eliciendum cum gratiâ divinâ the will of man having conquered the dominion of sin by converting grace is made free and then it freely conjoyns it self with Gods grace to produce a good effect Then it lies upon our own diligence never wanting the directing vertue of the Spirit to increase the good gifts of Sanctification by acts of often doing well then we do further and promote those holy inspirations to a plentiful or unplentiful increase This is not passively to be led by the Spirit but to walk in the Spirit as it is Gal. v. 16. Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh In a word this distinction reacheth over all which can be said upon this matter There are some actions which principally concern the well being of a justified man without which regeneration cannot consist these are they the turning of the heart to God a true belief a faithful conclusion of our life in the fear of God and the peace of a good conscience justifying grace doth so attend the production of these actions that the Lord in his own good time makes us able for these things willing to do and actually to perfect those necessary parts of salvation Other works of obedience as to do this or that good to shun this or that evil all these especilly and particularly considered do not concur to our saving health as to the very making or marring of it In the practice of all these particular good instances the motions and conduct of the Spirit are never wanting to them that are regenerate more or less but sufficient to have kept them blameless in every particular but in many of these we sin often and are wanting to the co-operation of grace through our own stubbornness in the will and sensuality in the affections I will conclude You see how diversly we are led by the Spirit how many sundry ways we are assoiled from Sin and Satan by the direction and efficacy of grace The natural man is able of himself to bring forth no spiritual good work The Lord doth totally and with no assistance of vitiated nature bring forth the first good preparatory grace in the will From thenceforth unto conversion this previous preparatory grace is made effectual or uneffectual by mans free-will In the act of conversion and renovation wherein all the controversie about free-will is moved the Lord doth turn our heart unto himself the will for the act being the passive subject and at the same instant it is the cause of a good action in turning it self to God in subsequent grace unto the end of our life the will being made free from the dominion of sin works together with the motions of celestial inspiration This is the sum of all If any thing be delivered too briefly impute it to the compass of the time If any thing be hard to be conceived impute it to the deep discourse of the matter If any thing be defective in the discourse give Gods grace the glory of all and impute it to my infirmity THE FOURTH SERMON UPON Our Saviours Tentation MAT. iv 1 2. Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights he was afterwards an hungry MAny things were rightly applied by him that compared the success of the Children of Israel upon their entrance into the Land of Canaan with the circumstances of this combate between Christ and Satan 1. the Israelites were miraculously brought through the Red Sea so the first glorious Apparition of our Saviour which went immediately before this business was the Baptism which he received of John in Jordan 2. The Israelites pass from the Red Sea into a great and solitary Wilderness So our Saviour was led after his Baptism into the greatest Wilderness of Judaea a place uninhabited by man for he was with the wild beasts Mar. i. 13. Then the Israelites were in great distress for foot hungry and thirsty their soul fainted in them And Christ had nothing to eat in that place he fasted forty days and forty nights and was afterward an hungry 4. As the Israelites were pined with hunger so they had bloudy Wars with all the Nations of Canaan many a time have they fought against me might Israel then say So many a time did the Legions of Hell attempt me might our Lord and Saviour say yea many times did the powers of darkness compass me about but they have not prevailed against me On the one side here was first the Red Sea then a journey into the Wilderness then scarcity of Food then War and fighting So on the other side here was first a Baptism then a sequestring into the Wilderness then a long Fast and then a long conflict with the Prince of Devils Moreover the men of Israel did appear in that forlorn and despicable fashion before the Canaanites that they were much scorn'd and vilified so God provided we seemed in their sight but as Grashoppers said Caleb and Josuah this drew the Kings of Canaan forth to beat them back and so were overwhelmed in their own pride and cruelty Thus in all points did our Saviour deal with Satan the Eternal wisdom against the wisdom of the Serpent He flies into the Wilderness as one abandoned of the World there he continues in great necessity as one whom none would succour not a morsel of food supplied him by God or man Adversarium non virtutis jactatione sed infirmitatis ostentione provocat thus he provokes and draws Satan out against himself not by a boasting challenge but by the appearance of
that God is with us from the beginning to the end of our life in want and in abundance in liberty and captivity in evil report and good report and he will never forsake us The words of the Prophet Isaiah are sweeter than the dropping of an honey-comb Isa xlix 14. Sion said the Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me Can a woman forget her sucking child that she should not have compassion on the Son of her womb Yea they may forget yet will not I forget thee I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands thy walls are continually before me St. Austin attributes so much to the power of faith against all the machinations of hell that he says the very Lesson of it being said by rote is able to defend us Ipsa recitatio symboli retundit inimicum The very repetition of the Creed doth beat off the enemy How much more mighty is the true feeling of faith when it lives within us If thou canst believe saith Christ all things are possible to him that believeth Mar. ix 23. Let Satan therefore keep his demur his hesitation his If thou be the Son of God unto himself Let him not take away your Garland by wavering for he that wavereth is as a wave of the sea sometimes rising aloft sometimes carried down to the Deep Let him not dry up the very fountain of grace So the Greek Fathers did always entitle faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mother the spring of all celestial gifts If any man say what faith what spring is this so much commended Briefly I will borrow this description to make it facile No man can have so much as an historical faith and well attend it but he must taste of some fiducial application that he is under the wings of the Almighty and looks for safety under his custody Nemo rectè potest credere Deo quin in Deum is no bad rule but I stand not upon that The faith of the Elect by which we shall be able to overcome our Ghostly enemies is not that which taketh all the holy Scriptures in the lump to be true but it is a willing a lively and an effectual assent to the Promise of the Gospel that Jesus the Son of the blessed Virgin Mary is the Son of God and is the Saviour of all those that repent and believe I say it is a willing and approving a rejoycing assent not forced like that of the Devils and wicked men who are convicted by the evidence of truth and with great horror and disdain confess it Moreover I said it was an effectual assent not a knowledge swimming in the brain informing the judgment but not reforming the heart such as hypocrites have But the understanding being enlightned by the Holy Ghost the will embraceth that which is good the heart is purified by it it works by love and transforms us into a new conversation answerable to that which we believe Now this belief in Christ which is the keeping the condition of Gods Promise doth imply three acts The first of assent that he is the Saviour of all those that believe in him which assent when it is lively and effectual is the proper act of that faith whereby we are justified before God The second act is of application when believing truly he is the Saviour of all that believe I therefore believe that he is my Saviour which is the act of that special faith by which we are justified in our own conscience The third act is of trust and assurance that because I do believe not only that he is the Saviour of the World but also my Saviour therefore I rest upon him for salvation So says our Saviour to his Disciples Let not your hearts be troubled ye believe in God believe also in me Joh. xiv 1. But this is not the act of faith as it justifieth us before God nor yet the proper act of special faith which doth justifie us in our own conscience but a fruit and consequent thereof and such a fruit as the Devil would pluck from the tree with this scrupulous injection if thou be the Son of God Now I will let you see as in a Map by pointing at spots of ground for whole Countries how faith is the fountain of all divine graces and therefore when Satan can make us reel and totter in our opinion whether we are the Sons of God there is not one Christian function in us stands sure but all the parts of true Religion are out of frame For first how can a man hope and wait for the performance of the Promises that doth not believe that they belong unto him Faith being the substance of things hoped for How can a man have true peace of conscience who is not perswaded that God is reconciled to him How can a man rejoyce in God who is not assured of Gods favour towards him How can a man be thankful to God who is not perswaded of Gods love and bounty to him They that have sinned how shall they be perswaded to turn unto him if they be not perswaded that his mercy is ready to receive them No man can perform obedience who is not perswaded that his endeavours are accepted of him No man can pray fervently who doth not assure himself that he shall be heard For so the Apostle How shall they call upon him in whom they have not believed Rom. x. 14. Who can patiently bear afflictions who is not perswaded that those fatherly chastisements proceed from Gods love and and tend to purge him as the Chaff is Winnowed from the Wheat Who can worship God with zeal and devotion who is not resolved and comforted that his service is accepted of him Hope Joy Peace Thankfulness Repentance Obedience Prayer Patience Worship all these will vanish away like a morningmist before the Sun if the Devil can make you distrust with such a tentation as this If thou c. And no marvel if in the first place and before all other parts of sin Satan labours to fill the World with little faith he can spare enough of that out of his own store to infect all the earth for who so great an Infidel as himself in this very tentation The words indeed come off very roundly and confidently that the Son of God with one word can command all the stones in the Wilderness to be made bread But to what end I pray you Whether you say for Christs sake or for the Devils sake every way it will chime Infidelity Argue in the first place why it should be done for Christs sake For if he were God what need he make bread of a stone that could make it of nothing Or though he were hungry what need he make bread at all Is not the bread of heaven able to live without material bread And Chrysologus revies it with his objection Nonne potest panem vertere in saturitatem qui potest in famem lapides immutare He
For if we say we feel our selves translated from death to life by the fruits of mortification and vivification for the time past and by a firm resolution to produce better fruits for the time to come how will this agree with continuing in the works of the Devil and yet to collect we are the Sons of God There is no coherence in these two nay there is a flat contradiction in the terms For the practice of sin especially of any great crime cannot possibly stand with the assurance of special faith You cannot say I do verily believe I shall persist without interruption in the grace of God unless you add I do firmly purpose to walk in all the ways of God Eternal life is given conditionally believe that is believe effectually and thou shalt be saved Now it were extreme folly to make God a liar to think we should attain everlasting life without keeping the condition or giving all diligence to keep it As for the rejoynder to this it is altogether as weak as the objection that many live debauchedly and yet presume and crack of special assurance I know that the most wholsom truth that ever was taught may be distorted to ill use and so this Doctrine taken with the left hand may prove hurtful to some evil men will distort the Scripture to their own perdition Yet it is against reason and against the grounds of special faith if any man will look upon them but with half an eye For whosoever live like Libertines regardless to please God so far ought they to be from being certain of life eternal that according to that present state of bitterness wherein they are unless they mend they are certain of eternal damnation The Grashopper feedeth only on the dew and Ephraim feedeth on the wind Hos xii 1. A man that is in a dream may be deceived and think he sees what he doth not shall he that is awake therefore and knows what he sees misdoubt that he is deceived I do defend it and maintain it and that upon good consideration that there is no motive in Divinity of greater force and efficacy to encourage a man to do well or to preserve him from hainous sins than to fix in his heart that Christ died for the sins of the whole world and for his sins in particular and albeit he is laden with iniquity and hath abused the bloud of the Covenant yet by repentance and newness of life he is perswaded that bloud shall not be in vain to him but that God hath remitted his sin and is this a stumbling-block to make a man a hypocrite Will any but a most riotous unreclamable Son run on in leudness because he knows he hath an indulgent Father Or waste and consume his means because his Father hath entailed his Land upon him The Prodigal in the Gospel came to himself and turn'd a new leaf because he knew he had a Father would receive and forgive him Shall we abide in sin because grace abounds Rom. vi 1. St. Paul cries out upon it as the greatest Solecism in Divinity The more a man is assured of Gods love towards him in Christ in pardoning his sins in redeeming him in glorifying him hereafter the more will his heart be enflamed with love towards God and towards his neighbour yea towards his enemy for Gods sake the more studious he will be of his glory the more desirous to please the more careful to obey the more ready to return and repent when he hath offended I say it will be so not barely it ought to be so Paul and Peter and divers in the Gospel were assured upon Christs words of their Salvation do you ever read they were less faithful in their ways or any whit the more presumptuous If words can be clear and legible these are in St. John 1 Ep. iii. 2 3. We know when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is and every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure As if he had said A man cannot stedfastly hope for glorification but it will make him purifie his heart I must gather up my meditations briefer in the three following Conclusions And the third is in part already opened that this special assurance is not the formal act of justifying faith but an effect which follows it Faith is called special faith two ways 1. Because our Lord Jesus and his merits is the object of it and so it is called faith in his bloud Rom. iii. 5. For although by that faith which doth justifie we believe all the Articles of faith and the whole Word of God as well threatnings as promises yet the object of it as it justifies is Christ and in regard of the general compass of belief it is called special faith 2. It is called special faith in regard of the effect by which particularly and specially we apply Christ unto our selves Some have most inconsiderately taught That this special faith in the latter sense or particular application is the very essence of justifying faith Which opinion hath drawn upon it self a world of scandal and absurdity By faith we obtain remission of sins that is the Covenant of the Gospel But by what faith It cannot be by this special assurance For certainly a mans sins must be forgiven before he can be assured they be forgiven what more idle than to be assured by special affiance that we were reconciled to God before we were reconciled therefore in order of nature there is another degree of faith which goeth before by which we are justified before God and that is a lively and effectual assent that this is most true that Christ came into the World to seek and to save that which is lost This is eternal life that we might know thee the only God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Joh. xvii 3. And as that is a plain speculative Text so we have the exercise and practise of it Mat. xvi 16. Our Saviour ask'd his Disciples Whom say ye that I am Peter answered Thou art Christ the Son of the living God This was his intellectual asset to the truth of salvation and thereby he was justified Blessed art thou Simon Bar-jona blessed for that confession Therefore special assurance is not the formal act of justifying faith In a word our confidence is begotten by Gods mercy our confidence doth not beget Gods mercy We live in our Mothers womb as soon as ever the soul possesseth the body yet we feel not when life was first given So we live by faith and we are justified by acknowledging the mystery of salvation as it is Rom. x. 9. If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and shalt believe in thy heart that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved Yet we do not feel or perceive we are justified till the actions and fruits of faith put themselves forth abundantly in us Infants are
ingrafted into Christ by Baptism before they can perceive their insition and do not say this reason holds not in us we are of age to understand our own belief It is not our understanding that makes God gracious unto us but his own free mercy And in this respect many like new-born babes receive the kingdom of heaven I mean that divers go out of this World into Abrahams bosom who never overcome distrusts and tentations at least till they are even going out of the World But this charitable and most true assertion were invalid if particular application of Christs mercies by firm assurance did justifie a sinner I resolve it therefore unto you that general assent goes first in order that Christ perfect man and perfect God is the Saviour of all those that believe then we draw a particular assent that he is my God and my Saviour then our boldness and assurance that by him we shall pass from death and reign with him in glory is the effect of that particular assent and so the Scripture speaketh Eph. iii. 12. In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him Here is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which causeth us to speak with alacrity to God here is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may assure it self any thing and these are effects produced by faith in him that is by justifying faith Not to cloy you with more than one other quotation 1 Tim. iii. 13. They purchase themselves a good degree and great boldness in the faith which is in Christ Jesus The object of faith is verum the object of certitude and assurance is bonum Faith is a perswasion or assurance of the mind though working upon the heart Affiance is an affection of the heart though proceeding from the assurance of the mind Now hear the fourth Conclusion speak This affiance or special assurance is not alike in all that are justified nor at all times alike in any man This Conclusion will serve to quiet the troubles of the Conscience two ways First When the same man at sundry times finds himself so divers from himself now full of spiritual Consolation a few days after that his comfort is but luke-warm at another season almost stark cold let no man think his case remediless because of these alterations in his Spirit Many times doubts will arise and continue long with a terrible perplexity Nevertheless though I am sometime afraid yet put I my trust in thee says Dauid Psal lvi 11. When these flat contrary perswasions come into your mind yet God will never leave you so destitute of his grace but that you shall have some strength left to pray to be delivered out of those tentations that the bones which he hath broken may rejoyce and a happy wading out of those doubts may prove to be the greater confirmation The spirit of a good man is sometimes well enlightned with assurance sometime a little obscured sometime very dark after there shall be a long and a lasting serenity in his Conscience As a woman that hath newly conceived begins to suspect her conception by and by some other signs cast into her mind that she is deluded Afterwards she feels the fruit of her womb quicken and then her opinion is constantly confirmed Faith after the manner of alterative qualities hath its growth its declension its reparation It grows to an infancy then to youthfulness then to a stronger age and the more it lays hold of the Promise for its own blessing the more it cleaves fast to the foundation Besides this should procure them peace of mind who cannot alledge that great confidence for their own part and strength of assurance that others seem to challenge to themselves yea and truly have Every tree doth not shoot out his root so far as another and yet may be firm in the ground and live as well as that whose root is largest So every faith stretcheth not forth the arms of particular assurance to embrace Christ alike and yet it may be a true faith that lives by charity repentance and good works some faith abounds with one sort of fruits some with another God is delighted with all that are good and he will reward them In all kind of Divine Conclusions some are more doubtful spirited than others In our very meats one believeth that he may eat all things another eateth herbs Rom. xiv One man esteemeth one day above another another esteemeth all days alike Let not him that is strong in faith despise him that is weak So one hath examined himself is perswaded especially by his good endeavours to please the Lord and by the redemption of Christs bloud which he felt effectual in him in the Sacraments rests every way assured that Christ will glorifie him at his second appearance Another dares not take such solid comfort for he is more oppressed with tentations more afflictions come upon him and chiefly perhaps ignorance darkens his understanding give this man leave to say and he shall be heard Lord I believe help thou my unbelief Because I said that ignorance especially darkens the understanding of them that are so weak in faith you shall know wherein Many are pluckt back from particular affiance in Christ because they know not the method how to proceed For they are taught that nothing is to be believed with the certainty of faith unless it be contained in the Creed or in holy Scripture but they cannot find this or that mans Salvation written there therefore they are posed how to apprehend it with the certainty of faith I make my answer First how easie it is to reduce it to one of the Articles of the Creed or more than one but especially to this that we believe the forgiveness of sins But to the main Objection all the Doctrine of Faith which we believe is written or deduced out of holy Scripture but the act wherewith we believe is in our selves and not to be lookt for in Paper and Ink No but that is wrot in our own hearts through the testimony of the Spirit by good examination Now the Major Proposition is Whosoever believeth stedfastly shall be saved in Scripture The Minor Proposition but I believe stedfastly is wrote by the Spirit in our own heart therefore the Conclusion is divine and good And because it dependeth upon an Argument whereof the principal part which draws on all the rest is totally and immediately revealed in Scripture therefore the assurance of a mans particular Justification is lawfully reduced to the assurance and certainty of Faith Another fair pretence causeth divers men rather to leave place in themselves for some distrust than to aim at strong assurance because it relisheth much more of humility to be cast down at the recognition of our manifold sins Indeed it is good to ponder our own unworthiness and imbecillity so far as to make us humble and to acknowledge no good can come to us from any thing that is in our selves but it
is in his own house and may lurk there safe and secure but when he departs this life and comes out of doors Vae capiti woe be to him then his torment was deferred to be increased When Hagar and Ismael had spent their bottle of water and were ready to give up the Ghost for thirst was not this a good time to remember how injuriously Sarah had been despised and Isaac mocked And that both he and she were the root and fruit of fornication He that in the distress of scarcity will smite his hand upon his breast and examine his secret faults and say I have sinned against the Lord this man hath made great gain of his poverty Quisque optat cum sanâ mente lamentari quàm cum insanâ perpetuò ridere says Gregory Who had not rather with the enjoying of his wits be weak than with the loss of his wits be strong and merry So who had not rather feel the Famine and misery of the world and repent than flow in the satiety of all things never feel the sting of his sins and die impenitent As one said that good Fathers sometimes have wicked Children lest vertue should seem to descend by natural inheritance and again wicked Fathers have sometimes vertuous Children that wickedness may not run on in a perpetual propagation so riches and abundance lest they should be thought to be no blessings at all now and then fall upon the best And yet lest you should think them the best of all things now and then they fall upon the worst men Or as another draws out the line of justice very well no man is absolutely good or absolutely evil but as the best have some evil in them so the worst have some good some talent of nature which serves for the use of Common-wealths encrease of Arts publick peace or some ornament of the Universe therefore the good of the worst men is rewarded with a gift of outward fortune and the evil of the best men is punished with scarcity no wonder therefore if he that is the Son of God do sometimes pine for lack of bread Fourthly Though a good man labour and watch and cannot earn the bread of his carefulness yet he shall fill his bosom with better fruits for occasion is given hereby to the righteous to exercise these three spiritual graces Prayer and Patience and Charity Prayer comes after trouble and necessity as Resurrection comes after death Even the very Philistins were driven to repentance to restitution to send back the Ark of God into his own Land when the Lord smote them with Emerauds and diseases If such fruits grew from an evil stock when a vengeance and calamity was in their Land then much better fruits of sighs and prayer will bud from them who are planted by the rivers of waters who weep and lament that their iniquities have deserved such great chastisement The Beasts and Fowls of the air do lack and suffer hunger that by the voice of nature they may call upon the Lord to be replenished then the young Ravens do call upon him and the Lions roaring after their prey do seek their meat of God He is the door which opens to let forth all blessings spiritual and temporal Quam nemo nisi ebrius ignorat as one says ' None but a reeling drunkard can miss the door into which he should pass David seems to utter a Paradox Psal xxxvii 25. I never saw the righteous forsaken nor his seed beg their bread Surely experience is opposite to this and the Posterity of many have been in great want whose memory is blessed for their righteous conversation Some have very well turn'd the Verb beg into a Participle begging and then the construction is fair I never saw the righteous forsaken nor his seed forsaken begging their bread for they are not forsaken to whom the Lord gives patience in the inward man though they be destitute and forsaken Let God wrestle as he will and cast us down yet we must pray and suffer and not let him go until he bless us But abundance of all things is a great slur unto devotion In Egypt where the River Nilus over-flows their grounds constantly instead of rain and where the heaven is clear continually above nemo oratorum coelos aspicit the heathen could say so God had fewer Prayers made unto him there than in any place of the world Therefore lay the beginning of this Point unto the end is not the soul better than the body Is not the spirit of Prayer better than a full barn Is not a little holiness better than all the Vintage of Abiezer Moreover we are commanded patience we promise patience and I hope we resolve patience now that we may draw this good motion out of the secret corners of our heart distress and penury will put it in practice This is it which St. Austin calls Gods great allowance above thousands of Gold and Silver Patrimonium fidei patientiae in corde Christ makes the righteous sole Executors and Administrators of his patience Be not tormented with emulation though you see another shine like a bigger Planet than your self though you see the most vicious man set over you in advancement Dabo huic novissimo sicut tibi The Owner of all the Earth may do what he will with his own he will give unto him that is last in his favour as unto thee nay more than unto thee in this life yet I cannot call it more if you will balance those light wares with the talent of your Patience When God took all from Job yet says Gregory Patientiae munere coronabatur He was crowned like a Saint in heaven with the victorious Crown of patience upon earth Is it not better to suffer in the present because we had not these things to use than suffer because we had them and did abuse them It is a saying attributed to the supposed Dionysius Divinae justitiae est non emollire optimorum fortitudinem materialium donationibus It suits well with the Divine Justice and Providence not to make the fortitude of his Saints effeminate with abundance And if they had always their Salary of earthly blessings here as upon compact their Religion would be more weighed down with Avarice than confirmed with patience The last spiritual exercise which is caused by the need and want of Gods beloved is this that merciful minded men may fill the bellies of the hungry with the bread of their charity God hath suffered his fire to wast away the habitation of the poor man that your contribution may build him up again a covering for his head and those good works shall receive you into the everlasting Mansions The waves of the Sea swallow up the substance of our brethren that our collections may restore it again and this is it which Solomon calls Casting our bread upon the waters Jacob and the Patriarches were well-nigh famished in the Land of Canaan that Pharaoh might relieve them
followed Remigius in this fancy for it delivers that the Devil took him up to a place which had been often infected with vain-glory In Cathedrâ doctorum multos deceperat inanis gloria many of the Pharisaical Doctors who sate in the Chair of Moses to teach the people loved the praise of men more than the praise of God and were infected with vain-glory But this opinion will quickly vanish when it is rationally opposed For the Pulpit out of which Solomon prayed and left it for the use of teaching was but five Cubits high above the people and it was within the outward part of the Temple and it was fit to be no higher that the voice of the Teacher might come clearly to the Auditory But surely the place from whence our Saviour was egg'd to take his leap was an exceeding Altitude And I find that the height of the Temple was one hundred and twenty Cubits 2 Chron. iii. 4. There is no probability that their Rabbins sate so far aloft above their Auditory to preach unto them I think the second Temple wanted sixty of that till Herod finished it with Altitude and Glory Others having look'd upon exact delineations of the Temple deliver that the Roof of the Temple was built flat after the manner of all the Jewish buildings and as all private houses were commanded by the Law to have a Battlement about them to keep them from danger that walk'd upon the top of the Tarras so the Temple had a Battlement about it adorned in several spaces which perhaps were made like Wings and call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Pinacles How those Battlements were capable for Christ to stand upon they describe not but I am sure according to Josephus no man could set his foot upon the flat Roof of the Temple Quod aureis verubus horrebat acutissimis ne ab insidentibus avibus pollueretur says he it was stuck thick with gilded Spires as sharp as Needles that the birds of the Air might not mewte upon it and defile it We Christians dare do all unseemliness against the Walls of our Churches no reverence of the place will deter us but the Jews were so careful that they would not endure the Fowls of the Air should lay their dung upon the top of the Sanctuary Thirdly others draw out Models of the Temple having at each corner lofty Spires higher than all the rest I know not whether David alludes to them when he speaks of Polished corners of the Temple Psal cxliv. 12. and upon one of these I think in best propriety of phrase and matter Jesus was placed as upon an Altitude conspicuous to all the City though as I told you before our Saviour declin'd that intention of Satans and made himself invisible The observations from hence shall be two First that the Devil chooseth the highest place he could find And secondly the most divine place of all where to pitch the ground of his tentation Upon the first I mean not so much the local elevation of the place to which I could add that Satan loves to ascend on high to build up a sin as high as Babel and that David was aloft walking on the house-top when he fell into unlawful love with Bathsheba let this pass for as great sins may be practised in the lowest corners of the earth but I mean after the figurative Exposition of the Fathers they that have clambered up to some high Pinacle of Fortune they whom God hath made eminent in any gifts of Art or Nature let them take heed that Satan stand not at their right hand to puff them up with Arrogancy If you despise those whom you see beneath you whether it be a Pinacle of the Kingdom or a Pinacle of the Temple upon which you stand remember by that mark that you must needs come thither of the Devils setting Many that have designs upon promotion think the bird is catcht when they are advanced they are as sure as a Ship in the Haven which need fear no tossing when if they understood their own condition well it concerns them to be more vigilant of themselves and of their affections than ever The wiliness of the Tempter hath made it as hard a thing to moderate a great fortune Servare modum rebus sublata secundis as it is to guide a Ship Royal under all the Sails Therefore St. Austin said upon my Text Non est laus stetisse in pinnaculo sed stetisse non cecidisse It is no such cunning thing to stand upon a Pinacle but to stand sure and not fall there is the cunning The Historian says true many were thought fit to govern till they were trusted with Government for this evil Angel hath such inveterate malice against all those that bear rule and title that it is very rare to find a man so well affected to Gods glory to the Church to the publick good when he sits at the Stern to govern as when he was a private man Divers that had true hearts to all good purposes when they stood upon the same level with the common people are quite metamorphosed by that time they get up to the top of a Pinacle Satan passed them over in the throng but he joyns close to them when they are exalted S. Pauls was a rare temper and to be found but among men of most divine graces that could stand safe any where and not pollute his conscience I know both how to be abased and how to abound Phil. iv 12. God is very abundant in his mercies to endue some with that spirit that they are as humble as just as conscionable upon a lofty Pinacle as upon the lowest Pavement But more usually those Potentates whom the Scripture records have fallen into the snares of destruction Joab was resolved he could not be great enough without the fall of Abner nor Naaman but by pretence of Idolatry nor Sanballat but by hindring the work of the Temple nor Felix but by Bribery no nor Nicodemus himself but by some dissimulation If every good Saint hath his Angel Guardian as certainly every honourable Magistrate hath an evil Angel of hostility to oppugn him every high Pinacle hath his Satan Lastly Observe how the wicked One would pollute no common place but the very house of God he setteth him on a Pinacle of the Temple Many times when a City is taken by the enemy some strong Castle or Fort holds out which is not won so easily The Church is Gods Castle his Tower of defence against all spiritual iniquities and Satan would not only take possession of the holy City but of the best Fortress which God held in it and brings Christ to be tempted upon the top of the Temple All places are pervious unto him he is shut out of none you shall find him says Chrysostome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Exchange of Merchants upon the Bench of Judges in the Temple of the Priests And above all places on earth if he
make us his instruments to defile the holy Temple Gods glory is put to the greatest scandal and reproach And this is brought to pass so many ways that it is plain to see there hath been a most witty complotter in the treachery 1. When any Prelate is so puft up that he thinks himself too great to be a door-keeper in Gods house but will be higher than all the Church and se● on the top of the Pinacle who sitting in the Temple of God exalts himself above all that is called God 2. The Temple is defiled by setting up Idols in the Courts of our heavenly King even in the midst of thee O thou Sanctuary of the Lord. 3. By offering up unclean Sacrifice either false Doctrine or impious Prayers or superstitious Worship or corrupted Sacraments 4. When men set their foot within the sacred Tabernacle with carnal thoughts with worldly imaginations with no zeal or attention 5. To bring any prophane work any secular business within those walls which are consecrated to the name of the Lord. This is that Camel which the Jewish Priests did swallow when they strained at a Gnat. For they told our Saviour that he brake the Sabbath he did not keep the Law but they themselves did licence and allow the prophanation of the Temple by bringing Merchandize into it selling of Sheep and Oxen and changing money and you know how Christ revenged it even with anger and indignation I must borrow time to tell you how Christ did bestir himself in the reformation of that abuse more than in any thing else throughout all the Gospel For first he corrected that fault twice over in the second of St. Johns Gospel in the beginning of his Ministry and Mat. xxi toward the end of his life anon before he suffered You see what an obstinate evil it was which would not be redressed for one admonition 2. When he came to Jerusalem there were many other faults flagrant crimes wherewith the place abounded yet the first thing he reformed was the abuse of the Temple 3. He would not tolerate the least prophanation wink at no fault for he would not permit that any should carry so much as a Vessel through the Temple Mar. xi 16. 4. He reformed this trespass not only by preaching and quoating Scripture against it but by a scourge and by violence by word and deed And surely if words will not serve God will bring blows to maintain the reverence of his house that it be not contemned What a dissolute carriage it is to see a man step into a Church and neither veil his head nor bend his knee nor lift up his hands or eyes to heaven Who dwels there I pray you that you are so familiar in the house Could you be more saucy in a Tavern or in a Theater This is no other but the very gate of heaven says Jacob when he had but a vision of God and his Angels Brethren renounce the Devil let him not alienate your reverence from that place which God hath specially appointed for the saving of your soul Holiness becometh thine house for ever O holy blessed and glorious Trinity AMEN THE ELEVENTH SERMON UPON Our Saviours Tentation MAT. iv 6. And saith unto him If thou be the Son of God cast thy self down For it is written He shall give his Angels charge concerning thee and in their hands they shall bear thee up lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone IT is altogether unknown to man when a sin comes merely from the suggestion of his own heart and when it comes from the tentation of the Devil But in one case eminently above many others it is most likely that there is some hellish provocation when out of good principles and religious grounds our heart is quite turned out of the way to rebell against the Lord. Ely the High Priest had a tender fatherly affection Who could turn this wholsom water into poyson to make him wink at the vices and dissoluteness of his Sons but Satan David was a thankful Prince and loved to remember how God had multiplied his favours upon him yet upon this stock grew that evil fruit to number the people Why the Text says Satan stood up against Israel and provoked David to number Israel King Josias was an enemy to the Heathen that knew not God and he that deludes good motions made him so irreconcilable that he would fight against Pharaoh Necho to his own destruction and harkened not to the word which came from the mouth of God Certainly the hand of Joab was in this and in all such fallacies where a good fountain is made to send forth sweet waters and bitter as to sin because grace abounds to neglect publick Prayer because faith comes by hearing to cark and care too much for the world because a man would provide for his Posterity And this master-wit of Hell laid this bait to make our Saviour swallow it in this present tentation For Christ being demanded to make bread of stones he replies that he was confident in his Fathers Promises Man shall not live by bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Are you so confident Thinks the Tempter and upon this confidence I will thrust you on Have you appeal'd to Cesar And to Cesaer you shall go It is true that you say God is very gracious and will not destitute you in any want or danger you have answered very well therefore cast your self down from this Pinacle and be confident still God will look to it that you shall be supported This is the very train discovered and made as clear unto you as the light of the Sun In the former tentation he would drive Christ to unlawful means if that take not because he trusts in God then trust in him still and refrain from the use of things lawful so St. Austin distinguisheth that his first fallacy was Deum defuturum ubi promisit that God would not help where he had promised to assist and the second fallacy which now I am to handle is Deum adfuturum ubi non promisit that God would help where he had not promised to assist Where many things are to be found out in one verse they must be divided severally and in this order I take it to be expedient 1. Here is Satans demand Cast thy self down 2. Upon what supposition he demands it Why if thou be the Son of God 3. Upon what authority authority enough for it is written 4. Upon what assistance why the best in the world whether it is the supreme or the instrumental The supremeis God He shall give his Angels charge concerning thee and the instrumental are the most glorious powerful and excellent creatures in all the world the whole Host of Angels in their hands they shall bear thee lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone These are such particulars as the wisdom of the Spirit hath left us
to consider upon these words and as I begin at Satans demand so I make two branches of it the Motion and the Mover The Motion is tumbling headlong to be cast down and the Mover must be himself Cast thy self down To the handling and use of these are required your ear my utterance and Gods grace to both I begin with the Motion and if the meaning of him that counselled it had been well carried it were a motion easily perswaded to him that is of an humble spirit a good man is ever ready to be directed to go and sit down in the lowest room and to be abased to the very center of humility When the heart is in good awe of God the joynts will bend unto the earth O come let us worship and fall down and kneel before the Lord our Maker This we are sure is far from Satans purpose and can be no construction of his words Optat omnes cadere qui se sentit prae omnibus cecidisse says St. Austin He would have all men fall in that sort as himself hath done with aspiring and presumption that they might never rise again The Beast in the Fable which had lost his tail made an Oration before all the Beasts of the Wood what a comly thing it was to want a tail and very useful and so concluded that they would all cut off theirs but the Fox made answer You intend not to make us decent like your self but to have us all as deformed After the same manner the Devil Preacheth unto Christ to descend from the top of the Pinacle to the bottom not to set him in the posture of an humble man but to make him arrogant like Lucifer for such a violent precipitation says he can do no hurt at all to such a one as you are a most holy one that are called the Son of God I will use Bonaventure's saying upon it Satan did interlace lofty pride with this lowly seeming motion Vt descendendo corporaeliter faceret cum superbire spiritualiter ut simul esset ascensus vanus descensus verus That he might fall down bodily and be proud spiritually and so he thrust together a frivolous presumption and a dangerous descension How much is humility abused when Pride will wear the colours of that good vertue to deceive the world There was grose ambition in Absalons stooping to steal the hearts of the people The Scribes and Pharisees would dop to the ground when they greeted their friends in the Market place The same Bishop that hath more Princely Augustious titles ascribed unto him then would fill up a Sermon by themselves subscribes himself very often Servus servorum Christ the servant of the servants of Christ As a Kite will sweep the earth with his wings that he may truss the Prey in his Talons and fly aloft to devour it So all the crouches and submissions which an ambitious man makes are to get somewhat which he seeks for and to clamber to promotion This is observed because Satan impels Christ to cast himself down not for true humility sake but upon vain glory to flutter in the Air that all Jerusalem might take notice how precious he was to the care and custody of all the Angels In the next place convert your thoughts to this see what kind of Miracles they are which the Devil delights in the working of Miracles is reduced to Gods Omnipotent Prerogative beyond the ordinary Law of Nature And Christ did often put it in act to save to revive to comfort the body to convert the soul Nay but these are no part of the Devils asking neither cure the sick nor give eyes to the blind nor raise the dead nor help up Eutiches again as Paul did when he fell from the upper window of the house to the ground none of these good offices of mercy doth he require but mitte te deorsum if you be the Son of God tumble down and confound your self Non signa humano generi salutaria sed perniciosa requirit says Bernard Do some pernicious Miracle and then you please him Beware of those men whose wit whose counsels whose directions tend to nothing but to some mens ruine and destruction Hic niger est hunc tu Romane caveto you see who is their Leader and whose steps they follow The Heathen could say how that Orator must needs have much malice in his complexion who was a better Accuser than a Defender that could sooner find a hole in his Adversaries cause than help his own Client so it is Satanissimum let me use a new word in this case he is a very Satanist upon whom that description of David lights Destruction and unhappiness is in their counsels and the way of peace they have not known The Magicians of Pharaoh could bring forth Frogs upon all the Land of Egypt as well as Aaron when he stretcht forth his rod but the Magicians with all their Inchantments could not rid the Land of those Frogs as Aaron did when he cried unto the Lord. Inchanters are permitted to work strange mischiefs but the Lord hath reserved it to himself to work strange mercies Ahitophel was exceeding wise no doubt accounted the Oracle of his age yet we know no instance of his wit in all the Scripture wherein he had his hand but in most turbulent and seditious propositions The Devil made use of his craft to serve his own turn but a wit that is sanctified with Gods grace know it by this character it had rather make than mar advance than pull down preserve than destroy reconcile than put at enmity When the voice from heaven spake to Peter as he was in a trance Arise Peter kill and eat the meaning was he should eat of such things as the Gentiles did which were prohibited before communicate with the Gentiles convert the Gentiles Now do you think that Cardinals mouth was not full of gall that made this Exposition of the Miracle Arise Bishop of Rome wage war with the Venetians and kill them because they will not obey yout Interdict Certainly this mans breath was like the strong East Wind that brought most of the grievous Plagues of the Land of Egypt I do not like such Prophets though Micaiah was wrongfully reputed such a one by Ahab that never prophesie good but evil nor such Disciples as would shew their authority by calling down fire from heaven nor such unlucky spirits that are like the malignant Planets which produce nothing but maleficous effects When Songs were sung in every Street of Greece that Philip had eraced the fair City of Olynthus O but when will he build up such a City Says a silly woman and then I would sing too An ill turn is quickly watcht for beside the venomous inclination of our own nature to do hurt You shall have the Devil to boot to help it on he counsels like an enemy no miracle which brings good with it to mankind but destruction Mitte te deorsum Cast
this lower Region God hath committed the Children to the nurture of the Parents the Woman to the safeguard of her Husband the Subject injured to the justice of the Magistrate the Sick and Impotent to the refection of them that are whole the Poor and Naked to the liberality of the Rich. Every weak and distressed is appointed his Protector by Gods Ordinance that is strong and whole and that Patron that looks not to those poor Clients with whom he stands incharged let him take heed that himself wants not a Patron when he looks for Christ to be his Advocate But when a whole Nation of true Believers nay when a whole world of Christians have been persecuted all at once Who looks to that God And will give them the wages of wicked Servants that should have been nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers to his precious Portion and yet had their chief hand in the Tragedy against it And because the whole earth sometimes fails of their duty towards the Church therefore the Lord hath his Angels in store as the last and infallible refuge that the less we are beholding to the Earth we may acknowledge our selves the more beholding to Heaven If Davids bowels earned for a rebellious Son and gave all the Captains charge Deal gently for my sake with the young man even with Absalon Verily the Lord will put his Ministers upon that good Office to be a Wall of protection to his obedient Sons Aut eripient periculum aut eripient animam Either they will take your afflictions from you or take you from your afflictions The Angel of the Lord tarrieth round about them that fear him and will deliver them And though the Devil meant nothing less than truth in his Sermon since he would needs preach let us lay hold of this for a true ground that the good Angels are very certain to keep their charge as they are commanded they are like the diligent Souldiers under the Centurions authority He says unto one go and he goeth and to another come and he cometh But their charge is set and appointed them it is not in their own free choice to lend their assistance where they please So the Schoolmen draw many questions to this Principle Non sunt liber â potestate praediti sed ministri ad nutum Domini The reason is twofold First All things must be done in order and without direction and appointment whom the Hosts of heaven should guard how far and at what time the Discipline would be altogether confused in that heavenly custody Secondly The knowledge of those blessed Spirits is finite they are not present at all our troubles which we suffer on earth they being far remote in heaven they know not the groanings of the heart it is out of their Sphere to apprehend what succour is needful for Infants that cannot moan themselves that cannot ask it of all these things they must be made acquainted and then their Province is allotted unto them by the especial Commission of God Wherefore as they are given by nature and grace to love Mankind so by a special Mandate and charge they are bound unto it Peter imputes his deliverance out of Prison to the Angels Ministry but principally to the Lords word and authority he doth not say that the Angel pull'd him out of danger of his own motion but now know I that the Lord hath sent his Angel and hath delivered me from the hand of Herod and from the expectation of all the people Acts xii 11. It was a good speech of Jonathans 1 Sam. xiv 6. There is no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by few Had he but added one thing more the speech had been complete and full of faith there is no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by few or by none at all Then to what use serves the Auxiliary custody of Angels when the strength of all protection is in God alone without the subordinate performance of any Creature To dissolve this Question into many Answers First They that say their Creed and understand it that God is the Father Almighty and have the Theorie that his vertue by it self is all-sufficient yet when it comes to the experience and practice they will boggle and be much unconfident of their own security if some powers which are ordained of God and more familiar to us than his infinite Essence be not promised to relieve us in the day of our Visitation Israel had great cause to have strong affiance in him that had brought them out of the Land of Egypt yet a weak Plant had need of a Prop to be bound unto it and therefore their Charter was thus enlarged Behold I send an Angel before thee to keep thee in the way and to bring thee into the place which I have prepared Exod. xxiii 20. This was ex abundanti somewhat given above that which needed for the rudeness and infirmity of our faith Secondly The Ministry of those blessed Spirits is used here below not for the defect of the supreme power but to shew his Majesty and Dignity as earthly Princes have their Stipatores some bands of Noble Gentlemen to stand about their Person rather for Pomp than necessity Yet it begets obsequiousness and awe unto their Majesty Pavorinus a man of rare skill in Learning whensoever Hadrian the Emperour discoursed with him condescended in all things to let the Emperour overmatch him and when his friends thought it too much obsequiousness Favorinus thus excused himself I will permit him to be more learned that hath thirty Legions of Souldiers under his command So the imployment of that heavenly Host lends no assistance to God but proclaims him that hath so many terrible Ministers to command to be most dreadful and glorious and who is able to stand before his Host Thirdly The Angels and Saints shall make up one Triumphant Church in heaven the whole body of things in heaven and things on earth being gathered under Christ the head therefore they are knit together in these good Offices of defence and guardianship as a taste of that unity which shall be complete hereafter And indeed it is through Christ that these parts are recollected together which were disjoyned before It pleased the Father to reconcile all things unto himself in him whether they were things in heaven or things in earth He is that Ladder upon which Jacob saw Angels ascend and descend and so Christ speaking of that reconciliation which he had wrought told the High Priests Hereafter ye shall see the heavens open and Angels ascending and descending Fourthly Aquinas doth thus excogitate There are two ways wherein man stands in need of help to have grace infused into him and to be guided and assisted in perfecting that which is good Deus immediate hominem inclinat ad bonum infundendo ei gratiam God only and immediately doth infuse supernatural grace into the heart Sed inveniendae sunt
of darkness Invidiâ coelum tundimus non solùm voluit orari verùm etiam pulsari says Tertullian God would not only be called upon but bids us beat at door knock and cease not till we overcome him with importunity Make this Collection moreover from the Point none so good but by continual assault Satan thinks he may pervert them so none so bad but by continual instruction we may reclaim them The Conversion of the very Mahumetans is to be hoped for for if your Doctrine fall drop by drop upon their stony hearts why may not those Flints be worn in pieces Even the Calling of the Jews is to be laboured for though they be dry sticks cut off from the tree from the natural Olive yet being perpetually watered with instruction they may live again Preach the Word be instant in season out of season so Paul wrote to his Timothy Which Text is an Hyperbole for as Gregory says the Word would hurt it self Si habere importunitas opportunitatem nescit If that which is preached out of season were not fitted to be seasonable if importunity did not watch an opportunity But the Greek Fathers do generally follow St. Chrysostomes qualification Opportunum est libenter audienti importunum invito The Word is ever in season to him that is willing to learn but always out of season to him that hateth to be reformed Yet he that thinks Reformation an untunable Song may be brought about with continual instancing and inculcation Shall the good Shepherds be weary to seek that which is lost and gone astray When the Devil will have no nay but tumbles out tentation upon tentation to destroy souls And so far upon his importunity again he taketh him up c. His variety of shifts is the next thing considerable that he removed from a Pinacle of the Temple to an exceeding high Mountain Hereupon some have taken needless pains to commit a great errour I mean those that have search'd out Geographically for the highest hill upon earth as if the Devil had taken up Christ to that Altitude from whence he might behold the furthest prospect Some conceiting the Mountains of Ararat to be the nearest to the Firmament because the Ark rested upon them when the waters were asswaged Some contending for the Mountains of Teneriffa to exceed them for they are higher says Aristotle than all that part of the air which hath either clouds or winds or vapours or any disturbance in it Others pleading for the Riphaean hills whose Promontory to the Basis casts a shadow of thirty miles and more which exceeds all other parts of the earth in height by that measure and proportion But if these were ten times higher than they are they should no whit necessarily concern my Text for they are all of a vast distance from Jerusalem and are quite out of the Land of Canaan but we have no warrant to say that Christ in his bodily presence did remove farther upon earth than the Land of Judea but when his mother fled with him into Egypt Neither was it the advantage of the hill altogether whereby Satan shewed all the Kingdoms of the world unto our Saviour as I will explain by and by Not to insist much upon Topography but thus in brief Jerusalem it self was environ'd with many delicate hills Her foundations are upon the holy hills says David some of those excelled in bigness some of a lower scantling Sion and Hermon were but little Libanus did over-peer these two and so did Basan Even an high hill as the hill of Basan Psal lxviii 15. It is not evident which of those higher Satan made his choice but without contradiction it was an high hill as the hill of Basan A spire or Pinacle of the Temple was a lofty eminence what did drive him to leave it for the top of a Mountain Why is it not so with all Projectors to shift inventions and try new conclusions as fast as the old couzenages are detected and there is a superstition in some weakly grounded God knows to change the place which hath not been lucky unto them Balaac the King of Moab was a great practiser in this kind when Balaam had rather blessed Israel than cursed them upon the high places of Baal says Balaac Num. xxiii 13. Come I pray thee with me unto another place and curse me them from thence and when Balaam had no power to speak evil against Israel there but said there was no inchantment against Jacob nor divination against Israel Balaac chang'd again ver 27. I will bring thee to another place to the top of Peor peradventure it will please God that thou mayst curse me them from thence But it is not the shifting to this place or that place that breeds contrary affections in a good man Coelum non Animum mutant Where there is an inward principle of goodness firm and sure under every cope of heaven the mind is unalterable Such as are like Ruben unstable as water and therefore should not excel as his dying Father told him such let them but cross the Seas and change air and they change their Religion For such ungrounded resolutions the best counsel is to keep quiet at home where they may serve God with an upright heart and not be carried away with Satan from the true Temple of Christ to those high Mountains or cities of seaven hills where they shall be tempted to Idolatry Now what if this mountain which Satan took up like the throne whereon he would reign what if it had been devoted to most gross Idolatry before Would it not be thought the fitter place for such wicked service now For that black hellish motion which follows All these will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me Nay further what if the wisest and one of the most illuminate Servants of God did miscarry upon that Mountain Had not Satan some hopes then to pervert Christ Whom he took to be a Son of God not the eternal and only begotten Son I dare propound my conjecture I call it no more that Solomon did commit Idolatry upon this very Mountain 1 Kings xi 7. Then did Solomon build an high place for Chemosh the abomination of Moab in the hill that is before Jerusalem and for Molech the abomination of the Children of Ammon assent unto this as you like it I will only add to this Point that the place was chosen to raise a great expectation upon that which should be propounded Parturiunt montes if it were divine doctrine a Mountain was thought a fit place to deliver it to call up the attention of the Auditors So that excellent Sermon was delivered to the Apostles on the Mount Mat. v. Docturus Apostolos culmen perfectionis montem conscendit says St. Austin Christ taught them from on high because he exhorted them to the top of perfection Or if they were Prophetical Visions so God did use one of the Angels carried John in the
snow did not equal him His countenance was altered and his raiment was white and glistering Then for strange persons such as long since were departed and gone out of the world because the world was not worthy of them they return in visible shapes to play a new part upon the stage of the earth Behold there talked with him two men which were Moses and Elias I enter upon the handling of these Points without more circumlocution I have acquainted you before with two things of main consequence in this Miracle of the Transfiguration first the final cause why Christ was transfigured Secondly the efficiency from whence this exceeding brightness was derived Now I come to set it forth unto you first in his face then in his raiment Distill out the very best that all the Heathen have wrote and it is not able to teach us so much as is contained in this portion of Scripture touching the immortality of the soul and the beatitude of the life to come Here are the two last Articles of the Creed exemplified and set out in their real truth the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting The immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the flesh are confirmed in the persons of Moses and Elias who are brought forth to appear before mortal men face to face And our Saviour makes himself a spectacle of the happiness of the world to come for the fashion of his countenance was altered or thus in another Evangelists description his face did shine as the Sun I may say unto him as Daniel did to Nebuchadonosor upon the interpretation of his dream Tu es caput aureum Thou O King art the head of Gold Dan. ii 38. But we are sure if that head be gold the inferiour members under him shall not be iron and clay Of his glory we shall all receive and with the light of his face all the body shall be beautified This is a Beacon shining upon the top of an hill which shines from the East unto the West from one end of the earth unto the other But it is a pacificous Beacon which portends peace and not war where you read that the Lord looks like burning fire there he threatens us to beware of his indignation so John makes a character of Christ Rev. i. 14. His eyes were as a flame of fire in a great commotion of passion the eye will look like a forge of wrath as Tully displaies Verres ardebant oculi toto ex ore crudelitas emicabat His eyes did burn with anger cruelty did every where sparkle out of his face The Philosopher says that the Phancy is seated in the middle Region of the brain above the eyes which upon great and sudden wrath calls up the spirits hastily unto it self and with that swift motion they are heated and seem to flame in the eyes Flammea torquens lamina says the Poet of his Turnus Therefore this phrase of speech is borrowed from the manner of men that the eyes of Christ were as a flame of fire And it bids us kiss the Sun lest he be angry if his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that put their trust in him But at this apparition which I entreat of he did recreate his servants with his looks Here is no mention of f●●e in his eyes but of light in his face and that is always taken in good part for an auspicious Omen They looked upon him and were lightned and their faces were not ashamed Psal xxxiv 5. They that stand before him and have a reflection from the light of his countenance shall not knit their brow and look down for fear unto the earth as Cain did Yet more than so this Sunshine Majesty wherewith he was beautified doth not only dissipate shame but serve us with the hope of Salvation Make thy face to shine upon thy servant O save me for thy mercies sake Psal xxxi 16. It is a good thing to be safe under his mercy the chearful aspect of his face doth promise that at the least And doth not this glistering transmutation assure us likewise that his grace shall shine in our hearts to produce the fruits of life The life is the light of men says St. John and by inversion it is true to say that this light is the life of the soul Therefore this was not the irradiation of the Sun or any other star which though it be a comely creature yet it is but an inanimate thing but to shew it was Lux viva and Lux ad vitam living light and light that begetteth eternal life therefore it sparkled from the living flesh of the eternal Sun of God And it may be observed how usefully St. Matthew says his face did shine like the Sun not as if he did then illuminate half the world at once with his face for then the rest of the Disciples who went not up to the Mountain must have known somewhat of this alteration it being most probable that the Transfiguration fell out in the night but because the Sun doth enough on his part to shine unto all men and if any want the benefit it is not for defect of the light which is spread sufficiently abroad So Christ by himself and his Priests hath annunciated the truth openly that it is our own fault and not his if it be not tendered to all people and known throughout the world 2. The Sun before he ariseth sends out beams and gives some light to the Horizon but makes the day more clear when he is risen upon the earth So Christ did give the Patriarchs a glimpse of faith before he was incarnate and lived upon the earth but he did embrighten the Church much more with faith when the world had heard and seen with their eyes and looked upon and their hands had handled the word of life And do you mark who were present witnesses at the fulgor of this transfiguration Both Moses and Elias who had lived on earth in the Age before and three Apostles who did live in that present Age because he was that light which gave the lustre of faith both to the former and to the latter Ages of the world take heed your heart be not thick clay and gross earth which will not admit and give transparency to this spiritual light He that believeth not abideth in darkness It is perilous to be in darkness and most horrible to abide in it and without faith you shall abide in the darkness of Hell for ever Though this which I have said already be much yet this prospective of admirable light leads us further for in this Transformation the Master did shew what Liveries of glory the Servants should wear when they should dwell with him in his Kingdom for ever As Zalumna said to Gideon of Gideons brethren so doth this enlightened countenance of Christ say unto his Saints As thou art so shall they be each one according to the form of the Children
I have read unto you I am proceeded in this subject and by so much as I have read in these two Verses St. Luke hath more than the other two Evangelists to wit that Moses and Elias talked about Christs sufferings in Jerusalem and that Peter James and John were asleep and waking of a sudden were startled at the transmutation I have spoke severally the last day in what bodies Moses and Elias did appear now I proceed to these persons that appear And because I must not break the joynts of an History I take the parts whole thus First With what fitness these two were presented rather than any other for celestial witnesses Moses and Elias Secondly What they meant by this communication to speak of his Passion and Sufferings They spake of his decease which he should accomplish at Jerusalem Thirdly That the earthly Witnesses Peter James and John were asleep at the beginning of this Miracle But Peter and they that were with him were heavie with sleep Fourthly The mists of drowziness were dispelled they did awake and then they saw the Vision and as the next Verse will prove it they heard the conference To these do you give Attention and I my Exposition The Lord did not pick twain out of so great an host of blessed Spirits to stand upon Mount Thabor but that there was some hability and fitness in their persons rather than in any other And the first mark eminently stampt upon them for this work is this The Law and Prophets do equally and concordiously bear witness to Christ Moses the first handler and publisher of the Law Elias the greatest by far of all the Prophets O Elias how wast thou honoured in thy wondrous deeds And who may glory like unto thee Ecclus. xlviii 4. As the Kings Coin is stampt on both sides so the Gospel like a piece of currant Metal is engraven on the one side with the ancient testimony of the Law on the other side with the strong Predictions of the Prophets Says Philip to Nathanael We have found him of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write Jesus of Nazareth the Son of Joseph Joh. i. 45. But Peter might go further and say We have seen him attended and waited on by Moses and the Prophets The Law and the Prophets and the Gospel make good Musick when they are three parts of one song but if you make several Airs or several Ditties of them you mar all good harmony We see Moses and the Son of God together says St. Ambrose so often as we read that portion of St. Matthew Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soul and with all thy might We see Elias and the Son of God together so often as we read that desire inflamed to maintain Gods honour I have been very zealous for the Lord of hosts 1 Kings xix 8. That zeal made Elias fast forty days and eat nothing And Christ doth answer it again The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up O how amiable it is to unite Moses and the Prophets and the grace of Christ all together to look upon them in one prospect to enterline the Old Testament with the New But if you part Moses from the Prophets or the Prophets from Moses or both from Christ you shall not find any glory in them The Samaritans received no Scripture but the Books of Moses The Jews receive none but Moses and the Prophets The Christian puts them all together and so Moses and Elias appear with Christ in glory And although many things are very difficult to be understood in the Old Testament in some places we do see Moses plainly in some places he is hard to be understood yet this Miracle gives us comfort that in the holy Hill of God in the glorification of heaven there we shall see Moses and Elias all that is wrote in the Law and the Prophets very clearly and that one jot or tittle is not perished which the Penmen of holy Writ did foretell should come to pass For example in Exod. xx 19. the Children of Israel cry out to Moses Speak thou with us and we will hear but let not God speak with us least we die To this demand God makes a full and explicite answer Deut. xviii 18. They have well spoken I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren like unto thee they shall hear him Here is a middle way difficult to be understood neither would God speak unto them in thunder to terrifie them and Moses could not abide always to be their Speaker as they would have it but a Prophet should come like unto Moses like unto him in humane nature but far more admirable in grace and power Why behold this dark mystery is expounded at this Transfiguration for Moses is brought to confess of Christ this is the Prophet spoken of like unto me whom you are bound to hear For the glory which was seen now the affrightment which took the Disciples the bright cloud which overshadowed the place all these hapned now even as it was at Mount Sinah call to mind what Covenant was then made and how this is the time to fulfil it Thus you see how Christs glory makes the Law and the Prophets intelligible which is the first reason why Moses and Elias did appear in glory Secondly These are they that had undergone many sorrows upon earth for the defence of their God and after much tribulation did win the crown of life in whose faces the Disciples might behold that through fire and water through cross and calamity through ignominy and dishonour we must enter into glory None so famous for exposing their lives to all dangers as Moses and Elias There was but a Bulrush between Moses and death when he was set afloat to be drowned in his tender infancy And if Jezebel and all her Gods could cut Elias throat she swore he should not have a day to live 1 Kings xix 2. What sharp encounters had the one with Pharaoh What dismal threatnings did the other denounce against Ahab The one was driven out rudely and violently from the presence of Pharaoh The other banished himself into the Wilderness and could not be found for three years Here were a fit couple that could shew their long Pedigrees of afflictions to be called the Sons of God These were fit indeed to preach of Christs Cross and of his sufferings at Jerusalem They that suffered much might aptly and confidently commend the sufferings of the body to the Disciples Si vis me flere dolendum est primùm ipsi tibi And here John and James the two ambitious brethren might see of what condition it behoved those men to be who in our Saviours Kingdom should sit the one at his right hand the other at his left What had they done for their Lords sake as yet when they askt that bold demand but to walk with him in Judea to travel from place
is one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one who hath the preeminence in all things the Master who is over all and above all which is Jesus Christ I mean not as it is alleaged out of Bartholus and some of the impudent Canonists that Christ as he was God and Man was Lord of the whole World Monarchically and Peter after him and by Peters right the successive Bishops of Rome by which fetch those branded Flatterers entitle their Popes to the direct right of all the Kingdoms of the earth indeed the Devil promised our Saviour all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them and since He refused it then the same Devil by the mouth of those Canonists profers it again to try though He will none of it himself if some other in the name of a Vicegerent will take it for him This is not the meaning of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that he is our Master in Heaven and Earth the Head to which all the Body is fitly knit by joynts and bands Colos ii 19. Joints and Bands Beloved neither of those words is idle or superfluous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 commissurae the joints are all those blessings and benefits which are bestowed upon us and knit unto us Christ by reciprocal gratitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 juncturae are all those offices of Christian charity which bind the Members one to another all things which belong to the Communion of Saints and hold us together under the Head which nourisheth us with his influence Now it is a very ill disjunction which some make to argue upon the two natures of Christ according to whether he is our Master and our Head If you name the one or the other alone you will confuse your own Creed and know not what to believe for all the conditions belonging to a Head are in neither but in both First it was fit the Church should have such an Head which is agreeing and conformable to the Body which is knit unto it a spiritual Head and fleshly Members are not consonant to make an unity Therefore Christ and his Church are said to be like Man and Wife which are one flesh Ephes v. 31. But the Head of the Church must be fit to nourish every part of the Body with spiritual blessings and make it increase with the increase of God this can come from none but the Divine and Infinite who can give spiritual life alone and quicken them which are dead in their sins this He can do as he is Magister Verbi Magister Spiritus who but Christ is Master of the Word preacht and who but the same Christ is Master of the Spirit which gives power unto the Word You see then it is no complemental Name which is given to Christ in courtesie but a Title of due Royalty and condign Authority when we call him Master Master says Peter it is good for us to be here Upon the same Bank of earth you may gather Flowers and Weeds the Flowers are set by art in the Garden the Weeds are the natural offspring So in this same speech which the Apostle uttered in a rapture of love and delight here are good conclusions to be approved and bad contents to be reprehended but the errors arise naturally out of the words the good conclusions are rather forc't than natural yet they deserve the precedency in my discourse and this is the begining that when Peter started out of sleep and saw Christ in glory it pleased him at the heart bonum est says he this is good and he never spake truer in his life The bravest Nations in the World when they have been at the height of their Empire have took more pride and delight in Theatrical Shews and Magnificent Spectacles of Triumphs than in any other pomp for the satisfaction of the eye when it meets with a right object is above any other pleasure But all other things in the world are Counterfeits to right Jewels in respect of the Object of Divine Glory when the eye gets that to gaze upon the Soul dilates it self with such greediness to be filled with it that it would be infinite to receive it O how amiable are thy dwellings thou Lord of Hosts Psal lxxxiv David takes up his verse and goes no further to express it but leaves off with indefinite admiration And Theodoret refused to comment upon those words non tam explicandus sensus quam intimo sensu degustandus the sense and meaning of that Verse is not to be expounded but to be rellished and tasted by our affections We have stoln a name from virtue and called our Riches our Goods but beware to steal from Heaven as Prometheus did and to call the fruition of any thing upon earth good if the delights of the earth could speak they would say unto you why do you call us good nothing is good but to dwell in the Tabernacle of the Most High One day in thy Courts says the Psalmist is better than a thousand The days of this Life are called Thousands of days the Life of Glory is called One day These are called Thousands for the mutability that 's called One for the unchangeable eternity says St. Austin Howsoever it is true in this sense the shortest salutation of those supernal joys is more satisfactory Canis ad Nilum a touch and away than the longest saciety of these transitory exhilarations Two great Prophets rise from the dead to represent the glory of the life to come three living Disciples Peter especially are ravisht with it si mortuis non credideris saltem viventibus credas either believe the dead or the living which you will it is a good thing to see Christ in the Majesty of his glory Mark those words says Tertullian with special note quae fingendi non habent arbitrium extemporary acclamations wherein a man hath no leisure to invent dissimulation so out of the first pure passion of his mind which could not be forged St. Peter cried out when he saw the Glory of Christ bonum est it is good We cry out of the times now adays and the Age we live in but the more unthankful we for we do or may live more happily by far under the New Testament than the Jews did under the Old Every vision of Majestical glory did exceedingly terrifie the antient Israelites When the Lord came down upon Mount Sinah with triumph and with the sound of the Trumpet the people removed and stood afar of and durst not come near it now the Gospel hath expelled this fear so far that the Spectators did not shun the glory of Christ when they saw it but desired they might continue upon the place where it was for ever Deus se magis amandum exhibet quàm spectandum says one upon it God doth exhibit himself in the New Testament rather to be loved than to be dreaded and doth not now intend our terror but our comfort The glory of the Gospel
in Pompey's company I may say in a better capacity of truth that the three Disciples could not miss their Parents their Children their Friends their Possessions their Countrey no nor the whole World beneath if they could but reserve a Tabernacle in any secret place wherein they might enjoy our Lord Jesus Christ The Prophets who were preserv'd by Obadiah's favour were contented to live in a Cave where they might serve God without Idolatry and Peter would possess a new-found World not inhabited by evil men alter alteri magnum theatrum sumus a few good ones are enough to enjoy one another without a contagion of the multitude Alas when he would needs be making a place for Christ that he could devise no better Structure than a Tabernacle But will God indeed dwell on the earth says Solomon Behold the Heaven and Heaven of Heavens cannot contain thee how much less this House that I have builded Solomon thought so meanly of the goodliest Temple that ever was built for Gods honour what a Building was here then not worthy to be named Let us make three Tabernacles As he was laid in a Manger when he was born so he was never housed richly and sumptuously all the while he lived upon earth never till Joseph of Arimathaea composed his body decently in a fair Sepulcher which is not an excuse that we should make him vile houses now but a provocation to make him amends on our part for that contempt which was offered him when he lived in Judaea As for the instance of my Text that Peter offered him a Tabernacle made of a few sticks it is to be born with both because he knew not what he said and he was able to do no better True love is satisfied that all will be taken in good part which is well intended As Jacob set up a Stone and poured oil upon it and called it the House of God Gen. xxviii 18. what would you have him do that had no better at hand but where the Land abounds with costly and sumptuous materials can ye bestow them better than upon the Church of Christ Do you not perswade your self that there the Lord hath heard you often from Heaven and given you all manner of things that are good and can you suffer those walls to be unadorn'd where you have been prosperous or can any heart be so hardned to suffer that Table to be unfurnisht with Ornaments at which we have often been fed with the Bread of Life and the Cup of Benediction I charge not this place with any such neglect but I commend and pronounce them blessed especially who have been liberal that Gods honour might be set out among us in the beauty of holiness and I lament it where it is otherwise for it is a mournful sight me-thinks to see any place excel the Church in preeminence and magnificence not as if I thought the Lord did favour us for fair walls and roofs without a fair inside but first it signifies the almightiness of God when we honour him with the best and chiefest of all outward things and secondly it makes our zeal shine before men that we love our Heavenly Father better than all the wealth of the Earth and the Lord loveth a chearful giver The best Temples that we can dedicate to God are our sanctified Souls and Bodies and therefore St. Austin said alluding to this Text Qui Deo vult facere tabernacula praeparet ei penitralia cordis He that will make a Tabernacle for God let him prepare a clean heart this is well said if we play not the hypocrites with this figurative Religion If some men be incited to offer up the Sacrifice of Alms unto Christ they tell you spare them for that and they will offer up the Sacrifice of a contrite heart Are not these two ill divided bid them worship and fall down and kneel before the Lord our Maker that they hold superfluous for they will bend the knees of their heart Are not those two ill divided Charge the rich men of the World to repair Gods decayed Churches and make them beautiful that draws money from them too fast therefore they say we will build a Sanctuary to the Lord in our inward heart Be not deceived God cannot be mocked with these metaphorical excuses I had rather offer with St. Peter to build a Tabernacle unadvisedly where there was no cause than be backward to build a Tabernacle for the mighty Lord where there was a cause Because Moses and Elias had preached Christ unto the Disciples they would do something again to requite it not hear the word of God gratis as some do as if they would give no mony for it If you will give nothing for that precious gift which cometh from above take heed the Lord do not say to you at the last day What good service have you done in all your life that I should give any thing to you as some men have their customs not to give so undoubtedly God hath his custom not to reward As David said to Araunah The Lord forbid I should sacrifice unto him of that which cost me nothing so Peter would not hear a Sermon of Christ crucified and do no good thing for it faciamus c. These Tabernacles which he spake of being an allusion to the Church I find them agree very well in this that the Militant Church is but like a Tabernacle portable from one place to another to be taken down in one place and to be set up in another always removing As we see the Gospel began to shine most bright at first in the Eastern Countries and now it hath pleased God that in the most conspicuous purity it is carried into the West From Jerusalem it removed to Antioch from Antioch to divers places of Achaia in Greece further and further every Age till now that the multitude of the Isles do praise the Lord like a Militant Tabernacle or Pavilion pitcht where God pleaseth to fight against the Devil and his Angels and to win ground from him that would destroy the Earth Psal cxxviii 3. The Wife which is spoken of there and likned to a fruitful Vine is an Allegory of the Church Now the Church while it wanders upon earth is vitis in lateribus domus a fruitful Vine upon the walls of the House it stands without the doors of the Palace but when the Church shall be settled quietly in the upper Jerusalem it shall be vitis in penetralibus domus the Vine shall be translated into the midst of Paradice there it shall be a City abiding for ever and no longer a removing Tabernacle Now you have heard St. Peters zeal in the Fabrique which he moved to be built in the progress of this point you shall hear these Tabernacles of his were but wild Chimaera's or as we say Castles in the air for he took Mount Thabor as it was now adorn'd with glory for the Heaven which he desired to enjoy
handle the Passion it self and the Object which stirred it up the Passion was inwardly very great They were afraid 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sore afraid says St. Matthew and outwardly it bewrayed it self for the same Evangelist says they fell on their face The Object which put them into fear in the Text is a Cloud describ'd by two properties 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was a bright one says St. Matthew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an overshadowing one says St. Luke Nor did these only afright them but the Passion Sermon also which Moses and Elias made and the Sermon which the Father made out of the Cloud This is my beloved Son In the second general part their Succour hath two tasts of mercy in it contactum he touched them alloquium and said arise be not afraid Thus I have made this part of the story complete by an harmony of all the three Evangelists which have wrote upon it and to these I am now ready to apply my Doctrine and Exhortation The Disciples Passion is that which led us to handle all the other parts and therefore I begin with it They feared As the Aegyptian Priest upbraided Solon because the Graecian Histories intreated of things but lately done and of no antiquity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 your Greeks are always Children so I may say of Greeks and Aegyptians and all the dwellers upon earth we are always Children for our own distrustful nature although no evil come nigh our dwelling doth discipline us with fear as if we were Boys that were always under correction An hair brain'd fear is foolish you will all confess and Solomon says that joy is madness then between them both you may gather that the wisest of all are not long in their wits but as St. Paul said of the awful authority of the Magistrate Rulers are not a terror to good workers but to the evil Rom. xiii 3. So I may safely say God is not a terror to the good Saints departed but to the bad that remain because our own heart is only evil continually The very merciful works of the Lord are doubtful every strange thing that he doth among us is terrible every punishment a little begun by our own suspicions makes us more miserable As the Spartans call their Country because of their rigid Discipline 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a tamer of men that would pluck down sawcy boldness so God hath put the hook of fear into our nostrils the whole world hath so many Monsters to scare us that it is in one part as well as in another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it takes down high spirits and dejects audacity And among all the instances of Sacred Writ which shew the instability and changeableness of high content upon earth seek for such another as my Text affords and I think you cannot match it What felicity can be durable in this mortal life if this could hold no longer to see our Saviour transfigur'd in glory and Moses and Elias talking with him even now the Disciples had a glance of celestial beatitude their hearts entranced with that pleasant Vision of a sudden comes a sad Catastrophe their joy is snatcht from them and upon the same ground where they were so much delighted they are sore afraid As the Historian says of Manlius Capitolinus who had both triumphed in the Capitol and been condemned in the Capitol Eundem locum habuit eximiae gloriae tristissimi exitus monumentum the same place was both his honour and his ruin So on the same Hill Mount Thabor uno pede upon the same standing uno momento even in the same moment the Disciples were in a Trance of joy and in a Trance of trouble As when Moses was born the Mother was glad for joy that a man Child was born into the world but instantly she droopt when he was taken away to be exposed to drowning and destruction So as soon as ever any earthly pleasure is begotten unto us presently it is snatcht a way to be drowned in tears upon some woful occasion Health is waited on by sickness comfort by tribulation mirth by fear even as the heel of Esau was in the hand of Jacob. Even now Peter had set his rest upon this place for ever Master it is good for us to be here but after this qualm you hear him say so no more now he had as liev be gone as stay so soon shall every thing upon earth cloy us so it hath pleased God that nothing but Heaven may content us Thrice happy though we feel it not when in the midst of full satisfaction and all the help and countenance this World can give us some cross point comes in our way that we may be willing to forget our own People and our Fathers House As the Poet makes his Aeneas to be scared out of Carthage where he was lull'd in sensauity by divine menacies in a Dream so the Lord is most gracious when he frights us out of the love of this World as Absalon set a fire on Joabs Corn to make him leave Jerusalem and come and speak with him so the Lord must send the Sword or Famin Fire or Water some destroying Element else we shall linger and delay before we come unto him some bright Cloud or other must stare us in the face that we may turn our back to these vanities and look to thee O God And surely to shake out that ill exprest desire Master it is good for us to be here it was Christs pleasure that Peter should be male-contented instantly upon the former motion I say he was winnowed with this afrightment to drive away that chaff For it was otherwise at his Baptism when there were heavenly tokens came down upon earth a Majestical voice did speak from the Clouds the Holy Ghost came down like a Quarry in the shape of a Dove yet no perturbation for ought we read among them that saw it But I must tell you I do not praise them for that there were Gods favourable Kindness and his Majesty combined together and we must not take hold of these with the loose rains of joy only but likewise with an awful reverence Exultatio summae bonitati timor Majestati debetur we lift our selves up with joy to feel his merciful goodness but it becoms us to cast our selves down with fear to see his glorious Majesty what say we to a stranger instance than this I have named Joh. xii 18. Christ prays unto the Father Father glorifie thy name the Father answers I have both glorified it and I will glorifie it The multitude said it thundred a strange Thunder which should speak articulate words and yet we do not find in that Chapter that the folk who heard it were amazed What are these three Disciples more white-livered than all others to be scared with far less than Thunder a strange comparison indeed says Rathertus nisi quod ibi superbia tumet hic autem humilitas pavet
your Paschal Lamb cease hereafter the circumcision of the flesh bloud and water shall take place now I deliver them to be your Sacraments you shall be born again by water and you shall be fed with that Cup which is the New Testament in my bloud but why bloud and wherefore water says St. Ambrose this question will bring on a second Mystery aqua ut emundaret sanguis ut redimeret wretched Babes we were brought forth into this world as Elisha brought the Aramites blind into the midst of Samaria among their Enemies Shall I smite them my Father shall I smite them says the King of Israel O no says Elisha use them friendly and set bread and water before them Thus I say we were born obstinati ad peccatum destinati ad judicium polluted with iniquity bound over to condemnation Shall I smite them says Justice now I have them here shall I consume them at once O no says our blessed Master I will wash away their pollutions with water and make them white as snow I will redeem them from condemnation and lay down bloud for bloud Here is a strain of curtesie far higher than that of Elisha's not bread and water but water and bloud Moses was sent to deliver Israel out of captivity he was tractus ex aquis as his name tells us sav'd out of a River where he was cast to be drown'd he came by water but the deliverance stuck a long time and could not go forward Moses's Miracles Aarons Eloquence the Plagues upon Pharaoh all could do no good until the door-posts were smitten with the bloud of the Lamb. First Moses in water and then the Lamb in bloud their Redemption was made perfect in bloud and water And these two streams at the last cast were enough to drown an Heresie which Christ knew would spring up like a Tare among the Wheat That 's the third Mystery Marcion he foresaw would doubt of the truth of his body whether his substance was flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone or but an airy phantastique I know not what Nay surely it had an elementary composition for here was water and it had the composition of the humors for here was bloud so Aquinas and the School Divines consider it even for this cause as a fountain of providence that for conviction of Heresie his side was pierced and c. But while I consider these two Blessings as they are Miracles and Mysteries so they are extra nos coming from Christ but not coming to us but upon some application you shall find them intra nos lying at every mans conscience First that which was bloud and water in Christ must be tears of much anguish for your sins in you and true compunction of heart I do not ask for a sullen grief in Nabal which smothers the heart in desperation and cannot vent it self in a weeping eye I do not ask for the weeping eye of a Crocodile which is not commanded by the compunction of the heart that were like Gideons Fleece which was wet when the Floor was dry but I ask for Mary Magdalens eye melting into tears and for Davids sinful heart melting in his breast like wax the one is the root and the other the fruit of repentance bloud and water Quicquid Christus in corpore mater sustinuit in corde every stroke that did fall upon the body of Christ did light upon the heart of the blessed Virgin Mary So who can think upon that which she did suffer but must suffer as much as she did think my pride my gluttony my wantonness my blasphemy my oppression my prophanness what have you done do you know whom you have kill'd O no Father forgive them My sins knew not what they did now they weep for it now they are prickt in heart and that 's my bloud and water Secondly that which was bloud and water in Christ what is it more in us amor erga Deum caritas erga proximum it shall be in me a provocation toward the fulfilling of the whole Law to love God and my Neighbour St. Paul speaks of a resistance unto blood and who is he that is dearer unto me than my bloud but my Redeemer Christ Our Saviour speaks of giving my Alms away or if I have nothing else in store let me give but a Cup of cold water for his names sake and it shall not lose a reward And who are they that must have my water my alms yea a plentiful gift from my hands it is my Brother my Neighbour or if you will love him better for God's sake than for your own sake he is one of the Members of Christ Martyrdom is welcom for Christs sake my love shall express it self in any good office for my Brothers sake Martyrdom and Charity are my bloud and water Thirdly and so you shall have your full doses of these two streams sanguis valet contra iram aqua contra libidinem Remember this last Application all our sensual and brutish affections are drawn into two heads by Philosophy the irascible part which is rectified by patience and endurance of evil and the concupiscible part which is rectified by absteining from that which is an apparent and a deceitful good if your stomach fret within you and malign at tribulation when the Cross of Christ is laid upon you prick the angry vein to save the Soul let out the bloud of an impatient heart if your appetite be intemperate your concupiscence effeminate dry up the body by fasting parch it even like a Bottle that is hung in the smoke Venus orta mari drain out those superfluous streams that surcharge the body sufferance of evil and abstinence from the baits of pleasures these are my bloud and water And so much touching the Conjunction of these two streams Now I come in a word to the Order first bloud and then water Some may say to the bloud here as the Midwife did to Pharez who striv'd to come into the world before Zarah his Brother Why didst thou make a breach why art thou the first Malice Beloved is ever full of confusion it heeds not where it begins nor how it proceeds to vengeance but blessings are like fruit taken in their season they descend in their order as in this place by bloud and water For do but consider how these two were applied even now to the several vertues of a Christian and you shall find that bloud hath the preeminence and deserves the first place for is not compunction of heart better than sorrowful tears is not martyrdom for Gods sake better than charity to our Neighbour is it not a greater conquest to suffer evil patiently than to abstain from deceitful good aquâ vocati sanguine electi is not Election better than Vocation If all these Comparisons hold as I think they do bloud is preeminent in way of blessing above water 2. Here were the great Legacies paid unto the World the two Testaments
upon the death of the Testator The Covenant of the old Testament was continued by Sacrifice renewed by Circumcision altogether confirmed by effusion of bloud Well the Covenant of the New Testament is established in Baptism in the Pool of water O what a comely thing is Order God kept it in his very death the Old Law was first drawn drie in the Bloud and the New Law succeeds it in the stream of Water and I like his Meditation well that said our Saviour had first uttered out every drop of bloud from his veins ut nos ad bibendum de aquâ aeternae vitae invitaret to invite us from thenceforth to drink of the water of everlasting life Our Romish Adversaries stand much upon that which I handle now for say they if the two Sacraments had been precisely out of Christs side then St. John would have made his Relation thus A Souldier pierced his side and there came out Water and Bloud for Baptism is our beginning in the Church our first milk and after that when we know how to examin our selves as St. Paul says then we come to the Supper of the Lord just so as they would have it Aquinas a sure man of their own side compares the Sacraments in this wise Baptism is a Sacrament of the greatest necessity of the twain the Supper of the Lord is of more perfection though not of so much necessity Well then since we must aim at perfection as the Apostle says why might not Christ give the first place to that which makes us perfect and the second place to that which is first in time but lag in perfection nay rather than we should make use of this Text for no more than a yoke of Sacraments they will allow it to be a Figure of none but of the Supper of the Lord for their wine is dash'd with water in their Chalice and this Text is the Authority for it bloud and water I am sure the letter of the Scripture is on our side that use pure wine in the Eucharist de fructu geniminis I do not read that Christ gave his Disciples ought but wine to drink I deny not but some of the ancient Fathers concur with them but it is apparent I can make no better excuse they forsake the Letter and build upon an Allegory He that feeds upon the Letter of the Text feeds upon Manna he that lives by the Allegorie feeds upon licious Quails Israel may desire such curious food but God was better pleased when they were contented with Manna I have done with the Order The period of all in a word is the readiness of the Fountain which could not be stopt for a moment Forthwith came thereout bloud and water Love is no delaier no protractor of time ready to do good speedy in execution good deeds did not hang in our Saviours fingers as they do with many of us our hands unclasp to part with any thing like a lock that 's rusty and goes hard you can scarce open it Abrahams forwardness in entertaining the Angels and the dispatch that he made is as much commended as his hospitality Gen. xviii Abraham says the Text hastened to the Tent to Sarah 2. Sarah made ready quickly three measures of fine meal 3. Abraham ran to the Herd for a tender Calf 4. Abrahams young man did hast to dress it nemo piger est in domo caritatis not a slothful person not a protractor of time in all the House of Charity Such expedition did our Saviour make to express his love to the World he yields up his body in the flower of his age not a wrinkle in his brow not a grey hair in his head he made haste to suffer Judas says he what thou doest do it quickly as who should say I know thy heart is against me and that thou wouldest sell me into mine enemies hand yet for old acquaintance sake do me the curtesie to protract no time what thou doest do it quickly There past but a little time from midnight to midday betwixt his Attachment his Arraignment and his Execution This was a Paschal Lamb eaten in haste as God gave Moses in charge for the Lord will hasten you out of Egypt And to come to the instance in my Text his joynts were stiff and cold the moisture of his body congealed long it would be I should have thought before a few drops of liquor could come forth with much violence and chafing the flesh O but the Testator was dead his Sacraments are the Seals of his mercy wherewith he assures his Promises unto us and he would not have the World stay one whit for their Legacies capiat qui capere potest out it gusheth like a torrent and forthwith came thereout bloud and water All you that thirst for the living God be as ready to drink as he was to give else we are magis mortui quàm mortuus as dead as death it self and past recovery Repent you but instantly make restitution of all things wrongfully gotten but instantly be reconciled to your enemies stick not at it but instantly instantly I say but continue those instants unto your lives end Our Saviour compared his love towards Jerusalem to a Hen that gathers her Chickens under her wings let this Comparison be the Pattern of our love to Christ You know the Hen must not sit for a spurt and be gone then her eggs addle and the Brood is spoiled Take the application unto your conscience nourish the good motions of Gods spirit in your heart sit upon them as the Hen doth upon her Brood that they may quicken in you by a lively faith We had need to do it for as Christ was sudden and made haste to express his love so he is sudden and will make haste to judgment Surely I come quickly they are the close of our Bible Even so come Lord Jesus and prepare us for thy second coming that we who drink at thy mystical Wound here may be satisfied with thy goodness as out of a River in thy Kingdom of glory AMEN THE THIRD SERMON UPON THE PASSION GEN. xxii 13. And Abraham lifted up his eyes and looked and behold behind him a Ram caught in a thicket by his horns and Abraham went and took the Ram and offered him up for a burnt offering in the stead of his Son THe place where this memorable Sacrifice was offered up had a name given unto it by Abraham in the next verse to that which I have read Deus in monte videbatur or Deus in monte apparuit which is interpreted God is seen or God did appear in the Mount from which name Origen raiseth this Meditation Nihil hic corporeum sentias sed quae Scripta sunt in spiritu videas Do not think in the story of this Sacrifice that you see a Ram or that you see Isaac you must apprehend it in Spirit and believe that you see nothing but the Oblation of the Son of God upon the
such a spark of fire blow it and kindle the whole man to be a perfect Oblation an whole Burnt-offering to be presented to God Immolata sacrificia sunt perfecta studia virtutum says Origen an whole Burnt-offering is he that hath quite renounced the world consumed the root of concupiscence denies himself all unlawful desires crucifies the old man suffers zeal even to eat and devour him encreaseth charity so far to enflame his heart as if his frail flesh could scarce subsist because of the love of God For such a one the Son of God became a Burnt-offering that He might not perish in everlasting fire this is the full satisfaction of Christ to purchase the full of redemption of them that shall be saved in the last part Abraham offered up the Ram in holocaustum pro filio instead of his Son The Jews as their own Rabbies testifie did so much rejoyce in after ages for the deliverance of Isaac that in the Feast of Tabernacles they sounded the praise of God with Rams horns as if they had been Trumpets because a Ram was substituted to death instead of their Patriarch Alas for pitty the spilling of Isaacs bloud it is of no price for the redemption of a Soul it is not a sufficient Pawn for his own head much less for the sins of the World Meliorem animam pro morte Daretis persolvo as Entellus said when he offered up an Heifer instead of Daris so the Ram in my Text the Lord of the Flock an Attonement of infinite value must bear the Curse and the Cross of our iniquities and lay down his life for his Sheep a strange Sacrifice consisting of two Natures in the Personal Union of God and Man must satisfie God for the absolution of Man such a one as suffered not for himself but was offered instead of Isaac pro semine Electorum and for the Seed of all the Elect that shall reign in glory The Heathen had a glimpse of some such thing in their superstitious manner of Expiation for if ruin did threaten any State or Kingdom they thought it possible to remove the publick vengeance upon one or a few more that would willingly undertake it whom they called Piaculares homines men that took upon them the punishment or calamity due to all the people and Caiaphas did seem to allude to this when he told his fellow Priests that one man must suffer for the whole Nation Caritas in patriam impietas in Christum his charity towards his Country was laudable his impiety against Christ was damnable One man must suffer indeed unum pro multis dabitur caput as he said of Palinurus so this was the true Pilot of the Ship that guides his Church in the tempestuous waves of tentation and the Pilot only was cast away in the storm that Isaac and the Sons of Promise might come safe to the Haven of eternal happiness To end all let us all conceive and let our hearts be strongly possessed with the credulity that we are going with Abraham to Mount Moriah to the Hill of Divine Worship and Adoration take Isaac along with you that is all your laughter your joy the strength of your pleasure in this world to offer it up unto the Lord then trust and be assured Isaac shall be spared and the Ram shall die Thus Bernard unfolds the Allegory Non peribit tibi laetitia sed contumacia Domino vives sed crucifixus mundo you shall not lose your joy nor your hearts solace wantonness lasciviousness rebellion of the flesh these shall be offered up and consumed you shall live unto God but be crucified unto the World Cum laetus accesseris ad Deum iterum tibi reddet quod obtuleris a sweet Meditation of Origen's when it is gladness and delight unto you to come unto God when you bring Isaac for a Sacrifice you shall not lose your Offering but again it shall be restored unto you as he that multiplied his Talents by good husbandry they were his own for his labour and more to boot take the single Talent and give it to him that hath ten Talents saith the Lord. You that live in excess of pleasure and jollity you that think Abraham hath lost his Isaac that a religious and a devout life obstinately averse from the sweetness of your time-consuming mirth and sport is but sadness and melancholy and mistaken As no man heard the Musick of Heaven but Pythagoras so such as have lost the exulting bravery of the world in appearance are the only men to whose soul the harmonious joy of Heaven doth reveal it self Like young Abishag in Davids bosom so Isaac and the fruit of joy and gladness is always before the eyes of Abraham Your heart shall rejoyce and no man shall take it from you says our Saviour Almighty God grant that we may esteem it the greatest treasure of our joy and felicity that Jesus Christ a Sacrifice well pleasing to his Father hath died for us and that his bloud hath washed away our sins and purchased us an Inheritance immortal with the Saints AMEN THE FOURTH SERMON UPON THE PASSION JOHN iii. 14. And as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness even so must the Son of man be lifted up THough King Hezekiah destroyed the substance of the brazen Serpent to avoid peril of Idolatry yet Christ hath renewed the memory of it in this Text. Neither was it fit that the remembrance of it should die because it represented the death of him by whom we live for ever The Disciple to whom our Saviour directed these words was Nicodemus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Ruler a primary man ver 1. the best in quality of all the Jews that had yet come to Christ to be taught The Text I am sure is not grown less than it was but still it is fit to be preacht of before a Ruler Rulers are illustrious in their outward splendor and Titles Let them use them nobly and he that is greater than they will make them greater But Christ calls Nicodemus to a new way of honour to be all glorious within and tells him copiously that this is to be atchieved two ways First By regeneration of holiness he must become a new man he must be born again he must be born of the Spirit or he cannot see the Kingdom of God ver 4 5. Secondly By Justification through Remission of sins in the bloud of a Saviour and of this my Text speaks magnificently as Moses c. So that Nicodemus the Ruler hath no readier way to amplifie his honour than to be acquainted with the Passion of our Lord And no way more direct to understand that salutiferous Passion than to possess his imagination with the figure of the Serpent which was erected in the Wilderness Christ could have taught him the mystery of his death in another Type and a little more ancient the immolation of the Paschal Lamb. But first Nicodemus took good liking to
loud voice Lazarus come forth AMong all the miracles that our Saviour wrought this suscitation of Lazarus or raising him up from the dead it was his true Benoni or Son of sorrow None came off with so much anxiety none cost him so dear in all the Gospel Twice he groaned in Spirit and once he wept his Passions were as variable as the life and death of Lazarus Look back to the fifteenth verse and you shall see it wrought comfortably I am glad for your sakes that Lazarus is dead Look unto the 35 verse and you shall see it wrought bitterly Jesus wept What alterations are there says St. Austin Gaudebat propter discipulos flebat propter Judeos horum fides confirmabatur horum incredulitas augebatur It joyed him for the Disciples sake that their faith would be confirmed and revived It grieved him for the Jews sake whose hearts were hardened The preparation then of this Miracle was not without sorrow but the event and sequel was worst of all For although the Counsel of the High Priests stomach'd at our Saviour long before yet they wisht his life no hurt till he had wrought this wonder which all the world were amazed at From that time Caiaphas began to talk like a Wizard That one man must die for the people and Christ must suffer Now you see good cause why our Lord might groan and weep Israel shall pass over into Canaan but Moses must die upon Mount Nebo the birth of Benjamin shall be Rachels funeral Lazarus shall be revived and Jesus crucified Yet I can tell you one thing Beloved how the Son of God shall neither groan nor weep for Lazarus but rejoyce in Spirit and be glad even at this day be glad as he stands at the right hand of God and it lies upon you to do it Did he then groan for the infidelity of the Pharisees Then sure he will now rejoyce if we believe in his works and have faith in the Resurrection Did he then weep because his own death was contrived for doing good Then he will now be comforted if you take heed that you do not again crucifie the Lord of life T●llite lapidem as it is in verse 39 remove the stone the hardness of your heart and joy will follow in heaven for the conversion of a sinner Do you consider that the days past were a time of mourning and sad contrition Why here is a Text which was not preach'd without Christs mourning and lamentation Do you remember his Passion but the other day Why this is the Text which was an occasion to bring him to his Cross and Passion What do you meditate upon this day but our Saviours issuing out of the Grave Why here is Lazarus broke out of the Tomb Lazarus come forth Which words as I have read them rise up into two eminent heads like Tabor and Hermon You shall perceive that the business in my Text is a work of great dignity that is one part and a work of great Divinity that is the other part The dignity consists in these two Points 1. In that which Christ had spoken before when he had said thus And what was that He pray'd unto his Father wherefore it is dignum oratione a work worthy of a Prayer for the preparation 2. It is Dignum proclamatione it was cried with a loud voice and fit to be published to all the world The Divinity appears in these three circumstances 1. Exeat mortuus that a dead man is summoned to appear 2. Exeat Lazarus Lazarus after four days departure comes forth 3. Exeat ligatus one who was bound hand and foot with Grave-cloaths walks upon his feet O strange Divinity the Monuments which were shut did open for Christ did call who had the Key of David The dead who lay in silence could hear his tongue for it was the same voice which makes the Hinds bring forth young ones and called Adam from the dust of the earth The body which lay putrified four days gave no offence in the smell Christ was at hand who is a sweet savour for us unto God The feet which were bound with Grave-cloaths could walk before him for in him we live and move and have our being Was not this excellent work worthy of a Prayer So far we have gone this day in our morning Sacrifice Was it not worthy of the proclamation of a loud voice fit to be preached that the world may hear of it and believe and be saved And that is the business which doth now take up your attentions With these two circumstances of the Miracle I must first begin the preparation of our Saviours Prayer and the promulgation of his loud voice or preaching And when he had thus said c. That is when he had prayed unto the Father Dimidium facti qui benè caepit habet And he that begins his work with Prayer as Christ did hath half dispatch'd it Vox clamantis the voice of a Crier was the fore-runner of Christ when he came upon the earth Vox orantis the voice of Prayer must be the fore-runner of our necessities when we look for any thing from heaven As the people shouted when the foundation of the Temple was laid grace grace be unto the first stone of the building so let the foundation of every thing be laid with shouting and strong Ejaculations to our God that he may say upon the moving of the first stone Grace be to the building In Gen. xii Abraham removed three times to several quarters and still before he pitcht his Tent he built an Altar to Jehovah remove not stir not enter upon no new task before you have built an Altar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says St. Chrysostom wheresoever you are pray and your own heart is a Temple or the Alter of Jehovah Religion is the Bow and the heart is the String but Prayer is that which bends the Bow Religion is unbent as it were and the Shafts cannot fly untill Prayer dispatch them Well might Peter who was prompt of tongue and ready to speak upon all occasions be counted a chief Apostle for Prayer which is the tongue of Religion and our Consciences Orator is the chief of all our vertues Debilem facito manu debilem coxâ pede no matter for infirmities in the feet for diseases in the hands so the dumb Devil be not in our tongues The penitent Thief had no hands to hold up they were nailed to the Cross no knees to bend for his legs were broken he had a tongue to say Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom and it did him service enough to open Paradise O the delusions of the Devil For all this that I have said you shall sooner make ignorants and vain people believe that Diseases are curable by unsignificant Charms by unhallowed mutterings than by godly Prayers As if the Devil could go further with Non-sense than a good Christian with Faith and Prayer One Talent in
Behold he goes before you to Galilee Was there any cause therefore that they should think to bless their eyes with him before they had made a journey into Galilee but behold the Angels had not all the mind of the Lord revealed unto them Jesus met the women hard by where the word was spoken and long before they went into Galilee So it is with all who are dear to God They look not for the vision of God till they are dead for no man shall see God at any time and live Yet before we get into Galilee before the Soul ascends into heaven he grants us that blessing to see him often with the eye of faith As the place is one part of the wonder so there is another Ecce another behold in the time just as they were going to tell the Disciples that an Angel had publisht at the Monument that the Master was risen just then he met them One hath made a good note of it qui communicant Christum aliis ipsum altiùs intelligent Teach the ways of the Lord to others and thou shalt understand them the better thy self Communicate unto the ignorant what thou knowest of Christ thy Saviour and thine own knowledg shall increase unto thee in the communication A great encouragement though the mysteries of faith are deep and inexplicable yet to preach them as we are able because we have this hope that Jesus the revealer of all secrets will meet us by the way And yet behold again that Jerusalem being so populous and at this time of the Passover throng'd with all sorts of strangers he was descerned of none but of these women these he meets and salutes them This is their reward that they left their soft Couch and some hours before the Sun rose came to seek the Lord. The Servants of God are called generatio quaerentium Psal xxii This is the generation of them that seek thee even of them that seek thy face O Jacob. He says in the Prophet Isaiah that he was found of them that sought him not much more will he be found of those that sought him Ask St. Cyprian why many that thought themselves Eagles could not behold him with their piercing eyes and that this little Nest of Sparrows these few women did encounter him St. Cyprian says quae ardentiùs dilexerunt quae devotiùs quaesicrunt such as loved him more affectionately such as sought him more devoutly they have the blessing to enjoy him But a wiser than Cyprian even Solomon says it Prov. viii 17. I love them that love me and those that seek me early shall find me In a word Christ meets all those that go in the way of faith and obedience as these women did And as the Father went out to meet his prodigal Son before his Son did look for him so go on in repentance in love in zeal in holiness and you shall see the unexpected day of the Lord. After this hear the words which our Saviour spake to the women St. Paul heard his voice from heaven but did not at first see him St. Stephen saw him stand at the right hand of God but did not hear him speak these persons had the blessedness both to hear him and see him and his tunable voice gave them this salutation before they spake to him all hail It is no question but Christ spake unto them in the Syrian or in the Hebrew tongue and their word of love and courtesie to one another when they met was shalom or peace And so the Syrian Paraphrast renders these words of my Text pax vobis peace be unto you But the Evangelist hath kept the Greek form of salutation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rejoyce The Latin tongue useth that word which was usual in the mouth of the Romans when they gave the wishes of a good day unto any avete an old Latian word whose meaning themselves did not know The Poet Martial was a good Critick that confessed it Exprimere Rufe fidicula licet cogant Ave latinum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potes Gracum Now at last to descend to our language we express it as you read it all hail which is a Saxon ideom for all health The optative form of the Hebrews was Peace of the Greeks Joy they were merry Greeks of us English health The common custom was that friends should meet friends with auspicious words with congratulation of happiness one to another whensoever they came together upon appointment or incidentary occasions Among the Heathen Humanity and Civility among us Christians Brotherly love is the original to salute one another with a Prayer when we meet But who is he among an hundred that thinks the name of God and a Prayer is in his mouth when he bids a Good morrow or a Good even to his Neighbour he hath no perceivance of his all hail or of those charitable words that come from him He doth not bless his Brother after the meaning of the phrase but he talks by rote like a Parrot And as it is most supine negligence to mean no good in our salutation and will fall into the condemnation of idle words so it is most devillish to give the outward salute of good words and to have war in our heart As Joab spake peaceably to Abner that is saluted him and then smote him that he died as Judas gave all hail to his Master and betrayed him with a signal of a courtesie A familiar thing in this wicked world to bid God save and God speed to them whose destruction we covet and to think of cursing in our heart at the same instant when the form of blessing is in our mouth Shame be to our dissimulation that it is but a form It began to be so odious among the Heathen to salute out of wanton fashion when they meant no kindness that it grew in use among them to confirm their Greetings with an oath In one of Terence his Comedies this passage is between two Servants Salve mecastor Parmeno tu aedipol Syra they swore they did verily mean them all the good wherewith they saluted them But this would not mend the matter in our dissembling age for we have many that will salute and swear and yet intend mischief to their neighbour and so will mix malice with perjury I leave them to the bitterness of their own sins and to have their portion with Hypocrites I am sure the salutation of our Saviour did really bring peace and joy and health to them that were saluted Gaudere eas jubet quae condemnatae erant ad habendum merorem says Euthymius womenkind in Eve was condemned to sorrow Gen. iii. Now Christ bids them rejoyce and obliterates the handwriting of sorrow that was against them Avete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now be merry and joyful now that you have seen with your eys that Christ is the resurrection and the life the Heavens and all the powers therein Archangels and Angels Patriarchs and Prophets
breakers up of Graves and robbers of the dead Say ye his Disciples came by night 4. The main intended contrivance was to discredit the true Doctrine of our Saviours Resurrection Say ye his Disciples came by night and stole him away 5. In the last place I will handle the improbability of all of what contradictions the Plot consists never to be pieced together for all this if it like you must be done while they slept Say ye c. The Text being part of a Confabulation of some that laid their heads together to do mischief in the first place it will be most proper to speak of these Confederates On the one part to see that men of the best gifts and qualities are the most wicked Sons of Belial when they are left to themselves they are of no worse credit and calling than High Priests and Elders The selected Tribe of God to burn Incense to his name and offer Sacrifice continually the eyes of the people for counsel and their tongue to pray for them So blessed by Jacob and by Moses in the name of their Father Levi that nothing but such an horrid sin as a conspiracy against Christ could unbless them again Every house thought it self happy to receive one of that order so Micah of Mount Ephraim every Lot of Israel took them for innocent and unsuspected as it is 1 Mach. vii 14. One that is a Priest of the Seed of Aaron is come and he will do us no harm Marcus dixit ita est their word was Law and their righteousness unquestioned All this credit they had that now the Devil might use them the better to suppress a manifest truth When one did highly commend Julian the Cardinal the Popes Legate at the Council of Basil Sigismund the Emperour answers Tamen Romanus est for all your great commendation this man is a Roman So the High Priests sate in Moses Chair were zealous of the Law fasted look'd sowerly pretended much affection to the Temple of the Lord Tamen sunt Pharisaici for all this praise they tasted deeply of the Leaven of the Pharisees and envied it that God himself should send his own Son to have more authority among the people or to be greater in estimation than they such as loved the praise of men more than the praise of God That was a mild character of our Saviours but the meaning of it is they had rather conjure with Hell to maintain their Error than retract it with open repentance and incur a little shame for their former obstinacy When Lazarus was raised from the dead and all the people wondred at it presently the High Priests warn their Council to meet for upon every good deed they fell a conspiring and the matter propounded to the Council was What do we For this man doth many Miracles O fools and slow of heart If he do many Miracles what should ye do But confess him to be the Son of God and fall down and worship him Is Lazarus revived to their knowledge And doth it not say unto them why will ye perish and not believe Nay God invited them thus far that those mighty sinners the Authors that put Christ to death heard of his Resurrection on this day within a little while after he was risen and by their own Ministers such as were of their own Faction that watched the Sepulchre those told them very certain tidings that an Angel of God had said to certain devout women He is risen he is not here They saw it they heard it they quak'd for fear and felt it they could not be mistaken O God what abundant means were these to let them know the truth and be saved For all this they are at their old santez What do we This man is risen from the dead let us cast a mist before mens eyes that they may never believe it Thus that which should have begot Faith in them begot madness and that heart will never be well softened which is hardened with the very grace of God Was Pharaoh ever religiously mollified that wax'd stubborn after so many Messages which Moses brought after so many Plagues on Earth so many Wonders from Heaven He never had a true relenting heart that dodg'd the grace of God so often Beloved that Pharaoh and these High Priests let them be your examples what a fearful thing it is to make ill use of those good means which are ordained for your salvation But I am not yet off from the main Point the Priests are one part of this wicked combination and they invited the Souldiers to joyn with them in the Plot against Christs Resurrection and undertake for another Plot to make Pilate wink at all passages and be pleased Davos Davos omnia these are the wits that carry the whole stratagem before them For what Impostures will not pass for fair dealing when they are recommended upon the credit of the Chief Priests Iis qui occaecantur authoritate sacerdotali facilè pro veritate obtruditur mendacium When well meaning men have the persons of some great Clerks in reverence and think the Spirit of God is among them how easie it is to fall into great errors upon that trust That it is no wonder if many stick obstinately to Popish superstition whose eyes are dazled with Pontifical Authority Woe be to them who are rotten in their own foundation and yet inveigle others to build upon their conscience And mark who those others were whom the High Priests made their Confederates some of those Souldiers that watcht the Sepulchre So the Fox and the Lion are yoked together Vulpina pellis leomna force and policy wit and violence The Sword of Paul as Pope Julian the Second said with the Keys of Peter Some of the Watch came into the City and shewed the High Priests all things that were done ver 11. At first they told the certainty of Christs Resurrection and gave God the glory and made a just Apology for themselves that they were charged indeed to look to the Tomb that the body which was in it might be kept safe and unremoved but some dreadful Powers from above came down and broke open the Sepulchre who could blame them therefore that they did not fight against Heaven If they might have been let alone to themselves they had said no more and gone away well excused But the High Priests more unjust by far than these Heathen make them unsay every word which they had spoken true and scandalize Gods name among the Heathen by teaching them to blaspheme A very hard case that in all likelihood these had been far more honest and sincere if they had never consulted with those that by their Duty and Office were their Teachers But a little matter alas draws men into the high-way of iniquity and the Priests could no sooner propound treachery but the Souldiers are in the knot First they carry more reverence to man than unto God and conjoyned to betray the greatest
the name of the whole Congregation to offer up two Lambs of the first year for a Sacrifice of Peace-offerings You will say that 's no strange matter to present a Peace-offering to the Lord true indeed particular persons did it often in their own behalf but Maimonides observes it that the publick Body the Vniversal Church of the Jews never offered any Peace-offering but at the Feast of Pentecost O who will work this work for the Militant Catholique Church that we may say of all the parts of it omnes unanimiter they conclude all for the Orthodox Faith with one accord Some strange salvation must drop out of the clouds we know not how to work this Attonement yet on both sides let every man take heed he make not the rent bigger with more obstinacy and greater separation sweetly did a meek Moses of our own Church write there will come a time when three words uttered with charity and meekness shall receive a far more blessed reward than three thousand Volumes written with disdainful sharpness of wit It may seem a wonderful and unanswerable scruple that many in the former Ages of the Church did so much transcend us in these dayes for gifts of Miracles gifts of Devotion and Learning for Watchings and Fastings for Industry and assiduous diligence for most prosperous success in winning many Souls to the Kingdom of Heaven but the true cause is that their unanimity and pious agreement opened a wide gate to admit sanctification into their breast and our discords exclude it No spirit can give life to Members dismembred unless they be first united and compact together Ezekiel knew not how scattered bones could live but the bones came together bone to his bone and then the breath of the Lord came into them and they lived and stood upon their feet Ezekiel xxxvii 10. The Scribes and Elders of the Jews in few years after our Saviour was crucified were like broken bones scattered and divided like as one breaketh and heweth wood every year by bribery or calumniations the High Priest lost his dignity and a new one was substituted Josephus most impartially hath related that there was no care of Religion no zeal for the Law among them because there was nothing but bandings and factions in their Synagogues Here was no accord and therefore no Holy Spirit came down into their habitations Against the Congregation of the famous first Nicene Council the Fathers that met together it is not to be concealed forgat themselves so far that they put up innumerous Bills of complaints one against another before the Emperor Constantine The Emperor knew this was a most repugnant beginning to the good work they had in hand to enter into the consideration of Christs business with distracted enmities therefore he threw all their bills and brables into the fire and then bad them proceed in the name of Christ and in the grace of his Holy Spirit Their heart is divided now shall they be found faulty says the Prophet Hosea chap. x. 2. A contentious stickler that loves to be the head of a Faction and to disjoynt things out of peace and quietness I wonder whether ever he thinks how the Apostles were composed and prepared when they received the Holy Ghost Fuerunt omnes eâdem animatione simul in unam so St. Austin reads they had one heart and one mind and one inclination to advance the Kingdom of Christ they were all with one accord in one place I enter now upon the last part of all that I may find the way out of my Text and conclude it is the other Preparation for the coming of the Holy Ghost as all the Disciples were knit in vinculo pacis in the bond of peace and concord so they were united together in vinculo spei in the bond of hope by patience and expectation they were ejusdem unanimitatis and ejusdem longanimitatis they kept together for the promise of the Holy Ghost till fifty days were fulfilled God made the Israelites number fifty days after their coming out of Egypt before the Law was delivered ut adventus sui desiderium accenderet to make their hearts burn within them with longing for his coming so he put off the coming of the Holy Ghost for the same space of time to make them think of his promise with eager expectation The Jews called it the Feast of fifty days and the Feast of weeks for whether we reckon by days or weeks or years we must wait the Lords leisure and say expectans expectavi Psal xl 1. I have waited patiently for the Lord and say with our Saviour not my will but thy will be done that is not my time but thy time be fulfilled Where is the faith where is the humility of those rash spirits that will not tarry the fulness of time but have all things at their whistle by and by or quarrel with God as if he had forgot them They received this blessing of wonderful grace that were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 long abiders in the 13. verse of the former chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or perseverantes ver 14. such as continue till the day of promise was fully come He that believeth let him not make haste says the Prophet Isaiah God will do all things by his own leisure and maturity if he happen to stay stay for him Habak ii 3. for at last he that cometh will come and then he is no flitter his gifts are without repentance and he will abide with us for ever AMEN THE SECOND SERMON UPON THE Descent of the Holy Ghost ACTS ii 2. And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind and filled all the house where they were sitting THE Feast of Christs Resurrection and the Feast of Whitsunday or coming of the Holy Ghost are distant one from another fifty days in space of time but are as near to themselves as the bark unto the tree in real substance and in spiritual conjunction In the Resurrection the strength of Hell was weakened for us In the descending of the Holy Ghost the vertue of Heaven was made powerful in us In the first the doors of the Grave were unlock'd that we might not be held in death In the other the windows of heaven were opened that we might be partakers of the life to come The Resurrection reduceth the soul into the body again which was dissolved by the sin of Adam The coming of the Holy Ghost doth again reduce grace into the Soul when original Justice had been taken from it by the same mans transgression These are parallell'd in primo gradu and the comparison may reach a little further to our present business that there was a great noise caused at Christs rising For behold there was an Earthquake Mat. xxviii 2. And loe as great a noise from above at the coming of the Holy Ghost for behold there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind These two honourable Feasts
very Apostles were enough to prove the Majesty of God 't is strange to work good upon any of us all our will is knotty timber our heart hollow and unsound what can the Workman make of such stuff but to commit the Talents of the Holy Ghost to such as these and to make them the Bankers from whom we should borrow the stock of the Church this is his exploit alone who can make a graine of mustard seed dispread into a tree that the Fouls of the air may build their nests in it Lord what are we that thou hast given such power unto men But Lord what art thou that hast given such power to most homely and simple men O Lord how excellent is thy name in all the world Thou that out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast ordained praise and put the Eloquence of the earth to silence by such unlookt-for Instruments These were no men of spirit active and stirring in the world such busie heads would never be fortunate to propagate the Gospel of peace Again they were of no honourable Order the Spirit had more use of humility than of dignity Inspirat non inflat as one said very well it inspired them it did not puff them up To be short they were not of the Scribes and Doctors that were Proficients in Arts and Learning that the work of God might disperse the greater amazement through such who were noted for ignorance and infirmity Yet they were not sent forth like Ideots and Fishermen that knew nothing but their Mechanical trade but were endued with power from on high to teach the Mystery of Godliness in all the Tongues that could be spoken Which is the next provocation to transport them with wonder as we read it ver 9. How hear we every man in our own tongue wherein we were born It will ask travel and pains through the whole life of a man to be cunning in two or three Tongues good Linguists know what study it costs them to come to a Grammatical excellency in a few Languages much more to a voluble pronunciation of them But to preach Christ Jesus in all the borders of the earth required more dispatch than to begin to get the elements of learning therefore by a shorter cut God gives them an inspiration to speak all Tongues in a moment and to preach the true sense of the Scripture in all those Tongues Sentire quae velint loqui quae sentiant they had words to cloath their matter as they pleased and they had matter to utter as well as words Quid voveat dulci nutricula maejus alumno quàm sapere fari quae sentiat They needed no more abilities than wisdom to know the mind of God and a tongue to declare their wisdom As in the beginning when God created the Heaven and the Earth he spake what he pleased and it was done Let there be light and there was light Let there be a Sea and there was a Sea So in the first foundations of the Church it was no more but let there be a revelation of the mysteries of the Gospel and there was a Revelation Let there be Tongues and there were Tongues Let there be a fountain opened in Jerusalem whose several spouts may water all the quarters of the world and it was so in the twinkling of an eye If God himself had come from heaven in his own Majesty his Almighty Word could not have been clearer than in this miracle Such as have an incredulous grudge in their minds an Ague that will never leave some carnal hearts they are troubled with a longing when they hear of this O that we had lived in those days when the arm of power from on high was made so manifest We take things up as the long revolutions of time have committed them to us but we live not in the days of wonder we see nothing for us by this strange omnipotency Beloved if there were a new Gospel to be preached we should have new Tongues as the Apostles had to publish it but the truth hath been preached round about the world to all Nations the continuance is old therefore why should new Wine of new Miracles be put into old bottles Then it was meet I mean on the first Whitsunday that the Gentiles should understand that way was made to call them to Salvation which could not be confirmed better than to hear the Cross of Jesus Christ published in so many forein Dialects and that the Prediction of the Psalm is fulfilled His sound is gone forth into all the earth and his Word unto the ends of the world there is neither Speech nor Language but their voice is heard among them Now it is confessed that it is accomplished and were not a miracle a most unnecessary and supernumerary thing to confirm it Hold you content that the Spirit is yet upon your tongues the seal is printed upon them to pray to God to bless one another to comfort one another If any thing will amaze a man in these days it is the bitterness the murmuring the swearing the lying the slandering of the tongue that we should do God more dishonour with one tongue than the Apostles did him honour with twenty So much for that Passion which took away the reason of them that were present for a time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were in an extasie they were amazed Now follows that which troubled their reason and exercised their reason I will put them both in one they hang so close together They were in doubt saying one to another What meaneth this Doubting is the unquietness of the mind which proceeds from ignorance It flutters about like Noahs Dove and knows not where to set its foot they wanted the Anchor of faith to fasten them to some certain resolution for as yet they knew not the Scriptures of the Prophet Joel to which St. Peter directed them Ver. 17. It shall come to pass in the last days saith God I will pour out of my spirit upon all flesh Doubtfulness is the fruit of carnal wisdom it holds to nothing stedfastly it hath more faces than Janus looking every way and on every side and hath as many thoughts as there be minutes in the hour and it is impossible it should be fix'd until it pitch upon some clear Text of Scripture and say this is the truth I build upon it for so it is written in the Word of God The benefit of the holy Spirit descending as this day upon the Church was to bring us out of the windings and crooked Lanes of doubting and reduce all opinions to one setled conclusion that there was no salvation to be found but in the meritorious Passion of Jesus Christ The Academicks of Greece were so far from any certainty of knowledge that it was the perfection of their learning to doubt of every thing Whereupon an Egyptian Priest reproved them for that puerility 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you that call your selves
they be driven from the presence of God And I pray you what credit is it to our Church to make such a bustle as some private men have done about scandalous Ministers as if the Clergy were grown so disordered that the most necessary thing to be provided for in the Weal Publick were new Laws for the rectifying and deprivation of scandalous Ministry When sundry Petitions were put into the hand of Constantine the Great at the famous Council of Nice against some Bishops and Priests and Deacons he threw them all into the fire with this answer He would not have complaints in that kind so publick but if he knew how to cover their trespasses he would cast his own royal Robe upon them As you wish that God might not be despised as you wish the Jesuits might not triumph at your Ministers beware to make such a mountain of that which private advertisement might better rectifie Many of my Brethren of good parts are unfurnish with means and where poverty and wit meet together I confess they seldom make an honest man between them God give them grace to bear their wants more religiously and with less scandal but I hope you will not think the whole Loom is bad because the List is coarse But for those that are so ready to blur their reputation whom God hath appointed to burn Incense before his name that is to pray for his people is it not a sign that God is despised by them Fifthly To step into the observation of a judicious Commentator it is an apparent disgust of contempt Minimè ad minas contremiscere not to tremble at his anger that threatens Primos in orbe Deos fecit timor says Statius not so soundly that fear was the first thing that made a God but I am sure that want of fear is the first thing that will make an Atheist and perswade a man there is no God The Prophet Isaiah could say no worse of the Idols made of stocks and stones but that they could do no evil that we should be dismaid at them Isa xli 23. Every part of our Saviours Passion was undergone to satisfie in the kind wherein we had most prevaricated Our Extortion wounded his hands our Gluttony gave him Gall to drink our want of fear put him into the strongest part of his Passion that Agony full of great fear in the Garden when he sweat drops of bloud as for them that hear lamentations read unto them that have heard the vengeance of Captivity and the Sword threatned to a wicked Land and yet their heart is not quail'd their courage is undaunted it shall fall out unto them as it did unto the Philistines they brought out Samson to play before them and made a mocking-stock so long of his Arms of Steel that at length he plucked down their Temple about their ears and brained them A filial fear that loves God for his goodness is like a bright day that hath not a cloud to disfigure it a servile fear that loves God for fear of the wrath to come is like a day that is overcast with clouds but it is clearer than the fairest Moonshine night It is good to have the Spirit of Adoption but it is better to have the Spirit of bondage than the Spirit of slumber It is good to be in Canaan but it is better to be in the Wilderness than in Egypt It is good to be a Child but it is better to be a Servant than a Stranger to the Lord. The Lions roar and the Beasts of the Forest are moved at his mighty voice the winds arise and the sowls of the air flutter and lay them down in their Nests the thunder-claps rend the air and the Spirits of Princes are dismaid and troubled but if the God of the Winds and of the Seas and of the Thunder threaten and menace us for our sins shall we not much more dread his fury and look pale at his indignation But when we bear all prodigious signs and wonders without crouching when we esteem not the terrours God help us that are now round about us is it not a sign that God is despised Sixthly To take another Arrow out of the same Quiver it is a sign we under-value the power of another Minimè ad opem ejus consugere not to fly to his help when we had need of relief so when the Israelites blurted at Saul as if he did not look like the man that could lead out their Armies against the Philistines Nunquid iste salvare potest Israelem Can such a man as this save Israel It is a manifest token that they did despise him God is much offended when we neglect him in prosperity and he is no less displeased when we do not fly to him in misery You are for the God of Ekron in your sickness says the Prophet to King Ahaziah when he sent thither for remedy is it because there is no God in Israel A word if you mark it that relisheth of most sharp indignation it is because there is no God in Israel Invoca me Psal ● Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will hear thee Invocantibus miseteri desiderat qui monet ut invocetur says Gregory God hath a great good affection to be gracious unto them that invoke him when he puts us in mind to be invoked The Children of Israel were miserably oppressed with bondage under Pharaoh yet their curs'd hearts had rather put up their wrongs and suffer them than be beholding to the Lord for their delivery Trajan had rather pine away with Leprosie than call upon the name of Christ whose Servants he had persecuted Wizzards and cunning Soothsayers so called some run to these for relief Tutelary Angels that have the Patronage over several Kingdoms so well do they know what God hath appointed in Heaven imaginary Saints that are fortunate in expelling some particular disease as it is thought some run to these for protection Non defensoribus istis our hope is not in such miserable comforters as these but the Lord is our refuge in the day of trouble If we say unto the needy that God is his portion and he must not steal if we say unto the sick that the Prayer of the Faithful availeth much he must not fret and be disquiet and yet he rageth and curseth at his afflictions if we say to the opppressed that God will judge their cause and yet they desire to break the net that held them in by violence and to take private vengeance into their hand Where is their patience Where is the testimony that they fly to the Almighty in the evil days Is it not a sign that God is despised Seventhly and lastly to end this Point let me borrow but the speech of the angry Goddess when she thought she should be contemned Et quisquam numen Junonu adoret Praeterea aut supplex aris imponat honorem that is when Sacrifice comes not in plentifully to the
very hour that we deliver the sacred will unto you with fear and reverence we walk with God This will not let me pretermit what Origen says and Irenaeus likewise was contained in the Apocryphal Book of Enoch Legatione functus est ad Angelos that he was sent an Embassadour from the Sages and Patriarchs of the world unto the Angels I will not go further in the Fiction The Hebrews had more leisure to tell strange stories than you have to hear them I believe the meaning is he walked to several places of the world to settle things in order in divers Kingdoms as when Samuel judged Israel he went from year to year in circuit to Bethel and Gilgal and Mizpeh and judged Israel in all those places A wearisom labour for Governours to make a journey of so many days and months but safety and the blessing of God certainly is upon it because they give no rest to their body till they see with their eyes how Religion and Justice are managed in the remotest places of their dominions this is to walk with God I am now making to the Conclusion for this time with the improbable and indeed impossible supposition of those Expositors that would make Enoch a Prior or Abbot or at least a member of such a Society some regular Canon that vowed stricter orders in obligation of inter-mutual obedience than all others that were called by the name of the Lord. It seems the Monks do greatly want good men of their livery that they would hedge in those into their body that never dreamt of their profession And I wonder they would accept of Enoch for a Votary who begat Sons and Daughters and I hope they will acknowledge in lawful Matrimony after he walked with God St. Chrysostome draws no other Doctrine from my Text and this very vehemently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For Enochs sake let no man think that a married life is any impediment to please the Lord Cornelius à Lapide the Jesuit could not let this observation alone but tells us that Enoch shall live upon the earth again before the day of judgment for three years and half and fight with Antichrist and be slain and then he shall be unmarried I think so too for if he should come into the world at this time as all that tradition is a most sickly dream but it he should he must bear the age of four thousand years and that were too old in conscience to marry But put case upon his return he would marry again how would the Jesuit forbid the Banes Why he drives it to this case Enoch was the Great-grand-father of Noah Noah since the Floud the common Progenitor of all flesh therefore when Enoch appears again upon earth he shall be the Father of all women descending from him in a right line and between such persons no Matrimony can be contracted This is a subtilty as wisely laid as the Sadduces question about the woman that had married seven husbands Whose wise shall she be in the Resurrection But because the Jesuits do so much commend Virginity above all things I would their fathers in the flesh could have been perswaded to have kept it then the Church had wanted them who are the only impediment on that part that probably no peace can be made among our Christian unchristian divisions Now they that do invent certain forms of Monastical Institutions from the beginning of the world divide them into two Sects the one from Cainan in an active life such as sung sweet hymns or ministred in sacrifices and conversed with the world Certainly these went the truer way the active life is most charitable and furthest from tentation For as Daws and Bats will breed about an house where there is no inhabitant so many sins will creep into a soul that is not operative But they of the other order instituted by Enos says a late Parisian Capuchin lived not with men but affected solitude spake not to men but affected silence By this Description it seems to me he makes them abhor the two best properties of a man who is animal sociabile sermocinativum the only creature on earth fit to unite himself in an orderly society and the only creature on earth to whom God hath given speech to utter the conceptions of his mind Their purpose is I think to commend a man dead unto the delights of the world not taken with the baits of pleasure like a beast and they make a beast of him by renouncing the best parts of humanity To enjoy a mans days with some sweetness of delight is far from reprehension pleasures indeed are to be mitigated for a little pleasure is enough to season a mans life as a little salt is enough with ones meat therefore the excess is to be reproved as the origen of much iniquity but this I will say in favour of a life that is lead with much alacrity the most horrible sins that are do usually come to pass through sullen melancholy Man was first put into Paradise to spend his days in content and joy Why should he live so opposite to the state of Paradise as to spend all his Age in sowreness and sad contemplations Adam was appointed to dress the Garden of God to keep the trees and herbs and grass well pruned and shorn and even Is not the whole world now the Garden of God And shall every elegancy mirth and pleasurable recreation in it be checkt for wanton and abominable Such censorious sowre-looking Pharisees of all the rest of the Jews did least please our Saviour The great Rabbi Ben Maimon says that Prophesie comes not upon men either when they are sorrowful or when they are sloathful but when they are joyful Therefore the Sons of the Prophets had before them Psalteries and Timbrels and Harps when they came down the Mountains 1 Sam. x. 5. A good Christian therefore may walk with God with a chearful merry heart yea and dance before God as Miriam and David did Happy are they that can suffer tribulations for Gods name without repining and no less happy are they that drink of the brook in the way of comforts and pleasures without surfeiting The Lord sanctifie them both unto us through his holy Spirit and grace AMEN THE SECOND SERMON UPON ENOCH GEN. V. 24. And Enoch walked with God and he was not for God took him WHen I lately commended before you what a rich example of piety and perfection Enoch was perhaps you thought this was wanting to make up the ful sum how he shut up his days in the love and favour of God To make a blessed end is the Crown of all other praise that goes before it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says Aristotle Let us look towards the conclusion of a mans days as Solons rule was and so pronounce him happy But I can follow no such order in this subject which I have to handle What passage Enoch had out of this world I can
Noah sent up clean Prayers to God with the Oblation of every clean Beast and of every clean Fowl For while Zachary burnt Incense in the Temple the whole multitude were Praying without at the time of Incense Luk. i. 8. And Solomon gives us light what was done at Sacrifice he spread out his hands to heaven in Prayer and dedicated the fat of the Peace-offerings to the Lord. Nay more the Evening Sacrifice burnt all night upon the Altar and the Priests continued in the Temple till morning at Prayer You that by night stand in the house of the Lord lift up your hands in the Sanctuary and bless the Lord Psal cxxxiv. 2. I know not what company they had at the Prayers of the Sacrifice by night or day very little if their devotion were no greater than ours I read in the Ages upward what a thrust there was in their Churches at the daily service of Prayer which concourse is quite disused in our days and unless the office of Prayer be pieced out with a Sermon in all places you shall find a most contemptible paucity and yet we should know that in a Sermon God sacrificeth to us not we to him Let me be bolder with you they are scarce worthy to be called Prayers as they are most negligently handled The Priest reads I will not say how dreamingly sometimes the People gape about and have other business in their heads Some chop in at the latter end cannot spare leisure to all Some answer to one line and hold their peace at ten Some stand more upon their ease than to stand up or bow down when they should with reverend gesture What can there be in such Prayers as these to call them a sweet savour Our sins stink in the nostrils of God and are odious you confess that and miserable man have you no better than such careless shuffling Supplications to sweeten them They were Wisemen that took out Myrrh and Frankincense when they came to Christ Ad faetorem stabuli excludendum to correct the ill savour of the Stable where he lay but contrary to all reason when our heart is dung and our ways more filthy than Augias Stable we yawn out heedless heartless undevotioned Prayers to mend the matter O is it not to us that he speaks by the Prophet Amos v. 21. I despise your Feasts I will not smell in your holy Assemblies I will borrow a piece of a Sermon from St. Bernard to make up this Point Stand before the Lord chearfully reverently devoutly Non pigri non oscitantes non parcentes vocibus non praecidentes verba dimidia Be not drowsie let not your attention slip from you when God is praised leave not all the Prayers to the Priests care but every one make up his part do not mangle and chop Gods Service let your Spirits go with every word when you hear an Hymn or Psalmodie think of nothing else but that which is sung You are not allowed a good thought at that time if it be extravagant much less a worldly a malicious a wanton cogitation Pare away these superfluities that you may say My heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise Thus far that the devotion of Noah was very Aromatical in the sweet savour of his Sacrifice Secondly the care that this Patriarch had for the instauration of Religion above all things is like Mary's sweet Ointment which she poured upon our Saviour it shall be spoken of so far as the Word is Preaced in all the world Bethink you as well you may when Noah put forth his head out of the Ark to tread upon the earth which could afford him nothing but room to walk upon with how many thoughts he was distracted What house to put his head in where to be provided of Food and Raiment where were all the necessaries and comforts of life to be had How should he rake up a New World out of the Ruines of the Old All these instances and more than these were thoughts to take up a wise man and yet he laid all these under his feet and built an Altar upon them to institute a true form of Divine Worship in the first place that all the World might follow it Why it is evident that his heart gave him in charge to look to Religion above all the necessaries of life and to forget all things even himself till he had remembred God Abraham was a Pilgrim and it is ever observed in this Book of Genesis or with little exception that he never removed to any new place but first he built an Altar to the Lord. At the first quiet Station which the Children of Israel had vvhen they came out of Egypt Moses sanctified the first-born to God David was no sooner confirmed a King but he brought the Ark into its resting place We stand before a great God that will not be served with the second or third part of our care The Jews were rebuked that built houses for themselves when they were returned from Captivity and let the House of the Lord lie waste Christ did reprove it that the young man that was called to follow him should put in another thing between First let me go and bury my Father Can you find out any first before God that is the first and the Last Piety and Sacred Offices are sweetly managed when you give them the flower of your care and the pre-eminence before all things The day will shine prosperously on you if you give the first hour after you rise from your bed to Prayer The whole Week is blessed because the first day is the Lords-day to call holy Assemblies together The Heathen Romans began the Laws of the twelve Tables with a sanction of Religion Deos castè adeunto In all Commerce Confederacies Treaties let the honour of God be the prime and Master respect And all other fine devices will prove but counterfeits of wit to such sacred Policy Another thing makes this repair and settlement of Religion precious and highly valued for the unity and conformity of all parties present at it It was the first solemnity performed to God after the Floud that the Company before they dispersed might agree in one outward form of Divine Worship I do not know whether such a complete consent of all persons in the Earth was ever seen before or since the days of Noah Therefore it must needs afford an excellent savour There was no Idolatry in the world no different ways no divisions I am for this and I am for that This little Flock was at unity in it self the old Patriarch his Sons and Daughters agreeing in one Prayer and in one Sacrifice O rare and heavenly One Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts in the tongues of all the Angels is the most Angelical part of the Angels Ministry That is in heaven but the sacred Concord that I preach of was on earth An obedience running all one way no separations no
give thanks for this is the will of the Lord 1 Thes v. 18. If the Scripture had not said it natural ingenuity would lead you to the duty St. Ambrose says that Noahs Sacrifice was a free-will offering it was not commanded Qui debitum gratiae ut à se exigatur expectat ingratus est If you expect a Process to be served upon you to be thankful it is a kind of ingratitude for it wants the sweet savour But I will degree it to the highest to make my Doctrine useful As one Wave of the Sea drives on another and the latter puts on the next in a continual flux so the souls yearnings to thanksgiving take hand in hand and that which goes before plucks on that which follows after it A consultation must be called about it as David did What shall I render to the Lord The Soul asks it self the question and needs no Monitor as Elisha made it his own motion to the Shunamite in requital of her hospitality Behold thou hast been careful for us what shall be done for thee Proceed now What doth consultation produce Why the voice of joy and melody I will sing and give praise O but lip labour may be fruitless a Pharisee can say Lord I thank thee Prove it more than by some bountiful retribution bring presents unto the Lord that ought to be feared Let them be many and liberal such as God doth expect who gave us all and looks for no nigardly proportion in return O but again a Pharisee will give as well as pray Yes but he will boast and pride himself in it then wrap your thankful present in lowly confession O my God my goods are nothing to thee For what is the light beholding to them that look upon it Or what doth a Fountain get of a thirsty man that drinks of it Then that which brings up the rear and puts on the rest before it is a heart big with holy thoughts thankful for the grace of the holy Spirit above all things that stirs it up to be thankful and is ashamed of its own impotency that it is able to make no better retribution Therefore David changeth giving into taking What shall I give I will take the Cup of salvation As who should say fain I would render unto the Lord fain I would be thankful but that 's impossible on even terms all the Cattel are his upon a thousand hills If I can give nothing I will take somewhat for his sake I will take any thing in good part I will suffer any thing that the Lord doth lay upon me so you may compound these many things into a redolency to make a sweet savour to the Lord. This generous and well bred quality of gratitude is ever in good men where those few are to be found Few alas for God knows and benefactors find it that mercy and bounty are Pearles cast before Swine and that they are requited with malice revilings treachery from those whom they have bribed enough and estated in all they have No Rogues mark burnt upon the shoulder or face are so infamous as this character upon some that no benefits will win them no good turns will purchase them The Parable of the ten Lepers bids you expect nine bad for one good so it was among them that Christ healed Mundita cute leprosi corde healed of their Leprosie still sick of unthankfulness cured in the outward skin corrupted in their heart Where are the other nine says our Saviour Are they lost that they returned not to give thanks Yes certainly quite lost De ingratis quasi ignotis loquitur Christ makes as if he did not know them That is the fatall doom to have it pronounced by him Depart from me I know you not The next thing that follows is to be cast into the stinking Dungeon because the Lord did smell an ill savour from an unthankful Generation Hear now the fourth principal answer what the sweetness of this savour was it was Noahs charity that he desired to appease Gods wrath toward all flesh then living and to beseech his mercy to all Generations that should succeed Josephus the best reporter of the Jewish Traditions says it was the end of this Sacrifice to be a solemn Litany for the reparation of the drowned world and that it might no more be destroyed with an universal deluge My Text doth much concur if you read it word for word after the original that God did smell an odour of rest Quia fecit Deum quietum ab indignatione says the Gloss by this propitiatory offering he made the divine justice quiet or cease from indignation And mark what mercy in this Verse immediately follows the sweet savour I will not again curse the ground any more for mans sake and in the next Chapter the Rainbow is instituted for a promise and Sacrament of future safety I will confirm it with apt words out of Luther Delectatus est Deus perdendo genus humanum nunc iterum delectatus est augendo God was delighted in his justice before to destroy all people and now his mercy will be delighted to increase mankind again It is fairly seen now as the light that Noah entreated God by Sacrifice to be favourable to his Sons and Daughters to their off-spring to the whole increase of the New World and this was part of the sweet savour For God commends this zelum protensum zealous love that extends it self to all its neighbours round about to the whole body of Christs Church to all men living to all Generations to come as Tully in his Lelius writes like an honest man Non minoris mihi curae est c. I have as much care that this Commonwealth should flourish when I am dead as while I am alive Hezekiah's affections were too much contracted to himself when he said Is it not good if peace and truth be in my days 2 Kings xx 20. Moses is called Gods Elect his chosen Servant for standing in the gap to save all the people Nehemiah is very famous for he raised up the ruines of his Nation Ecclus. xlix 13. If forraign wits do not mistake us English they defame us sharply that we want publick spirits and are commonly careless of the common good But I doubt we are worse than they make us For it is not as they have heard that we intend our private wealths before the general wealth of the Kingdom no it is our private pleasure our private luxury that we project at rather than the honour of our Nation and Country This is a strong Garlick smell fit to be looked to and to be turn'd into a better savour with a great deal of redress and reformation It is an unnatural baseness to prefer our selves before the prosperity of the Land that bore us The seat of our Ancestors the receptacle of our Children and Progeny to come where we breathed the first breath of life whose dust which the wind blows about is the
direction not to retort her eyes under the guilt of a mortal sin or she thought the Commandement held her no longer when she came out of the Plain and was even entring into Zoar. Here 's a Jesuitical subtlety for you to aggravate the offence to the bigness of a Mountain if a Novice violate the private Law of his Superior but to extenuate the sin almost to nothing if a Servant disobey the private Law of his heavenly Master But it is not the wit of man that can set a size upon sins which are mortal and which are venial for it is the Lord that judgeth the Earth The next place to which I refer the heinousness of this womans sin is great folly and blindness of heart for she refused the will of God and the preservation of her own life upon such easie conditions as to hold still her head When Elisha's Messenger bad Naaman wash seven times in Jordan and he turn'd away in a rage his Servants spake reason to him if the Prophet had bid thee do some great thing wouldst thou not have done it how much rather then when he saith to thee wash and be clean If he would not use such gentle means so near at hand means of no expence no pain no lingring molestation he deserved to continue a Leper In like sort if Lots Wife had been set a task of many observations put to a strict and a tedious penance would she not have done it to have escaped a storm of fire and brimstone how much more when this was all that was required from her Go on streight to the Mountain that is before thee turn neither to the right hand nor to the left Quanta erat iniquitas in peccando ubi tanta erat non peccandi facilitas says the Father What a shame it was to offend when there was so much facility to decline the offence Were not all the Regions of the World free for her to look upon excepting that one City behind her which could not be seen for the smoak Ex omnibus unum elige Myrrha virum modo ne sit in omnibus unus A single exception is the smallest exception that can be made and let them feel the smart that cannot conform themselves to those things which are of such easie observation For wherein did the transgression of Adam and Eve especially consist God knows best but the trivial and best grounded conjecture is quod levis fuisset in tantâ copiâ unius arboris continentia all the Trees of the Garden else were frankly theirs both for food and pleasure both for delight and necessity What an easie imposition was this let this only Graft be untoucht the Tree of the knowledg of good and evil and all beside is yours Who could forget it or neglect it But they stumbled when there was nothing to make them fall that is they violated a Law which was neither burdensom in strictness nor in multitude of circumstances Therefore in those good hours which we set apart for repentance and bewayling of our sins let it strike us deep to the heart when we remember how much evil we have done upon very small provocation how many branches of the Law we have broken when we cannot justly say that we were strongly beset with any tentation and how far we have given way to our frailties when 't was prompt and easie to repress them The negative Commands of the Law are more obvious to us more ready in our power to obey them than the affirmative So St. Chrysostom spends his judgment upon it with a tacit reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is far easier to hold off our hand from sin than to put to our hand to virtue and we can sooner shew the evil that we have not done than the good that we have done Nay the Father makes that such a slight thing that he says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very Beasts might alledg that or it might be alledged for them that they had done no iniquity yet what a strong charge it will be against us all in the day of judgment that we have not girt our selves close no not to this negative obedience touch not taste not What facil Ordinances are these to a temperate man and nothing but custom and a sluggish spirit hath made them difficult to the intemperate Defraud no man extort from no man God is no austere God in those Statutes they are quickly learnt and quickly kept yet the wealthiest many times will do the contrary when they could not pretend as the necessitous may the least impulsion of poverty How soon may any one abstein from the Lords Table that finds himself unprepared and uncomposed for those sacred Mysteries yet God shall have their company at that holy Feast when he least desires it How easie a thing it is for a man not to fall down before Stocks and Stones and to worship them yet a smack of Idolatry abounds even in the Church of Christ We dream of difficulties we cry out against invincible tentations when there is no such matter I know there are Royal Laws in Scripture fit for heroick vertue to bless them that persecute you to pull down every high imagination to quench all the sparks of concupiscence to lay down our life for Christs sake God doth justly weigh both the duress and the weight of these Commands and our infirmity to fulfil them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sees us strive for mastery in those Combats and admires the fortitude of his Saints but in other things it is as strange how quickly our faintness and easiness is subdued Could you not watch one hour says our Lord to his Disciples What a poor request is this to wake one hour for his comfort and service Therefore the objurgation was the sharper because they fail'd him You will pollute my name for handfuls of barly and pieces of bread Ez. xiii 19. The Devil 's haec omnia is a strong allurement All these things will I give thee he may bate a great deal of that offer to them that are ready to run into sin let it be hoc aliquid a little preferment a little countenance and they are taken with the Snare O insensati O slow of heart like this sinner in my Text will you reject God and forsake his Word even in things wherein you may so easily perform obedience Thirdly it is another brand upon her sin that she was indocilis most unattentive to learn Lot went before her constantly and stedfastly without any reciprocation or backsliding the Example was in her eye all the way from Sodom to Zoar every step he trode was a Sermon to bid her do the like if she would be saved yet she made no benefit of the Pattern though he were her own Mate her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with whom she was bound in a more particular bond than all others to draw the same yoke What was this but to shut her eyes unto
and comes a fresh to view and mend with a second or third fancy what the first did mistake So if we could lay aside our selves and then resume our substance again we might spy out faults which now we discern not nor acknowledge As who should say lay down your body in the dust take it up again in the Resurrection like a Picture cast aside then I know we shall learn where the fault lies But self love must not be the judge whether God doth punish one man for anothers iniquity Secondly The superstition of the Heathen encreased this error There was a bloudy opinion among them called Succidaneum sacrificium if you have heard of it wherein one may lay down his life unto the Gods to redeem the danger of another Antinous the great Minion to Hadrian the Emperour cut off the remaining days of his own youth to recover Adrian from a desperate feaver And Philumena passing the love of women spent her heart bloud as a Cordial Julap to recover her husband Aristides Now upon what presumption did they stand A Principle they had for it but manifestly against God and the Gospel that every man was Lord of his own life to employ where he would for himself or for another Vitam approbare aliis quisque debet sed mortem sibi Let us live to have the good liking of other men but let us die as we like it our selves And this made them esteem what a conscionable thing God had given man when he gave him life Hoc est unum quare de vitâ queri non possum neminem tenet No man need keep it longer than he would quite contrary not only to Gods Law but the good Philosophy of Plato It is better to die than to live says he but love not thy sell so well to do thy self that benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stay till some other do so good a turn for you But O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken ought not Christ alone to suffer for the sins of others The just for the unjust The plowers plowed upon my back and made long furrows Here is plowing and making furrows as if there were seeds sown in the wounds of Christ of which we may reap thirty sixty and an hundred fold according to the measure of our faith So then the Doctrine of the heathen is both against Nature and against the Sacrifice of Christ Wherefore these must not be our judges whether God doth punish one mans person for anothers iniquity But Ventum est ad Triarios the third rank of Adversaries are the School Divines left-handed Benjamites able to cast a distinction at an hairs breadth Whose Doctrine when it is good is like the Moon at the Full light and entire but perchance spotted But when their Doctrine is false it is like the Moon in the Wain full of horns and distinctions Give me leave to make proof of it in this cause which I have in hand First Say they iniquity is visited upon those Generations which did not commit the fault Si communitas favet unius delicto minimè verò si ignorat If many concur to favour the sin of one man that man shall not perish alone in his iniquity It is true and God hath spoken Lev. xx If the people do not punish the man that giveth his seed to Molech c. But what was this to Achan Did he reveal h●s fault to thirty six Souldiers or to his Children Very unlikely that a close sin should be known to so many Very likely that among his Children some were Infants that knew not what it was to sin and yet he perished not alone c. Durandus divides the case thus One is liable to judgment for the trespass of another in divino judicio non in humano Man must not adjudge man to condemnation for the trespass of another but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to Gods good will it may be done Doth Durandus say so But so doth not Ezekiel The soul of the Son is mine as the soul of the Father that soul which sinneth shall die Ezek. xviii 4. Mark what the Prophet says Before his judgment every soul shall escape that is innocent before his judgment that made the soul meaning God and not the Magistrate In Verse 25. Are not my ways equal Nay are not your ways unequal My ways you hear the Text. God is defended from this injustice and not the Magistrate Thirdly Some deliver their opinion in this distinction In temporali paenâ non in aeternâ A modern affliction which lasts but for a time may chastise the Son for the Fathers iniquity but not an eternal condemnation For although our bodies may answer for our Parents being the fruit of their Loyns yet my soul is not engaged to any but to God alone Besides the wounds of the body in this life are like the cutting of the bark of the tree to inoculate a Bud which may bring forth fruit But In inferno nemo te Laudat Domine there is no repentance no remorse in Hell So that the Christian use of Gods chastisements is lost in eternal torments but not in temporal O take heed of this opinion to put a draught of gall and vinegar to our Saviours mouth when his lips upon the Cross were full of mercy My meaning is do not impeach 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gentleness of Christ to say he doth exact a momentary punishment upon a guiltless person For this were to say that Adam was not only the Root and publick person of all mankind but that all other Parents have the same state of prerogative That which Pelagius did impudently deny in original sin is true in actual sins Qui remisit Tibi peccata tua non imputabit aliena Fear not to bear the burden of thy Fathers sin when if thou come unto Christ he will refresh thee of thine own A fourth refuge is on this wise Affliction doth befall a man sometimes Ex antecedenti pro alieno peccato formaliter pro suo Take an instance to understand it by a Minister neglects his Flock a Father the education of his Children Now the mischief of this neglect may redound to the hurt of God knows whom So that though the Ministers fault went before their destruction yet ignorance and blindness in their own neart is the proper cause of the curse which lies upon them which is all that I labour for in this present controversie The last assault made by the Schoolmen deserves your observation for the Authors sake it is Aquinas And his opinion is like fluctus decumanus the tenth wave and more troublesome than all the rest Vnus punitur pro altero modo medicinali non paenali As who should say the Arrows of God are shot from heaven as out of a well-drawn bow against the capital sinner Some that stand in the way are wounded with the Arrows head yet not out of purpose
right to go first and the Tail to come after but Officers were changed upon importunity the Body was scratcht the Head was bruised every thing was out of order and by consent of all parts the Head was restored to that dignity for ever after to lead the Body And when disobedience hath disjoynted the frame of any Polity it is obedience must set all together and unite the Fabrick Observation of Ceremonies and petty duties may seem perhaps to be maintained too severely and the peremptory keeping of Circumstances to be rather Rigour than Discipline But it was the answer of a wise Magistrate to this complaint that assault would quickly be made against greater matters if the lesser were despised For observe it in a Wine-vessel the small twigs bind about the hoops the hoops bind about the planchers the planchers alone seem to contein the liquor you would think yet cut the small twigs and the hoops fly asunder the planchers start and the wine is spilt So is it with Ceremonies to despise our Garments our Gestures our Canonical Ordinances may seem no damage to Religion but the very substance of our Christianity would lie open to the wild Boar out of the Wood to root it up if the Hedg were broken In some cases I will grant it to be very true that the Orator says generosus est animus hominis magisque ducitur quàm trahitur our mind is free and noble and would rather go alone than be forced to duty but what duty can be expected from them in greater cases who are headstrong against Ecclesiastical Government in the smallest Ceremonies They that zealously wish abundance of happiness in the Church will be so far from complaining that Ceremonies are a burden to their Liberty that they would wish I think that Canonical obedience did lie more strictly upon the Clergie in the whole course of their Profession Which if it did I am perswaded that the studies of the Learned and the painful industry of Scholars had been more renowned in this Island than over all the World It is the sweet lenity of our Pilots to give us sea room to sail at random 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if we were compelled to knit our strength in clusters our prowess would be better tried in Gods Cause than when we come single and scattered one from another to write a Controversie For when every man follows the genius of his own disposition licence cannot choose but bring in confusion for though every one should do well for his own part yet the work must be out of order Some Monk will say perchance this is our Religion and just as we would have it Immane quantum c. great is the difference between my Doctrin and theirs and I fear we shall not part friends thus First I commend obedience where the thing commanded is feizable and may be done as to build no houses to drink no wine they call for obedience in things impossible as to water a dead stick and make it grow to pour water into a Siev and the like This is not obedience but pertinax inertia loss of good hours wasting of time and fruitless negotiation I commend obedience which turned the heart of the Children toward their Fathers and gives this praise to the Rechabites that they would not be enticed by Priest or Prophet but in all things hearkned to the voice of Jonadab they commend those unnatural Monks that take a Cloister over their heads to sleep and fatten though their Parents be most unwilling and curse them for it I commend the Rechabites obedience which is grounded upon the Scripture approved by the Spirit of God and his Prophet Jeremy they have no ground for their Canonical Orders but mans institution Votum obedientiae non directè colligitur è scripturâ says Gregory of Valentia nay temporibus Apostolicis non institutae sunt religiones says Aquinas our Religious Orders are later than the times of the Apostles Lastly the obedience which I praise is such where the things commanded are lawful and just Wine in those hot Countries might well be forborn and temperance the better mainteined in Tents they might dwell and shades of Tabernacles to acknowledg themselves but Strangers and Pilgrims in this World and Heaven to be their Country some say it was to forewarn the Israelites that the Captivity of Babylon was hard at hand and it was in vain to build Cities for a long habitation Finally having neither Barns nor Store-houses their Herds and their Flocks were their riches and they forbore to sow the ground and to gather in the fruits of the Harvest these things are lawful and honest and in them it was expedient to hearken to the voice of Jonadab But the Romanists commend obedience wherein fas and nefas are alike to complot Treasons and Massacres to dissemble and lie for Priests to leave off their Weed and ruffle it in other Countries like Gentlemen all this is obedience yea Maffaeus commends a Novice of the Jesuits Order who was consecrating the Host at the Communion his Superior Liola call'd him away for no other end but to try his duty he left his God Almighty half made and half unmade in the midst of Consecration and hasted to his Superior This is sweet obedience Men that have reason and will subject themselves to the power and dominion of their Rulers by the inclination of their own will natural agents are compelled to yield to forcible agents because the weaker qualities cannot resist the stronger Now the Underling that obeys his Praelate is exempted two ways from his Authority as natural things two ways do controul the vertue of a superior agent 1. Propter impedimentum ex virtute superioris moventis if a greater force oppose a lesser the greater must carry the sway Green wood resists the flame of a little fuel because the mixture of the wood is too hard for so small a fire so the supreme dominion and power belongeth unto God and that obedience which is performed to Man against God it is sacrificium de rapinâ not Obedience but Atheism not Obedience but Sacrilege not Obedience but Flattery The second resistance is when a natural body is subject in some qualities and in some free from subjection as wax subject to the fire to soften to the Seal to set a stamp upon it So an Handmaid is to yield all bodily service of labour to her Lord but quoad prolis generationem aut corporis sustentationem non ligatur To surfeit her body by excess of meats or to pine it away with fasting to commit uncleanness or to enthral her self to Virginity this is beyond the Sphear of Authority and she is not bound unto it Let us gather up this second part of my Text into one closure we commend the Rechabites for their Obedience and by their example we owe duty to our Parents natural and civil those that begot us those that govern us We owe duty to the dead after
them That the Nazarites had any dwelling in the Temple Maldonat is mistaken no more had these Shepherds who lived in Tabernacles Again some constrain themselves to the observation of a Vow but for a time for never any but Samson that we read of was a perpetual Nazarite some oblige the Votary for ever such was this which I treat of in Tabernacles they must live for ever Fourthly Some stand upon conditions like that of Anna if she had a Son she would give him to the Lord. Some are absolute like the Vow of Baptism wherein there is no capitulation But were it a Vow in any rank of these which I have named yet the complexion of the matter must have these four conditions according to the Schoolmen We will take that which is sound and refuse that which is corrupt Esto say they res adiaphora possibilis licita faciens ad cultum Dei 1. The thing vowed must be indifferent and free from necessity 2. An atchievment possible and not out of the reach of humane frailty 3. Unless it be lawful we offer our service unto Devils 4. That which we vow unto God must not be every idle fancy of our own brain it must bear weight and moment if we promise it unto the Lord. To begin with the first A thing not commanded but indifferent to be done or not done is the first condition of a Vow says Aquinas Stay there a while Shall I believe Aquinas or the Patriarch Jacob For I learn that the first ground of making a Vow is in Jacobs example Gen. xxviii by the light of nature before the Law and he vows both res praeceptas that God should be his God and res adiaphoras where the Stone was set to build up an house to God Beloved be not deceived with the leaven of the Jesuits this is Diana of the Ephesians and their credit lies upon it Indeed such Commandments as literally forbid sin are negative and obligant ad semper the yoke of them is never off from our conscience and so it is easie to acknowledge that they are Commandments But whereas inclusively there are duties to be done quae non obligant ad semper which bind us but at times and seasons therein we may meet with many parts of Divine Worship which seem superfluous and as it were given into the bargain Especially we want a good inspection to make a difference between these three things 1. There is the end of a Christian life 2. The next and immediate means to that end 3. The remoter means and further off The end is Gods glory and we cannot oversee that point but that it is the first injunction which lies upon our Soul The next and the proper end to that means are the strict words of the Commandments and those we cannot gainsay it are a necessary part of Christianity But as for the remote means which are further of there we boast that we do pay that which we did never owe but supererogate with God O deluded Conscience hearken and consider purity of body and soul is the scope of the seventh Commandment The next means to avoid Adultery is in some men Marriage in some the shunning of lascivious talk and lewd Company there are means more distant to subdue the wantonness of the body by strict Fastings by Canonical hours of Prayer to shun the very Country where bewitching Beauties tempt our affections Should you tell me in this case that your Prayers your Fastings your Pilgrimages were more than measure and above the Commandment I would tell you you did lie against God and your Conscience against God who hath commanded all that you can perform by might and strength and against Conscience for whatsoever my heart tells me will give me advantage to serve the Lord conscientia in iis est regula faciendorum and it is sin to omit it I appeal to a Jury of the Schoolmen Why did Christ and his Angels vow no vow because they are the most perfect Creatures of reasonable essence full of the noblest speculation yet they keep the Law of God and observe it Down then with that blasphemy that the observation of the Law is but Milk for Babes and Vows are left to try the vertues of an excellent and heroick spirits greater Tasks for the Champions of the Militant Church The Law is like the Passover which must be eaten Devotions of indifferency when conscience doth prescribe them are like the sower herbs to be eaten with it If you think the Sawce better than the Meat the Herbs more costly than the Lamb they are fermentum in Paschate and beware of the leaven of the Pharisees You will say was not this res adiaphora was it not in the power of the Rechabites to drink wine or refrain yes but when conscience had set it down before them as an excellent disposition to serve the Lord conscience hath made that which was indifferent in it self necessary unto them and their Task in this very thing to please the Lord. If this Chapter be not strong enough to convince our Adversaries though they glory in the Example of the Rechabites let them take the Cause For although they restrained themselves to the poorest life of keeping sheep and dwelt in Pavillions and drank no wine yet it came not from these observations that they were acceptable to God no God himself reduceth their good service to the fifth Commandment in the last verses of this Chapter because they have obeyed their Father Jonadab in all things therefore there shall not want a man of that Race to stand before him for ever And so much for the first condition of this Vow the observations in themselves are of indifferency and liberty but yet media remota ad praeceptum they are reducible to the fifth Commandment In the second condition I concur with the Schoolmen that a Vow must be possible to accompass lest they that pass by shake their heads and say this man laid a foundation and was not able to build it up non est votum sed ostentatio it is no Vow but plain boasting and ostentation They deal as certain of the Sect called Druides among the Gauls that took much upon trust in this life to pay their Creditors in the Resurrection When St. Peter would trust his feet to walk upon the Seas to Christ the waves surged and had well nigh drowned an Apostle A good Emblem for those who finding their affections calm and even say to morrow will be as yesterday and vow for the years to come but in time our heart loatheth this Manna and what are we but Bankrupts unto God and Peter sinketh A true Votary says Anselm gives unto God the whole tree with the fruit root and branches the works of the will and the power of the will for ever But if the Thistle should vow and threaten to bring forth grapes would it not be trodden down by the Beasts of the field as it is in the
Earth or in the Sea since my flesh hath been the consumption both of Sea and Land And again since we are born to that care and distress that every day must have his several necessity of hunger and thirst be not luxurious upon one entertainment as if at once you would spend all the brood of nature and leave nothing for to morrow To morrow must be cared for You cannot say to your appetite this is thy stint and hereafter thou shalt have no more It was but poor provision to send Hagar and her Child away with one Bottle of water into the desart Wilderness when the Bottle was spent her desire did come again upon her like an armed man for whosoever c. Yet this is not meant altogether to throw us into affliction that we must cater for the stomach every day It makes us often cast down our eyes upon the necessities of the Poor it makes us often lift up our eyes to the providence of our Heavenly Father it compels the Societies of men to seek out many industrious Vocations and to disrellish idleness In these regards it was an extravagant Prayer which the Woman of Samaria made in the next verse Sir give me such water to drink as I may not thirst neither come hither to draw But in some particular persons Gods vengeance is bent sore to vex their appetite where water nor wine nor any liquor hath vertue to satiate their thirst when that which they drink doth them no good but it is as if they had taken nothing As God gave bread to the Israelites but sent leanness withal into their souls So Haggai brought news of the Lords wrath unto the people c. i. v. 6. Ye eat but ye have not enough ye drink but ye are not filled Some Heathen Lawgivers attempted to rate every private Family in their Cities what they should spend at their Board and at last one of the wisest of them concluded there could be no rule given in that case because an heavenly hunger sometimes lights upon some men which devours in excess and is not satisfied It is the grace of God which gives meat in due season so that health and comfort go together with it I will borrow this Similitude to give it light Sometimes when we go to Physick for any Disease we are bidden to seeth such and such herbs in running water and then to drink the water We know it is not the water helpeth the sick man but the decoction of the infusion So it is not bread or drink consider'd barely in it self which doth nourish the body but the blessing of God infused into it When the Lord is pleased not to bless your victuals with his goodness soak what you can into your skin you shall thirst as if you never drank and again if He will let his power be shewed in our weakness you shall have the gift to abstain from all manner of liquors as if you never thirsted Spiritus sanctus aliquando supplet locum cibi potus in corpore says St. Hierom the Holy Ghost is called our Food not only in a mystical sense but sometimes God makes his Spirit supply the place of bodily refection that we shall not need to ask for it He that corroborated Elias to eat nothing for fourty days could have continued that Miracle upon his Servant for ever I will not reach for an instance beyond that Story which was the occasion of my Text. Our Saviour came hungry and thirsty to Jacob's Well sent his Disciples into the Town to buy provision in the interim demands drink of a strange Woman yet falling into a Divine discourse with this Woman forgets his hunger and thirst and when food was come he did not regard it And I am not incredulous of such Stories which report of long continued Fasts in devout men who spent their time so earnestly in Prayer that they put their body to an agony if not to an exstasie in these the Spirit did support the Fabrick of Nature instead of corruptible things It is a good thing says St. Paul that the heart be established with grace and not with meats Heb. xiii 9. To conclude this Argument God shewed in his Prophet Elias that he can find out sundry ways to uphold the state of our flesh One way Elias was fed by a miraculous multiplication of Oil and Meal with the Widow of Sarephath 2. By the Ministry of the Ravens in the Wilderness 3. By putting strength into his bones and marrow forty days to need no reparation And fourthly by using the Creature with temperance and sobriety at his daily repast so he did feel the continual urging of the appetite as all men do upon the face of the earth For whosoever drinketh c. So far upon the Text litterally and upon no other waters but such as the Woman of Samaria drew out of Jacobs Well In the Allusion Interpreters make it extend to all kind of worldly pleasure wherein our heart rejoyceth This one piece of natures store which gives but imperfect content stands for all the rest qui unam noverit omnes noverit It is in every thing else under the Sun as it is in this one Creature our thoughts are not quiet when they have enjoyed them no not a day you cannot gulp so much down of these earthly delights but ye shall thirst again The first thing which must be noted hereupon is the ground of the Similitude that all these vanities which we affect are justly compared to waters that slide away Whatsoever those fancies be that ensweeten your affections towards them they come unto you like that young Prophet whom Elisha sent to Jehu to Ramoth Gilead says Elisha Thou shalt anoint him King over Israel then open the door and fly and tarry not Salute him with good luck and be gone Good fortune as we call it sends no body of her errand but they dispatch as suddenly and fly away If any man that loves this World expostulate with himself that his pleasures dodg him as thus When will my delights continue for a time when shall I have rest from thirsting after more and enjoy that which is past O says the Tempter it will come anon you shall see it by and by Alass what a sickness is expectation which is no better than a doting delusion As the Mother of Sisera looked out at a Window to see her Son come home in triumph and she speaks to her wise Ladies in Debora's Song Why are his Charriot wheels so long a coming Look not after transitory delights as if a thing which is always in fluxu could be made permanent the Devil and all his Alchymistry cannot fix this Mercury A River may be shut up by a Frost and when the Sun thaws the ice the stream runs his current again So if you can attain to mortifie your heart as I think old Barzillai did whose affections to all worldly alacrity were Ice and Marble he cared not he said to
humour into devotion and Prayer Is your Temperature Sanguine and chearful I can tell what that will do if this living water feed it the mind will be bountiful easie to remit injuries glad of reconciliation comfortable to the distressed always rejoycing in the Lord. If a man be Phlegmatick and fearful there is a trial likewise what God can bring forth from such a nature How wary will the Conscience be to give no offence How pitiful How penitent How ready to weep over its own transgressions Finally in every Age of the life old or young in every condition of fortune regal honourable or servile this living water where God pleaseth incorporates it self into it and makes it grow and fructifie according to that use and purpose for which it was planted It is water then which doth increase and vegetate every Plant which our heavenly Father hath planted but with much disparity from our common waters as you may apprehend by divers instances For first pour all that you can draw from your fountain upon a tree that is quite dead and your labour is lost it will never spring again but most wretched were the state of man if the water which Christ gives did not bring us to live again when we were quite dead in corruption And you being dead in your sins hath he quickned c. having forgiven you all your trespasses Col ii 13. All the Sons of Adam beside our earthly mortality are under the infliction of a double death by nature it is a spiritual death to be bereft of grace It is an eternal death to be guilty of hell fire We are St. Judes fruitless trees bis mortuae once were enough but we are twice dead pluckt up from the root yet if the light of Gods countenance shine upon us we shall sprout again and wax green like a Cedar in Libanus What a sapless tree was Zachaeus before the Holy Ghost the Lord and giver of life as we do well call him in the Nicene Creed did bring salvation to his house You might as soon have squeezed water from a Pummy stone as charity from a Publican before his conversion yet though he were dead in covetousness as soon as He began to live in him he scattered abroad and gave unto the poor As the Father said of his Prodigal Child being now come home into his bosom This thy brother was dead and is alive again So let every penitent soul confess my root was dried up how should it come to spring again but by some influence from heaven I was a withered tree that cumbered the ground how am I exalted like Aarons Rod to bring forth Buds and Almonds I was a sensless stone and God hath raised me from thence to be a Child of Abraham Take another instance of diversity in every Plant that lives water is the means to make it bear but in every Plant it makes it bear such fruit and no other as was first grafted upon it it causeth a Fig-tree to bring forth Figs and a Vine to be laden with Grapes But if the fruit were sowre and unpleasant by nature water it while your arms ake it will never help it But this water in my Text which is so worthy of our Saviours praise it will make you gather Grapes of Thorns and Figs of Thistles Indeed it should do so but our Preaching is no better with many than River water gushing upon a Crab-tree the more we teach the more you are laden with your own natural fruit Pride Luxury Intemperance Faction Malice and Incontinency are as rife as ever they were nothing grows upon the stock for all the labour that is spent but sowre Wildings that set the teeth on edge it seems the chief ingredient is wanting the blessing from above you mind other things and then the chief pipe of all will be stopt by which the Spirit should enter into our soul There are some and I would they were but few that put in Bill and Answer as it were against Gods plea they urge their personal infirmities and natural inclinations and think that God can ask no more I am dull of understanding says one and what I am taught I cannot bear it away I am suddenly transported with indignation and I cannot suffer I am retentive of a wrong and cannot easily be reconciled All these are in the same tune with those ill manner'd Guests in the Gospel we cannot come I pray you have us excused Humilitas sonat in ore superbia in actione To plead excuse is a form of humility but in effect it is an open arrogancy Spend this breath of excuse in Prayer and Supplication and cry out often and affectionately drop down upon this heart O Lord drop down upon it and it shall bring forth fruit quite against the grain of your custom quite against the bias of nature The high-minded shall be humble as a Lamb The implacable shall forgive his brother seventy times seven times The Impostor shall make restitution the Bravaries of the time shall confess and amend their vanity Loe this is an alteration which nothing can produce but living water from natural sterility of good to supernatural fruitfulness Origen confounds Celsus with this Argument that the Christian Religion must needs be the power of God and not of man For in all Kingdoms where it had success it did civilize the most barbarous Nations It did mollifie and intenerate the most stony hearts It brought in Justice and good Laws among them that lived by Rapine and Robbery A strange fruit to be found upon such wild Plants Could it otherwise come to pass than because they were watered from above I think you will like this Doctrine best in the Prophet Isaiahs expression Chap. xi 6. under the Kingdom of Christ so it goes before The Wolf shall dwell with the Lamb and the Leopard shall lie down with the Kid. The Calf and the young L●on and the Fatling shall feed together and a young Child shall lead them All that place is noted by Eusebius for a Prophesie to be meant of the conversion of the Gentiles whose brutishness and savage life was changed into good nurture and sweet conversation Ye were darkness but now ye are light in the Lord. O blessed are ye when that which is natural and inbred to our disposition drops off and grows no more Then if ye be planted by the River of God ye shall bring forth your fruit in due season and look whatsoever you do it shall prosper Take a third instance of diversity Our Elementary water helps a Plant to bring forth one kind fruit at one season of the year and this is a blessing of Gods left hand to fill us with the plenty of the earth but the water which is the blessing of his right hand hath this excellency to make the same tree bear all manner of spiritual fruit and at all times and seasons never unfurnisht never empty A moral temperate man may be unjust A
moral just man may be carnal A moral chaste man may be covetous But if it be spiritual temperance or spiritual chastity coming from the grace of God it will be justice and peace and mercy and all the whole swarm of vertues that can be recited There is a difficult point in one of the Parables about a man that had not on a Wedding Garment What is this Wedding Garment One will have it to be Faith another to be Good Works a third to be spiritual Joy a fourth to be repentance Why Origen prevented all these controversies before they were moved if he had been mark'd Says he Vestis nuptialis est textura omnium virtutum The Wedding Garment is all these and more than these for it signifies that all vertue in the several threds should be woven into our heart Faith Hope and Charity are fruits that hang all upon a stalk three several divine graces yet they have but one soul Faith says there is a Kingdom prepared for the righteous Hope catcheth hold and says it is prepared for me Then Charity comes in for her part and says I will run to obtain it They are like the three principal vital parts in mans body the Heart the Brain and Liver One is as necessary as all three together for the decay of either is death without redemption No stragling single solitary vertue which hath no fellows comes from this coelestial watering The spiritual service of God says a learned Author may be measured three ways 1. Whether it come ex toto corde from all the heart from all the strength and from all the soul 2. Whether it be Cum totâ plenitudine with all the confluence of good works as it were in one fortunate conjunction 3. Whether it be in toto tempore continually and at all times alike Spiritus vivificat Joh. vi It is the Spirit that quickneth which makes a good man live and fructifie at one time as much as another It is no dead moisture which can do no good upon a Plant unless the Sun likewise be in a fit ascension to cherish it and make it spring This is living water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says St. Chrysostome It impels the Conscience to be never out of motion in some spiritual exercise The Son of God is called a living stone and the Spirit living water and man a living Sacrifice Righteousness is the savour of life unto life dead works are the savour of death unto death A tree that always bears is a Plant of Paradise Not a little Repentance or a little Charity once or twice a year at a Communion and then shake hands with Mortification till the next Christmass or Easter Among other reasons why the Holy Ghost assumed the shape of a Dove this is reckoned for one that it is a bird of a most teeming fecundity whether any bird that flies lay oftner I am not certain I believe not many such fecundity there is in a lively Faith it is never without some good Work either the Tongue is Praying or the Ear is Hearing or the Heart is Meditating or the Eye is Weeping or the Hand is Giving or the Soul is Thirsting for Remission of sins And this is enough to shew what fruitfulness is brought to pass by this heavenly moisture and for the first part of the Text. Yet it were an undervaluing and a diminution to so great a blessing to be called water unless the second part of my text did hold up the dignity let us come therefore to consider the rare vertue which is in it for it takes away the molestation of thirst for ever But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst Yet I will take in no more than the Text doth directly prove and leave that which some would draw in ex abundanti by the strength of their conjectures There are those that make this verse a convincing argument how a man that hath tasted the grace of God is never empty more but assuredly full and satisfied to the end of his life Which way soever the truth of that Controversie stands I wave it off but I think this Text is not to be charged with that meaning as if it proved it 'T is true he that drinks of this water shall never thirst but quousque bibendum how long must he drink let him drink all his days while his breath lasts and then he shall be satisfied with the goodness of the Lord as out of a River Again call to remembrance what is meant by this water every good and perfect gift which enricheth the Soul descending from the Father of lights but among all that heavenly Offspring perseverance is the fairest Nymphas supereminet omnes Perseverance must not be excluded from the Text. Then I have done with this rubb in a word he that drinks of this water and puts perseverance into the Cup he shall never thirst He shall never thirst Why then says the Son of Syrach concerning the wisdom which sanctifieth all things They that eat me shall yet be hungry and they that drink me shall yet be thirsty Ecclus xxiv 21. and very certain none so greedy to have more grace as he that hath some already none so instant to get ten Talents as he that hath received five Let Elisha be inspired with a competent measure for one of the Children of the Prophets and he will presume to ask that a double portion of Elias his spirit may rest upon him if it be possible Concerning all the fruits of the Spirit this judgment of Gregorie's is undoubted cum non habentur in falstidio sunt cum habentur in desiderio they that have them not think vilely of them they that have them do insatiably desire them Please you for the true explanation of the words to mark the Proposition must not be taken alone by it self but respectively to the Comparison that went before The water which the Woman of Samaria came for it consumes after you have tasted it and it is missed as if it never had been Therefore we call for Elementary drink every day for as much as drought is a torment to nature now when we are once made partakers of living waters we call for more and more not because want and driness doth afflict us but because desire doth please us So that distinction used by many will be clear to be understood sitis ariditati non desiderio opponitur he that drinks these waters of the Holy Spirit shall never after have a dry and a parched Soul but he shall ever have a thirsty affection to drink his fill The vertue therefore of the Spirit may be well drawn to these three heads First it moistens the Soul that it feels no driness like a barren Land which hath no natural humour in it there is no such thirst in him that hath a lively faith but it cannot choose but beget a thirsty affection and a longing to add more and more unto
sixth verse of this Chapter that Jesus being weary sat upon the Well quasi non alius fons esset quàm ipse Christus as who should say O ye Samaritans what Well do ye come forth to draw at that Pit from which ye drew of old is vanished but here 's a better sitting in the place a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. How ugly those things will appear to a regenerate man which in the days of unhappiness when sin did reign in his mortal body were the pride of his eyes how contemptibly he looks upon himself remembring how he was ambitious how high he thinks himself above the reach of fortune when he thinks not of high places The World would teach him wisdom how he may save his own the Gospel will teach him better wisdom to lose all for Christ before he could not see another glister and shine like a bigger Planet but he felt a gripe of emulation and his heart said oh that I were him or him but when he can truly say Vnto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul my conversation is in heaven then he can see no man abroad with whom he would change conditions and why all this O but because the new Wine hath filled the Bottle the Ram is offered up for a Burnt-offering and Abraham hath his Isaac untoucht Isaac is spiritual joy which Abraham cannot lose if the Ram which is carnal concupiscence be consumed instead of it and burnt to ashes Then Matthew leaves all his wealth with more delight than ever he got it then Paul esteems all the dignity he had in the Synagogue to be but dross for the excellency of the knowledg of Christ And you cannot hear too often what the holy Father St. Austin says of his own conversion that his fancy was in a good dream as if it heard a voice saying take up the Book and read and he pitcht upon these words Rom. xiii 13. Let us walk honestly as in the day not in chambering and wantonness not in rioting in drunkenness At that instant he felt a refrigeration within himself to cool the fire of lust which is kindled from Hell at that instant he laid his mouth to the Well of water nectareum bibit ore fontem and found it tempered with that ingredient of the Holy Ghost that he did never thirst It is a parabolical but a pious application which St. Austin maks upon the 28. of this Chapter The Woman of Samaria came forth with her Pitcher to draw water by which are moralized the unstable vanities that are as common as an open River Well upon some conference our Saviour reveals unto her that he was the Christ What 's next after that in the story the Woman left her water pot and went away into the City Now comes in Justins Parable the Water pot is this Appetite of ours made of clay and dirt with it we pluck up pernicious things from the hidden and dark pits of pleasure but she that knows Christ must abhor this Appetite and cast away her Pitcher quae credit in Christo renunciabit seculo leave your filthy desires behind you take them up no more and then Christ will take you up into his glory The third Experiment and the principal which extols this soveraign water comes now to be handled and it will serve fitly to conclude all 't is thus he that drinks of it liberally and thirstily unto the end of his life shall not only asswage the malignity of evil concupiscence now but shall be discharged of all manner of thirst hereafter when he changeth this life to live with God for ever Burdens heat the spirits and waste the moisture of the body and parch the throat with driness more than any thing Help a man that is so overladen with a comfortable draught of wine and you fortify and enable his strength to make him bear his carriage easily that he shall not sink under it but yet the burden remains upon his shoulders So in this time of our Pilgrimage sin will ever be a sore burden upon us and unless the spirit did comfort us it could not be supported but we have a draught of wine mingled with mirrh given us now to undergo the cross with fortitude and patience And in the day of Gods last visitation when He shall take thy soul into his rest thy burden shall be quite cast off and the tediousness shall be no more remembred Among the manifold mercies of God for which we are to bless his holy Name the pleasantest of them all is this Psal ciii Who satisfieth thy mouth with good things so that thy youth is renewed like the Eagles Surely there is much in joyning those two things together in that verse thy mouth shall be satisfied with good things when thy youth is renewed like the Eagles which is a Paraphrase of the resurrection of the life to come He that opens the door of his heart when Christ knocks to come in he shall sup with Christ Revel iii. 20. And Gregory notes that the grace which he will minister to us in the Kingdom of Glory is called a Supper quia post prandium coena restat post coenam nullum convivium for after Dinner the stomach may look for another Meal but having supt it looks for no more repast that day but is satisfied So in this life we dine with Gods grace and look for an other Banquet in the next life we sup with Gods grace that 's the hidden manna which is food for ever qui credit in me non sitiet in aeternum he that believeth in me shall not thirst for ever Then to drink of this water is to believe the reason is because faith swallows the hidden mysteries of salvation without chewing or biting upon them with the unsanctified tooth of humane reason fides sine difficultate intrat in animam it goes down like drink into our bowels with great facility Believe therefore that this water will suffer no thirst to possess your soul when you shall enjoy the presence of God and be it unto you according to your faith We ought not to trust so much to that which we see or feel as to be confident of the fulfilling of Gods Promises Lazarus shall no more thirst at the Rich mans Gate but the rich unmerciful man shall thirst for a drop of water to cool his tongue Therefore let him that is in misery say I take my turn to want for a little while I shall be full hereafter the hungry shall be fed with good things and the rich shall be sent empty away Fret not therefore at the prosperity of an unjust man Would you take his gains his honors his pleasures told ten times over with his losses and afflictions to boot which he shall sustein hereafter I am sure you like not the bargain The Silk-worm begins to live in silk at this time and continues but for two or three months the Ground-worm will not change conditions
of all the Royal Order yet neither the hand of man nor the fury of Satan could do him hurt but immediatly the Angel c. Brethren you see my Text speaks of a smiting Angel An Angel smote the first-born of Pharaoh an Angel made an exceeding slaughter in the Host of Sennacharib An Angel brandished a Sword before David when seventy thousand died of the Pestilence Conceive not of these things as if an Angel had a Sword of Steel or offered any visible violence per contactum but as Abulensis says the Angel did apply some pestilent noisomness to the air which in a moment entred into their bowels and destroyed their Vitals Beloved the holy Angels seem as it were desirous and ambitious to avenge Gods glory against the pride of Herod Indeed there is so little zeal in his cause now adays so few do stir in it as if to this hour we left all to them and expected Angels Nay rather as if we thought of neither God nor Angel Where is the Courage of Phinehas Where is the Zeal of Elias Where is the Voice of John the Baptist Where is the Sword that is not lent in vain unto the Magistrate The lean Cattel it may be shall go to the Shambles but Amalek and the fat ones are your prey and your Sacrifice Ecquid tinnit Dolobella Then no man cuts him off though he give not God the glory The world is grown as unconscionable as that heathen man who said He had rather heaven should lose a Star from the Firmament than himself to lose an heifer from his flocks of Cattel So we are more tender of our own reputation than to maintain his glory by whom Kings reign and by whom we hope to reign as Kings in glory The Noble Descent of our Ancestors the Antiquity of our House the Dignity of our Place the Gravity of our Years Praecedere quatuor annis these are things that our bloud will rise at if they be called in question but the profanation of the name of Jesus the alienation of holy things the demolishment of Churches irreverent carriage at Divine Prayers and the holy Communions are as little our care as matters of Religion did pertain to Gallio I must again recall you to the practice of the Angels For when the Sadducees did so much dishonour them that they said there were no Angels at all yet we do not read in all the Scripture that these Angels did avenge themselves of the Sadducees in their own behalf but in another quarrel in Gods cause they are as quick and hot as a flaming fire Nay for fear lest some body should step in before them to do the deed as soon as ever the word was out of Herods mouth that he was magnified as a God immediatly he is apprehended And that is the third part Tantus tam repentè without pause without time of revocation immediately c. The Judgments of the Lord are so sudden so accustomed to tread upon the heels of sin that all the comparisons of nimble motion are borrowed to express it The Flying Arrow Psal xci The noysom Pestilence that cleaves to the flesh in a moment in the same place The coming of a Bridegroom whose longing desires use not to be tardy Mat. xxv The Thief in the night that gives no warning The gliding of the Lightning from the East unto the West The blast of a Trumpet The crowing of a Cock that breaks our sleep What can be said more that Gods Angel doth immediately strike the insolent Nazianzen speaking of those Scoffers that abused S. Basil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is marvel that Thunderbolts are not stirring upon such a trespass St. Hierom in his Commentary upon the Prophet Habakkuk relates That Julian the Apostate reading this story of Herods downfall cavilled against the Christians for saying their God was patient and of long suffering Nihil iracundius nihil hoc furore praesentius says he ne modico spatio indignationem distulit Nothing more angry nothing more sudden he did not defer his indignation no not for an hour It is true indeed sin and death are Acus filum iniquity draws on judgment as the Needle draws the thread immediately after it For such as are vessels of dishonour when they first jussel against Gods Commandments they begin to crack in the very moment although they break not in pieces till the fulness of time when the Milstone shall fall upon them and grind them to powder In the day that thou eatest thou shalt die says God to Adam that is thou shalt grow mortal and decline every minute more and more to the grave But there is a chosen Generation yet let them not presume upon grace that shall be pardoned seventy seven times Whereupon says St. Austin Commemoratione hujus numeri omnia peccata sunt dimissa quando ipse per quem omnia peccata remissa sunt septuagessimâ septimâ generatione secundum Lucam natus est That is if sins be remitted seventy seven times to the Elect then all their sins shall be remitted for he in whom all sins are remitted Christ Jesus was born by a mystery in the seventy seventh Generation from God the Eternal Father according to St. Luke Immediately he was smitten in such Splendour of Attire in such Celebrity of Attendants before the face of Strangers among those who in their hearts were no better than his enemies never did he come out of that Chair of the Scorner from that Throne wherein he was Canonized till he was stript of all Dignity and deprived of that Title by the Angel of the Lord. Had he been struck with sickness in any other place I know how it would have been excused the fault would have been laid upon his long journey from Galilee to Cesarea perchance the Sidonians had been charged to poyson him such suspicions are very rife as if it were impossible for Princes to come to their end by natural infirmities but now no such rumour could be broached Immediately c. Beloved It is the most dreadful thing upon earth to be suddenly apprehended by judgment What will not our strict Reformers cavil at who demand to have the Prayer against sudden death to be put out of the Litany It is well if they themselves be so well prepared for the hour of Judgment come it never so unexpected Indeed it should be so But let the Christian whom I would instruct pray every Morning as if he should see the Sun rise no more Pray every Evening as if he should see the Sun set no more be ready to meet the Bridegroom at Midnight and yet despise not that Supplication From sudden death good Lord deliver us He that promiseth God repentance hereafter pays him in the mean time with iniquity Ab hôc loco hoc ipso tempore Deo servire statui it is St. Austins Meditation If your heart be touched at any Sermon do not consult with your Almanack what day will be most
being of our nature and yet I will tell you a vitious filthy sinner doth so ill become the name of a man that there is far more congruity between him and a Beast he is more Swine or Tyger or Fox or locust than man he is not four-footed but he is bruitish hearted in his inward parts he hath put off humanity But if repentance shall restore him out of this bestial conversation if God shall set good men at his right hand that by strength of reason force of perswasion timeliness of admonition yea or by sharpness of correction shall make him feel and know the beauty of an honest life he is redintegrated in the powers and faculties of a man which he had quite lost So that our being in the austerity of Philosophy is connexed with our well-being No good man and by consequent no not a man till he be governed by the Principality of reason civil Education and the conditement of Vertue is such a Parent as reposeth a vile person a transformed Monster into the proper line of his own Praedicament it makes him Man Not to flutter in the air as it were any longer with Paradoxes impious Catives I confess shall stand for men for they shall suffer the curses and punishment of men in Hell-fire What is it therefore which Jerusalem adds unto us that she is called our Mother why the renovation of the mind or the new man created after God in righteousness and true holiness And as the Birthright which Jacob obteined from Esau was instead of another birth unto Jacob so when such as were vessels of wrath became Heirs of the Promise by Baptism and the Ministry of the Church is not this a Mother that gives them a better life than they had before The Love of God is our life Faith conceives us Hope brings us forth Charity feeds us with her breasts Obedience wraps us in swadling bands and knowledg brings us up God doth inhabit our mind and understanding as the Soul doth inspire the Body As Abram was turned into Abraham and Simon into Peter when they pleased the Lord so take any one that is regenerate and chang'd from his vain conversation though his shape and substance continue as it was before yet the Angels that rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner behold him with their celestial eyes not as the same but as another Creature And no wonder if he become another object in the sight of Heaven the reasonable Soul is that which constitutes the natural man but Faith being superadded a better spirit possesseth him and Christ is the form of a Christian It is St. Paul's Phrase ver 19. of this Chapter My little children of whom I travel in birth again till Christ be formed in you As Ananias travel'd and earned for a Child till Christ was formed in Paul so Paul travel'd and had the sorrows of a Mother when ●he brings forth in the anxiousness of his heart till Christ was formed in the Galatians First the Church brought him forth then he laboured abundantly and assisted the Church to bring forth others The true solution of the old Riddle Mater me genuit eadem mox gignitur ex me the Son of Grace is begotten of this Mother and afterward filling up a place in the Communion of Saints he is reckoned into the collective Body which is called Jerusalem our Mother But a late Writer puts in his judgment very well I think how far the Motherhood of the Church intends to make us Children of Adoption it travels in birth that by her work Christ may be formed in us The Members of our fleshly body are formed in our Mothers Womb by her natural faculties she can go further for the absolution of the work that is the inhabitation of the Soul is the act of God so the Church doth the part of a Mother it propounds repentance discloseth the mysteries of faith perswades us with the expectation of a great reward in Heaven offers us the use of both the salutiferous Sacraments thus a new fashion a new Creature even the form of Christ doth creep upon us but the life by which we live it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it comes from without from above from the inspiration of the spirit of Christ But without that efformation or effigeation in the Womb of the Mother never expect the vivification or information of the Holy Ghost a Doctrin best known in those trivial words of St. Austin he cannot have God for his Father that will not have the Church for his Mother Ascribe the top of the blessing to him from whom every good gift especially those which are supernatural descends Of his own good will He begat us with the word of truth Jam. 1.18 His good will moved him to pity us his vertue and power went out from him to beget us and his truth which shined in our hearts was the instrumental cause to convert us Carry it along with you therefore that the invisible Father that is in Heaven works by the visible Mother the Church that is on Earth As Eve was the Mother of all living so she is the Mother of all believing Crescite multiplicamini is spoken to one as well as to the other both were ordeined in their several sorts for that blessing increase and multiply Therefore St. James hath conjoyned the Word of Truth to the Will of God both are mixed together to regenerate a pious people And although some have been too nice in expounding the Phrase Of his own will he begat us with the word of truth not with the words of truth in the plural as if our salvation were effected by pronouncing one word as when first we were made Members of Christ by saying I baptize thee and when we have sinned and return again to the Lord by saying I absolve thee yet be it briefly or largely it is the word spoken and preached by the Church which gives us this heavenly feature to be the holy ones of God Briefly the Mother that doth beget us is the Church Militant but the Mother to whose filiation and inheritance we aspire is the Church Triumphant It is true that in relation to Christ the Church is his Body and all we are his Members and in that reference it doth not make the Elect Servants of God but rather it is compounded of those Servants for properly the Body is not the Mother of the Members the Members are not the effect of the Body but they constitute the Body as integral parts And so Solomon hath more aptly given it honour in those delicious Metaphors of a Bundle of Myrrh a Cluster of Grapes and a Pomegranat which I think is the best resemblance a Pomgranat contains many kernels under one Coat so many thousands of Disciples are under the covering of Christ 2. As many kernels are in the small Pomegranat as in the great so the Graces of Christ are in the little Churches as in the more spacious 3. As