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A04985 Sermons vvith some religious and diuine meditations. By the Right Reuerend Father in God, Arthure Lake, late Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells. Whereunto is prefixed by way of preface, a short view of the life and vertues of the author Lake, Arthur, 1569-1626. 1629 (1629) STC 15134; ESTC S113140 1,181,342 1,122

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if my text did not expressely affirme yet would it by consequence inferre that God maketh no accompt of this Ceremoniall worship But this is a Paradoxe for Sacrifices are the peculiar of God and no man euer offered them but only vnto him who was or at least was reputed to bee God neither any that haue accepted them esteemed themselues lesse nor would goe for lesse in the opinion of the Offerers Men and Diuels that haue robbed God of his honour haue to that end chosen this kind of Sacriledge by Sacrifices they haue entiled themselues vnto the glory of God and doth not God out of his iealousie make it death for any man to sacrifice to any other but himselfe Exod 22 20. and for himselfe hee giueth this expresse Law Exod. 23.15 Thou shalt not appeare before the Lord empty and what is that but Thou shalt sacrifice vnto him But to come more close vnto the point Wee find directly in the Law Gods both precept and promise concerning Sacrifice His precept for in Leuit. to name no other place how curiously doth God distinguish the kindes set downe the circumstances of all Sacrifices and the accessories thereunto and that by way of command The Patriarches before Moses did sacrifice and can we be so absurd as to thinke they did it without the direction of God No verily for they had a spirit of Prophesie As the Precept is cleare so is the Promise also you shall find it in the same place where you find the Precept in the first and second of Leuit. you shall find it called a sweet sauour vnto the Lord in the 4. and 8. c. it is called an Atonement Genes 4. the first Sacrifice that wee read of was Abels and the Text saith plainly that God had a respect vnto Abel and vnto his offering the second was that of Noah and of that the text saith Genes 9. that God smelt a sauour of rest Iob sacrificed for his friends Chap. 42. and the Lord accepted him and when Aaron offered his first Sacrifice God testified his acceptance by fire from heauen Leuit. 9. so that it is as cleare that God delighteth in Sacrifices as that hee doth require them and the promise can be as little doubted as the precept What shall wee say then to my Text how shall wee make it agree with the rest of the Scriptures surely we may doe it easily and fairely God is All-sufficient and God is a Spirit being all-sufficient hee cannot need them and being a Spirit hee cannot bee sustained by them both these points are cleare in the fiftieth Psalme where God sheweth that there can be no colour that he should need them seeing all the beasts of the Forrest are his and so are the cattell vpon a thousand mountaines and God casteth off the absurdity of his being sustained by them with that pressing and conuicting question Thinkest thou that I eate buls flesh and drinke the blood of Goates Lucian scoffingly bringeth in the Heathen Gods as if they tooke great content in the nidour of the sacrifices but it were prophane to thinke so of the true God The occasion then of instituting Sacrifices was not from God and that is the first thing we must learne Whence then was it taken surely from man We consist of bodies and soules and wee need by our bodies to bee put in minde of those things which concerne our soule and therefore did God institute them hee did institute them to helpe our infirmities But what did hee intend to remember vs of by them First of our Ransome Galat. 4.4 Christ came not vntill the fulnesse of time but his death was to worke presently vpon the Fall and in that respect he is called Reuel 13.8 the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world That before Christ came men should not forget by whom they had their redemption and the remission of sinnes God instituted Sacrifices Secondly we were to be remembred of our Homage we were to acknowledge that what we held we had of God and were to seeke vnto God for what we did want And in remembrance hereof did God institute Eucharisticall and Votiue Sacrifices Some thinke that they should haue beene offered if man had neuer sinned but the Scripture is silent and I will not be so curious as to dispute it Let it passe inter pie credibilia and it is as possible there might haue beene Sacrifices as there were Sacraments before the Fall witnesse the two Trees the one of Life and the other of the knowledge of good and euill You may adde a third reason which is obserued by the Fathers and that is That God therefore instituted by Moses the Sacrifices to keepe his people from Heathenish Idolatrie and distinguish them from other Societies which reason must bee warily vnderstood for it cannot bee meant that God took occasion from the Heathen to institute Sacrifices amongst the Iewes for the Heathen had it by tradition from the Patriarches and God himselfe was the first Author of Sacrifices But this is true that the Heathen had corrupted foure things in a Sacrifice First The Materials for they vsed to sacrifice those things which God forbad Secondly the Forme for they corrupted it with many superstitions of their owne Thirdly the Ende they knew not wherefore they were ordained and fourthly the Owner they did not know to whom they did belong From these deprauations God did clense the Sacrifices in the Law of Moses and so did distinguish his people from other nations not by sacrificing but by sacrificing as they ought The last end of instituting Sacrifices was the prouision for the Priests and the sacred Feasts whereat the poore were relieued These bee the reasons why God instituted Sacrifices wherein you see that they all import a reliefe vouchsafed man But yet we haue not found out the true ground why God doth not desire nor delight in sacrifice and burnt offerings for put the case hee did institute them out of compassion towards men yet may hee desire what himselfe had commanded and delight in that whereunto hee hath annext the promise of acceptance Wee must therefore goe on and obserue that Sacrifices are bona quia praecepta non precepta quia bona they are things in their owne nature indifferent but they become more then indifferent they deserue the name of Good in vertue of the commandement of God but they lose this worth if so be wee place it in the Sacrifice and not in Gods Ordinance no sooner doe wee so misdeeme them but presently God doth not desire them God doth not delight in them But to wade farther into their estimate and to discouer more neare grounds of that truth which is in my text ●t 〈◊〉 Dei lib. 10 cap. 5. in the Ordinance of Sacrifices there are two things considerable opus operatum and opus operantis Chap. 10. the Offering and the Offerer Touching the Offering S. Austin hath a true rule Omne
their owne Heads winnowed like Chaffe Neither with their Heads only but also with their Hearts There is not a Passion which like a strong Gale of Winde doth not transport them Anger raiseth stormes within them Vaine Glorie as wings carrieth them beyond themselues Couetousnesse makes them base Enuie makes them vnsociable Pride maketh them Tyrants Luxurie makes them Beasts the Vngodly are as plyable as a Weathercocke neither need they any other winde to shift their situation but only their owne Passions But as if this Inward Wind did not turmoile them enough they are subiect to an Outward the wind of Gods Iudgement which the Chaldee Paraphrase calls Ventum furentem and the Prophets very commonly call it a Whirlewind Saint Iohn Baptist tels vs Matth. 3.12 that Christ shall come with his fanne in his hand and therewith shall throughly purge his floore Where marke that Gods Iudgement is compared to Wind of which our Sauiour Christ tels Nicodemus the wind bloweth where it listeth Iohn 3.8 thou knowest not whence it commeth nor whether it goeth so doe Gods Iudgements surprize men when the vngodly crie Peace Peace 1. Thess 5.3 then comes suddaine destruction vpon them You shall find this fully and excellently described Iob 21. But marke the Opposition of Chaffe vnto the Wind the weaknesse of 〈◊〉 to the irrisistiblensse of the Wind especially if it be a Whirlewind whither you respect the Impotencie of their owne Affections vnder which they sinke or Gods Vengeance which must needes ouer-beare them Who would set the Briars and Thornes against me in Battle saith God Esay 27 I will goe through them I will burne them together It must needs make much to the Miserie of the Vngodly that being so little able they must abide so violent an encounter violent it is but yet such as is meet for them for the Vngodly are called Reshagnim turbulent and tumultuous people and what Iudgement is so fit for them as to bee harrowed and hurled with the Wind They that giue rest to none it is pittie they should haue any rest The Vulgar addes to the Text Exegeticè from the Earth The wind driues the Chaffe from the Earth Saint Hierome makes a good Note vpon it Tàm infoelix erit impius vt ne terrenus sit puluis most miserable is the case of the Vngodly when the Earth that bare them 〈…〉 will not endure them God in Deuteronomie threatens such a Iudgement to the Iewes and we see that at this day they endure it their case may be any mans case and if wee bee Vngodly the Whirlewind may driue vs out of the good Land which God bestowes vpon vs. Russinus goeth a step higher Si facies terrae species patriae Coele●lis accipitur recrè puluis à facie terrae proijci dicitur quia à Visione Calestis Gloriae impius remouetur Adam in Paradise below forfeited Paradise aboue and the Iewes had little hope of Heauen the Truth that were cast out of Canaan the Type thereof Neither may wee presume of the Kingdome of Glorie if we be vnworthy of the Kingdome of Grace And no wonder for Chaffe that is winnowed from the threshing Hoore is reserued for the fire 〈◊〉 3. as Saint Iohn Baptist telleth vs neither are the wicked separated from the good but for their greater Woe But I must conclude Three things we learne in this Text First that the Vngodly are subiect to a double Punishment Poena Damni and Poena Sensus they are depriued of great Good and the Euill is great whereunto they are exposed Secondly the Non Sic and the Sicut aduise vs to compare the Happinesse of the Blessed Tree with the Miserie of this winnowed Chaffe that the Contraries being set one against the other we may the better discerne them and resolue which of them to choose Last of all We may see that there is no reason why we should enuie the pompes and vanities of this wicked World seeing they haue neither Substance nor Continuance Iob teacheth it more then once and so doth Dauid Psal 37. and 73. When we goe to a Play we doe with the Eyes of our Reason correct the Eyes of our Bodie and our Reason iudgeth them but Varlots whom our Sense beholds as Kings It were to be wished that when we come to the Stage of this World we would bring thither aswell the Eyes of Faith as of Reason our Iudgement would not bee so often perplext nor our Resolution staggered as they are with the seeming prosperitie and Glorie of the World we would with Moses 〈…〉 esteeme the rebuke of Christ better then the Treasures of Egypt and endeauor to be happy rather in deed then shew To shut vp all Blessed we would all be in this World but few take Notice of the Euidence of true Blessednesse That Euidence is in the first Resemblance the Resemblance to the Tree Let vs obserue it and desire to partake it otherwise we may be deluded with a seeming Euidence which you haue heard of in the latter Resemblance the Resemblance of winnowed Chaffe the double Miserie that is in it should make vs abhorre it as the double good of the former should make vs affect it God giue Vs a true Iudgement to distinguish them and Grace to make that discreet choice that we may partake the former of them Amen PSAL. 1. VERS 5. Therefore the Vngodly shall not stand in the Iudgement nor Sinners in the Congregation of the Righteous THe words contain the second of those Euidences whereby it may be known who are Blessed Men are Blessed in this Life and that which is to come and God hath set marks vpon either degree of Blessednesse The markes of the first degree you heard vnfolded when I last spake vnto you vpon this Psalme It followes then that I now open vnto you the markes of the second degree so farre as I find them exprest in this Verse For the better vnderstanding whereof we must obserue First what matter is contained in these words and then whereupon these words are inferred In the World to come there are two remarkable things the Entrance into and the State of it in either of these there is some thing Common and something Proper both to the good and the bad In the Entrance that which is Common is Iudgement both must come to the Barre that which is Proper is That in the Iudgement the Righteous can the Vngodly cannot stand In the state it is Common to good and bad to bee Societies or Congregations but it is Proper to the Righteous to be of such a Congregation whereinto the Vngodly shall not come neither shall the Righteous come into the Congregation whereof the Vngodly shall be So much must bee supplyed à Pari the ground is the same for both the reason of the latter difference is contained in the former for they that differ in the Iudgement must differ in the Societie also seeing God is pleased that that shall be
there is neuer a particle that I haue insisted vpon that is not fit to augment the grieuousnesse of the iudgement the iudgement which casteth a sinner out of the presence of God I should here take leaue of this point but that I cannot leaue out a good note of Cassiodores Cuius faciem timet eius faciem inuocat a strange thing two verses before he prayed Hide thy face c. and here he prayeth Cast me not out from thy presence hath the King forgot doth he contradict himselfe by no meanes marke his words and see a difference in the things wherof he speaketh Russinus the same difference which before I obserued out of Ruffinus when hee prayeth Hide thy face he limited his petition to his sinnes but here hee commeth to speake of his person and conceiueth a contrarie prayer Hide not thy face from me we must euer pray that our selues may be still in Gods gracious eye and we must pray also that his reuengefull eye be neuer on our sinnes I haue done describing the first punishment which is the Reiection I come now to the second which is the Depriuation And here wee must obserue first whereof we are depriued of the holy spirit and what is that that which maketh all Saints All Saints day this very day is a sacred memoriall of the gift If I said no more you might reasonably conceiue it but it is sit I speake more happily you will vnderstand the day better The Holy spirit as I told you is Gods Liuerie his Cognizance Iohn 14.16 none haue it but they that are his Christ tels vs so I will pray the Father and hee shall giue you another Comforter euen the spirit of Truth whom the World cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but yee know him for he dwelleth in you and shall be in you But to what end there are two principall vses of the Holy spirits inhabitation he is vnto vs the Oracle of God leading vnto all truth without whom we cannot perceiue the things of God yea they will be foolishnesse vnto vs but if we haue him 1 Ioh. cap. ● 1. Cor. 2. wee haue an vnction that will teach vs all things yea we can search the deepe things of God King Dauid had him in a double sort an Ordinarie vnuailing his eyes that hee might see the wonderfull things of Gods Law an Extraordinarie illightning him to fore-tell secrets of the Kingdome of Christ which were then yet to come The Chaldee Paraphrase and many of the Fathers vnderstand the holy spirit in this later sense for the Spirit of prophesie That is true which they say but it is not enough King Dauid had also the spirit of adoption and he doth not forget that in his prayer against depriuation Yea he must be thought principally to ayme at that for by the other gift wee may serue God on earth but without this we shall neuer goe to Heauen for so saith Christ Mat. 7.24 Many shall say in the last day haue we not prophecied in thy Name but they shall be answered depart from me you workers of iniquitie I know you not Therefore no doubt but King Dauid had an eye to that oracle which wrought in him a sauing faith and did as wee must feare to be depriued of that As the Holy spirit is an heauenly oracle in our Heads so in our Hearts it is an heauenly fire God who instituted sacrifices to be offered by the Church would haue them offered with no other fire but that which should be sent by him from Heauen yea the vsing of strange fire was capitall as appeares by the storie of Nadab and Abthu That type doth informe vs of a greater truth it teacheth vs wherewith spirituall sacrifices must be offered vnto God The first sacrifice spirituall must be a patterne to all the rest Christ by his eternall Spirit offered himselfe vnto God wherewith his propitiatorie therewith must our Eucharisticals be offered Saint Iude speaketh it plainely we must pray in the Holy Ghost The gift you see what it is but you doe not yet fully see what is the worth of it that I gathered out of tuus it is not onely a holy spirit but also the spirit of Gods holinesse or Gods holy spirit Our soule in vs is a spirit and we loue it so well that Sathan said not vntruely skinne for skin and all that euer a man hath will he giue for his life the Angels are yet better spirits 2 Pet cap. 2. higher in dignitie then Men their titles as Saint Peter affirmes confirme it Psal 103. and the Psalmist saith that they exceede in Power and we haue reason to respect them because they pitch their Tents about vs Psal 91. yea God hath giuen a charge vnto them ouer vs to carrie vs in their hands that we dash not our feete against a stone But there is a spirit beyond both these euen the spirit of spirits without whom the former cannot bee and from whom they receiue whatsoeuer good they haue hee is the fountaine of being and wel-being to them both If wee loue our owne soules and the safegard of Angels be deare vnto vs how should we loue Gods holy spirit that is so farre beyond them in infinitenesse of power and excellencie of being yea without whom they cannot be nor stirre without his command The phrase doth not onely import that the Spirit is Gods but also that it is the spirit of that which is most desireable in God that is his Holinesse which doth much improue the gift when the liuerie that it giueth vs and whereby he would haue vs knowne to be his doth make vs partakers of this Diuine attribute wherein to resemble him should bee the highest ambition of a reasonable soule But I will not wade farther in vnfolding the gift what hath beene said is able to make vs sensible of their losse that are depriued thereof especially when I shall haue added thereunto the Manner of losing which I called a depriuation The word is rendered vulgarly take not away But this taking away hath two remarkable things in it it is a taking backe of that which was giuen and a leauing vs not so much as any relique of the gift In regard of the first some render it Ne recipia● take not home againe in regard of the other Ne spolies strip mee not altogether so the Arabicke I will touch a little at both of them First at the Taking backe Hee that loseth what good he had is much more sensible of the losse then if hee neuer had it hee that was borne sickly and hath a long time languished in a disease is not so much pained as hee that being healthy and strong is shaken with a feauer or tortured with some ache Pouerty and disgrace are more bitter heart-breakes to them that haue liued in plenty and honour then they can bee to him who was neuer of better condition then a begger or
desire as if he meant that he would not any longer be flesh and bloud hee would be rid of that which is the nurserie of sinne which slakes his life in grace and disheartens his hope of glorie And it is likely King Dauid did not call onely for subuention against guilt contracted but preuention that he might contract no more he looketh backward and forward and it beseemeth vs all to pray against originall sinne 〈◊〉 7. O wretch that I am who shall deliuer me from this body of sinne Finally as Bloud signifieth not onely Sinne but the punishment thereof also Gene. 4. so much the Prayer be vnderstood to deprecate not onely sinne but the punishment also Dauid heard ringing in his eares Caines doome Maledictus because thou hast shed bloud therefore thou art accursed the doome against murder Gene. 9. which God denounced by Noah thundered in his eare 2 〈◊〉 12. He that sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed againe he could not forget that dreadfull voice which Nathan vttered vnto him The sword shall neuer depart from thy house and out of sense of all these as if he were euen presently ready to perish fall vpon this supplication Deliuer his Penitertials doe shew what deepe impression the terrour of Gods iudgements made vpon his soule and also vpon his body and no wonder if he that so felt them did pray to bee released from them But marke how he Prayeth first how discreetly then how zealously Very discreetly for he maketh choice of a person that can and will deliuer Can for he is Deus salutis it is his proper title to be a Sauiour In creatures you may find vanitie that will delude you or infirmitie that will faile you euen of Kings themselues it is said that their breath is in their nostrels and that they are not saued themselues by their much strength Dauid himselfe who so often deliuered Ismel and was attended with so many Worthies yet could hee not expect saluation from himselfe the Prophet Ieremies rule is peremptorie Chap. 17. Cursed is hee that maketh flesh his arme c. We must therefore resolue that saluation belongeth vnto the Lord especially when wee speake of spirituall saluation such as that is wherewith wee haue now to doe which standeth in the remission of sinnes the peace of conscience and freedome from death for who can remit sinnes but God onely And except he iustifie vs how should we haue the peace of conscience God vseth Ministers to worke these effects but they flow from grace not inherent in them but assistant to them and so they are the effects of Gods hand And to him also belongeth the issues of death for as it is his iustice that inflicteth it so except he release none can free from it But marke the phrase the God of saluation 1 Iohn 1● is it not a periphrasis of the name of Iesus And then behold a mysterie sanguis liberat a sanguine the bloud of Iesus clenseth from all sinne and so deliuereth vs from bloud bloud whereof we are guiltie and rising againe he receiued the keyes both of death and hell and so can deliuer vs from the bloud whereunto wee are endangered As Dauid is discreet in seeking to a person that can so is he also discreet in seeking to a person that will deliuer for he calleth vpon him not only as a God of saluation but as a God of His saluation God is a God of saluation as he is the Sauiour of all men but no man can cal him the God of his saluation except he bee a faithfull man so that there are two remarkable things in the Pronoune for it is verbum faederis Euangelici fi et spec●●lis Dauid sheweth thereby that he is in Couenant with God euen in the Couenant of grace for no man can vse that word except he bee in so blessed a state no man can call God His except God haue appropriated himselfe vnto him and appropriate himse●fe he doth not but by the words of the Couenant Ero Deus tuus I will be thy God And when God doth so appropriate himself we must keepe the ●itle of the Conenant in our Prayers and direct our words vnto him as he is ours this is the exercise of a speciall saith and it is the greatest comfort of our prayer it is most likely that he shall speede that hath so neere reference vnto God he that can will helpe And marke that though he were put to the conflict yet was hee not without Armour of proofe he saw whence saluation might be had and commeth with boldnesse to the Throne of grace more doe conflict with the horrour of conscience and terrours of death then preuaile against them to conflict is common vnto all sinners but to preuaile is the prerogat●ue of the children of God the God ossaluation doth ease doth vnburden onely those that can truely say he is the God of their saluation Dauid prayed Discreetly and he prayed zealously also for marke how he doubles the word O God thou God Nota in repititione magnum cor●●● affectum saith Gregorie such ingemminations proceed not but from ardent affections they importune God and they will take no deniall And indeede God doth not like cold suitors for that betrayech cold defires which in one that is at Gods mercie hath grieuously offended lyeth open vnto the sharpest wrath can find no fauour can promise it selfe no mercie we must therefore wrestle with God as ●acob did replie as the woman of Canaan did treble our petition as did Saint Paul if we meane that our Prayers shall pierce the cloudes climbe vp into the Heauens and enter into the eares of God Neither sacrifice nor frankincense were offered without fire vpon the one Altar or the other no more must any Prayer come from vs which is not warmed by zeale quickning it and giuing it speedie wings to flie from earth to heauen and make our words a liuely representation of those desires that are conceiued in our hearts And let this suffice for Dauids spirituall Pange I come now to the Deuotion the argument whereof is the righteousnesse of God But there is a double righteousnesse of God the one is legall the other Euangelicall The legall is that which dealeth with men according to their workes the Euangelicall is that which dealeth with men according to their faith the latter is here meant and not the former from the former a sinner can expect nothing but condemnation because this is the tenour of it Cursea is he that abideth not in cuerie point of the Law to d●e it from the later we may expect saluation because it stands in the renussion of sinnes therefore wee must ioyne Libera that is gone before with Iudit●a and so you will find that it is Iustitta liberans it is such Iustice a freeth vs from Iustice and therefore Symachus translates it not amisle Misericordia this Iustice is nothing but plaine Mercie mercie
they make them vsurpers of Christs office And howsoeuer their Schooles qualifie the matter their Liturgies cannot be freed from this imputation And the notions of the vulgar vnderstanding and the affections of their heart in their practicke deuotion are framed according to their Liturgie not according to their Schooles the more reason haue we to censure the abuse Moses at Mount Sinai Aaron in the Tabernacle may be typicall Mediatours but there is no true one either in Earth or Heauen but only our Sauiour Iesus Christ None of Redemption as the Papists confesse neither any of Intercession as we moreouer hold and hold it with the Primitiue Church But I here end my Text and with my Text this whole Chapter Only I will giue you one generall obseruation vpon it which may not bee neglected This whole Chapter is but an Exordium to the next Chapter shall I say or to the whole Law indeed to the whole Law but immediatly to the next Chapter Now in this Exordium I would haue you obserue how God playeth the skilfull Oratour and performeth all things which the best rules in Rhetoricke require in an Exordium The rules require that an Orator should Captare beneuolentiam worke himselfe into the good liking of his Auditors And why because if they like not the man they will not much care for the matter And doth not God this at the fourth Verse Doth he not set forth his well deseruings of them in ouerthrowing their euemies in setting them free And what may better giue God an interest in their loue then the experiment that hee had giuen them of his reall loue The next rule of Rhetorike is Reddere Auditores dociles to bring them that alreadie affect the man to bee desirous to bee informed of the matter And how is that done by shewing how much the matter concerneth them how beneficiall it will bee to them For men gladly heare of their owne good and the greater the good the more gladly doe they heare of it See how excellently God playeth this part of the Orator at the fift and sixt Verses how significantly hee setteth forth the benefit which they shall reape by their obedience shewing them what a rate hee will set vpon them what an approach they shall make to him how sacred how blessed their state shall bee which is so much the more to be esteemed in that they shall haue it as a Prerogatiue none shall haue it but they And who will not bee curiously inquisitiue after such a matter and heare them gladly that bring such good tydings The third point of Rhetoricke is Auditores attentos reddere to rowse his Auditory make them shake off all dulnesse and drowsinesse that no part of the speech slip by or passe vnweighed This is done by setting before vs the danger that may ouertake vs and the respect that must be vsed by vs. And God omitteth not this point of Rhetoricke all the rest of the charge is spent hereabout It serueth to quicken and quallifie the Israelites as beseemed that heauenly Sermon which they were to heare from the mouth of God Chrysoil Hitherto tend their Preparation which you heard of heretofore and the humiliation wrought by the Harbingers of God whereof you haue heard this day What shall I say now to you but only this The same Sermon that was preached to Israel is to be preached now to vs for we are now the Israel of God therefore vnto vs belongeth this Oratorie of God Yea God hath deserued better of vs then euer he did of Israel for we enioy the truth whereof they had but the Type We haue reason then to affect him Yea and to affect also that which is deliuered by him for it containeth our soueraigne good our blessed communion with God And those spurres of attention must worke vpon vs no lesse then vpon them Because though wee be not called to the Parliament we must come to the Assizes the Assizes is much more dreadfull then was the Parliament Finally though wee were not at those Espousals we shall be at the mariage feast It concerneth vs therefore to prouide our wedding garment In a word will we nill we we are parties to this Couenant though not as it was vailed yet as it was vnuailed Therefore not one of the Articles must passe vs vnregarded because enquirie will be made after our conformitie vnto euery one of them GOd grant that we may so set God and our owne good before our eyes that we may willingly open our eares and gladly apply our hearts to heare him and heare of it that what we shall learne at the foot of Mount Sinai may make vs more fit to climbe to the top of Mount Sion Heb. 12. So shall we be incorporated into the blessed Societie that dwelleth there while wee liue here and hereafter hauing our Harps sing there a new Song before the Throne before the foure Beasts and the Elders Reuel 14. which none can learne but the 144000. which are redeemed from the Earth AMEN FIVE SERMONS PREACHED in Saint Maries in OXFORD Vpon Luke 3. Verse 7 8 9. BY The Right Reuerend Father in God ARTHVRE LAKE the late L. Bishop of Bath and Wells LONDON Printed by W. STANSBY for Nathaniel Butter 1629. FIVE SERMONS PREACHED AT Saint Maries in OXFORD The first Sermon LVKE 3. VERS 7.8.9 7. Then said he to the people that were come bee Baptised of him O generation of Vipers who hath forewarned you to flee from the wrath to come THis Chapter is the second Lesson appointed for this Morning Prayer the Argument whereof is nothing else but a storie of Saint Iohn Baptists seruice what paines he tooke and what successe he had his paines were great his successe diuers To say nothing of them with whom hee preuailed nothing at all such as were they that despised the counsell of God against themselues being not baptised of him Luke 7. This Chapter sheweth that betweene them with whom hee preuailed there was no small odds for some were sincere some hypocrites Saint Iohn vseth them accordingly For he instructeth the sincere mildly but his Sermon against hypocrites it very sharpe you haue it in my Text my Text is Saint Iohns reproofe of those Iewes which came dissemblingly to his Baptisme More distinctly to open it consider Whom hee reproueth and How The persons were many a multitude and they seeme well disposed whether you respect their Paines or their pretence Their paines they came out they tooke a iourney from home to come vnto him and the pretence of their iourney cannot be disliked for they came to be baptised Such were the persons But how dealeth Saint Iohn Baptist with them Surely notwithstanding their great number and their faire shew hee doth not spare to tell them that they were in worse case then they thought and must take a better course then hitherto they had For their Case whereas there are but two heads whereunto we reduce all Euill
take faith for Scientiall or Conscientiall they are spectacles to the world of a dying faith their errors cannot be excused and their superstitions are intollerable Whether wee be in our declination or no it is worth our enquirie An old Friar preaching to his Brethren spake these words Fratres in principio religionis nostrae c. Brethren when our Order first began we were full of Conscience in processe of time we lost a syllable and then retained nothing but Science we haue now lost one syllable more and wee are nothing but Entia certaine flow Belites good for nothing I am sure we haue lost one syllable if wee haue lost no more for Conscience to Godward and towards the world are rare things But what talke I of Christian faith We haue ouerliued Ciuill faith I am pridem fugêre pudor verumque fidesque In quorum subiere locum fraudesque dolique though cases of Conscience bee not so corruptly deliuered by vs as by Iesuits Psal 14. who teach men artificially to lie and to murder meritoriously yet in practice we are gone very farre and if God should looke downe from Heauen to see if there were any that would seeke after God Chap. ● he should find that all are gone aside c. Wee may reade a picture of our selues in Ieremie if we doe not exceed it What may wee conceiue but that the Sonne of Man is comming Psal 110. for towards his comming this degeneration will be most manifest Not at his first Comming for then the birth of his wombe was like the morning deaw it suddenly ouer-spread the earth The Kingdome of Heauen suffered violence and the violent tooke it Christs second comming shall bee like the dayes of Noah as then so at Christs comming Men will be eating and drinking marrying and giuing in marriage then the Floud came and then shall come the Fire Neither shall Faith be only latens lurking as in time of persecution but languens giuing vp the Ghost for want of grace But let vs weigh the phrase shall he find when he commeth then hee commeth to seeke this faith and so indeed bee doth For as all Iudgement is giuen to him as hee is the Sonne of Man and hee shall come to iudge in the glorie of his Father so his first enquirie is not only What his Church suffereth but How it is disposed neither must we looke for his relieuing hand except he find vs busie at our faithfull cries When God sent Moses to deliuer Israel marke what he saith vnto him Exod ● Rom. 8. I haue seene the affliction of my people and haue heard their crie and Saint Paul telleth vs that they that haue the first-fruits of the Spirit sigh in themselues while they looke for the redemption of their bodies Saint Peter 2. Pet. 3. Seeing all these things shall be dissolued what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conuersation and godlinesse looking for and hastening to the comming of the Day of God Christ before both Luke 21. Watch and pray alwayes that you may be accounted worthy to escape all those things that shall come to passe and to stand before the Sonne of Man If God giue vs sighes and groanes which cannot be exprest it is a good prognostication of our deliuerie if we be senslesse and stupid it is a signe of our destruction either in terra nostra when he bringeth troubles vpon our State and the Clouds gather apace and threaten a storme Ambros or cum orbe terrarum at the genetall Day of Iudgement which cannot bee farre off as appeares by the generall defect of faith at which time there will be very few left to bee saued Finally obserue the phrase Christ doth not doubt but foretell what shall be yea and deplore also those wretched times because he is the Sonne of Man that is hath giuen vs so great an interest in him and himselfe beareth so great an affection to vs So that the manner of the speech doth Terrorem incutere and should Torporem excutere it serueth to strike a terrour into vs and to rowse vs out of our lethargie I haue done with the Argument I haue shewed you what is affirmed I come now to the Argumentation and in few words will shew you How it is inferred It is inferred First very strangely for God in good things should be a patterne vnto man but man is here made a patterne for God a wicked man for a good God but it is not in wickednesse but in goodnesse And Christs meaning is to teach vs That we may imitate not only the good but the bad also in that which they doe well Christ himselfe did so he compares his second Comming to the stealing on of a thiefe in the night Et quod decuit Christum cur mihi turpe putem Yea hee biddeth vs doe so imitate not only the bad Steward in his Prouidence but the Serpent also in his wisdome Saint Paul borroweth Sentences out of the Heathen Poets Saint Austine borrowed a rule of interpreting the Scripture from Tichonius the Donatist Truth and Goodnessse in whomsoeuer they are they are Gods and therefore whether the point be speculatiue or practicke if it bee of this kind in whomsoeuer wee find it wee may follow it and in following it we follow not m●n but God God I say in that of his which we find in men for virtus vel in hoste landatur and this imitation is one of the profits wee may make of our most deadly enemies Therefore it is too much precisen●sse to dislike some things in our Church because therein wee follow the Church of Rome as if all principles of reason and Religion were dead in them as it is too much malice in the Romanists to dislike many things because they come from vs though otherwise they cannot denie them to be reasonable Christs Inference teacheth vs more indifferencie of Iudgement Though the Inference may seeme strange yet is it very strong for wee may strongly conclude à minus probabili ad maius if a corrupt Iudge will bee moued with importunitie how much more a iust God If a poore Widow preuaile so with man how shall Gods owne Elect preuaile with him If the Cries of Nature worke so much how shall the Cries of Grace worke The proceeding of the wicked Iudge may well resolue vs of that which wee may expect from God This Parable represents a strong motiue Maith 7. If you that are wicked know how to giue good things to your children when they aske you how much more your Father which is in Heauen c. Therefore Christ doth not only moue the question as if it were a Probleme but turnes it into a direct Affirmation I tell you Hee will and Christs I tell you is a seale of certaintie for hee is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse yea it is Hee himselfe that shall doe what hee saith as appeares Esay 63. Who is hee which
thereon It is not so in Gods workes Christ told St. Paul that his strength was made perfect in weakenesse 2 Cor. 12.9 St. Paul taught the Corinthians that the weakenesse of God is stronger than men For proofe hereof God in this Prophet referres himselfe vnto the Israelites deliuerance out of Egypt and willeth the Iewes by his proceeding in that worke to measure all his proiects The first encouragement then of the Iewes is a consideration that God is the Architect of their building and where he is the chiefe workemaster seeme the beginnings neuer so small the worke cannot faile to proue glorious This is the first Rule The second Rule is that they must not set the estimate of the glory according to the charge spent in the building but according to his worth that shall inhabit it for Non domus dominum sed dominus domum c●h●nestat it is not the house that maketh the master but the master that maketh the house honourable Therefore the Iewes eyes were to be fixed rather vpon the grace which God would doe their Temple than on the expence which they were able to bestow in building thereof This is their second encouragement exprest in a second Rule and it is the argument of those words that now I haue read vnto you The summe is Christ will assuredly make a remarkeable a comfortable entrance into that Temple seeme it neuer so meane a Temple which was now a building by Zorobabel Iosua and the rest of the Iewes The chiefe points therein to be considered are two Christs presence in the Temple and the assurance thereof giuen to the Iewes The presence is Maiesticall whether you respect the preparation thereunto or the description thereof This time will not suffer me to passe beyond the preparation for this though the last Sunday of Aduent is but a preparation against Christmas day and therefore it may suffice if I prepare you for that Feast the rest of the matter shall be reserued for its due time In the preparation we will obserue the manner and the time The manner will shew vs what is prepared and how What both the worlds the great and the little The great is set downe in these words Heauen Earth and of Earth the Sea and the dry Land The little world is noted by all Nations all not onely contradistinct to the Iewes but including them also Both the Worlds shall be prepared But how They shall bee extraordinarily rowsed and as it were summoned to attend and intend the presence of Christ this is meant by the shaking of them Besides this manner there is a time here also set downe that doth belong vnto this shaking For hearing of so strange a thing a man may demand how often how soone shall this shaking bee If the demand be how often the holy Ghost answers Yet once once more and no more but once for those two notes are included in these two words Yet once If the demand bee how soone the holy Ghost answers very soone it is but a little while this shaking is very neare it is at hand You haue the particulars which God willing I meane to vnfold at this time I pray God I may so doe it that we all thereby may be prepared as wee ought to commemorate the Birth of Christ First then of the two worlds that shall bee prepared the greater offers it selfe vnto vs. It is here broken into its parts Heauen Earth c. Heauen is in the Scripture threefold first that which is called the Throne of God and is inhabited by the Angels and Saints which are departed The second is that which is called the Firmament wherein moue the Sunne the Moone the Stars they are the Host of that Heauen The third is the Aire wherein flye the Birds for they are called volu●res Coeli the Fowle of Heauen Heauen in my Text must not bee limited it extends to all three The second part of the world is called Earth that containes all the inferiour Globe and is here as elsewhere in Genesis resolued into its parts the Sea and the dry Land Also the word which wee translate dry Land noteth a desolate place and may bee rendred a Wildernesse and so therein and in the Sea may bee intimated an allusiue parallel to the passage of Israel from Egypt into Canaan The little world is here exprest by the name of all Nations To vnderstand the phrase we must obserue that after God had chosen a peculiar people the rest of people were called Gentiles that is Nations and so properly they signifie in the language of the Old Testament all people and kindreds that are without the Church But in this place it must haue a larger extent because Christ came to be knowne as well to the Gentile as to the Iew as in the next Sermon you shall heare more at large Therefore by these words wee must vnderstand simply all people as well those that were within as those that were without the Church Hauing thus shewed you what is to bee prepared I must now shew you how God will shake them that is rowse them extraordinarily Though all Creatures doe continually serue God yet while they keepe their ordinarie course they doe not so euidently serue him but that Atheists question his prouidence St. Peter shewes vs what is their ground All things continue alike from their beginning To refute them 2 Epist c. 3. God doth sometime as it were vnioynt the frame of Nature Exod. 8.19 and maketh the very Magicians to say Digitus Dei est hic this miracle must needs be wrought by the God of Nature Iosua 2.11 He maketh the Canaanites to confesse The Lord your God is the God of heauen aboue and of earth below as Rahab told the Spies Dan. 3. The proud King of Babylon when he saw that the Lions could not touch the body of Daniel nor the fire singe the three Children was faine to giue glory to the true and euerliuing God It is none of the worst arguments wherewith we may stoppe the mouthes of Atheists and make them acknowledge the Lord of Nature if wee presse them with those many stories found in vndoubted Records for which in nature there can be no reason yea there is euident reason for their contraries Such a kinde of change or dealing with the Creatures and putting them out of their vsuall course is here meant by shaking But let vs apply it to the two worlds and you will see it more euidently I beginne with the Heauen Mat. 3. 17. the vppermost Heauen that was apparently shaken at the first comming of Christ God the Father more than once vttered his voyce so audibly at the first comming of Christ that it was plainely heard by men on earth Mat. 3.16 Acts 2.3 God the holy Ghost hee came downe in the Doue came downe in fiery tongues he became as Tertullian speakes the Vicar of Christ vnto the Church Iohn 1. As for the Angels
carried towards heauen and heauenly things while our thoughts doe so stoope wee approach that fire of which Saint Iames speakes that it setteth the tongue on fire and wee may well say that the whole frame of nature is set on fire thereby so set on fire that it is melted so melted that it is dissolued There is a threefold band 1. betweene GOD and Man 2. betweene superiours and inferiours 3. betweene those that are equals In those that come neare this fire they are melted all there continueth no communion betweene God and vs for want of pi●tie no communion betweene superiours and inferiours neyther respects the other as it ought nor any commerce between equals each doth endeauour to deuour the other But to open this a little plainer From our bodie naturall wee must learne what an euill this melting is in the bodie politicke In the bodie naturall if a ioynt bee dissolued wee finde a double euill the part groweth weake in it selfe and troublessome to the neighbour parts as you may see in an arme out of ioynt it is weake it selfe and a burthen vnto the next part whereupon it resteth beeing not able to sustaine it selfe the same falleth out in the policique melting Men through disorder grow weake themselues and they are troublesome to others weake they are though their lusts bee strong because that strength is not of the man who should bee a reasonable creature but it is of a beast of the sensuall part of a man Hee that rideth a fierce horse let the horse keepe what pace hee will so long as the rider commandes him by the bridle wee say hee rides strongly but if the horse get the bit in his mouth and runne away the faster his pace the weaker the rider because hee cannot checke him Our affections are as that fierce horse and our reason should bee as a strong bridle stirre they neuer so much if reason commaund wee are strong but if reason haue no power and they runne loose then certainely the more violent they are the weaker are wee Wee speake significantly when wee say that a man transported by his passions is an impotent man and wee therein imitate the phrase of GOD himselfe who by the Prophet reproouing Iudah for her vnsatiable spirituall fornication saith How weake is thy heart Drunkards and murtherers adulterers and all kinde of dissolute liuers thinke themselues very stronge because they haue their full forthe in sinne but let them not deceiue themselues they are melted they are dissolued this is but a weakenesse they haue lost that strength not onely wherewith God created them vnto vertue but euen that strength wherewith humane policie doth strengthen them vnto ciuill societie they are vnprofitable therefore But that is not all the euill A member out of ioynt is not only vnseruiceable it selfe but also painefull to the other partes And whosoeuer groweth disordered as hee weakeneth himselfe so is hee mischieuous to others adulterers to other mens wiues murtherers to their persons robbers to their goods slanderers to their good name it is the condition of all sins they disorder policies That which I obserue vnto Iudges herein is that they should not onely take notice of the facts vpon which they sit Iudges but to stirre vp in themselues the zeale of iustice should diligently consider these two things which cleaue vnto euery such fact the weakenesse and the annoyance of the malefactour hee is not what hee should bee seruiceable to the State and what hee should not bee hee is mischieuous vnto others So much is implyed when hee is said to bee dissolued But let vs see of whom this melting or dissoluing is affirmed The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolued Some take these words according to the figure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and resolue them thus All the inhabitants of the earth are dissolued as if the melting and dissoluing did concerne onely the persons yea and point out also such persons as are apt to bee dissolued namely those that haue their thoughts and affections grouelling vpon the earth We haue a distinction in Saint Paul of the two ADAMS The first was of earth earthly the second was the Lord from Heauen as is the earthly so are they that are earthly and as is the heauenly so are they that are heauenly 1. Corinth 15. they are so in this that the earthly is easily dissolued but the heauenly is not if wee did set our affections on things aboue and not on things below if wee had our conuersation in Heauen and would bee though in the world yet not of it wee neede not feare melting wee should not bee dissolued but while wee grow more like the old Adam than the new while wee set our affections on things below and sauour onely the things of earth no wonder if wee melt if wee bee dissolued The Admonition for vs all is to keepe vs to the example of CHRIST yea to let CHRIST liue in vs let our hearts bee possessed with the loue of Heauen and Heauenly things so shall wee not proue melting or disordered members of the State But the words may bee taken as they lye in my Text and the dissoluing may bee applyed no lesse to the earth than to the inhabitants thereof both may bee dissolued both may melt But then wee must obserue a distinction There is a penall and there is a sinnefull melting the earth is subiect to a penall but the sinnefull is that whereunto men onely are subiect and being subiect thereunto cause the earth to bee subiect to the other A fruitfull land may become barren and a healthy Countrey become contagious yea a Countrey that is like the Garden of GOD as Sodome was may become a salt a dead Sea as Sodome is which is the penall melting or dissoluing thereof But this befalleth not except the people sinne and the crye of their sinne come vp vnto God Maledicta terra propter te hath a constant truth there is neuer any penall melting where a sinnefull melting hath not gone before The Vse that I would make hereof is That when wee see plagues wee should thereby bee put in minde of sinnes the Magistrate should bestirre himselfe thereabout especially hee should inquire after crying sinnes GOD taught this lesson to Ioshua when the Israelites fled before the men of Ai Ioshua rent his clothes and fell to his prayers and so did others with him a good worke you would thinke in such a case to deprecate the wrath of GOD but GOD telleth Ioshua that he should intend another worke Vp saith hee what makest thou here Israel hath sinned therefore they cannot stand before their enemies Goe thou and correct that sinne and that sinne was but the sinne of one how much more must hee doe it if as in the Text All the inhabitants bee dissolued The more sinners the more speed must the Magistrate make and there can be no more than All. But All may bee vnderstood eyther of singula
reade either Bellarmine or Suarez or which is more authenticall Bulla Coenae Domini and he shall see in what state they hold all that come within the compasse of their Censure To trie the vprightnesse of this Censure I haue chosen this Storie wherein you shall haue Christ himselfe sit Iudge and guiding our Conscience in conceiuing of this case aright In the Reuenge you may see the Traytors Passion but with remarkable difference But in the Censure the Sophistrie of their Ghostly Fathers which resolue them of the lawfulnesse of such reuenge And although the storie may seeme lesse pertinent because herein they which afflict are good and they euill that are afflicted yet indeed the argument holds more strongly for if it be not lawfull for the good in this case to persecute the bad much lesse it is lawfull for the bad to persecute the good If Iames and Iohn that were Pillers of the Church no lesse then Saint Peter are disliked for desiring such vengeance against the Samaritans that were otherwise execrable people much lesse may Samaritans desire it against Iames and Iohn Let vs then suppose that these Traytors were as Catholike as Christ and his Apostles and wee as Hereticall as the Samaritans you see Christs carriage in this case Whereby you may apprehend his Iudgement of this Treason Hee would not allow a Prayer for fire would he then allow the consumption it selfe He would not allow Fire from Heauen and would he allow fire from Hell He would not allow Oculum charitatis perturbatum passionate Reuenge or reuenge in hot blood and would hee allow Oculum charitatis extinctum aduised hatred and reuenge in cold blood Hee would not allow it in Iames and Iohn whom he dearely loued and would he allow it in Iesuits in Rebels persons hatefull to God and men He would not allow it against Samaritans and would he allow it against Professors of his Truth It cannot be doubted he would not allow it And now I must briefly let you see that Papists are most like vnto Samaritans though they would fasten that infamy vpon vs. Two things I obserued in the Samaritans First that their Temple was but of a later Edition much yonger then that of Ierusalem and built without any lawfull warrant and yet notwithstanding they did countenance it with the Names of greatest Antiquity and what doe Papists offer to the Church but new deuices many hundred yeares yonger then the Truth and yet would they out face the World that they haue their Originall from Christ and the Apostles Their Pedigree is as true as was the Samaritans As for our Church this is our comfort that though we are not matches for Christ and his Apostles yet wee professe our selues their followers and for the truth thereof refetre our selues vnto their writings by which onely we desire to be tried And yet these Samaritans deadly hate vs that are Orthodoxe but blame our Doctrine as they that haue weake eyes or deafe eares accuse the Sun-shine of darknesse Na●●●● or Musicke of vntunablenes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And if they could be contented to call for Fire from Heauen we are contented to indure it God we desire may be Iudge betweene vs and if in dislike of our Doctrine he will send a fire we refuse it not though it consume vs. But they dare not trust God they will trust themselues and not expecting helpe from aboue they will seeke it from beneath And yet it is markeable that whereas they boast of Miracles and the Wonders of their Saints that make the blinde to see the deafe to heare the lame to goe and dead to reuiue as their Legends tell vs yet of all their Saints not one euer would worke a Miracle to destroy vs Heretickes heere they leaue their Idolaters to doe what they can forge and performe by their hellish heads and hearts whereof wee haue had many woefull experiments Nazian Orat. 3. the Gun-powder Traitors as Iulian comparable to Aetna But let them take heed the same God that hath here reprooued Iames and Iohn will not spare for to censure them hee hath done it in our eyes by bringing to light and that strangely what they thought hidden only in the depth of their owne hearts and hath turned their mischiefe vpon their owne pates And that the rather because their Guides abuse his name and calling themselues Iesuites are plainly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are a snare on Mizpah c. Hosea 5. and Build Syon with blood Micha 6. and would haue made Westminster a Mare mortuum I cannot tell ●o whom to paralell them except to the Zeloti remembred by Iosephus who gaue themselues that Name euen as the Iesuites haue giuen themselues theirs and both vpon the like pretence of maintayning their Country their Liberty Learning Discipline and what not that was good whereas notwithstanding the same Author obserues that neuer were there worse Miscreants in a City and that did more contrary to that which they profest He obserues also their end that by Gods iust iudgement they were brought to as great extremity and tortured with as manifold misery as may befall wicked men I will not prognosticate only I wish them grace that tread their steps to take heede of their Ends which is rather to be wished them to be hoped for so little remorse appeared in them vpon the detection of so foule a fact King Dauid when he had rashly vowed the vtter destruction of Nabal and his family and that in a case to this For denying entertainment when he was pacified by Abigail and his Passion ouerpast thus recalled himself Blessed be the Lord God of Israel that hath sent thee vnto me blessed be thou that hast stayd me from shedding innocent blood and reuenging my selfe with mine owne hands And these Apostles when Christ she wed his dislike werequiet went vnto another Towne sparkles of grace which shew that the eye of their Charity was not extinct though it were troubled and that though they were mooued beyond measure yet they could come vnto themselues againe And indeede it is a Rule that the longer a good man pauseth vpon his sin the greater it seemes vnto him because the mist of Concupiscence that blinded his eyes is more and more dispelled and the more he seeth the more he sorroweth for his sorrow for sin is proportionable to his sight thereof But in the wicked it is cleane contrary an vnexpected calamity ouer-taking them in their sinne may haply open their eyes and they may haue a glimmering sight thereof and make Pharaoh's or Simon Magus his confession Confesse the sinne but no sooner is the calamity ouer-blowne but their Lethargy casts them into a dead sleepe againe Some of these Traytors were so dead in their sinne that they awakened not at all and of those that did the sense was quickly gone Certainely their Aduocates that now Apologize for them extenuating the sinne of the Actors and excusing by the seale of
you that are the Penitents that it doth not you should not be here to doe penance if you had such doome as GODS Law requireth you are therefore bound to thanke GOD for the clemencie of the State and make good vse of this time of grace remembring that though you scape the corporall fire there is another fire which you haue cause to feare which St IVDE telleth vs was figured out in the perpetuall burning of Sodome and Gomorrha the fire of Hell and assure your selues that if the Land of Canaan spued out those impure persons Heauen will receiue no such and if they that transgressed MOSES Law perished ciuilly without all mercie most wofull shall their destruction be that are reserued for that fire which shall deuour the aduersaries the fire of Hell You shall doe well therefore to quench that fire before you come at it and there are three waters with which you must quench it The first is the water of your teares you must imitate King DAVID who all the night long washt his bed watered his couch with his teares there he sinned and there he bathed himselfe so must you But mans teares are too weake a water to wash away either the guilt or staine of sinne which are the fewell of that fire you must therefore moreouer vse two other waters the water of CHRISTS blood to wash away the guilt and the water of his Spirit to purge out the corruption of your sinne If you make good vse of these three waters that fire will neuer seize on you otherwise assure your selues that though we spare you GOD will not spare you he will one day punish you most seuerely And it were good that our Law did not spare so much as it doth considering the growth and ouer-spreading of impuritie It were to be wisht that our temporall Sword did strike as deepe as the Sword of MOSES did it may when it pleaseth the State and it shall not doe it without example of other Countreys Or if that may not be obtained at least it were to be wisht that the old Canons of the CHVRCH were reuiued and ghostly discipline exercised more seuerely for certainly the scandall is great which such sinnes bring vpon the CHVRCH and they that slander vs without a cause when they haue iust cause how will they open their mouthes against vs Our care then should be to stop their mouthes but principally we should prouide that there be no wickednesse amongst vs which is the end of the doome and the last point of my Text. I will touch it briefly The Iudgement was seuere but it was necessarie Necessarie for the State which is to preserue it selfe free from guilt there must no wickednesse be amongst you No wickednesse that is impossible in this world for viuitur non cum perfectis hominibus they that haue most of the Spirit haue some-what of the Flesh and the Field of GOD till haruest will haue Tares as well as good Eares and the good eares will haue chaffe as well as good graine and the good graine will haue bran as well as flower We may not looke then for any State wherein there is no wickednesse The Law therefore requireth onely that there be Nullum scelus no haynous wickeduesse no tantum scelus as the Vulgar speaketh enormous transgressions there must be no crying sinnes the State must haue a vigilant eye vpon such sinnes and execute vengeance vpon notorious sinners they must not be amongst vs. But they will the Serpent will be in Paradise yea Lucifer was in Heauen the Arke had a CHAM and amongst CHRISTS Disciples there was a IVDAS Be then they will amongst vs. But the meaning of the Law is they must not be indured by vs they must not scape vnpunished if they doe they will proue contagious such sinnes are like fretting Gangreenes they are like vnto Leauen they infect all about them and if they doe not infect they will make guiltie and for sparing such a one GOD will not spare a whole State And there is good reason for Qui non vetat cum potest iubet GOD taketh them for abettors that will not when they may reforme inordinate liuers Therefore the State must put away from amongst them such inordinate liuers 1 Cor. 5. Hierusalem below must as neere as may be be like vnto Hierusalem aboue Apoc. 22. of that aboue St IOHN saith Extracanes impudici no vncleane person commeth thither neither must any be indured here so soone as they appeare they must be made expiatorie Sacrifices and their death must free the State from guilt But I draw to an end A word to you that are the Malefactors Origen Ad paenitentiae remedium confugite qui praeuenti estis tam graui peccato Seeing you haue beene ouertaken with so foule a fault neglect not the remedy which GOD hath left you heartie and vnfained repentance for your sinne the rather because you haue to do with a most mercifull Iudge who doth not onely moderate the punishment but commute it also commute the punishment which you should suffer in Hell with a punishment which the CHVRCH inflicteth here on Earth Consider the qualitie consider the quantitie of these different punishments and you will confesse that it is a most mercifull commutation Cast then your eyes backe and consider what you haue done how haynous your offence hath beene and cast your eyes forwards likewise and consider what you haue deserued how great a danger you haue incurred by inioying a short and beastly pleasure Thinke vpon both these often and thinke vpon them seriously so shall you yeeld GOD the greater glorie for the mercie which he vouchsafeth you and he shall worke the greater comfort in your soules by assuring you of the remission of that sinne wherewith you haue so greatly prouoked him And to vs all this I say Eligamus priùs affectus castigare quàm propter ipsos castigemur Let vs plucke out our eyes cut off our hands rather then by retayning them to be cast into Hell-fire Let this spectacle remember vs often to set before vs the shame of the world and the horror of a guiltie conscience which befall enormous sinners in this life And if that will not hold in our corrupt nature let vs set before vs the neuer-dying Worme the euer-burning Fier Or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let vs begin here our life in chastitie Nazian that we may one day be in the number of those Virgins that follow the Lambe whether soeuer he goeth Reuel 14. And let Magistrates and Ministers both be iealous ouer the State with a godly iealousie that as by the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments it is espowsed to one Husband 2 Cor. 11. so it may be presented as a chast Virgin vnto CHRIST when those heauenly Nuptials shall be solemnized wherein standeth our euerlasting happinesse This God grant for Jesus Christs sake by the operation of the Holy Spirit To which one
vpon whom this Law was made blasphemed but in his rage as appeares yet he dyed for it Wonder not at GODS seueritie he measureth no more to himselfe then he doth to Parents Exod. 21 to Magistrates He that curseth his father and his mother the parents of his flesh must be vsed so and shall not he be vsed so much more that curseth the Father of his Spirit He that speaketh euill of the Ruler of the people must be vsed so and shall not he that speaketh euill of the King of Kings and Lord of Lords The comparison maketh Quicunque in GODS case to be most iust To which root we shall refer your Blasphemie that are the penitent I know not in charitie we hope the best we hope that it commeth from a mixture of grosse ignorance and vnruly passions for these doe rayse euill thoughts and murmurings That it doth so let it appeare in your repentance St Paul in conscience of his Fall by ignorance gaue himselfe no better a title when he had occasion to mention it then Maximus peccatorum the most grieuous of sinners euen when he lead a most holy life he could not forget his fall in the hight of GODS grace And of St Peter the Ecclesiasticall Storie reports that at the crowing of the Cocke the Remembrancer of his Fall euerie night during his life he did wash his bed and water his couch with his penitent teares GOD make you so mindfull and so sorrowfull otherwise you will betray that your Blasphemie sprang from malice and then be sure that the same GOD that commanded such seueritie to be executed here on earth will himselfe execute much greater vpon all those which through irrepentance goe to Hell Yea haply he may euen in this world make you a Spectacle of a forlorne wretch to the terrour of others as he did Sennacherib Hercdot ●●b 8. vpon whose Statua there is this Inscription 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let euerie one that looketh vpon me learne to be godly Such a Spectacle I say may he make you if by often recounting and bewayling of this crying sin you doe not quench the fire of his wrath and preuent his iudgements For God will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his Name in vaine The last point is that it must be done without all indulgence Moriendo morietur he shall surely dye surely be stoned We may not with Eue turne surely into ne fortè lest the Diuel worke vpon vs and we prouoke GOD as Saul did in Agags case and Ahab in Benadads You haue heard the Law A word of those to whom it was giuen and so I end In the entrance of my Text you find that it was giuen to the Israelites the Israelites were the people of GOD and surely it concernes them if any to be most zealous of his glorie who is their Glorie But did it concerne them onely Then it is dissolued because their Common-weale is at an end Take therefore a Rule That if a Law which in the institution thereof was Nationall to the Iewes in the equitie of it be Oecumenicall euerie Christian nation is bound to giue it a Reuiuor though they may varie the punishment as they find it expedient for their State And indeed this hath receiued such a reuiuor in most Christian States Iustinian the Emperour of Constantinop●e made it capitall The wise Gothes inflicted an hundred stripes for it and in disgrace shaued the delinquents head and beard and imprisoned him during life Fredericke the Emperour cut out the tongue of all that offended in this kind St Lewis of France caused their tongue to be bored with a hot Iron wishing that his owne tongue might be so vsed if euer he did blaspheme Philip of Vuloys caused their lips to be slit And touching our owne State I haue nothing to say in excuse thereof for that it hath all this while left this sinne onely to Ecclesiasticall censure and hath not prouided some corporall punishment for it but that of Solon who being demanded why he made no Law against Parricide answered that he thought none in his Common-weale would euer be so impious to commit it So I thinke our State thought there would neuer rise such lewd persons amongst vs But seeing there doe it is high time we had some sharpe occasionall Statute to represse them If holy Iob were so carefull to sacrifice for and sanctifie his sonnes ne fortè lest peraduenture they had sinned with what zeale should we be stirred vp when we see the fact is most apparent I conclude Let all Blasphemie be put out of all our mouthes yea and hearts also and let vs pray GOD to set a watch before our lips and keepe the doore of our mouthes that his grace may rule in our hearts that he may be our feare and his prayse may be our talke that praysing him here on Earth we may be admitted into the number of his Saints which with heart and voyce prayse him for euermore in Heauen A penitent Prayer for a Blasphemer MOST Sacred and most dread Almightie Euerlasting God to whom the Angels continually doe cry Holy holy holy Lord God of Hoasts the glorie of whose admirable and comfortable wisedome reacheth from one end of the world to another mightily and sweetly ordereth all things J the vnworthiest of men the most grieuous of sinners humbly sorrowfully prostrating my deiected disconsolate both soule and body before thy holy eyes pray that the sighes and groanes of a broken and contrite heart may not be excluded from thine offended eares Lord J haue beene deepe in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquitie Sathan hath filled my heart therewith and out of the aboundance thereof my tongue hath sent forth many flashes euen of the fire of Hell as a brood of the Serpent J haue set my mouth against Heauen J haue blasphemed the holy the reuerend Name of my God and vilified his vnchangeable vnchallengable Prouidence Haddest thou dealt with me as I deserued fire and brimstone from Heauen should haue consumed me or the Earth should haue gaped and swallowed me downe quicke into the pit of Hell J deserued to be made a spectacle of thy iust vengeance that gracelesse wretches seeing my iudgement might feare my offence J confesse this ô Lord J confesse it vnfainedly penitently but woe is me if J haue no more to confesse but these my euill deserts Thy long-suffering towards me putteth me in better hope yea this medicinall confusion whereunto thou now puttest me puts me in good hope that thou hast not forgotten to be mercifull vnto me neither hast thou shut vp thy tender mercie in displeasure Lord J doe not despise this goodnesse of thine that leads me to repentance that workes in me remorce of conscience And from that penitent Blasphemer that proued a most worthy Apostle from his mouth doe J take vnto my selfe that saying worthy of all men to be receiued That Iesus Christ came into the world to saue
their sinnes offend God and if they offend they shall be punished because God is not onely sensible of his wrongs but also Iudge of our liues as he hath prescribed the precepts of his Law so hath hee added sanctions thereunto and as the precept sheweth what we must doe so what he will doe we learne out of the Sanction if we faile to obey thou O Lord wilt not faile to strike for there is Wrath with thee and from thee will that wrath breake out on vs. And woe be to vs if it breake out for thy wrath O God is a powerfull wrath And indeed how can it be otherwise if it be thine who art a God of power Can wee looke into thee and not apprehend Almightinesse in thee But our eyes are too weake to pierce so farre happily in that that comes from thee a naturall man may behold what power there is in thee Heauen and earth are the worke of thy hands nay they are the Host that attends thy Person if they are mightie thou much more for what they haue thou gauest them and in proofe thereof thou takest from them at thy pleasure As the Sunne did shine first at thy command so at thy command it hath lost his light it was from thee the fire receiued his burning qualitie and when thou forbaddest it it could not burne thou madest the waters flow thou spakest but the word and they were sollid like a wall Thou fixedst the Globe of the earth and it stood still and when thou didst vtter thy voice it quaked it trembled for very feare when thou sendest foorth thy spirit thou renewest the face of the earth and all things wither and returne to nothing if thou with-draw thy spirit How powerful then art thou O Lord at whose command is the power of euerie creature and fighteth for thee against thine enemies The Sunne can scorch them the fire consume them the aire poyson them the earth swallow them and how many spectacles haue we of such Iudgements But what speake I of these greater souldiers of thine and weapons of thy wrath How many beasts in the fields How many birds of the ayre How many fishes in the Sea haue vndertaken Gods cause against man and executed remarkable Iudgements vpon sinners But I doe not yet come home enough hee that readeth the plagues of Aegypt and considers what a destruction God wrought by frogs and flies and lice the least whereof wrested a submission from Pharaoh and his Kingdome and forced them to confesse their vnablenesse to resist can he choose but be amazed at the sight of Gods power when these creatures so farre in their owne nature vnder the power of man when he commands them to be his Executioners so farre ouermatch the stoutest of men But what looke I without vs for the sinnewes of Gods wrath What sinnewes may wee find euerie man within himselfe If God bee pleased to reward vs according to our deseruings he shall need no other we wil doe him this seruice our selues Our wits will not only faile vs but insnare vs our hearts will be so farre from eschewing that they will carrie vs headlong into all mischiefe our eyes will see fearefull visions our eares bee filled with dreadfull sounds our tongues will betray vs our feete miscarrie vs our hands offer uiolence vnto vs no power of our soule no part of our bodie wherewith we haue conceiued or acted sinne that will not lay on some deadly stroke vpon vs for sinne But of all the souldiers of God wherin we are most feelingly to behold the Power of his wrath there is none comparable to our owne Conscience which laieth on so heauie a burden and peirceth with so deadly a sting that there is no man whom it cannot crush with its waight and which will not runne mad if he throughly feele the smart thereof I will not draw a man down into hell where into notwithstanding wrath will tumble sinfull man I might there shew him vtter darknesse the priuation of that light which shineth in heauen vnquenchable fire in opposition to the Waters of life that streame in heauen the weeping and wailing insteed of the endlesse musicke that is aboue the murmuring gnashing of teeth insteed of the triumphant songs of blessed Soules finally the tormented and tormenting fiends insteed of the blessed Sain●s and Angels that are aboue And what are all these but euidences of the power of Gods wrath And is the power so large so palpable and yet vnknowne Can it be such and yet not discerned of man If he climbe into heauen God manifesteth it there and he finds it in earth if his thoughts fal thither neither can he descend into hell but there he shal meete it nay he must goe from himselfe or else God will force him to behold it Why then doth thy seruant Moses moue this question who knoweth it Is it not because men doe not heed it and so though they should yet take no notice of it And indeed Lord if any be ignorant his ignorance is inexcusable and yet some such beasts rather then men are there that are willing not to know what they are not willing to regard Or if men be not so grosse as thus to winke with their eyes that they may stupifie their hearts yet do their lusts dim their sight and they see so imperfectly that they they are but weakly affected with it Hence cōmeth it to passe that thy minatorie words and works stay so few from falling into sin and reclaime so few that are fallen there into they do not belieue that thou wilt strike vntill they feele thy stroakes are on them The Israelites would not as Moses had good proofe for fortie yeere and wee are no better then they though our triall hath beene much onger then theirs we haue no vsefull knowledge of the wrathfull power of God This question may well bee moued of vs euen of vs to whom God hath vouchsafed the same power ouer his wrath our little feare argueth our little knowledge and we may not thinke that we haue any true knowledge which doth not end in feare such a feare as can hold Gods hand or at least moderate his stroake is the onely argument that wee haue profited in that schoole of the great and lesser world wherein we haue so full so plaine a Lecture read vnto vs of the powerfull wrath of God A Meditation vpon Psalme 90. VERSE 12. So teach vs to number our dayes that we may applie our hearts vnto wisedome THE SECOND PART THou dost manifest thy power O Lord and we are the monuments of it our mortalitie is therein are grauen the capitall Letters that describe thy powerfull wrath For what is mortalitie but a reall voice in our eares or presenting rather vnto our eyes the doome of sinne Thou madest vs immortall and immortalitie was a part of thy Image which art eternall our time then had no terme it could not be defined by any kind of period But