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A00593 Clavis mystica a key opening divers difficult and mysterious texts of Holy Scripture; handled in seventy sermons, preached at solemn and most celebrious assemblies, upon speciall occasions, in England and France. By Daniel Featley, D.D. Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1636 (1636) STC 10730; ESTC S121363 1,100,105 949

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Joh. 6.10 11 12 13. multiplyed the loaves and fishes hee gave this sensible and undeniable proofe of the truth of this miracle both by saturitie in the stomacks of the people and by substantiall remnants thereof in the baskets When they were filled saith the Evangelist hee said to his disciples Gather the fragments that remaine that nothing be lost Therefore they gathered them together and filled twelve baskets with the fragments of the five barley loaves which remained over and above to them that had eaten Cloven tongues The holy Ghost which now first appeared in the likenesse of tongues moved the tongues of all the Prophets that have spoken since the world began For the l 2 Pet. 1.21 prophecie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost Of all the parts of the body God especially requireth two the heart the tongue the heart whereby m Rom. 10.10 man beleeveth unto righteousnesse and the tongue whereby he maketh confession unto salvation the heart to love God the tongue to praise him Out of which consideration the Heathen as Plutarch observeth dedicated the Peach-tree to the Deitie because the fruit thereof resembleth the heart of man and the leafe his tongue And to teach us that the principall use of our tongue is to sound out the praises of our maker the Hebrew calleth the tongue Cobod that is glory as My heart was glad n Psal 16.9 30.13 57.9 Buxtorph Epit radic and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my tongue also Hebrew my glory also rejoyceth They who glorifie not God with their tongue may be truly said to have no tongue in the Hebrew language and verily they deserve no tongues who make them not silver trumpets to sound out the glory of God And if such forfeit their tongues how much more doe they who whet them against God and his truth whose mouths are full of cursing and bitternesse direfull imprecations and blasphemous oathes These have fierie tongues but not kindled from heaven but rather as S. o Chap. 3.6 James speaketh set on fire of hell and their tongues also are cloven by schisme faction and contention not as these in my text for a mysticall signification Cloven Some by cloven understand linguas bifidas two-forked tongues and they will have them to be an embleme of discretion and serpentine wisdome others linguas dissectas slit tongues like the tongues of such birds as are taught to speake and these conceive them to have beene an embleme of eloquence For such kinde of tongues p Hieroglyph l. 33. Pierius affirmeth that the Heathen offered in sacrifice to Mercurie their god of eloquence and they made them after a sort fierie by casting them into the fire ad expurgandas perperam dictorum labes to purge out the drosse of vain discourses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the originall it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tongues parted at the top but joyned at the roote and they represented saith q In Act. Quia in proximo debebant dividi in omnes terras Gorrhan the dispersion of the Apostles which after ensued into all countries These tongues were not of fire but As it were of fire The matter of which these tongues consisted was not grosse and earthly but aeriall or rather heavenly like the fire which r Exod. 3.2 Moses saw in the bush for as that so this had the light but not the burning heat of fire It is not said of fires in the plurall but of fire in the singular number because as the silver trumpets were made all of one piece so these twelve tongues were made of one fierie matter to illustrate the diversitie of gifts proceeding from the same spirit And it sate Sitting in the proper sense is a bodily gesture and agreeth not to tongues or fire yet because it is a gesture of permanencie or continuance the word is generally used in the originall for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ſ Chrys in Act. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to abide or reside and so it may expresse unto us the continuance of these gifts of the Spirit in the Apostles and may put us in minde of our dutie which is to sit to our preaching and continue in the labours of the ministrie Give t 1 Tim. 4.13 14 15. attendance saith the Apostle to reading to exhortation to doctrine Neglect not the gift that is in thee which was given thee by prophecie with the laying on of the hands of the presbyterie Meditate upon these things give thy selfe wholly to them that thy profiting may appeare to all Upon each of them Whether these tongues entred into the mouths of the Apostles as Amphilochius writeth of S. Basil or rested upon their heads as S. Cyril imagined whence some derive the custome of u Lorinus in Act. c. 2. imposition of hands upon the heads of those who are consecrated Bishops or ordained Priests it is not evident out of the text but this is certaine and evident that it sate upon each of them It sate not upon Peter onely but upon the rest as well as him S. Chrysostome saith upon the * Chrys in act c. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hundred and twentie that were assembled in that upper roome those who say least affirme that it rested upon all the Apostles For howsoever the Papists take all occasions to advance S. Peter above the rest of the Apostles that the Roman See might be advanced through him as Hortensius the Oratour extolled eloquence to the skies that hee might bee lifted up thither with her yet the Scripture giveth him no preheminence here or elsewhere for Christ delivereth the keyes of heaven with the power of binding and loosing into all x Matt. 18.18 Whatsoever ye binde on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever yee loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven of their hands he breathes vpon them all John 20.21 22. and sendeth them with as full commission as his Father sent him All their names shine in the y Apoc. 21.14 foundation and gates of the heavenly Jerusalem and here in my text fierie cloven tongues sate upon each of them And there appeared unto them c. As in the Sacrament of Christs body so in these symbols of the spirit we are to consider two things 1. The signes or outward elements 2. The thing signified by them Of the signes yee have heard heretofore hold out I beseech you your religious attention to the remainder of the time and yee shall heare in briefe of the thing signified by them Miracles for the most part in holy Scripture are significant the cloudie pillar signified the obscure knowledge of Christ under the Law the pillar of fire the brighter knowledge of him in the Gospell the renting of the veile at the death of our Saviour the opening of the way to the Sanctum Sanctorum into which our high
e●antutique caeteri Apostoli quod fuit Petrus pari consortio praediti honoris potestatis Cyprian makes an inference from these words for which the Popes have looked awry upon him ever since The inference is this Christ after his resurrection gave all his Apostles equall power saying as my father sent me so I send you receive ye the holy Ghost whose sinnes yee remit they are remitted Here lest any addicted to the Papacy might thrust upon the Martyrs words this meaning that Christ gave all the Apostles equall authority among themselves but not equall to Peter their head he addeth the rest of the Apostles were the same that Peter was admitted into an equall fellowship both of honour and power Marke I beseech you the Martyr speakes here not of a priviledge or singularitie but a society consortio not a superiority but a parity pari and this parity both in honour honoris and of power also potestatis where there is a parity in honour there can be no preheminencie where there is a parity in power there can be no supremacy Where then will our Adversaries fasten Upon those words of Christ u Mat. 16.18 Thou art Peter and upon this rocke will I build my Church St. Austin beats them off this hold expounding the rocke of Christ not of Peter thus Upon me I x August in haec verba Super me aedificabo te non super te aedificabo me will build thee not me upon thee Yet if we should leave it them the building upon Peter or laying him in the foundation of the Church will no more make him the supreme head of the Church than the rest of the Apostles for we read of y Apoc. 21.14 And the wall of the Citie had 12. foundations and in them the names of the 12. Apostles of the Lambe twelve foundations upon which the heavenly Jerusalem is built on which the names of the twelve Apostles were engraven and of more also now therefore saith he ye are no more strangers and forreiners but fellow Citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God and are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and z E●hes 2. ●0 Of more Prophets From whence Saint a Jer adver Lucifer Super omnes ex aequo Ecclesiae fortitudo solidatur Jerome inferreth that the strength of the Church is solidly founded and equally built upon all the Apostles Will they fasten upon the promise made to Peter Mat. 16.19 whatsoever thou shalt binde on earth shall be bound in heaven these words might carry some shew of a priviledge granted to S. Peter if S. Matthew and the other Apostles were not joyned in Patent with him z Mat. 18.18 whatsoever yee shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and * Joh. 20.23 whose soever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them The last refuge to which our adversaries flye is that text a Joh. 21.15 Feede my lambs feede my sheep Which charge of our Saviours makes nothing for Peters supremacy Peter himselfe being Interpreter for what Christ gives him he gives all Elders in charge b Pet. 5.2 Feed the flocke of God which is among you If feede my sheepe make Peter an oecumenicall Pastor then feede the flocke of Christ spoken in like manner to all Elders makes them oecumenicall Pastors If the word pasce when it is spoken to Peter signifies rule as a Monarch then pascite feede yee spoken by S. Peter to Elders must likewise bee interpreted rule yee over the Flocke of God and Church of Christ as Monarchs For as c Cic. orat pro Cecinna Nunquam obtinebis ubi tu volueris verba interdicti valere oportere ubi tu nolueris non oportere Tully spake to Ebutius so may I say to Bellarmine you shall never perswade any man of understanding that words must signifie what you will have them and conclude nothing but what you will inferre from them that the word pasce or feede when it serveth your purpose must be taken for to beare rule over the whole Church and when it serveth not then it must signifie nothing but teach as every Pastor doth Had the Apostles so understood the words of our Saviour to Saint Peter Upon this rocke will I build my house and To thee I will give the keyes of the Kingdome of heaven as the Church of Rome at this day doth viz. I will appoint thee Head of all the Apostles and visible Monarch of the Church and infallible Judge of all controversies they would never have contended as they did afterwards d Luk. 20.24 which of them should bee counted greatest they would never have taken upon them to send him e Act. 8.14 Now when the Apostles which were at Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of God they sent unto them Peter and John with John It is not the manner of Subjects to send their Soveraignes in Embassages or messages much lesse joyne any other of their Subjects in equall commission with them as the Apostles doe John with Peter Had the Church in the Apostles time understood that our Saviour by that charge Pasce oves meas Feed my sheep made Peter universall Pastor of the whole world and by his prayer for him that his Faith might not faile priviledged him from all possibility of errour they would have rested upon his resolution in the first f Act. 15.11 Synode Saint James would never have presumed to speake after him in the great point which was then in controversie nor have added a distinct Head or Canon of his owne That the Gentiles should abstaine from pollution of Idols and from fornication and from things strangled and from bloud The Apostolicall letter should have beene indorsed not as it was The Apostles and Elders and Brethren but Peter Christs Vicar and Monarch of the Church and the Apostles his Counsellours or after the like manner Had Saint Paul beleeved Saint Peter to be Head of the Church he would never have g Gal. 2.11 withstood him to the face as hee did at Antioch much lesse have stood upon even tearmes with him as he doth saying h 2 Cor. 12.11 In nothing am I behinde the very chiefest Apostles and i Gal. 2.6 they who seemed to be pillars added nothing to mee and ver 7. the Gospell of the uncircumcision was committed to mee as the Gospell of the circumcision was to Peter If any mans eyes are so dazeled with the lustre of the Popes triple Crowne that hee cannot see Pauls equality to Peter in the letter of the text yet hee cannot but see it in the Fathers Commentaries k Ambros in comment 2 Cor. 12. Hoc dicit quia non est minor neque in praedicatione neque in signis faciendis nec dignitate sed tempore Chry. in 2 Cor. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle speaketh on this wise saith Saint Ambrose that or because he is not
not to make satisfaction so long as he held the sterne right and guided it by the compasse in like maner though our actions and good intentions miscarrie in the event we are not to be blamed if we steered our course by the compasse of Gods word though the barke be cast away as St. Pauls was the lives of all in it shall be safe and our temporall losses shall alway turne to our spirituall and eternall advantage Yea but God is in heaven we are upon earth how may we come to have speech with him or open our case to him or receive answer from him The Jewes had two meanes to receive answer from him either by the mouth of the Prophets when the spirit was on them or from the Priests when they had put on the breast-plate of judgement we have no such meanes now to enquire the will of God neither are visions nor dreames by which men in former times understood the pleasure of God now either frequent or undoubted oracles of truth yet have we still meanes to advise with God both by prayer and consulting the holy Scriptures Of the former St. James speaketh ſ Jam. 1.5 If any man lacke wisedome that is counsell and direction in his affaires let his aske it of God that giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shal be given him But let him aske in faith nothing wavering c. Of the second the Prophet David t Psal 119.24 Thy testimonies are my delight and my counsellers in the Hebrew men of my counsell Having now composed the presse what remains but to clap it to the sheets and labour by a word of exhortation to print some of these rules in your harts Be wise now c. Be wise 1. In the choice of your wisdome 2. Be instructed in the means of your instruction make choice of the wisdome that commeth from above from the Father of lights not that which commeth from beneath from the Prince of darkness receive instruction from the spirit not from the flesh from God not from the world so shall you be wise unto salvation and instructed to eternal life Be your selves clients and sutors to God before your clients and sutors have accesse unto you ask counsel of him before you give counsell to them and content not your selves with the waters of the brooke or rivelet but have recourse to the u Cic. de orat l. 2. Tard● est ingeni● rivulos consectari fontes rerum non videre fountain Now the fountaine of all law is the wisedome of God as the wisest of the heathen Law-givers in effect acknowledged it Zamolxis ascribing the lawes he delivered to the people to Vesta Zoroaster to Hormasis Trismegistus to Mercurie Lycurgus to Apollo Solon to Minerva Numa to the Nymph Aegeria Minos to Jupiter If time be well spent in searching records of Courts and evidences of conveyances and titles of lands how much better in searching the holy Scriptures which are the records of heaven the deeds of Almighty God and evidences of our salvation Who would not search where he may be sure to find treasure In Scriptures you may be sure to finde it wherein all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge are hid the treasures of naturall Philosophy in Genesis of morall Philosophy in Exodus Deuteronomie and Ecclesiastes of the Politickes in the Judicials of Moses and the Proverbes of Solomon of Poetry in the Psalmes of History in the bookes of Chronicles Judges and Kings of the Mathematickes in the dimensions of the Arke and Temple of the Metaphysickes in the bookes of the Prophets and the Apocalyps Doe you desire that the tree of your knowledge in the Law should spread farre and neere and that all men should shade themselves under your boughes Water the root of the tree which beareth up your lawes and sendeth sap and life to all the branches thereof and that is true religion for x Psal 111.10 the feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedome and a good understanding and care have all they that follow after it First to look to the maine chance and provide for their eternall estate in another world next to learne certainly that they are in state of grace here thirdly to observe where they are weakest and there to strengthen themselves against the assaults of the enemie fourthly to make use of the historie of the world and comment upon the speciall workes of Gods providence lastly to entertaine God his Prophets and Apostles for their learned counsell to direct them in all their suits in the Court of heaven and managing all their weightiest affaires on earth so shall they be sure to attain that which David so earnestly sought of God by prayer saying y Psal 73.24 Guide me by thy counsell and after that receive me to thy glory To whom c. THE JUDGES CHARGE A Sermon preached at the Readers Feast in LINCOLNES Inne THE NINTH SERMON PSAL. 2.10 Be instructed or learned yee Judges of the earth Right Honourable Right Worshipfull c. AT the siege of Tarentum a Aelian de Var. hist l. 5. when the Citizens were driven by extremitie of famine to the point of yeelding themselves into the hands of the Romans they were strangely relieved by the charity of their neighbours at Rhegium who every tenth day fasted themselves and sent in their provision for that day to the Tarentines In memory of which reliefe they kept ever after a feast which they called Jejunium o● Festum jejunii the Fasts feast or a feast grounded on a fast Such is the Feast bid at this time in this place gained by a long prescription out of the Lent Fast It may rightly be called Festum Jejunii the Feast of the Fast a Feast of the Law beside if not contrarie to the Law of Feasts appointed by the Church Wherein yet I conceive according to the right meaning of the first founders of this exercise and Feast the Ecclesiasticall cannons of the Church and locall statutes of these houses doe not harshly clash one against the other but rather like strings tuned alike and dexterously touched make a perfect chord and strike full unisons both intending Festum Jejunii the one a spirituall the other a scholasticall the one an Evangelicall the other a Legall Feast in the time of Fast For the Church appointeth more frequent exercises of pietie and devotion Prayers Lectures and Sermons which are the soules dainties at this time than any other season of the yeere And agreeable hereunto in the Universities which are the Nurseries of Religion and Arts and in these noble Seminaries of justice and knowledge in the lawes the most solemne and profitable exercises for the proficiencie of students whether readings disputations or determinations have beene time out of minde and are yet performed in the Lent wherein the eye of the soule is the more apt and single for the contemplation of divine and humane knowledge by how much it is
in Lambeth Chappell A.D. 1622. March 23. THE TENTH SERMON JOHN 20.22 And when hee had said this hee breathed on them and saith unto them receive yee the holy Ghost Most Reverend Right Honourable Right Reverend Right Worshipfull c. A Diamond is not cut but by the point of a Diamond nor the sunne-beame discerned but by the light of the beame nor the understanding faculty of the soule apprehended but by the faculty of understanding nor can the receiving of the holy Ghost bee conceived or delivered without receiving in some a Aug tract 16. in Joh. Adsit ipse spiritus ut sic eloqui possimus degree that holiest Spirit b Ci● de mat Qui eloquentiam laudat debet illam ipsam adhibere quam l●●dat Hee that will blazon the armes of the Queen of affections Eloquence must borrow her own pencill and colours nor may any undertake to expound this text and declare the power of this gift here mentioned but by the gift of this power Wherefore as in the interpretation of other inspired Scriptures wee are humbly to intreat the assistance of the Inspirer so more especially in the explication and application of this which is not onely effectivè à spiritu but also objectivè de spiritu not onely indited and penned as all other by the spirit but also of the spirit This of all other is a most mysterious text which being rightly understood and pressed home will not only remove the weaker fence betweene us and the Greeke Church touching the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Sonne but also beat downe and demolish the strong and high partition wall betweene the reformed and the Romane Church built upon S. Peters supremacy For if Christ therefore used the Ceremony of breathing upon his Apostles with this forme of words Receive yee the Holy Ghost as it were of set purpose visibly to represent the proceeding of the holy Spirit from himselfe why should not the Greeke Church acknowledge with us the eternall emanation of the holy Ghost from the Sonne as well as the Father and acknowledging it joyne with us in the fellowship of the same spirit Our difference and contestation with the Church of Rome in point of S. Peters primacy is far greater I confesse For the head of all controversies between us and them is the controversie concerning the head of the Church Yet even this how involved soever they make it may be resolved by this text alone For if Christ sent all his Apostles as his Father sent him if he breathed indifferently upon all if he gave his spirit and with it full power of remittting and retaining sinnes to them all then is there no ground here for S. Peters jurisdiction over the rest much lesse the Popes and if none here none elsewhere as the sequell will shew For howsoever Cajetan and Hart and some few Papists by jingling Saint Peters c Mat. 16.19 Keyes and distinguishing of a key 1 Of knowledge 2 Of power and this 1 Of order 2 Of jurisdiction and that 1 In foro exteriori the outward court 2 Foro interiori the inward court of conscience goe about to confound the harmony of the Evangelists who set all the same tune but to a different key yet this is confessed on all sides by the Fathers Hilary Jerome Austine Anselme and by the Schoole-men Lumbard Aquinas Allensis and Scotus alledged by Cardinall d Bellar. de Rom. pont l. 1. c. 12. Bellarmine that what Christ promised to Peter e Mat. 16. he performed and made good to him here but here the whole f Hieronymus adver Lucifer Cuncti claves accipiunt super omnes ex aequô ecclesiae fortitudo solidatur bunch of keyes is offered to all the Apostles and all of them receive them all are joyned with S. Peter as well in the mission as my Father sent mee so I send you as in the Commission Lastly as this text containes a soveraigne Antidote against the infection of later heresies so also against the poyson of the more ancient and farther spread impieties of Arrius and Macedonius whereof the one denyed the divinity and eternity of the Sonne the other of the holy Ghost both whose damnable assertions are confuted by consequence from this text For if Christ by breathing giveth the holy Ghost and by giving the holy Ghost power of remitting sinne then must Christ needs bee God for who but God can give or send a divine person The holy Ghost also from hence is proved to be God for who can g Mar. 2.7 or Esay 43.25 forgive sinnes but God alone So much is our faith indebted to this Scripture yet our calling is much more for what can bee spoken more honourably of the sacred function of Bishops and Priests than that the investiture and admittance into it is the receiving of the holy Ghost * Primum in unoquoque genere est mensura regula caeterorum The first action in every kind of this nature is a president to all the rest as all the furniture of the Ceremoniall law was made according to the first patterne in the Mount such is this consecration in my text the originall and patterne of all other wherein these particulars invite your religious attention 1 The person consecrating Christ the chiefe Bishop of our soules 2 The persons consecrated The Apostles the prime Pastours of the Church 3 The holy action it selfe set forth 1 With a mysterious rite he breathed on them 2 A sanctified forme of words receive ye the holy Ghost 1 First for the person consecrating All Bishops are consecrated by him originally to whom they are consecrated all Priests are ordained by him to whom they are ordained Priests the power which they are to employ for him they receive from him to whom h Matth. 28.18 all power is given both in heaven and in earth By vertue of which deed of gift he maketh i Matth. 10.2 choice of his ministers and hee sendeth them with authority k J●h 20.21 as my Father sent me so I send you And hee furnisheth them with gifts saying receive yee the holy Ghost and enableth them with a double power of order to l Matth. 28.19 Teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 11.24 This do in the remembrance of me preach and administer both the sacraments and of jurisdiction also Matth. 18.18 Verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall bee bound in heaven and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven And that this sacred order is to continue in the Church and this spirituall power in this order even till Christ resigneth up his keyes and kingdome to God his Father S. Paul assureth us Eph. 4.10.11.12 Hee that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens that he might fill all things and he gave some
grant at the suite and for the merit of Jesus Christ and him crucified to whom with the Father and blessed Spirit bee rendered all glory praise and thanksgiving now and for ever Amen THE TREE OF LIFE SPRINGING OUT OF THE GRAVE OR Primitiae Sepulchri A Spitall Sermon preached on Munday in Easter weeke April 22. THE THIRTEENTH SERMON 1 COR. 15.20 But now Christ is risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that slept Right Honourable c. Plin. in panegyr Aegyptus gloriata est se nihil imbribus coeloque debere Siquidem proprio semper amne perfusa tantis segetibus induebatur ut cum feracissimis terris quasi nunquam cessura certaret PLiny the younger writeth of Egypt that she was wont to boast how shee owed nothing to the clouds or any forreine streames for her fertility being abundantly watered by the sole inundation of her owne river Nylus A like or greater priviledge it must bee confessed this renowned City hath for a long time enjoyed in that she hath not beene indebted to any wandering clouds nor needeth shee to fetch the water of life from any forreine river or neighbour spring being richly stored by the overflowing industry and learning of her most able and painefull Preachers within her selfe filling not onely the lesser cisternes of private congregations but the greater also of these most celebrious and solemne assemblies And for mine owne part so let the life blasts of the spirit refresh me in the sweat of my holy labours and the dew of heavenly benediction fall upon your religious eares as I never sought this place nor am come hither to make ostentation of any so much as conceived gifts in mee nor to broach any new opinions of mine or any other nor to set before you any forbidden fruit though never so sweet and to a well conditioned stomacke wholesome nor to smooth or levell the uneven wayes of any who plow in the Lords field with an oxe and an asse much lesse to gaine vulgar applause or spring an hidden veyne of unknowne contribution by traducing the publicke proceedings in the State or Church but onely in obedience to the call of lawfull authority to build you in your most holy faith and elevate your devotion to the due celebration of this high feast of our Lords resurrection and by crying as loud as I am able to awake those that sleepe in sinfull security that they may stand up from the dead and Christ may give them and us all light of knowledge joy and comfort Which that I may bee enabled to performe I humbly entreat the concurrence of your patience with your prayers to God for his assistance in opening the scripture now read in your eares But now Christ is risen c. This is no sterill or barren text you heare of fruits in it and although the harvest thereof hath beene reaped by many Labourers before mee yet there remaine good gleanings for mee also and those that shall leaze after me even till the Angels shall thrust their sickle into the large field of the ripe world and reape the reapers themselves The fruit is of two sorts 1 Christs prerogative 2 The deceased Saints priviledge who in their degree participate with him Hee is above them yet with them hee is the first-fruits and they are the rest of the heape and a Rom. 11.16 if the first fruits bee holy the whole heape is holy The ground which beareth this fruit Occasio scopus is the doctrine of the resurrection from the dead which the Apostle like a provident husbandman first fenceth and maketh sure and after breaketh and layeth it downe Hee fenceth it from the beginning of this chapter to the 35. verse by invincible arguments confirming the truth of the resurrection afterwards to the end of the chapter he layeth it downe by apt and lively similitudes declaring the manner thereof And this hee doth with much vehemency and contention of arguments his zeale being kindled through blasts of contradiction by some in the Church of Corinth who directly denyed the former verse 12. and obliquely carped at the latter verse 35. Neither did these alone at Corinth as much as in them lay subvert this maine article of our faith b 2 Tim. 2.18 but Hymeneus and Philetus with others at Ephesus perverted the sense of it saying that the resurrection was past already Obser 1 Whence I first observe against Bellarmine Parsons and other Papists that the Divell tyed not himselfe as they have surmized to any rule of method ex occas in laying his batteries against the articles of the Creed in order For the resurrection of the flesh is the last article save one yet hereticall impiety as you have heard first ventured on it Howbeit the Cardinal that he might more conveniently tye all whom hee supposeth Heretickes in one chaine and thrust us into the lowest place c Bellar. orat habit in Gymnas Ro● anno 1576. H●manigeneris ostis e●itotus alioqui perversus ordinis perturbator esse soleat tamen non sine aliquo ordine catholicae ecclesiae veritatem oppugnate vol●●t c. beareth his Reader in hand that the enemy of mankinde albeit in other things hee bee a disturber of order yet in impeaching the Apostles creed hath kept a kind of order 1 For within 200. yeeres after Christ hee assaulted the first article concerning God the Father almighty maker of heaven and earth by the Simonians Menandrians Basilidians Valentinians Marcionites Manichees and severall kinde of Gnostickes 2 After 200. yeeres hee set upon the second article concerning the divine nature of Christ by the Praxeans Noetians Sabellians and Samosetanians 3 In the next age he opposed the divine person of our Saviour by the Photineans Arrians and Eunomians 4 From 400. to 800. he impugned the third fourth fifth sixth and seventh concerning the incarnation passion resurrection ascension of our Lord and his comming to judgement by the Nestorians Theodorians Eutychians Acephali Sergians and Paulians 5 From the yeere 800. to 1000. hee bid battell to the eighth article concerning the holy Ghost by the schisme and heresie of the Graecians 6 Lastly from the 1000. yeere to this present age hee hath oppugned the ninth and tenth articles concerning the catholicke Church and remission of sinnes by the Berengarians Petrobrusians Waldenses Albigenses Wicklefists Hussites Lutherans Zuinglians Confessionists Hugonites and Anabaptists Refut Were these calculations exact and observations true the Cardinall deserved to bee made Master of ceremonies amongst heretickes for so well ranking them But upon examination of particulars it will appeare that his skill in history is no better than his divinity To begin where hee endeth First hee most falsly and wrongfully chargeth the worthy standard-bearers of the reformed religion before Luther with the impeaching the ninth and tenth articles of the creede They impeach neither of them nor any other nay they will sooner part with the best limbe of
where divers candles or torches in a roome concurre to enlighten the place the light of them remaineth impermixt as the Optickes demonstrate by their severall shadowes so all the divine graces conjoyne their lustre and vertue to adorne and beautifie the inward man yet their nature remaines distinct as their speciall effects make it evident to a single and sharp-sighted eye God was in the bush that burned and consumed not yet God was not the bush The holy Ghost was in the fiery cloven tongues yet the holy Ghost was not the tongues The spirits runne along in the arteries with the purer and refined blood yet the spirits are not the blood The fire insinuateth it selfe into all the parts of melted metall and to the eye nothing appeareth but a torrent of fire yet the fire is not the metall in like manner zeale shineth and flameth in devotion love godly jealousie indignation and other sanctified desires and affections it enflameth them as fire doth metall it stirreth and quickeneth them as the spirits doe the blood yet zeale is not those passions neither are all or any of them zeale howsoever the schooles rather out of zeale of knowledge than knowledge of zeale have determined the contrary 2 Secondly zeale is defined to bee not a morall vertue but a divine gift or grace of the Spirit the Spirit of God is the efficient cause and the Spirit of man is the subject which the Apostle intimates in that phrase i Rom. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being fervent or zealous in Spirit This fire like that of the Vestals is kindled from heaven by the beames of the Sunne of righteousnesse not from any kitchen on earth much lesse from hell They therefore qui irae suae stimulum zelum putant they who imagine the flashes of naturall choler are flames of spirituall zeale toto coelo errant are as farre from the marke as heaven is distant from the earth No naturall or morall temper much lesse any unnaturall and vitious distemper can commend us or our best actions to God and men as zeale doth The fire of zeale like the fire that consumed Solomons sacrifice commeth downe from heaven and true zealots are not those Salamanders or Pyrausts that alwayes live in the fire of hatred and contention but Seraphims burning with the spirituall fire of divine love who as Saint Bernard well noteth kept their ranke and station in heaven when the other Angels of Lucifers band that have their names from light fell from theirs Lucifer cecidit Seraphim stant to teach us that zeale is a more excellent grace than knowledge even in Angels that excell in both Howbeit though zeale as farre surpasse knowledge as the sunne-beame doth a glow-worme yet zeale must not be without knowledge Wherefore God commandeth the Priest when hee k Exod. 30.8 lighteth the lamps to burne incense though the fire bee quicke and the incense sweet yet God accepteth not of the burning it to him in the darke The Jewes had a zeale as the l Rom. 10.2 Apostle acknowledgeth and the Apostle himselfe before his conversion yet because it wanted knowledge it did them and the Church of God great hurt No man can bee ignorant of the direfull effects of blind zeale when an unskilfull Phaeton takes upon him to drive the chariot of the sunne hee sets the whole world in a combustion What a mettled horse is without a bridle or a hot-spurred rider without an eye or a ship in a high winde and swelling saile without a rudder that is zeale without knowledge which is like the eye in the rider to choose the way or like the bridle in the hand to moderate the pace or like the rudder in the ship to steere safely the course thereof Saint m Inser 22. in Cant. Bernard hits full on this point Discretion without zeale is slow paced and zeale without discretion is heady let therefore zeale spurre on discretion and discretion reyne zeale fervor discretionem erigat discretio fervorem regat Discretion must guide zeale as it is guided by spirituall wisedome not worldly policy and therefore Thirdly I adde in the definition of zeale that it quickeneth and enflameth all our holy desires and affections according to the direction of spirituall wisdome For wisdome must prescribe zeale when and where and how far and in what order to proceede in reforming all abuses in Church and State and performing all duties of religious piety and eminent charity What Isocrates spake sometime of valour or strength is as true of zeale viz. n Isoc ad Dem. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that zeale and resolution with wisedome doth much good but without it doth much mischiefe to our selves and others like granadoes and other fire-works which if they be not well looked to and ordered when they breake do more hurt to them that cast them than to the enemie Yet that we be not deceived in mistaking worldly policy for wisdome I adde spirituall to difference it from carnall morall or civill wisedome for they are too great coolers they will never let zeale exceed the middle temper of that * Vibius Statesman in Tiberius Court who was noted to bee a wise and grave Counseller of a faire carriage and untainted reputation but hee would o Juven sat 4. Ille igitur nunquam direxit brachia contra torrentem never strike a stroake against the streame hee would never owne any mans quarrell hee would bee sure to save one Such is the worldly wise man hee will move no stone though never so needfull to bee removed if hee apprehend the least feare that any part of the wall will fall upon himselfe The p Cic. de orat l. 1. Tempus omne post consulatum objecimus iis fluctibus qui per nos à communi peste depulsi in nosmetipsos redundarunt Romane Consul and incomparable Oratour shall bee no president for him who imployed all his force and strength to keepe off those waves from the great vessel of the State which rebounded backe againe and had neere drowned the cocke-boate of his private fortune Hee will never ingage himselfe so farre in any hot service no not though Gods honour and the safety of the Church lye at stake but that he will be sure to come off without hazzard of his life or estate Hee hath his conscience in that awe that it shall not clamour against him for not stickling in any businesse that may peradventure reflect upon his state honour or security In a word peradventure he may bee brought with much adoe to doe something for God but never to suffer any thing for him This luke-warme Laodicean disposition the lesse offensive it is to men the more odious it is to God who is a jealous God and affecteth none but those that are zealous for his glory he loveth none but those that will bee content to expose themselves to the hatred of all men for his names sake Hee q
they who are frozen in their sins were somtimes singed and thawed with the consideration of this infernall and eternall fire If they did but minde it they could not but feare it and if they feared it they would in time seeke meanes to escape it and if they sought them in time they might find them in my text And so I passe from the salting of men with fire to the seasoning of sacrifices with salt Every sacrifice shall bee salted with salt There was nothing but t 2 King 2.14 death and barrennesse in the waters of Jericho till Elisha cast salt in the springs In these waters Saint u Isidor Pelus ep 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isidore descryeth a type of our naturall estate wherein we were dead in sinnes and barren of good workes till the true Elisha Christ Jesus cast salt in the springs I meane our hearts whence are the issues of life Salt hath three most knowne properties 1 To powder 2 To season 3 To cleanse It powdereth flesh and keepeth it from putrefaction it seasoneth meats and drinkes and it cleanseth wounds fretting and eating out the corrupt matter in them And answerable hereunto there are three effects of the word mixed with faith 1 It powdereth the heart 2 It seasoneth the speech 3 It cleanseth the sores of wounded consciences Materiall salt is not more necessary in our houses than this spirituall salt in the house of God for without it no taste of goodnesse no relish of holinesse no sapour pleasing to God In some sacrifices of the old law flesh in some wine in some oyle in some meale but in all and with all salt was offered These sacrifices were not onely shadowes of the body which was Christs sacrifice on the crosse but also types of our spirituall sacrifices the meat offerings of our almes deeds whereby wee feed the hungry the drink offerings of our penitent teares the peace offerings of our praise and thanksgiving the heave offerings of our elevated desires and affections the whole burnt offering or holocaust of martyrdome for the testimony of the Gospel And as the legall sacrifices were seasoned with salt and consumed with fire so all our spirituall sacrifices must bee seasoned with the salt of discretion and consumed with the fire of zeale And because the zeale is in the man and the discretion is seene in his offering it is said Every man shall bee salted with fire and every sacrifice shall bee salted with salt To begin with the holocaust or whole burnt-offering When a servant of Christ overcommeth the violence of fire by his faith and remaines as unmoved in the torment thereof as the x Godwin in Archiep Cant. Cranmerus flammâ saeviente erectis in coelum oculis Domine suscipe spiritum meum exclamavit corpore tam immotus perstitit quam palus cui alligatus est stake at which hee is burnt in this sacrifice salt is most necessary I meane the salt of spirituall wisedome and religious discretion For a man must not offer himselfe to the mercilesse flames but being adjudged to them and by the secular arme brought to them patiently and cheerfully suffer them rather than deny the Lord that bought him No man must seale the truth of the Gospell with his blood unlesse hee bee called in as a witnesse and required to depose and then hee must not onely depose in a free profession of his faith but also deposite his life for the further confirmation of his Christian profession He that is called to suffer must in the first place consider for what he suffereth for all are not blessed that suffer but those that y Mat. 5.10 suffer for righteousnesse Blessed indeed most blessed are they that are persecuted for righteousnesse sake not those who are executed as malefactors for murder felony blasphemy schisme obstinacy or fancy None dyeth a Martyr but hee who dyeth for the faith by which the just liveth If a Jew bee scourged to death for the abrogated rites of the ceremoniall law or a Jesuited Papist hanged drawne and quartered according to the penall statutes of this kingdome for treason against the Prince in the Popes quarrell or if an Anabaptist bee burned to ashes for his fanaticall and fantasticall revelations hee dyeth the Popes or his owne Martyr not Christs His suffering as z Ep. 1. Si occisi extra ecclesiam fuerint corona fidei non est sed potius poena perfidiae Cyprian the blessed Martyr determineth the point against all heretickes is Poena perfidiae non corona fidei a punishment for his heresie or perfidiousnesse not a crowne of faith or a wreath of glory Another sacrifice of the whole man is when a devout Christian giveth up his members as servants unto righteousnesse and his whole body as a living a Rom. 12.1 sacrifice unto God in this likewise the salt of spirituall wisdome and discretion is most requisite For wee must so devote our selves to the service of God that we altogether forget not our duty to man we must so follow the things that are above that we neglect not our affaires below quit not our calling on earth much lesse in aspiring to angelicall perfection cast our selves down beneath Heathens and Infidels by casting away all care of provision for our b 1 Tim. 5.8 If any provide not for his owne and especially those of his house or kinred hee hath denied the faith and is worse than an Infidell family There was never any sect had a more plausible pretext for their heresie than the Euchites who nothing but praied continually yet because they distinguished not between time and season mis-understanding the precept of the Apostle c 1 Thes 5.17 pray continually which requireth that we pray upon every occasion and at all seasons that is fit houres for prayer not simply at all times which are allotted us by God for d Eccl. 3.1 every purpose under heaven but especially because they jusled out all other duties of piety and Christian charity for it they were themselves by the ancient Fathers driven out of the Church and deservedly excommunicated who e Epiph haeres Massal Euchi● Aug. de haeres ad quod vult Deum communicated nothing to the publicke but were all for their private devotion Undoubtedly as when the fattest and best of the sacrifice was consumed the Priests might take the rest for their use so after wee have given God the flower and best of our time the rest wee may nay wee must employ in the workes of our speciall calling for our owne and others behoofe Next to the sacrifice of the whole man is the sacrifice of the hidden man of the heart I meane f Psal 51.17 a broken spirit and contrite heart In this sacrifice the salt of discretion is as necessary as in the former For even godly sorrow must not exceed the rivers of Paradise must bee kept within their bankes A man may pricke his heart for
Anthemes first single voices answering one the other and after the whole Quire joyning in one as it were tracing the same musicall steps hath not nature drawne with her pensill a perfect grasse green in the Emrald a skie colour in the Saphir the glowing of fire in the Carbuncle the sanguine complexion in the Ruby and the twinckling of the starres in the Diamond and all these together in the Opall which hath in it the lustre and beautifull colours of all these precious stones c Plin. nat hist l. 37 c 6. In Opale est Carbunculi tenuior ignis Amethysti fulgens purpura Smaragdi virens mare c. incredibili misturâ lucentes Such is this feast of all holy ones it is the Churches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Kalendars pandect as it were a constellation not of many but of all the starres in the skie in it as in the Opall shine the beautifull colours and resplendency of all those precious stones which are laid in the d Apoc. 21.19 foundation and shine in the gates and walls of the heavenly Jerusalem Upon it we celebrate the chastity of all Virgins the simplicity of all Innocents the zeale and courage of all Confessours the patience of all Martyrs the holinesse of all Saints Upon this day the Church militant religiously complementeth with the Church triumphant and all Saints on earth keep the feast and expresse the joy and acknowledge the happinesse and celebrate the memory and imbrace the love and set forth the vertues of all Saints in heaven Which are principally three shadowed by the allegory in my Text 1. Patience in tribulation They came out 2. Purity in conversation And washed their garments 3. Faith in Christs death and passion Made them white in c. The better to distinguish them you may if you please terme them three markes 1. A blacke or blewish marke made with the stroake or flaile Tribulation 2. A white made by washing their garments and whiting them 3. A red by dying them in the bloud of the Lambe 1. First of the blacke or blew marke They came out of great tribulation The beloved Apostle and divine Evangelist Saint John who lay in the bosome of our Saviour and pryed into the very secrets of his heart in the time of his exile in Pathmos had a glimpse of his and our country that is above and was there present in spirit at a solemne investiture or installation of many millions of Gods Saints into their state of glory and order of dignity about the Lambe in his celestiall court The rite and ceremony of it was thus The twelve e Ver. 5 6 7 8. Tribes of Israel were called in order and of every Tribe twelve thousand were sealed in the forehead by an Angel keeper of the broad Seale of the living God Ver. 2. After this signature Loe a great multitude which no man can number of all nations and kindreds and people and tongues stood before the Throne and before the Lambe and they had long white robes put upon them and palmes given them in their hands in token of victory and they marched on in triumph singing with a loud voice Salvation from or to our God that sitteth upon the Throne and to the Lambe at which words all the Angels that stood round about the Throne and the Elders and the foure living creatures full of eyes fell before the Throne on their faces and worshipped God saying Amen Praise and glory and wisedome and thankes and honour and power and might be unto our God for ever and ever Amen This glorious representation of the triumphant Church so overcame and tooke away the senses of the ravished Apostle that though he desired nothing more than to learne who they were that he had seen thus honourably installed yet he had not the power to aske the question of any that assisted in the action till one of the Elders rose from his seate to entertaine him and demanded that of him which hee knew the Apostle knew not but most of all desired to know and would have enquired after if his heart had served him viz. who they were and whence they came that were admitted into the order of the white robe in Heaven The answer of which question when the Apostle had modestly put from himselfe to the Elder saying Lord thou knowest the Elder courteously resolveth it and informeth him particularly concerning them saying These are they that are come out of great tribulation c. Thou mightest perhaps have thought that these who are so richly arrayed and highly advanced in Heaven had been some great Monarchs Emperours or Potentates upon earth that had conquered the better part of the world before them paving the way with the bodies and cementing it with the bloud of the sl●ine and in token thereof bare these palmes of victories in their hands Nothing lesse they are poore miserable forlorne people that are newly come some out of houses of bondage some out of the gallies some out of prisons some out of dungeons some out of mynes some out of dens and caves of the earth all out of great tribulation They who weare now long white robes mourned formerly in blacke they who now beare palmes in their hands carried their crosses in this world they who shout and sing here sighed and mourned under the heavie burdens of manifold afflictions all the dayes of their pilgrimage on earth they whom thou seest the Lambe leading to the f Ver. 17. living fountaines of waters dranke before deep of the waters of Marah and full cups of teares in the extreme heate of bloudy persecutions and in consideration of the great tribulation which they have patiently endured for the love of their Redeemer he bestoweth upon them these glorious robes whited in his own bloud and hee taketh them neere to himselfe that they may stand before him for evermore g Mat. 5 11 12. Blessed thrice blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousnesse sake for great is their reward in heaven The heavier their crosse is the weightier their crowne shall bee their present sorrowes shall free them from all future sorrowes their troubles here shall save them from all trouble hereafter their temporall paines through his merits for whom they suffer shall acquit them from eternall torments and the death of their body through faith in his bloud shall redeeme them from death of body and soule and exempt them from all danger miserie and feare Which priviledges the spirit sealeth unto them in the verses following They h Rev. 7.15.16.17 are before the Throne of God and serve him day and night in his Temple and he that sitteth on the Throne shall dwell among them They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sun light on them nor any heat For the Lamb which is in the midst of the Throne shall feed them and shall lead them into living fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all
And by o Luk. 1.68 69 74. Zachary in his Hymne Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which hath visited and redeemed his people And hath raised up an horne of salvation for us in the house of his servant David That we being delivered from the hands of our enemies might serve him without feare And by St. Paul p Rom. 8.15 Ye have not received the Spirit of bondage againe to feare And by q Luke 12.32 Christ himselfe Feare not little flocke for it is your Fathers pleasure to give you the kingdome This latter feare because it excludeth confidence in God is excluded it selfe but the former not onely standeth with certainty of perseverance in grace but mightily supporteth it For even for this end God promiseth to put that feare in the hearts of all true believers that r Jer. 32.40 they may not fall away from him Whereupon Tertullian acutely inferreth playing upon the double sense of the Latine word securus * De cult Jer●n Qui secutus est non est solicitus qui est solicitus potest esse secutus Hee that is secure that is carelesse of the meanes of his salvation is not solicitous or watchfull but hee that is solicitous or watchfull may bee secure that is free from all feare of unavoidable danger The last objection which our adversaries make against the doctrine delivered is taken out of the worme-eaten evidence of the ancient Pelagians as wee may see in Saint ſ Ep. ad August Dicunt lapsis curam resurgendi adunt sanctis occasionem teporis offerri eo quod electi nulla negligentiâ possint excidere Hage conference p. 12. c. Prosper They viz. the Pelagians upbraid that all care of rising out of sinne is taken away from those that are lapsed that to holy men is ministred an occasion of slacknesse in their devotion or lukewarmnesse inasmuch as the Elect according to our doctrine cannot fall away by any negligence howsoever they behave themselves that consequently this doctrine taketh away all praiers obsecrations obtestations exercise of mortification care of the means of renewing our covenant with God and watchfulnesse over all our wayes But wee answer with the ancient t Aug. de correp grat Prosp resp ad ob●ect Vincent Fathers that the certainty of the end no way derogateth from the necessity of the means of salvation which on Gods part are admonitions threatnings promises commands counsels punishments and rewards on our part continuall prayer watchfulnesse progresse in godlinesse unfained desire of and earnest striving for perfection After Christ prayed for S. Peters faith that u Luk. 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not it might not faile Peter was assured of his perseverance yet Christ commandeth him with the rest * Mar. 14.37.38 Christ saith to Peter Simon sleepest thou couldst not thou watch with mee one houre watch pray lest yee enter into temptation to watch and pray lest they enter into temptation watchfulnesse therefore and assurance are not incompatible None ever had greater assurance of their salvation than the Apostles after Christ cheared their hearts x Luk. 10.20 In this rejoice not that spirits are subject unto you but rather rejoice because your names are written in heaven yet our Saviour admonisheth them to y Luk. 12.35 stand with their loynes girt about and their lights burning and to take heed to themselves z L●k 21.34 lest at any time their hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkennesse and cares of this life and so that day come upon them at unawares Questionlesse after Christ had given to Saint * Act. 27.24 Paul the life of all them that were in the ship with him hee was assured of their safe arrivall yet when the shipmen were about to flye out of the ship under colour as though they would have cast anchor Paul said to the Centurion and to the souldiers except these abide in the ship you cannot bee saved None may otherwise receive or apply to themselves the promises of grace and remission of sinnes than they are tendred to them in holy Scripture but in them they are propounded unto all upon condition of repentance faith holinesse of life new obedience and perseverance in it to the end To beleeve therefore the remission of sinnes and to bee assured of Gods favour notwithstanding wee hold on our sinfull courses is not spirituall confidence but carnall presumption Assurance of salvation is an effect of a lively faith which a Gal. 5.6 worketh by love and consequently all that have it the more they are assured of Gods love to them in Christ the more their hearts are enflamed with love towards God and their neighbour also for Gods sake the more zealous they will bee of his glory the more thankefull for his mercy the more desirous to please him the more fearfull to offend him the more carefull to obey him the more wounded with godly sorrow for their incurring his displeasure and the more ready to turne unto him by unfained repentance Admit what they so much clamour against us for that the adopted sonnes of God are in no feare or distrust that their heavenly Father will disinherite them yet neither may they nor can they presume hereupon wilfully to provoke him because they know that hee hath many sharpe roddes to chasten them with besides as temporall plagues painefull sicknesse irrecoverable losses terrours of conscience and spirituall desertion To conclude the certainty of our beliefe that wee shall undoubtedly arrive at the celestiall Canaan is no reason why we should flacke but rather mend our pace thither Thus having wiped out the spots and blots which the ancient and latter Pelagians have fast upon the white stone we shall more easily be able to discerne the characters engraven in it and read The new name Wee receive many new things from our Saviour 1 A b Mat. 26.28 new Testament signed with his blood 2 In this new Testament a new c Heb. 8.8 Covenant 3 In this new Covenant a new d Joh. 13.34 Commandement 4 To obey this new Commandement a new e Ezek. 36.26 heart 5 And answerable to this new Heart new f Mar. 16.17 Tongues 6 And consonant to these new Tongues new g Apoc. 14.3 Songs Behold h Apoc. 21.5 I make all things new a new i 2 Pet. 3.13 heaven and a new earth and a new k Apoc. 21.2 city and in it new l Eph. 4.24 inhabitants to whom the Spirit here promiseth a m 2 Cor. 5.17 new name upon which the Interpreters have many new conceits Alcazar the Jesuite whose profound head the Pope lately graced with a Cardinals hat in his prolixe commentaries upon the Apocalyps falling upon the words of my text will needs have this new name to be some derivative from Jesus as Jesuitae or Jesuati or the like For this name Jesus as out
mandasse ne quis se dominum deinceps vocaret divinantem credo verum Principem orbis terrarum ac mundi totius natum esse Platina writeth Augustus by a Proclamation forbad that any should call him Lord whereby though he intended no such thing yet God who secretly moved him to it may seeme to give all men to understand that no Lord ought to be named the same day with his sonne that when he came into the world all other Lords and Kings were as much obscured as the starres are at the rising of the Sunne m Hom. Il. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In his presence and in comparison of him there is no King Lord or Master For as all Kings are but his subjects all Lords his servants so all Masters his scholars in whose schoole there is great difference betweene the scholars some are able to construe a lecture to others but none can give a lecture but he who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both the wisedome and the word of God From whence we heare n Mat. 11.29 Learne of me of whom we heare o Mar. 3.17 This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well pleased heare him p Col. 2.3 In whom we heare all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge are hid to whom wee heare St. q John 6.68 Peter beareth record Thou hast the words of eternall life and St. Ignatius r Ignat. epist ad Philad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is my ancient record and Tertullian ſ Tert. Nobis non opus est curiositate post Christum nec inquisitione post Evangelium cum hoc credimus nihil amplius credere desideramus hoc enim prius credimus nihil ultra esse quod credere debeamus There needs no curiositie after Christ nor farther enquiry after or beyond the Gospell when we beleeve it we desire to beleeve no more and St. Cyprian t Cyp. ep l. 2. ad Cacil It is agreeable to the Religion we professe and our reverence to God to keepe the truth of that which our Lord hath delivered and according to his commands to correct what is amisse that when he shall come in his glory and majesty he may find that we hold that he admonished us to keepe and observe what he taught and doe what he did and St. Jerome u Hier. ep 57. Nullum primum nisi Christum sequentes We follow none as first but Christ and Vincentius Lerinensis adver heres Keepe the Depositum x Quid est depositum quod tibi creditum non quod à te inventum quod accepisti non quod excogitasti Custodi fidei catholicae talentum esto spiritualis tabernaculi Bezaleel pretiosas divini dogmatis gemmas exculpe fideliter coapta adorna sapienter adjice gratiam splendorem venustatem intelligatur te exponente illustriùs quod ante obscurius credebatur eadem tamen quae credidisti ita doce ut cum dicas novè non dicas nova What is the Depositum That wherewith thou art trusted not which thou hast found out that which thou hast received not which thou hast invented keepe the talent of the Catholike faith be thou a Bezaleel of the spirituall Tabernacle cut the gems of divine doctrine shining in his word insert them curiously in thy discourse set them off with a good foyle let men understand that by thy exposition clearly which before they beleeved obscurely yet be sure to teach no more than thou hast learned of Christ though thou speake in a new manner yet deliver no new matter If we teach not that which we have learned of Christ or teach any thing as needfull to salvation which we have not learned of Christ we hazzard if not lose the name of Christians for Disciples of Christ Christians are all one no Disciple of Christ no Christian every one so far a Christian as a Disciple of Christ What Christians then are Papists whose Creed consisting of foure and twenty articles twelve of them they learned of Christ the other twelve of Antichrist as may be seene in the Bull of Pope y Bu la S.D.N.D. Pii Papae quarti super formâ juramenti professoris affix ad Conc. Trid. p. 439. Pius affixed to the Councel of Trent Shall we simply affirm that they are Christians we wrong then our selves and all the reformed Churches who have severed from them Shall we absolutely deny that they are Christians we wrong them who hold with us the profession of the Trinity the two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper and the three Creeds the Apostles the Nicene or Constantinopolitane and that of Athanasious Although the Roman Cardinall might justly be blamed who caused his Painter to draw King Solomon halfe in heaven and halfe in hell yet I suppose they could not justly be censured who should draw Popery or the Church of Rome as she is at this day partly in heaven and partly in hell in heaven in respect of those heavenly truthes which she maintaineth with us against Atheists Jewes Turkes and all sorts of Infidels and many ancient Heretiques but in hell in respect of many pernicious and hellish errours which she pertinaciously defendeth against the cleere letter of Scripture and doctrine and practice of the Primitive Church The blessed Apostle resolveth a like question concerning the Jewes who received the Old Testament but rejected the New in a like manner y Rom. 11.28 As concerning the Gospell they are enemies for your sake but as touching the election they are beloved for the Fathers sake Wee can hardly come off this controversie upon better tearmes than these that Papists as concerning the principles of the common faith are Christians but as touching their proper errours by addition to it detraction from it corruption of it they are no Christians You wil say this is no simple or direct answer neither need it so to be because the question is not simple As it is superfluous to give a mixt or double answer to a simple question so it is dangerous to give a simple and single answer to a mixt question or a question of a mixt subject 1 For instance let the question be concerning Ayat the Jew who used indifferently either of his hands as we use our right hand Whether was he a right handed or a left handed man 2 Or concerning a part of speech which taketh part of a noune and part of a verbe Whether is it a noune or a verbe 3 Or concerning a Myrmaid which in the upper part resembleth a maid in the lower a fish Whether is it a fish or a maid 4 Or concerning the Muscovy Monster which feedeth like a sheepe yet groweth like a plant and hath his root affixed to the earth Whether is it a beast or a plant 5 Or concerning an Androgyne that hath in it both sexes Whether is it a man or a woman 6 Or concerning the apple mentioned by Seneca that hath in it a middle kinde
blessed Virgin the babe a Luke 1.41 sprang in the wombe of Elizabeth so I doubt not but that at the reading of this text in your eares the fruits of your devotion which are your religious thoughts and zealous affections leap and spring for joy in the wombe of your soule for now is the accepted time the time of grace now is the day of salvation the day of our Lords Incarnation As the golden tongued Father spake of a Martyr Martyrem dixisse laudâsse est to name a man a Martyr is to commend him sufficiently so it may be said of this text to rehearse it is to apply it I need not fit it to the time for the time falleth upon this time and the day upon this day now if ever is this Now in season If any time in all the yeere be more acceptable than other it is the holy time we now celebrate now is the accepted time on Gods part by accepting us to favour now is the day of salvation by exhibiting to us a Saviour in our flesh let us make it so on our parts also by accepting the grace offered unto us and by laying hands on our Saviour by faith and embracing him by love and by joy dilating our hearts to entertain him with all his glorious attendants a troupe of heavenly Souldiers singing b Luke 2.14 Glory be to God on high on earth peace and good will towards men c Esay 49.13 Sing O heavens and be joyfull O earth and breake forth into shouting O ye mountaines for God hath comforted his people and will have mercy upon the afflicted Keepe this holy day above others because chosen by God to manifest himselfe in the flesh bid by an Angell and by him furnished both with a lesson and with an Anthem also Well might the Angell as on this day sing glory in excelsis Deo c. for on this day the Son of God out of his good will towards men became man and thereby set peace on earth and brought infinite glory to God in the highest heavens Well may this be called by the Apostle d Gal. 4.4 The fulnesse of time or a time of fulnesse which filled heaven with glory the earth with blessings of peace and men with graces flowing from Gods good will The heavens which till this time were as clasped boxes now not able longer to containe in them the soveraigne balsamum of wounded mankind burst open and he whose name is e Cant. 1.3 an ointment poured forth was plentifully shed upon the earth to revive the decayed spirits and heale the festered sores of wounded mankind Lift up then your heavie lookes and heavier hearts yee that are in the midst of danger and in the sight nay within the claspes of eternall death you have a Saviour borne to rescue you Cheare up your drouping and fainting spirits all ye that feele the smart and anguish of a bruised conscience and broken heart to you Christ is borne to annoint your wounds bruises and sores Exult and triumph ye gally slaves of Satan and captives of Hell fast bound with the chaine of your sinnes to you a Redeemer is borne to ransome you from spirituall thraldome Two reasons are assigned why festivities are religiously to be kept 1. The speciall benefits of God conferred upon his Church at such times which by the anniversary celebration of the dayes are refreshed in our memories and visibly declared to all succeeding ages 2 The expresse command of God which adjoyned to the former reason maketh the exercises of devotion performed at these solemnities duties of obedience It cannot be denied that in this latter consideration those feasts which are set downe in the booke of God have some prerogative above those that are found wrtiten onely in the Calendar of the Church But in the former respect no day may challenge a precedencie of this no not the Sabbath it selfe which the more to honour him whose birth we now celebrate resigned both his name place and rites to the f Athanas hom de semenie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lords day and if we impartially compare them the worke wrought on this day was farre more difficult and the benefit received upon it greater than that to the memory whereof the Sabbath was at the first dedicated It was a greater miracle that God should be made a creature than that he should make all creatures and the redemption of the world so farre exceeds the creation as the means by which it was wrought were more difficult and the time larger the one was finished in sixe dayes by the commandement of God the other not in lesse than foure and thirty yeeres by the obedience of Christ the one was but a word with God the breath of his mouth gave life to all creatures the other cost him much labour sweat and bloud and what comparison is there betweene an earthly and an heavenly Paradise Nay if wee will judge by the event the benefit of our creation had beene none without our redemption For by it we received an immortall spirit with excellent faculties as it were sharpe and strong weapons wherewith wee mortally wounded our selves and had everlastingly laid weltring in our own blood had not our Saviour healed our wounds by his wounds and death and raised us up againe by the power of his resurrection To which point Saint Austine speaking feelingly saith Si natus non fuisset bonum fuisset si homo natus non fuisset If hee had not beene borne it had beene good for man never to have beene borne if this accepted time had not come all men had beene rejected if this day of salvation had not appeared wee had all perished in the night of eternall perdition Behold now is the accepted time In this Scripture as in a Dyall wee may observe 1 The Index 2 The Circles Certaine Behold Different 1 The larger 2 The narrower The accepted time The day of salvation To man in generall it is an accepted time to every beleever in particular it is a day of salvation Lynx cum cessat intueri cessat recordari Because we are like the Lynx which mindeth nothing no longer than her eye is upon it the Spirit every where calleth upon us to looke or behold Behold not alwayes or at any time but now not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not time simply but season the flower of time not barely accepted but according to the originall well accepted or most acceptable not the day of helpe or grace but a day of salvation As in the bodies which consist of similar parts the forme of the whole and the forme of every part is all one for example the whole ocean is but water and yet every drop thereof is water the whole land is but earth and yet every clod thereof is earth the
eternity yet I deny that this is any good description of time because every description ought to be per notius by something that is more known whereas eternity is farre more obscure than time it selfe all men have a common notion of the one few or none of the other Neither doe they give any better satisfaction who define time by duration For albeit there is a time of duration of every thing and a duration also of time it selfe yet duration is not time duration is the existence of any thing in time not the terme or time it selfe They define time most agreeable to the Scriptures who affirme it to be the continuall fluxe of moments minutes houres dayes weekes moneths yeeres ages from the creation of the world to the dissolution thereof after which the u Apoc. 10.6 Angel sware that time should be no more But I need to speake no more of time at this time because the word in my text is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 time but season or as it is here rendered The accepted time The season is that in time which light is in the aire lustre in metals the flower in plants creame in milke quintessence in hearbs the prime and best of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now there being a threefold season 1. Naturall which Husbandmen observe in sowing Gardeners in planting and graffing Mariners in putting to Sea Chirurgians in letting bloud Physicians in purging c. 2. Civill of which the Poet speaketh Mollissima fandi tempora which all humble suppliants observe in preferring petitions to Princes and great Personages 3. Spirituall which all that have a care of their salvation must observe in seeking the Lord while he may be found The Apostle in this place pointeth to this third and his meaning is Behold now presse hard to get into the kingdome of heaven for now the gate is open now labour hard in Gods vineyard for now is the eleventh houre now put up your petitions to the Prince of peace for now is the day of audience now provide your selves of spirituall merchandize for now is the mart now cast your selves into the Bethesda of Christs bloud for now the Angel troubleth the water now get a generall pardon for all your sinnes under the broad seale of the King of heaven for now is a day of sealing When the King commeth saith St. x Chrys in hunc locum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostome there is no time for sessions or assises but for pardon and favour Behold now the King is come to visit his subjects upon earth and from his first comming to his last the day of grace continueth Behold now is this accepted time He calleth it an accepted time saith St. y Ib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostome because now God accepteth them to favour who a thousand times incurred his displeasure It is called in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a time of good will and favour as Calvin rendereth the words who biddeth us marke the order first a time of grace is promised and after a day of salvation to intimate unto us that salvation floweth from the meere grace and mercy of God We are active in sinne to our owne damnation but meere passive to the first grace we draw on damnation with the cart-ropes of vanity but God draweth us to salvation with the cords of love The speciall point of doctrine to which this ecce or index in my text pointeth is that we ought to take speciall notice of the time of grace beginning at the birth of our Saviour and ending to us at the day of our death and to all men that shall be upon the earth at the consummation of the world As the celestiall spheres are wrapt one in another and the greatest which the Philosophers terme the Primum mobile invelopeth all the rest so the parts of time are enclosed the lesser in the greater houres in dayes dayes in yeeres yeers in ages and ages in the time of the duration of the world To explicate then to the full the time of our Lords birth it will be requisite to treat 1 Of the age of the world 2 Of the yeere of the age 3 Of the day of the yeere in which the true z John 1.9 light that lighteneth every man that commeth into the world first shined on the earth 1 Of the age of the world The Jewes according to an ancient tradition received from the house of Elias make three ages of the world as it were so many stages of time 1 From the creation to the law 2 From the law to the Messias 3 From the comming of the Messias to the end of the world To each of these they allow two thousand yeeres counting thus 1 a Carion in Chron. Duo millia vacuum 2 Duo millia lex 3 Duo millia Messias post mundi deflagratio Saint y Aug. de civit Dei l. 22 c 30. Post hanc tan quam in die septimo requi escet Deus cum eundem septimum diem quod nos erimus in seipso faciet requiescere Austine doubleth these files and maketh reckoning of sixe ages 1 From Adam to the Deluge 2 From the Deluge to Abraham 3 From Abraham to Solomon 4 From Solomon to the captivity 5 From the captivity to Christs birth 6 From Christs birth to the day of judgement after which in the seventh we shall all keepe an eternall Sabbath in heaven By both which computations it appeareth that the birth of our Saviour fell late towards the declining and end of time as b Maxin Taur hom 6 de nativ In fine temporum natus est ille cujus aeternitatem nulla saeculorum tempora comprehendunt Maximus Taurinensis observeth Here the wit of man which like the Sea will still be working though oftentimes foaming out his owne shame curiously enquireth why the desire and joy of all mankind was so long delayed why he was so late born whose birth was of more importance than of all the Potentates Princes Kings Emperours and Monarchs of the whole world Was not Christ the bright morning starre how came it then to passe that he appeared not till the afternoone if not evening of the world Was not he the bridegroome whose * Marriage song Epithalamium Solomon by the spirit of prophesie endited in the booke of Canticles how could hee then heare his dearest Spouse breathe out so many sighes and shed such abundance of teares in so many ages still longing for his comming and crying c Cant. 1.1 Let him come into the flesh and kisse mee with the kisses of his lips Was not hee the good Samaritan which healed the wounded man after Moses the Levite and Aaron the Priest passing by left him as they found him and did him no ease at all how then could this tender hearted Chirurgian suffer wounded mankinde to lie so many ages weltring in his owne bloud and
even as a good Carpenter in stead of a rotten groundsill layes a sound The same trust then must we give to God which we must not give to riches him must we esteeme above all things looke up to him in all things depend upon him for all things This is to trust in God which the Psalmist in his sweet dittie saith is a good thing good in respect of God for our trust in him is one of the best pieces of his glorie Joseph holds Potiphars trust a great honour 2. For us for what safety what unspeakable comfort is therein trusting to God Our Saviour in his farewell Sermon John 16. perswading to confidence saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word signifying boldnesse and what is there in all the world that can worke the heart to so comfortable and unconquerable resolution as our reposall upon God The Lord is my trust whom then can I feare They that put their trust in the Lord are as mount Sion that cannot be moved Oh cast your selves therefore into those almighty hands seeke him in whom you shall finde true rest and happinesse honour him with your substance that hath honoured you with it trust not in riches but trust in God Riches are but for this world the true God is Lord of the other therefore trust in him riches are uncertaine the true God is Amen ever like himselfe ergo trust in him riches are meere passive they cannot bestow so much as themselves much lesse ought besides themselves the true God gives you all things to enjoy riches are but a livelesse and senselesse metall God is The living God Life is an ancient and usuall title of God he for the most part sweares by it When Moses asked his name he described himselfe by I am He is he liveth and nothing is and nothing lives absolutely but he all other things by participation from him In all other things their life and they are two but God is his owne life and therefore as Aquinas acutely disputeth against the Gentiles must needs be eternall because beeing cannot be severed from it self Howbeit not only the life he hath in himselfe but the life which he giveth to his creatures challengeth a part in this title A glympse whereof the heathen had when they called Jupiter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Those creatures which have life we esteem beyond those that have it not how noble soever other waies those things be Therfore he that hath the perfectest life must needs be the best God therefore who is life it self fountain of all that life which is in the world is most worthy of all the adoration joy love and confidence of our hearts and the best improvement of that life which he hath given us Trust therefore in the living God not in riches that is idolatrie yea madnesse What greater madnesse can there be than to bestow that life which we have from God upon a creature that hath no life in it selfe nor price but from men Let me then perswade every soule that heares me this day as Jacob did his houshold Put away the strange gods that are among you or as St. Paul did his Lystrians O turne away from these vanities to the living God who gives us richly All things to enjoy Every word would require not a severall houre but a life to meditate upon and the tongues not of men but of Angels to expresse it God not onely hath all in himselfe but he gives to us and gives us not somewhat but all things and not a little of all but richly and all this not to looke on but to enjoy Here the Preacher said it should content him to top the sheaves onely because he could not stand to thresh them out it shall content me with the Apostles to rub some few eares because I cannot stand to top the sheaves Whither can you turne your eyes to looke besides the bounty of God If you looke upwards his mercie reacheth to the heavens if downewards the earth is full of his goodnesse and so is the broad sea if you looke about you what is it that he hath not given us aire to breathe in fire to warme us water to coole us cloathes to cover us food to nourish us fruits to refresh us yea delicates to please us beasts to serve us Angels to attend us heaven to receive us and which is above all his sonne to redeeme us Lastly if we looke into our selves hath he not given us a soule rarely furnished with the faculties of understanding will memorie and judgement a body wonderfully accommodated to execute the charge of the soule and an estate that yeelds due conveniencies for both moreover seasonable times peace competencie if not plentie of all commodities good lawes religious wise just Governours happie and flourishing dayes and above all the liberty of the Gospell More particularly cast up your Bookes O yee Citizens and summe up your receits I am deceived if he that hath least shall not confesse his obligation to be infinite There are three things especially wherein yee are beyond others and must acknowledge your selves deeper in the bookes of God than the rest of the world First for your deliverance from that wofull judgement ef the Pestilence O remember those sorrowfull times when every moneth swept away thousands from among you when a man could not set forth his foot but into the jawes of death when piles of carcasses were carried to their pits as dung to the fields when it was crueltie in the sicke to admit visitation and love was little better than murderous Secondly for your wonderfull plentie of all provisions spirituall and bodily Yee are like the Sea all the Rivers of the land runne into you nay sea and land conspire to enrich you Thirdly for the priviledge of your governement your charters as they are large and strong so your forme of administration is excellent and the execution of justice exemplarie For all these you have reason to aske with David Quid retribuam and to trust in God who hath beene so gracious unto you And thus from the duty we owe to God in our confidence and his beneficence to us we descend to the beneficence which we owe to men expressed in the varietie of foure epithetes to one sense To doe good to be rich in good workes ready to distribute willing to communicate all is but beneficence This heape of words shewes the vehement intention of his desire of good workes and the important necessitie of the performance and the manner of this expression enforceth no lesse Charge the rich c. Hearken then yee rich men of the world it is not left arbitrarie to you that you may doe good if you will but it is layd upon you as your charge and dutie the same necessity there is of trusting in God is of doing good to men Let me fling this stone at the brasen forehead of our Romish Adversaries whom their shamelesse challenges
it be unlawfull to make an image of God what suppose you is it to make a god of an Image by adoring it in Gods stead Was not Phoedra an adulteresse when shee lay with Hipolytus because shee protested that shee embraced Theseus in him whom he so neere resembled Were the Jewes that worshipped the Calfe or they that worshipped the brasen Serpent or the image of Baal free from idolatry They dare not say it because the Spirit of God condemneth them for Idolaters yet they might plead for themselves as Papists doe that they worshipped God in the Calfe and Christ to come in the Serpent and him that dwelleth in a light that cunnot bee approached unto in the image of Baal or the Sunne For they were not such Calves as to fixe their devotion on a Calfe of their owne making they were not so deceived by the old Serpent as to attribute divine power to a Serpent of brasse their eyes were not so dazled with the beames of the Sunne that they mistooke the Sunne for God No the words of q Exod. 32.5 Aaron To morrow is a feast Jehovae to the Lord and those of God himselfe Thou r Hos 2.16 shalt call me no more Baal for I will take away the names of Baalim out of their mouth make it a cleare case that they made but a stale of the Image who bowed downe before it intending the honour to God himselfe as ſ Joseph antiq Jud. Jeroboam instituit ut in vitulis Deus coleretur Josephus testifieth of Jeroboam Jeroboam saith hee appointed that God should bee worshipped in those Calves which he set up in Dan and Bethel And what shall we say if Papists are indebted to the Heathen for this answer who set this varnish upon their idolatrous practice as you may see in t Lact. divin institut l. 2. c. 2. Non simulacra colimus sed eos ad quorum imaginem sunt facta Lactantius u Tyr. ser 38. Dicunt se maximum Deum in simulacris colere Tyrius and * Clem. constit Apostol lib. 1. cap. 6 7. Aiunt nos ad honorem invisibilis Dei visibil●s Imagines adoramus Clemens Romanus Saint Paul also testifieth as much of the Heathen in generall Rom. 1.23 They changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man and to birds and to foure footed beasts and to creeping things And of the Athenians in particular Acts 17.23 Whom therefore yee ignorantly worship him declare I unto you The greatest God as Tyrius speaketh the invisible God as Clemens the incorruptible God as the Apostle the God whom Paul preached the Lord Jehovah is the true God that made heaven and earth yet the Jewes and Gentiles who worshipped him by an image or according to their own imaginations in Scripture stand charged with Idolatry and for ought appeares to the contrary as deeply as if their devotion had pitched and settled upon the image of the Calfe the Serpent the Sunne the starre Rempham the similitudes of men birds or creeping things and not glaunced by them to their Maker Yee heare that the Papists plea take it at the best is no better than the idolatrous Jewes plea the Priests of Baals plea the Gentiles plea and what if the learnedest of their owne side debarre them of this plea also what if their great Doctors teach that the image is to be worshipped for it selfe and not only in relation to the prototypon as they speake what if they curse all those who make any scruple of the veneration of Images Certainly Cardinall x Lib. 2. de Imag Sanc. c. 21. Imagines Christi Sanctorum venerandae sunt non solum per accidens impropriè sed etiam per se propriè ita ut ipsae terminent venerationem ut in se considerantur non solùm ut vicem gerunt exemplaris Bellarmine his words are plaine enough The Images of Christ and Saints are to be worshipped not only by accident and improperly but also by or for themselves and properly in such sort that they bounded termined the worship as they are considered in themselvs and not only as they stand for the samplar that is the person or thing they represent This his assertion he there endeavoureth to prove out of the second Councell of Nice and the late Conventicle at Trent which who so readeth cannot but see that speech of the Prophet David verified in the Patrons thereof They that make Images are like unto them and so are all they that put their trust in them To which text Clemens Alexandrinus as it seemeth to mee had an eye in that his pleasant allusion whereby hee representeth the folly of Idolaters As saith hee the naturall birds were beguiled by the counterfeit and flew to the Pigeons that were drawne in the Painters shop so naturall stockes flye to artificiall senslesse men to senslesse Idols How wardeth the Cardinall off this blow after this manner Wee have no recourse unto nor performe any religious service to any Idoll though wee both teach and practice Image-worship Why what is the difference between an Image and an Idoll An Image saith he is the representation of something which really subsisteth as of God Angel or man but an Idoll is the semblance of a thing feigned or imaginary that hath no beeing at all but in the fancy of the deviser God in the Law forbiddeth us to worship the later sorts of similitudes not the former Let us try this new coined distinction by the touch-stone of Gods Word How is it written y Exod. 20.4 Thou shalt not make to thy selfe Pesell that is any thing that is carved or graven as not only the interlineary Vatablus Tremelius z 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sculptile and the Septuagint but the vulgar Latine also corrected by Sixtus a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sculpsit dolavit Buxtorf Epit. rad and revised by Clemens render the Hebrew Admit that the word Pesel signifieth not an Image as Justin Martyr translateth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but an Idoll say these first words of the commandement meet with the worshippers of Idols not of Images yet certainly the clause following nor the likenesse of any thing that is in heaven above or in the earth beneath or in the water under the earth reacheth home to all Images For all Images are likenesses of something in heaven earth or under the earth The Idoll of Baal was the likenesse of something in heaven the Calfe of something on earth Dagon of something in the waters under the earth For the first was the representation and similitude of the Sunne the second of a Beast the third of a Fish yet the Scripture calleth these images Idols and their worshippers Idolaters therefore the Papists are in the same damnation with them and contradict themselves in terminis in saying they worship Images not Idols For every Image worshipped is an Idoll True say
sore beat by him Applicat Deus unum habuit filium sine flagitio nullum sine flagello 1. Is it so doth God chasten every sonne whom he receiveth nay in whom he delighteth not sparing his only beloved sonne with whom he was ever well pleased why then should we looke to be priviledged and exempted from the orders of Christs schoole How nice and tenderly have wee been brought up that we cannot endure the sight of our heavenly Fathers rod We sticke to sip of that cup which was Davids diet-drinke and Jeremy and Job tooke it all off are we better than these holy men nay are we too good to pledge our Saviour in the cup of his passion Doe we breathe out some sighes in our crosses hee sighed out his last breath in torments upon the crosse Nos suspiramus in cruciatibus ille expiravit in cruce Doe our troubles and vexations draw some watery teares from our eyes his drew from him teares of bloud yea clotted bloud from all parts of his body Doth the burthen of our sinnes presse our soules the burthen of the sinnes of the whole world lay upon him Are wee pricked with cares hee was crowned with thorns Are we cruciated he was crucified Tacitus reporteth that though the amber ring among the Romans were before of no value yet after the Emperour began to weare it it became to be in great esteem so mee thinkes sith our Lord and Saviour both bore his crosse and was borne upon it we should make better reckoning of crosses and it should be counted an honour for every Christian to take up his crosse and follow him 2. Againe doth God chasten as many as he loveth and consequently loveth them not at all whom he never chasteneth how far then are most of us besides the matter in our judgement and opinion of these things If we see a man flourish in prosperity we commonly say such a man is beloved of God for he thriveth in the world and all things prosper with him but if on the sudden all the fruits of his labours are blasted with some sharp wind of adversity if wee see him never without some griefe or other some crosse or other we alter our opinion and suppose him to be some wretch whom God plagueth for his sinnes If the Viper be upon Pauls hand hee is presently a t Act. 28.4 murderer whom vengeance would not suffer to live whereas the verdict and sentence of the Holy Ghost whereto our judgements should absolutely submit is farre otherwise Loe these are the wicked who have their u Psal 17.14 portion in this life the rod of God is not upon them they grow in wealth and their seed is established in their sight They come in no * Psal 73.5 6 7. trouble like other folke neither are they plagued like other men Their eyes stand out with fatnesse and they have more than heart can wish Thou hast planted x Jerem. 12.2 them and they have taken root and bring forth fruit I speake not this to detract from the bounty of our gracious God who hath the blessings of this life and the life to come in store for his children and he bestoweth them upon them when he seeth it good for them but to lessen somewhat our great opinion of them and put us in a better conceit of afflictions which are surer arguments of Gods love than the other Had the Apostle said We must through many pleasures enter into the Kingdome of Heaven it is to be thought Heaven would have been full by this time but he saith not so but the direct contrary We must through many y Acts 14.22 afflictions enter into it Wherefore as passengers that have been told that their way lyeth over a steep hill or downe a craggy rocke or through a morish fen or dirty vale if they suddenly fall into some pleasant meddow enameled with beautifull flowers or a goodly corne field or a faire champian country looke about them and bethinking themselves where they are say Surely we are out of the way we see no hills nor rockes nor fens nor deep clay this is too good to be the right way So in the course of our life which is a pilgrimage upon earth when we passe through fields of corne or gardens of flowers and enjoy all worldly pleasures and contentments let us cast with our selves Surely this is not the way the Scripture directeth us unto here are not the tribulations we are to passe through we see no footsteps of Gods Saints here but only the print of Dives feet somewhere we have mist our way let us search and find out where and when we turned out of it This anxiety of mind this carefull circumspection this questioning our selves and suspecting our owne wayes will bring us into the right way for by thus afflicting our selves in prosperity we shall make it the way to Heaven As the Passeover was to be eaten with sowre herbes so let us sawce all our worldly comforts with these sharp and sowre meditations that we surfeit not of them We find no grievous crime laid to Dives his charge only this is father Abrahams memento to him Sonne remember thou receivedst thy pleasure in this life Continuall z Lact. divin instit l. 6. c. 21. Cavenda sunt oblectamenta ista tanquam laquei plagae ne suavitudinum mollitie capti sub ditionem mortis cum ipso corpore redigamur cui mancipamur prosperity and worldly pleasures are like luscious fruit more sweet than wholsome they distemper the spirituall taste they breed noxious humours in the body and dangerous maladies in the soule And if they end not in sorrow we are the more to sorrow for them according to that sweet speech of Saint * Aug. confes l. 10. c. 1. Caetera vitae hujus tantò minus flenda quantò magis fletur in iis c. Austine The joyes and delights or rather the toyes and vanities of this life are by so much the lesse to be bewailed by how much more we bewaile and by so much the more to be bewailed by how much the lesse we bewaile them and for them On the contrary afflictions are usually tokens of Gods love badges of his servants arguments of his care remedies against most dangerous evills and occasions of excellent vertues and as the other have a sweet taste at the first but are bitter afterwards so these are bitter at the first but sweet at the last For in the end they bring the quiet fruit of a Heb. 12.11 righteousnesse to them thot are exercised thereby b John 16.20 Yee shall mourne saith Christ to his Disciples but the world shall rejoyce but be of good comfort your sorrow shall be turned into joy What then are we professedly to pray for afflictions No God requireth no such thing but only that we patiently endure them May we not enjoy the blessings of this life We may but not over-joy in
come to one first cause that setteth all on working and it selfe dependeth upon no other former cause This truth the Poets fitly resembled by a golden chaine upon which heaven and earth hang whose uppermost linke was fastened to Jupiters chaire The morall Philosophers also yeeld a supply of their forces to aid this truth There can be but one chiefe good say they which wee desire for it selfe and all other things for it but this must needs be God because nothing but the Deitie can satisfie the desire of the reasonable soule and because in the highest and chiefest of all good there must needs be an infinitie of good otherwise we might conceive a better and more desirable good now no infinite good can be conceived but God Neither is it a weake pillar wherewith the Statesman supporteth this truth Nulla fides regni sociis omnisque potestas Impatiens consortis erit No one Kingdome can stand where there are two p Bod. de rep l. 2. c. 20. De vnius dominatu supreme and uncontrollable commanders therefore neither can the whole world which is a great Empire or Kingdome be governed by two or more supreme Monarchs This argument may be illustrated by the fact and apophthegme of the Grand Seignior who when his sonne Mustaphas returning from Persia was received and entertained with great shouts and acclamations of all the people he commanded him presently to be slaine before him this oracle to be pronounced by the Priest Unus in coelo Deus unus in terris Sultanus One God in heaven one Sultan on the earth q Lact. divin institut l. 1. c. 5 Adeo in unitatem universa natura consentit Lactantius also harpeth upon this string There cannot be many masters in one family many Pilots in one ship many Generalls in one armie many Kings in one Realme r De Ira Dei cap. 11. Non possunt in hoc mundo multi esse rectores nec in una domo multi Domini nec in una nave multi gubernatores nec in uno regno multi reges nec in uno mundo multi soles many sunnes in one firmament many soules in one body so the universalitie of things runnes upon an unitie These and the like congruities induced the greater part of the heathen Sages to assent to this truth Mercurius Trismgeistus giveth this reason why God hath no proper name because he is but one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Orpheus calleth God the one true and first great begotten because before him nothing was begotten whose nature because he could not conceive he saith he was borne of immense aire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythagoras termeth him Animam mundi and Anaxagoras Mentem infinitam Seneca Rector of the whole world and God of heaven and all gods Tully and Plato were confessours of this truth and Socrates a Martyr of it but Beloved we need not such witnesses for we have the testimony of those three that beare record in heaven of God the father I am God and there is ſ Esay 46.9 none other of God the sonne this is t John 17.3 life eternall to know thee to be the only true God whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ of God the holy Ghost O Lord there is u 1 Chron. 17.20 none like thee neither is there any God but thee there * 1 Cor. 8.6 is but one God the father of whom are all things and wee in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him This point is not more cleere in the proofe than profitable in the use which 1. Convinceth the errour of the Manichees who taught there were two Gods and of the Tritheites who worshipped three and of the Greekes who multiply their Gods according to the number of their cities and of the Romans Qui cum omnibus gentibus dominarentur omnium gentium servierunt erroribus who when they had subdued all nations made themselves slaves to the errours of all There was no starre almost in the skie no affection in the minde no flower in the garden no beast in the field no thing almost so vile and abject in the world which some of the Heathen deified not Omnia colit error humanus praeter eum qui omnia condidit This Unity of the Trinity inferreth a Trinity of Unity Viz. 1. Of faith 2. Baptisme 3. Charitie The two former the x Ephes 4.5 Apostle inferreth in that verse wherein hee declineth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 surely there can bee no verity of unity where there is no unity of verity If there bee but one God then the worship of him must needs be the onely true religion if there bee no name under heaven by which we may be saved but the name of Jesus Christ y Acts 4.12 it insueth hereupon which serveth wonderfully for our everlasting comfort and the terrour and confusion of all Infidels that onely the Christian can be saved The Poets fained that the way to heaven was via lactea a milkie way but the Scripture teacheth that the only way thither is via sanguinea not a milkie but a bloudie way by the crosse of Christ 3. From unity of faith and Sacraments there followeth a third unity to wit the unity of love For how can they bee but united in love who are members of one mysticall body and quickened by one and the selfe same spirit The neerest and strongest tie among men is consanguinity how neare and deare ought then all Christians to bee one to another who are not only made all of one bloud as all men and women are but also are redeemed by one bloud the bloud of Christ and participate also of one bloud in the Sacrament Where the union is or should be firmer the division is alwayes fowler how then commeth it to passe that as in the Church of Corinth one said z 1 Cor. 1.12 13. I am of Paul another said I am of Apollo another I am of Cephas so in our Church one saith I am of Luther another I am of Calvin another I am of Zwinglius Is Christ divided Is the reformed religion deformed Is not this a cunning sleight of Satan to divide us one from another that so he may prevaile against us all as Horatius did against the Curiatii the manner whereof * Decad. 1. l. 1. Conserus manibus cum non motus tantum corporum agitatioque anceps telorum armorumque sed vulnera quoque sanguis spectaculo essent duo Romani super alium alius vulnerati tribus Albanis expirantes corruerunt ad quorū casum cum conclamasset gaudio Albanus exercitus Romanas legiones jam spes tota nondum tamen cura deseruerat exanimes vitae unius quem tres Curiatii circumsteterant Forte is integer fuit ut universis solus nequaquam par sic adversus singulos ferox ergo ut segregaret pugnam eorum capessit fugam ratus secuturos ut quemque vulnere
her husband on the sudden loseth him which I call God to witnesse saith x Orig. in Cant. Conspicit Sponsa Sponsum qui conspectus statim abscessit frequenter hoc in toto carmine facit quod nisi quis patiatur non potest intelligere saepe Deus est testis Sponsum mihi adventate conspexi mecum esse subitò recedentem invenire non potui Origen I my selfe have sensible experience in my meditations upon this book And who of us in his private devotions findeth not the like Sometimes in our divine conceptions contemplations and prayers we are as it were on float sometimes on the sudden at an ebbe sometimes wee are carried with full saile sometimes we sticke as it were in the haven The use we are to make hereof is when we heare the gales of the Spirit rise to hoise up our sailes to listen to the sound when we first heare it because it will be soon blown over to cherish the sparkes of grace because if they be not cherished they will soone dye There came a sound Death entred in at the windowes that is the eyes saith Origen but life at the eares z Gal. 1.8 For the just shall live by faith and faith commeth by hearing The sound is not without the wind for the Spirit ordinarily accompanieth the preaching of the Word neither is the wind without the sound Away then with Anabaptisticall Enthustiasts try the spirits whether they be of God or no by the Word of God To the y Esay 8.20 Law and to the testimony saith the Prophet Esay If they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them And if we saith the Apostle or an Angel from heaven preach unto you any other Gospel than what ye have received that is saith St. * Aug. contr lit Petil. l. 3. c. 6. Praeterquam quod in Scripturis legalibus Evangelicis accepistis Anathema sit Austine than what is contained in the Propheticall and Apostolicall writings let him be accursed From heaven This circumstance affordeth us a threefold doctrine 1. That the Spirit hath a dependance on the Son and proceedeth from him for the Spirit descended not till after the Son ascended who both commanded his Disciples to stay at Jerusalem and wait for the promise of the Father which yee have a Act. 1.4 heard saith he from mee and promised after his departure to send the b John 15.26 When the comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father Act. 1.5 Yee shall be baptized with the holy Ghost not many dayes hence spirit and accordingly sent him ten dayes after his ascension with the sound of a mighty wind in the likenesse of fiery cloven tongues 2. That the Gospel is of divine authority As the Law came from heaven so the Gospel and so long as we preach Gods word ye still heare sonum de coelo a sound from heaven Thus c Lactan. instit l. 3. c. 30. Ecce vox de coelo veritatem docens sole ipso clarius lumen ostendens Lactantius concludes in the end of his third booke of divine institutions How long shall we stay saith he till Socrates will know any thing or Anaxagoras find light in darknesse or Democritus draw up the truth from the bottome of a deep Well or Empedocles enlarge the narrow pathes of his senses or Arcesilas and Carneades according to their sceptick doctrine see feele or perceive any thing Behold a voice from heaven teaching us the truth and discovering unto us a light brighter than the sunne 3. That the doctrine of the Gospel is not earthly but of a heavenly nature that it teacheth us to frame our lives to a heavenly conversation that it mortifieth our fleshly lusts stifleth ambitious desires raiseth our mind from the earth and maketh us heavenly in our thoughts heavenly in our affections heavenly in our hopes and desires For albeit there are excellent morall and politicke precepts in it directing us to manage our earthly affaires yet the maine scope and principall end thereof is to bring the Kingdome of heaven unto us by grace and us into it by glory This a meer sound cannot doe therefore it is added As of a rushing mighty wind This blast or wind is a sacred symbole of the Spirit and there is such a manifold resemblance between them that the same word in Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latine spiritus signifieth both what so like as wind to the Spirit 1. As the wind bloweth where it d John 3.8 listeth so the Spirit inspireth whom he pleaseth 2. As wee feele the wind and heare it yet see it not so wee heare of the Spirit in the word and feele him in our hearts yet see him not 3. As breath commeth from the heat of our bowells so the third person as the Schooles determine proceedeth from the heat of love in the Father and the Son 4. As the wind purgeth the floore and cleanseth the aire so the Spirit purifieth the heart 5. As in a hot summers day nothing so refresheth a traveller as a coole blast of wind so in the heat of persecutions and heart burning sorrow of afflictions nothing so refresheth the soule as the comfort of the Spirit who is therefore stiled Paracletus the Comforter 6. As the wind in an instant blowes downe the strongest towers and highest trees so the Spirit overthrowes the strongest holds of Sathan and humbleth the haughtiest spirit 7. As the wind blowing upon a garden carrieth a sweet smell to all parts whither it goeth so the Spirit bloweth upon and openeth the flowers of Paradise and diffuseth the savour of life unto life through the whole Church 8. As the wind driveth the ship through the waves of the sea carrieth it to land so the gales of Gods Spirit carrie us through the troublesome waves of this world and bring us into the haven where wee would bee Cui cum Patre Filio sit laus c. THE MYSTERIE OF THE FIERY CLOVEN TONGUES THE LXV SERMON ACTS 2.3 And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire and it sate upon each of them AMong the golden rules of a Cael. Rodig lib. antiq lect Nunquam de Deo sine lumine loquendum Pythagoras so much admired by antiquity this was one that we ought not to speake of God without light the meaning of which precept was not that we ought not to pray to God or speake of him in the night or the darke but that the nature of God is dark to us and that we may not presume to speak thereof without some divine light from heaven Nothing may be confidently or safely spoken of him which hath not been spoken by him In which regard b Salv. de gubern lib. 1. Tanta est Majestatis sacrae tam tremenda reverentia ut non solùm illa quae
in their mouths and they cannot freely powre out their soules into the bosome of their Redeemer but they looke not into the cause of it they have not got a stocke of heavenly knowledge and sanctified formes of words their hearts are not filled with the holy spirit for were they full they would easily vent themselves They cannot freely bring forth because they have laid up nothing in the treasurie of their hearts To Peter and the rest of the Apostles As those that were wounded with the darts of Achilles could no otherwise bee cured than by his salves and plaisters so the Jewes who were wounded by S. Peters sharp reprehension could be by no other meanes cured than by his owne salves and receipts which he prescribeth afterwards Here our o Lorin comment in Act. c. 2. Aliàs notatum est quoties Petri cum aliis Apostolis mentio fit Petrum primo loco poni tanquam ducem ideoque nunc Judaei omnes ad illum se convertunt in c. 1. v. 13. Facit ad Petri primatum non mediocriter quod tum Lucas in isto capite sicut in Evangelio texens Apostolorum catalogum ut etiam Matthaeus Marcus primum ante omnes nominant adversaries who will not let the least tittle fall to the ground that may serve any way to advance the title and dignity of the Bishop of Rome will have us take speciall notice that here and elsewhere Peter is named before the rest of the Apostles and that yee may know that all is fish that comes to Peters net Bellarmine will tell you that the Popes monarchy is proclaimed in those words in the Acts Rise up Peter kill and eat Acts 11.7 I know not with what perspective the Cardinall readeth the Scriptures but sure I am hee seeth more in this vision than any of the ancient or later Commentators ever discerned yet Baronius seeth more than he Those were healed saith hee who came but within the shadow of Peter Acts 5.15 They brought forth the sicke into the streets and laid them on beds or couches that at the least the shadow of Peter passing by might over-shadow them The same vertue is given to the shadow of Peter which is given to his body that we might know that such store of grace was given to Peter that God would have the same gifts derived to his successours who represent his person Thus as yee see the Papists as men in danger of drowning catch at every rotten stake to support their faith in the Popes supremacy Lorinus catcheth at the placing of a word Bellarmine at a mysticall apparition and p Baron ad an 34. p. 303. Eadem virtus umbrae corporis Petri tradita quae corpori ut cognoscamus tantam gratiarū copiā Petro collatam ut eadem dona in successoribus qui referunt personam Petri propagari Deus voluerit Baronius at a shadow What serveth this shadow to illustrate or confirme the Popes or Peters supremacie It pleased God for the manifestation of his power and the performance of Christs promise to his disciples that they in his name should worke greater miracles than some of those that he had done to heale the sick by Pauls handkerchiefes and Peters shadow Ergo Peter was chiefe of all the Apostles and the Pope the Monarch of the visible Church Neither is there any clearer evidence in that vision which S. Peter saw of a sheet let downe from heaven in which there were foure-footed beasts of the earth and wilde beasts and creeping things and fowles of the aire And hee heard a voyce saying unto him Arise Peter slay and eat At manducare est capitis saith the Cardinall but it is the head that eateth the Pope therefore is the head Hee should better have concluded the Popes are the teeth for S. Peter himselfe made no other interpretation of this vision than that the Gentiles whose hearts God had purified by faith were not to bee accounted uncleane and therefore he alledgeth this apparition in his apologie for going unto the uncircumcised and eating with them As little maketh the setting of Peters name before the rest for his authority over them For here was a speciall reason why the Jewes directed their speech to Peter in the first place because it was he who charged them so deepe he put them in this perplexity and therefore to him they addressed themselves for counsell and comfort Elsewhere where there is not the like occasion others are named before him as q Gal. 2.9 James Cephas and John who seemed pillars James and ſ Marke 16.7 Tell the disciples and Peter Andrew and the r John 4.2 the citie of Andrew and Peter Disciples Here I demand of Lorinus doth the naming of Andrew before Peter or of James or the Disciples prove that any of these were superiours to Peter If they were what becomes of Peters supremacie If they were not what maketh the naming him before them for it Without all question if the setting of Peter after the rest of the Apostles Disciples in the texts above alledged maketh not against the setting him here before them maketh not for his supremacy Men and brethren what shall we doe Seneca saith Levis dolor est qui consilium capit It is a light griefe which admitteth of consultation but wee may say more truly Sanus dolor est qui consilium capit It is an healthfull malady and an happie griefe which drives us to our spirituall Physitian and exciteth us to a carefull use of the meanes of salvation S. t 2 Cor. 7.9 11. Paul rejoyced at this symptome in his patients at Corinth Now I rejoyce not that yee were made sorrie but that yee sorrowed to repentance for behold this selfe same thing that yee sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulnesse it wrought in you c. What shall we doe to satisfie the Father for the death of his Sonne to ease our burthened consciences to wash away the guilt of the effusion of innocent bloud Behold here the effects of soule-ravishing eloquence attention compunction and a sollicitous enquiry after the meanes of everlasting salvation or if yee like better of an allegoricall partition see here 1. The weapon wherewith they were wounded the Word preached when they heard c. 2. The wound which was a pricke at the heart 3. The cure not words but deeds they said what shall we doe Here yee have a patterne both of a faithfull teacher and religious hearers a faithfull teacher tickleth not the eares but pricketh the heart his words are not like bodkins to curle the haire but like goads and nailes that pricke the heart though the goads goe not so deepe that pierce but the skin the nailes goe farther for they are driven to the very heart of the auditors up to the head The religious hearer when he is reproved for his sin spurneth not at the Minister of God but receiving the words with meeknesse communeth with his owne