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A59749 Ta proz eirenen, the things that belong unto peace, or, A seasonable discourse for these factious times delivered lately in a sermon before the judges at St. Maries in Nottingham at the assizes there, and now printed at the command of some persons of honour ; to which is annexed A short and modest apology for the author and book of the several weighty considerations, humbly recommended to the serious perusal of all, but more especially to the Roman Catholicks of England, by Thomas Sheppey ... Sheppey, Thomas. 1682 (1682) Wing S3221; ESTC R33738 21,949 42

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in the Church as many Creeds as Heads Destruction and Unhappiness is in all their ways and the way of Peace they have not known In their bed appointed for rest they study how to be Turbulent and travel with mischief and bring forth Ungodliness These these are the Troublers of our Israel the Thorns in our Eyes and the Goads in our sides the very Firebrands and Bellows of Sedition But we hope better things of You and things that accompany Salvation though we thus speak And though for the Divisions of Reuben there are great thoughts of heart Yet we will leave this Point and these wicked Men who are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up Mire and Dirt and proceed to something that may prove an expedient to these growing mischiefs and that shall make up the last part of this Discourse and it is this The best way to maintain Quiet between God and Man between Man and Man and in a Man 's own Breast is to put in execution the Apostles advice here that we every one do our own Business Wherein the Apostle recommends to us Diligence in our Calling thereby excluding Idleness and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or intermedling with other Mens Affairs We must be busy but in our own Concerns And then withal by the near Connexion of this with what went before Studying to be quiet is intimated that the more busy we are at home the more quiet we are like to be abroad Man saith the Scripture is born to Labour as the sparks flye upward And though every good and perfect gift be from above yet we must not neglect Industry in our Station and Calling The Husbandman must rise up early and sit up late and eat the bread of carefulness and then he may prudently expect that his Gainers may be filled with all manner of store that his Sheep may bring forth thousands and ten thousands in his Fields that his Oxen may be strong to labour and that there may be no decay in his Cattle Every man must attend his Office the Seaman must look to his Ship and the Tradesman to his Shop that so he may eat the Labours of his hands The Glorious Angels themselves though Spirits yet are Ministring Spirits ordained for the Praise of God and the Service of his Church Even in the state of Innocency Man was placed in the Garden of Eden to dress it as well as to keep and injoy it And this Diligence is to be used says Solomon Prov. 6.11 Lest Poverty come on thee as one that travelleth and necessity like an armed Man That is to say If thou mind not thy business Beggery will assault thee so suddenly so violently that thou canst not resist it All that belong to Gods Vineyard must be Labourers All are Stewards in his Family And as for the Magistrate in particular his business is so great that it made St. Chrysostom exclaim Miror si quis Rectorum salvari possit Nay it is Observable that Gods way of proceeding with his own People the Israelites puts every man in mind of his doing his business For though he could very easily have rained down on them loaves ready baked and fit to eat yet he rain'd down Manna which being scattered about the fields was with no small labour to be gathered together to be bruised in a Mortar or some other way and so formed into Loaves and baked that so at the same time he might supply their wants and teach them Diligence But if to the Temporal Concerns of a Man you adjoyn the spiritual necessities and Eternal Interests of a Christian you will ex abundanti as we say be convinced of the great Reason St. Paul had to press this Duty of looking to our Business I will instance but in that one business of Repentance wherein a Man must unravel his whole Life it is the leading a new Life a putting off the old Man and putting on the New an utter extirpation of all superfluity of Naughtyness and an Address to and a finall passage through all the Passages of Holy Living We have all our accounts to make even between God and our own Souls The Duty of Repentance without which we shall All perish consists of many Parts and so much imployment that it requires much Time and leaves a Man in the same degree of hope of Pardon as is his Restitution to the state of Righteousness and holy Living And who ever hath made the experiment will find that it is not so easy a business to root out the habits of many inveterate Sins which a Man hath contracted through the whole Course of his Life We find it work enough to mortify one beloved Lust in our very best advantages of strength and Time In so much that we read in the lives of the Antient Hermits of a famous Ascetick who having spent many years in that one Verse of the Psalmist I said I will look to my ways that I offend not with my Tongue yet acknowledged he was far from having attained that very Lesson And yet a defect in that very business is able to evaporate all our Religion for he that bridles not his Tongue that Mans Religion is in Vain To which we may annex the Command of the Apostle that we use all Diligence to add to our Faith Vertue and to our Vertue Knowledg and to Knowledg Temperance and to Temperance Patience and to Patience Godliness and to Godliness Brotherly Kindness and to Brotherly Kindness Charity Now certainly Sirs who ever seriously weighs these things will presently cry out who is sufficient for these things Life is short Art is Long the mystery of Godliness is no such easy Trade as many dream of And therefore the Apostles Counsel is most reasonable here To study to do our own Business and onely our own Business for I think we have enough to do However one Caution must necessarily be here interposed and it is not mine but that of a late Excellent Prelate of the Church of England It may be a fault and a great one too so to do our own Business as not to regard what becomes of others So our own turn be served and we get by it no matter who loses This is deservedly prohibited by our Apostle himself Philip. 2.4 Look not every man on his own things but every man also on the things of others and v. 24. he complains that All seek their own and not the things that are Jesus Christs And therefore our own here and our own there are two different Things That which he blames there is our Own of Interest there may be too much of our own in that But what he commands here is our Own of Duty and Office In this we must do so much our Own that we must not meddle with anothers Now how well this is observed especially at this time we need but appeal to our own eyes and Ears I have not time to Anatomize these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉