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A11012 Lectures, vpon the history of the Passion, Resurrection, and Ascension of our Lord Iesus Christ Beginning at the eighteenth chapter of the Gospell, according to S. Iohn, and from the 16. verse of the 19. chapter thereof, containing a perfect harmonie of all the foure Euangelists, for the better vnderstanding of all the circumstances of the Lords death, and Resurrection. Preached by that reuerend and faithfull seruant of God, Mr. Robert Rollocke, sometime minister of the Euangell of Iesus Christ, and rector of the Colledge of Edinburgh. Rollock, Robert, 1555?-1599.; Charteris, Henry, 1565-1628.; Arthur, William, fl. 1606-1619. 1616 (1616) STC 21283; ESTC S116153 527,260 592

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they bee for by so doing they not onelie depriue themselues of happinesse but also they turne the blessinges of God into a curse to them When IOHN hath informed PETER that it was the Lord vvhat does PETER It is saide When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord hee girded his coat to him for hee was naked and cast himselfe into the Sea He shewes a great zeale and forwardnesse for in my judgement this doing of PETER proceeded not from foolish hardinesse and inconsiderate rashnesse but from a true zeale and feruent desire to meete with the Lord. Nowe will yee compare IOHN and PETER together ye will find great diuersitie of giftes IOHN knewe the Lord first and that by sight PETER knew the Lord next but by hearing for IOHN informed him IOHN was before PETER in faith knowledge but PETER who comes behinde passes IOHN who was his teacher had instructed him for he is more zealous than IOHN was IOHN exceeded in knowledge but PETER exceeded in zeale This lets vs see the trueth of that sentence of PAVL One and the selfe same Spirit worketh all gifts distributing to euery mā seuerally as he willeth 1. Corinth 12.11 Euen in the Apostles themselues for euen among them some excelled in one gift and some in another IOHN excelled in knowledge and had knowledge of the glorious person of Iesus Christ and namelie of His diuinitie as his Euangell declares for it is full of high mysteries sublime doctrine of Christ aboue the rest of the Apostles PETER excelled in zeale and forwardnesse and was more ardent in zeale than the rest as wee may reade in the Gospell PAVL excelled in labouring and painfulnesse in preaching of the Gospell for hee sayes himselfe I laboured more aboundantlie than all the Apostles 1. Corinth Chap. 15. vers 10. The LORD gaue not all graces to anie one of them but to euerie one such a measure of grace as Hee pleased neither had it beene expedient to themselues nor so profitable to others It had not beene expedient to themselues because it might haue beene that they would haue comtemned and despised others in respect of themselues It had not beene so profitable to others because others would haue enuied them for their great perfection of graces And so by this meanes the bodie of IESVS euen His Church which should bee compact and straitlie joyned together would haue beene miserablie rent asunder On the other part this inequalitie and diuersitie of giftes that the Lord giues to men is a speciall meane to joyne and knitte together the members of the misticall bodie of CHRIST for as in the bodie of man the inequalitie and diuersitie of functions giftes that are giuen to seueral members joynes and holds together y e mēbers of y e body euē so y t inequality diuersity of spiritual graces giuen to euery mēber of y e body of Christ euery one hauing neede of the helpe of another joynes and holdes together the members to make vp one compact bodie Rea●e of this in the first Epistle of Sainct Paul to the Corinthians Chap. 12. vers 24.25 Nowe I shall onelie marke one thing and so I shall ende All the night preceeding when the Lord Iesus was absent Johns faith and Peters zeale were languishing and dwining but in the morning when Christ returnes both Johns faith and Peters zeale beginne to reuiue and to gette newe strength and vigour Whereof we may learne that this grace of faith knowledge and zeale is wakened and raised vp by Christ who is the onelie matter and object of them for our faith and knowledge proceedes of His gracious light which shines in our darke soules Our zeale proceedes from the Spirite of Christ who by His comming kindleth a burning fire in our heartes and makes vs to burne with zeale who before were colde in the seruice of God PAVL sayes God that commanded light to shine out of darknesse is Hee who hath shined in our heartes to giue the light of the knowledge of the glorie of God in the face of Iesus Christ. 2. Cor. Chap. 4. vers 6. The wordes import that all faith and knowledge of God that wee haue is by looking vnto the face of Iesus For when wee looke vnto His face the beames of that glorie which shines in it is conueyed into our soules and lighteneth them and so workes faith and knowledge in them And when wee shall gette a full sight and see Him as Hee is clearelie face to face then wee shall bee like to Him in glorie for His glorie shall transforme vs into this same image from glorie to glorie 2. Cor. cap. 3. vers 18. Then seeing that no grace can either bee wrought or entertained in the soule without the presence of the Lord Iesus and the beholding of His countenance wee should bee carefull constantlie to looke to His face and beholde His glorie in the mirrour of the worde so long as wee are in this pilgrimage that so hereafter wee may see Him face to face and so bee made partakers of His glorie which Hee hath purchased to all them that loue Him by the shedding of His owne blood To Him therefore with the Father and the Holie Spirite bee all praise and glorie AMEN THE XLIX LECTVRE OF THE RESVRRECTION OF CHRIST IOHN CHAP. XXI verse 8 But the other Disciples came by shippe for they were not farre from land but about two hundreth cubites and they dr●we the nette with fishes verse 9 As soone then as they were come to land they sawe hote coales and fish layed thereon and bread verse 10 Iesus saide vnto them Bring of the fishes which yee haue nowe caught verse 11 Simon Peter stepped foorth and drewe the nette to lande full of great fishes an hundreth fiftie and three and albeit there were so manie yet was not the nette broken verse 12 Iesus saide vnto them Come and dine And none of the Disciples durst aske him Who art thou seeing they knewe that hee was the Lord. verse 13 Iesus then came and tooke bread and gaue them and fish likewise verse 14 This is now the third time that Iesus shewed himselfe to his Disciples after that hee was risen againe from the dead IN this seuenth appearing of Christ Beloued Brethren in the Lord wee haue spoken alreadie of the place of His appearing to vvit at the Sea of Tiberias and vve haue spoken of the persons to vvhome Hee appeared vvho vve●e seuen in number the Lord by His secret prouidence gathered them together and kept them together albeit some vv●uld haue su●dered from the r●st to the ende the Lord might shew Himselfe v●to them being assembled together in one place W●e hau● spoken of their exercise how they vvere fishi●g but got little successe howbeit they had laboured all the night We told you also of the Lords appearing to them He shewes Himselfe to them in the morning and finding y t they had caught nothing Hee biddes them cast out the net on the
finde them all most clearly manifested in the person of Iesus Christ Now wouldst thou know that in him thou shalt find all things that the soule of man stands in neede of can require What can the soule of man require Desirest thou honour If thou beleeuest in him he shall grant thee that power prerogatiue that thou shalt be the Sonne of God Ioh. 1.12 Desirest thou riches He was made poore that thou through his pouertie mightest be made rich 2. Cor. 8.9 not with transitorie and corruptible riches but with riches and treasures incorruptible permanent desirest thou food meat drinke to thy soule He is that bread of life he is that water of life desirest thou wisdome sanctification and redemption Christ is all these vnto thee 1. Cor. 1.29 Ioh. 8.12 Desirest thou light He is the light of the world Ioh. 8.12 Desirest thou life He is thy life Col. 3.4 What euer he suffered it was for thee for by his stripes we are healed Esai 53.5 He was burthened with shame that he might redeeme thee from shame and cloth thee with glory he was taken and bound to set thee at libertie who was bound with Sathan and sinne he was mocked and was dumbe before the earthly Iudge that thou whose mouth before was closed through the guilt of sinne before God might haue boldnesse peartnesse in thy prayers supplications he suffered-anguish and griefe that thou mightst finde comfort ioy he dranke the gall that thou mightst drinke of a sweet and ioyfull cuppe he was naked that thou mightst be clothed and if thou wilt goe through all the points of his suffering and apply them to thy broken and casten downe soule thou shalt finde that euery one of them shall furnish comfort vnto thee yea if thou be a true penitent sinner beleeuest in him thou shalt find all these miracles to be wrought and performed in thy soule which euer the Lord in the dayes of his humiliy wrought on the body of any thou shalt finde life to thy dead soule eyes to thy blind soule eares to thy deafe soule limbes to thy lame soule a new tongue to thy dumbe soule c. Therefore as we should take pleasure delite in reading the whole parts of the Scripture for it is all by diuine inspiration is profitable to teach to cōuince to correct to instruct in righteousnes 2. Tim. 3.16 so chiefly that part which cōtaines the historie of the passion resurrection of Christ for of all there is none more profitable none more necessarie none more easie to be vnderstood by the simple none more easie to be kept in memorie none more forcible to mooue the affections either to admire the incomprehensible and infinite loue of God toward sinners or the fiercenes of his wrath for sinne or the seueritie of his iustice in seeking such exact satisfactiō or to moue to detest abhorre sin which made the Sonne of God to be made so vnworthily alwayes handled at last to be so shamefully crucified or to reioyce for these incomprehensible benefits that Christ hath acquired to vs our effectuall calling frō the kingdome of darknes to his marueilous light our iustification in pacifying the wrath of God in satisfying for sinne in absoluing vs from guiltines in dying that we might liue in bringing peace ioy to the conscience c. our sanctificatiō whereby we are repaired to his owne Image Nothing serues more for the mortificatiō nor when we consider how Christ hang vpon the Crosse for sin nothing will moue vs more effectually to cōforme our selues to him as an ensample in his humility patience obediēce loue finally in offering our selues to him as he offered himselfe for vs nor when by faith we beholde Christ on the Crosse crucified for vs. Now this history of the death resurrectiō of Christ haue many worthy men learnedly cōfortably handled exponed with great painfulnes no lesse cōmendatiō amōgst the rest that reuerent faithful man of God M. Robert Rollocke of blessed memory for his learned iudicious expositiō thereof for his manifold other graces which God vouchsafed on him deserues with the first to be cōmēnded for God in him as in a vine ensample gaue vs a shew of such qualities cōditiōs as are required to be in a Bishop of Iesus Christ 1. Tim. 3. In him learning godlines stroue together knowledge consciēce art nature a professiō an answerable conuersatiō he was faithfull painfull in his calling his calling did he decore with an holy harmlesse life for betweene these two there was such an harmony cōsent that in reading his writtings any man might see the maner of his life in seeing his life he might also therein read his writtings for his life spake what his pen wrote his person was a patterne of his writtē precepts he was neuer idle but euer doing the office of a Minister of Iesus either did he read meditate pray comfort preach or write no trauell did he refuse that he might glorifie God who sent him enlarge the kingdome of Iesus Christ acquire miserable soules from misery to felicity from darknes to light from death to life that so at last he might finish his course with ioy that was his meat his drink the delite pleasure of his soule Great graces did the Lord bestow vpō him excellēt knowledge great humility feruēt zeale charitable interpreting of all mēs doings compassiō toward all sorts of sinners Who in cōceiuing was more quick in iudgmēt more solide in memory more stedfast sure in deliuery more pithy in conuincing more powerful who with learning had greater facility easines in declaring his mind resoluing y e text of Scripture greater clearnes in raising y e grounds of doctrine greater power in applying greater wisdome in furnishing cōsolation greater dexterity in loosing of things obscure doubtsome In one word we may be bold to say of him that which Nazianzene spake of Athanasius that his life was a good definition of a true Minister preacher of the Gospell But we need not to insist in praysing him seeing so many euen all that knew him by face or heard him doe praise him for the singulare excellēt vertues graces that God bestowed on him yea they who neuer knew him by face but by his learned iudicious writtings dwelling afarre off haue highly commēded him the posteritie whose profite so much hee regarded in his labours wee doubt not shall know praise him and we had rather be silent than to speake too litle Now Sir because we thought that these Lectures on this history of the passion resurrectiō of Christ in it selfe for the matter so mouing alluring would profite edifie many if not of the most learned at least of the simple sort that other Sermons that were deliuered by him and set out by vs of before were well
Him whē He was dead in y e graue alas she had another kind of loue to Him thā we haue now but now albeit He be now glorified in y e Heauens we will suffer our selfe easily to sunder frō Him without a cōplaint or mone but if we foūd either y e force of His death or yet the force of His life glory we would neuer be glad vntill we were joyned w t Him Now when she sayes they had taken away y e Lord albeit she speakes not y e trueth yet I will not say she made a lie but she failed in ignorance she spake as she thought but she knew not y t the Lord was risen Ignorāce is a sore thing for whē once any mā cōmits a sin through ignorance he goes forvvard frō one sin to another so she makes an euil report to y e Apostles striue therefore to get this misty cloud of ignorance remoued frō thee for if thou takest pleasure to ly in it y e end of it shall be vtter darknes Brethrē marke y e mercy of God y e Lord layes not this to her charge it is said commonly loue hides a multitude of sins y e Lord vvhen He loues a person He casts y e mantle of His mercy ouer his sins hides them He vvill be loth to reuile them vvhom He loues a man vvil not shame another whō he loues vvel much lesse will y e Lord doe it No He vvill cast y e cloak of His mercy vpō them y t they appeare not before y e judgemēt seat of His Father Now I see further albeit those things were not true yet by them y e Lord brings good to y e disciples for they were lying in sluggishnes so wakens them so He works light out of darknes yet y t is no vvarrand for thee to do euill Let no man doe euill that good may come of it Rom. 3.8 Marke last cōcerning this womā Marie I see she comes to y e knovvledge of y e resurrectiō of Iesus with great paine for she waked y e night before w t care she comes out early in y e morning to y e graue goes home w t great care heauines It is not a litle thing to come to Christ in His glory thinkest y u to step in at the first to see God in His glory thou vvilt not get leaue to see y e glory of a King at y e first thinkest y u to come to Christ at the first No y u must come to Christ y e sight of His glory vvith many teares great paine But what if thou shouldst paine thy selfe all thy lifetime if thou get a sight of this resurrection in glory if thou gettest a blencke of y t countenance if it vvere at thy last end it shall svvallovv vp in a moment all thy displeasure paine if thou shouldest suffer martyrdome yet y t sight of His glory shall furnish such joy as shall swallovv vp all displeasure the sight of that eternall weight of glory makes vs to count all the afflictions of this present life to be but light and momentanean when we looke not to the things that are seene but to the things that are vnseene Thou thinkest the time here to be longsome but once thou gettest a sight of that glory thou shalt think it but a moment Novv leauing Marie Magdalene I come to the rest of the vvomen y t were at y e graue of whō we haue these four things shortly first what they do they enter into y e graue of y e Lord for it was large not an hole surely they behoued to loue Him well in whose graue they went Next whē they enter in the graue we haue set down what they see they see an Angell in the shape of a young man clothed in a faire white robe sitting in the graue thirdly we haue how they are terrified and lastly wee haue the speech of the Angell to the women Then first comming to the graue they runne not away as Marie Magdalene did but enter in the graue seeking the LORD and in this point they goe beyond Marie she went backe but they goe forward otherwise she went beyond them for loue zeale and faith in Christ No not one of the disciples surpast Marie Magdalene in loue faith and zeale yet they surpasse her in this point and as they excell her in going forward they get sure information of the resurrection of Iesus Christ for their reward Marke the lesson they who are inferiour in spirituall graces in some duties will excell them who are superiour and when the superiour falles backe they will goe forward and this lets vs see that it is the LORD who makes the difference Hast thou moe graces than thy companion Hee that preferred thee at one time will plucke His hand from thee another time and put them before thee and to this end that thou who gloriest in thy graces may glorie in the Lord for thy grace is not in thy selfe but in His Hand This for the first thing followes the next What see they They see in the shape of a young man an Angell cled with a long robe from top to toe I take this Angel to be y e same of whō we spake y e last day who first remoued away the stone and then sate downe on it his eyes burning like lightening and cled in white rayment Novve this Angell withdravves himselfe and hides him in the graue vvhen hee savv the vvomen comming neere lest he should haue frighted them away he goes in the graue but he sate on the stone first to terrifie the men of warre lest they should trouble the women besides this there is another cause why hee goes in the graue beeing to testifie the Resurrection he chuses the commodity of the place that when he should get the women in the graue that the Lord was risē in the graue he might instruct them better by the emptinesse and roomenesse of the graue that the Lord was risen from the dead Well that same Lord that terrifies the wicked with His looke that same GOD is mercifull to His owne and that Angell that terrifies the men of warre he is a minister of mercie to the godly women I say more at that same time whilst as He chases away the wicked in doing of that He shewes mercie to the godly and He terrifies the wicked that they should not bee a stoppe or terrour to the godly all the terrours and judgements of the wicked as they serue to the glorie of God so they serue for the well of His owne for the LORD hath not only His owne glory before His eyes but also of the ●ell of His owne Then consider againe the circumstance of the place wherein the Angell teaches these women the resurrection of Iesus Christ The Father of Heauen is very carefull of euery circumstance that serues for the testimonie of Christs Resurrection first Hee is carefull of the