Selected quad for the lemma: knowledge_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
knowledge_n love_n patience_n temperance_n 1,817 5 11.3534 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25395 The morall law expounded ... that is, the long-expected, and much-desired worke of Bishop Andrewes upon the Ten commandments : being his lectures many yeares since in Pembroch-Hall Chappell, in Cambridge ... : whereunto is annexed nineteene sermons of his, upon prayer in generall, and upon the Lords prayer in particular : also seven sermons upon our Saviors tentations [sic] in the wildernesse. ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1642 (1642) Wing A3140; ESTC R9005 912,723 784

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

leape straight into Heaven from Predestination we leape straight to Glorification it is no matter for Mortification there be no such meane degrees But Saint Paul tels us it is so high that we had need of a ladder in which be many steps insomuch as he puts a How shall to every steppe Rom. 10.14 How shall they call on God on whom they have not beleeved c. There must be calling on God beleeving on him hearing his word There must be ordinary meanes and there is a ladder of practise aswell as of speculation or contemplation 2 Pet. 1.5 6. Joyne vertue with your Faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and so patience godlinesse brotherly kindnesse and love If these things be in you you shall not be idle and fruitelesse in the knowledge of Christ for he that hath not these things is blinde he goeth blindfold to the wood and may chance hap beside heaven or steppe besides the ladder A great many say as Balaam did O let my Soule dye the death of the Righteous but they care not for living the life of the Righteous He went but blindfold he knew not the Angell that stood with a sword drawne in the way but would have gone upon it if his Asse had beene so foolish A great many thinke that presumption in being secure of their salvation is good Divinity Balaam thought he went well when he went on the point of a naked sword So one entised by the flattery of a harlot thinkes he goes to a place of great pleasure but he goeth as one that goeth to the slaughter and as a foole to the stockes Prov. 7.22 Those whom it pleaseth God to have partakers of his Kingdome he puts them in minde To remember their Creator in the dayes of their youth before the evill dayes come He giveth the grace of timely Repentance and suffereth them not to deferre it till the last cast and then to thinke that with the turning of a pin as it were they shall with a trice be in heaven with Elias in a whirle winde Augustine saith We may in some cases advise men to have great hope that they shall be saved but in no case give them warrant of security So in Ephes 5.6 This wee know that no whoremonger nor uncleane person hath any inheritance in the Kingdome of Heaven Let no man deceive you through vaine words he that doth righteousnesse is righteous and he that doth unrighteousnesse is of the devill Joh. 3.7 Now therefore to neglect the hearing of the Word or when he commeth to heare it to clap downe in his place without desire or minde to beare it away thereby to be bettered in his life and without purpose after by meditating on it to chew it and so to kindle a fire within himselfe whereby it may be digested and turned into the substance of the minde this is to tempt God So also to beare a greater countenance and make more shew of holinesse than indeed is in one is to lay a greater yoke on himselfe than he need as Act. 15.10 is a tempting of God Againe he that sinneth must looke for evill to follow Psal 91.10 He therefore that sinneth and yet thinketh to escape punishment tempteth God They that by often experience have found that such and such things have beene to them occasions of sinning and yet will presume to use the same againe tempts God And those which set up their Idols in their heart and put the stumbling blocke of iniquity before their face EZech. 14.3 and thinke not they sinne such tempt God He that comes to aske forgivenesse of God and will not performe the condition of the Lords Prayer that is Forgive others tempts God Generally he that seeketh for good of God and will not performe that which he is to doe or doth evill thinking to escape scot-free without endevouring to avoyd or resist it both these tempt God and to these two may all other be referred IV. The fourth is we must not at all tempt God at no hand we must not thinke but God is able to bring water even out of a Rocke Numb 20.11 when there is nothing but rockes and stones but when we may hope to finde it we must digge for it So when the soyle will beare Corne we must Till it When Elisha was in a little village not able to defend him from the Assyrians he had chariots and horses of fire to defend him 2 King 6.17 but when he was in Samaria a strong walled City then when the King of Israel sent to fetch his head he said to those which were with him Shut the doore ver 32. Christ in the Wildernesse miraculously fed many in the City he sent his Disciples to buy meate as John 4.8 In the beginning when the Gospell was published there wanted sufficient men for the purpose the Apostles had the power as appeareth Acts 8.29 that on whomsoever they laid hands he received the holy Ghost and was straight able and meete to Preach the Gospell but after every man to his study 1 Tim. 4.5 These things exercise c. We see that notwithstanding Paul was told by an Angell that there should be no losse of any mans life in the ship yet he caused the Mariners to cut the ropes and to cast Anchor Act. 27.23 24.29 30 31 32. Nay when some would have gone out by boate he would not let them so here Christ answereth that howsoever Angels attend on him he may not tempt God V. Now follow the reasons why we may not tempt God There be two sorts of tempting the one by ignorance the other by unbeliefe It is the manner of Chirurgions when they are to dresse a wound and know not how farre nor which way it goeth to tent it In the same manner is God after the manner of men said to tempt us sometimes to prove what is in our hearts and whether we will keepe his Commandements Deut. 6.2 as he did the Israelites forty yeares To this end he both made them hungry and fed them with Manna We sometimes tempt God as if the arme of his power had received a wound or his eye a hurt as if he could not helpe or discerne our wants as well as before because he brings us not water out of the Rocke Numb 20.10 but such miracles now are not agreeing with his will which content us He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy Rom. 9.19 And we must not despise the riches of his bounteousnesse and patience and long-suffering which leadeth to Repentance Rom. 2.4 The Lords hand is not shortned that he cannot save nor his eare heavy that it cannot heare because he doth not reprove us we thinke him like us Psal 50.19 When God holds his peace we thinke his tongue is cut But I will not alwayes hold my peace saith God Mal. ult But how shall I know this say men now adayes as Zacharias knew his wife was with childe Luk. 1.18 who
divided and that also falleth into the division of having The parts of the soule as God maketh them Deut. 6.5 are reason or understanding called the soule 2. The affection or will called the Heart Therefore they are foolish schoolemen that expound by the heart the body of man So the duety of the mind being to know as is abovesaid in the treatise of the heart and appetite to regard love falleth right to this But under the division for the well expounding of the parts we must labour for the true sense of this Therefore as we know the parts of the mind so we must know that these parts have their order Vires animae sunt ordinatae the powers of the soule are set in order saith the Philosopher The order is this that we must know it before we can regard it and love it For ignoti nulla cupido there is no love of that we know not the Philosopher That invisa possumus cupere incognita nequaquam we may covet things unseene but never things unknown Augustin Therefore they say well where two things be in order if the first be taken away the second shall never be fulfilled So if ignorance be brought in God shal never be desired nor loved and so not had The first kowledge He must be knowne and that standeth first the duty of the mind and understanding part 2. Love he must be loved esteemed the duty of the second part the heart or will Now the end of knowledge is but the fulnesse of perswasion a setled beliefe which we call faith both the meanes and end of knowledge And therefore comprehended in the first part as the fulnesse of regard and love is nothing else but obedience But to make it more plaine let the mind begin that we may first know God knowledge must have its object and that is God He cannot be knowne à priore in himselfe therefore we must seeke to know him à posteriore and that is by his attributes and effects For his Attributes they are those ten set downe Exod. 34.6 7. His Majesty Truth Vnchangeablenesse Will Justice Mercy Knowledge Power Vbiquity Eternity Of these two especially are called principall and concerne us most his Justice and Mercy the other 8. are called communiter ad dno common to two because they fall into these two alike So knowledge in fulnesse 1. proceeding to faith apprehendeth 1. the Justice of God 2. his Mercy and beleeveth them both Adde the other 8. to his Iustice that he is of infinite majesty infallibly true c. and they make it more perfect and consequently more fearefull adde them also to his Mercy that he that loveth us is King of eternall life c. and it maketh his Mercy more and consequently farre more to be beloved Out of this faith or knowledge proceeding of his justice there proceedeth feare and out of it humility These out of Justice the first part and out of the knowledge and faith of mercy with the other 8. proceed two duties more one hope who would not hope 2. Fructus spei invocatio precatio est interpres spei The fruit of hope invocation prayer is the interpreter of hope By prayer or thankesgiving i. to acknowledge from whom we have received it Love hath his effect and fruit Love is full in obedience which is a conforming of our selves and our will to the Will of God Or a bearing willingly of whatsoever it pleaseth God to lay on us for not conforming our selves to him in this life and that is called patience obedientia crucis the obedience of the Crosse In these the having of God doth wholly consist and there can be no other duety added to them We must understand this that it pleaseth the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures by the figure Synecdoche for shortnesse of speech sundry times to name one of these and thereby to meane and comprehend the whole worship of God As Iohn 17.3 all is given to knowledge This is life eternall that they know thee c. In another place all to feare And in another place all to hope c. In the rest under the name of one synecdochicall to comprehend all the other Virtutes 2. 3. propos●tionis Vertues of the second and th●rd propositions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall not be must be perpetuall And not without good reason for they have a very good dependance one of the other Now to these we must adde the duty of the second proposition 1. true religion and out of the third proposition pure religion against joyning it with other worship And beside these out of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be which is the future tense to consent to it in our life till this non erit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall not be devoure our erit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be It includeth the verture of perseverance through all the Commandements And coram facie mea before my face includeth sincerity and singlenes of heart for our heart is as well before his eyes as our other parts contrariwise condemneth hypocrisie These make up the manner of his worship In the resolution of the first Commandement the first thing in it Knowledge is knowledge of which in regard of the excellency and dignity of it Iohn writeth thus ch 17. v. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. This is eternall life that they know thee In the handling of these severall vertues as before in the explication of the Commandement we must follow those rules that we have set downe Vsus necessitas cognitionis Dei The use and necessity of the knowledge of God The first thing concerning knowledge is the use of it and thence the necessity of it The necessity out of this place that knowing we must attaine everlasting life And forasmuch as life everlasting is so much worth to us and without this knowledge we lost it but we are dull by our owne nature therefore we are to seeke a further provocation We must therefore adde that Ier. 9.24 where God plucketh from us all our Peacock feathers as gifts of nature as wisdome gentry riches strength c. and chargeth not to rejoyce in them but in that we know God But let him that glorieth glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me And herein only must we glory But as we said it is not the excellency that can so strike into us our dull hearts but they cannot desire to be excellent But because we cannot be without it when we come to shew that we must needs have it that is ferrea ratio a hard reason If he finde us ignorant that we cannot doe agendum i. the law being our agend and no action can be without moving and no moving without the will and no will without desire and no desire without a thing knowne therefore take away knowledge and take away all and so nothing shall be done and consequently we shall become idle Not but that
we shall doe for evill men are practicall But our knowledge being deprived of the true end we must needs erre in false ends and waies and so wander and never come to the right end but to another end and so consequently end in darknesse deprived of the fruit for which we came into the world So that Rom. 10.14 it is true that without hearing there can be no knowledge and therefore is hearing called the sence of knowledge without knowledge no beliefe without beliefe Auditus scientiae sensus Hearing the sense of knowledge no love without love no obedience and therefore that knowledge is necessary to obedience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How shall they call on him in whom they have not beleeved and how shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard and how shall they heare without a preacher Rom. 10.14 2. There is in all these vertues an inchoation in this life and a perfecting in the life to come The schoolmen call them by the name of first and second perfection so our knowledge in this life is but praelibatio a taste of that which shall be blessed in the life to come And as the Apostle maketh two resurrections the first and the second and blessed is he that hath his part in the first for he shall have it also in the last so there are two knowledges the first fides faith the second visio Dei vel vita aeterna the vision of God or eternall life and blessed is he that hath his part in the first so that as in the second resurrection none shall have part but those that have had in the first so in the second knowledge none can have their portion but they that have had it in the first And as none can be partaker of the second unlesse he hath been partaker of the first so the first availeth nothing without the second 3. The great witnesse of this is Christ Luke 10.42 Martha troubled herselfe about many things and no doubt necessary in entertaining of Christ honourably yet we see what Christ said unum est necessarium one thing is needfull and that is this that Mary had chosen to sit downe at Christ his feet and learne his will A necessary practice of knowledge in Mary whereas great provision was made by Martha for the entertainement of Christ Christ restraineth the necessary part into one point so the learning of the Will of God is onely necessary If this onely be necessary and seeing the end that without it there is no processe then we have done with the first part the first part must needs be from knowledge And thus we see both the excellency and necessity of it 2. Part. How to come to knowledge There must be a finding All knowledge is either of our owne invention or we learne it of others In the second is this That if knowledge be so necessary how shall we come by it In knowledge there is a teacher one that is taught We must either finde it out of our selves or learn it of others For finding it of our selves Ier. 10.14 hath taught us a lesson Every man is a beast by his owne direction if he hath none to direct him but his owne naturall knowledge he shall come to more grossenesse and absurdities then the very beasts We are all destitute of the knowledge of God by nature So having no hope to finde it our selves and being not like to learn it of others because all are thus affected We must seeke to an higher teacher that hath higher knowledge then we have and he is set downe to us 1. Sam. 2.3 Deus scientiae Dominus For the Lord is a God of knowledge and by him enterprises are established So then he can teach us and of his will we be very sure He hath knowledge to teach us and others we must not looke for it elsewhere Esay 54.13 Erunt omnes docti à Deo And all the children shall be taught of the Lord. Psal 36.9 For with thee is the well of life and in thy light shal we see light Though we are all blind and have no light in any of our selves yet in his light we shall see light And therefore he can teach and that he is willing we have seene before The next thing is that seeing we know where we must have our knowledge to see 1. whether we are willing to be taught which cannot but be seeing the necessity of it 2. Whether God be willing to teach us Gods willingnesse in Iob is testified that he hath written understanding in the reines of man So he began it in Adam he preserved it in the Patriarks and then it decaying he taught it by traditions after that they being corrupted and knowledge more decaying he wrote the law If there prove no sufficient knowledge it is either on the teachers part or on his that is taught being so written it was broken at the foote of the Mount when that was broken he tooke order for a new writing and in Deut. he taketh order for continuall practice of it that they should continue in the hearing of it Nehem. 8.8 he gave it to the Levites to interpret it to the people and make them to understand it and they read in the booke of the Law of God distinctly and gave the sense and caused them to understand the reading When they failed and false interpretations came he raised up Prophets to give the true sense of the law And when this was not sufficient as its Heb. 1. He sent his only Sonne the last expounder of the law and he going up to glory And as he hath done th●s in his word so hath he done it in his ministery Philip Peter to his Father gave of the gifts that he had received unto men As Ephes 4.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. And he gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastours and Teachers c. and 1 Cor. 12.28 And whereas in Gods knowledge there are required two things 1. The outward meanes of the Minister 2. The inward meanes of the holy Ghost For the outward meanes we have in Act. 8.29 the Eunuch sitting in his Chariot and reading a place of Esay desirous to know the meaning of the place God provided him a Minister that is Philip to expound it to him And so in Act. 10.30 Cornelius continuing in fasting from the fourth houre to the ninth houre and on the ninth houre falling to prayer c. was provided for by Peter For the inward meanes the holy Ghost Christ Luke 11.13 giveth forth that his Father will send downe his holy Spirit c. So that the outward means being diligently performed on our part we may be perswaded he will performe the other which is in Ioh. 5.39 Christ perswades the Pharisees to search the Scriptures and so perswades us in them to come to life Search the Scriptures for in them c. That that remaineth which
for we have no warrant that our other studies shall be sanctified unlesse this be first that shall after sanctifie the other So that it is necessary in all things For this attaining of knowledge as it must have his course so it must have a space of time and diligence withall the one without the other is nothing Time Psalm 46.10 vacate videte To attaine knowledge 1. time 2. d●l●gence must be used be still or take time and know that I am God They must be at leisure that they may know It will not be had at certaine times 1 Cor. 7.5 his counsell is to the man and wife not to come together for a time that they might 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 give themselves 1 Time To leave the use of the bed that they might vacate mel●ori attend better things or be at leasure to prayer and fasting and by an argument à majore if we should abstaine from indifferent things then from other things that are not indifferent This Act. 17.21 of the Athenians howsoever other businesse fell out that they did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spend their time which is more then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be vacant to tell or heare of novelties then we may be ashamed that this hath not wrought that in us which it did in them For Diligence Augustines rule for this is strange 2 Diligence but it may be the rule till a better come Satis reputatur quis facere cum tantum facit pro Deo quantum facit pro mundo Ier. 4.22 For my people is foolish they have not knowne mee they are foolish children and have no understanding they are wise to doe evill but to doe good they have no knowledge Media cognitionis adipiscendae we then discharge our duty to God-ward when we are as industrious in his service as we are for the world If we bestowed but asmuch diligence on Gods statutes as we doe in the penall statutes of a Prince as 6. Micah 16. for the statutes of Omri are kept and all the manners of the house of Ahab ye walke in their counsels then we might come to some knowledge Jer. 4.22 if that paine that we take to doe evill and to deceive we would take to study the Law and to learne the Commandements of God he would not complaine of us as he doth that we perish for want of knowledge Now to the pointe the necessarie meanes First there is required prayer wisdome and knowledge Jam. 1.5 must be asked of God in the 8. Wisd v. 21. Solomon makes it a point of wisdome first to know how to come by wisdome c. 9. he makes his prayer to God for it as also 1. King 3.6 Solomons prayer for wisdome is set 10. v. that which is more that God tooke great pleasure to be desired it and this is the first meanes Secondly the other are set down Deut. 6.6.7.8.9 i. first that wee should bring it into the heart which is past the braine for this First thou shalt whet them i. our catechising or the first principles must be had perfectly How wee shall come by it it is set downe Rom. 10.17 an ordinary meanes hearing and repeating Talking of it which signifieth to conserre Writing and in that included reading which are fruitfull with other and alone A binding of them before our eyes and upon our hands not now used but the fathers interpret the having before the eyes Meditation which doth as it were put it before the eyes and for the binding it on their hands as in Physick there is a rule per brachium fit judicium de corde that the straints and veines come from the heart to the hand so it is in divinity by the arme is practise and exercise meant and this is to binde it on the armes it is a good way to make aconscience of the practise of that wee know Quod datur oranti quodaperitur quaerenti id exerce see that thou exercise and put in practice those gifts and graces which thy prayers have obtained of God Bernard But the contrary practising bringeth forth poenales caecitates for illicitas cupiditates penall blindnesse for unlawfull desires No knowledge to the knowledge of practise The heathen man saith that he that hath an habit of justice shall be able to say more of it then he that hath the perfect speculation of the Ethicks so the poorest man that hath practised his knowledge and is well practised in faith shall say more of the feare of God and of faith then the learnedest Doctor that hath not practised and so in all other things exercitium is signum potentiae and so signum scientiae Exercise is a signe of knowledge as well as of strentgh The signes of knowledge 3. Humility The next rule is of the signes of knowledge they are foure That is true that of the consequent the best rule is by the antecedent If feare want there can be no love if love want there can be no obedience The want of humilitie is a signe of no knowledge But specially that of humility Augustines prayer Domine Deus noverim te noverim me he adds they know not God if they know not themselves Vera scientia non facit hominem exultantem sed lamentantem True knowledge begets not pride but teares So the Heathen man saith Quod faciunt alii de aliis id ipse de se facit apud se Et inter sapiences sapientior qui humilior est That which other men would have others to doe that he exacted of himselfe And he is wiser then others that is more humble then others He that hath a conceit of himselfe can never come to knowledge 2. That which the Heathen give forth 2. Order and it is Aristotles in his Metaphysicks Scientis est ordinare he is a wise man that can order his doings to preferre eternall things before temporall c. But we doe contrarie it is a common order to put private profit against common profit and to preferre temporall things before eternall Therefore this is a signe that we have no knowledge 3. In the 1 Cor. 14.26 we must not be like those 3. Constan●ie 1 Cor. 15.58 that be children in knowledge that be carried away with every wind of vaine Doctrine and as Joel saith They are empty cloudes carried with the winde and like the waves carried with the tyde In our dayes there are more turning tempests by reason of the want of knowledge 4. That which was before alleadged 4. Practice No man doth against his certaine knowledge then if we knew God If wee practice not wee have but a foolish knowledge our actions would witnesse it If our knowledge were in heavenly things as it is in sensible we would not do against it but now we have but a pretie opinion in Divinity and therefore it doth not stay us 5. Lastly That we hinder not knowledge in others whether it
uses also for first either they are spurres and provocations to do good and secondly if wee doe good to be our comforters to cherish the thoughts of the heart so there is a beginning of blisse here The first of them is Feare toward God the reason because the word of God being the object of faith Timor inter affectiones prima the prime affection is feare Because the affections have their prius posterius their first and last Looke what object is first that affection is first according to this conclude because Gods justice was first proclaymed therefore feare first to be handled There is a faith in Moses i. e. the knowledge of Gods justice 1. Moses his feare And these 2. are properly attributed to feare Why God set justice first to be apprehended Whether wee take it whole and in grosse or the five books of Moses before the foure Gospells or in the very beginning wee see our faith apprehendeth in the order of the word that in what day soever thou shalt eat of the fruit of the tree thou shalt die before the other the seed of the woman shall bruise the Serpents head So the Justice of God offereth it selfe first to be handled which justice the knowledge that is by faith apprehending armed with the other eight attributes to make it seeme more fearefull considering it with them and the conscience telling us that man hath taken of the forbidden fruit necessary it is that feare come out of this consideration and consequently be in us for our transgressions It is that which before was said Joh. 3. ●6 si crederetis Moysi crederetis mihi if yee beleeved Moses yee would beleeve mee first Moses must be beleeved and then Christ The first is a faith in Gods justice There is a most manifest example of this Jonah 3.5 crediderunt Deo timuerunt they beleeved God and feared which is nothing else but a faith in Gods justice They of the later writers giving to faith 6. motives make the two first and especiall these 2. contritionem a grinding to powder by feare by that knowledge the law being apprehended Psal 119.120 the Prophet telleth us what is the true object of feare My flesh trembleth for feare of the O Lord I am humbly afraid of thy judgments this effect is of faith in the justice of God The reason why it pleased God to set justice first to be apprehended and feare is that before any matter be brought to passe that that hindreth must be taken away Have God wee cannot because Esa 59.2 there is a separation betweene him and us and as it is said Ephes 2.14 there is a great partition wall betwixt therefore wee cannot have him Causae prohi●entes expellentes p●●catum The causes which hinder the growth of sinne are 1. Timor feare Now as wee should looke for him that should breake downe so if wee will have it broken downe it is expedient that wee should not build it higher therefore wee must cease to heape sinne upon sinne and looke for Christ to breake downe that which is already built That that causeth us to cease from sinne is the feare of God Prov. ● 13 expulsor peccati timor domini the feare of the Lord teacheth us to hate evill not saying as it is Rom. 6.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What shall we say then shall we continue in sinne that grace may abound therefore this is the reason why God commandeth feare because it makes to leave sinne There are besides this two other reasons and two other affections but it pleased God to make choyce of this here for not onely feare but shame and griefe or paine cause men to leave an evill thing but they that are moved neither with shame nor griefe with feare are moved For shame Psal 83.16 the Prophets prayer is Fill their faces O Lord with shame 2. Pudor shame that they may seeke thy name for griefe Esa 28.19 vexatio dabit intellectum if a man smart for it experience will teach him understanding 3. Dolor griefe Puder tollitur multitudine peccantium dolorem tollit aut certe mitigat volup●● terrena But wee know that in multitude of offenders there is no place for shame therefore that cannot prevaile seeing the world is full of offenders and for paine we have terrenas consolatiunculas some few worldly pleasures to beate it out or at the least to season it but feare which it pleaseth God here to require at our hands is that when these faile it faileth not as we see it hath prevailed in evill men yea in beasts Gen. 3.10 Adam walked up and downe in Paradise with comfort enough though he had Fig-leaves and was naked his humbling came not to any perfection till he heard the voyce of the Lord comming toward him Acts 24.25 Felix the Deputy being a very ill man and an Heathen we see he fell into a trembling on a discourse of Pauls concerning justice and temperance and other vertues and especially of the judgements of God This were somewhat but that it moveth beasts also and that beast in which there is most brutishnesse Numb 22.23.25 27. Balaams Asse being in feare of the Angel of the Lord that stood in the way while there was roome enough on both sides ranne aside out of the way when there was no roome 〈◊〉 that one might passe by another he rubs the Prophets foote against the wall and when there was no way at all to escape the Angel of the Lord he falleth downe flat under him and though he were sore beaten yet he could not be made to runne upon the Angels sword no stripes can drive an Asse where he seeth danger to be to runne into that danger but he will be sooner killed with stripes then move Yet beyond these as that Iam. 2.19 that howsoever all other things are not brought forth out of the Devils yet feare commeth of their faith Daemones credunt contremiscunt the Devils beleeve and tremble therefore this must needs bee a most forcible meanes and he is far gone and in a very fearfull case that feareth not You will happily say but God speaketh much of love that were a better way to be brought by love to obedience and beliefe Objection Responded It is true It is a farre better way but the case is so that love will not prevaile with us for he that doth love a good thing Solution must have a knowledge of it and by his knowledge a taste of it and if his taste be infected as in a Fever they that are troubled with it are delighted with nothing but that which seemeth good to the corrupted state and if wholsome meate be offered them yet they love it not If the love be infected there is no love of that which is profitable unlesse it agree with their corrupted taste and consequently cannot be brought by love to taste of the wholsome meate yet this reason will be
the land of promise this to that part of the land that is beyond Iorden and the other to that on this side where Ierusalem and Sion stood And for amor gratuitus the love that aimes not at reward as Bernard saith though it be gratuitus yet Deus nunquam sine praemio diligitur tametsi sit sine intuitu praemii diligendus Our love to God shal not be unrewarded though we should love without● respect to the reward and so they beginne I love because I have received But Rom. 9.3 there is a strange end of it where the Apostle respected his owne commodity so little that he wished himselfe accursed that the glory of God might shine to the salvation of Israel This distinction is profitable that we may know we are not in the state of reprobates though we love not God propter se meerely for himselfe Vsius ameris the use of this love Now we come to the use of this love there is a chap. 1 Cor. 13. to end where he plainely sheweth the necessity of it he setteth it down thus If a man for his knowledge were an Angel and for his Faith were able to remove mountaines and for his liberality had given away all that he had and had left himselfe nothing and for his constancie had endured Martyrdom yet they should not prevaile they should bee nothing except he had the love of God with him and in the end of the same chap. there is a singular commendation of it though not to shew the necessity of it yet it may be a great motive to love Faith hope and love it is the greatest of the three if we take it in quantity it is the greatest both for the breadth and for the length for whereas faith and hope consist in the bounds of mans person and in singular men this spreadeth abroad and reacheth to God and man and in man to our selves and to others and in others to our friends and even to our enemies Austin Bea●us qui te amat amicum in te inimicum properte Blessed is he that loveth thee O Lord and his friend in thee and his enemy for thee And this for the breadth Now for the length whereas the other are in us but in the forme of a lease but for the term of our life the gift of charity shall be even as a freehold and continue for ever in Heaven In these respects and of that honourable place that Christ and God vouchsafe it is that of our Saviour Matth. 22.40 saying all the Law and the Prophets make two heads and both these are love and Saint Paul Rom. 13.9 11. maketh but one head of all and calleth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulfilling and abtidgment of all and that in this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt love thy neighbour c. Iohn 13.34 it is called mandatum novum a new Commandement admitting that though all the old Commandements were cancelled yet we have it in the new Commandement and 1 Iohn 2.7 it is but the old Commandement for both the old and the new are all one there is in the old and the new Diliges thou shalt love But that which goeth beyond these and which imposeth a necessity in this that whereas all other before spoken as faith hope c. or that shall be spoken as patience c. none of them are mutuall nay they are not in God at all and when as he dealeth in them we are not to answer him as hee dealeth with us if he promise or threaten we must not likewise promise or threaten but here in this there is mu●ua vicissitudo a mutuall vicissitude if God love us we must love him againe and therefore most necessary Gregory saith Magnum est vinculum charitatis que ipse Deus ligari se voluit strong is the bond of love seeing God himselfe will be bound with it this affection saith Bernard Solus triumphat de Deo doth onely get the victory over God and as he also saith Nescio quid magis dici debeat in laude tua O charitas I know not what can be spoken more in thy praise divine love then that thou hast brought God out of heaven into earth and hast lift up man from earth into heaven hominem Deo reconciliasti Deum homini pacasti Therefore as on this side we are to consider how willing God is that this should grow in us so now we must consider what is on Gods behalfe performed to stirre us up unto it The Heathen say magnes amorisamor nothing is more effectual to move love then to love and therfore that is it that continually is first set down on Gods part i. where the love of God is beaten on that on Gods part is set first which how great it is it appeareth by nothing more then that of Bernard he in his booke de diligendo Deo sets it down in these six quod nos 1. prius dilexit 2. tantus 3. tantillos 4. tales 5. tantum 6. gratis For the first the Priority 1 Iohn 4.10 herein is that love Prior. Prius not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes and vers 19. We love him because he lved us first for our prior it was his love because he loved us first Aug. Nulla est major ad amorem invitati● quam praevenire amando nimis enim est darus animus qui etsi noluit impendere noluit rependere no more kindly atractive in love then in loving to prevent for exceeding stony is that heart which though it like not to love first will not love againe neither neither first nor second For the second ● Tantus tantus the greatnesse of his love and the consideration thereof Aug. saith in the same place tantus ut non liceat conaridicere quantus it is so great that it is not possible to say how great For the third 3. Tantillos tantillos for our estate he loved us when wee were wormes our smalnesse is set downe Rom. 9.11 applied to Iacob and Esan and to all that are elect Cum nondum essemus when as yet we were not we cannot be smaller then so not to be at all and yet he loved us even before we were For the fourth 4. Tales Tales what we were Rom. 5.10 he loved us when we were his enemies we estranged our selves so farre from him that we served his very enemy For the fifth 5. Tantum Tantum i. for the exceedingnesse of it we may say as we said before but yet we have great light in the Scriptures God being not willing that it should be buried The Fathers upon Iohn 3.13 Sic Deus dilexit mundum c. So God loved the world to that same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So saith Chrysostome a man may put all the adverbs that will set up a comparison in the highest degree Patru
may be publike gratulation civilly or ecclesiastically for that was the third part of temperance And whatsoever was not a hinderer of any of these it was a day of publike joy There the people were ready to mourne therefore he saith they should goe home and he willed them to testifie by the use of the creatures the joy of the benefit which God had vouchsafed to his Church But out of these three cases it must not be used And contrary to these Esa 22.13 Even as in the time when there was occasion that they should rather mourne they fell to joy and gladnesse when they should rather have fasted they fel to feasting both those are contrary to this precept And a third thing whereas the Apostle reckoneth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wine they straight take hold of it but where he joyneth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 little they take no hold of it There must not be redundantia superfluity Amos 6.6 it is counted an especiall fault of the Princes of Israel that they dranke wine in bowles c. whereas wine and ointments are to be used no otherwise then will serve for medicines of nature or duty or testifying their joy or pleasure for blessings received if it be not used for some one of these we have no warrant for it and it disposeth us to this sinne And you may apply the five rules to the right governing your selfe so both these vices are salved by a vertue called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Temperance that is here commended Gal. 5.23 where it is made an especiall fruit of the spirit and Tit. 2.6 where Titus is called especially to preach it and exhort young men to it and 2 Pet. 1.6 it is commanded that vertue shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in knowledge and to that is joyned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Temperance unto young men and to those that bend themselves to knowledge and in scientia abstinentia in knowledge is Temperance 2. The second thing is Idlenesse Idlenesse The light of nature answering to him that asked what was luxuria that it was nothing else but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a passion of idlenesse Ezek. 16.49 lusting after strange flesh it came of Idlenesse Idlenesse highly displeaseth God as well in regard of the next Commandement as in regard of losse of time which is to be carefully employed Gal. 6.10 and Ephes 5.16 when we have over-seene our selves in losse of time we must be carefull to redeeme it It commeth also under this Commandement making us applyable and like soft wax for concupiscence Idlenesse is in two things Being 1. Given to sleepe 2. Awaked and not exercised in our callings The first in Rom. 13.13 when he hath beene in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 banquetings and then in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drunkennesse thirdly he commeth to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee translate it chambering but is properly lying in bed And there is joyned with it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wantonnesse the companion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chambering and beginning of concupiscence Amos 6.4 he speaketh there and upbraideth them as with an offence And they lay and stretched themselves on their beds and Mich. 2.1 that by thus stretching themselves they began to cogitare nequam and to have wicked thoughts And we our selves see 2 Sam. 11.2 that David after his sleepe he was disposed to take the aire in his Turret and so was made a fit matter to receive the impression of the sight For which cause Solomon Pro. 20.13 meete for this purpose after that he had sain vers 11. Those that are young a man may know them by their actions whether their words be aright And then vers 12. thus you shall know whether they apply their eares and eyes to knowledge as God created them otherwise as vers 13. if they love sleepe the effects of it shall come upon them 2. The quantity of it Prov. 6.9 Vsque quo dormis ultra horam how long wilt thou sleepe O sluggard Rom. 13.11 when the houre commeth then to be on his bed as the dore on the hinge so hee that is slothfull will never prove good 3. The manner as we see in Ionas cap. 1.5 It is said there that he was dead asleepe when the danger hung over him and being for his cause Ierome on that place Some sleepe doth not seeme to be requies lassi but sepultura suffocatt the repose of the wearied but the burying of the dead Esa 29.10 The sleepe of slumber is a certaine plague of God and as it standeth there is to be understood as well of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the drowsinesse of the soule as of the sleepe of the body wherein a man is often iterating of it It is a signe that as Ionas in the thickest of the tempest slept deepely the visitation of God being upon him In these regards we come to be faulty in our naturall desires A●o●ia not labouring in our callings As on the other side with wanting labour and giving our selves to ease we come to have Heb. 12.12 hanging heads and loose knees that are fit for no good thing And consequently as there is none of the creatures of God whether it be naturall or artificiall but standing still it groweth to be corrupt as water for it most properly standing doth putrifie and being putrified once engendreth Toades and other such venemous creatures so ease in the body bringeth forth podagram the gout and in the minde the disease of it Basill calleth podagram anima the gout of the soule Ambrose calleth them creaturas Domin superfluas superfluous creatures of God which doe no way profit the body wherein they live But as the Heathen man saith of the Hogge that hath animam pro sale Salt instead of a soule they should not else be sweete 2. Thes 3.11 Idlenesse there not measured by doing nothing but by not doing the duties of their places They that are placed here and doe not study if they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all then if they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 busie bodies 1 Tim. 5.13 he saith there they be not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idle and not onely that but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idle pratlers And upon these commeth tale-carrying lying faining c. forging and they disquiet other and not onely that but they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 busie bodies medling out of their calling These be here restrained In each of these as there groweth a disposition to make the body fit for the evill motions of the soule so the vertue 1 Pet. 2.11 Abstinence and fighting against such concupiscences as doe militare conira animam fight against the soule 1. For the first against sleepe 1 Pet. 1.13 he hath that which hee calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sobriety properly watchfulnesse 1 Thes 5.6 the Apostle hath the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be sober and watch drunkennesse and sleepe are in the night these are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉