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A22562 Three treatises Viz. 1. The conversion of Nineueh. 2. Gods trumpet sounding the alarum. 3. Physicke against famine. Being plainly and pithily opened and expounded, in certaine sermons. by William Attersoll, minister of the Word of God, at Isfield in Sussex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1632 (1632) STC 900; ESTC S121173 371,774 515

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Israel when they saw the wrath of God kindled against them the chosen men of Israel smitten down Iosh 7.8 the Canaanites to preuaile against them to cry out O Lord what shall I say when Israel turneth their backes before their enemies And when the people were smitten by the children of Benjamin with a greeuous slaughter they went up and came to the house of the Lord and wept and sate there before the Lord Iudg. 20.26 and fasted that day untill the even The third cause is Gods threatning to destroy for some generall or notorious sins reigning in the land crying unto God for vengance This moved these Ninevites to fast when Ionah the Prophet cryed out against them Chap. 1.2 because their wickednesse was come before the Lord. This is so urgent a cause that it prevailed with Ahab who by the instigation of wicked Iezabel sold himselfe to worke wickednesse for when he heard the fearful threatning denounced against him by the Prophet against his house he rent his garments put on sackcloth fasted 1 King 21.27 and humbled himselfe whereby he obtained a respit of the judgement a temporall reward for a temporal repentance The fourth cause is the calamity and misery of the neighbour Churches lying under the Crosse Psal 80.13 when the boare out of the wood doth waste them and the wild beast of the field devoure them to witnesse our communion of Saints and to shew a fellow feeling of their sighes and sorrowes that they also may doe the like for us This seemeth to be the cause of the assembly of the Congregation at Antioch they laboured mightily in praier fasting for the people of God dispersed among the Gentiles Act. 13.2.5 and specially for the poore Saints at Ierusalem persecuted through the cruelty of Herod Act. 12. The last cause why the Churches assembled in this manner was to crave a blessing from God when they did enterprize or execute any special work which highly cōcerned the church or cōmon wealth Act. 13.3 When the Church did lay their hands on Paul Barrabas they fasted and prayed cōmended them to the grace of God that he would prosper their ministery These were the reasons of such solemne assemblies And are not the same causes found among us Yes doubtlesse all of them presse us to the practise of this duty and call upon us for humiliation to move the Lord to shew mercy in these daies of trouble heavinesse Are not dāgers threatned on every side nay are they not already inflicted upon us Hath not the Lord a controversie against us for our common sinnes hath not iniquity the upper hand and is not godlinesse troden under foot And as for the miseries and desolations of the neighbouring Churches are they not in paine like a woman in travaile bring forth nothing but wind Psal 79.1.2.3.4 may we not say The heathen are come into thine inheritance thine holy Temple have they defiled and shed the blood of thy Saints like water that they are become a reproach to their enimies a scorne and derision to them that are round about them who say where is their God Lastly we enterprize great things how can we looke for a blessing if we crave it not with fasting and prayer doubtlesse this is the cause why we have no better successe in our endeavours because we trust in our multitudes munition pollicies and seeke not aright the God of heaven Let us come to the uses Vse 1 First it reproveth such as hold fasting to be meerly Iudaicall and ceremoniall a part of the rudiments of the Law which are shadowes of things to come and that it hath no use in the times of the Gospel And true it is this exercise had in it somewhat ceremonial and proper to the Iewes annexed unto it as one certaine and fixed day of the yeare Levit. 16. Levit. 16.29 Zach. 7.5 This shall be a statute for euer unto you in the seuenth moneth on the tenth day of the moxeth ye shall afflict your soules c. and it had sundry legal rites and facrifices annexed unto it But may we not say the like of the Sabbath is it to be holden wholly ceremoniall not to be obserued as moral because the day is changed and all the rites abolished together with the strict rest No doubtlesse there remaineth a Sabboth and holy day of rest for the people of God to the end of the world or else religion would soone perish out of the earth So we may say touching fasting true it is we find no setled time in the new Testament appointed and set apart to fast by the ordinance of Christ neverthelesse because the causes of fasting remaine which we noted before as great a necessity lyeth upon us as ever lay upon the Iewes when the like occasions shall be offered unto us that were offered unto them Now where the causes of the institution remaine there the things themselues must continue but the causes of the institution remaine therfore fasting it selfe must continue Be sides when our Saviour was blamed by the Pharisees Disciples the Disciples of Iohn because his disciples fasted not doth he exempt them vtterly from it discharge them from such practise as impertinent unto them No doubtlesse he only sheweth the unfitnesse of the present time Math. 9.15 but layeth a commandement upon them to do it afterward then shall they fast And they performed it accordingly Act. 13. Secondly it reproveth the Popish fasting to whom I may say as Paul sometime did to the men of Athens Act. 17.22 I perceive that in all things yee are too superstitious And indeed here is one mystery of iniquity The chiefe points of religion remaine in the Church of Rome howbeit in name onely not in nature in shew not in substance in appearance not in truth I may say therefore of them as Iohn doth to the Angel of the Church in Sardis I know thy workes Revel 3.1 that thou hast a name that thou livest and art dead They have the name of Christ of justification of the Scripture of prayer of faith of the Sacraments of repentance but they have set up a mock-Christ they have overthrowne his humanity and destroyed all his Offices they beleeve justification but it is by their owne workes they receive faith but it is nothing but a beleeving the word to be true which also the Devils doe they admit repentance but it is nothing else but penance and corporall chasticement they acknowledge the Scriptures but they have patched their Apochryphal additions unto them and their owne Traditions as unwritten verities to be of equall authority with them they use prayer but it is in an unknowne tongue they have the Sacraments but one of them they have defiled the other they have destroyed and turned it into the idolatrous and blasphemous Masse And herein lyeth the depth of Satan For if he should utterly have
soone be changed the difference wil soon be espied They are now as a Lyon within a grate or a Wolfe kept in a chaine Let the Lyon loose set the Wolfe at liberty ye shall soone see him as fierce and cruell as ever he was Remember what they were when they bare sway such as they were then such they are now in heart affection such as the fathers were such are their children a cruell a barbarous a bloody generation ever delighted with shedding blood Blessed be God the father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath not given us as a pray unto their teeth and let them fulfill the measure of their sinnes that upon them may come all the righteous blood which they have shed upon the face of the earth Above all the Galileans c. or those eighteene c. The examples of others and the miserable event upon them are propounded to teach the Disciples and all others to turne o God these men judging these punishments to be the wages of unrighteousnesse Doct. Examplesf Gods judgments upon some are profitable to others This teacheth that the example of Gods judgements which he useth and executeth upon nations kingdomes cities families houses and particular persons are profitable meanes to stay from that euil which God hath chastised in others In the glasse of others wee may looke upon our owne faces We see this Deut. 24. Remember Miriam Deut. 24.9 what the Lord thy God did upon her by the way 2 Sam. 11.20 21. after ye were come forth out of Egypt the Like is noted 2 Sam. 11. Wherefore approched ye so nigh the City when ye did fight knew ye not that they would shoote from the wall who smote Abimelech the sonnes of Ierubesheth 2 King 9.31 did not a woman cast a piece of a Mil-stone upon him from the wall that he died c. Math. 24.37 The words of Iezabel are grounded upon this foundation Luc. 17.27.32 Had Zimri peace that slew his master Christ our Saviour chargeth all to beware of excesse propounding the examples of Noah and Lot to tye up their hearts to looke after the appearance of Christ in glory and to draw them from the love of the world and afterward he addeth to the same end Remember Lots wife So that we see Dan. 5.20.22 the examples of Gods judgment in former times are profitable to them that come after to hold them in the wayes of righteousnesse and to keepe them from the pathes of death This is proved plainely from the unchangable nature of God Reason 1 he is one and the same now as he was in former times his words are not yea and nay but yea and amen he is not variable and unconstant Mat. 3.6 Iam. 1.17 like a reed shaken with the winde hither and thither but remaineth ever the same Psal 102.27 With him is no variablenesse neither shadow of turning he is the Lord he changeth not and his hatred against sinne is no way diminished 1 Cor. 10.11 6. Secondly from the end of Gods chasticements which is to respect others as well as those that are chasticed for they are written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the world are come Rom. 15.4 and these things are our examples to the intent we should not lust after evill things as they also lusted Now let us apply these things Behold here the great kindnesse of God who teacheth and instructeth us many wayes Vse 1 not onely by his word by his mercies by his present judgments by his promises by his threatnings but even by examples of things recorded that have fallen out all of them were written for our good The moe wayes we have the moe meanes God hath used the more inexcusable we are We are giuen to looke upon examples and to behold what is done by others and to follow them even in evill but as we see the examples so let us beleeve the punishments that befell them also Woe unto them and wretched is their estate that are not moved by examples of Gods judgements What will move and peirce our stony hearts if these things will not move us to turne unto him neither the hammer of his word nor the iron rod of his judgements Nay while we lye under a grievous visitation are we any whit softned or do our hearts relent What teares have we shed or what hath our behaviour beene or what sinnes have we forsaken O what can be said of us but that we are brasse and iron a stubborne and stiffe necked generation a people that are secure and senselesse and have our consciences as it were seared with an hote iron God hath executed sundry judgments upon us he hath given us cleannesse of teeth and want of bread in all our places Amos. 4.6.9 yet we have not returned unto him he hath smitten our great Gardens and the fruits of the earth with blasting and mildew yet we have not returned unto him he hath sent among us the pestilence after the maner of Egypt and now threatneth us with the sword of the enemie yet we have not returned unto him what marveill then when we profit by none of them and nothing will doe us good if he make us fearefull examples to others This we read Deut. 29. When God hath brought all the curses of the law upon the land the generation to come of their children that shall rise up after them when they see the plagues of the land and the sicknesses which the Lord hath laid upon it made like the overthrow of Sodome and Gomorah shall say Deut. 29.24.25 Wherefore hath the Lord done thus unto this land what meaneth the heat of this great anger then men shall say because they have forsake the Covenant of the Lord God of their fathers c. The Lord God setteth former examples before our eyes to teach us and he will teach our posterity by the examples of his judgments before our eyes to teach us and he will teach our posterity by the examples of his judgements fallen upon us When the generation to come shall read and heare of his great judgments upon us that he hath smitten downe many thousands of us in his great wrath and heavy displeasure so that the former plagues will be forgotten in comparison of this if yet we will not returne and repent he will double and trebble his strokes and encrease his plagues yet seven times more and cause this to be forgotten in comparison of those to come and when any shall aske wherefore hath the Lord done this unto his people shall not men say as the truth is because they were warned and they would not be warned Is it not for the raigning sinnes in it that cry to heaven He hath spoken unto us and besought us by innumerable his mercies but they will not enter now he is constrained to send his destroying Angel and to scourge us with furious mortality and yet our dul
therewith rest contented Secondly having store of this worlds good if wee doe not set our hearts upon them then we will be content to leave them whensoever God the supreme and soveraigne Owner calleth againe for them and not excessively mourne for them when they leave us And as we will not refuse and reject them when we have them seeing they are the gifts of God so when they betake them to their wings and flee away we will looke after them with a quiet minde as it was with Iob who because hee rejoyced not when his substance was great Iob 31.25 1 21. and when his hand had gotten much therefore he did not much grieve when his wealth was taken away but in his greatest losse praiseth the Lord. So also it was with Paul who because he used this world as not abusing it and esteemed the best things thereof no better then dung in comparison of Christ and his benefits 1 Cor. 7.31 Phil. 3.7 8. 4.11 12 13. it was no great paine to him to take forth a farther lesson in what state soever he was therewithall to be content he could be abased and abound every where in all things he was instructed both to be full and to be hungry to abound and to have want yea hee could say I can doe all things through Christ which strengtheneth me Thirdly if worldly riches be wanting we will not seeke them by evil meanes nor glory in them when we have them to make us high minded or to put our trust and confidence in them Lastly it will make us keepe a vigilant eye over them that through our abuse they doc not degenerate from their owne nature and become Satans baits to allure us nor his snares to intangle us nor his thornes to choke us that the seed of the Word cannot prosper neither the graces of God grow in us Hence it is that I goe about to perswade to lay hold on Gods speciall providence watching over his children to succour and relieve them out of hopelesse and remedilesse troubles when they appeare destitute of all succour and in a manner in a desperate estate without all meanes left unto them When the Sonnes of Iacob stood gazing one upon another that is Gen. 42.1 they fared as men amazed and at their wits end that they know not what to doe for themselves their wives and their children then the Lord by his good hand opened a way for their reliefe that there was plenty of Corne in Egypt when there was none in the Land of Canaan verifying his gracious promise Gen. 8.22 So when the poore widdow in time of a great famine was brought to that extremity 1. King 17.12 13. that shee had but an handfull of meale in a barrell and a little oyle in a cruse and was now going purposely to gather a few stickes to dresse it for her selfe and her sonne that they might eate and die when she was in this great perplexity necessity and extremity the Lord that never leaveth his by his good providence directed the Prophet Elijah who immediately before had himselfe beene fed by Ravens that brought him bread and flesh in the morning verse 6. and bread and flesh in the evening to tell her good newes that the barrell of meale should not waste verse 14. neither the cruse of oyle faile until the Day that the Lord sendeth raine upon the earth Thus it was with the widdow of one of the sonnes of the Prophets she was left so farre in debt that her children were to be sold to satisfie the griping and greedinesse of the mercilesse Creditor and she had nothing to discharge it 2 Kings 4.2 but a little pitcher of oyle yet she was provided for by wonderfull meanes all which examples as a cloud of witnesses doe verifie the saying of the Psalmist Psa 33.18 19. and 37.25 Behold the eye of the Lord is upon them that feare him upon them that hope in his mercy to deliver their soule from death and to keepe them alive in famine and Psal 37. I have beene young and now am old yet have I not seene the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging bread But if there were no other reasons or considerations then such as are handled in this Scripture to be as a preservative or counterpoison against diffidence and distrust touching earthly things which doe more disquiet disturbe not onely the naturall man but even the Regenerate themselves oftentimes then any thing in the world besides herein we may finde matter sufficient to take from us the carnall feare of future wants first because we are his Flocke and he is our Shepheard Will the good Shepheard starve his Sheepe and not make them lye downe in greene pastures This confidence in God doth the Prophet shew and concludeth from this ground the point in hand The Lord is my Shepheard Psal 23.1 therefore I shall not want how then can they assure themselves to be in the number of the Sheep of Christ that doe not rely upon the care of this great Shepheard As then the Prophet saith in another case Esay 40.11 Ezek. 34.2 Should not the Shepheards feed the Flocke So we may be assured that the Shepheard of Israel that leadeth Ioseph like a Flocke will never be wanting to his sheepe that call and cry unto him Secondly because the Title given to God assureth us hereof he is called a Father Psal 80.1 2. Will the father give over the care of his children and forsake or forget the fruite of his owne body nay doth not the Prophet say Esay 49.15 Can a woman forget her sucking child that she should not have compassion on the sonne of her wombe yea they may forget yet will I not forget thee whom I have graven upon the palmes of my hands And Christ our Saviour speaketh to the same purpose What man is there of you Matth. 7.9.10.11 whom if his sonne aske bread will he give him a stone or if he aske a fish will he give him a Serpent If ye then being evill know how to give good gifts unto your children how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that aske him Lastly because we have the promise of a Kingdome and of the glory of heaven which is unspeakeable incomprehensible and everlasting He that hath promised us a Kingdome will he with-hold from us food and raiment nay Rom. 8.32 as the Apostle teacheth us to reason He that spared not his owne Sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things So should we cōclude that seeing he hath called us to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven 1 Pet. 1.4 He will never leave us nor forsake us in this life but if we first seeke the Kingdome of God Matth 33. all other things shall be added unto us He
make mention and yet it was not priviledged from the judgements of God This teacheth that the sinnes of a nation or people or kingdome when they are growne to an hight both in the manner measure Doct. 3 doe cause the Lord to bring desolation and destruction upon that land When sinnes grow generall the judgements are generall When sinnes are generall and overspread a kingdome as a Leprosy doth the body then Gods judgements also are generall See this Gen. 6.5.7 and 18.20.21 and 19.24 Deut. 9.4.5 For the wickednesse of the nations the Lord did drive them out from before thee and 2. Samu. 24.15 2 King 21.12.13.14.15 Hos 4.1.2.3 The reasons Reason 1 First because the justice of God requireth that the punishments of sinne should be answerable to the sinne it selfe If the sinne once become common it is just with God that there should come a generall judgement also And albeit haply some few should repent and bee free yet it is no reason this should priviledge and exempt the rest and keepe away the generall judgement from them for hee that doth repent shall have a recompence for himselfe when notwithstanding a generall judgement as a violent flood shall sweepe them all away Againe when sinne is extreame it is reason that judgemēt also shoud be extreame when sin is at the highest it is reason that judgement should be at the highest and a generall defection of sinne must of necessity have a generall waight of judgement that when we have filled up the measure of the one God may fill up the measure of the other Gen. 15.16 Vse 1. Seeing this is true that God will bring desolation upon a land for sinne then have we cause to feare that the day of our desolation and of our mourning is not farre off For seeing it hath beene proved that wee are growne to the hight of wickednesse both in the manner by breaking all the bounds that God hath set to keepe us and also in the measure by adding sinne unto sinne then certainely in the next place what can be expected but that our land should mourne and destruction come upon us Hos 4.1.2 as paine upon a woman in travaile because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the Land but by swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing adultery they breake out and blood toucheth blood And if God destroy his owne people and other nations and roote them out for the same sinnes that sway and swarme among us filling all places and abounding in all persons every where what can we looke for but that wee having the same weight of sinnes should also have the same waight of judgement God hath made us to drinke of as bitter judgements as ever any nation did onely this remaineth that as yet wee have not drunke the dregges we have not yet tasted the cup of utter desolation and destruction Now if God have gone thus farre with us and our sinnes are heaped up to a full measure pressed downe and running over why should not wee feare to drinke of utter desolation as well as any other seeing the same sinnes are to be found among us So then we see that the day of Gods visitation cannot be farre off by his course of Iustice and certainely it is the nearer because all feare is so farre from us and the land so full of security which being added to our former sinnes will be a great meanes to hasten his judgements Secondly it teacheth us notably who are the greatest enemies of a land and bring wrath upon it certainely the greatest enemies are those that bring the daies of ruine and desolation and mourning upon it It is not simply such as sinne for there is no man that sinneth not daily but such as commit sinne with an high hand breaking all the bounds and bankes that God hath set unto them continuing in sinne and adding one sinne to another These certainely are they that pull downe destruction upon a land It is true such persons are ready to accuse the Ministers of God and the faithfull of the land as Ieremy was charged to weaken the land and to hasten the desolation thereof and to be the troublers of the state howbeit they may answer these as Elijah did Ahab 1 King 18.18 I have not troubled Israel but thou and thy fathers house in that ye have forsaken the commandements of the Lord. Is the physition the troubler of the patient or the disease that is within him Is the law the cause of strife and contention or the malice and envy and emulation that is in men Is the watchman the cause of the approch of the enemy or the armour and munition and fortifications the weakning of a Citty No doubtlesse these strengthen the same and serve to keepe him out The Ministers of God are the physitions of the soule to cure the diseases thereof and the horsemen and Charets of Israel to defend it 2 King 2.12 13.14 and the word is the meanes to beate downe sinne which weakneth and wasteth the land till it come to destruction Lastly this serveth for instruction and admonition for all and every one of us If we have any love to our Countrey if we long after the peace and prosperity thereof or desire the florishing of our kingdome if we would not destruction to come upon us and it and if we would live in quietnesse the way is to take heede of adding sinne to sinne and prophanenesse to prophanenesse We account him an enemy and that justly that combineth and conspireth with another to bring him to destroy the land and undermine the state thereof so is he the greatest spirituall enemy that a State can have that followeth sinne with greedinesse and multiplieth one iniquity upon another The way therefore to prevent such judgements is to breake off our sinnes by true repentance which turne upside downe kingdomes Citties Families private houses and particular persons We wish to have our Citties flourish and our families prosper and our children to continue our names and memories after our departure but what availeth all this unlesse wee set our selves to worke holinesse and righteousnesse This is the onely way to keepe our State our Citties our townes our villages our families and our children from mourning and misery and to prevent the desolation and finall destruction of them To conclude let no man blesse himselfe because wickednesse overspreadeth the land as water doth the sea neither thinke that we may with more safety and security commit sinne because the land is generally wicked but let every soule and sinner repent him of his sinnes and not harden his heart because of the wickednesse of the times 5. So the people of Nineveh beleeved God and proclaimed a fast and put on sackcloth from the greatest of them even to the least of them Hitherto of the preaching of Ionah now followeth the effect thereof wherein consider two things both what the
grace never considring how they pray neither before whom they pray neither have any feeling at all of their owne wants and necessities and therefore no mar veil if they receive nothing ● Ier. 47.10 but go away empty as Ier. 48. Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lord deceitfully such do most of all deceive themselues These are they that draw nigh to God with their mouthes and honour him with their lippes but their hearts are farre removed from him Causes of cold prayers in vaine doe such worship him Math. 15. If any desire to know what are the causes of such could and livelesse prayers they are these especially first ignorance of the nature of God of his piercing eye and of his powerfull hand and of his glorious presence filling all places and searching all hearts and beholding all persons how they stand before him Secondly want of faith the root of all evill Heb. 4.2 for our prayers do not profit because they are not mixed with faith in them that make them as the Apostle speaketh of hearing the Gospel Heb. 4. For faith is the life of every part of Gods worship Thirdly confidence in the flesh and not trusting in the living God and looking for all good things from him Such are they that trust in their wealth and boast themselues in the multitude of their riches which as ranke thornes do so choke them and as heavy burdens do so presse and oppresse them that they cannot lift up their hearts to God Eph. 5.5 from whence our helpe cometh A covetous man which is a worshipper of Images can never make a fervent prayer he is so taken in the snare of his owne substance whereby he is drowned in perdition and destruction Fourthly the corrupt iudgement of the sinful world that hate zeale to the death and cannot abide such as are zealous but as the frendship of this world is enmity with God Iam. 4.4 so whosoever will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemy of God Iam. 4. So the beholding of the prosperity of the wicked men that either pray not at all or else if they pray are neither hote nor cold but are newters or indifferent men who if they prospe● here regard not what become of them hereafter that say 1 Cor. 15.32 let us eate and drinke for to morrow we shall dy 1. Cor. 15. But our hope is not in this life onely but we must looke to the recompense of reward and cast a sure and steadfast ancre in heaven Lastly to lye in some knowne sinne This either stoppeth our mouthes that we cannot speak or powreth water upon our prayers that our praiers have no heat in them but are frozen with the cold of our corruptions Our daily prayer therefore must be to God the searcher of all hearts to clense us from our secret sinnes Psal 19.12 Secondly learne from hence what it is that seasoneth every worke of God preaching hearing receiving the Sacraments prayer and the rest without zeale they are nothing worth Prayers are not commended for their length nor for often repetitions of one and the same thing Math. 6.7 for the heathen thinke to be heard for their much babling neither are they accepted because they are cunningly and curiously compiled as if we were Orators not Christians pleaded at the barre for our f●e not shewed the fruit of our faith sought to please the eares of ignorant men not to pierce the eares of the eternall God The Apostle would not preach to men in the entising words of mens wisedome 1 Cor 2.4 but in demonstration of the spirit and power and shall we dare to speake unto God in a florishing and foolish stile to tickle the eare as if we ment to shew our skill in Rhetoricke rather then commend our suites to God That which giveth a grace to our prayers is the spirit of zeale without this they are as sounding brasse they can profit us nothing neither ascend to the presence of God Lastly in every duty labour to be zealous For as it is in prayer so it is in the worship of God zeale is the salt that seasoneth the same and without it every worke hath lost his Savour It is strange to consider how in worldly duties the more earnest a man is the better he is accounted and accepted He that is earnest in his masters businesse is judged a good seruant he that is earnest in his Prince affaires is rewarded as a good subject he that is earnest in his fathers cause is esteemed as a good child onely in the matters of God wherein we should be most forward who should be master and Father and King and all unto us I wot not how his servants children and subjects are reviled and reproched for their zeale Neverthelesse we must not be offended nor discouraged for the taunts and evill reports of the world but be ready to walke through good report and evill report that we may please him who hath set us in his seruice Onely we must learne how to direct our zeale aright for there are extremes on both sides As it may be too cold so it may be too hote and fiery the meane is best that we may be aright zealous of good workes Tit. 2.14 There is an ignorant zeale Ioh. 16.2 Gal. 1.14 there is an idolatrous zeale Phil. 3.6 such was theirs that cut and mangled themselues till the blood gushed out Act. 26.11 1 King 18.28 and that would burne their children in fire and offer them in honour of their devilish goddes Ier. 7.31 here is an hypocriticall zeale such as was in the Pharisees that did compasse sea and land to make one a proselite that is one of their owne sect Math. 23.13 There is a zeale more damnable and vile than all the rest of such who contrary to their own conscience and knowledge do violently resist and maliciously oppose themselves against the Gospel and the professors thereof this was in the cursed and proud Pharisees that opposed themselues against our Saviour committed the sin against the holy Ghost which shal befor given neither in this life nor in the life to come Math Math. 12.32 12.32 That our zeale therfore may be good Rules to be observed to make our zeale good first the matter must be good Gal. 4.18 our zeale is good if the thing be good otherwise if the matter be evill the more earnest it is more sinful it is his indeed rather choler then zeale Secōdly true zeale beginneth with our selues and in our selues frō thence proceedeth to others They are the most skilful Physians and best able to heale others who have wrought a cure upon themselues Luk. 6.42 against this rule do all hypocrites offend Thirdly we must make greatest account of the greatest matters Math. 23.23 Such do erre herein that are hote hasty in matters of ceremony but altogether cold in matter of substance these
no fruit then thou maiest cut it downe This is the summe of this Parable the application whereof is So God hath placed you of Iudea in a fertile place hath bestowed many blessings upon you and hath looked for good fruit from you but behold ye bring forth none I tell you therefore except ye repent that speedily ye shall all likewise perish Now for our better proceeding in the orderly handling of these words Observe herein 2. things An exhortation to repentance or a threatning of destruction to the impenitent vers 3. 5. An amplification or enlargement thereof in the residue The amplification or illustration is By examples By a parable The examples are of the Galileans Eighteene upon whom the tower fell and slew them The second amplification which is by parable we will relerue to the proper place handle the same particularly For all these things belong vnto us as well as unto those to whom they were spoken by our Saviour and may be applied to us as well as unto them The doctrine of repentance was never more needfull to be preached and the threatning also as fully concerneth us Except we repent we shall likewise perish as Marke 13. least we passe by the exhortation uttered to the Disciples by our Saviour as impertinent to us he addeth What I say unto you Mark 13.37 I say unto all Wa●ch So it is in this place as if he had said what I say unto these I say unto all Repent Wherefore Doct. the generall point that Christ laboureth to presse and perswade is to worke in them and in all others repentance The way to prevent Gods judgments is to amend our lives This teacheth that the onely way to prevent and escape the judgments of God is to amend our lives and turne unto him with all our hearts and to repent from dead workes We live in the dayes of many judgments some lying heavy upon us others hanging over our heads so that we may say with the Prophet Psal 1●0 1 Out of the depths have I cried unto thee O Lord and 42.7 deepe calleth unto deepe at the noyse of thy water spoutes all thy waves and thy billowes are gone over me The meanes ordained of God to revoke his heavy hand gone out against us is to turne from our evill wayes See this Deut. 4. Deut. 4.29 30 31. after that God punisheth his people for their sinnes he saith When thou art in tribulation and all these things are come upon thee even in the latter dayes if thou turne to the Lord thy God and shall be obedient unto his voyce hee will not forsake thee nor destroy thee 2 Chro. 17.13.14 if thou seeke him with all thine heart and with all thy soule Thus the Lord said to Salomon 2 Chro. 7. If I shut up heaven that there be no raine or if I command the Locustes to devoure the land or if I send postilence among my people if my people which are called by my name shall humble themselues and pray and seeke my face and turne from their wicked wayes then will I heare from heaven and will forgive their sinne Ier. 3 22. and will heale their land And the Prophet Ieremy bringeth in the Lord speaking Math. 3.7.8.10 Returne ye back-sliding children I will heale your backsliding So doth Iohn the Baptist reprove the Pharisees O generation of vipers who hath warned you to sly from the wrath to come bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance and now also the axe is laid unto the root of the trees every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewne downe and cast into the fire So then the onely way to stay Gods hand and to stop his judgments now that his arrowes fly through the land is to returne from all our evill wayes and to cause others to returne The reasons follow Reas 1 First because untill we repent all judgements hang over our heads and shall overtake us as they did the old world as they did Sodome and Gomorrha as they did Pharaoh and infinite others We may be destroyed by fiery Serpents burned in the fire drowned in the waters swallowed up in the earth as Dathan and Abiram and may looke every day for some plague or other to find us out and seaze upon us Secondly when we truly repent forgivenesse of sinnes and other blessings do follow For repentance and remission go together We see this in the Ninevites Ionah 3.10 God saw their workes that they turned from their evill wayes and he repented of the evill he had said he would do unto them and he did it not If then we would prevent Gods judgments Vse 1 first we must beware of all false counterfeite turnings and by-pathes of our owne invention and walke in the Kings high way Some make confession of our selues to have sinned and to say I am a sinner to be true repentance but thus every civill man should repent Some make all kind of sorrow and greefe and sheding of teares to be turning to God but so should Esau repent Some content themselues with a little humbling and an outware casting downe of themselues to hang downe their heads for a day like a Bulrush but so should Ahab repent Some thinke every good word Lord Lord to be repentance and if they can but say Lord have mercy upon me they have truly repented but so should every sicke man repent Others turne not from sinne untill sinne turne from them and they leave it not till they can follow it no longer but thus every old man repenteth Others turne from one sinne to an other as many from one disease into another and from evill to worse as it were from a fever into a frenzy Lastly others turne from some sinne but not from all they will keepe some beloved sinne still but thus Herod and Iudas repented but this must be the Covenant that we make with God to keepe us from all sinne remembring that he which faileth in one point is guilty of all Iam. 2.10 All these blind wayes wherein the greatest sort doe walke must be avoyded of us True it is wicked men may walke in all these pathes they may confesse their sinnes and desire others to pray for them but this is an enforced repentance this is compulsion not conversion and thus Pharaoh repented whereas true repentance must be voluntary and as a free-will offering They may confesse some heinous and capitall sinne knowne to others as well as to themselues whereby they have brought shame and confusion upon themselues howbeit they will not confesse all but thus Iudus repented saying I have sinned Math. 27.4 in that I have betrayed innocent blood but he acknowledged not his covetousnesse that he was a theefe and kept the bagge They have often some remorse and touch of conscience but it is a great deale more for the punishment threatned or inflicted then for the sinne committed if they might any way escape
being borne in a forraine land are willing to forsake it to come and dwell where the word of God is truly and plentifully preached being peacable to the state and proselytes to the same religion and serue the same God with us doubtlesse God will be avenged of such as hurt or oppresse them for he will not have such vexed wrenged This was forbidden to the Iewes Exod. 22. Exod. 22.21 Levit. 19.33 Thou shalt neither vexe a siranger oppresse him for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt Levit. 19. If a stranger sojourn among you ye shal not vexe him he shal be as one borne among you thou shalt love him as thy selfe for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt so Deut. 24. Deut. 24.18 Thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in Egypt and the Lord thy God redeemed thee thence therefore command thee to doe this thing This was often remembred and repeated to the Iewes But what may some say doth this belong to us who were never in Egypt Ioh. 8.33 much lesse strangers in Egypt or any other land as the Iewes said We were never in bondage to any man I answere though we were not yet we know not whether we shall be neither how soone we may be Pro. 27.1 Math. 7.12 we know not what hangeth over our heads neither what a day may bring forth Besides the common rule leadeth us to this homanity Whatsoever ye would that other men should doe unto you doe ye even so to them for this is the law and the Prophets Our forefathers have for the truths sake beene driven from house and home and beene constrained to forsake wife and children lands and goods and have received comfort and releefe in a strange land where God inclined the hearts of the magistrates to favour them is it not then reason that we now should doe the like and shew mercy But how many wicked and envious men are there among us which murmure and grudge that such should come over and dwell among us who have left their countrie for their conscience sake and the Gospels They pretend and plead that they grow rich and wealthy they see it and grudge and grieve at the fight of it For answere unto these 1 Sam. 2.8 observe these few points First who made them so 1. Tim. 4.8 Is it not God he maketh poore and maketh rich he bringeth low and lifteth up and doe we envy them and repine at them Or shall our eye be evill toward them because his is good Secondly it is Gods blessing upon them no doubt for the faiths sake because they have preferred the Gospel of God before their owne goods And indeed godlinesse is profitable to all things and hath the promise of the things of this life and of that which is to come To this purpose our Saviour teacheth Every one that hath forsaken houses Math. 19.29 Luc. 18.29.30 or bretheren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands for my names sake and for the kingdome of Gods sake shall receive manifold more in this present time and in the world to come life everlasting Thirdly Is it not better they should be rich then poore better I say not for them onely but even for others If they were poore they must be releeved for we are debters to Iew and Gentile even to the Turkes and infidels so farre as we doe not helpe them against Christ and Christianity If they be rich they will not be chargable to any of us but will rather be helpfull unto others Fourthly What is the cause they grow so rich because they are painfull and industrious And wherefore are many poore and in need among us but because they are idle and will not labour nor use the meanes that these do Lastly I am perswaded that God blesseth us and the land the better for giving entertainment to the distressed members of the Churches scattered abroad We have done some good to them but much more to our selves as the Shunamite that entertained the Prophet of God did him and his servant good but she did more to her selfe and her owne house Thus we see what sundry branches there are of cruelty all which as we should alwayes consider so most especially in these dayes of our publike humiliation when we make solemne profession of our unfained repentance Secondly judge by this note and property of the religion of the Church of Rome Such as have not understanding to judge of the doctrine let them open their eyes and behold their practises for by these fruits ye shal know them Whom have they in their fury spared What age what sexe what person Surely neither high nor low infant nor suckling no not such as never saw the light neither living nor dead neither distressed nor distracted sheading the blood of the Saints as water spilt upon the ground and making themselves drunke with the blood of poore Christians a thousand times better and more righteous then themselves Never did the Turkesand savages shew themselves so beastly and barbarous as these counterfeit or bastard-Christian-Papists who boast they serve Christ but serve Antichrist They can suffer the Iewes that daily blaspheme Christ Iesus our blessed Saviour to dwell among them but they will not suffer those to buy or sell or abide among them that professe Christ as wel as themselves nay better and looke for salvation and eternall life wholly through his merits and not their owne The soules that lye under the Altar cry unto God without ceasing day and night for vengeance against such blood-suckers saying Revel 6.10 How long Lord holy and true doest thou not judge avenge our blood on them that dwel on the earth Their king-killing doctrine is of the same stampe that Princes have forfeited their crowne and Scepters their subjects discharged of the duty of alleageance whensoever the Pope pleaseth to pronounce them heretickes and to thunder against them his Excommunications The Gun-powder treason shall remaine for ever as a monument of this unmatchable cruelty It is and hath beene ever otherwise with the true Church of God there shal no such murtherings and massacres be found and commited in all the mountaine of Lord Esay 11.9 but the Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe they shall not hurt nor destroy in all mine holy mountaine saith the Lord. Lastly let us earnestly and often desire of God to preserve us from such unreasonable and wicked men Object nay wild beastes in the outward shape of men 2 Thess 3. It wil be objected touching those of the Romish religion though they be enemies to the Gospel and to our profession yet we see no such matter in them they live as peaceable men and the quiet of the land they meddle not with others or against others Answ But what is the reason or where is the cause doubtlesse not in the persons but in the times Charge the times and the persons will