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A02178 The workes of the reuerend and faithfull seruant af Iesus Christ M. Richard Greenham, minister and preacher of the Word of God collected into one volume: reuised, corrected, and published, for the further building of all such as loue the truth, and desire to know the power of godlinesse. By H.H.; Works Greenham, Richard.; Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1612 (1612) STC 12318; ESTC S120843 1,539,296 988

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whereas the Lord might absolutely command vs yea he affoords not onely a reason but many reasons as foure in number which is to none else that euery way we might be perswaded Now he vseth the word of remembring for a speciall watchword of watchfulnes which importeth thus much Whatsoeuer ye do do this and do it with care haue a speciall regard to this in any case forget it not that so we might thinke the breaking of this day to be no trifle it is taken carefully frō vs when we giue a special charge Deut. 5. Take heed to this day remember it ere it come ye may be ouertaken By the Sabbath is meant the holy rest so the land hath a Sabbath and this day is exempted by God from the rest to this end Indeed by nature all daies were alike and common till God seuered one which for his sake and the ends sake must be distinguished from the ordinarie daies so all men and creatures were common vntill the Lord set them apart to speciall vses The Sabbath is wholy morall tows and to our Fathers partly morall and partly ceremoniall to the Iewes vnto whome euery commaundement had a ceremonie first by reason of their weaknes secondly because they were vnder the clowde Now they are cut off But before them was the morall vse of this precept euen from the beginning Exod. 16. nay Gen. 2. and no tradition quenched it So our Sabbath continues and takes hold on the conscience True it is euery day we are bound to sacrifice and not to forget our dutie Psal. 1. 2. we must pray continually and Dauid sacrificed thrise a day Psalm 55. but this day must be wholly sanctified no part of it must be giuen to other things to look to our selues in So Adam had a vocation and a rest in part and wholy for nature distract can doe nothing well As for the cremonie of the day it was in the seuenth day but that is altered into the day wherein our Redemption was finished and the world renewed and therefore by the Apostles themselues this day was instituted 1. Cor. 16. Actes 20. 7. For the name it is plaine Apoc. 1. 10. The rest of it in regard of the straight-yoke was from gathering sticks Numb 13. 32. from kindling a fire Exod. 35. 3. and the sanctifying of it was in killing of Lambs and offering flowers The Sabbath is a signe but not a ceremonie as the tree in Paradise it doth admonish of the true Rest is a pledge of the euerlasting Rest. It is the agreement betweene the Lord and vs Exod. 31. 17. Ezech. 20. 12. It is the Market-day of the soule to gather Manna which is the bread of life Well we must first rest from what frō our owne worke works words and delights for the Law is spirituall Esai 58. 15. First we must rest from the works and labours of the sixe dayes which are heere opposed to rest from bearing burthens Iere. 17. from gathering Manna Exod. 16. which was their foode from treading the wine-presses and making bargaines Nehem. 13. from bringing sheaues Ibidem both in Earing time and Haruest Exod. 34. 21. To worke on the Sabbath is to defile it Exod. 3. The plague of fire is God his iudgement of it Ierem. 17. 27. Gods seueritie by death Exod. 35. As for the sanctifying of it GOD hath made it holie Gene. 2. 3. By his blessing he associateth vs to make it holy as well as himselfe that is by our obedience He hath done what he can to make it holie let not vs prophane it he will not account it holy vnles we so vse it We must therefore separate it from the comon vses as the Church the font the cup which are pu to holy vses to the worship of GOD the furthering of religion First we must seperate into Gods worke as preaching Luc. 4. 16. Reading Acts. 13. 13. Prayer 16. 13 conference Mala. 3. Meditation Psalm 92. or any good worke Matth. 12. 12. whatsoeuer sheweth in vs the power of Christ his Resurrection Now to the reasons It were a great sinne not to yeeld to his Commaundement a greater not to yeelde to his perswasionss His first eason is Sixe dayes shalt thou labour c. This is rather a permission than a commandement as was that of eating of the Trees in Paradice If GOD had giuen vs one for our selues and kept sixe for himselfe it had bene equitie in him to command and dutie in vs to obey now he hath kept but one for himselfe and that for profite too To breake the commaundement in respect of such liberalitie were great sinne as we may see in Nathans conference in Aeuaes reasoning and in Iosephs argument with his Mistris as also in Io●s speach to his wife And doe all that thou hast to doe That is Finish all ere this day come Reserue this wholy to GOD vse not this to performe any part of thy busines For therefore haue I parted the sixe dayes and giuen thee them that this one may be wholy mine Secondly the Lord saith it is his Sabbath therfore not ours neither to vse it in our Fayres our Haruest or our plaies So that the offence reboundeth vp to heauen Rom. 13. 2. In it thou shalt doe no manner of worke Here is the negatiue part worke sixe dayes Rest the seuenth in them doe all in this doe none a flat antithesis GOD hath dealt prodigally with vs let vs not deale sparingly with him Thou thy sonne We see he begins with the superiour ergò he ought to be so far from hindering that he must looke to the sanctifying of this day and prouide that his inferiours and they in his gouernement rest as well as hee both from their owne and from their Maisters busines The practise whereof we may reade Nehem. 13. And the reason is good because in respect of God and his seruice there is no respect of Master and seruant so that though the superiour rest himselfe if he prouide that all his house doe rest as well as himselfe hee violateth the Lords rest Deut. 6. 7. Thy cattell for bodily rest This sheweth Gods mercie to be great which prouideth for man and beast and this hee doth that too much might not be exacted of the creature but that they might haue a breathing time And secondly that wee seeing them rest might the more effectually be moued to rest our selues as the King of Niniuie Thy stranger We must haue Lots care ouer the bodie of our strangers they are of our iurisdiction whiles they are vnder our roofe and wee must sanctifie our house much more euery man must be sanctified GOD thus in setting downe euery particular takes away all occasion of quarrelling in the breach of this law For in sixe dayes This is set downe that in the Lords method wee might consider of his workes as Dauid Psalm 139. and Iob chapt 10. Wee haue the example and practise of it in GOD
away Thus much therefore we say that as we prescribed in the other callings so for milking of kine making of beds and dressing of meates as for trauailers Bakers and Brewers that their busines if it be necessarie must bee done either early in the morning or lately in the euening There are two kindes of calling of more difficultie the one by sea the other by land the one of Mariners the other of posts For men being on the Seas cannot come conueniētly to the publike places of religion and in ciuill matters there are often great necessities and vnknowne to priuate men Concerning the first we say they are either in necessary affaires or they are not if not they are to be counted as flat breakers of the Sabbath if they be in their lawfull and necessarie callings the times must bee so diuided that their bodies may be cased and their soules refreshed Howbeit if the present necessitie grow to be more violent then holds the generall rule of things that cannot be done before or after To this we adde that in some respect because the Mariners haue intermissions by reason of their oft changing there might be meanes appointed for the worship of God priuately For there be vicissitudes of labouring spent in quaffing drinking and sleeping which leisure they might haue as free for the worship of God priuately as any on the land Besides the proportion of sixe and seuen obserued that they may doe some one day in seuen which they should do on the Sabbath it selfe For then the Lord accepteth the equitie of the law when vpon necessitie we cannot obserue the prescript time of the law Furthermore when their ships lie at roade and at ancker when they either are staied by tempest or mend their tackling or waite long at hauens for their traffique then what time hath before been lost it is now to be redeemed if it be not at the set times yet as we saide at some times obseruing the proportion of the law Thirdly if they were as prudent in heauenly things as politike in earthly though they cannot so conueniently haue accesse to the publike meanes yet in the whole companie for feare of pirates they goe for stronger fence many together by a generall contribution they might allow a Minister among them Againe considering that the Mariners are either such as be of the richer fort or such as bee of a meaner condition we say that the richer and more wealthie Merchants swimme so in their gaines as if they haue but hearts to pay the tithe of their increase they may not onely conueniently finde a Minister in the ship but also liberally prouide for the worship of God on the land As for the poorer fort if they cannot offer an oxe let them offer a turtle doue if they cānot offer a doue let them offer a little fine wheate flower I meane if they cannot prouide a graue preacher yet at the least they may procure some good man to read the holy word of God vnto them to deliuer the plaine and pure sense of the Scriptures to them and to help them in prayer and other holy exercises of religion For if they can in their seuerall ships maintaine a guide skilfull in seafaring to conduct them in ther nauigations then by a generall purse they may farre more easilie sustaine the charges of a teacher who in great dangers may strengthen comfort them in all estates may guide and safegard them to the hauen of heauen Fiftly in respect that they haue greater blessings on the Seas receiue greater testimonies of Gods fauour taste more bountifully of Gods power in imminent and fearfull dangers and more liberally haue experience of his prouidence in their marueilous preseruation than their brethren on the land I thinke they ought not to be lesse zealous but more carefull of the worship of God than others on the land Though then the prescript forme of the law cannot alwaies be vsed and yet the proportion of the law may bee obserued and seeing God is the Lord of the seas as well as he is the gouernour of the land he is no lesse to be worshipped in the one than in the other yet the want of this his worship hath distinguished the seafaring men from others by their monstrous prophanenes and brutish irreligiousnes And yet in that this euill is not so generall but that euen in that calling there are some that feare the Lord it is manifest that the fault is not in the calling which in it selfe is lawfull but in the corruptions of the persons who are degenerated into an hellish atheisme Now concerning Posts thus much briefly Either the Posts trauaile on the Lords day vpon necessitie or without necessitie If they goe on the necessarie affaires of the land and such as by foreslacking would be more dangerous and the speedie dispatching of them would be more profitable to the whole bodie of the realme the libertie is permitted and is greater or lesser according to the grauitie and slendernes of their affaires but if they haue no necessitie the rule of God his lawes take hold on them Howbeit for the most part subiects are not so precisely to iudge of them because Princes matters are not knowne to all men but they are rather to pray that both the Princes heart may be right herein and that the Lord would moue them euermore to vse those waies which are most conuenient And thus much generally of the vsuall workes of our calling It remaineth to speake of those works which haue not the ordinary course of the weeke daies but are neuerthelesse vsed at certaine set times and seasons as Faires in certaine moneths and quarters of the yeere as the seeding in the winter and in the spring time and the haruest in summer in Autumne Hereunto we may adde speciall iourneies taken in hand not vsually but extraordinarily the gathering of Saffron at the time of the yeere Al which things haue their seuerall seasons and are vnnaturally thrust on the Lords owne times howsoeuer men haue pretended a necessitie flesh and blood hunting after liberty disputeth to the contrary First as for Faires and Markets which by politike wise and worldly men on the Lords daies are maintained it argueth the want of godly wisedome where they be vsed because without any preiudice to the worship of God they may not conueniently bee obserued For if no necessitie profit nor pleasure could cause the Papists to haue their Faires on their Christmas day Easter day holy Thursday and Corpus Christi day then it is a shame for vs that in truth and zeale ought to goe before them to defile the Lords day herewith yea I adde it is intollerable because a firme statute ciuill law enforceth a plaine inhibition of all such worldly conuents and assemblies on that day These faires are for the most part either solemne Marts and of greater continuance or petie Markets and of lesse
serue Gods prouidence Rehearse the second Commaundement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen Image nor the likenesse c. What euill is expressely forbidden in this Commaundement I am forbidden to make any Image either to represent God or to worship him by What euill is generally forbidden I must auoide all inuentions and deuices of men in the outward worship of God which be contrarie or besides the written word of God Which be the speciall euills forbidden Chiefly all corruption in the substance of doctrine prayer Sacraments and discipline of the Church What occasions of euill be forbidden There be some which wee must necessarily auoyd vnlesse wee will fall into superstition and idolatrie and they be these 1. First to ioyne the false parts of worship with the true worship of God 2. Secondly to be present in bodie at idolatrous and superstitious seruice 3. Thirdly the reseruation of some speciall monument of superstition and idolatrie Which bee the lesser occasions forbidden and yet so wee haue the speciall groundes of Gods worship we must and may tolerate them when we cannot helpe them 1. First all vaine idle and superstitious Ceremonies 2. Secondly all keeping companie with false worshippers Is not the euill in heart also forbidden Yea so farre forth as I lust in my heart to haue any of them preuaile or be established What good is generally commaunded All the outward meanes of Gods worship which be agreeable to his written word What is specially commaunded I must vse such doctrine prayers Sacraments and discipline of the Church as bee agreeable to Gods word in the substance What occasions of good be here commaunded 1. First to haue and vse good bookes of the doctrine and history of the Church written according to Gods word 2. Secondly erecting and maintaining schooles of learning as nurseries of the ministerie 3. Thirdly sufficient prouision to be made for the Ministers of Gods word 4. Fourthly building and maintaining Churches and all things belonging thereunto 5. Fi●ly I must v●●●ll good ceremonies and orders agreeable to the word of God 6. Sixtly 〈◊〉 fami●●● company with the true worshippers of God What good in heart is commaunded I am commaunded to vse the meanes of Gods worship not onely outwardly but also in spirit and truth What is me●●● by these words For I the Lord thy God am a iealous God c That God will punish false worship in the false worshippers and in their posteritie vnto the ●●●rth generation What is meant by these word● And will shew mercie vnto thousands c Th● God will blesse his true worship in the true worshippers and their posteritie vnto the thousand des●ent W●●t is ●●●●●●●f these The vse is to make false worshippe more vile and his true worship more pretious in our eyes 〈…〉 third Commaundement Thou ●●●● not taketh● Name of the Lord thy God in vaine c. What 〈…〉 forbidden 1. First 〈…〉 ●●●ning or ●ursing enchanting or coniuring 2. Secondly all 〈…〉 by false Gods or naming them with reuerence 3. Thirdly 〈…〉 swearing or speaking of GOD without reuerence 4. Fourthly to c●use Gods Name to bee dishonoured by false Doctrine or vngodlie life 〈◊〉 in my ●●●●●r in others W●at good is herein commaunded 1. First in matters concerning Gods glorie I must sweare by GOD onely in Iustice. Iudgement Truth 2. Secondly I must endeuour from my heart to growe vp in true knowledge and a godly life that so Gods Name may bee praised in my selfe and by mine example in others What is meant by these words For the Lord will not holde him guiltlesse c That God will certainely punish the dishonoring of his Name in any sort What is the vse of this The vse of this is to make vs more fearefull to dishonour him and more carefull to glorifie his Name Rek●●●●● the fourth Commandement Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holie c. What is here generally commaunded I am commanded to make it my whole delight to sanctifie the holie Sabbath of the Lord from morning to night What is 〈…〉 commaunded 1 First to vse ●ll the publike meanes of Gods worship in the congregation of Gods people 2. Secondlie to reioyce to vse all such priuate exercises as may make the publike meanes ●●●●●table to my selfe and to others W 〈…〉 bee those priuate exercises 1. First the examining of my sinnes and wants priuate prayer reading of the Scriptures singing of Psalmes conference with others and applying all things to my selfe with a care to profite others 2. Secondly relieuing the needle visiting the sicke and them that be in prison comforting them that bee in any miserie reconciling them that be at variance admonishing the vnruly and such like What is especially commanded The spirituall beholding of the Creatures of God thereby to prouoke my selfe and others to praise him What else is A diligent searching of my heart with a like care to finde it out and to reape some profite of the forenamed meanes so that I may be the better for and through them What is then particularly forbidden 2. All such labours and pleasures in thought worde and deede are forbidden as may hinder mee and others for vsing of or profiting by the same meanes 2. Secondly the leauing 〈…〉 of those publike meanes or priuate exercises What is here generally forbidden The vsing either of those publike or priuate meanes in ceremonie without some good fruite in my selfe or care of fruite in others Rehearse the fift Commaundement Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long in the Land c. Whom doe you vnderstand by father and mother By father and mother I doe not vnderstand onely my naturall parents but also those whom God hath set ouer me for my good as Magistrates Ministers Masters such like What duties doe children owe vnto their naturall parents Children ought reuerently and obediently to receiue the instructions commaundements and corrections of their parents to succour them and to pray for them What are they forbidden to doe To refuse or murmure at the instructions commandements and corrections of their parents or to neglect any dutie belonging to them How may they trie their loue by these duties They may trie whether their loue be right three wayes 1. First if they bee as desirous to doe all these duties to their parents as they would haue their parents to doe all duties vnto them What is the second 2. Secondly if they be as desirous to doe all duties to their parents as they would haue their children hereafter to honour them What is the third 3. Thirdly if they bee as willing to doe all these duties to their parents as they would receiue long life or any other blessing at the hands of God What duties doe parents owe to their children Parents ought to teach correct pray and prouide for their children How may they trie their loue by these duties They may
much in effect Wilt thou learne sincerely to worship me according to that substance manner and end which I haue prescribed and wilt thou truly trie thy loue to mee by exercising the duties of loue to thy brethren then forget not to keepe holie the Sabbath wherein I shall teach thee both how thou shalt walke vprightly in the worship due vnto mee and also liue obediently in duties concerning man Againe the nature of the word remember importeth thus much that this law was not only grauen in the hearts of our forefathers as were all the other but also in expresse words inioyned vnto Adam and Eue in Paradise and manifestly practised of the Israelites in the wildernes Exod. 16. and that therefore in this common promulgating of the Law they should especially remember this which is not newly giuen as are the rest but rather renued as being giuen out before True it is that before this solemne publishing of the Law in mount Sinai this and all other Commandements were written in the hearts of our fore-Fathers as we may see in the booke of Genes For the first we reade how the Lord said vnto Abraham Gen. 17. I am GOD all-sufficient walke before mee and be vpright Concerning the second Gen. 31. 19. Rachel is saide to steale her Fathers Idols Genes 35. 2. Iacob reformed his household and cleanseth it from Idolatrie For the third we may see how religious they were in swearing Concerning the fift what authority exercised Iacob towards his children what duties they yeelde to him both in life and death How they hated murther it is manifest in that historie Both Iosephs continencie and the punishment threatned to Abimelech declare how hainous a thing adultery was vnto them Concerning theft Laban his quarrelling with Iacob and Ioseph his accusing of the brethrē doe shew that it was a thing vnlawfull Lastly Abimelech the king reprehendeth both Abraham Genes 20. and Isaak Genes 26. for bearing false witnesse in denying their wiues Thus we see what efficacie is couched in this preface in that it sheweth both by the precept and practise giuen and yeelded of our first fathers how this commandement alone was giuen in expresse words as also that this one precept is the schoole of all the other Commandements But to what end to keepe it as ceremoniall No to sanctifie it as morall for the end of the Sabbath consisteth in these two things first in the morall secōdly in the figuratiue ceremoniall or shadowish obseruation of it as wee take the word shadow here for a figure because a ceremonie is more then a shadow That I call morall which doth informe mens manners either concerning their religion to God or their duties vnto man that I meane figuratiue which is added for a time in some respect to some persons for an helpe to that which is morall as Deut 5. 15. Remember that thou wast a seruant in the land of Aegipt Howbeit that this first morall ende is here vnderstood the first words declare where it is saide Sanctifie the Sabbath day For where mention is made of the ceremonie it is saide keepe and not sanctifie the Sabbath Now what is it to sanctifie the Sabbath day but to put it apart from all other dayes for a peculiar vse of Gods worship for otherwise wee must know that all other dayes are sanctified so that to sanctifie it is to do that thing on the Sabbath for which it was commanded but of this we shall speake more largely by the grace of God in the last reason In the meane time let vs briefly obserue this that as our first parents did sanctifie the Sabbath in viewing the creatures of God for to praise him so wee sanctifie it in vsing the means which hee hath appointed for his worship So that first wee vsing the exercises of religion whereby we may be sanctified and then ioyning with them the spirituall vse of the creatures whereby wee may be furthered in our sanctification should after vse the exercises of loue whereby we may shew that wee are sanctified Our first Fathers needed not ordinarily the ministrie of the Word but had the great bookes of Gods workes We haue need of the Word both publike and priuate and therefore must learne it that hauing learned it wee might the better exercise the duties of loue So then that which was first to Adam is now the last to vs to wit the beholding of God in his creatures and the praising of him for the same In the Psalme 92. which was appointed to be sung of the Church on the Sabbath is set downe as the chiefest vse thereof the singing of Gods mercie the shewing of his righteous iudgements in rewarding the godlie though afflicted in punishing the vngodlie though here they be aduaunced as also in learning to know God in his worship and in his workes Againe Psal 95. we shall not see any ceremoniall vse of the Sabbath but that it should be vsed in praying to God in praising of God and hearing of his Word This is confirmed Exod. 31. 13. Speake vnto the children of Israel and say Notwithstanding keepe my Sabbaths for it is a signe betweene mee you in your generation that yee may know that I the Lord doe sanctifie you As also Deuteron 5. 12. Keepe the Sabbath day to sanctifie it as the Lord thy God hath commaunded thee And Ezechiel 20. vers 12. I gaue them my Sabbaths to bee a signe betweene mee and them that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctifie them In which places as the reason is adioyned of keeping the Sabbath So wee must vnderstand that where it is called a signe it is meant a document and not a figure for euery figure is a signe but euery signe is not a figure as we may see in the sacraments which are not figures or shadowes of things to come So that in that the Lorde saith My Sabbath is a signe betweene mee and you it is as much in effect as if he should say my Sabbath is a common instruction betweene you and me of mee as the Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier of you as created redeemed and sanctified so that the Sabbath is a document pledge of Gods will whereby we should know what hee is vnto vs and wherein wee should learne what we should do to him In which respect this commandement is no more ceremoniall then the first where the Lord propoundeth what he is to vs and secretly includeth what wee should be to him No maruell then though this be the principall ende which was not begun to the Iewes but first inioyned to Adam and Eue. Wherefore we may thus reason both safely and soundly Whatsoeuer is the first ende is the chiefest ende but to sanctifie the Sabbath is the first end because it was ordained so to Adam in time of his innocencie at what time it could not bee a figure because by the iudgement of
shall enter into my rest although the workes were finished from the foundation of the world 4. For hee spake in a certaine place of the seuenth day on this wise And God did rest the seuenth day from all his workes 5. And in this place againe If they shall enter into my rest 6. Seeing therefore it remaineth that some must enter thereinto and they to whom it was first preached entred not therein for vnbeleefes sake 7. Againe hee appointed in Dauid a certaine day by To day after so long a time saying as it is saide This day if yee heare his voyce harden not your hearts 8. For if Iesus had giuen them rest then would hee not after this day haue spoken of another 9. There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God 10. For he that is entred into his rest hath also ceased from his owne workes as God did from his 11. Let vs studie therefore to enter into that rest least any man fall after the same example of disobedience Behold say they the Sabbath which Christians must obserue is to rest from sin I answere this is not proued For this was as well to the Iewes as it is to the Christians For it is said Psal. 95. To day if ye will heare his voyce 8. Harden not your heart c. This the Prophet wrote after Caleb and Ioshua had entred into Canaan whither though many entred not yet some entred so that they had euen that rest then as well as we haue now Wherefore it doth not follow because the resting from sinne is also enioyned to the Christians as a pure vse of the Sabbath therefore it taketh away the other Againe the resting of God from his workes cannot be a figure of resting from sinne no more than God his workes can be a figure of sinfull workes Now seeing the Lord here vseth an argument of proportion betweene his workes and our workes his ceasing from his workes and our ceasing from our workes because betweene the figure and the thing figured must be some proportion and resemblance I pray you what proportion is there betweene God his workes and our sinnes what analogie betwixt God his resting from his workes and our resting from sinne Againe that it cannot be here meant of the rest from sinne it is manifest because that which is here spoken is set downe to Adam Genes 2. 2. 3. at what time there was no sinne in the world and therefore no resting from sinne therefore no figure of resting from sin because all the learned herein agree that there were no figures before sinne Besides and fourthly the Apostle sheweth that this rest is meant of the kingdome of heauen For as Dauid spake this of the land of Canaan so the Apostle speaketh it of the kingdome of heauen Wherefore he concludeth Let vs studie therefore to enter into that rest where we shall not onely rest from sinne but from all our ordinarie workes of our callings where shall neither be eating nor drinking nor marying nor giuing in mariage And as the people before were threatned that for their vnbeleefe and disobedience they should not enter into the land of Canaan so we are here threatned that vnlesse we studie and striue against these things we shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen Howbeit although the Sabbath was not a figure vnto Adam of resting from sinne yet it was vnto him a signe that he should come to the kingdome of God where should neither be eating nor drinking nor marying all which seeing Adam had it is manifest that he was not in the kingdome of God as yet The Sabbath then did put him in minde that he should not alwaies be working but that he should be translated though not die for although he was created in innocencie yet not free from being translated to a better place at God his good time but as the Apostle saith he should haue been changed as were En●ch and Eliah though after a more excellent manner We haue now the Lords day which assureth vs that as now by faith and hope we enioy the life to come so hereafter these two ceasing we shall more fully and perfectly enioy the same and as our Sacraments purely vsed shew a thing not to come but alreadie past so this day truly kept is a resemblance of a thing not past but to come For as on this day from the morning to euening we praise God if we keepe the day holie and yet withdrawne and interrupted with many by-thoughts and secret distractions so in heauen being freed from worldly carnall fearefull and manifold affections and troubles we shall more continually praise the Lord. What is then the alluding of this word rest This it is As God rested from his workes after he had made the world so we must rest from our workes What from the workes of sinne no from the workes of our callings and consequently from the workes of sinne much more So the analogie betwixt the Lord his rest and ours teacheth vs that we must rest from our ordinarie workes and this rest putteth vs in minde of that continuall Sabbath wherein when we cease from working eating drinking sleeping marying and all such workes as we are subiect vnto with corruption then also shall we vndoubtedly cease from sinne which kinde of rest in fulnes we must not looke for in this life This is a generall rule in Diuinitie to be obserued that of one place of Scripture there is but one naturall and proper sense although by consequence searching out the contraries the causes the effects and such like other things may be also gathered out of it If the words be more proper and naturall the sense is more proper and naturall if the words be borrowed and metaphoricall then is the sense borrowed and metaphoricall Now allusions are not so much for the proofe confirmation of the matter as for the amplifying and illustrating of the same For example 2. Corinth 13. 1. the Apostle saith This is the third time I come vnto you Where we must vnderstand how the Apostle had been with them once in bodily presence and twice wrote vnto them and yet he saith this is the third time I come vnto you He alludeth then to this as yee see O Corinthians in the law that two or three witnesses were sufficient to confirme the good and condemne the euill so I haue beene with you thrice which is sufficient to confirme the faith of the godly to leaue the vngodly without excuse Againe Rom. 10. 18. we reade But I demaund Haue they not heard No doubt their sound went throughout all the earth and their words into the ends of the world Here we see the Apostle alludeth to that Psal. 19. 4. which is meant of the day and the night This is then the allusion As the day and the night spread ouer the whole world so the Apostles were sent to preach ouer the whole world Againe Galat. 4. Paul alludeth
doe affirme that on that day it perisheth if it be vngathered on which day it commeth foorth then I do think that by the law of necessitie this thing happening it may be gathered on the Sabbath yet with these conditions that as many gather as can conueniently be gotten that no publike exercise of the worship of God be omitted that their mindes be holy and spiritually occupied that gather it Now if some will obiect that there is somewhat in the order of nature which fighteth with the ordinance of this law I answere for as much as this thing commeth on the Lords day but seldome times that therefore it is not a thing ordinarie but as a work of necessitie Now to fold vp this question we required in gathering that we should be spiritually minded which they may shewe in giuing it a marke of separation that is that they bestow it on the poorer if the be of they more wealthie sort if they be of meaner condition yet they may impart something to their more needie brethren as testifying thereby that they seeke not their gaine but the glorie of God It remaineth briefly and in a word to speake of trauailing which if it bee ordinarie and vsuall is in no case lawfull but if it be extraordinarie and necessarie as often it happeneth to Lawyers or Physitions the according to the necessitie it is more or lesse permitted We see that many Papists wil not stirre out on their Saints daies whereby is detected the want of our spirituall loue which make no conscience to cease on the Lords day And so the religion deuised by man findeth better entertainment a further practise than that which was ordained by God If any man obiect the losse of his liuing if he should not labour on this day I oppose against that the losse of God his glorie and that with his interrogatory whether the miserable pelfe of man should not giue roome to the immortal glorie of God And experience confirmeth the trueth of Gods word that in vaine men rise early and so late take their rest in vaine they build and take so great paines when the Lord denieth the blessing And what were it to bee rich by policie and poore by God his displeasure What though the bagge be heauie and their consciences troubled What if they be rich with men and poore with God Againe who is it that so disposed of his iournies and his affaires so as some making conscience of their Sabbath are in their iournies in one day better prospered in their affaires in one houre more furthered than many others contemning the ordinance of God are in many houres and in many dayes Who directeth men to bee prouident in their sales and bargainings Who besotteth and infatuateth others Who sendeth a man that not for a simple desire of gaine but for a single care to walke in his calling vseth the trade of buying and selling moe chapmen in one houre than another man hath in an whole day whose heart is inflamed whose eyes are inkindled with louing gaine and looking for profit howsoeuer it come by hooke or by crooke Men ascribe this to chance and so they oft by the iust iudgement of God receiue a blanke that is trusting to the blind world they receiue not so much gaine as will acquite their charges Can men trauaile day and night by sea and by land and that for a thing transitorie and will they reach out no houres for the defence of God his worship Doe they feare theeues if they inlarge their iourney for the keeping of a good conscience are they not afraid of theeues when for their worldly affections they can trauaile early and late Because herein the terror of their owne consciences will preach more forcibly to them than I can speake I will leaue them to that practise of the man of God which is vsed Nehem. 12 And thus hauing spoken of the workes of our callings now wee are to speake of the workes of our pleasures Concerning the lawfull recreations of this life which Christianity doth permit and not forbid for of vnlawfull pleasures being alwaies out of season and especially on the Sabbath we haue nothing to say whether they may haue place and time on the Lords day or no here is the question In this part of the treatise I say wee doe not speake of prophane idle pleasures but of them which bring some further vse after they be vsed which are permitted by the word of God so measure in them may be vsed and they be sanctified vnto vs by the word and by prayer And yet euen for these we dare not giue the time consecrated to God vnto playing and pleasures Neither are we curiously to frame any exquisite diuision in this matter but first we will consider of the feasts and bankets accustomed on this day and afterward of other recreations and exercises at that time frequented and vsed which though in their time place and persons they are not vnlawfull yet at this time on the Lords day we denie them to be lawfull As for feasts we may part them into Loue feasts Church feasts sumptuous feasts which carie with them some further expences and larger liberalitie as are those which are vsed at mariages at the admitting of men into their ciuill offices or else are taken vp for some speciall benefits receiued or some extraordinarie iudgements remoued or some other causes like vnto these as when men carying some port and countenance in the common wealth according to their degrees and callings at some times doe ordaine Touching these solemne and sumptuous feasts thus much we affirme briefly Such as on the Lords day institute such solemnities and stuffe euery office and bumbast euery corner of the house with men and women are to be admonished duly to consider of that which is reported of Dauid both in the historie of the Kings and in the booke of the Chronicles who hauing a vaine desire and superfluous appetite would not deferre but longed to taste of the water of the well of Bethlehem a well fenced citie and from whence water could not be conueied by hand without some ieopardie to them that fetcht it Wherfore three of his most worthie men haue this busines assigned them to the compassing whereof their liues were hazarded At their returne grace making his after fruites better than the former after better deliberation vsed he powred forth the water on the ground saying God forbid that I should drink the blood or the liues of these three men shewing thereby both his offence in sending them the free mercie of God in sauing them Wherefore for as much as these pompous preparations cannot cōueniently be vsed on the Sabbath without the hazard of mens soules though the Lord in mercie may saue their soules as in that diuers offices in great families require diuers persons to performe diuers duties and so that which is a day of rest is made a
their bounds breake out of their bottels cloysters and chambers to ou●rflow all is vnable to drawe our bodies out of the dust Sure it is that flesh and blood can hardly admit this doctrine and therefore we had neede to arme our selues with these and such like meditations If we weigh more deeply the prouidence of God in his Church either whilest it was more particular in one familie or more general in moe we shall haue our faith in this doctrine the more cōfirmed For he who accomplished his promise made vnto Abraham in blessing al the nations of the earth in his seede euen when the ordinary course of nature was dead both in Abraham and Sarah by bringing Isaac out of their loynes and fulfilled his couenāt vnto Dauid his seruant in bringing Iesus into the wombe of Mary whilest as yet shee knew no man who was the promised seede to bruise the Serpents head is no lesse able to take vs out of the drie wombe and dead bowels of the earth according to his promise Gen. 22. Abraham at God his commandement is readie to offer vp his sonne Isaac in whom all the promises were to be accomplished neither was he hindred by vnbeleefe why The Apostle saith Heb. 11. 19. He considered that God was able to raise him vp euen from the dead from whence he receiued him also after a sort neither would he tye the power of God to ordinarie meanes Thus we see he ouercame all vnbeleefe by faith in the resurrection What if we consider how mightily the Lord restored and multiplied his Church after he had ouerflowed the whole earth with water What if we call to minde the mightie preseruation of the Church in deliuering them through the red sea when the waters diuiding themselues stood as a wall on either side of the Israelites What if we consider how mightily the Lord cōducted his people safely thorough the wildernesse fortie yeeres giuing them Manna from heauen water out of the rocke healing them that were stung of Serpents with the beholding of a dead Serpent and preseruing their apparell that it was not worne in so long a time Shall we not thinke that the same God is able to raise the bodies of his Saints out of the earth It is recorded 2. King 4. 36. that Elisha the man of God restored to the Shunamite her sonne being dead and 2. King 13. 21. we reade that a dead man being cast into the sepulcher of Elisha and touching his bones reuiued and stood vpon his feete Did God thus confirme the doctrine of Elisha and will he not much more confirme the doctrine of his deare Son Could Elisha by the power of God giue life vnto others shall not the Lord aduance his owne person in himselfe at the last day Daniel 3. Shadrach Meshach and Abednego refusing to serue the false gods and the golden Image which Nebuchadnezzar had set vp who might haue had policie to haue kept their faith to themselues as our Familists do now adaies were cast into the hot fiery furnace and yet by beleefe in God were so preserued from it that the fire had no power ouer their bodies not an haire of their head was burnt neither were their coates changed nor any smell of fire came vpon them Dan. 6. the Prophet of God refusing the commaundement of the King was cast into the den of Lyons who by faith obtained the Angel of the Lord to shut vp the Lyōs mouthes that they could not hurt him Ionah 2. we reade how he being in the fishes bellie three daies and three nights at the commaundement of the Lord was cast out vpon the drie land Matth. 27. 52. it is said that the graues did open themselues and many bodies of the Saints that slept arose 56. And came out of the graues after his resurrection and went into the holy citie and appeared vnto many What shall we say of these things Did the fire contrarie to it nature cease to burne the bodies in it at the presence of an Angell will it not restore the bodies being burnt at the power of God presence of Christ Did the Lyons spare the body from deuouring and shall they not deliuer againe the bodies hauing deuoured them Can the Whale deliuer Ionah after three daies and will not the sea surrender her dead Did the dead arise before their time to shew Christ his passion shall they not arise at their time to appeare at his glorious comming Cannot that God that made Angels to appeare in humane shape make men appeare out of the earth in their owne shape And why did the Angels from heauen the dead bodies from earth so suddenly receiue that estate and so suddenly lay it downe but to shew that their time of perfection was not yet come Now let vs see those reasons which are drawn from God as he is our Mediatour wherein we will consider certaine things done in his owne person and things to be obserued in the meanes which leade vs vnto him Luk. 8. 55. Our Sauiour Christ ariseth from death to life the daughter of Iairus And which is a further degree Luke 7. 14 he reuiued the widowes some lying on the beare in a coffin readie to be buried Nay which yet is a further degree and more marueilous Ioh. 11. 44. he raiseth Lazarus Marthaes brother hauing been dead foure daies Lastly Matth. 26. he mightily raiseth himselfe hauing beene dead three daies and three nights and that without all qualitie of corruption Who then dare doubt vnder paine of damnation that the same Iesus Christ can raise our mortal and corruptible bodies or that he will not change our vile bodies and make them like his glorious body by tha● mightie power whereby he is able to subdue all things vnto himselfe Behold Pilate sealeth the stone which couereth Christ in his buriall armed men are prepared and watchmen sit at the graue neither could all these things keepe vnder the power of Christ from rising What then Forsooth which is most vnlike they inuented that poore sillie soules came stole him from the armed men Well he was seene first of Mary then of certaine Disciples afterward of moe than fiue hundred We see now his rising was corporall it was no spirituall resurrection in what sort he rose in like manner shall we rise also but he rose in the flesh then shall we rise in the flesh and therefore not in the spirit alone as our brainsicke heretikes imagine Now he rose not for his owne cause no more than he was purely borne holily liued and innocently dyed all these things he did for vs that we might be sanctified that we might be iustified that we might be glorified Neither did he suffer in the bodie alone but in the soule also whereby he shewed that he freed not the soule alone but the bodie also because the body as well as the soule was guiltie and punishable for sinne He rose not in soule alone but in
for whatsoeuer is ours by gift it is the interest of others by necessitie whatsoeuer is proper to vs by possession is common to the Church by vse and participation and whatsoeuer wee haue wee haue it for dispensation as the stewards of God his gifts and disposers of his graces And therefore as at the audites and dayes of accounts such stewards are culpable and vnworthie of their places who hauing large summes of money for the liberal maintenance of the family haue appropriated all to themselues so likewise in that great day of reckoning and audite of Angels those stewards will bee found damnable and iudged vnworthie to haue had accesse to the Lord his treasurie who hauing receiued of God singular graces and plentifull gifts for the building vp of his Church and distributing things necessarie to the Saints in due season haue notwithstanding enriched themselues alone and impouerished their fellow seruants vnto whose vse and for whose good such rich reuenewes of God his graces and gifts were committed to their fidelitie It followeth in the Psalme The sorrowes of them that offer to another God shall bee multiplied their offering of blood I will not offer neither make mention of their names with my lips Heere the man of God declareth himselfe to bee no lukewarme professor and therefore as in the third verse hee sheweth the profession of his faith concerning the communion of Saints so in the fourth verse be protesteth his hatred to the false worshippers and he teacheth that none can truly loue the Saints but he must also hate the wicked God cannot abide to be worshipped in part or by mixture of religion as though the Arke and Dagon God and Mammon Christ and Belial should bee ioyned in worship together Many are not so fully contented with the Saints as that they are throughly discontented with the wicked who so long as they see matters of ciuill authoritie and good order haue successe can loue the word to serue time and season whose liking of it is so small that when other religion commeth they find not themselues much discontented But we must learne so to belieue in the true religion as our faith may drawe out of vs an vnchangeable loue and this true loue must be free from all appearance of idolatrie and contrary religion whatsoeuer If euer this doctrine was necessarie it is now most needefull sith true religion so decayeth false religion so aboundeth heathenish prophanenes so groweth all which no doubt arise o● so little esteeming and small liking of the truth For whereof first did spring heathenishnesse Euen from hence men were contented that euery nation should worship as they listed and liked whereupon they did grow to haue both their country gods and houshold gods for we reade that the Senate of the Romans would receiue Christ as their God yet so as they would also maintaine their owne gods Not much vnlike is our familie of loue and common sort of Protestants both which can easily tolerate any kind of religion come what profession come will Wherefore we may see how this Psalme fitly may be vsed when we will accuse our selues of want of loue to the Saints or when wee will accuse our selues of wa●t of hatred to idolaters seeing the spirit of the man of God so earnest and our selues so cold herein In that he saith hee will not make mention of their names with his lips he declareth his through hatred vnto them which the more euidently appeareth in that hee would not only not cōmunicate with them in his goods but also that hee would not meddle with their ceremonies Neither must wee thinke that this was any peculiar thing vnto Dauid but that it was common also to all the Israelites as we may see Exod. 23. 13 ye shall make no mention of the name of other gods neither shall it be heard out of thy mouth and not to them alone but to all Christians in like manner as appeareth Zechar. 13. 2. And in that day faith the Lord of hostes I will cut off the names of the idols out of the land yea and they shall bee no m●re remembred Besides the law commaundeth all auoyding of occasions of idolatry Deut. 7 25. where are set downe two reasons the one that wee should not bee snared with such occasions the other because it is an abomination to the Lord wherein although somewhat be political yet because whatsoeuer is impure is abhominable to the Lord and our nature is prone vnto and hardly kept from corrupt religion wee hating the impuritie of the doctrine must also hate the impuritie of the ceremonies To the Law agreeth also the Prophet as Esay 30. 22. where the Lord not only commaundeth them to auoid all idolatrie but euen the appertinances thereof Yee shall pollute the couering of the Images of siluer and the rich ornaments of the Images of gold and cast them away as a menstruous cloth and thou shalt say vnto it get thee hence This seemeth precisenes and puritanisme to the world which can be content to vse things for forme and fashion but if we vrge vpon puritie wee are counted precisians Well if it be so then Dauid was a precisian The holy ghost also exhorteth vs also to abstaine from all apparance of euill 1. Thess. 5 22. 1. Iohn 5. 21. Babes keepe your selues from idols And the Apostle Iude verse 23. willeth vs euen to hate the garment spotted by the flesh True it is that one may haue a priuate vse of the meate prepared for Images but as it is an appertinance of idolatrie it is to be auoided Wherefore we are to pray that we may so haue our hearts rectified by the spirit of God as not only the substance of false religion may be auoided but also the appertinances thereof whereby we may the better prouide both for God his glory and our owne peace Whereas he saith the sorrowes of them that offer to another God shall bee multiplied hee sheweth how besides the comforts which he had in the Saints he so much the more hated the idolaters because hee sawe the more they inwrapped themselues the more their spirits were troubled in them and then they could find least rest whē they had most trouble So that as the man of God commendeth true religion by this effect that it yeeldeth peace of mind and comfort of conscience in trouble so hee discommendeth false religion by the contrarie because howsoeuer in prosperitie it bringeth aswelling ioy yet in aduersitie it maketh men cry to the rocks to couer them to the mountaines to fall vpon them This must cause vs more narrowly to search our hearts whether we haue this loue of true religion or no against the which neither the gates of hell nor terrours of Satan nor troubles of conscience can preuaile for this religion is no lesse comfortable than true when wee feele our selues assured thereby of our iustification by Christ of the ministerie of God his Angels watching ouer vs and that
zeale is opposed to luke-warmnes which is too temperate a warmenes for the profession of the Gospell Wee must not then onely renounce coldnes farre from vs and put away lukewarmnes but wee must be very hote and feruent in the profession of the truth Againe 1. Cor. 14. 1. that which our common translation hath Follow after loue couet gifts but especially prophecie the naturall Text hath bee zealous after the more excellent gifts And Rom. 12. Be feruent to the spirit that is let Gods spirit inkindle in you a fire which may cause you to flame with a zeale of Gods glorie and with a loue of mankinde Now there are diuers kinds of zeale there is a zeale of the world there is a zeale of the flesh there is a zeale of false religion there is a zeale of heresie and there is a zeale of the true word of God First wee see the zeale of the world maketh men to labour day and night to get a transitorie thing The zeale of the flesh tormenteth mens minds early and late for a momentarie pleasure The zeale of heresie maketh men trauaile and compasse Sea and Land for the maintaining and increasing of theis opinion Thus wee see euery man is eaten with some kinde of zeale The drunkard is consumed with drunkennes the whoremonger is spent with his whoredome the Heretike is eaten with heresies oh how ought this to make vs ashamed who are so little eaten spent consumed with the zeale of the word And so much the rather because godlie zeale leaueth in vs an aduantage and a recompence which the worldlie and carnallie zealous men haue not For when they haue spent all the strength of their bodies and powers of their minde they haue no gaine nor comfort left but torment of conscience and when they are outwardly spent they are inwardly neuer the better whereas the godly being consumed for a good thing and eaten vp with the zeale of Gods glorie haue this notable priuiledge and profite that howsoeuer their outward man perisheth and decayeth yet their inward man is still refreshed and nourished to euerlasting life Oh what a benefit it is to bee eaten with the loue and zeale of a good thing Leauing now the carnall and worldly zeale wee know how zealous Idolaters were that they would euen offer their children in the fire We know the zeale of the Iewes Math. 13. who would compasse Sea and Land to make a man a Proselyte Heretikes as we see spare no labour and let not for a●●e cost to maintaine their Heresies but these are not good The true zeale is that whereof the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 11. I am iealous ouer you with an holie jealousie Rom 10. the Apostle ●aith the Iewes had the zeale of God but not according to knowledge Wherefore to shewe some properties of true zeale whereby we may trye our selues let vs first know that our zeale must be grounded on knowledge for otherwise it will carrie vs further to destruction as it did them who oppre●●ed the truth and persecuted the deare seruants of God and yet thought that they did well Wherefore in true zeale it is requisite to haue knowledge going before Wee see the zeale of the Prophet did arise here of the contempt of the law of God For seeing it to be ●o exquisite perfit euerlasting powerfull comfortable it is a manifest argument that he was well grounded on the word This zeale then that we may the lesse be deceiued with the contrary hath these few rules first as we haue already said it must be agreeable wholy with the word of God to begin where it beginneth to end where it endeth Therefore we may thus trie our true zeale If first and especially wee make conscience of the principall matters of the word as of prayer of the Sacraments of discipline of charitie and then of the lesse things that are commaunded if wee will doe them if anie be forbidden wee also auoide them yet euer tollerating through loue little things as they that would not trouble the Church of God Wherefore the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 11. 1. 10. If anie man lust to be contentious we haue no such custome neither the Churches of God as if he should say If any man will striue about matters of lesse importance wee according to the order of the Church will not striue with them but rather will beare many things in loue and yet so as still we vse this caueat That we account nothing small or little which is Gods word This doctrine may be manifested by familiar examples If a man shall steale things of great weight or some great summe of money which deserueth hanging and the cutting off of life we will abhorre him but when it cōmeth out that they may ●eale lesse things as wood and corne and that not of necessitie but euen of greedinesse of minde thinking it not to be subiect to so high a punishment they will make no conscience of it But if Adam was cast out of Paradise for the biting of an apple wee must not thinke any thing that the word commaundeth or forbiddeth to be little or that the doing or not doing is but a trifling sinne least that through the iust iudgements of God we falling by little and little by degrees fall into great monstrous sinnes And as this is in life so is it much more in the worship of God It is a great fault that wee will make a scruple in matters of small importance and will not sticke to be dissolute in things of greater weight Indeed it must needs be confessed that our grand zeale must be in great things and yet wee must not lightly esteeme of any thing in the glorious word of God The second rule of true zeale is that wee must looke to the things which are within as well as to the things which are without This also our Sauiour Christ teacheth vs by reprehending the Pharisies in telling them that they made cleane the outside of the platters but left the inside foule shewing that their liues outwardly was without reproofe but inwardly they were full of secret pride disdaine selfe-loue and hatred Our zeale must beginne within and in time appeare outwardly and as we will not sinne outwardly so we must be as loth to sinne inwardly Wherefore here also are two things to be obserued the first is that we feare no more to do ill before men then we do by our selues For wee be giuen to be loth to be accounted ill and yet make no such conscience to be ill we see theeues whores and ill-do●rs are loth to bee so accounted and yet in the meane season if they can doe this secretly they make no care of it We outwardly are carefull to maintaine our credit and to trauaile with our selues yet secretly wee can commit sinne greedily What is this but to be painted sepulchers and dishes cleane without but foule within Wherefore wee
all that now Christ is readie to come because we see small faith on the earth For if euer this was it is now wherein is not onely a defect of faith which euer was but because now men goe cleane against faith for now not onely the principles of the faith are not obserued but they are thought absurde and things cleane contrarie are prescribed Is it not monstrous that now some teach for doctrine that a man may lie and forsweare without sin or shame Seeing that sinne is now in it ripenesse which was before but in the eare could the diuell from hell broch more profound blasphemies If the regions begin to grow white and sin groweth ripe and yellow we must looke for the Angell shortly to thrust in his sickle Well whensoeuer the dave of iudgment is I feare the day of the departure of the Gospel is at hand Our securitie is such that we may rather say the Lord hath suffered vs too long then that we can accuse God for seuerenesse in striking vs too soone Be it then that as yet the day is not come wherein the world shall crackle about our eares or though we see not our Ierusalem destroyed yet we know our day of death cannot be farre off and quickely we shall come to our doome CHAP. XX. Of the shortnesse of our life and the meditation of Death how profitable IT is the vsuall manner of the Holie Ghost 1. Pet. 4. Iam. 2. Iohn 12. to perswade men to godlinesse because they haue but a quantitie of dayes This is such an ordinarie Argument that vse hath taken away the force of it yet Dauid saith that euen ordinarie things by grace moue vs and where grace workes not euen extraordinarie things moue vs not Concerning shortnes of life the heathen could say that a man is but a man of a day olde and the Philosophers teach that his life cannot be long But we will leaue all them without the Church and come to them within Dauid said it was a span long Moses and Salamon say it is a life of dayes and I will obserue withall that Moses Ioh Dauid Salomon when they describe the life of man they can find nothing to rest on as vaine enough whereunto they might compare it so base a thing is this life that it may abide any extenuation in the world In regarde whereof they haue compared it to a bubble a sleepe a vapour and they cume so farre at the length that they compared it to a thought whereof wee know there may be no fewer then a thousand in one day Esay 38 it is saide it may be spent before night And 2. Cor. 5. it is compared to a booth or a shepheards tent which we see doth last but a while In our daily and ordinary prayer Christ admonisheth vs of this point when hee teacheth vs to pray that wee may haue a portion for a day as though our life were shutte vp or may bee shutte vp in one day There are long spaces which by a speedy course are quickly ended and there be short spaces which hauing a slow moouer are long in going but if the space be short and the motion swift there is no hope of continuance and such a one is our life The Israelites went no further in thirtie yeares by their slowe motion than by a swift passage they might haue gone in eleuen dayes So that one may bee going a long iourney in a little time and a little iourney a long time Our way is short and for the manner of our motion in this short way it is compared to a Weauers shuttle and to a Poste and to a shadowe to a Poste Nay it is not of so long continuance for a Poste leaues a print of his steppes behinde him but a man doth leaue no impression he is still going the motion neuer ceaseth The swiftest thing in nature for motion may stay but mans life doth not stay For though at the praier of Ioshua the Sun stood still which is wonderful swift yet the time of mans life stood not stil but euen then a d●ies iourney went forward Salomon considering of mans life called it vaine and then as not thinking that a sufficient word he corrected himselfe called it Vanitie it selfe But Dauid going further Psal. 62. saith man is lighter than vanitie too If we adde this that nothing befals vs all our life long but it may befall vs any day or euery day we shall confesse this life is vaine The calculating of this time is good but the increasing of our account is the cause of all euill Matt. 25. the enuious seruant was ouertaken in his account be thought he had many daies to come which he had not before his Lord appeared The Virgins were truely foolish that dreamed of a day which was denied them Luk. 12. the rich man ouershot himselfe and was preuented contrarie to his account It is the vsuall complaint of the Prophets that men say The prophecie is deferred the plague shall not come yet and we say in our hearts the Bridegrome wil not come yet our Lord wil be long in comming the burthen of the Lord shall ouerpasse vs so forth It is good reason to remember the praier of Moses Psal. 90. 12. that we beguile not our selues in the computation who cryeth Lord teach vs to number our daies For numbring of people Dauid is an example for numbring our money our sheepe our lands and our frames euery man can be an example But to number our daies is a rare kind of numbring it is a strange Arithmetike what rearages we are fallen into with the Lord for our time not spent to his glory this is a numbring wherewith we are vnacquainted Oh that we knew what it were to account of time surely this I will say if there were many worlds in the possession of some that are departed they would giue them vs for one day or houre which we haue in such plentie and so little esteeme of Well in the numbring of our yeeres we neede take no great paine for Moses hath set it downe to be 70. yeeres If our life last but so long a little Arithmetike will cypher it out and we know it is a matter of no great arte to number our yeeres euen from our first father to this age A worldly man in this businesse would begin to adde and to multiply putting still to the times past that which is to come and withdrawing from time to come times past But we must know that all that is past is to be substracted and to be counted nothing and the daies to come are not to be added for an addition must be of a thing existent but the time to come is not But let vs make a supposition of that to be which is not that a man may write of 70 yeeres let vs I say set that downe as the grosse summe Halfe that time is
not to him he needs it not we can do him no good but for his sake oh that we might do good to men For this cause I say the Lord hath giuen the poore a bil of his hād for the receiuing of his right which is due to himselfe in these words Whatsoeuer men do to one of these little ones they doe it to me Neither hath the Lord onely shewed his liking of this kind of mercie he hath giuen vs reasons why we should so doe as Luk 6 Giue and it shall be giuen to you againe these are brethren and therefore inseparable if we giue it shall be giuen vs againe If then we will driue away famine from the land we must giue so that with this sacrifice the benefit of the whole countrie is purchased But beside this Matth. 19 it is said Giue to the poore and ye shall haue treasure in heauen So that we shall not onely haue mercy if we shew mercy but the Lord himselfe will shew himselfe exceedingly thankefull to vs for the same And yet we see our diffidence herein And as the seede is not the grounds that receiues it but his that sowes it so that which is bestowed in mercy is not so much his vpon whom the gift is bestowed but his that bestoweth it So here is another reason we must giue because we haue receiued it the Lord requires nothing but his owne he requires nothing to be giuen but that we haue receiued of him therefore we see of them that receiued talents the Lord requires nothing to be repaid but his own There is hath bin these many daies a complaint against the pastors of the land because they feed as though they fed not and for this there is great hatred against them sprung vp from the people which though it be a iust conceiued wrath yet I thinke we measure thē not by the right measure that is by another measure than we measure our selues by for we haue a talent of riches as they haue a talent of knowledge wherein we are as slacke to performe mercy to the poore as they to the ignorant so that in condemning them we condemne our selues For as it is sure that the haruest is great in spirituall things there are but few labourers so in respect of temporall things there is as great an haruest the labourers are as few because as the ignorāt people are the haruest of the learned Ministers so the poorer sort is the haruest of the rich men Another reason is this because we cannot retaine it is therefore a good policie to giue and to make vs friends of the wicked Mammon We cannot carrie any thing with vs from hence haue we neuer so much here it is gotten and here it is gone and though we could carry our gold with vs yet when we come in another world that which is currant here will stand vs in no stead for it wil not go for currant there Wel admit these things could doe vs good yet we cannot carry them safely with vs for there are many robbers wil meet vs in the way therefore we must follow the manner of them that go by pirats they carry not all they haue with them but they commit all to others of their friends by writings and bils which we see to be vsed of our exchangers So then wee must carry with vs only our bils which will stand the spoilers in little steed though they light vpon them And surely the Lord hath made the rich his factors and exchangers here on earth and seeing the Lord hath giuen vs a bill of his hand for that we commit to the poore we may safely make our claime to all for this bill will goe with vs and shall be reade euen at the iudgement seate when Christ himselfe shall say Looke what ye haue done to one of these ye haue done it to me So that it is good to shew mercy because otherwise wee cannot long keepe that we haue surely if that which is spoken of mercy in the world should be cut off a great part of the Scriptures shuld be don away But amōg many reasons this may moue vs to mercy that in the time of iudgement the Lord will be content to leaue off all other actions of knowldge and truth c. and come to this one of mercy And albeit the Lord may challenge the other too yet because the special clause of iudgment shall be concerning mercy we must specially looke to this To apply this to our selues I neede not I cannot accuse men all mens mouthes wil condemne thēselues the Preachers of the word neede not to bend their braines to finde out an accusation for this point because all men can doe it what is more vsuall than this mens deuotions growe cold And indeed there is greathardnes of heart there is much complaining but little redressing and therefore seeing the land doth accuse it selfe I accuse it not 5 This is the difference between the punishments here those in another life here no vehement punishment is permanent there the punishment is euerlasting yet most vehemēt Alas that there are no more fit termes to expresse it But small perswasion wil serue and a twine threed wil draw him that belongs to God but if he be a child of reprobation a cable rope wil not serue and though he should see the smoke and the mountaine of fire yet will he turne and sowse himselfe in the mire of sinne like a sow Take a man in a fit of a burning ague and ye shall heare him vtter such words and so protest of his paine as if it were v●s●fferable but this is another manner of age and shall vexe vs more than all the burning agues in the world and yet it shall continue Paul alleageth a very plaine reason why there is so little mercie among men Euery man seekes his owne and we seeke not the things one of another We forget we are members one of another and therefore the Lord needes nothing but our owne mouths to condemne vs. For seeing we call God Father I would gladly know by what title we call him Father There is no reason but that Christ is our brother and he hath made vs the sonnes of God for there is no fatherhood in God but by brotherhood in Christ. But how is Christ thy brother more than to another seeing he hath done as much for another as he hath done for thee Well if another hath as good a title to Christ as thou then he is thy brother too and if he be thy brother I say to thee as Malachie saide of the fatherhood If God be thy father where is his feare so if he be thy brother where is thy brotherly loue But Christ hath yet another reason we are not onely brethren because God is our father and Christ our brother but for that we are as neerely knit in coniunction as the lims and
ourtakes vs and we are as good as absent or else if wee be waking we goe away before it be done or if we tarrie as soone as we be gone we commit all to forgetfulnesse And so if with want of knowledge wee be mercifull and true dealers it is but after our owne braine and because the Lord hath not planted the Lord will roote it out The end of all is if men will not grow in the knowledge of God his wil they shal neuer come to the knowledge of God that is they shall not knowe God his mercy God his trueth glory and blessednesse neither will he euer know vs. For as without the knowledge of Gods will there is not nor shall be any knowledge of God so if we know not God God will neuer know vs. 11 When we shal be ioyned to God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost then shal we know as we are knowne then shall all teares be wiped from our eyes then shall our infirmities be taken from vs then shall we dwel with the Angels and with al the hosts of heauen in most happie blessednesse it selfe We see now by this chaine not forged by our own braine but framed out of Gods word that hee is indeede blessed whom God chooseth whom Christ redeemeth whom the Spirit reneweth whom faith stayeth whom the word Prayer Sacraments and Discipline buildevp in the Lord in whom faith breedeth peace peace sinceritie sinceritie loue loue a feare of displeasing and a care of pleasing God in whom this care striueth to a mortification in pouertie of minde this pouertie comming from a mourning heart possessed in a meeke spirit and aspiring to true righteousnesse all these things being ioyned with that sanctification which lamenteth the sins of others and relieueth the wants of others knowing to vse prosperity and aduersitie as pledges of Gods fauour and vndoubtedly looking for the kingdome of heauen in the life to come If any of these linkes be missing the chaine is broken if any of these members be wanting the body of blessednesse is lame and dismembred CHAP. XLV Of Miracles and how God worketh without and with meanes and how we ought to attend on the meanes THe Miracles that were wrought in the Church were partly in mercie and partly in iudgement as in turning Iereboams hand into leprosie and into cleane flesh againe but the miracles against Aegypt were onely in iudgement 2 Signes are giuen to confirme vs in the word are not more excellent than it if then they draw vs from the word we must hold them accursed as wel as the false Prophet Deut. 12. That which Paul speaketh of tongues 1. Corinth chap. 14. is true of all miracles which are signes to beleeuers which may teach vs not to desire them for if we beleeue not Moses and the Prophets neither would we beleeue if miracles were brought from heauen So is it in the Sacramēts which are ordained to nourish that faith which is ingendred in vs by the word and therefore must not bee separated from the word nor esteemed aboue the word For we shall then profite truely by Baptisme when we in and by the word shall beleeue the washing away of sinne and get power to mortifie sinne daily within vs and then shal we profit by the Lords Supper when we beleeue all the promises of our Redemption wrought by Iesus Christ and shall be vnited into his body daily more and more by the word 3 Pharaoh did aske a signe not for any purpose to yeeld thereunto but if they could not doe any he might haue the greater aduantage against Moses and the people So the Scribes and Pharisies aske a signe of Christ to whom he answered the adulterous generation seeketh a signe So many in these daies aske proofe of many things in religion not that they minde to yeeld thereto but if they cannot haue such proofe as will stop their mouthes they may more quietly continue in their error We must learne to leaue this kinde of questioning which is seldome graunted for good let vs so frame our requests as that they may be reuerent and we may haue a desire to rest in that which is graunted 4 A wonder may moue vs for a time but commonly it lasteth at the most but for nine daies and we shall neuer gather any fruite thereby except it doth prepare vs to profite more effectually by the word 5 Some think that the miraculous Manna was not so straunge because it is to be found in these daies in other countries I answere not of that colour not of that propertie Therefore this was a miracle as may appeare by these reasons following First because it was neuer seene before and then came at Gods commaundement Secondly because neither raine nor faire weather did let it Thirdly because as soone as they came to the borders of the promised Land it ceased Fourthly because if it were kept till the morning it stanke but on the Sabbath day it continued sweet albeit gathered the day before Againe when it was reserued in the Arke it putrified not Fiftly because it followed the Israelites whither soeuer they went Sixtly because it fell in such abundance as that it sustained so great a multitude 6 At what time the Lord first sent Manna the children of Israel being rauished with the loue of it called it Manna that is meate prepared of the Lord herein they acknowledged the goodnesse of the Lord. This Manna is first commended for the colour it was as white as the precious stone called Bdellium Secondly for the taste tasting like fresh oyle Numb 11. 7. Thirdly for that it was Angels foode or meate prepared by Angels Psalm 98. And yet for all this when the people had beene accustomed to it they loathed it and set light by it wherefore their sinne was the greater The reason of it may be this This Manna was giuen them not onely to be foode for their bodies but also to be a token vnto them that seeing the Lord fedde them from heauen they were not to settle themselues on the earth but to looke for their inheritance in Heauen So many therefore as did rest in the bodily foode not respecting the thing spiritually signified by it they were soone weary of it So is it also with vs for albeit all the blessings of God be very deare vnto vs and of a great price at the first receiuing of them yet when they are common the best blessings are lightly regarded If it be so in earthly things which are agreeable to our nature how much more will it be in spirituall things which are so contrarie to our nature And hereby the great corruption of mans heart is discouered which will not be moued but with noueltie As for example the sunne if it were but seldome seene how glorious a creature would it be accoūted but because we haue the daily vse of it therfore very few of vs regard it Nay the word of