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A05479 Twelue sermons viz. 1 A Christian exhortation to innocent anger. 2 The calling of Moses. ... 11 12 The sinners looking-glasse. Preached by Thomas Bastard ... Bastard, Thomas, 1565 or 6-1618.; Bastard, Thomas, 1565 or 6-1618. Five sermons. aut 1615 (1615) STC 1561; ESTC S101574 96,705 150

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cast forth into the Wildernesse into the place of Dragons to haue thy abiding with Zym and Dragons and Ostriches and Ohim c. yet heere God looketh vpon thee The same God which saw thee when thou fleddest from thy Brother I the same God which saw thee when thy Mother which bare thee forsooke thee and shut thee vp in a little Arke of Slime and Pitch and cast thee forth among the Bulrushes and left thee floating vpon the water We see as the littlenesse or vnaptnesse of the persons cannot hinder God in executing by them works of wonder no more can the vnlikelinesse or vnaptnesse of the place He can make as many Springs to flow out of the rocky Desart as from Apenninus the father of Riuers hee can store the waste and roaring Wildernesse with as much prouision as fruitfull Aegypt he can leuye as great an Armie from Sina bushes as from the middest of Pharaohs Kingdome But what is the reason that God appeareth to Moses rather in the Wildernesse then in Aegypt Haue the Aegyptians onely driuen out Moses from them Haue they not also chased God away He cannot abide in Pharaohs Court there is so much hardnesse in Pharaohs hart he cannot abide in their land for their cruelty nor in their Temples for their Idolatry It was a poore entertaynement that the Lord of life when he came to dwell with vs and to inhabite our flesh that hee must be driuen to seeke the Asses cratch and that our vnthankefulnesse did thrust the God of life into a Stable but it was harder that quietly the Babe IESVS could not enioy that but Mary must be driuen to flie by the way of the Wildernesse into Aegypt to hide her Sonne for feare of Herod and the Iewes Why doe we thus banish God from vs and chase him forth into remote and farre Countries from whence he will not returne but to smite vs and iudge vs as he did the Aegiptians heere Why doth hee rather dwell in the thornie bush then in Pharaohs heart He is not in Samaria but he is in the Desart with Eliah he is not with Belshazzar in his Pallace Dan. 5. but he is with Daniell in the denne of the Lyons Dan. 6. He is not in Sodome but hee is in the Mountaine with Lot He is not with Saul in his Tent but he is with Dauid in the caue Oh our vngratefulnesse nay our wretchednesse if where we are most there God is least Now for the third part in order the Place particular It should little boote to set downe the varietie of the opinions of them which haue interpreted this vision but God had doubtlesse his secret heere Some apply it to the Israelites and their peruerse disposition which were alwaies like the thornes which resistes the fire Some take for the Bush the wombe of the blessed Virgin some the bodie of CHRIST I will not maintayne these opinions neyther will I impugne them but we more safely compare this vision with that of Abrahams where God appeared to him in a firebrand out of a darke Fornace The reason is God sufreth not his people to be extinguished in darkenesse The afflicted and oppressed people of Israell we may resemble to the low shrub or bush The tyranny of Pharaoh to the fire burning in the middest which had consumed them had not God miraculously preserued them So by the presence of God the bush scapes the fire as it is written that although the flouds lift vp themselues against the Sanctuary of God yet it shall not be moued because God is in the middest of it Saint Paul saith of God our God is a consuming fire But Moses can say our God is a preseruing fire To the Aegyptians he was a consuming fire but to the Israelites a preseruer from fire He consumed the Captaynes of Ahaziah but he preserued Elijah Hee consumed the Princes of Nabuchodonosor but he preserued the three children in the middest of the fire Isay was preserued by this fire for when God touched his mouth with a coale burning from the Altar he heard Thine iniquitie shal be taken away and thy sinne purged And although the fire be now out of the Bush yet Christ hath brought fire anew from heauen and left it burning in the Tongues and Lippes of his Apostles and made them the Lights of the world Now touching the Vision No doubt but Moses was wonderfully astonished with the miracle he goeth aside to wonder to gaze at this strange sight But these if thou compare Moses with those miracles which God wil worke by thee with those great wonders in Aegypt with his continuall appearing to thee in a Cloude by day and in a Pillar of fire by night This burning flame I say if thou compare with these and with Mount Sinai burning all with fire it shall seeme to be but a little sparke And yet that great deliuerance of Gods people which was wrought by Moses at which all the earth trembled which filled all hearts with astonishment which was done with so mighty an hand outstretched arme compare we it to our deliuerance in Iesu Christ and it will seeme but as shadow to a body and lesse indeede than a little sparkle to a great flame What is their deliuerance from Aegypt to our deliuerance from Death and Hell What the leading of them through the red Sea to our washing in the bloud of Christ What the standing of the Sunne at the praier of Ioshuah to the descending of the Sunne of God into the world What the slaying of the first borne in Aegypt to the crucifying of Iesus Christ the Lord of Life Come we how to the manner of his calling which is the fourth in order Heere wee earne first that this was no dumbe shew to terrifie the holy man For it hath Doctrine annexed to establish his minde And indeede the miracle is great but the calling of Moses is greater And God calleth Moses by name familiarly which telleth him that now hee hath a kinde of fellowship and acquaintance with God that he must now walke with God and forget his father and acquaintance in the flesh and his flocke of sheepe and the world and follow his calling For God by speaking to him in this sort doth enter and insinuate himselfe into his minde and moue him to regard his daily walking as a continuall judging For how must they walke with whom Gods eie doth alwayes walke as an indiuiduall companion Now God by nameing vs when hee calleth shewes that hee knowes vs when he speaketh not He calls vs in time he knowes vs before time when he calleth he is not neerer to vs than he was before but he teacheth vs to draw nearer to him But this is the least we can imagine of God to thinke hee walketh with vs as an indiuiduall companion for hee walketh in our soule and betweene the diuisions of
in person Shall we gaze now vpon his Image What looseth a childe by growing to a perfect man Doe we complaine after the Sunne is risen that we cannot see the Starres Then this ceasing of the law is not her abrogation but her co●…summation For the Arrow moueth while it is shooting at the marke but hauing hit the marke resteth in ●…t So the law which did leuell and shoot at Christ with so many moueable signes and Sacraments doth as I may say cease from her motion of practising them any more hauing attayned to her full end in him the earth bringeth forth fruit of her selfe but first the blade then the eare then after full corne in the eare so did the blade or hearbe spring forth in the law of Nature secondly the eare or culme in the law written but wee haue in the Gospell the pure graine or full corne which is Iesus Christ Therefore as the stalke and eare are of necessary vse till the corne be ripe but the corne being ripe we no longer vse the chaffe with it so till Christ was exhibited in the flesh which lay hidden in the blade and spike of the law these ceremonies had their vse but sithence by this death and passion this pure Wheat corne is threshed and winnowed and by his ascension laid vp in the Garner of Heauen these are of no farther vse By this then it is plaine that the law continued egene and profitlesse and beggarly till Christ came which did indeed and substance exhibite what the law had in figure and vnder promise What iniury is done to a poore man when his debt is payde or what looseth the shadow by the bodies presence We grant that all those shadowes of the law in the times of emptinesse went before Christ f but Christ came in a time of fulnesse euer since they followed Christ. The Iewes were taught by these shadowes that the body should come we know by the same shadowes that the body is come and therefore wee looke into the written law and read it daily that by comparing the Law with the Gospell that is the shadow with the substance we may by these signes and figures and these dimensions know the true body which dimensions the Apostle wisheht that euery true Christian should know to wit what is the length breadth and depth And because he which was made flesh was not man onely but God which is high ouer all he hath one dimension of height which belongs not to a natural body Think we then how should he be counted to euacuate the law or cause emptinesse whose is all fulnesse which came and filled time which was before void and empty which hath fulnesse of power to all power Which hath fulnesse of force fulnesse of truth to whose fulnesse compared not onely the poore figures of the law were empty but the heauens themselues and the Angels in heauen whose is fulnesse of wisedome fulnesse of knowledge to the hidden treasures which is full of the holy Ghost whose is the fulnesse of the Godhead which dwelleth in him bodily Whose is fulnesse of fulnesse euen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all fulnesse and that not onely to be in him but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dwell and that not for himselfe onely But for vs all of his fulnesse we haue all receiued Little was it for him to fill those empty vessels of the law which were borrowed for a time and to let runne the oyle of his grace and mercy out of that pitcher of his humane nature to pay the poore widowes I meane the Synagogues debt he was not so contented but let it runne still and it runneth ouer and ouer to pay all our debts for he thus abounded superabounded to them to vs to Iewes to Greekes to all the world to all that were to all that shall be Therefore as soone as Christ is borne see how these vessels beginne to fill Saint Mathew no sooner spake of his birth but he filleth one vessell straight this was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it might be fulfilled which God spake by the Prophet Isay when he speakes of his going downe to Aegipt He filleth the Prophet Hoseahs measure that it might be fulfilled c Out of Aegipt haue I called my first borne When he speakes of the place of his birth hee fils a third vessell The Prophet Michaiah And thou Bethlem in the land of Iudah are not the least among the Princes of Iudah for out of thee shall come the ruler which shall feed my people Israell When the children were slaine he fils a fourth vessell namely the Prophet Ieremiah Then was fulfilled that which was spoken c. In Rama was a voyce heard mourning weeping great lamentation Rachell weeping for her children Wheresoeuer he goes he fils To Nazareth that it may be fulfilled c. He shall be called a Nazarite Whatsoeuer he saith he filleth That it may be fulfilled I will open my mouth in Parables Whatsoeuer he doth he fils This when he but rideth vpon an Asse this was done that it might be fulfilled c. Tell ye the daughter of Sion behold thy King commeth vnto thee meeke sitting vpon an Asse Whatsoeuer is done to him maketh for this filling if they beleeue not the Scripture is fulfilled I haue blinded this peoples heart If they hate him the Scripture is fulfilled they hated me without a cause See how this Oyle neuer ceaseth running But what shall I speake of such fillings when he filleth all that is written not onely by speaking but by silence For when he spake not before Pilate a Scripture is fulfilled He was brought as a sheepe to the slaughter and as a sheepe before the Shearer so he openeth not his mouth I he fulfilleth the Scripture not onely by liuing but by dying and the manner thereof which was so necessary that himselfe had neede to say all this was done that the Scripture of the Prophets should be fulfilled I our Sauiour sheweth that hee was bound to the law to suffer and die Ought not Christ to suffer these things and to enter into his glory And therefore as you haue seene from the instant of Iudas his betraying beginning to enter his passion he gaue vs the alarum in that 56. verse of Math. 26. so when he hangeth on the Crosse false witnesse hanging betwixt theeues his drinking of gall parting his garments in all these the oyle runnes in all these the Gospell saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to this last when Iesus hauing finished all these cried 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is finished and so the oyle ceased for the vessels of the law were full they could hold no more Well then may Christ say I came to fulfill the law For by thus comming he hath fulfilled all So the Law and the Prophets w●…re that