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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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ashamed to begge let these be the objects of your charity Florioes View of Tuscany Doe good to all but especially unto the houshold of Faith this is the speciall duty of such a day as this is to honour God with our substance to distribute our bread to the hungry Wherefore forget not this duty it 's a sacrifice where ●ith God is wel-pleased I commend this duty unto your practice and the Lord stirre up your hearts and cause you to draw forth your hearts to the reliefe of the distressed afflicted especially the poor members of Jesus Chri●● that this may be a good day and a day of rejoycing to you and a good day and a day of rejoycing to them and let the memoriall of this day be Monumentum aere perennius Le ts imitate the Je●s in the Text and use all the care we can that such dayes as these are may never faile nor the memoriall of them perish from our seed The Day of Iudgement Discovered from Rom. 2. 16. In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Iesus Christ according to my Gospel A Serious discourse of the day of Judgement is both seasonable Serm. 7. at St. Maries Oxon. Decemb. 9. 1655. 1. This Doctrine is seasonable 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. and profitable seasonable because as the Apostle informed long agoe there shall come in the last dayes scoffers walking after their own lusts and saying where is the promise of his comming There have been of old multitudes of Hereticks who have decried and endeavoured to expunge this Article out of the Creed concerning the day of Judgement Such were the Sadduces Epicures Dositheans Samaritans Mar●chees Prod●anitae Floriani Symmachiani and of all these Sects the vilest were the Borboritae against whom Augustine made an elaborate Confutation Aug. lib. de Haeresibus ad Quod vult Deum c. 6. V. Act. Mon. vol. 1. Near of kin to those filthy beasts were the Harlots against whom there was long since by King Hen. 2. a Proclamation sent into Northhamptonshire and the lewd Ranters their genuine abhominable off-spring in these last and worst of times Now adaies Hell it selfe is broke loose through the variety of Hereticks who though differing from one another yet all agree against the truth like Herod and Pilate who of enemies were made freinds and they both agreed together against Christ What shal we say when Scepticks Antiscripturists Atheists in print and practice in their works and deeds deny the day of Judgement Surely as at all times so now especially the Preaching of this Doctrine of the day of Judgement is exceeding seasonable 2. This Doctrine is as profitable as seasonable And this will 2. This Doctrine is profitable be evidenc'd by two Reasons which are of great weight and consequence 1. Because the Preaching of this Doctrine is an incentive and a 1. Because it is an Incentive to godlinesse speciall motive to excite unto the practice of godlynesse Why doth God command all men to repent there 's a strong reason used by the Apostle to perswade Because hee hath appointed a day it the which he will judge the world in righteousnesse And from the consideration of the day of Judgement the Apostle draws a strong engagement unto Holyness of life and conversation Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought wee to be in all holy conversation and godlynesse looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God 2 Pet. 3. 11 12. 2. Because this Doctrine of the day of Judgement is the foundation 2 This Doctrine is the foundation of comfort of comfort unto the godly Hence Paul triumphed I have saith he fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith Henceforth there is layd up for me a crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day c 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. Such as have been troubled who belong to Christ they shall have rest as the Apostle saith When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty A●gels and the righteousness of God is engaged for performance 2 Thes 2. 6 7 Seeing it is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you who are troubled rest with us Now to come nearer the words Their connexion and dependance is upon ver 12. For as many as have sinned without Law shall also perish without Law And as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law Although they had not the Moral Law promulgated to them by the Ministery of Moses yet they had the Law of Nature written in their hearts And the Law of Nature though unwritten in Tables of stone shall condemn them that sinned against the written Moral Law What else is the Moral Law but a Transcript more fairly wrote of that Law of Nature which was first wrote in Adams heart Those likewise that sinned against the written Law as the Jews did shall be judged by it For there is a dreadfull curse threatned Deut. 27. 26. Cursed is he that confirmeth not all the words of this law to doe them Now if the Question be propounded When shall this judgement bee executed upon Jews and Gentiles My Text gives in the Answer In the day c. Which words containe a plain assertion and an evident proof of a grand Article of our Faith concerning the day of Judgement Wherein wee may observe 1. A Fundamental Doctrine asserted That at the day of Judgement the secrets of all mens hearts shall be judged by Jesus Christ 2. Here 's a full proof of this assertion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to my Gospel Which is not to be understood as if Paul Secundum quod annuncio per Jesum Christum Hier. Suum appellat ●atione Ministerii Calvin was the Author of the Gospel but onely the Publisher thereof Jerome thus understands the Apostle According to that which I declare by Iesus Christ And this the Apostle calls his own as Calvin observes in respect of his Ministry So that I conceive Paul may be thus understood as if he should say This is the Gospel that Christ my self and all the Apostles have taught This and no other Gospel I preach unto you The words thus opened and divided contain three Doctrines 1. That there shall be a day of Judgement 2. At that day the secrets of all mens hearts shall be judged 3. Iesus Christ shall be the Iudge at that day I resume the first Doctrine in order according to this Method Doct. 1 1. To lay down evident proof for clearing of so great a truth Method 1. 2. 2. To make some usefull improvement of all by particular Application For proof hereof Scripture and Reason both contribute abundantly The Doctrine proved to the evincing and stablishing of us in this Article of ou● Faith I begin with Scripture Testimony which is
David so to be overwhelm'd in sorrovv for Absalom and in Jonah so to lament the loss of his Gourd The loss of Revenues profits in the Trade Liberty Oh how doth it stick near a man But where 's the acting of Faith Now the just shall live by faith and if any man draw back my soul Heb. 10. 38. shall have no pleasure in him A true Believer lives by Faith when Trading decays Lively-hood and Profit decays Now let 's learn to live by Faith Though thou shouldst loose all there is enough in the Promises to make up all with Interest if thou canst but make them thine ovvn by particular Application Much time is thrown away in passing our censures one upon another reviling this or that instrument I plead not in the least for any but utterly abhor any irregular practices or indirect ways but I press patience and submission unto Gods will to look thorow all instruments and secondary causes unto the first cause to hear the rod and who hath appointed it The Lords voice cryeth unto the city and the man of Micah 6 ● wisdom shall see thy name heare ye the rod and who hath appointed it It 's a doggish quality to snarle at a stone and not look at the hand that throws it Pray then fervently and watch against infidelity and an impatient and murmuring spirit The Lord lay them not unto our charge We might have been in Canaan long ere this had we not been murmurers in the Wilderness I know well that our condition is so lamentable that we can neither bear diseases nor remedies And complaints finde no better entertainment then in those times wherein the best of Historians lived and said in his Presace That complaints Querclae ne tum quidem gratae cum sorsan necessariae Liv. Praef. are not pleasing no not then when they are necessary There 's much bitterness and implacableness upon mens spirits devouring and calumniating one another Such expostulations are rise where is the promise of his coming Where 's the reformation so much spoken of Where 's the removing of the burthens letting the oppressed go free breaking the bread to the hungry cloathing the naked such are peculiar duties for a Fast Is there not rather fasting for strife and debate to smite with the first of wickedness I aggravate these things no further but onely let me tell you as there were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spots in your Fasting-days Let 's bewail them with tears of blood let 's fast for our former Fastings and be humbled for our out-side Humiliations and lay to heart our negligent services and deprecate that curse that hangs over our heads for performing the work of the Lord negligently The Lord may call us to an account as justly as he did the Jews Zech. 7. 5. Did ye at all fast unto me even to me In the second place I proceed to an Use of Exhortation Let me Use 2. For Exhortation press home the duty of the Text to wait for the fulfilling of the Vision in these concussions and commotions when men are at their wits end and wonder what vvill be the issue Oh let 's take heed of impatience and murmuring let 's bevvare of tumultuous murmuring spirits of tempestuous affections Though there be a storm abroad vve should endeavour after a serene quiet spirit at home A calmness upon our spirits vvill be of singular use for us amidst the fluctuating condition of the Kingdom Every one will be ready to ask What shall we doe How shall we demean our selves in these dark times Such questions as these require an answer and a word spoken in due season is like apples of gold in pictures of silver I will advise nothing as a States-man that 's out of my Sphere nor as a subtle Politician for such Policy is the bane of Religion but from direct warrant out of the Word of God By way of advice I commend unto your thoughts these ensuing Propositions which I take to be Propositions of Eternall Truth 1. It 's unlawful to do any evill that the least good may come Prop. 1. It 's unlawful to do evil that good may come thereof Rom. 3. 8. thereof And not rather saith the Apostle as we slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say let us do evil that good may come whose damnation is just God needs not our lies to maintain his cause This was Rebockah's and Jacob's fault for the compassing of a good end to betake themselves to indirect means This is a broken refuge Isa 28. 15 17. and will fail Because ye have said we have made a Covenant with death and with hell are we at agreement when the over flowing scourge shall passe thorow it shall not come unto us for we have made lies our refuge and under falshood have hid our selves Therefore thus saith the Lord Judgement will I lay to the line and righteousness to the plummet and the hail shall sweep away the refuge of lies and the waters shall overflow the hiding place Augustine is resolute that if it was possible by an officious lie to compass the Redemption of the whole World yet so weighty and universal a good must be rather let fall then brought about by the smallesst evil 2. Another Proposition for confirmation is That no good intentions Prop. 2. Good meanings cannot justifie a bad action 1 Chron. 13. 10 and meanings can ever justifie the doing of any evill action Vzzah's intention was good but because against the rule he was punished with death He invaded the Priests Office and therefore the Lord smote him dead upon the place 3. It 's the duty of Christians to walk by rule and keep close to Prop. 3. We must walk by rule Isa 8. 20. it and that 's the written Word of God To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to these it is because they have no light in them Let 's not be a rule to our selves nor follow extraordinary impulses upon our spirits and revelations but bring all to the touch-stone Let 's try all things and hold fast that which is good and let the Scripture be the Umpire let 's acquiess altogether in its determinations As many as walk according to this rule peace be on Gal. 6. 16. them and mercy and on the Israel of God 'T is not any rule but this rule If an Angel from Heaven Preach any other Doctrine then what is contained in the Scriptures let him be accursed Whatever Seekers Familists Enthusiasts c. pretend to live above Ordinances and so they are indeed as much above Ordinances as a Swine is above a Pearl which it tramples under feet I say all their Lights however new are but Ignes fatui false Lights to lead us into dangerous destructive ways Let 's therefore for every action look unto the rule bring every thing to rule and square all by
great matter they shall bring unto thee but every small matter they shall judge so shall it be easier for thy self and they shall bear the burthen with thee He must be an able man 1. He must first be a man of judgement Qualif I. A Judge must be an able Man and understanding well skilled in the Laws He must have a spirit of discerning to discern between right and wrong Judges pass many years study at Inns of Court before they come to this promotion They must be men of mature age and solid parts Learned Grave and Judicious 2. He must be able in respect of moderation and equanimity able to subdue and get the mastery of his own passions not suffering his affections to pervert judgement Hercules Club they say was made of Olive Wood There must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a Judge he must be willing to bear and forbear the rusticity and homely delivery of Evidences from illiterate people and stoop to the capacity of the meanest Countrey-man who comes for Iustice 3. A Iudge must be able in respect of courage Iudges are to turn the Wheel over the Wicked they are to encounter with Beasts of Ephesus they must be of such a Lion-like spirit as to pluck the prey out of the Lions mouth Hereupon it 's conceived that Judah the Law-giving Tribe had the Lion couchant sitting by the prey for its Scutcheon The Lion couchant is not afraid of any Res●uer This likewise was symboliz'd in the steps of Solomons Throne adorned with Lions A Judge must grapple with the Hydra of sin and oppose the Current of Times and Torrent of Vice he must be of a resolved courage with Esther If I perish I perish and with Luther when he went to Wormes If every tile was a Devil yet he would goe to Wormes and preach Christ Come what will come a good Judge accounts this Maxime like the Law of the Medes and Persians Fiat justitia ruat coelum The second Qualification of a Iudge is He must be a man fearing Qualif 2. A Judge must be a man ●ea●ing God God 2 Sam. 23. 3. The God of Israel said the Rock of Israel spake unto me he that ruleth over men must be just ruling in the fear of God Only a godly man is fit to be a Iudge though I abhor that Anabaptistical Opinion Dominium temporale fundatur in gratiâ yet I am assured that the fear of God planted in the heart of a Iudge moves him to judge righteous judgement This serves him as a compass to steer his actions by And when he is tempted to pervert Iustice by great mens Letters he sets Josephs resolution before him as a continual Monitor How shall I do this great wickedness and sin against God He will neither be threatned nor intreated nor Courted nor Complemented nor Flattered nor Over-awed to wound his Conscience by perverting Iustice This this it is even the fear of God that will beautisi● the soul of a Iudge The Iudges Scarlet Robes puts a glory and lustre upon the Beholders eyes but Divine Graces make him more glorious within Such a Cloathing is of wrought Gold If the fear of God be wanting in a very short time judgement will be turned into gall and the fruit of righteousness into hemlock Wisdom will degenerate into craft and subtilty Power into private revenge Valour and Courage into violence and peremptory obstinacy Now the fear of God will set all right if this be in the heart it will set all right in the practice of the life 3. A Iudge must be a man of truth A true-hearted Nathaniel Qualif ● A Judge must be a man of tru●● no Machivilian nor Iesuitical Politician He must be a plain-hearted man His heart must dictate to his tongue and the Spirit of God dictate to his heart He is such a Prudent Man that his Heart addeth Learning to his Lips Prov. 16. 23. The heart of the wise teacheth his mouth and addeth learning to his lips He 's a Man of Integrity he speaks truth loves truth and searcheth every Thicket and sifteth the matter to the bottom to finde out the truth and it 's his care to keep men of truth about him even such servants as are persons of integrity Psalm 101. 7. He that worketh deceit shall not dwell in my house he that telleth lies shall not tarry in my sight 4. A Iudge must be a man hating covetousness Covetousness is Qualif 4. the mother of Oppression Bribes blinde his eyes he dares not meddle with them Bribes are pitch he dares not touch them lest he be defiled He 's afraid that his hands will wither therefore he shakes his hands of them He 's afraid that they will prove like Equus Sejanus or aurum Tholossanum a Moth a Canker to consume the rest of his substance Job 15. 34. The c●ngregation of hypocrites shall be desolate and fire shall consume the Tabernacles of Bribery Corrupt Iudges are Icterici they as was before hinted cannot see aright But an upright Iudge seeth clearly he washeth his heart and his hands both He dares not take a Bribe in a private Chamber he fears lest the Timber and Stones may cry out against him When he comethon the Bench he fixeth his eye neither before him on the person nor about him on the Beholders nor behind him for Bribes but he looks upward towards God remembring that he who sits now to judge others shall himself be judged at a higher Tribunal by the impartial Iudge of Heaven and Earth and there give an exact account of all his proceedings Thus Right Honorable you have the Glass of J●thro set before you wherein you may behold your own face You have heard what manner of Persons you ought to be who undertake this weighty Calling 2. In the next place give me leave to set down the Rules which 2. you ought to observe in execution of Iustice You must execute judgement speedily yet deliberately impartially according to truth regularly and compassionately Iustice must be executed speedily Such a charge we read Ezra Rule 1. Justice must be executed speedily 7. 26. Who will not do the Law of God and the Law of the King let judgement be executed speedily upon him whether it be to Death to Banishment or to Consiscation of Goods or to Imprisonment English delays as some have observed are worse then Spanish Strappado's Let not the poor Client be tired out by tedious attendances tossed up and down and never a whit the nearer from Court to Court but let his business be dispatch'd with all convenient expedition Unconscionable Lawyers deal like unconscionable Chyrurgions who keep the Wound long in Cure for their own advantage Non missura cutem nisi plena cruoris hirudo You that are Lawyers doe not snarle and intangle a cause and so bring it into Mazes and Labyrinthes but with what facility and expedition may bee let the controversie bee decided