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A13339 The amendment of life comprised in fower bookes: faithfully translated according to the French coppie. Written by Master Iohn Taffin, minister of the word of God at Amsterdam.; Traicté de l'amendement de vie. English Taffin, Jean, 1529-1602. 1595 (1595) STC 23650; ESTC S118083 539,421 558

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cause them to denie a God which is the principall and fundamentall argument of all the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles especially considering that if this foundation should bee false all the rest were but lies and vanitie Likewise these men that registred the holy Scriptures neuer labored after the glorie of man by ostentation of anie new inuention For al of them euen from Moses to the Apostles haue had one the same matter subiect of their writings namely this selfe same diuinitie Neither haue they sought after glorie reputation nobilitie of descent or vertues but haue set downe as in sundrie places we may perceiue euen their owne infirmities and transgressions yea somtimes matter of reproch to themselues to their posteritie Prophane writers do ordinarily tend to magnifie the vertues valiant actions of men to the end to giue thē the praise But the holy scripture euery where tendeth to glorifie God euen in euery thing that may becōmendable in man Shewing that al victories deliuerance aduancemēt to dignitie vertue to be briefe that all goodnes cōmeth of God not of man 5 As concerning the contents of the holy scripture it is the same that only laieth open the verie fountaine of mans corruption that sheweth how great and pernitious it is The multitude and grieuousnes of his sins The horrible punishmēt that they deserue not only in this world but in the world to come Only this holy Scripture teacheth the assured remedy against these horrible inconueniences so that man feeling himselfe worthie of all misery euen of eternall death doth notwithstanding find himself cōtent ioyfull in the midst of the tribulations of this life blessed in the assured expectation of an incomprehensible eternal felicitie This Scripture laboreth wholy to humble man and to exalt God It exhorteth man to renounce wickednes to apply him selfe to righteousnesse to despise present and temporall goods that he may aspire to those that be spirituall inuisible and eternall To be briefe it teacheth as well true holinesse and pietie towards God as true loue peace and concord among men earnestly exhorting them to these duties Who is it then that ought not to haue a feeling of this in his owne conscience that this holie scripture proceedeth from God 6 Moreouer in other bookes we find counsels exhortations and reasons to perswade Heer we haue expresse and precise commandements wherby it appeareth that a superior speaketh that giueth commandement to his inferior namely God to man The holie Scripture prescribeth a Law not onely to the bodie or in externall causes but also to the spirite cogitations and affections of the soule It is therefore the spirit of God that speaketh who onely hath dominion ouer the soule and knoweth the affections and passions of the same In this holie Scripture we find promises and threates of eternall weale and woe as well to the soule as to the bodie It is then the Eternall and the Almighty that both promiseth threatneth This holy Scripture teacheth vs the same thing which the creation of the world doth namely that there is a God almighty all-wise most good and beneficiall He therefore that is the Auctor of the creatures is also the Auctor of the holie Scripture In this Scripture we find predictions of matters which mans vnderstanding could neuer foresee yea the verie time of the performance of the same is many times noted sometimes a hundred yeares a thousand yea three thousand before they came to passe Yet are they alwaies fulfilled in their due time of necessitie therefore God must be the Auctor of the same 7 Again all the Philosophers together in their many volumes haue neither said nor taught so righteous so holie and so necessarie matter as doth this holie Scripture in the ten wordes of the law yea euen in these two short sentences That we should loue God with all our hart with all our strength and with all our soule our neighbour as our selfe From God onlie therefore must this doctrine proceed The style likewise of this Scripture is simple and without affectation and yet it penetrateth and pierceth the hart and conscience far more deepely then the writings of the most excellent Orators in the world Whence should such efficacie proceed 1. Cor. 2.4.5 but from the spirit of God which is the Auctor thereof This is it that S. Paul expresly noteth saying Neither stood my woord and preaching in the entising speech of mans wisdome but in plaine euidence of the spirit and of power That your faith should not be in the wisedome of men but in the power of God 8 This holy scripture propoundeth vnto vs the history from the beginning of the world with the doctrine euer since continued among both Iews Christians yet which is wel worthy to be marked we find no contradiction or disagreement either in the histories or doctrine that may not easily be vnfoulded and reconciled But as for other books they begin their Histories two or three thousand yeares later And what discorde do we find in their writinges both in their histories and in their doctrine Againe there are no books for the maintenance and confession of the doctrine whereof both men and women euen by thousands from age to age Princes marchants artificers learned and vnlearned haue voluntarily resolued euen with cheerfulnes to abandon fathers mothers husbands wiues children goods dignities yea life it selfe and suffered torments that cannot be sustained by any one that is not holden vp by some diuine power Yet heer may you behold Martirs that is to say authentical witnesses that this holie scripture proceedeth from God This also is the reason why of all other bookes the Deuill an enemie to God and to the saluation of mankind hath most endeuored to falsifie to corrupt and to abolish this holie Scripture therby as it were confessing that proceeding from God it is repugnant to him necessarie for mans saluation And yet hath the same bin miraculously preserued and kept in his integrity euen with the danger of their liues that were guardians thereof yea which is more euen by the Iewes themselues the sworn enemies to Iesus Christ of whom the Law the Prophets do beare witnes And therfore S. Augustin compareth them to Stationers who in their shops do keep many books but for the vse of other men They haue bin preserued therefore vndoubtedly by his only prouidence who was their Auctor And to this purposeis the example of the time of Antiochus most notable For in his daies 1. Mac. l. 57 59. namely in the hundred and fiue fortieth yeare of the Grecian Monarchie did they deface and burne all the books of the Law that could be found and yet within two yeares after 1. Mac. 3.37 48. euen in the hundred and seuen fortieth yeare of the said Monarchy was the book of the Law foūd again among the Iewes Yet who did euer obiect either to the Iewes or Christians
heauen for the scope of theyr liues are no men but beasts for they neuer thinke their souls to be immortall they beleeue not that they must die neither doo they remember that after death there is a hell and eternall fire prepared for those who liuing heere doo neuer seeke after lyfe euerlasting Yea Mat. 16.26 VVhat doth it auaile a man saith our sauiour Iesus Christ to winne the whole world and to loose his owne soule Luke 9.23 This lyfe beeing vnto him a high waie to death and to a firie torment that shall neuer be quenched 11 Let vs not therefore make riches honour or other carnall commodities the leuell of our liues but let vs aime at the celestial and eternall life as Iesus Christ admonisheth vs saying Iohn 6.27 Labour not for the meate which perisheth but for the meate that endureth to euerlasting lyfe Againe Seeke first the kingdome of God and his righteousnes Mathew 6 33. and all other things shall be ministred vnto you But we cannot attaine to this eternall lyfe without the knowledge of God that wee may put our trust in him call vpon him in all our necessities obey his commandementes and with thankesgiuing acknowledge that all goodnes commeth from him And in deede wee cannot trust in God neither call vpon him vnlesse we bee assured of his wyll and power to helpe vs neither can we obey him with anie kindly obedience which consisteth in loue vnlesse we knowe how deeply we be bound both to loue and obey him as also we cannot acknowledge all goodnes to proceed from him vnlesse we knowe him to be the fountaine of all goodnesse This therefore must be the end of our life euen to increase in the knowledge of God that by reposing our confidence in him by calling vpon him by obeying him and by acknowledging him to bee the fountaine of all goodnesse wee may attaine to lyfe euerlasting 12 True it is that in the creation of heauen earth and in the conduct and gouernment thereof he reuealeth himselfe vnto vs maketh vs to feele that he is a God almighty al wise al good well dooing howbeit especiallye in Iesus Christ as is aforesayde doo we knowe God God I saie our God father and sauiour almightie wise holy righteous mercifull good and true And this is the knowledge wherein God is truely glorified and by the which wee obtaine life euerlasting as Iesus Christe himselfe doeth teach vs Iohn 17.1 saying Father the houre is come glorifie thy sonne that thy sonne also may glorifie thee As thou hast giuen him power ouer all flesh that he should giue eternall life to all them that thou hast giuen him And this is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely verie God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. And in deed as when a man is loth to go out of his way it is requisite he shuld know both whether which waie to go so haue we both in Iesus Christ very God very man For in that he is God Augustine of the Citie of God li. 11. c. 2 and consequently life to him we must go in that he is man by him we must come vnto God and bee vnited with him that wee may obtaine life euerlasting And in that sense doth he call himselfe the way Iohn 14.6 the truth and the life If he be the life he is the place whether we must go if he be the way by him we must trauell to attaine to life euerlasting As also by calling himselfe the truth he teacheth vs that hee is the accomplishment and truth of al that afore time was figured touching life euerlasting the meanes to attaine to the same Thus the second principall end of our life should consist in knowing of God through his sonne Iesus Christe and knowing him to put our trust in him to call vppon him to obeye his commandementes and to acknowledge him to be the fountaine of all goodnesse that so wee may glorifie him and glorifying him attaine to life euerlasting 13 Moreouer the end of glorifying of God our saluation wyll be a ready meanes to make vs to liue according to God for it will be a continual aduertisement rule to bridle vs from al thoughts affections words and deeds contrarie to the glorie of God the saluation of our soules considering that beeing contrarie thereto they ouerthrow the two principall ends of our life 14 Now let vs come to the third end of our life which is to bee considered in the particular vocation of euerie man This ende ought not to bee our profite honor or other carnall commoditie but that in seruing of men we may serue God God the creator and redeemer can well inough preserue both our bodies souls without the ministery of men but thus far he honoreth vs as to vouchsafe to worke his workes by vs. 1. Tim. 4.16 And in this consideration doth he giue and hath giuen vs shepheards ministers of his word to the end as S. Paul saith to saue those that harken vnto them by illuminating their hearts creating saith in them by reforming them to obedience through the means of the holy ministery with the efficacy of his holy spirit blessing the labors of his seruants In this respect also vouchsafing there should be food for the body he hath appointed some to be husbandmen to til the earth some to be millers and some to be bakers For the furnishing vs of apparell that some should be shepheards some shearers of sheepe some carders some spinsters some weuers fullers diers tailers c. For the prouiding of vs of houses that some should be carpenters masons c. To be briefe that there should bee an infinit number of artificers and marchants whose function is to furnish all things requisite for the entertainment and maintenance of the bodie Hee also ordaineth kyngs princes and magistrates by their authoritie to keepe euery one within the compasse of his vocation and so to execute theyr office in the maintaining of the good and punishing the wicked Thus God fulfilleth his work will in the preseruation of our bodies saluation of our souls Col. 3.24 by the emploiment of men in his seruice euery one according to his vocation Neither is there so much as the bondman but doth serue God by seruing his Lord as S. Paul saith That by faithful seruice to their masters they serue the Lord. 15 Hereby it appeareth that the end of mans life ought to rest in the seruing of God by seruing of men in their vocation It doth not therefore consist onely herein that the artificer should get sufficient to maintaine his family the marchant to obtaine ric●es other men credit dignitie and carnall commodities For this is the seruing of our selues not of God albeit men for the most part do thus corrupt prophane their labors workes life liuing to another end than they ought And in
such meanes as God hath ordeined for the bringing of them to saluation God hath limited to euerye man the terme of his life but withall hee hath ordained and appointed that for the preseruing thereof he shall both eate and drinke If thou sayest that thou shalt of necessitie liue thy course that God hath prescribed and therefore that for the preseruation of thy life thou needest not to eate or drinke thou dost the●in directly fight and striue against the will and pleasure of God and this is temptation neither dost thou notwithstanding God hath decreed the time of thy life forbeare to eate or drinke Why then dost thou not the like for thy soule as hee therefore that should abstaine from foode and say that he neede it not to liue by should drawe to this end so they that saye that being elect they neede not beleeue the Gospell nor amend their liues for the atteyning to the kingdome of heauen do teach men to tempt God and reuersing his prouidence striuing against his will and so farre as in them lyeth abolishing the meanes and way to life and saluation doe drawe on to death and eternall damnation Which is more if any man aske the cause why some doe beleeue and amend their liues and others doe not the holy Ghost doth aunswere That it is election that maketh this difference so farre therefore are the elect from no neede of this holy life is they doe pretend that contrariwise holinesse and amendment of life is the token and fruit of their election Againe wherefore doe they say that if there be election the elect shal not need to liue in holinesse they doe this as is aforesaide onely by such an absurditie to proue that there is no election notwithstanding there be so many and euident testimonies therof in the word of God Iohn 10.27 Rom. 8.29 Act 13.48 and 28.24 Apoc 2.27 Mat. 20.16 Marc. 13.20 Eph. 1.4 Rom. 9.11 and 11.5 Phil 4 3. they do therfore vpon an imaginary absurdity which indeed is none reiect the expresse worde of God notwithstanding the same doth very well agree that both there are elect persons and that they cannot perish yet must liue neuerthelesse in holynes that is to say walke in the way that leadeth to saluation which is ordeined for them from before the beginning of the world And indeeed S. Paul affirmeth both the one and the other saying that God hath elected vs to the end we might be holy 6 Hauing thus discouered either the grosse ignorance or the malice and bad consciences of those that vse these allegations for the reiecting of the doctrine of Predestination we will now proue that there is nothing of greater efficacie to moue and enslame our harts to the amendment of life then the knowledge and feeling of our election First if we be elected to life eternall we are also elected to haue faith and consequently to amend our liues for those be the stayres and passage from election to glorification as S. Paul teacheth Rom. 8. The knowledge therefore of election to saluation bindeth vs to amend our liues that is to say to walke in that path whereby God vouchsafeth to lead the elect to the enioying of euerlasting life Eph. 1.4 God saith S. Paul hath elected vs in Iesus Christ before the foundation of the worlde that we might be holy and vnreproueable before him in loue Eph. 2.16 Againe We are the worke of Gods hands created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordeined that we should walk● in them Col. 3.12 Heereof also doth the same Apostle take occasion to exhorte the Colossians to amendment saying Now therefore as the elect of God and beloued put on tender kindnesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long suffering for bearing one another and forgiuing one another The like ground taketh S. Peter 1. Pet. 2.9 saying Ye are a chosen generation a royall priesthoode a holy nation a peculier people that yee should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darkenes into his merueilous light 7 What poore maiden is there who hearing that some king had among all other chosen her to be his sonnes wife and withall ordeined that to that end forsaking her parentes and kinsfolkes she shall come to him on foot in the midst of Winter would not willingly and readily leaue all and euen in Winter and on foot come to the King to finishe this great marriage as we reade of Dauid who hearing that Saul had chosen him to be his sonne in lawe by giuing him his daughter in mariage in case hee could bring him an hundred fore-skinnes of the Philistines ventured his life to the end by satisfying the Kings desire to be his sonne in law Euen so we vnderstanding and hauing witnesse that God hath chosen vs to be the spouse of his sonne Iesus Christ and coheires of his kingdome also that it is his will that forsaking the worlde and the fleshe we should walk through the path of good works in amendment of life to come to heauen there to accomplishe this happye mariage how feruently should we renounce the worlde the flesh and euery thing that contrarieth his will that we may the more speedily and cheerefully proceede in amendment of life and so performe this blessed mariage 8 Moreouer he that knoweth that there is an eternall felicitie replenished with all glory for the elect horrible condemnation with most fearefull torments prepared for the reprobate how happy would he think him selfe if God should send him an angell to assure him that he is of the number of the elect whose names are written in the booke of life But amendment of life is vnto vs as a message witnesse and seale of our election for as election is the cause and fountaine of amendment so doth amendment leade vs to our election as the effect to the cause the fruite to the tree or roote the brooke to the spring and the light to the Sunne How earnestly therefore ought we to labour to amend our liues and to encrease in sanctification to the end more and more to be assured of our election by the fruites of the same as also S. Peter after he hath exhorted vs to amendment of life and good works 2. Pet. 1.10 doth admonish vs to study by the same to make sure our election 9 But aboue all let vs consider the fountain of our election and that is the free loue goodnes and mercy of God towards vs. As S. Paul alleadging the authority of Malachy doth declare Malach. 1.2 For to shew that Iacob was chosen Esaw reiected in the person of God he saith I haue loued Iacob and hated Esaw Rom. 9.15 As also in the same consideration he alleadgeth this sentēce written by Moses Exod. 33. ●9 I wil shew mercie to whom I wil shew mercie And in the same sence are the elect tearmed the vessels of mercy but indeed Rom. 9.23 in as much
mightily to moue vs to amendement First when by the kingdome of heauen is signified the blessed estate and incomprehensible felycitie that wee shall inioy in heauen therein are wee taught that our estate is farre different from the estate of bruite beastes who by their death are reduced to naught For as for men when they die all is not death with them but they that beleeuing in Iesus Christ haue amended their liues shal depart into a life replenished with all glorie ioy and incomprehensible eternall felicity heere signified by the kingdome of heauen as contrariwise they that remaine hardned in theyr euill doinges shall for euer bee tormented with the fire of Gods wrath Dan. 12. Many saith Daniel that sleepe in the dust shall awake some to life eternall and others to eternall reproch and infamie Iohn 5.28 This sentence doth Iesus Christ confirme saying The houre shall come that all that are in the graues shal heare the voice of the sonne of man and shall come foorth euen they that haue done good to the resurrection of life they that haue done euil to the resurrection of condemnation And to this end shall Iesus Christ come to iudge the world that the childrē of God that haue amended their liues may be exalted into the fruition of the kingdome of heauen contrariwise the disobedient swallowed vp with the deuill his Angels in hell That we may the better feel the efficacie of this reason For the kingdom of heauen is at hand we are vndoubtedly to beleeue it is in deed an article of our faith that Iesus Christ shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead And in this respect S. Paul writing to Timothie 1. Tim. 4.4 saith I summon thee before God before the Lord Iesus Christ who in his appearance and kingdome shall iudge the quicke the dead Acts. 17.31 As also the same Apostle in another place saith God hath ordained a daie when he shall iudge all the world in righteousnes This was an old resolute point of the Iews religion as it appeareth by these sentences of Iesus Christ The men of Niniue shall rise in the day of iudgement to condemne this generation Math. 12.41 Math. 10.15 Againe If it shall be more easie for Sodom in the daie of iudgement than for those townes that woulde not receiue the Gospel These threatnings wold haue bin of smal waight with the Iewes had they not bin perswaded that there was a daye of iudgement wherein the children of God should be receiued in to the kingdome of heauen and the vnbeleeuers and obdurate in wickednes cast into euerlasting death 3 To the end the rather to confirme vs in the expectation of this daie of iudgement so much to be desired and so blessed for those that do amend their liues but so terrible to the rebellious obstinate Math. 25.31 S. Mathew representeth vnto vs the form therof saying Whē the son of man shall come in his glorie all the angels with him then shal he sit vpon the throne of his glorie and he shal separate the sheep from the goats and he shall set the sheep on his right hand the goats on his left to thē on his right hand he shal say Come ye blessed of my father inherite the kingdome prepared for you from the beginning of the world And to them on the left hand hee shall saie Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fyre which is prepared for the deuill and his Angels and they shal go into euerlasting paines and the righteous into euerlasting life Let vs therefore bee fully resolued that the daie will come that such as haue amended theyr liues increasing in faith working in loue and fructifying in good workes shall bee gathered into the fruition of the kingdome of heauen and the others into euerlasting fyre And in deede sith it is so sayth Saint Augustine that all thinges before prophesied in the holy Scriptures August in his Epist 42. to Mandarens haue come to passe and beene fulfilled in theyr season as the floud the bondage of the seede of Abraham in Egypt and theyr deliuerie the captiuitie of Babylon and the returne from the same the comming of Christ in the flesh and all that concerned his passion his resurrection and ascension into heauen his promise to send the holy Ghost to the Apostles the calling of the Gentiles other like matters what reason haue we to doubt of this day of iudgement which hath bin foreshewed in so many passages of the holy Scripture 4 Neither can we anie way doubt thereof if we haue anie reason or vnderstanding For if we beleeue that there is a God which all nations in the world doo confesse we must also beleeue that hee is righteous if he be righteous hee will reward the righteous that amend their liues punish the disobedient that are giuen to wickednes But this reward or punishment is not performed in this life but in part and that verie seldome as both the Prophet manifestly declareth in the 71. psalme and experience doth dayly teach It followeth therefore that after this life there is another wherin the righteous haue their reward euen the fruition of the kingdome of heauen and the disobedient shal be punished with euerlasting torments This discourse doth S. Paul confirme in expresse words for he seeing the persecutions of the faithful 2. Thes 1.5 and their grieuous afflictions least they should be shaken with some opinion that there were no prouidence or iustice in God he vpholdeth to the contrarie doth shew that the persecutions afflictions that they suffered were a manifest demonstration of the iust iudgment of God To the end saith he that ye may be accounted worthie the kingdome of God for the which ye do also suffer For it is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you that are troubled rest with vs. But when shal that be Euen when the Lord Iesus shal shew himselfe from heauen with his mightie Angels In flaming fire rendering vengeance to thē that do not know God which obey not the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ which shall be punished with euerlasting perdition from the presence of the Lord and from the glorie of his power when he shall come to be glorified in his Saincts to be made maruellous in all them that beleeue If then it bee a righteous thing with him to recōpence tribulation as is aforesayd to those that trouble vs euen vs I say that are pore vpon earth how much more righteous will it be with him most horribly eternally to punish those that haue persecuted euen the person of Iesus Christ the welbeloued sonne of God In this sense is this daie called the daie of the restoration of al thinges because the disorder and confusion that seemeth now to be in the gouernment of the world Act. 3 21. shall bee then
God and are become such as haue need of milke and not of strong meate Thus we see how this worde Pilgrimes or Trauellers doth warne vs not to stand still but to march on and walke forwarde in that blessed path that leadeth to the kingdome of heauen 12 As they therfore that be vpon their iournies doe not abide in those hostryes o● Innes where they are well vsed lodged or entertained and where they finde plesant gardens walkes or such other inticements but after their ba●t or in the morning doe passe on their way Euen so we albeit God in this life giue vs goods honours houses and other carnall commodities yet let vs remember that we are trauellers and must not stay but goe forwarde on our iourney toward heauen yea and in case we be afflicted with sicknesse pouerty or any other calamity yet must we still thinke that we are vpon our iourney and therefore taking comfort say Peraduenture we shall be better to morrowe but howsoeuer it bee our way lyeth forward that we may soone be at heauen this doth S. Paul teach vs where he saith Because the time is shorte heareafter 1. Cor. 7.29 that both they which haue wine be as though they had none and they that weepe as though they wept not and they that reioyce as though they reioyced not and they th●t buye as though they possessed not and they that vse this worlde as though they vsed it not for the fashion of the world goeth away And I would haue you without care Thus we see that there ought to be nothing that should let vs from proceeding and going forward on our way and that we should not stop at any disturbance or alurement either of the worlde or of the slesh 13 It now therefore remaineth that as they who are to departe from a forraine land toward their own country do prepare things necessary for their iourney so that we likewise prouide that which is expedient for the happy perfourmance of our iourney towards our heauenly countrey let vs therefore make ready the chariots of good consciences the horses of feruent praier to God the oyle of holinesse in our lampes the sworde of the spirite Eph. 6.16 which is the worde of God and the buckler of saith that resisting all our enemies that warre against vs Gen. 19.26 Luke 17.32 we may constantly proceed in our iourney let vs not as Lots wife looke behinde vs but without any sorrow for leauing the worlde and the flesh let vs cheerefully go forward in this blessed voyadge To conclude as they that returne into their country doe leaue none of their goods in those places where they haue bene strangers but doe either send them before them or carry them with them euen so let vs looke that we leaue not our goods vpon earth but send and transporte them into heauen by enlarging them plentifully to the poore who shall bee our horses and moyses to carry them and withall let vs think that all that we leaue vpon earth at our departure is euen so much lost also that we shall neither keepe nor finde any thing in our heauenly country more then we haue giuen Apoc. 14.13 neither carry thither any thing but the good that we haue done as S. Iohn saith of those that doe dye in the Lord that their workes doe follow them 14 Thus may we see how the continuall meditation of this that in this life we be strangers pilgrimes and trauellers wil stand vs in great stead for the amendment of life that denying the worlde we may prepare our selues by al good works by faith hope praier patience meditation vpon Gods word and desire to be in fruition of our inheritance in heauen wherof we are burgesses and finally taking possession therof we may reioyce in ioy and eternall glory The tenth cause of amendment drawen from the kingdome of heauen which is in vs. Chap. 10. HOw the kingdome of heauen which after the resurrection we shall enioy ought to induce vs to amendment of life wee haue already shewed now as secondly by the kingdome of heauen is signified the estate whereinto the Children of God euen in this life Luke 17. 21. Rom. 14.17 are reestablished through saith in Iesus Christ so let vs beholde how mightily this kingdome which Iesus Christ hath said to be in our selues ought to enflame our harts to amend It consisteth saith S. Paul in righteousnes peace ioy in the holy ghost by righteousnes he vnderstandeth that singuler benefite comprized in this that Iesus Christ hauing by his death satisfied Gods iustice for all our sinnes and so paid all our debtes hath also giuen and imputed vnto vs his perfect obedience to the end that by this his righteousnesse wee may be iustified in the iudgement of God This benefite is the assured foundation of our saluation and therfore both in greatnes excellencye incōprehensible and indeed being by nature the children of wrath pore sinners such as hourely by our iniquities doe deserue death and eternall damnation what greater benefite can God bestow vpon vs then in his iudgement to be absolued and so iustified that wee may be the children of God and inheritours of life euerlasting The remembrance therfore of such a benefite ought to induce vs to amend our liues and diligently to beware of offending God and surelye if onelye one sinne may make vs in his iudgement guilty worthy of damnation can we be so vnthankeful to God and such enemies to our soules as by pleasing our flesh and the worlde to tread vnder foot such a benefite and so happy and blessed an estate shall wee that can appeare before God iustified by the righteousnes of Christ to be absolued in his iust iudgement go make our selues guilty and worthy of sentence of eternall death by offending of God shall we who by this righteousnesse are aduowed to be the children of God be such wretches as by giuing ouer our selues to sinne make our selues the children of the deuill when this righteousnesse hath freed vs from the power of Sathan shall wee by offending God reduce our selues againe vnder his tirannie when Christ by paying our debtes hath so purchased this righteousnesse for vs that the deuill can pretend nothing against vs shal we by our sins binde our selues anew to eternall death 2 Sith one onely sinne is a hand-writing giuen vnto Satan by vertue whereof hee maye detaine vs in the prison of hell there to dwell for euer vnlesse we bee deliuered by the paiment of Iesus Christ in dying for vs is it not a monstrous and horrible case that beeing brought foorth of hell and by this righteousnesse lifted vp into heauen we should by our sinnes so cast our selues again into hell that we should abide swallowed vp therin either that our sinnes should procure Iesus Christ againe to discend into our hell to fetch vs forth By the shedding of Christs bloud al the spots of our soules are washed away
6. Heb. 2.14 rose againe for our iustification when by dying he mortified our old man by rising againe raised vs vp into newnes of life when by his death he destroyed him that had the empire of death did he not by destroying this kingdome of Satan bring the kingdom of heauen nearer vnto vs And in deed this kingdom of heauen was neuer so neare our fathers other the beleeuing Iews in old time Wel had they the promise that the seed of the woman should bruse the serpents head but we do see the performance thereof in Iesus Christ who by his death hath ouercomen the deuill and the power of Hell Well had they the pascall lambe to figure vnto them that for the auoyding of eternall death they must be washed in the bloud of Christ But as Iohn the Baptist euen with his finger pointed to this Lambe Iesus Christ saying Behold the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Iohn 1 2● so this lambe did afterward really shed his bloud for the remission of our sinnes to free vs from eternall death Well did they stay and ofter innocent beastes in sacrifice as it were laying their sinnes vpon them that by their death signifying the death of Iesus Christ to come they might haue as it were an assured pledge of the remission of their sins consequently hope of life But there was not as yet any payment or satisfaction for sinnes And therefore these sacrifices were as it were bonds with sureties wherein man the principall debtor Coloss 2.14 acknowledgeth the debt Iesus Christ vndertooke as a pledge and surety 5 In this sence did Iesus Christ in his death make ful paymēt for the sins of al the elect consequently also of those that liued vnder the first testament as the Apostle saith which also S. Paul vnder the same cōsideration termeth the former sins Coloss 2.14 Heb. 9.15 Rom. 3.24 not that they were not pardoned to the beleeuing Iews But because vntil that day there was no price laid downe for the satisfaction of Gods Iustice And in that sence dothe the same Apostle say that he nailed those obligations to his crosse as hauing then satisfied discharged the same And therefore were the expiatorie sacrifices circumcision with other like ordenances of the law abolished at his death Neither could they haue been kept as necessary but that they would still haue been witnesses that Christ stood yet bound Besides not content to haue by this abolition as it were canceled these obligations he hath also ordeined Baptisme and his holy supper to be vnto vs as it were authenticall acquittances and witnesses of payment made 6 It is likewise the benefite for the which he cōmandeth vs to amend adding this reason For the kingdome of heauen is at hand For it is as if he had said Behold this is the time that I will breake the serpents head and destroy him that hath the empire of death and banish the prince of the world Now do I goe to make payment for al the sins of the elect to crucifie the old man that he may no longer raigne in them to purchase for them newnesse of life To be short to reestablish them in state requisit cōuenient for the children of God Is not the kingedome of heauen then very neere at hand Amend therefore for it is time that you feeling your iustification and attonement to be made with God shold be at peace in your consciences should renounce the deuil the flesh the worlde and your selues mortifie the olde man who is crucified with me and become new creatures by vertue of my resurrection But if contrariwise you remayne hardened in your sinnes and will not giue ouer and mortifie the ambition pride couetousnes fraude whore dome insolencie dronkennes ryot hatred enuy malice and other corruptions and doe not amend by growing in al good workes shal you not so much as in you lyeth quench the kingdome of heauen that is in you and with most villanous ingratitude tre●d vnder foote this incomprehensible benefit heere offered The heathen that neuer heard speaking hereof for their continued impenitency shall be iustly cōdemned The Iewes who had some knowledge albeit obscure and a farre off shal be more grieuously punished because they did not amend But you to whom this kingdome of heauen is neare at hand vnlesse ye amend shall incurre a condemnation without comparison more horrible and fearefull And the beleeuing Iewes who neuer sawe this kingdome of heauen but from far off and obscurely and yet as the Apostle saieth to the Hebrewes did beleeue it and reioyced and walking in the feare of God did amend Eph. 3.9 shal be your iudges to your confusion 7 We are furthermore to consider the preaching of the Gospel signified also by this kingdome of heauen Iesus Christ saieth Verily I say vnto you among them that are begottē of women arose not a greater then Iohn Baptist Heb. 11. notwithstanding he that is the least in the kingdome of heauen is greater then he He doth not heere meane that the least in the christiā Church shal either in piety or in glory in the kingdome of heauen excel Iohn Baptist but that they shal be greater Prophets then he that is to saie that they shal be able more amply perticulerly and euidently to speake of euery thing that concerneth our redemption saluation in Iesus Christ And indeed what euident assured knowledge hath there been reuealed to the Christian Church concerning the person of Iesus Christ that he was conceaued by the holy Ghost borne of the virgin Mary very God and very man likewise of his offices that he hath receaued the anoynting of the holy Ghost to be our Priest king Prophet Consequently of his sufferings death resurrection ascentiō into heauē of the certitude of our iustification saluatiō not by workes but by grace by the merits of his death Moreouer how the Gospel of saluation was directed to the Gentils wherby there was reuealed to the world a mistery secret Mat. 11.11 which as S. Paul saith hath from the beginning been hiddē in God cōteining a wonderful wisedome then reuealed to the Angels And albeit the ancient fathers we●e neuer destitute of the spirit of God Yet had they it not euer without cōparison so plentifully as it hath bene communicated by the preaching of the Gospell 2. Cor. 3.8 And therefore doth S. Paul call it in excellency the ministery of the spirite And Iesus Christ termeth it regeneration Mat. 19.28 as whē he saith to his Apostles ye that haue followed me in regeneration shall sit vpon twelue thrones Truely therefore in regarde of the preaching of the Gospell Iesus Christ did saye that the kingdome of heauen was at hand and that therefore we must amend As indeed Mat. 19.28 what excuse may we pretend if hauing such a sonne of light before our eyes we be neuerthelesse giuen
for the kingdome of heauen is at hand Heereby doth the holie Ghost teach vs that the first thing that is to bee preached in the Church and sounded into our eares that especially and aboue all things we are to learne in the Gospell whereupon principally wee should set our heartes and mindes To be briefe the same which we ought chiefly to practise is this first sermon of Iesus Christ and of his forerunner Saint Iohn Amend your liues for the kingdom of heauen is at hand Now the word which the holy Ghost doth ordinarily vse throughout the new Testament and namely in this first sermon whereby to expresse Amendement signifieth vnderstanding aduice and wisdome after the knowledge of our error corruption and transgression Thus the Amendement whereto wee are heere exhorted consisteth in this that where before time we haue beene so foolish and vnaduised as to followe our owne corruptions and so to offend God wee may heereafter obtaine vnderstanding and sense euermore walking in the feare and obedience of God 2 Out of this Sermon therefore considering the propertie of the word which Iesus Christ doth vse we gather two things the first that it is an extreme folly to liue according to the flesh and so to giue ouer our selues to sinne and contrariwise that the beginning of wisedome is the feare of God Psal 111.10 Prouerb 1.7 walking in his waies The second that man naturally is inclined to this folly namely to giue himselfe ouer to his lustes and consequently to offende God for otherwise it were in vaine by so notable a reason to exhort him to shunne the same As concerning the first point The holy Scripture in many places tearmeth sinners fooles sinne ●●oli ●nesse Moses foreshewing the corruption and rebellion of he I raelites Deut. 32.5 saith thus They haue corrupted themselues towarde God they resemble not his children but are a froward crooked generation Iere. 4.22 Do ye thus reward the Lord O ye foolish people and vnwise My people saith the Lord are foolish they haue not knowen me they are foolish children haue no vnderstanding They are wise to do euill but to doo well they haue no knowledge Againe See saith Saint Paul that ye walke diligently not as fooles but as wise men And writing to Titus Titus 3.3 he speaketh more plainly saying We our selues were in time past vnwise disobedient deceiued seruing the lustes and diuerse pleasures Prou. 1.22 liuing in malitiousnes and enuie Salomon in his Prouerbs doth vsually so take it Wisedome saith hee crieth out O yee foolish how long will ye loue foolishnes and the scornefull take their pleasure in scorning and the fooles hate knowledge And so in many other places But that we may the better vnderstand what a foolishnesse it is to offend God the holy Ghost especially in the olde Testament and sometimes also in the new doth signifie this Amendement by conuersion and turning to the Lord. Oh Israel sayth the Lord by Ieremie Iere 4.1 Iere. 31.18 If you returne returne vnto mee Againe Conuert me O Lord and I shall be conuerted Againe I desire not the death of a sinner saith the Lord but rather that hee conuert from his wickednes and liue Exech 33.11 Conuert ye O ye house of Israel Likewise sometimes in the new Testament Bee yee better aduised that is to saie Amend saith S. Peter and S. Iohn Act. 3.19 and conuert And S. Paul saith that hee shewed them of Damascus and others that they shoulde repent and turne to God and doo workes worthie amendement of life Act. 26.20 This phrase of speech teacheth vs that mans life resembleth a pilgrimage wherein whosoeuer offendeth God by walking after the world and the flesh he doth as it were turne his back to God to heauen and to life and goeth to the deuill to death and to hell fire And contrariwise that conuerting and turning to God by Amendement of life hee turneth his backe to death to hell and to the deuill and goeth to God draweth neere to him and directeth his course to heauen to life euerlasting Is there therefore anie greater foolishnes than to offend God that is to saie to turne from God and life euerlasting and to go after the deuill and death If anie man should voluntarily call himself into the fire or into some riuer either stab himselfe or drinke poison men would not saie that he were a foole but rather that hee were frantike and besides himselfe What shall wee then saie to those who willingly offending God do cast themselues into hell fire and into the bottomlesse pit of eternall death To the ende therefore that we may amend it is requisite that we retire conuert vnto God and returne to him But how Euen by ceasing to offend him and by walking according to his word for so do we turne backe from the deuill from death and from hell Let vs I saie conuert and turne vnto God yea let vs drawe neere vnto him yet as Saint Austen saith not by changing of place Prosper in his sentences out of S. Austen for hee is euerie where but by alteration of manners for as he addeth According as we grow like or vnlike vnto him so doo we eyther approch or she backe from him 3 For the second point This exhortation Amend that is to saie Be ye wiser and better aduised together with the reason thereunto added whereby to induce vs so to doo doo sufficiently as is aforesayde shew that man of his owne nature is inclined to this folly and rage namely to apply himselfe to all corruption sinne and so for the amending of his life ought to become wiser and better aduised Now notwithstanding we might note many examples of this folly yet at this present we will consider onely of seuen of the chiefest And in the meane time as the number of seuen doth commonly signifie perfection so will we thereby declare that man is perfectly foolish vntill he change his minde that he may amend And these be the follies 1. Not to beleeue that there is a God 2. To account more of man than of God 3. To thinke to liue euer 4. Not to know wherefore we liue 5. To iudge of mans felicitie or miserie by the outward apparance 6. To beleeue our enemies sooner than our friends 7. To thinke our selues wise 4 These seuen follies are the cables of vanitie and the roapes that drawe on iniquitie Of these doth Esay saie Wo vnto them that draw iniquitie with cordes of vanitie Esa 5.18 and sinne as with cart ropes For by these cordes and cables hee vnderstandeth certaine false opinions and peruerse imaginations wherewith the deuil quenching in men all feeling of sinne apprehension of God draweth them as it were with cordes and cables to all iniquitie and consequently to the pit of hell Of these he setteth downe three examples The first of prophane persons scorners of God who saie Let him make speed
let him hast his worke that we may see it let the counsell of the holy one of Israel drawe neere and come that we may know it Secondly of those that call euill good and good euill that make darknesse light and light darknes that make bitter sweet sweet bitter Thirdly of those that are wise in their owne conceits and skilfull in the consideration of themselues The explaning therfore of these seuen follies afore mentioned may stand as a commentarie and opening of these cords and cables mentioned by Esay as also to shew that these follies tende onely to persuade man that he is a beast and that after his death he is to attend neither good nor euill thereby to staie all his thoughts and affections vpon this temporall life to plunge him in the pleasures of the world and the flesh and consequently to take from him all holines and religion Inasmuch therefore as we are now to amend our liues we must learne to renounce these seuen follies and to be wiser hereafter Of the first Folly Not to beleeue that there is a God Chap. 2. THe first principall folly is the same whereof the Prophet Dauid speaketh Psa 14.1 53.1 speaketh saying The foole hath said in his heart that there is no God Of those that in their heartes doo saie thus there be two sorts the one pronounce it with their lips the other with their woorks A● for the Iewes of whom Dauid heer speaketh they in their woorks shewed that their harts did say that there is no God And t●is doth he note where for proof therof he addeth They are corrupt and become abhominable But among Christians there are some a matter of extreem terror that say both in hart and mouth that there is no God Yea and this impietie hath taken such hold of diuers that they will not stick to say it and that not whisperingly mumbling or between the teeth but euen with open throat And in deed in many places they dispute no longer of differences concerning the hope of saluation seruice of God but now the question is whether there be a God Yea it is a common phrase when a man affirmeth that there is a God Who did euer see him that we may beleeue him 2 The sole representation of such a blasphemie might suffise to terrifie our harts and to make vs to sweat euen water and blood for anguish That Christiandome should afford any so abhominable monsters as should denie God God I say not onely the creator whom we may behold in his works but also the redeemer that is to say God reuealed in the flesh iustified in the spirite 1. Tim. 3 16 seen of Angels preached to the Gentils beleeued vpon in the world and lifted vp into glorie This verelie is a iust and terrible iudgement which God executeth vpon those whose harts and mindes are plunged and so swallowed vp in the pleasures of the world and the flesh that they neuer think vpon God no more then if there were none It is a horrible vengeance that God layeth vpon those who to the ende without remorse of conscience to giue themselues ouer to their owne abhominations and corruption do maliciously go about to choak vp these reliques or remainders of the image of God namely That there is a God a prouidence a righteousnes in God As Dauid also noteth Psal 10 4 that all the imaginations of the wicked do concurre that there is no God It is the punishment that those men doe deserue who when they sweare for affirme any thing do spue out of their polluted lipps this blasphemie I renounce God To be briefe It is the payment wherewith God iustly punisheth the extreem ingratitude of such as contemne the incomprehensible treasure of the doctrine of the Gospell treading vnder foote the most precious blood of Iesus Christ And himselfe hath pronounced that such people do deserue a more horrible iudgement then the inhabitants of Sodome and Gomorrha Math 10 15 It is also the last plague and persecution wherewith Gods children toward this end of the world shall be tried when these monsters shall scorne their simplicitie and constancie in refraining from euill vpon their assured hope in God and for feare of his name 3 But as there is no wound more mortall than the same that plucketh foorth mans heart or soule so is there no poison or pestilence of greater force sodainly in men to kill all faith hope charitie with the feare of God and consequently to cast him headlong into the pit of hell than to deny the principle foundation of all religion namely that there is a God To the end therefore to arme the elect against such an extreame and pernitious temptation to make those that shall suffer themselues to be carried awaie with so bitter a temptation the more inexcusable in the daie of iudgement we will produce against these Atheists sundrie witnesses against whom no exceptions can bee taken and first all Iewes and Christians because they allow of the olde Testament secondly all men liuing thirdly all creatures as well those that haue essence onely as those that with essence haue life and those that with essence and life haue motion and feeling and lastly man although he speake nothing who besides his essence life and motion is also indued with reason And in deed the creation preseruation and guiding of all these creatures doo with a loude voice proclaime that there is a God And first we will begin with those that allow the olde Testament to be the word of God and consequently with all Iewes and Christians that are or euer were For as in the olde Testament the testimonies that there is a God are most euident infinite and of sundrie sortes so is it a desperate presumption and impudencie to go about to denie that which by so many millions both of Iewes and Christians haue euermore beene beleeued and confessed 4 If these Atheists do saie that both Iewes Christians haue all bin deceiued by beleeuing the holy Scripture whether of the olde or new Testament and consequently all testimonies of the diuinitie therein contained What booke haue they so authenticall or ancient as the Bible wherwith they may to the contrarie proue that there is no God Againe how can they shun the conuiction of their owne consciences which will force them to acknowledge that the holie Scriptures proceeded from God if they wil consider but these reasons folowing First they make no doubt whether the bookes attributed to Plato Aristotle Polibius Liuie Demosthenes Cicero Homer Virgil such others were writtē by those men to whō they be attributed What reason thē haue they to demand whether the Bible were written by Moses Iosua Esdras Dauid the Prophets and Apostles They also at the least in general termes do approue the contents of the said prophane bookes whether for historie or for doctrine With what mallice are they then possessed that should
more of man than of God and that confessing God with our lips we renounce denie him in our hearts and workes That we may therefore Amend our liues let vs renounce this so pernitious solly to esteeme more of man than of God And contrarywise let vs loue and feare God reposing our whole confidence in him onely as in him who only is vnto vs all in all for man is nothing but in God The third Folly To thinke that we shall liue euer Chap. 4. ANtigonus who succeeded Alexander the great in parte of his dominions beeing recouered of a certaine sicknesse sayde Plut. in his Apothegines That by the same among other documentes hee had learned that hee was mortall Wherein hee layeth open the common opinion of man who thinketh that hee should liue euer And in deede such is our inclination to incredulitie that vppon the long dela●e of anie thing that wee haue a while expected wee conclude that it will neuer come to passe So the euill seruant mentioned by Saint Mathewe seeing his master tarrie awaie so long Mat. 24.48 imagined and concluded that hee woulde neuer come 2. Pet. 3.3 Heereto hath the saying of Saint Peter relation In the last d●ie there will come mockers which will saie Where is the promise of his comming for since that our fathers dyed all things continue alyke from the beginning of the creation Thus wee see how the scorners only of the dela●e of the comming of Christ can take occasion to beleeue that hee wyll not come at all As also when God himselfe by his seruants threatneth them wyth death they turne it to a scorne saying Let vs eate and drinke Esa 22.13 Esa 28.15 to morow we shall die Again We haue made a couenant with death and with hell we are at agreement Though a scourge run ouer and passe thorough it shall not come at vs. Euen so we likewise when we heare of death yea and dayly see the examples thereof yet because it forbeareth vs a while taketh no hold of vs do imagine with our selues Cicero in hi● booke of old age that it shall neuer come at vs. And this is it which a certain Ethnike the prince of all Latine Orators signified Where he sayde that there is no man so ouer taken with age but that hee weeneth to liue yet one yere longer Thus doth he thinke to liue euer considering that albeit he hath liued a hundred yeres yea two hundred yet still he is of opinion that hee may liue one yere longer and when that is past yet one yere more and so by one and one for euer 2 This doth the common course of man confirme Wee all with our lippes do confesse that once we must die and that death is the gate either to heauen or to hell which not withstanding what one person doth liue as either hoping to goe to heauen or fearing to goe to hell If we see that resolutely within two or three dayes we must die then is there none of vs but is sorrie that he offended God that euer he liued in fornication drunkennesse deceit ryot and other excesse in a bad conscience deuoide of the feare of God Then will we desire to recouer that we may Amend Then will we vow to God that if he will prolong our liues we will walke vprightly Then will euery one with that he had cut off some of his pleasures and excesse to the end therewith to haue releeued the necessitie of the poore Then who could not be content wholy to haue beene giuen to the seruice of God to haue had more care of his soule then of his bodie of the life to come then of the life present We confesse that when death draweth neere we will vse these and such like complaints and lamentations Yet now whiles God graunteh vs time and meanes to liue according to the same why doe we it not Wherefore do we not make hast to liue in like sort as being at deaths doore we wish we had Surely because wee neuer thinke to die 3 When a man after condemnation is returned to prison all his mind runneth vpon death he detesteth his former life he falleth vpon his knees to pray to God he regardeth no soft bedding delicate fare or costly apparell Yea if he bee such a one as feareth God all his cogitations are bent to life euerlasting and forgetting the world and worldly businesse hee conce●●eth great ioy in that he is so neere the gate and possession of the kingdome of heauen This sentence of death passed vpon vs the first day that wee came into this world Our soules are as in a prison in our bodies wee attend onely the time of execution wee all confesse wee must die yet w●t wee not whether within a day or an houre All this notwithstanding who either feeleth or sheweth himselfe readie or who prouideth to die as doth he that hath receiued his sentence from an earthly iudge But what is the cause of this our dulnesse and folly Euen because wee thinke not to die but doe imagine that our liues shall last for euer 4 If either woman or maiden preparing costly rayment with exquisite attires wherein to shew her selfe at some marriage feast shoulde beginne to finde her selfe euell at ease and withall that her Doctor or Phisition hauing felt her poulse shoulde assure her to dye within one fortnight would shee thinke any longer to proceede with her pompe feasting and pastimes No shee would then fall to weeping and prayer to giuing of almes and reprouing the vanitie of the world shee would aduertise her cōpanions to beware and to auoid the same But God who knoweth the length of our daies hath alreadie warned vs of our death hee saith it is at hand he hath not promised fourteene dayes neither two nor one no not one houre Wherefore doe our mindes then runne vpon the course of the world Why doe we so delight in vanitie ryot and excesse Wherefore doe wee not rather employ our selues vpon meditation of heauenly and eternall felicitie And why doe we not bestow our time in such workes as in our death may minister comfort and ioy Forsooth because we thinke to liue euer 5 Wee do reade of Philip king of Macedon and father to great Alexander that euery morning one of the gromes of his chamber at his first waking saide vnto him O king remember thou art a mortall man There is also a common posie written vpon many tablets and ringes Cogita mort that is Thinke to dye Why Was kinge Philip so forgetfull of his mortalitie that hee must be put in minde thereof euery day Or must wee Christians bee put in minde of death by painted tablets or ringes But as the end as well of the speech to the king as of this tablet tendeth onely to aduertise vs to liue as wee shoulde dye so are they likewise obiections to conuince vs of such folly and giddinesse as maketh vs to thinke that we
of which two or three are spent so that now we are come to the last If a thousand and fiue hundred yeeres and more are with him but as one houre then can 70. or 80. be but one minute how long so euer we account thē It is therfore extreame folly to thinke to liue euer not to see death cōsidering that our longest life is but a momēt 11 Sith then that this false opinion causeth vs to forget heauen for earth the soule for the bodie heauenly treasures for earthly goods that we may the rather Amend our liues let vs be of another mind and now being throughly perswaded that wee must die and that shortly that there is nothing more certaine than death or more vncertain than the houre of the same In summe that our life is but as the course of a day or of an hour yea rather as a minute of time let vs so liue as if wee were euery day to die yea euery hour of the day let vs liue in such sort as at the houre of death wee may be glad that we had liued let vs imploy this day hour or minute of life vpon such things as may tend to the ioy glory euerlasting let vs walke this day as if this night we should come to the eternal habitation let vs not build where we cannot long continue but in heauen where wee shall dwell for euer let vs make our prouision not where our pi●grimage is so short but that we may liue wher we shal remain for euer let vs take heed that the thorns of this world catch no hold of vs to detaine and hinder vs in our course to heauen from whence he that is excluded is for euer accursed The bel at the gate ringeth the porter crieth out Make hast let vs remember the ten virgins Math. 25.1 take oyle in our lamps that when the bridegrome commeth wee may go into the marriage For one daie or houre or one minute of carnall pleasures let vs not depriue our selues of perfect ioy which shall neuer be taken from vs let vs indure stormie weather for one daie that wee may haue a thousand millions of yeeres of fair weather let vs patiently beare the tribulations of one moment of time which will breed vs great comfort for euer let not the reuenue of one mās life whose life is but a day depriue vs of the riches alotted to the life of Christ Ioh. 16. ● who liueth for euer let vs not for one apple which euen alredy beginneth to rot loose the euerlasting fruit of the tree of life 2. Cor. 4.17 for the purchase of goods which immediatly we must leaue let vs not forsake the tresures which we may inioy for euer 12 To cōclude sith vndoubtedly we must die we know not the time which surely wil be shortly let vs liue as men alredy adiudged to death let vs liue as not knowing the houre thereof yea let vs liue as knowing it to be at hand And because it is so harde a matter to perswade vs that we must die that shortly let vs say with Moses the mā of God Teach vs O Lord to number our daies Psal 90.12 that we may apply our hearts vnto wisdome This praier seemeth of smal importance For who cannot reckon from 70. or 80. yeres But herein he sheweth mans dulnes that he cannot comprehend the shortnes of his life by counting that it is not past 70. or 80. yeres at the most Also that the holy ghost must teach vs that as he addeth we may apply our harts to wisdome Therby shewing that the knowledge of the shortnes of this life shall endue vs with wisedome to shun the vanities thereof that wee may apply our mindes to those things whereof the blessed fruit shal remain with vs for euer Thus we see how by renouncing this folly namely To thinke to liue euer and by beleeuing that we must all die that shortly we shall bee better aduised so amend our so short life that at the departure therefro we shall through Christ enter into life euerlasting The fourth Folly Not to know wherefore we liue Chap. 5 THe folly to think to liue euer is as we haue shewed great yet is the● another as great no lesse pernitious that doth accōpany it namely That we know not wherefore we liue And in deed if you question with men and aske them to what end God hath created them or wherfore they liue for the most part you shal haue either no answere or an answere to no purpose Ther are as is aforesaid four sorts of creatures in the world amōg whō man is the most excellent yet aimeth lest at the purpose of his creation First some haue essence only as the earth the sea the stones such like creatures secondly some with essence haue life termed Vegetatiue as trees hearbs thirdly some with essence life haue sense or feeling as fishes soules beasts and so forth Lastly there is man who with essence life sense or feeling hath also vnderstanding reason Now aske of man wherefore God created the earth he wil say for the habitatiō both of men beasts the nourishing of hearbs and trees Wherfore the sea riuers for nauigation nourishmēt of fishes Wherefore stones to serue for buildings secondly wherfore God created hearbes and trees hee will saye for the foode of man and beast thirdly wherefore God created fish soules and other creatures hee will saie some for foode others for draught and burden and others for other vses Yea and ascending higher he will say that God created the s●●● to giue light to minister heate the ayre ●o giue breath so of other creatures Lastly aske of man him selfe wherfore God created him to what end he liueth he will answere That he knoweth not Or if he tell his mind plainely he will say for him selfe The poore artifi●er to nourish his family the marchant to enritch himselfe The Courtier or Captaine to grow into reputation to attaine to dignity or honour others who are worse then beasts to take their ease Generally all in this life to prouide themselues of whatsoeuer the lusts of their flesh may desire To be briefe experience doth euidently declare that there is not almost any that knoweth wherefore he liueth or that referreth not his life to som other end thē he should 2 This is a folly worthy great reproofe that man endued with vnderstanding can yeeld a reason for the essence and life of other creatures yet himselfe being the most excellent of all others wotteth not wherfore he liueth or wherfore God hath giuen him vnderstanding This is a most pernitious folly and replenished with all ingratitude for whereas all other creatures created for man do cōtinually tend to the end purpose of their creation namely to serue man in giuing him all thinges needfull for his maintenance man only not knowing wherefore he liueth inuerteth
owne and welbeloued Sonne Iesus Christ What mercy goodnesse and loue shineth in this redemption That he so loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne to the end that all that beleeue in him might not perish Ioh. 3.16 1. Ioh. 4.9 but haue life euerlasting What a seale of his truth in that notwithstanding the ingratitude and vnworthinesse of the world he yet in his appointed time sent the seed of the woman promised to our forefathers Gen. 3.15 to breake the Serpents head To be briefe what power shewed he in this redemption wrought by Iesus Christ Gal. 4.4 wherein he surmounted and ouercame the deuill sinne death and hell But what doth such an image of God so expressely represented before our eyes in the person of our Lord Iesus Christ accomplishing our redemption shoot at but to giue vs to vnderstand and earnestly to feele the wisedome holinesse righteousnesse mercy truth goodnesse loue and power of God the father of Iesus Christ That we might loue him put our trust in him cleane vnto him call vpon him acknowledging him to be the inexpuiseable fountaine of al goodnesse and so glorifie him And the rather because by this meanes we are reclaimed from death and euerlasting damnation we bee made the children of God through the same Iesus Christ and inheritors of his kingdome and glory Rightly therefore doe we say that the ende of our redemption shoulde tend to encrease our knowledge of God that we may glorifie him That it is the dutie whereto Saint Paul exhorteth vs saying You are bought for a price 1. Cor. 6.20 therfore glorifie God in your body in your spirit for they are Gods Also in another place Eph. 1.6 God hath chosē vs to him throgh Iesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will to the praise of the glory of his grace 8 Ther is yet another consideration When Christ gaue sight to the blind raised the dead healed the sicke wrought other like miracles Mat. 9.8 Luk. 13.13 the same were so many testimonies seales of his diuinitie consequently arguments to induce men to glorifie him As he himselfe saith speaking of the sicknes of Lazarus This sicknes is not vnto death but for the glory of God Ioh. 11.4 that the sonne might be glorified therby For his raising frō death was a testimony of his diuine power But we al are naturally as concerning the soul dead in sin blind sicke of a hūdred diseases And as the soule is more excellēt thē the body so the illuminating restoring to life curing of the diseases of the soule are miracles more excellētly representing the deuine power grace then those of the body Of necessity therefore these miracles being performed in vs through faith in Iesus Christ do bind vs to glorifie him And how By effectual demonstration that where we were blind sicke dead in spirit we are now illuminated cured raised againe to life And indeed the motions affections holy works of Gods children being assured testimonies that in soule they be illuminated risen againe are the true meanes to glorifie God Contrariwise if we walk as men yet blind in the darknes of ignorance as men sicke polluted in vice corruption as men yet dead in sin We doo so much as in vs lieth abolish the miracles of Iesus Christ consequently his glory In this respect Saint Peter saith Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles 1. Pet. 2 1● that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of the visitation Mat. 5.16 And in the same sence saith Iesus Christ Let your light so shine before men that seing your good works they may glorify God your father 9 But what argument is this to glorifie God in our holy conuersation good works Because as we haue before said shewed the same be testimonies effects of our spiritual resurrection consequently of Gods power goodnes mercy toward vs. Wherupon the ignorant seing that we who in the time of our ignorāce were dead in sin giuen ouer to all vice corruption since we were illuminated in the truth of the Gospell haue by this spiritual resurrection declared such an alteration in vs that now we are contrariwise become as it were new creatures walking in purenes holines loue may also glorifie God in two sorts First in this miraculous alteration that they see in vs as being a worke truely proceeding of the power and goodnes of God Secondly in this that by such miracles they be moued to allowe and embrace the same religion which we professe as being conuict that it is truely of God not of man Psal 65.1 To conclude where Dauid crieth out O God praise waiteth for thee in Sion He manifestly declareth vnto vs that they which be regenerate through the redemption in Iesus Christ are burgeses of Sion and members of the Church bound to praise God And also that we frustrate God of his dutie and expectation Psal 119 175 if we refer not out whole liues to his glory saying with Dauid O Lord let my soule liue that I may praise thee 10 The secōd principal end of our life should tend to attaine to life euer lasting John 3.16.17 And indeed In as much as God hath sent his Son into the world that the world through him might be saued that he so loued the world that he hath giuē his only begottē son to the end that al that beleue in him might not perish but haue life euerlasting It thereby appeareth that as the end of our redemption accomplished in Iesus Christ is the sauing of the elect so we that beleeue in him shoulde in all the course of our liues aime at this To bee saued by him Otherwyse wee doo so much as in vs lieth reuerse that excellent and wonderfull work of our redemption God hath created man without comparison more excellent than beasts yet if man be not saued nor attaineth to life euerlasting hee is much more miserable than the brute beast which passing ouer this life a great deale more easilye than man after death feeleth no euill and contrariwise the man which aimeth not at this lyfe euerlasting after all his calamities both bodily and ghostly tribulations in this life at his death entereth into incomprehensible and eternall torments If man who naturally desireth felicitie could comprehend the felicitie of such as attaine to the kingdom of heauen likewise the miserie and woe of those who at their decease doo passe into euerlasting death the very horror of the death of these wretches together with the soueraigne felicitie of the blessed would make him earnestly to couet after life euerlasting to esteeme this incomprehensible felicitie to be one of the principall endes of his lyfe Such therefore as doo neuer propound the kingdome of
than himselfe But Solon answered that no man was to bee called blessed before his death Rightly did Solon there reproue the folly of Croesus who thought himselfe blessed in vncertaine prosperitie As Solon lykewise being accounted so wise shewed his follye by signifying in such an answere that Croesus had bene blessed if he had continued in such prosperitie vntill his death Yet if Solon iudged that Croesus coulde not thinke himselfe blessed in all his prosperitie what would hee haue iudged if he had beene a Christian and had seene the change of Croesus prosperitie not into that calamitie that befell him when Cyrus afterward tooke him prisoner but euen into hell and death euerlasting Might hee not and that iustly haue sayd that Croesus notwithstanding his prosperitie euen albeit the same had stuck by him vnto his death was neuer blessed but most accursed 6 Plato a Heathen confirmeth the same by a notable discourse Plut. in his consolation to Apolonius which Plutarch indeauouring to comfort Apollonius vppon the death of his sonne doth alleadge This euermore sayth hee was one resolute opinion that whosoeuer departed this lyfe had liued vertuously at his death he was transported to the Ilands of the blessed and there feeling no inconuenience inioyed soueraigne felicitie And contrarywise they which liued wickedly and vniustly were sent into the prison of iustice and vengeaunce called Tartarum At the first sentence was awarded by liuing Iudges and while men were yet aliue but the same daie that they were to die Howbeit there grewe such abuse heerein that complaint was brought from the Ilandes of the blessed that some were sent thether that had beene wicked and peruerse liuers And thereuppon was the occasion of such abuse examined which was sounde to proceede of this that iudgement was giuen while the men yet liued clothed with honourable carcases wyth riches nobilitye and other lyke qualities In respect whereof they found many witnesses who making their apparaunce before the Iudges affirmed for them that they were men that deserued to passe to the sayde Ilandes of the blessed The cause of the errour once found out it was decreed that from thence forth ther should no iudgement passe vntill after death when the soules should bee depriued of theyr bodies and that also not by men yet aliue and subiect to bee abused by the outwarde shew but by spirites who should see nothing but the spirits and naked soules of those whom they were to giue sentence vppon to the ende that they which in this world had wrought wickednesse in theyr honourable bodies clothed with nobilitie riches and such other qualities might bee sent to tormentes and contrarywise that they who during theyr liues had kepte righteous h●lye and vertuous soules albeit in poore abiect and afflicted bodies might passe into the Ilandes of the blessed This was the discourse of a Heathen man who had attained some sight of the truth albeit intangled in ignorance and errour yet fitly confirming our argument namely that wee must not iudge of mannes felicitie or miserie by the outwarde apparance 7 This folly of iudging by the outward apparance doth yet proceede farther For it can take no place at the least wherein to stay and settle it selfe in mans heart but onely among those that denie Gods prouidence namely those that thinke there is no righteous God that administreth iustice For confesse that there is a God and that hee is righteous and thou canst not iudge of mans felicitie or miserie by the outward shew Thou canst not I saie iudge whether hee that liueth in prosperitie be blessed or another in affliction cursed For sith most vsually the wicked do prosper in this lyfe and contrarywise the children of God haue most trouble what should become of Gods iustice whose nature is to rewarde euill to the wicked and good to the good A certaine Bishop of Verdune in his Chronicle reporteth that one Almauri king of Ierusalem on a time demanded of a certaine Doctor howe he could proue another life after this The Doctor asked him whether he beleeued there was a God Which when he had graunted It sufficeth sayd the Doctor For if there be a God he is righteous if hee bee righteous he must administer iustice in rewarding the good and punishing the wicked Nowe thy selfe sayde hee hast knowen such a wicked man who alwayes liuing in pleasure and honour slept in peace Thou knewest such another a verie good man in continuall tribulation euen to the death If therefore there bee a righteous God it cannot bee chosen but there is another lyfe wherein this good man resteth nowe in blisse and the wicked man in woe Whether this was a true reporte or but a fiction for example and doctrine yet doeth it surely most playnelye teach vs that hee that by outwarde prosperitie iudgeth a man to be blessed and by tribulation to bee accursed denyeth a God in that hee denyeth his iustice The doctrine of this historie or example doeth Saint Paul also confirme saying That the tribulations of the faithfull layde vppon them by the wicked that are in prosperitie are a manifest testimonie of the iudgement to come farre other than the fooles do by the outward apparance imagine The reason hee also addeth saying 2. Thes 1 For it is a righteous thing wyth God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and rest to you that are troubled Which iustice if it be not executed in this life he concludeth that it shal be in the latter comming of Iesus Christ to iudgement 8. It is blasphemie against God sayth Dauid to saie that he will not regard mans transgressions to punish them according to his iustice Wee will not therefore saie Psal 10.13 that the sinner liuing in pleasure alreadie condemned in the sight of God and waiting but the houre of eternall death can bee blessed or more blessed than the faithfull and troubled man who walketh through tribulations to take possession of the kingdome of heauen For if by outward apparance wee iudge the wicked man that is in prosperitie to be blessed and the good man that is in affliction accursed we shall abolish Gods iustice yea euen God himselfe And this is the rather to bee noted to the end that when the children and seruants of God doo finde themselues sometime pricked with this temptation they may the better stand vpon their gard with constancy to resist the same 9 Some men in olde time reiected the booke of Ecclesiastes Philast in his catal of heretikes c. 132. Iac. Chrisost polit in the preface before the com on the Canticles thinking that Salomon wrote it in his olde age after hee had beene carryed awaie by the multitude of his wiues Alleadging that in that booke hee placed mans soueraigne and chiefe felicitie in the pleasures and lustes of the flesh as if there were no other lyfe after this Some Epicures lykewise in our time doo abuse it to the lyke purpose alleadging that there
saying Then did he see it and counted it he prepared it also and considered it And vnto man hee said Behold the feare of the Lord is true wisdome and to depart from euill is vnderstanding Hereby we see that as they that doo know Iesus Christ and walk in the feare of God are truly wise so they that haue not this wisdome are very fooles albeit they thinke themselues wise in that beeing esteemed wise men as concerning the world they are in deed foolish Christians in the sight of God 6 These seuen aforesaid follies do euidently declare that wyth great reason the holy Ghost warneth vs in the first sermon of Iesus Christ and of Iohn the Baptist that for the good and due Amendement of our liues the knowledge and feeling of our naturall follies ought to admonish vs to be more wise circumspect and better aduised hereafter For as in beleeuing that there is no God In thinking better of man than of God In thinking to liue euer so not to liue as if we should die In not knowing wherefore we liue and so liuing at randon not for the seruice of God and our neighbours but for our selues In iudging Gods children in respect of their outwarde tribulations to bee accursed and the wicked thorough their prosperitie to be blessed Beleeuing our enemies the world the flesh and the deuill rather than God our perfect and faithfull frend To be short in thinking our selues wise because we are wise as men and yet are ignorant and fooles as Christians Being I saie possessed of all these follies the same are against vs so many ropes and strong chaines in the hands of our enemy the deuill wherwith to pull vs on to sinne and to make vs continually to offend God to heape iniquitie vppon iniquitie and consequently to turne awaie from God from heauen from life euerlasting glory to folow after satan and so to cast our selues into the hel fire in to death into euerlasting damnation And contrariwise if beleeuing there is a God and esteeming him to be as he is all wise almightie all iust and true we doo loue feare and put our whole confidence in him If beleeuing that we must die and that shortly we doo applie our harts to wisdome liuing as we would euen at death wish wee had liued If knowing wherefore we doo liue we do referre the whole course of our liues to the glory of God to our saluation and to the seruice of our neighbors If iudging of mans felicitie or miserie not by the outward apparaunce but by the testimonie of God in his word we doo euen perceiue that the children of God albeit in tribulation are blessed and the wicked though in prosperitie accursed If renouncing the pernitious counselles of our enemies the world the flesh and the deuill we doo listen vnto and beleeue the counsels and admonitions of our God To conclude if considerding that all discretion knowledge and wisdome of man without the knowledge of Christ and the skil of saluation be but folly Also if vnderstanding that we be but fooles men deuoid of knowledge so long as wee are not wise and well aduised Christians therefore wee conuert and returne to God and walke in the waie that shall bring vs to heauen to life and to euerlasting glorie If I saie we doo thus conuert and amend our liues according to the will of God we shall finally become inheritours of his kingdome through his sonne Iesus Christ our Lord. The end of the first Booke VVHEREIN MAN IS TO AMEND The second Booke That man knowing Idolatrie and superstition ought wholy to abstaine from all participation in the same Chap. 1. WE haue before declared that the greatest Folly wherewith man is possessed is the offending of God And contrariwise that the beginning of all knowledge wisedome resteth in walking in his loue feare and obedience Also that as all men are naturally inclined to this Folly namely to offend God so we ought by amending our liues heereafter to become more wise and better aduised Now are we more particularly to vnderstand Wherein we are principally to amend The first point therefore to be intreated of consisteth in this That man hauing obtained knowledge of the truth ought to renounce all Idolatrie in no wise to participate in the same Many there are who with their bodies assisting at Idolatrie and superstition do neuerthelesse maintaine that they deserue not to be reproued because they disallow the same in their hearts These men should remember that sith Christ suffered both in body soule for the redemption both of our bodies and soules reason would that wee likewise should glorifie him as Saint Paul saith both in our bodies souls which are his And in deed inasmuch as man consisteth both of bodie and soule we are to cleanse both bodie and soule of all pollution that we may as Saint Paul admonisheth fulfill our sanctification 1. Cor. 6.9.20 1. Cor. 7.1 It is therefore a most sacrilegious and intollerable diuision to giue ouer our bodies to the seruice of the deuill when we say that we reserue our soules to God Will the worst husband among men bee content that his wise prostituting her bodie to whoredoome shall saie for excuse that she reserueth her heart for him S. Paule saith our bodies are Christes members and that applying them to whoredome we take them from the body of Christ make them the members of an harlot But the holy Ghost calleth Idolatrie whoredome he therefore that with his bodie assisteth at Idolatry dismembreth himselfe from Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 6 and maketh himselfe a member of the Idoll 2 In this consideration doth the Apostle exhort the Corinthians to flie from Idolatrie and least they should reply as these men do saying We disallow it in our hearts we know that the Idoll is nothing 1. Cor. 10 he addeth I speake as vnto those that haue knowledge not to the ignorant Then doth he bring them back againe to their owne iudgment the feeling of their owne consciences by the vse of the supper For as the communicants by eating the bread and drinking the wine haue a participation in Christ and are made his members so they that be assistants in the sacrifice of the Idols and doo eate of that that is sacrificed vnto them are made partakers of the Idols euen of the deuil as he expresly saith because that which is sacrificed to Idols is sacrificed to the deuill But saith he afterward yee cannot drinke the cup of the Lord and the cup of deuils yee cannot be partakers of the Lords table and of the table of deuils And to the end to preuent all replication he addeth Do we prouoke the Lord to anger Are we stronger than he And this he saith to shew vs that notwithstanding whatsoeuer we aledge that we do not apply our harts therto or that we know that the Idol is nothing yet in that we assist with our bodies
the head our steadfast abiding in the doctrine of truth and vnion in the faith of our Lorde and Sauiour Iesus Christe are all wrought by the ministerie of the woorde which Iesus Christ hath ordained in his holye Church To bee short that preaching is as it were the knitting and ioyning of the sinewes to vnite the faithfull into one bodie Whosoeuer therefore despiseth or reiecteth this order and benefite of Iesus Christ hee tendeth onely to scatter the Church or vtterly to destroy it Neither is the light of the sunne yea euen meat or drinke so necessarie and profitable for the preseruation of this present life as is the ministery for the vpholding of the church and bringing vs to saluation and life euerlasting 10 The premises throughly considered do also teach vs the reason why God where he might haue vsed the seruice of Angels to reueale vnto vs the doctrine of saluation Act. 8.26 and to instruct vs by the reading of his word vouchsafed to speak vnto vs by the ministerie of men like vnto our selues whereof we haue sundrie notable examples The Eunuch treasurer to Queene Cand●ces read vppon his chariot the booke of the prophet Esaye Act. 9.9 God was not satisfied with this his affection and dutie neither did he send an Angell to expound it vnto him but imploying the minister●e of man he sent him Philip. When Iesus Christ appeared to Paul and conuerted him yea euen spak vnto him he could also haue instructed him himselfe Act. 10.3 or haue sent some Angell to doo it but he contrarywise sent him to Ananias that at the mouth of an ā he might learn his will The Angell sent to Cornelius the Centurion to declare vnto him that his praiers and almes were come vp before God in liew of teaching him appointed him to send for Saint Peter that of him he might vnderstand the doctrine of saluation What man therefore is he that now dare either by expectation of reuelation from heauen or by contenting himselfe onely with reading presume to reuerse or controll the order established in the wisdome of God for the teaching of men and the bringing of them to saluation by the ministerie of men What confusion might insue of such rashnes and presumption What ingratitude against God to contemne such an honour and reuerence doone vnto men and a benefite of such greate excellencie yea euen of profite and necessitie Truely therefore inasmuch as the preaching of the Gospell is tearmed the kingdome of God Col. 4. such as doo despise and reiect it doo make themselues not onely vnworthy thereof but also most wretched and accursed instrumentes to aduance the kingdome of sathan Rather therfore apprehending the incomprensible treasure of the ministerie of the woorde let vs with the Prophet Esay and the holye Apostle Saint Paule saye O howe beautifull are the feete of them that bring gladde tidinges of peace and doo also bring gladde tidinges of good things 11 Neither must wee imagine or thinke with our selues Esa 52.7 Rom. 10.15 that being a little entered thereinto we neede not to heare anie more preaching for euen all the daies of our liues must wee be Christs schollers in the schoole of his Church vnder the ministerie of men As also the faithfull in olde time were called disciples whereby the holy Ghost signifieth vnto vs Act. 11 26. that the children of God must continue daily disciples and so learn in Christs schole vntill that departing out of the same they ascend into heauen And in deede such as being impotent and weake when they haue some voyage or iourney in hande and therefore doo take a waggon or a horse and when they haue ridde some fifteene or twentie leagues doo not straight waie without consideration of they businesse leaue theyr horse or chariot but doo retayne the same vntyll they come to theyr iourneyes ende but our iourney wyll neuer bee at an ende vntyll that by death wee bee lyfted vp into heauen The forwardest among vs as the holy Apostle Saint Paule saith doo yet knowe but in parte 1. Cor. 12.13 Ephes 4.13 And the ministerie is ordayned to profite vs vntyll wee become to bee perfect men and haue attayned to the perfect measure and full age of Iesus Christ as the same Apostle more at large doeth teach vs. And this perfection and age of man is neuer accomplyshed vntyll death And truely as the office of the ministerie consisteth in feeding the flocke of Iesus Christ by the preaching of his holie woorde so this woorde Foode doeth teach and admonish vs that as for the time of our lyuing and beeing in this worlde wee doo stande in neede of foode for our bodyes so can wee not forbeare preaching and teaching for the feeding and nourishment of our soules vntill we be lifted vp into heauen 12 But wert thou as skilful as Saint Paul yet must thou confesse that thou still standest in need of the holy ministerie 1. Cor. 14.3 2. Tim. 3.16 For preaching is ordained not onely to teach vs that which wee knowe not but also to reprehend our vices to exhort vs to our duties to comfort vs and to strengthen vs in the faith and obedience of God Whatsoeuer hee bee therefore that knoweth himselfe hee doeth sufficiently by these reasons and considerations vnderstande that hee hath neede of the holy ministerie all the dayes of his lyfe Schollers haue nothing to learne but knowledge and that euen of humane doctrine and therefore theyr studies haue a limitation but preaching is ordayned not onely for increase of knowledge but also to teach vs to put our knowledge in practise that is to say to aduaunce vs continually more and more in faith and amendement of lyfe wherein we shall neuer be perfect vntyll death By the premises then it doth appeare that euerie one that hath anie purpose to obeye this exhortation of Iesus Christ and of Saint Iohn where they saie Amend your liues must resolue to ioyne with the Church of Christ that diligently and carefully they may heare his worde all the dayes of theyr lyfe Also that it is the duetie of euerie Christian to put in practise this saying of the Prophet Esaie Esa 2.2 In the latter daies the mountaine of the house of the Lord shall bee prepared in the toppe of the mountaines and all Nations shall flow vnto it and many people shall go and saie Come let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lorde to the house of the God of Iacob and hee will teach vs his waies and wee will walke in his pathes And that wee may inioye such a benefite let vs euen feele in our selues that burning affection and desire which that excellent Prophet Dauid had Psal 27.4 that with him we may praie to God to giue vs grace that wee abide and remaine in his temple all the dayes of our liues 13 Some there are that confesse that indeed it is their duetie to doe this but they can not
the holy supper to the end that by participation in his body bloud we might the more be strengthened in this assurance that Christ is ours together with all his benefits so feede our soules spiritually to life euerlasting And indeed as ther is no saluation but in Christ so doth not Christ any whit profit vs except we belieue that he is ours together with all his benefits Well is he presented vnto vs in the preaching of the Gospell but ther be yet two other points those very notable in the cōmuniō of the holy supper For God who in his preaching speaketh generally to al men in his holy supper directeth his particular promise as it were by name to euery the cōmunicants therin And not so satisfied he also deliuereth them a seale and visible token to assure thē that his pleasure is that Christ with al his benefits should as certainely belong to euery of thē as they see touch and tail that they be partakers of that bread wine that is deliuered vnto thē He thē that careth not to be cōfirmed in this assurance that Christ with all his benefits is his is possessed with too much pride if hee thinketh it needles either that he prophane it as not feeling what a comfort and ioy it is to haue assuraunce of his saluation in Iesu● Christ The second reason is that we presenting our selues at the Lords table may by so doing make as it were a publike protestation that we haue no fellowship with Idolaters and heretickes neither with the world But that we take our selues to be the children of God the mēbers of the body of Christ that we looke for life and saluation through him onely and so shew forth the benefit of his death al this in remembrance of him to his glorie The first reason declareth how necessary the vse of the holy supper is in regard of our selues The second how requisite it is to the glorie of God and the edification of our neighbours We might also add a third reason That is that the holie Supper is a seale of our vnion knitting together into one bodie vnder our head Iesus Christ as S. Paule expressely saith That we who are many are but one bread and one bodie because we are all partakers of one bread And thus those men that voluntarily do abstaine therefro do depriue their soules of their food Christ of his glorie and by their euill example doe minister offence to their neighbours To conclude They seperate or rather keep them selues seperate from the bodie of Christ Hereby it appeareth that they which be negligent and care not for communicating in the Lords Supper when he giueth them opportunitie do deserue not onely not to be accompted members of Christs Church Nomb. 9.9 but also to incurre the most horrible iudgement and vengeance of God As God in old time declared by Moses That the man that did not celebrate his passeouer should be cut off from among the people and beare his owne sin because he offered not the offering of the Lord in due season 2 Againe we see in sundrie reformed Churches a number of negligent hearers of sermons but yet are there many more that care not for communicating in the Lords Supper and that vpon sundry considerations first some that liue in bad consciences in whordome theft drunkennesse or other iniquities from which they are not determined yet to abstaine do forbeare the communion as doubting least they should aggrauate their condemnation according as saith S. Paule 1. Cor. 11. He that eateth and drinketh vnworthely eateth and drinketh his owne damnation These men doe resemble those who lyuing in fornication do refuse to marrie least thereby their fornication which they are not minded to giue ouer should be the more grieuous as being conuerted into adultery They may also be likened to those who hating their neighbours when they say the Lords prayer Our father which art in heauen c. do leaue out this petition forgiue vs our trespasses as we forgiue them that trespas against vs as imagining that if they should say that they should pray to God not to forgiue their owne sinnes because they forgiue not their neighbours But as they who lyuing in fornication and will not marry least they should forsake their adultery are in a wofull estate so the others that aske no forgiuenes for their transgressions and seek to continue in hatred against their neighbours are worthy double condemnation one in respect of their hatred that they continue the other for their sinnes for the which they aske no forgiuenes Euen so they that forbeare the holy Supper in respect of their bad consciences do pronounce sentence against themselues namely that they deserue double death first for their sinne which they do continue in wicked consciences and secondly because they seperate themselues from the communion of Christ in whom onely is the fulnesse of life What shall they then doe Let them put away their wicked conscience Let them dissolue the bands of Sathan Let them come forth of hell If they say that they can not so farre master their affections Why haue they married themselues to fornication hatred theft and other like iniquities vpon condition that they will neuer be diuorced from the same surely that is a token that they do not steadfastly beleeue that there is a hell prepared for such liners Or at the least the pleasure that they take in their sinne doth quench all remembrance thereof Otherwise the sole apprehension of this horrible and vnquenchable fire would force them to giue ouer the wickednesse that leadeth and draweth them thereto And indeed if in a mightie tempest they should chaunce to finde themselues vpon the sea in daunger of drowning they would a thousand times protest to forsake their bad consciences that so they might submit themselues to the obedience of God But how can they lie downe and sleepe vpon a pillow of fornication theft hatred and other wickednesse giuing themselues as a pray to Sathan if God in his long suffering should not recouer them Let them flatter themselues at their pleasures for if they continue in abusing the pacience of God and abstaining from the holy Supper to the end to goe on in a wicked conscience their estate is most woefull and accursed As he therefore who wanting the gift of continencie and liuing in fornication ought to abhorre it and to prouide himselfe of a remedie by marriage so as often as they haue aduertisment or heare of the celebration of the Lords supper let them at the least thinke themselues wakened and summoned to renounce their wicked consciences and by participating in the holy supper to seperate themselues from the societie of the wicked to glorifie God and to be confirmed in faith and courage to goe forward from good to better 3 Others doe forbeare the communion because they will not submit themselues to Ecclesiasticall orders and discipline If wee might admit
to the poore whether to their reliefe or to their contempt to bee doone to his owne person Yea I say hee will make accompt of it and rewarde it as if it were done to himselfe Were it not our dutie therefore to abhorre all contempt of the poore For who would not thinke him either mad or desperate that shoulde denie Iesus Christ of meate and drinke in his hunger or thirst or cloth in his nakednesse or harborrow in his necessitie Euerie one would euen spit in his face that shoulde shew himselfe so vnthankefull and peruerse Or who would not euen take the bread out of his owne mouth and the garment from his owne backe to relieue Iesus Christ if in his owne person hee shoulde shew himselfe vnto vs naked or famished Who woulde not thinke it a great blessing to lodge him in his house and by displacing himselfe to lend him his bed Who woulde not goe to meete him and with olde Abraham and Lot saie vnto him If I haue found fauour in thy sight Gen. 18.3 19.2 I pray thee turne into my house and take thy repast The contempt and neglect of the poore in this behalfe doth to our confusion mightilie crie out that wee beleeue not Christ where he protesteth that whatsoeuer wee doe to the poore wee doe it to himselfe and so are wee conuict of this incredulitie Besides wee may boldly saye that the reliefe giuen to the poore in the name of Iesus Christ is vnto him more acceptable then if it were giuen to his owne person because that in relieuing the poore besides our charitie wee also shew faith apprehending the truth of his promise where in he accepteth any thing done to the poore as done to his owne person 2. Cor. 9.6 8 Moreouer the holy Ghost many times compareth Almes to the seed cast into the ground and thereupon Saint Paule expresly saith He that soweth sparingly shall reape sparingly he that soweth liberally shall reape liberally Augustine of the words of the Lord. The poore mans field saith S. Augustine is fruitefull and doth quickly and plenteously returne that which it hath receiued The husbandman byeth land oxen and horse and feedeth them he tilleth his ground he casteth in seed and all vpon hope of a doubtfull and vncertaine haruest but in giuing to the poore it is not so he shall not neede to lay out any money for fieldes or cattle neither to till or soyle his ground God doth shew and offer it readie prepared sit for to receiue the seede which being cast into the hands of the poore returneth assured plentifull and euerlasting fruite If any man shoulde offer his land readie tilled and soyled and will vs to sow it vpon condition the crop should be our owne we would neuer tarrie for much entreatie nay rather then to want seede we would sell our clothes for such a purpose sith therefore that the poore are a fat and fruitful soyle readie prepared by the Lord to receiue our seede what is that let that hindreth vs from sowing in that ground by imparting of our goods to the poore especially considering that there is neither frost nor drought neither weede nor darnell nor grashopper nor armie of souldiers to debarre vs from reaping the euerlasting crop thereof By experience we finde that if wee keepe our corne long in the garner it will at length take heate and spoyle but in sowing it wee doe not onely keepe it but also it is encreased and greatly multiplyed Euen so is it with our goods or rather better for seeking to keepe them they doe not onely decaie Mat. 6.19 as Iesus Christ sayth by ●ust moath or otherwise but also they doe corrupt vs by a peruerse confidence that wee repose in them and by the pride and surquidrie which they engender in our harts Wher contrariwise being sowen and scattered in the hands of the poore they are safely preserued and layed vp for vs with encrease in the kingdome of heauen 9 Againe Almes is called not onely seede to teach vs that we shall reape a blessed croppe therof Pro. 19.17 but also it is likened to a loane made vnto God Salamon expressely saith that hee that sheweth mercy to the poore lendeth to the Lord. If wee thinke nothing lost that wee lend to a goodman and one that is of abilitie but looke to receiue it againe much rather may wee looke to recouer that which wee haue lent to the almightie and faithfull Lorde What excuse may wee pretend in the presence of God when sinners doe lend to such as be like to themselues Luk. 6.34 vpon an vncertaine hope to recouer their loane and yet we refuse to lend vnto Christ when in his members he desireth to borrow and becommeth him self surety for it with promise of great reward as Saint Luke saith Lend to the poore looking for nothing againe and your reward shall bee great in heauen Luk 6.35 Of two thinges wee must confesse the one either that we doe not make so much accompt of the spirituall and euerlasting vsurie and rewarde is of a little money subiect to losse which at the farthest we must forgoe at death either else that wee accompt that which wee lend foorth vpon vsurie to men by nature lyers to be more safe then that which we lend to him that is truth it selfe who cannot shrinke or become banquerout a payment worthy diuers couetous persons that trust more in man then in God Augustine in his Epist If thou wilt be a good Marchaunt sayth Saint Augustine and an excellent vsurer giue foorth that which thou canst not keepe if that thou maiest receiue that which thou canst not loose Giue a little that thou maiest receiue a hundred times as much Againe giue a temporall possession for an euerlasting inheritance And againe Christ saith vnto thee giue mee of that which I haue giuen to thee I aske but mine owne giue and restore I haue beene a liberall giuer to thee now make mee thy debtour and I will pay thee euerlasting goods If some mightie towneship should vse such liberalitie towardes her Burgeoyses as to deliuer them good letters and sure assignations to receiue for a hundred in readie money a hundred of Annuall rent for life who would not deliuer foorth his money to such profit But God promiseth to these that shall giue to the poore a much greater rent without comparison and that not for a temporall life but for a hereditarie and euerlasting rent What then is it that letteth or stayeth vs from cōming deliuering our mony to him by the hands of the poore Euen our incredulitie because we think al that we giue vnto them to bee our losse Albeit contrariwise it is the onely way to keepe our goods for euer But all that we keepe during our liues is lost at our death so that which in our life time we giue to the poore we shall finde againe after our death and enioy it in life euerlasting
for otherwise God would more plentifully distribute them to his welbeloued children in Iesus Christ whereas contrariwise they are more common to the wicked who for the most part are better prouided of them whiles the poor is more aduanced to the kingdome of God The gallant Bridles golden Sadles do nothing amend the horse but rather his agilitie nimblenesse and strength Euery beast saith Epictetus is estemed by his virtue shal man be so by his wealth Musicall instruments are to no vse to him that cannot play vpon them so are riches vnprofitable to him that cannot vse them As the horse is of no vse without a bridle so are riches without reason Wel may they make a vicio●s man more honorable in the sight of the world but as faire Tapisserie which couereth soule broken walles Besides they are endued with another dangerous vse for they draw flatterers who are euē so many poisners of vertue How many other dangers are they also subiect vnto Lay not vp for your selues tresures vpon the earth Mat. 6.19 saith Iesus Christ wher the moth canker corrupt and where theeues breke through and steale Whereof wee haue experience enough in so many banquerupts robberies by sea and by land and persecutions for the name of Christ besides that albeit a man hath the vse of them whiles he liueth Seneca in his prouerbs 1. Tim. 6.7 yet at death he must forsake them To this necessity is euery couetous man driuē neuer to doe good vntill his death according to the prouerbe then he leaueth his goods to his heires And indeed as we came naked into the world Eusch in the life of Constantine lib 4 so must we certainely carrie forth nothing with vs. Great Constantine speaking to one of his courtiers said Oh couetous man how farre shall thy insatiable couetise extend Then with a Iaueling that he had in his hand marking out a mans length vpon the ground he said vnto him When thou hast gotten all the world yet at the last thus much must be thy portion if thou canst obtaine that Let the couetous man therfore that mindeth to Amend according to Christes exhortation diligently thinke that in lou ng and desiring riches he loueth and coueteth vanity he loueth coueteth the thornes that choake all vertue yea he loueth coueteth the rootes of all mischiefe the fountaines of al vice In liew of coueting if he haue any let him imagine how to auoide then allurements abuses as vnderstanding that in riches in stead of vertue felicitie he shal find occasion of corruption misery 13 The third remedy consisteth in careful meditation vpon the horrible vengeance grieuous punishmēt which the couetous mē must of necessity expect from him who iustly detesteth such vice Are we not already to note this one pointe that as charity is the gift of God proceeding from his fauour grace so contrariwise couetousnes is a vengeance which he poureth vpon those whō for their sins he hath giuē ouer into a reprobate sence as S. Paul also noteth God so detesteth the couetous persō that if any of those that professe his word doth giue himselfe to that vice Rom. 1.29 1. Cor. 5.11 S. Paul willeth vs to hold him excōmunicate not to eate or conuerse with him And this he saith to confirme that which he hath said in another place namely that the couetous man shal not enherite the kingdome of heauen in that sence doth S. Iames summon thē to Gods iudgement seate admonishing thē to consider of his horrible vengeance 1. Cor. 6.10 Iam. 5.1 Now saith he ye rich men houle ye weepe for your miserie that is at hand your riches are corrupt your garments are motheaten your gold siluer is cankered the rust of them shal be a witnesse against you shall eate your flesh as it were fire ye haue heaped vp treasures for the last daies Behold Gregorie in a certaine Homely Augustine vp on the words of the Lord. Ambrose of Naboth the Iesralite Augustine in a certaine Sermon the hire of the laborers which haue reaped your fields which is of you kept backe by fraud crieth the crie of them which haue reaped is entred into the cares of the Lord of hoasts The couetous mā saith S. Gregory in this life burneth in desire to get care to keep that he hath but hereafter he shall burne in fire of euerlasting tormēts What a madnes is it saith Augustine to win gold to loose heauē The couetous man saith Ambrose hath as it were steppes to couetousnes the more that he climeth the higher that he goeth the greater is his fal What shal be his last fal for gathering saith Augustine cōsidering that he hath lost himself before he make any gain Couetousnes is a horrible giddines which maketh man insatiable to climbe high that he may fall low to kindle the fire of Gods wrath that he may feel the euerlasting slaine therof to lose the celestiall tresures to get terrestrial riches which fil him with vice misery 14 If they say that in this life at the least they shall reape cōmoditie plesure felicitie by thē let them think how miserably they are therin deceiued First be they such beasts as they cannot consider what this life is If they cannot deny but they must die what cōtentation can they reape in cutting the wood making the fagots wherwith they shal hereafter burn for euer we read of an Ethnike who being demāded whether he had rather be Socrates wise vertuous or Crassus welthy lustful answered in life he would wish to be Crassus but in death Socrates which he said in respect of the felicitie and reputation which hee imagined in Socrates after his death and he had some reason if being Crassus in his life time hee might haue beene conuerted into Socrates at his death But sith that might not bee he confesseth that he who in this life is Crassus vnlesse he be a beast deuoide of soule is in death most wretched as consequently also in life which in such men is no other but a path to woe an encrease of miserie Are not these couetous men then in this life miserable considering that they bee wretched except they bee beastes in that it is a heauie curse to them that they be men endued with immortall soules If there remained in them any sparke of the image of God If they had any remorse of conscience would not the same be to thē a tormentor vrging them to exclaime that they are miserable in the middest of al then wealth As if a man vexed with the Gout or with the Collicke should lie in a rich bed and haue al pleasures that might be so that to mens seeming he should be thought most blessed yet in himselfe he should feele all miserie and sorrow Againe albeit such were the dulnes of his conscience that he
to the host by some one of the companie euen of those that professe the religion yet ordinarily in such sort as the host accompteth it as a commendation of his magnificence plentie As also if he that semeth to find the fault chance afterward to make another it shal likewise be such as he likewise wil looke for the like censure which hee also will take to redound to the praise of his liberalitie and plentie Hereto haue relation all excuses of meane entertainment and desire to take patience euen in a feast that sloweth with all dainties and are motioned onely to minister occasion to the guests to say that there is but ouer much and by such a censure to get the commendation of plentie and liberality Thus each man reprouing and accusing other of excesse no man sheweth any Amendement Yet let vs not thinke but these pettie censures proceeding either of worldly ciuilitie and slatterie or of Christian admonition are so many sentences giuen by our owne mouthes which shall be laide before vs in the daie of iudgement to our condemnation God hath ordained meate and drinke for two principall purposes First to nourish and relieue vs to the end that thereby recouering new strength and force which fitly is called refection wee may euery man applie our selues to that seruice whereto he hath called vs But our banquets contrariwise doe returne vs vnprofitable as growing so dull and heauie by our long sittinges and plentie that wee are fitter and more readie to sleepe like hogges then as Christians prouided to follow our vocations especially to heere or reade Gods worde or to tend to prayers and meditation And thus in our banquete we take not our refection but destruction If a horse by eating too many Oates should grow heauie and slacke to goe or drawe wee woulde beware of giuing him too much least wee shoulde both loose our prouender and weaken our horse Euen so in meate and drinke and long sittinges if the plentie make vs heauie and slow in our vocations namely in the seruice of God we haue iust cause to cut it off and so to take away the abuse which is especially hurtfull and to be condemned 2 If our studies were as much applyed to make our feasts as sober and simple as they are plentifull and delicious both our bodies would be better at ease our soules more readie to their actions and our selues better able to relieue the poore And indeede euen in dutie we are bounde to leane more to sobrietie then to superfluitie and excesse to vertue then to vice and to remember the saying of Iustine to this purpose Iustine lib. 20 Frugalitie is the mother and nurse to all vertue Yet doe our aboundaunce of dainties our diuersitie of meates and our inuentions of new sauces and wantonnesse declare the contrarie So that now it will aske more time to learne to be a good cooke to make the body sicke then to be a Doctor of Physicke to minister health We reprooue such women as to the end to seeme more beautifull and to allure mens fancies doe paint themselues Yet wee commend such cookes as can make diuersitie of sauces to prouoke appetite to meate Do we feare eating too litle an appetite accompanied with health There was neuer man that repented his being sober but many their eating and drinking too much The best is therefore to vse common and grosse meate for that is easiest gotten soonest and with least labour made readie of lowest price nothing so hurtfull and such as wee eate not much off The Romaines did eate either in publique or with their doores open that euery man might be a witnesse of their frugalitie 3 The second purpose and vse of foode is to procure vs to prayse and glorifie God for his goodnesse and liberalitie towards vs. And therefore Saint Paule saith Whether wee eate or wether we drinke 1. Cor. 10.31 or whatsoeuer wee doe let vs doe all to the honour and glorie of God But to the contrarie which of vs when we tast the sauour of meate or drinke is in heart mooued to say with Dauid O Lord thou art good and gracious Psal 119.68 In how many of our feastes doe wee take occasion or argument to enter into the acknowledgement or discourse of the goodnesse sweetnesse or power of God the auctor of all goodnesse Plutarck reporteth that a certaine nation called Siborites Plu. in his banquets of the 7. Sages did vsually inuite Ladies to their feasts a yeere before hand to the end that they might haue time to prouide themselues to come honourably or rather in great pompe But it were fitter saith he when we are inuited to a banquet in time to prepare to come prouided of speech and honest profitable and conuenient communication If this consideration coulde take place in a heathen Philosopher what a shame is it for vs Christians to come into companie and feastes vnprouided of such holie and vertuous talke as might tend to Gods glorie and the edefying of the assistants And indeede the sauce of Christian banquets ought to consist of wise vertuous and holie discourses But our want of instruction and the starued affection of our hartes to vertue doe cause vs to consume our time at banquets either in vaine talke or in vrging our guests to eate and drinke Xenophon and other Philosophers were of opinion that it were good and profitable to collect note downe al table talke If Christians yea euen our selues that professe the reformed religiō Plut. in his Syme lib. 1 shold put this in practise what should we find in such registers Words and discourses which the next day would be found vnworthy our vtterance euen such as euen worldlings would be ashamed of So long as the Chruch continued vnder the crosse at euery feast the table talke consisted of holy communication questions of edificatiō But now such discourses are odious anoy vs. Ther is now no newes but of mery sētences sauoring somtimes too much both of the world the flesh Plutarch in the banquet of the 7. sages 4 The Egyptians in their banquets cōmonly exhibited that which they called Scelet in which word they signified the bones of man dryed ioyned knite together and thereby admonished the assistants that within some shorttime themselues should bee like to the same This truly was a meanes to restraine thē from vsing their food with excesse or vaine speeches At Metz in Lorraine they haue a custome that at marriage feasts the hangman in person cōmeth to demand a dish of meat And this at such feasts ministreth occasion to talke of death of vertuous life To many men these customes may seeme bitter and not fit for banquets but if we wist how ready we are to too much mirth to offending of God in our banquets we would confesse that our diseases do require such Phisicke Iobs children were well taught instructed yet no doubt at their banquets one
God loue of the world neglect of heauenly felicitie wil cry out for euerlasting vengeance against their parents so that if they account not their children as beasts without soul or if they loue them with the due loue belonging to parents let them declare their loue especially to the soule the Christian instruction whereof surmounteth all worldly treasure An ancient Philosopher said that hee could haue bin content to haue gone vp into the highest pinacle in the towne Crates Plut. in th● bringing vp of children thence to haue cried O fathers what meane you that imploy your whol indeuors to get riches why are ye so carelesse for the instructing of your children to whom ye leaue thē It is as if parents whē their childe were sicke to the death without prouiding for his health should prepare him new garments Some say it would be a great comfort for them in heauen to know their neere kindred consequently their children and this commeth of natural affection But might it not be a greater discomfort for them euē in their life time to see them go to hell for want of instruction T●e Lacedemonians were very careful to bring vp their children in vertue according to the lawes of Lycurgus their law giuer therby grew to this custome that if anie man committed anie trespasse it was lawfull for anie that sawe him freely to reproue him and it was a great reproch to mislike of such reprehension 13 Some charge their childrē to be dulwitted hard to be bowed or brought to vertue Albeit naturall inclination bee a great helpe to profiting yet exercise custome to do wel is a mightie meanes to bend and shape them that waie yea euen such that by experience wee finde this olde prouerbe true Vse ouercommeth nature And this dyd Lycurgus the Lacedemonian lawe giuer verie aptly demonstrate to his people Plut. in his Lacon Apot●eg Hee tooke two whelpes the one of a hunting kinde the other of a mastiffe that followed the kitchin Then dyd hee bring vp the mastiffe to the game and the hound to the kitchen Afterward meaning to make demonstration and so to perswade the people to his purpose hee caused them to bee assembled and brought forth his two dogs where setting downe a dish of pottage and withall casting off a hare the hound fell to the pottage the mastiffe followed the hare Behold then sayth he what it is of doctrine vse he that came of a hunting kind yet vsed to the kitchin followeth his pottage and the other come of a mastiffe following the kitchin being now vsed to the game followeth the hare The wheele-wright doth by strength bow his timber letting it he long in that bent it abideth crooked Barren ground wel tilled soyled and sown with good seed groweth fruitfull yeeldeth good increase Iron weareth with handling The water by continuall dropping weareth the stone Wilde beasts may bee tamed and wilde coltes by custome bee brought to the saddle and are content to bee lead by the bridle The Greekes named Manners by a word that signified Custome Thereby to declare that euen the dullest capacities may by instruction and custome bee fashioned to vertue As contrariwise the wit most inclined by nature to vertue may by bad instruction and the conuersion of the wicked be peruerted and grow vicious 14 Parents therefore are heerein to respect two pointes First to begin to frame and bend their children in their tender youth to vertue remembring that a seale entereth deepest into softest waxe Plato warneth mothers and nurses from telling foolish tales to theyr children least they infect theyr tender wits with folly astonishment Experience sheweth that children will sooner learn anie language by conuersation thā older folkes Also that the yonger the twigge is the sooner it is bent or made straight Secondly it is the parents duetie to restraine their children from haunting conuersing with such as bee vicious and peruerse And in deed we see that they doo soone learne villanous and vnseemely speeches and malitious and leaude actions wyth theyr corruptions and as the olde prouerbe sayth Halting with the lame they shal learne to halt A child that naturally speaketh well by conuersing with such as corrupt theyr speech shal degenerate and speake as badly Tie a young twigge that is crooked with a straight one that is stronger than it and in growing it wil become straight so continue when it is vndone And contrariwise a straight one tied to that which is crooked and stronger than it selfe will grow continue crooked 15 The Lacedemonians were maruellous carefull to prouide that their children should not be corrupted by euill companie And in regard thereof Plutarch in his Laconical● we reade that when Antipater demanded of them fiftie children for hostages one of their chiefe magistrates named Etheocles aduised thē not to condescend thereto least they being brought vp in the societie of such as were wholy giuen to pleasure and vice might peraduenture grow vicious and so bring home afterward to their countrie nothing but corruption and miserie and therupon in lieu of fiftie children they offred the double number of men and women and so of aged persons alreadie formed of strength and discretion to withstand vice and corruption Lastly when Antipater still vrged them to send their children and vsed great threates in case they should disobey they plainly answered saying Let him if he can require anie thing more grieuous than death for rather will we condiscend thereto than to send our children O wonderfull constancie and care to preserue their children from vice and corruption If the heathen had such regarde to this vertue importing the training vp of their children in the obseruatiō of the laws of a mortall man what a shame may it be vnto christian parents that are so negligent in bringing vp theyr children in the heauenly doctrine and forming theyr manners and behauiors to pietie and godlynes in the feare and obedience of God Moreouer by this example may parents take warning when they mean to put forth their children to anie trade or occupation eyther to learning carefully to see and enquire whether such as they thinke to place them withal be vertuous or endued with the fear of God In the admittance of a seruant the feare of some temporall or carnall inconuenience causeth thee to enquire of his or her truth or other qualities Therefore if thou committest a childe to the instruction of a master before thou enquirest of his vertues thou shewest that thou hast lesse care of corrupting or infecting thy child with vice than of some small incouenience that might happen by an vnthriftie seruant When thou buyest an earthen pot thou soundest vpon it to see whether it be broken least thou shoulde be deceiued in a small peece of monie yet doest thou not sound whether the master to whome thou committest thy child be vicious or vertuous albeit by putting him to one that is
the same as before wee haue more at large declared In the second booke c. 17. of Adulterie and all fornicatiō Princes therefore and Christian magistrates that inflict no punishment for adulterie are vnexcusable in the sight both of God and men And they must thinke that as such iniquitie doeth prouoke Gods wrath not against the adulterers onely but also against the whole nation where it is tollerated so by not punishing it themselues doo maintaine the wrath of God as a fyre kindled to consume both them and their subiects To whom by such slacknesse and conniuence they also giue head to commit it wythout all feare The Emperour Iustinian in a decree whereby he ordayneth death to baudes that make sale of women or maidens for fornication In the Nouell Constitutions Rub. of Bauds Gen. 38.24 doth adde this Wee beleeue that thorough this our care to maintain chastitie our common wealth wyll take great increase and that God will graunt vs all prosperitie We reade that the Patriarke Iuda when hee sawe that his daughter in law Thamar whome hee had promised in marriage to his sonne Sella had played the harlot hee condemned her to die euen to bee burned Wherein the Magistrates of our time are to note three points that may induce them to doo their duties First that albeit the persons bee not yet married but betrothed onely yet as is aforesayd this adulterie deserueth death Secondly that adulterie was punished wyth death namely by fyre euen before the lawe giuen by Moses Thirdly that no kindred or friendshippe shoulde withholde the Magistrate from punishing adulterers And heereof we haue an instance in Zaleucus the Locryan Lawyer Val. Max ca. 5 Aelian l 1● hee hauing ordained that both the eies of an adulterer shoulde bee pulled out when his owne sonne was taken wyth that fault would needes haue two eyes lost and so caused one of his owne and another of his sayde sonnes to be plucked forth 61 It is therefore a great reproch and slacknesse in Christians so to mitigate the punishment of this sinne that they haue shewed themselues in manner neuer touched with the abhomination of such iniquitie In the dayes of the Emperour Iustinian adulterers were put onely to some fine of monie which might in deed somewhat restraine the poore but the rich thereby tooke occasion to commit it the more as thinking themselues quit for a smal summe of monie True it is that by vertue of some decrees of the said Iustinian the women taken in adulterie were thrust into some monasterie But what else was this but formally to oppugne the saying of Saint Paule who commandeth that the woman who cannot containe should marrie In the Councell of Tibur it was decreed that if the woman that had committed adulterie Counsell of Tibu● holden the yeare 895. cap. 46. Counsel of Orleance cap. 1. Causaid constitui mus 17. q. 4. could retire and saue her selfe in the Church shee should not bee redeliuered into the handes either of her husband or of the Iudge The lyke was also decreed in the first Councell at Orleance where it was moreouer ordained that if her husband or the Iudge did redemaund her shee should be redeliuered but with an oath that they should doo her no hurt vpon paine of excommunication And thus dyd the Cleargie in those daies drawe vnto them the notice and iudgement of adulterie whether to purchase thereby the fines for their owne profite or for anie more vilanous or detestable purpose But as by that meanes they were wylling to saue and preserue the bodyes of the adultresses so haue they strained the soules to the end to cast them headlong into euerlasting death The Counsell of Elibertin cap 18. In deed in a Councell holden in Spaine it was decreed that if a Bishoppe a priest or a Deacon were taken in adulterie hee should neuer againe be receiued into the peace and reconcilement of the Church no not in the houre of death Also that this rule should bee in force against all other persons vpon theyr seconde offence And therefore sayth Saint Cyprian in his dayes some Bishoppes woulde not receiue adulterers to the peace of the Church But hee was of opinion to vse some moderation least sinners should fall into desperation and that desperation should draw them on headlong into all wickednesse And therefore sayth hee The Councel of Ancyra Cap. 20. it were good they shoulde trye theyr repentaunce wythout limitation of time which notwithstanding by one Councell was appointed to be seuen yeres 62 Thus may wee see whereinto those men do fall that will be wiser and shew more mercie than God But mortall man notwithstanding whatsoeuer authoritie hee pretendeth must not alter the decrees of the liuing Lord. And the Lord hath commanded that adulterers should bee punished with death Neyther is there in manner anie nation in the world but agreeth to this iudgement of God as wee haue before declared If therefore wee would obeye God in punishing adulterie with death his wrath would be turned from vs and wee should bee freed from thousands of questions difficulties that growe vppon the sparing of theyr liues and men standing in more feare of God would not so soone abandon them selues thereto In olde time theeues were not by anie lawe eyther of God or man punished wyth death but adulterers were but now contrarywise theeues must die for it and adulterers must escape in manner scotfree Is not this a token that Christians are more feruently bent to the preseruation of their goods than of the chastitie or honour of their wiues They alleadge the example of Christ who dismissed the woman that was taken in adulterie with out condemnation Iohn 8. But as Christ came not to execute the office of a Iudge neither would vsurp it so when he had asked her whether the sentence of the Iudges had condemned her and vnderstood no before he dismissed her hee sufficiently declared that if sentence had bene passed he would not haue hindered the execution 1. Cor. 10.8 And therefore by the premises let all Christian Magistrates vnderstand that it is theyr dutie to punish such iniquitie and with all remember that whatsoeuer slacknesse or negligence shall bee found in them shall not remaine vnpunished And so let them in holines resolue straightly to forbid this abhomination of adultry to stop the course of it and to take away all allurements entisements thereto and that with such punishment that all other may feare to commit the like iniquitie Let them also diligently see to other fornication that it escape not vnpunished as remembring the vengeaunce that the Lorde did take of the like when for the same in one daie he slew twentie and three thousand 63 Namely let them not suffer among their subiects any stews tauernes or other receptacles of adulterie for hire which serue as baites allurements and meanes to defile and destroy both bodies and soules for euer also to prouoke Gods
bare dominion And in deed as a great branch cut from a tree bringeth downe a number of small ones with it and as when a great prince commeth forth of his pallace a multitude doo follow him euen so doo the subiectes ordinarily followe the example of their prince and magistrate whether good or badde Quintilian in his fourth declamation As also what so euer the prince doth it seemeth that hee commaundeth it yea the affection to please princes and to imitate their actions is of more force than the lawes and punishments ordained in the same If the prince take a pleasure whether in vertue or in vice so wyll his subiects Cicero verie aptly sayth that the magistrates in matter of wickednes or vice doo not onely conceiue it Tacitus Annal. 3 but also doo spread it and as it were water theyr subiectes therewith hurting more by theyr example than by the sinne it selfe It is a common saying taken of Plato Such as the prince or magistrate of a citie is such are his subiects And this doth a poet note saying What euer the king in example doth leaue Seneca His subiects thereto full fast will cleaue And in this sense sayth one Wilt thou haue thy subiects good Cic. his book of lawes 3. be thou good For the prince by wel doing teacheth his subiects to do well The same author sayth that the examples of princes doo neuer rest where they first begin Cic. in his Ep. to Claudian Vellerus Paterculus l. 2 Seneca of clemencie but doo breake foorth and scatter farre and neere And in deed as Seneca sayth The worlde noteth the wordes and deeds of princes and magistrates neither can they lie hidden no more than the Sun beames And therefore as he addeth the magistrate is diligently to take heed to his reputation fame which is of great efficacie whether it be good or bad 68 Now let vs come to examples Zozom Eccl. hist l. 8. c. 1 When the kings of Iuda professed either the feare of God or the seruice of Idolls the people inclined accordingly either to good or to euill to serue God according to his lawe or to pollute themselues in the seruice of Idols Zozomenes reporteth of the Emperours Arcadius Honorius the sonnes of Theodosius that they following the example of their father made professiō of the truth of the heauenly doctrine and that their subiects regarding their example were therwith so touched that the heathen were easily conuerted to Christianitie the heretikes returned to the catholike church and that the Arrians and Eunomenians daily decreased and many of them ioyned with those that folowed the doctrine which their Emperors maintained Agis the last king of Lacedemon was in his youth addicted to his pleasures but after he was called to the gouernment he vtterly gaue them ouer and was so inclined to vertue that by his so notable change he purged the towne of Sparta Eras Apot. l. 1 Aurel. Victor in his life of all the corruptions wherewith the barbarous nations had infected it by his example reduced the inhabitants to their auncient frugalitie and sobrietie Likewise the Emperour Vespasian suppressed many vices by good lawes but more by example of life which in deede is of greater efficacie as the same authour reporteth as contrariwise when Ptolome king of Aegypt Iustin l. 30 Vellciu● Paterculus l. 2 sayth Iustine was giuen to pleasure wantonnesse all his subiects presently imitated his maners The same also extēdeth euē into buildings as we read that after the destinction of Carthage the Romanes gaue themselues to pleasures falling frō vertue to vice not by degrees but as it were by a headlong downefall And when Scipio Nasica Metellus and C●●eius Octauus all principall Lordes in Rome began to build porches gorgeous galeries the magnificence of these publike persons saith the author was immediatly seconded by the excessiue superfluitie of the people 69 But as it is the dutie of magistrates to seale their good holy decrees with good and holye examples so is it not inough that they begin onely vnles they also constantly perseuer in theyr sayd dutie their estate is slipperie and as the trees that grow vpon high places are most moued and beaten with winds and consequently in greatest danger of ouerthrow so kings princes and other magistrats being exalted aboue the people are more mightily assalted whether by the deuill who knoweth the consequence and importance of the●● fall whether by flatterers or euill counsellours for theyr particular profit whether by the notice of their greatnesse together with the corruptions and vices common to others which doo many times incli●e them to excessiue licentiousnes Salomon a man indued with many the graces of God for a long time b●re himselfe so wisely and vertuously that he atchiued maruellous reputation but afterward especially toward his olde age hauing taken an incredible number of wiues and concubines 1. King 11. euen strangers contrarie to Gods commandement he grew into extreame outrage miserably diuerted from the seruice of God gaue himself to all kinds of superstition and idolatrie And hereof grew that great calamitie euen the diuision of the realm in his successor Roboam when the ten Tribes reuolted were plunged in all Idolatry vnder Jeroboam his successors many times were at warre wyth the two other tribes in whom onely the kingdome of Salomon did remaine Ioas king of Iuda 2. Chron. 24 had a good and religious beginning in his gouernment which continued all the daies of Iehoida the high priest but after his death leauing the temple seruice of God he gaue himselfe to Idolatrie so drew his subiects thereto that albeit God sent them prophets to reclaime thē yet would they giue no eare Aurelius Victor in his lyfe Bab. Ignatius in his life wherupon the wrath of the Lord was kindled against Iuda and Ierusalem The Emperour Nero during the first fiue yeeres of his Empire liued so vertuously that Traiā wold vsually say that al princes wer far behind the fiue first yeres of Nero yet he afterward grew a mōster in al lust extreme cruelty Likewise the Emperor Caligula was in the beginning a very good prince but afterwarde very wicked so that it is written of him that hee was in the begining the best in the end the worst Emperor that euer liued 70 To the end therfore that hauing well begun they may be the better instructed to perseuer in their duties besides the prejuises we will also for a conclusion adde some admonitions sentences notable aduertisements which it were good they shoulde vnderstand meditate haue in continual sight to the end to put them in practise First let them know that ther is nothing more difficult than to raigne and gouerne well Whereupon also acknowledging the waight of their charge they ought daily with Salomō to craue wisedome at the hands of God 1. King 3.9 to the end they
wherein euery one being a pray vnto Satan runneth and casteth himselfe headlong into death and euerlasting destruction But the end of the ministery tendeth to assemble from this dissipation the elect in Iesus Christ to make them pertakers of that saluation that is in him And this doth the other similitude of the building of the body of Christ confirme for as they which are seperate from Christ our life are in death so the meanes to reuiue and saue them resteth in this that we be builte and engraffed into the body of Christ that we may be saued in him and thereupon doth S. Luke say that by the preaching of the Apostles God did dayly adde to his Church such as should be saued In this sence also are Ministers called Fathers Acts 2.42 engendring children to God because he vouchsafeth so to vse their ministery 1. Cor. 4.15 that they who by nature are the children of the deuill doe become the children of God and heires of euerlasting saluation The principall end therfore of the holy ministery is to withdrawe men from death and destruction Cipri in his Ser. of fall and to make them partakers of saluation and life euerlasting And therfore as S. Ciprian saith The shepheard can receiue no greater hurt then in the hurte of his flocke and this doth S. Paul sufficiently shew in his owne person saying I feare least when I come 2. Cor. 12.20 I shall not finde you such as I would and least my God abase me among you and I shall bewaile many of them which haue sinned alreadye and haue not repented of the vncleannes and fornication and wantonnes which they haue committed 3 And indeede as they which shal be saued by their ministery shal be as S. Paul calleth them their crown Phil. 4.1 glorie ioy in the day of the Lord they that shal win most to righteousnes shal shine as the Starres for euer so contrariwise Dan. 13. 3. the bloud of such as shall perishe through their owne negligence shall be required at their handes as the Lord doth protest by the Prophet Ezechiell saying Sonne of man I haue established thee to be a scoute ouer the house of Israel thou shalt giue eare to the worde of my mouth Ezech. 3.17 and shalt warne them from me When I shall say to the wicked thou shalt surely dye and thou giuest not him warning neither dost admonish him to departe from his wicked way that he may liue the same wicked man shall dye in his iniquitie but his bloud will I require at thy handes Heb. 13.17 Prosper of Contemplatiue life li. 1. God also establisheth Pastors ouer his flocke as the Apostle saith vpon condition to be accomptable vnto him for them in the day of iudgement If he saith a good old father to whom the dispensation of the word is committed be afraide or ashamed to reproue offenders albeit for himselfe he lead a holy life yet shall hee perishe through his silence And so what shall it auaile him not to be punished for his owne sinne when he shal be punished f r the sinnes of others 4 Now to satisfie this end of the saluation of men by the ministery the first principall duty consisteth in preaching the worde of God Rom. 1.16 which S. Paul therfore calleth the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue and this is it that hee teacheth in the sentence before alleadged saying Take heed vnto thy selfe and vnto learning for in doing thus thou shalt saue both thy selfe and those that heare thee The same maye wee also note in the other sentence 1. Tim. 4. 16. where the Lord saith I haue ordained thee a light to the Gentiles that thou maist be a saluation to the ends of the earth Acts 13.47 And truely how are the ministers the light of men to saue them but by preaching Christ also if it be so that we be saued by faith that faith commeth by hearing the word of God likewise that we cannot heare without a preacher It followeth the duty of the minister is to preach so to saue Rom. 10. Marc. 16.15 In this sence doth Christ commaund his Apostles to goe preach throughout the world adding this that he that beleeueth shal be baptised shal be saued for this cause doth S. Peter commaund them to feede the flock of Christ cōmitted vnto thē 1. Pet. 5.2 And S. Paul so earnestly cōmendeth this duty to Timothy and in his person to al Ministers 2. Tim. 4.2 Preach the worde saith he be instant in season and out of season improue rebuke exhort with all long suffering and doctrine yea he adiureth him in the name of God and of our Lord Iesus Christ who shall iudge both the quick and the dead in his apparition and kingdome 2. Tim. 4.1 to employe himselfe in this duetie whereby he declareth that they cannot neglect this dutie but they must hainouslye offend God and feele the vengeance of the soueraigne Shepheard of the sheep whē he shal appeare in iudgement as S. Paul also saith Woe be to me if I preach not The same Apostle saith If any man desireth to be a Bishop 1. Cor. 9.6 1. Tim. 3.1 he desireth an excellent worke But all titles and professions be knowen by the workes proper vnto them as hee is knowen to be a tailor that cutteth out and soweth garmentes he a shoemaker that maketh shoes hee a phisition that imploieth himselfe in curing of sicknesses and so of others And so likewise is a Bishop a Pastor and a Minister knowne in that he preacheth and teacheth the word of God 5 Howbeit as the Phisition who ordeineth a potiō which in liew of health procureth death is not a Phisition but a murderer so is it with the Pastors that doe preach lyes in stead of trueth and the inuentions and traditions of men in stead of Gods word and therfore did Iesus Christ enioyne his Apostles to teache men to obserue all that he had commaunded them Mal. 28.20 and the same doth Ieremy note Ier. 1.6 saying The Lord stretched foorth his hand and touched my lips and said vnto me Beholde I haue put my words in thy mouth The same doth the Lord also teach to Ezechiel saying Sonne of man I haue made thee a watchman ouer the house of Israel Ezech. 3.17 and 33.7 Thou shalt hearken to the woorde of my mouth and shalt warne them from me This duety is very plainely and expresselye by the Lord commended vnto al Prophets and Ministers in that speaking to Moses he saith Deut. 18.18 I wil raise them vp a Prophet like vnto thee from among their brethren and I will put my woordes into his mouth and he shall saye vnto them all that I shall commaund him 1. Cor. 11.23 It is therefore their duety to propound nothing to the Church either in doctrine or for the seruice of God but what they haue
of the deuill Col. 1.15 neither by smiting the first borne of Egipt but by giuing himselfe euen the first borne of euery creature to death for vs. It were therfore a two-folde rebellion not to amend our liues and so to obey him who being as S. Paul saith the sauiour of all men 1. Tim. 4.10 as concerning the bodily life but especially of the faithful in respect of eternall saluation hath a two-folde right and authoritye to command vs. And the premises doth S. Augustine confirme by an excellent confession and praier that hee maketh to God saying I know Aug. in his Medita c. 39. O Lord that I owe to thee my self because thou hast created me yea more then my selfe because that being made man for me thou hast redeemed me euen so much the rather as thou 〈◊〉 greater then he for whom thou hast giuen thy selfe But in as much as I haue nothing more then my selfe also that I cannot giue to thee that which I haue without thy selfe take me and draw me vnto thee that I may be thine in following and louing thee as I am thine in being created and redeemed by thee 4 Moreouer in tha● in our beleefe we doe confesse that we doe beleeue in Iesus Christ our Lord wee doe also by that tytle acknowledge in him a two-folde authoritie to commaund vs and consequently in our selues a twofolde obligation to obey him For as beeing both God and man in respect of his diuinitie hee is Lord ouer all creatures so hauing redeemed vs by his death hee is our Lord and wee that doo beleeue in him are his peculyar people and seruantes And therefore it were a double disobedience in vs if we as his creatures shoulde not obey the Lorde of all and as his peculyar people and proper purchase bee wholy subiect to him that is more particularly Lorde ouer vs. Iesus Christ is also called King of Kings and consequently king of the whole world yet is hee also particularly king ouer his Church And in deed 1. Tim. 6.15 Psalm 2 as wee reade that the yron scepter is giuen to him to raigne and rule ouer all nations and kingdomes of the earth so is hee particularly established king ouer 〈…〉 heere a twofolde authoritie in Christ which doth doubly binde vs to amend by obeying of him who beeing Lord of the whole world is particularly and more excellently king ouer the Burgeses of Sion and the members of his Church 5 All th●se names and titles Iehoua Creator Redeemer Sauiour Lord and king attributed to him that commaundeth to amend being well considered as is afore shewed doth teach vs what authoritie hee hath to commaund vs and how deeplie wee are bounde to obey him as his creatures children subiectes and seruantes and wholy to consecrate vnto him all whatsoeuer wee are haue knowe or can doo in his seruice wythout whome we neyther haue neyther are neyther doo or knowe anie thing Let vs therefore acknowledge that wee are not in our owne power to liue at our owne pleasures but doo appertaine vnto Iesus Christ and must practise the same which the Apostle Saint Paul sayth of himselfe I liue yet not I but Iesus Christ liueth in mee Galat. 2 20 1. Cor. 6.19 Let vs remember what the same Apostle sayth You are not your owne for yee are bought with a price therfore glorifie God in your bodies and in your spirites for they are Gods We are therefore bound as our sauiour Iesus Christ admoniseth vs to denie our selues that is to saie our owne sense and wisedome and to followe his also our owne will Math 16.24 Luke 9.23 Rom. 12.2 that wee may will that which hee willeth And heereto also doeth Saint Paul exhort vs saying Bee ye changed by the renuing of your minde that ye may proue what is the good wil of God and acceptable and perfect 6 There bee two sorts of seruants and bondmen the one borne at their masters houses the others purchased by their masters Neither of these may liue after his owne will sense or vnderstanding but as it shall please theyr master and Lord. Now are we borne the seruants of Christ for he created vs all and besides he hath also redeemed and purchased vs that wee may belong more particularly to him As the master therefore of those seruantes that are borne in his house or whome he purchaseth doo pretend that they doo him wrong when they spend anie time either to theyr owne particular profite or in the seruice of others so maye Iesus Christ and much more iustly complaine of vs that are his two folde seruants namely by birth and by purchase if wee imploy euen neuer so lyttle of our liues to serue and please our selues the world or the deuill our enemies and this must needes redounde to a double sacriledge and twofolde prophanation of that which by double reason ought to bee dedicated and consecrated to him who with double authoritie doth command vs to amend The second cause of Amendement drawen from the name Holy attributed to Iesus Christ wherein is handled Election Reprobation and Gods prouidence Chap. 2. THE Prophet Esaie rehearseth that hee sawe the Lord sitting vpon his throane Isay 6.3 and the Seraphims aboue him crying one to another Holy holy is the Lord of hoasts Heere dyd they speake of Iesus Christ Iohn 12.41 as Saint Iohn in his Gospell doth affirme who also reporting another vision which himselfe sawe sayeth There were foure beasts which cryed night and daie wythout ceasing Holy holy holy is the Lord God almightie Apoc. 4.8 This title Holy thus thrice repeated among other thinges doth teach vs that he is souerainly good righteous merciful wise mightie and true euen so excellently and perfectly that in these and other lyke diuine properties he is most holy and in them holdeth nothing in common wyth other creatures And in deed if in man there bee anie goodnesse righteousnesse wisedome or truth hee hath them not of himselfe but from God Neither hath hee thereof anie more but small droppes or sparkes and the same are but graces happened and accidents or qualities as they saie in schooles so that euen without them hee is neuerthelesse a man But as concerning God hee hath all these properties of himselfe they bee in him perfect and infinite yea they are in such sorte his essence that to denie his righteousnesse wisedome power mercie and goodnesse is to denie God Marke therefore how rightly he is called Holy holy holy 2 It is no maruel that this and all that proceedeth herefro doth passe mans vnderstanding for it exceedeth euen the capacitie of the Angels And this doth Esaie in this vision testifie saying The Seraphims couered their faces with two wings Esay 6. ● as not able to abide the brightnesse of this holynesse But the more incomprehensible that it is the more doth it admonish vs diuersely and in many sortes to amend And indeed among the most dangerous pernitious
this when he beheld the glorie of Iesus Christ 15 According to the purpose of the premises we saie that whereas God hath chosen some euen whome hee woulde and not other some and in all that God in his prouidence hath ordained done for the execution thereof there resteth such wisedome goodnesse mercie and iustice that for the approuing of that which in the wisdome of mans flesh seemeth strange vniust it sufficeth to shew that the same was so ordained and decreed in the eternall and determinate counsel of God And indeed if anie man ask why the gospell is preached rather to some than to other some also why among those to whom it is preached some doo beleeue some do rest vnbeleeuers it is reason sufficient to aunswere that some are chosen and other some are not So many saieth Saint Luke did beleeue as were ordained to life euerlasting You beleeue not saieth Iesus Christ because yee are not my sheep Acts 13.42 Iohn 10.26 My sheep heare my voyce and follow mee When the Apostles asked Iesus Christ why he taught the people by parables wherein they had no vnderstanding which afterward hee opened to them alone hee lifted them vp into this consideration that they were chosen and the other not To you sayth he it is giuen to know the secrets of the kingdome of heauen Marke 13.10 but it is not giuen to them And therefore when we reade that some euen in lieu of conuerting and beleeuing haue bin hardned and become more wicked whereby the preaching of the Gospell hath bin vnto them a sauour of death vnto death It sufficeth that we aunswere that this befalleth not the elect but as Saint Paule saith 2. Cor. 2.15 those that perish and are vessels of wrath prepared to perdition And therfore the preaching of the Gospell whereby some are hardned is neuerthelesse of a sweet sauour before God as hee doeth expresly affirme 16 Let vs therefore conclude that all that God hath willed in the election of some and not of other some and in his prouidence and the execution of the same is good righteous holy and commendable And albeit we cannot comprehend it yet let vs beware that of our ignorance we take no occasion to blaspheme God but rather let vs acknowledge that it is because we doo not yet know anie thing of the incomprehensible holynes of Iesus Christ namely that he hath an infinite power to dispose of his creatures as hee will an incomprehensible wisedome to ordeine most wisely mercie and iustice which in him are but one essence wherby he can do nothing but in mercy iustice This if thou doest not vnderstand I saie to thee againe accuse thine owne ignoraunce and reuerence this holynesse which passeth thy vnderstanding Beleeue so much as in his word he testifieth vnto thee and permit this infinit power and wisedome to doo and to know euen that which thou canst not comprehend Remember that he dwelleth in an vnaccessible light which thou must reuerence but not enter into Beware thou beest not an aduocate for so wicked a cause 1. Tim 6 16 Rom. 3.4 Psalm 51 6 as is the cause of the reprobate to iustifie it in the sight of God For howsoeuer thou thinkest it to be he will alwaies as Dauid saith ouercome when he is iudged 17 In the meane time for the better vnderstanding of our intent knowledg in this doctrine we saie that if we stād vpon the consideration of mans creation to the image of God both hee and all that are descended of him were created to life for in man created to the image of God there was no matter or argument of death But if wee speake of the predestination hidden in the eternall counsell of God the same is a profound deapth that should euen rauish vs into admiration And whereas Saint Paule calleth those that are not elect vessels of wrath prepared to destruction he hath regard to theyr first original and nature of men Rom. 9. 22 Heb. 7.10 Rom. 5.12 according as all beeing yet in the loines of Adam when he transgressed Gods commandement dyd all sinne in him and are all guiltie of death and infected with mortall corruption Not that there was not in God a former counsell which went before wherby he had decreed and disposed of his creatures vpon certaine causes to vs vnknowen but for that from the transgression of Adam proceeded the curse and death of mankinde Saint Paule sayth that God prepared vessels of mercie for his glorie because that all that the elect haue to guide them to life euerlasting proceedeth of the grace of God Rom. 9.13 but others are prepared to perdition because they are giuen ouer to themselues so that following their owne corruptions they go according to the eternall decree of God to destruction And heereof do we gather that albeit God had iust cause to vs vnknowen thus to dispose of his creatures by choosing some and reiecting other some yet did hee not hate or condemne anie thing but sinne and corruption It is not therefore fit that wee should seeke the cause of the destruction of the reprobate in heauen when wee see that it resteth in earth neither that we should impute that vnto God which is in man himselfe neither should the reprobate also murmure at the mercie of God poured vppon the elect considering that God may doo good to whom he wil either at their owne destruction whereof there resteth a twofold occasion in thēselues namely original sin the iniquities that do therof daily proceed 18 Moreouer as concerning the transgression of Adam Eue 1. Sam. 2.6 Amos 3.6 Iere. La. 3.38 Iob. 30.39 Psalme 104. 105. 106 107. 136 Math. 10.29 it is certaine that the same neuer came to passe without the decree and ordinance of God And in deed the holy Scripture in infinite places doth testifie that all things depend vpon his prouidence decree If a sparow falleth not to the ground without the will of God shall man so excellent a creature created after the image of God take so horrible a fall without his prouidence and decree A man may giue a little child some small stripe with a rod without the parents appointment which notwithstanding they would peraduenture dissemble and winke at but none dare vndertake to cut him of the stone or to cut off any lim without his fathers good will and authority Euen so the greater that the importance of Adams transgression was in that it tended to destroie ouerthrow so excellent a work of God namely man created to his image the more are we to beleeue that it was neuer doone without his counsell or decree Moreouer if in his prouidence hee hath ordained what he will haue done with all other creatures hath he not think you ordained what shall be done with the principall and most excellent for which he created all the others Again if God creating all the world
absurditye forged in their own brains they may cauil and reiect this doctrine of predestination and consequently deny the worde of God let them rather acknowledge their ignorance and confesse that they ought to beleeue and doe that which God saith albeit they cannot comprehend the reason therof and not complaine in their false conceits and so reiect the euident testimonies of the holy scripture Secondly in as much as God who knoweth both the elect and the reprobate commaundeth all to amend 2. Tim. 2.19 Iohn 13.8 with what conscience can they which know not whether they be of the number of the reprobates think to exempt themselues from their due obedience or alleadge that it were in vaine in case they were reprobates for they cannot deny but that all men are bound to obey God vnder paine of damnation euen albeit they could not comprehend whereto this obedience should serue yea or that of their obedience they should not looke to reape any benefite or profit 2 Thirdly such as God hath forsaken and so are reprobates can neuer amend and therefore it is a false presupposion to say that it were in vaine for them to amend in case they should be of the number of the reprobate considering that it cannot be that the reprobate should amend as if a man should say seeing that hee that sinneth against the holy Ghost shall neuer obtaine remission of his sinne it is in vaine for him to amend this speech presupposeth false namely that he can amend so likewise that it is in vaine for a reprobate to amend is a false imagination because no reprobate can amend Againe the same which those men doe confesse must be done for the bodily life Mat. 12.31 because they know not how God hath ordained therof doth condemne them in that which they alledge concerning the soule for not knowing how God hath ordeined of their bodily life or death they can confesse that they must eate and drinke to preserue life and neuer alleadge that it is in vaine in case God hath decreed that they should dye the next day In matter therefore of the soule they are likewise to confesse that they ought to amend and neuer to alledge that it is in vaine in case their place be among the reprobate otherwise that which they eat and drinke for the preseruing of their transitory liues wil beare witnesse against them that the allegation of this ab●urditye by themselues forged doth in matter of the soule proceede either of grosse ignorance or of malice and peeuishnesse 3 Moreouer as the effect of Predestination sheweth it selfe either by the obedience or disobedience to Gods worde so they which say that if they be not of the number of the elect it is in vaine for them to amend doe teach men to take the marke and way of the reprobate which is not to amend rather should the horrible punishment of the reprobate induce them to amend in hope that by amendment they may grow into the number of the eiect Marc. 1.15 To conclude where God preaching his Gospell declareth that it is his will that thou shouldest beleeue amend and be saued Mat. 4.17 Why dost thou reiect his reuealed wil vnder a pretence that thou wottest not what hee hath determined of thee in his secret counsaile Why dost thou not rather giue credit to his protestation Ezech. 33.11 who saith I will not the death of a sinner but rather that he should conuert and liue Conuert therfore and liue and forsaking that wicked suggestion of the deuill who saieth Peraduenture it is in vaine for thee to conuert for if thou beest none of the elect thou shalt not liue doe God that honor to beleeue that hee is true and the deuill a lyer for in that doubte whether thou beest elect or no know thou that conuersion and amendment is a token fruit of thy election and contrariwise obstinacie and proceeding in wickednes is a manifest signe of reprobation 4 Let vs now come to the other proposition If we be elect say they we cannot perish and therefore need not to amend First this is the speeche of a hyreling who properly feareth not to offend God but to be punished by God for that he would not amend but for feare of damnation Secondly in as much as by the amendement of our liues God is greatly glorified and our neighbours edified Confesse that either thou makest no accompt of the glory of God or the saluation of thy neighbours or else that thy speeche is peruerse when thou saiest Being elected I cannot perish and therfore neede not to amend for albeit amendment should stand thee in no stead yet is it requisite and meet that thou shouldst amend were it but to glorifie God Mat. 22.37 and to helpe to the saluation of thy neighbour and heereto art thou bound because God commaundeth thee to loue him with all thy hart and thy neighbour as thy selfe Thirdly thou dost plainely beat downe this purpose of election which S. Paul doth propound Eph. 1.4 when he saith God hath elected vs that we might be holy and vnreproueable As if a Souldier saith I am enrowled and therefore I need not to fight wil not euery man say that he doth but mocke for hee is not enrowled for any other end euen so doe wee mocke with God if we say that being elected we need not to liue vertuously considering that contrariwise we are elected onely to this end to be holy 5 Again election to saluation doth not abolish but establish the second causes and the meanes by God ordeined for the attayning therto And indeed God for the sauing of his elect hath ordained that they should beleeue in Iesus Christ that to procure beleefe they should heare the Gospell that they should pray to God to giue them his holy spirite that they should amend and walke in his feare and that they should be exhorted to these duties God I say hath in his wisedome ordeined all these meanes whereby to bring his elect to eternall saluation What rashenesse is it therfore in man to vpholde that the elect neede not beleeue in Iesus Christ heare the holy Gospell or amende their liues To be shorte that they neede not the meanes ordeyned by God for the bringing of them vnto life euerlasting Is not this to seeke to be wiser then God to striue against his wisedome to reuerse his will and to abolish the meanes whereby hee hath ordeined to bring the elect to saluation When therefore to the end to bring the doctrine of predestination into hatred thou saiest that thereof it doth necessarily followe that the elect need not to heare the Gospell to beleeue in Iesus Christ to amend their liues to praye to God or to be exhorted to these duties thou seest that it is all false and that contrariwise God will saue his electe by these meanes which in his wisedome hee hath ordeyned Necessarilye therefore the elect must be saued yet by
them Num. 23. The mightie God hath not cursed them or how shall I detest them The Lord hath not detested them Againe The mighty God cannot lie neither is he as the sonne of man to repent He hath spoken and shal he not performe he hath sayde and shall hee not confirme it Beholde I haue receiued his worde to ble●se and seeing hee hath blessed them I may not reuoke it This is the foundation of this safegard and protection He perceiued no iniquitie in Iacob neither did hee see any frowardnes in Israel the Lord his ●●des with him and the Kings triumph in him To conclude of the peo●●e of God he saith He that blesseth thee shal be blessed and he that curs●th thee shal be cursed This assurance haue they that seeke to amend their liues vnder the protection of this strong and mighty God 11 And indeed albeit when we walke in simplicity plainnes and truth and so labour to amend our liues if the whole world should life against vs to molest and destroy vs yet hath this strong and mighty God euen whole armies of Angels to keepe vs as in olde time he had for Elizeus he hath Seas to swallow vp the Pharaohs of our time 2. King 6.3 Dan. 6. and all that persecute the children of God If we be constant in the seruice of God he is yet able to stoppe the throat and to tye vp the pawes of the hungry Lyons that we shall not be rent or deuoured as in olde time hee preserued Daniel that was cast into the Lyons denne If in purpose to amend we will not fall downe before idols albeit men take vpon them to burne vs quick yet let vs say with the three Hebrew Princes Our God is able to deliuer vs and with them protest that we will worship no Idols and remember that God is able to deliuer vs out of the siery furnace yea euen to preserue euery haire of our heads from burning Dan. 3. as he preserued those three Hebrew Princes To be short that all creatures are euen so many mighty armies at the commaundement of the creator ready to be imployed to our good and saluation either to preserue vs from the assaults of our enemies so long as we perseuere in well doing either to chastice vs and so to bring vs to amendment either to punish the disobedient and obstinate Let vs therfore apprehend this soueraigne power of this mighty God Iesus Christ that fearing to offend him and so amending our liues we need not to feare the endeuors of our enemies let vs vndoubtedly beleeue that as he is almighty and hath so many and such strong armyes at his commaundement so hee hath power to preserue those that shall amend their liues and to destroye and roote out all such as shall rebell against him or seeke to hurt his faithfull and obedient subiects and seruants Luke 2 14. Iohn 14.27 Eph. 2.17 12 Iesus Christ is also called the Prince of peace to represent vnto vs that it is he that is the author giuer therof This is witnessed in that at his birth euen millions of Angels sung this song Glory be to God on high and in earth peace as also himselfe saide to his Apostles I giue you my peace and the same did he cause them to publish throughout the worlde in his name As also S. Paule saith that at his comming he preached the gospel of peace to all that were neer hand or a farre off this peace may be considered in two sortes First it signifieth peace and tranquility of conscience whereof S. Paul speaketh saying that being iustified by faith we haue peace toward God through Iesus Christ Secondly this peace contayneth all blessinges both of body and soule And as this Prince of peace who commaundeth vs to amend is author both of the one and the other peace so this title Prince of peace giuen to Iesus Christ should be vnto vs a mighty argument and a quick spurre to moue vs to amendment of life Lastly being by nature the children of wrath and al our affections Gods enemies Eph. 2. 3. Rom. 8.7 and euen so many souldiers in the deuils pay to fight against God and to incense him against vs this Prince of peace Iesus Christ vouchsafed to dye for vs to the end to make satisfaction for all our sinnes and so to appease Gods wrath and to take away the cause of this so mortall and wofull warre betweene him and vs. Rom. 5.1 Phil. 4.7 13 This is the groundworke of this so blessed a peace which the children of God doe enioy for being iustified by faith in Iesus Christ we haue rest and peace of conscience as knowing that God is our father that he aduoweth vs to be his children and loueth vs in his welbeloued sonne And this peace passeth all vnderstanding as S. Paul saith because there is nothing so cōtrary to the sence of man as in our selues to feele this grace that being sinners worthy Gods wrath we should neuerthelesse be assured that we are righteous and welbeloued of God whereby to hope well in the middest of dispaire to see great riches of heauenly and eternall goods in the gulfe of our pouertie and in this our weaknes and infirmitie euen indignity wherewith we are possessed to be at quiet and in full assurance against the deuill death sinne hell and all other our enemies Now to shew that this peace is mightie and of force to make vs to amend our liues he addeth that it will keepe our sences and thoughtes in Iesus Christ togither with all our affections and desires signified by the hart but from what euen from diuerting from God and from the obedience and duetye that we owe vnto him for finely if wee coulde feele what a comfort peace and consolation there is in this peace of our soules before God we would be loath to loose such a soueraigne felicitye by displeasing him and so in liewe of this peace to bring vpon our consciences trouble terrour and feare through the apprehension and feeling of Gods wrath 14 And indeed there is no such hell or anguish in this life as a bad conscience it is a cruel and intollerable tormentor if we haue a childe that by crying is grieuous vnto vs we seek to appease him either by threats or promises by gifts or stripes but if he will not be so stilled either we can send him away from vs or our selues goe from him that we may not be troubled with his crying it is not so with a troubled minde deuoide of this blessed peace The conscience once feeling or apprehending the wrath of God euen but a little will neuer suffer vs to be quiet promise threaten giue strike what euer you doe still it cryeth lowder and lowder and stil it tormenteth yea when you seeke to send it away it sticketh closer vnto you neither can you departe from it for being in you it is alwaies at hand How diligently therefore
ought we to amend our liues that so we may retaine in vs this treasure of peace whereof Dauid speaketh Psal 16.11 saying Thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy and at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore Againe By lifting vp the light of thy countenance vpon me Psal 4.7 thou hast giuen me more ioy of hart thē they had when their wine and their wheat did abound And in this sence did S. Paul say that the kingdome of God consisteth in this peace that proceedeth of the righteousnesse of faith and begetteth in vs ioy thorow the holy ghost the miserable estate of those who by offending God doe depriue themselues of this peace ought to make vs to resolue constantly in the feare of God and the rather because this peace cost so deare vnto the prince of peace who purchased it Rom. 14.17 not with golde or siluer or any other worldlye precyous thing but by the shedding of his precious bloud euen by suffering trouble feare terrour and incomprehensible astonishment which our selues haue deserued and dayly doe deserue to the end to deliuer vs from the same and to giue vnto vs that blessed peace and quietnesse May it then possibly come to passe that we meditating vpon such a price of this peace should suffer our selues to be drawen to sinne and to offend God and thereby to loose so excellent a treasure purchased so dearely Truely so shall we seeme to thinke Iesus Christ to bee a verye inconsiderate and vnaduised marchant that would giue so excellent and incomparable a price for a benefite whereof we make so small accompt and which we are so ready to leaue by offending God wherby we may please the world and the flesh our enemies 15 Moreouer Iesus Christ being the Prince of peace is the author of all blessinges both spirituall and carnall assured vnto those that obeying his commaundement doe amend their liues 1. Tim. 4.8 Godlynesse saith Saint Paul hath a promise both of this life and of the life to come As contrarywise they whose heartes cannot repent and amende doe heape togither the treasures of Gods wrath the fountayne of all wretchednesse And indeede Rom. 2. Leuit. 26. how many notable promises euen in respect of this present life doth the Lord make vnto those that walke in the feare and obedience of his commaundementes and contrariwise how many horrible and terrible threates doth hee vse against such as will not amend Deut. 28. hauing threatned the wicked disobedient with great wounds hee many tymes saith that if by the firste they will not amende but remaine hardned he will enforce them seauen times more according vnto the multitude of their sinnes Leuit. 26. and shall he not doe it iustly for seeing that by offending this Prince of peace and author of all blessinges wee prouoke him to wrath what can wee attend but in stead of his blessinges a whole burden of curses If a maister hath promised his man great goods in case he serue him in all reuerence obedience and fidelitye can hee hope for those goods at his maisters hand if forgetting and contemning this duetye hee applye himselfe to wrong him and doe him iniurye 16 Wee read that Hanun King of the Amonites when hee had iniuried and prouoked Dauid by wronging his seruantes 2. Sam. 10. whom hee sent to comforte him vpon the death of his father looked for warre and prepared to wage Souldiers and according to his expectation Dauid came vpon him and destroyed him What then are we to looke for when wee offend this Prince of peace and doe euen leauye warre against him by such thoughts willes woordes and woorkes as proceede from our fleshe what I say are we to expect either in liewe of peace prosperitye and blessings to haue such a warre as will redound to our eternall destruction and confusion Contrariwise if wee endeuour according to his commaundment to amend let vs be assured that hee will blesse vs who is the fountayne and author of all blessing for as there is no creature that can debarre the sunne from shining and the cloudes from dropping at the creators will so is there no creature that can diuert the blessing whereof this Prince of peace is author so long as by amendment of life wee doe cleaue vnto him And indeed the holy Apostle S. Paul saluting the Churches that hee writeth vnto doth vsually pray vnto God to multiplye his grace and peace vpon them through Iesus Christ by this conioyning of grace and peace shewing that it is in vaine to looke for peace and prosperitye at the hands of Iesus Christ vnlesse we also haue his grace but hauing his fauour and grace which resteth vppon such as amend their liues we cannot doubt but he will poure forth his blessinges vpon vs 17 We are also to thinke that this Prince of peace dying for vs hath with himselfe crucified our olde man that is to say the corruptions and vices of our soules to the end our thoughtes and affections which naturally are enemies vnto God should no longer war against him but remaining dead in his death our selues might serue God in hart minde walking in newnes of life and so amēding our liues according to his commaundement What madnesse and ingratitude is it in vs to suffer this bodye to reuiue in sin that againe we may leauy warre against this Prince of peace and prouoke him to wrath against vs doe we not hereby not onely voluntarily depriue our selues of all the blessings whereof this Prince of peace is the fountaine and author but also purchase vnto vs his curses by prouoking his wrath indignatiō against vs let therfore this title of Prince of peace binde and enforce vs to harty amēdment to the end that retaining this peace and quiet of conscience in the sight of God which is an inestimable treasure we may also keep this spring of all blessinges alwaies open vnto vs that so we may be blessed in this life but especially in the life to come 18 Lastly let vs acknowledge and apprehend these two titles wonderfull and Father of eternitye that so we may assure our selues First that in his wisedome power and goodnesse hee will so surmount whatsoeuer wisedome force or blessing that man can comprehend that hee will alwaies shewe himselfe as the Prophet Esay sayth Esay 28.29 Wonderfull in counsell and magnificent in woorkes And this is to teach vs truely to sanctifie his name and to assure vs as the Apostle Saint Paul saith Eph. 3.10 that hee is able more aboundantlye to poure his giftes vpon vs then wee can aske or thinke also to make vs to hope in him beyond all hope as knowing that if it were requisite to alter the course of nature and to worke miracles for our preseruation against our enemyes and to make vs to feele the fruites of his promises he would shewe himselfe wonderfull to his glory and to our comfort and saluation And
heereof wee haue examples and assured pledges in his deliuery of his people Exod. 14. whom he led dry foote through the sea Dan. 3. Dan. 6. in the three Hebrew Princes in the burning furnace and in Daniel in the Lyons denne 19 Finally he is called the Father of eternity thereby to teach vs that it is he that poureth forth his blessings vpon vs all the dayes of our liues and will continue vnto vs the fruition of the same with wonderfull encrease eternally and infinitely in his kingdome and glory and hereof to assure vs Mat. 28.20 1. Thes 4.16 he hath promised to be with vs euen vnto the end of the worlde And S. Paul saith that he will then lift vs vp into heauen into the house of God his father there to abide with Iesus Christ the immortall King 2. Tim. 1.10 who through his Gospel hath brought vs to light life and immortalitie This eternitye of ioy and glory should binde vs greatly to loue Iesus Christ to obey him and to put our whole confidence in him considering that it is he by whom we are by whome we shall continue to be and be for euer blessed Let therefore these tytles wonderfull Counsailor strong and mighty God Prince of peace Father of eternity be alwaies in our sight and in our mindes to the end that as Iesus Christ to whome they be giuen doth commaund vs to amend so we diligently amēding our liues may finally by a happy path replenished with all blessings proceeding from the wisedome power and goodnes of Iesus Christ attaine to the fruition of the wonderfull and perpetually perdurable felicity which this wonderfull and father of eternity shall giue vs to enioy continually and without end The sixt cause of amendment deriued of these two names Iesus Christ. Chap. 6. THe angel of God being sent vnto Ioseph when the virgine was conceiued Mat. 1.21 declared vnto him that she should bring forth a sonne and commaunded him to name him Iesus and for a reason of this name added That he should saue his people from their sinnes according whereto as also to shew that he is our Sauiour the angel that declared his natiuitie to the Shepheards said vnto them Luke 2.11 This day is borne the Sauiour which is Christ As therefore it is this Christ that commandeth vs to amend so the consideration of these two names may stand vs in great stead to moue vs to yeeld vnto him al obedience and so to amend our liues First this name Iesus signifying a Sauiour admonisheth vs that by nature we are lost and that there is no other saluation for vs but in him onely as it is written Act. 4.12 that There is no other name vnder heauen giuen vnto man whereby we must be saued This onely tytle therefore of Sauiour doth already binde vs to acknowledge that we are not our owne but his that hath saued vs from euerlasting destruction and that in that consideration we are bound to deny our selues that we may liue 1. Cor. 19. not to our selues neither after our discretion and will but according to the good pleasure of our Sauiour so that not liuing to our selues but he liuing in vs we may amend our liues 2 But let vs moreouer consider what manner of destruction this is wherefro he hath saued vs it is from the fire of hell from the curse and wrath of God from darkenesse from the woorme that will euer be gnawing and from the sorrowes that engender eternall weeping and gnashing of teeth this is a merueilous enforcement of our duetye to amend And indeede if thou fallest into a deep riuer in apparant danger of drowning if any man should cast thee a rope or himselfe leap into the water to saue thy life thou canst not sufficientlye confesse and acknowledge thy selfe his debtor to doe him pleasure and seruice all the dayes of thy life But we were not onely in danger of falling into hell but were already fallen euen from our infancy and dayly through our sinnes fell deeper and deeper yet Christ cast vs not in a rope to pull vs vp and saue vs but threw himselfe into our sea of woe into our hel to be shorte into horrible death wherein wee were drowned to plucke vs foorth with what affection then ought we to say vnto him Lord we are more then bound to loue honor serue please and obey thee in all that we may with our whole hearts all the dayes of our life Ionas being in the bottome of the sea in the Whales bellie protested that being deliuered hee would sacrifice to the Lord a Song of thankesgiuing Ionas 2.10 that hee would paye vnto him his vowes namely besides his prayses that he would no more disobey God but readyly and willingly would obeye him as in effect he well shewed when being againe commaunded to go to Niniuie he went boldely and spake freelye in the name of God Now if we could feele according as we ought that our sinnes doe dayly cast vs into the bottome not of the sea but of hell and that by them not a fish but the deuill doth swallow vs vp what protestations would we make to Iesus Christ to holde our liues and saluations of him in case he would vouchsafe to plucke vs out of this pit and gulfe of death how feruently would we vow to praise him and to renounce all rebellion and disobedience and to amend our liues Being therefore by such a Sauiour drawen out of such a gulf of death are we not bound to perfourme such vowes and by amendment of life to correct our passed disobedience with Ionas and to become ready and willing to doe whatsoeuer he shall commaund vs If thou beest vpon a scaffold ready to bee beheaded for thy drunkennesse or adulterye and thereupon hast a pardon and thy life saued vpon condition thou fallest no more thereinto how hartily wilt thou promise with thy hand subscribe and with thy tung swear that thou wilt neuer more cōmit adultery or drunkennes that thou wilt abhorre all tauerns and drunkards all whores and bauds and to be short amend thy life Now Iesus Christ hath saued thee not from an apparant danger of death but euen from death it self and not from the death of body but from euerlasting death And what doth he require of thee he cōmandeth thee to amend thy life art thou not bound so to do shuldst thou not feele thy hart euen open to promise and sweare to amend and to shun al occasions that might procure thee to displease and offend him 3. How often doth the Lord represent to his people of Israel their deliuery out of Egipt thereby to make them to vnderstand how much they are bound to loue him and to keep his commaundements as a preface at the publishing of his law hee maketh this protestation I am the Lord thy God that hath brought thee out of the land of Egipt out of the house of bondage And in another
righteousnes What else haue wee therefore to doo but still to haue this name Iesus whereby wee bee aduertised that hee hath saued vs from our sinnes and consequently from eternall death before the eies of our vnderstanding that wee remembring that he hath withdrawen vs out of hell from eternall fire darknesse weeping and gnashing of teeth maye in heart bee feruently inflamed in his loue And that the remembrance that he hath paide so many deadly debts to discharge vs maye more and more inforce his loue Finally let the representation of the death of our olde man crucified with this Sauiour make vs so to abhorre sinne and corruption that we suffer it not to liue in vs to our owne death Thus shall the name Iesus beget in vs a feruent desire to loue him to please him and to obey his commaundement wherein hee willeth vs to amend our liues Acts 10.38 Luke 4.18 Esay 61.1 Iohn 1.16 1. Ioh. 2.27 8 Now let vs come to the title Christ. This name in Greeke as also the name Messias in Hebrue doeth signifie as much as if wee should saie Annointed And by this annointing is meant the fulnesse of the holie Ghost which he hath receiued as Saint Luke noteth and himselfe doth acknowledge where hee applieth to himselfe this saying of Esaie The spirite of the Lorde God is vpon mee for he hath annointed me He was fulfilled to the end wee might be partakers of his fulnesse as Saint Iohn saith who also speaketh of the holy Ghost saying The annointing that you haue receiued from him abideth in you 1. Cor. 3.16 and you need not to bee taught but as the same annointing teacheth you all thinges and it is true and is not lying and as it taught you yee shall abide in him Saint Paul calling vs the temples of God addeth this reason Rom. 8 9. that the holie Ghost dwelleth in vs. This name Christian deriued from Christ and proper to his disciples confirmeth the same For likewise as the same Apostle sayth They that haue not the spirite of Christ are not his But as there is no true or naturall fyre but yeeldeth heate or light so the holye Ghost cannot bee in vs wythout the feeling and shewing forth of effectes beseeming his holynesse And therefore this name Christ aduertising vs that wee are partakers of the annointing of his holy spirite should be vnto vs a mightie and liuely argument to amend our liues And this shall wee the better vnderstand by considering the names attributed to this spirite to represent vnto vs the effectes of the same 1. Pet. 5.2 First hee is called Holy because that of himselfe and in him selfe being holy euen in al perfection it is he that sanctifieth vs by separating vs from the common degree of other the children of Adam to the end we may be dedicated and consecrated to God Whereupon Saint Peter sayth that wee are elect through the prouidence of God in the sanctification of the spirite to obey and be sprinkled with the bloud of Iesus Christ And that as being made the children of God through faith we must be wholy renued Saint Paul teacheth vs that this commeth of the holy Ghost He sayth he that hath raised Iesus Christ from the dead Rom. 8.11 1. Cor. 15.45 shall quicken your mortall bodies with his spirit dwelling in you In this sense is he named the second Adam that proceeded from heauen in a quickning spirite For the Apostle compareth the spirituall life that Christ by his spirit imparteth to the beleeuers with the sensual life that men receiue from the first Adam And therefore we do in vaine boast of Christianitie and the spirit of Christ so long as we are not so renued as to haue nothing in common with the vnbeleeuers that dwell vnder the tirannie of the vncleane spirit which infecteth with all corruptions defilings all those that haue not the spirit of Christ 9 Particularly he is named the earnest pennie of our inheritance As when a man doth purchase an inheritance hee first giueth earnest that is some part of the monie promised Ephe. 1.14 that serueth as a beginning to the paiment of the total summe so God hauing redeemed vs by the bloud of Iesus Christ giueth the earnest penie of his holy spirit that is to saie a beginning of knowledge of the true God of sanctification of loue to God of righteousnes and of peace ioy in the holy spirit attending vntill he finish in vs the communication of that light ioy holynes and glory that we shal haue perfectly in heauen Whereby it appeareth that wee wrongfully boast our selues to be christiās annointed with the spirit of Christ so long as we be not indued at the least with some beginning of this heauenly light sanctification loue of God spiritual peace and ioy which are the earnest of the spirit do not indeuor daily to increse in these spirituall giftes and graces He is also called Water Esay 55.1 44.3 for of the holy Ghost doth Esaie speake saying Come vnto the waters all yee that thirst Againe I will poure my spirite vppon the thirstie and my riuers vpon the drie Then to expound the same he sayth I will poure forth my spirite vpon thy seede Heereby doth hee shewe vs that as raine with the moisture thereof fatteth the earth to make it fruitfull so doth the holy spirite with his inuisible grace make vs fruitfull to produce the fruites of righteousnes as Iesus Christ also declareth saying He that beleeueth in me Iohn 7.38 out of his belly shall flowe riuers of the water of life This saith S. Iohn he spake of the spirit that all they should receiue that beleeued in him As therefore if hearbs watered do stil continue drie we iustly saie they are dead so can we not aduow our selues to be Christians watered with the spirit of Christ so long as in sted of bearing fruit by amendement of life and giuing our selues to good workes we continue drie and withered 10 Sometimes hee is also called Water to signifie his power to purge and cleanse our filth and corruption as Ezechiel sayth I will poure vpon you cleane waters and yee shall bee cleansed Ezech. 36. 25 I will cleanse you from all your filthines and from your Gods of doung And will giue vnto you a new heart and will put into you a new spirite and I will take your stonie heart out of your flesh and will giue you a heart of flesh and I will put my spirit into you and cause you to walke in my statutes and to keepe my ordinances and you shall doo them But if we in lieu of amending our liues do abide in our filthinesse and corruption with stonie heartes and keepe not the ordinances of the Lord it is in vaine for vs to intitle our selues Christians watered with the holye waters of his spirit And because that by watering vs with the liquors of his graces hee maketh vs strong
whereof the one doth signifie Be ye better aduised or learne to know your ignorance or fault and the other as much as if wee should saie Returne and conuert By the first the holy Ghost teacheth that it is a great folly to offend God considering that God exhorting vs to amend commandeth vs to be wise and aduised And the other confirmeth it to be in truth a great folly For when God saith Conuert returne to me namely by amendement he giueth vs to vnderstand that by transgressing his law we go to the deuill by amending we turne backe and go from the deuill to the liuing God And in deed if anie man list to demand what waie the idolaters fornicators whoremongers dronkardes couetous persons dreamers blasphemers and to bee short all they that giue themselues to the world and to the lusts of the flesh doo take the aunswere is certaine and readie euen they that take the waie that leadeth to hell that forsaking life they go to death and running from God they draw neere to the deuil Saint Paul making a catalogue of these people doth resolutely pronounce 1. Cor. 6.10 Rom. 6.23 Deut. 27.26 that they shall not inherit the kingdome of God also that the reward of sinne is death and cursed is he that keepeth not the commandements of the law And because there are few that take care to obey God to amend their liues Math. 7.13 our Lord Iesus Christ pronounceth that broade is the gate and path that leadeth to destruction As therefore if a man departing from Paris taketh his waie into Spaine and yet giueth out that hee wil take his waie through Flanders or Holand euerie man will scorne him as a foole or take pittie of him as if he were a senselesse person that goeth farre amisse euen so is it with him who taking no course to amend but continuing in offending of God doth neuertheles say vphold that he will go to heauen for euery man may iudge him to be senselesse and greatly out of the waie because he taketh the contrarie course which leadeth to hell 2 Now if there be no greater madnes or pernitious folly than by offending God to take the waie to hell and euerlasting fire Iesus Christ in commanding vs to amend doth iustly saie Be ye wise better aduised and conuert returne to me And in deed if God should aske the sinner Wilt thou amend Wilt thou go to hel fire into weeping and gnashing of teeth with the deuills There is no man so desperate but that he will answere No Lorde God forbid yet hath not God good cause to replie Why thou takest the way thether thy workes doo leade to hell and euerlasting destruction and therefore amend But how Lord be better aduised As now thou turnest thy backe to me and thy face to the deuill so turne conuert thou to mee Where thou goest from heauen and drawest neere vnto hell turne backe leaue the world the flesh and all the corruptions of the same walking in my commandements amend thy life Thus turning thy backe to the deuil thy face vnto me going from hell thou shalt come to me the fountaine of life euerlasting And in deed saith S. Augustin we draw neere vnto God who is euery where Prosper in his sentences out of Augustine Se. 91. Sc. 195 not by remouing from place to place but by alteration of manners For as dissimilitude separateth vs frō him so doth resemblance and imitation conioyne vs with him And what a woe is this saith he by displeasing God to abandon this soueraigne felicitie which is in all places Let this commandement therefore Amend that is to saie Be ye better aduised and conuert vnto me waken and inflame our hearts to amend our liues and to be wise and aduised to conuert vnto God If a marchaunt seemeth willing to trust another that is redie to be banquerout with all his goods one warning will be inough to reclaime him ye shall not need to praie him to beware or to alleadge many reasons to withhold him The only feare apprehēsion of the losse of all his goods wil be reason and exhortation sufficient What shall wee then doo when Iesus Christ saith Be ye better aduised that is Amend and note that by offending God so taking the waie to hel we indanger our selues yea we do euen assure our selues to loose both bodies and souls for euer Is it not meere madnes and vngrateful rage to continue and not to be wiser and better aduised that wee may conuert to God and by amendement preserue our bodies and souls vnto life euerlasting The eight cause of Amendement taken of the reason added by Iesus Christ where he saith For the kingdome of heauen or of God is at hand Chap. 8. NOw let vs especially consider the reason added by Iesus Christ For the kingdome of heauen or of God is at hand And for the better vnderstanding therof let vs note three significations of the kingdome of heauen First by this kingdome is signified the blessed estate and incomprehensible felicitie that wee shall inioye after the resurrection is when Iesus Christ sayth Math. 8.11 Many shall come from the East and from the West and shall sit at the table in the kingdome of heauen with Abraham Isaac and Iacob Agayne Math. 7.21 Not euery one that sayth Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but hee that doth the will of my father shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Againe Suffer little children to come vnto mee Math. 19.14 for vnto such belongeth the kingdome of heauen And so in many other passages Secondly by the kingdom of heauen is signified the estate of the regenerate man which consisteth in the true knowledge of God in faith in mortification of the olde man and in newnesse of lyfe As when Iesus Christ sayth The kingdome of God is in you Luke 17.21 Also in this saying of Saint Paul The kingdome of God is not meate or drinke but righteousnes and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Thirdly Rom. 14.17 the kingdome of heauen many times signifieth the ministerie and preaching of the Gospell As when Saint Paul speaking of certaine faithfull seruants of Iesus Christ sayd Col. 4.11 Math. 11.11 These onely are my companions in the worke of the kingdom of God Againe as where Iesus Christ saith He that is best in the kingdome of heauen is greater than Iohn the Baptist Whereto wee also refeere this saying of Iesus Christ Math. 13.3 13.44.45 The kingdome of heauen is like vnto seede that fell in diuerse groundes Thereby signifying that the holy ministerie bringeth not fruit in all men Likewise where he compareth the kingdome of heauen to a treasure hidden in the earth and to a marchant that sought for good pearles thereby to shew how highly wee are to esteeme of the holy ministerie 2 All these significations of the kingdome of heauen ought
obey him that hath alreadie done vs so much good both in bodie and soule Not without cause therefore doth God so sharply complaine of those that rent and tread vnder foot such vehement bondes whereby they are summoned to theyr duty in amendement as we haue many notable examples in the writings both of the Prophets and Apostles Gods benefites are the cordes of humanitie Osc 11.4 as Oseas tearmeth them whereby hee seeketh to plucke vs from the waie of perdition and by amendement of lyfe to leade vs to saluation Doeth not the deuill thinke you hold vs fall fettered in mightie and strong chaines sith we cannot be drawen by these cordes of mercie and humanitie to the seruice of our God 6 Yet is there thus much more The ministers do propound not onely the benefites receiued out also the promises of other most excellent and plentifull blessings and benefites both bodily and ghostly to those that by amending theyr liues shall labour to obey God And this it were to bee wished that euerie man would note in the reading of the olde and newe Testament to the ende they might both the better vnderstand them and be by them the more earnestly moued when they are in the sermons represented vnto vs. For how wonderfull is the goodnes of God who vouchsaseth to promise vs so many benefites if wee amend our liues that is to saie if we performe the thing whereto we are alreadie bound If I owe vpon a verie formall bill a hundred crownes will my creditor to the end to induce me to paie the same faithfully promise to giue mee ten times as many more Yet thus doth God deale with vs. For what is al our obedience and amendement of life in respect of the benefites that God promiseth to obey him whereto we are alreadie bound If he that is free bindeth himselfe to serue another then is it reason that his master should promise him some wages reward for his seruice but we are not free but alreadie bound to serue our God yet doth he promise vs great benefits if we imploy our selues faithfully in his seruice by amending our liues Are not wee then verie stubborne against God and enemies to our selues that thus contemne the promises of his rewards and benefites towards vs If a Prince should promise a tayler or shoomaker sonne thousand crownes for one yeeres seruice would any man refuse it Would not he to whome it were offered or promised bee readie to leaue his house his wise his children and all other things to goe to seruice to such a Lord for one yeere How vnthankfull or senslesse are we therefore that will not be otherwise wonne and induced to serue God who by so many so excellent and so assured promises doth daily inuite vs thereto 7 Besides the representation of benefites alreadie receiued and of promises of more to come doo they not also propounde in the name of the almightie righteous and true God most grieuous and manifolde threatnings to the end that if we will not by curteous and fatherly gentlenesse bee induced to amend Leuit. 26. Deut. 28 Leuit. 26. wee may bee as it were forced by the threatninges of a seuere and rigorous Iudge What a scroule of woes doeth the Lorde by his seruant Moses propound agaynst such as will not amend Wherein wee are also well to note that hee denounceth if the first stripes can breede no amendement hee will adde seuen times as many more Also if wee will not yet amend our liues he wyll yet double them seuen times more And in deede as hee afflicteth and punisheth vs to the ende to make vs to conuert and turne to him and consequently to induce vs to amendement of lyfe so doeth hee by his so often redoubling of his threates shewe that wee must eyther humble and bowe our selues by obedience or else breake them to our euerlasting and eternall destruction Is it not then a horrible obstinacie and monstrous m●re dulitie not to feare and tremble at such threatnings of the liuing God Are not the same which hee heeretofore hath executed and daily doeth execute against the impenitent euen so many seales and myrrours representing vnto vs the verie truth of his great and terrible threatnings thereby to induce and perswade vs steadfastly and vndoubtedly to beleeue that our selues vnlesse we amend shall also feele the execution of his vengeance against vs as himselfe sayth in Saint Luke Luke 13 3 1. Cor. 10.7 If yee will not amend you shall perish likewise In lyke manner also Saint Paule noting some punishmentes and vengeances inflicted in the wildernesse vppon Idolaters fornicators tempters of Christ and such as murthured against him thereby to warne the Corinthians to beware of the like iniquities in conclusion doth adde that all these things were done for example sake and are written for our learning as those vppon whome the endes of the world are come Wherefore sayth hee let him that standeth take heede that hee doo not fall And in deed wherefore are offenders publikely executed but for example to those that looke vpon them that they may beware of committing the lyke offences least themselues doo also incurre the lyke punishment When he that hath committed some wicked murther seeth another murtherer executed will hee not saie in his heart If the Iudge wist what I haue done hee would lykewise condemne mee to die But God seeth all hee is iust and will not bee corrupted with rewards Whē therfore the minister of the word doth lay before vs the horrible punishments executed agaynst those that will not amende doth hee it not to the end that they which heare of such iudgements of God shoulde immediatly resolue to amend and saie in themselues If we wil amend this fault which we so grieuously punished in such and such wee also shall vndoubtedly perish in like sorte 8 Neither maye wee harden our heartes in wickednesse because there is no lykelyhoode of occasion to feare anie calamitie or affliction but contrarywise let vs remember the Niniuites What lykelyhood was there that they shoulde feare that within fortie daies Niniuie shoulde bee destroyed Ionas 3 Math. 12.41 It was a flourishing towne the chiefe citye of a mightie realme yet at the preaching of Ionas a man to them vnknowen they also heathen deuoid of all knowledge of the true God or of his holy doctrine dyd conuert to God in fasting sackcloth And shall not they bee iudges against such as dayly hearing Gods threatnings at the mouthes of those whome they knowe to bee his seruants doo notwithstanding continue obstinate without amendement And albeit it seeme that God slackneth the execution of his vengeance against many vnpenitent persons yet ther is a time of their punishment ordained and it shall be executed vpon many in this life but in the later day of iudgement vpon all those that make no account to amend 9 Heereof let vs well note the examples propounded by Saint Peter and Saint Iude
man was crucified with Iesus Christ wee must not nowe raise him again but leaue him dead And as a dead man is no longer possessed of the motions thoughts affections and woorkes of a liuing man so wee by our Baptisme beeing dead into Iesus Christ must no longer haue anie motions affections wordes or workes of our old man 13 There yet resteth this consideration that by Baptisme we do put on Christ But Christ whom we haue put on is holy and of a sweete sauour before God Gal. 3.27 And shall we be so slouthfull as to trail this sacred garment through the mire and silthines of this worlde Or putting it off to put on the villanous and stinking garment of flesh by walking in the affections thereof Let vs walke saith Saint Paule honestly as in the daie not in gluttonie or dronkennesse Rom. 13.13 neither in chambering and wantonnesse in strife and enuying But let vs put on Iesus Christ and take no thought for the flesh to fulfill the lustes thereof Thus doeth our Baptisme diuersely and in sundrie wise binde vs to amende our liues But because in Baptismes names are giuen as in olde time in the circumcision so ofte as wee heare our names let the same be an aduertisement vnto vs of our Baptisme putting vs in minde of our duties to amend 14 Vpon the holy ministerie dependeth also the communion in the holy supper of the Lord. Many are the reasons for the which Christ dyd ordaine it all which doo also binde vs to amend Of these wee will now consider soure principall The first by the vse of the holy supper our faith is strengthned and our soules are spiritually fed in the hope of lyfe euerlasting And therfore as the child when hee commeth to age is bound to honor his parents not onely for his begetting bringing into this life but also because they haue fed and brought him vp still do continue the same duties vnto him euen so should it be with vs whom God hath as it were begotten into his Church through our Baptisme and to whom he hath since in his holy Supper ministered the food of our soules in the communion of the bodie and bloud of Iesus Christ For not onely our spirituall new birth by Baptisme but also the spirituall foode which this good father ●●eth vnto vs in his holy supper do binde vs to honor him yea and should thereto mightily induce vs considering that for food to our soules hee hath deliuered his onely sonne Iesus Christ to be crucified for vs. If anie man had a child so sicke that nothing coulde serue for his foode and recouerie but pearles confected or preserued how much should such a child bee bound to loue and honour his parents that for his releefe had not grudged at theyr expense Truly it were a most bitter ingratitude not to care to please or obey them Euen so what reproofe shoulde we deserue of our heauenly father who seedeth vs in his holy supper not with pearles but with the verie flesh and bloud of his son Iesus Christ in case wee should make no account to please him by amendement of life withall considering that as there is no comparison betweene pearles and the body and bloud of Iesus Christ so the spiritual life of our souls is without comparison much more excellent than the life of our bodies 15 Moreouer as meate and drinke ministred vnto the bodie do maintaine the life motions senses of the bodie so from the communion in the bodie and bloud of Iesus Christ which is the foode of the soule must proceed the spirituall and heauenly life cogitations affections wordes and deedes And therefore as it were a strange case if the bodie by eating and drinking shoulde gather no sustenance and consequently want all motions sense and bodyly operation so were it a monstrous matter that the soule communicating in the body and blood of Iesus Christ should gather no spirituall foode that might bring forth newnesse of life and holines in words and deeds 16 Besides as the holy supper is the table of Gods children the faithfull members of the Church of Iesus Christ so the communicating thereat is a solemne protestation that wee are the children of God true belieuers members of the church of Christ and that so we seperate our selues from the prophane worldly and vicious people and do purpose to liue holily righteously and religiously as it beseemeth the children of God and faithfull members of the Church Such therefore as communicating in the holy supper doe not neuerthelesse amende their liues but walking after the worlde and the flesh are giuen to whoredome drunkennesse gluttony couetousnesse deceite fraude ambition pride enuye hatred backbiting with other like vices and corruptions doe shew themselues counterfects hipocrites do eare and drinke their owne damnation and doe horribly scandalize or offend the Church whereof they shoulde be members togither with the doctrine that they doe professe First what an impudency is it solemnely to protest by taking the bread and wine that thou thinkest thy selfe to bee the childe of God and yet in thy selfe doest find that thou doest not so think that thou art a member of Christ and yet dost not belieue him that thou renouncest the world and the flesh and yet art in loue with them that thou wilt liue in holinesse and yet hast no will thereto that thou seekest life in Iesus Christ when voluntarilie thou doest cast thy selfe into death that thou wilt amende thy life yet hast no intent to forsake thy vice and corruptions to be short thus to abuse this holy communion to the end to make men belieue that which God seeth to bee false and contrarie to thy protestation 1. Cor. 11.27 Doest thou not belieue the protestation of S. Paule who saith that Whosoeuer shall eat this bread and drinke of this cuppe vnworthely doth eate and drinke his owne damnation because hee discerneth not the Lords bodie namely from bodily and carnal food which the mouth of the wicked and abhominable do receiue as wel as the mouth of the righteous man one that feareth God 17 Againe doest thou not apprehende the offence that thou doest commit in that thou openest the mouth of the aduersary to religion to condemne the doctrine of truth to reiecte the Church of Christ to blame the children of God and to blaspheme God himselfe thinkest thou not that thou doest harden them in their errours in the way of destruction damnatiō doest thou not consider that thou doest arme and encourage them to seduce such as are members of the Church and redeemed by the blood of Iesus Christ by declaring vnto them that men so giuen ouer to the world and the flesh cannot bee of the true Church that the doctrine of truth can bring forth no such fruits that the Church is no house for drunkerds adulterers couetous persons deceiuers quarelers enuious people men possessed with other like vices shouldest
thou not remember what Iesus Christ pronounced That it had beene better for thee that a milstone had beene hanged about thy necke Luke 17. 2. and thou haddest beene cast into the sea then to haue offended euen the least of these Thus doe wee see how mightely the communion in the holy Supper of the Lord should moue our hearts to deny euery thinge that beseemeth not the children of God and members of the Church of Christ and more and more to endeuour to amende our liues Luke ●● 19 1. Cor. 11.26 18 This holy Supper is also instituted to the end to celebrate it in the remembrance of Iesus Christ or as S. Paul saith to shew forth his death That is not only to report put men in mind that Christ is dead but also to represent vnto vs that he that dyed is the sonne of God and prince of glory Secondly that hee hath suffred not a simple death but euen such a death as was accursed in the law conioined with the terrible wrath of God Thirdly that he dyed not for the righteous and his frends but for sinners his enemies as our selues are all of vs by nature the Children of wrath Ephes 2.3 Can we then thus shew forth the death of Iesus Christ with our mouthes praise his great goodnesse mercie and loue towards vs which shineth therein yet in our workes prophane denie as it were euen spite him by liuing as men for whom Christ hath not dyed so in effect shew that sin liueth raigneth in vs which by the death of Christ whome we preach shold be mortified Let vs rather in eating the bread drinking the wine which lead vs to the death of Iesus Christ so relish and tast therein his goodnes and loue that our heartes may open our mouthes to declare this his death and that our hands and feet that is to say our works may agree herewith to the end in a holie harm onie to testifie by amendment of life the feeling of this in comprehensible benefite of his death whereof hee maketh vs pertakers in his holy supper to his praise and glorie 1 Cor. 10.17 19 Finally as loue is the fulfilling of the law and the marke of Gods children so is there nothing that can more mightely induce vs thereto then the vse of this holy supper And in deede as Saint Paule saith We that are many are but one bread one bodie for we are all partakers of one bread The bread made of many kernels is but one bread so we that communicate in the bread of the holy supper are but one bodie vnder one heade Iesus Christ There must therefore bee amonge vs such an vnion in thoughts minds and works such a feeling of the benefit of ioy and of the tribulation in sorrow such reliefe and support such equitie right such peace loue such help and succour as if there were but one liuing soule amonge vs all 1. Cor. 12.12 And this is it whereto S. Paule exhorteth vs saying As the body is one hath many members all the members of the body which is one though they be many yet are but one body so is Christ that is to say the Church vnited vnto the head Iesus Christ Neither is there as he saith in the same Chapter any deuision in a bodie but all the members haue like care one for another in somuch that if one of the members do suffer all the rest of the members do suffer with it and if one of the members be honoured all the rest do reioyce with it then he addeth Ye are the body of Christ the members thereof ech for your parts This seale therefore of our vnion should make vs to remember that which before was touched in the Chapter of charity or loue euen that we should not doe that to others which wee would not shoulde bee done to our selues also that we should so doe to others as we would be done vnto And as a great part of our amendement consisteth in the practise of the●e two rules so so often as wee do eate of the breade of the holy Supper let vs remember that that seale of our vnion doth bind vs to amend in any thing that dependeth vpon loue wherein consisteth the fulfillinge of the law as is aforesaid 20 Common prayers are also one part of the ministery And in the same ought euery one with hart and mind to accompany the mouth of the minister as if the whole congregation spake vnto God in him And what doe wee require in them Is it not that hee would vouchsafe to worke in vs all that he requireth of vs that wee may obey and please him Hereof then it followeth that the smale amendement that appeareth in vs is a manifest testimony that wee suffer the minister to speake alone to God and in our hartes haue no feeling of any desite or feruent affection to obtayne those graces that hee craueth of God for vs and consequently that we are ouertaken with hypocrisie and prophanation of the holy prayers Let vs therefore remember that we doe speak to God by the mouth of the minister and that we doe especially desire that hee would giue vs grace to amende that as our petition admonisheth vs of our obligation so being hearde wee may shew the fruit of our praiers in the amendment of our liues 21 To conclude the exercise of ecclesiasticall discipline is also a dependance of the holy ministerie And the principall ende thereof tendeth that euery member of the Church shold walke in the feare of God and that if any one goe astray he should bee brought backe into the way of saluation This doth euen already shew vs that wee are most desperately wicked if besides the documents exhortations reprehensions publicke admonitions we also despise reiect such as perticularly may be made vnto vs by those persons to whome God hath committed the care of our saluation by laying that burden vpon them When a man goeth astray in some forrest is it not a comfort to him to bee tould of his errour and taught the right way And when a man falleth into a ditch ready to be drowned is he not to thank him that pulleth him forth and saueth his life Surely this is the end and as it were the whole summe of this ecclesiastical discipline And because there bee some so hardened in wickednes that they dispise all admonitions and exhortations Iesus Christ hath giuen the Church authority to binde them denouncinge them to bee heathen and publicans that is men that haue no communion in the Church of Christ And this is it that he teacheth Mat. 18. 15. saying If thy brother trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault betweene him thee alone If hee heare thee thou hast wonre thy brother But if he heare thee not take yet with thee one or two that by the mouth of two or three witnesses euery
our bodie lyfe or earthly goods for anie offence cōmitted by vs doth without comparison more daunt and quaile vs than the desert of euerlasting death and the losse of the kingdome of heauen 4 Let vs therefore plainly confesse the truth that naturally wee loue the bodie better than the soule the goods commodities of this temporal life better than the tresures of eternity And consequently that in lieu of seeking first the kingdome of heauen and the righteousnes thereof and thereupon expecting that all other things shall be giuen vs according to the promise of Christ wee contrarywise setting the ca●t before the horse doo first and much more seeke that which concerneth the bodie and this present life than anie thing that toucheth the soule the kingdom of heauen And yet he that knoweth not that the body is more than the soul hath no soule neither hath anie vnderstanding or reason and is no man but a beast And he that confesseth not the kingdome of heauen to be infinitly better than all the kingdomes of the world sheweth himselfe to bee most peruerse and malitious 5 That we may therefore correct these corruptions so amend our liues Math. 13.44 45. let vs remember that Iesus Christ likeneth the kingdome of heauen to a treasure hidde in the field which when a man hath sound he hideth it and for ioy thereof departeth and selleth all that he hath buieth that field Also to a pearle of great value for the purchase wherof the marchant selleth al that he hath But what was this so excellent treasure or pearle of so great price euen the Church or holy ministerie The kingdome of God in vs and the kingdome of glorie in heauen This kingdome of heauen therfore must we first especially seeke after and after the example of those marchants sell all we haue that is to saie forsake all that we account to bee precious concerning this life that wee may inioy this kingdome of heauen 6 And in deede first they that beeing members of the Church doo vse the holy ministerie are accounted to bee the children of God and members of Iesus Christ who also imployeth this holie ministerie to driue from them the kingdome of Sathan and to establish his And so are they gotten on to the first step and entered in at the first gate In the meane time because there be also hypocrites that do enter and abide there for a time in shew keeping the place of Gods children it is requisite moreouer that the kingdom of heauen be in vs. For as all they that are possessed with righteousnesse Rom. 14.17 peace and the ioy of the holie Ghost which Saint Paule calleth the kingdome of God are certaine to enrer into heauen so is it in vaine to pretend to enter into the kingdome of God which is in heauen vnlesse the kingdome of heauen which is the gate be first in vs that is to saie if we haue not the true knowledge of God and of his sonne Iesus Christ a liuely fayth a feruent charitie vnles wee increase in sanctification of bodie of soule and of minde vnles in our selues wee do feele a good conscience conioyned with peace and ioy in the holie Ghost and vnlesse wee bee regenerate in newnesse of lyfe As also Iesus Christ himselfe doth plainly say That vnlesse wee bee borne againe wee cannot see the kingdome of God And in deede it is written Iohn 3.3 1. Cor. 6.9 That neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor wantons nor theeues nor couetous men nor dronkardes nor euill speakers nor rauishers shall inherite the kingdome of God Yet before hee pronounceth this sentence hee wakeneth vs saying Deceiue not your selues to the end that casting off all illusions and sweete baites of the world the flesh and the deuill we may be assured that by amendement correcting of these vices and other lyke corruptions we shall inherite the kingdome of God Wherefore as where there bee two gates to a towne it is not inough that wee enter the first vnlesse wee also passe through the second so is it not inough that wee beeing members of the Church vsing the holie ministerie which we haue sayd to be as the first gate to the kingdome of heauen vnlesse wee thence proceede to the second in liuing as true and liuely members of the Church declaring the effectes of the holy ministerie by the testimonies of our faith mortification of the old man newnesse of lyfe in briefe by dayly amendement For albeit wee haue preached the worde of God yea and wrought myracles yet shall wee not therefore enter into the kingdome of heauen vnlesse wee also amende our liues as Iesus Christ also sayd Not euery one that saith Lord Lord Mat. 7.21 shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but hee which doth the will of my father which is in heauen Manye will saye vnto mee in that daye Lord Lord haue we not by thy name prophecied and by thy name cast out deuils and by thy name done many great workes Then will I professe vnto them I neuer knew ye Departe from me ye workers of iniquitie 7 The parable of the seede sowen in sundry sorts of ground doth euidently declare that for the establishing of the kingdom of heauen in vs Mat. 13. also that we may assuredly enter into the kingdome of God which is in heauen we are to amend in three points First as the seede that fell by the way side and so was deuoured by the soules of the aire so must we beware that our harts be not so hard and impenitent that the woorde heard when it cannot enter into thē vanish away and be as it were euen violently caught away by satan Secondly we must be so firmly resolued to beare in patience the losse of parents brethren sisters goods dignities yea euen of life that being possessed with this good humour of patience a good conscience and faith the sunny heat of persecution may not make this sacred seede vnfruitfull or vnprofitable or cause vs to forsake the Church which is the kingdome of heauen and so fall againe vnder the tiranny of Satan as a dogge to his vomite or a washed sow to her myre Thirdlye 2. Pet. 2.12 as the seede that fell among thornes cōmeth at the last to be choaked vp and stiffeled so must we beware that the cares of worldly affaires the earnest desire of the cōmodities of this transitory life do not choak vp the good seede of the heauenly doctrine These three pernicious inconuemences must we au●id and amend in case we desire to enter into the kingdome of God that is in heauen 8 Now where it is said in this parable that only the fourth part of the seed did bring forth fruite we are thereof togather for the inducing of vs to amēdmēt of life that the number of those that shal be saued in the kingdom of God which is in heauen sha●be small and this doth our
to the workes of darkenesse What an ingratitude will it be in vs who by nature are Gentils if when the kingdom of heauen is thus come vpon vs by the preaching of the Gospell we make no accompt thereof neither haue any care to amend our liues according to the cōmandemēt of Iesus Christ how mightily wil the deuil possesse vs vnlesse by the ministerye of the holy ghost he be expelled to the end to make roome for the kingdome of heauen in vs 8 Iesus Christ saith The men of Niniue shall rise in iudgement with this generation and condemne it for they repented at the preaching of Ionas and beholde a greater then Ionas is heere Againe Mat. 12.41.42 The Queene of the south shall rise in iudgement with this generation and shall condemne it For she came from the vtmost partes of the earth to heare the wisedome of Salomon and beholde a greater then Salomon is heere Woe thē be vnto vs if hearing the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 13.12 we doe not obey his commandement and amend It is now time that we should arise from sleep saith S. Paul for now is our saluation neerer then when we beleeued by the preaching of the gospell and were before vnbeleeuers The night is past and the day is come let vs therfore cast away the works of darknes and put on the armour of light so as we walk honestly as in the day not in gluttony and drunkennes c. 9 This kingdome of heauen is at hand and dayly gathereth vpon vs in two maners which for a conclusion wee will heere adde First all faithfull beleeuers doe know and are assured that at the separation of the soule and the body the soule shal be exalted into heauen with Christ Now as dayly this seperation doth by death drawe neerer and neerer to the faithfull so doth the kingdome of heauen also come vpon them how carefull therfore should we be to amend our liues and to prepare our selues to make our entry into heauen the holy Ghost protesteth that there shall enter no vncleane thing Apoc. 21.27 neither any that worketh abhomination or lyes We must therefore put of all the workes of the flesh which are as S. Paul noteth adultery fornication vncleannesse wantonnesse idolatrie Gal. 5.19 witchcraft hatred debate emulation wrath contention sedition heresie enuie murther dronkennes gluttonie and such lyke And afterward protesteth that they which commit these things shall not inherite the kingdome of God Let vs then beware of delaying of this amendment least in a matter of such importance we bee surprised we haue not two soules that we may hazarde one If the day of death findeth vs a sleepe in our sinnes woe be vnto vs let vs remember the saying of S. Peter The end of all thinges draweth neere 1. Pet 4. Be ye therfore sober and watchfull in praier Euery of vs shall in our death finde this end of all things and indeed let vs look vpon a rich man caried dead out at dores and we shall see that all is at an end with him neither hath his body any more then his length of ground 10 Let vs therefore remember to be sober not in workes of pietie for in them we cannot be too plentifull neither in sinne for we must vtterly abstaine therefro wherin then euen in thinges appertaining to this present life 1. Cor. 7.29 by practising this admonition of S. Paul And this I say brethren because the time is shorte hereafter that both they which haue wines be as though they had none And they that weep as though they wept not And they that reioyce as though they reioyced not And they that buy as though they possessed not And they that vse this worlde as though they vsed it not for the fashion of this worlde goeth away And I would haue you without care Here doth he shew that the sobriety whereto S. Peter exhorteth vs doth admonish vs that there is drunkennesse not onely of the body but also of the spirite And indeede where Iesus Christ saith See to your selues Luke 21.34 that your harts be not ouercome with gluttony and drunkennesse neither with the cares of this life He doth sufficiently declare that there is another kinde of drunkennesse then either with beere or wine And that is when the care for the things of this life whether of warre or marchandise or of landes and possessions of wiues or of children doe so feaze vpon and entangle our mindes and affections that we are diuerted letted frō that which is required for the seruice of God and the saluation of our soules if a man rise in the morning and goe to the Tauerne and tarry there all day and at night commeth home drunke and so againe the next day and the next and all the weeke long and neuer thinketh vpon his famely but letteth his wife and his children sit staruing at home wil we not say that he is a drunkard and in case he continue this course a moneth or two will we not reporte of him as of a perfect and desperate drunkard What shall we then say of those that doe so set their harts and mindes vpon the affaires of this life that so soone as they are vp in the morning they are presently at the Tauern of those cares wherein they delight and whereto they so giue themselues that they care neither for the kingdome of heauen the seruice of God nor the saluation of their own soules which is more during this repast at home their mindes are in their tauernes yea and which is worse whether they speak to God in their praiers or that God talketh to them by sermons their mindes are so wandering that immediatly they are in this tauerne of worldly cares and affaires and that so deepely that they neither hear God speaking to them neither wot what themselues doe say to him for there is no more but the body that speaketh or heareth euen a body as it were without a soule for their minde is in their Tauerne If they then follow this course not one moneth or sixe or tenne neyther one yeere but ten twentie thirtie yea euen to the death may we not well call them perfect drunkards Likewise as to that tauerne that beareth the name to haue the best drinke or wine the drunkards will soonest resort as seeking occasions to be drunk so these spirituall drunkards doe seeke after townes and places of most practise where there is great dooinges which breede encrease of cares that likewise they may be the more drunken in them 11 This is an excessiue and most pernitious drunkennesse yet ouer common among christians and therefore let euery man examine him selfe that knowing it he may amend And indede sith the kingdome of heauen doth dayly approch to the faithfull by death we are in duty to beware according to Christs admonition that our harts be not ouercome with this drunkennesse of cares least that day ouertake