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A14032 An exposition vpon the canonicall Epistle of Saint Iames with the tables, analysis, and resolution, both of the whole epistle, and euerie chapter thereof: with the particular resolution of euerie singular place. Diuided into 28. lectures or sermons, made by Richard Turnbull, sometimes fellow of Corpus Christie Colledge in Oxford· now preacher and minister of the word of God and the holy Sacraments, in the citie of London. Turnbull, Richard, d. 1593. 1591 (1591) STC 24339; ESTC S118931 472,056 683

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their praiers The praiers of the righteous pearce euen Ecclus. 35. vnto heauen they reach vnto the cloudes they come vnto God himselfe they ascend to him and his graces discend vnto the righteous Though then there be infinite distance betwixt heauen and earth God and man yet heareth he from his holie hill the praiers of his righteous seruantes poured out vnto him Which Ieroboam that wicked king also knew who hauing his hand which hee thrust out to haue taken the 3. Kings 13 man of God dried vp he desired the Prophet and man of Exodus God to pray that it might be restored Pharao king of Egypt knew that the praier of Moses and Aaron the righteous seruants of God preuailed much wherfore when the plagues of God fel vpon him and his people then desired he Moses and Aaron to praie for him This the captaines Jerem. 4● and remnant of the people of Israel after their ouerthrow destruction by Nabuchodonozer right wel cōfidered how effectuall the praiers of the righteous we are with God for which cause they besought Ieremie the Lords seruant to pray for them This thing to teach Abimelech king of Gerar almightie God tolde him that Abraham whose Gen. 20. wife the king had taken away was a Prophet he should praie for him who praying the people and Prince were healed of their disease wherewith God for Sarah had plagued them To which purpose to shew of what weight the praiers of Gods Saints are with him he commaunded the three frends of Iob to goe and be reconciled vnto Iob Iob. 42. whom they had not comforted in affliction as they should haue done and telleth them that hee should pray for them at whose praier he would be intreated All which teacheth that onely their prayers are of force with God for good who are iust and righteous The praier saith Saint Iames of the righteous preuaileth much As in him that praieth it is required that he be righteous so is it required in the praier of the righteous that it be also feruent proceeding from a pure affection flowing from vnfeined faith kindled by a burning zeale influmed with feruent loue continued in great earnestnesse and constancie without which our praiers obteine little or nothing at the hands of God but being earnest constant and feruent they preuaile greatly When Moses continued Exod. 17. feruent in praier in the battell against the Amalechites the people of Israel prospered Our Sauiour Christ teacheth by two places in Saint Luke his gospell that our Prayers must be feruent and constant by the example of Luke 11. 18. the man that obteined the borowing of bread of his friēd by his feruencie and earnestnes in asking and would not take the deniall or repulse and so through importunitie obteined of the widow who solliciting the vniust iudge to auenge her cause vpō her enemie obteined her request at length with much a do through her constancie continuance in praier Wherby our Sauiour also teacheth vs that we must continue in praier and cease not if we wil obteine the petitions of our heartes with God The woman of Cannan often reiected yet still feruently persisting obteined Mat. 15 and had her request for her daughter from our sauiour Iesus Christ And the Apostle in this place teacheth that the praiers of the righteous auaile much if they be feruent Wherfore as he that praieth must be righteous so must his praier be feruent earnest and constant if hee wil obteine any thing at the hands of God Wherence we may learne that the wicked are out of hope of obteining for their comfort the things they praie for because it is said that the praiers of the righteous auaile much not the praiers of the wicked whose praiers being heard of God tend to their greater and iuster condemnation destruction and punishment And the praiers also of the righteous are then effectuall when they are feruent Let all them which hope to receaue their petitions at rhe hands of God in all things applie themselues to righteousnesse let them not be faint hearted of a wauering minde colde in asking easilie repelled soone discouraged in praying but let them be feruent and constant therein if they look to be regarded for our Apostle affirmeth that the praier of the righteous auaileth much if it be feruent And that the praier of the righteous auaileth much being feruent the Apostle proueth by the example of Elias at his praier the heauen was as it were shutte vp for a time and againe thereat opened Whereof thus saith S. Iames Elias was a man subiect to like passions as we are and praied earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not on the earth for 3. yeares and 6. moneths he praied againe and the heauen gaue raine and the earth brought foorth her fruite This storie touching Elias is recorded in the book of 3. Kings 17. 18. Kings where it is mentioned that in the daies of Achab Iezabel there was great and extreame famine drought vpon the land so that men perished for want of food cattle died for lacke of water in the Countrey of Samaria In which distresse Achab and his seruant Obadia deuided the land to seeke for water for the residue of their cattle and horses least they also for want of water should pearish At what time Obadiah met with Elias Elias talked with Ahab whom he councelled to make hast and to get home least the raine should stay him After which raine ensued immediatly in the land Which storie James here citing faith that Elias praied and it rained not for 3. yeares 6. moneths and he praied againe and it rained In the story there is no mention of his praier neither for drought neither for raine concerning the drought this only is said that Elias tolde Ahab the king that there should neither raine nor dewe fall but according to his word for certaine yeares yet the Apostle saith he praied and it rained not for 3. yeares and 6. moneths Cōcerning the raine he is said to haue tolde this to the king whom he biddeth to haste least the raine did stay him he is saide to haue couched vpon the ground to haue put his head and face betwixt his knees and to haue commaūded his seruante to looke to the sea ward but mention of his prayer is none But hereby is it manifeste that in both cases he praied when he saw the horrible idolatrie of the princes and people and the bloudie persecution where vnto the Church and Saintes were subiecte for zeale to Gods glorie for care ouer the church he praied for famine and drought frō the Lord that thereby they being punished might remember them selues repente of the wickednes they had committed and retourne vnfainedly vnto God Whose prayer God heard and brought famine drought vpon the lande for three yeares and sixe monthes And afterwardes either seeing their repentance or hoping for
health are in the power of God alone and not in the hande of mortall man Men are meanes praiers are instruments but it is God that saueth yea which healeth Another effect of praier is that through the faithfull praiers of the Saints their sinnes are forgiuen the sicke If saith Saint Iames hee hath committed sinne it shall be forgiuen him Where●●●o Saint Iohn condiscendeth if any man see his brother sinne a sinne not vnto 1. Ihon. 5. death let him aske and hee shall giue him life for them that sinne not vnto death As therefore the faithfull prayers of Gods Saintes are not causes but instruments of obtayning health so are they also meanes of obteyning remission of our sinnes at the handes of God Matt. 6. Therefore our Sauiour in that fourme of prayer which he woulde to bee vsed for our selues and for our brethren also willeth that wee shoulde praye for forgiuenesse of sinnes not in our selues onely but in our brethren also VVherewith Christ mooued prayed for the Luke 23. Iewes and Steuen for forgeuenesse of those men which persecuted him Seeing therefore that the prayers of the Acts 7. Elders hath this double effect they ought not to be neglected of men Nowe where the Apostle witnessed that the sinnes of the sicke shoulde bee remitted and forgiuen by the praiers of the Elders it sufficiently refuteth the sharpe and rigorous censure of the Nouatian heretikes and their horrible blasphemie who denie pardone of sinne to such as anie wise sinne after their conuersion to the Gospell and the knowledge of the trueth Saint Iames affirmeth that if anie of the brethren any of the professed Christians anie of the Church after the profession of Gods trueth shoulde commit sinne after their conuersion and the Elders prayed for it it should bee forgiuen Salomon confesseth that the righteous offendeth seuen times a day and is a gaine restored Dauid sinned Pro. 24. after he knewe God and his sinnes though notorious and grieuous yet were forgiuen as to him vpon his confession and repentance Nathan promised Iames our Apostle 2. King 12. speaking of the professours of the Gospell confesseth that in manie things they all sinne If there were no Iames 3. remission of sinne after the profession of the Gospel and the knowledge of the truth why doth Saint Paul will Gal. 6. the brethren of Galatia that if any offended of infirmitie they should restore him in the spirit of meekenesse considering themselues least they also were tempted why doth S. Iohn speaking to those that knew the truth say that if any of them sinned they had an aduocate with 1. Iohn 2. the father who was the propitiation for their sinnes euen Iesus Christ the righteous Palpaple therefore is this heresie of the Nouatians and refuted by these and like places of Scripture Moreouer that here the Apostle mencioneth sinnes in mens sickenesse it intimateth and giueth vs to vnderstande Deut. 28. that sinnes are for the most part the causes of our sickenesse and bodily diseases The Lorde threatneth sickenesse pestilence and diseases against such as sinned and transgressed his commaundements God brought vpon Aegypt botch blaine boile and sore Exod. 9. diseases vpon the people for their churlish crueltie towardes the Israelites their shamefull contempt of the Prophets the abusing of the pacience of God Meriah Num. 12. the sister of Moises was stroken with the leprosie for murmuring agaynst her brother the Lordes minister Abimelech and the Philistins were stroken with diseases in their Gene. 20. secrete places for taking away the wife of Abraham Gehesie was plagued with the leprosie of Naaman the Assirian 4. King 5. for his couetousnesse and receyuing of gifts Dauid confesseth that Gods heauie hande of sickenesse was vpon him for his sinne from toppe to toe so that hee had Psal 38. no rest in his bones by reason of his iniquitie Saint Paul recordeth to the Church of Corinth that many of them 1. Cor. 11. were diseased for the abuse of the Lords supper Our Sauiour Christ healing him which was diseased eight thirtie Iohn 5. yeares willed him to sinne no more least a worse thing happen vnto him noting thereby that the cause of his disease was his sinne And no doubt the cause of our newe sickenesses whereof wee taste euerie yeare is the newe sinne which we dayly encrease our newe adulteries New sinnes procure new sickenesses oure newe deuised pride our newe extorcion couetousnesse and oppression our newe crueltie and iniquitie which we multiplie continually against the Lord. VVhich thing Saint Jamee to teach vs telleth vs that if the sicke haue committed sinne it should be forgiuen by prayer and this is the first remedie against bodily infirmities both generall and particular as the Apostle hath prescribed The seconde remedie in particular affliction as 2. Remedie sickenesse is mutuall confession ioyned with prayer so that prayer againe is annexed and ioyned as a remedie whereby that we might helpe one another the better there is required mutuall confession and free conferring one with another touching offences giuen Acknowledge ye your sinnes one to another and pray one for another that ye may bee healed For the prayer of a righteous man auayleth much if it be feruent Helias c. In which words these things may be obserued 1 Mutuall confession with praier is required 2 To what ende to the ende we might be healed 3 The force of the righteous mans praier 4 Howe that force is shewed by example of the praier of Elias Concerning mutuall confession and conferring one Mutuall confession with another about offences giuen done it is very necessary to the recouerie of health in sicknes for God soonest heareth such as haue put away al malice hatred out of their hearts and are at peace and loue with their brethren this is chiefly done where brotherly we confer one with another touching offences and trespasses committed which done we can best helpe one another with our mutual praiers As therfore mēbers al of one body ought Rom. 12. 1. Cor. 12. Ephe. 4. to helpe one another so Christians being all members of one body ech of them mēbers of ech other ought by mutuall helpe to assist and aide one another in sicknesse Wherefore to this purpose as in sicknes he willed that the Elders of the church should be sent for and assembled to praie for the sicke so a second remedie and helpe in sicknes is that the brethren thus assembled should conferre mutually touching offences committed that mutually confessing and mutually forgiuing God might the better heare their mutuall praiers of loue for those which were sicke among them To which purpose this place serueth acknowledge your faultes one to another open that which grieueth you that a remedy may be sought and found out for it the better This mutuall confession and acknowledging one to another wherein one of vs hath offended another the sacred
desert of Maon perceiuing the inestimable loue of God toward Psal 116. Psal 143. 12. 144. 10. him protesteth that he will therefore be thankfull and do God seruice Behold Lord for I am thy seruant I am thy seruant and the sonne of thy handmaide In this sence infinitely is setuant taken in holy Scripture meaning all such as serue God in profession of religion Specially they are called the seruants of God and of Christ who in some seueral and chiefe calling do homage vnto God and promote his kingdome So Princes in common wealths Preachers and Ministers in the Church of Christ are seruants of God and of Christ in speciall seruice Our sauiour Christ in some sence is also a seruant in that in the office of a mediatour he serued the wil and pleasure of his father whereof the prophet Ezechiel speaketh Ezech. 34. I will set vp a shepheard ouer them and he shall feed them euen my seruant Dauid he shall feede them and be their Shepheard By Dauid not meaning Dauid the king the sonne of Ishai but Iesus Christ of whom Dauid was a liuely type and figure Isai also speaketh of Christ in the Isai 52. 53 v. 11. 42. 1. person of God Behold my seruant he shall prosper hee shal be extolled and exalted very high speaking of our sauiour Christ in whose hands the worke of our spirituall deliuerance prospered Seruing therefore as the head great Shepheard of the church he is called in a special respect the seruant of God Dauid and other Princes seruing God in the chiefe place of the common wealth in handling the scepter of gouernment are called Gods seruants Magistrates seeking by setting foorth Gods glory and true religion by geuing precepts and making lawes for the aduancement of godlines and vertue are called the seruants of God in that speciall seruice as Augustine Epist 50. to Boniface the Earle at large sheweth So the Apostles and Ministers of Gods word specially called to the ministerie of the word and sacraments are called in respect of that speciall seruice specially the seruants of God and of Christ as Saint Paul in sundrie his Epistles Saint Peter and this Apostle of himselfe speaketh calling themselues the seruants of the Lord. Princes themselues haue no greater honour then to 1. Iames 1. become seruaunts vnto Christ and to licke dust vnder the feet of his Church as the Prophet speaketh which is that earthly Princes should not feare to set out the gospel Psal 72. and geue all their strength to the enlarging of Christ his kingdome though it bee with hazard of their crownes Yea this is by the Apostle to the Hebrewes 1. chap. verse 7. attributed to the angels of God as their hiest honour to be ministring spirites to Christ and to be subiect vnto him How many times doeth Abraham Isaac Iacob Moses Iosua Dauid Ezechiah and all the zealous kinges of Iuda entitle themselues the seruants of God How often doeth God shew foorth his great loue fauour and goodnes to Israel yea and many other vnder this name that they are his seruants Who euer of the Princes of the earth but Pharao and Senacherib and the like exalted themselues against him in this wise Who is the Lorde that I should heare his voice I know not the Lord neither vvill I let the people goe Exod. 5. Exod. 5. If thou vvert as mightie as Dauid the King and Prophet yet this is thy greatest honour vvith him to say Behold Lord for I am thy seruant I am thy seruant and the sonne of thy handmaid Psal 116. If thou excellest al kings in vvisdome riches honor as Salomon did yet this is thy Psal 116. glory to reioyce in the seruice of Iesus Christ If thou vvert vviser then Daniel more righteous then Noah more perfect then the Prophets this is thy glory the seruice of Christ If vve vvere Princes on earth Prelats in the Church Angels in heauen yet this is the height of all glory to reioyce in the seruice of Christ Who are vve and vvhat are our fathers houses vvho can imagine and frame vnto our selues greater glory then to bee seruantes vnto Christ This the Apostles did not vvho alvvais held it their greatest glory to be indeed the seruants of Christ 1 Now this name of seruant must teache vs humilitie that we submitte our selues to Christ whose seruants we are and for his sake and by his example to serue one another wherunto he exhorteth You know that the Lords of the Gentiles haue rule ouer them and they that are Matt. 20. exercise authoritie vpon them But it shall not be so among you but who so will be great among you let him be your seruant and who so wil be chiefe among you let him be your minister euen as the sonne of man came not to be ministred vnto but to minister and to geue himselfe John 13. for a raunsome for many Whereunto his example in washing his Disciples feet serueth Whereupon he concludeth You call me master and Lord and ye say well for so I am if I then your Lord and master haue washed your feete ye ought also to wash one anothers feet For I haue geuen you an example that ye should doe euen as I haue done vnto you Verely verely I say vnto you the seruant is not greater then the master neither the Ambassador greater then hee that sent him So by their calling vnto his seruice hee by his example teacheth them humilitie both to serue him and to serue one another also The holy Apostle teaching the Saints that their freedome and liberty Gal. 5. consisteth in mutuall seruing one another in the humilitie of their hearts thereunto exhorteth Brethren you haue been called vnto libertie onely vse not your libertie as an occasion to the flesh but by loue serue one another Elsewhere about to entreate of the particular dueties of Ephes 5. speciall persons as a sentence generall he premiseth this Submitte your selues one to another in the feare of God Vnto whom Saint Peter subscribeth Submitte your selues 1. Pet. 5 one to another deck your selues inwardly in lowlines of minde for God resisteth the proud and geueth grace to the humble Hereof our profession and calling putteth vs in remembrance who are seruāts by calling to serue God in spirite and trueth and to serue one another in the feare of God Let disdainfull contempt let ambitious honour let insolent pride let peeuish arrogancie be abandoned abolished frō the harts of the Saints who are therfore seruants to serue God his sonne Iesus Christ in all pure holy obediēce for his sake to serue one another in loue 2 By our seruitude we are furthermore taught what we owe vnto Christ Iesus our Lord and maister euen all Luke 1. seruice which is the ende of our redemption and cleansing by Christ from our sinnes Zacharie the father of Saint Iohn Baptist therefore saith wee are redeemed and deliuered
greatest brunt of his afflictions in liuely hope in assured faith in wonderfull confidence in inward feeling of rare comfort of the holy Ghost breaketh out and saith I know that my redeemer liueth and that I shall rise againe in the latter day shall see God in my flesh and not with other but with these same eyes This point of wisdome had Dauid learned whē Psal 23. in great confidence and truste and singular consolation of the spirite he brake out and cried Though I shoulde walke through the shadow of death yet will I feare no euill for thou Lord art with me thy rod and thy staffe comforte me This wiseome was in the Prophets Apostles holy Martyrs whereby their torments and sufferings being in themselues extreame yet became to them tollerable To know therefore the ende and vse of the crosse and outward afflictions to feele the presence of the spirit of God in midst of our miseries comforting vs whereby the burthen of the crosse is lightened This is surely the wisdome mentioned by the Apostle If any man lack wisdome 2 This wisdome is not a qualitie in nature but grace an excellent grace and gift of God therefore of him onely is this wisdome to be sought which the Apostle to intimate willeth that if any man lack this wisdome he should aske it of God to beare the crosse patiently to know the vse of affliction truely to feele the comfort of the spirite inwardly this is wisdome not of man but of God not of our selues but from his heauenly goodnesse from whom all wisdome floweth as from a fountain truely therefore Salomon The Lord geueth wisdome out of his mouth commeth knowledge and vnderstanding And Pro. 2. 6. the holy Patriarke Iob searching and seeking out the fountaine of wisdome and the wel-head from whence all heauenly Job 28. knowledge commeth and confessing that there is no naturall meane by which men might attaine thereunto concludeth finally that it is the speciall gift of God who only knoweth the way of wisdome and vnderstandeth the place thereof When the dreame of Nabuchodonosor was reuealed vnto Daniel the prophet the Prophet Dan. 2. referring all wisdome vnto him as vnto a fountain geueth thanks and praise to God the name of God be praysed for euer and euer for all wisdome and strength are his hee changeth times and seasons he taketh away kings setteth vp kings he geueth wisdome ro the wise and vnderstanding to those that vnderstand This Solomon the king rightly considering praieth for wisdome vnto the Lorde 3. Kings 3. 4. 29. who gaue him wisdome in wonderfull manner aboue all kings and princes To this infallible trueth wise Sirach subscribing in the entrance of his treatise and booke of Ecclus. 1 Esd 3. 4. 60. wisdome confesseth All wisdome saith he commeth of the Lord and hath beene with him for euer and is with him for euermore and as a I wisdome generally is from him so is this speciall grace and gift to beare the crosse paciently and not to faint vnder the yoke and burden of afflictions Which when Paul perceiued confesseth to Philip. 1. the Church of Philippi that it was giuen them not onely to beleeue in Christ but also to suffer for him To this purpose it serueth that almightie God is called the God of Rom. 15. pacience consolation because he giueth both pacience and consolation vnder the afflictions of this life Can flesh and blood beare the heauie yoke of Christ vnlesse it bee strengthened by Christ through whom wee can doe all things Could man indure infinite and intollerable torments Philip. 4. and so manifold afflictions as whereunto wee are subiect vnlesse it were giuen him from God Could anie suffer the spoile of their goods the losse of their children the slandering of their names the restraint of their libertie the beating of their bodies the departure from their countrey the sicknesses and diseases wherewith they are compassed the diuers temptations whereinto they fall dayly were it not that they had receiued this wisedome from God The holy and blessed Apostle therfore acknowledging this to bee the gift of God wisely to behaue our selues vnder the crosse affirmeth that it is a gift from God of whom onely we must looke to craue it if any man saith he lacke wisedome let him aske it of God 3 Paciently to beare the crosse and wisely and well to behaue our selues in our afflictions being a gift from God what hope haue we to obtaine it by asking of h●● Three wayes are we here to conceiue hope of obteining this wisedome from God 1 From the promise we haue from God that hee will heare when we call open when we knocke giue when we aske it of him almightie God assureth vs of this hope by his Prophet by whom he willeth vs in the dayes of tribulation Psal 50. Luke 15. 30. to call vpon him with promise that he will heare vs In fine he protesteth that he is more readie to heare vs then we to call vpon him and more willing to supplie Isai 65. our neede then we desirous to aske it at his hands therefore saith he before they call I will answere while they Mat. 7. speake I wil heare them Our blessed sauiour inuiteth vs to pray by this hope of obtaining aske and you shall haue seeke and you shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you therefore in another place he assureth his that John 14. whatsoeuer they shall aske in his name he would doe it that the father might be glorified in the sonne And againe in that day shall you aske me nothing verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer you shall aske the father John 16. in my name he will giue it you hitherto haue you asked nothing in my name aske and you shal receiue that your ioy may be full And the Apostle in this place promiseth that if we aske we shall receiue the wisdome we pray for Seeing then wee haue promise to obtaine whatsoeuer we aske at the hands of our heauenly father if we aske it according to his will And particularly Saint Iames here 1. John 5. promiseth that wisdome shall be giuen vs when we aske it of God then is there great hope we shall obtaine it let vs therefore aske it 2 As from the promise is made vs that we shal obtaine so from the liberalitie of God we must conceiue hope of obteining the thing we pray for God giueth to euery man liberally shall he not giue vs wisdome who is liberall to all men Shall we distrust his goodnesse who is rich to all Rom 10. that call vpon him Shall we suspect his bountifulnesse which powreth out plentifully his blessings vpon al flesh Rom. 8. So liberall is our God that he hath not spared his owne sonne but hath giuen him for vs all vnto death how shall he not together with him giue vs all things also Such is the bountie
place subscribing thereunto he Psal 145. affirmeth that the Lord is neare to them that call vpon him euen all such as call vpon him faithfully Our blessed Sauiour in the Gospel to allure all men earnestly to pray commendeth praier and the force thereof from the Mat. 7. promise thereof made of obteyning therefore saith he 2 Seeke and you shall finde aske and you shall haue Iohn 14. 16. Mat. 21. 22 knock and it shal be opened vnto you And againe What soeuer you aske the Father in my name hee will geue it you Seeing then to praier so liberall and large promises are made by God and by Christ doeth it not greatly aduaunce and set foorth the excellencie and vertue of praier The Apostle Saint Iohn to commend praier vnto mē from the largenes and certainty of this promise witnesseth 1. Iohn 5. vnto vs that whatsoeuer we aske of God according to his will it should be geuen vs. And finally our Apostle thererence to shew the excellencie and rare vertue of praier willed if any man want wisdome he should aske it and it should be geuen him Herence then is praier commended James 1. that thereunto are so large promises made that what we aske in praier shal be geuen vs. 2 As the promises made of obteining doe greatlie commend the excellent vertue and force of praier so doe the testimonies and witnesses in Scripture touching the worthines thereof not a little commend it vnto vs. For what vertue is there whose praise in more places whose force in better manner whose excellent vertue by more Ecclus. 35. testimonies is commended Sirach extolling the great vertue inlarging the singular excellencie of prayer c. writeth that who so serueth the Lord should be accepted with fauour and his praier should reach vnto the clouds Matt. 21. Our sauiour Christ expressing the rare force and vertue of praier auoucheth that men shal be able to make moūtains remone out of their places to cast themselues into the sea Saint John in the Reuclation calleth the praiers of the Reuel 5. 8. Saints that sweet odour which came out of the golden vials and censers and ascended vp to God S. James expressing James 5. the great vertue of praier saith that the praier of the righteous is of great force if it be feruēt Many like are the testimonies of holy scripture wherin great force is attributed to praier which were tedious to set down in particular Finally our apostle attributeth this force power vnto James 1. it that it obtaineth the vertue of pacience a singular point of diuine wisdome To all which S. Augustine subscribing in Sermon 226. de tempo aduancing the worthines of praier affirmeth that it is the key which openeth heauen and bringeth vs to the presence of God our praier ascendeth and Gods mercy discendeth vpon vs. Praiers therefore proceeding from faith easily mount vp and pearce euen vnto God S. Chrisost in Vpon 22. Mat. opus imperf de prefect euangelij like maner both vpon the Gospel in other places of his writings setting downe the great praise of praier and the excellencie thereof concludeth that there is nothing of greater force power then sincere earnest praier Whether then we respect the promises made vnto the praiers of the Saints or whether we looke vnto the liuely testimonies of the holy scriptures the reuerend fathers whereby the force of praier is witnessed both waies praier for the excellent vertue is commaunded vnto vs. 3 Finally the vertue and force of praier by sundrie effects diuerse examples of men by praier working great matters and miracles also is manifest and apparant Herein leauing the effects of the praiers of the holy Patriarkes before the time and law of Moses wherein the great power and force of praier appeared let vs come to Moses and Exad chap ●4 and 17. such as succeeded in their times and places What shal we here say of the praiers ef Moses were they not of great force when thereby he both remoued the plagues of God from Pharao and also obtained passage by the red sea Pharao and his armie therein destroied Were they not of great vertue when at the praier of Moses the people ouercame Exod. 17. the Amalakites their enemies when hee ceassed they were ouercome of them The praier of Iosua was of great vertue when thereby the Sunne staied in the heauen Iosua 10. vntill hee had subdued the fiue kings his enimies Great was the praier of the man of God when at his praier the hand of king Jeroboam which was dried vp for 3. Kin. 13. that he stretched it out against the Prophet was restored Great were the praiers of Dauid who in infinite places witnesseth that he cried vnto the Lord his praiers were Psal effectuall Great was the force of Elias his praier who praied to God and it rained not for three yeeres and sixe 3. King 17. 18. chap. monethes and he praied againe and it rained and the land was fruitfull as the Apostle out of the storie gathereth Great were the praiers of the same Prophet and Elizeus Iames 5. 3. King 17. 4 chap. 4. Job 24. also by whose praiers the dead were restored Great was the praier of Job when God accepted it for his three friends which had in the matter of Job so shamefully offended in handling so euill a matter so cunningly What should I rehearse vnto you the praiers of Peter and Iohn Acts 3. whereby the begging cripple was healed The praiers of Peter alone whereby both Eneas was healed of the palsie and Tabitha restored to life also The praier of Paul and Asts 9. Acts 16. Acts 4. Sylas whereby the foundation of the prison was shaken They shake then both earth and heauen to make way and passage vnto God As also the place was shaken wherein the Apostles were praying being persecuted of the Iewes By praier Iehosaphat was deliuered from the danger when with Ahab he fought against the Aramites in Ramoth Gilead By praier hee obtained victorie against the Moabites 3. King 22. 2. Chron. 20 2. Chron. 32. and Ammonites which came out against him By praier Hezekiah escaped the huge host of Sennacherib king of the Assirians whose princes captaines and people were mightily by the Angel of God destroied and Hezekiah deliuered By praier Anna obtained a sonne By praier Daniel was deliuered from the rage of cruell Lions What shall 〈◊〉 1. ●e say of the rest of gods Saints who through praier haue wrought miracles raised the dead vanquished their enemies subdued the rage of cruell tyrants obtained victorie ouer Satan got strength against temptations wisdome to beare afflictions and finally haue seene wonderfull effects of their praiers so that the vertue and force of praier herehence is worthily commended vnto vs which in this place the Apostle by all these meanes intimating willeth if any man
thereby by God to be humbled whether it be by pouertie whether by contempt whether by calamitie whatsoeuer if we fixe and fasten not our eies vpon the present miseries but lift vp our hearts and cast our cogitations vpon the glorie whereof we shall be partakers we shall also be exalted so that we haue great and iust cause to reioice vnder the crosse whereunto the Apostle exhorteth Let the brother of lowe degree reioice when he is exalted Nowe as the crosse and afflictions are profitable to the poore brother and brother of lowe degree who thereby is exalted so also is this doctrine needfull and profitable to the rich Againe saith he He that is rich let him reioice in that he is made low wherein is taught how men which haue al things at wil should behaue themselues in wealth that they waxe not proud of their abundance and plentie neither trust too much to the frailtie of their cōdition but alwayes to looke to the crosse which followeth them which if it be laied on them therein they ought to reioice also When God then taketh away and remoueth the flattering and deceitfull baites of this world from rich men and so they become contemptible vnto others if he turne their wealth into wo their mirth into mourning their plentie into pouertie their abundance into want their worldly happinesse into miserie in this their humbling are they exhorted by the Apostle to reioice for thereby many occasions of many sinnes are remoued and therefore rich men by spoile of goodes losse of wealth decrease of riches or what other way soeuer tried in that they are humbled must reioice Seeing then in the state of this life there is great occasion ministred of impacience both in the poore and low degree of men and also in the rich and plenteous estate of men the onely salue of both their sores is in all changes and chaunces of this life to behaue themselues pacient vnder the crosse and thus is the doctrine here deliuered profitable for poore and rich as the Apostle teacheth Let the brother of lowe degree reioyce in that he is exalted and againe the rich in that he is humbled If any obiect here that Saint Iames willeth the brother of low degree to reioyce when he is exalted and the rich man when he is made low and humbled which seemeth contrarie to other Scriptures where we are exhorted Iere. 9. to reioyce onely in God as by the Prophet Ieremie men are commanded neither to reioice in their wisdome riches strength nor any other thing but in that they know God which executeth iudgement equitie and iustice on earth And by Saint Paul who aduiseth men to reioice in Philp. 4. the Lord onely Reioice in the Lord alway and againe I say reioice Hereunto the answere is easie 1. If we acknowledge whatsoeuer happeneth vnto vs to be from God who both woundeth and healeth casteth down and lifteth vp humbleth and exalteth then either in our low degree being 1. Kings 2. exalted or in our riches and plentie being humbled to reioice is to reioice in that God sendeth and so to reioice in the Lord. 2. If againe we looke into our owne wretched cōditiō who of our selues haue nothing but whatsoeuer we haue we haue receiued it thē in the things which we haue receiued from the hands of God moderately to 1. Cor. 4. reioice is also to reioice in the Lord who is the fountaine and well-head of all graces and blessings 3. Finally if we hold this as a ground and foundation that all good 1. Per. 5. gifts flowing vnto man grow of his meere fauour and mercy not from any merit or desert of ours then in the good blessings of God of exaltation aduauncement glorie or other whatsoeuer to reioice is godly christian and dutifull and thus men reioycing reioice in the Lorde The Apostle Saint Iames then in exhorting the brother of lowe degree to reioice when he is exalted and the rich in like maner when he is made lowe and humbled is in all points ansvverable vnto other Scriptures vvherein vve are required to reioyce in the Lord for thus for Gods sake and in the obedience of his commandements to reioyce is to reioyce in the Lord also These things thus set downe the Apostle geueth a A reason reason of the later doctrine that the rich must reioice whē he is made lowe Which reason is drawen from the nature of the things themselues for wealth riches and worldlie pompe are most vaine vncertaine transitorie and fraile so that when we enioy them and they flowe we must not be Psal 62. 1. Tim. 6. proud of them nor set our mindes vpon them if we be bereft of them we must not cast downe the head heart but rather reioice as the Apostle exhorteth For what should men put confidence in vain and transitory riches or why should they faint in hart for the losse of that which most easily pearisheth Touching the vanitie and vncertainetie of worldly wealth pompe and glorie how often and how carefully therof are we admonished in holy scripture Solomon the wiseman dissuading men from settling their eies and affections Pro. 23. vpon worldly wealth and riches reasoneth from their vncertainenes and vanitie wilt thou cast thy eie vppon that which is nothing riches taketh her to her wings as an egle and flieth away into the heauē Dauid his father through longe experience seeing that there was nothing Psal 37. more vaine then the riches and goods of this world Acknowledgeth that albeit the riche be strong and shoote vp like the greene bay tree yet are they cut downe from the earth like Grasse which withereth They passe away and are not if thou seeke their place thou shalt not finde it Solomon bringeth in the rich proude and couetous men of Wisd 5. the earth whose whole delight and happines was worldly pompe and glorie euen from the bottome of hell it selfe to confesse the vncertainty and vanitie of their condition wherein in their times they so greately gloried What say they hath pride profited vs or what profit hath the pomp of riches purchased vs all these paste away as a shadow and as a post that passeth by As a shipp in the water an arrow in the ayre a birde in the heauen and element our Sauiour Christ dissuading men from heaping and hurding Mat. 6. vp such vncertaine treasures willeth that men should not lay vp for them sealues treasure on earth where ruste and moath corrupteth and theeues breake through and steal To which purpose the Apostle giueth them epithites or additions and calleth them vncertaine charge them that are rich in this world that they bee not high minded and 1. Timo. 6. that they trust not in vncertaine riches therefore our Sauiour termeth him a fool that in the vanity of his minde Lu. 12. through confidence in vncertaine wealth plucked down his barnes and enlarged them and then
them vp to reprobate mindes as the scripture speaketh The proposition of the holy Apostle standeth still for true Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God Of this matter more may be seene vpon the first Epistle of Peter 3. Chap. v. 17. Rom. 9. 18. v. Thus their errour is refuted who holde that as good motions are inspired vs from God so euill suggestions are suggested by him also so that when men steale take away by violence commit adultery do iniurie to their brethren or any such like they must not say we are moued solicited and stirred vp thereunto by God Wherefore the Apostle here in his proposition giueth them admonition Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God 2 This being the proposition in the second and next place followeth the confirmation of that proposition containing the arguments and reasons why men may not say they are tempted of God which reasons are three The first reason is drawen from the nature of God God is by nature and of himselfe pure simple holy righteous good neither doth he admit the darknesse of errour or deceite neither moueth or solliciteth hee any to errour or euill he falleth not himselfe neither casteth he any into wickednesse For he being in nature good pure holy cannot be moued to commit euill neither moueth he any thereunto wherefore hee is not authour of euill temptations in men 2 That God is good holy pure innocent righteous and one that hateth sinne the Scriptures in sundry places teach vs. For first in the booke of Leuiticus not once but often it is said that the Lorde is holy and therefore the people by like example ought in like maner to be holy Leuit. 11. 20. 2. Chron. 19. Iehosaphat the King exhorted his princes rulers officers magistrates and iudges to execute iudgement and iustice without partialitie or respect had of mens persons rendering this reason because they executed the iudgement of God with whom there is no respect of persons nor any iniquitie Dauid the princely prophet telleth men that the wicked shall not stande in Gods sight because Psal 5. GOD hateth all those that committe iniquitie In an other place hee beareth this recorde of God that Psal 145. he is true in all his sayings and holy in all his workes Siracides the sonne of Sirach would not men to impute Ecclus. 15. the cause of their sinnes vnto GOD because he hateth all sinne and wickednesse of man wherefore he thus exhorteth Say not thou it is through the Lorde that I turne backe for thou oughtest not to do the thing that hee hateth and say not thou hee hath caused mee to erre for hee hath no neede of the sinfull man for the Lorde hateth all abhomination of errour and they which feare him loue it not Many mo the like places are in scripture set downe which affirme of God that he is holy righteous iust and a hater of iniquitie which all confirme this place of the Apostle who disputing of the nature of God sheweth that hee neither is tempted to euill neither tempteth any for which cause men ought not to say when they are tempted they were tempted to euill by God Satan beeing a lyer from the beginning and not continuing in the truth Iohn 8. Ephes 6. mooueth men to falshoode and errour and not God the Diuell being the prince of the wickednesse and darknesse of this world stirreth and soliciteth men therein to wickednesse and tempteth many wayes to euill and mischiefe for which cause he is called the tempter because he alwayes tempteth men to commit iniquitie and sinne Matth. 4. So doth not God who is of a pure perfect holy righteous disposition and neither himselfe is tempted neither tempteth he any to euill Whereupon the Apostle as by his first reason here sheweth that when men are tempted they must not lay the euil vpon God neither say they were tempted of God because he neither can be tempted of any to euill neither tempteth he any 2 Another reason why when men are tempted to euil they may not say they are tempted of god is drawne from the setting downe of the verie true and perfect cause of temptations The true natural proper immediate cause of temptations is our owne concupiscense therefore not God For there cannot be two or many true naturall immediate proper efficient causes of one thing Therefore seeing of temptations to euill we haue the true naturall and proper cause in our selues euen concupiscence and carnall corruption which dwelleth in vs by original deprauation we may not make God but that the cause of our temptations to euill Saint Hierome therefore against Jouinian saieth that as in good things God is the Contra Jouinian Rom. 9. doer and perfecter for it is neither in the willer neither in the runner but in GOD which sheweth mercie and helpeth that we may come vnto the ende so euill things and sinnes the seede that is in vs is the prouocation and pricker forwarde but the diuell the perfecter of all euill The chiefe and immediate cause of euill temptations is our owne corruption and concupiscense which drawing vs away from the rule of reason and the right path of the commaundementes of God entiseth vs whereof Saint James here saith euery man is tempted when he is drawne away by his own concupiscense and is enticed The similitude of entising is taken either from beasts which hunting after their pray are oftentimes intangled by the baite of the taker and pursuite of the hunter or from birdes which seeking for meate spying corne or breade crummes or vvormes or the like baite in the snare or pitfolde or among lime tvvigges or vnder the net vvhich shall ouervvhelme them are taken entised and entrapped or from the fish vvhich greedily gaping and running after the baite of the angler svvallovveth dovvne both baite and hooke and so is deceyued Euen so men through their concupiscence are drawne avvay either the sweetnesse and pleasure either the gaine and profite either the easinesse and facilitie of a thing proposed and so are entised Our owne concupiscense therefore drawing vs away and intising to euill being the naturall and proper cause of euill temptations wee may not ascribe our temptations vnto God but vnto our selues and this is the second reason why when we are tempted we may not say that wee are tempted of GOD because our owne concupiscense not God is cause of these temptations 3 By occasion of this place before hee come to the The effests of lust and concupiscense third reason he setteth downe the effects of this concupiscense the cause of euill temptations which I noted for the third thing in this discourse This he doth by a kinde of gradation or slipping from one thing to another wherof thus saieth Saint James Then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death In which place he noteth first the
famous Physicion calling and counting it follie blasphemed it All men which by vile speeches disgrace discredite reproach or speake euill and maliciously of Christian religion as diuers and sundrie wise prophane rich men offend blaspheme the worthie name whereupon we are called and whereby we are called 2 As by their speech so by their liues men blaspheme and dishonour the Gospell when they which professe religion walke not neither liue thereafter by which meanes the Gospell is flaundered dishonoured blasphemed 2. Kings 12. Thus Dauid blasphemed the worthy name whereby he was called when by his adulterie he caused the name of God to be euill spoken of and blasphemed by the wicked the rulers ouer the people of Israel causing them to houle blasphemed the name of God in like manner as is Isai 52. witnessed by the Prophet The Iewes which professed the selues the people of GOD by breaking the law of God whereof they boasted and liuing in all vncleannes mischiefe Rom. 2. and wickednes caused also the name of God to be blasphemed among the brethren as Saint Paul writeth All men professing godlines yet liuing disorderly dishonestly and otherwise farre then their calling requireth blaspheme the worthy name whereby they are called as adulterers fornicators vncleane persons couetous men extortioners oppressours drunkards vsurers liers deceauers the malicious and enuious the slaunderous and reproachfull persons with such like professing godlines but practising wickednes in their whole conuersation blaspheme the name whereby they are called And thus the rich men oftentimes blaspheme the Gospell in like manner Albeit both wayes the worthy name whereby Christians are called be blasphemed by the wicked rich men of the world yet the Apostle seemeth to haue spoken of the former kinde whereby the Gospell is euill spoken of and blasphemed as by the spitefull malicious and vile slaunders mockings and reproaches of Christ and his religion Which thing while the rich men of the world doe they ought to be helde as cursed and execrable To honour such as these are what madnes is it And as in the Apostles time there were such hare-braines and frantike fooles so this madnes also remayneth among vs in these daies For we cappe we crouche we bowe we bende we preferre we honour we esteeme we respect and that with disdaining of the poore brethren vngodly men mockers and scorners of religion arrand papists knowen adulterers open blasphemers dayly liers luxurious and riotous persons carnall professours yea and professed enemies vnto the Gospell and worthie name whereby wee are called whose whole force is bent whose whole laboure is imploied whose studie tendeth by all possible meanes not onely in part to corrupt but in whole to subuert Christian religion to bring in idolatrie restore superstition and sowe the seede of scisme in the Church of Iesus Christ What madnesse is this in our braines what phrensie hath possessed vs what lacke of sense and reason what doting follie hath bewitched vs These are then the two euils which in accepters of mens persons are here condemned peruersnesse of iudgement in preferring the prophane rich whō God abhorreth and contemning the poore godly whom he hath called and their doting madnesse in that they honour and preferre those who for their tyrannie vnmercifulnesse and extreeme crueltie towards the Saints and their horrible blasphemie whereby they blaspheeme and speake euill of the worthie name whereby we are called are to be counted execrable and cursed And this is the second thing in this first reason to be considered the euils which in respecters of persons in the professing of the Gospel of Christ are here condemned 3 The third thing in this first argument is the conclusion The conclusion wherof thus saith the Apostle but if ye fulfill the roiall lawe according to the Scripture you doe well but if you regarde persons yee commit finne and are reprooued of the lawe as transgressours In which wordes the Apostle concludeth that charitie which by the lawe of God is prescribed can not stande with this respect of persons for the lawe requireth that men shoulde loue their neighbours as themselues without exception counting all men our neighbours therefore in the dueties of loue men must not regarde mens persons but generally do their duetie to all And this conclusion seemeth to be inferred by the way of preuenting an obiection which might haue beene made by them which honour the rich with the contempt of the poore for they might say to honour is a point of loue loue is the fulfilling of the law therefore in honouring the rich we fulfill the will and the lawe of God and so doe well Matt. 22. Rom. 13. Gal. 5. 1. Tim. 1. and offend not Thereunto Saint Iames answereth if in deede you loue according to the true meaning tenour of the law which willeth vs to loue our neighbour as our selues and counteth all men our neighbour and therefore inioyneth loue generally towardes all to bee extended you doe well But if you regarde in your loue the persons of men and loue honour preferre men because of their riches pompe glorie and outwarde appearance you sinne and become transgressours of the law If you loue euen the rich also as men you do wel but if you loue and honour them because of their riches you doe sinne and transgresse the law This conclusion in these two verses contayned ministreth vnto vs the consideration of foure things 1 VVhat the royall lawe is here mencioned 2 Why this lawe is called a royall lawe 3 VVhat this royall lawe commaundeth men 4 Howe this lawe is fulfilled 1 The lawe which here is called royall is the lawe of loue and righteousnesse prescribing what duetie to euerie one pertaineth and it containeth that part of the lawe which in the second table is deliuered teaching vs to loue one without hating of another to honour one without contemning of another to preferre one without disdaine of another to regarde the rich without neglect of the poore brethren The lawe of loue therefore which prescribeth what duetie is to bee perfourmed to euerie one is the royall lawe by Saint Iames here mencioned But if you fulfill the royall law which sayeth thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe you doe well 2 This lawe of loue here called the royall lawe is therefore called the royall lawe 1 Because it is from a King not mortall but immortall euen the king of kings and Lord of Lords euen from God This law then proceeding from this King is called the kings lawe the royall 1. Tim. 6. 15. Reuel 5. lawe the princely lawe And that this lawe concerning loue is from GOD it is manifest for God in the reforming of his people among other things prescribeth Leuit. 19. this lawe vnto them loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Saint Paul agreeable thereunto sayeth Concerning brotherly loue I neede not to write vnto you for 1. Thes 4. 1. Iohn 4. you are taught of God to loue one
man be iustified by the like The deuils beleeue and tremble yet not iustified not saued Now that the deuils beleeue there is one God yea and confesse Iesus Christ to be his onely sonne yet tremble before his throne and diuine presence the holy word of God and the most sacred scriptures do teach vs when our blessed Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ was come into the land of the Gergesens there mette him two m●n possessed with deuils which came out of the graues very fierce and terrible so that no man might passe by that way And these deuils possessing these two men cried out vnto Christ with trembling and feare Iesus thou sonne of God what haue we to doe with thee art thou come hether to torment vs before the time In another Euangelist in like manner when the people preaced about Christ to be healed the vncleane spirites which were in them whom Christ then cured seeing him fell downe before him and cried saying Thou art the sonne of God The deuill possessing him whom neither fetters could holde nor chaines could binde nor bandes could bridle seeing the Lord Iesus a farre of running and worshipped him crying with a lowde voyce what haue I to doe with thee Iesus the sonne of the most high God To this sense soundeth that also in the Euangelist Saint Luke 4. item v. 41. eius deus Luke 8. 26. Luke who writeth that the vncleane spirite possessing the man in the Synagogue of Capernaum in Galile knew Christ God blessed for euermore and also confessed him openly Whereof the Euangelist saieth thus In the Synagogue there was a man which had a spirite of an vncleane deuill which cried with a loude voice saying vnto Iesus Christ Oh what haue we to doe with thee Iesus of Nazareth Art thou come to destroy vs I know whom thou art euen the holy one of God These places nowe cited out of Saint Matthew cap. 8. ver 18. 19. of S. Marke 3. cap. ver 11. and cap. 5. ver 2. 3. c. of Saint Luke cap. 4. ver 33. 34. c. and 5. 41. Luke cap. 8. ver 26. and many such like places doe euidently shewe a kinde of beliefe to bee in the deuils whereby they be perswaded there is a God Their confessing also the sonne of God Iesus Christ to be God euen the sonne of the most highest and their prostrating and casting downe of themselues before his diuine presence Finally their feare least he should torment them and their desiring of him not to sende them into the deepe the place of their punishment confirmeth this truth the deuils beleeue also and tremble The deuills then doe not onely beleeue there is one God but also confesse Iesus Christ to bee his sonne and tremble for feare of his mightie power To conclude this beliefe of the deuils and vnclean Acts 19. spirites saint Luke in the Acts of the holy Apostles setteth forth most euidently in the storie of the seuen sonnes of Sceua the priest and Iewe. Which sonnes of his being Exorcists and taking vpon them to call on the name of Iesus whom Paul preached coniured therby the foule and vncleane spirites to come out of men but the euill spirit by them thus coniured in a certaine man answered them and said Iesus I know and Paul I know but who are you Thus did the deuil nor only beleeue but confesse also not onely Christ the sonne of the most highest but Paul also the seruant of the Lord and of our blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ Albeit these testimonies out of the newe Testament bee most cleare to teach vs that the deuils beleeue there is one God yet let vs also cast our eyes vppon the former generations and looke euen from the beginning and in the succeeding ages and wee shall see out of the olde Testament also this same confirmed and so haue a most sweete and pleasaunt harmonie of them both together VVhen God Almightie had made man and placed him in the most pleasaunt garden of Eden and had giuen Gene. 3. him commaundement that he shoulde not eate of the forbidden fruite which grewe in the middest of Paradise euen of the tree of the knowledge of good and euill Satan tempting man to disobedience doth not denie that there was anie God which had giuen such commaundement to man but as beleeuing there was one God and confessing the same vnto Euah asketh her whether God indeede had commaunded them not to eate of the tree of knowledge VVhen the sonnes of God the holie Angels stoode all about the throne of God and Satan himselfe comming from the compassing of the earth and the worlde Iob 1. 2. presented himselfe also before his diuine Maiestie and God had demaunded of him whether he had considered Iob his seruant The deuill as beleeuing the heauenlie and diuine nature confesseth the Godheade in his accusation of Iob hath Iob serued God for nought Thus the deuill at that time also beleeued Finally when the Lorde Almightie sitting vpon his heauenly throne and hauing all the hoste of heauen about 3. Kings 22. him as it were consulting and deuising to bring a iust plague vpon Ahab the wicked and vngodly King of Israell had but asked the question who woulde entice Ahab that he might perish in Ramoth Gilead Satan the deuill as beleeuing that diuine nature and excellent maiestie to be God submitted himselfe to Gods will offered himselfe to the execution of his iudgements and sayd I will entice him Thus then both the testimonies of the olde and the authorities of the newe Testament confirme the doctrine of our Apostle the deuils beleeue and tremble Nowe where the Apostle Saint Iames saieth thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well the deuils also beleeue and tremble this speach thou doest well may haue a double sense For either it may be taken irronically and in taunting wise as iustly vpbraiding and reprouing them for their vaine ostentation of fayth and their boasting in their beleefe which is no better then the faith of diuels VVherefore as when men doe most wickedly yet we in reproouing in taunting in mocking and checking manner say O it is well done and so reproue their iniquitie So here Saint Iames bitterly and sharpely inueighing agaynst the wicked and iustly reproouing their vaine faith sayeth Thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well the deu●ls beleeue also and tremble and so condemneth their hypocrisie As who should say is it well done in deede when thou doest beleeue no better then deuils do Or else it may be spoken affirmatiuely and to this sense thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well for it is a good thing thus to doe but yet is not this all neither is it inough or sufficient neither must thou rest in that degree of fayth but goe on and proceede and growe from faith to faith and then to beleeue there is one God is well Otherwise thy faith shall not profite thee for the deuils
confusion shame and ignominie as Absolom not content to be the kings sonne but hunting after 2. Kings 18 the kingdome before his time tooke sword in hand against his father and was miserably confounded and destroyed So euen among vs within our times and knowledge some in high place some in lower roomes endeuouring by greedie desire to rise and aspire higher then reason and calling required haue applied themselues some with popular demeanor some with shamefull treason some with secreat conspiracies some with deuillish and vnnatural treacheries some with one horrible deuise or other to attaine their purpose But blessed be God all in vaine for thereby they seeking great honour haue come to fearefull endes Euen so let all thy enemies pearish O Lorde and the enemies of thine annointed But saue and defend thou her O Lord from the face of her aduersaries and keepe her vnder the shadowe of thy winges let her be before thee as the sunne shining in his might both now and for euer Amen Finally some ambitiously bent to enlarge and increase 3. Kings 23. their kingdomes haue either lost their liues and labours as Achab for his indeuour for Ramoth Gilead or haue spent more by seeking them then gained by the recouery of them or finally keep those kingdoms countreies or prouinces whereunto they haue aspired with greater labour and cost then either comfort to thēselues or commoditie vnto their people and so they haue not obteyned their purpose This hath fallen out in former times this I trust will fall out by the helpe of God to barbarous Turkes cruell Saracens bloudie Spaniards and such ambitious persons Thus no doubt in these as in a light ouershadowing wee see how truely the Apostle affirmeth that the vnrulie pleasures and immoderate desires of men are oftentimes without effect ye lust and haue not ye enuie desire immoderatly and cannot obteine ye fight and warre get nothing Now the reasons folow why such desires of men are voide of their effects commonly and for the most parte Why the desires of men are voide of effaecti frustrate and the reasons are two 1. Men desire riches wealth and honor and seek by all meanes to come therevnto yet they are often deceiued of their purposes because they aske not these things from God the only geuer of all good things yea whose gift riches and honour are in speciall And for riches who can deny them to be the gift of God Was it not by God that Abraham becam so wealthie were not Isaac his riches the gift of God did Gen. 13. Gen. 26. Gen. 30. Gen. 31 Gen. 41. not God blesse Laban with riches for Iacobs sake saith not Iacob to his wiues the daughters of Laban that God had taken away their fathers goods and riches and geuen it to him doeth not Joseph call the second sonne whō the Lord gaue him in Egypt Ephraim because the Lorde had made him increase in wealth riches as well as in children in the land of his affliction Iob confesseth riches to haue beene geuen him from God when thereof speaking he saith The Lord gaue and the Lord taketh away blessed be the name of the Lord. When God had tried Iob Iob had repēted before the Lord the Lord gaue vnto him Iob. 1. twice as much riches as he had before for his first wealth was seuen thousand sheepe but his later fourteene thousand Iob. 41. his former wealth was three thousand Camels but his later was sixe thousand his former wealth was fiue hundred yoake of Oxen his later a thousande his former wealth fiue hūdred she asses but his later was a thousand and this was from God When Salomon had from God choise geuen him what he would aske he asked wisdome 3. Kings 3. to gouern his people which thing so pleased god as that God therefore said vnto him because hee had asked neither long life nor riches nor the life of his enemie therefore he would geue him also that which he asked not both riches and honour Therefore the sonne of Sirach referreth riches to God as the geuer thereof Prosperitie Ecclus. 11 1. Sam. 2. 7. saith he and aduersitie life and death pouertie riches come of the Lord. Seeing then riches are from God they ought to be asked of him and sought for at his handes Which if wee doe not we may labour and trauaile long enough before wee shall attaine thereunto And as riches are from God so honour also is from 1. Kings 2. Psal 113. 7 him Anna the mother of Samuel confesseth the same The Lord saith she maketh poore and maketh rich brin geth lowe and exalteth he raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth vp the begger out of the dunghill to set them among Princes and to make them inherite the seate of glorie Whereunto the Princely Prophet Dauid Psal 75. subscribeth in the Psalms To come to preferment is neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South but God is the iudge hee maketh lowe and hee maketh high God promiseth Salomon both riches and honour so that among the kings there shoulde be none 3. Kings 3. like him al his daies Dauid confesseth his preferment before 2. Kings 6 3. Kings 20. Saul to be from God The Queen of Saba referreth Salomons glorious and pompous aduancement to god Daniel confesseth all power all promotion all honour all preferment to be from the Lord. Cyrus the heathen king confesseth his glorie to haue beene of God also whereby it appeareth that both riches and glorie are Dan. 2. 4 1. Esdras from the Lord. Wherefore seeing these are both from him when they are not asked no maruaile they be not obteyned The first reason why mens desires concerning wealth and honout are oftentimes voide is because they aske not these things from the hands of God whose gifts they are but they seeke them by their owne meanes by euill waies by vnlawfull trades by wicked endeuours Thus one by fraud another by force one by violence another by villenie one by this euill meane another by that goe about and seeke to attaine to wealth and honour but they seek not these in the fear of god nor at his hāds which geueth them therefore full oft their purposes are frustrate Thus men lust haue not the thing they lust after they enuie and desire immoderately yet obteine not that which they desire and whereafter they enuie They fight they warre they striue they struggle they toile they moile yet compasse not nor comprehende that which they laboure thus after because they aske it not of GOD but seeke by euill meanes to obtaine it They acknowledge not God the geuer of these things therfore they labour in vaine They lust they enuie they desire they fight they warre yet they obteine not because they aske not Wherefore as men hauing any thing in their power and hand to geue looke to be asked and desired the
bee ouyded for the Scripture teacheth vs that naturally we lust after enuie and desire euill things Thus the Scripture here signifieth that which out of the Scripture is gathered Nowe hee sayeth that the Scripture sayeth that the spirite which dwelleth in vs lusteth after enuie By the Spirite here the corrupt affection and heart of man is vnderstoode the crooked crabbed and corrupt disposition of nature the fancie the inclination of Ezech. 13. our hearts naturally In which sense and signification the Prophet vseth the worde Spirite when God willed him to say to those Prophets which prophecied out of their owne hearts He are the worde of the Lorde Thus sayeth the Lorde GOD Wo vnto the foolish prophets that followe their owne spirite and haue seene nothing The Prophet Daniel speaking of King Belshazzar sayeth that when his heart was puft vp and his Dan 5. Spirit hardened in pride then was hee deposed from his kingdome and they tooke his honour from him In which places and the like the Spirite is taken for the heart minde and corrupt affection of man The meaning then of this place is that it is manifest by testimonies of Scripture tending thereunto that the heart spirit and minde of man is naturally set vpon enuie euill wickednesse neither dooth the Scriptures speake in vaine thereof for we are giuen in deede to lust to enuie to desire to quarrell to contende either for encrease of wealth or of honour among men Therefore the Scripture sayeth not in vaine for it is too sure and certaine that the spirite which dwelleth in vs naturall corruption which possesseth the seate of our hearts lusteth after enuie Some by spirite here vnderstande the Spirit of God and reade the whole sentence interrogatiuely thinke you that the Scripture sayeth in vaine the spirite that dwelleth in you lusteth after enuie Making this the meaning dooth the Scripture teach that Gods spirite moueth vs to enuie debate lust and such like No it is not Gods Spirit that moueth men therunto wherwith we are not guided when we are quarrellous and contentious But how those words then thinke you that the Scripture saith in vaine may be vnderstood I see not Therefore I retaine the former sence as môst naturall The other part of this answere is but the Scripture offereth more grace and therefore saith God resisteth the proude but giueth grace to the humble Whereas naturally wee are giuen to euill and lust after enuie the Scripture offereth more grace and giueth vs better counsell then to giue our selues to these quarrels and to be caried away with such desires therefore it sayth God resisteth the proude but giueth grace to the humble By the Scripture here hee vnderstandeth euident testimonies for this thing is in sundrie places recited By the proude hee vnderstandeth such as in following their owne desires and lusts rebell agaynst God By the humble he meaneth such as in meekenesse of spirite and humilitie of minde submit themselues to God with reuerence and endeuour to suppresse their euill affections in themselues whose endeuour God fauoureth and furthereth giuing his grace vnto them which is farre better then all worldly riches wealth honour whatsoeuer or delights and pleasures most precious among the sonnes of men This saying God resisteth the proude but giueth grace vnto the humble eyther in the verie same woordes or in woordes of the same sense is often repeated and it consisteth of two members 1 That God resisteth the proude 2 That he giueth grace to the humble For the first God resisteth the proude Dauid the princely Prophet auoucheth the same God sayth he wil Psal 18. saue the poore people but will cast downe the proude lookes Which thing Almightie God also rhreatneth against the obstinate and rebellious people by his Prophet the high looke of man shall be humbled and the Isai 2. Iere. 49. 16. 50. 24. 30. Ezec. 17. loftinesse of man shall be abased and the Lord onely shall be exalted in that day Ezechiel setting downe the Parable of the two Eagles whereby Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon and Iochoniah the king of Israel were ment which Nabuchodonosor abounding in power riches and a mightie kingdome should carie the other into captiuitie and afterwarde shoulde bee plagued for his oppression of the Church and people of God comforting the Saints the Prophet telleth them that God would beate downe the proude enemies of the Church and exalt her which was low and despised and saith All the trees of the field shall knowe that I the Lorde haue brought downe the high tree and exalted the lowe tree that I haue dried vp the greene tree and made the drie tree to flourish I the Lorde haue spoken it and done it In like manner entreating of the fall of Zedechiah and the captiuitie of Iehozadecke the Priest in the person Ezec. 21. of GOD the Prophet speaketh thus sayeth the Lorde God I will take away the Diademe and take away the crowne whereof the one might concerne the priest the other the Prince I wil take away the diademe and take of the crowne they shal be nomore the same I will exalte the base or humble abase him that is high And cōparing Pharao with the king of Assiriah for prosperitie Ezech. 31. prophesying like destruction to them both witnesseth that God would abate both their prides and resist the insolencie of their spirites Nabuchodonosor being cast downe by God and afterwarde exalted againe Daniel 4. breaketh forth into these wordes in Daniel the Prophete Now therefore I Nabuchodonosor prayse and extoll and magnifie the King of heauen whose workes are all truth and his wayes iudgements and those that walke in pride he is able to abate The whole 10. chapter of Sirach tendeth Ecclus. 10. almost to no other purpose but to teach that God resisteth the proude Salomon the wise king ouer Israell auoucheth the same truth and saith the pride of a man Prou. 29. shall bring him lowe because God euermore resisteth the proude as the Apostle teacheth Saint Peter hath the very same sentence decke your selues with lowlinesse of 1. Pet. 5. minde for God resisteth the proude and giueth grace to the humble The blessed virgin Marie in her song Luke 1. singeth prayse vnto God who had put downe the mighty from their seate and exalted the humble and meeke Our Sauiour Christ saith that such as exalt themselues Luke 14. in their owne pride shal be abated and brought low And the heathenish Megera in Seneca saith to Lycus rule being proude in minde and beare a lofty and high stomacke Seneca in his traged for God followeth at the backe the proude to punish them and resist them Who so through worldly desires therefore shall lift vp themselues against God must looke to haue God to resist them as an enemie and with his mighty power to withstande them for the Scripture teacheth that God resisteth the proude See Cyprian 1. lib. epist 3. fol. 7.
Now how and by what meanes doth God resist the How God resisteth the proude proud by many meanes and sundry 1 He resisteth them by punishing them for their pride against him as he did the builders of the Turret of Babel whose toppe should haue reached to heauen if Gen. 11. their purpose might haue bene effected But God seeing the vanitie of their mindes the pride of their hearts and the insolencie of their spirites punished them with confusion of their language that one could not vnderstand another and so they were resisted When Manasses was 2 Chro. 33. Daniel 4. puft vp with pride he was resisted by the punishment of God who deliuered him vp into captiuitie wherein he was humbled Nabuchodonosor waxing proude of his goodly and gorgious citie which he had builte was resisted by God through punishmentes for the Lord made him seuen yeares to remaine in the fieldes as a beast and bannished him the societie of man So Jsai the prophet speaking against the proude Babilonians Isai 13. 14. 13. Iere. 29. v. 16. 50. v. 29. 30. Psa 31. 18. v. 27. bringeth in God threatening by punishments to resist them I will visite the wickednes vpon the world and their iniquitie vpon the wicked and I will cause the arrogancie of the proude to cease and caste downe the pryde of tyraunts Dauid mentioneth this way of resistance the Lord preserueth the faithfull and aboundantly rewardeth the wicked doer Thus was the pryde of Goliah resisted when God punished him by little Dauid who with his sling stone patted him on the pate cast him 1. Kings 17 to ground and with his owne svvorde cut of his head and so abated the pride and glory of the Philistines Thus God resisteth the pride of Assur by bringing many punishments vpon him for his arrogancie and insolencie of spirite Thus God punished the pryde of Absalon and so resisted his seditious enterprices by hanging him by the 2. Kings 16 haire of his head in a thicked Thus God resisted the pride of Antiochus vvho in the hautinesse of his harte had threatned to make Hierusalem a common buriall place for the Ievves but immediatly 2. Mach. 9. GOD smote him vvith an incurable disease in his bovvels vvherevvith till his death he vvas tormented So resisted he Herode Agrippa vvho making on oration to the people vvhereat they cried it is the voice of Acto 12. God and not of man he proudly chalenging this praise was resisted by God by like punishments Capanêus in Capanêus great pryde being one of the captaines which besieged Thebes saide he would besiege it in despite of GOD whose pryde God resisted by punishment for a thunder bo●●e as some say or as other write a stone from the wall fell vpon him and slewe him Finally when Apryes king Apryes of Aegypt had proudely sayd that neyther man nor God colde take his kingdome from him he was by the iust punishment of god resisted for he was choked and so destroied Thus by sending punishments vpon the proude the Lord resisteth them 2. Sometimes he resisteth the proude by hindring their purposes by some meane vnlooked for As when the proude king of Assiriah had intended the destruction of Hierusalem god resisted him first in raysing vp Tirrhaka the king of the Blackemores to fight against him for 4. King 19 Act. 4. 21. which he departed and afterward vpon a second siege by sending his Angell to destroy his people which when he sawe he departed and went to his owne countrie In like manner was Saules proude and malitious heart a bated 1. Kings 23 who purposing the destruction of Dauid hearde say by a messenger vpon the sudden that the Philistines had inuaded the lande for which cause he returned from pursuing Dauid and so he was resisted 3. God also resisteth the proude when hee turneth their deuises vpon their owne neckes and maketh them fall into the mischiefe and snares which they haue prepared for others When Haman in intollerable pride had Esther 7. 9. determined the destruction of the Iewes and had prepared a iubbet or gallowes for Mardocai the Lorde resisted his proude purpose and caused him to be hongevpon the same gallowes which he had prepared for another When the proude princes of the prouinces of Babylon had diuised and determined the death of Daniel Daniel 6. and by a false accusation had condemned him to the denne of Lions God resisted their proude and malitious deuise and caused that the same Lions deuoured them their wiues and children whom they had thought should haue bene the death of Daniel When Cush one of Saules kinsmen had falsly accused Psal 7. Dauid the man of god threateneth that God would in this wise resist him and therfore saith that he hath made a pitte and himselfe was fallen thereinto and that his mischiefe should fall vpon his owne pate and his crueltie vpon his owne head In another place shevving how Psal 9. God resisted the wicked and proude men of the earth by ouerthrovving them in their ovvne enterprises and causing their ovvne vvicked and mischieuous deuises to sall vpon themselues affirmeth that the Heathen were sunke dovvne in the pitte that they made and that their feete were taken in the same nette they had spredde for other Againe witnessing that the vvicked enterprises of Psal 34. the proude should turne to their ovvne destruction the Prophet saith wickednesse and malice shall slay the wicked and they which hate the righteous shall perish To that purpose is that saying the wicked haue drawen their Psal 37. 57. 6. 94. 23. sword and bente their bowe to caste dovvne the poore and needie and to slay such as are of an vpright conuersation but their svvord shal enter into their owne harts and their bovves shal be broken Therefore Salomon his sonne saith he that diggeth a pitte shal fall therinto he Prou 26. Ecclus. 27. v. 25 26. 27. that rolleth a stone it shal returne vpon him To turne the wicked deuises of the proude vpon their owne pates to make the mischiefes of the vngodly to light vpon themselues to bring the proude into the pitte of perdition which they haue deuised for other men is a way whereby also god resisteth them 4. Moreouer GOD resisteth the proude by confounding their councels enterprises and deuises as appeareth 2. Kings 17. in proude Achittaphell and others As in the inuincible nauie of the proude Spaniardes so they called Anno 1588. it sent against little England so miraculously confounded and in greatest parte destroyed by the mightie hand of God 5. Neyther thus onely are the proude resisted but also God resisteth the proude by remouing and taking avvay frō them the things vvhereof they haue bin proude as he threatened the damsels of Israell to take avvay all Jsai 3. their brauerie and excellent ornamentes because they vvere proude thereof Novv some are proude of riches as
discomfited Thus the saints and church of Christ for Peters deliuerance drewe neare Acts 16. vnto god by praier Thus Paul Silas drew neare to god when at their praier ihe very foundations of the earth shooke and trembled Thus the praiers of gods Saints shake heauen and earth and make away for vs wherby we draw neare vnto God Thus flie we to God in our needes thus drawe we neare vnto him thus are we ioined vnto god to whom we draw neare by praier which leadeth vs to the presence of god and of Christ 4 Neither do men draw neare to god by praier only Sophon 3. 2. Zacha. 1. but also by repentance which is a returning again to god vvhom through the sinnes and iniquities of our liues we had left and forsaken Thereof thus saith the Lord by his prophet turne againe vnto me and I will turne vnto you saith the lord of hosts In another of his Prophets the lord speaketh in like maner of drawing nere to god by repentance O Israel if thou returne returne vnto me saith the Iere. 4. lord Thus did Dauid draw nere to the lord when after his horrible sinnes he repented was reconciled vnto god 2. King 12. Psal 51. Thus Manasses the king falling away from god by shamefull idolatrie and wilfull obstinacie by his repentaunce in prison returned and drewe neare to God Marie Magdalen running away from god by loose life drewe neare vnto him by repentaunce VVhen the prodigall childe by his doting follie had forsaken his father yet by confession Luke 15. and earnest repentaunce hee drewe neare vnto him So when wee our selues by the transgression of our liues sequester and separate our selues from god by our vnfeined repentaunce and sorrowe of our hearts vve returne and dravve neare vnto him This thing is greatly neglected of vs men and vomen chuse rather to run and raunge further further from god by levvdnes loosnes of their liues then by sorow of hart remorse of conscience repētance for their sins to returne dravv nere vnto him surely this is a most necessary approching dravving nere vnto god then which there is nothing more expedient in the vvhole life of man For seeing the iust man falleth Prou. 24. seuen times a day frō god euery man so long as he liueth by his iniquitie he seperated himselfe frō the Lord dayly neither is there any bord left for vs to swim out by but this of repentance wherby we grow in fauour a fresh and drawe neare vnto God then must repentaunce needs be a necessary thing in the life of man for which cause it is so often and so highly commended vnto vs. 5. Men are said more ouer to drawe neare to God when they seeke to his holy arke when they runne to his Leuit. 24. 13. 14. Num. 9. 8. Nu. 15. 33. 27. v. 15. ● Kings 14 word to aske counsell As Moses oftentimes in matters which were hard and difficult or whereof he had not manifest cōmission from God drew neare to God by asking counsell from him When Saul was to follow the Philistians the priest willed that they might draw neare vnto God whereby was meant the asking of counsell at the mouth of God and of his word Thus such as in matters wherof they are ignorant seeke counsell from the mouth and word of God in his preachers and prophets drawe neare vnto God 6. By reposing all trust and confidence in God and cleauing constantly vnto him wherof Psal 73. 28. 7. Of none of all these the Apostle here seemeth to speak properly but of an other drawing neare which is by puritie sincerenes of life wherof chiefly in this place he speaketh which he commendeth vnto vs in these words cleanse your hands your sinners and purge your harts you double minded Which I take not for a new precept but with Bede others as the meane māner of performing ● Bede that which here now is enioyned that we drawe neare to God in puritie and sinceritie of life which consisteth in the cleansing of our hands and purging of our hearts before the Lord. Let vs then cōsider the place 1. In calling them sinners Sinners he meaneth not them which are subiect by naturall infirmitie to the committing of sinne as all men are so long as they rest remaine vpon the face of the earth but hereby he noteth their hainous and hornble iniquities 1. Tim. 1. 9 whereunto they were giuen 2. By wauering or double minded he noteth the shamefull hipocrisie which vvas crept in euen into their liues vvhich made some shewe of religion and had a pretence of godlines such as in outward shevv seemed deuout religious righteous holy but in their harts vvere full of vngodlinesse and impietie thus they seeme outvvardly one invvardly another in vvorde one in vvorke another one in talke another in truth therfore are they called double minded Like Ianus whom some take for Iapheth one of the sonnes of Noe others for Saturne whom the Heathen paint double faced These the prophet Dauid often sharply reproueth for that Psa 12. ●1 55. c. they speake with a double heart hauing one thing prōpt in their mouthes another couered in their minds a sinne euill and odious before God and man Therfore if we will draw neare to God our double harts must be purged that we may be such indeed as we pretende to be in shew least we heare with our great shame blush you not at it that when as in shew you beare the person of noble Agamemnon in deed you play the parte of cruell and deformed Thersites in being one in shew and another in deed If this holy Apostle did so earnestly call vpon them for reformatiō of their liues which were double minded what shall wee do to such as are triple quadruple three minded foure minded yea of hundreth minds what voice shall we sounde what speach shall we vtter what mouth shall we open against such Who with the Camelion can turne themselues into all shapes who are now hote now colde in religion now professours now Romanish Catholikes now thus now otherwise minded and affected to bleare the eyes of the simple is it not high time that we call out a lowde to them to be cleansed and with open mouth crie to them to be purged 3. The wordes bearing this signification the matter followeth that men in puritie sinceritie of their liues draw neare vnto God which cōsisteth in two things 1. In cleansing of their hands 2. In purging of their hartes before God Cleansing of the handes noteth the redresse and reformation What meaneth the cleansing of hands of all the outward life of man the correcting of all his actions and deedes of all which though it bee not yet of most of them the hande is the instrument wherefore the outward workes of men are vsually called the works of mens hands because most of them haue the
al pride and vanitie the adulterer beareth vp head as if he were right honest the couetous persons vsurers oppressours extortioners deceauers lyers and the rest of that rabble marche on bare-faced without all remorse and spende their daies in prodigalitie and care not Wherefore if there be any consolation in Christ Iesus if there be any feare or dread of endles death or loue to long and euerlasting life if we haue any care of saluation or any feare of vtter condemnation if we haue any desire to the continuance of the Gospell amongst vs or any zeale to Gods eternall glorie if wee delight in sweete and pleasant peace or take pleasure in the prosperitie of our Countrey then let vs in the feare of GOD sorowe and weepe before our destruction come vpon vs let vs turne our wanton mirth into mourning and our ioye into heauines that by our true and heartie repentance and vnfeyned mortification before God wee may turne away the indignation and wrath which wee haue most iustely from him deserued 2 As our humbling our selues before God standeth in thus afflicting of our selues by repentance so also doeth it in our casting downe of our selues before God wherein there are two things to be noted 1 The precept 2 The reason Touching the thing thus saith Saint Iames Caste downe your selues before the Lorde Like vnto which councell is that of Saint Peter Humble and prostrate 1 Petr. 5. your selues vnder the mighty hand of God that he may exalt this casting downe of our selues whereby wee acknowledge our owne vnworthines and testifie and beare witnes of our sinnes before his diuine maiestie confesse from our hearts that we haue deserued al plagues al miseries all calamities all punishments and thereby craue pardon and forgeueues that we may escape that whereof our consciences are afraid is and hath been a signe of our humbling of our selues of true repentance in the saints of God When holy Dauid saw the wrath of God kindled against him for his adulterie and his sore indignation beginning to burne in the punishment of the child then besought 2. Kings 12. he the Lord then went he in and fasted and lay all night vpon the earth and so cast downe himselfe before God In like manner when Absolon had slaine Ammon his brother Dauid the king feeling the wrath of God vpon his house as was threatned by Nathan rent his garments 2. Kings 13 Luke 18. 13 Mat. 8. 8 lay on the groūd in most humble and lamentable maner casting down and prostrating himselfe before God Therunto Saint Iames in this place exhorteth and willeth vs to humble our selues by casting downe prostrating our selues before the Lord. Thus must we abate our proud spirites cast down our loftie and lordly lookes couer our faces for the shame of our sinnes against God committed Whereunto the Apostle respecteth in this exhortation Cast downe you selues before God thus to do how holy a sacrifice how acceptable an offering how pleasant a duetie is it to the Lord To the perfourmance wherof the rather to moue vs The reason the Apostle setteth downe a reason full of comfort Caste downe your selues saith the Apostle before God and he 1. Pet. 5. will lift you vp The same reason Saint Peter vseth Humble your selues therefore vnder the mightie hand of god that he may exalt you in due time That men therefore should not thinke their labour lost when they prostrate and cast downe themselues in true humilitie before God neither their humilitie to be destitute of reward the Apostle reasoneth from the effect Cast down your selues God will lift you vp The proud then shall not alwaies be aloft neither shall the humble alwaies be cast downe but the daies will come when both the proude which exalt themselues shal be brought lowe and the humble which cast downe themselues shal be exalted The Lord exalteth those which in true humilitie of their hearts cast down themselues before him This preached Ezech. 17 God by Ezechiel where promising to pull down the proud enemies of the Church which exalted themselues against it and to exalt and lift vp the Church which was lowe cast down and contemned both in the sight of the world by maliciousnes of the wicked and in the sight of their owne eyes through humilite saith All the trees of the field shall know that is all the world shall know that I haue brought downe the high trees and exalted the low tree that I haue dried vp the greene tree and made the drie tree to flourish God exalteth those that are caste downe and humbled Herunto holy Iob subscribeth God setteth vp on hie Iob. 5 them that be lowe that the sorowful● may be exalted to Iob. 22 saluation In another place intreating of the deliuerance of the Saints which humble themselues vnder the mightie hand of God and cast downe themselues before his his throne of glorie when the proud and wicked shall be destroyed round about them he faith When others are cast downe then shalt thou say I am lift vp for God will saue the humble person And Salomon to like purpose auoucheth that the Pro. 29 pride of a man should bring him lowe but the humble in spirite should enioy glorie The sonne of Sirach witnesseth Ecclus. 10 to like effect that God casteth downe the thrones of the proud Princes and setteth vp the meeke in their places Which thing our blessed Sauiour preached to the Luke 14. people whom when as ghestes they shoulde be bidden to any feast hee exhorteth that they should not take the highest but the lowestroomes because such as humbled themselues shoulde be exalted In the parable of the Pharisie and Publicane wherof Luke 18. the one lifted vp himselfe in pride and therefore was contemned of God the other cast downe himselfe was exalted hee concludeth and knitteth vp the matter with this heauenly diuine and most godly sentence Hee that exalteth himselfe shall bee brought lowe and hee that humbleth himselfe shall be exalted Finally disswading his Apostles from vaine desire of honour exhorteth them to serue one another in humilitie and true loue because Mat. 23. they who exalt themselues are brought lowe of God and they which humble themselues are by him exalted Seeing then our casting downe before God is rewarded with exaltation and lifting vp by him we thereby ought to be moued to cast downe our selues before him Falling abasement as the Grecians say is the companion of pride and the loftie minde goeth before Prou. 16. 18. ver 12. Prou. 15. destruction saith Salomon so the casting downe of ourselues goeth before our exaltation and glorie Salomon therefore a little before saith to this purpose the feare of the Lord is the instruction of vvisedome and before honour goeth humilitie So then the high vvay and right path to be exalted of God is to humble and cast dovvne our selues before him vvherefore if our casting
dovvne and abasing our selues before God vvorke our glory and our lifting vp by him it is reason sufficient thereunto to moue vs cast dovvne your selues before God and he vvill lift you vp Novv God exalteth and lifteth vp such as cast dovvne How God lifteth the lowly themselues before his diuine maiestie diuerse vvaies 1. When he ministreth invvard comfort of his holy spirite in all the difficulties and daungers of this present vvorld in so much as come life come death come sword come famine come plague come persecution come peril come nakednes come prosperitie come aduersitie come sicknes come health come wealth come woe these are lifted vp in heart with comfort from God So they which caste downe themselues haue the Spirite of God in all distresse to comfort them and so are they exalted by God 2 God also lifteth vp those who cast downe themselues and humble themselues before him by sending thē deliuerance and riddance from their troubles wherewith Gen. 41. they were afflicted So Ioseph submitting himselfe and casting downe himselfe in all Christian duetifulnes to God was therefore lifted vp by God and deliuered God speaking Esah 17. by his Prophet of the deliuerance of the Church and Saints which cast downe themselues in dutifull maner and were also low and contemned in the world affirmeth that as he would bring downe the high tree the proude so would he by deliuerance exalt and lift vp his seruant the low tree and the tree cast down in the world The Prophet Dauid entreating of the lifting vp of the Psal 149. Saints by deliuerance from their trouble sayeth The Lord hath pleasure in his people he will make the meeke glorious by deliuerance Thus lift he vp Jacob who in Gen. 3. 32. the humilitie of his minde cast downe himselfe before God when he kept him from the iniuries of Laban and from the crueltie of Esau his brother Thus did God lift vp Dauid whome he deliuered out of infinite troubles Thus did God lift vp Hezechiah when hee deliuered him from Sennacherib the king of Assiriah Thus lift he vp many of his deare Saints when hee rid them from their miseries and afflictions whereunto they were subiect Thus he lifteth vs vp dayly nowe deliuering vs from troubles at home now from troubles abroade now from troubles by sea and nowe by land nowe by straungers now by our domesticall and houshold people nowe by professed enemies nowe by counterfeit friends intended Hereof haue we examples innumerable hereof haue we experience in other in our selues thus God Almightie lifteth them vp by deliuerance from their troubles who humble and cast downe themselues before him Whereof neuer people nor nation hath had greater experience and An. 158● triall then we of England nowe presently haue whome the Lorde hath deliuered by his owne hand from immenent daunger and present perill of the proude Spaniards who with determinate purpose and full resolution to haue inuaded our Countrie and subdued our Nation came with bloudie mindes prepared tortures with a mightie nauie with long preparation with helpe of manieprinces but the Lorde hath deliuered this humble and despised land and hath lodged their shippes in the bottome of the sea and sent their dead carkesses partly into this land partly into Scotland partly into Ireland partly into other Countreys to proclaime what accesse their diuelish and desperate attempte hath had 3 Neither thus onely but God aduaunceth them vp to great honour who in the humilitie of their heart humbled themselues before him When Dauid humbled himselfe before the Lorde and counted himselfe vnworthie 1. Kings 18. of that honour to be the kinges sonne in lawe the Lord not onely aduaunced him thereunto but made him to reigne and rule in the steade of Saul the wicked king of Israel When Moses was appointed by God to doe a Exod. 3. message to Pharaoh he in humilitie refusing it was therefore exalted to bee the prince and captaine of his people Daniel humble in minde and cast downe before the Lord Daniel 1. 2. 3. was by him exalted to great glorie euen to be the chiefe and ouerseer of all the princes of the prouinces of Babylon Psal 113. 1. Kings 2. And thus we see it true both that Dauid and also Anna the mother of Samuel song that the Lord raiseth vp the poore and meeke out of the dung-hill to set him among his princes and to inherite the seate of glorie 4 Finally God lifteth vp those which prostrate and cast downe themselues before him by exalting them in the ende to the glorious kingdome of his sonne euen to the eternall kingdome of heauen Which our Sauiour Christ promiseth to such as are truely humble Blessed Matt. 5. saith he are they which are humble in spirite for theirs is the kingdome of heauen To this kingdome they are in due time exalted who prostrate and cast downe themselues before God And as Christ humbling himselfe before God was therefore highly exalted by him farre aboue Philip. 2. Ephes 1. all principalities and powers and euerie name that is named not in earth onely but in heauen also euen so doth our most gracious God highly exalt and lift vp such as in meekenesse of their hearts in humilitie of their spirites in lowlinesse of their mindes cast downe themselues before him These in fine he crowned with eternall glorie and immortalitie these hee raiseth vp together maketh thē to reigne with Christ in heauenly places to these he promiseth his eternal kingdome of gorie there to rule reigne with the Saints for euer according to the doctrine of the Apostle cast downe your selues before God and he will lift you vp Now the Lord for his mercie giue vs this grace that we may in all things humble our selues and prostrate our selues before him and be by him exalted And the God of peace which brought againe from the dead our Lorde Iesus Christ the greate shepheard of the sheepe by the bloud of the euerlasting couenaunt make vs perfect in all good workes to doe his will working in vs that which is pleasant in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom bee praise for euer and euer Amen Iames Chap. 4. verses 11. 12. Sermon 21. verse 11. Speake not euill one of another brethren he that speaketh euill of his brother or he that condemneth his brother speaketh euill of the law and condemneth the law and if thou condemnest the law thou art not an obseruer of the law but a Iudge 12 There is one lawe giuer which is able to saue and to destroy who art thou that iudgest another man ● part THese wordes and the rest to the end containe the fourth and laste parte of this Chapter which is touching the remoouing of two euils and mischiefes which grow of pride Whereof the one is reproch and speaking euill of our brethren the other is the vaine confidence of men whereby they rashly determine long ●wo euils
from false surmised crimes and voide of all deserued spotte of false suspicion to be assailed and assaulted with reproachfull slaunder of the wicked wherein they seeke neither the glorie of god neither the peace of their countrey neither the welfare of Princes neither the happie estate of Commonwealthes but onely their owne priuate profitte and commoditie which they endeuour to enlarge increase by the discrediting diffaming backbiting and slaundering of others Neither is this true in great personages in Princes and Peeres of Common-wealthes before whom the innocent oftentimes for gaine are accused of the wicked but also in our priuate and ciuile life it is a practise moste generall for our owne gaine priuate lucre and commoditie to accuse condemne speake euill of other men and to slaunder one another 3 Neither for these causes onely doe we speake euil of our brethren but also stirred vp by enuie for the graces and benefites of God poured in plentifull maner vpon our neighbours wherat we being moued through enuie we speake euil of them as vnworthie those graces and benefites receaued and therfore it commeth oftentimes to passe that the wicked moued with enuie for the blessings of God vpon his children speake euil of them Whē the malicious and malignant people of this worlde see the Saints of GOD to flourish in vertue to increase in grace to excell in faith to be zealous in religion constant in profession of good hope in all afflictions aduanced to honour enriched with worldly wealth or any such way either inwardly or outwardly blessed by God they enuying them for the same slaunder them taunte them and speake euill of them in most wicked and vngodly manner The princes of the prouinces of Babilon seeing the vertue honour and glorie of Daniel whereunto hee was aduanced by God through Darius the King of Babilon enuying his state forged and framed an accusation Dan. 6. against him to Darius whereby he was adiudged to the denne of Lions when the obstinate and rebellious Iewes saw the zeale boldnes constancie and courage of the Ierem. 18. holy prophet who would not be feared with the faces of men from exequting his charge then they through mere malice and enuie slaundered the prophet and deuised against him and smit him with their bitter and backbitimg tonges The scribes and Pharisies through enuy of the graces of God in our blessed Sauiour Christ Mat. 12. John 8. raised vp many false accusations and vttered many slaunderous speaches against his royall person as the holy gospell witnesseth Herewith were the Iewes stirred vp against Actes 6 Steuen whose spirite they not able to withstande and resist they raised false accusations and suborned false witnesses in forged manner slaunderously to accuse him as one that had spoken euill of Moses and God The same cause pricked them forward in like maner to speak Acts 13. against the doctrine of Saint Paul and to raile against his person through malice and enuie conceaued against him To cōclude there is nothing more cōmon in the life of man then for such as are indued either with inwarde graces of the spirite or outward benefites by the hande of God for the malice and hatred wherewith men followe and pursue them to be euill spoaken of and slaundered 4 Finallie that which properly concerneth this place our euill speaking proceedeth of pride and therefore as a mischiefe and effect of pride it is here condemned The pride which of our selues we haue conceaued maketh vs to mislike whatsoeuer is not according to our pleasures and mislike moueth vs to speake euill of other men who walke not liue not doe not all thinges to our liking For as the Ape and Rauen thinke their owne young ones fairest and best fauoured yet is there not a more deformed thing among beastes then the Ape neither a fouler among the birdes then the young Rauen So men like their owne doings be they neuer so bad and condemne all others in comparison of themselues The Isai 65. Iewes through pride of their owne heartes contemned the Gentiles and spoke euill of them Stand aparte say Luke 18. they to the Gentiles for I am worthier then thou The proud conceite of his owne righteousnesse which the proud Pharisie had conceaued made him to contemne the poore Publican and to speak euill of him euen to the face and in the presence of God in the Temple I thanke thee O God that I am not as other mē extortioners vniust adulterers or euen as this Publicane The proud and wicked men of the world seeing that the Saintes woulde not runne the same excesse of riot with them and liue as pleased them therefore saith Saint Peter they speake euil 1. Pet. 4 of them Our Apostle here making pride the cause of this euill and insinuating that the proud and arrogant persons of the world will proudely condemne and slanderously speake of all those who liue not after their pleasures condemneth it as the effect of pride neither is there finally any thing that more moueth men to speak euil one of another then pride doeth So that the proud person hardly euer speaketh well of any but that he only may be in estimation account and credite he speaketh euill of al others These and the like causes may be alleadged of this euil and mischiefe which S. Iames worthely condemneth Speake not euill one of another brethren How men speak euil This mischiefe is manifolde and sundrie waies are men saide to speake euill one of another 1 When men misreport of vs and charge vs with that which is not true then speake they euil of vs. In this kinde was Dauid euil spoaken of as in the Psalme he witnesseth Cruell witnesses rose vp against me they asked me things Psal 35. I knew not they charged him with things vntrue to bring him into disgrace discredite and disfauour with men Thus Doeg the Edomite the chiefe of Sauls Heardmen spoke euill of Dauid and Achimelech the Priest of Nob affirming that they tooke councell together against 1. Kings 22. the king I saw the sonne of Ishai when he came to Nob to Achimelech the sonne of Ahitub who asked councell of the Lord for him Such euill speaches were they of those flattering Parasites and backbiting Sicophants who falslie infourmed Saul that Dauid intended mischiefe against him In this kinde proud Hamon spoke euill against Mardocheus 1. Kings 24 Hester 3 and the people of the Iewes who charged them with thinges vntrue in bringing vp euill and false reports of them There is a people saith he scattered and dispersed among the people in all the Prouinces of thy kingdome whose lawes are diuers to all lawes obserue not the lawes of the king In the seruice indeede of their God they obeyed not but in ciuill things they were obedient vnto the lawes of Assuerus and therfore were charged falsly with disloyaltie rebellion against the lawes of the king Thus we speake euill one
other Gods but me To the obseruing wherof blessing and life is promised to the breach thereof death and cursing Deut. 28. 30. Deut. 27. Leuit. 26. is threatned This is that law which onely geueth definitiue sentence and iudgement peremptorie vpon all men In the whole course of the lawe and Prophets it is witnessed that the lawes of life and death which presse the hearts and consciences of men are only the Lordes and that he onely according thereunto iudgeth so that men may not take vpon them to drawe all others after their tailes and leade them at their pleasures which whē they refuse thē also to speake euil of thē iudge thē The holy Prophet Isai subscribeth hereunto The Lord is our Isai 33. Lawe geuer the Lord is our king he will saue vs saith the Church by the mouth of the Prophet It was the Lorde Psal 147. which gaue this law vnto his own people Israel the Lord shewed his word to Jacob his statutes and his ordinances to Israel he established a lawe in Jacob and ordeyned a testimonie in Israell which he commaunded our fathers to teach their children saith Dauid the holie Prophet And this concerning the moral preceptes thereof is euerlasting vniuersall and to all the world giuen Therefore he is to be reputed the law giuer and the iudge only which gaue it first vnto Israel his people Who being the onlie geuer of the lawe can thereby either saue or destroye condemne or iustifie pardon or punish wherefore this must men leaue to him alone which if they do not but wil condemne their brethren after their wills then challenge they to themselues the right of God then thrust they him from his heauenly throne of iudgement therin endeuour they as it were to rise vp in his rome and giue that sentence which only belongeth vnto him then which arrogancie and pride what can be greater It is the Lord that searcheth the hearts and raines it is he who perceth into the cogitations of men and seeth that they are but vaine he knoweth only who are his and he alone can tel when and whom to saue or condēne to discharge or destroye this prorogatiue we take from God of this priuiledge we spoile him of this preferment of iudging and condemning of making and setting lawes of life and death to the consciences of men we then bereue God when we in the pride of our hearts speake euil and condemne our brethren vvhen they displease vs and our humours Thus men challenge to themselues that vvhich is Gods and Christs only thus take they sentence of iudgement out of the mouth of God and take the povver of geuing lavves to the Church out of his hands hovv great is this blasphemous presumption hovv hainous is this extreame vngodlynes For as it is not only doting and foule follie but horrible impietie and vvickednes in the highest degree for men to take vppon them to repele the eternall lavves of God geuen by him to the Church and all posteritie for euermore So is it likewise no lesse vngratiousnesse an louer bolde and presumptious rashnes ●o make other lawes contrarie to his as if we would teach him wisdome and thereby to iudge our brethren Christ is our king hee onely is the head ouer his Church therefore as vnto the king and chiefe head of his Church it belongeth of right to geue lawes to the saints Was it euer heard among earthly Princes that loyall subiects either could or would either repell or change the lawes of their Princes or doe they at any time take vpon them to make lawes of their owne heads without their Princes in their owne kingdomes or can there be greater treason and rebellion then to endeuour to seeke such lewde libertie doe the Princes and Peeres of Common-weales call Parlements set downe lawes without the authoritie of their Kinges and Emperours were not this great conspiracie and shall men take vpon them in the church which is the royal seat of Christ and the very septer of his kingdom to establish lawes without his licence were there euer lawes proclaimed in any kingdom but in the name of that king which there raigneth shall men proclaim lawes of their own deuising in christs kingdom vnder any other name or authoritie then by the name authoritie of Iesus Christ wherefore we deny Christs soueraintie ouer vs when without him we will make lawes to others and we refuse God to be our law geuer when besides his lawes we will proclaime lawes to binde our brethren Which thing as grosse sollie and great impietie the Apostle condemneth testifying that God only is our law-geuer and iudge in whose power it is to saue and destroy and therefore men ought not to challenge that to themselues in any wise Of this euill how many are now giltie is not euery one readie to prescribe lawes of the liues of their brethrē and sisters If we see any either in the habite of apparrell or in the talke of the tongue or in the gesture of the bodie either in the course of his Common life or in the religion and worshippe he perfourmed to God or any other thing which walketh not according to our pleasures and agreeth not in all things to our life and ruie how soone speake we euill of him how proudly doe wee iudge him how peremptorilie doe wee condemne him Thus one man dealeth with another one woman thus iudgeth another thus the people condemne the pastors the pastors the people thus the Cleargie speake euill of the Temporaltie and they of the Cleargie thus one preacher of another one laie man of another and almost euery one of his neighbour Is not this to vsurpe that which belongeth vnto god is not this to take the scepter of iudgement out of the hande of Iesus Christ This is reprooued by Saint Paul who art thou that condemnest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne master what hast thou to Rom. 14. intermeddle where thou hast not to doe This is condemned by this Apostle who ascribeth prescription of lawes and pronouncing of iudgement to God onely who can saue and destroy but thou ô man canst saue none therefore by thy proud iudgement condemne and destroye none yet condemnest and destroyest as much as in thee lieth thy brother when because hee liueth not after thy pleasure thou speakest euill of him And this is the third argument of the Apostle The fourth and last reason why we should not speake The fourth reason euill or rashly condemne our brethren is from the frailty of our owne common state and condition For all men are subiect to infirmities therefore ought we not one of vs rashly to condemne another And this reason that it might be more forcible it is proposed in the manner of an interrogation Who art thou which iudgest another art not thou a man subiect to like infirmities why doest thou so proudly then iudge thy brother who art thou that iudgest
horrible sinnes For albeit there bee no sinne so little or small in the opinion or estimation of man but that it commeth before the Lorde and entreth into his eares whose eares heare and whose eyes see all the workes of men neither is their anie sinne kept from his knowledge yet to note the horrour and haynousnesse of some sinnes aboue others the holie Ghost in the sacred Scripture sayeth of such that they crie vnto the Lorde VVherefore Moises to shewe the great and grieuous sinne of Cain in murthering his louing and naturall Gene. 4. brother bringeth in GOD speaking thereof to him Cain what hast thou done the voyce of thy brothers bloud crieth vnto mee from the ground When the filthie Sodomites had stained themselues with vnnaturall lust with foule fornication and all shamefull vncleannesse Gene. 18. of the flesh impietie and vngodlinesse the crie of their iniquitie was great in the Lordes eares and their sinne exceeding grieuous in his sight To shewe the barbarous crueltie of the people of Aegypt and their extreeme exactions wherewith they ouercharged Exod. 3. Isai 5. 9. 1. Kings 9. 16 Iob. 34. 28. and pressed to grounde the Israelites the Prophet thereof speaking bringeth in God thus conferring with him there-about in Horeb I haue seene I haue seene the oppression of my people which are in Aegypt and haue heard their crie because of their taske-maisters To like purpose our Apostle setting foorth the great iniquitie and iniurie done to the poore labourers in the detaining and keeping backe of their wages by the rich men of the world affirmeth that the same crieth vnto God and that the crie thereof is gone vp to the eares of the Lord of hostes Wherehence we are taught and may well learne that albeit men themselues by vs oppressed doe not alwayes powre out the bitternesse of their hearts neither alwayes ring in the eares of the Lorde agaynst them by whome they are oppressed yet the verie iniquities and sinnes of the wicked themselues crie out day and night in the eares of the Lorde against them for vengeance Thus Gene. 4. murther though kept for a season from the knowledge of men thus adulterie fornication and fleshly vncleannesse Ecclus. 23. though it be done in secrete that no eye doeth see it thus oppression and extortion though all men almoste practise it thus pride though the whole lande Isay 3 flyeth after it thus vsurie briberie and all manner couetousnesse thus peruerting of righteous iudgement and all manner wrongfulnesse and iniurie thus lying swearing blasphemie and slaunder thus all iniquitie and vnrighteousnesse of men whereby the lande Sophonie 3. Osea 4. is altogether polluted and bloud thereby toucheth bloud cryeth in the eares of the Lorde of hostes who beeing a righteous iudge and that GOD onely to Deut. 32. Psal 94. whom repaying vengeance belongeth will reward it accordingly And assuredly as all sinnes at all times haue cried out for vengeance from the Lorde who hath heard them and in iust measure punished them so the haynous and horrible sinnes of our age crye out in like manner for vengeaunce our shamelesse adulteries whereof our countrie is full our cruell hatred whereby we murther one another in our heartes our intollerable pride in flaunting ruffes in coloured starchings in newe cuts and iagges in periwigges and french frilles in the deuill and all which our vanitie and the iniquitie of our times haue deuised our suttle and fraudulent dealings our voluntarie bankerouting our great oppression and extortion whereby the faces of the poore are pitifully grinded our vsurie which hath succeeded and gotte in the place of noble marchaundizing whereby we eate vp one another our manifolde open and secrete publike and priuate offences daily and hourely in moste wicked manner committed crie out in the eares of the Lorde of hostes and vnlesse wee seeke speedy redresse through vnfained repentaunce vnto GOD vvee shall feele the smarte and griefe thereof subiect to the like destruction here mentioned by the Apostle sith wee are guiltie of the like or the same iniquities against which it is iustly denounced Here God is called the Lord of hostes which attribute God the Lorde of hostes or addition is oftentimes and in sundrie places giuen vnto him because he hath all his creatures alwaies readie as an innumerable and infinite hoste to fight at his pleasure and becke against the wicked for the maintenaunce of his glory and defence of his seruauntes Which thing Sirach notably expresseth there are saith he spirites created for vengeaunce which in their rigour Ecclus. 39. lay on sure strokes in the time of destruction they shevve forth their power and accomplish the wrath of him that made them fire and hayle and famine and death these are created for vengeaunce the teeth of wild beastes the scorpions and the serpentes and the sworde execute vengeaunce for the destruction of the wicked They shal be gladde to do his commaundement and when neede is they shal be readie vpon earth and when their houre is come they shall not ouer passe the commaundement The droppes of raine from heauen were his hoste to fight against and destroy the men of the first world Fire Gen. 6 7. Gen. 19. from heauen was his hoste to fal downe and consume the Sodomites and them of Gomorrah The mightie hayle stones which fel vpō the soldeours of the kings which ioined battle with Iosua wherewith more perished then by the sword of the people the scrawling wormes the hopping Iosua 10. frogges the creeping lice and other like creatures were his hoste to fight against Pharao and his people Exod. 7. 8. 9. 10. 14. and the raging sea rose vp against him and ouerwhelmed him and his armie One people is his armie to punish another and euery one of his creatures serue at his Psal 105. 28. 29. 30. c. pleasure either to worke the deliuerance of his seruants or the destruction of his enemies and therefore is God often called the Lord of hostes The Seraphins in the prophete stood vp and cried one to another holy holy holy is the Isay 6. 1. 9. Lord of hostes the whole world is full of thy glorie Ieremie Ierem. 10. the prophete yeeldeth this attribute and name vnto him who cōparing the idols of the natiōs with the Lord saith the portion of Iacob is not like them for he is the maker of all things and Israel is the rodde of his inheritaunce the Lord of hostes is his name Nahum the prophet Nahum 2 describing the victories of the Caldeans against the Assyrians and the punishments by God brought by them vpon the same people crieth behold I come vnto thee saith the Lord of hostes and I will burne her charrets in the smoke and the sword shall destroy thy yong lions and I wil cut of thy spoyle from the earth and the voyce of thy messengers shall no more be heard In the prophecie of Malachie it is often
from whome he had both commaundement and courage for the fighting of the Lordes battailes After whose death and the manifolde battailes hee had with Kings and Countreys the people came to the Lord to enquire who should succeede him as their captaine to Iudges 1. fight against the nations and hee appointed Iudah captaine ouer them Dauid the valiant warriour confesseth in sundrie Psalmes that his warrely prowis and fortitude Psal 18. was from the Lorde therefore hee cryeth out in the Lordes prayse I will loue thee dearely O Lorde my strength the Lord is my rocke and my fortresse and hee that deliuereth me my God and my strength in him will I trust my shielde the horne of my saluation and my refuge To like purpose in another place Through thee Psal 44. saith he to God we thrust backe our enemies and in thy name shall we tread downe those that rise vp against vs. Finally he breaketh out and praiseth God Blessed be the Psal 144. Lord my strength which teacheth my hands to fight and my fingers to battaile he is my goodnesse and my fortresse my tower and my deliuerer my shield and in him I wil trust whch subdueth my people vnder me Which had beene great impietie in the princely Prophet had warres beene altogether vnlawfull Salomon the diuine and heauenly Eccles. 3. preacher affirmeth that there is a time for all things a mong other things he sayth there is a time for peace and a time for warre Nowe we knowe there is no time for wicked things if warre were wicked and euill there were no time for it 2 Neither doe these places onely shewe it to bee lawfull in the former times vnder the lawe and Prophets in the time of the olde Testament but also the new Testament confirmeth the same to bee as lawfull vnder the Gospell VVhen Iohn Baptist preached and infourmed all Luke 3. states and degrees of men in their dueties when the soldiours asked him vvhat they should do he biddeth them not forsake their calling as a thing vnlawfull but sheweth how it might be vsed aright oppresse no man saith he and be content with your wages Whereupon Saint Augustine thus concludeth whom he willeth to be content with their wages he willeth not Epist. 5. Marcellino Mat. 8. to leaue their warfare When our Sauiour was besought to heale the Centurions seruaunt vvhich vvas a man of vvarre the gouernour of a hundreth soldiours he neyther disdained his person neyther condemned his calling nor denied his suite but cōmended his faith without any more ado vvhich he would not haue done had the calling beene vnlawfull Saint Peter by God was sent to another Centurion Act. 10. to whom he preached all the wordes of life yet is there no sillable nor sounde of condemning the condition and calling of the Centurion Cornelius When there was a greate conspiracie against Paul of more then fourtie which sought his life he was contented through the ayd Act. 23. of armed souldiours to be brought safely to Cesaria and so deliuered from the rage of his enemies which eyther he would neuer haue done or if through feare hee had done yet it should and would eyther by Luke in the storie or by himselfe in some place haue beene confessed to haue bene euill done vvere vvarres vnlavvfull altogether The author to the Hebrewes commending the most holy men and Saints of God as for other many excellent Heb. 11. effectes of faith so also that through faith they subdued kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained the promises stoppeth the mouthes of Lions quenched the violence of fire escaped the edge of the sworde of weake were made strōg waxed violent in battle turned to flight the armies of the aliants If to waxe stronge in battle to subdue kingdomes and putte to flight the armies of the aliants be praise-worthie hovv then can vvarres bee but lavvfull 3. Tributes are certaine contributions made by the people and giuen to the Prince to defend them by warre if occasion serued whereof beyng demaundeth his iudgement whether it were lavvfull to giue it or no our Sauiour Mat. 22. willed tribute to be giuen to Cesar the Emperour and himselfe for himselfe and his traine paid it as Saint Mat. 17. Rom. 13. Matthew recordeth Saint Paul exhorteth the Christian subiectes to the paying of tribute as parte of their subiection and obedience vvilling that custome be payed to whom custome and tribute bee paid to whom tribute belongeth 4. The learned auncient fathers found no such matter in vvarres but commended them as things most lavvfull Saint Cyprian in his Epistles saith of vvarre When 2. Lib. epist 2. priuate men shedde bloud it is sinne and a great faulte but when it is publikely done it is a vertue wherein he counteth priuate reuenge and thereby shedding of mans bloud haynous murther but waging lawfull warres he reputeth as a singular vertue Saint Augustine in sundry places as in his Epistles to Epist 5. 48. to Bonifa a warrier others and also in that which he writeth to Bonifacius a warrier sheweth that as the Gospell hath not taken away the lavvfull vse of meate and drinke mariage riches and such like so neyther hath it taken away the vse of lavvfull warres without which no common-wealth can bee preserued the lavvfulnesse vvhereof the examples of Abraham Moses Josuah Dauid the godly Centurions in the gospell and infinite the like shevv most euidently 5. Conditions in vvarres required that they may be lavvfull though there might many be assigned yet I suppose that these be the chiefest 1. That no warres be vndertaken but by the authoritie of the King Prince Emperour or other chiefe officer and gouernour in the common-wealth so that warres without his appointment are not lawful warres but vprores rebellions and ciuill seditions vtterly condemned Thus Core Dathan and Abiram rising vp against Moses Absolon Num. 16. 2. Kings 15 taking sworde in hande against Dauid his naturall father Adoniah against Salomon Basha Zimrie Shallum and 1. Kings 1. the seruants of Ammon the king not armed by the authoritie of their princes but against them are thus condemned Brutur and Cassius and such like of their owne heads arming themselues against their common-weales and countries haue bene condemned as seditious persons 2. Warres also must be vvaged and vndertaken for defence of religion of publike peace of the state of the countrie and the safetie of the common-wealth and people committed vnto princes for the suppressing of wicked malefactours and the lavvfull defence of loyall subiectes Saint Augustine therefore vvriteth thus to Boniface Augustine to Bonif. 48. Epist the vvarrier all thinges are quiet and husht vvhen vvarres are vvaged for they are not vndertaken of desire to rule or for crueltie but for studie of peace that the godly may be supported and the vvicked punished which endes euen the very Heathen respected For Homer bringeth in Hector exhorting his souldiers Homer Ili to
posteritie for euer Isai speaking to the people in the name of the Lord was sawen in peeces with a sawe of wood as the Hebrewes record in their writings Ieremie spoke vnto Ierem. 5. 20. 42. 44. the Israelites in the name of the Lorde and his worde was contemned and lightly regarded as winde himselfe smitten by Passhur the priest his counsell reiected by the people and men of Israell and hee commaunded to speake no more vnto them in the name of the Lord and this bore he patiently What should I speake of Micheas 3. King 22 Amos 7. 2. Chro. 24. Daniel 6. stroken by Sidkiah the sonne of Hananie Amos abused by Amasiah Zacharie slaine by Ioash the king Daniel cast into the denne of Lions with what inuincible courage cōstancie with what patiēce long suffering they haue endured contempt of the people persequutiō by the princes famine hunger of the land restraint and imprisonment by false suggestion of the wicked reprochfull taunts and vile speaches cruell torments bitter threatenings bloubie woundes and vndeserued death the holy Scriptures and sacred stories plentifully do teach vs. If such men therfote of such pietie and godlines of such eminencie excellencie of such renowme for vertue so dere so greatly beloued of God which haue spoken vnto men in the name of the Lord haue bene partakers of like calamities haue bene companions of like sufferings and therein haue shewed themselues patient shall not we farre inferiour vnto them in all degrees be content to suffer with patience that which they haue suffered before vs whē then we are subiect to the iniuries oppressions afflictings of men when we are vnder the cruelties persequutions and furiousnes of the wicked let vs cast our eies vpon the sufferings of the prophets their patience let vs holde fast the counsell of this Apostle that we take the holy Prophets for ensample of suffering aduersitie long patience and by their example learne to addresse our selues in all our afflictions thereunto that we being compassed about with so many examples of the prophets may without murmuring and sinister affection runne on vvith ioy the race that is set before vs that finally with them vve may possesse our soules in patience vvhereby the Apostle stirreth vs vp in this place and first reason Luk. 21. 2. Another reason is dravven frō the acknovvledged and confessed revvard of patience vve saith the Apostle count them happie vvhich endure If vve our selues make this accompt acknowledge that they are happie which suffer aduersitie patiently shall not vvee endeuour to attaine vnto that vvhich our ovvne consciences acknowledge to bring felicitie and happinesse That they are blessed vvhich endure and suffer aduersitie wrongfully it hath bene sufficiently shevved 1. Iames. v. 12. Greater revvard to vertue none cā be giuen then felicitie happines hereunto all mē tende hereafter they striue that they might be happie though not all a right this happines is promised to the patience of Gods saints vvherefore vve ought to giue all diligence in all our afflictions to behaue our selues patiently that vve may be partakers of this happinesse And so much the more earnestly vve ought to striue there after because the revvard is knovven and confessed of vs and vve our selues counte them happie vvhich endure therefore the full persuasion of this so excellent a revvard ought to stirre vp out dull affections to the performaunce of patience What induraunce receiueth this blessed revvarde vve may easely coniecture not suffering and induring for euery thing but vvhen vve suffer and indure for the truth sake for the profession of the gospell for righteousnesse then are men happie for not the suffering but the cause maketh martyrdome as S. Augustine auoucheth to Dulcitius Neyther the induring but the cause quarrell Epist 61. Dulcitio vvherefore and vvherin men suffer purchaseth the crowne and revvarde of happinesse vvrongfully to suffer at the handes of men is a thing acceptable vnto God wherefore if eyther for Gods cause and his truth sake or for no 1. Pet. 2. deserte in our selues but of the malice and wickednesse of wicked men vvee suffer vvrongfully and therein endure patiently vve shall receaue the crowne of glorie euen eternall blessednesse and felicitie in the kingdome of God Thus the Patriarks thus the Prophets thus the Apostles thus the holy Martyrs are counted blessed for they haue endured Thus also such as suffer losse of goods sicknes of body anguish of mind slaunder of name death of friendes restraint of libertie oppressions of men or other crosse or affliction whatsoeuer if therein they endure patiently shall also be blessed If happinesse be promised as the revvard of our patience and so accompted with men what reason of greater force what persuasion of more waight what argument of sounder substaunce may be made to persuade to patience then the reward of patience euen eternall happines Behold saith Iames we count them happie which endure 3 The thirde reason is drawen from the example of Iob. Ye haue heard of the patience of Iob and you know what end the Lord made What the sufferings and trials of Job were what he suffered in his children in his goods in his body by his wife by his friēds the storie teacheth vs and it was wonderfull It had bene a great matter to haue lost at one time by the Sabeans 500. yoke or oxen and as many shee asses with the death of his seruaunts but at the same time and immediatly to heare tidings that fire from heauen had burnt vp 7000. sheepe and all his seruaunts sheapheards which kept them encreased his triall mightily and wonderfully proued his patience It had bene a great crosse thus to haue bene bereft and robbed of his riches and substaunce but together to haue his children all at one clap to be slaine with the fal of their owne brothers house when they were making merie and so suddenly to be oppressed with stones and timber without all rescue helpe or succour what a straunge triall was this It had bene much thus to haue lost both his riches his children together but afterward to be stroken with botch and boyle from top to toe that all men abhorred him what encrease of his crosse what waight of his affliction was this The losse of goods the death of childrē the disease of body was great but for his owne wife who should haue bene his cōfort to be his corsie which should haue bene a help to become a hindrāce who should haue encouraged him to prick him on to curse God that he might die what sea of sorow could be greater and finally to make vp the ful measure of al affliction for his deare friends to checke him charge him as an hypocrite what anguish of mind might hereunto be cōpared in one day of rich to become poore of wealthy to become destitute of full to bee emtie of plentifull to become needy of a
may whollie rest and relie vpon his diuine pleasure that after we haue suffered a little he may make vs perfect confirme strengthen and stablish vs. To whom be glory dominion and maiestie now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter 5. verse 12 Sermon 26. Ver. 12 But before al things my brethren sweare not neither by heauen nor by earth nor by any other othe but let your yea be yea and your nay nay least ye fall into condemnation 3. Place of the Chapter NOw commeth the Apostle to the thirde place in this chapter handled which is concerning swearing Vnto which he slideth descendeth very orderly for that in the former treatise he had exhorted the Saints to patience and disswaded al murmuring and impatiencie and commonly most grieuous and horrible othes with most bitter execrations growe of our impatiencie Therefore hauing discoursed thereof he addeth in the next place admonition and councell touching swearing willing vs to detest all such wickednes and to accustome our tongues to simple and true speach Though then the Apostle seeme properly to speake of such vaine and wicked othes as where unto men breake oftentimes through impatiencie yet will I touch this more generally and hereunder conteine all othes whatsoeuer are rashly and wickedly made by men In this 12. verse conteyning the third place concerning swearing three things are to be noted Namely 1. The condemning of the thing as horrible and detestable sinne 2. The correcting of that euil what men in stead of wicked swearing should doe 3. The reason why men ought not to sweare 1 Touching the first of these thinges thereof thus saith our Apostle Aboue all things my brethren sweare not Where he condemneth othes and swearing Which place being falsly applied by the Anabaptists for the condemning of all othes and of swearing it shall not be impertinent to this place but both profitable and proper to consider whether all swearing ought vtterly to be condēned or no. And if not then what swearing what othes the Apostle here reproueth Which thing that it may the better appeare let vs in briefe and in a word consider what an othe is what it is to sweare An othe is the affirming or denying of a thing An othe with the calling on of the name of God to witnesse and auouch the trueth of the thing vttered To sweare is to affirme or denie a thing with the calling on of the name of God for the auouching of the trueth of that thing which with solemne othe we haue protested Or an othe is an earnest and vehement affirmation or negation of a thing lawfull and honest by the name of God whereby we desire him to be a witnesse vnto the trueth and a reuenger and punisher of all such as vse deceat falshood This being the definition of an othe whether is it altogether condemned or not The Anabaptists abusing this place and that of our Sauiour Christ Sweare not at all condemne all othes as Mat. 5. vnlawfull in Christians But the word of God rightlie and trulie vnderstoode permitteth Christians in some causes and cases to sweare By which men must not challenge vnto themselues libertie of swearing for what they luste but ought to learne neuer to sweare at al but so and vnder such condition as the scriptures teach them and no other wise That Christians and the Saints of God may sweare Wheather Christians may sweare in some cases and therefore all othes and swearing not vtterly condemned it may by sundrie groundes and arguments be proued 1 What the morall lawe of God permitted that is lawfull for the morall lawe is perpetuall vniuersall and generall binding all men comprising all times containing al things that are lawfull This lawe permitteh men to sweare this giueth licence to the Saints in some cases and some causes to sweare Moyses in the repeating of the Deut. 6. lawe from the mouth of God gaue this charge to Israell the people of God thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serue him and thou shalt sweare by his name To the like purpose in the same booke the prophet giueth the like commaundement thou shalt feare the Lorde thy God Deut. 10. thou shalt cleaue vnto him sweare by his name Thus almighty God maketh the calling vpon his name in their lawfull othes to be a parte of his diuine seruice and permitteth the same vnto his people so that to sweare by the law of God is permitted The holie prophets the best expounders and interpreters of the lawe haue therefore taught the people in certaine cases to sweare Ieremie saith thus to Israell thou shalt sweare the Lorde liueth in Ierimie 4. truth in equitie in iudgement The prophet Dauid the Psal 63. worthy prince of Israell protesteth that all they shal be commended that sweare in the name of God their heauenly King Isay exhorteth and willeth that who so sweareth Isay 65. Ierimie 12. on earth should sweare by the true God The Lorde in Ieremie his prophet teaching this not only to bee lawfull but laudable and praise worthy in al his seruantes and therefore also requireth it as a parte of his diuine seruice and saith it shal be that if they haue learned the waies of my people then they shall sweare in my name the Lorde liueth Thus the lawe and the Prophets teach that in certaine cases and in some respects it is lawfull to sweare 2 That whereof we haue God himselfe the Patriarkes Christ and Saint Paul for our example and warrant cannot be altogether vnlawfull But the Lord our God a most holy God and most iust the Patriarkes the most deare seruants of God Iesus Christ the eternall sonne of the father and the onely true patterne of all perfection the holie Apostle the most elect vessell and most pure seruant of Iesus Christ haue sworne how then are al othes vnlawfull how is all swearing forbidden And first touching God is not hee recorded at sundrie times to haue sworne and that by himselfe VVhen Abraham at Gods commaundement was readie to haue Gene. 2● offered vp his onely sonne in sacrifice to God the Lord stayed his hande and saide by my selfe haue I sworne sayeth the Lord because thou hast done this thing and hast not spared thy onely sonne therefore will I surely blesse thee and will greatly multiplie thy seede as th● starres of heauen and as the sande which is vpon the sea shore and thy seede shall possesse the gates of their enemies The princely Prophet Dauid prophecying of the Psal 110. eternall Kingdome and Priesthoode of Christ bringeth in God swearing vnto him The Lorde sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech VVho speaking also of the othe of the Lord made vnto him touching his posteritie whereon the Psal 132. people grounded their praiers and desired the establishment thereof sayeth in like manner the Lorde hath sworne in trueth to Dauid and hee will
not all then vnder this condemnation Let as many then as haue any feare of God before their eies any care of their owne saluation any desire to escape endlesse condemnation any remorce of conscience for their sinne in this behoofe cōmitted any sparcle of grace any feeling of the Spirite of God whereby they are sealed vp to the day of redemption Ephes 4. repent themselues of this wickednes correcte this grieuous sinne in their manners reforme and refraine their lippes from all vaine swearing and blasphemie that thereby they fall not into condemnation but may liue for euer If condemnation be threatened to the vaine swearing of men how much more subiect thereunto are they which geue themselues to horrible periuries and false swearings Which thing almightie God reseruing finally to be punished in eternall torments of hell fire yet to shew how greatly hee detesteth this wickednes euen in this life in some measure he punisheth it When Iosua Josua 9. the Princes of Israel had made a faithfull othe to the Gibeonites Saul afterward violated it almightie God in the 2. King 21. daies of Dauid punished it with three yeares famine thorow out Israel till the seuen sonnes of Saul were geuen to the Gibeonites to bee slaine When Mataniah named by Nabuchodonosour Zedichiah had sworne subiection to the 4. Kings 24. 25. King but afterward forswearing him sealfe and rebelling the Lorde punished his periurie by the King of Babylon who tooke him prisoner slue his sonnes before his eies then put out both his eies and caried him bounde into Babylon where he was kept in perpetuall miserie I neede not say that therefore none of the posteritie of Edward the fourth came vnto the possessiō of the crowne of England because he solemnely swore at Yorke to holde him sealfe contented with his owne duke dome and to performe loyall obedience to the King Duke Elphred conspiring against King Adelstane for swore him sealfe in his purgation therefore at Rome wherefore almightie God stroke him presently in Saint Peters church there and so hee died Earle Godwine hauing treaterously slaine Alphrede brother to King Edward the third thereof charged by the King at table at a certaine time the Earle tooke breade in his hand and swore desiring that the bread might choake him if he were there of giltie which breade hee eating was there with all sodenly choaked that hee fell downe and died To be shorte one may stande for many which is notoriously knowen that a woman which in the yeare 1575. for alittle flaxce forswore her selfe in wood-streate in London therefore was presently stroken and miserably died with great torture tormentes and terrour Infinire like exampls of the iuste iudgements of God in this behalfe are exstant and albeit God doe not alwaies strike all persons in like manner offending yet that it might appeare how greatly he detesteth this wickednes he giueth men a taste of his anger and wrathfull indignation euen in this life present shewing thereby how much more sharpely they shal be punished in the world to come And thought in great patience he beareth with this intollerable sinne of men for a long time and season yet shall they not be vnpunished for euer Truely in this thing therefore saith the poet Tibullus Though that periurie be at the first couered yet at length punishment commeth without noyse secretely And Homer in like manner saith Albeit God foorthwith punish not periuries yet doeth hee at length whereby most grieuous punishments falle on the authour his companion and children which hath committed them Which thing seemeth to haue beene fulfilled in Philip king of Macedonia his children whom Pausanias recordeth to haue fallen into so many miseries calamities and troubles because he violated his othes and falsified his promises so often Wherfore howsoeuer either vain swearers or periured persons doe here escape the reuenging hand of God yet shall they vndoubtedly be subiect to eternall condemnation vnlesse they both leaue their wickednes and speedely repent themselues of their sinne embrace the councell of the Apostle who correcteth this euil Let your yea be yea and your nay nay least ye fal into condemnation This reason drawen from danger not temporal only but eternal rather might be a sufficient stop and stay to keep our lips from this wickednes from which refraining we are so far that we pretend excuses to our vanity 1 Some therefore say I am forced to sweare men otherwise will not beleeue me Shall man force thee to blaspheme and shal not Gods word drawe thee to obedience shall man make thee to doe more in transgressing then Gods word in obeying Is there any necessitie to force thee to doe that which doing thou fallest into condemnation yea is not thy owne vanitie thy inconstancie in thy words thy falshood in thy promises thy periurie in thy othes thy often swearing not vainly only but vntruely also cause that no man giueth thee credit if in al thing● thy deedes were agreeable to thy words thy performāces according to thy promises if thou wert thy words master and neuer protestedst but the trueth if thy tongue were geuen to simplicitie and thy lippes not defiled with lies then shoulde thy worde be beleeued as well yea rather better then thine othe but because thy wordes are but wind and in thy speaches there is no hold because thy promises are without perfourmance in thy saying there is no faith because in thy tongue there is no trust and in thy talke there is no trueth therefore thou swearest yet thou art not beleeued The law saith He that is once presupposed and taken for an euill man is alwaies so presupposed and he that is taken once for faithlesse vntrustie is alwaies so presupposed Aristotle as Laertius writeth or Demetrius as other affirme being asked what Laertius de vitaphilo profite men gate by their lies falshoode and vntrueths in them answered this onely that oftentimes whē they tell the trueth yet men will not beleeue them The fault therfore redoundeth vpon thy owne head that thou art not beleeued so farre therefore is this pretence from excusing thy swearing that it rather encreaseth thy offence 2 If we pretend our custome doeth this excuse our sinne Nay doeth not custome of doing euill aggrauate the wickednes that seruant that is accustomed to rob his master and doeth it therefore more commonly is more punishable thē he that hath once done it so hath done The childe that by vse and custome groweth to be disobedient deserueth with more seueritie to be chastened then he that once offendeth and so leaueth Euery wickednes how much more commonly it is done so much more hainous is it The man more accustomed to adulteries is the more filthie whoremonger the wife that hath more vsually prostituted her selfe to others is the more detestable harlot the theefe that by custome robbeth deserueth more iustly to be hanged the more vsually any euill is committed the more haynous
lawfull vnto him for his blessings bestovved vpon vs which is the matter here by the Apostle mētioned though sometimes our godly songes may containe some other argument as the songs Psalmes of Dauid vvere for sundry purposes and of manifold matters Yet here I say S. Iames speaketh of singing praises vnto God Concerning the manner how we must sing though curious and deuided musike in our priuate houses for the exercise of our skill for the attaining to perfection of that arte cannot be condemned yet in our songes and exercises to GOD moste chiefely in the face of the church and in the middle of the holy congregation vve must sing in most plaine and modest manner and so as shall serue beste for edification that vvee haue regarde not so much to the sound as to the sense of that which is songe Singing in the best times and among the most holy men of God hath had and now may also haue three ends or opportunities when and wherein it is lawfull and laudable to sing 1. To recreate our heauie and sorowfull heartes with some holy and godly songe and Psalme The princely prophet Dauid oftentimes in the sorow and heauinesse of his heart song to solace recreate his sorovvfull spirite before God Christians in like manner in the anguish of their spirites the troubles of their hearts the vexations of their mindes the griefes of their soules may sing for their godly recreation songes and Psalmes vnto God that thereby they may be lightened and comforted 2. Another ende vse and occasion of singing is the testifying of our thankefulnes vnto God for his immeasurable mercies bountifull benefits gratious goodnes towards vs. Wherin Miriah the sister of Moses with the damsels Exod. 15. and daughters of Israell is an example vvho after the destruction of Pharao and his armie in the redde sea to testifie their gratefull memorie and thankefull hearts for so vvonderfull a deliueraunce songe as followeth I vvill singe vnto the Lord for hee hath triumphed gloriously c. When Barak by the counsell and pricking on of Deborah had armed the people against Sisera the captaine of Iudges 5. the hoste of Iabin king of Canaan and had confounded discomfited his armie and chased him to the tents of Iael who slew him so deliuered the people frō the slauery of Iabin for so vnlooked for a victory for so glorious a conquest mighty deliuerance Deborah and Barake in token of their thankefulnesse song the same day saying prayse ye the Lord for the auenging of Israell and for the people that offered themselues so willingly When litle Dauid so victoriously had triumphed ouer the prowde Goliah of 1. King 18. the Philistines the daughters of Israell met Saul the king and Dauid his seruaunt singing and playing vpon their timbrels violes and other instruments and in token of thanks giuing said Saul hath slaine his thousand and Dauid his ten thousand Dauid being marueilouslie preserued from his infinite enemies and at the length by the mightie power of Psal 18. God brought to sitte on the throne of Israel in signe of his thankfulnes to God therefore euen at the entring in to his kingdome he singeth a psalme of praise vnto God I will loue thee dearely ô God my strength the Lorde is my rock and my fortresse and he that deliuereth me my God and my strength in him will I trust my shielde the horne also of my saluation and my refuge When almightie God had heard the humble suite 1. Kings 2. of Anna the mother of Samuel who being barren desired that she might haue a childe at her request he had geuē her Samuel her sonne to testifie her thankfulnes to God for the same song a song of praise therefore vnto GOD. When the Lord had looked to the humilitie of the blessed Virgin and made her the vessell of Christes conception for that blessing she brake out and sang My soule Luke 1. magnifieth the Lord and my spirite reioiceth in God my Sauiour Zacharie and Simeon in like manner the one after the birth of Iohn Baptist his sonne the other after he had receaued Luke 1. 68 Luke 2. 29. Christ into his armes according to the promise of the holy Angell song in token of their thanksgeuing the song of the former is Benedictus Blessed be the Lorde God of Israel the song of Simeon is Nunc dimittis Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word Whereby and by the like examples it is not only lawful but laudable also in the Saints of God either for benefites blessings either of victory against our enemies or of deliuerance out of trouble or for the fruits of the earth receaued in due seasō or for what thing soeuer we haue mercifullie receaued at his hand to sing to God and so be thankful 3 The third vse and ende of singing is to aduaunce thereby the glorie of God to stirre vp men to zeale to his worde feruencie in praier and earnestnes of perfourming all laudable seruice vnto him Whereunto the example of Elizeus may be referred who at the request of Iehosaphat 4. Kings 3 called for a minstrell who playing singing psalmes to God thereby was stirred vp to pray and prophecie Dauid prouoked himselfe by all meanes forwarde more earnestly to pray to God and to praise him for his Psal 57. mercie wherefore he saith Awake my tongue awake viole and harpe I will awake early I will praise thee among the people ô Lord I wil sing vnto thee among the nations Thus by all possible meanes as by playing vpon instruments and by singing the Prophet stirreth vp himselfe to the aduaunancement of Gods glorie And to this ende he brought in sundrie instruments of musick diuine kindes of songs and psalmes varietie of tunes and harmonies into the church of God The old Hebrewes toke vp and set downe the arke of God with singing this was vsed in the time of the Apostles Saint Paul saith I will pray in the Spirite I will pray with the vnderstanding also I wil sing with the spirit I wil sing with the vnderstanding also wherunto he exhorteth 1. Cor. 14. all the Saints be filled with the Spirite speaking vnto your selues in psalmes and himnes and spiritual songs Ephes 5. 19 Col. 3. 16 singing and making melody in your hearts vnto God geuing thanks alwaies for all things vnto God euen the father in the name of Iesus Christ This vse the beleeuing Iewes afterward retained as both Plinie his answere thereof to Traian the Emperour and Tertullian in his Apologetico aboundantlie recordeth Lib. 10. Epist Tertul. apolog 2. ca. who both auouch of them that they rose vp early to sing songs and psalmes to God Saint Augustine writeth that Saint Ambrose brought the same manner into the Church of Mediolanum where Lib. confis 9. c. 7. he was Bishoppe Whom the other of the west Churches followed
can it be grownded then vppon the Euangelists doctrine The Apostles themselues did not alwaies necessarily vse that signe in healing but sometimes the word and prayer only somtimes laying on of hands only sometimes touching Act. 3. v. 6. Act. 9. v. 34. 40. Acts 28. 8. Acts 20. 10 Acts 5. 15 only sometime lying vpon as in the Actes of the holie Apostles in sundrie places appeareth Sometimes the verie shadowe of the Apostles serued as the shadowe of Peter healed many sometimes things brought from them and giuen to the sicke as from Paul were brought vnto the sicke kercheifs and hand kercheifs and deceases were taken from them and foule spirites departed So Acts 19 then it was no such sacrament in the dayes of the Apostles Neither doth this place any whitte helpe or profit them For heere annoynting is a signe of health and recouerie the gifte therof seasing the signe must cease also neither ment James that it should be vsed as a salue of a surgeon or as a medicine of the physition but that in sickenes they lifting vp their minds to God and powring out their prayers to him might receaue that in signe that as their bodies by that externall meane should bee healed so their souls should be clenged purged and purified by the holy annoynting of the spirite of God and of Iesus Christ So that the Apostle speaketh not of their sacramente which thing euen Cardinall Caietane their Caietane owne man confesseth in like manner The Aposte in this place speaketh according as the gifte of healing was in force in his time and binding hereby men thereunto during the time of the continuance of the same and not for euer as the papists doe Out of which place we may learne thus much that as when in the Apostles time the gifte of healing was in force men were willed to sende for the Elders of the Church that they might pray for the sicke and annoint them with oile that they might recouer So nowe the gift being taken away in our great and extreame sickenesse to send for the elders of the Church the Pastours the Ministers the preachers of the worde with the faithfull brethren that by them we may be taught that the cause of our sickenesse is our sinne that they may informe vs in the doctrine of vnfained repentance that they may comfort and counsell vs in our extremities that they may powre out praiers vnto God for the assistance of his grace and encrease of all needfull spirituall vertues in vs and for riddance out of our paines and sickenesse as shall seeme best to his heauenly wisedome VVhich done we may vse all other lawful meanes of phisicke or the like for our recouerie in the feare of God But now is it quite contrarie with most men for as if sickenesse befell men rather by chaunce and fortune then by the prouidence of God and by naturall causes onely and not as punishments of sinne chastisements of men in this world from the hand of God or as trials of our pacience and exercises of our faith in their bodily diseases they foorthwith flie to outward remedies shewing that they haue more care of the life of their bodies then of the saluation of their soules They poste to the Physition they sende in all haste to the Apoticarie they runne to the Surgeon they greedily seeke after all outwarde meanes but their hearts are not turned to God who sendeth death and giueth life who woundeth and maketh whole bringeth to graue and lifteth vp againe they search not out the true cause of their sicknes which is their sin But whē Phisitiō leaueth hearing ceaseth speach faileth senses are gone and the partie more then halfe deade then doe most sende for the minister runne for the Pastour seeke to the preacher when he can not profite the sicke person VVhat counsell can nowe bee giuen what instruction can nowe be taken what comfort can now be ministred what exhortation can preuaile in this extremitie This ought not to be so my brethren it is not the meaning of the Apostle whose counsell is rather that in all our bodily diseases we should flie first to spirituall and ghostly physitions as appeareth Wherefore in this place the Apostle willeth that if anie be sicke they should call for the elders of the Church that they might pray for them VVhose prayers in that behalfe of what force they be the Apostle expresseth the praier of the faithful shal saue the sicke and the Lorde shall raise him vp and if he haue committed sinne it shall be forgiuen him Which place teacheth that healing in that time was not to be ascribed and assigned to the annoiting with oile but to the praiers of the Elders flowing from faith and the praier of the faith shall saue him saieth the Apostle The praier of faith proceeding from a stedfast hope an vndoubted trust an earnest beliefe is therfore of great force For God is neare at hande to heare all such as call Psal 145. vppon him euen such as call vppon him faithfully and our Sauiour telleth him which in the Gospell sued for his sonne possessed with a foule spirite that all thinges Matt. 9. are possible to him that beleeued and in another place whatsoeuer you aske beleeue and you shall obtaine it Of Marke 11. this matter see more Iames 1. ver 6. Prayer is the effectuall instrument and meane to the obtaining of health which to that effect God would to bee vsed Therefore when the holy Prophets or blessed Apostles restored life to the dead sight to the blind limmes to the lame health to the sicke hearing to the deafe speach to the dumme or the like they haue vsed praier thereunto Elias the Prophet restoring the sonne of the widowe of Sareptha being deade to health or rather 3. Kings 17. to life it selfe stretched himselfe vppon him and called vppon the name of the Lorde And Elizeus his seruant and successour in the place of prophecie restoring the deade sonne of the Sunamite to his life againe went into the childe shutte the doore vppon 4. Kings 4. him prayed and stretched himselfe vppon the childe and hee reuiued When Peter restored Tabitha to life hee kneeled Acts 9. downe and praied and then turned to the bodie and said Tabitha arise VVhen Christ raised vp Lazarus hee first Iohn 11. prayed Father I thanke thee that thou hast heard me I knowe thou hearest me alwayes but because of the people that stand by I said it that they may beleeue that thou sendest me And in other cures both our Sauiour himselfe and the Apostles vsed prayer VVhich is the meane and instrument of healing here by the Apostle sette downe the efficient cause whereof is God himselfe therefore hee sayeth And God shall raise him vppe and if hee hath committed any sinne it shall bee forgiuen him Life and death Ecclus. 11. Deut. 32. 1. King 2. 6. 16. Wisd 13. 13. Tob. 2. sickenesse and