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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
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
by their owne choise therefore haue no cause therein to reioice theeues robbers pirates murtherers man quellers euill doers busie bodies who by their own desert procure their owne miserie ought not therein to reioyce Let no man saith Saint Peter suffer as a theefe murtherer euill doer 1. Pet 4. or as a busie bodie in other mens matters but if any suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but let him glorifie God in that behalfe When men are causes of their owne crosses and procure by their wickednesse their own punishments and afflictions they must not therein reioyce but rather lament and be sorie but when we fall into temptations by the will of God then must we count it exceeding ioy Foolish men punished for their wickednesse malefactors chastined for their vngodlinesse wicked ones afflicted for their vngraciousnesse haue cause of sorow not of ioy of mourning not of mirth of lamentation not of laughter in that they fall not hereinto by Gods will but by their owne wickednesse though secretly they doe that which from euerlasting God hath determined Vnder the worde Falling into is insinuated vnto men vnder what affliction and crosse they must reioyce vnder that crosse which God imposeth and layeth vpon vs vnder those afflictions whereinto wee fall by the pleasure and purpose of God to trie vs therein when we suffer we must count it exceeding ioy 3 The circumstance of time may not be lightly passed ouer My brethren count it exceeding ioy when you fall that is whensoeuer you fall into temptations This teacheth the children of God that once or twise to reioyce vnder the crosse is not inough to the perfect dutie of a Christian but whensoeuer as often soeuer at what time soeuer we are assaulted and assailed with temptations so often to shew our selues pacient therein and ioyous because Heb. 10. our crowne is onely giuen in the ende of all our combats which the authour to the Hebrues recounting teacheth vs that we haue alwaies neede of pacience that in fine and at length wee may obtaine the promise For which cause the Angell requireth patience in the Smyrnians Reuel 2. and constancie vnder the crosse to the ende Bee thou constant vnto death and I will giue vnto thee the crowne of life It is not inough to begin to runne in the race of pacience but wee must runne out our race with pacience if we will be crowned Therefore Saint Paul admonisheth that we runne on with pacience the race that Heb. 12. is set before vs. Wherefore as he that hath borne the brunt of many bickerings and hath quit himselfe valiantly and like a man in sundrie assaults and skirmishes If before the ende of the battell he faint and giue ouer loseth all his former labor and as he that plaieth on a stage though he behaue himselfe excellently in sundry acts yet if in the last act he quaile he beareth away neither prime nor price in that action and as hee that runneth a long time but falleth or sitteth downe before he come to the goale hath not the crowne or garland so if men in manie miseries in sundrie temptations in diuers afflictions haue reioyced vnlesse whensoeuer they fall thereunto they still reioice they loose their praise and commendation of pacience whereof the Apostle to foretell and foreteach vs would haue vs count it exceedtng ioy whensoeuer wee fall into temptations 4 Finally hee would men to count it exceeding ioy when they fall into diuers or manifolde temptations Wherein we must learne that the afflictions of the saints are manifolde diuers and sundrie and that specially in three respects 1 These afflictions are manifolde in respect of the diuersitie of instrumēts which God vseth in inflicting them vpon the Saints For some times hee vseth the Diuel sometimes the meanes of men some times other his creatures as instruments and meanes by afflictions to tempt the Saints Hee vsed Satan in the temptation of Job 1. 2. ca. Job to whom he gaue licence in his goodes and in his bodie to afflict him Men almightie God vsed to afflict Israel his people wherefore in the Prophets the Assirians the Babilonians the Philistines and Aegyptians with other are both plainly called and manifestly discribed as the instuments of God to afflict his people In which sense Assur is called the rodde of the Lords furie and the staffe Esai 10. Iere. 27. Ezec. 17. 26 of his wrath and indignation Thus the Lord calleth Nabuchodonosor that cruell tyrant and shamefull idolater his seruant because he vsed him as a meane to afflict his people Thus vsed also God the Caldeans and Sabians as Iob. 1. his instruments to afflict Job the Patriarch and seruant of God Thus he vsed Sennecharib to afflict Hezekiah the Scribes and Pharisees to afflict our Sauiour and to vse all meanes of persecution against the Apostles and disciples Thus he vseth men to rob spoile slaie murther and euerie way to afflict his saints and seruants God vseth in like maner other creatures in afflicting of his Saints Sometimes the heauens giue abundance of raine whereby the corne and graine of the earth is destroied and the Saints and others brought to extremitie some times the aire is infected wherehence sicknesse plagues pestilence groweth and the people are destroied Some times brute beasts rise vp against men and destroy them as the Lion did the Prophet The Lions which destroied 3. Kings 13. those whom Salmanaser sent to inhabite Samaria whereof that none were good were hard to affirme By infinite 4. Kings 17. other his creatures the saints themselues are oftentimes afflicted wherefore if we respect but the diuersitie of instruments which almightie God vseth in these externall afflictions we shal easily be forced to confesse that in that regard euen our afflictions and temptations are sundrie 2 As in respect of the diuers instruments thereunto by God vsed the temptations of men are diuers and manifold so if we looke into the nature of temptations they Psal 34. are no lesse manifold and diuers Hereunto the holy prophet hauing regard crieth out Manie are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth out of all As many in number so diuers in nature are our afflictions Some are afflicted by exile and banishment some by captiuitie and imprisonment some by famin and nakednesse some by perill and persecution some by slaunder and reprochfull contumelie some by rackings and tearings in peeces some by slaughter and sworde some by fire and fagots some by sores of bodie and sundrie diseases some suffer in themselues some are afflicted in their friends in their wiues in their children some in their goods some in their bodies some in their credits some by sea some by land some at home some abroade some by open enemies some by counterfeit friends some by cruell oppression some by manifest iniuries some by force some by fraud some afflicted and tempted by one meanes some by another
all wauering and doubting it easily refuteth those fantasticall spirites which condemne prayer as superfluous God say they knoweth our need seeth our want before we aske he will for his fatherly goodnes supplie this want without asking he heareth the inwarde sighings and sobs of the spirite and knoweth what the spirite meaneth therefore is prayer in Gods children superfluous Indeed if God because he knoweth our need and heareth the sorowfull sighings of the Saints Woulde therefore supplie our want without asking then were prayer superfluous but to be therfore superfluous because he knoweth our needes and necessities is a reason carnal sensuall and deuilish For were this carnal reason sufficient God knoweth our needes before we pray therefore praier is superfluous why doeth the Apostle here will vs If any man lacke wisdome to aske it of God God knoweth our infirmities he seeth our impatiēcy he beholdeth the vnablenes of mans nature he seeth whether in afflictiōs we behaueour selues as is cōuenient notwithstanding the apostle willeth vs to aske this point of wisdom from God Neither Saint Iames here onely commendeth praier as needfull but the whole course of the Scriptures of God require it in the necessities of men as an instrument most necessarie Almighty God though he knew our troubles whereinto by his will we should be plunged yet commaundeth hee vs in our troubles to call vpon him for deliuerance The Lorde Psal 50. foresaw the miserable captiuitie of Israel his people in the land of Babylon yet doeth the Prophet will them to Lament 2. poure out their hearts before God both for their present miserie and also for their future calamitie Our Sauiour Mat. 6. Christ auouching to the Saints that God their heauenlie Father knew their necessities and therefore they shoulde not be distrustfull as the heathen and Gentiles yet for all necessities both bodely and ghostly he set downe prayer as a helpe and remedie the forme whereof he left vnto alposteritie and commaunded also that men shoulde aske seeke knock for at the gates of Gods mercies the thinges Mat. 7. that were needfull It were horrible blasphemie to say that Mat. 26. Luke 22. God did not know the distresse and agony of our Sauiour in the garden and impietie without comparison most detestable to thinke that the Father was not readie to helpe him yet doeth our Sauiour thrise on a rowe pray to the Father that that cuppe might passe from him The hearts of the Apostles were knowen and it was needefull for the accomplishing of their ministerie that to the eleuen a twelfth Apostle in Iudas his place might be substitute yet in that so heauenly a busines they pray to God for direction Acts 1. God knew that Anna the mother of Samuel was 1. Kings 1. barren and despised therefore of her enemie he sawe her affliction and considered her teares yet was it not geuen her what she desired but after her prayer vnto God Praier is not therefore superfluous because God knoweth our needes and necessities before we aske What haue not the holy Patriarkes haue not the blessed Apostles haue not the Saints of God in all times vsed praier May it then be iudged as superfluous What haue we either to supplie our bodely necessities or to minister to our spirituall wants as of our selues and may we not truely of both say We haue nothing but what we haue receaued And vvhereby doe vvee receaue 1. Cor. 4. these things from the hands of God Is it not by praier Is it not necessarie then in all The Poet saith vvell therefore that praier profiteth both poore and rich alike when it is vsed and hurteth both children and olde men being neglected Men praye therefore to God Saint Augustine affirmeth Epist 121. to Proba the vvidovv not to teach him their necessitie for vvho knovveth the minde of the Lorde to instruct him but to exercise themselues in praier make them capable of those thinges vvhich vvillingly he doeth geue them Therefore men pray to God that thereby it may appeare that he is the geuer of all good things that the effects and euents of things depend vvholly vpon him that increase of his graces is to be looked for onely from his heauenly maiestie and thereby vve taught to behaue our selues more thankfully and duetifully vnto him Seeing then no man can be so blinde vnlesse he vvilfully stoppe his eies against the light of the trueth but needes confesseth praier to be a thing most necessarie in the life of man vvhich neither man nor vvoman rich nor poore learned nor ignorant Prince nor people one nor other can vvant altogether but is the onely meane and instrument vvherby all the treasures of God reposed and laide vp in store for his Saints in Iesus Christ are plentifully poured out vpon men then notvvithstanding this to holde it as superfluous in the Saints is not onely like Gyants to fight against God and his trueth but as hauing put off the vvhole nature of men and transformed into the shape of bruite beastes to striue and contende against the course of nature it selfe vvhich vvho so doe are not onely vvorthy to be secluded the societie of the Saintes but also to be sequestred and put out from the companie of men Were there then no other place in all holy scripture to commend prayer as a thing most necessarie vnto men yet vvere this one al-sufficient that the Apostle S. James here maketh it the meane to attaine vnto vvisdome If any man lack vvisdome let him aske it of God 3 Besides this vvhereas Saint James promiseth that if we lack wisdome we should aske it and it should be geuen vs doeth hee not most highly commende praier vnto men whose vertue force and excellencie is such as whereby the most excellent gift and vertue of patience a singular point of heauenly wisdome is obteined the vertue efficacie whereof is set downe farre and wide in the scriptures of God whereof if we will consider a little it commendeth praier not a litle 1 That almightie God hath made so large and liberall promises thereunto as that we shall obteine that from him by praier which we aske to which ●●rpose almighty God by his Prophet saith Call vpon me ●n the day of thy trouble and I wil deliuer thee Psal 50. and thou shalt glorifie me call vpon me and I will deliuer thee By another Prophet to like purpose is it said Thou shalt call and the Lord shall answere thee thou shalt crie Isai 58. and he will heare thee The wiseman Salomon commending Pro. 15. vnto men the excellencie of praier by the promise therunto made that God woulde heare it saith God is farre from the wicked but he heareth the praiers of the righteous Dauid by great experience and long triall hauing felt the trueth hereof crieth out The eies of the Psal 34. Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares open to their praiers And in another
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
of trueth whereby we are regenerate and borne againe why are men and women so daintie and coy why are they so choise hereof that they wil heare it onely when where and of whom they luste as if the men make it the word of trueth and the instrument of our regeneration Let not men and women pretend that they are sanctified men and women let them not vaunte themselues to be purer then their brethren and heare this word with this partialitie For I protest vnto euery such in the feare of God that vnlesse this word of trueth and instrument of regeneration be sweeter vnto them then the hony and the hony combe by what messenger soeuer the Lord doeth send it that they flatter and deceiue them selues in a vaine shadowe of holines and are not truely sanctified vnto the Lord neither haue effectually tasted of the doctrine of regeneratiō wherof this word is the mean and instrument As then our regeneration is attributed vnto the word of trueth as vnto the meane and instrument so is saluation also as afterward is added to the Sacraments in like manner as Saint Paul saith that Christ washeth and sanctifieth Ephes 5. his Church by the washing of water through the word And againe when the bountifulnes of God our Sauiour Tit. 3. appeared not by workes but according to his mercie hath he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renuing of the holy Ghost The holy Sacramentes are meanes the word of trueth the instrument mean whereby we are begotten againe and new borne which greatly commendeth the excellencie of the word which this Apostle expressing saith Of his owne will begat he vs with the word of trueth 3 The finall cause of our regeneration is that wee should bee the first fruites of his creatures that is that out of the whole lumpe and masse of mankinde out of all people tongues nations and kinreds of the earth wee might be select culled and chosen out to bee a peculiar proper and speciall people vnto him who had called vs euen vnto God whose chiefe treasure whose portion and lot whose inheritance and peculiar people the Saints are In which place hee alludeth chiefly vnto the lawe wherein the first fruits and first encrease were the Lords as things picked out set a part chosen out for God himselfe Whereof thus saith God in the law Thou shalt not Exod. 22. linger nor deferre to render thy tithes and thy first fruits and thou shalt giue me thy first borne of thy children In the same booke of Moises it is commaunded the people that they offer the first fruits of their ground in the house Exod. 34. 35. ● Leuit. 2. 14. Deut. 12. of the Lord their God In the repeating of the lawe by Moises thus was it saide to Israel Thou maiest not eate in the towns the tithes of thy corne wine or oile neither the first fruits of thy cattell or sheepe nor the fruits of thy hands The first fruits therefore as appeareth were dedicate to God neither was it 〈…〉 for men to eate or touch them as things reserued for the vse of the Lorde onely As then the first fruits were the Lords portion of the people and things dedicated and consecrate as holy vnto him so the Saints of God regenerate by his word are holy peculiar proper sanctified to the vse of the Lord the chiefe treasure he hath the thing he hath commaunded to bee receyued for himselfe which the Apostle insinuateth in this place when setting downe the ende of our regeneration affirmeth it to bee that we might bee the first fruites of his creatures of his owne will begate he vs with the worde of truth that we might be the first fruits of his creatures The Israelites Iere. 2 were called sometimes the first fruites of God because they were chosen of God aboue all other people to serue the Lord only and the first offred vnto the Lord of al nations whereof the prophet Ieremie saith Israel was as a thing hallowed vnto the Lord and his first fruits all that eate it shall offende euill shall come vpon them saith the Lord. This is most true of the true Israel which is of God of the Saints of the Church whom God hath separated from all people hallowed and sanctified vnto him selfe chosen to be a speciall possession inheritance and treasure vnto himselfe for which cause we by him are regenerate Of his owne will hath he begoten vs with the word of trueth that we might be the first fruits of his creatures S. Paul disputing to like purpose of the causes Tit. 3. of our regeneration and saluation teacheth vs the ende thereof to be the inheritance of life we are saued by his mercie through the washing of the newe birth and the renuing of the holy Ghost which he shed vpon vs aboundantly through Iesus Christ our Lord that we being iustified by his grace should be made heires according to the hope of eterna●l life The like end shall we find of our redemption predestination and the like all which tende to one end to shew that we are redeemed called iustified regenerated to be partakers of immortal glorie that therfore we should be dedicate and consecrate to God to be a speciall treasure vnto him to serue him in holinesse and righteousnes all the dayes of our life We are begotten by the will of God with the word of truth according to the Luke 1. Apostles doctrine Being now to this end regenerate we must endeuour our selues to shine in vertue to excell in holinesse to abound in all righteousnesse and be chiefly carefull that we bereaue not our selues of so holy an ende of regeneration by contagion of sinnes and the workes of wickednesse The excellencie therefore of the word of God is here apparant partly in that it is called the word of truth partly in that it is here the meane and instrument of regeneration the most manifest token of Gods goodnesse towards vs. Sundrie are the commendations of the word of God Psal 19. and the Gospel of Christ Dauid the holy Prophet falling into the praise therof saith the law of the Lord is perfect conuerting the soule the testimonie of the Lord is sure and giueth light or wisdome to the simple the statutes of the Lord are right and reioice the heart the commandement of god is pure and giueth light vnto the eies the feare of the lord is cleare endureth for euer the iudgements of the lord are true righteous altogither more to be desired then gold yea then much fine gold sweeter also then the honie and the honie combe Moreouer by them is thy seruant made circumspect and in keeping of them there is great reward In another place to like praise is it Psal 12. spoken The words of the Lord are pure words as the siluer tried in a fornace of earth fined seuen folde It is no small commendation of the word that it is the
teach men this how much more ought the light of Scripture to teach vs this wisdome 4 As the time so the maner how must not be neglected Sometimes we speake familiarly sometimes reuerendly sometimes meekly sometimes sharpely somtimes gentlely sometimes hastily respect had to the disposition of men with whom we haue to talke 5 The things we speake of must be weighed they must be honest seemely good profitable necessarie for time and person such as we our selues know and therfore can the better talke of them to others 6 Finally our talke must be to aduaunce the glorie of God whereof it ought to be the instrument it must tende to the benefite of our brethren to peace godlinesse iustice equitie loue and all maner of vertue These things being diligently obserued wee may speake and offende not against this place of the Apostle wherefore my deare brethren let euery man be swift to heare but slow to speake But we obseruing neither person place nor time regarding neither maner matter nor end babble out we know not what and oppose our selues to the Apostle here being swift to speake but slow to heare Euerie one will now speake all men will become teachers The Artificer the shoomaker hosier tinker and tailer the vintener the clothier the weauer and the cobler the marchant the mariner the carpenter and the painter the master the seruant the fathers the children the mistresse the maiden the mother and the daughter the yong men the olde folke the simple and the ignorant will now take vpon them not to speake onely but to teach also and not other but their teachers of whom we should learne with pacience heare with silence take counsell with reuerence and be informed with humblenesse Therefore our Sauiour in the song of Solomon biddeth his Church being ignorant to go to the pastor to learne knowledge 1. Can●ic if thou knowe not saieth he O thou fairest of women get thee forth by the sheepe folds and feede thy kiddes by the tents of the shepheards And almightie God perswadeth the people to take the lawe of the Lord at the Mal. 2. mouth of the priest who should be as the treasure house of Gods word of whō the people ought to be instructed Dauid being a prophet in the humilitie of his mind with gratefull memorie and great thankefulnesse to God Psal 11 of whom he was instructed saieth vnto the Lord thou hast made me wiser then my teachers He truely humbly thankefully but men and women now in arrogancie of their spirite in pride of their hearts in vanitie of their mindes in presumption of their owne knowledge thinke themselues wiser then their teachers and take vpon them to alter and change to order and set downe what in the Church ought to be done obserued and retained These falsely proudly vnthankefully disorderly contentiously preposterously deale wherfore let them learne here a better lesson and holde fast the counsaile of the Apost●e that they be swift to heare but flowe to speake as they are exhorted let them hearken with reuerence to the woorde preached by the faithfull Ministers of Iesus Christ and be not new fangled nor caried away with euerie Ephes 4. winde of vanitie that they may follow the trueth in loue and in all quietnesse humilitie peace and godly vnitie growe vp vnto him that is the head euen Iesus Christ and heare his word with reuerence and not rashly prate and prattle thereof with insolencie that thereby they may preuent this first inconuenience and remoue the first hinderance of our attention Whereof the Apostle speaketh wherefore brethren let euerie man bee swift to heare but slow to speake This place then remooueth loquacitie and rash speaking when we should giue attentiue eare to the word of God taught vs this is an enemie to knowledge to heauenly doctrine this hindereth the course of the worde of God in out hearts wherefore it ought to bee farre from the Saints of God which to abolish the Apostle here exhorteth Let euerie one be swift to heare and slow to speake 2 The other euill which hindereth the woorde of God in man is wrath and anger choler and snuffing whē wee are taught and informed in the worde For we cannot profitably heare vnlesse we be peaceable quiet and modest both towards all men and specially towardes our teachers Many kindes there are of wrath and anger manie things wherefore and wherein men are angrie but to passe that ouer as appertaining to another place the Apostle speaketh of that wrath and anger which riseth from desire of contending and of intractablenes of way-wardnes 2. Chro. 16. 7. Acts 54. 2. Chro. 26. 18. 19. Luke 4 28. whereby we suffer not our selues to be taught or reproued no not by the word of God it selfe Thus by the affections and perturbations of our minds we oftentimes make the word of God frustrate fruitlesse in vs and so to lose not onely the blessed effecte it would worke in vs but also in a manner the credite and estimation which it should haue among men Whereunto were we the seruants and true Disciples of Christ we would yeald all attentiue audience This anger groweth partly from selfeloue and preiudicate Cyrilin Iohn lib. 4. c. 34. opinion of our selues standing wise in our owne conceites we disdaine to bee checked controlled informed or reproued of any Partly herence that naturally we more esteeme darcknes then light falshood then trueth error then veritie superstition then religion From which if men draw vs then are we angrie Herence in all times haue risen perfecution imprisonment calamity affliction with all manner of violence and villanie against the reprouers of wickednes teachers of true religion reformers of corruption and superstition by the wicked of this present euil and corrupt world Herence the anger furie and madnes of the princes and people against Isai Ieremie Michat Amos and the rest of the Prophets arose sprong and flowed Herence the outrage of the Scribes and Pharisies against Christ Iesus our Sauiour and his most holy Apostles the cruell persecution by the bloudy tyrants and Emperors of Rome against the Saints and blessed Martyrs was raised Herence the vnquenchable wrath and malice neuer reconciled of the Romish Cleargie against the faithfull preachers of Christian religion who caried away partly with selfeloue and preiudicate opinion of themselues as the onely learned and wise men in the whole world and partly being naturally blinded in superstition whereunto they haue sworne their allegiance curse with bell booke and candle persecute with fire sword and fagot whosoeuer speaketh against them whereby the course of the word of God is hindered Herence mislike rebuke disgrace reproch disdaine and all manner euill dealing towards the ministers groweth for that men cannot ne will not heare of their faultes be reclaymed from their sinne and informed in their duties roundly and sharply without offence and anger who seeme they neuer so wise in them selues yet are they both
testie fooles and wayward which refuse to bee informed these are they of whom Salomon speaketh in his preacher be not of an hastie spirit to anger for anger resteth Eccles. 7. in the bosom of fooles these know nothing and nothing wil they learne If they be reproued they are offēded if they doe know any thing they know not as they should whereof admonished they fal into anger Salomō saith the scorner will not loue him which rebuketh him neither go Pro. 15. Ose 4. to the wise Osei condemneth it in Israell that they spoke against the prophets and preists for rebuking them It was reckned for great sinne in the people for hating the prophets which reptoued them openly in their assemblies Sirach condemneth it with Salomon among the follies and fooleries of men to hate instruction and disdaine to be Amos. 5. Ecclus. 21. taught and informed therefore he saith He that is not wise wil not suffer him selfe to be taught And the Apostle here forbiddeth anger and wrath to be wreaked against them which informe and teach vs wisedom Thus then to hate the instructor to speake against the teacher and prophet to persecute them which rebuke sinne and iniquitie among men to disdaine to be taught and instructed to be angrie with those by whom our sinnes are condemned our enormities reformed our erours reclaimed is not ōly great infirmitie but malitious wickednes and deuelish folly which thing as an hinderance vnto knowledge in the word of truth an impediment to our new birth and regeneration in Christ rebellious and wickedly opposed vnto God himselfe who by the word calleth vs to repentance the Apostl here condemneth and remoueth wherefore my deare brethren Let euery man be swifte to heare but slowe to speake and slowe to wrath Of this latter there is a reason here rendred why men should not be angrie when they are reproued and taught in the word because that that anger worketh not the righteousnes of God A reason from disprofit from disaduantage This wrath and anger herence conceiued worketh not the righteousnes of God yea it hindreth Gods worke in vs in that the audience and hearing of the word is hindered It worketh not that which is righteous before god which of his seruants he requireth namely to heare his word with reuerence to do his wil with carefulnes and be fruitfull in all good workes to his glory This anger wrath geuing place to disordered affections tumults of our minds worketh not the righteousnes of God Yea where this is there godly righteousnes christiā dutifulnes and holy obedience to the word is exiled abandoned abolished clean estranged from among vs there the righteousnes of God ruleth not neither is that moderation and godly attētiō which before was cōmēded that we should be swift to heare but slowe to speake in any measure performed yea rather sinne is suffered to haue his souerainty in vs for as patient godly reuerence hath all other vertues tied as in an indissoluble inseperable chaine so al impietie al vngodlines vnrighteousnes of men ruleth raigneth whē impatience wrath disquieteth vs. This reason ought to moue men to put away al swelling al anger wrath from thē and without choler snuffing or disdaine to heare gods word instructing them that they may be begottē againe by god with the word of truth to be the first fruits of his creatures Now let vs pray vnto God who of his own wil hath begottē vs with the word of truth that we should be the first fruites of his creatures that we may be strēgthned with the grace of his holy spirite in the inward man to heare with redines to speak of his word with sobernes to keep it with carefulnes that in happy issue of our waies we may be blessed with spirituall blessings in Christ our Sauiour To whom with the father the Spirite the most heauenly comforter be praise glory honor and maiestie now and for euer Amen Iames Chapter 1. verses 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. Sermon 7. Verse 21 Wherfore lay apart all filthines and superfluitie of maliciousnes and receaue with meekenes the worde that is graffed in you which is able to saue your soules 22 And be you doers of the worde not hearers onely deceiuing their owne selues 23 For if any heare the worde and doe it not he is like vnto a mā that beholdeth his naturall face in a glasse 24 For when he hath considered himselfe he goeth his way immediately forgetting what manner of one he was 25 But who so looketh into the perfect law of libertie and continueth therin he not being a forgetfull hearer but a doer of of the worke shal be blessed in his deede 3. part of the last member of this chapter THe third branch of this last and fourth thing in this first Chapter conteyned is touching certaine admonitions which follow this doctrine of regeneration and they are as exhortations to the regenerate In setting downe whereof he descendeth to the fruites of regeneration and effects of the word of trueth in the Saints least they hiding this inestimable treasure in the ground and shutting it vp as it were in the secrete closet of their own bosomes might in their liues be found fruitlesse and vnprofitable And the admonitions here are foure Whereof two in these words and verses are conteyned Namely 1. To heare the word of God In which exhortation there are three things 1. What he admonisheth of To heare the worde 2. How it must be heard 1. Laying aside filthines and malice 2. With meeknes 3. Why. The reason It is able to saue our soules 2. Not to heare onely but to doe also In which two things are handled 1. The admonition or exhortation it selfe geuen 2. The reasons rendred 1. From hurt to themselues 2. From the losse of the vse of Gods worde by similitude Now to come to the first admonition and the first 1. Admonition thing therein conteyned The thing whereof he admonisheth it is to heare the word of God the word of trueth Whereof he geueth iust admonition here because hee hath before tolde vs that thereby wee are begotten to be the first fruites of Gods creatures Seeing then the worde of God is that word of trueth wherewith almightie God begetteth vs againe to be the first fruites of his creatures it standeth vs in hand with all peaceablenes and quietnes of minde without filthines and superfluitie of maliciousnes to heare it to receiue it to embrace it Concerning hearing this word of tructh which here is called receiuing the worde what one thing is there wherein the holy Prophets and other the Saintes of God haue more laboured then often to admonish the people to heare the word of the Lord Moses in the repeating of Deut. 4. Deut. 5. the lawe calleth Israel to the hearing of the law of God wherefore in sundrie Chapters he thus exhorteth and admonisheth Deut. 6. c. the people
are amisse this profit and vse vve loose vvhē we heare the vvord only and doe not thereafter this vse of Gods lavve and vvord Moises commendeth vnto princes and people Deut. 7 vvho exhorting the King continually to reade and meditate in the lavve shevveth him for vvhat end he should so doe to learne to feare the Lord and not to heare and knovve alone but to keepe his commaundements This vse vvas respected vvhen he vvilled the Leuites to teach the lavve vnto the people that they might learne to doe Deut. 31. Psal 119. and keepe the ordinances and the vvords of the lavve of God prescribed Dauid disputing of the vse and end of the lavve maketh it the reformer of our manners the directer of our pathes the line and leuell of our life and the guide of our waies to godlines Saint Paul affirmeth that all scripture is inspired from aboue and is profitable to teach 2. Tim. 3. such as are ignorant to conuince such as are repugnant to correct such as erre and wander in conuersation to instructe in righteousnes wherefore to what end to what vse to what purpose euen that thereby the man of God may be absolute perfect to euery good worke Perfectiō in righteousnes holy conuersation in life is the vse of the law and word of God As therefore the chiefe ende of sciences and humaine artes is not knowledge but action that when a thing is learned it may be put in vre and practise And as the vse and ende of morall philosophie is not to knowe only but to practise also whereunto they are vnfit which lacke experience to practise as Aristotle teacheth so the 1. lib. Ethic. c. 3. vse of Gods word which is the arte of all artes and that diuine philosophie which neither Thalis nor Pythagoras Socratet nor Plato Zeno nor Aristotle neither any other of the learned heathen haue deuised and inuēted but which we haue receiued from God himselfe is not meere knowledge to wote what to doe but practise of obedience that we may so doe in action as by hearing the word we haue learned This vse and end men then lose when they content themselues with hearing onely Which thing the Apostle here proueth by a fit similitude wherein he compareth the word of God to a glasse As the chiefe vse of the glasse is not to see our faces only but to correct our faults that there be no blemish or deformitie therein so the word of God hath this vse not to shew our selues only but to reforme our enormities that there remaine no iniquitie in vs. The word of God may well be compared to a glasse The word like a glasse Three speciall properties are in a glasse wherby the word is resembled vnto it 1 A glasse sheweth the perfecte forme of our faces with all the deformities and blemishes therein to correct them if they may be corrected So the lawe and worde of God sheweth the perfect face and fashion of sinne in vs that so farre forth as natural infimitie permitteth all blemishes may be amended for which cause Saint Paul saith that thereby we come to see sinne and by the lawe haue knowledge thereof because by the lawe is the knowledge of sinne that then being knowen we might by grace reforme Rom. 3. it 2 The glasse sheweth their owne faces which looke thereinto and not the faces of others that they might be carefull to wipe away their owne blemish and dyrty spots and not be curious in clearing of others So the lawe sheweth euery one that loketh thereinto his owne sinnes cheifely not the sinnes of his brethren so much that euerie one should be carefull of his owne life and not be too curious in the liues of others Wherefore holy Dauid so often desired to bee informed in the lawe and statutes of Psal 14. Psal 25. Psal 86 God that he him selfe might walke therein and be reformed as in his psalmes many waies it appeareth and the Apostle exhorting all men to make triall of themselues by the word not only at the receauing of Sacraments but otherwise 1. Cor. 11 by the ministerie of the word for the proofe of their faith woulde not haue them as busie in the liues of others but as carefull of their owne to mend themselues Let euerie one examine him selfe and so let him eate of this bread and drinke of this cup And againe proue your 2. Cor. 13. selues whether you are in faith examine your selues know you not that Christ dwelleth in you except ye be reprobates the word must teach vs to see our selues and our owne infirmities and endeuour to reforme our owne blemishes of sinne and not to be curious in them searching into the liues of others before our owne be throughly reformed 3 The glasse sheweth vs our blemishes which seene we hate and with mislike wipe them away so the worde of God sheweth vs the deformitie of sinne which sinne must be hated of vs thus Gods word taught Dauid to hate his owne waies and Marie Magdalen to loth here former life This maketh the Saints of God to hare the very garments defiled with the flesh and conceyue mislike against those sinnes wherevnto in times past they were giuen These things being so the Apostle compareth the word of God to a glasse Of which comparison there are two partes or members 1 They which looke into the worde of God without endeuour or yet desire to reforme their liues thereby are like such as looke into a glasse to see themselues but not to reforme their faults or blemishes of life as soone as they are gone they forget what fashion they were of thus their peering pooring and peeping into the glasse profiteth nothing as good neuer a whit as neuer the better The looking or hearing of hypocrites is like the vaine looking into glasses of fooles Fooles looke into glasses to see themselues but not to correct any thing amisse in them so hypocrites heare the worde of God and looke into his will to see it but not to correct their maners thereby Fooles looking into glasses with perswasion of themselues that they are faire when they are deformed come therehence as wise as they went and hypocrites thinking themselues righteous when they are wicked come as wise from a Sermon as they went thither As fooles looking into glasses see not that therein that which is indeede the right side is the left and the left the right and so thinke all is well So hypocrites seeing not by the worde their disordered liues that all things are topsie turuie in them perswade themselues all is well inough and so are not profited As fooles looking into glasses thinke they see a face in deede when they see but the reflexe or turning backe of a face therefore they coll they kisse they fall in loue oftentimes with the face seene in the glasse as Nareissus did with his owne face when he behelde himselfe in the water so
they shewe their riches wherewith they are indued This seemeth to haue been cōmitted by mē in their publique meetings in S. Iames his time wherein they measured esteemed Christian religiō the faith of Christ Iames 2. according to the outward appearance of men reputing those that caried greatest pompe and shew the most religious By which meane the poor which were religious in deede became vile contemptible and disdained Which euil hath ouerwhelmed our church countrey for now in these times wherein Lady money Queen riches raigne ouer men as it neuer did more in the worlde euery man is so much esteemed and regarded how much he is worth and as he is great in honor and so according to his riches and honor so is his estimation be they otherwise murtherers extortioners oppressors caterpillers vsurers couetous adulterers epicures blasphemers drūkerds or what soeuer Thus the wicked for riches and worldly pompe are regarded the poore for their basenes are contemned thrust to wall ouerruled be they neuer so honest Whereby it commeth to passe that seeing all thinges now are measured and esteemed by riches glorie and worldlie pompe and no regard of honestie no rewarde for vertue no place for religion therefore all men geue themselues to heaping and hoording vp of riches to brauerie of apparrell to hunting after honor and worldly preferment that for the one or the other they may be esteemed amōg men Thus couetousnes pride ambition and vainglorie is fostered nourished and chearished greatly vertue religion true honestie is depressed and cast downe Thus to measure esteem the religion and faith of Christ by outward appearance and in Christian assemblies and publicke meetings to preferre the rich wealthie honourable and pompous persons with the contempt and disdaine of the poore brethren is one way wherby the faith of Christ is had in respect of persons 2 Moreouer men haue the faith of Christ in respect persons when in the Sacraments of the Church we haue respect to mens persons as by ministring the Sacramēts with greater reuerence and care to the rich then to the poore when at the Lords table we disdaine to ioyne the the poore and the rich together The Sacraments equally belong to all like reuerence ought to be vsed in ministring them to the poore as to the rich the Lords table is common to all whereat saith Saint Chrysostome the subiect differeth not from the Souetaigne and Prince neither 2. Cor. hom 18. the Priest from the people To parte them therefore in the administration of Sacraments and to preferre the rich with the contempt of the poore is also to haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons which is here condēned Thus the rich mightie and honourable who disdain herein their poore Christian brethren sinne thus such ministers as herein please and delight the humors of the wealthie with discountenancing of the godly brethren offend also 3 Professors and hearers haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons when they heare the word of God only for the mans sake not for the words sake or when they heare it of this man and not of another because of his person Wherein many greeuously offende in our dayes Such as wil heare none but those that haue taken degrees of schoole Which thing though it be worthely accounted of among all wise men yet therefore contemning others which haue not like degrees yet happely equall talents is respect of persons Such as will heare this man because he is formall and not another because hee refuseth some ceremonies in the Church or this man because he refuseth and not another because hee admitteth these indifferent things they also haue the faith of Iesus Christ in respect of persons Such as heare this man because hee is euer inueying against Bishops pluralities two liuinges Albeit they scarce make one and contemne such as haue the liuinges and therein labour as learnedly as painfully as fruitfully as others they in like manner haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons Thus they heare the word nowe not for the wordes sake but for the mans sake thus they decline from the thing to the person and so are partiall in their hearing For the word is the word whether a Doctot of diuinitie preach it or a man learned yet not graduat whether one subscribing to ceremonies or not subscribing whether one with one liuing or with two liuings whether this mā As they term small charges or benefices or that man preach it Wherefore not indifferently to heare it of al but for this or that respect to heare it of one not of another is to haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons and a sinne worthely condemned euen in them which in outward shew pretend greatest holines perfitest religion most feruent zeale to the word which vnlesse they leaue therof vnfeynedly repent I protest vnto thē in the feare of God that they doe against duetie that they flatter themselues in their owne follie that their religion is not pure and vndefiled before God that they haue the faith of Iesus Christ in respect of persons and therfore are guilty of great iniquitie and vngodlines beefore the Lord euen of peeuish curiositie The Paschall Lamb was commanded to be eaten the quarters the head the feete the purtenance it had been great peeuishnes and vaine Exod. 12. curiositie for the people to haue said Wee will chuse this peece and we that we the quarters and we the head wee the feete and so euery one what him lusted where all were commaunded to eate all Euen so is it peeuishnesse for vs to chuse what wee will heare or of whom when we must heare al the will of God and that of all Preachers Finally in this kinde they sinne before God most horribly who therefore will not heare their owne or other Prechers because they inueigh sharply against their pride their brauerie their flaunting ruffes their coloured haire their diuersitie of starches their borowed frilles such like vanities against their vsuries extortions couetousnes blasphemies and all manner iniquitie This is also a great point of vngodlines a manifest token of counterfet religion a plaine argument of halting hypocrisie and the hauing of the faith of Christ in respect of persons by the Apostle no doubt as other kindes condemned To Heb. 13. heare one with disgrace of another to heare straungers with disdainfull contempt of our owne Preachers to run Acts 20. 28. 1. Pet. 5. 2. and hurrie after new men and let our ordinarie Pastors whom the holy ghost hath placed ouer vs to preach and speake to the walles is not onely discredite to them and great discouragement so that they labour not with ioye but with great greefe which is a thing vnprofitable to the Heb. 13. people but also disobedience to the lawes rebellion against God neglect of duetie a point of resistance vnto the holy Ghost by whom they are placed ouer vs. 4
peruersnesse in iudgement Our Sauiour Christ shewing whom Almightie God hath called Matt. 5. to eternall happinesse in his euerlasting kingdome pronoūceth the poore in spirit to be heires therof wherfore he saith Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heauen So then such as by the miserable condition pouertie of this life haue their minds and spirites brought vnder and tamed to obey God are they whom God hath chosen to be rich in faith heires of the kingdome of heauen This thing the blessed virgin acknowledging affirmeth such as of whome no account Luke 1. is made in the world and are altogether vile in the eies of men by God to be aduaunced euen to heauenly dignitie and therefore sayeth that God had put downe the mightie from their seate and exalted them of low degree Saint Paul disputing of the calling of men to eternall saluation by the preaching of the Gospel shewing that the poore of this worlde haue the chiefe rowme and place in the eternall election of the Saints writeth thereof in this wise to the Church of Corinth brethren you see your calling howe that not manie wise ● Cor. 1. after the flesh not manie mightie not manie noble are called but GOD hath chosen the foolish things of the worlde to confound the wise God hath chosen the weake things to confounde the mightie vile things and things which are despised in the worlde hath God chosen and things which are not to confound the things which are that no flesh should reioyce in his sight Such Leuit. 26. Jere. 31. 1. Cor. 6. as were vile weake miserable poore base hath God called to be heires of his kingdom To these hath God made promise of good things euen that he would be their God they should be his people These are the Lords inheritance Exod. 19. 1. Pet. 2. and his portion for euer these are a chosen genetion a holy nation a roiall priesthoode a peculiar people vnto the Lord. Though then their condition be miserable in the worlde albeit they be implicate and inwrapped in basenesse pouertie yet are they replenished with spiritual treasure and chosen of God to be rich in faith and heires of his kingdome Seeing God so regardeth esteemeth and honoureth the poore of this world that in the inheritance of his heauenly kingdome he preferreth thē before the rich and proude of the people then is it great peruersnesse of iudgement to preferre the rich whom he reiecteth and contemne those whom he honoureth with the glorie of his heauenly kingdome Which place as it worthily condemneth the vanitie and peruersnes of their iudgment which preferre the prophane rich men of the world to the poore which are godly religious so is it also full of singular consolation and comfort for the poore thus dispised of men For if they haue an eye to the heauenly kingdom wherunto they are called by God what is more excellent If they regard eternall life whereof they are heires by Iesus Christ what is more glorious If they looke vnto the immortal incorruptible inheritance which is laid vp reserued for them 1. Pet. 1. in heauen what is more singular If they record recount with themselues that they are chosen of God to be rich in faith what is more comfortable Which dutifull consideration swaloweth vp as a bottomles gulfe deuoureth Rom. 8. all the miseries afflictions calamities of this world while wee holde fast the principle of the Apostle that all the afflictions and suffering of this life are not to be compared vnto the glorie which shal be reuealed to the children 2. Cor. 4. of God whose momentanie and light afflictions cause vnto them a farre more excellent waight of glorie while they looke not to the things which are present but to the things which are to come neither to those which are seene but to those that are not seene for the things which are seene are tēporall but the things which are not seene are eternal This consolation incouragement paciently to endure the pouerty basenes of their life is herehence ministred by the apostle when to condemne such as haue the faith of Christ in respect of persons of peruersenes of iudgement he sayth Hearken my deare brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this worlde to bee rich in faith and heires of the kingdome which he hath promised vnto those that loue him That the Apostle sayeth hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith c. it followeth not that therefore hee casteth off all rich men But here is mention made of the choosing of the poore partly for their comfort partly to beare downe the intollerable pride and insolencie of the prophane rich men partly to teach that God chooseth not men to his eternall inheritance for any thing whereof the worlde accounteth Otherwise it is true that God our of all estates of men chooseth certaine whome hee will make rich in fayth and heires of his kingdome which consisteth of all estates degrees and conditions of men seruants and maisters princes and people rich poore base and honourable for God would all men to be saued 1. Tim. 2. 2. Pet. 3. and to come to the knowledge of the truth God hath chosen the poore to be heires of his kingdom but you haue despised them to despise them whom God hath chosen to contemne them whom he accoūteth of is in iudgement to swa●ue from God which is peruersnes for to oppose our selues to God in our iudgemēt and therein to be contrarie vnto him to preferre those whom he refuseth to refuse them whom god preferreth to honor thē whom God reiecteth to reiect those whom God honoreth is wa●wardnes peruersnes in iudgmēt wherof they are guilty which honor rich prophane persons dispise the poore which are godly which is the first euil in these respecters of persons by the apostle here condēned 2 The second euill in them is madnes it is a kinde of frantikenes madnes for men to reuerence honour and preferre those before the godly brethrē whō they for many causes ought rather to accoūt execrable cursed The prophane rich men for sundry causes ought to be held as execrable cursed thē to honor prefer exalt these is a kind of madnes This do the respecters of persōs who seeing a mā come in with a gold ring on his finger in good ●y apparrell say Sitte thou downe in a good place but to the poore in vile rayment say with contempt Sitte there ●or here vnder my footstoole The respecters of persons therefore are not onely peruerse in iudgement but mad after a manner also That the rich ought rather to be counted and helde ●s cursed then to be honoured and preferred before the ●oore brethren the Apostle sheweth and that for 3 great ●uils and sinnes which commonly raigne in the prophane ●ich men of
this world 1 The first euill for the which the prophane riche Tyranny ●en are to be held as execrable is their tyrannie they ●ppresse the poore by tyrannie Men are oppressed by tyannie diuers waies 1. When they are imprisoned afflic●ed persecuted cruelly by the rich and mighty men of the ●orld then are they oppressed by tyrannie The poore ●rethren the holy men and Saints of God for the profes●on of the faith for the religion of Christ for the defence ●f the word of trueth by the mighty men of the world a●y wise afflicted are oppressed by tyrannie Thus were ●e Apostles of Christ by the cruell Scribes Pharisies and ●rinces of the people by tyrannie oppressed when for the ●ospels sake they were imprisoned scourged excommu●icate and persecuted Pylat Herod conspired together Mat. 27. ●o oppresse our Sauiour Christ by tyrannie Thus was Acts 7. ●aint Steuen the blessed Martyr oppressed by the tyrannie ●f the Iewes and for the religion of Christ persecuted vn●o death Thus the Prophetes by the tyrannie of their ●rinces as Isai Jeremie Amos and the rest haue been op●ressed Thus the holy men of God the poore Saints and ●rethren in Fraunce in Flaunders in Italie in Spaine are ●ppressed by tyrannie Thus the renowmed Martyrs in ●ur own countrie and nation not long since haue in like ●anner by tyrannie beene oppressed After like manner ●● the time of the Apostle the poore brethren were oppressed by the tyrannie of rich men wherefore the riche ought rather to be accounted execrable and cursed then with disdainefull contempt of the poore brethren to bee preferred and honoured of men 2 The rich oppresse the poore by tyrannie when in the trades of this life they deale hardly deceitfully vncōscionably extremely This oppression God expresly forbade his people the Israelites in the law When thou sellest Leuit. 25. ought to thy neighbour or byest ought of him you shall not oppresse one another Saint Paul forewarneth 1. Thes 4. of this oppression Let no man oppresse or defraude his brother in bargaining for the Lord is an auenger of such things When the rich men haue gotten commodities into their hands and make the poore pay therefore what themselues lust when they make the poore pay deere whē they might affoord it cheaper when rich men geue mean wares to the poore for the best euill for good putrified corrupt for sound currāt thē they oppresse the poor by tyrannie This oppression in all times and in al commonwealths in all coastes and countreyes of the worlde is vsed whereby the poore through the tyrannie of the rich are oppressed For which the rich ought to be accounted accursed 3 The poore are oppressed also by tyrannie of the rich and wealthie when they wryng them by vsurie forfeitures exactions impositions and vll manner extortiō As the rich oppressed the poore by tyrannie in the time of the Prophet Isai where against he crieth out and complayneth Isai 3. What haue ye to doe that ye beate my people to peeces and grinde the faces of the poor saith the Lord euen the Lord of hostes Almighty God in the Princely Prophet Dauid crieth out against this tyrannous oppression Doe not all workers of wickednes knowe that they Psal 14. eate vp my people as they eate bread Thus were the people oppressed by the tyrannie of the riche in the time of Micheas the Prophet whereof he spake in this wise They hate the good and loue the euill they pluck their skinnes from them and the flesh from their bones and they eate Miche 3. vp the flesh of my people and flay off their skinnes from them they breake their bones and choppe them in peeces as for the potte and as flesh within the cauldron Thus the Prophet condemneth their Iudges officers rulers and rich men of the land for their cruel extortiōs exactions oppressions whereby they might be very well compared to Wolues Beares Lions and sauage Beastes which rent and teare the flesh from the bones the skinne from the backes the partes from the body so outragious is their crueltie These cruel persons for their tyrannous persecution and oppression may be compared to the fish Sargus which haunting the Aegyptian sea oppresseth the little fishes catching al their meat and reliefe from them They are not vnlike the fish Scarus which some take to be the Gilthead or Goldenie Which fish chaweth cud like a beast and deuoureth all the little fishes which meete him Such are the rich men of this worlde against the poore for like Sargus they deuour the meat sustenance and liuing of the poore and eate vp the laboures of their hands and the sweate of their browes licking and wiping the fatte from the beard of the poore Like Scarus they deuour the poore of the land and eate vp the people as it were bread These growe rich of the pouertie waxe fatte of the need feed ful of the emptines cloath themselues of the nakednes house thēselues by the vnharbouring prank vp thēselues by the penurie make themselues mery by the miserie of the poore and so oppresse them by tyrannie for which they should be held accursed 4 Finally rich men oppresse the poore when they weary and waste the bodies of the poore with toilesome labour vnrewarded as the Landlord vseth the poore Tenant the rich the poore without hire to whom they doe seruice for whom they labour toile and moile for feare afflicted and oppressed by their tyrannie Herēce is it that in sundrie places of the land the poore Farmer is compelled to carte to carrie to plowe to sowe to fetch to beare to doe all manner busines for the tyrannous oppression of the Gentleman Thus and by like meanes the rich oppressing the poore by tyrannie ought rather to be accoūted accursed then with the contempt and disdaine of the poore to be preferred Seeing therefore the rich by sundrie waies afflict the poore for the which we should hold thē as execrable it is a point of madnes for men through partiall respect had to their persons to honour them with contempt of the poore which are godly 2 Another and seconde euill for which they ought to be helde accursed is their crueltie and vnmercifulnes Vnmercifulnes For they drawe the poore before iudgement seates either for their profession and religion as in the time of the Apostle was vsuall For for the profession of Christian religion the holy Apostles the blessed Martyrs the faithfull seruants of Christ were drawen before seates of iudgement as in the whole booke of the Actes of the Apostles Acts 5. c in the stories Ecclesiasticall by Eusebius Nicephorus Socrates and others written is apparantly euident Or els for their debts they cruelly handle them and other for matters of no great waight or when loue woulde forgeue all bring them before seates of iudgement sue them in the lawe wearye them with this Court or that and shewe all vnmercifulnes against them Thus
it is with men in our age let a poore man owe ought to the rich he shall forfette his bande he shall paye for the time he shal be sued for the debt with all vnmercifulnes and crueltie he shal be forced to satisfie to the vttermost farthing which is a sinne for which the prophane rich men are to be accounted accursed Or finally when rich men pretende title to the right of the poore and so wrongfully sue him to take from him his right patrimonie purchase or inheritance partly by his owne countenance partly by his riches calling the poor before iudgements for his owne Not that it is now not lawfull for any rich man to sue the poore for his right or that all rich men doe bring the poore before iudgement seates alwaies for as it is lawfull for the rich to get his owne in some respectes So neither doth euery rich man sue euery poore man which is indangered vnto him but because the prophane couetous and wicked rich men commonly so doe and that then when they should forgeue for Christes sake as when the poore is vnable to pay when he is godly and desirous to liue by his labour and endeuoureth to liue out of debt and danger and yet cannot Now to call such before iudgement seates to sue them for extremities to sollicite and trouble such and with crueltie to seeke the vttermost of them is mercilesnes and crueltie for which the prophane rich men are to bee accounted execrable and accursed These wicked prophane vngodly rich men care not for wife nor children houshold nor familie of their poore distressed brethren they regarde neither vertue religion godlines nor honestie they turne their eyes frō their pouertie vnablenes carefull endeuour they will be satisfied they will cast them in prison bring them to seats of iudgement keepe them in durance they wil make dice of their bones but they will haue the extremitie of them and the more godly men be the more these tirannes rage against them forgeuing rather great summes to the voluptuous prodigall lasciuious wicked and wanton persons then to release small matters to the godly Seeing then the rich vse such vnmercifulnes towards the poore for which we should rather account them cursed it seemeth great madnes in men so partially to honour them which are thus wicked 3 The third sinne and euill in the rich men of the Blasphemie world wherefore they are to be helde accursed is their blasphemie against the religion of Christ they blaspheme the worthie name whereby ye are named You are named after Christ Christians this worthie name is by prophane rich men blasphemed they blaspheme the worthy name which is called vpon you that is where after you are called or named The Apostle according to the phrase of the Hebrewes speaketh As the name of the father is called vpon by the child that is the childe is named after the name of the father Which phrase Iacob vsed when hee blessed the two sonnes of Joseph the Angell which hath Gen. 48. deliuered me from all euill blesse the children and let my name be called vpon them and the name of my Fathers that is let them be named by the name of my Fathers and by my name The name of the husbande is also called vpon by the wife that is the wife is named after her husband as the Prophet Isai speaketh In that daye shall seuen women take holde of one man and say Wee will Isai 4. eate our owne bread and weare our owne garments that is we will finde our selues but let thy name he called vpon vs let vs be called by thy name In religion the true worshippe and seruice of God the name of God is called vpon the professors of Gods seruice Moses speaking of Deut. 28. the preferment of Israel aboue all other people that God was their God and they his people saith Then all people of the earth shall see that the name of the Lord is called vpon ouer thee Daniel the Prophet of God in his prayer and confession of his sinnes and the sinnesnnes of the people Dan. 9. saith in this wise O Lord heare O Lord forgeue O Lord consider and doe it deferre not for thine owne sake O my God for thy name is called vpon thy Citie and vpon thy people thy Citie people are called after thy name the citie of God the people of God Amos prophecying of Amos 9. vniting the Edomits and other enimies of the Iewes with them in the misticall bodie of Christ in like maner speaketh in the person of God I will raise vp in that day the Tabernacle of Dauid which is fallen downe and I will raise vp his ruines and builde it as in the daies of old that they may possesse the remnant of Edom and of all the heathen because my name is called vpon them saith the Lord that doeth this Vnder the Gospell Christian religion and the name of Christ is called vpon Christians that is Christians are named after the name of Christ as here the Apostle speaketh The worthy name of Christ which was called vpon the Saints that is whereby the Saints were named being Christians of Christ by the wicked worldlings and prophane men of the earth is blasphemed and euill spoaken of For rich men commonly are enemies vnto religion and either openly they blaspheme it or secreatly scorne at it So that as not many wise according to the fleshe nor many noble nor many mightie are called thereunto so neither many rich men because their happinesse trust and confidence is in their wealth which withholdeth frō comming to the kingdome of GOD. For the which cause our Sauiour pronounceth it easier for a Camell to Mat. 19. passe through the eye of a needle then for a rich man to enter into the kingdome of God Seeing then these prophane rich men dishonour God and his Gospell it were madnes for you his children to geue honour vnto them The worthie name of Christ and his Gospell as generally of all men so specially of prophane rich men may two wayes be blasphemed dishonoured and euil spoken of 1 When they deride iest scorne and scoffe at Christian religion speaking maliciously disdainfully against Christ and his profession Thus the Scribes and Pharisies with the Iewes blasphemed the worthy name of our profession when they called Christ Samaritan when they saide hee cast out deuils by the power of Beelzebub the Iohn 8. Mat. 12. prince of the deuils when they called and counted his doctrine deceite heresie newe and strange doctrine not to be suffered Thus Iulian the Apostata blasphemed this worthie name when in contempt he called Christ Galilean Carpenters sonne the man crucified Thus Porphirius Tripert hist. lib. 6. c. 6. Cyril contra Jul. c. the Philosopher Lucian the scorner blasphemed the worthie name whereby we are called when they reuiled reproached spoke euill of and scorned the Gospell The Heathen Philosophers and Galen the
feete cut off gathered bread vnder my table as I haue done so hath God rewarded me His crueltie was punished from God by like crueltie Samuel telleth the same tale to Agag king of the Amalakites whē he cut his bodie in peeces in Gilgal as thy 1. King 15. sword hath made women childles so shall thy mother be childlesse aboue other women and so he slue him and cut him in peeces before the Lorde thus crueltie with crueltie bloud with bloud was repaied from the Lord. And this is the thing which God by his Prophet threatneth against Mount Seir for their crucltie against Israel Ezech. 35. the people of God therefore as I liue saieth the Lorde God I will euen do according to thy wrath and according to thine indignation and hatred which thou hast vsed against them euen as thou hast dealt cruelly euen so shalt thou be cruelly handled The Angel cōmendeth the righteous iudgement of God in executing the seueritie of his Reuel 16. wrath against them who were sharpe seuere and cruell against his people Lorde thou art iust and holy because thou hast iudged these things For they shed the bloud of the Saints and Prophets and therefore hast thou giuen them bloud to drinke for they are worthie Thus haue they the heauier iudgement from God whose deedes are cruel and seuere toward others Neither is this true onely in the crueltie of mens deeds but also in the rigour of their iudgement against others who incurre so much heauier wrath and iuster condemnation from God how much the sharper they are towards their brethren in iudging censuring thē according to the apostles doctrine Our Sauiour Christ had respect and regard to this who disswaded men from rash ambicious and rigorous Matt. 7. iudgement iudge not least you bee iudged condemne not least you be condemned For they incurre the worthier iudgement and shall assuredly find the heauier condemnation which offend themselues in iudging and condemning their brethren S. Paul maketh those mē subiect to the greater cōdemnation who being themselues faultie Rom 2. yet ambiciously censure their brethren therfore saith he thou art inexcusable O mā whosoeuer thou art which cōdemnest for in that thou condēnest other thou cōdemnest thy selfe Wherby the apostle S. Iames disswadeth men from vsurping authoritie of rigourous iudgement of others My brethren saith he be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation By which it euidently appeareth that how much the more rigorously we iudge others so much the heauier cōdemnation we heape against our selues but most especially being guiltie of the same sinnes or as great as we rigorously condemne in our brethren If wee condemne a theefe to the bottomlesse pitte of hell as vnworthie life yet our selues steale be oppressours vsurers or extortioners of the people if we condemne without fauour or pittie the adulterous person and yet our selues breake wedlocke if we condemne lying and vse our tongues to deceite slaunder and horrible blasphemie if we condemne dronkennesse with austere seueritie yet geue ouer our selues to riotousnes banquetting and faring deliciouslie euery day if we condemne couetousnes yet bee rauished Luke 16. 1. Tim. 6. Ephes 5. with loue of money making our golde our god our siluer our safegarde our substance our succour if wee reprooue anger in our brethren and burne and boile in irreconciled hatred and deadly malice of heart if finally we be rigorous against our brethren and vsurpe ambitiously the authoritie to iudge and condemne them we prouoke the greater wrath we heape vp the seuerer iudgement we receiue the iuster condemnation against our selues Which Saint Iames here vseth as his first reason why wee should not so doe My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation The seconde reason why men ought not to vsurpe 2. Reason this authoritie ouer their brethren is from the viewe of our owne weakenes the consideration of our owne condition the facilitie in our selues to fall through naturall frailtie therof the Apostle thus In many things we offend all therefore we must not be too rigorous against other men seeking and looking rather into our owne readinesse to sinne Let vs take the view of all states degrees of men Princes and people masters and seruants fathers children husbands and wiues rich and poore learned and ignorant high and lowe wise and foolish preachers and hearers all all I say are subiect to the same imbecilitie and frailtie of nature in many things we fall all Is there a bodie without a blemishe is there a day without a cloude is there a man without offence is it Prou. 24. true that Salomon saith the righteous and iust man falleth seuen times a day and riseth vp againe are wee not all subiect to sundrie infirmities and offend in many thinges euery one of the sonnes of Adam shall not the remembrance of this our common condition remoue so great seueritie rigor of iudgement from vs This ought then to make vs lesse secure and more remisse and gentle towards the offences of the brethren The very Heathen knew that all men are subiect to H●ratius this condition wherefore one of their owne Poets saide No man liueth without crime or sinne The continuall meditation thereof should induce vs to follow gentlenes and not to vse too great rigour towards others Men fall and sinne as Lactantius hath noted three Lib. 6. c. 13. waies in deedes in speeches in thoughts and cogitations and there is no man which doeth not fall through euerie one of these sundriwise In deede men sinne be they neuer so holy for who is he whose life is incorrupt whose feete haue neuer slipt whose whole life is cleare from all Pro. 20. sinne Shew him me and I will praise him tell mee where he is and I will honour him let me see him and I wil worshippe him as a mortall god He shal be in my iudgemēt holier then Abraham he shal be more renowmed then Moses and Aaron he shal be more pure then Dauid or Daniel he shal be more perfect then Iob the righteous hee shal be more glorious then Paul the elect vessell of Iesus Christ for all these in action haue sinned In wordes whereof in the next place our Apostle shall speake who offendeth not Who either in anger moued or in mirth pleasant or in pastime delighted or by importunitie of men pricked forwarde hath not fallen either to cursing or to slaunder or to swearing or to loosenes or vanitie of his talke that he hath not in respect therof iust cause with Dauid and Sirach to pray to haue the dore of Psal 141. Ecclus. 22. his lips kept and a seale of wisdome set before his mouth that he offend not in his words In thought our falles are so many as that it passeth the strength of man by cogitation not to admit the thing which is either wicked in deed or euil to vtter
vsurpe authoritie rashly to iudge and condemne the brethren This I would to God our sharpe censurers and seuere iudgers would weigh who geue definitiue and peremptorie sentence of al men who chalenge a chiefe power and absolute authoritie ouer all their brethren who condemne without charitie whatsoeuer doeth not please them selues Would God they would but turne ouer the leafe wherein their owne infirmities are registred and turne the other ende of the wallet before them to fixe their sight vpon their owne blemishes and blottes of corruption then would their pride be abated their heate asswaged their chollor cooled their iudgementes moderated their arrogancie delaied and qualified and thēselues brought to a temperature not so ambitiously to vsurpe and arrogate to themselues the censuring of their brethren Which to effect and compasse in the Saints the Apostle vseth this reason also My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation for in many things we sinne and fall all Of our manifolde fallings many are the occasions sundrie are the causes 1 The original corruption which lieth couched in our bosomes wherby we are led captiue vnto sinne 2 The snares of Sathan which he laieth to take vs and intangle vs in the pitfold of iniquitie 3 The euil examples which are presented before vs whereby we are drawen to all vngodlines euery day 4 The lenitie of the gouernours of discipline who according to the rule of iustice take not execution vpō sinne whereby others are pricked forwarde to like sinne For whereas punishment is not executed saith Salomō speedelie there are the hearts of men set vpon mischiefe Eccles. 8. Psal 101. Therefore Dauid saith hee would betimes destroy all the wicked of the land that he might cut off all the workers of wickednes from the citie of God 5 Finally the fearefulnes and flatterie of the Ministers of the word who either for feare or for fauour tell not men of their manifolde offences wherby they are occasioned sundrie waies to fall The reason of the Apostle is this Seeing all men are subiect to many falles and infirmities therfore must they not be too seuere against their brethren be not many masters saith the Apostle knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation for in many things we offend all Now the fall of man is double either particular or generall Particular as to fal into any one sinne or more as theft dronkennes adulterie murther couetousnes vsurie extortion slaunder lying blasphemy and the like Into some or many of these euen the most holy Saintes haue may and doe daily fall Generall falling is when men fall Heb. 6. 1. Iohn 5. Mat. 12 away not in one onely sinne but generally in all resist the grace of God offered This is apostacie this is the sin vnto death this is the sinne against the holy Ghost euen a generall and vniuersall falling away frō the knowen trueth Heb 6. 10. 2. Pet. 2. Whereof the authour to the Hebrewes affirmeth that who so doeth so sinne cannot be restored by repentance And S. Peter auoucheth that it were better for mē not to haue knowen the trueth then after that they haue knowen it to fall away from the holy commaundements Thus doe not the Saints fall but onely the reprobate Of the former kinde the Apostle speaketh for al men fal particularly in many things which we ought alwaies to cōsider that it might teach vs not to vsurpe authoritie ambitiously to censure and iudge our brethren whereunto this place and exhortation serueth My brethren be not many masters for we shal receiue the greater iudgement for in many things we offende or fall all Whereas Saint James willeth that wee be not many masters doeth it take away the authority of masters ouer their seruāts No assuredly for then would neither S. Paul so carefully nor Saint Peter so diligently haue geuen precepts concerning obedience of seruantes to their masters Saint Paul exhorteth seruants to be subiect to their 2. Tit. Ephes 6. masters and to please them in all things to be obedient to them which are their masters according to the flesh with feare and trembling in singlenes of minde as vnto the 1. Tim. 6. Lord. In another place in this wise he councelleth them Let as many seruants as are vnder the yoke count their 1. Pet. 2 masters worthy all honour that the name of God and his doctrine be not euill spoken of To whom Saint Peter subscribeth Seruants saith he be subiect to your masters with all feare not onelie to the good and courteous but also to the froward Seeing these Apostles haue enioyned this obedience to seruants towards their masters and the same spirite spoke in them and in Iames our Apostle it foloweth then that the authoritie of masters is not here abandoned If we must not be many masters neither be iudges ouer our brethren shall we thinke that power is taken away hereby from Princes iudges and magistrates ouer their Subiects and such as are vnder them Neither For then woulde not the Scriptures teach what magistrates should be in common wealthes neither enioyne obedience to be performed vnto them Moises being wearied with the gouernement of the whole people of Israel Exod. 18. is taught by Jethro his father in law the priest of Midian to chuse more offiicers and gouernours vnder him whose qualities are foure Men they must be 1 of courage 2 fearing God 3 dealing truly 4 hating couetousnesse Moises according to this counsell ordained Deut. 1. 16. officers and iudges ouer the people taught them their dueties and set downe the qualities in them required To whom obedience by the law of God is to bee performed Exod 20. Which God contained in the fourth commaundement where it is said honour thy father and thy mother not onely the parents of our bodies but the parents and fathers of the countrie which are princes and magistrates in common wealthes This obedience he requireth when he giueth them authoritie to determine causes and willeth Exod. 22. men to stande to their verdit Our Sauiour Christ taught the same by his own example who in tokē of ciuil Matt. 17. subiection paied tribute to Caesar And afterwarde being tempted by the Scribes and Herodians and demaunded Matt. 22. the question whether it were lawfull to giue tribute to Caesar or no answered them in this wise Giue to Caesar that which belongeth to Caesar and to God that which belongeth vnto God S. Paul by Christes spirit taught willeth euery soule to be subiect to hier powers because Rom. 13. their power is from God Finally S. Peter exhorteth all men to submit themselues to all maner humaine ordinance 1. Pet. 2. for the Lords sake The soueraintie of the prince ouer the people the correcting controlling and iudging of the magistrate and ciuill officer of the transgressing and offending persons is not hereby remoued VVhat if we may not bee many masters shall
he that said to his soule soule eate and drinke and take Luke 12. thy pleasure for thou hast much goods reposed for many yeares him God resisted by remouing him his riches Some are proude of beautie vvhom God resisted by sending sicknes or other meanes to hinder and remoue that from them Some are proude of their vvitte those he resisteth by causing thē to fall eyther by palsies or such like into doting follie Some are proude of their strength vvhich languishing sicknes abateth Some are proude of their powre as Nabuchodonosor Senecherib Antiochus Pompey Alexander the like whom God resisted partly by taking away life partly by remouing their power wherin they trusted frō them Which thing Job insinuateth when Iob 12. he saith that God loseth the color of princes and causeth them to be girte with a girdle he leadeth away Princes as a pray and ouerthroweth the mightie he taketh away speach from the counseller taketh away the iudgement of the auncient he powreth contempt vpon princes and maketh the strength of the mightie weake This God doth not only to punish the people in the defects of their Magistrates and Princes but also when men are proude of any of their gifts they are resisted by losing the things whereof they are proude and this vvay doth God also resist the proude not seldome 6. God resisteth the proude also when he turneth their ambition and vaine glory into ignomie and shame Esd 1. 1. Macchab. 2. 62. 63. It is verified lib. 2. ca. 9. v. 5. 6. 7. c. Isai 14. 11 as is apparent by the priestes vvhich seeing the office of the priests to be in contempt vvould haue chaunged their estate by their names and so called thēselues by straunge names vvho seeking their vvriting in the Geneologie by the names they pretended found them not and therefore vvere depriued of their offices Thus such as do ambitiously seeke honour and glorie by the iuste iudgement of God lose both their offices oftentimes and also their estimation with men and Pro. 16. 11. 2. 18. so are they resisted Salomon noting this kinde of resisting when God causeth a downefall into all miserie in them which were puffed vp with pride and swelled in arrogancie of spirite affirmeth that pride goeth before destruction and an high mind before the fall Thus the fall followeth their ambitious exaltation confusion their vaine glorie ignominie their hautines and arrogancie and so they are resisted 7 Finally God resisteth the proud in destroying their remembrance and cutting off their posteritie from the earth for their pride and wickednes Thereof the holy Psal 34. 37. 35. 36. Ecclus. 10. 21. 4. Prophet Dauid may be vnderstood The face of the Lord is against them which doe euill to cut off their remembrance from the earth The wise Sirach saith that god cutteth off the remembrance of the proud Thus did God by Elias threaten to resist Achab by destroying him and cutting off his posteritie for their pride and rebellion against 3. Kings 25 him When proud persons therefore think to make their names immortall and seeke to make their houses and habitations to continue for euer and call their landes also Psal 49. by their names then contrarie to their expectation to roote out their remembrance is a mightie resistance of God against them By these and the like waies the proud are resisted by God and this place of the Apostle is found true God resisteth the proud Now as God resisteth the proud so he geueth grace vnto the humble which is the other member of this sentence of the Apostle Such as forsaking all worldly things addict themselues wholly vnto him to serue and worship him in humilite who cast the crowne of their owne wit riches wealth glorie at the feete of God and prefer him before all creatures These doeth God helpe these hee furthereth to them he geueth increase and greater measure of his grace as to those only whom he looketh vnto As by his Prophet Isai he recordeth To whom shoulde Isai 66. I looke but to him that is poore and of an humble and contrite hart and trembleth at my words These are they in whom he multiplieth his graces and furthereth with his fauour as our Apostle speaketh GOD resisteth the proud but geueth grace to the humble This song Anna the mother of Samuel song in her psalme of praise The 1. Kings 2. Lord raiseth vp the poore out of the dunghill to set him among the Princes and to make him inherite the seat of glorie Whereunto holy Iob agreeth The Lord setteth vp on high those that are lowe that the sorowfull may be exalted Iob. 5. to saluation Salomon auoucheth the same trueth The pride of a man shal bring him low but the humble in spirite shall enioy great glorie And what is the glorie of the humble is it not the increase of the graces of God here Pro. 29. and the recompence of our humilitie in the life to come S. Peter vseth the same words which S. James here geueth out God resisteth the proud but geueth grace to the hūble 1. Pet. 5. In many of the former cited places both mēbers are in one sentēce expressed that as god resisteth the proud so he geueth grace to the humble These he blesseth with plentifull benefits to these he giueth a greater measure of his holy spirite to these he sheweth his louing fauour and mercie in ample manner these he daily ladeth with greater and greater blessings from his hand these he mightely exalteth of his fatherly goodnes and thus sheweth or geueth he grace vnto the humble Which thing Chylo the heathē Philosopher perchance meant who being asked Chylo what god Iubiter did answered hee casteth downe high things and exalteth the things which are lowe This thing is manifest in Moses who being of an humble spirite and walking lowly before the Lord receaued grace many waies from God Dauid being humble in spirite was therefore taken from the flock of sheepe to rule the people of the Lord. Elizabeth the mother of Iohn B. and Anna the mother of Samuel Marie the virgin mother of Christ seruing God in their humilitie receaued grace and plentifull fauour from the hands of God Finally the Lord encreaseth his blessings multiplieth his graces enlargeth his promises extendeth his fauourable countenance to those which setting aparte all worldlie things cleaue immoueablie vnto him according to this place of the Apostle God resisteth the proud but geueth grace to the humble Almightie God therefore hath his two hands outstretched the one wherewith as with a mallet or hammer he bruiseth and beateth downe the proud the other wherwith he poureth out his plentifull graces vpon the hūble the one wherewith he resisteth and withstandeth those who through loue of worldly things rebell against him the other wherwith he fauorably entreteth greatly enlargeth such as renouncing worldly vanities cleaue vnto him in humilitie of their mindes
God diuerse wayes 1 In How are men subiect to God 1 obediently and reuerently yeelding themselues to his worde and will in hearing what he commaundeth and carefully perfourming what hee inioyneth For as the sonne is subiect to his father and the seruant submitteth himselfe to his maister then when the sonne heareth and obeyeth the will of his father and the seruant of his maister euen so the Saints of God are subiect to God and submit themselues to him when they obey the will and comaundement of God which thing vndone wee submit not our selues to him but rebell against him VVherefore as all the Prephets so Isai chiefly in Isai 1. Ezech. 20. 8. the person of God calleth Israel the people of GOD rebelles agaynst him in that they neglected his commaundements Almightie God in like manner measureth our submission Mal. 2. by our obedience confessing that wee haue cast off his Lordly and fatherly yoke where wee denie him honourable obedience as vnto a father and fearefull reuerence as to a maister All the Prophets our Sauiour Christ Steuen the martyr the blessed Apostles haue condemned the Israelites and Iewes as a rebellious people in that they woulde not obey his worde and therein chiefly shewe their submission Nowe the will of God what is it but our sanctification that we shoulde abstaine ● Thes 4. from fornication that euerie one might knowe howe to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour And wherein is our obedience to him shewed Is it not in the puritie of our life As obedient children sayeth Peter fashion not your selues vnto the former lustes of your ignoraunce but as he that hath called you is holy ● Pet. 1. so bee ye holy in all conuersation because it is written be ye holy for I am holy If then our submission to God shewe it selfe in the obedience to his will and worde then neither idolatours neither cursed couetous persons neither filthie fornicatours neither pestilent vsurers neither blasphemous swearers neither bitter backebiters neither cruell extorcioners neither violent oppressours neither proude Peacockes neither bloudie murtherers neither shamefull lyers neither beastly drunkards neither deceitfull dealers neither any such like of the rabblement and route of the wicked submit themselues to God but rather therein rebell against him 2 As by obeying his will men submit themselues vnto God so by yeelding themselues to Gods pleasure to doe with them after his will men submit themselues vnto him Thus the three children yeeldinng themselues to the pleasure of God either to deliuer them or not to deliuer them from the fierie fornace submitted themselues Daniel 3. to him Dauid the king of Israel submitted himselfe to God in like manner when hee sayeth If I haue 2. King 15. founde fauour in the eyes of the Lorde he will bring me againe into the Citie and shewe me the Arke and Tabernacle thereof But if he say I haue no delight in thee beholde here I am let him doe with me as seemeth good in his eyes Our Sauiour Christ was subiect and submitted him selfe to God when he yeelded himselfe applyable to the Mat. 26. 1. Pet. 4. 1 pleasure of his father concerning the drinking of the bitter cuppe of his passion Father take from me this cuppe if it bee possible but if this cuppe can not passe away but I must drinke thereof thy will bee done So when in all our temporall estate for honour orignominie on earth when for health or sickenesse when for children or for other things whatsoeuer wee yeelde our selues wholy and obediently vnto God when we freely and voluntarily abide his pleasure therein when without grudging or groyning muttering or murmuring Matt. 6. wee can pray as our Sauiour teacheth Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen when wee prescribe not to God eyther time or place or manner or meane or measure in any thing but subscribe wholly and in all things vnto him then submitte wee our selues vnto GOD but if wee otherwise doe then submitte wee not our selues to God but rebell against him 3 Neyther thus onely submit men themselues vn-God but also when they beare with pacience the crosse which the Lorde layeth vpon them then submitte men themselues to God Thus the holy Prophets afflicted of the princes and people thus our Sauiour Christ reuyled slaundered falsely accused cruelly executed by the Iewes thus holy Iob spoyled of the Ismaelites or Sabeans robbed of the Caldeans tempted of Satan vprayded of his wife condemned of his friendes the Apostles suffering manifolde iniuries of the aduersaries of the gospell Finally the holy martyrs and all Gods Saints suffering with pacience manifolde afflictions and bearing willingly the crosse imposed and layde vppon them thereby submitted themselues vnto God VVhereunto the Apostle here exhorteth Submit your selues vnto god which is the thing which the Apostle commaundeth and the first thing in the first point of our duetie obserued 2 The next thing in this first part of duetie is the contrarie wee must submit our selues to God but we must resist the diuell which thing the holy Apostle Saint Peter in like manner commendeth vnto vs bee sober 1. Pet. 5. and watch for your aduersarie the diuell like a roaring lion goeth about seeking whome hee may deuoure whom resist steadfast in the fayth To this purpose not altogether impartinently serueth that of Saint Paul bee angrie and sinne not let not the Sunne go downe vpon Ephe. 4. your wrath neither giue place to the diuell VVhich thing had Euah our great grandmother learned which lesson had shee conc●yued to haue resisted and withstoode the subtile s●eights of Satan the diuell who egged her to disobedience to God and drewe from her submission to him shee had not tasted of the forbidden fruite Gen. 3. whereby she plunged herselfe and all her posteritie into perdition Had the Israelites learned to haue resisted the diuell when by the beautie of the daughters of Moab he Num. 25. tempted them they had not burnt in lust neither committed fornication with them where by the wrath of god was prouoked and they therefore destroyed Had the men of the first world rmembred to haue resisted Satan when with carnall pleasure they were tempted they had not Gene. 6. 7. caused the doores and windowes of heauen to open and poure downe water vpon them whereby they and all the worlde was drowned Had the Sodomites beene hereof Gene. 19. mindfull as no doubt they were taught by Lot the preacher of righteousnesse when they burnt in vnnaturall lust one with the other they had not so sore offended as thereby to call fire and brimstone from heauen by which they perished Had Absalon remembred to haue resisted Satan when by ambition he pricked him on to rebell agaynst 2. Kin. 15. 16. his owne father Dauid the Lordes annoynted he had not endeuoured to haue thrust him from his royall seate of honour neither had he taken sworde in hande against
Ps 90. 17. Ier. 25. 14. Lamentat 3. 64. helpe of the hande as the instrument to bring them to passe as robberies theft picking stealing murther oppression beating bribery corruption such like Vnder the word hand S. Iames comprising the whole life of man all his outward actions requireth such as would draw neare to God to cleanse their hands cleanse your hands you sinners Which in effect is the same which the Prophet Isai 1. exhorted the people of Israell vnto who teaching them information of their liues exhorteth them to vvash themselues and make themselues cleane to take away the euill of their workes from before the eyes of the Lorde The princely Prophete in like manner shewing who they Psalm 24. were which by entring into the Lordes sanctuary drawe neare vnto God saith they were such as were purged from the filthie soile of this world whose hands were innocent and whose hearts pure He that hath innocent hands saith he and a pure heart and hath not lift vp his minde to vanitie nor sworne to deceaue his neighbour he shall receiue a blessing from the Lord and righteousnes from the God of his saluation Cleansing and washing of handes signifieth the innocencie of our outwarde life therefore Mat. 27. when the Iewes besought Pilate to put Iesus to death to shew himself guiltlesse and innocent therein he called for water and washed his hand before them and said I am guiltlesse of this mans bloud looke you vnto it To which sence this of James soundeth clense your handes you sinners But least we should thinke it enough outwardly to be clensed as hypocrites do albeit out harts remayne full of all corruption and filthines therefore to the cleansing of the handes which containeth the reformation of our outward life the Apostle ioyneth the purging of their hearts as an inward reformation in all such as by puritie Purging of heart and sincerenes of life will draw neare to God Which thing he doth most necessarily For the heart Mat. 15. is the fountaine of all our actions from whence all wickednesse euill proceedeth as to the Iewes our Sauiour auouched Which when holy Dauid perceaued he desirous Psal 51. to reforme his life acceptably to God desireth that he might haue a new heart and a right spirite with in him And to this purpose almighty God himselfe in the people of Israell requireth not onely the puritie of the outward workes but the innocencie of their hearts also and Deut. 10. Ierem. 4. therefore willeth them to circumcise the foreskinne of their hearts And generally in his prophetes he requireth the purging of their hearts that their consciences mindes and inward partes might be purged from euill workes that in bodie and soule in life and heart they might serue him and glorifie his name Saint Paul seeing that true innocencie and puritie Rom. 12. must be first grounded in the hearts without reformation wherof al is hypocrisie both to the church of Rome Ephes 4. and of Ephesus also entreating of true reformation and sanctification willeth that they be renewed in the spirite of their mindes Lactantius in many wordes shewing Lib. 6. c. 23. that the heart and minde is the fountaine of all wickednes and that thereis no puritie or chastitie when the hart is not purged saith Howbeit the body be stained and defiled with no euill yet is there not therefore perfect chastitie if the minde be incestious neither may that be counted vndefiled chastitie when lust hath defiled the cōscience Wherefore as in perticular there is no pure chastitie though our outward man be cleane vnlesse our affections of heart be pure in like manner euen so generally there is no true innocencie though the outward man be reformed vnlesse the hart be also purged before God Saint Iames to remoue all hypocrisie from men requireth in such as will drawe neare to GOD in puritie of life not onely that their handes bee cleansed but also their heartes purged that both inwardly and outwardly they might bee holy Now that S. Iames exhorteth men to cleanse their hands and purge their heartes as other Scriptures also speake we may not take him as if this cleansing and purging were in our selues or of our selues for there is no 2. Cor. 3. motion or inclination naturally in our selues to any thing that is good for of our selues as of our selues we are not able to thinke a good thought much lesse to performe a good action pleasant and acceptable to God Yea all our sufficiencie is from God who worketh in vs both to will and also to performe according to his good pleasure Philip. 2. And the Lord God is saide in Moses to purge all our euill and wicked affections to circumcise and purge the heart Deut. 30. of his people Which is the truth of Gods promise who promised by the mouth of his seruaunt Ezechiell to giue Ezech. 11. 36. them new harts to take their harde stonie hearts from them and giue them hearts of flesh which might be reformed Wherefore when Israel and Ephraim the people Jerem 31. of God saw that it was not in themselues to returne repent and draw neare to God they desire to haue repenting hearts and relenting mindes from him and therefore pray in this wise to God Turne thou me ô Lord and I shal be turned conuert thou me and I shal be conuerted for thou art the Lord my God In like manner in the Lamentations the saints church say to God Turne thou Lament 5. psal 8. 7. vs vnto thee and we shal be turned Which Dauid wisely considered when he desired reformation and correction of his heart from God Purge me saith he to God with Psal 51. Isope and I shal be cleane wash mee and I shal be vvhither then snovve And a little after Create in me a cleane verse 10. heart ô God and renevv a right spirite in mee So that the cleansing of our handes and purging of our hea●ts are not in our ovvne povver but are vvrought by God in the Saints Why do the Prophets thē vvill vs to do these things Why doth Saint James here vvill sinners to cleanse their handes and double minded persons to purge their heartes Surely to teach vs that when God by his Spirite goeth about to reforme vs we must not drawe backward but in all things geue token of true repentance continually shewe foorth the fruites of the spirite in the whole course but especially in the reformation of our liues And this is the meane or maner how we may draw neere vnto God euen by cleansing our hands and purging our hearts before him These things being so if then we submit our selues to God if we resist the deuill if we drawe neere to God in puritie of our liues if with open eyes we embrace light flie darkenes then shal the sunne of righteousnes shine in our heartes then shall Christ Iesus
dwell in our mindes then shall God himselfe draw neere in louing fauour vnto vs and ouershadowe vs with the presence a● brightnes of his countenance then shall we be one in t●● God and God with vs then shall hee dwell re●● affli●● with vs Mala. 4. for euer Which thing he geue and graunt vnto vs who hath not spared his only sonne for vs Euē god the father to whom with the sonne and the holy Ghost one one God in glorious trinitie bee praise dominion and maiestie now and for euer Amen Iames Chap. 4. verses 9. 10. Sermon 20. Verse 9 Suffer afflictions and sorrowe ye and weepe let your laughter be turned into mourning and your ioy into heauines 10 Caste downe your selues before the Lord and he will lift you vp THese wordes conteine the thirde part and place of this 4. Chapter which is touching The thirde place ●● part of the Chapter our humiliation and humbling our selues before God which cōsisteth in two things as here by the Apostle is set downe Namely 1. In chastising our selues throgh repentance and mortification of life wherein are two things to be obserued of vs. 1. What he commaundeth To suffer affliction 2 How it is to be done 1. Sorrowing 2. Weeping 3. Turning laughter into mourning 4. Ioy into heauines 2. In casting downe and prostrating our selues before the Lord wherein two things are to be noted 1. What hee commaundeth To prostrate our selues before God 2. Why That God may exalt vs. Now concerning this place it is the doctrine of humiliation and humbling our selues before God for the iniquities and sinnes by vs dayly against him committed Wherein the Apostle opposeth to the former vices in man things contrarie to their wantonnes and pleasures the afflicting and humiliating of themselues to their pride and arrogancie Christian modestie to their carnal delights lasciuious and lewde mirth he setteth down vnfained sorow and griefe whereby their repentance might be shewed whereunto these two verses serue Suffer affliction sorrowe and weepe c. wherin two things are to be considered 1. The chastising of our selues 2. And our casting downe our selues before God 1 Touching the chastising of our selues therin two things may bee obserued 1. what hee commaundeth 2 how the same is to be perfourmed The precept Suffer afflictions which is not an exhortatiō to patience in trouble wherof afterward c. 5. 7. but to chastise and afflict our selues by true repentance and mortification of our liues suffer affliction be you afflicted afflict your selues by true repentance before the Lord. Which exhortation is right necessarie because the whole life of worldly carnally minded men whose happines is in pleasure lust delights of the flesh is altogether spent in riot wantonnes banquetting iollitie laughter mi●th and wicked reioising wherin men drowned forget neglect their duetie vnto God neither remember they the iudgements of god and his heauie wrath which therfore hangeth ouer them as the storie of the first world in the daies of Noe declareth Wherein they were geuen to eating to drinking to riotousnes to wantonnes and all Gen. 7. pleasures of the flesh vntill such time as the floud came vpon them and destroyed them And the example of Sodom confirmeth in the dayes of Lot whereof the Gen. 19. men and the women with al the people gaue themselues whollie to the satisfying and fulfilling of al the lustes and desires of the flesh and excesse of their liues till the Lord rained fire and brimston vpon them from heauen and miserablie destroyed them Which negligence rising from the plentie and prosperitie of worldly thinges almighty GOD foreseeing gaue charge thereof vnto Israel his people that when they came into the land of Canaan where they shoulde Deut. 6. 8. possesse great and goodly Cities which they builded not houses replenished with all manner of goods which houses they filled not welles digged which they digged not vineyardes which they planted not When they had eatē and droken and were full abounding and flourishing in all worldly prosperitie they should take heede least they forgat the Lord who had geuen them all these thinges Seeing then prosperitie and worldly wealth seeing carnall delightes and fleshly pleasures make vs stubborne forgetfull and negligent in our dueties to God is it not necessarie that we be often admonished and earnestlie exhorted thus to chastise our selues by repentance true mortification least we be carried away with the sway of earthly things vnto finall destruction Which when our Apostle Saint James had considered as hauing care of our soules health exhorting vs to true humiliation and chastising of our selues saith Suffer affliction or be chastised and sorowe and weepe that therby our repentance which is to saluation not to be repented of might be witnessed Will we liue for euer then 2. Cor. 7. 2. Tim. 2 must we die here by repentance and mortification to sinne Will we obteine eternall rest then in this life must 1. P●t 1 we be afflicted Wil we reioyce with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious then must we here sorowe for a season Will we haue mirth without end then must wee lament our iniquities in the bodie that our soules may liue in heauen for euermore with God They which haue their pleasure in this world shall surely haue their paine in the world to come as Abraham witnessed to the rich glutton in the Gospell they which are here full shall there want they which here laugh shall Luke 16 Luke 6 there weepe waile and lamente they that liue in pleasure vpon the earth shal suffer punishment and torments in the world to come vnlesse here they mortifie thēselues and be chastised through repentance let vs there fore be admonished by the Apostle let vs holde fast the exhortation of S. Iames Suffer afflictions The afflictions which here we are exhorted to suffer What is affliction here are nothing els but the conceauing of griefe for sinne true and vnfeined repentance for the life past the chastising of our selues by fasting watching praying and such like before the Lord the true mortification of our earthlie members and the subduing of all carnall desires in our selues that thereby we may bee truely humbled before God This affliction holy Dauid suffered thus did he chastise himselfe thus was he afflicted before the Lord when he washed his couch with his teares in the night season Psal 6. Psal 35. and watered his bed with weeping when in the sicknesse of his enemies he humbled himselfe with fasting and his prayer was turned into his bosome when his iniquities Psal 38. 102. 9. were gone ouer his head and as a weightie burthen they were too heauie for him to beare when his wounds were putrified and corrupt because of his foolishnes when he was bowed and crooked very sore when he went mourning all the day long when his reines were full of burning and nothing sound in his flesh when he was weakened very much
greatly broken when he roared for very griefe of his heart Daniel the holy Saint and man of God in like manner Dan. 9. afflicted and chastised himselfe with sackcloth fasting and ashes for his owne sinnes and the sinnes of the people Thus haue the Saints of God done thus must all they doe which feare God by true repentance of their heartes and true mortification of their liues chastise themselues which is the suffering of affliction which the Apostle here teacheth Suffer afflictions This place nothing fauoureth their heresie which holde that they ought to beate themselues with scourges Iesuites and Papists for that it did more put away sinne then any confession Which their doating follie they compared with martyrdome Of which sect of heretiques Alphonsus speaketh Who because they scourged themselues were called Flagellarij or Flagellantes se beating themselues Alphonsus de Castro lib. 2. cont heresis Whose heresie hath patronage neither in the olde nor in the newe testament neither of man nor woman in all the whole Scripture commended Neither must it foster the foolish opinion of wicked Iesuites and popish persons who for vaine-glorie for opinion of desert and merite at the hand of God at certaine times scourge and beate themselues in like maner But of that popish practise we haue no example either of holy Patriarch Prince or Prophet either of blessed Apostle Euangelist or Martyr neither of man woman or saint whatsoeuer in Scripture mentioned neither any commaundement counsell or exhortation either in the olde or in the new testament neither from God Christ the Prophets or Apostles of Iesus Christ neither finde we any iote title sillable in all the worde of God therefore is that practise as drawen from heretiques condemned and disallowed Here the chastising of our selues the suffering of affliction by the Apostle specified is the vnfained repentaunce of our hearts for sinnes cōmitted our true humiliation before God for the same which S. Iames here commendeth vnto vs suffer affliction 2. The way whereby this our humbling and chastising of our selues is performed is also here expressed and it is in foure thinges which are as signes and tokens of the true chastening of our selues before God 1 Men shewe their chastising in their sorrowe and heauines of heart which is not the least token of afflicting Signes of this outward affliction our selues and of our suffering affliction prescribed by the Apostle which is the inseperable companion of our true repentance before God This sorrowing and heauines of our heartes is that contrite spirite that humbled and broken heart which Psal 51. 2. Cor. 7. is a sacrifice acceptable and pleasant before God Which sorrowe Saint Paul commendeth euen that sorow which leadeth to repentance not to be repented of I now reioyce saith hee not that you sorrowed but that you 1. Cor. 5. sorrowed to repentance This godly sorrow Saint Paul required in the Corinthians for that they had tollerated the incestuous adulterer ye are puft vp and haue not rather sorrowed that he that hath done this deed might be put from among you This is that inward grife of the Saints which in their hearts they conceiue for their sinnes committed agaynst God and thereby shewe their afflicting and chastising of themselues before him Thus holy Dauid by vnfeyned sorrowe for his sinnes committed shewed himselfe humbled and afflicted before God as both in the storie and in his Psalme of lamentable repentance is affirmed Manasses 2. Kin. 12. Psal 51. 2. Chron. 33. hauing done manie things agaynst God to despite the Lorde withall being caried away into captiuitie humbled himselfe and afflicted himselfe by repentance which in his sorrow and griefe he conceyued appeared Marie Magdalen chastising and afflicting herselfe for sinne by repentance gaue manifest token thereof in the great sorrowe which she shewed herselfe to haue conceyued euen in the presence of Iesus Christ Saint Peter hauing denied his maister shewed himselfe to haue bene Mat. 26. therefore chastened in conceiuing such great griefe and heauines of heart as forced him to go out of the iudgement hall which was the house of the high priest and to weepe bittetly Thus the holy men of god calling to remembrance their iniquities and sinnes againg God committed and therfore afflicting themselues by repentance before the Lord begin their afflicting and chastising them selues with sorow And this sorow bewraieth it selfe partly in hanging downe of the heade in the casting downe of the countenance partly in outwart behauiour and gesture of the bodie partly in our speeches and words which are the witnesses of our affections and giue testimonie of our heartie sorrowe And this is the first thing wherein the chastising and afflicting our selues appeareth 2 As the chastising and afflicting of our selues consisteth in sorow and griefe conceiued for sinne so doth it in like maner appeare in our weeping and lamenting for the same vvhen we povvre out teares before God in token of our vnfeigned repentaunce vnto him VVhich thing must not be counted altogether effeminate and such as becommeth women onely but it is euen in the best men and most holy Saintes of God a thing commendable and highly to be praysed being ioyned with true faith in Iesus Christ For which cause Dauid the princely Prophet and holy man of God vvas not ashamed to confesse that in signe of his chastising of himselfe Psal 6. by true repentaunce hee wette his bedde and watered his couse with teares VVhen the booke of the lawe of God was founde and brought to Iosiah the godly and vertuous prince and he thereby had perceyued howe greatly the people 4. King 22. had offended in signe of his humilitie and chastising of himselfe with true repentaunce he wept before the Lord. The Prophet Ioel calling the people to this afflicting of themselues by true repentaunce therein hee requireth Ioel. 2. weeping Turne saith hee vnto the Lord with weeping fasting and mourning The Prophets calling the people to repentaunce haue exhorted them to mourne weepe before the Lorde Saint Peter for feare of the Iewes hauing denied and for sworne his master Christ at the looking backe of Christ he remembred himselfe he repented Mat. 26. him of his sinne his heart melted and rent in peeces as it were for sorrowe and to testifie his humiliating of himselfe for the sinne committed he went out and vvept bitterly To this purpose therefore this Apostle exhorting the Saints to suffer affliction to chastice themselues by vnfeigned repentaunce shevving the vvay and manner hovve it must be done teacheth that it must bee in sorrovv and vveeping Herehence then vve see vvhat the true vse of vveeping is and for vvhat cause vve may vveepe lavvfully to vtter the sorrovv of our hearts to testifie our true repentance to God to vvitnesse our afflicting of our selues for our sinnes agaynst God committed vve are exhorted Why the sai●● may weepe to vveepe Saint Augustine that graue and reuerend
our sinnes the ioy which vve take in vayne or wicked things must vvholy be lefte of and turned into heauinesse if by suffering afflictions and chastising our selues before God we will shew our selues humbled Euen such ioy as wee conceaue in our wealth and worldly condition such ioy as of our dignities honours here arise in our harts such ioy as of any worldly thing whatsoeuer is gathered such mirth and ioy as eyther wee cause to our selues or counterfeit fooles make vnto vs such vaine merimentes as for wanton recreation men deuise for their dissolute and disordered solace cheering vp of thēselues such ioy as the couetuous man taketh of his riches the proude man or woman of their brauery the leacherous and adulterous person of his filthie vncleannes or any other maketh of any vanitie whatsoeuer must be turned into heauines as the Apostle exhorteth that so wee may shewe foorth the true humiliation and chastising of our selues by repentance wherevnto the Apostle moueth suffer affliction sorrowe and weepe let your laughter be turned into mourning and your ioy into heauinesse Neyther must such like mirth and ioy onely be remoued but in the dayes of our heauinesse in the time of our repentaunce in the affliction of our selues before God euen honest and lawfull mirth for a time must be layd a parte and we must wholy giue our selues to mourning whereunto Saint Iames called the men of his time suffer affliction sorrow weepe let your laughter be turned into mourning and your ioy into heanines And haue not we as great and as iuste cause to exhort Why England should mourne men in these daies haue not we cause to suffer afflictions ought not wee to sorrowe and weepe is there not cause now ministred vnto vs why our laughter should be turned into mourning and our ioy into heauinesse 1. If wee waigh and ponder our sinnes aright vvhich euerie one in perticular committeth or if wee caste our eyes vpon the sinnes generally committed in the world and what punishment might both specially hange ouer euery one and generally ouer vs all for the same is it not cause enough why we should sorrow and weepe why our laughter should be turned into mourning and our ioy into heauinesse When the princely prophet Dauid tooke the suruey and vewe of his owne sinnes and recounted the due punishment which he had deserued for the same then sorrowed 2. Kings 12 15. Psal 6. 35. 51. c. he and wept then was his laughter turned into mourning and his ioy into heauinesse When the king of Niniue considered at Jonas his preaching the greatnesse of his sinne and the destruction of the citie within Ionas 3. fortie dayes for the same then turned he all his laughter into mourning and his ioy into heauinesse and shall not we whose eyes are full of adulteries whose handes are replenished with bribes whose feete are swifte to shedde innocent bloud whose lippes are giuen to lying whose tongues can tell no truth whose mouthes are full of blaspemie cursing and bitternes whose mindes are set on mischiefe whose hearts burne and boile with malice whose liues are puft vp with pride whose bodies are stayned with all iniquitie sorow and weepe for these sinnes shall not our laughter be turned into mourning and our ioy into heauines for these iniquities against God committed When Isai and Jeremie the holy Prophets men of God saw the sinne of Iuda and Hierusalem and the heauy Isai 22. Ierem. 9. punishment hanging ouer them for their grieuous iniquities so turned all their laughter into mourning and their ioy into heauinesse as that the one wepte day and night therefore and would not be comforted the other desired a fountaine of teares in his head to bewayle the calamitie that was imminent When holy Dauid sawe Psal 119. that men kepte not the lawe of God his laughter was so turned into mourning and his ioy into heauinesse as that his eyes gushed out with water for the transgression of his people When Esdras the scribe sawe the shamefull 1. Esd 9. and horrible abominatiō of the people in mixing the holy seede with the people of the lande wherein the handes of the princes and peeres of the people were the chiefe he rente his clothes for sorowe he tore of the hayre of his bearde for griefe he sat downe astonied turning all his laughter into mourning and his ioy into heauinesse When our blessed Sauiour sawe the obstinacie and hardnes Luke 19. of the peoples harts whose cogitations were so darkned they could not see the day of their visitation and perceyued in his spirite their destruction approching euē his mirth such as it was for his laughter we read not seemed to haue bene turned into mourning and his ioy into heauines whē he burst out into weeping watry tears ouer the city of Hierusalem said ô that thou hadst euen knowē at the least in this thy day the things which appertaine vnto thy peace But now are they hidden from thee Shal these men of god for these causes turn their laughter into mourning and their ioy into heauines in the publike breach of Gods lawes in the diminishing of his maiestie in blemishing of his glory in falsifiyng of his truth prophaning of his Gospell counterfeyting in his profession abusing of his patience contemning of his threatenings shall not our laughter be turned into mourning and our ioy into heauines 2. Moreouer if we consider how the malice of the whole worlde and the hatred of the greatest princes and men of might is kindled and inflamed against vs how they are confederate and haue combined themselues against the truth of God and against the Lordes annointed for the defence of the same who by secrete conspiracies and open attempts of horrible treason by raysing Anno 1586. the subiect against the Prince and the people against their lawfull Soueraigne haue at many times by diuerse wayes endeuoured the death of her Royall person decay of religion destruction and vtter calamitie of this our natiue counttie whose determinations had they effected according to their mindes our streates had runne with streames of bloud our children had bene slayne before our faces our daughters rauished in our owne sightes our wiues abused before our eyes our houses on flaming fire in our presence our selues finally murthered in moste cruell manner Gods truth had perished from among vs religion and the Gospell had beene put to flight Romish superstition had inuaded this lande againe to the destruction of innumerables soules when with thankfull harts for this miraculous deliuerance out of the iawes of so cruell Lions gratefull memorie to God for so wōderfull safety frō so bloudy enemies we shal reméber these things shal not our laughter be turned into mourning and our ioy into heauines 3. When we consider besides this that the hope of our happines the state of our wealth the continuance of the gospell the terme and time of our
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
acceptable sacrifices vnto him whom they serue in holines John 4. Rom. 12. Luck 1. and righteuousnes al the dayes of their life do not alwaies vse it in vvord of mouth but giue the consent of their hearts there vnto And in all things and at all times to repeate the vvordes might seeme vaine superstition and babling follie But the spirite of God in this place is vehemently caried avvay vvith iuste condemnation against such as vvith out regard had to the good pleasure of God or respect had to the mortalytie of our nature vvould haue all times seasons things and euents to serue them at their wills for which cause in the pride of their hartes they determine presumtuously of things to come and say in their vaine confidence to day or to morow will we go into such a cittie and there continue a yeare by and sell and gaine which thing the Apostle condemneth and correcteth and in stead thereof teacheth vs to say If the Lord will and if we liue we will doe this thing or that thing 4 The Apostle hauing thus reproued the sinne and corrected this euil among mē in the fourth place he repeateth the same vice and mischiefe with reprehension although in other words yet to like purpose and therefore saith You reioyce in your boasting all such reioycing is euill you doe not onely conceaue such vaine confidence in your heartes but you also vtter it in your wordes neither doe you only vtter it in wordes and in your speaches but also you boast of your sayings you reioyce in your boastings all such reioycing is euill In presuming thus of your selues in the vaine confidence of your owne heartes in the lewde libertie of your tongues wherby you derogate from Gods prouidence and arrogate to your selues you reioyce but all such reioycing is euill And in that he saith not all reioycing is euill but all such reioycing is euill it is apparant that he condemneth not all reioycing but onely vaine reioycing conceaued of the trust and confidence we haue in worldly thinges For otherwise God permitted yea willed and commaunded Deut. 12. his people to reioyce as the Scripture teacheth vs. By his seruant Moses he charged Israel his people that they should not eate their offeringes within their owne gates but in the place where the Lorde had appointed they their children their seruantes and the Leuite that was within their gates and so to reioyce before the Lord Deut. 16. their God in all they put their hands vnto To which end and purpose they were commanded to keepe the feast of weekes which was Whitsontide and therein also to reioice before the Lord through the viewe of the plentifull encrease which the Lorde God had geuen vnto the earth Other Feasts also as the Feast of vnleauēed bread the Feast of Tabernacles at the gathering in of their haruest wherein it was alowable and permitted them to reioyce Exod. 23. The Prophet Dauid often exhorteth to reioicing therfore he aduiseth the people to sing ioyfully vnto the Lord Psal 81. their strength and to sing laud vnto the God of Iacob to take the song to bring foorth the timbrell the pleasaunt Psal 122. harpe with the lute or viole Dauid himselfe was not void of this affection but rather therewithall rauished hee breaketh out I reioyced when the people said we wil go into the house of the Lord. To which affection as in some respects lawfull he stirreth vp his people and godly Subiects O come let vs sing vnto the Lord let vs heartelie Psal 95. reioyce in God the strength of our saluation The Sauiour of the world euen Iesus Christ the righteous commendeth Mat. 5. reioycing vnto his in miserie and exhorteth thē in the midst and among their greatest afflictions persecutions to reioyce Whose example the elect vessell of God Saint Paul imitating aduiseth the elect seruants of Christ in their Rom. 12. troubles to reioyce Which thing of himselfe and the rest of his brethren he freely and liberally confesseth When Rom. 5. 1. Cor. 4 Ephes 5 he speaketh vnto the Church and Saintes of Ephesus exhorting them to be filled with the spirite and to sing to themselues in psalmes hymnes and spirituall songs making melodie in their hearts vnto God Doeth he not cōmend vnto them the affection of reioysing When hee willeth the Saints of Philippi to reioyce in the Lord alwaies what els commendeth he then the affection of reioycing Philip. 4. What that the Prophet willeth that neither the wise man Ierem. 9. glorie and vainly reioyce in his wisdome neither the rich man in his riches nor the strong man in his strength but that he that reioyceth should reioyce and glorie in the Lord Doeth he not condemne one and commend another kinde of reioycing What that Christ willeth his not to reioyce that the deuils were subiecte vnto them but Luke 10. that they should reioyce that their names were written in the booke of life What that hee exhorteth the Church against the day of iudgement to lift vp their heads and to reioyce because their redemption approacheth Doeth he not commend the affection of ioy as lawfull in some Luke 11. measure in the Saints of God What that Paul beseacheth Philip. 2 the Saints of Philippi in Macedonia by their vnitie and religious consent to fulfill his ioy What that S. Iohn reioiceth Iohn 2. 3. Epist ouer the saints because they walked in the trueth argueth it not that there is a ioy and reioycing lawfull in the people of God To reioyce therefore in the aide and helpe of Gods spirite and in the presence of his power to reioyce in his gifts and graces either vpon our soules or bodies plentitifully poured moderately to reioice in our publicke peace and priuate quietnes in our obedient wiues and tractable children in our trustie seruants and faithfull friendes or the like tokens of Gods fauour towardes vs so that all confidence be wholy reposed in him that is the authour and fountaine of all graces and goodnes is not forbidden the mirth of their hearts proceading from a good conscience in the holy Ghost the ioy of their mindes lightened by assurance of the mercies of God in Iesus Christ the affection of reioycing stirred vp raysed in the inward parts of man through duetifull vew and thankfull remembrance of the blessings of God towardes vs as tokens of his loue is not condemned by S. Iames nor heere forbidden the Saints of God Which the very circumstance of the place doeth teach vs for inueying against the vaine confidence of proud persons who without regard had to the will of God and the shortnesse of their owne liues say within themselues and sometimes vtter their speaches vnto other To morrow we will goe to such a Citie and there continue a yeare and by and sell and gaine he inferreth this speach now you reioyce in your boasting all such reioycing is euill
denounced destructiō vnhappines against the wicked This cōmination threatning of extreame calamitie Iere. 48. is familiar in al the Scriptures Whē Ieremie the prophet should foretell the destruction of Moab their extreame calamitie through captiuitie by Nabuchodonozor before he fought with Pharao Necho king of the Egiptiās he in this wise denounceth their destruction woe be vnto Nebo for it is wasted Keriathaim is confounded and taken Misgab is confounded and afrayed The prophet Isai foretelling Isai 3. the plagues which the wicked should suffer crieth out wo be vnto the wicked it shal be euill with him for the workes and rewarde of his handes shal be giuen him And a little after denouncing the vengeance of God vpon Isai 5. the couetous drunkards wantons and the like which seeke all occasions to harden their consciences in sinne and all prouocations and allurements to pricke them on and stirre them forward to all wickednesse against euery of them he denounceth miserie and calamitie vnder the common phrase of Scripture Wo saith he to them which ioyne house to house wo to them that rise early to follow dronkennesse wo to them which drawe iniquitie with cordes of vanitie and sinne with carte roapes Who Isai 29. also intreating of their wretchednesse who like hypocrites in hearte dispised Gods worde mocked at the admonitions of the Prophets yet outwardly set a fayre face on the matter and pretended in behauiour religion and godlinesse vnder the same phrase denounceth their destruction wo be vnto them which seeke deepe to hide their councels from the Lorde for their workes are in darkenesse and they say who seeth or knoweth vs In another place foretelling their calamitie who contrarie to Isai 30. the commaundement of God and their solemne promise vnto him depended not vpon his protection and mightie power but sought succour in their aduersitie at the handes of straunge princes he saith wo vnto the rebellious children who seeke counsell but not at me and couer with a couering but not my spirite that they may lay sinne vpon sinne Wo vnto them that go downe into Isai 31. Egypt for helpe and stay vpon horses and charrets because they are many and in horsemen because they bee very strong but they looke not vnto the holy one of Israell neyther seekevnto the Lord. Amos denounceth many plagues against many people Amos. 6. and places in his prophesies vnder this forme wherefore foretelling such wicked and prophane rich men as gaue themselues to all volupteousnesse without regarde had to the miserable distresse of their brethren in like manner crieth out and denounceth against them wo to those that are at ease in Sion and trust in the mountaine of Samaria which were famous at the beginning of nations and the house of Israell came to them Go you vnto Calneth and see and from thence go to Hamach the great then go to Gath of the Philistines be they better then these kingdomes or the border of their land greater then your border yee that put away farre from you the euill day and approch to the seate of iniquitie they lie vpon beddes of iuorie and stretch themselues vpon their beddes and eate the lambes of the flocke and the calues out of the stall they sing to the sounde of the viole they inuent to themselues instruments of musicke like Dauid they drinke wine in bowles and annoint themselues with the chiefe ointments but no man is sorie for the afflictions of Ioseph Abacuc foreshewing the punishmentes of GOD which should light vpon the heades of couetous cruell Abacuc 2. and corrupt persons breaketh out and crieth wo vnto him that buildeth a towne with bloud and erected a citie by iniquitie Many the like we reade and heare in the prophets From whom if we discend and come to Christ in the gospell shall wee not see that by like speach he denounceth like destruction against the wicked Doth not Christ Luc. 6. our Lord and Master foretell them that were full in this worlde and liued in all loosenesse and licentiousnesse of life and such as were puffed vp with pride vaineglorie ambition and arrogancie of the spirite of their miseries when he crieth out against them wo be vnto you which are full for you shall hunger wo to you which now laugh for you shall mourne and weepe wo vnto you when men speake well of you for so did their fathers to the false prophetes doth hee not denounce like miserable Mat. 11. calamitie against the cities of Corozin Bethsaida and Capernaum when hee in this wise vpbrayded them for their vnthankefulnesse and impenitencie wo to thee Corozin wo to thee Bethsaida for if the miracles done in you had bene done in Tyrus and Sidon they had long since repented in sacke cloth and ashes Verily I say vnto you it shal be easier for Tyrus and Sidon in the daye of iudgement then for you And thou Capernaum which art lifted vp to heauen shalt be cast downe vnto hell for if the notable signes which were wrought in thee had bene done in Sodom and Gomorra they had remained vntill this day But I say vnto you it shal be easier for them of the land of Sodom in the day of iudgement then for thee Doth not Christ threaten like calamitie against Mat. 23. the Scribes and Pharisies for their hypocrisie vnder the same forme of commination vvhen he breaketh our and sayth wo be to you Scribes and Pharisies hypocrites for yee tith minte and anise and commine and leaue the waightier matters of the lawe as iudgement mercy and fidelitie these ought you to haue done and not lefte the other vndone Ye blinde guides which straine at a gnat and swallovv vp a Camell Wo bee to you Scribes and Pharisies hypocrites for you make cleane the vpper side of the cup and platter but within you are full of briberie and excesse Doth not Saint Paul shevving vvhat miserie calamitie 1. Cor. 9. and punishment he shoulde suffer if hee preached not the gospell note it in the same phrase of speach wo vnto me if I preach not the gospell Doth not Iude vnder a wo denounce all miserie Jude v. 11. vpon the wicked wo vnto them for they haue followed the way of Cain and are caste away by the deceate of Balams wages and perish in the gaine saying of Core Doth Reue. 8. 9. 10. not the Angell in the holy Reuelation vnder the three woes therein mentioned expresse all the miseries and calamities of the wicked Our Apostle according to the vse and manner of the Prophets our Sauiour the Apostles in this place albeit in another forme of speach yet to like purpose denounceth against the wicked extreame destruction and calamitie Go to novve yee rich men weepe and hovvle for the miseries that shall come vppon you So then if wee runne ouer the bookes of the Scripture if wee peruse the workes of the Prophetes if wee caste our eies vppon the
sinnes of the wicked rich men for which their calamitie is threatened are three 1. Their iniurious and fraudulent detaining of the wages of their Reapers and haruest seruants 2. Their sensua litie which stand●eh in these 3. 1. Pleasure 2. Wantonnes 3. Banquetting and riotousnes 3. Their crueltie which in two thinges appeareth In 1 Condemning the righteous 2 Slaying them when as they resist not 1 The first sinne and euill condemned in these wicked rich 1. Sinne in the wicked men with whom and against whom Saint Iames dealeth and for which so sharpe a sentence of so iust condemnation is geuen out against them is their fraudulent detaining of their hirelinges wages whereof hee geueth speciall example in their haruest labourers such as reaped their fieldes who helping them to get and gather in their graine and corne into their barnes and bringing in the increase of their land for them whereon they liued Yet for so needefull and necessarie so painefull and profitable a worke they were vnrewarded and their wages deteined by fraud from them no doubt an extream point of euill dealing And vnder this particular example the holy Ghost conteyneth all iniurious dealing with their seruants either in this kinde or in any other kinde whatsoeuer The greatnesse of their sinne the Apostle amplifieth in most effectual manner Behold saith he the hire of the labourers which haue reaped your fieldes which is by you kept back by fraud crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lorde of hostes 1. Saith he beholde Of which speach there are diuers vses Sometimes it is vsed in cases of ioy and reioycing as when Christ the Prince of peace and eternall Mat. 21. glorie shoulde come into the citie of Ierusalem to the great ioy of all such as receaued him the Euangelist citing the words of Zacharie the Prophet saith Go tell the daughter of Sion beholde thy king commeth vnto thee Zach. 9. meeke and sitting vpon an Asse and a colte the fole of an Asse vsed to the yoke Sometimes it is vsed for a greater euidence certaintie of a thing Saint Iude citing the wordes of Enoch the seuenth from Adam for a great euidence and certaintie Iude v. 14 of the Lords comming to iudge the worlde vseth this phrase of speach Behold the Lord commeth with thousands of his Saints to geue iudgement against all men and to rebuke all the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes which they haue vngodly committed and of all their cruel speaches which wicked sinners haue spoaken against him In like manner in this place to assure Iob. 4. 18. Reuel 7 them that their wickednes was certainlie gone vp into the eares of the Lorde the Apostle breaketh out in this manner Behold the hire of the labourers which haue reaped your fieldes which is of you kept backe by fraude crieth and the cries of them which haue reaped are entred into the eares of the Lord of hostes Sometimes it is vsed to moue attention vnto a thing spoken and this is familiar in the Prophetes in our Sauiour and the apostles also sometimes to this purpose vsed The Prophet Nahum prophecying of the peace which Nahum 1. Iuda should enioy by the death of Sennacherib the king of the Assyrians to moue them to greater attention thereunto as it may be thought he saith Beholde vppon the mountaines the feete of him that declareth and publisheth peach And Abacuk prophecying of the strange plagues Abacuk 1. calamities which shoulde befall the people for their shamefull iniquitie and contempt of Gods worde to stir them vp to greater attention thereunto as I suppose hee crieth out Behold among the heathen and regard and wonder and maruaile for I will worke a worke in your daies you will not beleeue it though it be told vnto you And may not the princely Prophet Dauid be thought in Psal 133. this sence to haue vsed this word when he commending peace loue and vnitie among men saith Beholde how good and pleasant a thing it is brethren to dwell together in vnitie Sometimes it is vsed in strange and wonderfull things which rarely are heard or seene as Jsai intreating Isai 7. of the strange and extraordinarie rare and wonderfull manner of Christes conception in this wise expresseth it Behold a virgine shall conceaue and beare a sonne and they shall call his name Emmanuel Our Apostle as wondering at the harde dealing of the wicked may not amisse in this sence be thought to vse it Behold the hire of your labourers which reaped c. as a thing therefore either most certaine that the crie of their seruants were entred vnto the eares of God or a thing to bee wondred at that any would be so hearde hearted as to defraude their labourers of their hier the Apostle breaketh out and saith beholde the hire of your labourers c. 2 The hire of those laubourers which reaped their fieldes was detained this amplifieth their wickednes To detame the wages of any labourour who by the toyle and moyle of his bodie and in the sweate of his face eateth his breade connot be but agreat sinne but to denie them their wages by whom our fieldes are reaped our corne and graine got and gathered in to our garners the fruites of our Landes safly brought into our barnes and houses whereof we our wiues children and famylies doe liue the surplus whereof wee turne to the encreasing of our riches is no doute a greuious and most haynous sinne before God therefore the Apostle leauing other seruants whom no dout they defrauded in like manner rehearseth those in whose iniurie their iniquitie most manyfestly appeareth Wherefore he saith beholde the hire of your labourers which haue reaped your fieldes whose wages by you is helde backe through fraude crieth 3 The wages of their hired seruantes was by fraude kept backe to detaine and holde backe the wages of the hierling and seruante which for his lyuing worketh with men is an euill and sinne by the lawe and worde of God forbidden Whereof the Lorde by his seruante Moyses admonished Leuit. 19. the people of Israel to which purpose they had commaundement from the mouth of God that the wages of the hierling should not rest nor remaine with them till the morning intymating that as euery one had done his worke so he should receaue his wages which by the Deut. 24. masters shoulde in nowise bee detained And in another place thou shalt not oppresse saith he the hired seruante that is poore and neadie neither thy brother neither the stranger that is within they gates thou shalt giue him his hire for his day neither shall the sunne goe downe vpon it For he is poore and therewith sustaineth his life least Malach. 3. hee crie vnto the Lorde and it be sinne vnto thee The Prophet Malachie in the person of God condemneth the same in the people who pronouncing iudgement against their manifolde
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
his will but by voluntarie offering of himselfe because his time was then come and standing in the iudgement hall examined and apposed concerning his doctrine by the high priest whom he willed to aske such as had heard him speake and preach for which answere hee was smitten of a seruant of the high priests though in minde he put vp the iniurie and in bodie was now at their pleasures yet in speach and worde hee withstoode the iniurie when hee saide to his smiter If I haue spoken euill beare witnesse of euill If well why smitest thou me Saint Paul beeing smitten on the face at the vniust commaundement of the Acts 23. high priest Ananias resisted in wordes that iniurie aud vniust fact and sayde the Lorde shall strike thee thou painted wall fittest thou here to iudge me according to the law and commaundest thou me contrarie to the law to be smitten Saint Augustine writing to Marcellinus diligently Epistol S. Mercel weighing the precept of Christ and of Paul and carefully comparing their examples with their doctrine witnesseth that the precepts of our Sauiour and the Apostle ought rather to be referred to the pacience and quietnesse of our hearts in the bearing of iniuries then to our outward actions and behauiour affirming that in these cases outwardly wee ought to haue greater care of our oppressours profite then of their willes and pleasures concluding that by the precept of not resisting euill in holy Scripture contained wee are prepared in minde and heart euermore to more and more iniuries but outwardly that it is lawfull either to doe or to say that which may most profite the oppressour and best keepe him from doing further iniurie As Christ and Paul his Apostle in minde and heart prepared to death it selfe yet outwardly did and spoke that which might best represse and restraine the aduersarie VVherehence it followeth when by bearing and suffering of men we make them woorse rather then by our pacience winne and gaine them then is it our dutie in minde to prepare our selues still to beare but in our outwarde action speach and behauiour to do that which may moste profite the oppressour and withholde the enemie from further iniurie and in this wise also is it permitted the Saintes of GOD to make resistaunce not repugnant to this or anie like place of holy Scripture 3 Finally there are times and seasons when by repelling force by force it is lawfull to resist also When Christians are so narrowly besteed and so straitly beset with their enemies as that they cannot haue the ayde of ciuill powers and lawfull magistrates of the common wealth but must either resist by force or bee in daunger of the losse of their liues and goods without all recouerie or recompence in such a case to resist I holde it lawfull altogether so that it bee done in a moderate defence of our selues without priuate malice or desire of shedding of blood If a man in a house be beset with wicked persons so that he can not haue aide of ciuill power for the present instant neither hath hope of recouering the damage which he may sustaine either of goodes or of life to resist with all strength power and courage and to fight for our goodes liues and bodily safegarde is not forbidden If in the high way we bee inwrapped in daunger where no Magistrates are to succour wee are as extraordinarie Magistrates to our selues to withstande force by force violence by violence might by might VVhich properly is not violence or iniurie but lawfull defence which nature it selfe hath imprinted and impressed in the hearts of men Thereof the heathen Oratour Tullie speaketh it is For Mil● sayeth hee a lawe not written but borne with vs which wee haue not receyued learned nor read but drawen and sucked from Nature her selfe vnto which wee are not taught but made not infourmed but inured that if our life fall into snares force ot dartes of our enemies or robbers wee should seeke all honest meanes of preseruing our safegard and health And our blessed Sauiour Christ permitted his Disciples Luke 22. to carrie and weare swoordes about them for their owne defence when they coulde not haue the lawfull ayde of princes and Magistrates So that albeit hee reprooued Peter for smiting with the swoorde and cutting off the eare of Malchus for that then the magistrate and ciuill officer was at hande and shoulde haue defended his innocencie yet at other times and when they went abroade he permitted them to weare weapons Hereunto the customes of Countreyes and Nations yeelde which permit it as lawfull in iourneyes and trauailes and the like opportunities to weare and carrie weapons for their honest defence about them And by these meanes is it not forbidden the iust men to resist the wicked Nowe as in some cases it is lawfull to make priuate resistance to priuate men howsoeuer blockish Anabaptists chatte chirpe or chatter to the contrarie so may it be demaunded whether it may stand with a righteous and iust mans dutie to make publike resistance by warre and publike reuengement I answere that these places doe not forbidde lawful warres Which to bee a thing lawfull in the Saintes of God it may manie wayes appeare euidently the olde and the newe Testament confirmeth it the examples of renowmed men highly euen therefore commended approue it Saint Augustine wryteth that the Manichies for this Contra Faust Manich. lib. 22. cap. 73. cause found fault with Moises because he was a man of warre and such a prince as armed the people of God agaynst manie Nations and slue mightie princes and shed much bloud The like fault the Anabaptists finde nowe with Christians whose opinions as they are not soundly grounded vpon the worde of God nor the examples of the Saints so neither is there any substanciall Why warres are lawfull reasō to approue thē but manifoldly may they be refuted 1 And first of all it may appeare that some warres be lawfull in that Almightie God himselfe teacheth Dent. 20. what in warres by his people ought to be obserued as first to offer them conditions of peace and other things in the lawe expressed Moises promiseth the people that the Lord should be their captaine to destroy the nations and Deut. 31. by warres subdue them to the people The Lorde armed the people in sundrie cases and commaunded them Deut. 13. with the sworde and by force of warres to subdue the idolaters of the lande For which cause hee also willed Num. 10. Moises to prepare him Trumpettes and other warlike instruments for the people The Lorde God spoke in an other place to Moises and willed him to auenge the iniuries Num. 31. Exod. 17. done by the Madianites against his people and against the Amalakites in another place in like manner whome the Lorde by dint of the sworde of Israel mightily destroyed By God was Iosua set a worke in all Iosua 1. c. his warres
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
hence forth therefore is there laide vp for me a crowne of righteousnes which the righteous iudge shall then giue vnto me or in that day and that day is the same day wherein Iesus Christ shall appeare in glorie to render vnto euerie one according to that he hath done in his bodie be it good or euill Wherefore as fathers lay vp for their children golde siluer landes possessions yet giue 2. Cor. 5. them only when they are of age so God hath layde vp eternal treasures for vs but giueth them vnto vs only when we are of perfecte age in Iesus Christ and that is only in Eph. 4. the life to come And as the glory of Gods Saints is reueiled only in the day of Christs appearing so also the full measure of the punishment of the wicked is there vnto reserued that as God suffereth them to fulfill the measure of their iniquitie here so also they should in that day receaue the perfecte measure of their punishment whereunto they are saide to be reserued The holie patriarcke Iob preaching of the eternal tormentes and punishments of the wicked Iob. 21. the wicked saith he is kept to the day of destruction and they shal be brought fourth to the day of wrath Sirach saith that the most highest hateth the wicked and will repay Eccl●● 12. vengeance to the vngodly and kepeth them to the day of horrible punishment Saint Paul entreating of the impenitent and hard hearted persons who contemned Rom. 2. the lenitie long sufferaunce and great patience of God auoucheth that therefore they treasured and heaped vp to themselues wrath against the day of wrath and declaration of the iust iudgement of God who should reward euerie man according to his workes The same doctrine did he publish to the comfort of the Saints and terrour 2. Thes 1. of the wicked to the Saints of the Church of Thessalonica affirming that the Lord Iesus Christ shewing himselfe from heauen with his mightie Angels shoulde in flaming fire render vengeaunce vnto them that knowe not God nor obeyed the Gospell of Iesus Christ To whom Saint Peter subscribeth the Lorde sayth he knoweth 2. Pet. 2. how to deliuer his out of temptation and to reserue the vniust vnto the day of iudgement to bee punished S. Iude in his Epistle generall painting out in flourishing Iude ver 13. 14. 15. 2 Pet. 2. 4. 1. 3. c. v. 7. and liuely colours the vngodly of his time and the great impietie whereunto they were giuen noting their punishment which in full and perfect measure shoulde fall vpon them and bee powred out also in the day of the Lordes appearing affirmeth that they are reserued for the blackenesse of darkenesse for euer Lactantius Lib. 5. cap. 23. thereof therefore sayeth wel Albeeit God vse both here and in the life to come to punish the vexations and afflictions of his people yet doeth hee will vs paciently to looke for that day of heauenly iudgement wherein hee will either honour or punish euerie one for their deserts Let not sacriligious persons and soules thinke that such shal be despised and contemned and left vnreuenged whome they haue thus torne as it were in peeces For their rewarde shal come assuredly vpon the rauenous wolues which haue tormented the sillie and simple soules which haue done no wickednesse Let vs onely about and endeuour that righteousnesse alone be puni●●●● by men in vs let vs giue all diligence that we may deserue from God both the reuenge of our suffering and the reward also Thus Lactantius As the Scriptures alledged speake seuerally of each so sometimes ioyntly of both For Daniel the Prophet entreating Dan. 12. of the deliuerance of the righteous and the iust punishment of the wicked referreth both vnto the day of iudgement VVherfore hee saith Many of them that sleepe in the dust shall awake Manie that is all some to life that is the rewarde of the godly some to ignomnie and perpetuall contempt as the wicked Christ teacheth the same in the parable of the tares and the wheate in the Matt. 13. Gospel by tares hee vnderstandeth the wicked by wheate the godly and the haruest noteth the day of iudgement wherevpon this is concluded that both the tares the wicked shal be cast into the fornace of destructiō and the wheate the godly gathered into the barne of Gods mercie and should shine as the Sun in the kingdom of heauen In another place it is auouched that both the Matt. 25. 5. Iohn 29. righteous should hear their cōfortable ioyful sentence of entering into their kingdome only at the day of iudgement and the wicked the dreadful voice of their final condemnation to be cast downe into hel fire therein to be punished with the diuell and his angels for euer Finally S. Paul wryteth that in the day of Christs comming onely 2. Cor. c. 5. wee shall all appeare before his tribunall seate euerie one to receyue according to that which hee hath done in his bodie be it good be it euill So then it appeareth most manifestly that neither reward is giuen the Saints nor punishment rendered the wicked in full and perfect measure before the day and comming of the Lord Iesus which thing Saint James to perswade vs willeth the afflicted Saints of God to be pacient till the comming of the Lord. Before which time neither Abel nor Noah nor Enoch neither Abraham Isaac nor Iacob neither Ioseph nor Iob nor any of the Patriarkes neither Elias nor Isai Michai nor Ieremie Daniel nor Amos neither any of the Prophets Neither Dauid nor Asa nor Hezechiah nor Iosiah neither any one of the Princes neither Peter nor Paul Iohn nor Iames nor any of the Apostles Neither Matthewe Luke Marke nor Iohn nor anie of the Euangelists neither Steuen nor Policarpe nor Ignatius nor any of the holy martyrs haue receyued the fulnesse of their glorie but shall at the day of iudgement haue the consummation of their blessednesse Neither Cain nor Ismael Esau Saul nor Pharaoh Ahab nor Iudas nor Pilate nor any of the rabble of that wicked route haue their full punishment but it is reserued vntill the comming of the Lorde when as the soules and bodies of the righteous shall bee cladde with immortalitie and glorie so also the bodies and soules of the wicked shall bee cast into eternall torment Thus Saint Iames partly to bee a comfort to the godly and partly for a terrour to the wicked exhorteth the Saints to bee pacient vnto the comming of the Lord. 2 The exhortation thus set downe the next and second thing in this discourse of paciēce is the similitude which the Apostle vseth to shew them how they ought to be pacient And it seemeth to bee added to preuent that which the poore afflicted might haue obiected we might they say haue beene pacient a long while and waited for deliuerance from our oppressions and miseries yet see we no remedie we finde no
length of daies from seede time to haruest shall not christians looking for immortall fruite of their patience settle their hearts so that neither multitude of troubles nor waight of miseries nor grieuousnes of oppressions nor number of iniuries shal be able to dawnte and disquiet them be yee therefore patient and settle your hearts saith the Apostle And in the manifold afflictions of this life the harts Mēs minds settled in affections minds of Gods Saints are sundrie waies settled 1. Our hearts are settled in our afflictions by the sweete promises we haue from God of our deliuerance who hath promised to deliuer the righteous out of troubles and such a● put their trust in him Dauid thereof saith Many are Psal 34. the troubles of the righteous but the Lorde deliuereth out of all In another place to like purpose the saluation Psal 37. of the righteous is of the Lorde hee shal be their strength in time of trouble Therefore almighty GOD Psal 5● saith to his people call vpon me in the day of thy trouble and I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie mee The Prophete exhorting men to settle themselues to rest Psal 36. 91. 15. and relie vpon God in their miseries yea in all thinges giueth this counsell from the promise of God commit thy cause or thy way vnto the Lord and trust in him and he shall bring it to passe He will bring foorth thy righteousnesse as the light and thy iudgements as the noone day Thus hath God promised to defend our cause to restore vs to our right and in our miseries to deliuer vs therfore ought we therby to settle our mindes God saith 1. Cor. 10. Paul is faithful which wil not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our strength but wil giue the issue with the tētatiō that we may bear it And S. Peter The Lord knoweth how 2. Pet. 2. to deliuer the godly out of tentation Seeing then wee haue such sweete promises of deliueraunce out of troubles therefore therein ought we to be patient and to settle our mindes vpon these promises that the Lorde will deliuer vs in due time from all afflictions and finallie washe away all teares from our eyes as the Scripture teacheth 2. As by the promises of our deliuerance our hearts or settled through patience in our oppression so also ought they to be settled in the experience we haue of the power of God in the deliuerance of the righteous If we looke to others or our selues we shall finde experience triall of this truth whereby our heartes ought in all our miseries to be settled Hath not God deliuered Moses and Exod. 14. Israell his people from the armie of Pharao when the red sea was before them hard sharpe rockes on both sides the enemie at their heeles following so that their state was daungerous What did not God deliuer Dauid from 1. King 18 19. 20. 21. 23. 24. sundry attempts of Saul who sought by many waies his vtter confusion for which cause he so often praiseth God for his deliuerance as the booke of Psalmes therewith is replenished and full Was not Hezechiah the godly king deliuered Psal 18. 23. 27. 86. 144. 4. Kings 19 mightily by God from the powre and armie of Sennacherib into whose iawes God put his bitte bridle and ledde him away into his owne countrie by a rumour of inuision that vvas brought him and by the destruction of his armie by the Angell of God Did he not deliuer the Israelites out of the hands of the Philistines other their enemies which often and long time had them in subiection as the booke of Iudges of Samuell recordeth When the Aramites had besieged Samaria therfore Iudges 1. Samu. 4. Kings 7. the people Prince and countrie in great distresse by famine and perill by reason of the enemie was it not deliuered miraculously by God who caused the Aramites to heare a noyse of horses and charrets vvherewith they terrified fledde and lefte their prouision behind them Was not Iehosaphat by him deliuered both in the battle 3. Kings 22 in Ramoth Gilead and also from the Moabites Amorites and Amalachites which ioyned battle against him hath he not deliuered infinite other his holy Saints from 2. Chron. 22 their oppressions afflictions and troubles they haue suffered if wee seeke experience in our selues vvhich of See Psalm 61. v. 4. 63. v. 7. 91. 4. vs is it vvhom at one time or another God hath not deliuered eyther from peril by lande or by sea at home or abroade eyther from oppression and iniuries of open enemies or daungers of counterfaite friendes either from griefe of minde of sickenesse of bodie eyther from spoyle of goods or perill of life by the wicked Seeing therefore we haue this triall and experience of Gods helpe in our oppressions shall we not therein be patient and settle our hearts 3. Neither thus onely are our hearts settled in our miseries but also when we cast our eies vpō the crowne of glory which we shall receaue the glorious hope whereof we shal be pertakers if we endure with patience we should settle and quiet our mindes in our miseries Thus Paul exhorting the Romanes to settle their hearts and in their Rom. 8. afflictions which by the example of Christ they should suffer comforting them telleth them that the sufferings of this their mortall and temporall life are not to be compared to the glory which should be reuealed to the sonnes of God And in like manner to the Church of Corinth the 2. Cor. 4. momentanie afflictions which are for a season cause vnto vs a far more excellent eternall waight of glory while we look not to things which are seen but to things which are not seene for the things which are seene are temporal but the things which are not seene are eternall Our Sauiour Heb. 12. Christ settled his hart vpō the hope he had of the glorious crowne wherof he should be partaker By whose example S. Paul exhorteth vs also to endure with patience the afflictiōs of this life run with setled minds the race which is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the authour and finisher of the faith Who for the ioy that was set before him endured the crosse and dispised the shame and is set at the right hand of the throne of God This crowne is giuen the Saints after their miseries here be ended and they are made partakers of the promises after the troubles of this life are finished whereunto hauing an earnest regard and casting their eyes continually thereby their hearts and mindes are settled so that these miseries and afflictiōs are mightily borne of them vnder the burden whereof they are not greatly disquieted As in the Apostles the holy martyrs and many other of the chosen Sonnes of God is apparent 4. Finally our hearts in afflictions are settled when we record and recount often the
another This grudging and murmuring is either when we greiue that wicked rich men should so highly be exalted should abound in wealth excell in power and the poore yet righteous and iust men should by pouertie iniurie and pen●rie be pressed downe in the world Or els it is that muttering and murmuring whereby we take it in euill parte that our selues should be so tost and tormoiled other should be dealt withall more gently thinking that wee beare a greater burthen and heauier crosse from God then wee haue deserued and that other men as yet not touched haue deserued more Or finally it is that grudging which is in our afflictions whereby we are discontent that wee should sigh so long vnder our afflictions and the wicked which afflicte vs should so long scape vnpunished and through impatiencie complaine hereof to God This ought not to be in the Saints of God who ought to bee renowmed for their vnspeakeable pacience Whose bounden duetie it is to pray euen for their enemies to wish well to them which haue done them iniurie to blesse them that curse Matt. 1. 6. 18. Ephes 4. 1. Pet. ● them or forgiue and forget offences committed in all godly moderation to settle their hearts and to commit their cause to him that iudgeth righteously And if this moderation and equitie of our minds be to be shewed towards our enemies for whose iniuries and oppressions we ought not to murmure or impaciently to complaine against them vnto god how much lesse ought we then to grudge or murmure one against another How much lesse becommeth it the Saints to grudge and murmure one against another for the dayly offences which are giuen For who is he that can liue so vprightly but that in one thing or another at one time or another hee shall giue offence If euerie one giue some offence vnto another shall we complaine to God in the bitternesse of our heart shall we desire reuenge from God against thē and shall we not all then perish for no man liueth without some offence giuing We therefore in these small offences asking iudgement from God and reuenge agaynst others desire the same agaynst our selues in as much as we in the like offende our brethren and so shall we all be condemned This grudging and muttering proceedeth from impaciencie argueth discontentment of the mind causeth mutuall complaining vnto God and desireth reuenge against such as haue done vs iniurie VVhich thing is farre from the excellencie and dignitie of a Christian Finally it bringeth condemnation vpon vs who haue lost pacience according to the denouncing of the scripture wo be vnto them that haue lost pacience thereby falling from dutie to men from charitie to the brethren from obedience to God from trust in his diuine prouidence from sincere imbracing of the Gospell of Christ which prescribeth vnto vs pacience and so we incurre iust and deserued condemnation for which cause the holy Apostle in this place doth not onely recommend vnto the Saints the excellent vertue of pacience but also disswadeth murmuring therunto contrarie grudge not one against a● other brethren least ye be condemned The reason why we should not murmure one agaynst another is drawne from the presence of the Lord who is at hande as a iust iudge to auenge vs of our enemies and to crowne vs for our pacience or punish our murmuring The Lorde our God beholdeth our iniuries with open eie and seeth our oppression by the wicked he is prest and at hand to rescue and deliuer vs as it shall seeme best to his diuine maiestie he marketh all our behauiour vnder the crosse let vs not therefore be impacient neither murmure but therein shewe all Christian moderation as becommeth Saints The Lord is at hand the iudge standeth before the How God is at hand doore 1 In that he seeth all the creatures of the world and beholdeth all the miseries and oppressions of his people Thus was he at hand and at the doores of the Aegyptians to see and behold the grieuous oppression of his people Exod. 3. Israel Wherefore he protesteth to his seruant Moises I haue seene I haue seene the trouble of my people Israel in Aegypt and haue heard their crie because of their taskemasters and do know their sorrowes For it is the Lord that beholdeth from heauen al the children of men Psal 33. and from the habitation of his dwelling he considereth them all that dwel on the earth Thus was he at the doores of Abraham to behold the mocking and persecution of Jsmael Gene. 21. against Isaac at the doores of Isaac to heare the intended murther of Esau against his brother Iacob He was at hand and at the doores and gates of Laban to beholde his oppressing of his nephew Iacob He was at the doores Gene. 27. Daniel 3. of Nabuchodonosor to beholde the fierie triall of the three children At the heeles doores and gates of the princes of the prouinces of Babylon to beholde and see heare and marke the wicked purpose and deuise they imagined against Daniel At the doores of Saules palace to beholde Daniel 6. 1. King 18. 19. c. the persecution of Dauid At the doores of the S●cibes Pharisies high priests and princes of the Iewes marking and viewing their crueltie against his sonne Iesus Christ and his holy Apostles At the doores of the persecuting Emperours to beholde their crueltie towards the blessed martyrs At the doores of all oppressours extortioners vsurers couetous persons iniurers and hurters of their brethren to see view marke and beholde with open eye the violence wickednes of men against his seruāts 2 As he is at hand and at the doore to see our miseries so also is he at the doore to deliuer vs from our enemies rescue vs from our oppressours Moises telleth Israel Deut. 4● that there is no God that cōmeth so neare to any people as the Lord commeth neare to them to helpe and deliuer them from all their dangers Dauid the princely prophet Psal 34. subscribeth and consenteth hereunto the Lord saith he is neare vnto them that are of a contrite heart and wil saue such as be afflicted in spirit to deliuer them for though many be the trobles of the righteous yet is the Lorde at hand to deliuer them Therefore saith he in another place God is our hope strength our helpe in trouble neare Psal 46. readie to be found And the Lord himselfe promiseth his presence to helpe his Church and defende it against all Isai 27. their oppressions and iniuries I the Lord sayth God doe keepe it that is his Church I will water it euery moment least any assault it I will keepe it night and day Thus is the Lord at hand thus standeth the iudge at the doore euermore prest and readie 3 The Iudge standeth at the doore to beholde our behauiour vnder the crosse and to see howe we take these afflictions which he suffereth according to
his good will to be laide vpon our loynes He is at hand to view whether through impacience we bite the lippe hang downe the heade wring the handes stampe with the foote stare with the eyes murmure with our mouthes or any wise frette fume or rage agaynst God or whether in the moderation and quietnesse of our mindes wee in inuincible fortitude manhoode and courage doe beare the oppressions of the wicked that either hee may punish our impaciencie our crowne our constancie with immortalitie and glorie This consideration might teach vs carefully therein to behaue our selues For as the eye of the mistres keepeth the maiden the eye of the parents the childe the eye of the maister his seruant in awe and in order euen so the presence of the Lorde and his watching and wakefull eye keepeth vs in our afflictions in godly moderation that therein we breake not out into rages through our impaciencie 4 Finally the Lord is at hand and the iudge at the doore to execute his iust iudgements vppon them that wrongfully afflict his seruants and powre out the vessels and vials of his wrath agaynst them that trouble his chosen So that albeit our persecutours and aduersaries for a time rage exercise their tyranny vpon vs yet they shall not endure and continue alwayes neyther shall they scape scotfree neyther shall they auoyde the reuenging hand of God which in it due time shall light vpon them in full weight and presse them to powder in his sore indignation who suffereth not the rodde of the wicked alwayes to bee vpon the righteous but by executing vengeaunce vppon their aduersaries giueth peace vnto Israel whereunto hee is readie for as a Iudge hee is at hande to reuenge the righteous and to punish also the wicked and cruell oppressours of his people This place of Saint Iames may easily teach vs that the cause of all impaciencie and desire of reuenge agaynst our aduersaries and all muttering and murmuring in our afflictions proceedeth and groweth from this wicked stocke roote heade or fountaine euen from the ignoraunce of the power and presence of God For were we throughly perswaded that God almightie seeth our miseries is able to deliuer vs beholdeth our behauiour vnder the crosse and will in due time auenge our cause vpon our enemies were we fullie assured that we are not left to the rashnesse and temeritie of foolish fortune and blinde chaunce which thinges Christians doe not acknowledge neither subiect to the willes pleasures crueltie and tyrannie of men but according to the good purpose of our God who numbreth euen euery heare of Matt. 10. our heades so that without his prouidence not one of them shall perish what a steppe would this make to pacience what quietnesse would it worke in our hearts what strong consolation and comfort would it cause in our afflictions howe effectually would it remooue all murmuring from vs that in all things we should holde fast the exhortation of the Apostle grudge not one against another brethren least you be condemned behold the iudge standeth before the doore Reasons why we should be pacient 4 The fourth and last thing in this treatise concerning pacience is the rendring of certaine reasons why the Saints of God ought to addres them to pacience vnder the crosse and the manifold afflictions of this life the reasons are foure as hath beene noted 1 From the example of the Prophets which haue spoken vnto vs in the name of the Lord. Which reason may thus be formed that which the holy Prophets of God haue suffered that wee by their example ought to suffer in like manner but the Prophets of God haue suffered aduersitie and haue had pacience we ought therefore to suffer in like manner and in all our troubles to haue pacience To reason from example of other and thereby to moue to pacience is most vsuall in holy Scripture Christ Matt. 5. our Sauiour exhorteth his to suffer paciently reuilements persecutions and all manner of euill by the example of the holy prophets whome men in their time Heb. 12. likewise persecuted The authour to the Hebrues reasoneth from the example of our Sauiour Christ wherby he stirreth and moueth the Iewes to pacience seeing we are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses let vs cast away euery thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth on so fast and let vs runne with pacience the race which is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the authour and finisher of the faith who for the ioye that was set before him endured the crosse despised the shame and is set downe at the right hand of the throne of God The Apostle S. Peter also reasoneth from the same 1. Pet. 2. example in sundrie places of his first Epistle to the same vertue but chiefly when he thus writeth hereunto are ye called for Christ also suffered for you leauing you an example that you should follow his steps Who when he was reuiled reuiled not againe when he suffered threatened not but committed it to him that iudgeth righteously in which place through the consideration and vew of Christs example the Apostle moueth Christian seruāts to abide with patience the heauie yoke of their harde seruitude vnder infidels and vnbelieuing maisters And our Apostle S. James persuading the saints and chosen seruants of God patiently to endure the cruel persecutiō and affliction of prophane rich men of this worlde draweth his first argument and reason from the example of the holy prophets take saith he my brethren the prophets for example of suffering aduersitie and of long patience which haue spoken vnto vs in the name of the Lord. The examples of Gods saints in generall who haue bene subiect to manifold afflictions therin haue quit themselues patient are many And leauing Abels suffering by Cain his brother Abraham his patiēce in the iniuries he suffered by the Egiptians Philistins princes of the east Isaac his patience in respect of the iniuries of Ismael and the Philistins Jacob touching the oppressions attempts and deuises of Esau Joseph by the patriarks his brethren and infinite the like the Apostle generally propoundeth vnto vs the example of the prophets which haue spoken vnto men in the name of the Lord. Which thing if we shall particularly vnfold let vs begin with Moses the great Prophete which spoke in the name of the Lorde to Pharao and the Egyptians to Israel and the Iewish people Exod. 5. 6. 16. Nu. 11. 16. the chosen people of God what vile speaches reproches and checkes bore he at the hands of Pharao what rebellions vprores false accusations suffered he at the hands of the people who is so blinde that seeth not or so ignorant which knoweth not How Elias was persequuted by 3. Kings 18. 19. 4. Kings 2. 9. Achab and Iesabel how Eliseus was mocked of the children and sought for by the king of Syriah to haue bene punished the stories aboundantly witnesse vnto all
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
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
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