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A34898 A cabinet of spirituall iewells wherein man's misery, God's mercy, Christ's treasury, truth's prevalency, errour's ignominy, grace's excellency, a Christian's duty, the saint's glory, is set forth in eight sermons : with a brief appendix, of the nature, equity, and obligation of tithes under the Gospell, and expediency of marriage to be solemnized onely by a lawfull minister ... / by John Cragge, M.A. ... Cragge, John, M.A. 1657 (1657) Wing C6783; ESTC R4552 116,039 199

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Lord alwaies and again I say Rejoyce By this zeal John Baptist leapt in his Mothers wombe at the presence of Mary conceiving By this zeal Simeon's trembling armes received heat to embrace our Saviour By this zeal the Angels rejoyce in heaven at a sinners conversion Surely it was a high pitch of affection and no affection but zeal that lift the soul of Diagoras of Chylon the Lacedemonian of the Roman VVidow off the hinges this affection was joy And as a high pitch of joy so strain the pegg of sorrow and it will prove zeal Joy a rapture for the present good sorrow a pressure for the present evill Rachell's sorrow for her Children Mourning and weeping and great lamentation Jeremiah's mourning for the captivity of the people Come and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow may make up the tale of zeal David's mourning all the day long watering of his couch Ezekiah's chattering as a swallow or crane in the desert is the fruit of zeal Hope when it is wafted with full sailes towards the Haven and like the Heliotrophium spreads it selfe towards the Sun of righteousnesse is zeal It was this zeal of strerched forth Hope that put this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or full assurance in Paul's mouth I am perswaded that neither death nor life c. shall be able to seperate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Rom. 8. 38. And as hope so fear when it is a Graduate in the University of the Soul puts on the habit of zeal this fear must be filiall Such zeal as this was the fear of Martyrs which feared God more then thousand deaths and burnings This zealous fear of God wrought in Ignatius this heavenly resolution Fire gallowes wilde beasts breaking of my bones quartering of my members crushing of my body and all the tortures of hell come upon me so that I may enjoy my Lord Jesus and his kingdome Anger when in the forge of the affections it receives a heat more than ordinary becomes zeal In this zeal Moses broak the Tables when he saw the golden Calfe set up Phinehas in this zeal thrust through the Adulterers Samuel slew Agag Hatred when it growes inveterate and headie Aeternum servans sub pectore vulnus is zeal This is the zeal that all Saints have towards sin Satan corruption Love when it is elevated to the height is zeal such love such zeal was that of Jonathan's love stronger than death stronger then the love of a woman 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rejoycing at anothers hurt when it is fixed upon the right object in a high measure is zeal that object must be malum poenae the evill of punishment not malum culpae the evill of sin In this zeal Moses and the Israel●tes sung a song of deliverance for the overthrow of Pharaoh Barak and Deborah for the death of Sisera This zeal wings David's Apostrophe to God VVash thy footsteps O Lord in the blood of thine enemies and laugh at their destruction Thus you see zeal consists not in anger love or sorrow alone but in a high pitch of all the affections or any of them In the second place we come to distinguish the severall kindes of zeal or by the touchstone of tryall to difference true from false All zeal is a fire and then true when like Eliah's fire it is from Heaven then false when like Nadab's and Abihu's it is strange fire such as God commands not False zeal may be fixed either upon the true or false object true zeal onely upon the right object When zeal is set upon the false object it may be great setting Churches and Commonweales in combustion but can never be good This wildfire is either Doctrinall in opinion or Practicall in conversation Doctrinall so the Turks are zealous for their Mahometan superstition and Alcaron the Ephesians for their Temple of Diana and silver Shrines the Church of Rome for their Popes Supremacy Images Indulgences the Brownists against the buildings of our Churches which they call Antichristian Synagogues Practicall in conversation when our zeal towards riches makes Mammom our God and things below that should be our Perspective-glasse to look towards Heaven proves our Looking-glasse when such is our zeal in Prayer that though we seem to petition first for spirituall things after for temporall our affections reads them backwards like figures valuing the latter ten times more than the former Again zeal may be false when it is fixed even upon the right object and that either in regard of the measure or means In regard of the measure either too cold which is remission or too hot which is superstition too cold and this is the temperature of carnall worldlings time-serving polititians formall professours that will seem to be Christians and yet will give no sheafe of their corn no penny of their talent no oyle of their cruse to the poor members of Christ Christians in name yet Devills incarnate indeed zealous for the smoak of their chimney's the watercourse of their channells the dust of their waies the bubble of their fame yet without any touch of conscience hear the name of God blasphemed see his Church profaned ruinated see the Fatherlesse wronged the Widow oppressed see the bleeding wounds of both Church and Common-wealth gaping Zeal upon the right object too hot which is superstition this zeale is either of them which are too hot for Ceremonies that they advance them into the chair of Substance punish the neglect of them as severely as blasphemy as murther as theft Too hot against Ceremonies that while they brand others with superstition surmount the highest Tower of superstition forsaking holy solemnities for a Ceremony the Sacrament for a gesture the Ministry for things of the least moment pay Tithe of Annise Mint and Cummine let passe the wonderfull things of God strain at a Gnat and swallow a Camell False zeal yet fixed upon the right object in regard of the means and ground upon which it is builded builded either upon ignorance our own ends or other men Ignorance of them that are hot in themselves a spur to others a censurer of all men that are slacker then they in duties that ought to be done yet they know no ground in Scripture no reason in Nature why This is false zeal the zeal of ignorant Romists to believe as the Church believes Zeal upon the right object for our own ends thus Judas was zealous for the bag the People in the Wildernesse for the Bread the Priests of Bell for the Wheat and Oyle those in Tertullian's time that went with the Christians to the Assembly of Prayer because they were commonly attended with Love-feasts This is false zeal because it is not a heat of the heart but of the stomack and may be so sincere as to arise out of the bowells yet it ends in the belly False zeal upon the right object when it is builded upon men zealous of the Word when it is
true Orthographie and charactering of his cares the Comma's Colons and Periods if any there be of his passions The second unfolds his Casuum discrimina a thousand diversities of dangers accidents varied with divers Cases with Genders of sorrow ingendring numberlesse declining that which is good and inclining to that which is evill The third displaies his misconstruction of Charity in not Concording and agreeing with equalls in not Governing his Inferiours in not submitting to the government of Superiours And what is the last but an Accenting of his griefes by severall pricks in the flesh and Scanning of things upon the fingers of human reason to tickle the ear of fancy and affection What is his Rhetorick but a Poyson cooked in a painted dish each Trope a translation from Purity to Corruption each Climax climbes up by degrees of renued griefe each Auxesis augments and each Hyperbole makes up the height of his hardship What is his Logick but an art of Reasoning to inform Reason of the losse of Reason each Predicament a Ladder of human frailty declaring the Substance of his body of death the Quantity and Quality of his sin in what Relation he stands to the Devill Hell and the Grave the guilt of every Action the sting of every Passion ubi quando Where When in what manner and Habit every sin was committed Demonstrating by causes and proving by Induction his destruction His Musick is a Modulation made up of diversity of maladies in place of melodies his birth by Originall sin sounds Base by Actuall Treble worse unconstant never keepes Tenour his life is a Cliffe his might a Minim his wit but a Crochet his wisdome a Quillet his glory but a Quaver Lord what is Man His Arithmetick deciphers the numberlesse number of his necessities adding subtracting dividing multiplying measuring all things by the rule of Golden number roules in a Circle and ends in a Cypher His Physick serves to seek out the symptomes of his sicknesse the brain conceives frenzies madnesse vertigoes in the brain the Eye sees three hundred diseases in the sight of the eye the Ear can hear of a Parotis or impostumated inflammation in the ear the tongue can tell of an Angina or Argurangina a Quincie or silver-Quincie in the throat which ties the tongue-strings The Hand can feel a Chiragra or Gout of bribery in the hand the Sinews are sensible of convulsions of worldly cares the Bowells of Tympanies or swellings of pride the Heart of a Cardialgia or carnall fear the whole Man of a noli me tangere impatience of admonition Thus Man is become the Anatomie of Misery and the Misery of Anatomy and yet his greatest misery is that he cannot help his misery making the whole World a Pesthouse the Earth an Aceldama or field of blood and the Sea a Golgotha or place of Sculs Thus what Man is in his body The next what in his Soul First What in regard of misery of losses Secondly What in regard of misery of crosses In regard of misery of losses the soul of Man hath lost blessings internall externall eternall Internall the perfect Image of the Creator the perfect knowledge of the Creature God Christ holinesse in heart uprightnesse in life union betwixt God and the soul which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very soul of the soul Lost blessings externall not Rivers of Milk Wine Oyle Mountaines of Gold Silver Diamonds not a world of Crownes Scepters Diadems these were but Blanks but the Prize in this Lottery lost was his lot of inheritance in Heaven communion with Saints and Angells in that inheritance that never fails Lost blessings eternall the glory of a Crown and a Crown of glory the blessed Vision and the vision of Blisse of the Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity Secondly what the Soul of Man is in regard of the misery of Crosses crossed with the stain of sin crossed with the pain of sin the stain of sin the Mind is stuffed with vanity the Understanding is darkened with ignorance the Will stiffned with stubbornesse hence the Soul is defiled with lust polluted with filthinesse outraged with passions over carried with affections pined with envy overcharged with gluttony surfetted with drunkennesse boyled with revenge transported with rage The pain of sin consists in consciousnesse of horrour of Conscience and sense of a reprobate sense This horrour meets a man in the dark and makes him leap in the night and makes him quake in his sleeps and makes him start in every corner and makes him think every Bush a Man every Man a Devill every Devill a messenger to fetch him quick to Hell By this Theodorick saw the face of a Man in the mouth of a Fish Nessus heard the noise of Murder in the voice of Birds Saunders run distracted over the Irish Mountains This made Cain wander Saul stab himselfe Judas hang himselfe Arius empty his bowells at the Stool Latomus cry desperately he was damned Julian confesse that he was conquered makes Man the Lord of all slave to all Lord what is Man Thus this Generall what degenerate Man is in this life the next what degenerate Man unregenerate is in his death Come to his Bed-side and see how darts of calamity dart him Stiches aches cramps feavours obstructions rheume flegme chollick stone winde as so many tempests and whirlwindes attempt him View his body sweating his members trembling the head shooting the face waxing pale the nose black the neather jaw-bone hanging down the eye-strings breaking the tongue faultring the breath shortning the throat ratling at every gasp the heart-strings cracking Thus strugling in comes Death Hells Purveyor to summon the Soul to Hell Reason accuses the Devill endites Memory gives evidence Conscience condemnes damned Spirits flutter like flies to catch this Spirit flying O then with what stentorious cries would it pierce the Clouds if it had a voyce to cry Help Eyes that were as quick-sighted in vanities as Lynceus and see for some comfort help Ears late organs of melody and hearken for some comfort help tongue that was my Suada-Orator or Demostenes perswade Satan affright Death flatter Hell and tell my soul some comfort Help Feet that were my wings of swiftnesse and quickly fetch some comfort help hands that were my Sword and Buckler quiet my conscience stop hells mouth banish Satan and minister me some comfort Alas the Eyes are closed up the Ears deaf the Tongue speechlesse the Feet lame the Hands dead not able to remove the slime that stops the breath and Man that was even now a Body and Soul is a stinking Carcase without Soul Lord what is Man Thus Death is displayed Next what degenerate Man is after death A man of Death fewell of Hell fire lashed with Satyrs wounded with Scorpions scourged with Furies sting'd with Dragons gnawen with Vipers still rowling the Stone of sorrow with Sisyphus turning the restlesse Wheel with Ixion hungring and thirsting freezing and burning with Tantalus burning with heat freezing with cold
them back again Thus much this forequoted speech of Solomon imports as if he had said You that solace your selves with all delights in the heat of your blood well go on in your courses banish dull and sad thoughts with the purest Wine shake off your fits of melancholly with peals of laughter sleep on in the laps of your Dalilah's chear up your selves with Pipe and Tabret and the sweetest Musick yet a little more sleep a little more slumber live on as though there were no Heaven no Hell no Wrath no Judgment Yet know this and know it you must that God hath his hook in your nostrills and ere long his wrath and fury shall wax hot against you like fire Job goes about to inform gluttons and worldly minded men men hardest of beliefe in the truth of this Doctrine Job 20. 23. When he is about to fill his belly God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him and shall rain it upon him while he is eating 27. The heaven shall reveal his iniquity and the earth shall rise up against him the increase of his house shall depart and his good shall flow away in the day of his wrath Even the Church of God it selfe that like a wanton Minion had put far from her the evill day was glad to confesse this and that with ruefull moan to complain Lam. 1. 12. Is it nothing to you all ye that passe by behold and see if there be any sorrow like to my sorrow which is done unto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger A day of anger indeed Lam. 2. 21. The young and the old lie on the ground in the streets my virgins and my young men are fallen by the sword thou hast slain them in the time of thine anger thou hast killed and not pittyed Gods anger is such a flame as cannot be quenched his day of anger such a day as neither wisdome nor honour nor riches nor gold can ransome us from Ezek. 7. 19. They shall cast their silver in the streets and their gold shall be removed their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the Lord. It is not Crownes imperiall nor Thrones nor Diadems that can escape this day Ps 110. 5. The Lord at thy right hand shall strike through Kings in the day of his wrath Therefore the holy Ghost to note the certainty of Gods anger calls it a day of wrath of fierce wrath a day of displeasure hot displeasure heavy displeasure a day of Gods vengeance Jer. 46. 10. A day of the Lord and a cloudy day Ezek. 30. 3. A day of darknesse and of gloominesse a day of clouds and thick darknesse Joel 2. 2. Arguments and reasons further to confirm it may be these The first is drawn from the nature of God who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity unpunished a consuming fire that the stubble is burned up before him a God of glory that Dagon cannot stand in his presence a light that cannot dwell with darknesse a jealous God that burnes the chaffe with unquenchable fire wounds Kings and spews all workers of iniquity out of his mouth For in Creatures wherein by reason of the antipathy of their nature and humours there is but a finite distance there can scarce be any agreement the Vine will not thrive in the same place with the Colwort the Elephant is enraged at the sight of a Ram one Bird and Beast pursues another with eager pursuit Then how much more shall God who is infinitely holy everlastingly good eternally happy threaten punish be angry at take revenge upon sin that abuses his mercy despises his justice defaces his image What man will not take care to break a Cockatrice eggs and kill a Serpent And shall not God in the day of his fierce wrath take revenge upon sin which that old Serpent Satan brought into the world The reason why men are not angry at those crimes that deserve Phinehas his zeal and Samuel's indignation is because our understanding cannot see the hainousnesse of them our wills cannot sufficiently desire revenge our affections with eagernesse pursue them But God understands and wills and hates as things are in themselves and as they deserve The second Reason may be drawn from Gods Will who justly decreed to poure down the fierce Vialls of his wrath in the day of his wrath upon all disobedient persons See Deuter. 28. the curses and comminations God in his anger threatned to bring upon the people See if he do not set apart the wicked for fuell of his wrath against this day Prov. 16. 5. The Lord made all things for himselfe yea even the wicked for the day of evill Now if God be willing to poure out his heavy displeasure upon those that displease him what can hinder his mighty arme for performing Creatures indeed may be angry but oftentimes like Drones without stings cannot hurt as Canons charged with powder without shot onely makes a roaring like the Popes Bulls threatens many hurts none but them whose consciences are enslaved Saul may be angry at David but cannot finde him out but from Gods all-piercing eye none can hide himselfe Satan may desire to kill Job Jonah may be angry till death for N●niveh's preservation yet God puts a bitt in both their mouths which if he be angry nothing can be holden out of his reach Princes if they take captives may have the rescued from them again as Lot was from the King of Sodom bought with a price as Joseph of the Ishmaelites But no power can rescue us from Gods anger no ransome but Christs blood redeem us Gods Will being set afoot all his Attributes follow if his Will say Be angry his Eye seekes out the object of his anger and findes it his wisdome tempers the cup his hand whets the sword his arme strikes the blow Thus you see there is a time of Gods anger for sin because he will have it so The third Reason that there is a time when God is angry is drawn from the cause which in generall is sin and in speciall the contempt and contumacious despight we offer unto God in every sin we commit The Apostle uses the same reason Rom. 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Despisest thou the riches of his goodnesse and forbearance and long suffering The conclusion he infers is this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou treasurest up to thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God Nebuchadnezzar was angry at the three Children for contempt of worshipping of his Image and threw them into the hot fiery Furnace Daniel for the like was throwne into the Lions den Shall Kings wrath burn thus like fire for despising of their unlawfull decrees and then shall not God who is a consuming fire be angry at us vile wormes for despising of his pure holy and wholsome Lawes which the Angells dare not
promised to be a Husband to the widow a Father to the fatherlesse a succour to the poor a guide to the stranger They that offer wrong to these strive to separate those whom God hath wedded to himselfe by holy affections by promises by his Son Jesus Therefore see what God saies Exod. 22. 22. Ye shall not afflict any widow or fatherlesse child if thou afflict them in any wise and they cri● at all unto me I will surely hear their cry and my wrath shall wax hot and I will kill you with the sword and your wives shal be widowes and your children father lesse Lastly all filthy unnaturall and abominable lusts of the flesh these rebell against the spirit anger God the Father of spirits witnesse the adultery of David for which the sword never departed from his house those thousands of Benjamites that were slain for abusing the Levit's wife those Cities of Sodom and Gomorrah that were buried in the fiery flakes of brimstone Thus we have discovered a few of the chiefest of those sins that provoke Gods anger By these and all others let us examine our souls and sit an audit in our consciences whether we have any share in kindling of Gods anger or no. O that many mens consciences did not tell them without examination and that we did not see by daily experience that Hos 4. 2. by swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing of adultery men break out that blood touches blood Thus much for the Use of Examination The next Use is of Enquiry if it be so that we have angered God how we may foresee and know the day of his anger Mariners desire to so see a storm diggers in Mines a damp souldiers would be forewarned that they may be fore-armed against the comming of their enemies The tru●h is God for the most part keeps the expresse day of his anger in his secret will to himselfe yet many times shewes that it is near and those are either such as must infallib●y come to passe as the last Judgment or are revealed to us with a condition as Niniveh shall be destroyed if they repent not Jerusalem shall be demolished if she will not know the day of her visitation Judas shall smart for it if he betray his Lord and Master and these events which are conditionally proposed to us may be known three waies First by the threatnings and menaces of Gods Prophets and Ministers for they are his mouth and as long as they speak his Word cannot lie If the Prophet tell Zedechiah that if he go to the Battle he must be slain tarry at home he must or die If Daniel tell Nebuchadnezzar that God was angry at the great Tree he must either give over his beastly lusts or live with the beasts So when Gods Ministers threaten a day of anger against any Nation Citie Family for their proud transgressions it must of necessity come to passe either here or hereafter be repented of here or for ever punished hereafter The second signe whereby we may know that the day of Gods anger is at hand are lesser plagues that he sends as fore-runners and harbingers of severer wrath like Tamberlain he first hangs out his Ensigne of peace then his red Crosse of justice and musters smaller plagues against us if then we return not and strike a League he hangs out his black Flag of implacable wrath skirmaging and massacring till neither Prince nor People root nor branch be left He is like a Man of war discharges a warning-piece at his enemies if they despise that quits the Hatches of them with a second strikes off their mani-Mast with a third and so sinks them He sends little flashes before the great thunder-crack come Hence it is that his anger is first compared to a smoak then to a kindling of fire then to a flame of fire then to a consuming fire then to an unquenchable fire He sent to the Egyptians Frogs Lice Locusts Murrain Blood Darknesse Hail Death of the First-born and lastly an utter Overthrow Christ Matth 24. having told Jerusalem of warrs rumours of warrs troubles famines pestilences earthquakes ends his speech with a nondum finis yet is not the end these are but the beginnings of trouble To apply What shall we think God meant by the late threatning of dearth and famine such streams of blood-shed in our neighbour Nations feavours and pestilences scattered abroad as though the destroying Angell were shooting at Rovers I will not conclude that his day of anger is at hand and that he will make us the Butt at which he will discharge his whole Quiver of Arrowes but this I say that either repentance or destruction must follow Neither is it the least signe that a day of vengeance is at hand and that the Lord hath a controversie with his people when he takes holy and religious men zealous Ministers from amongst them If a Seal be plucked from an Evidence it argues the whole Writing shall be torn assunder cancelled throwne in the fire burned Godly men are as a Signet on Gods hand Seales and Pledges that he will not destroy the righteous with the wicked A royall Priesthood whom he oftentimes takes away that they may not see the ensuing misery as Pearles pluck'd from Rings Wheat gathered from the Tares foretells the one must to the furnace to be new moulded the other to the fire to be burn'd As children taken from the breasts of mothers adjudged to die that they may not see their execution Thus God sent Lot and his Family out of Sodom and then rained down fire and brimstone upon them After God had taken away the godly King Iosiah what miseries and calamities like waves one in the neck of another pursued the Jewes till their utter desolation The third signe whereby to know that a day of God's anger is at hand is his suffering of sin long to raigne unpunished Vespasian had for his Ensigne an Anchor with a Dolphin painted in it an Anchor to signifie that he was slow in comming a Dolphin that he was fierce in taking revenge It is the Tree that continues unpruned that must be hewen down the Oxen that go in fat Pastures that must to the shambles So sinners if God feed them it is but to fat them for the knife if he preserve them it is but for further judgment This is not the least token that God hath sealed us up unlesse we repent for the day of his anger What heart though harder than Adamant would not bleed to think of the scourges of other Countries The streets running with blood the Cities burning with fire the children slain in the parents sight the old gray heads dyed in crimson blood the young led into captivity while while we are hedg'd about on every side with peace wallow in abundance and which is worse in unthankfulnesse in sin What good could we not yet promise this our Nation But when the Streets rings with swearing and profanenesse Markets
21. which St. Paul presses Heb. 12. 1 2. Let us run with patience the race that is set before us looking unto Jesus the Author and finisher of our faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the crosse and despised the shame Fourthly these sharp humours have run in all the veines of the mysticall body of Christ hitherto no afflictions befall us but such as are accomplished in our brethren that are in the world Joseph was in prison Daniel in the Lion's den the three Children in the fiery furnace Job on the dunghill Lazarus prostrate at the rich Man's gates the blessed Virgin 's heart was pierced with a sword the Apostles in the gaole And we have a promise that the God of all grace after we have suffered a while will make us perfect stablish strengthen and settle us And that God of his fidelity will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that we may be able to bear it Fiftly God hath put bounds to the storms of this troublesome Sea huc usque thus far the waves shall rage and no further Thirty years were appointed the sick man at Bethesda's pool twelve years to the woman with the bloody issue three months to Moses ten daies of tribulation to the Angell of the Church of Smyrna three daies plague to D●vid Yea the number of the godly mans tears are registred in Gods book and the quantity kept in his bottle they are but a showr that will end in sun-shine a troublesome torrent that will waft us to the haven of rest Be faithfull unto death and thou shalt receive a Crown of life Sixtly we are called to give an account of our Stewardship how we have improved our Talent to repetitions in Christs school to see how much faith patience and godlinesse we have learned all this while and whether we cannot like ●ob receive at the hand of God some evill as well as we have hitherto received a confluence of good As therefore we have alwaies prayed Thy will be done so let us not be now offended at this which is done by his holy will Seventhly meditate that all things shall work together for the best to them that love God insomuch that neither death nor life nor Angells nor principalities nor powers shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Every pang is a prevention of hellish pains every sanctified respite an earnest of heavens rest It is but the Crosse of Christ sent before to c●ucifie the love of the world in us let us therefore with Simon of Cyrene carry it after him the pains will shortly passe the joy will never passe away Lastly consider there is no equality no proportion betwixt the houre of temptation here and the everlasting jubilee hereafter As is the centre to the circumference an instant to eternity a molehill to a mountain a drop of water to the sea so are the Saints crosses to their crownes as is the earth little or nothing in respect of heaven so is our earthly sufferings in respect of it therefore glory is called the kingdome of God of the Father of Heaven Abraham's bosom Matth. 8. 11. it 's called a Paradise of pleasure wherein is the Tree of life the house of our Father all fulnesse of joy the new Jerusalem an inheritance incorruptible undefiled that fades not away reserved in the highest heavens It 's called the glory of God our glory rest refreshment such felicity as neither eye hath seen ear hath heard neither hath it entred into the heart of man For it is the habitation of God of Christ of the holy Ghost as great a difference as there is betwixt a Snailes house and a Palace a Tortoise shell and Solomon's Temple Jonah's Gourd and the Towers of Ninivey so much and more difference is betwixt heaven and any thing that can be upon earth We see this is the composure of the World that finest things are scituated in the highest places the earth as grossest is put in the lowest room the Water above the Earth the Aire above the Water the Fire above the Aire the Sphears of Heaven purer then any of them above the rest which you see beautified with Sun Moon and Stars shining more gloriously then all the pretious Stones in the world and all this but the neather side of the pavement of that Palace then what shall be the glory of the Heaven of Heavens within able to drink up all afflictions as the Sea does the River Iordan There are three distinct places in which every Saint successively is resident first in his mother's wombe secondly in the world thirdly in heaven As much as the whole Universe is larger then our mothers wombe so much is heaven larger and ampler than it for if one star exceed the earth so much in bignesse then what shall the heavens that contain infinite stars Secondly as in largenesse so in time our time to be in our mothers wombs is but nine months but on earth it may be an hundred times nine months but our beeing in heaven is without period of daies months or years Thirdly as no man can remember what sorrow he had in his mothers wombe so shall our joies in heaven drink up all our sufferings upon earth And this glory consists either essentially in the beatificall vision or operatively in the effects it works in us Essentially in the beatifical vision though the Familists and Millenaries understand it not confounding grace and glory but no man upon earth hath seen God neither can he be seen that is perfectly it is true we may see God here in a naturall vision in his Creatures as in a Glasse wherein some splendour of his glory shines he may be seen in a specular or symbolicall vision by signes and characters of his glory so Moses is said to have seen Gods hinder parts Esa 6. 1. I saw the Lord sitting upon his throne high and lifted up his house was full of maj●sty and the Seraphims stood about him We see God here by the vision of faith when by Doctrine of Christ his Son and the operation of the Spirit we know the will of the Father But the beatificall vision in heaven is to behold God and Christ Jesus face to face we shall see him as he is no veiles being put betwixt us Stay here and pause a while What comfort will this be to see the Lamb sit upon his seat of state If the wise men of the East came so far and rejoyced to see him in the manger what will it be to see him sitting in his glory If St. Iohn Baptist did leap at his presence in his mothers wombe what shall this his presence do in his royall and eternall Kingdome If the Queen of Sheba was astonished at the sight of Solomon what shall we be at the sight of millions of Saints in his Court