Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n abraham_n prophet_n zion_n 48 3 9.0475 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A02178 The workes of the reuerend and faithfull seruant af Iesus Christ M. Richard Greenham, minister and preacher of the Word of God collected into one volume: reuised, corrected, and published, for the further building of all such as loue the truth, and desire to know the power of godlinesse. By H.H.; Works Greenham, Richard.; Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1612 (1612) STC 12318; ESTC S120843 1,539,296 988

There are 31 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

all ioy so God would not haue vs to murther all griefes but that the remembrance of our bodies turned to moules and of soules called to the booke should correct our vnruly hearts remembring in our deepest ioyes the lamentable cries of Syon and accompting our delight to be but as the ruines of Babell 12 Oh that men would feare and follow the Lorde Well follow they must one way or other If wee will not follow the shepheard to the folde we must follow the butcher to the shambles if we chuse rather to goe to the shambles then to the fold we are sheepe indeede and worse then sheepe too But men haue gotten an old distinction when they are not able to turne their sicke bones on their beds they then will bring a dish of sinnes and dryed skinnes to the Lorde but how vnacceptable a sacrifice such refuses are Malachit doth tell them and they shall one day trie it 13 If yee aske whether a man may not lawfully desire to be in the Ministerie or no I answere that in the Ministery are two things a worke and a worship a dutie and a dignitie the worke or dutie to the glorie of God and good of his Church a man may desire but the worship and dignitie to serue our owne loose mindes is not to be desired 14 It is the wisedome of God in his holie word not onely to instruct vs in things concerning our saluation but also to teach vs in things of this life For although all things be good in the ordinance of God yet they are not good to vs vnlesse by knowledge and faith we be able to vse them according to the ordinance of God with prayer and thanksgiuing And as it is not sufficient to be a good man onely but a good man must vse good things So it is not enough to vse good things alone but he that must vse them must see himselfe to be a good man that is to haue his heart clensed by faith and by prayer whereby he is assured that he hath fetched the interest from Christ who hath and giueth title to all being himselfe the heire of the world 15 When we examine our selues we are to sit in iudgement on our selues and to keepe a solemne court in our owne consciences to su●uay our memorie our wit our senses our members and to see how we haue vsed them but yet so as least we should be too fa●ourable to our selues either in not espying out our sinnes or in not condemning our sinnes still we remember to make the law the Iudge but Christ the answerer of t●e Iudge 16 If God his children are readie to slip in a moment how much more dangerous is the estate of the wicked who are willing to fall continually 17 It is wonderfull to see a poore sinner readie to swound and fall dead almost at euery little sinne when nothing in the world doth feare him or driue him to this feare and yet when aduersitie strange iudgements of God persecution death come to be exceeding patient and comfortable couragious and valiant and againe it is straunge to see others who maruell that men will suffer themselues to be feared with sinne and aske what men meane to stand trembling at the word yet let sicknes come or if the hand of God be vpon them or let death come towards thē they quaile at the name of sicknes hell or death and either they proue very senselesse blocks or else they be in a most desperate estate Yea if God begin to reckon with them euery stirring of a mouse shaking of a leafe mouing of a shadow euery noise of the eare euery countenance of a godly man euery chirping of a bird or drawing neere of the least and weakest creature towards them appalles their courage and makes them most fearefull cowards They most feare when God his iudgements are executed which feare least when they are threatned and they feare least when God his iudgements are accomplished which tremble most when his wrath is denounced Wherefore as we most long for courage and most lothe cowardlines when the euill day approcheth so let vs labour for a good conscience which breedeth t●ue boldnes flie far from sinne which bringeth a spirit of feare on vs. And surely experimentall wisdome may teach vs that it is better to feare the euill to come when onely feare and no euill is vpon vs than to feare then when besides the feare the affliction itselfe so sorely presseth vs that we haue no libertie or leaue to breathe for any comforts or to hope for any deliuerance 18 We are wont to ascribe the afflictions of the Church or Common-wealth the defect of right discipline and gouernment to the sinnes of the Magistrates when rather if we consider things with a single eye our owne sinnes haue begot such fruites For that God who rather loueth many than one that God who for tenne good men would haue spared whole Sodom who rather taketh away Saul a sinful gouernour than punisheth his louing Israel being humbled subiects knoweth rather to take away the King if the subiects be good than he desireth to alter the whole estate for the sin of one vnlesse it be when both Prince and people agree together in sin That God which euen in the time of the Church remaining but in a few families would rebuke Kings as Phara●h and Abimelech that they should doe his Prophets Abraham and Isaac no harme ●oubtlesse the sinnes of the people doe breede defects of well doing in Princes When Israel began to sinne the Lord withdrawing his grace from Dauid left him to the numbring of his people The Altars were not taken away and why in the time of Iosiah The holy Ghost saith the people had not prepared their hearts to walke with the Lord their God 19 It is farre otherwise in our Christian profession than in the profession of other Arts. Physitians loue to haue some secret experiments wherein they haue a singularitie and which in their life they will communicate to none Lawyers haue some points which they will not make common but keepe for present and priuate gaine But this is rather a note of pride and of a conceited minde in heauenly things than of godlinesse For as true godlinesse forewarneth others of that sinne the sting torment filthinesse whereof we haue found so it traineth vp others to that fruit of holinesse whose beautie glorie and excellencie we haue both tasted and proued 20 It euer hath beene and is that prayer or comming to the diuine Seruice as they call it and resorting to the Sacraments haue beene more accompted of than the word hearing of it preached Many of superstition may thus come to prayer and of custome resort to the Sacrament who either doe not at all heare the word or else they heare it at their leisure or else they doe it but in ceremonie without vnderstanding or if they vnderstand it
by his terming of them excellent ones such as are fit as well to doe good as to receiue good from others Wherfore the Apostle saith Rom. 1. 12. that he desired to receiue mutual comfort by thē Secondly this appeareth by the opposition of the verse following which is of the worship of God and therefore it cannot be restrained to outward things Againe in that verse he maketh mention of false worshippers as here he nameth excellent ones meaning that he would vse the benefit of them to waine himselfe from false worshippers as men will frequent the companie of the learned that desire learning and they that will haue their lips schooled by the law of grace will oft resort to the graue speeches of the wise And surely it is a speciall helpe to further our selues in the pure worship of God if we diuorce our selues from the crue of false worshippers and wholy espouse our selues to the fellowship of them that worship in spirit and in truth This reason also may appeare to be generall because it followeth in the order of our confession of our faith that we beleeue the holy and vniuersal congregation the communion of Saints and this communion is in receiuing as well as in giuing and therefore being vnderstood of such a mutuall participation of gifts from one to another it must followe as a particular part thereof that wee be readie to doe good And where he saith All my delight is in them that is in the Saints we must not thinke that he meant to take away ciuill dutie from them that were in authoritie for that must be giuen to them in outward things yet in our hearts and in our affections the graces of God his children must be most esteemed In respect whereof when Iames saith Iam. 1. 2. that the Iewes had their faith in respect of persons when they were wont to say to the rich Sit thou here in a good place and to the poore Stand there his meaning was to rebuke them for that they so highly despised the one and so vily esteemed the other Wherefore wee must learne alwaies to giue vnto Caesar that which belongeth to Caesar but God his children must alwaies bee neerest our heart And this was it that our Sauiour Christ saith that they which heard the word and did the same were his mother his brother and his sister not that he lightly regarded his mother for he was a patterne of obedience to all children yet he loued her more as she was the daughter of God than as shee was his mother Likewise we reade that hee answered the woman that cried vnto him Blessed is the wombe that bare thee and the paps that gaue thee sucke His mother no doubt had as singular blessings as euer were giuen to woman in outward things in that she brought forth the Sauiour of all mankinde howbeit herein she was chiefly blessed in that she beleeued in him to bee her Redeemer That are in the earth See hee maketh mention of the Saints here on earth and speaketh no of the Saints which are in heauen from whom as we are seuered in body so are we also in the soule and wee haue no dealing with them either in soule or bodie Wherefore it is ●●●d of the Prophet Abraham knoweth not vs. True it is that the Lord maketh his Angels ministers vnto vs and therfore sending them to doe any thing he maketh it known vnto them Howbeit wee reade no such thing of the Saints that are dead who as they know nothing of vs or our estate which onely is knowne to the Lord and are not vsed as ministers of the Lord so they cānot heare or helpe vs as some foolishly haue imagined The Saints which are dead may be in some respect remembred but in no case worshipped remēbred I say not for their power to be prayed vnto but for their vertues to bee imitated Wherefore in Heb. 11 the holy Ghost setteth downe a register catalogue of the Saints that seeing wee are compassed with so great a clowde of witnesses wee must cast away euery thing that presseth downe and sinne that hangeth so fast on that we may run with patience the race that is set before vs. Here wee see these are set before that wee might so farre followe them as they followe Christ and in this respect they are called witnesses but to honour them as God or to appoint holy daies vnto them or for them it is not lawfull But behold when it was painful to the belly gods of Rome to remember the good life of the Saints to follow them than which nothing is more grieuous to them the diuell to drawe them from this inuented a more easie way for flesh and blood and taught them an easier lesson by appointing in the stead of this holy and painfull imitation a carnall and voluptuous rabble of holidaies vnto the Saints and that as they said for the better remembrance of them and thus that transformed Angell of light knoweth how to transforme pure religion In like manner whē it was an hard thing to preach Christ crucified because it would call them to a sight feeling and forsaking of their sinnes and so they were made more vnquiet the diuell found out an easier way and for sooth would haue Christ painted vpon the crosse in their Church windowes which was a thing more easie to behold being pleasant to the eye than it was to heare that sinne should bee crucified in them if euer they would hope for the fruite of Christ his death Againe when they could not away with bearing the crosse of losse of name of friends goods and life for Christs sake they thought it was good to professe it by wearing some crosse about them or by erecting in euery place a crosse of wood stone or such like thing But let vs learne to be prouoked by the graces of God in his Saints to follow them in goodnesse and labour to haue Christ crucified in our hearts by the ministerie of the word euer preparing our selues in truth to beare the crosse of Christ by preferring the pure profession of his Gospell before any thing in the whole world deare vnto vs. Besides we are here to learne that if our delight be in God his Saints on the earth wee must be farre from vsing them maliciously or speaking of them cruelly This delight then must bee to receiue some profit and benefit by these graces which they haue also to vse to the comfort of the childrē of God whatsoeuer good we haue receiued For as well the seruant which puts not out his talent with gaine was punished as those that contemned the talent Neither in truth haue we any right vse of the gifts which wee haue receiued of God vnlesse we put them out by imparting them to our brethren in loue and so the gaine may returne by holy reuenewes to the Lord himselfe neither haue we truly learned any thing vnlesse wee haue in some measure communicated it with others
helpe them nor their opinions comfort them This then may commend vnto vs the word of God that it onely maketh vs safe and staieth vs in all troubles wherefore it is said port 12. 4. Except thy law had beene my delight I should haue perished in mine affliction So the Prophet Ionah hath a notable sentence worthie to be written in letters of gold and of all men to be remembred Ionah 2. 18. They that waite vpon lying vanities forsake their owne mercie Whereby he sheweth that they which depend on any thing saue on God alone refuse their owne felicitie and that goodnesse which otherwise they should receiue of God So that the Prophet himselfe in not going to Niniuie waited on vanitie and could finde no comfort in himselfe We may for a time trust to Idolatrie or vngodlinesse but when the touch-stone and triall of Gods law comes they cannot stay vs nor saue vs for they will deceiue all vsers of them as false and vaine 1. Sam. 12. 21. Samuel exhorting the people to repētance willeth them to follow the Lord and not to turne backe saying also If ye turne backe that should be after vaine things which cannot profit you nor deliuer you for they are but vanitie Where he teacheth vs that when miseries come our delights are but vaine and therefore cannot helpe vs. The Scriptures also applie this to ill manners as Ephes. 5. the Apostle setting downe a bedrow of many sinnes addeth this Let no man deceiue you c. where because some thinke that for such sinnes God would be entreated he saith nay not so be not deceiued vnlesse ye repent God will not be entreated Likewise Gal. 5. the Apostle hauing taught them to prouide temporall things for them that minister spirituall saith be not deceiued where he hath this sense ye may haue many reasons with your selues against this doctrine but when God commeth to tread downe the wicked then your reasons will not stand before his maiestie for the truth onely there preuaileth doe not deceiue your selues your hope will abuse you And here all flattering of our selues in sinne will prooue deceiueable wee walke in a nette and deceiue our owne consciences but this must make vs feare we must not reckon without our hoast nor make our account without our auditour for if we doe we will beguile our selues or flatter our selues Let euery man therefore looke to the fleights of sinne in himselfe and to the deceit of his owne conscience and he shall see that all the wayes of man are euill but the Lord is for euer true Wee must thus examine our selues Good Lord will this thing stay mee in the day of trouble will this thing comfort mee in the houre of death then it is a sure thing then it is comfortable otherwise it is vaine and cannot stay me it is deceitfull and will not comfort me Now if we trust in the word wee shall in death knowe that it is no imagination howsoeuer the world would now perswade vs that we liue too precisely and Sathan lyeth to get vs at a bay we shall then know our labour was not lost and when the Lord commeth to iudgement if we haue laide a good foundation when the tempests arise the windes arise and the raine fall we shall be sure and not beguile our selues that we shall be on the rocke of Gods word and built in faith wee shall bee sure as mount Sion and safe as Ierusalem when the floods of vengeance come Vers. 119 Thou hast taken away all the wicked of the earth like drosse therefore I loue thy testimonies MArke the proprietie of the word he saith not thy statutes doe I loue but thy testimonies he saith here thus much seeing O God thou hast summoned the wicked I will embrace more ioyfully the record and couenant of my saluation made vnto mee in thy word For when we see Gods iudgements on the vngodly this ought wonderfully to commend Gods mercie in free sauing vs from the like that whereas wee were in the like condition of sinne he might haue measured the like to vs and yet vouchsafed to make his couenant in force vnto vs. Was it not a great mercie to saue Noah and his when all the world besides was washed away with water Did it not wonderfully commend the goodnesse of God that in the great destruction of Sodome he should deliuer Lot What a thing is this that the Lord will make a couenant with vs as with Noah that if wee shall trust in Christ we shall neuer be confounded Againe when the man of God seeth the wicked deceiued because they trusted not in the word this maketh him to loue the word and assureth him that there is an end of all perfection but the law of God is exceeding large that it neuer failes in trouble nor deceiueth any in death Wherfore this must make vs to loue it also And if wee compared this word with other vanities of the world and felt in it such ioyes and most specially in death and in troubles and that when all failes this doth minister sufficient comfort surely the perswasion hereof would mooue vs pathetically to expresse our mindes and say with the Prophet Oh how loue I thy lawe it is my meditation continually Then when our strength shal faile our breath draw short our friends depart our goods countrie and life shall forsake vs the word will be so sweete so deare and so pretious that when all these are gone this will yeeld vs great comfort We haue also learned here a further thing in the minde of the Prophet who reasoneth thus Seeing thou hast troden downe the wicked as earth and scoured them as drosse therefore will I embrace thy couenants and records of thy iudgements therfore the euidence of thy couenant which thou hast made to me is most holy and pretious For when the iudgements of God were so seuere against others was it not the great mercie of God to make a couenant with him Was it not a wonderfull grace of God that being conceiued and borne in sinne like vnto the other hee should escape Gods iudgement Was not it a great mercie that when all flesh should perish Noah and his familie should escape Was it not the great goodnesse of God when Sodome was consumed to saue Lot When the Lord had left all to ignorance was it not his great mercie to preserue Abraham When the Lord ouerthrewe the Egyptians was it not free mercie to saue the Israelites Was it not the great grace of God to leade forward Caleb and Iosua into the promised land when to so many he had denied it Our Sauiour Christ gaue thankes to his Father as for a speciall mercy of God that he had reuealed those things to babes and little ones which he had concealed from many mightie of the world If we consider how many are left in ignorance giuen ouer to superstition and remaine vnder the heauie hand of God what a mercie of God
vs●st to doe to them that loue thy name c. The words in their proper tongue signifie thus much According to thy in lgements which thou do●st execute to them that loue thy name according to that in the fourth verse of the seuenth portion I remember thy iudgements of old o Lord and haue bene comforted His meaning therefore in these former words is not fully expressed Here we may learne the necessarie vse of this word and how needfu●l a thing it is and how speciall a gift it is of God his wisedome rightly to discerne and distinguish the words Iudgements as we haue often fore shewed is taken either for executing the threatnings of the Lord denounced in wrath and in desert or else for the performance of his promises made in compassion and of mercie His meaning briefly is be mercifull in iudging me as thou art wont to iudge thy seruants let me haue iudgement in mercie and enter not into the iudgement of my sinnes for no flesh then shall be saued and deale with me as with thy deare seruant If we be guiltie of our owne crosses we must acknowledge our sinnes as the iust causes thereof for neuer any of the children of God obtained mercie without this We are then in trouble to looke to the promises of God if we by faith can finde the like testimonie of a good conscience but when we see our sinnes to be the cause of our troubles or that it is the Lord his hand of iustice vpon vs we cannot in truth vse this prayer of the Prophet There is a iudgement in righteousnesse and there is a iudgement in mercy Of the first the man of God speaketh when he saith Enter not into iudgement c. the iudgement in righteousnesse of the second the Prophet Ieremie speaketh Correct me O Lord yet in iudgement that is in the iudgement of mercy and fatherly correction And because we faile for the most part either in our outward actions or inward affections we had neede to pray that the Lord would deale with vs according to his mercifull iudgement True it is that the Saints of God doe say O God of my righteousnesse O God of my saluation but that is to be vnderstood in respect of men and not in respect of God but they that come with their case to be iudged and pleaded before God must needes say Lord be mercifull to thy seruants We must neuer draw neere then in prayer before the Lord without this clause that the Lord would accept vs in Christ hi● obedience and that we doubt not of mercy when the Lord iudgeth vs in his Christ. Here we are to obserue how the Prophet maketh an experience of the Lord his dealing and thus reasoneth with him I see thou Lord dealest mercifully with them that loue thee but I loue thee therefore Lord deale mercifully with me This deceiueth many we reade not the word of God for imitation or as thinking that those affections which we reade to haue been in the children of God are to be required in and of vs also but let vs know that whatsoeuer haue been the strangest and rarest affections of God his children they are for vs to follow For though we cannot attaine to them in the like measure that this man of God because we will not deny that he had a greater measure of Gods spirit than we haue yet we must by vsing the like meanes attaine to some measure if not an hundred fold yet threescore and thirtie fold Now we see that he hauing obtained the like graces with God his people craueth here the like mercies with thē For his sense is euident as thou diddest not make a couenant with thy seruants after their sinnes but according to thy mercy euen so Lord deale with me Here is no speciall thing mentioned but he setteth downe that which hath been and may be in the children of God He prayeth no● for any speciall mercie then but for that mercy which by experience he hath seene ratified in others likewise he speaketh not here of any extraordinary graces of God his holy spirit but of thē which are ordinarie and incident to any one of God his children as to another although not in like measure And surely we haue not the like mercies with them because we haue not the like graces that they had To loue the word of God as gold to gape after it to breath and ●●nt for it are singular gifts of God but giuen to none in that time with such speciall prerogatiue as they may not in some measure be giuen to the Saints of God in our time if we soloued the Lord. For that which the Apostle Peter said of them that feared the Lord to wit the Lord hath no respect of persons but they that feared the Lord are accepted the same the Prophet speaketh here in effect of them that loue the Lord. For when the promises are generall in pronouncing we must make them particular by a seuerall applying of thē to our s●lues Let vs then be ashamed of our selues for our wants of loue The Lord hath not graunted vnto others nor denied vnto vs any speciall priuiledges as they thought among the Papists who in their readings had wont to admire much at the Saints of God and to follow them but little The Lords hand is not shortened that he can lesse helpe vs than he hath in times past our forefathers neither is his mercy lesse that he will not helpe vs for his is the kingdome his is the power his is the glorie for euer but our sinnes as saith the Prophet haue made a partition and a diuorcement betweene the Lord and vs our loue is lesse our sinnes are greater than they were in our forefathers Let this comfort vs the man of God here prayeth not for any extraordinarie mercy For as the loue of God to vs ward is common with other of his children in like manner our loue to Gods word must be common with them and if we haue the like graces with them we shall obtaine the like mercies with them For in the substance of saluation if we haue faith the Lord will deale with vs according as he dealt with Abraham Isaac and Iacob with the Prophets and Apostles Wherefore the Lord as we said a little before hath set downe his promises i● generall words which we must deriue by faith as particular and proper to our selues Now if we had this sealed in our hearts that they were neuer confounded nor deceiued which put their trust in the Lord we should be assured that his arme is not shortned he is as able to reach it out vnto vs as euer he was before if onely we will beleeue and say with the Prophet of God Amen We must take ●eede that we suffer not as ill doers and that the Lord finde vs not lying in some sins for then we cannot in truth vse the Prophets prayer for the like mercies in that we
to stay the Lordes mercie for the other wee must depart because of that abomination 6 The world is as the Lords great chamber whereunto all are admitted the Church is as the chamber of presence The natiuitie of the Church is a greater worke then the creation of the world The world was finished with a Word but many dayes and many yeares did the Lord trauell before the Church could be brought forth to his good liking Hee shooke the earth darkened the heauens turned the whole course of nature before he had framed and set vp the little Church of the Iewes But in gathering the Church of the Gentiles the Sunne became blacke as a pot the Heauens were couered as with a haire-cloth the vayle of the temple rent the earth trēbled the graues opened aboue all the GOD of nature suffered But of all the third gathering shall be fearfull when heauen and earth shall not abide to see but shall melte and consume away at the glorifying of that Church which the world so contemneth yet on this Church hangeth the continuance of the world For certaine it is the world standeth and all the foure windes are stopped till all be sealed and in that moment that this number is filled this world shall out of hand vanish away 7 In the world wee doe as it were but see the Lords backe parts we see him as a thing in a troubled well dwelling but in the neather and outward courtes of the Temple but in the Church we see him almost face to face 8 That mightie Sampson suffered himselfe to be shauen and his strength to bee as another mans for the great loue of his Church hee shed his precious blood from all parts of his bodie for it and that no bloud might be too deare for vs with his heart bloud he hath testified how much he doth loue vs his loue and spouse the Church of the faithfull 9 It is true that the Psalmist saith Psal. 16. the Lord hath no neede of our seruice and therefore he hath set ouer his loue to the Chuch there to be answered vnto her in obedidience furtherance of his members there he would haue it seene how we value his benefits All blessings are continued on this earth for the Church sake The Sun doth shine vpon the earth vpon the iust and vniust but vpon the vniust for the iust mans sake 10 The Church is the household of faith the citie of the liuing GOD the spouse of the Lamb CHRIST the kings daughter the childrē of light of the liuing God the children of promise of the freewoman a chosen generation a royall priesthood an holy nation people gotten by purchase the mysticall body of Christ the sold of the Prince of Pastors the virgin Israel the children of Abraham the elect seede of God heires of grace ioynt heires with Christ the Sanctuary of the Lord the daughter of Sion the Lords heritage the people of his pasture the sheepe of his hands the temple of the holy Ghost the price of his blood the Lords Eden Thrice blessed and happy are al the liuing stones of the most beautifull building Confer Psal. 147. 2. 3. 1. Pet. 2. 9. 10. Phil. 3. 8. Ephes. 2. 19. 20. 1. Thes. 2. 19. 20. 2. Cor. 3. 2. 2. Cor. 6. 11. 12. 1. Thes. 2. 8. Rom. 9. 3. Reuel 21. 10. CHAP. XIIII Of the Confession of sinne THis is a good affection of Christianitie to conceale a fault and this also is a good affection of men regenerate to testifie their faults to all men whereby they make knowne their thankefulnesse in that whereas by nature they were thus by grace they are so and so Againe men vse it to comfort others that though they bee in their old estate yet they may receiue grace if they hinder not themselues and shut out the grace of God from them Thus the children of God are wont to aggrauate their sinnes that others might haue comfort in the like case Matthew in the ninth chapter and the ninth verse shameth himselfe by the name of a Publican and yet if we looke to his sinne it was not like the sinne of Peter against the ninth commaundement nor like the sinne of Dauid against the sixe and seuenth commaundements the sinne of Paul against the first as of them that crucified Christ himselfe But that which he concealeth the other Euangelists blase abroad that which they conceale he blaseth abroad And this is one argument of the truth of the word for wheras other Chronicles do euer cōmend themselues and their owne natiue countries best as if you read the Chronicles of England you will thinke it the hest nation it is contrary in the word the deniall of Peter is more expresly set downe of Marke than of any other yet did he write the Gospell out of his mouth Paul setteth out his own faults in more sharpe measure and manner than any other can doe Act. 26. Moses Gen. 49. seemeth to discredit his owne birth Wee see all these were of God who is then most glorified when we are most cast downe 2 As the hiding of our sinne with Adam hindreth mercie so to testifie our sinne to be greater than it is with Cain displeaseth God highly 3 Confession without yeelding and feeling is nothing but a testimonie against our selues let vs then so confesse that it may moue vs to loue the truth 4 Pharaohs confession is rather in iudgement than in affection in respect of the punishment not of his sin ergo it is not enough yet he hath profited further than many of vs which will not confesse our sinnes at all 5 Whensoeuer we haue sinned it is good to haue this or the like meditation good Lord wilt thou call me to iudgement and enter thine action with mee How shall I doe then I will take this order I will disagree and fall out with my selfe But is there any hope that God will then shewe mercy Yea no doubt for if the Lord were minded presently to imprison vs he would neuer by his prophets forewarne vs by a writ hee might vse the whole host of the creatures to execute his vengeance euery houre but hee deales more mercifully with vs if we confesse our sinnes 6 Naturally we be all slowe to confesse our sinnes we cast short reckoning on our owne faults Adam said I haue not sinned Lord hee lesseneth his sinne in conceit saying The woman gaue it me and I did eate Iob seemeth to make an apologie as being vnworthy of such a punishment But wee must learne that a sinner the more hee doth extenuate and hide sinne the more he doth aggrauate sinne and hasten iudgement the more freely he doth confesse and iudge himselfe the more he is freed from Gods seate of iustice Pro. 28. 13. 2. Cor. 11. 31. 32. CHAP. XV. Of Conscience LOoke how is our Conscience so is our confidence it is a tender peece we must
most sweete and soueraigne remedie of his grace So ancient and so experienced a souldier as you are in this spirituall battaile should now be valiant and strong vnto the combat and though victorie be not to be hoped from the weaknesse of flesh yet the experience we haue had of the goodnesse of God in our former troubles ought to assure vs of the returne of his helping hand in all our necessities Shall I put you in minde of the grace of God towards you in your comforting of others euen then when your selfe haue been in some discouragemēt If others haue receiued comfort from you raise vp the same comforts vnto your selfe Neither is there any cause you should feare least the spirit which in you was able to erect and confirme others should not be able to refresh and comfort your owne soule In other things we loue our selues too much and doe well vnto our selues rather than to others but here many times by the fraud and deceit of the enemie wee are made cruell vnto our owne bowels and become his abused instruments to torment our selues Who will put a sword into the hand of his aduersarie to wound himselfe withall And who will strengthen his enemie that is alreadie too strong for him Yet this is our folly that we will conspire with Sathan against our selues and arme him with weapons vnto our owne destruction Saint Peter saith Resist the diuell being strong in faith We must not therefore yeeld our selues vnto his tyrannie nor cast away that weapon of faith by which alone wee may bee able to ouercome But I will vrge this argument no further I know that the benefits of this life are common for the most part both to the reprobate and to the elect yet both in those which are common there is a great and large difference and there are some so singular as carrie with them a stronger testimonie of the fauour of God than that it may without impietie be denied In common benefits it holdeth that as things most aduerse are yet turned vnto our good so much more the good gifts and blessings of God doe carrie with them a testimony of his loue and fauour towards vs. For as the Lord speaketh vnto vs in the word and by his spirit so his good and fatherly prouidence towards vs is not without voyce but soundeth aloud vnto the declaration of his loue But there are as I said some benefits so special that the vse of them is proper only vnto his children Remember with me the first time of this trouble dismaying of your conscience and remember withall how many meanes the Lord hath ministred vnto you for your comfort What shall I say of those whom the Lord hath put euen into your bosome the more neerer to applie his mercie vnto you Maister C. Maister B. Maister R. c. all so furnished vnto your comfort that you may well thinke they were as so many hands stretched out from heauen to support and strengthen your weaknes withall If I should set myselfe to remember how many other the seruants of God haue by diuine prouidence been directed to minister cōfort vnto you the number would be innumerable Master S. Master F. Master D. Master B. Master G. Master G. and almost who not of those that haue been trained and brought vp in that schoole Consider how great a mercie this hath been that so many excellent Physitions of the soule should at seueral times apply themselues if not vnto the cure at the least vnto the mitigating of your disease I will not examine how many and great comforts you haue receiued from them by word in presence and by letters in absence this onely I aske of you whether you haue not knowne all these to beare vnto you the same testimonie to speake the same comfort and to cōfirme you in the same assurance of the loue of God towards you Now what spirit must that bee that shall contradict the spirit of God in the mouthes of so many and faithfull witnesses My good friend marke what I will say vnto you as the patient that is sicke in body willingly resigneth himselfe vnto the sentence and direction of his skilfull and faithfull Physition so must the children of God in their spirituall maladies yeeld themselues vnto the Physitions of their soules so much the more because the Lord hath giuen vnto the ministers of his Gospell the power of binding and loosing both in the publike ministerie of his word and also in the priuate consolation of his children I will not speake of that which is publike although not altogether vnfit vnto my purpose considering that that which is publikely spoken as vnto all hath also a particular addresse vnto those that are the Lords As whē the Lord saith by his Prophet Blessed are all they that mourne in Sion I will for the present rest in that vse of this power of binding and loosing which is priuate and particular Remember that of Saint Iames who saith that vpon the prayers of the Elders of the Church the sins of the diseased shall be forgiuen him which words can haue no other sense but that by them shall bee pronounced vnto him the forgiuenes of sins A most excellent practise wherof we haue in our Sauiour himselfe Luk. 7. where first he proueth by argumēt vnto Simon the Pharisie that the mourning sinner was pardoned all her sinnes and therefore was now no sinner and wicked one as hee vncharitably esteemed her to bee then turning himselfe vnto the distressed soule first saith Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee and afterward Thy faith hath saued thee goe in peace Wherein though there be some things extraordinary in our Sauiour Christ as the sonne of God yet is it that power which he hath communicated vnto all his seruants saying Whose sinnes you forgiue they are forgiuen c. which is nothing else but whose sins vpon due examination and trial of their repentance you pronounce to be forgiuen they are forgiuen Here again remember my deare friend how many of the faithfull and expert seruants of Christ haue examined your estate by conference with your selfe haue found all signes vnto health and saluation Vnlesse therefore Sathan dare contradict the spirit of God speaking by the mouthes of so many witnesses he cannot say but you are the Lords Now for your selfe I am assured that you will not nor dare not say but this hath beene the constant testimonie of all the seruants of God sent vnto you and that they were such as you had no cause to suspect their partialitie or flatterie in any sort How is it then that the voyce of so many should not be vnto you as the voyce of God himselfe Who though he do not speake vnto vs now immediatly from heauen as in some times past yet he speaketh vnto vs by the mouthes of his seruants his Prophets When Dauid said in the horror of his
some when one is vehement say he is an Heremite too precise for vs to follow he had neede of a new world some if the Preacher be comfortable thinke he is a clawbacke and seeketh for liuing some say if they heare one for the peace of the Church tolerating some ceremonies that he is a time-seruer and man-pleaser if they heare one zealous and vnwilling to giue any little credit to superstitions then they say he is factious if he be young and vehement then they say he will grow wiser and colder in time if he be old and still faithfull then he wants wisedome and is but a doting foole But wisedome is iustified of all her children if doctrine be vsed we learne if perswasion we are moued if threatnings we are humbled if promises we are comforted if lenitie we thinke God calleth vs in mercie if seueritie God calleth vs out of securitie and so we profit by all in something though by some in more things and oftner 51 We are said to be alwaies in God his presence and yet we are said to be in God his presence in the time of God his worship The fathers are said to walke with God they were as children alwaies looking on their father to see what hee would haue them doe God being present with them though inuisible to nature yet visible to faith Yet we are said to be in God his presence in his worship because more neerely we bring our selues before him And sure it is that the more we are in his presence whiles we are in any holy exercise the more shall we be in his worship euen in our ordinarie callings Againe the more carelesse we are in his worship to bring our selues into his sight the more carelesse of his presence shall we be in our ordinarie callings 52 This is not the priuiledge of God his children not to be tempted neither is it a difference betweene the godly or vngodly to be tempted or not tempted but God his children pursue it not in the greedines of their affections but they either sin not or he drawne by delay vnto sinne God his children before feare to sinne the wicked before lay platformes of sinne the godly in sinning finde some paine the wicked a pleasure the godly thinke of their sinne with shame and griefe the world put their sinnes in a new die by speaking and doing of them with glorie and gladnes the wicked blaspheme God in sinning the godly rebuke themselues for sinnes the godly are fiercely and violently pursued of temptation the wicked are so●●ishly and voluntarily infatuated by temptation the godly powre out their spirits to be cured in temptation the vngodly powre out their spirits to be strengthened in sinnes Abraham laughed Sarah laughed Abraham reioyced by faith in their promise Sarah derided by vnbeliefe the thing that was promised Zacharie questioneth with the Angell Mary questioneth with the Angell Zacharie doth it in vnbeliefe Mary doth it to be confirmed in the meanes for her faith 53 It is wonderfull how some delighting and lying in a sinne will correct the selfe same sinne in others and cannot abide it in their owne children and yet it hath been obserued that politike dames ciuill housekeepers cunning whores secretly bathing their bodies in filthines could not abide a wāton looke or vnchast behauiour in their children Howbeit these secret sinnes as all others in time haue blurted out And let such sinners know that God will still giue them some to be as a glasse to see their owne sinnes in them as it were face to face Thou complainest against thy sonne thy seruant or against thy inferiour but doest thou gouerne him hast thou taught corrected and reformed him hast thou gone in and out in godly life before him hast thou taught him publikely as well as priuately and at home as wel as abroade If thou hast though thy sonne be a reprobate or thy seruant a castaway thou hast at the least though not cōuerted his hart yet striken him with confusion of conscience 54 It is both the fault and the folly of many that being rebuked of a sinne like beasts following the drouer or puppits following the play maister say they doe but as others doe wherein they rather accuse themselues of a new folly than excuse themselues of their old fault For thinking they doe well because they doe as others doe they strengthen rather than weaken the sin by ioyning to sinners and increasing the multitude of sinners in that kinde whereas on the contrarie if they for themselues would leaue the sinne the number of offenders would grow the lesse and then the number of well doers being greater than the number of euill doers would make them ashamed of themselues and though not for conscience sake yet for shame the sinne would be the sooner left In regard whereof a godly father hearing of an heresie like to spread in the Church got as many to subscribe to the true part as could be gotten which he did for this cause that the aduersaries seeing a few holding with them and many standing against them might suspect their cause and be the more ashamed of their defence And experience proueth that sinne is like to die shortly which is nourished of none but starued of all and that sinne is like to preuaile which is entertained of the most and withstood of the fewest we must beware of following a multitude to sinne 55 Looke wheresoeuer in Realme Citie towne or household there is any remnant of the Lords seede although it sustaineth for a while some iniurie as Noah in the old worlde Lot in Sodome Ieremiah among his people and Abraham with his yet as they are preferued from many iudgements by these men so their eyes shall see them fall in the end The world is not couered with water vntill Noah be prouided for in the Arke Sodome is spared vntill Lot be deliuered and the Lord euen rebuked Kings for his seruant Abrahams sake If this were so in the infancie of the Church whilest it was in one or few families how much more will the Lorde gouerne and preserue it now vnder the kingdome of Iesus Christ if peaceably wee waite vntill the arme of the Lord be reuealed vnto vs 56 It is an euill signe when gentlenesse makes vs worse and wanton more bold in disobedience more remisse in obedience and it prognosticateth good to bee made by gentlenesse more free in obedience more afraide to disobey This being as true in the spirituall estate hath caused the Lorde to cause some to beare the yoke from their youth and who are more pliable to the word Others againe not tasting of any crosses which haue beene more vntractable to all good duties Among many pawnes of God his loue this is one chiefe when God his blessings breede in vs humilitie and carefulnes among manie tokens of euill this is one when God his benefits breede pride and fluggishnes And this is a triall of
Gods prouidence in going in vnto his maide in lying himselfe and causing his wife to sinne so Lot in departing from Abraham to whom the couenant was made and without a iust cause in being loth to depart from Sodome in lying with his daughters so Dauid Iob Zacharie Noe Peter and the Publican sinned who were all iustified by saith as Abraham was who beleeued in God Some as a meane betweene these doe magnifie the righteousnes which is by faith with out works but in the meane while liue vngedly but these haue imagined a kind of righteousnes common to the dissolute Protestants which shall better be discouered when it is set downe what a righteous man is True righteousnes is by imputation for the obtaining whereof we must first feele and acknowledge our selues voide of all righteousnes full of all vnrighteousnes by reason of our sinnes And this caused Paul to count all his former righteousnes as dung Secondly that we feeling the weight of our sinnes desire to leaue them and be freed from the punishment due vnto them Thirdly that by faith we flie vnto Christ seeking to haue his righteousnes imputed vnto vs and our sinnes not imputed but cleane forgiuen vs. So was the Publican and Abraham so is Christ sent a Mediatour vnto vs when we are wounded by the sword of the word Now although being thus iustified in Christ there doe yet sinne remaine in vs for all that it must not raigne in our mortall bodies but we must doe the worke of our father Abraham walking in vprightnes of heart before the Lord as it was required of Abraham in which sense Dauid saith In whose spirit there is no guile as if he should say his sinnes did still remaine if he walked not vprightly This vprightnes of heart may be tried by foure speciall notes first that we loue all good things as well as one and hate all sinnes as well as one and that both in our selues and others so that although we cannot performe all yet we will haue respect vnto all the Commandements Psalm 119. 6. Whereof Saint Iames giueth a reason when he saith that he that commanded the one commanded the other whereby he discouereth the hypocrisie of those which had religion in respect of persons and such is the religion of Papists and of the Familie of loue Such was the religion of Herod and of the yong man that would follow Christ but when the one was reproued of his whoredome and the other bidden sell all that he had they would be Disciples no longer although before they would doe many things gladly and be great professors Such is the state of many Protestants who will condemne whoredome yet be couetous yea they will doe great things but will not be brought to glorifie God in their callings which sheweth their religion to be vaine their hearts full of hypocrisie And yet this rule may haue exceptions for we doe neither know all good nor all euill at the first much lesse loue the one and hate the other as we ought yea we see many sinnes which as yet we cannot come out of as we should Againe there may be sinnes of frailtie although not of presumption but yet if we be not grieued for these and displeased with our selues when by any one we are ouertaken and hate sinne and loue goodnesse when the Lord doth reueile it vnto vs we keepe an euill conscience and our corruption shall be discouered for in that measure we like of sinne in that measure is hypocrisie in vs and if the oftner we sinne the more we be grieued it is a signe of vprightnesse and then there is hope to recouer the fall for this worketh a care and strife to come our of sinne and at the last a recouerie but in the hypocrite contrarie The second note is that we haue a single care to please and glorifie God in all our doings and to approoue our selues vnto him without hope of reward though trouble doe come vpon vs for it and that onely because we would please God and glorifie his Name and for the same cause eschue euill The want of this caused Christ to reprooue the Scribes and Pharises for fasting and prayer because they did it to be seene of men The want hereof condemneth the Papists and Familie of loue in all their workes because they doe them that thereby they may be righteous When iustification was giuen to workes then men would build Churches Abbeyes c. and these things were greatly praised of men but now when good workes are commanded not to merit but for Gods glorie as to be signes and seales of righteousnes few are brought to doe them which is a signe that there are but a few righteous men vpon earth This rule also hath his exceptions for we shall see much rebellion in our flesh and hypocrisie withall but we must note what is our chiefest drift and what beareth the chiefest sway within vs and of that shall we be named as is the vse in other things as to be of this or that complexion because that or this is the principall and it is called leauened bread though water be mixt with it so that if our consciences do witnesse with vs that our chiefe care is to please God then is our hart vpright with God though hypocrisie be ioyned with it For it is one thing to do a thing for hypocrisie another thing mixt with hypocrisie one thing for vaine glorie and another thing mixt with vaine glorie If we could see nothing by our selues yet herein must we not iustifie our selues and when we see infirmities ioyned with our speciall care we must haue care to leaue them striue thereunto so that we yeeld not our selues to them but rather they leade vs away captiues and whensoeuer we see them to behold Satan in them and therfore hate them and though they buffet vs yet still pray and arme our selues against them as Paul did The third note is that we neuer content our selues in our selues nor in the things that we haue done but still goe forward to leaue sinne and draw neere to God And this may be seene in Abraham and is set downe in the Prouerbs And Paul saith As many as are perfect are thus minded Here then are disclosed those that either stay in the beginnings or else slide backe when they are gone somewhat forward For if we haue tasted once of the good grace of God and then turne backe from it it is impossible to be renued by repentance whereof there are two causes first because they are alwaies learning and neuer the better Esai 28. where the Prophet rebuketh saying Line vpon line and precept vpon precept Secondly because that if they attaine to knowledge yet doe they not build themselues thereupon to keepe a good conscience thus experience teacheth in those that become heretikes This is so fearefull to the godly that they had rather
contrariwise if you be vnmindfull of God hee will not suffer you to finde the benefits of thes● one by the other The second Commaundement which requireth of you to worship God after the true manner that hee appointeth in his word teacheth you thus much that you must nourish your l●e in this estate by the practise of things whereby he is worshipped and honored of vs n●mely by hearing and reading of his holie word and by the vse of the Sacraments For that same that is s●irred vp and nourished by this meanes is most pure and will longest endure whe● f●●●thly loue soone vanisheth and fadeth away In the third Commandement as you are trusted with the glorie of God so you are charged b●o●h●r tha● you abuse not his Name if you be faithfull vnto the Lord in seeking his glo●ie and the aduancement of his truth and of the kingdome of Iesus Christ preferring it in all things as is meete then surely will the Lord blesse you and prosper your wayes but if you fall away and slide into any heresie and so dishonor his Maiestie then will God certainly plague you in his wrath and he will make that which you desire to haue greatest comfort in turne into a curse vpon you And I would haue you remember to this ende how God the Lord dealt with wicked Amaziah who for the prophaning of Gods glorie and worship had the hart of his wife drawne from him and so to his great reproch became a notorious whore So likewise my sister that you dishonour not God as being a meanes of withdrawing your husbands heart from the duties of his calling but nourishing Faith and a good conscience in all things with him so will the Lord for his owne Names sake blesse you together For you shall finde it true which hee hath spoken Them that honour mee I will honour and them that despise mee shall be despised But beware I say that you giue no occasion of falling away or back sliding vnto your husband least God also bring shame vpon you by him by giuing him ouer to some sinne I speake not this as thogh I doubted these things in either of you both for I hope of better things of you but in speaking to you I admonish my selfe wishing that wee all take heede that wee fall not as the wicked and sinners into the hand of God for he will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vaine I will spe●ke nothing of the fourth Commaundement onely referring you to that I taught publikely this day concerning the conscience wee ought to haue in the true and spirituall keeping of the same The fifth Commandement teacheth you to be obedient and to relieue and obey your husband And marke this Sister I shall now say vnto you if you had neuer so manie gifts if you had the wisedome of Ab●gael and all other graces which are in any woman yet if you wanted obedience to your Husband I tell you true that you are nothing worth and you could haue no part in Iesus Christ who denieth himselfe to be the gouernour of anie that will not acknowledge their Husband to be their head Therefore Sister let others doe as they list but bee you in the number of those that doe feare GOD and as the daughter of Sara by doing well who yeelded reuerence to Abraham and is commended in the Scripture for her dutifull speech shee alwayes vsed vnto him calling him Lord or Sir Now Brother remember that you must so gouerne as you must giue account of the manner of your gouernment euen vnto GOD himselfe Besides where there is greater dignitie there must you knowe that there are greater graces required and in ruling well there are manie speciall duties to be performed Therefore you must behaue your selfe wi●ely least you dishonour your selfe by abusing your authoritie for it is a daughter of Israel that is committed vnto you and one that is fellow-hei●e of the same grace in IESVS CHRIST with you Againe you must consider that a woman is a very fraile creature and may soone be discouraged when as there ought to be more constancie and stayednes on your part Therefore in the sixt Commaundement God forbiddeth all churlish behauiour all lumpishnes and all vnkindnesse and discurreous speeches charging you also to beare with manie weaknesses to the ende they may bee most quietly reformed And you Sister are forbidden all fullennesse and that you also for your part take heede of all bitter speeches and of naughtie names which wee heare throwne out of some women of vnquiet spirits and if you will haue your infirmitie cured by gentlenesse then deale you in like manner towards your husbands For it cannot be but occasions of vnquietnes will sometimes be offered on either part and therefore in many things you must willinglie beare each others burthen Besides this Sister there is a dutie required in this Commaundement that you take care of the health of your Husband in dressing meates wholsome for him And this shall bee a meanes that his heart shall be more bent in all louing affection towards you In the seuenth Commandement there are many things to be noted but I can but touch some one or two at this present for want of time the speciall vse and substance of it is this much that you liue chastly in this estate and that you keepe the mariage bed vndefiled and let me giue you both this warning that you take heede in the beginning marke what I say least that which ought to be a meanes to further chastitie should turne to the hinderance of you Therefore pray to God to giue you grace that you may be soberly affected in all things and namely in the vse of mariage and repent of that which is past if you haue any way offended the Lord in this behalfe For many failing in repentance for their former sinnes fall afterward vnto their vncleannes againe As for you Brother true loue towards your wife will bee a notable stay from all corruptions this wee reade of Isaack Gen 24. 67. because he loued Rebecca very dearely he had no more wiues but her albeit in those dayes it was a grieuous sinne euen amongst many of the faithful they had at once more wiues than one Therefore when you are from her abroade make a couenant with your eyes and let not your heart wander after any other but thinke vpon your owne wife and delight your heart in her continually and pray earnestly vnto God for her and so will the Lord increase your loue vnto her and moue her heart also to delight and long after you So must you sister that the same blessings may ouertake you as surely if you embrace his feare and walke in his wayes he will blesse you as well in bearing of children as in other his manifold graces which he hath in store to bestow vpon you Heere also I must by the way admonish you
creatures of water bread and wine in the Sacraments but acknowledge all inward grace to proceede from God his blessing and institution so we promise vnto our selues on the Lord his day a greater blessing not for any thing in the day it selfe but by reason of God his owne ordinance and promise of a blessing to the same And as we denie not a blessing from the Lord on priuate prayer reading and conference but acknowledge a greater blessing to be due euen by the Lord his owne promise to these exercises publike in cōparison of the other so wee denie not the grace of God to be vpon those houres redeemed from our outward callings and consecrated to the Lord but confesse a more speciall blessing from God to belong to that whole day which the Lord hath taken vp to himselfe alone and that for his owne promise sake vnto all them which come with simple hearts to obey his holy commaundement Now hauing gone through these reasons which proue the Sabbath day to be morall and that this commaundement is no lesse to be obserued than the other nine before we enter into the exposition of the law it selfe it shal be cōuenient to meet with such reasons as some men bring to preludice the trueth of that which hath beene alreadie spoken which being done by God his grace we will come to the other The reasons against the Sabbath may briefely be reduced into such as either seeme to be drawne out of the expresse words of the Scriptures or else by some consequence to be gathered from the Scriptures The arguments borrowed from the written word are either out of the olde Testament or out of the new they which are contained in the olde are taken either out of the lawe or out of the Prophets Out of the lawe they make much a doe about that which is written Exod. 31. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. where the Lord faith this vnto Moses Speake thou vnto the children of Israel and say Notwithstanding keepe ye my Sabbaths for it is a signe betweene me and you in your generations that ye may know that I the Lord doe sanctifie you Ye shall therefore keepe the Sabbath for it is holy vnto you he that defileth it shall die the death therefore whosoeuer worketh therein the same person shall be euen cut off from among his people Sixe daies shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest to the Lord whosoeuer doth any worke on the Sabbath day shall die the death Wherefore the children of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath that they may obserue the rest throughout their generations for an euerlasting couenant It is a signe betweene me and the children of Israel for euer for in sixe daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth and in the seuenth day hee ceased and rested Out of these words they snatch these three reasons First they triumph before the conquest and say it is manifest that it is a signe and therefore as they please to conclude it is a figure True it is that it is here called a signe vers 13. as also Ezech. 20. 12 it is plaine howbeit this is no good reason that seeing the Sabbath is a signe therefore it is a figure or shadowe For although euery figure and shadowe be a signe yet euery signe is not a figure or shadow A figure foresheweth a trueth afterwards to be reuealed a shadow betokeneth a bodie hereafter to be exhibited but a signe as it doth sometimes signifie a thing afterwards to be looked for so it doth sometimes assure vs of a thing alreadie performed The figure ceaseth when the trueth commeth there is no vse of the shadow when the body is present but the signe and the thing signified may be ioyned together and both of them serue for a present vse Againe they gather out of the 16. verse of the chapter which we haue in hand where it is said The children of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath that they may obserue the rest through their generations for an euerlasting couenant that because the Sabbath of God is his couenant for euer that is vntill Christ it is ceremoniall True it is that the lawe admitteth this phrase of speech sundrie times to say for euer that is vntill Christ in whom al things are fulfilled But we must obserue this general rule as our guide when we will know what figures and ceremonies end in Christ and what morall precepts belong vnto vs. When a thing is vrged to the Iewes and hath a peculiar reason made properly to the Iewe and appertaineth nothing to the Christian then as it begunne with the Iewes as they were Iewes it ceased with the Iewes but when the reason of the thing vrged is not peculiar to the Iewes but also belongeth to the Christians then the thing commanded is not proper to the Iew but common to the Iew and Gentile Wherefore let vs square out the reason by the line of this generall rule It is here added v. 17. For in six daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth and in the seuenth day he ceased and rested Where if it had beene said they shall obserue the rest for an euerlasting couenant because they were brought out of Egypt I would haue graunted it to haue beene peculiar to the Iewes but seeing this is the reason the Lord rested which is common not to the posteritie of Abraham alone but to the whole posteritie of Adam the commaundement must be granted generall both to Iew and Gentile For it is a common instruction to all men in all ages to labour six daies wherein the Lord made the heauen and the earth and to cease from labour the seuenth day because in it the Lord rested The plaine sense then of this place is briefly this as if the Lord should say I made this law in the beginning of the world and it shall last to the end of the world I made it to Adam the father of all generations and it shall endure to the last of all his posteritie from generation to generation I made this law to ease my selfe after my great paines taken in the creating of the world in sixe daies and you shall keepe it to ease your mindes which are fraught with many distractions by reason of your ordinarie callings in those daies Neither would I haue any to thinke that the Lord had neede of any refreshing who being infinite cannot be subiect to distractions or wearines but we must know that where the Lord is said that he refreshed himselfe by taking view of his creatures he commendeth his loue to vs ward in shewing rather what ought to be in vs than what was in him For such alacritie and diligence should we vse in our callings as we should be glad when the Lords day commeth that in it we shall recouer our selues and ease our mindes of those distractions which burthen vs in our outward calling and so
yet we may eate the fatnes of meate which was forbidden them And so in all the commandements the morall obseruation belongeth to vs as well as to them the ceremoniall keeping to them and not to vs. And the same we conclude of this place concerning the fire making on this day Out of the new Testament they also gather two reasons First they say it is not mentioned nor vrged so much in the new Testament as are the other precepts I an answere this is no good reason but is rather to be returned to the Anabaptists who reason that the iudiciall lawes are not to be vsed because they are not vrged Nay rather looke what the holie Ghost hath set downe more sparingly in the old Testament he hath more fully plainly supplied it in the new Testament and what thing the law containeth more fully that the Gospell handleth more sparingly because the Lord in his heauenly wisedome would not trouble vs much with one thing But we know it is named Matth. 12. and 24. Mar. 2. Iohn 5. Act. 20. 1. Cor. 16 and 16. Reuelat. ● The second argument is this The Apostles changed the day which say these men they neuer would haue done had it been morall I answere it was neuer commanded nor appointed what one certaine day should be kept among seuen but that there should be obserued a seuenth day which being kept it is sufficient and the law remaineth vnuiolated And yet we permit not that any man at his pleasure should now change this day For that which the Apostles did they did not as priuate men but as men guided by the spirite of God they did it for the auoyding of superstition wherewith the Iewes had infected it Againe as the Iewes vsed the other day which is the last day of the weeke because it was the day wherein the Lord made all things perfect so the Apostles changed it into the day of Christ his resurrection who was the beginner of the new world on which day we receiued a more full fruite and possession of all the benefits in Christ his conception birth life and death Besides this was the first day of the creating of the world wherein the Lord drew light out of darknes Lastly the holy Ghost is said on this day to come downe vpon the holy Apostles So that this day doth fitly put vs in minde of our creation to be thankfull to God the Father of our redemption to be thankfull to God the Sonne and of our sanctification to be thankfull to God the holie Ghost Now if any can alleadge more effectuall or equall reasons vnto these hee may alter the day so it be with the consent of the Church Wherefore the equitie of the law remaining it is not abrogated Circumcision as we haue shewed is considered two manner of wayes either as the seale of Faith Rom. 4. or as a signe of that circumcision which wee haue in Christ made without hands In this manner considered it is ceased as it is a seale of Faith it remaineth not the same in forme and manner but the same in effect For although wee haue not the same helpe of our Faith yet we haue a helpe The Iewes had Sacraments moe in number but we more excellent in signification Though we haue not many Sacramēts and holy-dayes yet wee haue two Sacraments and one day more effectuall than all they were which the Iewes had We see therefore in truth no reason as yet why we should not obserue the Sabbath as Morall Thus hauing confirmed the doctrine of the Sabbath by the holy Scriptures and proued that there is a morall vse of the same as well for vs as for the Iewes and hauing answered all the contrarie objections that might seeme to make against this doctrine it followeth now according to our first diuision that wee should speake of the obseruation of the Sabbath it selfe shewing how it is kept and wherein it is broken For both these are expressed in the Commaundement wherein is set downe the affirmatiue to teach how to keepe it and the negatiue to shew how we breake it First then we will shew how the Sabbath ought to be kept then afterward we will declare how it is broken Where it is said in the beginning of the precept Remember to keepe holic and in the ende thereof the Lord hallowed the Sabbath so that it is not simply said Remember to keepe but to keepe holy neither is it simply mentioned that the Lord left the seuenth day but blessed the seuenth day hallowed it Hereby is insinuated vnto vs that in this day we should grow in loue towards God tender affection to our brethren wee are taught that then wee keepe the Sabbath aright when we vse it to that ende for which it was ordained that is when we vse in it as we haue before shewed th●se exercises whereby we may be the more sanctified and God the more glorified both on this in the other dayes of the weeke These exercises be such as are either priuate or publike The publike exercises are twice at the least to bee vsed euery Sabbath and they bee these First the word read and preached then prayers feruently made with thanksgiuing singing of Psalmes reuerend administration of the Sacraments And first for reading and preaching of the word wee reade Nehem. 8. 8. And they read in the booke of the Law of God distinctly and gaue the sense and caused them to vnderstand the reading Also wee may see this in the practise of the Apostles Act. 13. vers 15. And after the lectures of the Lawe and Prophets the rulers of the Synagogue sent vnto them saying Yee men and brethren if ye haue any word of exhortation for the people say on And as the Ministers did reade and preach the word so it was the practise of the Church to heare as Eccles. 4. vers 17. Take heede to thy foote when thou entrest into the house of God and bee more neere to heare than to giue the sacrifice of fooles And it is saide Nehem. 8. 3. The eares of all the people hearkened vnto the booke of the Law And concerning praying thanksgiuing singing the Prophet of God vseth a vehemēt exhortation to the Church Psal. 92. 1. Come saith he let vs reioyce vnto the Lord let vs sing aloude to the rocke of our saluation 2. Let vs come before his face with praise let vs sing aloude vnto him with Psalmes And Psal. 65. 1. O God praise waiteth for thee in Sion c. Now for the Sacraments generally we are to marke that as in the time of the law the sacrifices were most vsed on the Sabbath day so our Sacramēts succeeding the sacrifices are then most to be frequented As for the supper of the Lord it appeareth Act. 18. 1. Cor. 11. as it seemeth that it was administred euery Lords day although now adaies the ministers may
to accelerate their death or to reade mee as some haue read Plato that thereby they should hasten the time of their deliuerance but that wee should learne when God doth becke for vs wee should bee readie to remoue and that for none other causes but for faith and in hope of Gods promises a full feeling of our sinnes discharged a sure confidence of God his power in raising vs vp againe and a stedfast hope of a more glorious possession after this life By these meanes wee shall so rest in the hands of God that when nature decaieth wee shall haue our departure with calmnes and in a good time shall through a naturall ripenes rather voluntarily fall of than violently bee pulled off Wherefore wee see that this rash and vndiscreete desire off death is either in mindes that are abiect or in men in whose flesh their spirits are alreadie buried as also that the triumph of the godly proceedeth from hence euen a full assurance that he which raised them vp euery morning will raise them in the last day and that hee which raised Christ their head will also raise them his members This is that which will stay all quiuering of the flesh wherewith many are so benummed that they cannot with gladnes drinke of that cup whereunto the Lord allotted them If euer this doctrine of the resurrectiō was needfull it is now adaies most needfull wherein wicked Heretikes would depriue vs of the comfort of it It will not serue in the time of temptation whether it come immediatly from the diuell or med●●tly by his instruments to rest in our infolded faith with the Papists or to say wee beleeue as it is in the Creede wee beleeue as the Church beleeueth But to leaue the diuell himselfe hee hath suborned such priuie and treacherous aduersaries of this doctrine as with impudent faces will agree with vs in matter and in word will graunt the resurrection and yet shift away in their manner and in sense and truth blasphemously denie the power of the same Thus Hymineus and Philetus would not flatly denie the resurrection nay they would graunt it but how they saide it was past Thus cunningly Satan would ouerthrow the manner of the resurrection by permitting them to dally in the matter Againe shall wee thinke that the Sadduces did generally resist it no they had their false glosses and their forced interpretations with whom Satan in policie would pretend a maintaining of that which in purpose hee sought to mangle and marre The Philosophers had many glancing and glorious speeches of the immortalitie of the soule but when they came to this point concerning the rising againe of the flesh nothing was more ridiculous and incredible vnto them In so much that many of them of the Epicures and Stoikes mocked Paul disputing of this matter and said What will this babbler say as wee may reade Act. 17. verse 18. And when hee spake of the resurrection from the dead some mocked and others said we will heare thee againe ●f this matter Surely if the rising againe had been nothing but the renewing of the minde as some fondly dreame and falsely affirme it may bee thought that the Academicks would haue conceiued this doctrine and Platoesidaea hath as great secrets But here is the point which they sticke at and can by no meanes digest it that the naturall bodie after it is consumed into the ayre fire water or earth should afterward reuiue and receiue supernaturall qualities and as Philosophers and Heretikes cannot brooke this kinde of teaching so sure it is that few of the common professors receiue it in truth as their liues doe manifestly proue Besides there is another euill more perillous than these Through the close subtiltie of Satan this mysterie of iniquitie is cunningly conueyed into the heads of the more learned sort to discourse of certane places of the old Testament which godly learned and ancient Fathers haue construed of the resurrection and are denied of these men As these places Iob. 19. 25. 26. 27. and Esaj 26 19. and Daniel 12. 2. It may be and I do thinke their intent and purpose was not to misconstrue the places Howbeit it was Sathans policie to abuse the truth and vndermine our faith it was the secret iudgement of God to suffer Sathan so farre to buffet them Wherefore that we may the better be armed against the day of triall and that we may stand strongly in the day of temptation in our possession we will by God his assistance first set downe those expresse testimonies in the word of God whereby this doctrine is confirmed Secondly we will alleage those reasons out of the Scriptures which implie this thing though they doe not plainely affirme it Afterward wee will vn●ase the shifting visard of Heretikes whereby they would counsell men to some liking of their opinions Wherefore that wee may the better answere the diuell and his limmes let vs first consider of that translation of Enoch Genes 5. 24. wherin the Fathers haue obserued a manifest testimonie of the resurrection with whome I agree in part but not in generall because I dare not affirme with them that the body of Enoch is in heauen seeing as yet Christ alone is risen from the dead and was made the first fruites of them that slept And albeit that Enoch and Eliah did not fall asleepe as did the other Fathers yet because it is saide Hebr. 11. 39. that the Fathers in old time among whom Enoch is mentioned receiued not the promise that is the fulnes of the promise it cannot bee that Enoch his flesh is yet in heauen And howsoeuer hee was taken away by vnknowne meanes neuerthelesse that GOD that could so hide the bodie of Moses that euen the diuell looking for it could not finde it hath also laid vp the bodies of Enoch and Eliah in such meanes a● are hid from vs. And as the Lord hath infinit meanes of hiding so hath he incomprehensible means of finding as well of the bodie of Enoch as of the bodie of Moses Now whereas it is saide Heb 11. 33. that they suffered that they may receiue a better resurrection it must needes be that there is a rising againe of the flesh Againe we read Exod. 3 6. that the Lord said vnto Moses I am the God of thy Fathers the God of Isaac and the God of Iacob In which place it may seeme not a sufficient proofe to confirme so great a matter Howbeit our Sauiour CHRIST vseth it as a bulwarke against the Sadduces Matth 22 32. where our Sauiour Christ to prooue the resurrection inferreth the same words adding to them thus much God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing where wee see how Abraham Isaac and Iacob being aliue haue their bodies in the Lord his hands in keeeping as well as their soules Wherefore seeing both the Prophets and Christ himselfe haue vsed this place to that ende wee also
heare the Apostles speaking the truth was it any marueile if they were seduced by false teachers If men doe not receiue the word in loue is it any marueile if they be deluded with heresie 2. Thess. 1. If men neglect the peace of their mindes offered by the Gospell preached is it any marueile if they haue warres If men neglect the foode of their soules is it any marueile if they finde a famine When we see then that men turne the Gospell into wantonnes and write against it is it marueile if the Lord sendeth troubles No no when men shall see such a confusion let them know that God will cleere his iustice and recompence vengeance to the wicked and restore the godly to their ioyes and yet shew them that here is no place of rest but that they must lift vp their heads to heauen where they shall haue rest without trouble Now let vs consider what these afflictions worke in the wicked and to what end they are sent vnto them Surely to plague them and to leaue them without excuse They are sent to God his children to humble them to bring them to repentance to keepe them from euil to encourage them in good and to recouer them being fallen But they are sent to roote out the wicked to consume them from the face of the earth and therefore he powreth out all the vials of his wrath vpon the wicked remnant And these manifold plagues haue often come to passe where the Gospell hath been preached because as it is the greatest mercie treasure if it be receiued so the vnnaturall refusall of it doth cause the greatest iudgemēts So the Israelites in the wildernes were punished first by idolatrie then by plagues were rooted out of the land And after Christ had spoken the Apostles preached the Iewes remained vnprofitable the Lord in his iustice in that they would not beleeue the true Christ suffered them to be deluded by false Christs and that they that would not profit by the true Apostles should be deceiued by false Apostles and then being punished with famine and sicknes they were by the Romanes subdued When the Gospell came to be preached among the Gentiles and was contemned the Lord first punished them by suffering them to fall into vile sinnes and then after gaue them ouer to the Turke We see how in the West-countrie where the Gospell was preached and refused the Pope was sent to them So likewise must we make our profit herein When God his Spirit falleth plentifully in vs yet men by his word will not be reformed the Lord will send heretikes and wicked men to corrupt them And will the Lord thus censure his owne people and will he spare the wicked No when we thinke all is quiet the Lord will send plagues for refusing the health of our soules the Lord will send famines for refusing the food of our soules the Lord wil plague vs with warres for neglecting the peace of our mindes And Matth. 24. the Lord hath set Ierusalem a type in that the Gospell neuer continued quiet or vncorrupt in any one place aboue the space of an hundred yeeres Well if we see not the beginnings of these things we are halfe mad if we will not feare the euents of them we are worse than so if we will not profit by these things wofull experience will teach vs our miserable estate We see how needfull affliction ●s whether we looke to God his children or to the wicked Miserie maketh mercie sweete and trouble maketh grace gratious Christ is then sweete and Iesus is then a Sauiour when we feeling no comfort at hand are driuen and drawne out of our selues to seeke some reliefe abroade And experience teacheth vs that in prosperitie we are readie to nestle our selues here belowe and forgetting the life to come we are blinded with the God of this world so we become worldlings staying wholy in these inferior things Now that God might by euidence prooue how whom he once loueth he alwaies loueth to admonish others a farre off he sendeth corrections to teach vs that we may not stay here belowe For if iudgement begin at the house of God what shall become of the wicked If the Lord so hamper the godly how shall the wicked looke to escape Now in these distresses and miseries it shall be that whosoeuer calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saued for so the Lord offereth grace in wrath mercie in iudgements so will the Lord moue his chosen and elect to desire these graces and will cause these iudgemēts threatned to fructifie whilest they that pray for the Spirit which shall conuey comfort into them by the word and Sacraments and so shall not onely be preserued from finne and iniquitie but also remaine sounder in iudgement and life passing by these plagues to heauen the wicked going downe by them to hell This is then the third thing which in the beginning wee noted the plaine meaning whereof is thus much If ye will now but ioyne in fellowship in prayer and in God his worship with vs you shall auoide these iudgements threatned and receiue these graces promised the sure pledges of life euerlasting Great is the grace and mercie of God who doth appoint a meane to remedie such miseries and a way to obtaine such mercies and therefore it is worthie further consideration and examination A SHORT TREATISE OF PRAYER VPON THE WORDS OF THE PROPHET IOEL chap. 2. 32 alleaged by Peter Act. 2. 21. WHosoeuer calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saued Ioel. 2. ●2 By calling on the name of God in this place which is but one and a particular part of God his worship are meant and vnderstood the other parts of the worship of God Thus the Scriptures sometime ascribe to this one other parte of God his worship as Genes 3. Then began men to call on the name of the Lord and Gen. 12. Abraham builded an Altar and called on the name of the Lord that is worshipped God Againe Psalme 50. Call vpon me in the time of trouble and I will heare thee In the new Testament we shall see the same For this place is alleaged Rom. 10 and 1. Cor. 1. the Apostle wisheth grace to all thē that shal call on the name of God that is worship God 2 Timoth. 2. Whosoeuer calleth on the name of the Lord that is worshippeth God let him depart from iniquitie So that vnder this one part of inuocation we see vnderstood all other parts And in our English tongue we rather vse this phrase We will goe to prayers or Are prayers done than we goe to the word of God to heare it we goe to receiue the Sacraments and such like when notwithstanding we frequent other actions of religion in the congregation besides prayer And both Ieremie and our Sauiour Christ calleth the Church an house of prayer as Matth. 21. 13. Mine house shall be called the house of prayer c. It
heart that hauing it thou hast all things and if thou want it yet in greatest abundance thou hast nothing Againe if thou haue it no manner of misery can make thee miserable and if thou haue it not in greatest felicitie thou art most miserable But the Israelites deat hereafter a cleane contrarie manner for the want of bread here in the wildernesse being put for their bodies did make them to despise their great and wonderfull deliuerance out of Egypt which was vnto them a signe of their spirituall deliu●rance And this is the nature of all naturall and worldly men so basely to estimate Gods graces that they had rather forgoe many richer spirituall benefits and blessings then one worldly and corporall commoditie for the want of riches doth vexe trouble them more then the want of spirituall and heauenly graces and the hauing of riches doth more reioyce their hearts than the burthen of sinne which procureth Gods wrath doth worke their griefe Such men know not that riches are no sure signes of Gods fauour though hee in the abundance of his mercy doth let his Sunne shine vpon the wicked and vpon the good so that the hauing of riches is no argument that he loueth vs nor the want o● them is any argument of his displeasure towards vs. Who so therefore seeketh God in these outward things onely and bindeth his fauour vnto them doth neither with them no● without them duely esteeme of the fauour of God but setteth light thereby which although in plaine words he speaketh not for the children of Israel here did not flatly speake against the Lord but against his Ministers Moses and Aaron yet whilest he is carelesse of the word prayer and Sacraments and despiseth and grudgeth against Gods Ministers and seruants he manifestly declareth what price it beareth in his heart It standeth euery man in hand then in his own● hear● to feele his sinne and to be sorrowfull for it to know it is in him and then to leaue it least the god of this world whom he serueth doe for a while giue him his desire that in the world to come hee may haue him for his portion and to such as acknowledge this murmuring to be a sinne and be grieued for it there followeth remedies to helpe out of it For as much as impatience and murmuring proceedeth from infidelitie the remedie therefore must be fetched first from faith in Gods mercies in the benefits which Christ hath by his death purchased vnto vs and in the hope of the Resurrection to euerlasting life and in Gods fatherly prouidence which things if we do belieue we must also belieue that God in this life will sufficiently minister vnto all our wants and vnlesse wee doe belieue them wee doe not neither can we belieue with assurance that the Lord will preserue vs. But if we doubt whether the Lord will helpe vs in earthly things we must needs much more doubt of his fauour in spirituall benefits First therefore the great and rich mercie of the Lord and his fauourable dealing with vs being duely considered shall be very profitable to worke in vs patience for if we see how the Lord forbeareth vs and rewardeth vs not according to our sinnes ●ay if we see that when for the ripenes of our sinnes he might confound vs yet ●e doth not so much as punish vs and when hee might iustly punish vs yet he dealeth mercifully with vs and bestoweth his mercies vpon vs. If I say we can acknowledge this to be his ●rdinarie dealing that by his long suffering he doth leade vs to repentance and by his manifold mercies he doth as it were weane vs from our sinnes this would much bridle our murmuring and instruct vs to patience And yet we see a further thing then this in this people of Israel for the Lord doth not only beare with their sinnes and bestow many mercies vpon them but to helpe them and to doe them good he doth vse extraordinary meanes as to bring downe bread from heauen to make water gush out of the Rocke where hee sheweth that for the safetie of his people euen when all meanes doe faile and when to mans iudgement there is no way to finde out helpe or deliuerance yet there will the Lord magnifie his mercie towards his seruants and will worke wonders for their preseruation Hee doth not thus deale with the Israelites onely but hee maketh this his ordinarie dealing with his seruants from time to time As Moses applyeth this place when he saith The Lord hath fed thee with this M●nna fortie yeeres that thou maist knowe that man liueth not by bread ●●ely and CHRIST in our person being tempted to vse vnlawfull meanes ouer came the diuell with this answere Man liueth not by bread onely Teaching vs and leauing vs an example to haue the s●me answere in readinesse in the like temptations knowing and assu●ing our hearts that the Lorde will by one meanes or other doe good vnto his children and dispose of all things that shall befall them for the best onely let them take heede of this that they rest in his word and goe no further but by faith waite on him therein and he will giue that shall be sufficient for them if not in earthly benefits yet in spirituall graces The second helpe which we must vse to refraine our murmuring is the liuely faith of our redemption wrought by Christ which cōsisteth in the free forgiuenesse of our sinnes and the imputation of Christs righteousnesse vnto vs in the sanctification which is by his holy spirit First then if we can stedfastly beleeue that God for Christs sake hath freely forgiuen vs all our sinnes yea that he hath giuen vs his onely beloued sonne that wee might be beloued in him wee shall without any great adoe beleeue that the Lord will not suffer vs to want any thing but with him will giue vs all things for seeing sinne which is the cause of all miserie is taken away from vs that so we might be with Christ inheritors of the heauens we may be sure that in the meane time no miserie shall hurt vs. Thus Abraham hauing receiued a promise for seed of his sonne Isaac doubting nothing but that the Lord would prouide meanes to bring the same to passe in the assurāce hereof sent his seruants to his owne people to prouide a wife for his sonne And these children of Israel no doubt if they had beleeued that the Lord had deliuered them out of Egypt that he might bring them to the promised land they would neuer haue doubted of his mercifull preseruation neither here in the wildernesse nor elsewhere till they had come to the land of promise And againe if we could firmely beleeue that God the Father for Christs sake doth not only not impute our sinnes vnto vs but that he doth also accept vs in the righteousnesse of his Sonne imputing the same vnto vs how should we doubt of meate
The Lord left vs a lesson that wee must learne thereby namely that it is not the meanes but the blessing of God vpon the meanes that nourisheth vs and therefore if we haue them wee must not put our trust in them and if we want them wee must not distrust in God Did Moses and Eliah liue fortie dayes without meate and did the Israelites walkein the wildernesse fortie yeeres in the same apparell which waxed not olde whereas othersome hauing meate in abundance yet are hunger-starued and being laden with clothes yet quake for cold shall we not yet learne that the blessings of God are all in all and that the other are but meanes prouided for our weaknes Dauid proued by experience that the righteous seede of the righteous parents were neuer forsaken nor begged their bread If we no doubt could come to such measure of obedience as they did then and if we could be righteous as in his time men were the Lord would prouide for vs as well as he did for them and we should haue as good experience hereof as euer had Dauid To this prouidence of God wee must bring a patient minde which first must bee contented with whatsoeuer the Lord sendeth alwaies acknowledge godlines to be great riches For we ought not to seeke great matters nor suffer our desires to be carried after high things for this did the Lord by his Prophet Ieremie rebuke in Baruck And CHRIST giueth vs another rule when he teacheth vs to pray for daily bread which when we haue then must we be contented This minde was in our father Iacob when hee prayed for nothing else but meate and clothing And this doth Paul generally command to be in all saying When we haue meate clothing let vs be contented We must first therefore seeke the kingdom of God and the righteousnes therof we must first labour for the forgiuenes of our sinnes in Christ that so we may be in the fauour of GOD and enioy the light of his louing countenance which when we haue and feele let vs esteeme it aboue all earthly treasure as Dauid doth let vs receiue it though it come alone yea though it bring troubles with it then for outward things we shall possesse our soules in patience If the Lord giue plentie of them wee shall take it as an ouerplus of his fauour but if he giue the lesse yet shall we be contented because we binde not his fauour to these outward things but if wee cannot rest in the fauour of God though wee want these outward things it is certaine wee neuer truly esteemed the fauour of God neither did we euer feele the forgiuenes of our sinnes if wee could not when we felt it be therewith contented and ready to forgoe all other things The second propertie of a patient minde is simplie to giue vp it selfe vnto God and commit itselfe into his hand waiting at all times for helpe from him who onely is the a●thor of all goodnes yet neither prescribing the meanes nor appoynting the time nor in any case indenting with him for the Lord will haue the disposition of his mercies free vnto himselfe to giue and to bestow when and where and how it pleaseth him and as it may most make for his glorie We must then euermore and with our whole hearts desire and craue of the Lord that his blessed Name may be glorified that his Kingdome may be enlarged and his holy will performed but the meanes to bring these things to passe we must whollie leaue vnto him who knoweth what is best and in other things which concerne our outward estate we ought alwayes to rest in his good pleasure This i● we can once doe so mercifully doth hee vse to deale with vs that when wee least desire them wee shall haue them and when we freely giue them vp to him he will soonest giue them vs againe Salomon desired wisedome of the Lord but for outward things his prayer was that hee might haue a meane estate then the Lord gaue him wisedome which his heart so much desired and riches also which he did not once desire Oh happie man if in his heart he had desired to walke before the Lord in feare Abraham gaue vnto the Lord Isaack his sonne which when the Lord did behold he quickly gaue him his sonne againe euen thus also must we thinke it standeth now with vs. The readiest way to obtaine life is to be heartily well contented either to liue or to die and to commit our selues vnto the Lorde knowing that nothing euer perished that was committed to his keeping so is it also in all other outward things the readie way to obtaine them is to giue them vp wholly into his hands But yet wee must not commit these things to the Lord with this condition that hee should giue them vs againe for that were to mocke the Lorde but without all care to haue them wee must giue them to him beeing in respect of his glorie and because his good pleasure is so heartily well content to forgoe them and then if they be good for vs we shall receiue them againe if not wee shall receiue some spirituall grace which better shall supplie the want of them Yea the infinite wisedome and mercie of God doth wonderfully appeare herein for sometimes he keepeth vs long without these things because that if wee had them hee seeth we would abuse them and would preferre them before spirituall blessings And sometime the Lorde seeing our small regard and accompt of spirituall things will by the want of these outward things bring vs to make greater accompt of them that when wee can well want the one and highly esteeme the other we may haue both together Let vs therefore reuerence this great goodnes and wisedome of the LORD and be content with the vse of life which he in mercie graunteth vs knowing that it is better to be a liuing dogge then a dead Lyon For whilest we liue we haue time to repent and time to glorifie God but after death there is no time left for repentance Whosoeuer then doth not account the vse of life a singular benefit though he doe euen want things necessarie for the same he is vnworthie of life or of any other the blessings of God therein The end of all then is this that patience is wrought in vs strengthened by the assurance of Gods mercies by faith in Christ by hope of euerlasting life and by trust in Gods prouidence and therefore the carking care of these things is left to the Gentiles which are ignorant of the forgiuenes of sinnes of Gods prouidence and of euerlasting life so that if we be like them in these greedie desires it argueth that either we know not these things or if in iudgement we doe conceiue them yet in heart we doe not beleeue them By meditation therefore of these things we must learne patience whereby we may ouercome our
many haue laboured much spoken abundantly and trauailed in great eloquence and yet haue neither gained glorie to God nor affoorded fruit to the hearers Hereupon it is that some that haue been as full as the vessell that hath no vent haue become as barren as the flint-stone is of water because they haue sought glorie but not by humilitie they haue shunned destruction but not left their pride Contrariwise we shall obserue how many speaking in the singlenes of their heart and humilitie of their spirit haue wonne many soules to the rich inlarging of Gods honour and kingdome Many vsing few words with a pitifull and sellow feeling affection haue comforted afflicted consciences instructed ignorant soules throwne downe proud spirits confounded hautie hearts profited abundantly them with whom they were to deale Many being lowly in their owne eyes haue not so much gloried in no● receiued glorie for their great gifts which God hath bestowed vpon them as they were comforted in their owne consciences with a rich testimonie of the sanctifying spirit who wrought in them some carefull vsage of the gifts receiued to his glorie that gaue them The Lord refuseth the seruice of wicked men he will not vse a proud spirit in his worke and therefore if we shall see that God doth not blesse our labours let vs suspect our selues to lie in some sinne let vs feare our owne hearts that they be not humbled before the Lord. And here it is good that we should be forewarned what lowlinesse it is the Lord requireth of vs least wee deceiue our owne soules in a false and phantasticall humilitie Wherefore as all men will grant humilitie to be voide of murmuring and grudging so we affirme that that is not a minde rightly humbled vnder the hand of God which is still perplexed and affrighted with immoderate feare of the daunger of some euill to come For as we condemne that hellish securitie which is voide of all feare so wee mislike that abiect minde which is oppressed with too much feare stil breathing out of such trembling voyces Oh what shall become of mee I am afraide that some euill will befall mee I shall neuer be able to beare it I had rather dye then feele it Whē we thus distrusting the Lord begin to teach him what he shall giue to vs or what he shall take from vs we are in the hie way to meete with the euill wee feared and nothing in the world will sooner bring the danger vpon vs. We therefore commend and affirme that to be true humilitie which as it repineth not grudgingly against the Lord so it shrinketh not too distrustfully before the Lord but as on the one side wee are readie to be thankefull if it bee the good will of the Lord to deliuer vs so on the other side wee are willing to laie our head to the blocke and offer our bodie to the striker if the Lord in wisedome should make triall of vs. This will teach vs to possesse our soules in meekenesse and patience this will strengthen vs to say boldly Lord if thou send this deliuerance thy name be praised if thou shalt further trie me Lord thy holy will be blessed Lord here I am spare mee if thou wilt trie me if thou pleasest This humilitie was in Abraham Isaac Moses Dauid Daniel Azariah Sidrach Abedn●go and others of the Saints and seruants of God Abraham when hee was most readie to offer vp his sonne euen then the Lord gaue him his sonne againe Dauid when he was prepared to surrender both life and liuing to the Lord obtained both life and kingdome for longer time At what time Ezekiah had resigned himselfe to dye at the will of the Lord the Lord gaue him his health againe and made him as it were a lease of his life for fifteene yeeres to come And surely there is no readier way to obtaine life than to offer our selues vnto death no better meane to auoide sicknes pouertie reproach or banishment than to haue our wils wholy resigned to Gods will as willing to beare the crosse as to be freed from it For as the more we striue against the will of God the lesse we preuaile so the sooner wee yeelde wee shall the sooner bee deliuered And yet I meane not that yeelding which the Lord by his threatnings or iudgements as by strong hand getteth of vs which is no voluntarie submission but a violent subiection and constraineth vs rather than allureth vs to obey the will of the Lord but I meane that willing humbling of our selues before the face of God which commeth from an hart bleeding at the conscience of his owne vnworthinesse and bruised with the sense of the Lords vndeserued goodnesse and that more kindly than if it were threatned with al the iudgements of the wicked and were braied and broken with all the plagues of hell The other extremitie which agreeth not with true humilitie is blockish senselesnesse and that dead and diuelish apoplexie of the minde which runneth without all foresight as neither caring for good nor bad sweete nor sowre heauen nor hell They that labour of this disease thinke it an high point of humilitie to say I am at a point let God doe what he will I care not if he saue me so it is if I be damned what remedie let men iniurie me as they will come what come will I passe not And these kind of men as past all feeling and now more brutish and blockish than any bruite beast in their life neither tremble at Gods iudgements nor reioyce in his promises in death they feare not hell they desire not heauen they are not grieued if they be damned they are not comforted to heare they shal be saued they confesse not their sinnes they professe not their faith they shew not their hope they liue like stockes and die like blockes And yet the ignorant people will still commend such fearefull deaths saying he departed as meekely as a lambe hee went away as a bird in a shell when they might as well say but for their fetherbed and their pillow hee died like a beast and perished like an oxe in a ditch But to come to the vse and fruit which we may gather out of this doctrine First let vs consider that if we be come to haue such a brawned and thicke skinne ouer our consciences as neither by publike preaching nor priuate reading as neither by the Law nor by the Gospell as neither with threatnings nor promises as neither by praying nor meditating wee can finde neither matter of comfort nor humbling wee are so farre from humilitie that we are as men rather dead than humbled and our case is most fearefull For in this Stoicall apathie and want of feeling wee feare nothing fearing nothing wee are easie to be deceiued being easie to be deceiued wee may soone be hardned and so by securitie being depriued of all heedfulnes we are snared of the tempter ere we
they are corrected for it And yet deale with these and such like men for the euil education of their children and they will answere doe not wee as much as is of vs required Wee send our children to the Church to be instructed of the pastor and to the schoole to be taught of the master if they learne it will be the better for them if not they haue the more to answere for another day what can wee doe more But remember O man consider O woman whosoeuer thus speakest that for thy sinnes sake and thy want of prayer there may be a plague vpon the pastors paines and a curse vpon the teachers trauaile If parents would haue their children blessed at Church and at schoole let them beware they giue their children no corrupt examples at home by any carelesnes prophanenes or vngodlines otherwise parents will doe them more harme at home than both pastors and schoolemasters can doe them good abroade For the corrupt example of the one fighteth with the good instruction of the other which is so much the more dangerous because that corrupt walking is armed with nature and therefore more forceably inclineth the affections of children to that side And further experience teacheth vs that children like or mislike more by countenance gesture and behauiour than by any rule doctrine precept or instruction whatsoeuer Some there be also that will not haue their children taught vntill they bee ten or twelue yeeres olde because as they say before that age they haue but an apish imitation To whom I answere that although indeede they cannot then deeply discerne nor profoundly conceiue things yet how many things before those yeeres both will they receiue and remember And I demand if children being apish in imitating euill whilest they be yong which they will haue the habit of when they be old why may they not much more better doe apishly good when they are young which they may doe carefully when they are old Besides let them so goe vntaught and they will grow so headstrong that they will sooner be broken than bended And sure it is that one stripe or two wordes will doe more good to a child in the beginning than an hundred stripes afterward And here let parents bee admonished of their vndiscreete correction who doe their children more harme in shewing a merrie countenance after their discipline vsed than they doe good by their chastising although in their anger they be corrected Neither doe I purpose to take away naturall affections and a Christian kinde of compassion in all our censures for it is my great complaint of the brutish vnmercifulnes of many parents herein but I would wish Christians to correct their vndiscreete affections herein by heauenly wisedome Neither am I so Stoicall as to denie a more milde and affable kinde of speech to bee both lawfully and conueniently vsed to children but yet I wish it to be voide of all vnseemely leuitie and without all shewe of foolish vaine and vnnecessarie behauiour To bee briefe how needfull household gouernement is towards our children it may appeare by the slender thriuing and smal profiting of religion and vertue either in the Church or Common-wealth For complaine men and preach they neuer so much abroade vnlesse they wil begin to reforme their owne houses and giue religion a roome at home especially in their owne hearts they shal trauaile much and profit little And surely if men were careful to reforme themselues first and then their own families they should see Gods manifold blessings in our land vpon Church and Common-wealth For of particular persons come families of families townes of townes prouinces of prouinces whole realmes so that conueighing Gods holy trueth in this sort from one to another in time and that shortly it would so spread into all parts of this kingdome Well I say let there be neuer so good lawes in cities neuer so pure orders in Church if there be no practise at home if fathers of families vse not doctrine and discipline in their houses and ioyne their hands to Magistrate and Minister they may but most vniustly as many haue done complaine that their children are corrupted abroade whereas indeede they were before and still are corrupted at home Alas if parents to whom the comfort of their children well brought vp is a precious crowne will not informe and reforme their children in the feare of God whom it doth chiefly concerne how should hope sustaine these men that others will performe this dutie to them for whom the charge doth farre lesse appertaine Lastly let parents remember that therefore oftentimes they haue disordered and disobedient children to themselues because they haue been disobedient children to the Lord and disordered to their parents when they were yong wherefore because they haue not repented the Lord punisheth their sinnes committed against others with the like sinne in others against themselues Wilt thou know then O father how thou maist haue that blessing to be the blessed father of a blessed seede wilt thou know O mother how to auoide that curse to be the cursed mother of a cursed seede then bring thy children within the couenant endeuour to make thy sonne by nature the sonne of God by grace and thy daughter by nature the daughter of God by grace and remember that God which on his part protested to our father Abraham that he was all sufficient for the accomplishment of his promise in giuing him a blessed seede required also of our father Abraham for his part that he should walke before him and be vpright Wilt thou then haue the one part of this couenant that is that God should blesse thee in thy seed then remember thou also the other part that thou walke before the Lord and be vpright Wilt thou haue thy children as the blessed seede of Abraham teach them with Abraham the commandements of God pray for them with Abraham that they may liue in the sight of the Lord be readie to offer them with Abraham that they may bee an holy sacrifice to the Lord It is thou O man O woman that maiest do thy child the greatest good and the greatest harme if thou praiest for him and repentest for thy selfe the Lord will blesse thy care the pastors paines and the teachers trauaile But if thou despisest these duties the Lord will denie thee those blessings and the curse of God will bee vpon thy childe at home in thy house abroade in the Church and in the schoole And seeing that the Lord hath promised that hee will bee thy God and blesse thy seede if thou bee faithfull thou maiest both hope that thou art of the faithfull if thou haue a blessed seede and feare that thou hast not as yet the blessing of the couenant when thy seede is cursed But some will say had not Iacob wicked children and Dauid godlesse sonnes And doth not daily experience teach vs that wicked men haue godly children Yes for besides
before the hi● God shall I com● before him with burnt offerings i● he hath shewed thee ò man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to doe iustly and to loue mercy and to humble thy selfe to walke with thy God that is that thou shouldest set him i● thy sight belieuing that he doth guide and gouerne thee Besides the Apostle teacheth vs ● Cor. 3. 18. that we all behold as in a mirror the glory of the Lord with open face and are changed into the same image For when we behold the Lord in his promises of reconciliation that he is at peace with vs of sanctification that he will renew vs of safegard and prouidence that for our good he will watch ouer vs and that he is at our right hand with his Angels and on the other hand with his creatures then we behold him as our redeemer as our teacher as our prouident father and as iudge of heauen and earth so we shall with Steuen see Christ and thus beholding God in his word and workes we may be said to walke before the Lord. Whereupon we may easily coniecture how requisite a thing it is often to heare reade and meditate of the word of God to be frequent in prayer whereby we may attaine to a cleerer sight of God his promises which are all yea and Amen in Iesus Christ. Whosoeuer then setteth God before him first as a God of glorious maiestie who will not iustifie the obstinate sinner then as a father of gratious mercie who comforteth the repenting sinner and in euery particular thing is perswaded that God seeth him as a iudge and a Lord of the spirits and God of glory and power it can not be but this will shake from him all drowsie securitie and chase away all vaine imaginations as the bright Sunne beames breake the darke and mistie clowdes And because there is no dealing betwixt God and man but by a Mediatour we must set God before vs in Christ and Christ in God that we may behold his iustice vnder his mercie and his mercie under his iustice And being thus perswaded that we are beloued of God in his beloued we shall doe all in his name which is the end of all happinesse This one lesson of Diuinitie will teach vs the vse of many and wil stand in steed of a thousand both to comfort and instruct vs to comfort vs with pacifying our consciences with a godly securitie in things most open and apparant to instruct vs by charging our consciences to auoide carnall securitie in things most inward and secret Vntill we are brought to walke before the Lord in this obedience all the wisedome of the learned is vanitie Hauing learned this one ru●e and made in truth this pedagogie of our actions the simplest soule shall come foorth himselfe in the conscience of vnfained holinesse For he is at my right hand This phrase of speech is borrowed from them who when they take vpon them the patronage defence or tuition of any will set them on their right hand as in place of most safegard Experience cōfirmeth this in children who in any imminent danger shrowde and shelter themselues vnder their fathers armes or hands as vnder a sufficient buckler Such was the estate of the man of God as here appeareth who was hemmed and hedged in with the power of God both against present euils and daungers to come Neither doth the Lord hatch Dauid alone vnder the hād but al other that put their trust in him as Psal. 91. 1. Who so dwelleth in the secret of the most high shall abide in the shadow of the Almightie c. Wherein we see this assurance of God his protection to be common generally to all which flie for succour wholy to him in time of temptation Againe Psalme 121. 4. it is said Behold he that keepeth Israel will neither slumber nor sleepe Vers. 5. ●he Lord is thy keeper the Lord is thy shadow at thy right hand c. Where we see he speaketh of the whole bodie and no● of any particular number of the Church We are then to learne thus much out of this straine that when we haue a care to set the Lord continually in our sight he hath a care continually to watch ouer our estate This glorious reioycing of faith is also in other places of the booke of God Psal. 23. throughout the whole Psalme the man of God sheweth that he had so richly and so sweetly tasted of the promises of God that in trouble he neuer wanted helpe The Apostle likewise to the Rom. 8 sheweth the happie estate of all the regenerate although in a more excellent patterne of his owne faith saying vers 31. If God be on our side who can be against vs 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God his chosen It is God that iustifieth 34. who shall condemne c. And afterward vers 38 I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come 35. nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Howbeit we must not thinke that the man of God was not remoued at all For he counteth himselfe a stranger vpon earth and he had many pushes and diuers assaults yet so as he was not finally moued and vtterly ouerthrowne He had many battels but got the victorie many men rose against him but the Lord was on his side still he was vnremoueable as Mount Sion and though he was shaken for a time yet in the end he was safe Now to the verse following Wherefore mine heart is glad and my tongue reioyceth my flesh also doth rest in hope Here are two pestilent opinions of the Papists ouerthrowne The one that we should not boldly reioyce in the vndoubted assurance of our saluation The other that we should dou●t and be in a mammering of our finall perseuerance In our confession of the faith immediatly after the article of the remission of our sinnes followeth the acknowledging of an happie resurrection and glorious immortalitie wherein we are assured that euen as in this life our sinnes are pardoned so we shall not miscarrie to the very resurrection and our very flesh shall rise againe to most blessed immortalitie Shall I doubt that God watcheth ouer me as a father in loue as almightie in power as a prouident preseruer in gouerning heauen and earth Shall I doubt that Christ true God and true Man died for my sinnes rose for my iustification ascended to take possession of that glorie which he will giue vnto me at his comming Shall I doubt that the spirit of God hath sealed me and sanctified me preseruing me vnblameable in Christ vntill the day of redemption Shall I doubt that I am of the number of the Saints which are ordained to that glorie which is freely giuen of God the Father dearely purchased of
true and iust Therefore you shall haue no harme vnlesse you be wicked and vngodly men I am a m●n that feare God Here is a rule of Christian life especially for Magistrates Wee must all feare God All that are in place and authoritie must knowe that they are vnder God Ioseph considered hereof not now onely but also in the last chapter of Genesis when his brethren were afraid of him Reade from the 14. verse of that chapter to the 19. where Ioseph saith Feare not for I am not vnder God And I pray you marke what this consideration wrought in him in the 20. and 21. verses When ye thought euill against me God disposed it to good c. Now if we feare God we must pray vnto him for our Magistrates that he will maintaine his feare among them For it falleth out that we are often times punished by them euen especially because we neuer pray for them Here be rules in this feare of God for religion for praying vnto God and praising God for true keeping of the Sabbath for conuersation of life First when as to the hindrance of the feare of God any lawes shall come foorth contrary to Gods word wee must remember that we forget not to feare God and to stand in aw of his rods if wee swarue from his word Secondly if we doe not on the Sabbath day more than man commandeth we shewe that we feare man more than God And lastly in all our doings and dealings either with the Lord or with men let vs remember to feare God for if wee feare not God what wickednesse is there which wee feare to commit Abraham when hee came to Abimelechs Court he feared adulterie he had no other reason but this Because the feare of God was not in that place Hence euen from the want of the feare of God commeth drunkennes and selling of wares without conscience and oppressing of the poore and heaping vp riches to another end than hee that gaue them or rather lent them hath appointed against all which since man cannot make sufficient lawes it were to be wished that euery man could say truly and from his heart I am a man that feareth God Vers. 21. And they saide one to another We haue verily sinned against our brother in that wee saw the arguish of his soule when hee besought vs and wee would not heare him therefore i●t is trouble come vpon vs. Euery word containeth doctrine vpon doctrine ●irst wee see how necessarie afflictions are to make vs call vpon God By this reason by afflictions we feele our sinne now without we feele our sinnes we call not vpon God For till we feele the burthen of our sinnes lying vpon our conscience as it were a weight to presse vs downe into hell we forget God we foolishly perswade our selues wee haue no neede for we can see none Therefore afflictions are very necessarie for vs to remember God to call vpon him and to bring vs to some assurance also thereby that wee are the children of God That affliction is so necessary to feele our sinnes both daily experience doth teach vs and examples and testimonies of the children of God doe confirme the same vnto vs. Iosephs brethren all the time of their prosperitie forget what they had done to Ioseph but now when they were in some distresse they came to themselues and began to call to account and to lay before them their hard dealing with their brother And Dauid saith in the 119 Psalme Before I was afflicted I went astray the ninth part of that Psalme but saith he now I keepe thy word So then wee may boldly conclude that affliction is a necessarie thing to bring vs to God And here wee may note the great loue and care that the Lord God hath ouer vs and his infinite goodnes towards vs in vsing al meanes for our saluation First the Lord setteth downe his law vnto vs. and hee hath added also threatning and curses to as many as shall neglect or disobey it But now if neither the law preached nor yet those threatnings are able to strike a terror into our hearts thē he vseth yet another meanes he taketh his rods and fatherly correcteth vs by that meanes to moue vs to crie to him himselfe by our crie to pitie vs and haue mercie vpon vs. The preaching of the law is necessarie and the threatnings for transgression of the law must often times bee vsed Iosephs brethren after they were sore threatned they then began to be humbled and to acknowledge their fault The Lord saide vnto Abimelech Thou art but a ●ead man if thou restore not to Abraham his wife againe So that wee may here see the end of threatnings e●her they bring a man to knowe his sinne and so to preuent the punishment due for sinne or else they hasten and heape greater punishment vnto vs if otherwise we doe no● repent After Iosep●s brethren were threatned they were humbled and so God repented him of the plague hee was minded to bring vpon them Abimelech after he was threatned he restored Abraham his wife againe and so the Lord staied from destroying him Now there are two sorts of people which would haue Gods promises preached vnto them and not the law of God The first are they which would continue in sinne As for these they are like to the Horse and to the Mule whose mouthes mus● bee holden with bit and bridle Another sort there is which would not haue the law nor the threatnings therof preached vnto them and these are they which feele themselues moued with the promises of God But we cannot be moued liuely with the promises of Christ except we first by the law and the threatnings of Iohn see the full measure of punishment that our sins haue deserued Therefore it is very requisit we first haue the law preached vnto vs that wee may haue a liuely feeling of our sinnes As those which would not haue the law preached were said to be of two sorts so those that feele their sinnes are also of two sorts for either they see sinne in generall or else they are humbled more specially Those which feele their sinnes and haue a taste thereof and see them in general and not specially these must be cut on both sides they must see sinne on both sides they must enter into the secrets of the heart for they haue not yet learned to discerne of thoughts they must euē haue their very hearts thoughts laid open vnto them In the third to the Hebr. we are bidden not to harden our hearts at the word of God Not to harden our hearts that is not only to heare the law preached vnto our eares to goe no further for so it neuer profiteth vs nay it is the power of death vnto death vnto vs but we must suffer it to soke into vs to haue his proper working to pearce to enter euen to the very secret cogitations of our hearts that not onely
the steadinesse stilnesse and mildnesse of our minde in that wee will not dispute with reason against any thing in our regeneration I see that many that wil not deliuer themselues and their reasons to be captiuated vnto the truth and refuse to beleeue the mysticall power of the Gospel are in time carried away by foule and effectuall illusions For there are many who hearing in the word of the wonderful creation redemption and preseruation of man and of the matter of the Sacramēts cannot beleeue them yet afterwards goe to witches and to be caught of the diuell which they cannot vnlesse they professe and practise an euill faith so that they which will no profit by the truth will suffer themselues to be deluded The other kinde of euill in my diuision was of things not apparantly euill As in times past we were carefull for nothing more then with libertie of minde to vse the creatures of God so now adayes nothing is lesse to be taught because loose libertie and licentiousnes serue so for the flesh and we do not by our libertie serue one another in loue We can say outward things are lawful euery man obiecteth outward things cannot desile a man I answere that when outward liberty bringeth inward bondage and the pretence of outward things lawfull hinder the necessary inward things they be made vnlawfull All things are vnlawfull saith Paul but I will not be brought vnder the bondage of any thing Well howsoeuer wee pretend this lawfull vse of outward things which in their owne natures are the good creatures to cloake our wantonnesse withal let vs know that the wickednesse beginneth in wantonnesse and wantonnesse endeth in wickednesse because it is the way of a dangerous downfall of our soules For either the Lord will punish it with present and temporall punishment or else will cast vs into some great sinnes hereafter And though I will not affirme that euery wanton young man is a meere wicked man yet I dare affirme that wantonnesse is the way to further euill Besides this am I sure of wantonnesse maketh vs vnapt to good workes it takes away the comfort of Gods spirit the ioye of the word the sweetnesse of prayer and of the Sacraments Againe as it is certaine that wantons pray not meditate not nor doe any good thing aright because that sinne desireth all euill and hindereth all good things so if the word would teach vs sinne we would learne it if it make for our good wee cannot learne it And that wee may see to how many euils youth and wantonnesse be subiect reade Galath 6. 1. Cor. 6. Eccl. 11. Psal. 25. Iob. 14. Ierem. 21. So now we know what is the meaning of the man of God in this word euill way that is that which is occasion of euill We can say in worldly things because the way is dangerous through ditches theeues pits or such like Oh that the same minde were in vs to preuent the perils of our soules Our Sauiour Christ taught vs that if our eye offend vs we should pull it out if our hand or foote offend vs we should cut them off the meaning whereof is that we should not indeed shred them off but resraine from the corrupt vsing of them and turne them to a better vse We haue shewed hitherto how carefully the man of God vsed the meanes to godlines and also how carefull hee was to auoide all occasions of euill Wee must not then thinke christianity to bee so small a thing if as lingerers wee make such friuolous excuses that it is hard to be a good man we shall surely neuer come to so high a dignitie We haue also shewed that vnles we labour to deny our selues we shall neuer buckle our selues after the graces of God Vers. 102. I haue not declined from thy iudgements for thou diddest teach me AS if he should say I haue seene and obserued that whosoeuer did resraine from euill they were wiser than their enemies they became more learned than their teachers and proued grauer than the ancient and that they which did not resraine were greatly punished plagued and trodden downe and as thou hast punished some so wilt thou also punish others wherefore I haue not declined from thy iudgements Was there euer towne people or person which truly beleeued in Iesus Christ in whose life and death did not appeare plentifully Gods mercy And contrarily how haue the vnbeleeuers bin giuen ouer to hardnes of heart and a reprobate minde many plagues wars and other iudgements of God to them incident Old Protestants are now become rustie because they made no account of Gods word in their youth Esau lost his Birth-right for a messe of pottage hee sought it afterwards with teares but could not haue it whose prophanesse grew by pleasures We see many wanton men to come to fearefull ends and silthie adulteries who beginning to condemne the word fell to spending from spending to rioting from riot to adulterie from that to theft and from stealing to death If we will obserue godly discipline we must first learne Gods doctrine if wee will learne his iudgements we must learne his mercie We attribute too much to fortune to fatall destinies to charmings and such like but no man doth looke vp to the hand of God wherein we take his name in vaine in not vsing aright his iudgements Thou hast taught me that is thou hast besides the ministeriall preaching giuen me an extraordinarie knowledge of thy iudgements Many knowe much who notwithstanding cannot profit by Gods iudgements So that the briefe and plaine meaning of the Prophet is thus much in effect O Lord I haue not had this knowledge in and of my selfe but I receiued it of thy Holy spirite it was thy mercie and thy grace that made mee knowe thy iudgements The man of God then sheweth vs in this verse that hee did alwayes set the iudgements of God before him what made him then so carefull to doe them the considering of them in his mind the occupying his eies to marke them the vsing of his eares to heare how God performed his promises to the obedient executed his fearefull threatnings on the wicked A thing than which nothing is worthie of greater meditation We heare often with our eares but with little profit the glorious promises and wonderfull vengeance of the Lord what is commaunded and what is forbidden but when we consider and see before our eyes how the Lord hath performed these things we are humbled from sinne comforted to obedience This is it that breeds triall proofe experience to see how the Lord hath in his mercy dealt with Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph Dauid his faithful seruants and how he hath plagued the Egyptians the Sodomites the olde world and other of his enemies Thy iudgements of old O Lord saith Dauid haue I considered Wee shall neuer effectually obserue the iudgements of old vnlesse we obserue the iudgements of God of late For
humble they feare themselues they seeke the Lord by prayer and are desirous to be established in the promises of God they are as strong as Mount Sion which cannot be remoued but remaineth for euer Psalme 125.1 Though then we be weake yet our Christ is strong though we haue many enemies yet the Lord hath promised to be our staie against them all Let vs knowe that perseuerance is as well the gift of God as to come at first to God We know what a free gift of God it was that we came to him Hee sought vs when we desired him not he found vs when we sought him not We see how before our calling we closed our eyes and would not see him we stopt our eares and would not heare him we drew backe and refused to goe to him and the Lord was faine to draw vs out so that our beginning came of God who reformed our iudgements and renewed our affections now to be established in seeing hearing and willingly drawing neere vnto God is his onely gift also Well we must be afraide of our selues and suspect our selues For why doe we slip often into such grosse sinnes why are we carried away with our owne affections why doe so many good motions die and perish in vs but only because of our securitie we are not careful to please God we are not afraide to offend God Well if we see that securitie hath bene the cause of our woe let vs labour to be carefull which is the cause of our good if securitie hath bene the cause we feared not let vs now be carefull that we may be afraide of our frailtie and trust in Gods word Otherwise if we be quiet with our selues and yeeld to presumption God will suffer vs to fall This is the cause why our sinnes breake out often to Gods dishonour and to the griefe of our owne consciences because we doe not more carefully to looke our thoughts and watch ouer our words It is added in this verse that I may liue So he saith Portion 10.4 Let thy tender mercies come vnto me that I may liue We see heere that the children of God thinke they haue no life if they liue not in Gods life For if we thinke we are aliue because we see so doe the bruit beasts if we thinke we are aliue because we heare so do the cattell if we thinke we are aliue because we eate and drinke or sleepe so do beasts if we thinke we liue because we doe reason and conferre so doe the Heathen The life of Gods children is the death of sinne for where sinne is aliue there that part is dead vnto God Art thou then giuen to malice to swearing to cursing to breaking of the Sabbath to adultery to filthines to stealing or slandring surely then art thou dead and if God should take away thy life from thee whilest thou art in this estate thy soule should goe sooner to hell than thy bodie to the graue We now see that Gods children finding themselues dull and slowe to good things when they cannot either reioyce in the promises of God or finde their inward man delighted with the law of God thinke themselues to be dead The Prophets meaning is this I am euen as a lumpe of flesh I am like an image or like an idoll of Gods childe I beare the face of his childe but I am as dead and as a blocke or a stocke or an idoll For as an idoll hath eyes and seeth not eares and heareth not mouth and speaketh not feete and goeth not euen so haue I eyes but I see not the glorie of my God I haue eares but I heare not the word of God I haue a mouth but I shewe not forth the iudgements of God I haue feete but I walke not in the law of my God The iust shall liue by faith Hab. 2. Rom. 1. Now I liue no more but Christ liueth in me saith the Apostle Oh that men would consider this that they are dead otherwise than their life is hidden in the promise and they haue no life but in Christ and from his spirit If the Prophet sayd this of himselfe where is the faith of our protestants where is the life of the godly where is their hope of a better life where is their practise of repentance where is the peace of conscience that passeth all vnderstanding where is the ioy of Christiās where is the care of mortification where is the quicknesse of sanctification where are all these become They are sewe and dead to good workes they liue in sinne they be but Christians in name they are very idols There is no life but in the word which we must finde by experience in our selues When Gods children finde this life of God in them then are they merrie and glad but when they feele that God withdraweth his spirit from them then they see how they are dead dull and carelesse as they were wont to be before they were regenerate Shall not this make vs more carefull and zealous of good workes and to be more iealous of our selues Let vs consider this that it is a ioy to haue a life and that euen the life of God the life of Angels the life of Christ when we contemne this life when wee are zealous of good workes when we feele spirituall ioyes when wee looke for a crowne of glorie when we labour to be renewed to the image of Christ. This is an heauenly life and though we will sweate and eate and drinke this is common with the beasts of the field and hauing no experience of faith in vs wee are either dangerously sicke or altogether dead If wee thinke it an hard matter to restore nature in a consumption how hard a thing is it to restore grace and saluation in a consumption of the soule If wee are without hope when a man is in a languishing disease when he hath no delight to eate when hee cannot brooke his meate and his sleepe is gone from him hee cannot labour and Physitians dare not meddle with him what hope is there when we are in such a consumption that the wo●d which we heare doth vs no good the Sacraments which wee receiue doe vs no comfort prayer doth vs no good and when we cannot abide to labour in good workes surely it is a token we are almost languished to death if wee be not already dead wee are in extreame danger The Lord indeede is gracious and would not our death but if wee bee consuming and see it not if Gods life be going from vs and Sathans life is comming to vs if Gods graces be languishing in vs surely we are as dead Let vs then search our owne corruptione that we may see how neare we are to life or how neare wee are to death whether wee growe or consume whether for the one wee are to feare and pray to God or for the other to reioyce and praise God Thus we haue heard that the faith
whilest they are contented and well pleased and whilest things haue that successe which they looke for who when they suffer discredit are vtterly cast downe We see here the man of God is content to lose his credit so God be not dishonored and is readie to buy glorie to the name of God with the losse of his own name For he resteth in this that though he may be misdeemed of the world ill iudged of yet he hath a warrant in his cōscience from the Lord that he wil depose for him and howsoeuer for a time he beareth the reproch as an euill doer yet the Lord will one day drawe out his righteous dealing and make it knowne to all men Wherefore the Prophet saith Psalm 37. Fr●t not thy selfe because of the wicked men neither bee enuious for the euill doers c. And then hee addeth vers 5. Commit thy way vnto the Lord and trust in him and he shall bring it to passe 6. And he shall bring forth thy righteousnes as a light and thy iudgement as the noone da● As if he should say waite still on the Lord and possesse thy soule in patience the Lord in time will put away the clowdie mists of ill reports and will cause thy righteousnes one day to shine as brightly as the Sunne in the midday If we should consider the discredit of Noah how he was accounted as a gazing stocke to the old world if wee should thinke how Enoch was despised in his time or how Lot was discredited among the Sodomites or what contempt Eliah suffered among the Idolaters in the age wherein hee liued with many other holy men wee would thinke it wonderfull Nay if wee would but consider but how this man of God Dauid suffered reproach contempt and discredit wee should much marueile First when hee had the rarest gifts of all his brethren and excelled them in the gifts of God he was set to keepe sheepe in the field when the rest were sent to aduance themselues in the warres Then when he had slaine the Beare and was come among his brethren where he saw the vncircumcised Philistin breathing out blasphemie against the Lord and his people and through Faith in Gods promises and zeale of the spirit could not abide him so to blaspheme the liuing God marueiling that his brethren without great indignation should sustaine it hee setteth vpon the great Goliah which when his brethrer saw in contempt they asked what that princocke could doe and tell him that it were more fitte for him to deale with his sheep-hooke then to attempt to fight for so noble a victorie Besides when as afterwards by his singular dexteritie which he had by playing on the Harpe he had appeased Sauls furious spirit they could not cease to despise him and opprobriously sayd of him Is not this the sonne of Ishai Then being offered one of Sauls daughters in mariage they mocked him by disappointing her of her dowrie afterwards when hee should haue had the second daughter who had her dowrie appoynted and allotted euery clawbacke scorned him yea Doeg that was the heardsman was suffered to slay the children of God So Dauid was faine to ●lie for succour to the Heathen kings his owne men contemning and forsaking him And yet stil he saith I am small and despised yet doe I not forget thy word Well let vs see did not the Lord promote him after he had thus continued in patience we know the Lord made his righteousnes glorious and his good name to shine abroad and his innocency to appeare to all men after the death of Saul By faith saith the Apostle Hebr. 11. 2. our Elders were well reported of whereof some are there said to be tried by mockings and scourgings vers 36. We suppose saith Paul we are made a gazing stocke and the off-scouring of the world yet he fainted not because he knew that howsoeuer vile he was in the eyes of the world yet the Lord delighted in him the Angels of God in heauē the Church of Gods Saints on earth reioyced in him his owne conscience felt ioy peace through that patience wherein he possessed his soule Wherefore our Sauiour Christ said to his Disciples Matth 5. Blessed are yee when men reuile you persccute you and say all manner of euill against you for my sake falsely c. Wherefore let vs learne that we are to fight daily against selfe-loue and loue of our credit and let vs be as contented to giue our names to the Lord as we are to giue him our goods our liues and our countries Let vs offer all that we haue to the Lord of whom we haue receiued it and of whom in his good time we shall receiue it againe Abraham gaue Isaac his sonne to the Lord in sacrifice and yet he receiued him again So let vs giue our names to the Lord by what meanes soeuer he pleaseth to receiue them For many would be content to do so if they might leese their name because they haue been famous in warre or haue come by it by some noble sufferings but to suffer discredit wrongfully and as traytors or rebels and to haue most false inditements in the face of the world proceed against vs so that people clap their hands at vs as notable malefactors or heretikes is a thing very difficult But if our Sauiour Christ be contemned as a destroyer of the Temple and S●euen bee accused to speake blasphemie against Moses let vs bee content to leese our name as weldoers also knowing that the Lord in time will take away the clowde which Sathan as a vatle doth put before vs who would perswade vs that when our name is gone God seeth not nor regardeth our righteousnes But hee that draweth the light to shine out of darknes he can also in time deliuer our names out of discredit Doe the wicked then thinke to obscure the glorie of Gods Martyrs Noah Lot Eliah and all the Saints and Martyrs of the Lorde are most glorious the Lord hath glorified them wee still praise them and daily they are commended in the Church of God Alexander the great in all his royaltie nor Pomp●y nor Caesar nor Tullie haue euer receiued such commendarions in their greatest pomps as haue the deare Martyrs of God And although with the Papists we make them not as halfe Gods to pray vnto them or as Angels to praise them yet we praise God for them Let vs learne therefore to giue our names freely to the Lord. Some mens sinnes saith the Apost go before to iudgement some mens follow after Some mens sinnes goe before and the godly Magistrate seeth them and punisheth them Some mens sinnes come after and shall be in time remembred and reuenged if they be not pardoned in the death of Iesus Christ. Trueth is the daughter of time and in time all shall bee reuealed whether it be good or ill and all ill either in this world or in the world to come shall be remembred and
died well as they liued well or else by their martyrdome glorified God and edified others who neuer sought great things in prosperitie nor were impatient in aduersitie If wee feare with Baruch Iere. 45. the wofull troubles at hand wee are vnfit to purchase glorie to the Lord but if wee be of Ieremiah his minde as considering how God hath alwaies assisted his and that if we beare the crosse patiently with his children who were iustified sanctified and blessed wee also shall be iustified sanctified and blessed and shall haue our faith strengthened whereby we may the better glorifie him For as the curse causelesse shall flie away and doe no harme so heauen and earth shall passe but not one word of the Lord shall faile Vers. 166 Lord I haue trusted in thy saluation and haue done thy testimonies HEre the man of God particularly applieth that to himselfe which generally before he had spoken whose meaning is thus much I haue seene that they that labour to keepe a good conscience shall haue peace therefore I labour to keepe a good conscience in hope that the same will come to me Now let vs first carrie away the lesson namely to apply that particularly to ourselues which wee heare reade or receiud of others generally And as he seeing the peace of the godly generally laboured to feele the same in himselfe particularly euen so we are not to satisfie our selues with the generall threatnings of the law and promises of the Gospell but to make them seuerall and particular to our selues We see whatsoeuer the law teacheth generally the prophecies inculcate particularly whether it be in threatnings or promises in things commanded or forbidden Wherefore let euery man desire of God that he may be a Prophet to himselfe by laying the line of the word to his owne conscience in this or such like manner This thing the Lord commanded therefore I must doe it for he commandeth me this thing the word forbiddeth therefore I must auoide it for it is forbidden me this the Lord threatneth to such a sinner if I lie in that sin I am to feare it this the Gospell promiseth to them that repent then I hope vpon repentance to feele the comfort of it For this is the true vse of hearing when by this meane we are either comforted and incouraged to doe well or terrified and dismaied to doe ill The words in their originall tongue signifie thus much I haue waited for thy saluation Wherein is commended vnto vs a speciall effect of faith which must be seene in waiting for that which is promised The first generall truth that we must here take profit by is that if we will keep a good conscience we must haue a sound faith which breedeth a good conscience and without which it is impossible to please God If we then will doe good things we must beleeue in God as the author of all goodnes wisedome and eternitie and that he hath made a sweete couenant with vs and beleeuing this to be true we must labour to keepe his commandements For without this faith we doe good or auoide ill either for hope of reward or for feare of ill so that our obedience is violent constrained and not free He beleeued not onely but also looked patiently for those promises which is here shewed by waiting For many say they loue the word who doe not in truth beleeue it or if they beleeue it as they wil say they doe not patiently waite for it and many thinke they feare God who worship rather an Idoll and stay not themselues on God his promises Many so perswade themselues to haue faith who will make haste that God should presently helpe which if it come not they withdraw themselues seeke meanes to serue themselues These declare themselues not to haue this waiting faith Faith saith the holy Ghost Heb. 11. 1. is the ground of things which are hoped for and the euidence of things which are not seene So that it is a thing which bringeth vs to the hope of that which afterward we shall possesse As he that beleeueth shall liue by faith so he that waiteth not on the Lord hath no true faith because he will not tarrie for the Lords appointed time but will prouide for himselfe The Prophet saith Esay 30. 18. Blessed are all they that waite for the Lord. And Habac. 2. 3. Though the vision tarrie saith the Lord w●ite for it shall surely come and not stay Againe it is said Psal. 147. 11. The Lord delighteth in them that feare him and attend vpon his mercie A doctrine worthie to be written with the Diamond of God his Spirit in our hearts This then is one of the chiefest effects of faith when we waite on the Lords leisure and make a distinction of the time of making and accomplishing Gods promises vnto vs. For betweene the one and the other God sendeth often crosse things in the way to trie vs whether we will waite or no. Indeed at the first whilest our faith is but tender it pleaseth him to feede vs as it were with pap and to performe his promises plentifully vnto vs but when we are growne to some strength he will not still deale with vs as with children but will often proue vs by suspending for a while his promises If we consider how Abraham waited tenne yeeres vntill the promise was accomplished and how Iacob staied himselfe one and twentie yeeres vntill he also obtained and if we call to minde how long the Lord proued Ioseph after he had dreamed and how he tried Dauid with many troubles and yet notwithstanding after so many temptations and dangers they beleeued we shall see approued witnesses of this true effectuall faith And as it is the nature of true faith to waite so it is the nature of incredulitie to be hastie so that if we haue not things presently to helpe vs we cannot be merrie we must make some shifts to helpe our selues For how cōmon a fruit of our vnbeleefe is it that we so often haue in our troubles and bring forth of the rotten stocke of our corrupt nature when helpe is a little deferred to say I haue prayed I haue asked counsell of Physitions I haue vsed all the meanes I can I haue staied thus long I may waite indeede vntill my heart breake I haue made hue and crie I can finde no release I am neuer the better I must needes goe seeke out I must aske counsell abroad I must needes goe to some wiseman I thinke now the Lord would haue me to vse some meanes for my reliefe Thus Sathan after our Sauiour Christ had long fasted thinking that after so long waiting his temptation should come in some good season moued our Sauiour Christ to seeke out and to make some shift to helpe himselfe and as he was the Sonne of God so he might the better and more easily prouide for himselfe Thus we see the man of God speaketh not onely of a small faith
are good for that which is good doth alwayes good They haue a mixte nature retaining some vse as a blessing of their creation and much euill by the fall of Adam And they haue bene euer greater causes of harme then of good by occasion And therfore saith a Father on the Prayer Prou. 30. Lord giue me neither riches nor pouertie Pouertie saith he hath bene the decay of many a man but riches of a farre greater number 3 Many desire that which when they haue gotten their conscience is afraide to vse 4 Nothing is ours but as we feele our title in Christ and as it is sanctified by praier and by the word 5 Manie are outwardly well and rich in this world which are inwardly ill and poore in godlines and many hate outward euill things which for want of spirituall knowledge fee not the corruptions of the heart 6 Though the hawthorns in spring-time haue a faire white flower pleasant to the sense yet indeed it is but a pricking thorne so riches glorious to the eye by Christs own mouth are called thornes They pricke both hand heart CHRIST hath spoken it in his time and it is not to be thoght that they haue changed their own nature since And though we feele not these pricks in the beginning yet we shall find this true in the end Though some die as swine in a ditch as benummed as men already plunged in the pit of hell yet haue others wished on their death-bed that they had neuer gone further then the shouell spade 7 There are two kindes of loue among vs as may be gathered by our common talke First we say we loue our friends that is we would haue them doe well Next when wee be said to loue money the meaning is we wish to haue it But let vs obserue that whatsoeuer we loue we wish the good of it And the good of euery thing is the end For which God hath created it to serue his glorie For this cause the Prophets tell vs that the wood and stones of our houses shall come and giue witnesse against vs at the great day for turning them violently to another vse than God hath ordained them Now the vse of riches is to be communicated else God might haue made all rich If we wisely note this we loue not riches when we desire so greedily to haue and keepe them None would be so loued of his friends as hee loues his meate that is to be eaten and deuoured as great men deuoure the poore and riches 8 And to shewe that God is highly displeased with this immoderate loue of riches hee punisheth it with itselfe hee doth punish a desire with a desire As the Prophet Nathan saith Thornes are folded one within another So it is in the desire of riches one desire followeth another Such men are well compared to great Mastiues who hauing receiued one morsell swallowe it vp greedily and waite for another The holy Ghost compareth them to horsleaches who sucke blood till they burst their skinnes When men begin to be rich their desire is infinite and they like not their substance when it may be numbred or manifested But we see Luk. 12 there is no other speech vsed of the rich man then of most poore men What shall I doo There is mention made of a beast in Daniel and in that hee was a beast indeede which wept because there were no more worlds for him to ouercome So is it with the couetous rich men 9 It is no maruell if riches fill not the soule for they were all made for man his soule for GOD. Whatsoeuer is capable of God that can neuer be satisfied with any thing else all riches all preferments cannot satisfie one soule but when God is come it is full and whatsoeuer is added more it runneth ouer Mans desire is like a burning fire and riches are the wood and fuell which may seeme to slake the fire for a time but it will burne more vehemently afterward The wise Preacher concludeth this saying Hee that loueth siluer shall not be satisfied with it and hee that lovethriches shall be without the fruit thereof Eccle. 5. 9. CHAP. X. Of Care Couetousnesse and Contentation IT is no great thing for a man liuing on another mans charges not to be couetous but for one that hath wife and children c. for to rest vpon Gods prouidence and to vse onely lawfull meanes with patience this is an argument of Faith So if death or age make vs carefully couetous and vnfit for heauenly exercises we may soone see what faith is in vs. This triall must be diligently taken in prosperitie least if we neglect it our Faith doe faile vs in aduersitie For if we doe not in the good day store vp our selues with comforts we shall be emptie in the euill day when it commeth If in prosperitie we set our delight on heauenly things wee shall easily want earthly things because wee neuer set our hearts on them But if our delight be in riches● then assuredly when they are taken from vs our Faith must faile vs because our ioy is taken away with our riches Beware then of couetousnes which is a sinne when all other sinnes waxe olde this waxeth young in thee for we see daily manie freed from other vices yet fouly spotted with this 2 We must take heede that we indent not with the Lord but simplie giue vp our selues to him and seeke the grace of God at all times with all our hearts and let vs aske other things as it pleaseth him For when we giue these outward things to the Lord then will he soonest giue them vs againe Salomon desired Wisedome and God gaue him wisedome which his heart desired and riches which his heart desired not O happie man if withal he desired the feare of the Lorde Abraham gaue the Lord his sonne Isaak the Lorde then gaue Isaak to Abraham againe So the readyest way to obtaine outward things at Gods hand is to giue them vp to the hands of the Lord not that we must commit them to the Lord with this condition for that were to mocke the Lord but with Abraham wee ought to giue them to him freely without hope to receiue them againe and yet being content in respect of the Lordes glory and will with the want of them and then if they bee good for vs wee shall haue them or else some spirituall grace which with the better shall supplie the want Therefore the carking and greedy care of these things is left to the godlesse which are ignorant of the forgiuenesse of sinnes and of Gods prouidence 3. Wee may not aske earthly blessings as signes of Gods fauour neither must wee esteeme the wants of these things as tokens of his displeasure Againe the Lord often keepeth these things from vs for that wee would abuse them and set more by them than by spirituall things
acknowledge it not hauing his word regard it not enioying his mercies inful measure wilfully resist them all If we so lie vnder sinne and fancie to our selues the Gospell and promises and mercie we deceiue our selues for as those that haue the fruites of the spirite haue no lawe written against them so they that haue not such fruites haue no Gospell written for them It is not the vniust man that shall liue by faith for hee lyeth vnder the law but the iust Gala. 3. Rom. 1. 17. Heb. 10. 38. Might not a man thinke you pen a Psalme of as many verses wherin the foote might run in this tenour For his Iustice endureth for euer as Dauid had done of his Mercie Psalme 136. The Lord will not part from any drop of his mercy to them which first haue not bin swallowed vp of his iudgements which haue not laboured and been heauie laden which haue not beene locked vp in hell for a season and felt for a time the fire thereof in their bones which haue not been baptized with the baptisme of their owne teares He that feeles not these things in some measure here elsewhere shall he feele them It is the iudgement of Abraham The diuels policie in youth in health in prosperitie is to sing vs songs of God his mercy but in age in sicknes in tribulation vpon thy death-bed he will make such reasons for his iustice as we shall neuer be able to answere Wherefore the Lord hath to make it more terrible in our eyes put vpon it the name of his most wrathfull indignation fierce and heauie displeasure It is not for vs as we do to put the remembrance of this farre from vs or to shift it lightly by turning ouer to a Psalme of mercy but to terrifie our owne soules with it and to cast our selues downe with the trembling consideration of his iudgements Of one example without a precept nothing is to be concluded and therefore in great wisedome that men at the last gaspe should not vtterly despaire the Lord hath left vs but one example of exceeding extraordinary mercy by sauing the theefe on the crosse by faith onely yet the peruersnes of all our nature may be seene by this in that this one serueth vs to loosnes of life in hope of the like whereas we might better reason that is but one and that extraordinary and that besides this one there is not one moe in all the Bible and that for this one that sped a thousand thousands haue missed what folly is it to put our selues in a way where so many haue miscarried To put our selues in the hand of that Physition that hath murthered so many going cleane against our owne sense and reason whereas in other cases we alwaies leane to that which is most ordinary and conclude not the spring of one swallow It is as if a man should spur his asse till he speake because Balaams asse did once speake so grossely hath the diuell bewitched vs. And yet if we mark in that example which the diuell so oft tempteth vs with we shall see euen in that little time he liued sundry good works as many as in that time case would be required first prayer secondly confession thirdly glorifying of Christ fourthly humilitie remēber me fifthly reprouing of his fellow sixtly acknowledging of his own deserts seuenthly patience And it is to be thought by these few that if he had liued he would not haue been behind any of the Saints The root being holy the brāches must needs be like vnto it My sentēce is that a man lying now at the point of death hauing the snares of death vpō him in that streight of feare and paine may haue a sorrow for his life past but because the weaknes of flesh and the bitternes of death doth most commonly procure it we ought to suspect our selues if we neuer sorrow till then And therfore let vs store our selues with good things against the euill day come vpon vs for our life past for as that man which in his health and good successe hath been diligent to feare God and to do good feeles in his sicknes an vnspeakable comfort which he would not misse for all the world and a mighty boldnes to speake vnto God towards whom he knoweth he hath not beene vnkind doth not feare at all so that man which whiles the world prospered with him neuer thought of God nor regarded his word nor the preaching thereof when the visitation of the Lord is vpon him when God shall take his soule from him his case is most miserable feeling no comfort nor daring to speake to God whom he hath neglected And sorrow such a one neuer so much yet he doubteth and must needs doubt for that he knoweth not whether his remorse be of the loath somnes of sin or for the feare of death whether he be humbled before the Lord or before sicknes It is good policie to print his iudgements first in our bowels and to diet our selues more sparingly with his mercies least making vp our sins in the remembrance of his mercies they breake forth flame to our confusion in body soule euerlastingly Eccles. 12. Psal. 73. Heb. 12. Rom. 11. Thy iudgements are as the great deeps Then to feare God when he sheweth mercy and to loue him when he executeth iudgements are two hard things yet necessarie Howsoeuer God doth now forbeare he will not doe so alwaies but he will set him downe in his iudgement seate and throne of iustice and our chiefe care must be how we may appeare without feare and trembling before him This is it that we must thinke of at midnight what we shall answere that dreadfull Iudge when he shall aske for our account Let vs set him before our eyes not as our fond braine is wont to imagine of him but as the Scriptures describe him When he will arise to commaund the Angell to blow his trumpe such a God as the Seraphins hide their faces at his glorie at whose presence the mountaines smoke and melt away whose wrath shall shake the foundations of the earth who ouertaketh the wise in their policie who wil not account the guiltie innocent at whose purenesse all our innocencie is as a stained cloth whose iustice the Angels themselues dare not call for whose iudgement when it is once k●●dled burneth to the bottome of hell Let this God take his place let him trie our hearts and examine our thoughts let him call for the account and take his reckoning let vs thinke how we shall stand before him quietly with peace of conscience who is it that can doe it Esa. 33. 4. let him of vs come forth Alas none shall dare to doe it If the Lord in his owne person should appeare vnto vs without Christ a redeemer we should flie from him with horrour and feare and neuer be able to stand in his sight 2 He that searcheth
set vs in a wonderfull taking to see so great kindnesse 5 God wil be with vs wheresoeuer wee dwell he will goe with vs wheresoeuer wee goe He doth not rule vs as Pharaoh did the Israelites to set vs to make bricke and to fetch the straw our selues but looke what he biddeth vs to doe he giueth vs strength and substance to do And for this worke when we haue done it which is very homely this wisedome passeth our conceiuing Behold what promise was made of halfe a kingdome for so vile a seruice of Herods so for a broken seruice he makes vs a promise of heauen and earth not a● they be now which if it were so it were too good for the best no hee will breake vp these frames not to destroy all but to renewall for the comfort of men So great is his mercy that as a Father saith that God his childrē hauing tasted of this in the life to come do as it were mourne and are grieued with themselues that their repentance was no greater and their thankfulnes no more whiles they were on earth and he that hath done best as Abraham Dauid or Paul they repent they haue done no more good 6 The promises of God are free in themselues in respect of the part going before First there is nothing at all in vs to moue the Lord to promise any good to vs. That wee may looke on that first and great promise made to Adam when the Lord after his fall had charged him with his sin he doth not confesse his sin which the vilest malefactors often doe but he chargeth the Lord againe that hee was the cause of it and makes his liberality the patron of his iniquitie and so very miserably sets it ouer to the Lord Euen at this time and immediately vpon such behauiour the Lord makes his promise to him that the seede of the woman shall bruse the serpents head Here is no cause of a promise in Adam he 〈…〉 o cōdition goes before It is true also that God made choise for his mercy of the v●●e●s people of the earth Take but the Historiographers and those that write for the Iewes and s●tting aside all inward gifts of minde whatsoeuer and come to their gifts of the body their outward shape and lineaments and for the very masse of their nature of all people they were most vnseemely and ilfauoured they were a pernicious and monstrous people and as far from al gifts euen of nature either of iudgement or wisedome as was vnder the Sun nay it were too homely to giue them the name whereby some haue set them out Of these people the Lord makes choice and makes the first promise to them So that this is also a free promise nothing com● to it to moue the Lord to make it And yet to these people the Lord promiseth Leuit. chap. 26. 12. I will walke among you I will be your God and ye shall be my people Againe in the reigne of Zedekiah when the measure of their sinne was come to the brim when they were in the estate of the Perezites Hiuites and Iebusites the Lord makes another promise with the same people greater than the former Ierem. 31. 1. saying Hee will be their father and they shall bee his sonnes and daughters So that God his promises are free in respect of the matter antecedent but in respect of that which followeth they were made with a condition and that is that wee bee holy But for the most part men herein deceiue themselues for as they heare that it is a free promise so they make it a free promise after There is no inducement indeede before he makes the promise but afterwards hee bindes it with a condition For it standes in the promises of God as in his threatnings In his threatnings there is no condition going before they are absolutely pronounced as that Ionas 3. 4. Yet fortie dayes and Nini●ie shall be ouerthrowne And that to Ez●kiah Esa. 38. Put thine house in an order for thou shalt dye and not liue Yet there is somewhat followeth after as Vnlesse ye repent which sometimes is expressed but if not expressed is alwayes to bee vnderstoode For neuer any threatning so strongly was pronounced from the Lord but this Vntill we repent if it were done would breake the force of it and turne it backe againe as the Niniuites repented and the Lord turned away his fierce wrath Ezekiah wept and the Lord gaue him length of dayes So how flatly and freely soeuer the promise made to vs yet this condition followeth We must be holy Thus wee see how Gods promises in respect of themselues before they be made are sure yet not as the wicked imagine that there is no limitation 7 That the Bible is the Librarie of the holy Ghost it may appeare first for that it setteth downe the infirmities of men without all flatterie as well as it commendeth them for their vertues Gens 49. Numb 12. Secondly the matter of it is altogether heauēly and nothing nor any part thereof sauoureth earthly it yeeldeth to no one affection or other but opposeth it selfe to all Thirdly the forme the dignitie of the s●ile and maiestie of the sentences in it is such as it cannot bee fully and wholy conceiued and vttered of any man and it is alwayes more powerfull in the matter than in words The Apocrypha going about to expresse the excellencie of it in Greeke is a very cold and barbarous thing Fourthly of all things it moueth affection in the readers pierceth into the secrets of the hearts which you shall neuer finde but for some little time and straight vanishing away in other writings of the profoundest Philosophers that euer were Fiftly of all it is most auncient and many good thing in Philosophers and Poets are fetcht from this Sixtly all the prophecies set downe by diuers writers with one consent are accomplished so are none of the diuels oracles Reade that of Iacob Genes 49. that of Moses Deut. 32. of Ethan Psalm 89. Esa. 45. Seuenthly the wonderfull preseruing of this booke from time to time 2. King 22. so that it hath not perished whereas many other bookes of great price and estimation are vtterly lost Eightly that there hath been such a continuall and vniuersall consent of this booke from time to time and because all the heretikes and labours of them that would withstand and confute this still are soyled and brought to nought Lastly the constant death of wise sober and meeke Martyrs whoeuer in their deaths for this haue had a plaine distinction from the deaths of other franticke and witlesse persons Many places of Scripture saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 3. are peruerted of the vngodly and you shall see the wickedst man talking most and making much of one kinde of Scri●ture Among Heretikes Arrius of this 1 My Father is greater then I. M●richeus of this 2 He was
found in the forme of a seruant Montanus of this 3 I will send you another Comforter Papists of this 4 Thou art Peter Vbiquitarij of this In whome the God head dwel● corporally Familists of this 5 The kingdome of God is within you And euill men the Epicures abuse this place That which goeth into the bellie defileth not the man c. The carnall professors this If he hath predestinated vs he will also cail vs. Those that vnder the name of peace desire to couer euill practises alleage this 6 Follow peace with all men And that which is abused not of one sector companie but of all is this Hypocrite first pull out the beame out of thine owne eye August de moribus ●a●ich reprouing their loose liues they alleage this Hypocrita prius c. So daily if wee deale with mo●es with motes I meane in the eyes for with motes in the Sunne any man may deale then this is vsed as a neck verse Hypocrita prius c. which when we haue said wee thinke we are presently quit and to haue entred another action of hypocrisie and reuenged them home vpon any reprehension I say wee flie to this as a sanctuarie wee vse it as a spell to charme the reprehender that hee cannot speake one word more But this is not Christ his meaning his being in the Flesh was not to maintaine sinne he came not to make men escape the gentle punishment of admonition he came to cācell the hand-writing that was against vs not to make a new hand-writing but as it is said in the Psalme wickednes hath a wide mouth and Dauid maketh it a maruell to see the mouth of wickednes stopped for rather then it will say nothing it will speake against itselfe 1. Cor. 7. Paul reasoneth the time is short therefore we must vse the world as though we vsed it not 1. Cor. 15. 32. The wicked say Tomorrow we shall d●e therefore let vs eate and drinke They gather a contrary conclusion out of the same promises 2. Cor. 7. Paul reasons Seeing we haue such promises let vs clēse our selues the wicked say Rom. 6. Let vs sinne that grace may abound We may reason thus rightly out of the former words of Christ He disallowed disorderly casting out Ergò hee alloweth orderly casting out he commandeth the beame to be cast out first Ergò the mote also We reason on the cōtrary No promiscuall casting out Ergò no casting out his owne first Ergò not ours at all Their conclusion is this if they durst say so much Praecipe quid faciam or● vt faciam sed ●e omnino corripito quicquid facio I loue not to heare of my faults meddle not with mine eyes So it is true which is in Prou. 26. A parable in a fooles mouth is as a thorne c. Hee thrusteth the blunt ende forward and by abusing of places they gore themselues 16 As we cannot see without the apple of the eye so we cannot know the thing of God without the teaching of God For though some things are learned by sense as we need not be taught from heauen to discerne betweene white and blacke colde and heate and such like and some things are attained by the light of nature or helpe of Arte as the knowledge of ciuill and humane things yet there are many things to be learned which we cannot attaine vnto by naturall reason onely without spirituall reuelation For to be perswaded that all things were made of nothing that a Maide should haue a Sonne that the Flesh corrupted should rise to incorruption that CHRIST a Sauiour on the Crosse should be a Iudge in the clowdes that we should be freed from death by his death and exempted from condemnation by condemnation that man should sinne and CHRIST should suffer where is the wise man where is the Scribe where is the Philosopher that can shewe a ●●●son But be it that man could be taught by nature to vnderstand things appertaining to GOD yet is needfull that that God should teach him because else he should learne it with incer ●intie and little assurance for besides that Iob confesseth how though he went euen into the shop of the Lord where he worketh yet he should not see him These reasons I haue to proue that I speake first the most and greatest part are full of simplicitie many cannot take the paines to search them of many that would take paines many want the meanes of manie that haue the meanes fewe come to anie thorow knowledge of them and they that come to knowledge labour vnder great vncertaintie whereof it commeth to passe that many either proue fooles or become Heretikes because medling with such things in the pride of their wits they haue not prayed to be taught of God CHAP. LI. Of murmuring IT is a common thing with men to grudge and murmure against Gods true seruants and therefore Ministers and Magistrates and such like must learne with patience to beare it and to prepare themselues for it For if the Israelites murmured against Moses being so ●are a man how much more will men now grudge against such as haue not obtained the like measure of graces This is a sore temptation and Moses himselfe did once offend because of the murmuring of the people yet was he said to be the meekest man vpon the earth But else alwaies Moses ouercomes euill with good for he was so acquainted with that people that he had as it were hardened his heart against them 2 This is the nature of murmuring it will cause a man to be no man at all which wee may see in the Israelites who wished to be in Egypt whereas yet they knewe that for their sinnes the Lord carried them thither and as it were in iustice cut them off for sinne so it is as much as if they had saide would the Lord had cut vs off rather than left vs in this case for they were contented to die if they might not haue their bellies full 3 To be assured of Gods prouidence and that we may not be ouercome of murmuring in worldly things we are to looke to the benefit of Christ in the forgiuenes of our sinnes the sanctification of Gods spirit and the hope of euerlasting life for if wee bee assured of these wee shall be likewise assured that the Lord will no suffer vs to perish in this world And if wee doubt of earthly things wee doe doubt of these spirituall graces much more and the want of the perswasion of the one doth bring the other For if the Israelites had been perswaded that the Lord had deliuered them and would bring them into the land of promise they would not haue doubted that he would preserue them in the wildernes which wee may see in the example of Abraham Genesis chapt 24 who because the Lord had promised him a seede sent foorth his seruant to get a wife for
them and one may well say Pouertie hath slaine a thousand but riches hath slaine tenne thousand They are very vncertaine they promise that which they cānot performe neither can they affoord a contented minde A man will say Oh if I could get so many Furres I should bee verie warme and yet his heate commeth from his body so many will say if I had many farmes I should bee well contented when as a contented minde commeth from the Lorde Take ●iuet and rubbe a Beggers cloake with it it will make the cloake sweete rubbe Veluet with it and it will slaine it Likewise take riches and giue them to a poore man and they will refresh him giue them to one alreadie rich and they will surcharge him They are not the water of life alwayes flowing but they are as the brookes of Arabia which are most drie when one should most neede them for water And they be as Spiders webbes which when they waxe ' great are swept away with a beesome and then eyther thou perish●st from them as did the rich man or they perish from thee as wee may see in Io● Art thou rich in money thou art in daunger of theeues Art thou plentifull in houshold stuffe thou art in daunger of fire Hast thou much gold the rust doth venim it and thee Is thine apparell gorgeous thou hast the Moth thine enemie Hast thou much cattel thou fearest rottennes in marchandise Pirates feare thee in husbandrie blasting hindreth thee Thus the Lord of Hosts hath set an host of enemies against all worldly things whatsoeuer When the ice is frozen one may walke on it for a time but when the Sunne commeth it melteth and such things perish sooner than they grow In momento ardet quod diu crescebat lignum The Temple was destroyed in fortie and sixe houres that was so long in building 3 The lesse account wee make of earthly things and the more account of heauenly things the liker we are to haue them for wordly things must be so craued as we first giue them to God and then wish to haue them if it please him as Dauid did when he was driuen out of his kingdome and Abraham when he was ready to sacrifice his sonne the one had his kingdome restored the other had his Sonne giuen him againe But when wee desire earthly things greedily and care little for heauenly the Lord withdraweth them from his children to teach them to seeke after spirituall riches and if we desire heauenly things the Lord wil giue them with earthly too as when Salomon asked wisedome it was giuen him with riches too and so had Iacob his desire with earthly blessings also therefore let vs seeke heauenly especially let vs seeke them in and for Christ which may giue vs the forgiuenes of our sinnes which if we can make sure all other things shall be ioyfull vnto vs for then shall we be made members of his bodie and that prayer which once he made Ioh. 17. shall euer be profitable to vs that is That the Father would loue vs with the same loue wherewith he had loued him And as God the Father in loue hath giuen vs his Sonne so will he with him giue vs all things so farre forth as he knoweth them good and fit for vs. 4 The nature of fleshly minded men is vnwisely to discerne of Gods dealings for they had rather for go many spirituall blessings than one corporall as the Israelites who for the want of bread despised their deliuerance out of Egypt which was a signe of their spirituall deliuerance And thus do men now adaies for if they be in prosperitie they are more grieued to forgoe some part of their riches than to forsake many of their sinnes Again if they want riches it greeueth them more than the want of spiritual things But we are to learne that riches are no signes of Gods fauour and if we see not his loue but in them we are too earthly minded and would binde God to be like vnto vs. Without riches many men eare not for God which although they say not yet because they neglect the word prayer and sacraments and despise his Ministers as the Israelites did Moses and Aaron they shew that the thoughts of their hearts are so but let vs take heede that this be not in our hearts and by all meanes auoid it least the God of this world whom wicked men serue doe giue vs here our hearts desire that in the world to come he may haue vs for his portion 5 We may not aske these earthly things as signes of Gods fauour therefore if we haue his fauour let vs not esteeme the want of them as tokens of his displeasure Againe the Lord holdeth vs without these things because we would abuse them and set more by them than by spirituall things yea the Lord for a time holdeth vs without these that we might esteeme of spirituall graces the more that so in time we may haue them both together Againe if we haue wealth and riches the Lord trieth vs if we will be more thankfull and more dutifull to him more reuerent in hearing his word and more louing to our neighbour which will ensue if we doe truely profite by them but if we be vnthankfull sluggish in hearing the Word in Prayer and Sacraments proud and contemptuous to our brethren then doth the Lord shew vnto vs the corruptions of our hearts which vnlesse we speedily cut off we may iustly feare that he will either cut vs off from them or them from vs if we belong vnto him Whatsoeuer you get by lawfull meanes giue euermore the tenth to the godly poore No through reformation can be hoped in Familie Church or Cōmon-wealth except the Lord worke it by some notable affliction where long case and prosperitie haue bredde either superstition or prophanenesse 6 Many are outwardly well and rich in this world which are inwardly ill and poore in godlinesse and many hate outward euill things which for want of spirituall knowledge see not the corruptions of their hearts 7 Nothing is ours but as we feele our title in Christ and as it is sanctified by the word and by prayer 8 It is a common Prouerbe He that loueth the law loueth the King and I say He that loueth the word loueth God Well thou shalt know at this time or at that time in thine owne conscience by the word preached that Christ doth offer to come thee it standeth thee in hand to entertaine this Prince not without some solemne preparation How thou must make prouision for his comming thou art taught Matth. chap. 3. First beware the great mountaine of thy reason rise not against the Word least speake Christ what Christ can speake we will doe as we list When this is pulled downe yet there are many crooked waies of hypocrisie to be made straight and many by-pathes in stepping to the world from the sight
the Canker-worme hath eaten that which the Canker-worme hath left the Caterpiller hath eaten they haue spoyled the Church from hand to hand Wherefore it behoueth those places that haue so cast the Lord out to labour the haruest may be recouered and that the branches be new planted that the holds cast down may be reedified and that the vines decaied may be repaired For want whereof euerie priuate mans field being as a garden and euerie mans garden being as a Paradise the Lords garden whether for want of manuring or for the sleeping of the dressers I know not lyeth like the field of the sluggish man and his vineyard like the vineyard of one that is idle And where euery house is curiously sieled euery citie aptly compacted the house of the Lord whether for that the spirituall workmen are confounded among themselues or the ouerseers of the worke be willingly corrupted lieth void waste in many places so that they that see it are constrained to say O Lord why doest thou behold vs thus and sufferest to see such vastation Neither yet shall the voyce of the enemie crying in the day of reuenge race it race it downe to the ground strike vs with such a terror as when violence shall come vpon vs our wiues our children without all respect of age and estate It is not possible that we in our great securitie should cōceiue a shadow of that inexplicable griefe which shall follow that persecuting plague hastning towards vs when the carkases of our friends shall make a way and be as a path in our streets when our women shall villainously be abused in the Lords Sion the children put to the edge of the sword the Princes hanged vp by the hands no sparing shall be of sexe or of age and besides so outragious a rage when our foes shall come to tread as holy ground where the glorie of God his house should strike them stone dead when their sword should be abashed and lose it glittering when it should see the Maiestie of the Lord in his Ministers and Preachers This is a matter of griefe and indignation for the harmelesse blood powred out by the king of Babel on the ground being compared to the blood of the Saints shed by the Pope it would be but as a spoonfull in respect of the Sea When this moodie Tigre comes he will pretend that he rootes out heresie but then why doth he suck the blood of infants who are not capable of heresie Well if this be his intent to roote out heresie is the sword a fit instrument to do it Paul and Peter and the rest of that blessed colledge and Christ himselfe put many notable heretikes to silence by the force of reason and not by dint of sword Was it Christ his meaning that the successor of Peter should draw out his sword when Peter himselfe was bidden to put it vp And yet this royall Priest and Bishop generally will drowne the Church in her own blood And do we not see how the guides Pastors and ouerseers of the Church are driuen out of sundry places where this Bishop hath set his foote whose harts could haue bene better contented at once to haue sealed their doctrine with their blood than to be separated from them to whose soules they had deuoted themselues An heauie farewell no doubt they took of their congregations when as we reade of some who filled their high waies with their beasts laid their children at the feet of the Pastors whē they departed from them crying vnto them What shall be our estate now ye are gone to martyrdome Who shall wash our children in the cristall waters of Baptisme Who shall ease our afflicted consciences when the aduersary shal accuse vs Who shall leade vs the way of life and bring our soules to rest Recompence them O Lord as they haue deserued that are the cause of this O Lord giue them sad harts So heauy a crosse will it be to see an irremediable desolatiō of holy things we know not yet the bitternes of this cup yet we haue them amōg vs which haue tasted it whom let vs entertaine with Ioseph with teares of mercie and let vs in their suites say to the Lord they haue beholden miserie O Lord cause them to behold the light of thy louing countenance for their reliefe comfort So be it 17 It is the great iudgement of God vpon the corrupt iudgement of the world that vnlesse sinne be prodigious and monstrous such as goe round about the world we are not mooued with it When we admonish other sinnes of iesting and such like forsooth we must smile when we doe so and we must laugh vpon them least we moue choler and giue offence Well for all sinne in equall measure and for the least of all sinnes Christ Iesus the Sonne of God was faine to shed his precious blood Howsoeuer sinne seemeth little to vs in committing it was very great to Christ in suffering for it They be small sins to vs which are vsuall to all but if they were not vsuall they would seeme prodigious 18 All the senses especially the eyes as they are most singular instruments to receiue good things by if they by Gods spirit be directed so if they be not well ordered do bring greatest euils and therefore Dauid prayeth that his eyes might be guided aright and Iob maketh a couenant with his eyes vnder which the other parts are included as also when Dauid maketh a couenant with his mouth Ioseph his mistresse first offended in looking without a cause for the wantonnesse of vaine lookes bewray the corruption of the heart we must then striue to haue a lawfull cause of all our doings that so we may be assured of Gods prouidence to watch ouer vs least if any harme happen vnto vs we be the iust occasion thereof Secondly she offended in not keeping a measure for whosoeuer seeth his owne corruptions truely will be afraid of the very appearance of euill as Iob although he was neuer adulterer yet priuie to his corruption he made a couenant with his eyes Iosephs mistresse spake to him day by day and he refuseth she abideth stil in her euill purpose but he still refuseth her and here is the difference betweene Gods children and the wicked the one continueth still in wickednesse and would haue all others such the other perseuere in godlinesse and would bring all men to the same she was conuinced of her fault and yet sorrowed not but continued Where note the oftner sinne the lesse griefe a note of the children of the diuell But contrarily the oftner sinne the more griefe a note of the child of God Ioseph was young about thirtie foure yeeres and yet chast contrarie to those that say fornication is but a tricke of youth Ioseph was entised and yet yeelded not a signe of a pure heart for although temptations be offered of those yet it proceedeth of our corruption
iourney might haue turned vs vp that time might haue bin the acceptable time of our calling If pretence of businesse will not keepe vs away but we will needes be plowed he tries another point and prooueth vs by pastime by playes by drowsinesse and brings a great vnlustines vpon vs that we haue no stomacke in the world to heare the Lord. Well if so be that he cannot fadge but wee will spite of his teeth come vnto the plough then hee will labour to make the plow passe ouer vs and so it shall not breake vp that is he will so deceiue vs with vaine and wandring conceits that we shal onely heare and hearing wee shall be as though wee did not heare and so Pauls doctrine is inuerted by Sathan Paul bids vs vse the world as though we vsed it not the diuell bids vs vse the world as though we vsed it not which if wee doe wee shall deale prouidently for the diuell but vnwisely for the Lord and for our owne saluation If neither of these haue that successe that he looketh for but we come vnder the hand of the Sower and somewhat falleth on vs then he goeth about to plucke out that which is sowne from vs and so will bee sure to hinder the taking of roote in vs and by this hee preuaileth mightily in many And because not onely fallow ground but sandie and stonie be vnfruitful if he cannot haue vs fallow he will haue vs sandie or stonie Wee knowe if seede be cast into sandie ground it is easie to bee carried away with euery winde and if the plow goe on stones it will not profit the stones but the stones wil hurt it Christ biddeth vs not to giue holy things to dogs and not to cast pearles before swine least these tread them vnder their feete and the other returne and al● to rent vs. Wherein wee vnderstand that if the word of God be spoken vnto them they blow it from them like swine and they receiue no more good than sandie ground And another sort there is worse than this who hearing the word resist and become enemies to the Preachers as did that wicked man Ieroboam who being reproued of his Idolatry 1. King ● 34 stretched out his hands to haue striken the Prophet wherin they are like to dogges and these are the stonie gounds But to come to breaking of fallow grounds euery man must be carefull first to vse the plow which is the word of God which he must come to heare then he must heare it as he ought that is he must pray before hee come CHAP. XVII Of Gods prouidence GOD his prouidence is great towards man Psalm 8. when as men see the Lord passing by the Sunne the Moone and Starres which are very beautifull and fasting his loue in a lumpe of clay wherein hee putteth a soule which afterward hee purposeth to glorifie hee passeth by creatures ingendring Muske to vs which ingender lice and stinch yea the Lord hath hid the gifts of creatures from themselues and made them to feare vs whereas if they knew the things wherin they excel vs they would not bee so obedient and yet the very life of all those thing are giuen vs to our comfort God hath yet a more particular care of vs for whereas all things naturally are delighted with their like the Lord being delighted euen with his first worke in vs much more is delighted with the second worke in vs by regeneration as when hee seeth we hate our selues to loue him wee heare not our selues but heare him But most wonderfull is it that God careth for euery particular singular persō yea for euery haire of euery person He called and knew the Saints by their names as Abel Abraham Moses Samuel Paul Christ did not onely know Nathaniel but a little accident about him that he was vnder the figge tree By this care the Lord knew to draw Lot out of Sodome he singled out Caleb and Iosuah yea he knoweth vs among twentie thousand CHAP. XVIII Of seeking of God THere are none almost but at one time or at another they seeke God though the common sort doe it at the last cast in their extreame agonies and when health and friends faile they goe to him But Malachy saith God is a King and will haue his senioritie and in this order of seeking many good men are deceiued for so they cousin not nor deale falsely they thinke they may scratch worldly riches but the Lord will not haue vs to take the siluer of worldly things before the gold of godlines neither must the seruant first waite some houres on himselfe and then on his maister but contrarie As there is a seeking so in seeking there is an order This is Gods prerogatiue to be sought first Matth. 29. He is a foole that thinketh that the gold of the Temple that is riches is better than the pietie in the Temple which sanctifieth the gold Salomons choise must be our direction Abraham sought obedience before his owne countrie Ioseph and Moses sought God rather than Pharaoh But we seeke preposterously giuing youth to pleasure old age to God wee make our eldest children Lawyers the second or yongest Diuines where as our fathers made the first borne to serue the Priesthood In our contracts we first seeke wealth and then religion a cursed match Well because we can see no impietie but a contrarietie wee may so seeke God that wee shall not finde God Wherefore let vs seeke God in his word and that not in a piece of the word but in all the word not making a conscience of some sinne and yet retaining some other sinne God will not be halfed and quartered in quantitie because he is indiuisible in substance Many will vse a restrained obedience and the world would haue a placard still for some sinne Such a one was he that would haue a dispensation for kneeling in the house of R●mmon with his maister Ananias would keep some part to himselfe God will be sought totally in respect of his word as also he requireth an vniuersalitie in seeking of himselfe Wee must not seeke God and the world together wee must not haue two strings to our bow hauing one eye on the word and an other on the world Wee must not thinke if wee haue God it is well if wee haue him not it is no great harme proposing pietie to our selues so long as wee be in the Church and promising immunitie to our selues being out of the Church CHAP. XIX Of sinne VIolent good things and constrained deserue no prayse and therefore the Lord suffered Adam to bee able to sinne that not sinning when hee might haue sinned hee might truly bee rewarded and not to haue sinned when there was in him none abilitie to sinne was worth no commendation And therefore the Papists doe euill in charging God that he might haue giuen him such gifts and right vse of his gifts as he should not haue
2 Spirit of faith and regeneration not vtterly quenched That the regenerate leese not the spirit of sanctification Ioh. 3. 7. 8. Ioh. 10. 28. 29. Note Simile Simile Vse of the doctrine of quenching the spirit 1 2 3 The notes of the spirit of sanctificatiō 1 First difference is in illumination 2 3 Knowledge of the godly like the Sun of the wicked like lightening Second difference in affections 1 2 Example How the faithfull loue God 2. Pet. 1. 2. 3. 4. The fourth rule The mercies of God how they worke in the wicked Notes of sanctification 1 Note Simile 1 2 3 4 What the godly are to feare Dauids feeling lost Note Our ioy may be lost Example Their state after arelapse We be as ready to murmur as the Israelites Murmuring Nature of murmuring Death Impatience Note Fauour of God how precious Riches no argument of Gods fauour Remedies against murmuring Faith in our Redemption and Faith in Gods prouidence goe together Belieue Gods prouidence and patience towards thee Rom. 2. 3. 4. Deut. 8. The second helpe against murmuring faith of our redemption Rom. 8. Gen. 24. 3 Beleeue thy sanctificatiō The conuersiō of a sinner how great a thing it is Esay 11. The third helpe faith of the resurrection See the treatise of the resurrection in the second part The fourth beleeue eternall life is thine The fift stay against murmuring Prouidence ● 2 3 Particular prouidence Note Examples of Gods prouidence See the treatise of the resurrection in the 2. part Psalm 37. A good obseruation 1 Properties of a patient minde Phil 4. 11. Ierem. 45. 4. Gen. 28. 1. Tim. 6. Psalm 4. The feeling of forgiuenes of sinnes brings cōtentation with it The second propertie of patience Prou 10. To receiue earthly blessings from the Lord wee must be voide of distracting cares Matth. 6. and resigne all our right into his hands Conclusion 1 2 3 4 1. Sam. 2. 30 Rules of true zeale Hypocriticall z●ale Brownisme Matth. 7. * Or though we know nothing by our selues 1 Cor. 4. 4. How to censure other men Admonition 2. Propertie True zeale and humilitie goe together Iob 31. How inferiours admonish superiours 3. Propertie To reioyce in the publike prosperitie of the Church when priuate crosses make vs sad 4. Propertie True zeale not blinde in reprouing sinne in ●indred P●r●es ●olly The ● note of zeale Ioh. 29. 8. 9. Brownists Admonition little practised The 6. note zealous in defence of the poore The 7. note 2. Cor. 12. 2● The sinnes of the flocke are the sinnes of the Pastor Two speciall fruits of vertue which euer increase one another A good name more precious thā gold Effects of a good name most comfortable in all states sorts of men Magistrates Lawyers Preachers Schoolemasters Captaines Psalm 40. 1. God will turne c. Godly poore Poore 1 Not to hurt our neighbours good name Susanna 2 Care to get a good name Care of a good name keepes vs in obedience 1 Infidels haue no good name The first step to a good name a religious care against open and outward sinnes great and small Simile Eccles 10. 1. Simile Note The iudgement of the world of the godly A religious care against secret sinnes which bring vs out of credit with God Secret sinnes many waies reuealed whē the Lord will afflict vs. Euill surmises Eccles. 7. The second step to a good name Auoide occasions of euill Example A prayer Note The third step to a good name is to be plentifull in good workes Simile 1 Two rules of good workes 2 Looke well to thine affectiō to the end thou hast purposed in thine heart of euery good worke 1 2 3 Good counsell against euill report 1 2 1 2 Psalm 37. 5. 6 Offences Non ●inor est virtus quā quaerere paris tueri Euill report 1 2 They are shamelesse men which regard not how they be reported of Worldly sorrowe Hypocrisie 1. grosse 2. close 1 2 Special rules when a secret sinne is cause of euil report 1 Ioshua 7. 2 How wee ought to profit by euill reports ● Two occasiōs of euil reports An euill thought resting in the minde how dangerous Vse of false reports 1 2 Luke 14. 11. Iam 4. 6. 1. Pet. 5. 5. Gen. 3. Examples of pride Gen. 11. 7. Exod. 14. Hester 7. Dan. 4. Amos. ● 1. King 20. 22 2. King 23. Act. 12. 23. 2. Chro. 16. 10 1● 2. King 20. 2. Chro. 32. 37 Vnthankefulnes punished 2. Chro 35 Dauid Matth. 16. 17. Matth. 26. Priuie pride and the fruit of it 2. Cor. 12. Saul Ahab Rehoboam 1. Sam. 9. 12. 10. 22. 1 King 2● 27. and 29. 1. King 12. 24. Hum●tie in the godly Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph Moses Dauid Pledges Ezekiah Iosiah Asa. Esai 38. 2. Chro. 34. 1● Ezechiel Zacharie Elizabeth Marie Wherefore the Lord hu●bleth his childrē before that he honoreth crowneth them with his graces 1 2 3 Priderots and cōsumes many good gifts of God ●● vs. Aphantasticall humility Impatiencie It is best for vs vnder the crosse to bee thus minded Gen. 22. 2. Sam. 15. How to auoid the crosse or to be freed if it become A Stoicall numneffe When sinners die a quiet death it is an euill signe A heart obdurate and hard in sinne Not too greedily to desire prosperitie Prosperitie Gods iudgements To accept the good meanes in time when God calleth vs to repentance Note Rom. 2. 4. Spirituall pride Note Pray well before after preaching As graces increase so desire thy feare may increase Wherefore our feeling and ioyes are but by fits Vnthankefulnes cause of dulnes Strange doubts in the godly of Gods wisdome power c. Wherefore Gods childrē are often exercised with euil thoughts How the godly by not suspecting their affectiōs may fall to grosse actions Security how dangerous Note Pro. 28. 14. Our priuie pride not respecting the meanes had plentifully how it is corrected Absēce from the congregation Note Victorie ouer our faults before they get strength and breake forth Psalm 119. By what mes sengers God awakens his children Psalm 11● Use of the former doctrine 1 2 3 To visit the sicke Heb. 11. 25. 27. Hebr. 12. 2. 3. Foolish children For what causes the Lord afflicteth parents in their children Education of children Mariage bed to be sāctified with prayer Godly children Gods speciall gift * As beautie strength wit c. * If the childe resēble his pa rent sin beautie strength wit for the most part naturally hee is infected with the sins which accompanied those gifts in his parents as pride vaine-glory A notable meditatiō in the correctiō of children 1 The follie of some parents 2 Parēts must giue their children a good example in their priuate familie When to begin to catechize children Wee must mourne and pray in the corrections of our children Household gouernment The want of household discipline cause of many euils A note for parents Obiection That parēts may haue a good conscience