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A17334 The schole of godly feare a sermon preached at the assises holden in Exeter, March 20, 1614. Bury, John, 1580-1667. 1615 (1615) STC 4180.5; ESTC S262 20,285 40

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THE SCHOLE OF GODLY FEARE A Sermon preached at the Assises holden in Exeter March 20. 1614. PSAL. 111.10 The feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedome a good vnderstanding haue all they that doe thereafter PSAL. 34.11 Come ye children harken vnto me I will teach you the feare of the Lord. MAL. 1.6 If I be a Father where is mine honour If I be a Lord where is my feare LONDON Printed by William Stansby for Henry Fetherstone 1615. TO THE HONORABLE SIR HENRY HOBART Knight LORD Chiefe Iustice of the Common Pleas and Sir LAVRENCE TANFIELD Knight Lord chiefe Baron of his Maiesties Exchequer continuance and multiplication of all heauenly Graces and earthly blessings THis Sermon being at first exacted by reuerend authority and since pulled foorth by violent importunity and euen pressed to the Presse inioyeth this onely freedome that it runneth cheerefully to your Lordships hands presenting it selfe a true howsoeuer slender testimony of the Authors thankefull and dutifull respect of your honourable fauours not onely in particular towards himselfe whom you haue beene pleased to grace farre beyond desert but also in generall to Gods Ministers whom with a iust and zealous care you as Gods vpon earth protect from oppression Who seeth not how resolute witnesses hauing armed themselues to seduce a tractable Iury with as formall a tale as the two Elders had deuised against Susanna your Lordship full of the spirit of Daniel that is the iudgement of God for so his name signifieth by prudent sifting and vnexpected interrogatories haue bunted out and dissolued their plotted falshood Who seeth not how vnaccustomed customes incroching vpon the Lords portion allotted and allowed to his Laborers haue shewed as faire pretences of remote Antiquity as were the old sackes old bottles old clothes and mouled bread of the Gibeonites when your discreet inquiry before the Inquest hath espied and descried their neere bordering neighbourhood In a word your Christian care to maintaine the hedge of Iustice for a fence to the Lords vine that euery one which passeth by may not plucke of her grapes putteth into our mouthes a ioyfull gratulation that your Honours are none of them that seek honor by muzzeling the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the Corne. And this leadeth vs to a farther duty viz. to looke vp towards Heauen vnto him that looketh downe from heauen vpon vs to behold and visit his vine which he hath planted with his owne right hand and made strong for himselfe and as hee hath giuen vs such nursing Fathers so we to returne vnto him prayse for your good beginnings and prayer for your good continuance to the glorie of his Name the vpholding of his Church the incouragement of his Ministers and your owne eternall reward through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen Your Honours to be commanded in all duty IOHN BERY THE SCHOLE OF GODLY FEARE 1. PET. 1.17 And if yee call him Father who without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your dwelling here in feare THis verse consisteth of a Doctrine and his Vse The Doctrine teacheth vs how to looke vpon God Ye call him Father c. The Vse warneth vs how to looke to our selues Passe the time of your dwelling here in feare The Doctrine proposeth God to our view like Ianus Bifrons as hauing two faces First the chearefull countenance of a Father Ye call him Father Secondly the seuere countenance of a Iudge who without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke If ye call him Father We neede not curiously discusse the seeming difference of Translations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Greeke phrase here vsed being compared with other like places of Scripture as Iames 2.7 Genes 48.5.16 Esay 4.1 yeeldeth vnto vs this plaine sense If yee call him Father that is if yee will passe for his children and professe him to be your Father which we may done three wayes 1. By pretending to the eies of others in shew 2. By presuming in our owne hearts by perswasion 3. By contesting vnto his owne face in prayer that he is our Father and we his children But quo iure God is our Father by what claime Father is a royall prerogatiue originally and primarily due vnto God alone Matth. 23.9 Call no man father vpon the earth for one is your Father which is in heauen but due to others secondarily and vnder him and to him it is due both by Creation and Generation Creation inuested him with an Vniuersall Fatherhood ouer all creatures 1. By Creation but among all principally of Adam who alone resembled his Father being made to the Image of his Maker Genes 1.27 and stiled Adam the sonne of God Luke 3.38 Nor is he Father of Adam alone but of vs also and of both parts of vs our bodies and our soules of our bodies mediately and virtually created in Adams loines and of our soules actually and immediately infused by himselfe For our bodies indeed we are bound to thank Patres carnis whō the Lord hath substituted to be our fathers according to the flesh but for our soules our soules must be lifted vp vnto Patrem spirituū Heb. 12.9 the Father of spirits qui infundendo creat creando infundit who at one and the same instant both createth and infuseth them into these earthly mansions of their fleshly tabernacle But what comfort is it thus to salute him by the name of father in this peculiar language before other creatures seeing the vnhappiest of all his creatures the damned reprobates that shall neuer come neere him or his patrimony are yet as neere as we to this paternitie and may take vp the Prophets words Malach. 2.10 Haue we not all one Father hath not one God made vs Wherefore seeing this is too low 2. By Generation mount we higher from Creation to Generation and here wee finde one Sonne begotten of his Nature and others begotten of his Grace I say one of his nature that is one with him in nature a Sonne as old and as good as his Father coeternall and coequall But as the former was too low Not of nature so this is too high a straine vnto which neither men nor yet Angels can reach for vnto which of the Angels said hee at any time Thou art my Sonne this day haue I begotten thee Heb. 1.5 In medio virtus nostra But of Grace the sinewes of our comfort lye in the middest viz. in the sonneship of grace by which a remnant of mankind through the election of grace Rom. 11.5 are separated in the name and for the sake of the naturall beloued Sonne to be sonnes and heires and coheires with him of euerlasting glory Rom. 8.17 for which purpose he granted forth a Dedimus potestatē and as many as receiued him potestatem dedit to them hee gaue power to be the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue on his name Ioh. 1.12 For this inheritance