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A01737 The stewards last account Deliuered in fiue sermons vpon the sixteenth chapter of the gospell by Saint Luke, the first and second verses. By Robert Bagnall, Minister of the Word of God, at Hutton in Somersetshire. Bagnall, Robert, b. 1559 or 60. 1622 (1622) STC 1187; ESTC S119158 78,252 118

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Almighty we shall be found faithfull in our places and shall haue the fruit thereof an eternall blessing as our Sauiour doth teach saying Mat. 24.45 46. Who is a faithfull Steward and wise whom the Master shall make ruler ouer his household to giue them their portion of meate in season Luk. 12.42 43 44. Blessed is that seruant whom his Master when hee commeth shall find so doing Of a truth say vnto you that he will make him ruler ouer all that he hath that is hee will make him an heire of eternall life Hee shall inherit the Kingdome prepared from the beginning of the world Math. 25.34 Hee shall walke with the Lord in white garments that is hee shall be glorified Reu. 3. and haue life euerlasting and the glorious company of Christ He shall be in Abrahams bosome as Lazarus was Luke 16. and eate of the tree of Life in the middest of the heauenly Paradise of God Reu. 2.7 Hee shall haue the Crowne of glory Hee shall be a pillar in the Temple of God that is hee shall be firme and stable in glory as a pillar irremoueable c. Eye hath not seene Reu. 3.12 neither eare heard neither euer did enter into the heart of man what good things the Lord hath prepared for them that loue him and serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of their life Illud verum et summum gaudium est saith Bernard in a Sermon that is the true and greatest ioy and therefore as it were rauished with a great loue thereof cryed out O beata regio Paradist ó beata regio deliciarum O blessed region of Paradise O blessed region of delights And therefore hee exhorteth vs to bee out of loue with this world whiles we bee heere and to hasten thither saying thus Festinemus ad locum tutiorem ad agrum vberiorem ad pastum saniorem vt habitemus sinè metu abundemus sinè defectu epulemur sinè fastidio that is to say Let vs hasten to a more safe place to a more fertile ground to a more sound feeding where wee may inhabit without feare abound without defect banquet without disdaine Here is the hauen the blessed port of rest and the liberall portion of the good and faithfull Steward But the slothfull wastfull cruell and vnfaithfull Steward shall be cut off or cut into pieces and haue his portion with hypocrites there shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth Math. 24.51 Wherefore seeing that we all rather desire to be reputed yea be indeed good Stewards then bad to enioy a good place and portion rather then a bad let vs depart out of the Kingdome of sinne and Satan and come to the Kingdome of light let vs shew and approue our selues good Stewards keeping our Farme places the world the body and the soule well and let vs not get our goods in the first mannor house the world wrongfully nor put our trust in them idolatrously nor keepe them to our selues basely nor spend them wastfully and vngodly but lay them out for the maintenance of the Gospell and helpe of the poore indigent members of Christ Iesus liberally Againe let vs looke to our second Farme place and mannor house our bodie that it be cleane and fit for the chiefe Lord and Master of all and his Sonne Iesus Christ and the holy Ghost to come into Let vs diligently watch the ports and gates of the same our Hearing Seeing Talking Tasting and Touching that nothing goe in nor come out that may defile the body Lastly let vs haue an especiall care of our principall part the soule the last mannor house Let repentance sweepe it cleane from impure thoughts and wicked cogitations let a good conscience be his bedding let faith be euer looking to Christ Iesus and cleansing and let the graces and vertues of the holy Ghost be the ornaments of his lodging And in all things and in all our places and charges let vs proue our selues good wise and faithfull Stewards that it may be said vnto vs to euery one of vs It is well done good seruant thou hast beene faithfull in little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter in into thy Masters ioy This approbation and allowance of our Stewardship and vnspeakeable reward giue and grant vs O heauenly Father not for our worthinesse for we haue no merits but for thy mercies and graces in Iesus Christ Amen The end of the first Sermon THE SECOND SERMON And the same was accused AS all men are Stewards vnder God what good Talents gifts so euer they haue they receiue frō him the fountaine of all graces Euen so they ought to occupy imploy the same according to the good pleasure of him the Collator and Donator as it is plaine in the Parable of the Talents Math 25. And as S. Peter teacheth 1. Epist 4. saying As euery one hath receiued the gift euen so minister the same as good Stewards of the manifold graces of God Whosoeuer doth this is commended and rewarded of his high Lord and Master with these words of grace to his comfort O well done thou good faithfull Seruant thou hast been faithfull ouer few things I will make thee Ruler ouer many things enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord Mat. 25.21 But if a seruant haue much cōcredited vnto him if it be but of an earthly Master and imploy it ill spend it wastfully eating and drinking with the Drunkards participating with the Adulterers and intreating his fellow-seruants hardly and yet thinketh that his euill carriage and outragiousnesse shall not be knowne but that he shall escape with impunitie O how this man deceiueth himselfe For the fellow-seruants will relate the treacheries bad vsages and cruelties of their fellowes to their Lord. As those seruants did which saw their fellow-seruant so cruelly handled Math. 18. And heere the bad Steward is accused to his Lord. Now if wee see by dayly experiences that bad Stewards to earthly Masters escape not alwayes free with their false dealings and other euill behauiours but one or other will espy them and disclose them and giue their Master intelligence and then he reckoneth and accounteth with them and displaceth them then we may much more assure our selues that no cloud of darknes no maske nor veile can be cast before the Lords eyes Psal 79.9 For hee that planted the eare shall be not heare Or he that made the eye shall hee not see God knoweth noteth seeth ouerseeth al things yea the very secrets of the heart and yet if he were not so quicke of capacitie of hearing and seeing Yet there are many tell-tales and pick-thankes in the Familie which relate all our misdemeanours and accuse vs vnto him as in my Text the false Steward is said to be accused And here beginneth a lamentable discourse a Tragicall Relation of the miserable estate of a bad Steward laid down in my Text in these points First He is defamed or
rich in grace for he is called the God of all grace All which graces and gifts he giueth vs in his Sonne Christ Iesus the most plentifull fountaine of all goodnesse in whom and by whom all these and many other good gifts ineffable are conferred vnto vs Chap. 1.16 as Iohn well proueth saying Of his fulnes haue all we receiued and grace for grace as if he should say grace vpon grace or graces heaped one vpon another The consideration of this doctrine should make vs in faith and full assurance to pray to this rich God and to none other for vnto whom should wee pray and of whom should wee craue for all good things but of him which hath all to giue and from whom euery good giuing and perfect gift commeth Iam. 1.17 Gen. 17.1 who is able to helpe in all extremities for hee is omnipotent is present with vs and neare vs as hee is vnto all that call vpon him faithfully And lastly he is willing to helpe and saue for hee would haue all to bee saued and to come to the knowledge of his truth 1. Tim. 2.4 And therefore our Sauiour Christ calleth all vnto him promising vnto all that come vnto him in repentance and faith refreshing Math. 11.28 Math. 28. He commands his Gospell to be freely preached vnto all and he biddeth all to his great Supper Luk. 14. O let vs in repentance and faith come vnto him and pray vnto him continually for he is the rich man here ment able to grant our requests Againe if all the good things we haue come from our rich God it should make vs most thankfully to acknowledge him to be the giuer and to returne all laude and praise to him from whom the benefit commeth for as all the waters come from the Sea and returne thither againe so all the benefits which we receiue come from God Iam. 1.17 and by our thankes-giuing should returne to him againe O let vs be thankefull and say with Dauid from our hearts and speake to our owne soules as he did Praise the Lord Psal 103.1 2 3 4 5. O my soule and all that is within mee praise his holy name Praise the Lord O my soule and forget not all his benefits which forgiueth all thy sinne and healeth all thine infirmities which saueth thy life from destruction and crowneth thee with mercy and louing kindnesse which satisfieth thy mouth with good things making thee young and lusty as an Eagle Let vs praise God our selues and exhort others to doe the like for it is good and godly so to doe And therefore the Prophet said 147. O praise the Lord for it is a good thing to sing praises vnto our God yea a ioyfull and pleasant thing it is to bee thankefull Thus much concerning the person meant by the rich man to wit God Now of his Steward The iudgement of ancient Writers concerning this Steward who he should be what should be his name haue been diuers euery man hauing a seuerall opinion and speaking as he thought quothomines tot capita tot sententiae Look how many men so many heads so many opinions which thing is to be deplored that so many learned men and famous in other matters should in this point bee so much deceiued Rom. 15.7 as to restrict this parcell of Scripture written for all our learning to one particular Man People or Nation it being also parabolically spoken Whereas it deepely concernes vs all and is to bee applyed particularly to euery seuerall man of vs. Some haue thought that Saint Paul was this Steward Act. 9.4 For he was a bad one vntill he was called of Iesus Christ and of this iudgement was Theophilus Bishop of Antiochia Some affirmed that the Iewes were this Steward and the Gentiles these Debtors Of this opinion was Tertullian lib. de fuga cap. 13. Gaudentius writing to Germinius supposeth that this Steward was the Diuell mis-implying all his gifts his wit and power to tempt men to their destruction Many others haue diuersly and strangely set downe their opinions which I thinke more fit to omit then to fill my paper with friuolous matters Let vs harken to them who come neerer to the scope of the place In this number I place Ambrose in his Commentaries Aug. in quaest Euang. Augustine in his Euangelicall questions Theophilact others who affirme that this Steward is all mankind further say that the word OIKONOMOS a Steward doth signifie not only Villicum a Bayly of Husbandry but one to whom all manner of goods and possessions in a Farme are concredited committed to t●●● to wit a generall Steward best expressed by the word dispensator which signifieth an Officer laying out money for an houshold vnder another man And therefore these reade the words following Render account of thy Stewardship for thou mayest be no longer Steward Thus Redde rationem dispensationis tuae non enim poteris amplius dispensare So then this Steward is all mankinde For euery man hath receiued of God the proper owner of all one good gift or another in trust which he ought to dispose and employ not as he listeth but as God the proper owner of al would haue him and must yeeld an account to him euen as the earthly Steward doth to his earthly Master For this cause euery man must needs be a Steward and a disposer of some good gift of God Kings then are Stewards to the highest of all acknowledge their aduancements to come frō the Lord and therefore in their stiles of Dignity vse these words by the grace of God Ministers are Stewards of the Lords House which is the Church and ought to breake the Bread of Life to their Flockes to preach the Word in season and out of season and must render an account 2. Tim. 4.7 All Magistrates are Stewards of the common house which is the weale publique and ought to consider that they are set ouer the people for the punishment of euill doers 1. Pet. 2.14 and for the praise of them that doe well Masters are Stewards of their owne Houshold and ought not onely to dispose all things in order but especially to make this resolution that they and their housholds will serue the Lord. Iosu 24.15 All men are Stewards of their owne bodies and of the priuy closet of their own conscience as Pontan hath There is none so mighty that is greater or so meane and base that is lesse then a Steward to the King of Kings to the Highest of all and what goods or goodnes he vseth hee hath receiued them all of the Father of Lights Iam. 1.17 1. Cor. 4.7 For what hast thou that thou hast not receiued He it is that deliuereth to his Seruants his Talents to some more and to some lesse Which doctrine confuteth the Pelagians Math. 2.5 and all such as ascribe all that they haue to their owne industry Whereas all that is good
commaunded the cruell seruant himselfe his wife and children and all that hee had to be sold Math. 18. inflicting the punishment not onely vpon himselfe but also vpon his wife and children Therefore let men be not vniust and cruell but true and mercifull for as the holy father hath August Sola misericordia est comes defunctorum Onely mercy accompanieth the dead That a man shall carry away with him and God in his mercy will reward mercy Fourthly men play the bad Stewards when they receiue the Lords goods and lay them not out according to his will but spend them vnlawfully wilfully and wastfully for which they are culpable and accusable as this bad Steward was The idolatrous person layeth out his riches vpon superstitious workes as Ahab and Iezabel The quarrelsome man layeth out his goods vpon vnnecessary suites of law hindering himselfe and his neighbours as the Corinthians did The vncleane person in chambering and wantonnesse as Sardanapalus and Absalon liuing altogether in carnalitie The Epicure and belly God in faring deliciously euery day as the rich Glutton Gam●ters in gaming as Octauius Augustus To conclude euery one which layeth out his goods in idle superfluous and vngodly courses of life playeth the parts of an vnthrifty and vnfaithfull seruant as the prodigall sonne And if a Preacher Magistrate or other Officer rebuke any of these for their vnfaithfull dealing and prodigall swaggering they will say What haue they to doe with vs we wast and spend but our owne money and goods building vpon a base ground for no man is Lord and proper owner of his wealth but onely a Steward for a time to the high Lord of all And as a great mans Bayliffe and Steward on earth ought to lay out the goods of his Master as he commandeth and must render an account how he doth it euen so must euery man being made a Steward in this farme the world employ the talents and gifts which he receiueth as the Lord of Lords the high Master of all commandeth and shall render an account as hereafter followeth The second Farme or Mannor-house wherein man a Steward vnder this rich man God is to be employed and which he ought carefully to looke vnto is his owne body the goods whereof as health power and strength are to be employed to the honour of God to supply our owne necessary occasions 1. Cor. 6. and to helpe our neighbour in all godly and honest affaires This Farme ought to be well and cleanly kept that it may be a fit dwelling Place and Temple of the holy Ghost for if wee will adorne our houses decke them sweepe them and euery way as much as in vs lyeth make them hansome and commodious for a great earthly person much more should wee haue a care to preserue from pollution and keepe cleane our owne bodies because they are the houses of the holy Ghost and further to giue our members instruments of righteousnesse vnto God Rom. 6.13 and to offer vp our bodies a quicke sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God Rom. 12.1 This Farme a good Steward should carefully looke vnto lest death should enter through the ports and gates thereof to the soule and worke the destruction thereof which ports and gates I will set open vnto you making as much haste as the Porter doth when his Master waiteth for him at the gate The ports and gates of the body are these fiue Hearing Seeing Talking Tasting and Touching Which gates should be heedfully watched that nothing goe in or out but that which pleaseth the Lord for as a great earthly man hath a Porter to keepe his gates that no lewd filthy nor contagious person should enter in to pollute his house or infect his people and so procure danger or death vnto thē or otherwise disorder himselfe Euen so euery Christian man should looke to the gates and doores of his body lest sinne enter in by them and death follow to the subuersion of body and soule The first port and gate of the body is the care the proper organ and instrument of hearing it is the mouth of the soule which giues it nourishment and sendeth downe foode into it and which makes it liuely and fructifie in all the rest of mans members Mans eares should be open to heare good things Reuel 2. Math. 13. as the Word as our Sauiour would haue vs and the Prophet Esay verse 3. exhorteth vs so to doe shewing the vtilitie thereof saying Incline your cares and draw neere Heare and your soule shall liue This word is the sincere milke whereby our soules are nourished and receiue their spirituall growths it is a lanterne to carry light 1. Pet. 2.2 and to direct it is a medicine to heale a guide to conduct a bit to restraine a sword to defend water to wash fire to inflame salt to season wine to reioyce raine to refresh a treasure to inrich a key to vnlocke heauen gates vnto vs and by the merits of Christ Iesus to let vs into an inheritance immortall and vndefiled and that fadeth not away Now beloued seeing that mans eares are the instruments vessels to receiue this Word let vs study to keepe them cleane and open to receiue the Word 1. Cor. 15. Moenan but shut this gate against al blasphemous speeches slanderous and filthy talking for euill words corrupt good manners The second port of the body is the eye which must not let in bad sights it must not couetously looke on his neighbours goods lands or liuings 1. King 21. as Ahab did on poore Naboths vineyard nor wantonly looke on his neighbours wife as Dauid did vpon the wife of Vrie 2. Sam. 11. This caused Iesus the sonne of Sirach in his ninth chapter verse eight to say Turne away thy eyes from a beautifull woman looke not vpon others beauty for many haue perished by the beauty of women for through it loue is kindled as a fire What harmes enter in by this gate it may appeare by the example of Putiphar his Lady and wife Gen. 39. who steadily beholding the beauty of Ioseph after many dayes at the last said Come lye with mee Let vs therefore take heed of wanton looking sinfull lusting and vngodly committing of sinne and wickednesse The third port and gate which letteth in sinne and death to the soule is talking out of the mouth executed by the tongue This should not be filthy nor foolish Ephes 5.4 Col. 3 8. Ephes 4.29 but good to edifie withall that it may minister grace to the hearers The tongue is the best member that a man hath if it be in tune in good order but the worst member if it is out of order And therefore Anacharsis being demanded what was the best member of a man and what the worst The people looking for a double answere vnto a double question He spake in one word and said The tongue for the former reasons Therefore the Poet said Est vitae pariter
accused in these words and the same was accused Secondly called and he called him Thirdly reprehended in these words How commeth it to passe that I heare this of thee Fourthly he yeeldeth an account Come render an account of thy Stewardsh Fiftly he is put out of his Office in these words For thou mayest be no longer Steward Of these in order and first of his accusation Wherein we are to note first his Accusers Secondly the capitall and hainous crimes whereof he is accused The Accusers or complainants are these 1. Satan 2. Angels 3. Saints 4. His owne Conscience 5. Sinnes 6. Creatures of God The hainous crimes wherof the euill Steward is accused of are these fiue 1. Vnfaithfulnesse 2. Cruelty 3. Slothfulnesse 4. Ill company-keeping 5. Wastfulnesse First the euill vnfaithfull and vngracious Steward is accused of the Diuell For which cause hee is called Reu. 12. The accuser of the Brethren which accuseth them before God day and night Hee accuseth our workes words and thoughts as Gregory noteth saying thus Lib. 2. moral Diabolus prima opera nostra deinde verba tandem cogitationes accusat He defameth man accuseth him of wickednesses reporteth them before God calleth for vengeance and speedy death lest the thred of mans life should be drawne out along and he should repent and obtaine eternall life Iob 1. If Satan was so impudent that he blushed not to defame and accuse before God holy Iob a man to whom there was none comparable in his time on the earth a perfect and iust man one that feared God and eschewed euill What is it that he will not alledge against a sinfull Nation a people laden with iniquitie a seed of the wicked corrupt children in whom from the sole of the foote vnto the head there is nothing sound in them but they draw wickednesse with cords of vanity and sinne as it were with a cart-rope Secondly an vniust Steward is defamed and accused of Angels Iob 20.27 Reuelant coeli iniquitatem improbi Esay 1. The Heauens reueale the iniquitie of a wicked man Per coelos Angelos qui in coelis sunt accipe saith the ancient Father In Math. 18. The fellow-seruant told to the Lord the cruelty of his seruant Now the Angels are our fellow-seruants as we may probably gather out of Iohn Reu. 22. where he fell downe to worship the Angell who said vnto him See thou doe it not for I am thy fellow-seruant and the fellow-seruant of thy Brethren the Prophets which keepe the sayings of this Booke Worship thou God Loe the Angell said to Iohn that he was his fellow-seruant and not onely his but of his Brethren the Prophets which kept the sayings of Gods Booke The Angels then tell God our faults as here Our prayers holinesse and righteousnesse as in Tobie 12. Let vs therefore that liue in the presence of God and his Angels carry our selues godly and honestly knowing that most pure eyes doe looke vpon vs. Thirdly a bad Steward is blamed and accused of Saints both triumphant which are in Heauen and militant which liue on earth Of Saints triumphant whose bloud was shed on earth by cruell Tyrants and persecutors for the Word of God and testimonie which they had For these being in the blessed port of Heauen cry out against them that imbrued their hands in their bloud Reu. 6. saying How long tarriest thou O Lord which art holy and true to iudge and auenge our bloud on them that dwell on earth And that an vngracious Steward is accused before God of Saints that are liuing in this mortall life it is also most manifest Ieremy blamed and accused the Iewes vnto God yea and craued reuengement against them in these words O Lord of hosts thou righteous iudge Ier. 11. thou that tryest the reines and the hearts let me be auenged of them For vnto thee haue I committed my cause When Antiochus oppressed the Church of God with great tyrannie Dauid accused him vnto God in these words Psal 74.10 18. Remember this O Lord how the enemy hath rebuked and the foolish people hath blasphemed thy Name Ieremy in like manner accused and blamed his persecutors vnto GOD and craued him to reuenge him saying Ier. 15.15 O Lord thou knowest remember me and visit me and reuenge mee of my persecuters If the poore is oppressed of the rich and make his mone vnto the Lord accusing him and crying for reuengement The Lord respecting the deepe sighing of the poore will awake as one out of sleepe and as a Gyant refreshed with Wine Psal 12. and will smite their enemies in the hinder parts and put them to a perpetuall shame True it is and memorable which Siracides hath chapter 35. where he saith God hath no respect of persons against the poore but doth heare the prayer of him that is wronged hee will not neglect the prayer of the fatherlesse nor the widdow if she complaine Doe not the widdowes teares goe downe her cheekes and they cry out to God on high in Heauen against him that hath caused the same Now beloued brethren and sisters if wee should wrong an innocent and harmelesse man in a righteous cause vpon earth we would be vnwilling yea we would tremble and quake to haue a complaint we knowing our selues guilty to bee made vnto a mighty Iudge or Potentate that can punish vs seuerely How much more then should it grieue vs and astonish vs and cause vs to make recompence and satisfaction to the parties whom we haue wronged when wee know that the complaints and cryes of them that are iniured doe sound in the eares of the Lord that an accusation is made against vs that an account must be giuen to the high Iudge and iustice without partialitie ministred Fourthly Rom. 2. the bad Steward is accused of his owne thoughts and testified against of his owne conscience and this is as forcible to conuict a man as a thousand witnesses and hereupon grew the prouerbe Socrates Conscientia mille testes When a mans Conscience is wronged hee liueth as merry as a Bird in a pitfall Lib. de moribus For Conscientia laesa est nunquā secura as Seneca writeth Chrysostome writing vpon the 50. Psalme saith Conscientia peccati formidinis mater that is to say The Conscience or knowledge of sin is the mother of feare If a man feare any creature Man Beast or Worme he may auoid them but hee can neuer flee from his Conscience she is a bird which hee alwayes carrieth in his bosome pleasant as the Nightingale if shee bee not violated but being wronged shee is like a Waspe or Snake vnder a mans cloathes or rather like the Bots in a Horse belly which neuer suffereth him to be quiet but are still eating and gnawing Sat. 12. And therefore Inuenal said that this is the greatest punishment and we must needs all yeeld vnto it Nocte dieque suum gestare in pectore testem This
Prodigall Sonne was such a Steward for he craued his portion of goods which belonged to him and got it of his Father and not many dayes after when he had gathered all that he could together hee tooke his iourney into a farre Country there he wasted his goods with ryotous liuing Euery man that hath good gifts giuen him of God and doth mis-imploy them is guilty of this sinne of wastefulnesse And so much concerning the hainous crimes whereof the bad Steward is accused The end of the second Sermon THE THIRD SERMON NOw next of his calling in these words And he called him God may bee said to call a man many wayes Sometimes he louingly inuiteth inticeth and calleth vs vnto him by his benefits shewing himselfe very bountifull vnto vs and patient to draw vs hereby as the Father doth his Child with an Apple Rom. 2.4 or some pleasing thing to repentance And thus kindely God dealt with the Iewes Ier. 5. but all the Lords louing kindnesses towards them were lost the people were so vnthankefull Againe the Israelites were thus called and inuited For they had Moses and Aaron to declare the Law of God vnto them to guide them and which by prayers put away all hurtfull things from them and by the same obtained all necessarie things for them euen Manna from Heauen but they like wanton and vndutifull children abused the goodnesse and lenitie of God towards them And thus the Lord calleth and inuiteth vs. For what singular blessings hath the Lord bestowed vpon vs not onely common and generall to all his people as our Election Redemption Vocation Iustification and other spirituall and perfect good things but priuate also which other Nations want For wee haue a most gracious learned godly and vertuous King peace and all other good things vnder him which other Nations doe lacke For which the Lord make vs thankefull God calleth man by castigations and the Rod of correction Reu. 3.19 Heb. 12. which are arguments of Gods loue to his children and proceed from it The Lord saith Whom I loue I correct And againe My sonne despise not thou the chastening of the Lord neither faint when thou art rebuked of him For whom the Lord loueth he chastneth and he scourgeth euery sonne that he receiueth Afflictions are the rod which our louing Father taketh in his hand and wherewith he whippeth his children round to make them repent and obey his calling and this may be a great comfort to Gods children that their heauinesse and afflictions are but short they haue a prosperous issue a speedy deliuerance for heauinesse endureth for a night and ioy commeth in the morning As after stormes and tempests comes sunne-shining weather and after a bloudy and red euen a faire bright morning Euen so after momentanie afflictions patiently endured the Children of God shall haue a farre more excellent and an eternall waight of glory 2. Cor. 4.17 Hereby the Children of God are bettered in this life For as iron is more bright when the rust is scowred from it Wheat more pure when the Chaffe is blowne from it and the Weeds sifted out and Gold when it is tryed in the fire is more precious So are the Children of God when they are tryed in the fiery furnace of afflictions and found faithfull This makes them to repent to seeke vnto God to pray vnto him to hope for deliuerance from him and to end as it were in a word is the plaine high way to Heauen Act. 14.22 For through many tribulations wee must enter into the Kingdome of Heauen Wherefore all yee that suffer in a good cause take the comfortable exhortation of Saint Iames Iam. 1.2 3 4. My brethren count it exceeding ioy when yee fall into diuers tentations knowing that the trying of your Faith bringeth forth patience and let patience haue her perfect worke that yee may bee perfect and entire lacking nothing God calleth man by his Word and this calling is two-fold Generall Speciall The Generall calling is an inuitation and bidding of all good and bad tagge and ragge to come from the kingdome of Satan sinne and darknesse to the Kingdome of Christ of grace and light executed by the outward preaching and reading of the Word For God which is rich in mercy and would haue all men to be saued 1. Tim. 2.4 and to come to the knowledge of his Truth vouchsafeth his meanes to all would haue his Gospel to be preached to all Math. 28. that all might beleeue yeeld their obedience and bee saued or else wilfully contemning their calling be left inexcusable This we may see to be true by his bountifull feast and the liberall inuitation which he made and appointed Luk 14. This is and hath been euen from the beginning the administration of the Lords Kingdome Thus God called Adam saying Adam Where art thou Thus hee called the people in Noah his time by Noah himselfe and so the people in the Prophets time by the Prophets themselues So he called them in the New Testament by Iohn Baptist Mat. 3. Math. 11. Yea Christ himselfe so called saying Come vnto me all ye that trauell and are heauy laden c. And hee commanded the Apostles so to doe giuing them their message saying Goe ye and teach all Nations c. Mat. 28.19 20. Mar. 16. And now Ministers doe it yea and shall doe it in Christs stead to the end of the world 2. Cor. 5.20 Now then saith the Apostle are wee Messengers for Christ euen as though God did beseech you through vs so pray we you in Christs stead that yee be reconciled vnto God But alas this generall Calling this bountifull offering of Grace takes no place among the wicked moues their hearts nothing at all For although their soules are almost famished and they are euen sicke vnto death yet they refuse all Physicke and reliefe and therefore are left inexcusable Musc and worthily perish Meritò perit aegrotus qui medicum non solùm non vocat sed vltrò venientem recusat that is the sicke man worthily perisheth which not onely refuseth to call a Physician but when hee is come repelleth him Some being called say as the rebellious Iewes said Ier. 44.16 17. The word that thou hast spoken vnto vs in the Name of the Lord we will not heare it of thee But wee will doe whatsoeuer thing goeth out of our owne mouth as to burne incense to the Queene of Heauen c. Others are persecuters of them that call them as they that were bidden to the great wedding who tooke the Kings seruants and intreated them sharpely Mat. 22.6 and slue them Such a one was Herod to Iohn Baptist Mat. 14. who could not abide him calling him from his filthy incestuous sinne with Herodias his brother Philips Wife Mark 6. but as soone as he was reprooued tooke a light occasion instigated by the curtizan to put him to death But now God
be thanked the Lawes are so well established and executed that no man dareth to lay violent hands vpon his Minister but yet the wicked will hurt him with their slanderous tongue many times and keepe his dues from him sometimes priuily that hee shall not know it And if hee doth know it then many times they will plead a custome their custome to deceiue yea they will say Our custome is an ancient custome Whereas Mala consuetudo est erroris vetustas that is An euill custome is the antiquity of an errour Some when they are called are somewhat more Formall Morall and mannerly then the former were For although they are meere Worldlings and preferre earthly things before heauenly yet they couer their affections and make comely excuses and reasonable as they thinke and will say when they are absent from a Sermon Wee were hindred by such and such meanes that wee could not be at it very like to them that were bidden to the great Supper and made seuerall excuses One said Luke 14. I haue bought a Farme and I goe to see it Another said I haue bought fiue yoke of Oxen and I goe to proue them and the third said I haue married a Wife and therefore I cannot come But none of these excuses pleased the Lord the maker of the Feast For hee being angry with these said None of these shall taste of my Supper of my spirituall and heauenly dish-meates and of my costly banquet What greater ingratitude and churlishnesse could any shew Nay what greater sottishnesse can the whole world bewray then to preferre Chaffe before pure Wheat rust before Iron Lead before Siluer Copper before pure Gold earthly and fraile things before heauenly and eternall good things And yet so foolish are we and ignorant yea so void of discretion and piety that we will still pretend and alledge one cause or another to hinder our comming when we are called thinking that we thereby help our selues when we most of all hurt our owne soules We pretend lets as that man did who when our Sauiour called him said Suffer me first to goe and bury my Father and we are worse then hee that would goe and bid them that were of his houshold Farewell and then resolued to come For many neuer resolue to obey their calling at any time but stand backe with wily shifts good for nothing but to beguile themselues So truely spake Christ No man commeth to me saith he vnlesse the Father draw him Marke the word draw as though a man were holden backe of some Tyrant as of Satan or were of himselfe so vnwilling to come that he must be drawne and haled along Let vs make excuses no longer but pray vnto God to giue vs both to will and power to performe Phil. 2. for in him it is to performe both The speciall and effectuall calling a benefit proper to Gods Children hath euer election going before it for it is the first fruit of it and comes next from it and therefore Paul sets our falling next to predestination Rom. 8.30 This speciall and effectuall calling takes place onely in them that are elect when as God doth by the preaching of the Gospel call vs out of the kingdome of Satan and sinne and as it were out of this world of wickednesses to the kingdome of Christ of grace and of light to be of the number of his children to be sheepe of his fold And here we are to note that God doth not call vs all at one time but at sundry times as it shall please him to dispense his grace vnto vs as we may see by his sending of labourers at seuerall houres into his Vineyard Mat. 20. Some are sanctified in their mothers wombe and speedily called and sent to their offices Mat. 3. as Iohn Baptist in his youth Peter when hee was of ripe age Paul somewhat late and the theefe when he was readie to be crucified Before the time of their calling they wander in the vast solitude and wildernesse of this world nothing differing from other men in outward shape but in qualities and maners and they being Christs sheepe are so saued and guided by him that they cannot bee taken from him Ioh. 10. neither runne into the pit of destruction This effectuall calling is wrought by the preaching of the Word and by these three meanes First God openeth and prepareth the eares which are the mouthes of the soule the bodie hath but one mouth to receiue corporall nutriment to sustaine it but the soule being the better part of man hath two mouths I meane his two eares to receiue in food for it which God openeth to that purpose as Dauid doth teach vs by his owne example Psal 40. saying Sacrifice and offerings thou didst not desire for mine eares hast thou prepared Secondly attendance is giuen to that which is preached and taught for he that hath cares to heare is commanded to heare Mat. 13. Reuel 2. Esa 55.3 And the Prophet Esay craueth and calleth for this attendance saying Encline your eares and draw neere heare and your soules shall liue Thirdly there followeth this preaching eares opening and good attendance giuen a wonderfull compunction and pricking of the heart as it may appeare by the example of those people that heard the Sermon of Peter who said vnto Peter and the other Apostles Act. 2.37 Men and brethren What shall we doe Well Peter followed them so earnestly when he saw them comming with good doctrine and exhortation that he did win them and there was added to the Church about three thousand soules But beloued note this that there is euer much adoe before that the Law compared to an hammer can breake the knottie affections of the heart and so currie and make the ground of mans heart fit to receiue the seede of the Gospel and there plant faith that may purifie it Acts 15.9 But here perhaps some may desire to know by what characters markes and signes a man may assure his soule that hee is predestinated to eternall life that he may take comfort by this doctrine For resolution marke this which I haue penned for thy good If thou seest thy sinnes and perceiuest Gods wrath and anger ready to fall on thee for them dislikest them art grieued for them bewailest them and heartily crauest pardon for them and beginnest to become a new man continuest with increase in the faith of Iesus Christ and doest seeke after the kingdome of God then no doubt thou art elected and effectually called Moreouer if thou art readie as it were with an Eccho to answere to euery thing that the Spirit of God shall endite and the Preacher shall speake truly out of Gods Booke then thou art effectually called Looke to Dauids example Psal 40. Psal 40. In the volume or rolle of thy booke it is written of me that I should doe thy will O my God I am content to doe it or I am delighted with it
vnto their prayers Againe Psal 34.15 16. The face of the Lord is against them that doe euill to cut off their remembrance from off the earth And this we may perswade our selues to be true because he is the onely true Vbiquitarie present euery where with his Spirit and from whose presence no man can flie And therefore the Psalmist by way of interrogation speaketh thus vnto God Psal 139. Whither shall I goe then from thy Spirit or whither shall I goe then from thy presence If I climbe vp into heauen thou art there if I goe downe to hell thou art there also If I take the wings of the morning and remaine in the vttermost parts of the sea euen there also shall thine hand leade me and thy right hand shall hold me If I say peraduenture the darknesse shall couer mee then shall my night be turned to day yea the darkenesse is no darknesse with thee but the night is as cleare as the day the darknesse and light to thee are both alike No man then can hide himselfe from the Lord no place is fit Amos 2. For though they digge downe to hell saith the Lord thence shall my hand take them though they climbe vp to the heauens thence will I bring them downe though they hide themselues in the top of Carmel I will search them and take them out thence though they be hid from my sight in the bottome of the sea thence will I command the serpent and he shall bite them The wicked Steward cannot then flee from the Lord his cause must come to the hearing of his Master he must endure sharpe reprehension strict examination and come to an account as after If the vniust Steward the euill man the theefe adulterer and such like offenders were perswaded that God did heare of their misdemeanors and euill carriages or that he did looke vpon them when they perpetrated their wickednesses me thinkes it should be a great terrour and shame vnto them If an earthly Prince a Noble man a Master or a Magistrate should looke vpon a man and see him deale falsely and vniustly or otherwise to play the filthy adulterer would it not make man to tremble feare and to be ashamed How much more then to consider that the King of kings and Lord of lords the high Master Magistrate and Iudge of all doth heare of his sinnes and looke vpon his sinfull and filthie facts Let vs all bee ashamed to commit sinne 2. Sam. 16. and not be like Absolom who shamed not to lie with his fathers concubines in the open Sunne in the top of the house euen in the sight of all Israel for the Lord heareth seeth and knoweth all the sins of man This wicked Steward before he was accused called and reprehended and brought to account was perswaded that the Lord had not intelligence of his falshood but how much was he deceiued For here the Lord saith How commeth it to passe that I heare this of thee There are three foolish and vaine conceits suggested of Satan which embolden a wicked man in the perpetration of his wickednesses 1. They thinke that the Lord neither seeth nor knoweth their wickednesses 2. Hee punisheth not straight but either delayeth long or punisheth not at all 3. If the Lord knoweth mans faults yet he concealeth them c. Concerning the first vaine conceit concerning the Lords not seeing and not knowing their sinnes how friuolous and impious it is this place doth proue for here the Lord saith How commeth it to passe that I heare this of thee The Master therefore heard it and had notice of all Although I hope that I haue spoken sufficiently of this point yet I beseech you hearken to two examples to ground you throughly in this point The first is of Dauid which committed adulterie and murther 2. Sam. 11. and presently the Lord saw it knew it and it was euill in his sight and sent Nathan the Prophet to reproue him 2. Sam. 12. who boldly layd his great sinnes to his charge The second example of Ahab that vile king of Israel and Iezabel his queene 1. Kings 21. worse then himselfe an instigatrix of his euils as Eua was to Adam when they had wrought poore Naboths death the Lord knew it and sent Elias to rebuke him To end this point in a word Apoc. 2. 3. chapt The Lord did bid Iohn write to the Angels that is to say the Ministers of the seuen Churches I know thy workes The second vaine conceit suggested of Satan is The Lord punisheth not straight nor presently but suffereth the vngodly Steward to flourish To which I answere That the pleasures of the wicked beeing taken with euill consciences neither are nor can be durable they flourish but for a time and in the middest of them are taken away Dauid a man after Gods owne heart Psal 37. saw that by his owne experience and therefore said I my selfe haue seene the vngodly in great prosperity and flourishing like a greene bay tree and I went by and loe he was gone I sought him and his place could no where be found Therefore fret not thy selfe because of the vngodly neither be thou enuious against the euil doers for he shall soone be cut downe like the greene grasse and be withered like the greene herbe For the Lord doth set them in slippery places and at last casteth them downe to desolation suddenly doe they consume perish and come to a fearefull end What plainer example to this purpose Luke 12. can bee produced then that of the rich man who in the middest of his prosperitie and worldly pleasures heard this dolefull voice Thou foole this night will they fetch away frō thee thy soule then whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided So that whereas they haue been fed fat in the great and large greene pastures of pleasures wasting their Masters goods as this bad Steward did yet all endeth in sorrow euen as the fat Oxe after his pleasant feeding commeth to the slaughter and the end of these is confusion For euen as a Snayle by little and a little creepeth vp from the root of an Hearbe vnto the top and as she goeth consumeth the Leaues and leaueth her nothing but foule and filthy slimy steps so likewise lust and pleasure if wee consent vnto them will creepe into our soules and will depriue them of all ornaments of vertue and will leaue behinde nothing but a foule filthy conscience reproach to vs and our posteritie The third vaine conceit suggested of Satan is the Lords taciturnitie For although he knoweth euery sinne when the world doth not yet for a time hee holdeth his peace and it commeth not out to the eyes of the world The impure person sinneth and so doth the Theefe and other offenders the Lord heareth of it and seeth it and yet for a time it may be neither speaketh nor punisheth But this silence is temporarie And therefore
and with-holding part of their owne goods from the Apostles He spared not Hierusalem no nor the very Angels that sinned but cast them downe and deliuered them into chaines of darknesse to bee kept vnto iudgement To conclude hee spared not Christ Iesus his deare Sonne but our sinnes beeing imputed to him he laid the punishment also vpon him both in his body and also his soule whose bloudy wounds and paines were sufficient to saue all but efficient and effectuall onely to redeeme all the soules and bodies of his elect and faithfull Therefore seeing that we know that he left no sinne vnpunished in the vnrepentant in all former ages but seeing hearing and knowing them all as wel the offenders as their offences straightwayes armed himselfe with iustice and iudgement and punished them most seuerely We may assure our selues that he hauing perfect knowledge and notice of all our misdemeanours and manifold transgressions perpetrated against his diuine Maiestie will not spare vs but will reprehend vs and say vnto euery vnrepentant and bad Steward How commeth it to passe that I heare this of thee and presently will call vs to account Which is the fourth point wherein the lamentable estate of a bad Steward a wicked man consisteth The end of the third Sermon THE FOVRTH SERMON Come render account c. AS the benefits which our good GOD bestoweth vpon the good Stewards are in number infinite in dignity excellent and in measure incomprehensible and as the ancient Father hath Chrysost Beneficia Dei omnibus horis consideranda For who is able to expresse to the full the happy state of that Steward to whom it is said of him that neuer dissembleth nor deludeth O well done thou good and faithfull seruant thou hast beene faithfull in little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter into thy Masters ioy Math. 25. So on the contrary no man can expresse to the full the lamentable estate of an euill Steward and vnprofitable seruant to whom it will be said of the true Iudge Cast that vnprofitable seruant into vtter darknesse there shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth two bad dishes to come in at the last where the first dish is weeping and the second gnashing of teeth And to this passe is this bad Steward come before him is praecipitium a place to fall downe forward behinde him is occipitium a place to fall downe backward on the one side Scilla on the other side Charybdis so that he can flee no way without great danger He must needs stand still and indure all hazzards and perils and come to his account to the true audit For now hee must take his vltimum vale his last farewell and sing his dolefull and euerlasting euen song Such a great and horrible day is come Ioel 2. Mal. 4. as the Prophet speaketh of Yea the day shall burne like an Ouen But first the account shall be taken For as a Prince and Nobleman when he taketh a dislike of his Steward first reckoneth with him and then putteth him out of his Office So this Rich man is here said to deale with his Steward and Christ with all at the last day yea his account shall bee more exactly and accurately taken then of any other in this world For he is God the Searcher of the heart and according to the same hee will iudge righteously hauing no respect nor regard to any mans person For before him the King and the Begger is all one when he shall come to take an account and iudge then Scepters and Shepheards shall be all one Princes and Pesants noble and ignoble yea the very King and the Begger shall be fellowes no better regarded shall bee the highest then the lowest but as when men put gold and siluer into a bagge many pieces are shuffled together and yet the best may be the lowest So will it bee at this generall audit If the greatest men of this world are the worst in faith and godly life and conuersation there will be no partiality vsed by the Iudge but they shall be tumbled to the bottome of the pit as soone as the poorest delinquent in the world For when our Lord shall come with his holy Angels to take an account and iudge the world all are alike For if great men and meane persons are in the same sinne they shall be bound together and cast as a faggot into hell-fire The glorious Angels at the great Haruest shall first gather the Tares separating them from the Wheat Mat 25.32 which is poena damni that is the punishment of that a man loseth a plaine priuation of God and all that is good Angels Saints Friends and then they shall binde them in Sheaues to be burnt which is poena sensus the sense of punishment as it were a possession of Hell and all that is euill Ludolphus thinketh that they shall not bee bound all in one but in many Faggots An Adulterer with an Adulteresse shall make one Faggot a Drunkard with a Drunkard another faggot c. Hee thinketh that they shall not bee bound together that haue commited distinct and seuerall sinnes neither according to the greatnesse of their Persons as King and King together rich and rich base and base But as there are seuerall sinnes so seuerall Sheaues and all this shall bee done without respect of person This account shall bee taken not onely of externall things but also of internall that is to say both of bodies and soules No man can excuse himselfe or vse any cunning to deceiue as before an earthly Iudge but euery man shall appeare rightly as he is For Christ to whom the Father hath giuen all iudgement will respect no man for his purse sake nor friends Ioh. 5. Therefore let vs deale sincerely towards God and Man knowing that we shall be called to account most strictly and accurately for euery idle word much more for euery wicked deed and because a good conscience is a perpetuall and best supersedeas in this point let vs follow the example of Paul who said Act. 24.16 that in this hee exercised himselfe that he might haue a good conscience towards God and men Tremble and quake O sinner at the cogitation of these things Repent reuert and turne vnto the Lord. For what art thou to stand in the presence of this Iudge being fraile vaine weake naked miserable filthy and horrible A man that hath imperfections in his eyes cannot looke on the brightnesse of the Sunne And how canst thou be perswaded that thou being an Infidell fraile and full of blemishes shalt looke vpon the Sunne of righteousnesse Christ Iesus Repent and beleeue and thou shalt look vpon him otherwise thou shalt be reiected For as the Eagle when she hath yong ones taketh them out of the nest and such as can looke on the Sunne them she keepeth and such as cannot she casteth away Euen so they that with the eyes of their Faith looke on Iesus Christ shall bee