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A43607 Syntagma theologicum, or, A treatise wherein is concisely comprehended, the body of divinity, and the fundamentals of religion orderly discussed whereunto are added certain divine discourses, wherein are handled these following heads, viz. 1. The express character of Christ our redeemer, 2. Gloria in altissimis, or the angelical anthem, 3. The necessity of Christ's passion and resurrection, 4. The blessed ambassador, or, The best sent into the basest, 5. S. Paul's apology, 6. Holy fear, the fence of the soul, 7. Ordini quisque suo, or, The excellent order, 8. The royal remembrancer, or, Promises put in suit, 9. The watchman's watch-word, 10. Scala Jacobi, or, S. James his ladder, 11. Decus sanctorum, or, The saints dignity, 12. Warrantable separation, without breach of union / by Henry Hibbert ... Hibbert, Henry, 1601 or 2-1678.; Hibbert, Henry, 1601 or 2-1678. Exercitationes theologiae. 1662 (1662) Wing H1793; ESTC R2845 709,920 522

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in their places minister content to the mind of man In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth Gen. 1.1 Heb. 11.3 Psal 145.10 Through faith we understand that the Worlds were framed by the Word of God so that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear All thy works shall praise thee O Lord. Of Light and Darkness Lux. ESt qualitas corporis lucidi quâ ipsum lucidum est alia illuminat agitque in ea non est substantia sed accidens seu affectio corporis Light was that bright quality immediately created by God Calv. and inherent in some meet subject Or the first day which God could make without means as Calvin well observeth This Light was the first ornament of the visible world and so is still of the hidden man of the heart the new creature The first thing in Pauls commission was to open mens eyes and to turn them from darkness to light To dart such a saving light into the soul as might illighten both organ and object So as that they who erst were darkness are now light in the Lord and do preach forth the praises of him who hath called them out of darkness into his marvellous light Light is not a body nor as some will have it a substance but an accident Non constar ex lumine 〈◊〉 q●id sit natur● laminis The truth is no man can tell what it is of any certainty An admirable creature it is surely a divine and heavenly thing than which nothing is more desirable nothing more profitable There are two excellent uses of Light 1. To refresh men by the sight of the earth and the things thereon Truly the light is sweet and a pleasant thing for the eyes to behold the Sun 2. To set us upon serious employments Man goeth forth unto his work and to his labour until the evening It is called the wings of the morning because it diffuseth in an instant the whole Welkin over In a word The most noble among inanimate creatures is Light Tenebrae As Light is the most noble among inanimate creatures so the contrary to i● Darkness is a defect and deformity The darkness mentioned Gen. 1.2 which covered that confused heap God created not for it was but the want of light The darkness in Egypt was extraordinary Exod. 10. when God did so thicken the Air that they might take notice of it not only by the eye but by the hand when they could rather feel than see what was next unto them so that for three days space they stirred not from their places So was also that in Judea at Christs suffering Mat. 27.45 This darkness some think was universal not onely over all the land of Jury but over the whole earth and so the Text may be rendred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tiberius say they was sensible of it at Rome Dionysius writes to Polycarpus that they had it in Egypt And it should seem that the great Astronomer Ptolomy was so amazed at it that he pronounced Either Nature now determineth or the God of Nature suffereth Sol non fert aspectum illum miserandum quem sine rubore fronte Judaei irnident saith Aretius Aret. The Sun hid his head in a mantle of black as ashamed to behold those base indignities done to the Sun of righteousness by the sons of men Darkness is either Natural or Metaphorical Darkness of Nature properly and literally so called is the absence of Light when the Sun taketh its leave of our horizon and all things are envelloped in the sable mantle of the night then we justly say it is dark Darkness used in a horrowed sense serveth in Scripture to represent a state 1. Of ignorance in divine matters 2. Luk. 1. ●● Eph. 5●● when the mind is destitute of spiritual knowledge unacquainted with the mysteries of salvation 2. Of misery and that of all sorts Temporal Psal 107.10 Isa 50.10 Mat. 22.13 Spiritual Eternal 3. Of iniquity In this respect it is that the power of sin ruling in mens hearts is called The power of darkness Col. 1.12 Eph. 5 11. Rom. 13.12 13. The works of sin which they act in their lives are called The works of darkness And especially flagitious enormities such as rioting and drunkness c. To say that God dwelt in darkness till he had created light was a devilish sarcasme of the Manichees for God is light it self and the Father of lights and ever was a Heaven to himself ere ever the mountains were brought forth or ever he had formed the earth and the world even from everlasting to everlasting being God Hell is called utter darkness being an expulsion from the blessed presence of God who is mentium lumen And God said Gen. 1.3 4.2 Cor. 4.6 Let there be light and there was light And God divided the light from the darkness God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. Of Night and Day Night 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 NIght is so called in Hebrew Ps 104.20 21. from the yelling of wild beasts therein according to that of the Psalmist Thou makest darkness and it is night wherein all the beasts of the forrest do creep forth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Varre the young lyons roar after their prey In Greek à pungendo quia ad somnum pungit Or of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to strike to which the Latine answers Nox à nocendo Some say of an Hebrew word which signifies to rest because men take their ease and sleep then So the Psalmist Man goeth forth unto his work vers 23. and to his labour until the evening It is a time of silence and fit for designe so sings the Poet Statuunt sub nocte silenti Ovid. Met. 4. Fallere custodes foribúsque excedere tentant The Jewes divided the Night into four watches Mark 13.35 1. Even 2. Midnight 3. Cock-crowing 4. The Morning The Romans divided their Night into ten parts viz. 1. Crepusculum Godw Antiq. The dusk of the evening 2. Prima fax Candle-tinning 3. Vesper The night 4. Concubium Bed-time 5. Nox intempesta The first sleep 6. Admediam noctem Towards Midnight 7. Media nox Midnight 9. De média nocte A little after Midnight 9. Gallicinium Cock-crowing 10. Conticinium All the time from Cock-crowing to the Break of day The darkness God called Night Gen. 1.5 Psal 63.5 Psal 16.7 Psal 42.8 Psal 119.55 O God I remember thee upon my bed and meditate on thee in the night-watches My reins instruct me in the night-seasons The Lord will command his loving kindness in the day-time and in the night his song shall be with me and my prayer unto the God of my life I have remembred thy name O Lord in the night and have kept thy law
Mount Tabor where he shall be transfigured for ever Give thy possession on earth for expectation in Heaven Not as that French Cardinal who said He would not give his part in Paris for his part in Paradise Man is to be considered in a four-fold estate In statu 1. Confectionis as he was created 2. Corruptionis as he was corrupted 3. Refectionis as he was renewed 4. Perfectionis as he shall be glorified In the first estate we give to man a liberty of nature Adamus habuit p●sse si vellet sed non habuit velle quod posset In the third we grant a liberty of grace for if the Son make you free ye shall be free indeed And in the fourth estate we confess a liberty in glory All the doubt betwixt us and the Papists is of the second estate how man corrupted is renewed how he cometh into regeneration after degeneration And yet herein we consent that the will of man is turning unto God and in doing good is not a stock or stone in all and every respect passive for every man is willingly converted and by Gods grace at the very time of his conversion he willeth his own conversion And so the will of man is in some sort co-worker with grace for this cause Paul exhorteth us not to receive the grace of God in vain And to this purpose that saying of Austin is very remarkable Qui fecit te sine te nen justificabit te sine te Fecit nescientem justificat volentem The difference then is this they write that our will is a co-worker with grace by the force of nature we say that it works with grace by grace we will indeed but God worketh in us both to will and to work Man is called earth thrice by the Prophet Jeremiah Cap. 22.29 O earth earth earth hear the Word of the Lord that is as Bernard expounds Earth by 1. Procreation 2. Sustentation 3. Corruption Alas what is man Nothing I had almost said Somewhat less than nothing embarqued nine months in a living vessel at last he arives in the world Lord of the Land yet weeps at his possession in infancy and age fourfooted in youth scarce drest makes not his Will till he lie a dying and then dyes to think he must make his Will O quàm contempta res est homo nisi supra humana se erexerit Tantus quisque est quantus est apud Deum And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground Gen. 2.7 and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul After the man is the woman made Gatak as a yoke-fellow standing on even ground with him though drawing on the left side Mulier quasi mollior the weaker vessel therefore to bo born withal Origen speaks somewhat contemptibly of women When Christ came into the Coasts of Tyrus and Sidon In Mat. 15.22 Behold a Woman Mira res Evangelista A strange thing O Evangelist that is the Author of transgression the mother o sin the weapon of the Devil the cause of our expulsion out of Paradise But Christ honoured women in lying in the womb of a woman He appeared first to women after his Resurrection and made them Apostolas apostolorum Apostles to preach his Resurrection to the Apostles There have been women of special note Sarah the Mother of the Faithful Hester the Nurse and preserver of the Faithful Women that ministred to Christ of their own substance c. There have been learned women Theano Crotoniatis was a Philosopher and a Poor too Pythagoras learned his natural Philosophy of his sister Themistocleas Clem. Alex. Olympia Fulvia Morata an Italian of the City of Ferrara taught the Greek and Latine tongues at Heidelberg Anno 1554. Aratha read openly in the Schools at Athens Leoptia wrote against Theophrastus c. Neverthelesse neither is the man without the woman 1 Cor. 11.11 neither the woman without the the man in the Lord. Mans Body PVulchrum corpus infirmis anima Isocrat est tanquam bonum navis malus gubernator The Philosophers say in respect of the substance of the body it consists most of earth and water but in respect of the vertue and efficacie it consists more of fire and ayre and so the body is kept in an equal temperature in the operation of the elementary qualities Omnia operatus est Dominus in pondere numero mensurâ that the humours may keep a proportionable harmony amongst themselves if this harmony be broken it bringeth destruction to the body As if the heat prevail then it bringeth Feavers if the cold prevail then it bringeth Lethargies if the moist prevail then it bringeth Hydropsies So that the extreme qualities heat and cold must be temperate by the middle qualities moist and dry For the body of man is like a Clock if one wheele be a misse all the rest are disordered the whole fabrick suffers Bodine observeth that there are three regions within mans body besides all that is seen without answerable to those three regions of the world Elementary Etherial and Caelestial His entrails and whatsoever is under his heart resemble the elementary region wherein only there is generation and corruption The heart and vitals that are divided from those entrails by the Diaphragma resemble the etherial religion As the brain doth the heavenly which consisteth of intelligible creatures Austin complaineth that men much wonder at the high mountains of the earth Hugo waves the sea deep falls of rivers the vastnesse of the Ocean the motion of the Starres Et relinquunt seipsos nec mirantur but wonder not at all at their wonderful selves And truly the greatest miracle in the world is that little world or rather Isle of man in whose very body how much more in his soul are miracles enow betwixt head and feet to fill a volume The body is not one member but many 1 Cor. 24.44 Head The head is the most excellent part of the body therefore the chief part of any thing is called the head Christ is called the Head of the Church and the Husband the head of the Wife And Israel is promised upon obedience to be made the head and not the taile Hence we uncover our head when we do homage to any man to signifie that our most excellent part reverenceth and acknowledgeth him In the head our reason and understanding dwells and all the senses are placed in the head except the touch which is spread thorow the whole body Besides the head is supereminent above the rest of the body and giveth influence to it There is also a conformity betwixt the head and the rest of the body And thus it is betwixt Christ and his Church he hath graces above the rest of his members he giveth influence and grace to them and he is like them The hair of the head as also the nails is an excrement 1 Cor. 11.14 and not to be
have those sins kept up that I prayed against But if we regard iniquity in our hearts the Lord will not hear us Our Saviour in the dayes of his flesh was full of prayers Isaac went into the field to pray David was incumbred with the mighty affaires of the kingdome yet he prayed thrice a day In the worthy commendation of the great Master of the Rhodes Turk Hist f. 580. one thing very considerable is that all the time he could spare from the necessary affaires of his weighty charge from assaults and the natural refreshing of his body he bestowed in prayer and serving of God he oftentimes spent the greatest part of the night in the Church alone praying his head-piece gorget and gantlets lying by him So that it was often said that his devout prayers and carefulnesse would make the City invincible Constantine was stamped in his coine praying he would especially be marked for that Two main motives to prayer are 1. Our necessities are many for soul and body we are as houses that stand in need of continual reparations 2. Our enemies are many within and without And there is no strength in us against this great multitude unless God stand by us and for us I give my self unto prayer Hebr. I am prayer that is a man of prayer Psal 109.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psalmes The Psalmes are the Souls Anatomy the Laws Epitomy the Gospels Index In a word the Register Enchiridion and Summary of the whole Bible Vain songs are Songs sung to the world lascivious Ballads are Songs sung to the flesh Satirical libels are Songs sung to the Devil Only Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs making melody in the heart are Songs sung to the Lord. Spiritual silence is a sweeter note than a loud if lewd Sonnet If we will needs rejoyce let us rejoyce in the Lord if we sing saith David let us sing to the Lord. And truly none have such matter of rejoycing as the Saints whose joy is so exceeding great that they are neither able reticere nor recitare neither to conceal nor yet sufficiently to expresse it For howsoever there be some pleadings in the Court of conscience every day yet the godly make it Hilary terme all the year Papists forbid people to sing Psalmes and permit onely Quiristers to sing lest the musick should be marred but the Apostle biddeth every Saint to sing Minde Saint Austin Quantum flevi in hymnis canticis suavè sonantis Ecclesiae tuae voces ille influebant auribus meis eliquobatur veritas tua in cor m●um ex eâ aestuabat i●dè affectus pietatis currebant lachrymae Confes 9. c. ● benè mihi erat cum eis Singing of Davids Psalmes under the Gospel is an Ordinance of Christ For 1. The Apostle takes away Philosophical inventions and Jewish traditions and leaves that injoyned as a standing ordinance Colos 3. 2. The Apostle reckons it among durable duties as prayer redeeming the time c. Spiritual Songs they are called both because they are indited by the Spirit and because they spiritualize us in the use of them Is any merry let him sing Psalmes James 5.13 Seal A Seal is for two ends viz. Safety and Secresie The Jews use to write on the back of their sealed Packets Nun Ch●t● Shin that is Niddui Cherem and Shammatha all sorts of excommunication to him that shall offer to break up sealed businesses Sealing is used in three cases to keep things 1. Secret that they may not be seen 2. Distinct that they may not be confused 3. Safe that they may be forth-coming There is a sealing of Signation and Obsignation To ratifie civility 〈…〉 as Hest 8.8 And spiritually as 2 Cor. 1.22 alibi Sacrament This word in so many letters and syllables is not indeed in the Scripture no more than the word Trinity Catholick c. but being now generally received it is not to be rejected seeing the Doctrine contained under it agreeth with the Scripture and nothing thereby is added thereunto The fathers of the Greek Church called these holy Rites mysteries because the substance of them was onely known to the members of the Church and hidden from others so the ancient Teachers of the Latine Church called them Sacraments because of the affinity and nearness between them and a Sacrament A Sacrament properly is that solemn oath in war Cicero de offic l. 1. Gerrh Lac. Commun by which souldiers bound themselves to their chief Captain for such was the discipline the old Romans in their wars And Sacraments metaphorically are the Churches band binding them to God so that when we are partakers of these holy signes which God hath appointed in his Church Est Sacramentum Sacrum visibile signum invisibilis gratiae Dei ad eam in nobis obsignand●m à Deo institutum we do bind our selves to him we do openly professe his true Religion we vow to fight under his banner against our enemies so that they are testimonies and tokens of the Covenant between God and us that he is our God and we bind our selves to be his people to serve him and no other God And thus we may consider a Sacrament as a visibe signe and seal ordained of God whereby Christ and all his saving graces by certaine outward Rites are signified exhibited and sealed up unto us Indeed a signe and seal differ one from another as the generall from the the especial for every seal is a signe but every signe is not a seal A seal certifieth assureth and confirmeth a thing a signe onely sheweth it but a Sacrament doth both It is a signe to signifie and represent a seal to ratifie and assure Aug. de Doct. Christ l. 2. c. 1. an instrument to confer and convey Christ with all his benefits to them that truly believe in him A pledge unto us of Gods promises a visible word and as a notable glass wherein we may behold assured testimonies of Gods eternal favour and of the abundant riches of his grace which he bestoweth upon us The word of God may fitly be resembled to writings or evidences and the Sacraments to seals which the Lord alone putteth unto his own letters Now God addeth them to the Word not that the Word was not sufficient without them but for an help to our weaknesse that we might have lively pawnes before our eyes of those things which we hear with our ears And these he hath ordained to be seals of the Covenant of grace which although not needfull on Gods part who is alwayes better than his word yet are very requisite to succour us who are prone to doubting The Lord therefore hath added them to give us greater assurance even as a Seale to a writing makes it more authentical So that Sacraments are as a visible Sermon preaching unto us most lively the promises of God that as the word we hear doth edifie and instruct the mind by the
given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Oh the unsearchable depth of my loving Saviour's love and the infinite value of my Redeemer's death upon whom fell the chastisement of our peace and on whom the Lord laid the iniquity of us all Oh who would not in a full eareer run and leap out of himself into the bosom of my crucified Lord in whose arms we may receive the solacing embracements of his infinite love None but he can bring us unto God for none but he can grant rest unto our souls As I live I will never seek any other Peace-maker among Angels or Saints in heaven or earth to make my peace with Heaven than him that is the King of the Saints Who though he accounted it no robbery to be equal with God yet for our sakes for my sake did humble himself to death even to the death of the Cross whereby having made our peace be hath freed us from all that 's ill and hath made us partakers of all that 's good He hath freed us from all that 's ill The blessed fruit of an happy peace is a well grounded security which whosoever is at peace with God enjoys Num. 17.23 enjoys a safe protection under his wings Surely there is no enchantment against Jacob neither is there any divination against Israel Subtilty cannot prevail against those whom the Lord hath resolved to bless nor power overcome whom the Lords stretched out arm will support What forces of arms of the mightiest man can resist the powerful arms of the Almighty or what wisdom of the wisest worldling can oppose the wisdom of the wisest God And if all these fail what can the Accuser of the brethren invent whereby to bring us into condemnation The Serpents head is bruised by the Womans Seed and Sin hath lost its sting for there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Condemnation nor separation from the love of God Satan and the world may assault but with little good success The flesh and sin may labour to entice us but to little purpose Death and the grave may seise upon us but 't is but for a short time In all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us And thanks be to God that giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ Forasmuch then as that the Lord hath troden the wine-press of his Fathers wrath alone to free us from all ill Be ye oh be ye who are the Lords redeemed cautelous and circumspect in your conversation that by the errors of your ways and continual transgressions you incense not his wrath against you nor provoke the eyes of his glory Sudden destruction will assuredly surprise that soul that sin keeps at odds with God and Hell gapes wide open for such as will not be reclaimed It was Joram's proposition to Jehu Is it peace And it was Jehu's reply to Joram What peace so long as the whoredoms of thy mother Jesabel and her witchcrafts are so many Out of doubt while we persist in wickedness adultery idolatry pride avarice sacriledge extortion oppression bribes perjury I might be endless we cannot be at peace with God and therefore lie ever open to the shot of general dangers As we are unfit through our obliquities to press into Gods presence here so is it impossible for us keeping the same path to be admitted into his glotious presence hereafter or to escape that deserved vengeance that comes swiftly from him to whom vengeance belongeth that driveth more furiously than did Jehu the son of Nimshi Break off then your sins to be at peace with God and Gods peace be with you So shall you receive large immunities as to be free from all ill so to be partakers of all good which is the second effect of this peace The largeness of my Gods bounty and my Saviours merits are not to be comprehended by humane capacity it is infinite Ponder the Apostles reason for this ample favour extended unto us and then let our souls rejolce Gods liberality is propounded in this wise He that spared not his own Son Rom. 8.32 but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things It cannot enter into my head to conceive how that the Lord will withhold what tends to our felicity being he gru●g'd not to give us what he loved best his onely Son He gave him without our demand and will therefore give all things without our desert What Paul said to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 3. I say to you that are reconciled to God All things are yours whether things present or things to come and ye are Christ's and Christ is God's The Lord giveth grace and glory saith the Psalmist Grace here Glory elswhere In a peaceable Commonwealth all things flourish men do plentifully enjoy themselves and plenty of all things without interruption whereas the discord and dissentions of factious Licentiates by rebellion against their Prince lays a gap open for ruine to enter upon them So when upon our address to God we have obtained a peaceable condition when we have laid down our arms or weapons intending no more to sight against Heaven when the Mediator of the New Testament by interposing himself betwixt God and us hath concluded an everlasting and unchangeable peace then then in very deed no good thing will be denied us There is no want to them that fear him Psal 34. This is most true For by this peace we are adopted the sons of God and heirs of glory whereby there is conveyed unto us by the eternal constitution of the Possessor of all things a just title to all things to blessings both temporal and eternal the treasures of his graces are conferred upon us the storehouse of his riches is ever open to us and the pure crown of immortality and royal diadem of glory is laid up for us For us who shall depart in peace according to Gods word and whose eyes shall see his salvation One word to you to whom a sinful life is far more pleasing than that that befits a Christian's Your iniquities separate between your God and you and deprive you of all that 's good I call you from Isaiah what he did from the Lord Children of transgression and a seed of falshood whose end cannot be good whilst you walk in those crooked paths wherein whosoever goeth shall not know peace Rectifie your ways alter your wild courses conform your selves to the will of God your Creator accept the Covenant of peace and live accordingly so shall your souls live Isa 55.7 Let the wicked for sake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Then blessed shall ye be in the city and blessed shall ye be in the field blessed shall ye be in the
of such difficulty that if he withdraw the supporting assistance of his active Spirit from us we cannot hold out Do we preach 't is as the Spirits gives us utterance do we pray the Spirit helpeth our infirmities do we beleeve he increaseth our faith and helps our unbelief do we live the life of grace Christ liveth in us by his Spirit Are we constant in our profession and holy exercises of Religion that constancy cometh from above by the effectual working of the divine power In all these his grace is sufficient for us and in doing them his Spirit worketh with us Thus much concerning Gods good will towards men expressed in spiritual matters As for his good will in temporal it is as clear as the sun we need no demonstration But because the extraordinary favours of God may not slip out of our memories think upon our deliverance from that intended invasion in eighty eight how that part of the invaders became as weak as water and part were over whelmed in the depths of the sea alive like Pharaoh and his host Think upon that horrid work of darkness the Gunpowder plot how vain the conspiratours were in their imaginations The Lords stretched out arme overcame the one his all-seeing eye discovered the other See thy Regína Dierum and by his Providence were both brought to nothing Think upon the Stupendious works of Divine Providence in the wonderful safegarding and happy restoring of our gracious King to which I have abundantly spoken upon occasion Without doubt all these and infinite more are sensible tokens of Gods good will in Christ toward us Wherefore 1. We may with comfort confidently approach to the throne of grace where we may receive of the Father whatsoever we ask in his Sons name for for his sake he will deny us no good thing seeing that in him he beares good will toward us Thus much the occasion of this text may assure us of which is the incarnation and birth of our Saviour It being the foundation of all our joyes and all good things we enjoy By it God comforts Adam the seed of the woman shall break the serpents head Jacob is comforted by the vision of a ladder reaching from heaven to earth and the Angels ascending and descending by it the mystery whereof may be this The ladder is Christ the foot of it on earth noteth his humanity man of the substance of his mother born in the world the top reaching to heaven noteth his divinity Job 19.25 God of the substance of his Father begotten before all worlds perfect God and perfect man by which union of natures he hath joined earth and heaven together that is God and man The going up and down of Angels by the ladder sheweth how by Christ the service of Angels is purchased unto us all which accordeth with that in Joh. 1.51 Verily verily I say unto you faith our Saviour hereafter ye shall see the heaven open and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Job again comforts himself in this that his Redeemer of his own flesh as the word signifieth liveth In the Old Testament they which sought to God came to the Ark or Propitiatory and there were they heard and received Gods blessing Now Christ God and man is instead thereof his Godhead being the fountain of all good things and his flesh or Manhood a pipe or conduit to conveigh the fame unto us Wherefore let us rejoyce in God our Saviour and comfort our selves in his good will towards men Moreover 2. We may the better bear temptations and afflictions and slight the assaults of the world That which in Spaniards deserveth the greatest commendations is an unmoved patience in suffering adversity accompanied with a settled resolution of overcoming them This if we attain unto in Christianity will shield us from despair and distrust for we may be well assured that God to his distressed servants is the neerest when he seemeth furthest then sweetest when he seemeth sowrest and then up in wrath to revenge our wrongs when the world doth think he hath forgot us For still he beares goad will towards us Lastly we must acknowledge Gods good will through Christ to be the sole cause of all our happiness It is a true Maxime in Divinity Publisht in Austins time Vniversa salus nostra Aug. Ned. Cap. 34. magna miserecordia tua Our safety on earth our salvation in heaven proceed from thy abundant mercies O Lord. Thus the Father the Son and the holy Ghost do all join together in one immutable resolution to prove their good will towards men The issue whereof cannot be but exceeding good For as Astronomers do well observe that when three of the superiour lights do meet in conjunction it bringeth forth some admirable effects So now seeing that these three infinite lights of the world three persons of the Deity are met together in one good-will towards men this benevolous aspect produceth this admirable effect that all true beleevers shall be hereby exalted into glory For which with thankful hearts we ought ever to pay the tribute of obedience And in assurance whereof to rest in Gods promises which can never faile In his name I end as I did begin To whom as the Angels did before us and duty ever binds us be rendred all honour and glory both now and for ever Amen The Necessity of CHRISTS PASSION AND Resurrection ACTS 17.3 Christ must needs have suffered and risen again from the dead I Am induced by these words to relate the greatest wonder of the world wherein is comprehended the profoundest Mystery of our salvation That the Son of God should become the Son of man that the Lord of glory should come in the forme of an humble and dejected servant that the Sun of righteousnesse should be deprived of light and then that the sole Author of our life should be put to death Weigh but the reason and the wonder is the greater It was for our redemption all this was effected and can there be a greater wonder then that he that knew no sin would putting on mortality suffer unutterable tortures both in soul and body and be content to die to save those that knew nothing but sin certainly there cannot be a greater wonder The most professed enemy to sinners herein did become to sinners the most professed friend He is ready to save who might be more ready to destroy But mercy binds the hands of justice and justice is overcome of mercy The eternal wisdome beholding from above with the gracious eye of pay the forlorne estate of mankind after their apostasy and treacherous violation of the sacred Covenant contrived a project not to be contrived by the Art of man whereby our Redemption should be wrought and liberty obtained Gods love to us did exceed our sins Our sins are not so great are not so many but his love can cover them and his mercy pardon them And where men come
the Word they feed all Nations by two and two to signifie the calling of two people Jew and Gentile Rom. 3.29 The Jews thought that God was confined unto them Is he the God of the Jews onely is not he also of the Gentiles yes of the Gentiles also Therefore our Saviour sent them as well to the Gentile as to the Jew They are likened to the bells of the High-Priest they depend on the vertue of the Eternal Priest after the order of Melchisedeck Psal 19. Rom. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that as the Psalmist reports there is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard their sound went into all the carth and their words unto the ends of the world They are like the middle bar in the midst of the boards in the Tabernacle which reach from end to end Exod. 26.28 They are the Chariots of the Lord Bernard who by saith hope and charity carry the Trinity through the world Non corporis praesentiâ sed mentis providentia saith Bernard not in bodily presence but in the wisdom of the mind providing for future things like Ezekiels chariot going to the four corners of the world Quae regio in terras nostri non plena laboris Thus Christ sent Now a little of the Apostles sending That they should go unto the Gentiles and we unto the Circumcision Nihil hîc statuunt Apostoli quod non ante statuit Deus Here the Apostles ordain nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith a Greek Father that was not preordained of God It was Gods own voice to Ananias Paul is a chosen vessel unto me to bear my name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel Act. 9.15 Paul was Gods chief Hearld the Gospels loudest Trumpeter It was Gods own voice unto Paul himself I will send thee far unto the Gentiles Act. 22.21 It was Gods voice unto the Prophets and Teachers that were at Antioch Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them Act. 13.12 Whereupon they immediately went and preached unto the Gentiles And here note the wisdom of God Paul a Gentile full of wisdom was sent here unto the Gentiles who sought for wisdom Peter a Jew excellent for working miracles sent unto the Jews who sought always for miracles and signs a sign of their infidelity all working togeher for the good of his elect of one mind when farthest asunder Now seeing the Jews have rejected the yoke of Christ and the Gentiles of whom we are a part have taken it on them We may say of them as they sometime of us We have a little sister and she hath no breasts Amazon-like she hath one breast the Old Testament but wants the other the chief breast the New Let us pray for them as they did for us that they may hear Christ crying out aloud to the Church Cant. 6. Return return O Shulamite return return that we may look upon thee and see as it were the company of two Armies the one of Jews the other of Gentiles all one Church one flock We pray thee then O Heavenly Father to call the uncalled Jew and Gentile to comfort the comfortless and to make an end of these dayes of sin wherein we live and cause our Saviour to appear in the clouds for our full and perfect Redemption Do it for his sake that died for us To whom with Thee and thy Holy Spirit be given all glory As it was in the beginning so now and ever shall be world without end Amen FINIS Deo soli Gloria ERRATA PAg. 5. lin 18. read earth p. 6. l. 17. r. us p. 7. l. 13. carnal p. 9. l. ult place p. 11. l. 1. then Marg. r. via p. 13. l. 46. ipse p. 14. l. 35. recusat vivere marg r. diligere p. 15. l. 6. that l. 10. replenisht l. 14. through marg absit p. 16. l. 16. loquentes p. 17. l. 37. Jerusalem p. 18. m. infimis p. 23. l. 42. Man p. 25. l. 9. vertue l. 10. godliness p. 27. l. 5. offence p. 28. l. pen. to p. 31. l. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 marg in uudis p. 32. l. ult with p. 34. l. 6. parvae l. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 35. m. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 37. l. 34. conversationis l. 36. distraction l. 48. Spirit l. 49. Bernard p. 46. l. 43. good p. 50. l. 7. eum p. 53. l. 1. know p. 72. r. generatione l. 44. in p. 73. l. 41. Spirit l. 45. add of p. 74. m. ille p. 77. l. 51. grants p. 78. m. vocis p. 79. l. 19. nothing l. 48. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 80. l. 24. add may p. 81. l. 27. add are p. 84. l. 49. r. sapientissimum p. 96. l. 14. through p. 100. l. 50. either p. 106. l. 19. r. Divesses p. 107. l. 16. parts l. 47. his p. 108. l. 47. she p. 109. l. 44. indifferent p. 113. l. 16. get l. 19. then marg ornamento p. 114. l. 7. vox l. 30. placed p. 115. marg calce p. 129. Mercury p. 130. l. 23. add in l. 31. mercies marg vulgatissima p. 131. m. introspicere p 134. l. 30. r. thence p. 135. l. 52. commends p. 136. m. egerint p. 140. l. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 142. m. ratis p. 148. l. 19. r. columna es A TABLE Of the Principal THINGS contained in the EXERCITATIONS A. ADam's fall what misery to mankind Pag. 4 Angels rejoyce at the good of Gods Church Pag. 18 What to be admired in God Pag. 20 Ardency in prayer how grounded Pag. 79 80 Ground of our Adoption Pag. 81. Benefit of it Pag. 81 82 Gods dearest children subject to Afflictions Pag. 117 God sends not Angels but Men-Angels to preach the Word why Pag. 128 Apostles called Pillars why Pag. 147 forward B. THe glory of our Saviours Body and Soul in his state of Exaltation Pag. 58 Brittle estate of man Pag. 85 Bishop what Pag. 126 Baseness of the Popish Clergy Pag. 135 Blessedness Pag. 136 C. GOD would have mens hearts prepared for Christ Pag. 4 Christ ordered our High-Priest by Covenant Pag. 6 Purity of Christs conception Pag. 12 Peace of Conscience what it produceth in man Pag. 31 32 Civil peace Pag. 33. Peace with the Creatures Pag. 38 Converts stand upon firmer terms in Christ than before their first declination Pag. 40 Christs cruel conflict upon the Cross Pag. 59 The best in this life partly carnal Pag. 71 Comfort unspeakable a benefit of the Spirit Pag. 75 Crying of the Spirit in our hearts Pag. 77 forward Crying in prayer what ibid. and forward Calling not to be neglected Pag. 87 Christ the Head of the Church how Pag. 104 forward Pag. 145 Cross of Christ Pag. 137 Conflict and Conquest of Saints Pag. 141 forward D. CHrist must die a cursed Death Pag. 8. His Dignity Pag. 15 16 A Doxology Pag. 18 Our divisions cause Papists insult Pag. 37 The
12.1 Remember thy Creators Isa 42.5 Thus saith God the Lord he that created the Heavens and they that stretched them out The Psalmist Ps 33.6 By the Word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the Host of them by the breath of his mouth That is God the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost created all Psal 67.6 7. Some observe God is thrice named here to note the Trinity of persons When Moses beginneth to rehearse the Law and to explain it the first thing that he teacheth them is the Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity Deutr. 6.4 Hear O Israel the Lord our God the Lord is One Three words answering the three Persons Galatinus and the middle word Our God deciphering fitly the second who assumed our nature Jarchi as is well observ'd by Galatinus R. Solomon Jarchi writing on that Cant. 1.11 We will make c. interprets it I and my Judgment-hall Now a Judgement-hall in Israel consisted of three at least which in their close manner of speech they applied to God John 8.56 Your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it Austin and was glad Abraham in these words acknowledgeth the Mystery of the Trinity saith Austin Add unto these Cottons 7. Vial. p. 5. what Mr. Cotton hath out of Brightman on Rev. 4.3 God is here resembled saith he by three precious stones holding forth the three Persons in Trinity A Jasper having as they say a white Circle round about it representing the Eternity of the Father A Sardine stone of a fleshly colour representing Jesus Christ who took our flesh upon him An Emrald being of a green colour refreshing the eyes of them that look upon it representing the Spirit who is as the Rainbow a token of fair weather and is a comfortable refresher wheresoever he cometh There was Concilium augustissimum as one terms it a most Majestical meeting of the three Persons in Trinity about the work of mans Creation Gen. 1.26 And afterwards about his Redemption Mat. 3.16 17. So likewise in the matter of mans Sanctification remarkable is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6 7. where the diversities of gifts are said to be of the Spirit The diversities of Ministeries whereby those gifts are administred of the Lord that is of Christ And the diversities of operations effected by the gifts and Ministeries to be of God that is the Father When Jesus was baptized prayed the Heavens were opened and the Aire clarified by a new and glorious light and the Holy Ghost in the manner of a Dove alighted upon his Sacred Head and God the Father gave a voice from Heaven Thou art my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased This was the greatest meeting that ever was upon Earth where the whole Cabinet of the mysterious Trinity was opened and shewn as much as the capacities of our present imperfections will permit The second Person in the vail of Humanity the third in the shape or with the motion of a Dove But the first kept his primitive state and as to the Israelites He gave notice by way of Caution Ye saw no shape but ye heard a voyce So now also God the Father gave testimony to his holy Son and appeared only in a voyce without any visible representment Also in the transfiguration of Christ the Son standeth the Father by his voyce witnesseth and the Holy Ghost overshadows him in a Cloud as before by a Dove Now the pur-blind Progeny of Adam being able to discern no clearer of the Godhead than he in the Gospel which saw men walking like Trees O blindness more than gross not to see or seeing not to discern when the Sun it self lodgeth in his Zenith Therefore many have ransack't Nature for Mediums to perswade the Doctrine of the Trinity One tells us That a Spring begets a River and that from both are derived smaller Brooks all which make but one water Another shews a Root from which riseth a Body and from thence Branches yet all but one Tree Another Dyonis de divin nomin 5.2 the Trinity may be shadow'd forth though but darkly by light the Father being as the body of light the Son as the beams and the Holy Ghost as the splendour of both Dionysius illustrateth it by the similitude of three Candles Dam●s●● de fid l. 1. c. 4. enlightning one and the same Room And Damascen of the Parelii when there appear as it were three and yet it is but one Sun And thus as difficult as the thing is Divines both Ancient and Modern Vid. Zanch. de tribus Elohim l. 8 c. 6. have in their Writings brought many similitudes and resemblances to express it by Amongst them all this is one of the clearest viz. The light of the Sun the light of the Moon and the light of the Aire all which are for nature and substance one and the same light and yet are they notwithstanding three distinct lights too Mr. Perkins on the Creed for the light of the Sun is of it self and from no other the light of the Moon is from the Sun and the light of the Aire is from them both So the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost are all one simple and undivided Godhead but yet three distinct Persons the Father having the foundation of Personal subsistence from himself and from no other the Son from the Father of whom he is eternally begotten and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son from both which he eternally proceedeth And God said let us make man in our Image after our likeness Holy Holy Holy Gen. 1.26 Isa 6.3 is the Lord of Hosts Jesus went up straight way out of the water the Spirit of God descending like a Dove lighted upon him And lo a voyce from Heaven Mat. 3.16 17. saying This is my Beloved Son in Whom I am well pleased Jesus was transfigured Matth. 17.2 5. a bright Cloud overshadowed them and behold a voyce out of the Cloud c. Go Matth. 28.19 and teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost For he received from God the Father honour and glory 2 Pet. 1.17 when there came such a voyce to him from the excellent glory 1 John 5.7 There are three that bear Record in Heaven the Father the word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one De Christo THE second person in the glorious Trinity is God the Son Jesus Christ The Name Jesus signifieth a Saviour so he was called before at Nomen Jesu salutis ben ficium quod ab illo expectandum denotat and after his birth A Saviour considering his Potency able to save considering his Habit proclaimed by the Angel at his Conception he shall save or regard his Act hence call'd Jesus at his Circumsion Or look into his Passion where he was Victus Victor unloosing others himself being
This fire of the Spirit must be fetcht from heaven Lumen de lumine from the Father of lights who giveth his Spirit to them that ask it By water because of its clensing cooling 2. Ezek. 36.25 Joh. 3.5 refreshing and fructifying vertue and quality Indeed many are washed with the water of baptism that are not washed with this water Simon Magus of whom it is said Fonte quidem lotus sed non in pectore mundus Let us ever say with the woman of Samaria But with more sensibleness than she did Lord ever give us of this water then shall we be clean and fit for the holy Jerusalem He is said to proceed from the Father and the Son Joh. 15.26 to shew the Essence and Nature that he is of for as the spirit of man must needs be truly of mans nature and is the most formal and essential part of man So and much more it must be thought of the Spirit of God upon whom no composition falleth And this in effect is the Apostles Argument What man knoweth the things of a man 2 Cor. 2.11 save the spirit of man which is in him Even so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God That is none knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God who is in him and of his own Essence and Nature That was a sweet promise I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 The best thing upon the basest What can God do more for his people This is to give them all good things in one so many are the benefits we receive by the Spirit Eph. 5.9 Delicata res est Spiritus Dei therefore we must observe and obey his motions We should lay our selves as instruments open to the Spirits touch submitting to his discipline as Paul did who said I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2.20 and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me Which requires a great deal of self-denial Serpents they say can do no hurt in water no more can that old Serpent where the holy Spirit dwells This is the Instructer which teacheth us the Spirit of life which quickens us the Advocate which speaks in us the Comforter which relieves us and the everlasting Fountain and Spirit of truth from whom all truth and celestial riches do flow unto us Your Father which is in heaven Mat. 7.11 Luke 11.13 Eph. 4 ●● will give good things to them that ask him Your heavenly Father will give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption De Sacrâ Scripturâ I Will not stand to search how ancient Writing is Exod. 24. wherein some have lost time and labour I know that many do make God the first immediate Author of it and do affirm that the first Scripture that ever was was Gods writing of the Law in two Tables But because we find that Moses wrote all the Word of the Lord and Josephus doth report a tradition of the Hebrews for writing and graving before the flood I hold it probable that both Scripture and Sculpture are as ancient as the Old World However we see the care that God hath taken for the publishing of his Will to the Church which he hath done both sufficiently that we need no more knowledge for eternal life than what is contained in Scripture and so clearly that the Word giveth understanding to the simple Scripture is twofold 1. Inward called Scriptura Cordis 2. Outward called Scriptura Testimonij The inward Scripture of the heart is that which the Spirit of God immediately writeth in the fleshly tables of the hearts of all the Sons of God and by this all that are to be saved are taught of God Jer. 31.33 Hebr. 8.10 2 Cor. 3.3 The outward Scripture of the Testimony is that which was inspired by the Holy Ghost and committed to writing by the Prophets Apostles and Evangelists to preserve and transmit sound and saving doctrine by their pens to all Posterity Of this latter Moses was the first writer in the world as may be proved by the Evangelist Luke 24.27 Hence we conclude that our Religion grounded in these writings is the old Religion even as old as the day of mans creation and fall whereas all other Religions are but of yesterday nay the gods themselves worshipped by Heathens and Turks were long after the time of Abraham There is no Question more worthy satisfaction in Divinity App●llatur ab Arminio Instrumentum Religio tis than that which enquireth into the Authority of Scripture 1. For all Religion depends upon it and wavering in this principle openeth a wide door to beastly Epicurism Devilish Atheism and all contempt of Religion and Justice 2. If the heart be not perswaded that the Scriptures be of God it will easily reject hearing reading practise and all the means of salvation 3. The doubting of this cutteth off all faith Rom. 14.23 and the comfort and strength of faith for a man must first believe Gods Word to be true Titubabit sides si Scripturarum vacillat authoritas Aug. before he can believe it to be true to him and what comfort in temptation without the Sword of the Spirit or what peace in terrour of Conscience without the Word which is the Well of salvation 4. The doubting of this cuts off all self-denial mortification and sound repentance for who will abandon his carnal delights and pleasures and undertake the strict course of godliness that doth doubt whether the Scriptures be the Word of God or not But it is clear that the Scriptures are the Word of God 1. The Lord professeth them to be his own words Isa 55.11 Mic. 2.7.2 The Prophets begin with the Word of the Lord and the Apostles 1 Cor. 11.23.3 The matter of the Scriptures they treat of the great works of the eternal God as Creation Providence justice and mercy both temporal and eternal c. Speaking of great mysteries above the reach of humane wisdom yea of things contrary to natural wisdom Searching the heart and discovering the thoughts Hebr. 4.12 And containing most ample and large promises of a blessed and eternal happiness by faith in the Messiah Amongst us Stephen Langton Arch-bishop of Canterbury first divided the Bible into Chapters in such sort as we now account them Robert Stephens into Verses Goodw. Catal. pag. 109. But not much commended by Scultetus who saith Imperitissimè plerunque dissecans which Covenant none could make or can make good but only God himself blessed for ever 4. Concerning the Instruments and pen-men of Scripture Their extraordinary calling infallible assistance 1 Pet. 1.11 unblameable conversation 2 Pet. 2.21 sincerity and uprightness in writing sparing neither others nor themselves their stile together with their joint-consent
where we shall be known and well entertained Paul pronounceth his afflictions light when he weighed them with that weight of Glory and looked on things not seen And let us use the means and hold the way to this blessed place 1. Promoting Gods glory 2. Seeking to please him in all things 3. Beginning heaven upon earth 4. Studying sanctification decking our selves with grace and getting the Wedding-garment for that Wedding-day for without Holiness none shall see God 1 King 8.27 2 Cor. 11.12 Isa 63.15 Luk. 16.22 Heb. 11.10 Joh. 14.2 2 Cor. 5.1 in that Presence-chamber of his Glory Scripture calls this place The Heaven of heavens The third heaven The habitation of Gods holiness and of his glory Abrahams bos●me A city which hath foundations whose maker and builder is God Christs Fathers house in which are many mansions A building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heaven The new Jerusalem The Paradise of God An holy place c. De Angelis ANgels were created it is conceived in the beginning Psal 33.6 when the Heavens were for saith the Psalmist By the word of the Lord were the heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth And it is likely before Man Job 38.4 7. by those words Where wast thou when the Morning-stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy Angels are Spirits of Heaven resembling their Creator as children do their father both in their substance which is incorporeal and in their excellent properties Life and immortality excellency blessedness and glory They are called 1. Spirits Nomen essentiae 2. Angels Nomen officii For their number they are said to be Thousands and Ten thousand thousands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dan. 7.10 Myriads Heb. 12.22 which because of the vastness of the number we render innumerable They are innumerable to us so are our sins the hairs of our heads the sands of the sea-shore the stars in the firmament not to God The supposed Dionysius the Senator of Athens Niceph. 1.2 cap. 20. ordered the Celestial Hierarchy thus That the first degree is given to the Angels of Love termed Seraphim The second to the Angels of Light termed Cherubim The third and so the following degrees to Thrones Principalities and the rest which are all Angels of power and ministration So that upon this account the Angels of knowledge and illumination are placed before the Angels of office and domination I think such curious brains put all out of order Augustine is of a more modest spirit Quomodo se babeat beatissima illa ac superna Civitas quid inter se distent quatuor illa vocabula Col. 1.16 dicant qui possunt Enchy● ad Laurent c. 58. si tamen possunt probare quod d●cant Ego me isthaec ignorare consiteor Let the like humility be imitated of us all Let no man presume to understand above that which is written And there their several degrees and dignities are only hinted as well among themselves as in regard of the inferior world and the government thereof The wisdom and knowledge of these Spirits is admirable Aug. Cogniti● conc●eata acquisita Schoolmen The Devils know much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more do the good Angels They have matutinam vespertinam scientiam Their morning-knowledge they have by creation and a continual contemplation of God their evening-knowledge they have by observation from the creatures and a diligent inspection into the Church Their power also is as wonderful Their office is to minister perpetually to God in obeying his will unto Christ as the Head of the Church and are also sent out to minister for the good and salvation of the Saints for Christs sake Not that God needeth them as Princes need the counsel and aid of their subjects But he maketh use of their service about us 1. For the honour of his Majesty and comfort of our infirmity 2. To make out his love unto us by employing such noble creatures for our good 3. To make and maintain love and correspondency between us and Angels till we our selves come to be like unto them The truth is though they excell in strength yet do they Gods commandments Luk. 20.36 hearkening to the voice of his word which they perform chearfully faithfully diligently speedily and constantly ever standing before the face of our heavenly Father and rejoycing more in their names of service than of honour of imployment than preferment to be called Angels that is messengers than Principalities Thrones c. accounting it better to do good than to be great to dispense Gods benefits than to enjoy them Let us imitate these good Spirits chiefly 1. In subjecting our selves to Christ as our Lord and King Phil. 2.9 This is their bowing of the knee and ours too 2. In doing the will of God alway chearfully as they do and therefore are said to have wings thus we pray Mat. 6.10 Laudant Deum Angeli adorant tremunt tremere dicuntur non metu formidinis l. 2. c. 50. de sacr Altar myster cum sint perfectè beati sed administrationis vel obedientiae affectu saith Innocent 3. Wise 2 Sam. 14.20 Psal 103.20 Heb. 1.14 according to the wisdom of an Angel of God Bless the Lord ye his Angels that excel in strength that do his commandments hearkening unto the voice of his word Are they not all ministring spirits sent forth to to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation Of the Celestial Lights Of the Sun Sol quasi solus v●l quia solus ex omnibus sideribus est tantus vil quia quum est exortus obscuratis aliis solus appareat Martinius THe Sun is the Prince of Planets coursing about with incredible swiftness so sweet a creature that Eudoxus the Philosopher professed that he would be content to be burnt up with the heat of it so he might be admitted to come so near it as to learn the nature of it The Sun is as it were a vessel whereinto the Lord gathered the Light which till then was scattered in the whole body of the heavens This David beheld with admiration not adoration Psal 8. Jer. 44. as those Idolaters that worshipped the Queen of heaven For that was a witty speech of Cyril They were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Atheists by night who worshipped the Sun and Atheists by day who worshiped the Moon and Stars And well he might for Chrysostom wondreth at this That whereas all fire naturally ascendeth God hath turned the beams of the Sun toward the earth making the light thereof to stream downwards This is the Lords own work and it ought to be wonderful in our eyes The Sun hath his name in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a servant as being the servant-general of mankind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 while he shines indifferently upon the evil and the good imparting to both light
and Physician to their unavoidable ruine Exempla hujus Peccati Saul Judas Arrius item Julianus Apostata But it is indeed difficult to judge of this sin Sine rarishmis inspirationi●us Be● because now in this Age of the Church the spirit of discerning is not so distributed as of old Manasses for many years furiously persecuted the Word of God erected abominable Idols and shed much innocent blood in Jerusalem whereby this sin was incoated but not consummate because at last he came to have Repentance given him Take heed of three things principally 1. Of every beginning of evil of denying Christ though but through infirmity so far Peter was in a dangerous way and it was time for Christ to look at him Satan teacheth his children first to go and then to run 2. Of acting wilfully and willingly against the known Truth of the Gospel there are sins of frailty through impotency and of simplicity through ignorance but take heed of sins of malignity through envy this is Giant-like to war against God 3. Of continuing to sin against conscience A man may sin till it be as impossible for him to repent as to come out of Hell being once plunged there Most justly may it be said of the man committing this sin what once most unjustly by Paul Away with him from the earth its pity that such a one should live There is a sin unto death 1 John 5.16 All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be forgiven him Mat. 12.31 32. but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this World neither in the World to come Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins Psal 19 13. let them not have dominion over me then shall I be upright and I shall be innocent from the great transgression Sinners By one man sin entred into the World Non intelligendum hoc de exemplo imitationis sed de contagio propagationis Johan Polyand praefat ad Com. Nemo mundus à peccato coram te nèc infans cujus est unius diei vita super terram Aug. Imbecillitas enim infantilium innocens est non animus infantium God at the first created men with their faces as it were turned towards himself that is doing his Will But now they are like him whom a wicked spirit is said to have caught by the pate and wrested his neck about that his face stood behind his back Fixa mutari nescia nam quis Peccandi finem posuit sibi quando recepit Ejectum semel attritâ de fronte pudorem Quisuam hominum est quem tu contentum videris uno Flagitio The three sorts of dead raised by our Saviour aptly resemble saith Augustine three sorts of sinners viz. 1. A sinner is dead in the house like Jairu's Daughter when he doth imagine mischief in his mind 2. Perseverare in malo Diabolicum digni sunt perire cum illo quicunque in similitudine ejus permanent in pecca●o Bern. A sinner is carried out in the Coffin like the Widows son of Naim when he brings forth ungodliness both in word and in deed 3. But then is he stinking in the Grave like Lazarus if he sin habitually without any remorse drawing iniquity with cords of vanity and heaping up wrath against the day of wrath One said wittily That the angry man made himself the Judge and God the Executioner there is no sinner that doth not the like The Glutton makes God his Eater and himself his Guest and his belly his God especially in the new-found Feasts of this Age in which profuseness and profaness strive for the Tables end The lascivious man makes himself the lover and as Vives said of Mahomet God the Pandor The covetous man makes himself the Usurer and God the Broker The ambitious man makes God his state and honour his God Of every sinner God may say justly as once by the Prophet Servire me fecisti Isa 43.24 Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins yea with the Salvages of Calecutt they place Satan in the Throne and God on the Footstool If Zions Daughter converse with sinners she ties her self to the bondage of iniquity Deaths Garden brings forth no other flowers but death The Rose of pride buds forth vanity envies wormwood is but bitterness the fair lilly of luxuriousness is but sorrow and contrition the stinging Nettle of careful avarice is but dolou● and affliction There is the soul the Daughter of Deity like a Bond-slave led into captivity from danger to danger vice to vice sin to sin thought to thought from thought to consent from consent to delight from delight to custom from custom to hardness of heart from thence to an evil death and from an evil death to damnation We may say of every sinner as Salust said of Catiline Magnâ vi animi fecit sed ingenio malo pravóque Sinners resemble those Monsters that are half like men and half like beasts Sinners may think they see God to favour them but 't is but imaginary as we read of Brutus that he saw his own Angel They are like mad men who imagine many things which indeed are not Wickedness overthroweth the sinner Prov. 13.6 Though a sinner do evil an hundred times and his dayes be prolonged It shall not be well with him neither shall he prolong his dayes which are as a shadow Eccl 8.12 13. because he feareth not before God The sinner being an hundred years old shall be accursed Isa 65.20 Guilt of sin The priviledge of greatness neither must nor will be any subterfuge for guiltiness Guilt of sin increaseth as sin is propagated therefore the sorrow of sin comes with much and daily addition For as he is an happy man who can be a beginner in good things having a share in all the good that follows the beginning even when he is gone So cannot he but be a most unhappy man who is a Ring-leader in evil for as it is easie to set fire on an house but not so easie to quench it so he hath begun mischief and all the sins and evils of that unhappy spark committed many Generations after him shall be upheaped on him to his greater condemnation Men may communicate in other mens sins divers wayes By counsel and advice when though another is the hand yet thou art the head and adviser Absalom committed the incest but by the counsel of Achitophel And the daughter of Herodias is the mouth that said Give me John Baptists head but it was by the counsel of her mother By commandment 1. Whether by word Doeg murdered the Priests of the Lord but it was Saul's fact who commanded him The high Priests servants struck Paul but their stroak was their Masters for he commanded it and Paul deals
ambition promised him for when one seeing him give away all his present inheritances said what Sir will you make your selfe a beggar No saith he I will reserve hope for my self But certainly Hope is a greater and better possession unto the people of God here than all the great and good things which they possesse Put as much into their hands as you can there is more than that put in their hearts by hope A child of God lookes over all his possessions and pitcheth upon expectation as his portion The estate which a believer hath in the promises is more than the estate he hath in possession Riches in the promise is better than riches in the chest There is no enjoyment but that in Heaven where we shall enjoy all that ever was promised so good as hope for what is promised Fides intuetur verbum rei spes autem rem verbi Luther Unto faith must be annexed hope faith makes a Christian hope nourisheth and sustains a Christian Spes alet agricolas Jam mala finissem letho sed credula vitam Spes fove● melius cras fore semper ait It is our duty patiently and cheerfully to wait and hope for a mercy promised cheering our selves up with such hope as do they that bear with their cookes making them to stay long for their dinner in hope thereby to fare the better Hope is compared to an Anchor Heb. 6.19 As a ship cannot be without an anchor no more can we without hope The ship is the soul of a Christian the anchor is Hope the sea where it is tossed is the world and the place whereinto the anchor is cast is heaven As the anchor in a storm or tempest holdeth the ship fast that it is not tossed up and down nor shaken with wind and waves So doth hope the ship of our souls in the tempestuous sea of this world Onely an anchor goes downward this upward that into the bottome of the Sea this into the top of Heaven Anchora in imo spes in summo The hopes of the wicked are not long liv'd they are soon dashed and disappointed Pro. 11.7 It 's likened to a spiders web Job 8.14 a little thing a beso in easily and speedily sweeps away the house and inhabitant together such is the hope of the wicked it s suddenly ruin'd That 's true hope that runs out into holynes for faith and hope work a suitableness in the soul to the things beleeved and hoped for 1 Joh. 3.3 c. Let us desire God to encrease our hope and to strengthen it daily more and more That this anchor being in heaven already may put us in an assured hope of heaven And the Lord in mercy so fortify this grace that no storms of afflictions may be ever able to prevail against it Lord increase our hope This I recall to my mind therefore have I hope For we are saved by hope Lam. 3.11 Rom. 8.24 but hope that is seen is not hope for what a man seeth Why doth he yet hope for But if we hope for that We see not then do We With patience Wait for it If in this life onely we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 Prov. 14.32 But the righteous hath hope in his death Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 Which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead Presumption There are two sorts of persons saith a learned Divine among others observable in the Church namely infirmi glorioli weak Saints and presumptuous hypocrites Ille vincit qui gratiam Dei sperat non qui de suâ virtu●e praesumit Tertul. Quicquid à vabis minor extimesci● major hoc vobis Dominus minatur these are usually cast down with an apprehension of their own sinfulness these are commonly lifted up with an opinion of their own righteousnesse Those abhore themselves as the worst of sinners these boast themselves to be the best of Saints Those account themselves to be nothing but sin these think themselves to have no sin Presumptuous sinners promise to themselves the future vision of Gods face whilest they go on in the wilfull breach of Gods law They perswade themselves that their condition shall be happy though their conversation is wicked Impudently laying as full claim to heaven as the exactest Saint Presumption usually springs from the false reasonings which are in the minds of men Concerning 1. The freeness of Gods grace in electing 2. The fulness of his mercy in forgiving 3. The worthiness of Christs blood in redeeming Thus is the sweetest honey turned into gall by bad stomachs the most wholesome Antidotes become poison to wicked men and the precious supports of a lively faith are abused to be props of presumption by arrogant hypocrites Origen did too much presume of the mercy of God when he carried sticks to an Idol Damascene when he did service unto Mahomet Cranmer when he did subscribe to the Pope Aaron when he made the calfe and Solomon when he fell to idolatry yet these men were prompted on either by passion and perturbation within or temptation from without The greatest example we have of a godly person falling into presumptuous sin is David for we see him with all crast and subtilty studying how to accomplish that which the very light of nature condemns and when he hath so done we see him covering and excusing of it Oh there the Philistines were upon this Sampson and his strength was gone there presumptuous sins did for awhila prevail over him When the heart at any time Saith Dr. Preston deliberates and yet that word is not sufficient to expresse it Of Gods alsufficiency But when the heart works according to its own proper inclination and then wilfully disobeye the Lord in any commandment certainly then it casts God away Austin calls sins of Presumption Peccata vastantia conscientiam sins that lay waste the conscience This is that great transgression that wickednesse with a witnesse He that heareth the words of the curse Deut. 29.19 20. and yet blesseth himselfe in his heart saying I shall have peace though I Walk in the imagination of my heart to add● drunkennesse to thirst The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoake against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven The soul that doth ought presumptuously Num. 15.30 31 the same reproacheth the Lord and that soul shall be cut off from among his people Because he hath despised the Word of the Lord and hath broken his commandment that soul shall utterly be cut off his iniquity shall be upon him Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins Psal 19.13 Ch●ys in
Miln turned about with the wheel of Time the covetous man is Sampson toiling for each corn not seeking because not seeing the things of above Nay this unhappy wretch is like the Miln-wheel which all the day long turns about and at night remains in the same place Covetousness brings nought home at last It is written of the fish Scolopendrae that having suckt in the fishers hook that sowre-sweet morsel She hath a rare trick to rid her from it For instantly she all her guts doth vomit Tarpëia daughter to the chief Keeper of Romes Capitol Go●●● An t ● is said to betray it into the enemies hand bargaining to have for this treason all the golden Bracelets upon her enemies left hands who when they were admitted did cast not only their Bracelets but Bucklers upon her through the weight whereof she was pressed to death Servas pecuniam Cyp● ●●em quae te servata non servat Possidere se credunt qui potius possidentur nec ad pecuniam suam domini sed magis pecuniae mancipati Sequi Chriftum quomodo possunt qui patrimonii vinculis detinentur Needless it was Babington in Gen●s and but a Philosophical folly or pang that Crates cast his money into the Sea and said Ego te mergam ne mergar à te For wealth and godliness may meet But take heed and beware of Covetousness Covetousness is to be hated Quid non m●rta●ia pectora c●git Auri sacra fames Quae reverentia leoum Quis metus aut pudor est unquam properantis avari because it is 1. A sin against nature making our soul terrene which should be celestial 2. The procurer of a curse Wo t● them that join house to house 3. The root of many evils 4. A besotting sin Thou fool 5. A leader into snares which drown men in destruction and perdition Let your conversation be without covetousness Hebr. 13.5 Love Gods love to Man The beloved Disciple tells us God is love 1 Joh. 4.16 So he is four ways 1. Substantialiter Q●icqui● in Deo D●us est Alst Not that we should think him to be a quality who is a living substance but There is nothing in God but God God is not accidentally but substantially good 2. Causaliter We love him because he first loved us Magnes amoris amor Love is both the loadstone and whetstone of love Our love is but the reflex of his 3. Activè loving all that he made Man especially The ground of this love being wholly in himself 4. Passivè Being lovely and most worthy to be beloved O taste and see that the Lord is good Psal 34.8 Mans love to God When the subject of our hatred is sin it cannot be too deep and when the object of our love is God it cannot be too high Too many love God as men the Physician Non propter se sed propter sanitatem Love all but God above all Ordo charitatis est ama post Deum Patrem This is Loves method first love God then our Kindred And if it happen that God and they come in competition Odium in suos pietas in Deum est then hatred to Kindred is piety to God Pilate that for love of men condemned Christ did kill himself Judas that for love of money betrayed his Lord hang'd himself and Julian's Treasurer that for Julian's love did leave Christ did vomit blood and die suddenly So let all thine enemies perish O Lord. Say not because we are commanded to love God with all our mind soul and strength therefore it is not lawful to love any thing else For we answer We may love something praeter Deum sed omnia propter Deum We may love other things beside God if we love them in and for God Christ will have of his Church her first love just love and onely love Therefore she is called his Turtle-dove for as that bird hath but one mate so the Church must have God only for her Love Love makes Christs yoke easie and his burden light Ovid. Chrysol Solus amor nescir difficultates Yea Love makes men Martyrs for God Audac●m faciebat amor God had rather men should love than fear him to be called Father than Master O love the Lord all ye his Saints Psal 31.23 I will love thee O Lord my strength Psal 18.1 Mans love to Man Why we should love one another this one briefly and pithily expresseth thus 1. Dilecti diligamus We are loved our selves therefore let us love 2. Dis●●●o● diligamus they are beloved whom we are charged to love 3. Yea Diligentes diligamus they also love God and us whom God commands us to love S. John proves the necessity of loving one another 1 Joh. 4.11 in these words viz. If God then first so loved us then ought we also to love one another Wherein he comprehends four Arguments If God who is Maker of heaven and earth Lord of all and therefore our Governor and Superior loved us base creatures then much rather should we who are equals love one another If God first loved us then ought we to love one another It is the best motive to love to perceive that we are loved God loved us freely But it is also necessary we should love one another 1. Necessitate praecepti because he hath commanded us to love them 2. Necessitate naturae for nature compels us The Pythagorians as Plutarah reports if they were angry one with another never slept till they had sh●●●en hands And Pliny reports of two goats which meeting on a narrow bridge Honor may be honored but Love will be abused 1 Cor. 13.7 so that they could not pass both together and yet were not able to turn The one lay down and let the other pass over his back Indeed we are ready enough to tread on one anothers backs but to bear one anothers necessities we are unwilling 3. Necessitate gratiae Love is a vertue so necessary that a Christian cannot be without it The Apostle reasons from the extent If God so loved us that is so well so truly and sincerely as he could not but do Qui est summum bonum verun● illud unicum est and so much even so that he sent his onely begotten Son that he should die for our sins Then ought we in some measure to love one another It is a sure signe we love God when we love our brethren For suth one elegantly As lines in a circle drawn from the center to the circumference the neerer they come to the center from whence they proceeded the neerer needs must they come one to another and the farther off they go from it the more are they distant one from another So Christians the neerer they come to God that indivisible Center of whom and to whom are all things Rom. 11.36 in their love the neerer must they needs come in affection one to another and the farther they go from him in
There are many kinds of fear 1. Natural which is the gift of God the ornament of nature by which we are warned and in some sort armed for the avoiding of evil that may befall us 2. Servile whereby goodness is not loved but punishment is onely feared 3. Initial to which he may apply those words in Prov. 1.7 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge 4. Filial a fear of God as he is our Father whereby we are solicitous not to lose his favour 5. Worldly and carnal when a man rather than to forsake his own contentment and case cares not to forsake God by forsaking his Commandments Augustus coming ill to his Crown is said to have broken sleeps and used to send for some in talk to pass the night away Caligula the Emperour hid himself when ever he heard the thunder Our fear of God must not be servile but filial Si Domnius ubi timor Malach. 1.6 to this end the fear and love of God are to be mixed Timete cum amore amate cum timore This by some called reverentialis timor by others a chast fear because it is like the fear of a chast wife who feareth to lose her husbands love But the last swayes exceedingly we are too much afraid of man When Gehazi saw the host of the Aramites he cryed Alas what shall we do When Herod frowned on them of Tyre and Sidon they quaked and sought his favour c. At this day if a great man set himself against us and threaten to break our backs If a rich man be our enemy and threaten to sit on our skirts we are in a woful case we know not what to do there is no heart in us Against this fleshy and ungodly fear oppose this buckler The Lord is my helper I will not fear what man can do unto me Such a man threatens me God sends a curst Cow short horns he hath a thousand wayes to curb him God can take the breath out of his nostrils in the twinkling of an eye Overcome him by flies as Pharaoh With one flie as Adrian He can send Wormes to eat him up as he did Herod c What comparison betweene God and man God is a Spirit man is flesh God is strong man is weak God is the Creator man is the creature If God be on our side who can be against us Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul Mat. 10.28 but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell Magnanimity A Painter in a rage casting his Pensel from him made such a some for a Mad-dog as he could not otherwise have light upon by Art and industrie Yet reason not rage is as I conceive a fit ingredient towards the making up of this vertue The old age of an Eagle is better than the youth of a lark It is reported of the Cannibals that in a whole age a man shall not finde one that doth not rather embrace death than either by word or countenance remisly to yield one jot of an invincible courage There is none seen that would not rather be slain and devoured than sue for life or shew any fear It was Alexanders great encouragement at his last fatal battel that he was to fight with all the power of Persia at once Mahomet the Persian Sultan enraged with the overthrow of his Army in his fury caused all the ten Captains which had the leading thereof to have their eys pluckt out threatning also to attire all the souldiers that fled out of the battle in womens apparel and so disgraced to carry them about as cowards Famous was the faith and fortitude of Philo the Jew Eus●b l. 2. c. 5. one of the Legates sent from them to the City of Rome who after he was excluded threatned and commanded to depart being likewise in danger to receive a mischief from Cajus the Emperour who was much moved and incensed against him yet he being reviled went forth and unto the Jewes which were with him in company he said We ought to be of good chear for by right God should take our part Sith Cajus is angry with us The Lacaedemonians were wont to say It is a shame for any man to flie in time of danger But for a Lacaedemonian it is a shame for him to deliberate Socrates would not hearken to his friend Criton perswading him to shift for himself by a dishonourable flight Necesse est ut eam non ut vivam as Pompey said Much lesse should a Christian when called by God to suffer Go said Luther I will surely go sith I am sent for in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ yea though I knew there were so many Devils to resist me as there are tiles to cover the houses in Worms When Spalatinus had sent to him to enquire whether or no he would go to Worms and appear in the Gospels cause if Caesar summoned him Luth. Epist Omnia de me praesumas said he praeter fugam palinodiam Fugere nolo multò minus recantare it a me confortet Dominus When the Earl of Salisbury being inclosed round with the Army of Sultan Melexala Turk Hist fol. 104. was advised to fly The noble Earl answered no more but God forbid that my fathers Son should run away from the face of a Sarasin Should such a man as I flee Said Nehemiah I am ready said Paul not to be bound only but also to die at Jerusalem for the Name of the Lord Jesus The righteous is bold as a Lyon Prov. 28.1 Pusillanimity Honourable exploits try what mettal we are of as hard weather tryes what health Withered leaves fall off in a wind rotten boughs break when weight is laid on them and earthen vessels when set empty on the fire This cowardly passion of faintheartedness dispirits a man expectorates his manlinesse and exposeth him to the cruel mercy of an enemy Some do account one pair of heeles worth two pair of hands But better of the two to be boldly temerarious than basely timorous As was Hannibal Decad. 5. f. 1. of whom Livy reports that Princeps praelium inibat ultimus concerto praelio excedebat He was first in the battel and last out Want of courage shewes that men like stags have stout and stately heads but want hearts Besides there is this evil in cowerdice that it is catching If thou faint in the day of adversity thy strength is small Prov. 24.10 Deut. 20.8 Isa 35.4 What man is there that is fearful and faint-hearted Let him go and return unto his house lest his brethrens heart faint as well as his heart Say to them that are of a fearful heart Be strong fear not Patience The Patient man is made of a Metal not so hard as flexible his shoulders are large fit for a load of injuries which he bears not out of basenesse and cowardliness because he dare not
a sweet savour behind it Wheresoever it comes it will procure favour of God and men When the name that the wicked have gotten shall rot the faithful shall be had in everlasting remembrance Therefore let us be all Zealous this way so shall we be renowned in this world Quàm magnus mirantium tam magnus invidentium populus est Senec. and eternally famous in the world to come Plato was once in such esteem that it was an ancient Proverb Jovem grecè loqui si vellet non aliter loquuturum quàm Platonem But the common people are apt to praise and dispraise with one breath Fame followes desert as the sweet sent doth the rose A man shall be sure to have both the comfort and credit of his worthy parts and practises In the Olympick games those that overcame Dignum laude virum Musa vetat mori● Hò●at did not put the garlands on their own heads but stayed till others did it for them That which had been much to a mans commendation if out of another mans mouth sounds very slenderly out of his own It is an hard thing to recover a mans good name if once lost It happened Lau● pro●rlo sordescit in ●re that upon a time Fire Water and Fame went to travel together but before they set forth they consulted that if they lost one another how they might meet again Fire said where you see smoke there you shall finde me Water said where you see marsh or moorish low grounds there you shall find me But Fame said take heed how you lose me for if you do you will ran a great hazard never to meet me again Still the Euge of a good Conscience and Gods approbation is principally to be sought after Whose praise is not of men but of God Rom. ● 29 Mer●t Caelum gratis non accipiam said the Jesuite before grace I had free will to it and when I had grace I deserved glory Satan had perswaded the Scottish Knox he had merited by his Ministery but that God brought to his mind those scriptures What hast thou that thou didst not receive And yet not I but the grace of God which was in me The Jewes of old did seek to be justifyed by their own works and these latter Jewes being asked whether they beleeve to be saved by Christs righteousness or not Answer that every Foxe must pay his own skin to the flear The Church of Rome seekes to be justified by her own righteousness and the righteousness of Christ They hold that Christs righteousness merits that our works should merit And Bellarmine saith De Iustif Opera sanctorum tincta sanguine Christi merentur that is the works of the Saints dipped in the blood of Christ do merit And truely that 's a slie and nice distinction of the Jesuites which they invented of late to make us beleeve that by the doctrine of merits they derogate nothing from the glory of Christ Indeed they say that we make satisfaction for sin and merit heaven yet it is not we that do it but Christ by us not our works simply in themselves but as dyed in the blood of Christ Our Merits are Christs merits and therefore they may deserve heaven I but Christ hath purged our sins by himself not by our selves he hath done it by his own blood immediately not mediately by our works dyed in his blood Therefore that is a meer delusion to mock the world withall Upon those word Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love The Jesuites say It is a world to see what wrything and wringing the Protestants make to shift off this place whereby it is cleer that good works are meritorious and causes of salvation If it be an unrighteous thing with God not to give heaven to our works then we have it not on meer mercy but of justice But we say It is just with God so to do not in regard of our merit Justum est ut reddat qui debet debet autem qui promisit but of his own promise They that came into the vineyard at the last hour had as much as the first yet not of merit but of Covenant It is an unrighteous thing for one to break his promise God hath promised to reward our works with eternal life therefore he should be unrighteous if he did it not yet we must not depend on our merits but on Gods promise ratified by an oath as he sheweth in the following words And for Opus operatum it is not sufficient so much as to acceptance with God because it is not enough to do a good work which God requireth at our hands but we must perform it in such a manner as the Lord requireth We must not only do bonum but bene Besides Merit is a meer fiction sith there can be no proportion betwixt the work and the wages It is well observed Co●●on on Cant. Certum est nos facere quod faimus sed ille ●acit ut faciasmut Aug. Like as Roma is become Amor inversus that the Church in the Canticles is no where described by the beauty of her hands or fingers Christ concealeth the mention of her hands that is of her works 1. Because he had rather his Church should a bound in good works in silence than boast of them especially when they are wanting as Rome doth 2. Because it s he alone that worketh all our works in us and for us We do what we do but it is he that causeth us so to do St Paul is so directly against Popish justification by works that one saith both wittily and well The Epistle of Paul to the Romans is become the Epistle of Paul against the Romans Certainly those misled and muzled soules did worse than lose their labour Act. Mon. fol. 1077. that built religious houses Pro remissione redemptione peccatorum pro remedio liberatione animae pro salute requie animarum patrum matrum fratrum sororum c. These were the ends that they aimed at as appears in stories The Papists think that as he that standeth on two firm branches of a tree is surer than he that standeth upon one onely so he that trusteth to Christ and works too is in the safest condition But 1. They are fallen from Christ that trust to works 2. He that hath one foot on a firm branch and another on a rotten one stands not so sure as if he stood wholly on that which is sound But let them be Moses disciples let us be Christs set not up a candle to this sun of righteousness mix not thy puddle with his purple blood thy rags with his raiment but detest all mock-stayes And account accursed for ever that blasphemous direction of Papists to dying people Conjunge Domine obsequium meum cum omnibus quae Christ us passus est pro me Join Lord mine obedience with all that Christ hath
c. Loe these are the inseperable markes of Popery and the brands of their Divellish religion And these do but hasten their incurable destruction rendring them odious to all Christian States Princes and people yea to Turks and Infidels How is the faithful City become an harlot Isa● 1. ●1 22. it was full of judgment righteousnesse lodged in it but now murderers Thy silver is become drosse thy wine mixt with water Come hither Rev. 17.1 and I will shew thee the judgment of the great where c. Babylon the great is fallen is fallen c. Cap. 18.2 Come out her my people Vers 4. that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her plagues Pope If the servant of servants be above the King of Kings and Lord of Lords then where is Christs Prerogative Ye take too much upon you O ye sons of Levi. St. Peter had a priority but not superiority or if a Primacy yet not a supremacy over the rest ●●lv Inst l. 4. c. 6. he had as our Divines acknowledge a precedency in place named for the most part first as the foreman of the quest and a●preheminency in grace reputed for his excellent Knowledge and Zeal he was the first Confessour Mat. 16.16 The first preacher Act. 2. The first baptizer Act. 10. The first worker of miracles Act. 3. Austin saith Epist 28. Deus docuit Petrum per posteriorem Paulum yet another addes Etsi ille primus iste praecipuus It was Frederick the Emperor his saying In capite orbis Deus per imperium exaltavit Ecclesiam in capite orbis Ecclesia nunc demolitur imperium Cyprian speakes much against Pope Stephen Epist ad Pomp. assuring Pompeius upon the reading of the Epistle Pope Stephen sent to Cyprian he should Magis ac magis ejus errorem denctare qui causam h●reticorum contra Christianos contra Ecclesiam Dei asser●re conat●r He taxeth him also of impertinencies and contradictions to himself that he did imperitè improvidè scribere Liber erat Mant. Eccl. 2. servile jugum sibi condidit ipse Pondus idem legum vidi ipse volumina quas 〈◊〉 Antiqui potuere patres nec possumus ipsi Ne● servare atas poterit ventura nepotum Thomas Holland of Exet. Col. Oxf. When he was to take his journey said to the fellowes Commendo vos dilectioni Dei odio papatus superstitionis The Pope imitates Peter to whom he pretends succession in the worst things he cuts off not onely the ear but head he denies Christ but weeps not for it Vzziah though a King must not meddle with the Priests office and Azariah the High-Priest must not intrude himself into the Kings office yet the High-Priest of Rome will have both swords he will be a Priest and a King too he will be for matters of the world as well as for matters of God Boniface the eight shewed himself one day in the attire of a Priest another day in the attyre of a Prince affirming that he was both Bellarmine of late hath somewhat minced the matter that the Pope hath no power in temporal matters directè yet indirectè quoad bonum spirituale he may play Rex Excellent So as a man get into an house it makes no great matter whether directly or indirectly And so as the Pope may depose Princes and dispose of their Kingdoms and butcher them at his pleasure what availeth it whether directly or indirectly I am sure this is indirect dealing by an indirect distinction to break down the wall of partition that God himself hath set up between the Priest and the Magistrate That the Pope exalts himself above all that is called God I prove 1. In that he is not onely in equipage with God in remitting of sins but is made more mighty for God in the creation made but creatures but he can make as many gods as he lust 2. More merciful than Christ which is concluded for this reason It is not read in all the Scripture that Jesus Christ drew any soul out of purgatory but the Pope of his great piety and mercy doth every day an infinite number nay Credat Judaeu● Appella Pope Gregory did bring Trajans soul out of hell 3. More wise then God for he can institute a sacrifice alsufficient to save those that Christs sacrifice cannot save 4. Of more authority than God whose word is not authentical without his allowance But what he saith though never so crosse to the Text is Ipsissimum Dei verbum Besides all the names and titles of Christ given him in the Scripture to shew him Lord of the Church are attributed to the Pope the head of Antichristian heresies Bellarmine saith that he is universal Pastour Rex Regum Dominus Dominantium De conc●● an●ho l. 2. c. 17. Admirabilis Leo de tribu Judae Radix David And those which Antichrist would onely rob him of are Head of the whole body of the Church Bridegroom of the Spouse Foundation of the Church as if one body might have two heads one spouse two husbands at once Moreover mind his horrible pride claiming authority above Kings Emperours Lawes Scriptures yea over men and Angels Their doctrine is that Papa babet imperium in Angelos Daemonas And their practise the like For Clement the sixt in his Bull upon the Jubile 1350. Prorsus mandamus Angelis Paradisi quatenu● animam in Purgatorio penitus absolutam in Paradisi gloriam introducant And is not this to make himself a god is not this that beast full of the names of Blasphemie I might adde much I will onely conclude with that saying of Pope Marcellus the second wherein he seemes to be prety ingenious On●ph in vitâ for striking his hand upon the table he uttered these words Non video quo modo qui hunc locum altissimum tenant salvari possunt I see not how any Pope can be saved And that of Pius Quintus Cornel. à Lap. i● Num. 11.11 recited by A lapide When I was first in orders I had some good hopes of salvation when I was made a Cardinal I doubted but now that I am Pope I do almost despair 2 Thes 2.3 4. That man of sin The son of Perdition c. Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God or that is worshipped so that he as god sitteth in the Temple of God shewing himself that he is god Papists The Pope hath given liberty to some to have all their own rites onely acknowledging his Supremacy but the ground being laid for point of Doctrine it matters not there 's enough gained to make him that had sworn obedience to accept of all the rest They that bear witnesse to themselves as Papists do are not to be heard in their own cause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unless they compass such a decree as Stratocles did for Demetrius Whatsoever Demetrius will command
but the dunghil Gifts are in some men tanquam in Organo in others tanquam in domicilio Schoolm But as Diamond is the best cutter of Diamond so that takes most with the heart that comes from the heart All men must give an account for their idle words and Ministers for their idle yea Idol silence A Ministers Motto is Holynesse to the Lord this must be written in his forehead Dxod 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good Ministers should be as fixed stars in the Churches firmament by the influence of their lips feeding by the regular motion of their lives confirming and by the light of both inlightning many A good Minister must be as Moses for his meeknesse and a Phineas for his Zeal Athanasius was called a load-stone for his sweetnesse Magn●s Adamas Ministers must be to their slocks as Moses to Aaron instead of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vici Dei Ex. 4. Aut p●●cantem aut praedicantem and an adament for his stoutnesse The Apostles had fiery tongues but yet cloven Barnabas and Boanerges the son of consolation and of thunder make a good mixture The good Samaritan poures into the soares both wine to search and oyl to supple See further the requisites of a Minister laid down by the Apostle 1 Tim. 3. Where he is very exact in forming him John Baptist was the voice of on crying Nazianzen saith he cryed louder by his life than doctrine He was tota vox his apparel diet conversation c. Paul was insatiabilis Dei cultor as Chrysostom calls him And it was Austins wish that Christ when he came might find him either praying or preaching And certainly there can be no better posture or state for the messenger of our dissolution to find us in than in a diligent prosecution of our general or particular calling Quid magis Ecclesiae curandum quàm ut idoneus praesit Episcopus Those that despise or want the Ministery have the chariot without the horses and horsemen 2 King 2.12 the letter without a guide Act. 8.31 they forget whither their wresting of mysterious places conduceth Ministers are the supporters of a people So Aaron was to bear the names of the children of Israel before the Lord on his two shoulders for a memorial so upon his heart A good Minister is a friend in court which we say is better than penny in purse He is like a candle which spends it self to give light to others Or like a cock which by the clapping of his wings awaketh himself and by his crowing others He is the very glory of Christ 2 Cor. 8.23 The Ministery is Onus ipsis etiam Angelis tremendum Chrys A burden too heavy for an Angels shoulders except God put under his arme Austin was termed Hereticorum malleus but so sensible was he of the greatnesse of his undertaking that he wept when he first entred into any government of the Church Act. Mon. 1578. Bradford was hardly perswaded to become a Preacher Latimer leapt when he had laid down his Bishoprick being discharged as he said of such an heavy burden And Luther was wont to say that if he were again to chuse his calling he would dig or do any thing rather than to take upon him the office of a Minister See the sands the gulfs thorow which a godly Minister must s●●le if he do his duty the world hates him if he do not God will curse him By the first he is in danger to lose his goods his name his life By the second his soul his heaven his God But let us imitate Christ and his Apostles Peter converted souls Paul subdued Kingdoms Auctin brought great fame to Hippo Ambrose to Mi●ain Ignatius to Antioch Policarp to Smyrna Dionisius Areopagita to Athens Irenaeus to Lyons Cyprian to Carthage Gregory to Nissa Theodoret to Cyrus c. Shall we succeed them in chaire and not in care Say to Archippus take heed to the Ministery which thou hast received in the Lord Col. 4.17 that thou fulfill it Pastour As Shepherds oftentimes go to seek the lost sheep in a coate made of the sheeps own wool So Christ came to seek man in mans clothes And mark in what fit places he looked for him In the womb he sought man amongst men In the stable amongst beasts In the Temple amongst hereticks in the crosse amongst thieves He looked also into the grave where he found some of his sheep fallen into the ditch See the paines Christ our Shepherd took to find us Mat. 23.37 How willing he is 1. He groanes for them O Jerusalem Jerusalem 2. How he loved them how often would I have gathered thee 3. His kind entertainment as a Hen her young ones Surely three Arguments that he was willing to find us Pastor oves 1. Educit de lacu miseriae Psal 40.2 2. Conducit per viam justitiae Psal 32.8 3. Perducit ad pascua vitae Psal 16.11 Shepherds as the Roman Postellers observe must have three things 1. Scrip. 2. Staffe 3. Whistle Where note by the way that Romish Prelates and Priests are first for the Scrip Cùm non pascunt sed pascantur Non â Pasco derivantur sed à pascor pasceris Acsi victuri assent sine ●urâ cum pervenirent ad curam then for the Staffe and last of all for the whistle for the truth is they are all for the Scrip and Staffe and nothing for the Whistle So long as they are full fed with the Priests of the Grove fare well and rule the rost it makes no matter in what Pasture the sheep feed of what puddels they drink or in what ditch they starve These shepheards feed themselves and not the flock being more like Pasties than Pastours These love the fleece more than the flock A good Pastour must resemble the Planet Jupiter Rom. 13.13 he must be 1. Benevolus in affectione well-willing in affection 2. Calidus in dilectione hot in love 3. Humidus in compassione moist in compassion 4. Diurnus in Conversatione dayly in conversation He must also discern the wholesome grasse from the hurtful and not suffer the flock to taste of that He gave some Pastours Ephes 4.11 John 21.15 16. Feed my lambs feed my sheep The Word of God The Divine glasse is the Word of God the Politique glasse is the state of the world many look on this neglect that The Prerogative of God extendeth as well to the reason Sacra Scriptura regula credendi certissima tutissimaque as to the will of man So that as we are to obey his law though we find a reluctancy in our will so we are to beleeve his Word though we find a reluctancy in our reason It s happy when the Word falls into hearts as showers of rain into a fleece of wool which fall gently and are received as gently Pythagoras his ipse dixit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was enough to satisfie or silence his whole
marred all therefore she must teach no longer Some women indeed have been servants of the Church but they were Deaconisses to minister to the sick Dr. Bastwick against Indepen and such like Not Praedicantisses to preach or have Peters Keyes at their girdles Requiritur in Praedicatore Audacia Preces Labor diligentia Jeremiah was not timerous when the Priests the people the Kings resisted his words but he was bould even unto death and you see that which at first they despised at the second preaching they willingly embraced Vid. Cap. 26.8 11 16. A preacher also must not onely instruct his people but also pray for them neither must he be so bold as to take Gods glory from him by saying so or so shall it happen but if the Word of the Lord be with him he will intreat And withal he must be diligent and laborious Ministers must not be married to their Livings as our Church had man and wife married for ever hereafter to hold their peace Too many notwithstanding there were if not still are who like Elocution a Romish god will never hold their peace till they have a Temple dedicated to them but after they have obtained seldome or never are heard to speak again Praedicat vivà voce qui predicat vita voce he doth preach most that lives best As it was said of John Baptist Cum miraculum nullum fecerit perpetuum fuit ipse miraculum A good man doth alwayes preach though he never come in the Pulpit whereas such a Minister as is no where a Minister but in the Church is like Achitophel who set his house in order and then hanged himselfe The Word preached is like Aarons rod if in the preachers hand it is comely but if he cast it from him it will prove a serpent But if the Preacher be a wicked man Vvam carpe spinam cave Consider what he saith not what he doth Hear him as long as he sits in Moses chaire but meddle not with him sitting in the seat of the scornful De scriptis Gentilium libenter assumit Ecclesia Innocent 3. l. 4. De sacr Alt. myst c. 4. siquid in ●eis probe dictum vel factum agnoscit tanquam mulieris captiva resecat ungues pilosque superfluos ut ab alienâ superstuitate mundata thalamumque veritatis digna sit introire Thomas the Apostle converted the Indians as Vesputius witnesseth Whose text was always Mat. 10.34 Think not that I am come to send peace on earth I came not to send peace but a sword He and his company preached so powerfully that the hearers have wept and bled and died for hearing their doctrine Of Chrysostome in his preaching it is said he was used not Aures titillare but corda pungere not to tickle mens eares but to prick their hearts He stoutly told Eudoxia the Empresse that for her covetousnesse she would be called a second Jesabel and to her threatning message he answered go tell her Nil nisi peccatum timeo I am affraid of nothing but sin He so took with hearts that when he should have been silenced the people cryed out Satius est ut sol non luceat quàm non doceat Chrysostom●s It were better the sun should not shine than that Crysostome should not teach Austin wished when Christ came he might find him Aut precantem aut praedicantem It s storied of Bonaventure his words were not inflantia but inflammantia Of Wallaus that when he left Middleborough it seemed rather the children were to part with their father than people with their Pastor Dionisius Areopagita begged these two things of God 1. That he might know the truth himself 2. And that he might preach it as he ought to others A congregation or multitude of several tempers and conditions said Greg. Naz. is like an Harp of many strings hard to give every one a touch in preaching especially as may please all and offend none Many will hear the Preacher for a little as the People did Jeremy but if he please them not Populus expetant placentia please them not they will even go so far in malice as they will rise up against him and seek his life But they who find fault with the Ministers for preaching damnation to the wicked come somewhat neer that Blasphemy of Alphonsus King of Spain who said That if he had been at the Creation he would have made things better than now they are He found fault with Gods works these with his word If they had penned the Scriptures I suppose it would have been without damnation A Bucket either above or beside the cock gets no water and people that are either above or withdraw from the Ordinances Ruth 2. get no benefit If Ruth will glean eares of corn she must keep in Boaz field and close by his servants Cry aloud Isa 58.1 spare not lift up thy voice like a trumpet and shew my people their transgression and the house of Jacob their sins Preach the word 2 Tim. 4.2 be instant in season out of season Necessity is laid upon me 1 Cor. 9.16 yea wo is unto me if I preach not the Gospel Eloquence There is the vein of speaking and there is vain speaking It is reported of Cyneas that he conquered more Cities by his Eloquence than his Master Pyrrhus did by his puissance Jerome stiled Eusebius Romani Eloquii tubam Paul's speech and preaching was not with wisedome of words nor with entising words of mans wisedome Floridè potius q●àm solidè Ut placeret quàm ut doceret Sanctè magis quàm scit● but in demonstration of the spirit and of power And truely it is not good to put the sword of the Spirit into a velvet scabbard that it cannot pierce More to tickle the ear than to affect the heart It repented Austin as well it might that when he was young he had preached more to please than to profit The window must not be so painted as to keep out the light Gods holy things must be handled with fear and reverence rather than with wit and dalliance Yet there is a lawful use of Rhetorick in Sermons so it be free from ostentation Let Ministers set out the Word of God as skilfully and adornedly as they can so as they still aym at the winning of souls Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci. It 's excellent at once both to please and profit both to tickle the ear and take the heart The Preacher sought to find out acceptable words Eccles 12.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verba deside●i Contempt Judaeis primum erat apud Deum gratia sed illi negligentes indisciplinati superbi postmedum facti fiducia patrum inslati dum divina praecepta contemnunt datam sibi gratiam perdiderunt Ingentia beneficia flagitia supplicia Good turns aggravate unkindnesses and mens offences are encreased by their obligations Ideò deteriores sumus saith Salvian
outward ears so do the Sacraments by the eyes and other senses The essential parts of a Sacrament are either 1. Outward which hath the signe with the ceremony ordained and the word Or 2. Inward which is the matter or thing signified viz. the saving benefits of Christ Jesus and the priviledges of the Covenant of Grace that is remission of sins imputation of Christs righteousnesse regeneration adoption c. Hence we must esteem Sacraments not according to their outward value but according to the blessing annexed in their lawful use For in as much as they are significations and seals of such excellent things they are with all reverence to be handled and esteemed even as means which exhibit to us and confirm the best blessings of God Yet neither the Word not Sacraments profit any thing without the Spirit this grace proceedeth from the holy Ghost who is unto our faith as marrow unto the bones as moisture unto the tree and as a comfortable rain unto the fruits of the earth If this inward Master and Teacher be wanting the Sacraments can work no more in our mindes than if the bright Sun should shine to the blind eyes or a loud voice sound in deaf ears or fruitful corn fall into the barren wildernesse or a shower of rain fall upon the hard-stones Hence whensoever we come unto these aright the Spirit worketh in us mollifying the hardnesse of our hearts framing us unto new obedience and assuring us that God offereth to us his own Sonne for our justification and salvation Therefore learn whensoever we come to the Word and Sacraments to crave the gracious assistance of the blessed Spirit to guide direct and regenerate us to eternal life to sanctifie us and to assure us of Gods endlesse favour in Christ Jesus It is the Spirit that quickneth the flesh prefiteth nothing John 6.63 Baptisme It is either 1. Proper as bare cleansing and washing Heb. 9.10 Or 2. Figurative And then it is 1. Metaphorical as affliction Mat. 20.22 2. Synecdochical put for the whole doctrine of John Mat. 21.25 3. Allegorical as repentant tears Luke 7.38 4. Catexochen for baptizing of Infants or adults converted The School teacheth of three sorts of Baptism 1. Fluminis per aquam 2. Flaminis per spiritum Ephes 4.5 3. Sanguinis per Martyriuns But of all these three sorts there is but one only Sacrament of Baptism the which is one in three regards Vnum quia 1. Ad unum 2. In unum 3. Per unum 1. Once truly received it is never to be reiterated again Against the Marcionites Hemerobaptists and others 2. For that all of us are baptized into one Faith of our Lord Jesus Christ For John's and Christ's baptisme differ not in substance but in circumstance 3. In regard of the water and words wherewith we baptize We may not use any other element but water nor any other words but I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the holy Ghost Verily verily I say unto thee Except a man be born of water John 3.5 and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God The Lords Supper There are four kindes of Suppers The 1. Sinners Supper 2. Devils Supper 3. Good mans Supper 4. Lords Supper The sinner makes a supper to the Devil Foenus pecuniae funus animae when in gaining the world he loseth his soul The Devil prepares a black banquet for sinners in Hell upon these two dishes weeping and gnashing of teeth The good man provides a Supper unto God when he opens the door of his heart and suffers the words of exhortation to come in Rev. 3.20 But here of the last Against the Papists that say the bread is really turned into flesh Zwinglius saith well Hi tentant Deum qui dicunt miraculum ist hic Dei virtute fieri ubi nemo sentit miraculum Epist. ad Amic quend Durandus saith verbum audimus motum sentimus modum nescimus presentiam credimus Of the likeness that is betwixt Christs Incarnation and the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and how the one explaines the true nature of the other Theodoret hath an excellent parallel Dialog For 1. As in Christ there are two natures of God and man so in the Sacrament are two substances the heavenly and the earthly 2. As in Christ these two natures are truely and entirely so are those substances in the Sacrament 3. As after the union those two natures make but one person so after the consecration the two substances make but one Sacrament 4. As the two natures are united without confusion or abolition of either in Christ so in the Sacrament are the substances heavenly and earthly knit so that each continueth what it was and worketh answerably on us None but holy ought to approach this Table Procul hinc procul ite profani all others are strangers who ought to be dealt withal as Exod. 29.33 Rather saith Calvin following Chrysostom will I suffer my self to be slain than this hand of mine shall reach the holy elements to those that have been judged contemners of God In all that come to the Lords Supper there is required a fitness 1. Fundamental and 2. Actual Even of those that know God savingly saith one and are truly godly in the main it may truly be said that they also serve the Devil and not God when and as far as they fulfil the Devils pleasure and are led by that learning which he hath taught the world in and about the worship of God as when men joyn with polluted and mixt assemblies mixt I mean with openly prophane and scandalous persons and such of whose interests in Christ they have no ground or proof at all in the service of the Lords Table Give not that which is holy unto the dogs Mat. 7.6 1 Cor. 11.26 But let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup. Catechising Dr. Hall calls it a preaching conference in his Epistle Dedicatory to the book called The old Religion Erasmus Munus arduum planè senile It hath been of antient use in the Christian Church And in the Reformation it was one great means of propagating the Gospel Clemens Alexandrinus Origen and Cyril were Catechists If this were diligently used both young and old should be better acquainted with the Principles of Religion and being wisely done would be more profitable than Preaching without Catechising for want whereof many that run to Sermons have been found to be very ignorant of the main Principles of Religion Come ye children hearken unto me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Psal 34 1● The Sabbath God sepapated it from all other days of the week for his worship The Sabbath of old had many priviledges which no other day had 1. The antiquity thereof 2. It was written with Gods own finger 3. There was a more exact rest observed in it
whereby we are become dead and buried with Christ Rom. 6.3 4 6. This Ark in the judgment of all Interpreters was a type of the Church The Ark was made after God's appointment not Noah's So the Church must be framed by God's will not by man's All were drowned that were not in the Ark So all regularly are damned that are not in the Catholick Church The Ark was neer drowning yet never drowned So the Church may be brought to a low ebbe yet it shall continue still There was in the Ark good and bad clean and unclean So we must never dream to have all holy and sanctified persons that be in the Church In the Ark there were divers mansions and rooms some for men some for beasts And In my Fathers house there are many dwelling places Noah and his family were saved in the Ark yet with much ado they endured much they were in continual danger they passed through many difficulties the smell of beasts little outward light the Ark ready to rush on rocks and mountains So the children of God shall be saved yet through many tribulations Lastly the Ark had but a few in it eight persons yet there was the Church Universality is no necessary note of a Church Christs flock is but a little flock The Ark was prepared 1 Pet 3.10 wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water Ark of the Covenant The Ark is a representation of the Church It was a chest or cabinet wherein to keep the two Tables of the Law Exod. 25. which above all other things must have the Law of God in it Signifying also thereby that Christ is the end of the Law covering the imperfection of our works It had upon it a Crown of Gold to set forth the Majesty of Christ's Kingdom or the eternity of his Deity which as a crown or circle had neither beginning nor end It was transportative till settled in Solomon's Temple So till we come to heaven shall we be in a continual motion It was a visible signe of God himself among them and therefore carried with staves that it might not be touched for reverence sake It was made of Shittim wood which corrupteth not Christ's body could not putrify in the grave c. In a word the several coverings did tipyfy Christ covering the curses of the law in whom is the ground of all mercy Which things the Angels desire to look into 1 Pet. 1.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Temple It was exceeding famous Called The Temple of the Lord. Jerem. 7.4 The place where Gods name was 1 King 8.29 The holy and beautiful house Isa 64.11 Gods resting place 2 Chron. 6.41 The mountain of the Lord. Isa 2.3 The desire of their eyes Ezek. 24.21 The house of God Eccles 5.1 David had told Solomon the house he builded for the Lord Si Palatia Principum si aedes privatorum ornamenta sua habent quid in Templa Alsted Architec c. 9. must be exceeding magnifical of fame and of glory through all countreys 1 Chro. 22.5 There were 153●00 men employed about the work of the Temple 1 King 5. The glory and stateliness of it you may read Cap. 6. It was known far and neare hence it was prophesied Psal 68.29 Because of thy Temple at Jerusalem shall Kings bring presents unto thee It was divided into three parts The Court of Israel the court of the Priests and Gods Court Hence Jeremy the Prophet thrice rehearses these words The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord Cap. 7.4 In the third court or Sanctum sanctorum the Lord did shew himself in a special manner unto the High-Priest once in the year The Temple was built of huge stones as may appear Mark 13.1 I conceive this is meant of the latter Temple re-edified by Zerubbabel Josephus writeth of them that they were fifteen cubits long twelve high and eight broad and so curiously cemented as if they had been inocculated one into another that a man would have thought they had been but one entire stone Quasi tota moles ex unico ingenti lapide in tantam magnitudinem consurgeret But there 's no trusting to forts and strong holds no though they be the munitions of rocks as Isaiah speaketh The Jebusites that jeared David and his forces were thrown out of their Zion Babylon that bore her self bold upon her twenty yeares provision laid in for a siege and upon her high towers and thick walls was surprized by Cyrus So was this goodly Temple by Titus He left onely three Towers of this stately edifice unrazed to declare unto posterity the strength of the place and valour of the vanquisher But sixty five yeares after Elius Adrianus inflicting on the rebelling Jews a wonderful slaughter subverted those remainders and sprinkled salt upon the foundation Hence was fulfilled the presage of our Saviour feest thou these great buildings there shall not be left one stone upon another that shall not be thrown down Mark 13.2 Quod vero Templum habere poscit Deus cujus Templum totus est mundus Cypr●d● Idóll van Dr. Sibbs c. in nostro dedicandus est monte in nostro consecrandus est pectore And certainly next to the love of Christ in dwelling in our nature we may wonder at the love of the Holy Ghost that will dwell in our defiled souls Delicata res est Spiritus Sanctus Let our care be to wash the Pavement of this Temple with our teares to sweep it by repentance to beautify it with holinesse to perfume it with prayers to deck it with humility to hang it with sincerity The Holy Ghost will dwell in a poor so it be a pure house Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God Which Temple ye are 1 Cor. 3.16 17. First-fruits The first of the first-fruits of thy land thou shalt bring into the house of the Lord thy God Exod. 23.19 The import of it seems to be this that the best yea and the best of the best is not to be held too good for God Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth Jer. 2.2 the love of thine espousals c. Circumcision De circumcisione Praeputii Aurium Labiorum cordis manuum pedum reliquorum membrorum Orig. Hom. 3. in Genes It was the seal of the covenant to the people of God Gen. 17.10 It was also to them a signe of the mortification of the old man and the resemblance holds well for 1. As in outward circumcision the fore-skin by which was signified natural pollution was cut off so by repentance the inward and spiritual circumcision our corruption is cut off from the heart and taken away 2. The body bled in that in this the heart in a spiritual construction And thus outward circumcision was but a signe of the inward that of the body did signify that of the soul the
all that therein is being himself of opinion that God in Essence one and in himself immutable without change or diversity yet for the manifesting of his omnipotency and power as he had created in the world sundry kinds of people much differing both in nature manners and condition and yet all framed to the image of himself So was he also contented to be of them diversly served according to the diversity of their nature and manners But there is but one true Religion 1. Because there is but one true God the object of true Religion Eph. 4.4 2. Because there but is one end and scope of Christian life and duty and that is eternal blessedness and one way to that mark which is Christ himself and one walking in that way which is Christian practice 3. Because there can be no agreement together of two divers religions no more than iron and clay can be tempered together 2 Còr. 6.14 15 Joh. 4.24 4. Because of the express word of God 1. Commanding straitly that himself be worshipped alone and enduring no compeer Exod. 20.3 2. Prohibiting that no tribe or family man or woman should turn his heart from the Lord to any other God Deut. 29 18. 3. Threatning severely to stretch out his hand upon them that swear by the Lord and by Malcham Zeph. 1.5 4. Executing his wrath and displeasure upon this mixture of Religion spewing out of his mouth those that are neither hot nor cold Rev. 3.16 Popish religion saith Were I to chuse a religion to license lasciviousness and gratifie the flesh it should be the Popish Religion said Sir Walt. Rawl that a lewd miscreant or infidel in the businesse of the Altar partakes of the true holy and blood of Christ that men may save the labour of searching for that it is both easy and safe to beleeve with the Church at a venture the bare act of the Sacrament confers grace without faith that the meer signe of the Crosse made by a Jew or infidel is of force to drive away the Devil that Masse in the very work wrought doth not onely pardon our sins in this life but when we lye frying in purgatory that Almes given merit heaven dispose to justification satisfy God for sin that abstinence from some meates and drinks is meritorious that indulgences may dispence with sin afterward to be comitted that one man may deliver anothers soul out of torments So that he that wants neither mony or friends needs not fear the smart of sins O Religion sweet to the wealthy to the needy desperate● Valdus of France Wickliffe of England Hierom of Prague and Luther of Germany framed not a new Church but reformed the old they endeavoured and not without happy success to cleanse and scoure restore and reforme those Churches which were foiled filthily with the blemishes of disorder and errour Cardinal Wolsey when bidden not for to fear the King loved him as well as ever he did said that was not the cause of his sadnesse but had he served God as diligently as he had done the King he would never bave forsaken him in his gray hairs Anselmus A godly person seeing a woman curious about her person to please her lover and himself not so diligent to please his God cryed out O miserable man whom so infinite love blessings and riches cannot provoke to such car● and diligence of pleasing God Tertul. as the vilest things do make our industry to please the Devil Religion is the greatest enemy to religion the false to the true Favos etiam vespae faciunt Omnia cum liceant non licet esse pium Wasps also make combs though instead of honey we find Gun-powder Traytours against Kings and Kingdomes must be punished in an high degree and great reason But why when hourely we hear high treason against God goes that uncensured so much as with a word The Egyptians worshipped whatsoever they conceived comely And Zenophanes saith if beasts could paint they would pourtray God to their own shape and feature because they can conceive no further Fourteen principal cities in Germany protested for Luther from whence came the name of the Protestant Religion It was the offer of great Cham the Tartarian Prince Tuus Pontif●x meus Pontifex 〈◊〉 tuus Lutherus meus Lutherus e●●o Bu●●ing of whom Lipsius reports that when Stephanus the mighty King of Poland was departed sent a Legate to them telling them he would be of any religion if he might reign Of Charles the fifth Emperour it is said his actions that seemed most favourable were the most pernicious to Religion However truth of Religion is not to be judged by the prosperity or adversity of the Professours Religion is rather a setler than stickler in Policy if they work otherwise they labour out of their vineyard and move out of their proper spheare Far then is Religion from overthrowing government or everting the degrees of superiority and inferiority that be among men True indeed we are all one in Christo Gal. 3.28 but not in mundo in Christ but not in the world Christ died indifferently for all that is for servants as well as for masters yet the degrees that be in the world must be retained and acknowledged to the end of the world Yet in all ages Religion hath been slandered Elias was called a troubler Paul an Innovator Luther a trumpeter of rebellion Melanchton a blasphemer of God and his Saints Calvin a Mahometan Zanchius an Anabaptist a Zwenckfeldian a Novatian and what not Contra Sychophantae morsum non est remedium Arminius paved his way first by aspersing the fame and authority of Calvin Zuinglius Beza Martyr and other champions of the truth The Papists reported the Waldenses those ancient Protestants to be Manichees Arrians Catharists c. As they do us to be Libertines Enthusiasts Atheists c. Thus they set their mouths against heaven and their tongue walketh through the earth Psal 73.9 But well said one God will cut out such false tongues Psal 12.3 And broyl them upon coales of Juniper Psal 120.4 However Religion is both the bulwark and beauty muniment and ornament of a land Even as Sampsons strength and glory lay in his hair so doth the strength and glory of a land consist in Gods sincere service which if it should be shaved and deprived of though every shower were a shower of gold saith a Divine every stone in the land a pearle every beggar an honourable Senator every fool as wise as Solomon every weakling as strong as Sampson yet for all our wealth honour strength wisdome and glory we shall sing a doleful Miserere with Phineas wife The glory is departed for Religion is gone If any man among you seeme to be religious and bridleth not his tongue Jam. 1.26 27. but deceiveth his own heart this mans religion is vain Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this to visit the fatherlesse and widows
became us For our better assurance of our High-Priests original and actual righteousness whereby he was harmless and undefiled he was being planted in a noble height seperate from sinners not but that he did communicate of the same common nature with all men but not of their guilt which is a necessary consequent of the violation of the heavenly law for where there is no transgression there is no guilt which is a binding over the offendor to receive a deserved puishment 'T is true One of those natural notions the Devil could never blot out of mans mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the punishment due to sinners was transfer'd to him but by his own voluntary submission thereunto as not for any sin of his own committing so without any guilt of his own contracting for had he been guilty before God the just Judge of all the world he could never be a propitiation for the sins of the whole world he could never satisfie the provoked justice of the Almighty thereby to appease his wrath and effect an eternal reconciliation betwixt him and us he could never obtain the free remission of our sins whereby to bring us into grace again neither were his intercession for transgressors any way available being subject to the same condemnation As he could not give a sufficient ransome for the redemption of mankind by the sacrificing of himself were he conscious of those crimes whereof sinners are So neither would his supplications prevail to benefit us for we know that God heareth not sinners Joh. 9.31 Wherefore to remove all rubs out of the way that might hinder his faithful execution of the Priestly function in all its parts and that there might no question be made of an absolute impetration and procurement of salvation to be confer'd upon as many as do beleave in him and obey him to the end he was as in respect of sin so in respect of guilt seperate from sinners This seperation was not local or in regard of place he dwelt among us and came to call sinners to repentance but vertuall in relation to his unstained condition and those divine qualities where with be was replemisht and whereof sinful men during their abode in the flesh are altogether uncapable By this means all his moral actions done in obedience to the supream authority which were infallible tokens of his inwrad pureness were meritorious for us Such is their unparalell'd worth that though them for the Authors lake the father is become propitions unto men Insomuch as for our everlasting comfort I may speak it Christ Jesus our high-Priest is able to save them to the utmost that come unto God by him Now there remaines no more but that with David we betake our selves to him q. d. abseis ergo ut de isl●s quisquiliis sim anxius Beza with the words of the same King Now Lord what wait we for our hope it even in thee Psal 39.7 Our hope is in thee to take off from us the weight of our sins our hope is in thee to suppresse the dominion of death our hope is in thee to deliver us from the Tyranny of the Prince of darknesse and to bring us reconcil'd into the highest place where thy honour dwelleth where thou are made higher than the heavens Thus am I happily devolved to the speculation of the dignity to which our high-Priest as became both him and us is above all heavens advanced After our Saviours humiliation there followed his exaltation for as he descended from heaven to earth so when he had finisht what he came for he ascended from earth to heaven returning to the place whence he came Albeit he endured many a fierce combate here yet having at length obtained the victory be went in triumph leading captivity captive to the place of his glory Ascendit ad Calo● Ruffin in Symbol Apostel non ubi verbum Deus anté non fuerat sed ubi verbum care factum ante non sederas Saith Ruffinus he went up into heaven not where the Word that was made God never was before but where the Word made flesh never sate before Something was to be done above by the man Christ Jesus when glorified as well as here below when humbled This was the place for oblation specially but that for perpetuall intercession Here he died for our sins but rose again for our justification Ephes 4.10 and ascending up on high fitteth in Majestie at the right hand of God making intercession for us that so he might fulfil all things all things requisite for the salvation of man that were to be expected from a Mediatour So that now he is declared mightily not onely to be the onely Son of God but to be our High-Priest for ever In being made higher than the heavens Earth which is his foot-stoole was no fit place for his glorious presence but his throne which is heaven For had he taken up his rest here for ever then had he not entred into the holyest of all not of this building but eternal in the heavens Now that he entred but once for all unto this whereas the Priests of Aarons order entred once annually into the sepond Tabernacle which was within the vaile called the most holy place 't is an argument of the perfection of his Priesthood of the imperfection of theirs for as it is Heb. 9.24 Christ is not entred into the holy place made with hands which are the figures of the true but into heaven it self to appear in the presence of God for us having obtained eternal redemption What Priest of what order soever beside him ever came to this height Who as he hath done ever paid such a price as the eternal redemption of the wicked is worth Or by their own power passed into heaven to appear as an Advocate to plead in the be half of sinners we find none but this we find First that hereby the world sin death the grave and hell are past peradventure overcome he remained not under their dominion but when brought to the lowest ●●be of a wretched estate up he gets again and gets all power both in heaven and earth Mat. 2.18 to be given to him So that better may this King of Kings say than the King of Spain Sol mihi semper lucet for he is Catholick Monarch Secondly hereby he hath opened the gates of heaven for all beleevers and made way for them to God wherein he hath shewed himself to be our Priest abundantly for if the were on earth he should not be a Priest saith the Authour to the Hebrewes Cap. 8.4 for if he had not gone before us it is impossible sin lying so heavily upon us we should have admission into his presence in which there is fullness of joy fo● evermore but now he is there to prepare immortal mansions for them that come to him whereby they may dwell with him in happiness There saith Anselme Infirmitas Anselm de similitudin bus
he is as man in heaven so he is as man higher than the heavens O praeclarum diem cum ad illud animorum concilium caetumquae proficiscar et cum ex bâc turbd et colluvione discedam Cicer. de sencetute Hebr. 12.24 higher than the heavens which are visible to the eye of man yet in part of the heavens where the God of glory is pleased to make the most ample and immediate manifestation of his glory 't is called the habitation of the highest a new world the new heaven Paradise the heavenly Jereusalem the City of the living God where there are an innumerable company of Angels the general assembly and Church of the first-borne and God the Judge of all and the spirits of just men made perfect There is I say Jesus the Mediatour of the new Covenant and the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than the blood of Abel There our high-Priest presents to the Father the propitiatory sacrifice of himself and sprinkles upon us his purifying blood that is by his powerful mediation he applies unto us who are faithful the saving merits of his never to be forgotten passion by which our mortal sins are freely remitted and we destin'd to a Crown incorruptible that never fades away in the highest heavens Thus are we through him had in perpetual remembrance and accepted of God in the beloved as righteous as if we had never offended When a man indeed looks on things directly through the aire they appear in their proper forms and colours as they are but if they be look't upon through a green glasse they all appear green So when God beholds us as we are in our selves we appear vile and squallid but when as presented before his throne in heaven in the person of our Mediatour our high-Priest after the order of Melchisedeck approved of for his merits then we appear before him as Christ himself holy harmlesse undefiled seperate from sinners and in some respect and measure made higher than the heavens for those that overcome by faith and a good conscience being Kings and Priests by him shall be so honourably esteem'd of Revel 3 21. as to be made sit down as coheirs with him in his throne as he sitteth down with his father in his throne As he vouchsafes us to partake of his merits so of his glory Cap. 5.10 making us unto our God Kings and Priests In lieu whereof let us in all humility with the four and twenty Elders fall down before him thut sitteth on the throne Cap. 4.10 and worship him that liveth for ever and ever And with those ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands celestiall spirits Cap. 5.11.12 13. let us say for of him 't is said worthy is the Lambe that was slain to receive power and riches and wisdom and strength and honour and glory and blessing Vnto thee therefore O our loving Saviour Christ Jesus our high-Priest who art holy harmless undefiled seperate from sinners and made higher than the heavens be ascribed by us as by every creature which is in heaven and on earth and under the earth and in the sea blessing honour glory and power for ever and ever Amen GLORIA IN ALTISSIMIS OR THE ANGELICAL ANTHEM LUKE 2.14 Glory to God in the Highest and on earth peace good will towards men THis is the sacred Anthem which by the heavenly quire of Angelical spirits was most melodiously sung as a pregnant expression of exceeding joy conceived in them at and for the so much desired nativity of our blessed Saviour These ministring spirits I propose as the fittest and compleatest pattern for our pious imitation to whom seeing we are made but little inferiour in regard of the lively image of God imprinted in our soules so be we also but little inferiour to them in expressing the joyes conceived in our hearts I may safely averr without the least smack or touch of Popery that the Angels of God in heaven rejoyce at the good of Gods Church whereof they themselves are apart for such is the spiritual sympathy of their holy affections with ours whose conversation is in heaven though our selves on earth that they bear a part with us in solacing themselves for our happiness The heavens could not hold these Angels from coming to the earth in hast upon the wing to bring the glad tidings of peace and great joy that shall be to all people the sun was anticipated in his course for the Angels proclaim a Saviour ere the sun the worlds eye did discover him That we therefore may not come short of affection if it be possible of them let us in a joyful sense of felicity Psal 103. Incipit à superieribus sinlt in infinis coming unto us by our Saviours coming unto us sing Hallelujah unto God and with David call upon all creatures from the highest to the lowest to publish the praises of the highest Blesse the Lord ye his Angels that excell in strength that do his Commandments hearkning to the voice of his word Blesse ye the Lord all ye his hosts ye Ministers of his that do his pleasure Blesse the Lord all his works in all places of his Dominion Blesse the Lord Kimchi O my soul and all that is within me blesse his holy name Elevate your hearts and voices good Christians in harmonical strains with these blessed spirits setting forth in some measure the exceeding greatness and glory of the love of God extended unto us without all measure Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace good will towards men This Song doth consist of three parts viz. 1. Glory 2. Peace 3. Mercy The 1. is Glory be to God on high there is the honor the reverend obedience the admiration and the divine worship which we ought to give to God The 2. is And on earth peace this is the effect of the former working in the hearts of men whereby the world appears in its most glorious splendor and transporting beauty being an entire chain of intermutual amity The 3. is Good will towards men this is Gods mercy reconciling man to himself after his perfidious apostacie and ungrateful dissertion from his Creatour Glory peace and mercy then must be the welcome subject of my discourse Glory to God Peace to the Kingdomes of the earth and mercy unto sinful men Gods mercy appears in our Saviours appearing to the world which brought peace on earth for which men and Angels glorify the Lord of glory Glory be to God on high The first part comprehends what ought to be the first and principal aim both of our Christian intention and pious execution wherein if we behave our selves well we shall have a part and portion in that inheritance which Christ with his blood purchased for us Glory be to God on high Gods glory is either divine or humane Gods divine gloty is that which is proper to the divinity incommunicable to any creature Which
the hearts of all that should read those stories Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Now if any Anabaptistical Humorist who hath a company of Phanatique toyes whiffling about his understanding should censure me for inforcing Bowing and Kneeling I have no more to say to him than this Being that God is the Creator and Redeemer of soul and body that therefore as well with the body as the soul we are to worship him by kneeling bowing and that especially when the act of our Redemption is presented unto us by visible signs as it is in the Lords Supper I conclude this with the Apostle 1 Tim. 1.17 Now unto the King eternal immortal invisible and onely wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen I follow still the Angels strain and pitch my thoughts on the second part the words are these And on earth peace From the time of Mans capital apostasie effected by the cunning project of the subtile Serpent all the creatures of God were at odds with Man affected with reciprocal enmity The fiery Dragon had set the world on fire Combustion and Confusion the two extremities of distempered Passion came on after Hence by reason of the perpetual opposition of the creatures Iniquity did abound and the love of many waxed cold The burden of these disturbances was so ponderous that all things did groan under it So many blustering storms did succeed one upon the neck of another as that the world seemed to despair of peace Mans wicked disobedience was taken so ill at Gods hands as well he might as that he was incensed against him and his posterity and for their sake cursed the earth Here then we find Man in hostility with God with himself with his brethren with all Gods creatures both in heaven and in earth So that he is excluded felicity whereof he was before possessed inviron'd with that deplorable misery which he then could not and we now cannot without Christ Jesus avoid His rebellion against God caused the creatures to rebell against him He neglecting his Creator is both by the Creator and creature neglected His falling from the Lord made the Lord and the servants fall out with him Because the sons of Adam had such aspiring minds as to seek after that which is proper unto God Peace is therefore departed from the sons of Adam Now there was no peace within none without until the Prince of peace Jesus Christ by grace put a period to the mutinous disposition of ill-affected humors until he had so salved the matter betwixt God and us as that all things might work together for the good of us that are the elect of God Wherefore as the Dove after the ●sswaging of the waters of the Deluge brought an Olive branch into the Ark of Noah so Christ as innocent as a Dove came unto the world and brought Peace and Reconciliation with him into the Ark of God which is his Church floating in a restless Ocean of intestine troubles Who was no sooner come but the Heavenly Courtiers invite us men on earth to give glory unto God in Heaven because that the God of Heaven did by his own Son send peace on earth to men For when he came he brought peace to us when he departed Zanch. he left his peace with us Qui pacem dicit dicit uno verbo omnia bona saith Zanchius Who names but peace comprehends in one word all that 's good And indeed all that 's good did in and through Christ descend to us from the Infinite Good out of the inexhaustible treasures of whose uncomprehended fulness we have all received Since then O my God that my soul and discursive faculty must now be fixt upon all that 's good refine I bese●ch thee my diviner thoughts and let not all that 's good be in any wise tainted by any unhallowed imperfections of mine Assist with thy Divine power in setting out this Olive-branch of Peace fetcht from Heaven that may in time spring up unto eternal life Our Saviour the Everlasting Son of the Father and blessed Peace-maker of Heaven and Earth wrought for believing men such as shall receive him by faith for whose sake he came into the world a foursold inviolable Peace Viz. 1. Peace with our God 2. Peace with our selves 3. Peace with one another 4. Peace with all the creatures First he wrought our peace with God What befell Adam for his insolent behaviour and disobedience against the Author of his life no son of Adam that hath but the least sense of misery can be ignorant of Upon the apprehension of the transgression he found himself and we since our selves miserably plung'd in a depth of inselicity for by the offence of that one man that first man all became enemies to God and God an enemy to all Thus God and man stood off at a distance never to come together but by a mediation Whereupon the God of mercy that delights not in the death of a sinner unwilling to see so noble a creature perish everlastingly provides and sends a Mediator that Son of his who was in his own bosom to reconcile us unto himself to bring us unto the bosom of his Father ratisying such a league as may if it were possible outlast Eternity Hence it was he took our flesh upon him whereby being God and Man he might bring man to God Oh the hardness of my stony heart saith Bernard in a heavenly extasie Bern. Vtinam Domine sicut Verbum caro factum est ita cor meum carnem fiat I would to God my God and Lord that as the Word was made flesh so were my heart hereby to be seelingly apprehensive of thine infinite mercy in granting pardon to my sin and peace unto my soul through the Lord Jesus It is the Apostles speech 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that is Christ is our Peace Eph. 2.14 our Peace in the very abstract By him our eternal quiet is procured Gods consuming wrath appe●sed and by his light are our feet guided into the way of peace A Jesuite spake it and to speak truth 't is Gods received truth Ex inimicis amicos ex servis filios ex filiis irae haredes regni fecit nos per Christum Deus God the God of peace hath made us through Christ that of being his enemies his friends of being his servants his sons of being sons of wrath heirs of a Kingdom not subject to mortality Bu●lest an headstrong credulity arising out of a flattering misconceit should draw some into a precipitate presumption of concluding themselves to be reconciled to God and restored to favour though they persist in sin and infidelity Learn this Orthodox truth grounded on that of the Apostle That they only who are justified by faith and sanctified by his Spirit have peace with God Rom. 5.1 through our Lord Jesus Christ Happy is that soul alone that hath faith it hath Christ Happy
in us not for a time but for ever for the Word dwelling noteth a perpetuity and is opposed to sojourning And also that he hath the full disposition and absolute command of the heart as a man of that house whereof he is Lord. Which disposition consists in these six notable benefits which are sure evidences of the Spirits being and dwelling in our hearts every one whereof is worthy our serious speculation The first is the illumination of our understandings with a certain knowledge of our reconciliation to God in Christ Jesus This is obtained by the special information of the Spirit he shall teach you all things he shall guide you into all truth John 14.26 16.13 saith the Saviour of the world This knowledge is not of Generals but of particulars that God is our Father Christ our Redeemer the holy Ghost our Sanctifier the Spirit of God faith the Apostle Rom. 8.16 Beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the sons of God Worketh in us a sure knowledge of the remission of our sinnes of our reconciliation and peace with God of our adoption into the liberty of the sons of God and faith the Apostle 1 Cor. 2.12 now have we received the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are given to us of God that is the righteousnesse of Christ assuredly It is not in man to know assuredly what great things God hath done for his soul without the special instruction of the Spirit called the Spirit of truth And the Spirit of wisdom and understanding Isa 11.2 the Spirit of knowledge The second benefit of the Spirit which discovers his being in our hearts is regeneration wherby our hearts are renewed by receiving newnesse of life and grace The coruptions of our nature are expell'd by the Spirits infusion of supernatural qualities into us whereby we are made new creatures and of the servants of sin and limbs of Satan are made the members of Christ and sons of God Hence he is called the Spirit of life Except a man be born again by water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of heaven saith our Saviour Ezek. 36.25 and Ezekiel doth Prophecy that God would sprinkle clean water upon them and they should be clean and from all their filthinesse would he cleanse them It is the Spirit that doth regenerate us who is here compared to clean water for these two causes 1. As water mollifies dry wood and puts sap into dry trees so doth the Spirit supple and mollifie our hard hearts and put sap of grace into them whereby we are made trees of righteousnesse and bring forth fruits of eternal life Christ saith John 7.38 39. that he that believeth in him as the Scripture saith out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water this saith the text spake he of the Spirit which they that believed on him should receive 2. As water doth purifie the body from all filth so doth the holy Ghost wash away our sins and our natural corruptions John 4.14 hence called a Well of living water springing up to everlasting life Again John the Baptist saith that Christ baptizeth with the holy Ghost and with fire where the Spirit is by consent of Interpreters compared to fire and that 1. As fire doth warm the body being benum'd with cold so doth the spirits our hearts frozen in sin and though dead in sins and trespasses yet by his reviving heat he quickens our hearts and brings us to life again 2. As fire doth purge and take out the dross from the good mettal so doth the holy Ghost separate and eat out the putrifying corruptions of sin out the canker'd and drossie heart of man And thus regeneration is wrought by the Spirit and therefore said to be born of God The third benefit of the Spirit in them to whom he is sent is an union or conjunction with Christ whereby we are made his members Hine baptismus dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 members of his body of his flesh and of his bones and partake of his benefits hereby his graces are in a plentiful manner and an abundant measure distill'd upon us which were in him above all measure hence it is compared to effusion Joel 2.1 John 3.24 I will pour out my Spirit hereby we know saith Saint John that we dwell in him and he in us because he hathi given us of his Spirit The Spirit is the bond of our conjunction descending from Christ the Head to all his members and begetting Faith that extraordinary vertue whereby Christ is apprehended and made our own by special application The fourth benefit whereby the Spirit is known to be sent of God into our hearts is the Spirits governing of our hearts For in whom he is be is Master ordering and disposing the understanding the will the memory the affections and all parts of the body according to his good pleasure for as many as are the sons of God Sam 8.14 Certum est nos facere quod sacimus sed illi 〈◊〉 ut faciamus are led by the Spirit The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord Psal 37.23 in token whereof they that are of the Spirit do savor the things of the Spirit Rom. 8.5 that is they affect and prosecute those things that are good And this called spiritual regiment it consists in two things 1. In repressing all evil motions arising either from within as from evil concupiscence corruption of our nature or from without us by the in●icement of the world or suggestion of Satan 2. In stirring up good affections and holy motions upon every occasion hereto belong those excellent titles given to the holy Ghost the Spirit of the Lord Isa 11.2 the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and of strength the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord he hath these several attributes because he stirs up in the godly these good motions of wisdom of knowledge of strength of understanding of counsel and of fear of the Lord. In Galat. 5.22 the fruits of the Spirit are recorded there to to be love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance where oever these be the Author which is the holy Gost of necessity must be As for love whose object is God and man God for himself man for God it is a testimony of the Spirits presence in us and rule of us he is sent into our hearts saith Lombard when he is so in us as that he makes us to love God and our neighbour whereby we remain in God and God in us As for joy it is a main work of the Spirit making us to rejoyce for the good of others as for our selves whereas carnal men pine away and grieve expressively for others prosperity As for peace it is that concord which must be kept in an holy manner Immane verbum est ultio Senec. with all men
enemies God in Christ Jesus his Son hath adopted us to be his sons And because thus sons behold a further pledge of his never failing-favour to us he hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Crying Abba Father So that upon the Spirit of God confer'd is confer'd the gift of prayer for in whose hearts he dwels he is not idle neither is he as that spirit that Christ did cast out of the man in the Gospel dumbe a dumbe spirit but a crying spirit not that the spirit properly cryes Abba Father for God the Father is not the Father of the spirit but of the Son and the beginning or fountain from whom as also from the Son the Spirit doth proceed but that it makes them in whom he ever is to be ever crying Abba Father Wherein is to be observed 1. An act Crying 2. The Object Abba Father This crying is praying and not every kind of praying but a vehement and ardent praying with all the affections and powers of the soul assembled together whereby the desires of our hearts are made known unto the God of heaven the soules voice is drawn up to the height Thus our Saviour in the dayes of his flesh is said to have offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears Conqueror tibi lachrymis Jesu Christi said one unto him that was able to save him from death Hebr. 5.7 We read how Jacob wrestlest with the Angel and would not let him go untill he had blest him Even so the spirit of prayer makes us to strive and wrestle with God and never cease crying until he hear us untill he grant us our requests It is so with us as it is with children that cannot relieve themselves without the aid of others they raise the strong cry and so continue without intermission untill their wants be contented and supplied so do we who are the children of God cry continually unto him who is the giver of every good and perfect gift until our desires be accomplished And forasmuch as we are compassed about with a world of infirmities so that sometimes we have not the heart to cry or at least cry not with all our hearts Quom do enim non exauditur spiritus à Patre qui exaudit cum Patre Aug. then the Spirit helpeth our infirmities And seeing our ignorance is so great as that wee know not what we should pray for as we ought the Spirit it self makes intercession for us informs us what we should ask for or ●od knowing the spirits intentions grant us what indistinctly and indirectly we beg by the Spirit Hence he is called the Spirit of Supplications Zech. 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Hierusalem the spirit of grace and supplications Hence he is called again an Intercessor for he makes continual intercession for the Saints according to the will of God Rom. 8.27 and in the 15. vers of that chapter the Apostle certifies the Romanes that they have received the spirit of adoption whereby they cry Abba Father Wherefore when the sons of God perceive the fiery darts of Satan flying about their eares on every side and themselves subject to infinite perills they fall a praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the spirit Eph. 6.18 and watching thereunto with all perseverance When the children of Israel as is reported in the book of Judges were in the heat of Gods anger sold unto their enemies many a time opprest many a time in desperate cases many a time vanquished for their revolting from God and forgetting his loving kindness they are said then to cry for life unto God whose eares were ever open to receive their hearty prayers Psal 40.1 Thus saith David I waited patiently for the Lord and he inclined unto me and heard my cry This crying is either mental only conceived in the heart or mind alone and only or vocal published by the mouth alone The mental cry onely conceived in the heart by the spirit is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that confidence and assurance which the Sons of God have that they are the Sons of God and that all things are theirs in Christ Jesus or more plainly it is the elevation of the heart to God in a secret manner preferring their petitions unto him with confidence that he will grant them what they humbly and earnestly sue for according to his will altogether this crying is internal Moses egit vacis silentium ut corde clamaret yet God to whom all hearts are open hears it as a cry when Moses spake not a word to God but onely desired in the secret cogitations of his heart his aid and protection at the red sea against the Egyptians the Lord sard unto him Wherefore cryest thou unto me Exod. 14.15 When Hannah prayed unto God for a manchild she spake with her heart onely her lips moved but her voice was not heard 1 Sam. 1.13 When Nehemiah made request unto King Artaxerxes concerning the City which was the place of his fathers sepulchres he had not at that instant any time to pray to God with his voice to prosper his suit yet saith the texts he prayed to the God of heaven Such indeed may be the sorrow and anguish of the heart as that the tongue shall not be able to utter the intentions of the soul and this doubtlesse was the case wherein Moses Nehem. 2.4 Curae leves loquuntur tngentes stupent Hannah and Nehemiah were David profest as much Psal 77.4 I am so troubled that I cannot speak bodily infirmities may cause this silence for we see that men at the last gasp when the soul is ready to flie out of the body and they in a manner by reason of the weaknesse of the Organ of speech not able to utter one syllable they lift up their eyes to heaven thereby signifying the hearts raising of this crying unto God Hence proceed those groanes in the children of God when their speech fails them which are the onely messengers of their thoughts and they are said to be the spirits groanings in their hearts whereby intercession is made for them They are called unspeakable groans unspeakable say some for their greatness and so indeed they are great in the ears of God unspeakable say others by reason of their weakness caused either by outward crosses or inward pressures of the soul expressions they are certainly of a good heart listed up to God and though weak proceeding from the special instinct and proper motion of the Spirit of prayer And albeit they be weak and confused in the hearts of Gods children so that they themselves can hardly discern or utter them in themselves Rom. 8.27 yet God who is the searcher of the hidden things of the heart knows the mind and meaning of the Spirit so that by the cryes sigh's or sobs to God never so small and in a manner insensible and seeble
like the saint pulse at the hour of death yet if they thereby by the Spirit make requests unto God it shall be heard of him and albeit those things which they sigh after be not alwayes manifestly and the Spirit moving thereunto distinctly seen of them yet God who is infinite in knowledge doth perceive their desires or rather the desires of the Spirit in them This mental crying is not common to all but proper to the children of the regeneration 1 Cor. 12.3 without which none can hardly call God Father as none can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost The next kind of crying is that which is only vocal consisting only of words Thus Hypocrites cry and pray for fashion not for conscience sake Vox praeteria nihil all voice no hearts they can cry loud enough in a Pharisaical pride Lord Lord and none shall stop their mouths but such heartlesse Christians shall not enter into the Kingdom of heaven These are they that draw near unto the Lord with their mouth and with their lips do honour him but have removed their heart far from him as he complains Isa 29.13 This is saith one Precationis inane simulachrum and in truth that prayer or cry which is only a lip-labour not proceeding from the heart is but as sounding brasse or a tinkling Cymbal it is like the Play called the Motions wherein though there is motion yet no life and although there be never so glorious and pompous observation of outward ceremonies and in that complemental manner only come before God and offer up their prayers unto him yet shall they have the repulse for their vain ostentation Thus Isaiah the first the Lord speaking of the hypocritial Jews that were curious in the external worship and service of God and would seem to pretermit nothing therefore professeth unto them because their services were not performed with the heart that when they made many prayers he would not hear them And the same Prophet Cap. 64.7 in effect calls such prayers no prayers when as be saith There is none that calleth upon the name of God he that cryes not to God with his whole heart cryes not at all to God for he that worships God must worship him in Spirit and in Truth not in bare formalities This kind of crying is but a vain beating of the aire is anothing available whereof the Spirit is no author and unless the Spirit cry in the heart there can be no true but a false crying Abba Father There remains yet a third kind of crying or praying viz. both mental and vocal wherein both the heart and the voice are directed to God the mind and the mouth both consonant both jump together here out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh And this is that pure language which the Lord speaking by the Prophet Zephany said that he would turn to the people that they might all call upon the name of the Lord. The Prophet Hosea advertiseth the Israelites Cap. 3.7 Cap. 14.2 Nec lecta neé neglecta Psal 77.1 to take to them words and to turn to the Lord that is such words as may make a true report unto God of their hearty conversion to him and lively saith in him Thus saith David I cryed unto God with my voice even unto God with my voice and he gave ear unto me Such a cry as is this is no false alarum but a true testimony of a sanctified soul of our confidence in him and is ever powerful with God The prayer of the faithful availeth much saith St. James for it is framed and composed by the admirable Art of the Spirit of God in their hearts ere it be uttered with the tongue The voice then reflecting on the heart the heart is made more zealous and then what is said of fame may be said of it Vires acquirit eundo it gathers strength in the uttering Let your voice therefore in prayer be conformed and correspond to the affections and wishes of your hearts that they may run together and let the affections and wishes of your hearts be guided by the Holy Ghost which if ye do it is without all contradiction a most certain Argument that God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father From the act of crying I passe to the object Abba Father The Spirit saith the Apostle beareth witnesse with our spirits Rom. 8. that we are the sont of God This testification of the Spirit in our hearts who is an infallible informer of the things that are given us of God makes to cry Abba Father For we can never call God Father except we be first informed and perswaded by the Spirit that we are the sons of God The Hebrew or Syriack word Abba and the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being in the Original here together gave occasion to some to observe that hereby is intimated the calling and union of Hebrews and Greeks of Jewes and Gentiles into one Church whereof Christ is the head But though this be true yet this Text is no sufficient warrant for this observation and therefore not to be insisted upon The gemination here Abba Father which is Father Father noteth the earnest affection and vehement zeal of Gods children in crying and praying unto the Father of Spirits their prayers are pressing and urgent cries and never satisfied until heard which ardency of theirs is grounded 1. Upon the sence of their wants necessity constrains them to use all earnestnesse in their own behalf they must knock hard they must seek hard they must cry hard Father Father ere they shall be heard or their suits obtained 2. Upon the knowledge of their own insufficiency and disability of furnishing themselves with corporal necessaries pertaining to the body or spiritual blessings and habiliments pertaining to the soul They know that the blessings of this life and the life to come must come from their Father which is in heaven 3. Upon Gods willingnesse and readinesse to do them all the good he can He is faithful in promising and as faithful in performing The word Abbah signifieth to be willing from whence God hath this Appellation a father is willing to protect his child from all dangers and to relieve him upon all occasions and although just cause of anger be offered him yet nature in time will work it out Even such is the tender affection of our heavenly Father known to his beloved sons that they are hereby the more emboldened to prosecute what they would have brought to passe They have his heart to be set upon them his eares alwayes to be open unto them his eyes continually watching over them his best wishes ever with them and all his blessings reserved for them These are encouragements for them to approach unto him who is more forward to give unto themall things than they themselves to demand any thing Hence it comes to passe that coming unto
because as Lyra saith that the Levites sung them on the steps or degrees whereby they went up to the Temple for indeed we read that there were such steps whereof if we beleeve Lyra there were fifteen which opinion as unlikely with Luther I passe over But it is probable that they were sung in an high place where they that were appointed to sing might be both better heard and seen As for the time when they were sung it is thought they were sung at the departure of the people out of the temple for an up-shot to their divine service therefore called songs of degrees or ascensions for songs of conclusions because short However Sine periculo bíc erratur and therefore more fit to conclude with all If it be thus we see the antiquity of this custom of concluding with a Psalme I return to the Author as he was in office in that therefore he was a King that was the inditer of this Psalme we learn this That Rex p●us est reipublicae opnamento Kings and Magistrates should be godly They are to have the practice of piety Many I think have it lying by them or in their hands few indeed have it in their hearts Many would have it if they did know how this is the way yet godly wisdom the practice will follow and this is gotten by going to God Mat. 7.7 God doth give the Spirit of wisdom to such as earnestly desire it Ask and it shall be given you Solomons request to God was for wisdom and he gave it him and more than that None was than more wise then Solomon the Queen of Sheba came from the farthest bounds of the earth to hear him discourse And none was then more wealthy or in so great prosperity Prov. 3.16 Bona throni and bona scabelli because none more wise The way then to prosper is to obtain wisdom of God Length of dayes is in her right hand and in her left hand riches and honour Again I gather from hence That Kings and Governours should not dispose the wisdom which God bestows on them to their own private ends but they must make others of the same rank their sons their subjects partakers of it as here David and Solomon did ut Regis ad exemplum that they might conforme themselves to the like godly courses Which may be a counterblast to all those bastards of the whore of Babylon that have snapped at the credit of some Princes witnesse K. James of blessed memory saying that he was more fit to be a Divine than a King Blind leaders of the blind why not both I mean not my profession In that they are filled with so great a measure of divine knowledge above others they are fitter to be Kings David was a King and a Prophet so was Solomon why should the like then be accounted a fault in others Furthermore he that is the Principal Member of Gods Church within his own dominions should be soundly grounded in Gods word and able to render an account of his faith How were it possible that he and his house with Joshuah should serve the Lord truly if he were ignorant of the points of Religion or of those things wherein he is to serve him Kings must serve God as well as others Reges ut reges saith Austin Worship him all ye gods Psal 97.7 Aug. It was Gods own command Deut. 17.18 where he setteth down what a King must do And it shall be when he sitteth upon the throne of his Kingdom that he shall write him a Copy of this Law in a book out of that which is before the Priests the Levites And it shall be with him and he shall read therein all the dayes of his life that he may learn to fear the Lord his God to keep all the words of this law and these statutes to do them c. Lastly from this ariseth another observation That Kings and Governours ought to pray for divine Knowledge and Wisdom For in their Kingdoms they are Judges of Ecclesiastical and Civil matters except they wilfully give up their titles of right How can they judge righteously if they be ignorant of the matters whereof they are Judges They must scan matters over and over and sift them for it is the honour of Kings to search out a matter Be wise now therefore O ye Kings Prov. 25.2 Psal 2.10 Psal 119.104 be instructed ye Judges of the earth But how is this gotten Through thy precepts I get understanding saith David Here I limit not my self to Kings but what I say of their duty I say of all Christians for they are Kings through Christ The use then is this Revel 1.6 How far from pleasing God are such as neglect this so great a duty and so great a good that whereas they may have wisdom for the asking or whereas if by asking they obtain it they should use it to the edification of others all is neglected hence instead of pious songs such as Davids Solomons the world is filled with swarms of Pamphlets Let us therefore pray that God would teach all of us so to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdome And this for Preface to what ensues The words are short and sweet being a breviary of the whole Psalm which is partly petitional non voz sed votum from this first verse to the eleventh and partly repetitional of Gods promises non votum sed vox from the eleventh verse to the end all which is sweetly compiled in these words Lord remember David and all his afflictions Two things are here recommended to Gods remembrance viz. David and his afflictions Luth. But what David Not bare David without either welt or gard not David materialiter but David formaliter saith Luther as he was godly David as unto whom God passed his word and promise that when thy dayes shall be fulfilled speaking to David by the Prophet Nathan and thou shalt sleep with thy fathers I will set up thy seed after thee which shall proceed out of thy bowels and I will est ablish his Kingdom 2 Sam. 7. he shall build an house for my name and I will stablish the throne of his Kingdome for ever And this is it that is comprised in this verse and enlarg'd in the rest Therefore saith he remember David that is the promises made to David We can have no better exposition of Scripture than scripture 1 Kings 8.28 Solomon in another place prayes for the same Therefore now Lord God of Israel keep with thy servant David my father that thou promised'st him saying there shall not be cut off unto thee a man from my sight as the originall is to sit on the throne of Israel but on condition so that thy children take heed to their way that they walk before me as thou bast walked before me And now O God of Israel let thy word I pray thee ●e verified c. Again
in our common speech we know when a promise is to any we use to say remember such a one Calv. And hence because the promise was made to David therefore as Calvin observes he is pleased in the midst of the verse in medio virtus here lyes the best part Gods promises But methinks I smell a Papist raising this doctrine out of these words That we are aided by the suffrages of the dead Saints Thedoret Remember David Dead Saints they are that raise it For we do not consider David here barely as Theodoret doth but as one to whom belong'd the promises as I said before I passe over this dead doctrine of the dead and turn back to the words of spirit and life Lord remember David The Kingly Prophet we see prayes to God he goes not to Angels or Saints for they are not as he well did know to be invocated Psal 73.25 Wherefore David saith whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee And again Ex profundis out of the deeps have I cried unto thee O Lord. I wonder that the Papists condemn him not of immodesty or presumption but albeit they are so full of modesty it is but Pythagorical that shameless modesty they rob God of his honour No wonder as Corvinus forgot his name they forget their manners But I say Give Caesar what is Caesars Angels are not to be invocated Mat. 4.10 but God alone The Papists distinction of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is meer Sophistry Both services are due to God Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Moreover Rom. 10. how shall they call on them on whom they have not believed If they call on Saints they must believe in Saints and what is this but to make Christ and his sufferings not to be the compleat object of justifying faith I onely name this Solomon learned otherwise from his father to make God the chief defender of his faith to whom he should pray Lord. Here also I observe a secret confession of Gods love in promising to David of Solomons hope in obtaining God is faithful and ready to promise and as faithfull and ready to perform Solomon both faithful and ready to receive A Looking-glasse for Kings and all others hoc facite vivite do the like and live Four divinity Lectures or Lectures of divine morality for Kings spring from Solomons Petitioning to the Lord in this manner drawn together from the contents of his Petition First that Church and Kingdom are in the hand of God to be disposed of as pleaseth him The most High ruleth in the Kingdom of men and giveth it to whom soever he will He is King of Kings and Lord of Lords By me Ksngs reign saith Wisdom Kings are Gods Vicegerents here on earth Dan. 4.32 Revel 19.16 who beare the stamp of the divine Majesty they are in his stead his servants Populum gubernando saith Thomas notwithstanding his other paradox Pro. 8.15 Therefore advisedly he runs not to man he seeks not to get a Kingdome by violence or by the strength of flesh and blood for there is no King saved by the multitude of an host Rom. 13. he trusteth not to the broken reedes of Egypt cursed is he that trusteth in man he learn'd this lesson from his father that vain is the help of man vain also the help of Princes Jerem. 17.5 Put not your trust in Princes but the name of the Lord is a strong tower Thus he acknowledgeth Gods supremacie Lord. Secondly as the first establishing of Church and Policie is in Gods power so is it he that causeth a flourishing Church and Policie As he gives the being so also the welbeing Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Psal 127. Arena sine culce indeed it may well be called Labour in vain except the Lord keep the City the watchmen wake but in vain This was Davids song for his son Solomon That King therefore that will have a flourishing Church and Common-weal must pray to God for it with all humility and submission This is via regia a Kings high-way Solomon hath chalk't it out Here observe his voluntary allegiance to God Lord. Thirdly Kings sons are to have a special care of the charge that their fathers leave behind with them as Solomon had here of Davids Therefore they must pray and do all that can be done for the welfare of their subjects so that they must not be slack in matters of Religion but very zealous it is that unicum necessarium David hath lead him the way the zeal of thy house hath eaten me up and Solomon was not far behind him he follows the tract And good reason The Crown can never be kept without good subjects the subjects can never be good without true Religion Solomon prayes for both and that is the next way to get both And David Peace be within thy walls Psal 122. and prosperity within thy Palaces the effect of both Both these Care and Zeal jump together in one peacefull King to root out Idolatry and plant true Religion What follows Peace and Prosperity Fourthly here is an Emblem of his hope joyn'd with innocency this made him pray to the Lord with heart of grace He knew the Articles If thy children will keep my Covenant and my testimony then their children shall sit upon the throne for evermore He found himself yet to have a good conscience for God will not hear the prayer of the wicked Therefore his innocence confirmed his hope Yet afterward he fell away whether wholly or no we conclude not uncharitably of him with the Papists whereby the bond was forfeited 1 King 11. the promise disanull'd and yet God was more merciful than he sinful for the Lord would not take all the Kingdom from Solomon nor his seed for Davids sake Mat. 1. Neither was Davids seed being in captivity quite cut off for Christ descened from the line of David according to the flesh and hence is called the Son of David and now reigns for evermore according to Gods promise and so is Davids Lord. This I touch by the way It is requisite then that Kings should have care to serve God continually in the integrity and innocencie of their heart If they fall from God God falls from them and then he will either rend their Kingdoms as he did Solomons or pull down both King and throne and lay their honour in the dust If not but that they will keep Gods Commandments and maintain Religion as David did as David shall they prosper all the dayes of their life This Solomon intended and in this intent cried he Lord remember David In these words again do but observe Solomons Sampson-like faith he presseth God with his promise his faith works upon that Since God was so gracious to promise Solomon
would not stick to exact the thing promised therefore whensoever God makes a promise either to King or people they must not be so coy as not to take hold of it and to challenge God of his promise For he promiseth to the end they should remember him and thereby he them Fear not then it is his delight Again Gods promise is the strongest argument a man can use it is a sign of an invincible faith to apply it the remembrance whereof should drive us to God And is the best comfort to a Christian man in this life It was here Solomons chiefest joy which made him come thus to God Lord remember David It should seeme by this speech that God was asleep or forgetful of his promise But the speech is not proper for he that keepeth Israel doth neither slumber nor sleep Psal 121.4 God cannot be said to remember or forget properly but by a metaphor not Theologicè but Oeconomicè as the Fathers speak or per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Logicians call ambignum ex analogiâ conceptus because we cannot otherwise conceive by reason of our natural imbecillity God is said then to remember when he shews himself to have a respect unto us for his promise sake So Tremelius expounds it Tremel demonstra te meminisse Lord declare by a plain demonstration that thou forget'st not thy promise made to thy servant David by performing it or being as good as thy word in me I will not enter into any Philosophical speculation concerning this And what should he remember A●● Vt impleatur quod promisit saith Austin To whom promised To David Lord remember David That is that he would fulfil in him what he promised to David his father that his seed should sit in his throne for ever that he should plant his Church and true worship there and dwell among them that the ministery should be pure and powerful the arme of God to salvation that he would give them food sufficient that the glory of his Kingdom should never come to decay This is the Summa totalis In these words we may perceive as in a Perspective-Glasse who it is that is the first raiser of a State and who the puller down States are not guided by blind fortune as the Poets feign nor by Angels appointed thereto in every Kingdom as the Platonists imagine nor by the Starres as some Star-gazers affirm but God alone guides all by his Providence The heavens doth rule saith Daniel by a Metommy of the subject for the adjunct Dan. 4. None can stay his hands or say unto him What doest thou saith Nebuchadnezzar A lesson for Kings and Magistrates that they sollicite none but God for the welfare of Church and Common-weale as here Solomon did But what is this all No they must do it of necessity therein to acknowledge his Supremacie and their Allegiance but this I toucht already They must also have as great care of Religion as of the Commonweale and more for that was the end why Commonweales were ordained without the Commonweale will but be a common poverty it is the soul of the Politick State it gives life unto it Whereupon it being without Religion is compared to a dead body without a soul but both being joyned together the one may say of the other Parsque tui latitat corpore clausa meo Both must be minded as in promise here meant by David So in Prayer Solomon is our example And as their care for the planting of Religion must be great so must they have a watchful eye for the peace of Jerusalem they shall prosper that love thee Lastly they must commit all to God Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not to thine own understanding Prov. 3.5 Victo i● mihi crede non hominum disciplinis aut industriá comparatur sed Dei O.M. benignitate arbitrio c. Ferdinand K. of Arragon He is the Watchman of Israel he it is that in the night and in the day discovers all plots and conspiracies that bringeth the rebellious to confusion It is he that giveth salvation unto Kings Psal 144.10 Thus they may assure themselves that if God be on their side they need not fear what man can do unto them If they cast their care upon the Lord he will care for them This was Solomons way to the throne when as he said Lord remember David Now let us come to know what David was in himself without any respect to the promises He was as his name imports beloved amiable or a friend true indeed for he was the beloved of the Lord for God was with him he was the son of Jesse Ruth 4.22 by profession a Shepherd but chang'd from a Shepherd to be King of Judah 2 Sam. 1.4 King of Israel cap. 5.3 God we see hath not respect of persons outwardly he chooseth poor David before any in Israel to be King for thus saith the Lord to Samuel Arise anoint him this is he 1 Sam. 16. David provided Ministers to serve the Lord 1 Chron. 16.4 He provided matter for the building of a Temple he appointed Solomon to build because God did for bid himself 1 Chron. 22.3 He gave Solomon the pattern and sound out the place 2 Sam. 5. He followed the Lord with all his heart 1 Kings 14. save in the matter of Vriah cap. 15. These are parts of the Acts and Monuments of David Thus we see Gods love to David and Davids zeal to Godward he did as much as he could more if he could do he would have done God denied David would not resist A doctrine for Kings and Governours not to counter-check Gods commands And when he heard he should not do it he sate not idle as many would have done but prepared materials for the building Let all of all degrees learn hence to provide all things for the setting forward of a good work What work better than the building of a house for God wherein to call on his name But in this age men scarce vouchsafe to repair nay some rather have pulled down and instead thereof erected stables Which indeed hath proved the way to bring an old house on their heads Contrary to this was Davids practice therefore saith Solomon Remember David or thy promise made to David my Father It follows and all his afflictions Some translate these words cum totâ or cum omni afflictione ejus some ad● and and then we read it thus as in our Bibles And all his afflictions The reason of this diversity lies in the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which sometimes beareth the force of the Article of the Accusative case and then they adde and to make up a perfect sentence it is called by the Grammarians Asyndeton when a conjunction is wanting Sometime the force of the Proposition cum then Remember David with all his afflictions the matter is indifferent the sense is the same There is a greater difference
in the translation of the word Gnuunotho Austin Hierom and Theodoret with almost all the Papists translate it omnis mansuetudinis ejus but Luther Calvin Tremelius and others translate it Cum totâ afflictione ejus So Arias Montanus a Papist Cum universa ejus afflictione ad verbum cum omni affligi ejus we follow the last But to leave off words and come to the matter it is manifest by these words that David had many afflictions yet he was the beloved of the Lord his darling so was Christ yet from the Cradle to the Crosse was he afflicted of whose troubles Davids here were types Therefore Gods dearest children are subject to afflictions they are Gods messengers to bring them to him messengers of life not of death of love not of hate for the Lord chasteneth whom he loveth David was afflicted by Saul and his followers before he had possession of the throne and after he was sole Monarch placed in the throne many were the troubles that attended on him Thus Kings are not exempted from being afflicted Among his manifold troubles this one is recounted the inward care he had of finding out a sit and convenient place where to build a Temple for the Lord. This we may perceive in the verses following he was tost too and fro with many difficulties inwardly perplexed and all for Gods glory Constantine the great was of his mind for no sooner did he conquer Maxentius and Licinius by which victory he ended the Persecution moved in the East and West Churches but he caused Bishops to be consecrated Churches to be built and then the Church of God began to flourish which before was almost drown'd in the red sea of bloody persecution for some hundreds of years I might be infinite in reckoning up the Godly Acts in this kind of Kings and Governours which outward acts shew the inward love they bore to God and true Religion Here is mention made of Davids afflictions to shew the truth or certainty of promise as if they had been therewith seal'd and sign'd Which proves that he endur'd all these troubles because he had so fair promises of God Therefore to whom God doth give comfortable promises no trouble or anguish should annoy him but he should willingly undergo all tribulations for the promise sake It was not for his afflictions that God made him this promise it was gratis Lastly Davids afflictions are put down for an example to incite others to suffer the like To comfort them and to assure them that albeit they suffer never so many troubles that it would seeme impossible that those promises should be accomplished yet should they put their trust and hope in God who out of stones is able to raise up children to Abraham As Solomon prayed thus in his own behalf so let us as the Apostle commands make intercession for Kings and those which are in authority Lord remember our David CHARLES the second by the grace of God King of Great Britain France and Ireland defender of the Faith c. Thou who art the King of Kings make him a King over many Kings thou who art the King of peace guide the feet of our King in the wayes of peace Sit thou in his heart the chief Defender of his faith Councel thou him from above to have mercy on them to whom mercy belongs and to execute justice to them to whom justice Lord discover all plots and conspiracies intended against his sacred Majesty Let them be taken in their own nets that conspire against him Make him careful of thy Church Fill him with Faith Hope and Charity and at last reward him with a crown of glory And grant that ever after his seed may sit on his throne till the coming of the Messias Amen THE WATCHMAN'S Watch-word ACT. 20.28 Take heed therefore unto your selves and to all the Flock over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you Overseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own blood WHosoever shall seriously observe Gods powerful providence in Pauls Conversion may discern an act of great mercy in God and a strange alteration in Paul It was the great mercy of the Almighty that ever Paul was converted to the faith He was a raveming wolf of the tribe of Benjamin using his best endeavours to devour the little flock of God breathing out threatnings against the Christian profession and slaughter against the Disciples of the Lord. Yet God in whose hands are the hearts of all m●n did so suddenly alter his savage disposition and so turn the course of his resolutions another way as for a time seem'd incredible From persecuting the Gospel the Lord won him to the preaching of the Gospel from being a profest Enemy to Christianity to be a strong Pillar of the Christian Religion The time was that his whole aim was bent to the extirpation of the Doctrine of Christ Jesus not a Professor durst hold up his head in his sight his imployment was to find out such and to bring them bound to Hierusalem To this purpose had he Letters framed countenanced by the Great ones and bacht with the chief Authority that his actions might pass unquestioned without contradiction Neither wanted he wit learning and courage to draw his projects into publique view and execution with all dexterity thereby to discharge his warranted Commission with approbation But when he heard that Voice from Heaven Saul Saul why persecutest thou me when he saw the Heavens took notice of his actions he was struck into a maze he trembled exceedingly his courage fell down his heart was astonished and suddenly turns Professor of that faith he erewhile persecuted to the death What before he endeavoured to pull down and trample under foot be took in hand to erect and build up Christ crucified was the subject of his discourse as before the object of his hate for whose sake he was put into as great fears as ever he put others and was subject to as great dangers by others as ever others were by him But in process of time he became a man of so undaunted a spirit as that no threatnings could terrifie him no fierce looks outlook him no power affright him no dangers discourage him from publishing to the world the Doctrine of Peace and Reconciliation through the blood of Jesus Christ call'd then by the Scribes and Pharisees as to this day by the Roman Sectaries Heresie God having thus made him a Chosen vessel to bear his Name before the Gentiles and Kings he went about from place to place preaching That Christ that was crucified was the Son of God Being at length come to Miletus he calls the Elders of the Church together to whom he delivers sundry wholsom Instructions tending to the good of Gods Church committed to their cure This was his Conscio ad Clerum and it was his parting Sermon It begins at the 18. verse of this Chapter and continues to the 36. Part of which Sermon are
of the Spirit and of power that your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God 1 Cor. 2.4 5. Thirdly What we teach we must press home to the Conscience as an arrow to the mark It is not the pleasing volubility of a superficial tongue olt-times exorbitant that doth the work of the Lord or makes a good Preacher or found Christian it must be toucht with a coal from the Altar that it may infuse into the cold hearts o● men the true zeal of perfect godliness The Word of God well prest well applied is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword Heb 4.11 piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart It swims not in the brain as the Prophets axe did upon the water but enters into the conscience and the very bowels as I may so say of the soul What humane Eloquence hath such effectual operation Surely it tickles the ear but toucheth not the heart Men may be never the wiser I am sure never the better where tickling words are preferr'd before solid matter and where men endeavour to please the ear more than to edifie the soul or to comfort a distempered or distracted Conscience or to inform a misled one God never condemns but he first indicts and arraighs He never punisheth but he first forewarns He never rejects but he first respects He never sends misery but he first offers mercy He puts the way of life and the way of death before all take which they will for better or worse Such is Gods good will to man that seeing man cannot or will not come to him he vouchsaseth to come to man such is his goodness either in his Divine person as he did to Adam or in his Messengers bidding them turn to him that he might turn to them that they might have experience of Gods mercy not of his judgments that He wills not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live Herein he useth not the extremity of the Law against man neither deals he as an unjust Judge first hang then examine the cause But he opens the case shews the cause sets their sins in order before their eyes and makes known the dangers they lie in by a Proclamation Cry aloud spare not lift up thy voice like a trumpet Isa 58.1 and shew my people their transgression and the house of Jacob their sins Such therefore are only fit for Gods people who can cry aloud and spare not Spare not For 1. Love Or 2. Fear Spare not for love Not for love of any Open rebuke is better than secret love Pro. 27.5 Not for love of money or reward lest it be said to thee as Simon Peter said to Simon Magus Thy money perish with thee For he that hath my Word saith the Lord let him speak my Word faithfully Not adde not diminish not put false glosses thereon Cursed be such Revel ult Jer. 23.28 Spare not Spare not sin spare no sin cry against all When the Lord brought the Israelites into the land of Canaan he gave them charge not to leave a mothers son of them alive They did not so they spared them but God spared not them when they fell into their Idolatry So God will not spare to plague those Messengers of his that spare to cry against sin and to cut it from off the earth Woe be to them saith the Prophet that sow pillows under all elbows Ezek. 13.18 Who say peace peace when there is no peace Jer. 16.14 for there is no peace saith my God to the wicked These like Hananiah make the people to trust in a lye Jer. 28.15 causing them to erre But Gods true Prophets and Messengers are against all sin and sinners without sparing or excepting any For Gods Word is in them as it was in Jeremy His Word was in my heart as burning fire shut up in my bones and I was weary of forbearing I could not stay cap. 20.9 It was Christs speech to the Pharisees concerning his Apostles If these should hold their peace or spare speaking the stones would cry out Therefore beloved Brethren cry aloud spare not cap. 62.1 Imitate that Angelical Doctor and Evangelical Prophet Isaiah For Zion's Jake I will not hold my peace and for Jerusalem's sake I will not rest until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth And again I have set watchmen upon thy walls O Jerusalem which shall never hold their peace day nor night Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence Spare not for fear Fear not little flock Be not afraid of their faces for I am with thee to deliver thee Jer. 1.8 Do they contend with thee do they condemn thee fear not spare not He is near that justifieth thee who will contend with thee Tua causa erit mea causa as the Emperor said to one so saith Christ to all his servants Causa ut sit magna magnus est actor author ejus neque enim nostra est saith Luther to Meloncthon Isa 50.8 Do they reproath thee do they revile thee Fear not spare not Be not dismaid at their reproachings or revilings Isa 51. Do they despise thee Fear not spare not He that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me saith our Saviour Luk. 10.16 Do they forbid thee beat thee do they seek to stone thee as they did Christ as they did Paul and the rest of the Apostles Fear not spare not but be like blind Bartis meus who the more the people charged him to hold his peace the more he cryed a great deal Mar. 10.48 Do they say they 'll kill thee Fear not spare not they may kill the body but cannot the soul Remember The righteous are bold as a Lion that turns not away at any Ministers as Luther said of Historians must have the hearts of Lions Thou shalt have thy reward Vincenti corona To him that overcometh will I give a crown Rev. 3. And they their punishment for Qui vos tangit pupillam oculi mei tangit He that toucheth you or any of mine toucheth the apple of mine eye Zach. 2.8 Touch not mine Anointed and do my Prophets no harm Psal 105.15 Do they provoke me to anger saith the Lord Do they not provoke themselves to the confusion of their own faces They do they do Witness the Primitive times wherein such as envied or hindred the prosperity of Gods Church never prospered Pharaoh sunk in the Red sea like a stone Ahab Elias enemy was shot with an arrow and died Nebuchadnezzar grievously punished Antiochus Epiphanes died in most miserable torments Herod the Great Christ's enemy perished with a lousie disease Herod Antipas that put John Baptist to death overcome by
ye not then defiled with the contaminating and for did customs of the world but as ye are separated from all others to an holy emploiment so do not ye degenerate but let your light so shine before men that they seeing your good works may glorifie your Father which is in heaven Know that the eys of all men are fixt upon you If covetousness pride luxury drunkenness or any other vice reign in any of you if any of you be of a dissolute life whose conversation is not ruled by the doctrine ye teach ye are but miserable creatures Be assured Pope Innoc. lib. 3. de S. Altar myst that Quisquis sacris indumentis ornatur honestis moribus non 〈◊〉 quanto venerabilior apparet hominibus tanto indignior redditur apud Deum saith one God contemns him and will reward him according to his work For It is not every one that cries Lord Lord that shall enter into the kingdom of heaven but only they that do the will of my Father saith Christ Take heed therefore to your lives If you preach well and live ill you do but build with one hand and pull down with another And thus much for the Caveat as it respects our selves Now of the Caveat briefly as it respects the Church of God Take heed to all the flock c. A Minister hath the custody of many souls and if any perish through his means he is liable to Gods judgments As therefore we come provided with Knowledge so with a resolution to propagate and diffuse it Knowledge in the best of us not communicated to the building up of the Church in holiness is like costly materials prepared for the erecting of some sumptuous building yet to no use the loss whereof is irrecoverable It stands us upon therefore to be instant in season and out of season to be Instructers of the flock committed to our charge both in doctrine and manner of living The reason hereof rendred in my Text is substantial in that we are made Overseers of the flock The word interpreted Overseer is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hence saith one Nomen Episcopi plus sonat oneris quàm honoris But I take it here in a larger signification than it is commonly used All Ministers are Overseers of that Flock the charge of whose souls is committed to them They are their Spiritual Tutors unfolding unto them the secret mysteries of Divine knowledge They must inform them if ignorant reform them if erroneous reprove them if dissolute confirm them if weak in the faith They are called Watchmen to watch for their souls salvation that they be not carried away with every wind of dectrine that they run not into absurd enormities but that they hold fast the profession of the faith in holiness and righteousness all the days of their lives They are called Pastors whose calling is to use all diligence to feed their flock and protect them from eminent mischiefs by a careful foresight or present needful power The Symbole of this say some is the Bishops Crosier the Spiritual Shepherds staff which is acutus in fine ad pungendum pigros rectus in medio ad regendum debiles retortus in summo ad colligendum vagos sharp in the end to prick up the slothful and make them nimble right in the midst to govern the weak but crooked in the top like a hook to gather the dispersed or such as go astray They are called Gods Stewards whose office is faithfully to provide all things necessary for his family They are called the Light of the world whose property is to discover things hid in darkness They by their knowledge dispel the clouds of ignorance by their holy conversation the works of darkness All things that are discovered are made manifest by the light for whatsoever doth make manifest is light hence they shew the house of Judah their sins Eph. 5 13. and the house of Jacob their thrnsgressions They are called Stars Fixt in the right hand of God tanquam in firmamento suo as in their heaven Stars have their light from the Sun so you not originally from your selves but derivatively from the Sun of Righteousness Your knowledge proceeds from the revelation of Jesus Christ who was in the bosom of the Father and must be communicated to the world And to this end they move perpetually about the world so ought you about the Church that all therein may be partakers of the light of life Wonderful are the effects and powerful the operation that the Celestial bodies have by their influences upon the Elements and upon those things compacted by them So questionless the effects wrought by the powerful preaching of the Gospel which is the power of God unto salvation by such whose conversation is in heaven as Divine stars are far superior unto them The operation I am sure more effectual because more spiritual For as the Stars beget life in things void of life and cause vegetation by their heat So they by their precepts beget saith in those that are dead in sins and trespasses which is the soul of the soul by which we live unto God for Faith cometh by hearing and the just lives by his faith Furthermore by the propagation of the Gospel by preaching the Church of God grows and all therein as tender plants and trees of righteousness bring forth the fruits of eternal life Lastly The fixt Stars candem sempet inter 〈…〉 disstantiam they keep the same proportion of distance to each other The like harmony must be among us that all of us together may declare the glory of God They are called Angels to whom God hath given charge over his people to protect them Heb. 1. ult For as they are ministring Spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation so are Ministers wherefore saith the Prophet How beautiful are the feet of those that bring the glad tidings of peace What shall I say more They are called Fathers All these names import labour in them to whom they are ascribed So that great must be the pains that we must take with the Flock the Church of God over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you Overseers A word to the people I beseech you brethren to know them which labour among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you and to esteem them very highly in love for their work sake 1 Thess 5.13 Apud Graecos majori in honore babebantur Philosophi quàm Oratores Illi enim rectè vivendi c. Lactantius The Grecians gave greater respect to their Philosophers than to their Orators because these taught them how to speak but those how to live well And s●ffer the word of exhortation Heb. 13.22 God must send ere man can go And here is Gods care of man his love to man God comes not in his own proper person He speaks not in his own proper voice So great is the Majesty of the one that
shall please God than put unworthy hands to hold it up Nil defensoribus istis indiget Ecclesia 'T is a fearful doom they shall undergo when God shall require the peoples blood at their hands who perish for want of knowledge however these men cannot be denied the benefit of their Clergy if they can but read As for them that cannot preach yet presume their presumption speaketh their folly yet such m●lapart audacity is sooner crowned with the Lawrel than a modest ingenuity Upon the first hearing they are nois'd famous when indeed they offer but the sacrifice of fools It was a religious wish of a wise man God forbid that every man that can take unto himself boldnesse to speak an hour together in a Church upon a text should be admitted for a Preacher though he mean never so well A setled brain a good sad temper a studious disposition a well-grounded learning is fittest for this enterprize Therefore we may justly admire the valour of some men that before their studies dare ascend the Pulpit and do there take more pains than they have in their library This makes some to use an inculcation of vain tautologie others as one saith such fugitive Divines that like cowards they run away from their text I say no more of them but wish with all my soul that ere they lookt abroad they had looked well into the perfect law of liberty at home and so I dismisse them As Ministers must look into the Word of God first so must the people after The lips of the Priest preserve knowledge for the peoples use Non libro sacerdotis sed labr● non codice sed corde conservatur scientia their blood will be required at his hands if they through his default wander out of the way and perish in their sins if otherwise their blood will be upon their own heads Your practice then dear brethren in looking into the Word must be To hear the Word when preached to hear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with joy rejoyceing with David to go into the house of the Lord and to dwell there for ever To hear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all readinesse of mind 1 Pet. 2.2 and longing after it Psal 119.131 To hear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all humility like Paul sitting at Gamaliels feet To hear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with fear and reverence as in Gods presence like Cornelius hearing what God saith To hear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with patience and a retir'd attention like Mary laying aside all cumbersom thoughts of the world that may distract your souls The Romans held their Censors so reverend that they thought him worthy of no small punishment that did but yawne before him and shall not God judge them think you that care not how they hear his Embassadors holding forth the word of reconciliation Heathenish Alexander and Attila that received Jaddus and Leo as the Lord himself and the foolish Galatians that received Saint Paul as an Angel of God even as Christ hiraself shall rise and condemn all perfunctory Auditors of his truth Take heed then how you hear and follow not the steps of that untoward generation of the Jewes in their peevish incredulity shutting their eyes upon the glorious light of saving truth Like that sullen tree in the Indies which they say closeth it self against the beams of the rising Sun and opens only to the dampish shades of the night What a shame will it be to you shall that conceit of a new invention be fulfilled in you Christians had once blind Churches and lightsom hearts but now blind hearts and lightsom Churches It was the complaint of one in his time that the fathers had plowed sowen reaped fan'd the wheat and set the bread upon the table but the children had not a mouth to eat it Let it not be so said of you for if it may for truth in truth you perish your souls everlastingly Solomon confirms me he that despiseth the Word shall be destroyed Prov. 13.13 Carefully look then into the Word by hearing so shall ye suredly passe that danger Again your practice must be to read the Law of your God whilest your tongues read your souls hear God speaking The circumspect reading of one Chapter whereof I speak it by experience sets me a thinking more than I can imagine it elevates the soul above it self which rests satisfied without expecting farther Enthusiasms or new Revelations such heavenly doctrine is thereby dropt into the heart as fits the reader to render a reason of his faith Those faithful witnesses of Christ in Bohemia called Thalorites if they had not diligently plyed the Scriptures could not have been so skilful in them as Aeneas Sylvius their profest enemy reporteth them Aeneas Sylvius de dict fact Alphons lib. 2. c. 17. Many hath fame crowned for wise men that read much but none for more wise than those who delight in the Law of the Lord and meditate therein both day and night Which meditation is the souls Perspective-Glasse whereby in her long remove she discerneth God as if he were near at hand Nothing can carry us so near God and heaven as this do but joyn them together and they give up a man to raptures and irradiate the soul with such high apprehensions that all that wisdom which this world hath hereby appears contemptible Now for the better understanding of the mind of God it will not be amisse in reading in meditating to confer Scripture with Scripture As the clouds clashing together in the aire above throw them at the length a most bright lightning so do the Scriptures when parallel'd The reason is strong Ireneus gave it Ireneus Ostentiones quae sunt in Scripturis non possunt aliter ostendi quàm ex Scripturis The demonstrations in Scripture cannot be otherwise made good than by Scripture A good wit invented this allusion the striking of two or three strings together directeth the Musitian for the tuning of his instrument so the comparing of several texts of Sacred Writ leadeth us to the true intention of the Spirit Thus if we read thus if we meditate we shall read we shall meditate with understanding Furthermore your practice must be to confer with the learned dead with the learned living so Christs disciples did with Christ the Eunuch did so with Philip. Hierom highly commends Marcella for the like and Fiabiola for the like zeal With the learned dead in their works breathing instructions are more effectual all grant but these have their operation And being the number is but small as the number of Pearls in comparison of baser stones the want blessed be our God is well provided for by their living monuments which we may use as a traveller doth a Map the better to find out the way or as Joseph did the mans help that advised him to leave Sechem and seek his brethren in Dothan But to what purpose is all this The Patrons
Bernard Bern. But the Spouse in the Canticles saith that the Pillars of the Church are made of Marble standing on Bases of gold made of Marble therefore strong made of Marble standing on Bases of gold therefore glorious to behold Such the Apostles glorious for their good life for their constancy in faith thus many glorious things are spoken of thee O City O Church of God I may say Helcath-●azzurim O thou field of strong men many glorious things are spoken of thee Solomon erected two Pillars in the Porch of the Temple that on the right hand he called Jachin that is he shall establish that on the left hand he called Boaz in it is strength by the first is meant if you believe Hugo Peter by the last Paul but give me leave to say all Christ's Apostles were like these two Pillars against the assaults of Satan for the gates of hell did not could not prevail against them shall not cannot against Gods faithful messengers Therefore Elias was called the Charets and horsemen of Israel that is Israels strength So God said unto Jeremy Jerem. 1. Behold I have made thee this day a walled City and a Pillar of iron And besides Pillars I may call the Apostles Lions like those two that stood besides Solomons throne for strength and beauty As strong so high like Kings high and mighty 1 King 10. high like Saul higher by head and shoulders than any other people by head for the understanding the mysteries of Religion by the shoulders to support them near heaven the higher the Pillar the nearer heaven Mighty like Sampson that they may pull down the rotten pillars of the adversaries on their head High to see over being overseers of Gods heritage Mighty because ordained to pull down the strong holds of Satan casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God Nemo sibi de suo palpet qu●sque sibi Satan est and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.4 5. High belonging to the most High they must reach to heaven over Nations over Kingdoms Jer. 1.10 Mighty not in Word only but in power and much assurance 1 Thes 1.5 Hence they are called able Ministers 2 Cor. 3.6 Thus they were and Gods Ministers are as the people of Canaan in respect of the Israelites Deut. 1.28 greater and taller than they who is able to stand before them But let not this make them high-minded for the greater a man is the more he ought to bow down under mercies and humble himself The authority of the Gospel must not be defended with high looks they must not look big about them on the businesse lest the pestilence of Ambition creep in among the Evangelical vertues saith Erasmus on John 6. Erasmus in Joh. 6. Therefore though great and high yet humble like unto Piramids seeming smallest where highest Thus Paul in nothing I am behind the chiefest Apostles 2 Cor. 12.11 here 's his greatnesse here 's his height though I be nothing here 's his humility here 's his lowlinesse He is something he is nothing riddle me this Of this after The Pillars of the Tabernacle were upright so as also the Pillars of Solomons Temple So were the Apostles so must Ministers Paul said unto the lame man stand upright on thy feet the Lord said unto the Levites thou shalt be upright and sincere with the Lord thy God upright fide conscientiâ holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience Hence proceed purity of doctrine 1 Tim. 3.9 good endeavour conscionable diligence good example not to be carried away with diverse strange doctrines Heb. 10.23 but holding fast the profession of our faith without wavering for he that wavereth is like a wave of the Sea Jam. 1.6 driven with the wind and tossed Upright in faith without bending either to the right hand or to the left left they fall and great be the fall of them for by faith ye stand 2 Cor. 1.24 From my former speech I deduce this consequence we may make these Pillars our pillows as Jacob made the stone his Gen. 28. where we may lie down secure sleep quietly without disturbance rest comfortably without annoyance Malè cubans suaviter dormit faeliciter dormiat Here we may find what Jacob found where he lay the gate of heaven I mean Christ I am the door saith he Now let us make this use that we maintain and not budge from the doctrine of the Apostles Take heed faith the Lord Adpenuitatem benefitiorum necessariò sequitur ignorantia sacerdotum Panormkan that thou forsake not the Levites as long as thou livest on the earth Deut. 12.19 Would therefore Papists know our Religion Would they know the Judge of all controversies We produce all the Apostles as witnesses of our Religion every Apostle as a several Pillar and all of them together as an heap on whose doctrine we rely This again is our confession this our profession as Jacob said unto Laban concerning the Pillars that they erected Gen. 31.51 So say we of all and every one of these Pillars behold this heap and behold this Pillar which I have cast betwixt us this heap be witnesse and this Pillar be witnesse that I will not passe over this heap to thee and that thou shalt not passe over this heap unto me for harme If you would know the reason take it their words are Gods words Gods Oracles No buckram * Of Rome Bishop of them all no Jesuites Knights of the Post can passe currant without Gods warrant Thus saith the Lord. In a word let me use a word of exhortation I direct it to such as be Ministers indeed be strong and beautiful in life and doctrine for how beautiful are the feet of those that bring the glad tidings of salvation be upright in faith and a pure conscience awake awake put on thy strength O Zion Isa 52.1 put on thy beautiful garments O Jerusalem and as they so shall we be Such honour have all his Saints Psal 149.9 I cannot passe over these Pillars yet yet I will not stay long on them We read that the Lord went before the Israelites in a pillar of cloud by day Exod. 13.21 So doth he now this blessed day this Sunshine of the Gospel go before us in a cloud of Witnesses Prophets Patriarchs Apostles we are compassed about with a great cloud of witnesses Heb. 12.1 We read also the Lord went before them in a Pillar of fire he goes before us in the Apostles as in Pillars of fire that give light unto us in this night of sin this vale of misery this shadow of death John Baptist was a burning lamp and the Apostles were the light of the world faith Christ Suâ fide sua doctrinà suis operibus luminaria facts sunt By their faith by their doctrine by their works they were made stars
no good edge When he giveth quietnesse who then can make trouble Job 34.29 and when he hideth his face who then can behold him whether it be done against a Nation or against a man onely Peace Epiphanius used to say that he never let his adversary sleep not that he disturbed him but agreed with him presently not suffering the Sun to go down upon his wrath There is peace 1. External 2. Internal 3. Eternal of the 1. World 2. Minde 3. God Or more plainly peace between 1. Man and man 2. Man and himself 3. God and man Christ both procures us peace by his blood and keeps peace by his intercession He both makes and maintains peace Pax nostra bellum contra satanam For as Aulius Fulvius when he took his son in the conspiracy with Catiline said Ego te non Catalinae sed Patriae so God hath not begotten us in Christ that we should follow the arch-traitour Satan but serve him in holinesse Est pax peccatorum pax justorum pax temporis pax eternitatis Pax temporis interdum conceditur bonis malis sed pax eternitatis nunquam dabitur nisi bonis quia non est pax impiis De pace peccatorum inquit Psal Nalla salus bello pacem nos possumus omnes Drances Zelavi in peccatoribus pacem peccatorum videns De hac dicit Christus non veni mittere pacem sed gladium De pace justorum dicit Apostolus fructus spiritus est Charitas gaudium pax paientia hanc reliquit Christus Apostolis pacem relinquo vobis De pace temporis inquit Propheta Orietur in diebus ejus justitia Innocens 3. l. 3. De sacr Alt. myst c. 11. abundantia pacis Hanc incessanter petit Ecclesia Da pacem in di●bus nostris De pace aeternitatis Dominus dixit Apostolis pacem meam d● vobis non quomodo mundus dat Ego do vobis De hac inquit David In pace dormiam c. Dona nobis pacem ut de pace temporis per pacem pectoris transeamus ad pacem aeternitatis It is observable that amongst these seventeen sins Omnia pace vigent pacis tempore florens which are called works of the flesh Gal. 5. eight of them are of the adverse party to peace and that all the nine fruits of the spirit there reckoned up are peace and the assistants thereof Which sheweth what a concourse of evils is in strife Pausanias in Atticis p. 13. and that all good things which we can expect from the Spirit are in peace Hence even the heathens feigned Eirene Peace to be the nurse of Pluto their god of riches The work of righteousnesse shall be peace and the effect of righteousnesse Isa 32.17 quletnesse and assurance for ever Tamerlane after a great battel with and victory over the Muscovit Turk Hist fol. 212. beholding so many thousands of men there dead upon the ground was so far from rejoycing thereat that turning himself to one of his familiars he lamented the condition of such as commanded over great armies commending his fathers quiet course of life who being now well stricken in years and weary of the world delivered up unto him the government of his Kingdome retiring himself into a solitary life the more at quiet to serve God and so to end his days in peace Accounting him happy in seeking for rest and the other most unhappy which by the destruction of their own kind sought to procure their own glory Protesting himself even from his heart to be grieved to see such sad tokens of his victory Yea Fol. 216. the stern Bajazet marching with his great army against Tamerlane and by the way hearing a countrey shepheard merrily reposing himself with his homely Pipe as he sate by the side of a mountain feeding his poor flock standing still a great while listning unto him to the great admiration of many at last fetching a deep sigh brake forth into these words O happy shepheard which hadst neither Orthobulos nor Sebastia to lose bewraying therein his own discontentment And yet withal shewing that worldly blisse consisteth not so much in enjoying of much subject unto danger as enjoying in a little contentment devoid of fear Better is an handful with quietnesse Eccles 4.6 than both the hands full with travel and vexation of spirit Famine It is the want of bread and bread is the stay and staffe of life When this stay is gone our lives fall quickly when this staffe is broken the thread of life breaks too Famine within hath fought more eagerly than sword without Xenophon reports of one Anaxalaus accused in the Spartane judgement for delivering up the City of Bizantium to the enemy when he saw many die with famine he answered he knew difference between warring with an enemy and Nature It is numbred among the sore judgements of God if it be not the sorest 1. Causing faintnesse and madnesse Gen. 47.13 2. Hunger burneth Deut. 32.24 3. It causeth pining and languishment Lam. 4.9 4. Shame and howling Joel 1.11 5. Rage and cursing Isa 8.21 6. It breaks all the bonds of nature Deut. 28.53 54. Lam. 4.10 Isa 9.20 But yet this famine of the body is a light judgement to a famine of the Word which drieth up the soul and bringeth with it eternal death Amos 8.11 12. Miserable was the famine amongst the Jews in Jerusalem besieged by the Romanes some chewing the graines of raw wheat wives snatching the meat from their husbands ●useb l. 3. c. 6. children from their parents and that which was most miserable the mothers from the infants mouths c. Many seeing no way but one went and and laid them down upon the Beers to welcome death So miserable was the sight that Titus himself sorrowed and sighed and stretching forth his hands called God to witnesse Turk Hist fol. 1●09 that he was not the cause of this calamity In Transilvania they ate up all the dogs cats mice and rats that they could get dead horses loathsome carrion of other hunger-starved beasts One man did eat another A woman having six children did among them eat one another until they were at length all six devoured yna thieves and malefactors hanged for their villanies were by the poor and miserably hungry people cut down from the Gallows and devoured At Athens the father and son fought for a dead mouse which dropped down betwen them from the top of the house God can cause a famine either by immoderate drought Joel 1.10 Or by immoderate moisture vers 17. These are usually the natural causes of famine but 't is good to enquire after the supernatural as Jacob enquired who stood on the top of the ladder and sent the Angels to and fro Gen. 28.13 I behold and low a black horse Pestilence The word in the Hebrew Ezek. 14.19 comes from another word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Loqui which signifieth to speak And
indeed in this judgment the Lord speaks aloud One calls it Bellum divinum Homer saith that the Plague is the arrow of God And Hyppocrates That a great Plague among them was the Divine disease 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because a punishment sent from God more immediately as an evil messenger And indeed it hath less of man and second causes in it than others Though second causes are not wholly denied yet they are hard to be found out Quicquid asseratur omnis pestilentiae caeca et delitescens est causa et aliunde quàm ex primis qualitatibus aut ex putredine perfecta Fern. De abd it rerum caus it puzzles the learned Physicians clearly to express them some referring it to the indisposition of the air others to malignant occult qualities in the air body or diet some to corruption in the blood and others to hunger and surfeit But Senertus concludes very honestly Qualis sit pestilentialis veneni natura qua ejus in qualibet pestilenti constitutione differentia nemo hactenus satis explicavit Lib. 4. cap. 10. Gods hand is seen much in this noisom disease Some Pestilences kill cattel and not men some kill men and not cattel and some kill one sort of men and not others as the le●rded have observed A certain Historian calls it and aptly A scourge of the greatest multitudes and the handmaid of Famine For this deadly disease lays heaps upon heaps as many places have had lamentable experience and scarce leaveth living enow to bury the dead As in the days of Decius the Emperor In David's time Seventy thousand were consumed by it in three days 2 Sam. 24.15 In Vespasian's days at Rome Euseb in Chrónico there died Ten thousand a day for many days together And in the year 1345. it was so general through the Christian world that it destroyed half mankind Where God gives it a commission it runs as fire in a corn-field Experience clears it however some have questioned it that a godly man may die of the Plague As did Oecolampadius and others Psal ●91 Hezekiah is thought to have had it So had reverend Beza his family was four several times visited herewith who was much comforted under it and other heavy afflictions by that sweet Psalm as himself witnesseth The Arrow that flieth by day the Pestilence that walketh in darkness Psal 91.5 6. Political Administration Vulgus The Common people I Do not regard saith Seneca to please the Vulgar for the things that I know the people do not approve and the things that the people approve I know not Nunquam volui populo placere nam quae ego scio non probat populus quae probat populus ego nescio Epist. Yet it 's good for Princes to know that if the common people be a beast of many heads it hath more hands and therefore not to be despised A good Horsman must sometimes use the reins not always the spur Some are to their Country as the worm in wood or moth in cloth not Common-wealths but rather Common-woes men Grievous was the disorder when Herod cannot be wrought with but by Herodias nor Pilate but with his wife underhand It is also hard with the whole body when the stomack which should feed all and concoct nourishment is foul and distempered The whole head is sick and the whole heart faint Isa 1.5 Magistrate A good Magistrate is a faithful Deputy of his Maker B. H. Magistratus descrip●●● His breast is the Ocean whereinto all the cares of private men empty themselves which as he received without complaint so he sends them forth in a wise conveyance by the streams of Justice His doors his ears are ever open to suiters and not who comes first speeds well but whose cause is best On the Bench he is another from himself at home all private respects of blood alliance amity are forgotten and if his own Son come under trial he knows him not Pity which is the praise of humanity and the fruit of a Christian love is by him thrown over the bar As for Favour the false advocate of the gracious he allows him not to appear in the Court there only Causes are heard speak not Persons Truth must strip her and come in naked to his bar without false bodies or colours A Bribe or a Letter on the Bench or a word of a Grate man are answered with an angry repulse Displeasure Revenge and Recompence stand on both sides the Bench but he regards them not only he looks at Equity right before him His hand is flower than his tongue but when he is urged by occasion either to doom or execution he shews how he abhorreth merciful Injustice his forehead is rugged and severe able to discountenance villany I know not whether he be more feared or loved his affections are so sweetly tempered The good fear him lovingly the mild sort love him fearfully and only the wicked man fears him slavishly If he be partial it is to his enemy His sword hath neither rusted for want of use nor surfeiteth with blood but after many threats is unsheathed as the dreadful instrument of Divine revenge He is the Guard of good Laws the Refuge of Innocency the Recompencer of the Guilty the Pay-master of good Deserts the Champion of Justice the Patron of Peace the Father of the Country and as it were another God on earth Magistratus vocantur ab Aristotele 3 Pol. c. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui enim legi concedit imperium ille videtur Dei permittere imperium Amongst the Romans Godw. Antiq. l. 3. c. 1. the Praetor or Lord Chief Justice might not keep Court and administer Justice upon certain days without the speaking of these three words Do Dico Addico Dabat actionem dicebat jus addicebat tam res quàm homines The Magistrate hath not to do in sacris but circa sacra He may not do Vzzia's work but Hezekia's The Minister hath vim admonendi the Magistrate vim coercendi Heathens pictured Magistrates by a Fountain because it conveys water all about Bad Magistrates are as a Briar Ut t●i inveniatur dolor ubi sperabitur auxilium Hierom. Mic. 7.4 or as a Thorn-hedge a man that takes hold with his fingers is prickt and glad to let go Or as the silly sheep that flying to the bush for defence in weather loseth part of her fleece So that a man shall have grief where he hoped for help and succour Or like unto Oaks which are strong but bear no other fruit but acorns for swine A good Magistrate like thunder fears many Poena ad paucos c. Psal 101.1 hurts few He sings of mercy and judgment which are the brightest stars in the sphere of Majesty He bathes the sword of Justice in the oil of mercy A well-tempered mixture of both these preserves the Commonwealth Cujus potestas ejus est actus People are but the Magistrates