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A00945 Certaine very proper, and most profitable similies wherein sundrie, and very many, most foule vices, and dangerous sinnes, of all sorts, are so plainly laid open, and displaied in their kindes, and so pointed at with the finger of God, ... Collected by Anthonie Fletcher, minister of the word of God, ... This present yeere of our happines 1595. Fletcher, Anthonie. 1595 (1595) STC 11053; ESTC S116009 166,265 184

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by and by iudge that the prince or gouernor of the same is iust and very mightie and wise though thou seest him not Euen so in the huge greatnes of this world and the agreement and well hanging togither of the things contained in the same though differing in their natures and the apt and fit placing of the whole it cannot be but that thou wilt presently conceiue in thy minde that there is a great a wise and mightie creator and preseruer of these things For not onely the mighty works of God in this great world but also his incomparable workmanship in the little world that is in man himselfe for so he is called of some do teach vs woonderfull knowledge of God The prophet Dauid speaking to God saith Thy knowledge O Lord is made woonderfull by me As if he should say By the knowledge of my selfe O Lord I am come to a woonderfull knowledge of thée AS the cause of trées and plants of their rootes stocks stems and boughes is in the séede So the cause of our transgressions foule sinnes and most dangerous iniquities is our owne corruption wherewith we are mooued and inclined to all euill and the ignorance and not knowing of our selues wherewith we are greatly hindred in the knowledge of our God and do also most sharply censure those things in others which we do loue and cherish in our selues We must know also that selfe loue is vnto vs a perilous theefe for it doth rob vs of the knowledge of our selues it blindeth our eies and darkeneth our vnderstanding It is a very common théefe so ranging and robbing in euery place so raigning and ruling without controlment yea it is so welcome to high and lowe that that saying of the apostle may séeme to haue beene spoken of these our daies Dangerous times will come saith he and men shal be louers of themselues O how true is it yea it is to too true that we neuer set our selues before our owne eies that is we neuer stay we neuer examine our owne thoughts words and works but let them passe and go on like roages and vagrant persons till by some others they be apprehended they go vntouched of our selues we be lynces that is earnest priers into the liues of others but about our owne liues we are very moles or wants that is starke blinde EVen as whéeles do run most lightly So godly men and vertuous women are most easily mooued to euery good action vpon any occasion offered If they do but heare of the wants miseries calamities pouertie imprisonment and sicknes of their poore brethren they presently begin to care for them and to cast with themselues how they may reléeue them succour helpe and comfort them The troubles and afflictions of their Christian brethren are to them as if they were their owne AS a whéele doth touch the ground onely with one side or a little part and with the other is lifted from the earth So a man that feareth God and loueth righteousnes and is carefull for the saluation of his soule dwelleth héere vpon the earth onely in bodie but in affect and desire he is lifted vp on high and so dwelleth in heauen in his meditations and the thoughts of his hart AS men in a cléere and bright shining night passing or trauelling néere vnto a déepe riuer do plainly sée and behold in a calme the shadowes and beautifull likenesses of the round moone and glistering stars but those stars and moone though they séeme to be in the waters are notwithstanding placed in the skies Euen so men that haue gathered and learned wisedome out of the word of God and do direct the whole course of their liues by the line of the same although they séeme to be in the flood of this life which daily is tending towards the sea of death yet in spirit and in minde they are fixed and placed in heauen and leading an heauenly and godly life they contemne and despise all those things which vnto the wicked and vngodly do séeme great high and precious matters and do draw after them with great force the most part of the world AS it behooueth him that walketh vpon coardes strained and fastened on high diligently to looke to his footing that he may not totter or decline this way or that way bicause he must néeds perish if neuer so little hée misse his way Euen so it standeth vs vpon to be warie and carefully to looke about vs and to take good héede where we set our feete that is our affections and the delights of our harts least we fall downe headlong into the bottomlesse gulphe of Gods displeasure For if we will fire our affections and bende our wils with a deliberate consent to do the thing that is euill vniust and vngodly making no conscience of any thing that we do be it neuer so opposite and contrary to the will of God it cannot be but falling from the state of grace we shall fall most suddenly and shamefully into the infernall pit of hell death and damnation From whence there neuer was there is not neither euer shall be any returne nor deliuerie Our blindnes in heauenly things héere shal be most iustly rewarded with intollerable tortures in most horrible feareful and stinking darknes there where no ease end nor remedie shall euer be found Let vs therefore be very carefull and take good héede that we lose not our eies and indéede our eies are then put out and we do vtterly lose our sight when we giue our selues ouer to carnall delights to fleshly lusts to worldly pleasures and to loue more the things that are below in the earth then those things that are aboue in heauen with God euerlasting life it selfe This was shadowed in Samson for the Palestines pulled not out the eies of that famous man vntill he had slept in Dalilaes bosome neither shall thy enimies blinde thée vnlesse thou wilt resigne thy selfe to foule delights filthy pleasures Whersoeuer soule lustes and forbidden pleasures do beare the sway there is no place for temperance and in the kingdom of dishonest loue vertue is not known And where vertue is wanting there is no wisedome and where wisedome is banished there is no sight but a miserable blindnes of minde and where Sathan the God of this world hath blinded mens mindes there is most certaine death and lamentable destruction The deuill that old serpent our deadly enimie doth so extremely hate vs that he layeth and kéepeth a continuall siege against all vertue and doth what he can to poison and to kill it euen in the hatching We haue great néede therefore of manie eies and many and continuall watchings that we may auoyde and escape his deceits that he trap vs not Pharao would kill the male children of the Israelites in their birth bicause the people of God should not increase this was the commandement of the deuill of Egypt and now Sathan doth what he can to kill
be fed with delicates and dainties from heauen and are nourished with the grace fauor of God they holde vp their hands they turne vp their eies they lift vp their harts and mindes to God that is in heauen from whence their soules receiue comfort ioy saluation and euerlasting life Such men are not in loue with this worlde nor with the transitorie things of the same They know and consider that the earth and all that is in it was once nothing and that it shall returne to nothing againe All is vanitie and vanitie of vanities But all their felicitie ioye and comfort is in the worde and will of God to know it that whiles they liue héere below in the earth they may do it That the course of this life being ended they may haue and enioy euerlasting life through Iesus Christ our Lorde LEarned and famous writers do report that in the vniuersall world there is nothing harder then the adamant stone especially that which is had in the Indians which in firmenes hardnes and valure excéedeth the rest but I am of opinion that the hart of man is harder than it for the adamant though it will giue place to no other thing nor be softened by any other means yet is it said to be subdued and mollified with the warme bloud of a goate But the hart of a man being hardned through the continuance and custome of sinne wil not be mollified brideled nor tamed neither with the bloud of a goat nor yet with the bloud of that immaculate lambe Christ Iesus which gaue himselfe a sacrifice for vs vpon the altar of the crosse and there bestowed his bloud that he might mittigate and appease our wilde mindes and pricke to the quicke our harde and senselesse harts and to open vnto vs the waie to the attaining of eternal life and euerlasting saluation O harde saith Bernard and hardened sonnes of Adam that will not be mollified with so great a force and power of loue With whom the bitter pangs of Christ his death and passion cannot preuaile We are surely that people to whom the Lord speaketh by Esay the prophet sayeng I know that thou art hard harted and that thy necke is a synewe of iron and that thy face is of brasse And Ieremie out of doubt speaketh no lesse of vs than of the Iewes they haue made saith he their faces harder then flint and they will not be conuerted I would to God these sayings did onely touch the Iewes and did not also hit a number of vs that professe the name of Christ looke to be saued by him pat vpon the thumbes Wée are proud hawtie and high minded and we hate to be humbled we are couetous enuious leacherous and we will not be brideled Wée are very rich and religious in words but we are very beggerly and haue no religion in our works Our lips and tongues onely are gilded and tipt with good spéeches but our harts are far from the Lorde The almightie vouchsafe to open the eies of our mindes and to mollifie our harts that we may sée and receiue his grace offered vnto vs and that forsakeing our selues and our sinnes we may be conuerted vnto him Amen AS the sunne doth not leaue shining and sending foorth his bright beames although a cloude will sometimes darken his light Euen so we must not giue ouer to exercise godlines and to do well euen towards them that be our enimies and will hate and persecute vs and the better we do the woorse will deale with vs. Christ commandeth vs to loue our enimies and to do them good and to pray for them that hate vs and persecute vs. AS the nut and oliue trées although they be beaten with rods yet bring foorth most plentifull fruits So we must not be weary of well dooing nor caste the exercise and practise of godlines behinde vs but rather more willingly and feruentlie procéede go on in the same although the friends of this world shall braule and rate at vs shall curse reuile and most vnkindly intreate vs. The lot of vertue is to be enuied and to finde fewe friends and if at all to be but coldly intertained with the most parte and greatest number of the worlde The prophet of God complaineth that for his vertues sake the princes of the earth laid their heads togither against him and yet he shronke not EVen as a quiet calme and pleasant water will shew vnto vs if we looke into it the verie image and likenes of our selues as it were a glasse but mooued stirred and troubled it doth not so euen so our owne harts if they be quiet and not troubled with horrors nor distempered with feares will plainly shew vs what we be so that we may easilie know our selues and not be deceiued but being filled with feares tossed with terrors and ouerwhelmed with troubles they cannot do so It behooueth vs therefore that our harts be not troubled nor ouerladen with feares Christ willeth his disciples that they fears not nor that their harts be troubled and in another place hée saith Feare not my little flocke The prophet was in heauie plight when he cried O Lord my hart is sore troubled And in an other place I was troubled in my sléepe Therefore that we may haue our harts quiet our soules in peace and our consciences vntroubled Let vs beware of sinne flie from all iniquitie and walke vprightly before our God all the daies of our liues God grant we may Then may wée saie The Lorde is the protector of my life of whom shall I be afraid And againe I will feare no ill for thou Lord art with me And if God be with vs who can hurt vs A Scorpion is a venemous creature which hath a pleasant pace but woundeth deadly with hir taile shée stingeth not with hir face but with hir hinder part Such a one is euerie smooth toonged and flattering bodie Which speaketh faire to his neighbours face and killeth him in his hart Honest Cato to see too but cruell Nero in experience AS a Bée doth carie a floure in hir mouth but behinde doth pricke verie sharpely with hir stinge So verie manie in these daies do vse most sweet and pleasant spéeches wil euen stroke as it were thy humor and disposition with soft and sugred communication to the ende that by reason of some malice couched in their harts they may worke thy woe and vtter ouerthrow Of these Dauid speaketh They came about me like bees c. Wicked men therefore must be taken héede of For the Scriptures do painte them out in their colours that we may shun them Mathew and Iohn do call them woolues Luke foxes Mathew and Luke the generation of vipers The Lord deliuer vs from them Amen EVen as a candle that it may giue light vnto others it selfe is burned and consumed And as salt it selfe is brused and molten
and compasseth about with the shadow thereof all those that flie to him for succour yea all the poore birds of God shall safely builde their nests vnder the shadow of his boughes He that dwelleth saith the prophet in the helpe of the almightie shall rest in the protection of the God of heauen Indéede to be vnder the Lords protection and in his fauour is to be in all safetie against all power of men and diuels and to be from vnder the wings of his grace is to lie open to all dangers and to death and destruction it selfe of our soules and bodies The Lord therefore kéepe vs so néere vnto himselfe in due obedience to his will and word that he may vouchsafe to be our shield and buckler against all the assaults of sathan EVen as lightenings do smite whatsoeuer they finde in the earth except the lawrell trée as Plinie affirmeth in his second booke chapter 55 So great calamitie is able to take away and to ouerthrow whatsoeuer is in man or that he hath saue onely firme and constant vertue for constant vertue is a goodly lawrell trée euer florishing and gréene and will not be consumed burnt vp nor destroied with any fire that breaketh out of the cloudes be it neuer so fierce nor with any violence of torments and troubles whatsoeuer To this vertue doth the apostle exhort vs saying My déere brethren ●e ye constant and vnmooueable alwaies rich in the worke of the Lord and indéed they that are grounded in the loue of Christ and leaue nothing vndone to auoid the dishonoring of God and the offending of their brethren and do their best indeuour to honor and obey the almightie and to edifie his seruant● do not onely not feare the firebrands of any sorrow whatsoeuer but also do euen despise all the firie flashings and thunderclaps of the world and do remaine constant and vnchangeable in the seruice of God euen to the losse of their liues if néede be Infidels that knew not Christ but were méere strangers vnto him thought it better to lose their liues than to violate their promises and othes made to their enimies Much more then ought Christians in such cases to be constant The Lord himselfe in the mouth of Ezechiel the prophet affirmeth that he shall neuer thriue nor prosper that maketh no conscience of violating and breaking his oth wherewith he hath bound himselfe though it be to his deadly enimie And Iosua hauing promised vpon his oth that the Gabaonites should liue in the countrie vntouched afterward when their great deceit was discouered and they found most vnwoorthie to liue yet for his oth sake he spared their liues We haue sworne vnto them saith he in the name of the God of Israel and therefore we cannot touch them We learne by this to beware how we binde our selues by othes but if we haue once done it we must not regard to whom but by whom we haue sworne and bound our selues EVen as the lambes with the which the shéepe were conceiued as they beheld Iacobs rod were of the same colour that the rod was of So such as the religion and actions of princes péeres of realmes and countries ministers parents and gouerners be such for the most part is the religion and such be the actions of subiects and inferiour persons For as examples are very dangerous in euill things so be they of great force and vertue in good and holy things When princes will haue godlie vertuous loyall and obedient subiects they must deale with them as Iacob did with his shéepe they must lay before them the rod of true religion iustice holines righteousnes and integritie of life and maners and then no doubt they will conceiue in their harts thoughts that be pure righteous chaste sound and holy and bring foorth great plentie of fruits of the same colour that the rod is of to wit not words onely but works also of ●aith and obedience to God and man Parents with their natural children ministers of the word with their spiritual children and maisters with their seruants must do the like AS most pleasant perfumes do euen then when they be in the fire giue out a most excellent odor and their swéetest sauour Euen so a vertuous and godly man when he is thrust into the midst of the hote scorching fire of calamitie and miserie doth then shew most his vertue faith religion patience and constancie THere be some men which now and then do bestow great cost and much of their riches vpon those that néede them not not drawne therunto with either loue or mercie but caried with vaine glory with vanity it selfe so to do Such men are like fluds which send their waters into the sea and leaue the drie land which is very thirsty vnwatred But such men by the commandement and will of God should helpe the poore féede the hungrie cloth the naked harbor the harborlesse visite and redéeme captiues c. For that is the mercy whereto the Lords blessing and mercy belongeth according to that he saith Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy It is a worlde to sée and consider that man dare be so bold and so shamelesse to make but a tush or a thing of nothing of the Lords commandement when in the mouth of his prophets he saith Breake thy bread vnto the hungrie And Giue thy bread to the hungrie soule and couer the naked with thy garment if thou wilt liue and be saued How thinkest thou O man that God will heare thée séeing thou thinkest him not woorthie the hearing With what hart canst thou beg a kingdome of him to whom thou deniest a péece of bread when he sendeth thine and his owne brother for it dost thou thinke that he will bestow vpon thée an immortall garment of eternall glorie séeing thou refusest to giue to his poore naked seruant that is readie to perish and to die with cold one of thy superfluous and old moth eaten garments The vaine men of the world which do lauish out their riches and substance vpon néedlesse things and méere vanities without regarding the néedie saints of God will neuer be able to answer their dooings before the iudgement seate of Christ Will the Lord of heauen and earth take this in good part that haukes and dogs are kept and fed fat and faire and his séely soules that he died for haue neither coates nor flesh vpon their backs or doth this please him that wals and stones be most curiously and costly adorned and couered and men want to eate and wherewith to couer their nakednes How swéete a sacrifice were it to God and how highly would it please him if many rich and costly suits of apparell that men and women haue more then they néed and many golden chaines care rings and other costlie iewels which serue more for pride then for profit were willingly euen in loue to God translated by the owners of
very good king and setteth down a very plaine paterne a most liuely picture of his vertue that such a man as walketh in an vndefiled way to wit whose life is vnreprooueable shall serue him and be to him a courtier and a counseller and voweth that no man of pride no vaine person nor speaker of euill things shall dwel in his house nor kéepe within his court As if he should say I will diligently inquire and search who they be which in any land countrie and kingdome are faithfull and do loue righteousnes and by their counsell with I be instructed and the familiaritie of them will I vse but all vngodly proud blasphemous lying deceitfull and wicked persons of all sorts will I vtterly expulse out of my house and driue and thrust them out of my court and will suffer them to finde no rest within my kingdome God grant that all good godly Christian princes may follow the steps and example of king Dauid in this and all other his princely vertues and holy exercises Amen IT is the part and dutie of euery good Christian that whatsoeuer he doth in word or déede he do all in the name of the Lord Iesus that is to the glorie of God and in an affiance and confidence that he hath in the name of God that he wil protect defend blesse prosper and preserue him in doing of the same and so to giue vp his hart minde will worke and all vnto God before he do attempt the doing and performance of the same There be very many that do some dédes which to sée to are very good works but not the lesse they kéepe their harts mindes and wils diuided and separated far from God Those things to wit their harts mindes wils and purposes they steale from the Lord and do bestow them vpon the world they regard not God they séeke onely to please men in the action of vertue they haue no respect vnto vertue it selfe but onely and barely to the shew and shape or likenes of vertue Such men are like vnto painters which haue a greater regarde to the colours and shadowes of images and pictures than vnto the substance of the same and contemning the inward parts they bestow all the wit skill and cunning they haue in expressing and painting out a bare shadow and outside of the thing and the more they deceiue the eies of them that behold it the more excellent men are they iudged But the Lord requireth at our hands first fruits that is our harts mindes wils desires and all that is in vs and that we should euen offer vp and consecrate vnto him our selues euen our bodies a quicke a●●●iuing sacrifice holy and pleasing God which is our reasonable seruice of God And when the Apostle willeth vs or rather beséecheth vs that we giue our bodies a liuely sacrifice holy and acceptable to God and calleth the same our reasonable seruice of God he meaneth that the offering of dead calues and vnreasonable beasts as in times past the Iewes offered vnto him wil not please God now neither that the Lord will accept and take in good part any seruice or sacrifice that we shall bring and lay before him either in words or works so long as we loue sinne and harbour iniquitie in our harts mindes and members The Lord will receiue no sacrifice nor seruice of those that be strangers vnto him but onely of those which are graffed in Christ Iesu and are now become in him new creatures in whom there is a newnes a righteousnes and holines of life in whom all old foule filthie and vngodly conuersation is past And therefore the Apostle saith to the Ephesians Be ye renewed in the spirit of your minde and put ye on the new man and to the Colossians he giueth counsell that they destroy the olde man with all his trash and put on the new man and most louingly he beseecheth the Romanes saying Let vs walke in newnes of life But bicause this newnes cannot be wrought in vs without the grace and holy spirit of God Dauid the prophet doth mightily crie vnto the Lord and saith O God create a new hart within me and renew a right spirit within my bowels or inward parts The Lord requireth of vs a lambe that is innocencie humilitie and méekenes and he would haue vs to offer vnto him a yoong pigeon or a turtle doue that is true contrition and puritie of hart and minde for those swéete birds do vse mourning in stéed of singing and are pretie and fine paterns of puritie and innocencie The Lord will not take receiue nor accept barking curre dogs that is railing raging cursing lying slandering blaspheming or any such vngodly persons neither their offerings sacrifices nor praiers when they come and bring and lay them before him no more than he did the sacrifice of Caine. The roring and cruell lion the rauening wolfe the foule and dirtie swine the blinde mole or want that is the tyrannicall and mercilesse man the oppressor piller and poller of his brethren the man that is méere naturall and carnall the man that is blinde and ignorant in spirituall and heauenly things they are neither sacrifices nor sacrificers that God will or is woont to take any pleasure in as he doth abhorre the vices so for the vices sake he doth detest the vessels vntill such time as they be purged and clensed of such foule and filthie matter If there were no other but onely Salomon to tell vs that the Lord requireth and calleth for our harts it is great reason that we should beléeue the Lord at one word and at one message when so louingly and fatherly he saith My sonne giue me thy hart The Lord helpe vs and grant that we may giue him our harts and whatsoeuer else of the inward and outward man Amen HEliotropium the herbe of the sunne so called bicause it windeth it selfe about with the sunne in the morning very early it beholdeth the rising thereof and all the day it euen followeth the course of the sunne euer turning the leaues towards the same but the roote it neuer changeth stirreth nor mooueth it hath that still fast fixed within the earth So very many will séeme to follow the sunne of righteousnes Christ Iesus but it is onely in leaues and outward shewes for their rootes that is their harts are far and fast within the earth where indéede their treasure is according to that which Christ himselfe doth say Where thy treasure is there is thy hart also Such men will lift vp their hands eies and voices towards heauen and God and with such goodly gréene leaues will make a faire florish and a beautfull shew but their harts and affections are surely set vpon earthly vaine vile and transitorie things and are as far from God as heauen and earth are distant one from the other They shew vnto the Lord onely bare and fruitlesse leaues
enuious persons are mightily tormented at the prosperitie of a superior bicause they cannot match him and they greatly disdaine an inferior least he should ouertake them and they cannot abide their equals for their equalitie sake Learned Basill and Bernard do compare an enuious person with a viper for as she conceiueth hir yoong one which as they report is brought foorth with the breaking of the belly of hirdam and vtterly killing hir bréeder So the enuious man conceiueth that enuie which gnaweth and teareth in péeces himselfe and worketh his owne ruine and vtter destruction ENuie is a picture or a resemblance of hell it is a great losse without any gaine or aduantage it is a dangerous dammage without one dram of commoditie Cursed Cain set forward with the stinging goades and smarting pricks of enuie did kill Abel his good and gracious brother And the sonnes of Iacob in their hot burning enuie sold Ioseph their innocent and best brother Saule in like maner being through enuie almost beside himselfe sought by all meanes to take away the life of holy and faithfull Dauid We are taught in the booke of Wisedome that through the enuie of the diuell death entred into the world This euil and dangerous disease is very busie in these our daies to enuie superiors to speake euill of men in authoritie to backbite and slander them which séeke the vnitie and the peace of the church and to condemne those that hunger and thirst after the aduancement of Gods glorie and the frée passage of the Gospell of Christ The Lord amend it AS a staffe made of a réede is hollow and emptie So the confidence and trust which we put in this world is vaine and will deceiue vs. Therefore the Lord commanded the people of Israel by the prophet Esay that they should not go downe into Egypt for refuge and doth denounce the destruction of those that would flie thither in these words We be to them which go downe into Egypt to séeke for helpe there And againe Thou dost trust vpon a staffe of a réede and the same broken that is vpon Egypt c. it will deceiue thée Euen such is the helpe of man whereunto infinite thousands of people despising and forsaking God do most earnestly flie But let vs leane vpon and trust to the rod of our God which deuoured the rods of the Egyptians and diuided the red sea into two parts whereof Dauid speaketh Thy rod thy staffe O Lord they haue comforted me EVen as learned and skilfull physitions with the bitter potions and sharpe medicines which they minister vnto their patients do mixe some swéete and pleasant thing to win those that be sicke the more willingly to receiue them So preachers of the word of God being learned and godly wise ought if néede be to temper their bitter and rough reprehensions with a swéet and comfortable doctrine and so of sharpnes and mildnes to make a soueraigne and holsome medicine to heale the spirituall griefes and diseases of their hearers For in all things that are done and spoken a measure kéeping and temperance must be vsed and consideration must be had what is fit for the time and agréeable to the persons and what in all our words and actions doth beséeme or misbese●me vs. AS some birds afore they flie out and mount on high stoupe downe with their heads and touch the ground with their bils So euery man before he be aduanced to any high dignitie ought to shew great humblenes of minde and a casting downe of himselfe EVen as many men are much delighted with musicke and will most gladly heare musitions make songs of the noble acts and singular vertues of many men but neuer care to imitate one vertue of a thousand which they heare with praises extolled vnto the skies So very many men in these our daies are outwardly very forward to heare sermons and the word preached and as Ananias will be willingly to sée to at some cost to maintaine preachers and all is in many but méere hypocrisie to please their owne humors with some strange and new matter with some Logike Rethorike and brauerie of words which they looke for without any purpose to frame their liues after such doctrine as the preacher deliuereth AS bées passing ouer other things take pleasure only in flowers and forsaking the rest do crop them So some hearers of the word preached do only desire to haue their eares fed with fine phrases delicate flowers of eloquence daintie similies pretie comparisons and pleasant histories as for sound doctrine they contemne it and hate to haue it a bridle for their lusts a reproouer of their vanities and a glasse to sée themselues in they séeke after flatteries and fables and they loath the truth which should do them good The holy apostle foreséeing this said The time will come when they will not abide wholsome doctrine but after their owne lusts will gather to themselues teachers hauing itching eares will be turned into fables And we read in the Acts of the Apostles that the Athenians applied themselues to nothing else but to heare and to learne newes And yet notwithstanding though the case stand thus in our time the preachers of the word ought not to giue ouer their faithfull labours in teaching but rather to be the more diligent carefull and feruent For although there be many curious vaine and idle hearers of their doctrine yet there be many graue learned and godly ones which séeke onely the good of their soules and the comfort of their consciences And if there were among a thousand onely one that loued and sought the truth for that one sake the truth of God ought to be preached That same excellent saying of the famous Poet Antimachus is well woorth the remembring who when he read his booke to all his schollers called togither and all sauing Plato forsooke him before he had ended his reading I will saith he go forward and reade on for Plato is to me as much as all the rest AS physitions do oftentimes cut off a rotten member least it corrupt and putrifie the other members So it behooueth men of authoritie if they will preserue the common-wealth in safetie to roote out of it all those that do giue themselues euen with gréedines to beastly behauiour and to rotten conditions as theft adulterie fornication murther blasphemie trecherie treason and such like least the rotten ones destroy them that be sound and the brutishly minded staine those that be of chaste conuersation and the wicked and rebellious crew draw the better sort to disobedience Solon said wisely that A common wealth is maintained and vpholden with two things to wit with due reward and due punishment For as it behooueth to reward well those that be profitable members and such as do liue in the feare of God and due obedience so it is no lesse necessarie and néedfull to giue
on high first kéepeth it lowe and holdeth it downe with the force of a van and the gathering togither of much winde Euen so our God presseth vs downe and kéepeth vs lowe that he may lift vs vp and exalt vs on high he throweth vs downe héere in earth that he may exalt vs in heauen and laieth many times disgrace vpon vs in this world among men that we may be gracious in the world to come with himselfe his angels and his saints On the other side AS a wrastler imbracing him with whom he striueth in the wrastling place for victorie lifteth him vp the higher that with the greater force he may hurle him against the ground So this world doth extoll vs that with throwing vs downe headlong it may hurt vs and that we may fall from the top of deceitfull and transitorie glorie downe to the bottome of most certaine and perpetuall ignominie Cyprian saith The world smileth vpon a man with a cruell purpose it flattereth to deceiue it calleth a man to it to kill him it extolleth him to vndo him AS men mad and frantike are woont to teare and rent themselues So wicked and vngodly men inflict vpon themselues most deadly and incurable wounds yea they be most wilfull murtherers of their owne soules and bodies For that is true in the booke of Wisedome Man through his owne naughtines killeth his owne soule And what greater madnes can there be than a man to run headlong vpon euerlasting destruction Iob hauing a desire to describe the ignorance of such men and to declare that euen in matters most euident and plaine they be vtterly void and destitute of wisedome he saith In the day light they run into darknes and as in the night so stumble they at noone daies And whereas the feare of God is the beginning of wisdome as Dauid and Salomon his sonne do both affirme and vngodly men loden with all maner of naughtines to the feare of God are méere strangers it is plainly and truly concluded that they be not onely without wisedome but also that they haue not so much as the beginning of the same AS the filthie swine regard not but thrust from them roses that are most beautifull and swéete and séeme to contemne most fragrant and pleasant flowers and do rather séeke after foule puddles and stinking mire and forsaking dainty dishes and costly iuncates do franke themselues most gréedily with wilde mast and vncleane things So vngodly men haue no taste of the word of God but hunting after vncertaine riches which are in continuall hazard and at the length will deceiue them they are as it were fettered in the inchanting pleasures and pestilent flickerings of the world From the which the Lord preserue and deliuer vs. Amen AS in a fruitfull and fertile ground among many wholsome and very medicinable herbes some that be dangerous and full of poyson do grow So the wits and wisedome of men togither with some profitable and wholsome counsels and admonitions do bring foorth perilous and pestilent errors and are therfore with wisedome and great discretion to be regarded euen as herbes are to be gathered and vsed But this wisedome and discretion is to be sought for and had onely in the word of God which is a lanterne to our féete and a most perfect light vnto our pathes It is onely acceptable to the soules of Gods saints and nothing but it doth féede them to eternall life It is swéeter vnto them than hony and the hony combe In mens iudgements words and works we may be deceiued in the Lords we cannot Thy iudgements O Lord saith Dauid are iust and more to be desired than fine golde or pretious stones and they are swéeter than hony and the hony combe It is the power of saluation to all that beléeue it it is able to saue our soules if it be throughly rooted in vs. The word of the Lord laid vp in our harts doth preserue vs from sinne it clenseth our harts and by the working of the holy Ghost with it it createth right spirits within vs. By the meanes of it the saints and seruants of God attaine to that puritie and cleannes of hart and minde that they wish for and desire nothing but that which is good godly and holy The author of the word is God himselfe who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued and therefore whatsoeuer is written in it is truth whatsoeuer is taught in it is vertue and holines whatsoeuer it promiseth after death is eternitie and endlesse ioy to the children of God when this life is ended Whereto the Lord bring vs all if it be his good pleasure AS that man that will giue an onset and encounter with an enimie or wil defend and kéepe himselfe vnwounded at his hands hath néede of a sword in his hand to smite the enimie withall and to repell his violence So whosoeuer will triumph and carry away the victorie ouer this world flesh and diuell must hold fast in his hand that is in his maners conuersation and the whole course of his life the worde of God which is called the sword of the spirit is sharper than any two edged sword This the Lord commandeth to be closed and safely laid vp in the cofer of our harts and to be worne as a signe vpon our hands and to be had for a remembrance alway before our eies Salomon doth counsell vs to binde it fast to our harts and to vse it as a chaine about our necks and to take it with vs when we walke abroad And Christ himselfe saith If any man loue me he will kéepe my saying Againe Blessed are they that heare the word of God and kéepe it The apostle also Not the hearers of the law are righteous before God but the doers of the lawe shall be iustified And Iames saith Be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your owne selues The Lord giue grace and his holy spirit vnto vs that we may loue to heare his word and to do his will EVen as doues do loue and delight in houses that be faire whited and do willingly frequent swéete and pleasant places but contemne and flie from blacke foule and vnsauorie cottages So faithles and vntrustie friends do hunt and séeke after the friendship of those men by whose wealth and riches they may be holpen reléeued and enriched But men in pouertie and distressed persons vnable to fill their bellies to clothe their backs or otherwise to pleasure them with some worldly things they vtterly despise they care not for their companie their loue nor friendship feare they God neuer so much Yea if some blustering storme and terrible tempest of aduersitie shall blowe away thy wealth and shall separate thy riches and thy selfe thy greatest friends as thou thoughtest will hide them from thée and no where be found but a faithfull friend loueth at al times
he neuer shrinketh aduersitie and prosperitie is all one to him Happy is he that findeth a true and trustie friend AS great and mighty fishes are not bred and fed in small riuers and swéet waters but in the salt and bitter waters of the seas So men that are excellent and very famous by reason of the notable and manifolde vertues wherewith they be indued are not delighted in the false and deceitfull pleasures of this world but are nourished and as it were swéetely cherished and brought vp in Christ with very sower sorrowes and bitter calamities which they endure and most patiently beare for Gods sake And as to a valiant soldier nothing is more noble and woorthie praise than to carry the armour and armes of his prince So a true Christian man estéemeth nothing of greater valure and more honorable than to beare the armes and badges of Christ his captaine that is to be throughly touched with great crosses and many afflictions and to be well armed with a godly patience Heare the Apostle that stout and valiant soldier of Christ I do beare in my body the marks of the Lord Iesu Yea he saith further All that will liue godly in Christ Iesu shall suffer persecutions Séeing Christ our head and onely sauiour suffered persecutions what maruell if we his members suffer them The holy scripture calleth calamities and persecutions yea and death it selfe indured in the quarrell of God and his truth a cup. Dauid prepared himselfe to receiue this cup I will receiue the cup of saluation and will call vpon the name of the Lord and expressing what this cup is he saith Right déere in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints Christ hath his cup and the world his the cup of Christ hath very bitter drink in it but very wholsome The cup of the world is gold to sée to and is ful of pleasures within but most pestilent and deadly it pleaseth the senses and killeth the soule AS a physition doth minister to his sicke patients sower and bitter potions to drinke that some hurtfull humor of their bodies may be expelled So God our heauenly physition willing to cure the maladies and to salue the sores of our soules doth reach vnto vs many times the cup of afflictions troubles and miseries that our sins and iniquities being taken away we may be restored to the former saluation of our soules The world doth offer vnto vs a very beautifull cup but it is full of deadly poison it delighteth our eies and taste but it worketh most surely our ouerthrow and vtter destruction This is that cup that Iohn in the Reuelation biddeth vs to beware of the Lord giue vs grace to shun it for he saith it is full of all abhomination and vncleannes Let vs chéerefully receiue the cup of Christ that is pouertie penurie obloquies euill reports backbitings slanders persecutions sicknes and death it selfe this is very sharpe and vnpleasant to our taste at the first but at the length most wholsome to our infected and sicke soules A Good bailife of husbandrie when he séeth plentifull fruits grow after his faithfull labours desireth that his lord or master may come that séeing his diligence and fidelitie in his calling he may reward him for his trauel and paines taken And a valiant soldier after dangerous fight and noble victorie gotten wisheth the presence of his prince that he vpon the view and sight of the sweate of his browes his grieuous wounds and courage may recompence the noble acts that he hath done So that man which hath faithfully handled the husbandrie and bailywike committed to him of the Lord and hath manfully fought against the world flesh and sathan and through the grace and mightie spirit of God hath gotten the vpper hand and victorie of them all he now most earnestly desireth that Christ his captaine vnder whose banner he hath fought would come that he might receiue his reward which is euerlasting ioy in heauen and eternall saluation through Christ with God his angels and saints for euer and euer Which though it be called a reward yet is it the frée gift of God vtterly vndeserued of man but onely deserued and purchased for vs by Christ Iesu in his death and passion vpon the crosse and to all that do beléeue in him it is frée But on the other side the wicked and vngodly whose delight is onely in the pleasures and pestilent flickerings of the world which do swallow vp vanities euen with gréedines and set at naught all vertue and godlines which are shut vp vnder iniquitie and become slaues vnto sinne which are pricked in their consciences and do feare the infernall woes and terrible torments of hell which are prepared for them against the day of their death they would not haue Christ to come to heare of his comming is troublesome and fearfull to them A guiltie man whose conscience doth disquiet him would neuer sée the Iudge a traitor would neuer willingly be séene of his prince nor a disloyall person of one that knoweth him AS brasse or copper doth make a greater sound and is heard farther off than gold whereas notwithstanding gold is far more excellent than it So eloquence ioined with knowledge soundeth lowder and farther than humilitie coupled with charitie and yet such humilitie is far better and more excellent than it Knowledge without humilitie puffeth vp saith the Apostle but charitie doth edifie Againe If I speake with the toongs of men and of angels and haue not charitie I am but as a sounding brasse or a tinkling cimball A great bragger and boaster of religion maketh much noise but an humble spirited Christian is far better than he AS trauellers not thinking of the sunne setting are ouertaken with darknes before they be aware So doth death suddenly come vpon many that neuer thought of it neither haue learned to die nor what shall become of them when they be dead But it behooueth all Christians that will be saued to watch to stand stedfast in the faith of Christ to quit themselues like men and to be strong and to do all that they do in loue AS earthen vessels are alike subiect to danger breaking whether they be new or old made So all men are open subiect to death alike whether they be yoong men and in their lustie and florishing age or they be old men and well strooken in yéeres If thou shalt come into a Po●ters ware-house where thou shalt sée a large table set full of pots some old and some new some little and some great and shalt demand of the Potter which of them all shall first be broken he may well say for answer That which shall fall first to the ground Euen so among men he dieth not first that is elder but he that first falleth to the ground that is that commeth fi●st to his graue What is this world else but a Potters ware-house and
pressed So man is brought to calamity that being pressed with sorrowes and exercised with afflictions he may bring foorth the swéete and pleasant liquor of obedience and vertue and so be aduanced to true Christianitie which is the greatest and highest dignitie in the world Miseries penuries and tribulations do for the most part kéepe vnder and stay our vnruly lusts and dangerous desires and are meanes that we lift vp our harts and mindes vnto God and that we be strengthened and confirmed in true pietie and vnfained godlines And on the other side prosperitie worldly wealth dignitie and honors are oftentimes meanes to hinder vs in holy exercises and to puffe vs vp with pride and vaine glorie and to drawe vs to disloyaltie and rebellion against our God The Israelites being stoong and torne of firie serpents they learned to knowe God and cried for his mercie And wicked Manasses being cast into the bands of the Babylonians and compassed round about with great calamities he fled vnto the Lord he acknowledged his sinnes sending vnto the Lord most feruent praiers and the Lord heard him And the prophet Nehemias saith They called vpon thée in the time of trouble and thou heardest them from heauen AS a master when his seruants obey him and do his will commandeth his steward or gouernor of his house to minister vnto them all things necessarie and that nothing be wanting but if they offend him and deale vnfaithfully with him he giueth a contrarie charge Euen so God the true and right owner of all things of whom the kingly prophet Dauid saith The earth is the Lords and all the fulnes thereof the round world and they that dwell therein if we do obey him and serue him faithfully and giue vnto him his due honor he commandeth the earth his ancient steward to minister vnto vs great store of necessaries and to giue vnto vs all good rich and pleasant things in due time but on the other side if we disobey him rebel against him and be not afraid to do those things which he forbiddeth vs and will commit we care not what sin euen with gréedines ioy and delight then he commandeth his steward the earth to denie foode vnto vs and to afflict vs with penurie and extreme want of all those things whereof it was woont to yéeld vs great abundance and not to be so bold as to reléeue or comfort vs vntill we be conuerted and flie vnto him confessing and acknowledging our sinnes from the bottome of our harts and most bitterly bewailing them shall prostrate our selues before the throne of grace crauing and crying for remission of our sinnes in the death and bloodshedding of our sauiour Christ crucified EVen as a colume or piller is somtime on thy right hand and sometime on thy left hand bicause thou dost change thy standing sitting or walking for it is vnmooueable and kéepeth one place So God is somtime fauorable and bountifull vnto thée and somtime séemeth to be wrath and angrie with thée bicause thou dost fall from vertue to vice from obedience and humilitie to pride and presumption for in the Lord there is no change no not so much as any shadow of change He is immutable alway one and euerlasting If thou wilt bend thy selfe to obedience and to a vertuous and godly life thou shalt euer haue him a strong rocke whereupon thou maist boldly build a castell and tower of defence he will be vnto thée a mighty pillor bearing vp heauen and earth whereto thou maist leane and not be deceiued wherein thou maiest trust and not be disappointed he will euer be at thy right hand that thou shalt not fall he will take thy part and will mightily defend thee against all thine enimies of thy bodie and of thy soule But if thou wilt shake hands with vertue and bid it adew and farewell and forsaking the waies of God wilt liue as thou list and follow thine owne corruption and make no conscience of ought thou doest defiling and blemishing thy selfe with all maner sinne and iniquitie then be sure the Lord will appeere vnto thee in his furie and indignation from whose iustice and iudgements none shall euer be able to deliuer thée the Lord therefore giue vs harts to feare him to loue him and to obey him EVen as the adamant stone placed néere vnto the load stone doth not suffer the load stone to drawe iron from it or if it seeme a little to mooue and to drawe it away it presently pulleth it backe and draweth it to it selfe Euen so a man indued with godly wisedome and righteousnes from God is firme and constant and doth so ouercome al the blustering blasts and burning brunts of calamities and miseries that he is not so scorched with the force of their flames that he prooueth vnconstant and loseth his dignitie And such is the iar and discord betwéene this world and him that being placed in the world he suffereth it not so much as in him lieth to bewitch men and to drawe them after it But if the world like a load stone shall at any time allure them to follow it he by and by bendeth himselfe with all his force by counsell by admonitions by his life and example to drawe them backe againe from it and to restore them to their former dignitie that is to the estimation and honor of true christianitie wherto the world and worldlings are méere strangers AS organ plaiers vnlesse some body blowe vnto them the windie bellowes do make no sound at all Euen so vaine men vnlesse they be pricked forward with commendations and praises of others haue neuer any minde or purpose to bend themselues to any good action EVen as marriners which are carried with the course and force of winds being in an hauen will not disanchor nor depart out of the hauen without a prosperous winde blowing to their very good liking So hypocrites do looke that the people should shout and clap their hands in token of their great praises and commendations they séeke for and hunt after vaine brutes and reports without which they are disposed to do nothing wel These men care not to do well and yet they séeke for and desire the rewards of well doing They haue no eie nor regard to God in any of their actions They are not to be imitated at any hand Christ himselfe doth giue vs warning of such Be ye not like vnto hypocrites c. But let vs do as the holy prophet of God doth teach vs I saith he haue set the Lord alwaies before mine eies he is at my right hand that I shall not be mooued Whatsoeuer he thought spoke or did he still behaued himselfe as one in the presence and sight of God and sought the glorie and praise of his name in all his actions So ought we to do the Lord grant we may This also is the Apostles counsell Whether ye eate or drinke or
whatsoeuer ye do else do all to the glorie of God AS a thicke wood and goodly groue giuing great shadowe very pleasant to behold doth delight the eies of the beholders so greatly with the varietie and thicknes of florishing trées and pleasant plants that it séemeth to be ordained onely for pleasures sake and yet within is full of poisonful serpents rauening wolues and other wilde hurtfull and cruell beasts Euen so an hypocrite when outwardly he séemeth holy and to be wel furnished with the ornaments of all sorts of vertues doth please well and delight much the eies of his beholders but within him there lurketh pride couetousnes enuie and all maner wickednesses like wilde and cruell beasts walking and wandring in the wood of his hart So that whiles he séemeth to be that he is not neither will be that he séemeth his exercise is to séeke whose house he may deuoure whose goodes he may gripe whose credit he may cracke whose name he may blemish and whose honest disposition and godly simplicity he may most abuse In the hypocrite this is verified Fained sanctitie is double iniquitie So that I speake with reuerence if any be a knaue the hypocrite is more if some may serue for one he may well stand for two Hypocrisie is a subtill euill a secret poison a lurking venome a painting and counterfetting of vertue a moath of holines In mine opinion there be no woorse men liuing than hypocrites be for when they purpose most to deceiue they handle the matter so and do so paint themselues with counterfet colour that you would thinke them to be very vertuous and godly disposed AS a flint smitten against iron or stéele doth driue out sparks of fire So godly meditations of heauenly things draw out of hard harts some warmnes and as it were fire of the loue of God The prophet Dauid had experience thereof when he said My hart wareth warme within me and in my meditation a fire was kindled That soule which shall be replenished with vertues and shal take pleasure in the contemplation of heauenly things shall no doubt haue most swift and speedie wings and shall be called most woorthily Auis petens alta se à terrae laqueis eripiens A bird that mounteth on high and pearseth the clouds fréeing hir selfe from the traps and snares of the earth Such was the soule of the prophet when he said My soule is euen as a bird escaped out of the snare of the hunter Let vs whiles it is to day and we may flie be lifted vp towards our God and forgetting the vaine things of the earth which are behinde vs and preasing with all our powers to the things aboue and neuer satisfied with the loue of God and the desire of heauen let vs boldly go forward and stretch out our selues to the reward of the high calling of God in Christ Iesu our Lord. For the things of this world haue euer béene false and at the length haue deceiued their louers and déerest friends EVen as he that hath a sonne which is in good and perfect health and a seruant that is excéeding sicke dealeth more roughly and seuerely with his sonne than with his seruant not bicause he loueth his seruant more than his sonne but bicause he would if it might be restore his sicke seruant to his former health but his sonne whom he loueth most déerely he reprooueth checketh taunteth and correcteth Euen so our God somtimes afflicteth his déere children whom he most tenderly loueth and doth suffer them to be exercised with wants with wéepings and wailings with sighes and sorrowfull sobs with hunger and cold with nakednes and want of harbour with heauines of hart and vexation of soule with sicknes of bodie and want of libertie and with a thousand other calamities and cares and in the meane time suffereth the wicked and vngodlie ones of the world to want nothing he giueth them health wealth and libertie worldly honor and dignitie and what not meaning and purposing by these meanes if the fault be not in themselues to bring them to knowe to feare to honor and to serue him by whose prouidence and appointment they haue and enioy all those good blessings and so be cured and healed of the sores and sicknes of their soules The holy men and seruants of God haue euer béene wel experienced in the Lords chastenings Ieremie the prophet saith to God Thou hast chastened me O Lord and I am corrected And the Apostle saith Whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he correcteth euery sonne that he receiueth Againe Let vs reioice in tribulations And to the Galathians God forbid that I should reioice but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ whereby the world is crucified vnto me and I to the world by the crosse vnderstand the afflictions of Christ wherewith the Apostle was exercised for Christs sake For this must euer be true All that will liue godly in Christ Iesu shall suffer persecution So that the troubles and afflictions of this life are not reiections maledictions and the curses of God but rather and most truly infallible signes of his grace and true tokens of his loue and mercies toward vs. Blessed are they saith truth it self that suffer persecution for righteousnes sake AS the skilfull pearle seller and cunning lapidarie doth willingly suffer the Indian diamond or adamant to be smitten and st●ooken with great and weightie blowes bicause he knoweth well that the hammer and anuill will sooner be bruised than the diamond or adamant will be broken So our most wise God yea onely wisedome it selfe suffereth men of excellent vertues of vnquenchable loue charitie and inuincible constancie to fall into diuers temptations and to be plunged déepe into manifold miseries bicause he will haue their inward graces to breake out and so shine before men that they seeing the constancie of his saints may glorifie God which is in heauen For he is sure that they be constant and that nothing can separate them from the loue of God Ioseph was imprisoned in Egypt Ieremie in Iudea Ezechiel in Chaldea and Iohn Baptist by wicked Herod and yet all these and infinite others did neuer shrinke from God but as they liued in him so they died in him and are exalted vp on high and shall dwell in his tabernacle and rest in the hill of his holines for euer and euer And so shall we do if we will be as they were AS when thou séest a great and goodly citie consisting of many and sundry sorts of men some of great reputation and very many of smal estimation some exceeding rich and infinite others extremely poore some in their fresh and florishing youth and some crooked with old age where all these though among themselues selues they be diuers and sundrie do liue in great concord and agrée well togither and are kept all within the bounds and limits of good and godly discipline thou wilt
and slaie all good works and all godly purposes yea he laboureth by all his meanes and instruments to strangle and to smother the very first motions of them in the harts and minds of men least they should increase and multiply he is that dragon with seauen heads which as Iohn saith in the Reuelation stoode before the woman when shée was to be deliuered of hir sonne that euen in the birth he might deuoure hir childe We may very fitly vnderstand by the woman the soule of man which when it thinketh and purposeth to do good works is said to conceiue and when it bringeth foorth and perfourmeth the same in deed is said to be deliuered as a woman of a childe but then sathan is foorthwith most eager and busie to stop the kindlie birth of vertue and godlines and to smother it so that it neuer come to light The Lord strengthen vs against his force and make vs wise against subtiltie that in all his sleights and craftie conueyances he may bée disappointed and we deliuered from him and that we may do the will and walke in the waies of our God mauger sathan and all his meanes EVen as the Ostrige being a great and mightie foule hath wings but doth not flie neither is lifted vp frō the ground with them so very many men in the world do séeme to bée caried vp to heauen vpon the wings of their ceremonies but are in déede in hart mind and desire fast nailed to the earth As the Ostrige hath wings and flieth not so they haue calling but they answere it not they haue knowledge but they practise it not they haue words but they worke not THe Kite being a most gréedie and rauening foule mounteth exceeding high so that you would thinke shee toucheth the gliding clouds and as shee flieth doth spred her wings and yet when shee is at the highest shee hath hir eies fast set and fixed below in the earth pryeng and spieng to catch if shée can some poore chicken or other praie within hir talons indéed shée flieth high but neuer looketh vp towards heauen but altogither downe towards the earth euen so thou shalt sée a number of men faining a certaine sanctymonie and counterfeiting much holines who although they are thought with the contemplation of heauenly things to be rauished and taken vp into the clouds yet they minde nothing lesse then true godlines neither any thing more then earth and earthly things Their studie is for worldly honor their greatest carking and care is for rich and large reuenues for dignities princes fauours and worldlie wealth Such men turne their backs to heauen and flie from God and so being disappointed of that light which they séemed to séeke for they are wrapped in palpable and most dangerous darknes but they that truely séeke after God do by the helpe and assistance of his holie spirite translate and conuey their minds from earth to heauen and so are illuminated with the brightnes of God his grace and loue for so saith Christ himselfe He that foloweth me walketh not in darknes but shall haue the light of life But we shall neuer follow Christ as we ought vnlesse we shall first vtterly denie our selues for he saith If anie man will folow me let him denie himself and take vp his crosse and folow me and then and so often do we denie our selues as treading vnder féete our old and former sins we leaue to be that we haue béene and begin to be that we haue not béene and follow the counsell of the apostle saying Layeng aside our old conuersation and putting off the old man which is corrupted after the lusts of the flesh let vs be renued in the spirit of our minds But alas I speake it with gréefe of hart the most part of the world despising and forsaking God do take for their guide and do folow as their captaine the violent lusts and foule appetites of their owne corrupted and cankered harts But if we woulde consider what that is that driueth vs whither we are going in such great haste what we do whom we folow what woe wée worke our selues and what will be the end we would surelie forsake those waies of our owne and turne our féete into the waies that is into the statutes and lawes of our God Dauid tooke this course and so the Lord graunt we may Amen EVen as a Bird doth not flie with one wing alone but with twaine So it is not enough that we know much of the Lords worde and will but we must do it also It will not suffice vs at the latter daie that we haue béene great professors of the Gospell and are deepely learned if also we haue not béene inflamed with a loue to God aboue all things and haue not loued our brethren as our selues if our knowledge our faith and profession do not mooue vs to praie to God for to visite and to comfort our poore brethren being sicke in prison or otherwise distressed if I say our faith and knowledge yéeld not fruits that we féede the hungrie cloath the naked call into our houses the harborlesse and shall not do to all men as we would be done vnto we shall be beaten with many stripes bicause we knowe the will of God and do it not Blessed onely are they that feare the Lord and walk in his waies And blessed are they that heare the word of God and kéepe it The greatest the highest the best and onely seruice that man can do and bring vnto the Lorde is his obedience to Gods word and the dooing of his will AS hée that maketh tooles and instruments of iron or other mettle maketh not rustines and canker neither is to be blamed if those things which he hath made by reason of too much moisture dust or other corruption shal afterward gather canker or rustines euen so that heauenly workeman our God did not bring in sinne and iniquitie neither can he iustly be blamed if his creatures do staine and blemish themselues with the foulenes of sinne and wickednes for he made them good God saw all things that he had made saith the holie Scripture and they were excéeding good Augustine in his 14. Booke of the Citie of God saith Good things may he without euill things but euill things cannot be without good things bicause the natures in which euill things are in as much as they be natures they are good For they be of God and in some measure they lead vs to the knowledge of him Dauid vnderstāding so much saith Howe excellent are thy works O Lorde thy thoughts are excéeding déepe An vnwise man doth not knowe these things and the foole doth not vnderstande them That man perisheth is damned and goeth to hell is not the Lords fault but mans owne EVen as plants and trées do spread abroad their rootes in the earth from whence they haue their nourishment So christian men bicause they
that it may giue good season and a swéete sauour vnto meates So a true Christian especially one aduaunced to dignitie and placed in authoritie should spare no labor but euen breake himselfe with studie and care and vndergo any paines to do good to profite many and to win some soules to God Such men indeede hath Christ appointed to be the light of the world and the salt of the earth They ought to be full of loue to God and man They should liue as strangers vpon the earth They should haue no acquaintance with pride couetousnes ambition emulation and such other sinnes of the world EVen as the sailers gnomon or rule which is commonly called the marriners néedle doth alwaies looke towards the north pole and will euer turne towards the same howsoeuer thou shalt place it which is maruellous in that instrument and néedle whereby the marriners do know the course of the winds Euenso euery Christian man ought to direct the eies of his minde and the waies of his hart to Christ He is our north pole and that fixed and constant north star whereby we ought all to be gouerned he is our hope and our trust he is all our strength whereupon we must still relie And as the gnomon doth euer behold the north star whether it be closed and shut vp in a cofer of golde siluer or wood neuer losing his nature so a right Christian man whether he abound in wealth or be pinched with pouertie whether he be of high or lowe degrée in this world ought continually to haue his faith and hope surely built and grounded vpon Christ and to haue his hart and minde fast fixed and setled in him and to follow him through thick and thin through fire and water through wars and peace through hunger cold through friends and foes through a thousand perils and dangers through the surges and waues of enuie malice hatred euill spéeches railing sentences contempt of the world flesh and diuell and euen in death it selfe be it neuer so bitter cruell and tyrannical neuer to lose the sight and view of Christ neuer to giue ouer our faith hope and trust in him Let vs followe the counsell of the holy Ghost which saith Put me as a signe vpon thy hart as if he should say Set me in thy hart in stéede of a marke whereat all thy thoughts words and works may be leuelled Put out of thy hart the marke of the world and place me there as the end vnto the which all thy purposes may tend vpon whom all thy cares may be cast and in whom thou maist rest thy soule in all peace A woonderfull gnomon and most excellent sailing néedle was that noble king and famous prophet of God Dauid when he said I set the Lord alwaies before mine eies for he is at my right hand that I shall not be mooued Therefore saith he my hart reioiced my toong was glad and my flesh shall rest in hope And the Apostle saith Let vs run toward the fight that is set before vs looking still vpon Iesus the author and finisher of our faith who hauing ioy set before him indured the crosse God giue vs grace continually to lift vp our harts and mindes our hand and eies to Christ Iesus and as Augustine saith To behold stedfastly our head AS all riuers of waters go into the sea bicause they came out of it and as Salomon saith All riuers and flouds returne to the place whence they came So let vs go and towards our God with all our harts strength and powers bicause we came out from him and were created of him Let vs therefore looke vpon him with the eies of a stedfast and constant faith grounded vpon his word let vs behold his glorie and the blessednes of his saints and let vs conceiue in our harts and soules an vnfained loue to him and let vs not haue two loues one for our selues and another for our neighbors but let vs loue them and our selues both with one and the same loue which may kindle and inflame our harts and mindes throughout with an earnest desire of immortalitie and that heauenly Ierusalem That we may say with the prophet O my soule returne vnto thy rest for the Lord hath done well to thée or as it may be translated bicause the Lord hath restored thée to thy selfe As if he should say O my soule when thou didst serue thy bodie and wast in bondage to it it was no maruell that thou didst séeke the pleasures thereof but now séeing thou art thine owne bicause the Lord hath restored thée to thy selfe séeke not anothers pleasure but thine owne séeke thine owne rest and not the rest of thy bodie of the flesh of the world séeke God delight in him flie vnto him and rest thy selfe in him put all thy cares griefs sorrowes in his loue and swéete comfort thinke of eternall blessednes presse it and print it surely in thy selfe This is thy spirituall rest this is thine own and only delight restored vnto thée by the benefit and bountifulnes of God THere is nothing liker vnto the world than the sea For as it floweth and ebbeth and all the waues thereof at the length fall into the earth So this world is neuer quiet it extolleth some and casteth downe others but all the vanities of it are ended in the graue If the sea lie open to many dangers how perilous then is the world if the sea be troubled with strange stormes with what tempests then is the world tossed If they that serue by sea are neuer without great perils how much more then the seruants of the world They whose heads are vnder the girdle of the world are continually shot at with the darts of enuie hatred and malice and are euer couered as it were with cloudes and stormes of a thousand cares How many are slaues to pride how many are dirtie drudges to couetousnes how many are consumed in substance soules and bodies by foule and filthie lecherie How many are deuoured and swallowed vp quicke of sorrowes and gréefes of hart and minde And doth not too much ioy and reioicing in worldly trifles kill some Many die laughing but mo sorrowing some with eating and drinking too much and many through want of sufficient giue the world adew Some grudge and whine bicause they haue many children and some are malcontent bicause they haue none some grudge not bicause they haue many but bicause they haue bad ones some boast of their beauties and some mourne for their blacknes Many desire to liue long but few to liue well All would be rulers and few will be ruled What then shall we thinke of this world Truly I thinke of it as of a thing most dangerous and most vaine and the going out of it is to me as the shore is to a man that hath trauelled far and long by sea and hath béene dangerously tossed with the surges and waues of
in the defence of his truth The Lorde roote out all hypocrisie and conuert or subuert all hypocrites AS great flouds and swelling riuers when they ouerflowe their chanels and do breake through their bankes by reason of their raging and violent streames and so spread and run abroad can not fill and couer the fieldes with water but they hurt corne or grasse or what so else is in their waie So great riches mightie powers and high dignities when they growe and increase in wicked and vngodly men do not spread abroade and run ouer the fieldes and limites of common wealthes but they do much harme to wit they polle and pill away the riches and substance of the séely weake and poore men they fill their diches I meane their purses with the blood of innocents they build their honors and establish their dignities vpon the disgrace and the oppression of the saints and seruants of God And whatsoeuer is in their waie and to their liking they carrie it with them by hooke or crooke by right or wronge they care not who wéepe so they laugh who be emptie so they be full who be vndone so they be aduanced Héere hence come slaughters and murthers Thus are many brought into great calamities and miseries But they that do these things to others do hurt themselues most For whiles they hurt others in their bodies goods or names they kill their owne soules AS a man much mooued with anger and far out of frame through indignation and wrath intending to kill his brother should throw at him precious stones goodly pearles and rich iewels should not damnifie nor hurt his brother bicause he woulde gather them vp kéepe them and inrich himselfe with them Euen so tyrants disposed to kill and with fire and sword to put to death the saints and true seruants of God which do excell in true piety and vnfained loue to God and man do torment them with diuers sorts and sundrie kinds of most cruell martyrdome of which things the children of God are glad and do reioice and grow stronger and richer in Christ being throughly armed with a godly patience they do take and beare them most quietly for God his sake without murmuring or grudging euen as their crosse wherewith most willingly they follow their Lord and sauiour Christ and do account such tortures inestimable riches and themselues happie that they be thought woorthie to suffer such things for the truth sake and in the Lords quarell Such euer haue béene all the martyrs of Christ that when they haue béene haled and dragged to most cruell torments and tyrannicall executions they haue taken and imbraced them most cheerefully as though they were rich and delicate banquets AS precious iewels made of most pure gold wrought cunningly curiouslie with great workmanship the néerer thou shalt come vnto them and the more stedfastly and cléerely thou shalt behold them the finer the brauer and more excellent thou wilt iudge them Euen so as thou shalt come néerer in vnderstanding and knowledge vnto the secrets and mysteries of God conteined in his written word and with the greater puritie of minde the more strength of faith and the brighter light of the grace of God thou shalt looke into them the profounder the déeper the more diuine and heauenly yea and the more comfortable to thy soule will they séeme and appéere vnto thée euery day Insomuch that thou wilt iudge thy selfe to haue béen little better then blinde and to haue séene nothing as thou ought in the mysteries of the diuine word And thou wilt make haste to crie vnto the Lorde with the prophet Open mine eies O Lord and I shall sée and consider the woonderfull things of thy lawe But that man that trusting to his owne gifts wit and learning and hath his hart and minde bewitched with this worlde and poysoned with sinne taking pleasure in those things which the Lord hath forbidden will go about to pearce into the most holie worde and to search out the secrets of the great and most highe God he shall lose his labour open his vanitie misse the marke he shot at and die in the blindnes wherein he liued and so passe hence to his owne destruction the iust reward of his presumption be he neuer so wittie skilfull and learned Through thy commandements saith the Lords prophet I am wiser then all my enimies learneder then my teachers and better experienced then the ancient men of the worlde Therefore true wisedome the best learning and heauenly experience is gotten and had out of the lawe of God by the inward working of the holie Ghost in our harts and minds The Almightie vouchsafe to write his lawes and statutes in all our harts that therby we may be wise against flesh this inchaunting world sin and sathan AS the hauke is then lost when trusting to hir wings shée riseth and mounteth too high So then do vaine men fall far from God when with their owne wit reason and wisedome onely and alone they will vnderstande the déepe misteries of God as though the counsels and wisedome of Gods eternal maiestie might and could be comprehended with the reason wit of man The Apostle his counsell is holie and good be not too high minded but feare AS they that haue cléere and sound eies do easilie indure the bright light of the sunne wherewith eies that be sore and diseased are greatly offended So vertuous and godly men are illuminated and woonderfully cléered in their vnderstanding and the eies of their minds with the diuine and heauenly light of the word of him that saith I am the light of the world wherwith the wicked and vngodly are highly offended in so much that they hate the light and loue darknes more then it And so growing blinder and blinder euery day at the length they fall and tumble downe headlong into the insaciable pit of eternall destruction AS a pot full of swéete liquor if it be made hote and boyled vpon the fire will driue away flies that they will not come néere it but if it be cold the flies will by and by go into it and it will receiue them and they will corrupt and consume it Euen so the hart of man if it be inflamed with a true and sincere loue of God will not receiue into it those dangerous temptations which are continually flying about it but wil remooue and driue them far off and giue no place vnto them but if by reason of slothfull idlenes in heauenly things and for want of a godly courage it grow cold in the loue of the Lord then is it obuious and wide open to all temptations it barreth out none it receiueth all none are reiected be they neuer so wicked all are imbraced intertained and welcome Then is it a receptacle of all abominations as idolatrie blasphemie murther adulterie and whatsoeuer is wicked mischeeuous and damnable The Lord therefore vouchsafe to take from vs
Ghost that we may passe through and breake in péeces all his snares VVE must not thinke that those men are forsaken of God which are much and continually exercised with diuers temptations for euen as a man that hath two sonnes the one an earnest louer of vertue strong in bodie and of a mightie courage the other depraued and of crooked disposition inclined to effeminate pleasures and wanton delights weake in bodie and of little or no courage The first he sendeth out to wars and doth aduenture him in perils and dangers of all sorts that he may exercise and acquaint him with the labours troubles and toiles of the world the other he cockereth and maketh too much of him he suffereth him to haue all things at his wil he is kept at home and as it were dandled vpon his mothers lap But at the last he that in all his affaires and dangerous aduentures did in euerie point quit himselfe like a man of great valure and noble courage receiued togither with great praise and deserued honor a most high and noble reward but he that was pampered and cockered at home had neither praise reward nor honor Euen so our heauenly father doth leade men that are strong and constant in faith through diuers and sundrie perils and dangers and doth drawe them as it were with his owne hande through bitter anguishes great perplexities and very narow streightes of calamities miseries and temptations and doth continuallie exercise them with fearefull cumbats against the enimies of their soules and through many and great labours infinite sturdie storms and bitter blasts doth strengthen and confirm them in vertue and godlines But the frayle and wicked men of the worlde and such as be méere naturall without any delight or comfort in his word and are no whit seasoned nor chéered with the dewes of his grace and his most blessed spirit he permitteth them to be in great prosperitie and to haue all things at their will and pleasure without smarting sighing sobbing and groning for wante or lacke of any thing that their harts can deuise or desire but at the length in the end of the day they that haue striuen harde and fought manfully and haue in battell ouercomed the flesh the world and the deuill shall be receiued into endlesse saluation euerlasting life and eternall glory And they which haue laid downe their heads and slept in the bosoms of worldy pleasures and haue slumbred in foule and filthie idlenes neuer caring nor thinking what will follow nor remembring the dreadful day of iudgment when the wicked shal heare their damnation denounced by Christ they I say shall be vtterly condemned reprobated and cast into euerlasting and endlesse miseries Then shall most plainly be séene and felt the losse that fleshly pleasures bring and the profite of crosses caried and borne for Christs sake AS wheate or other graine laide vp and kept in a garner cellar or chamber if it be not stirred and dressed often with a shouell or van will be full of corruption lose the swéete sauour ware vnholesome for mans body and will be consumed of wéeuels And apparel or garments being laid vp in a presse or other place if they be not much shaken and tossed will be eaten spoyled with mothes Euen so men if they be not tried with temptations and throughly exercised with calamities and miseries will be very quickly monstrously corrupted and will grow to be so rotten in all maner of sin and iniquitie that they will shrinke and fall quite from the Lord. But being well prooued canuased and throughly tried with many crosses afflictions and troubles one following in the necke of an other they become the firmer stronger and more constant in the faith feare and loue of God and so manfully fighting and courageouslie ouercomming the aduersaries and enimies of their soules they shall at the length be crowned with an euerlasting crowne of eternall glory The which crowne they onely shall haue saith the apostle which do striue lawfully And in another place he saith God is faithful and will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that which you are able to beare c. But in this case it is requisite that we be well furnished with the armour of God bicause our enimies do diuers and sundry waies assaile vs and most mightily impugne and fight against vs tryeng vs somtimes with one thing and somtimes with another So that if we be not clothed with the armour of righteousnes on the right hand and on the left we shall neuer be able to quit our selues against them I meane the world flesh and deuill our professed mortall and sworne enimies AS bées when they striue togither and are stirred vp through some vehement motion with throwing of dust are brought into order and appeased euen so men when they are tossed and tormented with troublesome broiles perturbations and passions if they would remember dust whereinto of necessitie they must be turned and neuer forget death which they shal neuer be able to escape they would easily be staied pacified and quieted and woulde represse and kéepe within compasse their stragling lusts and vnrulie appetites which cannot indure to be tamed nor ruled by reason AS a tree the more déepely it is rooted in the earth the taller it groweth and mounteth the higher So a man the more humble and lowly that he is the more and higher doth the Lord exalt him And as a trée set vpon the top of a mountaine is mightily shaken and easily rent vp by the rootes with euery blustering blast and storme of winde Euen so man in this world the more and higher he is exalted the more and greater dangers is he subiect vnto The holie virgine did perceiue and sée these things to be most true He hath saith she put downe the mightie from their seate and hath exalted the humble and méeke And the apostle saith God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble lowly Séeing therefore that we be compared to trées by Christ himselfe in his holy Gospell it behooueth vs to haue déepe and strong rootes of true and vnfained humilitie and in consideration of our frailtie and weaknes to set and place our selues in the bottom of the lowe valley of the knowledge of our owne misery That no tempests nor stormes may remooue and roote vs out That no vanitie may destroy vs No ambition trouble vs No gréedie couetousnes torment vs Nor any occasion whatsoeuer may possibly draw vs from the lowlines and humilitie of our harts and minds from the comtempt of the worlde and from a true and sincere loue of honesty and godlines A building is so much the firmer and stronger as the foundation groundworke of the same is laid lower and deeper The groundworke of Christian philosophie is vnfained humilitie and the déeper that the same is laid and setled in our harts the surer and more permanent will the building of our
religion be That saying of our sauior Christ of necessitie must euer be true and infallible He that exalteth himselfe shall be brought lowe and he that humbleth himselfe shall be exalted IT behooueth that sinne and iniquitie may greatly displease thée that the loue of thy selfe may be turned into a sincere loue of God For if thou shalt east into an hot burning fornace wood and stickes that be scare and drie and ready to burne there will arise and burne out a most pure and cleare flame of fire But if thou wilt cast into the same fornace gréene sticks wet and stinking rushes or some other such matter they will burne in déede but the fornace and whole house will be filled with smoke and will be euen blacke by reason of the thicke darknes which procéedeth of the foule and stinking smoke So the hart of man is a furnace continually burning if thou wilt nourish it with cogitations and heauenly meditations of the loue of God there will appéere and shine out of it a pure flame and bright light of true and vnfained loue to God and man But if thou wilt cherish and maintaine it with thoughts and deuises of selfe loue then it will be full of vile smoke stinch and darknes They perished saith the apostle in their own imaginations and their foolish hart was darkened The fountaine and originall of all euils and the center from whence the lines of all abhominations do flow is mans inordinate selfe loue Augustine saith that Adam did fall into that ouermuch loue of himselfe before he did eate the forbidden fruit And the same author saith that two loues did build two cities the loue of God Ierusalem and mans selfe loue Babylon It is selfe loue that Christ speaketh of sayeng He that loueth his life shall lose it And Paule saith In the latter daies men shall be louers of themselues couetous hautie high minded proude c. And againe we must not please our selues And Peter calleth the wicked and vngodly bold and pleasers of themselues There is no misery comparable to this that a man knoweth not his owne miserie And of follies there is none greater then not to know a mans owne follie but to haue an ouer well wéening of himselfe It is excéeding great and very laudable wisdome that a man cast downe and condemn himselfe that he may auoid the heauy iudgements of God and condemnation with the wicked world For the more vnperfect that we esteeme and iudge our selues to be the néerer to true perfection do we come For this in some measure is perfection euen to know and to acknowledge our owne imperfection EUen as after great showers and stormes of raine the aire is clensed and cléered So after great troubles sorrowes afflictions and temptations cleannes of hart quietnes of minde and peace of soule and conscience do follow AS with a pile or stacke of seare and dry wood the fire is quickly kindled and caused mightily to flame out Euen so the outragiousnes of carnall and fleshly lust is greatly prouoked mooued and stirred vp through rioting banqueting quaffing gussing swilling and continuall féeding and pampering of the belly and by taking the bodie from good lawfull and honest exercises and giuing it to idlenes slothfulnes and ouermuch ease and rest from labours EVen as of ouermuch fulnes of the stomacke and superfluitie of meats groweth that obstruction which the physitions do call oppilation or stopping whereupon bréedeth a continuall headach and that frensie which bringeth men to a madnes Euen so of a depraued and dishonest loue of this life of the corruption of manners of gluttonie and excesse eating doth spring an vnbridled and vntamed lust whereof ariseth that phrenetical madnes of heretikes and a corruption of their vnderstanding in matters of faith They which care not to kéepe a good conscience do at length fall to an incurable contempt of faith The apostle therfore ioyneth faith and a good conscience togither The which conscience saith he whiles some cast from them they haue made shipwracke of their faith If therefore thou wilt that the almightie shall like and allow of thy faith be sure that thou kéepe a good conscience without the which thy faith is dead and will do thée no good The Emperor Traianus compareth the treasure of rich men with the spleen EVen as when the spleen increaseth the other members ioyntes and parts of the bodie do consume and pine away So the great treasures and riches of couetous tyrants increasing the wealth of subiects and inferior persons is weakened and diminished whiles they pill and poll away their substance and goodes to enrich themselues withall And euen as the spléen increasing the other members do decrease So couetousnes growing greater and greater all vertues do vtterly decay and vanish away Bountifulnes liberalitie charitie truth righteousnes and all such excellent qualities are no more found in those men which are strangled and poisoned with a great and gréedie desire of worldly riches For being drowned in couetousnes they can neuer lift vp their harts to God nor stretch foorth their hands to do good to their brethren God giueth vnto men riches wit industrie knowledge and many other things signified and vnderstood by the name of Talents to the end that they should honor and worship God and bicause they should do him faithfull and true seruice which is the giuer of all good things The Euangelist saith that the Lorde called his seruants togither and gaue vnto them his goods Riches then and all goods whatsoeuer men haue in their possessions are not their owne but the Lords vnto whom they must make an account for the same The Apostle saith What hast thou that thou hast not receiued And the holy prophet his words are plaine The earth is the Lords and all the fulnes of the same the round world and they that dwell therein thou art then a seruant a steward a bailife the things which thou hast are Gods not thine they be his goods which he hath deliuered vnto thée that thou shouldest vse and bestow them not vpon thy foule lusts nor filthie pleasures vaine delights nor to hurt thy brother neither that thou shouldest hide them but to his good liking honor and glorie that his Gospell may be preached his poore seruants and distressed children reléeued that the honest causes of poore widowes and orphanes may be defended and that other such charitable déedes should be done and practised that the Lord finding thée faithfull in th●se small things may at the length giue thée greater matters that is the kingdome of heauen and the ioies thereof but if thou be faithlesse in these he will neuer trust thee with those Take héede and beware therefore that thou do not lauish waste and consume the Lords goods in the seruice of the flesh world and diuell It is a lamentable thing to sée how many yea innumerable men in these daies
with the riches goodes naturall gifts and talents which they haue receiued of the Lord do purchase and euen make sure vnto themselues euer lasting confusion death and damnation against the will and commandement of the Lord the owner and giuer of the same Ecclesiasticus saith truly that gold and siluer hath destroied many men If we would follow the counsell of the Apostle we should mortifie couetousnes which he calleth worshipping of idols The couetous man saith Augustine before he gaine monie he loseth himselfe and before he catch any thing himselfe is catched Couetousnes is a cruell tyrant and the riches of couetous men are those idols vnto the which that saying of the Lord by Ieremie the prophet may very well be applied Ye shall serue strange gods day and night which will giue you no rest The old philosophers purposing to describe aua●ice or couetousnes did faine that one Tantalus in hell was gréeuously tormented with thirstines and drought in the middest of riuers of waters signifying thereby that couetousnes is a very swallowing gulfe and an insaciable hel where couetous men euen burning with a loue of riches do most earnestly couet and gréedily run after those things wherof they haue great and vnspeakable abundance And the more they haue the more are they tormented with an vnquenchable thirst and an hote burning desire still to haue more and more In my opinion if a couetous man were so mightily and so heauily loden with gold and if it were possible fuller of riches than that ship that came to Salomon from Ophir yet he would neuer be satisfied RIuers and floods although they be most swéete and pleasant yet when they run and enter into the sea they are most bitter kéeping their right and due course they yéeld pure and wholsome water but once mingled with the sea they are as it were poysoned with bitternes Euen so the wealth and riches of this world although in the course of this life they do highly delight some men which haue them in possession not the lesse when they come to the sea of death whither all floods at the length shall come they séeme to be dolefull sower bitter intolerable and as it were poyson it selfe For rich and couetous men do then finde and féele that their riches wealth and prosperitie which the Lord gaue them to an excellent end haue béene vnto them many times occasions of euill That good man Augustine saith that pride is a sicknes or disease that commeth of riches Also gold is the matter or cause of cares labours toyles feares and of all vnquietnes it is perilous to the possessors of it and a great weakening of vertues in all them that set their harts vpon it And Chrysostom saith that riches are a schoole of malice enuie and hatred Christ Iesus therefore our heauenly schoolmaster saith Blessed are the poore in spirite for theirs is the kingdome of heauen And againe Lay not vp for your selues treasures in the earth Also You cannot serue God and mammon And yet this is euer to be vnderstood that riches of themselues are not euill but as they be to the wicked and vngodly hinderances of vertues so they are to the faithfull seruants of God helps and furtherances of many good things godly actions and very charitable works For godly men do possesse their riches be they neuer so ample and infinite and are not possessed of their wealth and goods their riches are drudges to them and not they to their riches EVen as gold is tried with a touch stone So is man tried with gold And as Chilo the Lacedemonian saith Gold doth most manifestly prooue and declare what they be that owe it And looke what the touch stone is to gold the same is gold to man The touch stone with rubbing the gold or siluer vpon it sheweth plainly what kind of gold or siluer it is and gold it selfe doth in like maner most easily bewray what maner of man one is There is no touch stone in all the world that doth more truly touch and trie al degrées of vertues and vices than gold wealth and abundance of riches The Israelites being very inclinable to the superstitions of the Egyptians were no sooner out of Egypt but they made a calfe of gold and iewels the which they worshipped in stead of God And in the land of promise they oftentimes consumed and wasted their gold and treasure in making of idols Whereupon did arise that great complaint which the Lord maketh by the prophet Oseas saying I haue multiplied their siluer and their gold which they haue made Baal as if he should say I haue giuen the Israelites great store of siluer and gold which they most wickedly haue wasted in making of the idoll Baal And by the same prophet the Lord saith Their siluer and their gold haue they made idols for themselues to serue But men that are godly and of sound and Christian religion do bestowe their goods their wealth and riches vpon building and repairing temples and churches dedicated to the holy seruice and true worshipping of God in féeding the poore saints of God in redéeming captiues in prouiding for poore widowes and orphanes and in doing such other vertuous and godly déedes of charitie The nobles of the Israelites returning from the captiuitie of Babylon did bring their substance and riches to build the temple of the Lord. And Tobias did féede the hungrie and gaue clothes to the naked The wise men of the east contrie opening their treasures offered vnto the Lord gold frankincense and mirrhe And now in our time that is truly offered vnto the Lord and is vnto him a sweete smelling sacrifice which is giuen to the poore distressed seruants of God I remember a report giuen out of one ●medeus when certaine orators talking with him demanded whether he kept any hounds or not he presently shewed vnto them a great multitude of poore beggers sitting all togither these saith he are my hounds with these do I hunt after the kingdome of God these do I kéepe and féede euery day the Lord send many such huntesmen HIeronymus saith that it is a part of sacrilege not to giue vnto the poore that which is their owne That is whatsoeuer thou art able to spare Money meate clothing harbour counsell comfort and whatsoeuer els thou art able to do That is not lost which thou dost distribute among thy poore brethren and sisters in the worlde For as Salomon saith He laieth in bancke vnto the Lord which hath pitie and sheweth mercy vnto the poore It can not be lamented and bewayled inough to sée how infinite thousands in the world do most vainly yea most vilely and wickedly spend and lauish out the goods and riches wherewith the Lord hath put them in trust to the end that they should vse them to his owne glory and the good of his church Some vnder the colour of religion and holines with their goods
Lord is hard at hande to them that are of a troubled hart and will saue the humble and lowly in spirit And the Lords words by Ose the prophet are these In their tribulation they will rise vp earely and call vpon me For the Lord his maner and custom is to helpe and succour the afflicted which call and crie for his heauenly comfort Héerehence is that of the Euangelist Iohn Your sorrow shall be turned into ioy And that of the apostle As you are companions of the passions and sufferings so shall yée be of the consolation and comfort And that also in the Actes We must enter into the kingdome of God through many tribulations And holy Iohn in the reuelation speaking of the saints which haue and shall haue the fruition of God in heauen saith Those are they that came from great tribulation Héereupon Augustine saith excéeding well That the Lord hath appointed thée to suffer it is a scourge of him that chastiseth thée and not a punishment of him that condemneth thée Who woulde not then be well contented with troubles and afflictions Who would not willingly vndergo the indignation malediction and persecution of wicked men Who would be afeard of the spite malice and whatsoeuer this wicked world can say or do Séeing the sequell vnto the sons and daughters of God is to be exalted and extolled into heauen and to be placed there at the right hand of the almighty through and with the Lord Iesu world without end The forenamed saints of God and other holy men from age to age in the midst of their calamities did still remember themselues to be men borne vnder that condition that their liues should euer be open and subiect to all the ineuitable darts of infinite troubles and that there was no refusing to liue and leade their liues in that condition whereunder they were borne And whiles they called to minde the euents of other men they knew right well that no new thing had happened vnto them And indéede the remembrance of mans condition and estate and of a common law and lot as it were incident to al doth mitigate the paine of troubles and doth make their burden the easier to bear And this is a thing euer obserued and noted in the children of God that they are so far from impatience and from repining at their afflictions that euen in the depth of their miseries they thinke themselues happy that they are counted woorthy to suffer any thing for Christs sake It were a great booke matter to remember all those that are mentioned in the holy scriptures which euen shrinking and falling away from God haue béene recouered reclaimed and healed by afflictions and tribulations as it were with physicke and medicine from heauen O how great is thy goodnes how incomparable is thy clemencie how infinite and endles is thy mercy O heauenly and most holie father Which dost therefore afflict vs that tho● maist chéere vs vp againe Thou dost therefore hold vs downe that thou maist comfort vs and dost suffer vs to fall into diuers and sundry calamities that we may learn to know thy righteousnes and mercies All these things thou dost not of hatred to vs warde but of loue not to destroy vs but to bring vs to thy glorie AS the aire is cléered with the brightnes and shine of the sun and when the sun is downe and set the aire is couered with darknes Euen so the minde of man when it is purged cleared with heauenly wisedome sought and drawne out of the word of God doth shine most excellently and sendeth foorth a pure and perfect light of christianitie which may most easily be decerned to procéed and to come from God himselfe But being without that true light it is ouerwhelmed with an horrible and fearfull darknes and giueth out nothing but filthy mists and stinking vapors which do spring and rise out of the corruption and rotten nature of man and euen from hel and sathan himselfe How can it be that darknes and blindnes should remaine and rest in that hart of man which the holie Ghost the authour of all light and the onely light it selfe hath chosen to be his owne seat and holy habitation Can error flowe out of the most pure fountaine of wisedome It is not possible that from the onely centre of all goodnes a line of wickednes should be drawne And can the fruits of death grow out of the trée of life These are vnpossible things And on the otherside where the holie spirit of grace and might hath not place and possession there is nothing to be found but blindnes error sin iniquitie and all abhomination yea and all the fruits of eternall death it selfe EVen as a bitter potion is not saide to be vnprofitable nor without hope when health and soundnes doth follow although it be excéeding bitter to him that taketh it So sharp and pinching calamities wherewith the Lord doth exercise now and then his children are not to be counted idle and in vaine when some peace of conscience and comfort vnto our soules do follow that when the iustice of God is séene many may be amended and the faith and patience of many may be tried For nothing is more auaileable for the aduauncing of the praise and commendation of true vertue then calamitie it selfe taken and borne patiently for Christs sake AS yoong chickins are in safetie from the hauke and puttocke so long as they straie not from about the wings of their dams and when they do straie far from them they are easilie taken of euery vermine Euen so they that depart not from God but kéeping themselues neere vnto him do walke and lead their liues within the compasse and limits of his laws and ordinances are most safely kept by him from the force inchantments engins and all the subtle deuises of sathan and his instruments but if they forsake God and not regarding his word diuide themselues from him by their sins and iniquities they must néedes fall into the tallons and iawes of that tyrannicall hawke and hound of hell from whence there is no deliuerie Whose whole indeuor and labor is like a roaring lion to séeke whom he may deuoure EVen as it is a thing very commendable and worthy praise that a soldier do euer beare about him the signes and badges of his captaine that it may appéere to whom he belongeth So is it no little honor to a true christian man to passe through manie dangers and to be experienced in many troubles and to indure many affliction● for his captaine Christs sake For sorrowes vexations and tribulations are the armor and badges of Christ And therefore the apostle which for Christs sake suffered many things saith I do beare about in my body the marks of the Lord Iesu EVen as the sun which vnto eies being sound and without disease was very pleasant and wholsome vnto the same eies when they are féeble
and transitorie spirituall things and fleshly matters the things that are aboue with God and the deceiuable trifles that are belowe in the earth may not be mingled togither Thou canst not both sauour of the Lord and of the world thou canst not beare both good and bad fruit it is not possible that thou shouldest both be barren and fruitfull If thou louest God and his doctrine be graffed in thée then art thou fruitfull if not thou art vnfruitfull For the truth it selfe saith He that abideth in me and I in him he bringeth foorth much fruit SAlt is made of sea water but so long as it is in the sea it is not salt it must be taken out of the sea and placed vpon the dry lande that being in salt pits where the sun may shine the aire blow vpon it the water may be thickned and so conuerted into salt This world is a sea so long as we liue in the world being tormoilde in the swelling surges of the pride thereof and tossed with the ebbings flowings of the worlds inconstancie and ouerwhelmed in the bitter waters of the sinnes and wicked practises of the same we are as yet no salt We must go out of the world and enter into the lande to wit into our selues and take a iust view of our owne imbecilitie and haue a due consideration of our owne miserable and wretched estate that the sun of righteousnes may thrust out his beames and the winde of heauenly grace may blow vpon vs and so we may be turned into an admirable and woonderfull salt that being seasoned our selues we may be meanes and the Lords instruments to season others We may be bold to inueigh against all iniquitie when we haue amended our owne amisses Yet must that be done in measure and according to knowledge for so it behooueth al men to do all things that they do It is well saide of one that salt is an excellent sauce and seasoner of all things so that measure be not wanting Otherwise measure and meane missing the salt it selfe is lost and that which should haue béene seasoned is vtterly spoyled For too much doth make very bitter that which measure would haue made ful swéete And yet notwithstanding all men must but especially the ministers of the worde lift vp their voices and crie out against all maner of sinne and wickednes For the Lord saith by Ioel the prophet Sound out the trumpet in Sion crie out vpon my holy mountaine and let all the inhabitants of the earth be troubled and quake And Esaias saith Crie out cease not lift vp thy voice like a trumpet The Scripture doth signifie so much when it saith That God commanded Moses to make two trumpets of siluer wherewith he should call the people togither when their tents were to be remooued For with the sound of those trumpets the people were roused and stirred vp to wars and to celebrate certaine daies wherein sacrifices were offered vp vnto God Euen so euerie preacher of the worde of God ought to call vpon sinners to remooue their tents from this wicked world and the maners and fashions of the same and so much as in him lieth to bring the people that are blinded in their sins and falling from God out of their errors perils and dangers with all their force and skill to mooue and stir them vp to be that in déede which true christianitie doth require That euery one may say with the prophet Esaie Let the vngodly man forsake his owne waie and the wicked man the cogitations of his owne hart and be turned vnto the Lord And with Iohn in the Reuelation My people auoide out of the midst of Babylon be yée not partakers of their sinnes As if he should saie Remooue and separate your selues from the transitory and lieng things of the world forsake the wickednes of it and pitch your tents by godly meditations and holie affections of your harts and minds not in the earth but in heauen For euery preacher of the Gospell ought to prepare his hearers so much as in him lieth and by his owne example to stir them vp against the enimies of their soules And to counsell them with the apostle To put on the armor of God that they may be able to stande against the deceits of the deuill for we wrastle not against the world flesh and blood but against princes powers and the gouernors of the darknes of this world It behooueth vs therefore to be well furnished with the armour of light and that the weapons of our warfare be not carnall but spirituall AS an expert and skilfull husbandman doth first draw out of his fields or lands and pulleth vp by the rootes thistles briers brambles and all other venemous and wilde wéedes and afterward committeth vnto them his good séedes Euen so a wise teacher of the word of God ought first to roote out sinne and vices and to till as it were the minds of his hearers and as much as in him lieth to draw and pull out of them both roote and rinde of all maner of euill and wickednes and to prepare and make them méete to receiue the good séeds of the holie word and to sowe in them those things which being rooted and growne vp may bring foorth both pleasant profitable and plentifull fruites And although vertue and godlines vnto the wicked and vngodly séeme euen horrible and bitter and all vice and naughtines swéete and well sauouring so that they are not willing that the gardens of their harts should be wéeded and trimmed bicause they would haue no vprightnes no integritie of life no truth nor honestie to grow there yet not the lesse the Lords ministers must euer thinke that the same is spoken to them which was deliuered to the prophets long since Make Ierusalem to know hir abhominations And shew my people their wickednes and the house of Iacob their sins Offer vnto them salt wherewith their corruption may be drawne out and they made to sauour swéetely in the nostrilles of God if they be not altogither rotten and consumed in their sinnes Thrust at them with the goade of the holie word and strike at them with the two edged sword of the law of God that if they be not starke dead in their abhominations and be not alreadie swallowed vp of hell if there be any recouery in them at all they may be awaked out of their deadly slumbers and may be so pricked at their harts that they may finde and féele how forlorne they are in the sight of God and flie to him for succour grace and mercy if they belong to his kingdome WHat doth it profite a riuer to flowe from a pure and cléere fountaine if it selfe be foule filthie and vnholesome Euen so the noblenes of fathers and the honours of elders and auncestours what doth it pleasure their sonnes when they themselues degenerate from their
naked vpon the crosse Before Christ did appéere in the flesh pouertie might haue séemed verie bitter and full of ignominie vnto men but after that the Emperour of heauen and earth had taken pouertie vpon himselfe and also touching himselfe said The foxes haue holes and the foules of the aire haue nestes but the sonne of man hath not where to laie his head Who doth not now sée that Christian pouertie in the seruants of God doth well become them and is honorable and that it is a true badge of Christian nobilitie IF a king should haue a certaine house fast lockte and close shut vp full of gold precious stones and costly iewels and would promise all those treasures to one that should open the same and would offer vnto thée two keies one of pure gold hanging at a costly string made of silke and golden threads but that would not open the same locke that thou mightest go into the house and the other of iron rustie and ill fauoured to sée to hanging at a thong of leather or whipcorde the which notwithstanding would open the doore and let thée in that thou mightest choose which of these keies thou wouldest were it not better and more profitable for thée to choose the old rustie iron keie then the keie of gold Yes no doubt The golden one indéed is more precious but what auaileth that when it will not open the doore and bring thee to the treasures The iron one is the viler but yet it is the better Such a king is our God and such an house is that heauenly habitation of his saints wherein are inestimable treasures endlesse ioies and vnspeakable good things which are woorthier and more excellent then man is able to expresse For so saith the holie Ghost No eie hath séene nor eare heard nor hart of man conceiued those thinge which the Lorde hath prepared for them that loue him All which heauenlie treasures God hath promised to all them that shal enter into his holie hill or house of saints The golden keie which the most part of this world do choose and trust to that they may enter into heauen is worldly wealth and aboundance of riches ioyned with couetousnes which will neuer open the Lords house where are kept his celestiall and inestimable treasures But that key doth rather open a foule and vile house of this world which is full of all filthines and abominations The iron keie is spirituall pouertie against the which the kingdome of heauen is neuer shut but standeth euer wide open to all them that bring with them that key so saith Christ himselfe Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Let vs therefore make no account of the golden key but let vs for Christ and his kingdom forsake and despise the deceitfull riches of this world which are desired and sought for far and neare by sea and land with dangers and losse of the bodies and soules of many thousands as though men could bribe God for their sinnes and purchase heauen with their worldly trifles and let vs without murmuring and grudging with all patience of hart and minde beare and imbrace pouertie and all those crosses and afflictions which vnto the world séeme bitter and intolerable of which kind very many do happen in the life of man Let vs earnestly séeke after the riches of the Lords kingdome and euerlasting life for they be stable and permanent let vs not set our harts and affections on this world for it waxeth olde rotten it staggereth is ruinous and readie to fall Iob speaking of rich men which do deli●iously pamper themselues euery day saith They leade their daies in pleasures and in the twinckling of an eie they go down into hel And Dauid saith They shall leaue their riches for others c. And Salomon saith Thy riches shal do thée no good in the day of vengeance And in the booke of Wisedome What hath pride profited thée and what good hath thy bragging of riches brought vnto thée all these things are gone away like a shadow and as a messenger running before EVen as a firebrand drawen from the fire and lying still waxeth cold and by little and little dieth and is extinct but being mooued and put to the fire burneth and flameth Euen so an idle life doth by little and little extinguish vertue but being well exercised it doth kindle and increase the same Therfore is it said in the booke of Iob Man is borne to labour And Ecclesiasticus saith that idlenes hath taught much mischiefe This mooued the Apostle to will Timothie to watch and to labour in all things And the same Apostle saith that euerie one shall receiue his owne hire or reward according to his labour Lawyers do say that inheritance is had with the burden thereof Séeing then that we be Gods heires and the fellow heires of Christ as the Apostle affirmeth it must néedes be that we come not ●● our inheritance not with idlenes but loden with great and ●●auie burdens of aduersities and tribulations and with sore ●●●our and gréeuous grones vnder the weight of the same If w● shall giue our selues to ease and shall séeke after rest in this l●●● and so slumber in securitie and idlenes our enimie the diuell ●ill surely deceiue vs. For whiles men slept saith the E●…ist the enimie came and did sowe darnell vpon the wheate Christ himselfe doth highly condemne idlenes when he saith Why stand ye héere all the day long idle And a little after Call the workmen saith he to take their hire Idle persons are not called to take hire but they which haue laboured And they are called from their labours to rest from pouertie to heauenly riches and from their calamities to euerlasting pleasures Yea euen when they be dead then are they blessed and rest from their labours the spirit saith so and therefore it is most certaine and true When Tobias slept there fell out of a swallowes nest doong vpon his eies which made him blinde and w●iles we do sléepe and slumber in slothfulnes and idle securitie without being vertuously and godly exercised there creepe out of the nests of our harts most wicked and pestilent cogitations which do blinde and numbe our vnderstanding and carrie vs into most dangerous disobedience and rebellion against the Lord. MEn in these our dangerous daies are very close harted merciles towards the poore afflicted members of Christ And though they hear their cries sée their poore bodies readie to die at their doores in stréetes and in prison yet vntill they perceiue that there is no way but present death with themselues they will impart no part of their goodes and wealth vnto them Such men are like vnto beasts which are not eaten vntill they be dead and boiled or rosted For vntill death hath them in his pot and there boile them after his maner the
hell to be tormented in the stinch and abhomination thereof for euer But others which in this life are incumbred tormented and afflicted with diuers and sundrie calamities and euen for their vertues sake are hated of the wicked and contemned of the world when they shall depart out of this life they shall be brought and presented before the Lorde with great honour and placed with the king of heauen in euerlasting glorie that is full of honor and full of vnspeakable ioyes These men the worlde is weary of and therefore doth scorne despise and hate them as men not woorthie to liue whereas indéed they ought to cherish and to honor them bicause they feare the Lord. And on the contrary side The world is in loue with men of sinne and doth onely honor those that abound with all maner of iniquitie and as it hath them in great admiration in their life time so it maketh no end of praysing extolling them when they be dead These the world adorneth with all the feathers it hath and yet in a very moment of time they lose all and then one houre taketh from them all those things honours dignities pleasures and delights which were long a getting with great care and no litle cost then themselues are sent into endlesse woes and euerlasting paines Héerehence is that sayeng of Ecclesiasticus The riches of the vniust shall be dryed vp like water and they shall make a noise like a great thunder-clap in time of raine And man saith the prophet is like a thing of nothing his daies passe away like a shadow Indéede man dieth and all his pompe vainglory and prosperitie with him And good were it for the wicked if they might neuer rise vp againe For as our old sayeng is It were better to lie stil then to rise vp to take a fall especially such a fall as theirs shall be to wit from heauen to hell from God to the diuell and from al blisse and happines into the most bitter curse of God and tortures of damnation EVen as smoke preaseth and flieth vp on high as though it would couer and darken the skie So enuie and calamitie do aime at those especially which are aduanced and placed in high degrée so that many times they are cast downe headlong from their dignitie very suddenly with much ignominie and disgrace especially when their honors haue changed and corrupted their maners Nabucadnezzar that mightie king which is compared to an eagle as though he were péerelesse among men as the eagle among birds yet notwithstanding immediately after his wealth power pride and prosperitie are compared by the prophet to light feathers that are blowen and caried away with euery blast of winde Séeing then that whatsoeuer this worlde doth or can affoord vs is indre subiect to a change then the Moone and more vnconstant then the winde let vs learne to contemne the world with all the trifles and trash of the same and séeke for the kingddme of God and the righteousnes thereof for that indureth for euer EVen as from the sap of a trée doth procéede that strength wherewith the boughes do florish and bring foorth fruit So from a godly prince such iustice vertue and godlines do procéede that thereby all the people are mightily mooued to true religion a right worshipping of God due obedience and honestie of life and conuersation SVbmission and lowlines of minde is as it were a vessell wherin vertues are laid vp and kept as iewels of great valure And as Bernard saith Humilitie of the hart is a receptacle of grace And Chrysostome his opinion is that Humilitie is a great sacrifice Gregory saith that Humble men when they stoupe lowest and prostrate themselues before the Lordes throne then they rise vp saith he to the similitude and likenes of God On the other side proude men whiles they vaunt and exalt themselues they imitate the diuell but such the Lorde is woont to bring lowe and to exalt the humble and méeke EVen as in winter when it is excéeding colde and in sommer when too much heate inflameth all things great thunder and lightenings are seldome heard and séene as Plinie reporteth in his second booke but in the spring time and haruest when the aire is cléere and calme then chéefly they burne and strike where they light So great calamities and bitter troubles do lie in waite for prosperitie they séeke not after them which in a lowe and meane estate do labour and take paines in heate and cold and all storms else but those do they most suddenly wound ouerthrowe and consume as it were with fire which in a calme spring time and haruest of prosperitie are drunken with pride and to too insolent with vaine glorie of the world and are set vpon the top of vanitie it selfe I suppose that in this life there is nothing safer nothing more profitable nothing better nothing fitter to aduance vertue to a due honor and to be short nothing that sooner bringeth tranquillitie and other good things than true humilitie and a Christian lowlines of mans minde Iames the apostle doth say that God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble And againe Be ye humbled in the sight of the Lord and he will exalt you And Peter in his first epistle canonicall Be ye humbled saith he vnder the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in the time of visitation And the Lord in the mouth of Abdias the prophet saith to the proude ones of the world If thou shalt be exalted as an eagle and shalt build thy nest among the stars I will pull thée downe from thence And the Psalmist saith I sawe the wicked exalted and lifted vp like the Cedars of Libanus and I passed by and behold he was not I sought him and he was not to be found his place could not be séene Indéede the proud and vainglorious sort of the world although they séeme to be very happie men yet they haue most miserable ends many times and foule fals from the height of their honors dignities and prosperities and that which is woorst of all they are tumbled downe into hell with the mightie hand of Gods indignation EVen as in the midst of the sphere is that centre from which all lines being drawen do tend towards their circumference So a good Christian man hath God for his circumference For whatsoeuer he thinketh speaketh or doeth it tendeth to Christ of whom he is compassed round about for as the Psalmist saith The Lord is round about his people And againe His truth shall compasse thée round about thou shalt not be afraid for any terror by night also Mercy shall compasse him about that putteth his trust in the Lord. Indéed our good sauiour Christ is that diuine circumference which compasseth round about his seruants and is at euery hand néere vnto his déere children He is that same celestial trée that couereth
shoote néerer and sooner hit a faire great marke than a little one So the diuell doth easily hit with his arrowes and strike with his darts the vaine glorious and proud men of the world but the humble and lowly he misseth with all the sleights and cunning he hath Euerie proud man that seeketh after vaine glorie is but vnwise and foolish for the diuell hath puffed him vp and made him a great marke whereat himselfe may shoote and the which he may the more easily hit and strike with his poisoned darts of death Such a man doth Salomon meane when he saith The foole doth not know that he hailed to bands vntill he be wounded vnto death True praise doth consist in vertue which hath déepe rootes and spreadeth far abroad all vaine things do quickly fall away neither can any vaine thing be perpetual The Ammonites and Moabites were highly praised and extolled in the mouthes of all men but they fell so far from that praise that the remembrance of them was cleane put out I sawe the vngodly man saith the prophet exalted and lifted vp like the Cedars of Libanus and I passed by and lo he was gone I sought him and his place was no where to be found And Salomon saith The name of the vngodly shall consume and waste away Wicked men which do féede and franke themselues with mischéefe and malice although for a time they séeme to prosper greatly and to be highly esteemed among men yet notwithstanding their florishing estate doth not continue long The day we sée doth often come that they which this day do praise to morrow will either dispraise or say nothing but especially this we knowe by daily experience that they which through hypocrisie without any vertue or iust desert haue stolen their praise and commendations by deceiuing of mens harts they either lose the same in this life before they die or euen presently after when they are cast headlong into all maner of miseries Christians therefore must not trust to the false and deceitfull glorie of the world bicause as Esaias saith All flesh is grasse and all the glorie of it is as the flower of the field And Ecclesiasticus saith All flesh doth wither away like grasse The prophet Dauid being disposed to speake of a wicked and vngodly man that is mightie and famous in the world he saith When he dieth he taketh not all neither doth his glorie or pompe go with him When he saith he taketh not all it is an Hebrew phrase and is all one as if he should say he taketh nothing with him And therefore saith the Lord by Esay the glorie of Moab and the glorie of the Cedar shall be taken away And Oseas the prophet saith that the glorie of the wicked Iewes shal be turned into ignominie It doth therefore behooue all Christians to séeke the glorie of God and as the Apostle doth admonish vs to do all things to the glorie and praise of him that when we shall go hence we may haue eternall glorie with God through Christ Iesu our Lord and sauiour For the glorie of this world is very transitorie and vncertaine it is buried with mens bodies when they be dead and posterities do forget it and blot it out of all remembrance The counsell of Chrysostom is excéeding good despising the glorie of the world saith he thou shalt he more glorious than they that séeke it CHristian men do profit more for the good of their soules and towards eternall life in the narrow and hot burning fornace of aduersitie and troubles than in the large and broad fields of wealth and prosperitie For as golde by fire is seuered and parted from drosse So singlenes of hart and true Christian simplicitie is best séene and made most euident in troubles and afflictions in prosperitie euery man will séeme godly but afflictions do drawe out of the hart whatsoeuer is there whether it be good or bad This made Dauid say Prooue me O Lord and trie me search my reines and my hart It is not amisse to vnderstand by the reines the inward delights and pleasures bicause the seate of lusts and desires is said to be in the reines and by the hart the secret cogitations bicause it is the shop and receptacle of the thoughts EVen as filthy matter or rottennes of a boyle blaine or push being hid within the flesh doth greatly gréeue and vexe sore the bodie that is sicke But if it breake and run out the paine is mitigated So sorrow being closed and shut vp in the hart of man doth mightily torment him but being thrust out with teares and grones the hart is somewhat eased and the minde a little pacified They therfore must néeds be out of measure gréeued from whom all teares sighings sobs are taken Ezechiel the prophet his wife whom he loued most déerely died whose death no doubt was gréeuous and bitter vnto him but that he might not wéepe nor bewaile hir death with teares and mourning did excéedingly augment and increase his sorrowe The fountaine of sorrow is in the hart of man whose waters if they flow not ouer through the eies they will ouerwhelme drowne the hart it selfe and will not once suffer the thought to turne from languish and intollerable gréefe For as a great and thicke smoke vaporing out of a foule blacke fyre vnlesse it haue frée passage and some vente or waie where through it may go out will all to darken bestinch and make blacke the house Euen so sorrowe and gréefe procéeding out of the hot fire of calamities being shut vp in the house of mans hart doth make it excéeding blacke and doth corrupt it with blacke and bitter choler vnlesse through the mouth or eies there be a breathing out of sighes set from the bottome of the hart and streames of teares trickling downe the chéekes Yet an effeminate and desperate wailing either for the dead or for any other cause as of men without hope is vtterly to be misliked and that Stoicall opinion also that a wise man should neuer be mooued neither with mercy sorrow nor anger is to be auoided For the motions and stirs of mans mind must be tempered with reason good counsell wisedome and discretion and are not to be vtterly pulled vp by the rootes Ecclesiasticus thinketh it good that a man moderately bewaile the death of others And when our Sauiour Christ himselfe behelde Marie Magdalene and others also wéeping with hir when hir brother Lazarus was dead he wept insomuch that the Iewes meruayled and said behold how he loued him AS a smoke which at the first is great and thicke ascending vpward is quickly scattered and out of sight Euen so the glory of the proud men of this world by little and little is obscured and vanisheth cleane away The damned ones which are tormented in hell with endlesse and euerlasting paines do know and acknowledge so much
flesh and blood the world and diuell haue their harts those go downward and take roote below Such men are like vnto trées which in the swéete and pleasant spring time will be well stored and full of goodly blossoms and wil make a franke offer and a large promise of much fruit but when the fruit is looked for and should be gathered there is none to be had they were but bare leaues and idle blossoms Such trées did Christ himselfe méete with when he was héere belowe vpon the earth in his bodie and at this day the whole world euen euerie citie and towne is very full of such trées yea it is hard to finde one house wherein there groweth not such a trée Well the Lord did curse them then and be we sure he will not blesse them now he that then did cause them to be cut downe and cast into the fire will in like maner cast into the fire and torments of hell all those that séeke him with their lips and are far from him with their harts Vngodly men which are delighted in forbidden things they come not néere the waies of the Lord whatsoeuer shew of holines they make with men they sit downe and rest themselues in the seate of wickednes for they haue onely their lips gilded with holines there is not one dram of godlines in their harts The prophet doth testifie so much when he saith that they which worke wickednes walke not in the Lords waies their harts are so far from séeking after God or any good thing that indéede they séeke after euill things as Salomon in his Prouerbs affirmeth Yet neuertheles there be some though the number of them be not great that euen as great and mighty vapors with the force and power of the sunne are taken and lifted vp from the earth and do séeke after the sunne by whose strength and vertue they are carried vp on high and growing into cloudes do euen follow the sunne So I say there is a remnant and a little flocke of Christs that in a true vnfained and sincere loue of God are lifted vp from the loue of this world and from all earthly and fleshly affections so far as is possible for man in this life to be and do séeke the Lord and his kingdome in the singlenes of their harts and thinking the time of their abode héere in this vale of all miseries to too long they daily sigh and grone for a dissolution and the comming of Christ to iudge the quick and the dead But this number is very small and we may admire them euen as the prophet Esay did and say Who are these that flie like scattered cloudes The Lord if it be his holy and blessed will turne the harts of all hypocrites and carnall worshippers of God to serue him in veritie and in truth and vouch he safe to increase the number of his single harted seruants Amen EVen as the blood in the bodie of a man being corrupted with a poisoned arrow doth by and by flie to the hart euen séeking and hoping as it were to finde some remedie and helpe there and yet doth euen so soone as it toucheth the hart finde death where it sought for life So men when they are sore pressed with calamities do make the world their first refuge and whiles they séeke for succour and comfort of the world they finde no better thing than death where they thought to haue found life Experience doth teach them that they sought for life in the house of death and for a medicine there where no good thing is to be had But it behooueth vs that do professe christianitie and do fight vnder that banner when we labour and are loden heauily with tribulations and afflictions foorthwith to repaire vnto God and with all spéede and possible haste to run vnto Christ who euen from the altar of the crosse where he offered himselfe for vs that by his death he might deliuer vs from euerlasting death calleth vs vnto him Our sauiour Christ is said to make a feast and to eate at the conuersion of a sinner when he forsaketh his wickednes and turneth vnto the Lord with a contrite and sorrowfull hart for his sinnes and offences committed against the word and will of God for so the Euangelist saith Bring hither the fat calfe kill it and let vs eate So that we can no way make the Lord a banket that will please and delight him but by forsaking the world our sinnes and our selues and in appealing to the throne of his grace and mercies seate We heare his voice euery day what meane we that we obey it not Why continue we in sinne which consumeth and rotteth our soules and bodies as rustines doth iron Why go we not home to our heauenly father We know his goodnes we haue great experience of his clemencie loue and mercie and yet still we linger Our patrimonie is gone we haue most lewdly spent wasted and consumed all so that we are no more woorthie to enter into the kingdome of God than are the very foule and dirtie swine and yet nothing wil driue vs to him It is euen as himselfe saith No man can come vnto me vnlesse my father drawe him the Lord then draw vs vnto himselfe What a madnes is it to séeke for helpe reléefe and comfort of the world which séeketh vs onely that it may deceiue and destroy vs The Lord calleth vs to giue vs comfort and vnspeakable ioy and we turne our backs to him the world doth but hold vp a finger and becken vs to it with a purpose to haue our companie to hell and damnation and we run and whine after it like a thirstie infant after the dug of his mother or nurse And thus we passe on séeking for life in the house of death and for ioy in the vale of miserie where none is to be found The Lord open the eies of our vnderstanding and make vs to know and to see that our helpe health comfort and life in this world and in the world to come standeth onely in him that made both heauen and earth Amen IDlenes as it bréedeth pouertie and beggerie in very many which might liue well and in good sort with diligent and faithfull labour So is it very dangerous in those that be rich and féele no smart nor want in this life for whiles they giue themselues to foule idlenes voluptuousnes doth ouercome reason and they are snared and taken in the deadly traps of the deceitfull flickerings of the world and are poysoned with carnall pleasures and fleshly delights which do beare them faire in hand for a little while but at the length do deceiue them and leaue them in shame and confusion For euen as the earth when it is not tilled nor trimmed doth bréede and bring foorth briers brambles and all noisome and vnprofitable things so idlenes in man doth bréede and broode in him vngodly thoughts and
wicked cogitations of all sorts and doth allure hale drawe and euen drag him to do those things which are so odious in the sight of God that he must either most earnestly repent that he hath done them or else he must die eternally for doing of them Idlenes therefore doth not become Christians for so doth our God and maker teach vs when he saith to Adam in the labour of thy hands shalt thou eate all the daies of thy life And iust Iob saith that man is borne to labour And the Apostle saith If any man will not labour let him not eate When Dauid continued at home in idlenes then did adulterie and murther créepe into his hart and ceased not vntill it broke out into effects and most dangerous actions Christ did shew a great hatred to idlenes when he said Why stand ye héere all the day idle SOmtimes it falleth out that a hen sitteth vpon ducks eggs and with hir diligent sitting the heat of hir bodie she doth hatch and bring them foorth and when they be able to follow hir she clucks them after hir maner as though they were hir naturall chickens she doth call them about hir but they being not of hir but the ducks kinde though by hir they haue beene hatched and of hir haue receiued life and though she hath a continuall care to bring them vp and to defend them from such enimies as séeke to deuoure them yet neuerthelesse they wil follow and séeke after that whereunto by nature they are inclined and giuen When she is scraping and scratching the earth to finde them foode they will be in the water mire or foule puddle after their kinde she may clucke and walke alone they will not kéepe hir companie vnlesse perhaps in some danger when the kite is readie to catch them for some succour they will ●lie to hir howbeit at the length when she perceiueth them to be vnnaturall and vnkinde to hir she doth forsake them and giue them ouer Euen so our swéete Sauiour Christ Iesus hauing taken great paines for vs and hauing humbled himselfe euen in the lowest degrée of all humilitie that can be named as in comming down out of his fathers bosome being most perfect most holy and omnipotent God being euery way equall and in nothing inferiour to his father to take our weake fraile and féeble nature vpon him and sinne excepted to haue a perfect féeling of all our infirmities as wearisomnes of bodie hunger and thirst and such others and besides the induring of these many yéeres togither hauing suffered a most cruell death and euen at his death vpon the crosse hauing tasted and taken a full cup of his fathers furie and indignation which was in déed filled and prepared for vs as a iust reward for our sinnes and should haue béen our owne cup and our owne portion for euer and euer had he not euen then taken and supt it vp to cléere and to frée vs from it Againe after all these things hauing still continued his humilitie in suffering death to kéepe his bodie thrée daies in the graue and euen as it were to tread and trample vpon him and then mauger death hell diuell and Iewes hauing risen againe and being ascended and gone vp to his father where now vntil his comming again to iudge the quicke and the dead he sitteth at the right hande of maiestie and power He now speaketh and calleth vnto vs by his prophets apostles and ministers and willeth vs to remember what case and estate we were in before he died and suffered all these things for vs and he would haue vs to know to be sure and neuer to forget that if he had not suffered death héere vpon the earth as he did we should neuer haue found any way or entrance into heauen the celestiall ioyes and pleasures of the Lords saints saluation and eternall life should neuer haue belonged vnto vs we should haue had no more to do with them then they that liue without faith and die infidels The horrors of hell and the stincking lakes of vnspeakable shame confusion torments endlesse death and damnation should haue béene our inheritance lot and perpetuall portion Christ therefore doth daily put vs in minde that we be not our owne but his and that we be the greatest and déerest purchase that euer was made in heauen or in earth and that the like price and cost was neuer bestowed vpon any creatures as vpon vs. When the angels which wer● in heauen in the presence of their creator did once offende they were hurled out and cast into hell Christ woulde not bestow vpon them one peny of all that great price and rich ransome which he paid for vs he would not then become man to shed one drop of blood for them but for our sakes he spared not one drop but shed all The Hen that himselfe speaketh of was neuer so diligent and carefull to gather hir chickins vnder hir wings as he hath euer béene most ready to shroude and to protect vs against all the enimies of our soules and bodies Many mothers shall sooner forget the children of their own wombs and vtterly forsake them before Christ will forsake vs yea he will neuer forget nor forsake vs vnlesse we first forget and forsake him Now therefore we being his so déerely bought and so truely paide for he calleth vpon vs euery day he clucketh vs and looketh for vs that we should follow him and tread in such steps as he hath appointed and that we shuld not range at randon but kéepe our selues within the hearing of his voice and our liues within the limits of obedience vnto the same these things I saie he looketh for at our hands But how deale we with this most kinde most louing and most mercifull redéemer and if the fault be not in our selues the fauiour of our seules and bodies Verily euen so as the vnnaturall and vnkind ducks deale with the hen of whom they haue receiued life they regarde not hir clucking neither we Christs calling when she is séeking and prouiding for them on the faire drie and wholesome earth they will be in some foule water filthie mire or stinking puddle And when the Lord Iesus calleth vs to integritie of life to do the thing that is iust and right in his owne eie and to speake the truth according to the knowledge of our harts then will we with gréedines pollute our soules and bodies with all wickednes and things that be abominable then will we oppresse our brethren not caring who sincke if our selues swim then will we not sticke to speake lies euen to Gods owne face And when the Lord calleth and sendeth vs to seeke heauenly things we presently returne to the foule puddles of the world carnall delightes and vaine yea vile pleasures so that we euer take the contrary w●y to that which Christ commandeth Christ calleth for our harts to haue them in truth and sinceritie with all diligence
to attende vpon his pleasure and to waite on his will he would haue vs not in part but wholy to giue them vnto him and without the hart he will receiue and take in good part at our hands and lips nothing But we on the otherside giue nothing lesse to God then our harts What is it that cannot and may not command our harts and haue them at pleasure sooner then Christ Iesus that with the death of his owne hart gaue life to our bodies and soules If the worlde do but a little smile vpon vs and giue vs but an alluring looke and a faire though a false word we will by and by follow it and bestow vpon it all our attendance If the diuell himselfe can make vs beléeue that we shall either haue profite or pleasure by doing his wil our harts mindes wils and all are readier for him then for Iesus Christ O matchles yea monstrous madnes they that séeke our destruction can sooner with a pleasant looke then Christ with the giuing of his life for vs haue vs at commandement Christ would haue vs to mortifie our earthly members as fornication vncleannes inordinate affections euill concupiscence and couetousnes which is idolatrie But who doth not nourish pamper and cherish all these The Lord woulde haue our conuersation in heauen but we are altogither earthly and carnally minded The Lord would haue our féete to stand within the gates of Ierusalem but we loue rather to be trampling the stréetes of Egypt Babylon and Sodom The holie ghost would haue vs to fight a good fight to finish our course after the will of God and to kéepe the faith not onely in words but also in life and déedes Indéed we are apt and ready to fight for worldly promotion honor dignitie reuenues and riches but for heauen and heauenly things we will neuer striue take no paines nor once trouble our selues we will haue i● with ease and all maner of pleasure or else not at all farewell it The courses we take héere in this life are very bad and the end vnlesse we repent is like to be woorst of all And whiles we haue no care to kéepe good consciences it is vnpossible for vs to kéepe faith Let stande before vs Christ and sathan the one pointing vs to heauen and eternall felicitie but the way to it ful of troubles gréefes and sorrowes the other pointing to hell but the way to it ful of delicates pleasures and daintie delights and let God call and the diuell call and I speake it with gréefe of hart the diuell is like to haue the greater number to follow him for those short pleasures and Christ but a fewe to follow him bicause they must go loden with crosses Daily experience doth teach vs no lesse when all our actions are carnall haue onely but a little outward shew and no taste at all of true godlines nor so much as any rellish of the spirit and loue of Christ Some will abstaine from the committing of many grosse sins now and then and yet not that I feare greatly in any true and sincere loue to God but either for feare of shame and punishment in this worlde or else feare of vengeance in the world to come which both are vnprofitable for the Lord hath no pleasure in forced seruice he will haue it voluntarie with the hart and procéeding of loue not of a seruile feare otherwise it shall be numbred with the rest of our sinnes This doth greatly condemne vs that though we do not such things our selues yet we can without trouble of conscience gréefe of hart or vexation of minde sée and heare the Lords name blasphemed his saboth vnhalowed idolatrie committed parents dishonored whooredome theft murder and couetousnes commonly vsed and all the lawes of God vtterly contemned and it shall neuer offend the greatest number so much as a thorne in a foote or a blaine vpon a finger What other thing is this but to forsake God in the plaine field and to be afeard to serue him in truth and sinceritie least we should thereby purchase mans displeasure Vnlesse therefore we learne to serue him better in more truth with greater zeale and singlenes of hart we haue nothing else to looke for but that he will forsake vs both in this worlde leauing vs destitute of his assistance that our enimies may pray vpon vs and also in the world to come in giuing out against vs his malediction curse wo and sentence of death The Lord make vs new creatures and giue an vnfained loue of himselfe déepe roote in our harts drawing after it a chéerefull obedience to his sacred word and the selfe same to our brethren wherwith we loue our selues so that all be in God that we may escape dangers in both the worlds that when death that inexorable executioner shall do his office we may arriue at the safe and happy hauen of Gods euerlasting kingdome purchased and paide for by Christ and kept in store for all those that beléeue aright and shall liue and die in him But alas the most part of vs as yet vntill it shall please the almightie to inrich vs be like proud beggers which not being woorth one farthing will boast of great wealth So many brag of great holines but haue none and of great faith as though they could remooue mountaines out of their places and yet know not what true faith is How fearful a saieng is that of Christ When the sonne of man shall come to iudge the quicke and the dead do you thinke that he shal finde any faith vpon the earth As if he should saie he shall finde very little howsoeuer now all perswade themselues that they be faithfull inough The Lorde amende vs for we haue receiued great and infinite good things from the Lords hand both for our bodies and soules but in giuing thanks we are like to the nine leapers mentioned in the Gospell which neuer turned backe to thanke God for their healing The Lord hath poured vpon vs infinite dewes of his swéet and blessed word and yet still we continue to be those drie trées to whom his curse cutting down and casting into the fire belongeth The Lord grant that with all spéede we may turne from our sinnes to righteousnes and holynes of life that God may turne his anger from vs and his fauor towards vs Amen MArcus Antoninus with an oration that he made vpon the death of Caesar is said to haue greatly delighted the people of Rome and that he mooued very many of them to shed great store of bitter teares when he put them in remembrance of the great benefits which they had frō time to time receiued of Caesar withal did shew them Caesars garment wherin his enimies Cassius Brutus had slaine him all full of blood whereat they were so mightily mooued that they expulsed the homicides out of the citie so that they durst not if they woulde liue any
longer come néere it And yet in these daies of ours let come neuer so good and heauenly an orator with the oracles of God himselfe in his mouth and shew most plainly what Christ the redéemer of the world hath done for man and prooue that man hath receiued vnspeakable and innumerable benefits by and through Christ and declare what bitter teares of water and blood did trickle downe his chéekes and what déepe and deadly sighes with many fearfull and gréeuous grones did rise from his hart before he came to the crosse and let him rip vp his passion stitch by stitch as the holy booke and diuine word shall direct and leade him and let him particularly shew how and where he was wounded that he was beaten spit vpon crowned with thornes nailed hand and foote to the crosse scorned and mocked of the Iewes and let him shew most liuely the wicked and cruell Iewes imbrewing their hands in his blood giuing him vineger and gall to drinke and who for all this will shed one teare giue one grone or sigh once from the bottome of his hart yea let the preacher declare and prooue that besides the death and passion of his bodie he suffered in his soule the heauie wrath and indignation of his father and the extreme tortures and torments of hell for a time no lesse than the reprobates that be there alreadie and no lesse then all we by iust desert should haue suffered for euer if Christ had not done it for vs And who for al this will driue out of the citie not Cassius and Brutus that killed Caesar but those horrible abhominable and most damnable sins for the which Christ was slaine For so saith the scripture He saith the prophet meaning Christ was wounded for our iniquities And a little after the prophet bringeth in God himselfe speaking thus of Christ For the sinnes of my people haue I smitten him And the Apostle telleth the Romanes the same thing Christ was giuen saith he for our offences And to the Corinthians Christ died for our sinnes according to the scriptures The matter then being so plaine that no man high nor lowe whosoeuer can cléere himselfe of the death of Christ but must néedes will he nill he confesse that there is in him the matter of Christs arraignment bitter passion and cursed death and that he is no lesse giltie of the same his death and bloodshedding than those that cried Away with him away with him it is no reason that he should liue any longer nor than those that did spit in his face and nailed his hands and féete to the crosse It must needes followe that Caesar was more beholding to his friends than the sonne of God is to many thousands of those that do professe his name and Marcus Antoninus was more beholding to the Romanes which were so readie at one oration to purge and cléere the citie of homicides and murthers than a great number of faithfull preachers of Christ be now to infinite thousands of their auditors which are so far from abandoning and thrusting out of cities and towns euen grosse vile and most lothsome sinnes that in their owne priuate houses yea euen in their owne bosoms and bodies they harbour nourish and maintaine them although they heare euery day the heauie iudgements and destroying wrath of God denounced against them not with a generall houering ouer their heads at al aduentures as though no body were spoken to but euen with a particular toutching and as it were an vnlacing of euery sinne in it kind to lay open the stinch and abhomination of the same that men might if they had grace be ashamed and afeard to staine and to blemish themselues with such things as the Lord vpon paine of condemnation hath inhibited and forbidden and yet all will not serue No man that will beleeue the holy scripture can be ignorant of this that the almightie did with the heauie hand of his wrath cast angels out of heauen when they were poisoned with pride and would not be contented with their owne estate and that therefore they became diuels this I say cannot but bée knowen of all and yet who is afeard of pride yea who will not be as proud as euer the angels were and though he prooue a diuell and purchase hell for his pleasure Pride gluttonie abundance of worldly wealth vainly and wickedly vsed idlenes from all good works and no stretching foorth of hands vnto the poore and n●edie were the very capitall and head sinnes which did euen wrest and wring from the Lord his heauie and most fearfull iudgements and did as it were with violence inforce him to destroy the Sodomites and Gomorrheans with fire and brimstone from heauen for that other most foule sinne the which I am afeard euen to name did spring and growe out of the sinnes that I haue named before And yet all these sinnes with infinite others do in as bad maner and no lesse measure swarme raigne and reuell in England than when they were at the woorst they did in Sodom What sequele then is to be feared and daily to be looked for with silence I passe ouer There is neuer a man that beareth the name of a Christian but he will confesse that his great grandfather Adam was expulsed and thrust out of paradise for eating one apple forbidden him by the Lord vpon paine of death and yet that man that with open mouth will make that confession will euery day eate seuen apples as bitter and as straightly forbidden as that and will he then for eating seuen thinke to scape better cheape than his grandfather that did eate but one No no the eater of seuen shall finde the way into euerlasting life as hard to enter as the way into paradise was to his grandfather being once thrust out vnlesse he spéedily earnestly and truly repent him and giue ouer the eating of such fruits as the Lord hath forbidden him It is very strange that the iudgements of God shewed vpon Caine for killing his brother vpon Saule for his disobedience vpon Iudas for his treason will not make all men to detest and to hate murther to loue obedience and to beware of trecherie and treason but that men will still liue as they list as though they were persuaded that either God doth not sée them or else not regarde them and that he will neuer call them to any account do what they will all is one God is not angrie nothing displeaseth him or at the least as though they had couenanted and agréed with hell and condemnation without controlment or feare of paine to take their pleasures in all vanities and abhominations whatsoeuer Is it not a woonder that we séeing before our eies if we will beléeue God a whole world drowned with an vniuersal deluge or generall flood of water and yet the same sinnes that were the cause of that generall destruction to be so pleasant sweete vnto
may be vtterly abandoned And if thou for thy part wilt begin euen striue to be the first thou shalt do well Wed thou thy selfe as in déede we all ought to do the will of God whatsoeuer it cost thée somthing for my sake thy poore brother in Christ that most déerely doth loue thée in the Lord Iesu and somthing for thy soules sake to kéepe it out of hell and that it may come to heauen but especially for Gods sake to whom thou owest all obedience and so shall I thinke my paines well bestowed and be ready all the daies of my life to labour still to do thée good Loue to thée in Christ Iesu hath constrained me to send abroad this little booke of Similies to let thée know that I wish well to thée and that I daily desire and beséech the almightie that sinne may be destroied and that the feare of God may euer possesse thée dwell in thy hart and florish in thy hands True it is good reader that we ought to desire to liue no longer than we haue a care to liue well and that the whole course of our liues may be acceptable to God That is the Apostles meaning when he saith Wherefore also we couet that both dwelling at home and remoouing from home we may be acceptable to the Lord. And a little after the same Apostle saith that Christ died for vs that hencefoorth we should not liue to our selues but vnto him that died for vs. Therefore it is a méere vanitie to say we be Christians vnlesse we cast from vs our old corruptions and custome of sinning and be changed in our mindes and become new creatures in Christ Iesu The which thing I do most humbly craue at the hands of God euen for his owne name and his onely sonne Christ Iesus his sake both for thée and me that when the daies of our miseries in this dangerous and troublesome world shall be expired thou and I may haue a ioifull méeting with the rest of the Lords saints and all his holy angels in the glorie of his endlesse blessed and eternall kingdome through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom be all honour power praise glorie and dominion now and world without end A necessarie Table of the chiefe and principall things contained within this booke pointing the Reader to euery page and Similie wherein the same is to be found by these two letters S. P. the first signifieng the Similie the second the Page with figures of both their numbers as followeth WHo they be that are Christs sheepe and who be not Similie 1. Page 1. A veine of our head is cut that the whole bodie may be healed S. 2. P. 1. As the sunne light offendeth bleared eies so the truth offendeth both ignorant and obstinate papists S. 3. P. 2. As al the members of the bodie haue from the soule their moouing and life So euerie part of a commonwealth is gouerned by a godlie prince S. 4. P. 2. The sorcerie of the papists Brownists Familists and such others S. 5. P. 2. The worde of God signified by raine and sweete dewes and the operation of them both S. 6. P. 3. The church of Christ and true religion now established in England ought not to be condemned nor euil spoken of bicause some bad men are mingled with the good S. 7. P. 3. A candle that is put out cannot light another candle S. 8 P. 3. The spots of the world are dangerous and to be shunned of all but especially of them that teach others S 9. P 4. Those ministers of the word shepherds of the Lords flocks which smother their learning and do not impart their knowledge to the church of God do offend greatly S. 10. Pag. 4. Euill and wicked counsell is woont to fall vpon the heads of the first inuentors and giuers of the same S. 11. P. 4. 5. The minde of man without the word of God is barren and bringeth foorth no good thing S. 12. P. 5. People for the most part do imitate their princes whether they be good or euill S. 13. Pag. 5. The end of godly gouernment is peace S. 14. P. 6. Where true iustice hath no place there peace is not to be looked for S. 15. P. 6. The prosperitie of this world is like winters weather the calmnes of the sea and the stabilitie of the moone S. 16. P. 6. The superfluous cares of worldly things laid apart our mindes ought to be occupied in heauen and euer waiting vpon our God S. 17. P. 7. Men are very truly called the sonnes of them whose manners and liues they choose to imitate and follow S. 18. P. 7. As sweete waters are corrupted and spoiled when they run into waters which art salt bitter or vnwholsome So good men are greatly blemished in vsing the familiaritie of the wicked and vngodly S. 19. P. 8. Enuie is alwaies vertues companion miserie onely admitteth no enuie S. 20. P. 8. An enuious man is as vnprofitable to a citie as darnell is to wheate S. 21. P. 8. The enuious man can neither abide a superior an inferior nor an equall He is fitly compared to a viper and to the rustines of iron S. 22. P. 8 9. Enuie is a dangerous disease rife in al places it is a picture of hell S. 23. P. 9. To put any trust or confidence in this world or to depend vpon vaine man is to leane to a broken staffe the rod and the staffe of the Lord are onelie to be leaned vnto S. 24. P. 9. In all our words and actions a measure must be kept and consideration is to be had what agreeth with the time place and persons S. 25. P. 10. Humilitie ought to go before dignity S. 26. P. 10. Many hearers of sermons delight more in the rolling toong of the preacher and his retoricall phrases than in the matter it selfe which he deliuereth S. 27. P. 10. Though sound doctrine bicause it brideleth lusts reprooueth sinne and is a pore and cleere looking glasse for men to beholde themselues in is not welcome to manie yet ought the teachers of the word to continue and to be feruent therein S. 28. P. 10. 11. A common wealth is maintained and vpholden with two things to wit with due reward and due punishment S. 29 P. 11. Men are then woont to be ecclipsed and darkened concerning the loue of God and their neighbors when they growe rich in this world S. 30. P. 11. 12. The getting of great riches is the losse of great quietnes S. 31. P. 12. A iust man is a mightie man be he neuer so poore and a wicked man is vile and base be he neuer so rich S. 32. P. 12. 13. A fine exchange betweene a rich man that is naught and a begger that is honest and vertuous S. ●● P. 13. As cloudes do couer the sunne so calami●ie darkeneth the minde of man S. 34. P. 13. No sound iudgement can be giuen of a man vntill
he be throughly tried S. 35. P. 13. The best foode for the soule of man S. 36. P. 13. 14. Not proud but humble men do profite by reading and hearing of the worde of God S. 37. 38. P. 14. 15. The riches dignities and honors of this world and the life of man are fitly compared to clouds in the aire which are suddenly dispersed and scattered with the windes S. 39. P. 15. 16. The word of God is a looking glasse that wil deceiue no man If a man behold himselfe well in it he shall see plainly that before he was man he was earth and before he was earth he was nothing S 40 P 16. As a birde thrusteth hir bill through the loopes of hir cage in token of hir great desire to be at libertie So the soule of a true Christian groneth and sigheth in the bodie in desire to be dissolued and to go to dwell with the Lord Iesu S. 41. P. 16. 17. Papists compared to vipers S. 42. P. 17. Man for his inconstancie is compared to a ballance that is mooued with euerie little weight S. 43. P. 17 18. Man is so wauering that he is compared to a Chameleon which changeth his colour according to the thing that is next him and also bicause the Chameleon will be changed into any colour saue white S. 44. 45. P. 18. Not they that trust to a dead faith but they that haue a liuely and working faith shall be saued S. 46 P. 18. Many men of very good qualities and indewed with sundrie vertues and full of good parts haue been strongly altered and greatly disgraced through their familiaritie with the wicked S. 47. P. 18. 19. When Peter came into Cayphas his hall he denied Christ S. 48. P. 19. What it is not to eat the word of God and not to fill a mans bellie and bowels with it S. 49. P. 19. The harder that the tree of sinne and wickednes is to be cut downe the more earnestly and diligently ought the preachers of the word to strike at it with the sharpe edge of Gods most mightie and most holie worde S. 50. P. 20. The Lord doth humble vs in this world that he may exalt vs in the world to come this world doth smile vpon vs with a purpose to deceiue vs S. 51. 32. P. 20. Wicked men are wilfull murtherers of their owne bodies and soules S. 53. P. 21. Vngodly men finde no comfort nor sweetnes in the word of God S. 54. P. 21. In mens iudgements words and works we may be deceiued in Gods we cannot Whatsoeuer is writtē in Gods word is truth whatsoeuer is taught in it is vertue and holines and whatsoeuer it promiseth in the world to come is eternitie S. 55. P. 22. The onely weapon that we must vse to ouer come the world flesh and diuell is the word of God and the practise of the same S. 56. P. 22. Poore men feare they God neuer so much are little set by in this world S. 57. P. 23. Christ hath his cup and the world his the one is bitter but wholesome the other very pleasant but pestilent and deadly S. 58. P. 23. and 24 and also S 60. P. 24. As a guiltie man whose conscience doth accuse him would neuer see the iudge and a traitor would neuer willingly be espied of his prince nor a disloyall person of one that knoweth him and on the other side a true and faithfull subiect that hath done dutifull seruice desireth the presence of the prince in hope to be well rewarded So the wicked and vngodly ones of the world are greeued to heare of Christs comming to iudge the quicke and the dead but they that haue liued with good consciences do grone for his comming S. 61. P. 24. There be great braggers of religion which make a great noise as thogh none were right professors of the truth but themselues such be not the best men humble minded Christians are better than they S. 62. P. 25. Death commeth suddenly vpon many that neuer thought to die nor cannot tell what shall become of them when they bee dead S. 63. P. 25. 26. All men are alike subiect to death whether they beyoong or olde this world is like a potters warehouse and all men in it are earthen vessels S. 64. P. 26. As the moone decreasing hath hir open side hanging downward but increasing and gathering light hath hir opening vp towards heauen So men meere naturall haue their harts set only vpon earth and earthly things but men regenerate haue the open side of their harts euer towards God heauen and heauenly things S 65. P. 26. 27. A common wealth without good lawes and holy ordinances put in practise is like a bodie without a soule S 66 P 28. As the horse is ordained to run the oxe to plough and the dog to hunt So is man borne to loue God aboue all things S. 67. P. 28. Mans hart is so hard that it must be smitten with the Lords owne hand and bruised with one calamitie or other or else no godo thing will euer issue out of it S. 68. P. 28. and S. 69. P. 29. S. 70. P. 29. The earth is the Lords steward and doth dispose and detaine the increase of it selfe at the Lords appointment when God wil plentie when he will scarci●ie S. 71. P. 29. 30. If man cleaue to God God will sticke to him if he will run from God yet can he not escape his hands S. 72. P. 30. A man that is vertuous without hypocrisie is an excellent iewell he is greatly greeued to see any bewitched with the forceries of the world he doth what he can that none may Carnall men are meere strangers to true christianitie S. 73. P. 31. Vaine and carnall men compared to organs S. 74. P. 31. Naturall men will do no good thing vnles they be pricked forward with the praise and commendations of the world S. 75. P. 31. 32. Hypocrites most plainly and truly described by a wood or groue full of goodly trees and pleasant plants to delight men and also full of stinging serpents to poyson and to kill men S. 76. P. 32. Heauenly meditations doe molli●ie and warme the hart and do greatly inflame men with a feruent loue of God This world and the things thereof haue euer been false and haue deceiued euen their louers and deerest friends at the length S. 77. P. 32. 33. The Lorde suffereth his owne children whom he loueth most deerely to bee oftentimes in great wants when the wicked haue euen the world at will The afflictions of this are not the maledictions and curses of God but rather most certaine signes of his loue and tokens of his grace S. 78. P. 33. 34. God doth su●fer his saints heere vpon the earth to be smitten and sore beaten of the world and to be throughly tried with diuers tentations to the end that their inward graces may breake
when their pride pleasures and riches and themselues be parted and on the other side there be not a fewe which do liue heere in great troubles and manifold afflictions and are no whit regarded of the world f●●re they God neuer so truely the end of whose liues doth bring the beginning of their ioyes S. 191. 105. Whatsoeuer this world doth or can afford vs is so light as a feather more subiect to a change then the moone more vnconstant then the winde The world therefore with all the trifles and trash it hath is to be contemned and the kingdome of God and the righteousnes therof is diligently to be sought for for that indureth for euer S. 192. P. 106. 107. The vertue of godly princes do mightilie mooue the harts of subiects to true religion a right worshipping of God and due obedience S. 193. P. 117. Humble men when they stoupe lowest and prostrate themselues most before the Lords throne then rise they vp highest and draw neerest to the likenes of God on the otherside vaine and proud men when they exalt themselues most then are they likest vnto the deuill S. 194. P. 107. They that be in great prosperitie are commonly in great dangers a low and meane estate is safest S. 195. P. 107. 108. To be vnder the Lords protection and in his fauour is to be in all safetie against all power of men and diuels and to be from vnder the wings of his grace is to ●●e open to all dangers euen to death and destruction of soules and bodies It is good for vs therefore in al obedience to keepe our selues neere vnto the Lord S. 196. P. 108. Calamities troubles and afflictions will ouerthrow any thing whatsoeuer is in man saue onely firme and constant vertue but that is so goodly so fresh and so florishing a lawrell tree that it will not be cōsumed burnt vp nor destroied with any fire that breaketh out of the clouds be it neuer so fearce nor with any torments or troubles whatsoeuer S. 197. P. 109. When princes will haue godly vertuous loyall and obedient subiects they must vse them as Iacob did his sheepe they may laie before them the rod of true religion iustice holines righteousnes and integritie of life that by the sight of those things they may conceiue good things and bring foorth fruit of that colour And so must parents deale with their naturall children and ministers of the word with their spirituall children and masters with their seruants S. 198. P. 110. When a man is in most danger and greatest distresse then is his vertue and constancie best tried S. 199. P. 110. The last daie of all daies that is the generall iudgement daie wil be a verie glomy and a blacke sessions daie for those men that do keepe their gold siluer and riches and see their poore brethren distressed and in great want and will not releeue them S. 200. P. 110. 111. Riches as gold money and such like laide vp in chestes and lockt vp in cofers are in danger to be lost through theeues fire or other meanes but being dispersed and scattered among the poore they are in safetie and will bring foorth much fruit and will be very profitable both to the giuer and to the receiuer S. 201. P. 112. The Lord calleth him a blessed man that releeueth the poore and needie and doth promise that he will deliuer him in the day of trouble A little is great riches to him that hath nothing S. 202. P. 112. It is very vnreasonable and vngodly that one christian doth not comfort and releeue another in their tribulations and wants S. 203 P. 113. Christians are commanded to lend without looking for any gaine thereby V●u●ers commit theft they must die and not liue They make marchandise of other mens myseries and their owne gaine of other mens losses The vsurer is like him that vnder the colour of loue wil take his neighbour which is alreadie downe by the hand to lift him vp that he may giue him a greater fall S. 204. P. 114. In the ministers of the word true doctrine and godly life must go togither He that teacheth good things to others and teacheth not himself to do them is like a sieue or boulter wherewith meale is sifted or boulted which sendeth foorth the finest floure and best of the wheat and keepeth the bran and woorst of the wheate to it selfe S. 105. P. 114. The tyrannie and crueltie of princes towards their loyall subiects doth threaten the ruine of their kingdomes but lenitie mercie doth make their kingdomes mightilie to florish and brings peace and safetie to themselues Mercy becommeth a christian prince verie well Mercy and truth haue kept do keepe Elizabeth our gratious Queene of England and elemencie doth strengthen hir throne Mercy doth lift man vp to Godward but crueltie doth cast man downe to hell warde S. 206. P. 114 115. Ingratitude is a greeuous sinne wherwith the Lord hath euer beene highly offended the Lords hand hath euer beene stretched out against it England hath receiued great infinite benefits both for their bodies and souls but England is far behind with thanks giuing vnto the Lord wherefore we must be either more thankfull or else looke assuredly for more punishment S. 207. P. 115. 116. Enuie is not bred in the harts of vertuous and godly men but in the harts and minds of the wicked and vngodly Enuie will not be tamed a man may ouercome and subdue his enimies but not their enuie Enuie doth teare and rende in peeces the man in whom it is The enuious man doth make the felicitie of another man his owne torment S. 208. P. 117. The Lord will haue his seruants tried in this world with many afflictions to the ende that the difference which is betweene them and the children of this world may appeere and be euident and that vertue may growe to perfection in them A christian man may be a martyr and euen liuing without losing his life by fire or sword S. 209. P. 117. 118. 119. Words of doctrine are verie profitable but when they are seene to worke holines and righteousnes in the teachers they then preuaile the more with them that are taught S. 210. P. 119. 120. The lighter ballance will euer be highest and the vainer and woorse man will euer extoll himselfe most the heauier ballance will euer be lowest and the better man will euer humble himselfe most It is in a christian man som perfection to know and to acknowledge his owne imperfection S. 211. P. 120. A theefe will speake thee faire and yet wil rob or kill thee The nature and conditions the bloodie tyrannie and more the beastlie crueltie of vsurers plainly and truly opened S. 212. P. 120. 121. 122. A verie true perfect and plaine description of hypocrites what is true vertue among Christians They that would seeme to be religious vertuous godlie and honest do differ so far from that they seeme to be as the
all idle slothfulnes in the matters of God and our saluation and to fill our harts full of vnfained loue to himselfe aboue all things and to our neighbors as to our selues and for his owne sake euen to our enimies that sathan our sworne enimie that soule flie of hell may neuer finde so much as one chinke or chap where through he may créepe into our harts Amen Amen AS in a true perfect and certaine clocke the whéeles being tempered and in equall and due proportion diuided do performe their courses and do keepe their seuerall compasses without iarring or differing one from another euenly and alike so that one moouing the others are mooued and one standing the rest are still and stir not so that though they be many in number in frame fashion and agréement they are but one Euen so in a Christian commonwealth there ought to be one and the selfesame will and so great a concord and likenes of mindes reconciled and drawen togither by vertue it selfe and so inseparably linked one to another with the infringible band of sincere loue in Christ that though in bodies they be infinite and innumerable yet in vnanimitie consent and good agréement in the Lord Iesu they should be all as one man This is that vnitie and brotherly loue which God himselfe so highly commendeth in the mouth of his prophet saying Behold how good and how ioyfull a thing it is brethren to dwell euen togither c. To this end came our sauiour Christ that I may vse the words of Zacharie euen to guide and direct our feete into the way of peace And the holy Apostle doth admonish vs to kéepe the vnitie of the spirit in the band of peace And to the Romanes he saith The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnes and peace Againe is not that example of our sweete sauiour woorthie of all men to be imbraced and imitated Simon saith Christ to Peter of whom do the kings of the earth take tribute or poll mony of their children or of strangers Peter answered Of strangers then said Iesus Then are the children frée Neuertheles saith Christ least we should offend them go thy way to the sea c. and pay for thée and me Lo● to auoid offence and to preserue peace what our sauiour Christ himselfe was contented to do euen that he néeded not and was frée from Much to blame therefore are all they and far from following the steps of Christ which séeke not by all meanes lawfull and possible to maintaine the vnitie and peace of the church of Christ The enimies of this peace are very intolerable men The Lord by his prophet calleth them wicked and vngodly men There is no peace to the vngodly And Salomon doth number them among the enimies of God which do sowe discord and dissention among brethren EVen as the spirit of man doth not strengthen the members of the body vnlesse they be fast and surely ioined togither So the holy Ghost doth not reuiue and comfort the members of the Church when they fall away and will not continue in league and fellowship with the seruants of God Longer than they are fast bound and knit to the congregation of Gods people in loue and peace in Christ the holy Ghost doth minister no strength no consolation no comfort vnto them There remaineth nothing else in such men but a numnesse and an extreme blindnes in heauenly things And whiles in their arrogancie and pride they forsake and condemne the church of God bicause they cannot draw it into subiection to their fond and fantasticall humors they become of men diuels incarnate AS the pilote of a ship without the shine of sunne or moone cannot take the hauen of any land So a man without the light of grace can neuer attaine to the hauen of glorie but howsoeuer he persuadeth himselfe that he casteth his anchor in a place of safetie it falleth out in the end that he casteth it vpon a rocke where there is no hope of saluation AN eagle so long as hir yoong ones be not very flidge and throughly feathered she doth not suffer them to go out of the nest and to flie abroad but after they be perfectly winged in the beautie strength of their feathers she throwes them out of the nest that they may flie and exercise their wings and feathers and vse them to the end wherfore they haue them Euen so our sauiour Christ that heauenly eagle after his resurrectiō commanded his disciples to stay at Ierusalem as it were in a nest and not to depart thence vntill in the day of Pentecost he had filled them with the grace of the holy Ghost then he commanded them that passing through the world and traueling through diuers coasts of the earth they should publish abroad and spread far and neare the Gospell of his kingdome This example of Christ is followed at this day to the great comfort and benefit of Christ his church when godly Archministers lay not their hands vpon any to admit them to be laborers in the Lords vineyard nor to do the office of a minister vntill they finde them sufficiently learned and well furnished with gifts and graces from God so far as they be able to discerne and iudge EVen as the eagle hauing hir yoong ones shut vp in the nest although she flieth excéeding high pearseth the loftie aire yet she withdraweth not hir eies from hir yoong ones but still beholdeth them and they also crying after their maner with their stretched out necks do looke after hir Euen so the Lord Iesus ascending into heauen did behold his disciples and they also hungring and thirsting after him did fasten their eies vpon him and did not lose the sight of him vntill he pearsed and broke open the heauens and entred into the presence of his father And although they were diuided from him in body yet in hart and minde they followed him still And Iesus that heauenly eagle séeing from heauen a fierce and cruell hauke preparing to destroy his nest and to kill his yoong ones he on the other side prepared himselfe and came against the hawke ouerthrew him and laid him prostrate vpon the ground The hawke was Saule who that I may speake as the scripture speaketh breathing out threatnings and slaughter against the disciples and seruants of the Lord he went vnto the high priest and desired letters of him to Damascus against all the Christians that he should finde there c. but the Lord Iesus did hurle him against the ground and gaue him for meate vnto his church and to the yoong ones of his nest whom he sought to destroy who now being called Paul doth recreate and refresh the whole church of God with holy most heauenly doctrine Behold how the lord hath euer prouided well for his nest that is his church his saints and seruants And this is our comfort in all
extremities euen to the end of the world For as of old from age to age he hath prouided for his owne and hath defended preserued and deliuered them in all their distresses were they neuer so desperate in the opinions of men so will he do still and for euer if we be not the cause of the contrarie through our wilfull obstinate and manifold sinnes and most impudent impenitencie The Lord shew mercie vnto vs and guide our harts minds and all our waies to the right honoring of his maiestie and true praise of his name AS we are woont to eate peares and the kirnels of nuts but throw from vs vpon the grounde the parings and shels So we ought vnfainedly to be in loue and delighted with vertue and godlines and to contemne and despise the shape shew or shadow of the same being separated and diuided from vertue it selfe for to retaine and hold the fashion and likenes of vertue without the substance of the same is meere hypocrisie THat man that doth couer and hide his foule faults and lothsome sins with a faire and beautifull shew of vertues fayning an holines where none is is not to be counted religious but an hypocrite Like vnto a swan whose feathers are all white but hir flesh blacke white without and blacke within THe margarits those little white shining precious stones which do grow within shell fishes in the sea in this point are very marueilous and woonderfull that though they be bred and increased in the sea yet haue they no similitude nor likenes with the sea For the sea is blue or skie coloured but the margarits are white The sea is horrible and full of discomfiture but they are chéerefull pleasant and so beautifull to behold that they mooue much greatly delight and allure mightily mens eies to looke vpon them the sea is bitter but they are amiable and without all bitternes But rather in some sort and measure by reason of their cleerenes and brightnes they represent the skie the reason is bicause they receiue influence from thence Such are vertuous and godly men which are surely grounded certainely setled in the loue of God and true Christian religion who being borne and brought vp in this world haue no semblance likenes nor fashion of the same In desire they be drawn in will they be seuered in words they differ and in works they vtterly disagree from it And they do rather resemble in some measure heauen from whence they receiue the influence of the grace and fauour of God EVen as the precious stone called a iacincte is turned and changed with the aire for in a cléere aire it is bright and in a cloudie season it is darkesome and not so pleasant So the preachers and teachers of the worde of God in their teaching and preaching ought to frame themselues to méete with the maners ages and qualities of all their hearers So did the apostle among the Corinthians Wée speake wisdome saith he among them that are perfect And againe he saith I could not speake vnto you as vnto spirituall men but as vnto babes in Christ Iesu I gaue you milke to drinke and not meate for yée were not yet able to beare it neither yet now are c. Againe I am made all things to all men that at the least I may win some to Christ AS one and the same medicine is not vsed and ministred to all that be diseased and sicke but diuers medicines according to their diuers diseases So one and the selfe same doctrine is not agréeable to all hearers The teaching therefore and preaching of the ministers of Christ must be so ordered and deuided that hauing diuers and sundrie hearers whose cases differ much and are not all alike euery one may haue his seuerall portion that not one through want of discretion in him go emptie away AS a diligent and learned physition before he minister anie phisicke to his sicke patiente ought not onely to séeke out and to know the disease of him whom he purposeth to cure but also his maners his vsuall behauiour the nature of his bodie and his qualities So a godly wise preacher of the worde must do his best indeuour to knowe the infirmities maners and dispositions of his auditorie that spirituall phisicke sit and méete for euery one may be ministred in due time EVen as that precious stone called a carbuncle doth not in darknes lose his shine and excellent beautie So a vertuous and godlie man in the extreame darknes of infinit calamities obloquies cursings railings backbitings slaunders and whatsoeuer doth shewe his Christian pacience and quiet suffering For he knoweth well that such things do profite much to aduance the praise of true and noble vertues THe hart of man is like vnto a censer filled ful of hot coles and made readie to receiue whatsoeuer thou wilt cast into it For euen as if thou shalt cast into a censer odoriferous and swéete pomander bals the whole house will bée filled with a most swéete sauour and pleasant perfume but if thou shalt cast into it brimstone or some such matter all the house wil be full of most horrible stinche So in like maner if thou shalt put into the hart of some man good and wholesome counsels and shalt instruct him with godly aduertisements and shalt open vnto him the fountaine of the truth thou shalt bring to passe that there shall procéed out of his hart a great sauour of a most swéete smell But if thou shalt fill him with euill and wicked counsels and shalt perswade and drawe him to impietie hatred trecherie and all abominations thou shalt be the cause of an intollerable stinche there shall come out of his hart a most poysonfull sauour wherewith not onely his owne hart but the whole house wherin he is and all the common wealth where he abideth shall bée hurt infected and poysoned EVen as out of an apothecaries shop where very wholesome medicines precious ointments and most pleasant perfumes are solde sometimes commeth most ranke and deadly poyson So very often from men greatly experienced and déepely learned do come verie pestilent pernisious and trecherous counsels Therefore saith Ecclesiasticus Haue but one counseller of a thousand And againe Do no secret thing before a stranger for thou canst not tell what he goeth about Also kéepe thy soule from an euill counseller Choose such a counseller as doth loue thy soule and desireth thy saluation Gregory saith No man can be more faithfull to giue thée counsell then that man that loueth and desireth not thy goods but thy selfe Euery man hath néede of counsell but let euerie man make good and godly choise of his counsellour The law of God saith Cyprian is the sterne of counsels Happie and blessed is that man that house and that common-wealth that is ruled with such counsels as are grounded and deriued from the holie lawes of God AS a man holding in