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A03949 Bromelion A discourse of the most substantial points of diuinitie, handled by diuers common places: vvith great studie, sinceritie, and perspicuitie. Whose titles you haue in the next page following. S. I., fl. 1595.; Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605. Summa totius Christianismi. English. 1595 (1595) STC 14057; ESTC S107410 412,250 588

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reioycing alway before him She is the breath of the power of God and a pure influence that floweth from the glory of the Almightie She is the brightnesse of the euerlasting light the vndefiled mirrour of the maiestie of God and the image of his goodnesse Which being one she can do all things and remaining in her selfe renueth all In the beginning was the word and the word was with God and that word was God The same was in the beginning with God Al things were made by it and without it was made nothing that was made In it was life euen the life of all gods creatures quickning and preseruing all things and in great wisedome disposing all things in their due order So that the wise man might well call it the delight of God which sitteth about his throne and the bewty of all his creatures through the beholding wherof it pleased God to pronounce and say That all things that were made were very good and in respect of their workemanship excellent This also is woorthie the marking in the worke of gods creation that whereas in the workes of all earthly creatures there is labour and sweate and wearinesse god by his almightie power brought this wonderfull matter to passe with great ease with great delight and ioy It was no more with him but his word and his commandement onely it was his will it should be so At whose will and word and commaundement as all the liuing creatures were made which he in his infinit wisedome thought good off so also might hee haue caused many more to bee made and created not because he was a weary of his worke but because hée thought it not expedient Yet some may thinke that Gods Creation was a laboure vnto him and a wearisome labour because we reade that he rested the seuenth day from all his worke which he had made VVhich he did not because he fainted as it were vnder the burthen of so waightie a businesse for it was neither a businesse nor a matter of waight nor a burthen vnto him or for his ease and refreshing but onely for his delight and further contentation but only because it was his will and that it so pleased him The easinesse of this woorke is so muche the more to be wondred at not onely that it was without paine and wearinesse but also that he did both vndertake and finish the same of his owne accord and of himselfe without any other helpes and meanes Nothing excellent nay if it be neuer so meane that is done on the Earth but hath great helpes The Citie and the Tower which Nimrod and his company went about to build the top whereof they purposed should reach vnto the heauens a mirrour to the worlde if it might haue bene finished was it done by one or by two No an infinit multitude put their heades and their hands to it and all little inough There were Carpenters and Masons and suche as should make bricke and burne it in the fire there were maister deuisers and maister builders and inferiour drudges and a number of labourers as thicke as the swarmes of Egypt They laboured all ioyntly with heart and hand heauing and shouing toyling and sweating and all to no purpose to their great griefe and discontentment for all was dasht How were the Pyramides of Egipt those famous monuments erected and set vp as easie think you as if one stone might be laide View the building but of a smal cottage and say what a busie piece of worke it it But with God was no such thing he was all alone and there was none other he begunne it and he brought it to passe hée commaunded and neuer laboured he created and neuer rested vntill all was as you sée The night and faintnesse come vppon man and hée must of necessitie leaue off That creature which hath not his rest cannot continue his strength to labour When the Sunne riseth man goeth foorth to his woorke and to his labour but how long If sixe or seuen houres togither without some foode and some refreshing it is a maruell but if hee continue vntill the euening hée can staie no longer at it for the weakenesse of his bodie will not suffer him and the light of the day is closed vp with night and darknesse Againe the woorkes of men may haue manie chaunges before they come to perfection and the workeman himselfe may bee displeased at his worke and beginne anewe but GOD as hee is vnchaungeable so euen at the first was his worke perfect without any alteration VVho hath made the earth by his power and established the world by his wisedome and hath stretched out the heauen by his discretion Ier. 10. 12. Furthermore in the maner of Gods creation this is All good not the least and meanest thing to be considered of That all that God made was good And God sawe all that hee had made and beholde it was verie good Euery thing in his order and in his kind perfect and absolute as saith the Prophet Moses though not durable and alwayes to continue No maruell then if the learned did name the worlde to bee bewtie séeing God himselfe after hée had created all sawe that they were verie good Also because the maiestie wisedome and power gods workmanship did giue a grace to euery thing to adorne it and to set it foorth to the commendation of man The works of the Lord saith the Psalme are great and worthie to be praised and had in honor which also are sought out of all them that haue pleasure therein All the workes of the Lord saith the wise man are good and he giueth euery one in due season and when need is So that a man néed not say this is worse then that For in due season they are all worthie praise And therefore praise the Lord with whole heart and mouth and blesse the name of the Lord who vpon all his workes hath powred foorth his blessings and hath made the wise and godly to beholde it although this knowledge be kept from the wicked who in no sort are worthie to be partakers either of gods goodnesse or of his blessings and comforts None are so set to dispraise and discommend and to disdain at gods workes and his creatures as the wicked which are readie to finde fault where they haue no cause and to despise that whereof they sée no present vse and to curse and abhorre those creatures whereby they may haue any hurt or hinderance Yet certain it is that god hath made nothing that hath any fault although many a gracelesse people thinke so which are destitute of wisedome For the one commendeth the goodnes of the other and who can be satisfied with beholding gods glory in them For through him all things are directed to a good end Many creatures séeme to be created hurtful and some wil say what good is in them Doubtlesse god forelawe that the earth should be filled and inhabited with two sorts of people the
fire and that very gréeuous also he sent deuouring grashoppers such as was neuer before neither after them should bee the like which did eate vp euerie gréene thing within the land hearbes of the field and frutes of the trées for the space of thrée dayes there was such a darknes in his land that none sawe an other neither did they rise from the place where the darknesse tooke them The lord left not there but yet was more gréeuous for he smote all the first borne of Pharaohs land the first borne both of man and beast from the first borne of Pharaoh himselfe that sat on the throne vnto the first borne of the captiue that sat in prison And there was a great crie in Aegypt for there was no house where there was not one dead Finally God made an ende of those punishments with the fearfull and vtter ouerthrow of Pharaoh himselfe and all his hoste in the midst of the sea They themselues confessing that it was the strong hande of the lorde himselfe in these words The lord fighteth for them In the Prophecie of I●el 1. 3. 4. Tell you your children of it saith the Prophet and let your children shewe to their children and their children to an other generation whether such a thing hath bene in your dayes or in the dayes of your fathers That which is left of the palmer worme hath the grashopper eaten and the residue of the grashopper hath the canker-worme eaten and the residue of the canker-worme hath the caterpiller eaten And these small creatures doth God call his great hoste shewing himselfe no where so strong as when hée worketh by weake and slender meanes When the lorde by his Prophet Moses Deutro 28. had feared the people by foretelling so many gréeuous punishments yet further to let them vnderstand howe strong hée was If thou wilt not keepe saith hee and do all the workes of this lawe and feare this glorious and fearefull name The Lorde thy God then the Lorde will make thy plagues wonderfull and the plagues of thy seede euen great plagues and of long continuance and sore diseases of long durance Moreouer he will bring vpon thée all the diseases of Egypt whereof thou wast affraid and they shall cleaue vnto thée And euery sicknesse and euery plague which is not written in the booke of this lawe will the lord heape vpon thée vntill thou be destroyed So true it is that the Prophet speaketh The arme of the Lord is not shortened but his hand is stretched out still Strong in his wrath stronger in his punishments and so strong that flesh and blood cannot endure the least thereof but is readie as it were to fall in pieces when it is remembred and when they heare of it The Lord the Lord strong and able to punish and 2 yet such is his nature that hee is more enclined to mercie Slow to anger And therefore to comfort the weake spirites of mankind that they should not vtterly faint and be dismaid through the consideration of his fearefull power he addeth these words which follow that is That he is mercifull and gracious slow to anger For as a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion no them that feare him For he knoweth whereof we be made he remembreth that we are but dust So the Lord saith My spirit shall not alway striue with man because he is but flesh And here is his gratious mercy séen in that he doth not alway presently punish and out of hand The olde world had a hundreth yeares space a long time to be thinke themselues and to repent And after all this time it pleased the Lorde to looke downe vpon the earth before he gaue the last sentence and said vnto Noah An end is come Before God would procéed to his fierce vengeance against Sodome and Gomorrha although their sinnes were excéeding gréeuous and the crie therof ascended vp to heauen yet he said he would go down and sée whether they had done altogither according to the crie and if not that he might know As though he had wished and desired in his heart it had bene otherwise In the Epistle of S. Peter it is remembred of some in the latter dayes who hearing the Prophecie of the latter ende of the worlde and séeing it not come to passe after a long time should scoffe and mocke thereat and say Where is the promise of his comming for all thinges continue alike from the beginning of the creation To whom the Apostle thus answereth That a thousand yeares in the sight of the Lord is but as one day and that the Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slacknesse but that he is patient and would haue no man to perish but would that all should come to repentance The Lord is a mercifull and gracious God in forbearing Wis● H. 20. His mercy is vpon all and though it be in his power to destroy yet he maketh as though he sawe not the sinnes of men because they should amend Loue couereth a multitude of sinnes and the Lord would in mercy passe by our infinite ef●ences if so be yet in time we would returne Although we haue gréeuously offended yet he doth not straightway execute his anger but patiently waiteth to sée whether his louing kindnesse and long suffering may prouoke vs to the obedience of his will and to do that earnestly and with a good heart from the which before we went so farre astray Hée dooth not punish vs according to our desert nor reward vs after our iniquities but sheweth himselfe most fauourable that our hearts may relent and serue him Although the Israelites kept not the couenant of their God as it is Psal 78. 38. 41. and walked not in his lawe but sinned against him more and more yet was he so mercifull vnto them that he forgaue them their misdéeds and destroyed them not yea many a time turned he his wrath away and would not suffer his whole displeasure to arise For he considered that they were but fleshe and that they were euen as a winde that passeth away and commeth not againe God considering our frailtie and weakenesse is patient toward vs and so tender hearted that he would haue no man to perish And therefore before any punishment that God did vse against his people he gaue them warning thereof by his prophets that they might haue iust cause to say that the Lorde was gracious and mercifull As we reade in the booke of Nehemiah cap. 9. 30 31. that God did forbeare them many yéeres and protested among them by his spirit euen by the hand of his Prophets but they would not heare therefore he gaue them into the hands of the people of the lands Which point of Gods mercy let euery one of vs apply vnto himselfe and bethinke our selues how God doth beare with vs from day to day and what diuerse and often warnings hee vseth toward vs to moue vs to
that which followeth marke their mischéeuous intents But he thinketh not so neither doth his heart estéeme it so but hée imagineth to destroy and to cut off not a fewe nations Gods woorke héerein is to chastise his people for their amendment and he hath respect vnto his iustice the wicked Assirians they purpose to destory them to inrich themselues and in them is nothing to be séene but the worke of malice and of the diuel But to let you vnderstand that God hath as it were a bridle in his hand to restraine them the Prophet vseth these wordes Shall the axe boaste it selfe against him that heweth therewith Or shall the sawe exalt it selfe against him that mooueth it When they shake the rodde shall it magnifie it selfe against them that take it vp When they lift vp a staffe is it not wood True it is and most true that no creature is able to doe any thing but as God appoynteth him and that they are all but his instruments to doo his woorke though the intentions be diuerse When he wil he sendeth warres and again at his wil they cease as the Psalm saith Hee breaketh the bowe and knappeth the speare in pieces Though Sanacharib come with multitudes as the dust of the earth against poore King Hezekiah and his people and thinking to deuoure them at once yet shal God put a hooke in his nosthrils and a bridle in his lippes and shall bring him back again the same way he came his whole army shal be destroied in a night and he shalve amazed at gods wonderfull worke Ammon and Moab and the inhabitants of mount Seir come vp against Iudah and their king Ichoshaphat 2. Chro. 20. Wherefore they fearing pestilence famine and the sword with other mischiefes that warre doth bring with it and séeing themselues vnable make their prayers vnto God saying O our God there is no strength in vs to stand before this great multitude that commeth against vs neither do we know what to do but our whole trust is in thee Then God sent them comfort by a Prophet saying Feare not for the battaile is not yours but Gods Stand still mooue not and beholde the saluation of the Lorde And now behold Gods prouidence and his worke When they of Iudah beganne to shout and to praise God for his great mercy then the Lorde layd ambushments against the children of Ammon Moab and mount Seir to flaie and to destroy them And this is straunge when they had made an end of the inhabitants of Seir euery one helped to destroy an other till there was not a man left as though euery one had sworne his owne death The lyke example is in the booke of Iudges cap. 7. For when Gedeon whom the Lord had strengthned came against the Midianites and the Amalekites whose number was as it were without number so many were they Gedeon caused the trumpets to blow and the people cried The sword of the Lord and of Gedeon And the Lord set euery mans sword vpon his neighbour and vpon all the hoste Not only in matters of warre but in all other punishments God hath his worke according to that of the Prophet Amos Shall there be euill in a citie the Lord hath not done it As if he had said Can any aduersitie come without gods appointment Read the 28. cha of Deu. sée whether it be not so Which thing holy men heretofore well considering did not impute their distresses miseries to any other cause but only to y● prouidēce of god Ioseph had great wrong mischief wrought against him by his own brethren Doth he blame his brethren or reuenge himself on thē No. But the vseth them wel when he might haue procured their trouble He kissed them wept vppon them made himself knowne vnto thē did not discomfort or discourage them Come néer my brethren saith he I am Ioseph your brother whom ye sold into Egipt Be not sad neither gréeued with your selues y● ye sold me For God did send me before you for your preseruation Whē ye thought euil against me God disposed it to good Feare not I will norish you your childrē he comforted them spake kindly vnto them VVhen Shimei cursed king Dauid they that wer about him wold haue slain Shimei for so doing Suffer him to curse saith he let him alone for he curseth euē because the Lord hath bidden him curse Dauid Who dare then say wherfore hast thou done so Dauid remembred y● words of the prophet I wil raise euil vnto thee out of thine own house Behold my son which came out of mine own bowels séekes my life how much more a stranger Suffer him It may be that the Lord wil looke vpon my affliction do me good for his cursing this day send me comfort in due time Iob in a godly mind when he was driuen to great aduersitie miserie repineth not neither curseth as the fashion of the world is whē they méet with such heauy crosses but he looketh vp to heauē saith Naked came I out of my mothers wombe naked shall I go hence The Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken it Blessed be the name of the Lord. In all his affliction did not Iob sin nor charge God foolishly by rash and vnaduised by grudging wicked and reproachful spéeches If Ioseph and Dauid had set their eyes vpon them that did them wrong they should haue thought vpō reuenge But because their trouble was by gods wil from his sending therfore they take it in good part both reuerētly patiently not only because they cannot resist but because god willeth nothing but that which is iust and for the good benifit of them whom he so afflicteth As the prophet saith It is good for me that I haue bene in trouble Let passe therefore the iniury of men which might increase thy sorow grief of mind and hasten thée to reuenge and consider gods will who hath breught that to passe which thy enemies haue done against thée Maruel not but commit the matter to gods infinit wisdome whose will as it is often most manifest so is it more often hid vnknowne Let vs only harp vpon this string y● as by his benefits he doth moue vs to serue him so by his crosses and punishments he driueth vs to repentance When miseries come we can sée Gods prouidence God graunt that when hee sendeth prosperitie wee may acknowledge his goodnesse and not be forgetfull So much for the gouernment of God in the affaires of men Now let vs consider the same in men themselues A sect of Philosophers called Pripatetickes although peraduenture they did acknowledge the prouidence of God in many things yet rather then they would haue man subiect to the same would deny that there were any prouidence at al as if it gréeued them that gods prouidence should stretch further then their owne reason did lead them And so long as they tried the
God hath raised vs vp togither and made vs sit togither in the heauenly places in Christ Iesus Philip. 1. 23. For I am greatly in doubt on both sides destring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all Luke 23. 43. Iesus said to the théefe that repented Verily I say vnto thée To day shalt thou be with me in Paradice And chapter 16. 22. And it was so that the begger died and was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome Wis● 3. 1. But the soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them Eccle. 12. 7. And dust return to the earth as it was and the spirit returne to God that gaue it Then shall they enioy fully that vnspeakeable comfort prepared Rom. 8. 18. For I account that the affictions of this present time are not worthie of the glory which shall be shewed vnto vs. Mat. 25. 34. Then shall the king say to them on his right hand Come ye blessed of my father inherit ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world 1. Cor. 15. 42. 43. 53. The bodie is sowne in corruption and is raised in corruption It is sowne in dishonour and is raised in glory it is sowne in weakenesse and is raised in power For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortalitie 1. Cor. 2. 9. The things which eye hath not séene neither eare hath heard neither came into mans heart are which God hath prepared for them that loue him By whose vertue and spirit they haue proceeded and gone forward from faith to faith as shall manifestly appeare by the whole course of their life and good workes Rom. 1. 17. The righteousnesse of God is reuealed from faith to faith ●● 2. Re● 1. 2●1 2. Grace and peace be multiplied to you by the knowledge of God of Iesns our Lord. According as his godly power hath giuen vnto vs all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the knowkledge of him that hath called vs vnto glory and vertue Whereby most great and precious promises are giuen vnto vs that by them ye should be partakers of the godly nature in that ye flie the corruption which is in the world through lust Therefore giue euen all diligence thereunto Ioine moreoner vertue with your faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperaunce and with temperaunce patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindenesse and with brotherly kindnesse loue For if these things be among you and abound they wil make you that ye neither shal be idle nor vnfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ For he that hath not these things is blinde and cannot sée farre off and hath forgotten that hee was purged frōm his olde sinnes Wherefore brethren giue rather diligence to make your calling and election sure For if ye do these things ye shall neuer fall For by these meanes an entering shall be ministred vnto you aboundantly into the cuerlasting kingdom of out Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Whereas altogither contrary the Reprobate conceiued borne and brought vp in sin death and the wrath of God when they depart out of this world they fall into another gulfe of destruction and their soules are plunged in that endlesse paine vntill the day come that their bodies and solues being ioined again they shall enter into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuel and his angels 〈◊〉 Psal 5 ●●●5 Behold I was borne in iniquitle and in sinne hath my mother conceaued me Ephe. 2. 3. And were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Rom. 7. 14. sold vnder sinne Rom. 5. 14. Wherefore as by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men forasmuch as all men haue sinned Dani. 12. 2. And many of them that sléepe in the dust of the earth shall awake some to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetuall contempt Iohn 5. 28 29. Maruell not at this for the houre shall come in the which all that are in the graues shall heare his voyce And they shall come forth that haue done good vnto the resurrection of life but they that haue done cuill to the resurrection of condemnation Luke 16. 22. 23. 24. The rich man also died and was buried and being in hell torments he lift vp his yes and sawe Abraham a farre off and Lazarus in his hosome Then he cried and said Father Abraham haue merry on me and send Lazarus that he may dippe the tippe of his singer in water and coole my tongue for I am tormented in this flame But Abraham said Sonne remember that thou in thy life time receiuedst thy pleasures and likewise Lazarus paines now therefore is he comforted and thou art tormented Mat. 25. 41. Then shall he say to them on the left hand Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuel and his angels The seuenth Chapter After what sort this doctrine may be preached with most profit SInte wee haue nowe declared the effect of this doctrine VVhat discretion the matter requireth it remaineth also that wee shewe what order we thinke best to be obseru●● in preaching and applying the same to euery particular man Whereas many find this matter so sharp and strange that they flie from it as from a dangerous rocke it is partly to be attributed to the malice and arrogancy of men And partly to the rashnesse and lacke of discretion of them that teach it and thirdly it is to be imputed to their ignoraunce which cannot orderly apply the same to themselues which faithfully and truly hath bin taught of others Concerning them which sinne of malice it onely appertaineth to GOD to amend them Which surely he hath done alwaies in his reason and likewise will do from time to time to whom he hath appointed to shewe mercy But for others which remain● obstinate in their sinne and wickednesse there is no cause why we should be moued either for their number or authority to dissemble Gods truth And as touching the second sorte I haue thought these things principally to be obserued in preaching this misterie First as in all other things so chiefly in this matter of predestination they ought to take diligent héede that in stéede of Gods pure and simple truth they bring not soorth vaine and curious speculations or dreames Which thing they cannot choose but do which goe about to compasse and accord these secret iudgments of God with mans wisdome so do not onely put difference betwirt predstinatiō and the purpose of god which thing they must néedes do but seperate the one frō the other For they either imagine a certaine naked and idle permition or else make a double purpose and counsell in God From the which errors they must néeds fall into many and greate absurdities For sometimes they are constrained to diuide
and will not tarrie Let no man bee wearie of well dooing For in due season wee shall reape if wee fainte not Let none of vs deceiue our selues God will not bee mocked For if our life be godly wee shall hereafter reape life and ioyes eternall If otherwise death standeth at the doore The crop must bee sowed in this worlde the haruest must bee in another worlde and then shall the Angelles bee the reapers For they shall seperate and diuide the good from the bad The grace of God teacheth vs to liue soberly righteously Present world and godly in this present world For all the doubt is in this present world where it is a hard matter for vs to goe upright and to behaue our selues in the feare of God as we ought to do For the life of man may well be compared vnto the passage of a ship in the sea which through tempestuous weather may be ouerturned by the mounting waues of the sea or torne in pieces by the gunshot of the enemie and théeuish and mischieuous pirates or else may be dasht in pieces against the rockes or suddainly sunke in the quicke sands or vnawares taken within the compasse of a whirlpoole and by the force and strength thereof carried violently into the bottome but after it hath once arriued at the hauen there is no such doubt there is no such feare So is our life in this present worlde subiect to many an ouerthrow the life of the bodie I meane not but the life of the soule whereof we ought to haue especiall care sinne within vs abounding like the force of the enemie the pirate or the mounting waues frailties infirmities like the quick soft sands euill examples of other and their wicked counsailes like the dashing of the rockes the temptations and snares of the diuel like the force of a whirlepoole which neuer leaue vntill we be brought to the bottome If any of these take hold of vs in this present world so that they preuaile against vs we are gone Therefore thrice happie is he who by a godly life can auoyd all these and at last arriue at the hauen and take vp his euerlasting rest in heauen Oh that we could be godly and watchfull in this present world for in the world to come we shall haue no hinderance and nothing to let but that most freely we may serue God and leade a godly life Let vs pray that the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ may be with vs and that it may abound who gaue himselfe for the sacrifice and satisfaction of our sinnes that hee might deliuer vs from this present euill worlde Gal. 1. Before that he suffered his passion he praied for vs Iohn 17. that in this present euil world we should not fall away from God I pray not saith he that thou shouldest take them out of the world but that thou kéepe them from euil And herehence groweth the exhortation of the Apostle written to the Phil. chapter 2. 15. wherby he warneth them and vs also by them that we should behaue our selues blamelesse and pure as the sonnes of God without rebuke and that we should endeuour to shine as lights in this present wicked world dwelling in the midst of naughtie and bad people Who by our example of godly life may be won to be godly in the day of Gods visitation whom the grace of God shall teache and touch their hearts and call them throughly A great comfort we haue and a great incouragement to be godly because we are not vnder the lawe but vnder grace that is we are frée from the curse of the law that we may the more chearfully giue obedience therunto being furthered assisted by the grace of God which strengthneth vs to doo his will For the lawe is not giuen to the righteous but to the vnholy and to the prophane The curse to the one and the blessing to the other Let vs be sanctified and holy and kéepe our harts from an euil conscience let vs hold out our profession without wauering séeing that we looke for the performance of great promises which he hath made vnto vs that will not deceiue vs. The deceit of sinne is readie to harden our hearts and make vs continually fall away The best are mightily tempted and much adoo they haue to kéepe and hold their owne How necessary therefore is it for euerie one of vs to prouoke one another to loue and to good workes Let euery one of vs striue aboue our strength with praier for Gods assistance and so much the more because the day of the Lord the comming of Christ draweth néere And i● this do not perswade vs yet that which may follow and fal out through our backsliding may through feare inforce vs. For if we sinne willingly after that we haue vndertaken the course of a godly life there remaineth for vs a fearfull looking for of iudgement which God in his wrath and heauy vengeaunce shall powre out And better it had béene for vs not to haue knowne the way of godlinesse then after we haue knowne it to turne away Rather let vs bee stirred vp and incouraged by the words of the Apostle S. Peter 2. Epist 1. 10. 11. Wherefore brethren giue rather diligence to make your calling and election sure by your holy life and godly connersation For if ye do these thinges ye shall neuer fall And furthermore by these meanes an entring shal be ministred vnto you aboundantly into the euerlasting kingdome of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ And if we finde that we are risen with Christ let vs séeke those things which are aboue where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God Our affections must be aboue and not on things beneath which are on the earth And if we be dead vnto sinne our life is hid with Christ in God So that when Christ which is our life shall appeare then shall we also appeare with him in glorie Thus by gods help I haue set downe vnto you the effect of sanctification contained in these words of the Apostle The grace of God hath appeared teaching vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world Now followeth the second part of my diuision noted in the text which is a perswasion and a reason mouing vs to this santification A perswasion vnto sanctification and that is the glorious inheritance of the kingdome of God expressed by the circumstance of Christ his comming at which time the godly shal be receiued into the kingdome of heauen their ioyfull dwelling place gathered out of these wordes Looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the glorie of the mightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ We cannot giue our selues vnto the duties of godlinesse vnlesse we shal be in the expectation and looking after the hope of another life and therfore very fitly doth the Apostle ioine vnto the duties of a godly life this spéech Waiting for
Bromleion A Discourse of the most substantial points of Diuinitie handled by diuers Common places VVith great studie sinceritie and perspicuitie Whose Titles you haue in the next Page following Scribimus indocti doctique problemata passim LONDON Printed by Thomas Creede 1595. Insigne Bromleianum TIMOR DOMINI INITIVM SAPIENTIAE The contents of the principall things handled in this booke Of the feare of God The Glasse of Vanitie Of the word of God Of God Of his Creation Of his Prouidence Of creating man after his Image Of Iustification Of Predestination A patterne of Sanctification The benefit of Adoption A Remedie for Sorrow To the Right Worshipfull and the chiefest now aliue of the Honorable house of the Bromleies his great frend fauourer Sir Henry Bromley Knight S. I. wisheth the grace and fauour of God in this world and in the world to come perpetuallioyes MAnet alta mente repo'stum The Poets speech expressing the effect of displeasure So hardly are we giuen by the course of nature to forget iniuries and displeasures or to let passe discurtesies offered But as the wise man saith it is a mans honour to passe by an offence so noble dispositions do not so much regard the iniurie of their inferiours as what may best fit and beseeme their estate I must needs confesse Right worshipfull that I haue greatly offended by reason of my absence want of thankfulnesse towards you for so great benefits receiued But as I found that I was many waies vnworthie and vnable to stand before your honourable father so haue I full proofe of the selfe same insufficiency in my selfe toward you euen vnto this present day Thinking it all that I could well performe if it were possible to make any requitall or part of amends for such bountifull liberalitie as also more then common curtesie from your selfe to make my hartie praiers vnto God for your prosperitie and good estate that you might rise from credit to worship and honour and princely fauour that you might match or at lest wise come as neare as might be to that high degree which your noble father possessed Yet could I not think that sufficient vnlesse I had in some measure shewed vnto your worship some fruit and effect of my studie and labours vnto the which I was so greatly mainteined by your honourable fathers liberalitie and furthered also not meanely by your fauour and good will which was and is the more to bee remembred of mee because it came from you on my part vndeserued and which is more vnlooked for This that I haue presently dedicated vnto your worships view and patronage part of it is no other then that which you haue read before and somewhat more to expresse my painfulnesse and good will though otherwise it be but mean and not so worthie the reading as I could wish it I laboured in the first part of the Epistle to the Romanes consisting on Iustification and was so bolde as to present it vnto your fathers honor thinking also to haue done my best in the second part of the same Epistle concerning Gods eternall predestination Which at this time by Gods helpe I haue finished yet so that my shoulders were eased of the burden For lighting vppon a treatise of that matter written by that famous and learned man M. Theodore Beza farre more excellent then I could either deuise or frame glad was I that my studie and searching was so well preuented The places of scripture which were added to prooue euery waightie point were so confusedly set downe that they might haue wearied the reader rather then directed him Which when I perceiued I tooke some paines though small to help in that behalfe And because euerie reader is not of the like vnderstanding and that this point of religion seemeth hard to conceiue especially to them whose wittes be not exercised in searching such matters I thought good out of euery chapter to take out the principall matters to ioyne thē to their proofes desirous to make al as plain as easie as might be possible All which I humbly request your worship to accept in as good part as it is offered which shall be a mean to encourage me to labor further if it like you And so I leaue to trouble you any further only wishing that your name and credit may be such as was that of the Right honourable the Earle of Bedford who had deseruedly gotten this title The good Earle of Bedford That in religion to God and to the Church in loialtie and faithfulnesse to the Prince and to the Realme in loue and liberalitie to learning and poore schollers in care and bountifulnesse to the poore and needie you may according to your deserts carrie this godlie and honourable title in the mouthes of all men that when they name you they may so report of you to be The good Knight Sir Henry Bromley Your Worships in his praiers to God for you and yours S. I. The Epistle to the Reader THe title of this booke gentle Reader may seem somewhat strange vnto thee at the first blush and such that if it be miscōstrued may procure me some dislike or discredit It may be that I haue followed the example of others who think themselues greatly pleasured if they can get their betters maisters landlords to name their children after their names If this bee the meaning it may somwhat abate that dislike discredit and derision which otherwise would fall vppon me in which respect I may be vouchsafed of pardon Or otherwise I may bee taken in an other sence as to declare my affectionate good will to my honourable patrone deceased as if I had caused this to be ingraued by his tombe Hoc monumentum posuit And if it be such that it may not deserue that credit as I know it cannot but wil haue his time to vanish much like the earth or the water that is frozen and is anon resolued for a wonder had neuer the gift to continue long much lesse a trisle yet thus much it may declare that I was not altogither forgetfull Or if it be a meane to encourage others of wealth and account to be beneficial to poore students let the one haue the good report the other the profit and let the derision redound to my selfe For my part concerning my patron the right honourable sir Thomas Bromley Knight Lord Chancellour and one of her Maiesties most honourable priuie Councell in his time I must needs confesse make it knowne to the world how the beames of this gracious sun did shine vpō me Diet apparrell bookes siluer gold preferment countenance fauour good wil and what euer my heart might desire neither can I satisfie my selfe or expresse my bounden dutie by any gradation And as I was vnworthy of so great benefits so the chiefest of them came vnto me vnlooked for Such was the bountifulnesse of him whose renowne shall remaine so long as the deliuerance from the Scottish Queenes
conspiracie is remembred Oh that poore painfull students might meet with such liberall purses and with such noble and honourable Bromleion hearts Sat sit optasse et siinuenisse rarum What the poore both see and receiue let them report to the shame of them that hoord vp their wealth and consider not that God hath made them but stewards and hath put it in their hands if they had hearts to dispose Especially if they could remember this which is set downe in sacred writ Pro. 19. 17. He that hath pitie vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lord and looke what he laieth out it shall be paide him againe Now as concerning these my rude and rurall labours if I might I would auoyd disdaine or if I may do any good it is the thing that would reioyce me greatly This vnlearned worke some will say should haue laine by me a long while vntill it might haue bin done more perfectly or else it should neuer haue bene put foorth Other excuse haue I none but this that I could not tell how otherwise to shewe my dutie and to giue a proofe of my good will where I was so greatly indebted It may be taken in good part if I answere you as one Iohn Philpot in the raigne of King Richard the second answered certaine noble and honourable personages who found themselues greatly agreeued that a merchant had got a prize on the enemie His answere was That he did it not to take away the praise of chiualry from them but rather that they might be incouraged to do greater exploits I haue not put foorth this slender exercise to barre any that are well disposed better learned and right willing to edifie of their praise and due commendation of the which I confesse my selfe farre vnworthie but rather to animate them that they let not their gifts lie hidden which being made manifest and knowne might procure the benefit of many He that cannot do better to him this may be some helpe the rest may take it in good part and labour to do other good who do both long for good helpes and would be glad of that which might further them to ease their painfull studie They that would attaine to learning lightly are those of the poorer sort who haue many hinderances Want of bookes want of sufficient maintenance want of time and many other lets I must needs acknowledge many wants and my imperfections are great wishing other that are better able that they would be of that minde as to do good to others whose capacitie is but weake and simple who haue small helpes and yet are set in such places where they of dutie should edifie and instruct and wold if they were better able If in this booke I haue not done wel I will be glad to be better enformed and willing to hearken to the direction of others and to follow their counsell Ending this tedious Epistle with this my wish desire and request to them that are learned and willing to doo good His meliora Thine to his power S. I. Of the feare of God and where it is to be learned namely in the word of God Of the word of God which cōteineth the Knowledge of God that as he is to be considered In Himselfe His workes which are General creation Prouidence Particular creation of man according to his Image Certaine most comfortable Exercises of Christian Religion gathered togither in one volume for the benefit of all such as loue and feare the Lord. Psal 112. 1. 2. 3. Blessed is the man th●● feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his Commandements His seed shall be mightie vpon earth the generation of the righteous shall be blessed Riches and treasures shall be in his house and his righteousnes endureth for euer THe Prophet Dauid desirous to drawe true blessednesse and heauenly happinesse into a short summe dooth in this Psalm and likewise in the first Psalm intreate thereof as though hée meant purposely to discourse of nothing else but of the chéefest happinesse and chéefest delight of a godly man Whereof as he himselfe was fully perswaded so in a godly mind and Christian zeale hée thought it his part to spread this loue and excellent knowledge into the hearts of all Much like to the godly affection of holy Abraham of whom God testifieth I know y● he will teach others So King Salomon hauing tried all the delights and worldly happinesse that flesh and blood might desire crieth out Vanitie of vanities Vanitie of vanities and all is but vanitie not hiding his excellent knowledge within himselfe as the Prouerbe is Cunning men are dangerous and loth to let other men vnderstand what they know but being moued with a charitable affection he doth not reueale this secret to a fewe or to some of his friends and to no more but hée professeth himselfe to be a Preacher and as it were a publique Crier that all may take héede and beware So also this kingly Prophet Dauid is in stéed of a Preacher and beginneth his discourse somewhat vnlike to that of King Salomon but both to the same effect In the beginning of his booke King Salomon sheweth what we should auoyd in the beginning of this psalm and of this his booke of Psalmes and heauenly meditations King Dauid sheweth vs what wée should desire They that are desirous that men should hearken to their perswasions and to reade their writings promise in the beginning some excellent matter to intreate off that they may winne their mindes to séeke and search thereafter as for pearles and treasure And among all matters if all the bookes might bée read which hath bene made from the beginning of the worlde vntill this present time there shall nothing be founde to be so profitable so necessary so heauenly as is the disputation and discourse of the chéefest good Wherein these two Kings of blessed memorie the father and the sonne Dauid and Salomon haue not trauelled as worldly minded men to aduaunce either honour or riches or pleasure wisedome strength beautie eloquence and such matters as the worlde doth admire and wonder at but as if with the Apostle Saint Paul they had bene wrapt into the third heauen they scorne these worldly delightes and set before our eyes nothing else but what the spirite of God dooth put into their mouthes and mooue them to exhort vs vnto As it was said vnto the Prophets Thus saith the Lorde And againe Sonne of man thus shalt thou say and speake vnto the people The one that is King Salomon hée speaketh thus in his last Chapter of his booke called Ecclesiastes principally there setting downe what is the chéefest happinesse Let vs heare saith hee the end of all Feare God and keepe his Commaundements For this is the whole dutie of man King Dauid he beginneth his booke Blessed is the man whose delight is in the lawe of the Lorde and who dooth meditate therein day and night Both of them ayming at these two principall matters the
lawes of men as of the lawes of God The lawes of men haue respect but to the outward déed but the lawes of God to the hart and inward thoughts of the minde No doubt euery one thinketh it a worthy matter to them that can kéep themselues in that compasse but because they knowe not the happinesse that consisteth therein therefore they do not so greatly set their hearts and mindes vpon it Which happinesse and great commodities and aduantages that it bringeth being considered would make vs to haue it in high estimation and more to desire it then that happinesse which the world doth account off Therefore let vs hearken how the word of God doth set it foorth vnto vs that we may be fully assured and perfectly know the benefites thereof and that we may account all earthly and worldly delights in respect of this delight but vanitie that we may be throughly inamoured therewith as if wée did behold the glorious and glistering throne of the Maiestie of God and that we may be as they that are rauished with an excellent and excessiue desire who can neuer be at rest vntill they haue obtained it And because the heart of man is principally set vpon earthly commodities and temporall blessings therefore it pleased the spirit of God first to begin with that perswasion that so by little and little hée might draw their mindes from earthly commodities to heauenly matters of great waight and importance And to say the truth what profite is there or what blessing may bee reckoned which the feare of God dooth not bring The Prophet Moses in a briefe summe dooth set downe all worldly commodities which procéede from the feare of God which are named Deutro 28. These blessings saith he shall come vppon thee and ouertake thee Blessed shalt thou be in the Cittie and blessed also in the field Blessed shall be the frute of thy bodie and the frute of thy ground and the frute of thy cattle the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe Blessed shalt thou bee when thou commest in and blessed also when thou goest out The Lord shall cause thy enemies that rise against thee to fall before thy face they shall come foorth against thee one way and shall flie before thee seuen wayes The Lord shall commaund the blessing to be with thee in thy store-houses and in all that thou settest thine hand vnto The Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods Hee shall open vnto thee his good treasure euen the heauen to giue raine vnto thy lande in due season and to blesse all the workes of thy handes so that thou shalt lend vnto many Nations but shalt not borrowe thy selfe And the Lorde shall make thee the heade and not the tayle and thou shalt be aboue onely and shall not bee beneath thou shalt be of the better and not of the baser sort of whom there is made small reckoning and account yea thou shalt liue in countenance and be well taken It is said of our sauiour Christ that hée encreased in wisedome and stature and in fauour with God and men so is it also with them that feare God whom it pleaseth God to account and accept for his children they shal increase in the fauour of God and men and they shall liue with credit and good report Good report whereas if thou liuest contrary and without the feare of God euery body shall be readie to speake ill of thée and as the Prouerbe is An ill name halfe hangd In consideration also of which prosperitie the Prophet Dauid doth breake forth into this spéech of wonder Psal 31. 19. How great is thy goodnes ô Lord which thou hast laid vp for them that feare thee And how hast thou done for them which trust in thee euen before the sonnes of men And as though the Prophet could not sufficiently satisfie himselfe with the commendation of the estate of them that feare God and liue in his obedience he vttereth yet more being plentifull in his spéeches as the sea is in his waues Psal 128. Blessed is euerie one that feareth the Lord and walketh in his waies When thou eatest the labours of thy handes thou shalt be blessed and it shall be well with thee Thy wife shall be as the fruitfull vine on the sides of thine house and thy children like the Oliue branches round about thy table Lo surely thus shall the man be blessed that feareth the Lord yea further he shall sée his childrens children to reioyce his heart and make his life the longer All this prosperitie the wicked sort shall sée and behold The wicked enuy at their prosperitie and be amazed they shall be angry in their heart and shall greatly enuy to sée the godly in such good state they shall gnash with their téeth and consume away For their own enuy shall eate them vp and bring them to their graue before their time God doth inrich the godly and them that feare him in such sort that it is past mans expectation and past that The straunge inriching of them that fear God which the godly themselues may hope for so that it séemeth straunge and wonderfull to the world both that the godly might haue the greater cause and that with moste chéerfull hearts to praise and magnifie the name of God and be thankfull vnto him and also that all other that sée it may acknowledge it to be Gods doing and as Iannes and Iambres the sorcerers of King Pharaoh said when they resisted Moses the seruant of God This is the finger of God and God hath done it and he onely hath brought it to passe who hath a care ouer his children more then the hen that flocketh her broode togither and couereth them with her wings As we read in the Psalmes When my father and mother forsake mee the Lord taketh mee vp According to that in the Prophecie of Esay Cap. 49. 15. Can a woman forget her childe and not haue compassion on the sonne of her wombe Though they should forget yet will not I forget saith the Lord. So true it is that the Prophet Dauid recordeth I haue bene yoong and now am old and yet sawe I neuer the righteous forsaken nor their seede begging their bread Which thing is manifestly séene in the examples of Abraham Isaack Iacob Ioseph and their posteritie which examples I cannot stand vpon but onely I referre you to their stories in the booke of Genesis where you shall sée the plentifull goodnes of God toward them being fed mainteined and inriched onely by Gods hand which stories are most worthie both the reading and meditation They that feare God want nothing whereas the Lyons want roare for hunger The earth is the Lords and all that therein is and he hath prepared the earth and all the blessings thereof principally and chiefly for them that liue in his obedience So that they may speake boldly and with assurance of confidence Quaeuis terra patria Euery place in the
world which séemeth to haue no ende shall vanish the heauens shall ware old as doth a garment but as the word of the Lord continueth for euer so are the praises of the feare of God euerlasting Wheresoeuer the Gospell is preached saith Christ throughout all the worlde there shal also this déed of Mary Magdaline which annointed his bodie with costly Oyle and wiped his féete with the haire of her head this déed which she hath done shall be spoken of for a memoriall of her meaning thereby not the déed so much as her heart and affection And such shall be the memoriall of them that feare God according as it is said The name of the godly shall flourish and the remembrance of the wicked shall rot As the whirlewind passeth so is the wicked no more but the righteous is an euerlasting foundation The wise man after he had intreated of diuers and waightie matters and drawing to an end of his booke as though he had for gotten one principal point Let vs now saith he commend the famous men who were honourable in their generations and were well reported of in their times There are of them that haue left a name behinde them so that their praise shall be spoken of There are some also that haue no memoriall and are perished as though they had neuer bin and are become as though they had neuer bin born and their children after them But the former were such men whose righteousnes and feare of God hath not bene forgotten and whose commendation shall endure throughout all ages Their seede shall remaine for euer and their praise shall neuer be taken away their bodies are buried in peace but their name liueth for euermore There is a seed of man which is an honourable seed the honourable seede are they that feare the Lord. Diuerse other goodly sentences the scripture dooth affoord in commendation of the feare of God but I thought the waight of reasons alleaged would more preuaile then the multitude of words which do delight but for the present time Much like pleasant musicke which is no longer of force to moue our mindes but while it soundeth But the waight of the reasons continue in our remembrance when as the multitude of words may soone be forgotten as if we had séene our face in a glasse and when we are gone we remember it no more 2. That delight which is next to the feare of God and an The next delight to the feare of God is the knowledge of gods word excellent delight aboue all worldly delights I thinke good at this present not to stand much vpon but to referre you to a more ample declaration thereof because I haue spent so much time in setting downe the commodities and commendations of the feare of God vnto the which no perswasions can be too tedious But because the studie and knowledge of the word of God is the onely meanes wherby the feare of God is taught maintained and increased therfore doth it seeme a matter as worthie to be considered and to be perswaded as the other And so much the rather because we cannot come so perfectly to the fear of God as by the knowledge of his word To the proofe whereof we haue an excellent sentence Prou. 2. The words be these My sonne if thou receiue my words and hide my commandements with thee to incline thine eares to wisedome and to bowe thy heart to vnderstanding if thou call for vnderstanding and vtter thy voyce for knowledge if thou seeke her as siluer and dig for her as for her treasures Then shalt thou vnderstand A light to our vnderstāding the feare of the Lord and find the knowledge of God All the life of man without the knowledge of the word of God is but a wildernesse and that is the onely path to bring vs out all our vnderstanding is but darknesse and that is the onely lanterne that giueth vs light Our parents that beget vs they beget vs after their owne image and that is sinfull so that as wée are borne in sinne so all our The seed of life delight by nature is in sinne Therefore this séede and this begetting may well bee tearmed a mortall séede and a begetting vnto death But that we may haue a reuerent care and a great delight in the word of God we are giuen to vnderstand that it is the immortall séede the séede that begets vs vnto life As saith Saint Peter Epistle I. He hath begotten vs againe not of mortall but of immortall seede which hee affirmeth to be the word of God that endureth for euer And this is the singular commoditie thereof I. Iohn 3. 9. That hee that is borne of God sinneth not vnto death but if he fall hée riseth againe by repentance The reason because he sinneth not nor delighteth héerein nor suffereth it to raigne within him is for that the séede of Gods word ioyned with his feare remaineth within him neither can he sinne because hée is borne of God and begotten vnto life by his holie spirite As they that are in the fleshe cannot please God for the wisedome of the fleshe is enmitie to God so the word of God doth make the power of his spirite more effectuall within vs and teacheth vs how to please God and to liue in his fauour Blessed is the man that feareth God for his great delight is in gods word and hée maketh more account thereof then of any treasure For all precious things in the world they can continue with vs but while we liue in the world but the séede of gods word as it is euerlasting s● it accompanieth the soule euen when it is departed from the bodie We are troubled about many things in this life but as our Sauiour Christ saith there is but one thing necessary and that is the hearing reading learning and meditating on the word of God And as wisedome is one of the VVisedome greatest commendations that can be giuen to the feare of god so doth the word of god deserue the selfe same commendation By thy precepts and commandements that is by thy word saith the Prophet Dauid I am wiser then the aged and my elders By thy word I haue gotten vnderstanding therefore I hate all wicked wayes This is your wisedome saith that holy man Moses vnto the Israelites Deu. 4. And this is your vnderstanding in the sight of the people which shall say Onely this people is wise and of vnderstanding and a great nation And this was the wisedome that god would should more preuaile with a King and highest gouernour in a realme then all the wisedome of his counsellours As we shall reade in the booke of Deutro 17. And when the King shall sit vppon the thorne of his kingdome he shall reade in this booke all the dayes of his life and it shall bee euer with him To what end and purpose Euen that he may go in and out wisely before his people That being taught and instructed
and the defrauding of iudgement and iustice maruell not For so it is like to come to passe So that there are feares and cares inough and matters to make them guiltie and their soules heauie that haue set their hearts vppon honour howsoeuer at the first it haue a glorious shew in the sight of the world but as for delight to speake and say it truly there is none When the wise King had shewed me thus much what Pleasure flawes crackes and rents there were in the chéefest delights of worldly men it was a matter too easie to iudge of the rest and of the meaner sort Which could terme no otherwise but méere foolishnesse and madnesse toyes and trifle The viole and harpe and musicall instruments how do they delight the hart What a ioy is it to spend our time in minstrelcie and dancing But what if musicke haue his mourning and that such foolish mirth doo ende in heauinesse What is beautie but the prouoking of lust and the forgetfulnes of God which maketh vs with an impudent face to say when we are called to God from this and all other earthly vanities I am maried to bewtie haue set my hart on vanity therfore he saith not haue me excused but in plaine tearmes I cannot come And when we thinke of braue apparell and delicate fare as though that were a thing to be desired let vs remember the rich man which was cloathed in purple and fine linnen and fared well and delicately euerie day who though hée flaunted on the earth and made the worlde his chiefest heauen yet afterward fried in torments and found the dolefull hell to he his dwelling place for euer Now what purpose is it for vs to desire to liue long Long life when there are no true delights but shewes and shadowes thereof When all things in our life are vaine what pleasure is it to liue séeing that as it is most certaine the longer we liue the more sinfull wée are This life of ours must haue an ende and peraduenture a fearefull or an vngodly end which if we could but remember and thinke vpon it would abate and pull backe our reioycing hearts although all our delight were to liue How much better were it to prepare our selues against the day of death Séeing that a short life is sometime a great blessing of God when as the course of sinne shall be cut off in vs And againe when we are taken away from wofull times to come and from those miseries which fall vppon the world VVisedome 4. Enoch was taken away least wickednesse should alter his vnderstanding For wickednesse deceiueth and bewitcheth the minde and the vnstedfastnesse of concupiscence doth soone peruert the simple heart And because the soule of this holy man pleased God therefore hasted he to take him away from wickednesse Yet the people see vnderstand it and consider no such things in their hearts how the grace and mercy is vpon his Saints and his prouidence ouer the elect The wicked and vngodly although they liue long in great prosperitie and sée not the graue in many yeares yet is their estate accursed and they liue long to their greater vengeance and condemnation vntill the measure of their sinne be filled vp to the brim and that the iudgement of GOD wayt for them at the doore Séeing then that these delights which worldly minded men make so great account of come to nothing and are in themselues but méere vanities and as it were shaddowes without a bodie and therfore may fitly be compared to S●dome Apples which in outward sight and shewe are very faire and beautifull but when we come neare to touch them they fall to ashes Let vs returne to the true delight and only paradice of the soule I mean the word of God in VVord which paradice is the trée of the knowledge of good euil the trée also of life and immortalitie wherein are perfections to be found and such as may well content the heauenly Angels and blessed soules Which is the onely instruction of wisedome the guide of our life the light in darknesse which sheweth vs a way to enter into paradice although Cherubins and the blade of a sword shaken be set to kéepe the way of the trée of life I meane it sheweth vs the way into the highest heauens although there be many lets and hinderances to kéepe vs backe And the way that it onely Feare chaulketh out vnto vs is this The feare of the Lord and the especiall regard of his wil and commandements which hath the promises and blessings of this life and of that also which is to come By which direction of the feare of God we reade that the famous Patriarch Abraham was safe from the iniuries of straungers Lot deliuered from the deuouring fire that came downe from heauen and from those dreadfull iudgements Noah escaped the drowning flood and perished not with the vngodly Iob that worthie mirrour of all succéeding ages preserued from the rage wicked intent of the diuel Iacob set frée from the murthering hand of his brother Esau Ioseph from misery exalted to honour Enoch taken from the wicked world and translated into heauen By which examples and testimonies drawne out of the word of God we sée the high and great commendations of the feare of God and that there is no worldly delight to be compared vnto it In a word the chiefest commodities and blessings that the heart of a naturall man can desire and the greatest glory that he can wish to rise vnto all are included and comprehended within the feare of God Vnto the which that I may as I would exhort you let vs call to our remembrance the words that God spake vnto his people by his seruant Moses saying O that there were such a heart in them to seare mee and to keepe all my commandements alwayes that it might go well with them and with their children for euer O that they were wise then would they vnderstand this then would they know that the feare of God doth make a blessed life and a happie end That we may perceiue that the fear of God doth teach vs to be vpright and iust and to eschue euill as it did Iob that so God may grant our requests as he heard and granted the praiers of Cornelius that it may come to vs as it did vnto Iudeth that none be able to bring an euill report of vs because we feare God Finally that it may be said of vs as it was of King Dauid that hée was a man after Gods owne hart because that with all the power that was in him he did performe those things which God woulde haue him and that we may be minded as he was I had rather be a doore keeper saith he in the house of the Lord then to dwell in the Pallaces of Princes And so as people indued with wisedome and with an heauenly spirit let vs passe by these delights of the world which
tribulation reioycing in persecution reioycing in torments reioycing in death because they haue bin so well learned in gods schoole in gods booke that the loue of God is throughly shed abroad in their harts by the inward secret and most heauenly working of his holy spirit Triumphing against the world and the cruelties thereof being fully perswaded that neither life nor death nor any thing else shall be able to seperate them from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus We learne that we are the children and beloued of god and that we are heires euen the heires of god and fellow heires with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him For the afflictions that may fall out vnto vs are not worthie of the glorie that shall be shewed vnto vs and that we shall receiue in the kingdome of heauen If it were not so saith the Apostle we were of all men the most miserable if our hope were ended in this life and if that persecution had not a ioyfull recompence He that striueth not shall neuer be crowned and he that doth not take vp Christ his crosse euen to the death shall neuer come where he is To them that thus endure trouble and are thus hated reuiled and slaine of the world they know and are assured by gods word that there is a crowne reserued for them which the Lord shall giue them at that day dreadfull to others but ioyfull to them When it shall be said vnto them Come ye blessed enioy the kingdome prepared of my father for you from the beginning of the world Search the scriptures for in them ye thinke to haue etrnall life And thus they do performe it It followeth in those words which I haue reade vnto They testifie of Christ you touching the effectuall reason that should moue vs to the reading of the scriptures And they are they which testifie of me In them ye thinke to haue euerlasting life because they direct vs vnto the knowledge of Christ wherein consisteth life According as he saith of himselfe I am the way the truth and the life To him saith the Apostle Act. 10. 43. giue all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beléeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes This is life euerlasting saith the Euangelist S. Iohn 17. 3. that they know thée to be the onely very god and whome thou hast sent Iesus Christ And thus the word of god doth testifie of our Sauiour Christ Ioh. 3. 16. That God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne for the redemption of the world that whosoeur beleeueth in him should not perish but haue life euerlasting They are they which testifie that I am the onely life to true repentant sinners to giue them ease and comfort that are swallowed vp and ouerwhelmed with heauie sorrowes and as it were vtterly cast away through griefe and distresse of minde for their sinnes According as the Apostle saith Christ came into the world to saue sinners Come vnto me saith Christ all ye that be heauily loaden with the burthen of your sinnes and I will ease you and I will refresh you For I came not to saue the righteous but to call the sinners to repentance They are they which testifie of his holie and vndefiled conception being conceiued by the holie Ghost and borne of a virgine and so being without all blot of sin to the intent that we might be freed from our vncleannes which we draw from our parents being born in sinne and conceiued in iniquitie being defiled by originall sinne and naturall corruption which testifie of his life and conuersation that it was altogither vnrebukable blamelesse and that in euery point he fulfilled the law of God y● his righteousnes perfect obediēce might be imputed vnto vs which are otherwise vnder the curse of the law that our sinne and disobedience might be couered and that we might not be called to account for the same which testifie that hée was condemned before an earthly iudge to acquite vs from the dreadfuil sentence of the heauenly iudge which testifie that in bodie soule he suffered gréeuous torments that the wrath of god might not take hold of vs which testifie of the wonderful worke of his resurrectiō of his triumphing ouer death sin hell and the diuel to make vs ioyful conquerers which testifie of his glorious ascention into heauen to giue vs assurance of y● heauenly possession which he hath purchased for vs which testifie y● he shal be y● iudge of quick dead to giue vs euerlasting comfort which haue put our whole trust in him when all other vnbeléeuers wicked vngodly people shal stand in his presence with great horror séeing his comming shall bee to be reuenged of their vnbeliefe and contempt Finally in an other consideration we may say that they They bring vs to the knowledge of God our selues are they that testifie of him For first and principally they teach vs the knowledge of God Secondarily and consequently the knowledge of our selues The knowledge of the Almightie power of God in the creation of all things of his infinit wisdom in disposing them in their due order of his great goodnes in doing al these things for the vse and benefit of mankinde Indéed the creation of the world and all the creatures therein do bring vs to the knowledge of God and this is onely the scripture of the heathen people but yet this doth not shew vnto vs sufficiently how God is our God and our father in Iesus Christ which knowledge we do only attain by reading the word of God And this is the scripture of the Christians Through which knowledge of God in respect of Christ we learn that God hath entred into a couenant with all faithful people that he would be their God and that they should be his people And that therfore they ought to performe vnto god his due scruice which especially consisteth in these thrée points First to worship the true God and to detest all idolatry and false gods to make our praiers to God alone and religiously and deuoutly to serue him Secondly that the worship of God doth cōsist in spirituall matters as faith hope charitie obedience righteousnes holines innocency patiēce truth and all godlines Thirdly to improue accuse and condemne all wickednesse and sinne infidelitie desperation disobedience impatience lying hipocrisie hatred slaunder iniurie and wrongfull dealing vncleannesse lust gluttony and all other vngodlinesse and iniquitie Furthermore that God doth in mercy and fauour reward the good and according to his iustice punish the offendors and that therefore he hath prepared ioyes and torments after this life For our soules are such that they neuer die and our bodies shall rise again to be ioyned to our soules at the latter day In respect of which knowledge of God the scriptures do perswade vs so to liue in this world that
and I will make this Cittie a curse to all the nations of the earth The destruction of this Citie shall be a matter of feare and wonder and shall be continually in euery mans mouth as an example of the reuenge that the lord hath wrought Worship the lord in the glorious Sanctuary tremble before him all the earth Say among the nations The lord raigneth surely he shall iudge the people In the tenth Chapter to the Hebr. The Lord shal iudge his people Before whose iudgement seate we shall all appeare to receiue those things which we haue done in our bodies according to that we haue done whether it be good or euill As the wise man in his booke called Eccle. putteth vs in mind Reioyce ô yoong man in thy youth and let thy heart cheare thee in the dayes of thy youth and walke in the wayes of thy heart and in the sight of thine eyes but knowe that for all these thinges God will bring thee to iudgement If thou set light by and disobey that which I command thee I am the Lorde thou shalt not escape when I shall shewe my selfe from heauen with my mightie Angelles in flaming fire rendering vengeance and paying euerie one according to his desertes The Lorde the Lorde shall appeare in glorie when hee commeth to iudgement and all his holie Angels with him And before him shall be gathered all nations and he shall seperate them one from an other as a shepheard seperateth the shéepe from the goates and he shall set the shéepe on his right hand and the goates on the left Vnto the goates that is to them that haue disobeyed him he shal say Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuel and his angels And if god spared not the angels that had sinned but cast them downe into hell and deliuered them into chaines of darknesse to be kept vnto damnation and spared not the old world but brought the floud vpon the vngodly and turned the Citties of Sodome and Gomorra into ashes cōdemned them and ouerthrew them and made them an ensample vnto them that after should liue vngodly Surely the Lord as yet and from this day vnto the end of the world will reserue the wicked and vniust vnto the day of iudgement vnto punishment The Lord shall consume them with the fire of his wrath and render vppon their heads their owne waies and they shall knowe how true and certaine this is that he is the Lorde For in his hand is a cuppe and the wine is redde it is full mixt and he powreth out of the same Surely all the wicked of the earth shall wring out and drinke the dregs thereof Therfore are we willed to lead our liues before the Lord in feare and trembling considering how dreadfull the Lord is As saith the Prophet Dauid My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am affraid of thy iudgements Knowing therfore the terrour of the Lord and his fearfull iudgement we perswade men that they haue a diligent regard to that which the Lord hath commanded And séeing that the Lord shall come in such dreadfull maner to iudge the vngodly and disobedient what maner persons ought we to be in holy conuersation and godlinesse And being fully perswaded thorof let vs be diligent that we may be found of him without spot and blamelesse And let vs marke what is written in the last words of the book of Salomon called Ecclesiastes his words are these Let vs heare the end of all Feare God and keepe his commandements For this is the whole dutie of man For God wil bring euery worke vnto iudgement with euery secret thing whether it be good or euill Thus much you haue heard concerning his sacred and Strong fearefull maiestie wherein also the force of his power doth shewe it selfe and yet it is further expressed in that hée is said to be strong Which especially is to be séene in his punishments where I might bring in manifolde and infinit examples of plagues against the wicked procéeding from his iust anger whereby the Lord hath shewed his mightie power and declared his maiestie to be most dreadfull and full of force As among the rest were most notorious the drowning of the old world and the burning of Sodome and Gomorrha with fire and brimstone from heauen This his mightie power did not the Lorde make knowne onely to straungers but euen to his owne people in making the earth to open and swallow vp some the fire to burne and consume others a mightie great plague to make a riddance of them firie serpents to sting them to death for their murmuring and rebellion that they also might confesse and acknowledge the mightie power of the Lord. And to declare howe strong hee is he maketh mention of his thrée great plagues the Sword and Famine and the Pestilence wherby not a fewe but thousands and infinit multitudes perish when it pleaseth God to strike by them as we may read in diuers places of the scriptures well knowne to them that are but meanely séene in them Againe this is a great argument to proue how strong he is that when one punishment is sent and past and gone he can send another and another in the necke of the same and still increase his power by adding and doubling and multiplying For as his mercies haue no ende so his iudgements cannot be numbred And where his anger is ●●●led there his power groweth stronger and stronger In the Prophecie of Iere. cap. 15. 2. 3. The Lord instructeth the Prophet what he shall answere the Iewes that had so greatly prouoked his wrath And if they say vnto thée Whither shall we depart then tell them Thus saith the Lord Such as are appointed vnto death vnto death and such as are for the sword to the sword and such as are for the famine to the famine and such as are for the captiuitie to the captiuitie And I will appoint ouer them foure kinds saith the Lord. The sword to sley and the dogs to teare in pieces the foules of the heauen to deuou● and the beasts of the earth to destroy He might haue gone further in reckoning vp his plagues and neuer bene wearied in throwing downe his thunderbolts That proud and hard hearted king Pharaoh that said Who is the lord that I should heare his voyce I know not the lord The lord that he might make manifest his power shewed himself to this wicked king in diuers plagues punishments Which were such that one excéeding an other one was more greeuous then an other The waters of his land being turned into blood the earth couered with frogges the dust of the earth chaunged into lice the aire replenished with great swarmes of flies the hand of the lord was vpon their beasts and cattle and they died by a mightie great murrain there came a scab-breaking out into blisters vppon man and vppon beast the lord sent lightning and thunder and haile mixed with
returne vnto him By which forbearing many are wonne to God as also the worst sort are hardned against the day of wrath heaping vnto themselues vengeance against the day of the declaration of Gods iust iudgement Wherein all both the best and the worst cannot say otherwise but that the lord is gratious mercifull in forbearing Slow to anger and of great kindnesse yet Correcting not so slowe that hée will neuer strike or that he will suffer his patience to be abused but when he is throughly prouoked hée putteth his anger in effect Neuerthelesse as the wicked féele the waight of his anger so towardes his people hée dooth so moderate the same that in wrath hée remembreth mercie and causeth his punishments to be but remedies to his his owne people as the Surgion vseth cutting and launcing for the benefit of him whome hée so handleth The scourges and afflictions 2. Macc. 6. 12. 17. that God sendeth amongst his people are not for destruction but for a chastening For it is a token of his great goodnesse and of his gratious kindnesse not to suffer sinners long to continue but straightwaies to punishe them For the Lorde dooth not long wayte for vs as for other Nations whome hee punisheth when they are come to the fulnesse of their sinnes but thus hée dealeth with vs that our sinnes should not be heaped vp the full so that afterwards we should be the more gréeuously punished And therefore he neuer withdraweth his mercie from vs and though hée punish vs yet dooth hée neuer vtterly forsake vs. So slowe hée is to anger that hée punisheth them that goe wrong in a measure warning them by putting them in remembraunce of the thinges wherein they haue offended that they might leaue their wickednesse Furthermore hée maketh them féele his rodde by a little and little giuing them space to repent If saith the wise man thou haste punished the Egyptians the enemies of thy children hauing deserued death with so great consideration and requesting vnto them giuing them time and place that they might chaunge from their wickednesse with howe great circumspection wilt thou punishe thy owne children When thou doest chasten vs thou punishest our enemies a thousand times more to the intent that when we iudge we shuld diligently consider thy goodnesse and when we are iudged we should hope for mercie We are neuer further off frō God then when he doth most fauour vs and he is neuer more truly serued then when he striketh vs with his rod. These effects of Gods anger and his corrections may more truly be termed chastisements then punishments according to that of the Prophet Ieremy cap. 10. 24. O Lorde correct mee but with iudgement let thy punishment be lenified and moderated with mercy let it not proceede in thine anger least I bee consumed and brought to nothing In the Psalme 85. God saith by the mouth of his Prophet If my children forsake my lawe and walke not in my iudgements then will I visit their transgression with the rodde and their iniquitie with strokes and scourges For as sinne and the breaking of Gods commaundements is the cause of correction so is correction the remedie to bring vs into the way againe By which forcible mean of Gods fauour we are so humbled and altered that it procureth amendment in vs. Yea it wrought mightily with the heathen king Nebuchadnezer and brought him to the worship of God This forcible meane of Gods fauoure I say of his fauoure for otherwise where hee dooth correct vs hee might destroy vs preuailed so with King Dauid that after he felt the stroke of his correction hée desired that the Lorde woulde instruct him in his lawe and furthermore that it gréeued his heart to sée the wicked transgresse Gods lawe Finally howe great the goodnesse of the Lorde is in correcting vs wée may well perceiue by the words of the Apostle 1. Cor. 11. 32. We are chastened of the Lord because wee should not bee condemned with the worlde For those whome GOD loueth those doeth hee chasten as for the wicked and vngodly hée letteth them runne on still till they haue filled vp the measure of their sinne and then in steade of correction whiche mighte conuert them they shall féele the gréeuous and heauie burthen of Gods wrath vtterly to destroy them Correction bringeth with it time and place to repent but a suddaine destruction cutteth off all repentance For the grace of God doth often accompany correction as alwaies his wrath is ioyned with destruction The Lord is mercisull and gratious slow to anger to bring the wicked to repentance whom the Apostle Rom. 2. doth greatly reproue for their hardnesse of heart and for abusing his gratious mercy and long suffering Despisest thou saith he the riches of his bountifulnesse and patience and long sufferance not knowing that the bountifulnesse of God leadeth thée to repentance Againe he is mercisull and gratious and slow to anger in respect of the godly because hee dooth not put his anger in full execution against them And that when he striketh them being moued thereto by his anger it is for their great good and benefit A more large exposition of that which goeth before is 3 Abundant in goodnesse seene in these words Abundant in goodnesse and truth Reseruing Mercy c. Which words giue vs to vnderstand how God vseth all meanes to kéepe vs in his feare by inriching vs with his benefits and powring downe his blessings vpon vs and not onely that but effectually performing whatsoeuer faithfully he hath promised dealing with vs and alluring vs as we sée how carthly fathers go about to winne their children to all vertue and goodnesse by faire words and promises and sometimes bestowing gifts vpon them And this onely and most substantiall argument doth the Apostle S. Paul vse Act. 14. 17. as it were by most sensible meanes to draw the minds of the heathen people from their Idolatry to the true worship of God For saith he although God suffered you to walke in your owne waies yet that you might be without excuse he left not himself without witnesse among you in that he did good and gaue you raine from heauen and fruitfull seasons filling your hearts with foode and gladnesse All which benefits although hée might haue withdrawne because you abused them to his dishonour yet still was he aboundant in goodnesse when you were most vnworthie of them A maister will not doo good to that seruant that shall disgrace him a father will withdrawe his heart from an vnkinde childe Although a mans iealousie bee such that hauing iust cause to forsake his wife for her lewdenesse hée will neuer be intreated to receiue her yet is the Lorde aboundant in goodnesse Let my people saith hee put away her fornications and I will receiue her againe into fauoure The Lordes workes are not as mans workes and hée is aboundant in kindnesse farre contrarie to our nature who can hardly or neuer incline our hearts
to fauoure This goodnesse GOD dooth not onelie vse to the Heathen to make them lift vp their hearts and mindes from the creatures to the Creator but in like sort also hée dealeth with the wicked to make them chaunge their mindes Hée sendeth downe his raine vppon the vniust as well as the iust and for the moste part they enioy the goodnesse of God in a more plentifull measure then doo his owne children As it is saide in the Psalme Whose bellies thou fillest with thy hid treasure for they abounde when other are in scarcitie they feele no want when other are pinched with penurie As though Gods benefites were hid from the good and secretly bestowed vppon the badde whiche matter hath suche ill successe that the wicked are more badde more proude more wrongfull more lewde and vicious as though they were not onelie Lordes or rather tyrants ouer Gods flocke but also had the blessings of GOD at their owne will and commaundement Such was the difference betwixt the rich man and Lazarus the one in his roabes the other in ragges the one faring delicately the other not hauing so much as a morsell of bread to satisfie his hunger so were the Egyptians Lordes when the Israelites were slaues the Canaanites dwelling in a lande flowing with milke and hony abounding in plentie without a scarcitie when the posteritie of Abraham wandred in the wildernesse and endured many extremities The Viole and the Harpe are in the feastes of some and Iacobs affliction is not once so much as thought on And who doeth not see howe the worser sort dooth abuse the aboundant goodnesse of God O that the complaintes and miseries of the poore could make their heartes relent or the wishes and prayers of the godly coulde procure a sufficient redresse or the fearefull endes of their forerunners could warne them The Egyptians drowned the Canaanites destroyed the riche man in hell O that they woulde thinke that they cannot haue their heauen héere and in an other worlde or that fearefull sentence might preuaile with them Reuelation 18. 7. So muche torment for so muche pleasure waight for waight and measure for measure at leastwise if it bee not beyonde all measure Yet more properly and more truely it may bee saide that GOD is aboundant in goodnesse towardes his owne people As the Prophet Moses doeth in moste large sort set it downe Deutronomie 28. According as hée had foretolde vnto his seruant Abraham testifying of himselfe I am all sufficient And againe I am thy exceeding great rewarde worke vprightly before mee When hée and his were straungers in other landes hée suffered no man to doo them wrong but reprooued euen Kinges for their sakes being readie to bee consumed by death and famine hee prouided they shoulde not want béeing gréeuously oppressed of their enemies hée heard their crye and deliuered them hée smote all their enemies and brought them foorth with siluer and golde and there was not one féeble person among their Tribes hée brought foorth his people with ioye and his chosen with gladnesse And gaue them the lands of the Heathen and they tooke the labours of the people in possession This doctrine is so comfortable to the good and godly that although the worlde sée it not yet they feele and perceiue in secrete sort that the Lorde is aboundant in goodnesse towardes them alwayes hauing regarde vnto them so farre foorth as standeth with his glorie and their good Blessyng them in prosperitie defending them from their bodily and ghostly enemies prouiding for them in all necessities standing by them and comforting them in all their miseries God was aboundant in goodnesse towardes his people and is and will bee vnto the ende of the worlde but alwaies with an exception as hee did to the Israelites Vnto all other blssinges saieth the Psalme GOD gaue vnto them the landes of the Heathen and they tooke the laboures of the people in possession To this end that they might kéepe his statutes and obserue his lawes But as it fell out amongest the Israelites so it is daily séene amongst vs. The Lorde in the Prophecie of Esay compareth his people to a Vineyard and his aboundant goodnesse to the care hée had ouer that Vineyarde Hee caused his Vineyarde to bee seated vppon a verie frutefull hill he hedged it in and gathered out the stones of it hee planted it with the best plantes and hée built a tower in the middest thereof and made a Wine presse therein Then hee looked that it shoulde bringe forth grapes VVhat coulde I haue done anye more to my Vineyarde that I haue not done vnto it VVhy haue I looked that it should bring foorth grapes and it bringeth foorth wilde grapes Suche also hath Gods care euer beene to vs and for vs as was that of the husbandman ouer his figge trée who dressed it and digged rounde about it and dunged it but when hée commeth to seeke for frute I am affraide hée shall finde none But with Gods aboundant goodnesse let vs also consider and feare this least the trée be cut downe For euerie trée that bringeth not foorth good frute shall bee hewen downe and cast into the fire And such iudgement that was pronounced against the Israelites shall also light vppon vs. I will tell you saith the Lord what I will do to my vineiard I will take away the hedge thereof and it shall bee eaten vp I will breake the wall thereof and it shall bee troden downe And I will laie it waste it shall not bee cut nor digged but briars and thornes shall grow vp I will also commaunde the cloudes that they raine no raine vppon it God graunt that euerie one among vs may consider his estate howe good the Lord is vnto him and bee warned betimes I beséeche yée that yée bee not partakers of Gods bountifull goodnesse in vaine To Gods aboundant goodnesse hée putteth a seale of Aboundant in truth full assurance and that is his promise least that wée should stande doubtfull of his goodnesse The world is full of promises but they bee nothing else but deceit the diuell can promise as fast but his promises are vntruthes for hée is the father of lies The fickle and vncertaine mindes of men are readie to promise any thing but for the most part there is no more hold in their words then in the winde The worlde the diuell and men promise mountaines but the truth is if they performe any thing it is but molehilles So that it were better neuer to harken vnto their promises then to hope for helpe from them It is the Lorde onely that kéepeth faithfull promise who euer liueth and alwayes helpeth For GOD is not as man that he should lye neither as the sonne of man that he should repent change his minde Hath he said and shall he not do it And hath he spoken and shall he not accomplish Though man doo promise yet is he alwaies wauering and more likely to chaunge his purpose then to
a fearefull word that although they dreame of mercy yet they shall finde the contrary For God will neuer recken them to be innocent nor euer reserue his mercie for them And although they crie Lord Lord yet shall they not enter into his kingdome For when they thinke to enter into his rest it shall be said vnto them Depart from me I know you not Let vs alwaies remember that the Lorde is strong and that his anger is fearefull and that his punishments are intollerable and hell torments euerlasting that so the feare of the Lord may still be before our eyes and that we may be affraide to offend his maiestie Then shall his mercy stand vs instead when wée fall and haue offended whereas otherwise we shall be bolde to commit sin and flatter our selues that god wil be merciful when as indéed we do but deceiue our selues and shal surely find hell when we thinke to go to heauen God graunt that the knowledge of God may turne to our good and that through our defaulte in flattering of our selues and presuming too much of Gods mercy we fall not away from mercy To whose mercy I commende you desiring you not to forget his iustice For God is a consuming fire and wilfull and obstinate sinners shall neuer escape his euer-during wrath To God the Father God the Sonne and God the holy Ghost be all glory and praise both now and euer Amen Deo gratia solique gloria Of his Creation Genesis 1. 1. In the beginning God created the heauen and the earth AS I haue set downe vnto you the knowledge of God by his properties and qualities so also is he further knowne by the consideration of his workes As saith the Psalme The heauens declare the glorie of God and the firmament sheweth his handie worke Amongst the workes of God first in order most notable is the worke of his creation wherein his power and wisedome is manifestly séene giuing vs a larger and more delightfull knowledge of him then that we should busily occupie our studies in searching the secret and hidden nature of God The spirit of God beginneth first with the declarion of this most excellent worke bréeding the knowledge of God in our mindes as it were by a wonder In the beginning God made the heauen and the earth Which sentence dooth affoord vs these thrée instructions First the consideration of the creation of the world Diuision and the creatures thereof and whither the world and the creatures were made to endure and to continue for euer Secondly how the world and all the creatures therin conteined were made Thirdly the cause the ende and vse wherefore they were made The world it selfe how beautifull a pallace is it and as it were a heauen in respect of hell beneath as it selfe also is a thing of nothing in respect of heauen aboue The heauen glistereth with the glorious sight of the Sunne the Moone and the starres The Sunne reioyceth to runne his course euen his spéedie and hai●ie course and as it were the glory of all Gods creatures commeth forth with a maiestie forbidding the eyes of all earthly creatures to behold it which by his force dooth burne the mountaines seuen times more then doth the heat of a furnace God giueth light to the darknes it self and causeth the Moone to appear when the light the glorious beames of the Sun are gone down The infinit multitude of the stars shew forth his wonderfull wisdome and decketh the heauens much more then all the precious stones costly ornaments the are in princes courts Cast down your eies behold the creatures on the earth The mighty lion which is a figure of gods power at whose roaring all the beasts of the forrest do tremble the rauening beare the instrument of his wrath as the example of the mocking children that did disdain the Prophet Elisha doth testifie the nourishing cloathing creatures the cow the shéep and the goat to the praise of his goodnes Wherin also the trées do instruct vs the oliue trée with his fatnesse the figtrée with his swéetnesse the vine trée with his cherishing How do the hearbes set forth the wisedom of God In that he hath giuen to euery hearbe his propertie some for comfort some for delight some to continue life some to restore life as none know it better then the expert Phisitian to whō God hath opened his wonderfull works therin Besides these looke vpon the lilly of the field whom God hath so richly arraied that Salomon in all his roialty is not like to one of these A wōder it is to sée how he hath hid great treasure in the lower parts of the earth not only tin lead brasse and iron but siluer also gold precious stones The earth the world euery part therof giue manifest witnesse what God hath wrought Euery element is furnished with his creatures the aire with birds the earth with trées hearbs and inestimable treasure and as the waues of the sea are innumerable so are the creatures therein conteined euen as the stars of the skie which no man can terme call by their names but only God himself To euery beast of the field and to euery foule of the heauen Adam gaue names but the creatures of the sea as the hidden work of God Adam saw not man knoweth not neither cā they euer be searched out that we may wonder at Gods wonders Some haue said that there is no creature on the earth but the sea doth yéeld the like Among the creatures of the sea none setteth forth the work of Gods creation so much as the huge great whale which ouerturneth mightie ships and striketh a feare into the hart of man As saith the Psalm 104. 24. O Lord how manifold are thy works In wisdom hast thou made thē all The earth is full of thy riches so is the wide great sea also wherein are things creeping innumerable both small and great beastes There goe the ships and there is that Leuiathan whom thou hast made to take his pastime therein When the wise man had delighted himself with the remembrance of the works of Gods creatiō either being rauished with the delight or vnable to satisfie his mind he breaketh forth saith Who hath seen all the creatures of God that he might tell vs For when he hath searched to the vtmost of his power yet may he truly say There are hid yet greater things then these be and we haue séen but a fewe of his works He doth not measure the knowledge of man in this matter that he hath attained the one halfe but leaueth him in the very enterance as though he had had but a glimce of some and not a sight of all As Adam being placed in Paradice had not a full view of all the secretes thereof neither had he any vnderstanding of the trée of life but assoone as he had tasted of the trée of knowledge for his rebellion and disobedience
he staid not long there Let vs therfore satisfie our selues with the knowledge of Gods creatures if it be but in a measure be contented though we sée not all but by and in them that we doo know let vs praise honor him who in such comely bewtifull vnsearchable sort hath made all Timantes a cunning Painter taking in hand to expresse the sorow of Agamemnō for the death of his daughter Iphigenia perceiuing his skill wold not reach so far couered the prince his face with a vaile leauing his sorrow to be cōceiued by the mind of the beholders whose eyes in this respect he could not satisfie In like sort finding my self vnable to fulfill thy desire and to set downe the consideration of all Gods creatures thinke it good to leaue the rest to thy studie and labour and take that to be sufficient for this present purpose which I haue said vsing silence where much may be spared thy studie eased and minde delighted For breuitie bringeth attention and a long discourse tediousnes The learned Philosophers and searchers of gods works perceiuing the excellency of gods creatures and the bewtifull frame of the world gaue it a a name agréeable thereunto and called it Bewtie it selfe For if the works of men deserue great commendation and that the Carpenter in the frame of his house the Mason in his stoneworke the Painter in his pictures may excel how much more excellent and passing bewtifull shall the frame of the whole world be and the workmanship of euery creature made and ordeined and created of God Who as he is in all respects worthie praise so doubtlesse must the works be which procéed from him infinit incomprehensible only good only almightie only wise only excellent in whatsoeuer may be said to be his When the Disciples of our Sauiour Christ shewed VVhether to endure him the faire building of the Temple and the garnished worke Maruell ye at these things saith he The time shall come that there shall not be a stone left vpon a stone which shall not be throwne downe The Temple it selfe yea euen the bewtifull gate of the Temple shall come to hauocke and ruine There is nothing excellent in the world that is of long continuance and the world it self hath but his time and shall passe away as though it had neuer bene nor euer created not through the default of the workemanship but through their procurement for whose benefit it was made and created Shewe me the light which will not darken shewe me the flower which will not fade shewe me the frute which will not corrupt shewe me the garment which will not weare shewe me the strength which wil not weaken shewe me the bewtie which will not wither shewe me the time which will not passe and tell me if thou canst whether that the worlde bee of the continuance but of an houre The ende whereof is compared to the trauaile of a woman the comming of a théefe in the night the flashing of lightning sodaine and vnlooked for in a moment in the turning of a hand in the twinkling of an eye before a man can say what is done or what is towardes For as GOD said It repenteth mee that euer I made man so not long after he vttered his voyce to Noah and sayd An end is come He created man and he fell he made the world and it shall not alwayes endure Man was made out of the dust and to dust he shall returne the world was made of nothing and to nothing shall it vanish it shall ware olde as a garment and at length be consumed with fire The goodnesse of the Lorde is great in the continuance of the worlde and longer should the time be if the wickednesse of men did not abounde Which time if it were not shortned no flesh should be saued but for the Elects sake for the benefit of the good and godly the dayes of the world shall be cut off Let mee alone saith God to Moses that I may consume this people vtterly Now come many miseries losses extremities and plagues vppon the world but for the sin that is practised in the world Which doubtlesse will be the cause of the ende of the world and of the destruction of gods bewtiful frame fire and brimstone fell vpon Sodom and Gomorrha a part of the world wheras if it had pleased God it might haue lighted on all the world The windowes aboue and the depthes beneath were opened and the whole earth was ouerwhelmed with water A token of a greater iudgement and of a greater destruction when not a part of the earth shall bee consumed with fire but the whole earth yea euen the heauens also and the whole world it selfe The glorious Sun shall be turned into darknesse and the Moone into blood the starres shall fall from heauen and the powers of the heauen shall be shaken the earth shall be dissolued the sea and the waters shall roare And if the wordes of the Apostle Saint Peter bee true as without all peraduenture they are moste certaine because the spirite of God hath set them downe which cannot lie neither can be deceiued as the world of old perished being ouerflowne with water so the heauens and the earth which are now are kept by the power of God in store and reserued vnto fire against the day of iudgement and of the destruction of vngodly men This latter day the end of the world shall come as a theefe in the night in the which the heauens shal passe away with a noise and the elements shal melt with heat and the earth with the workes that are therin shall be burnt vp Sin iniquitie and wickednes saith the wise man hath cast downe the thrones of the mightie and brought the earth to a wildernes and so it shal fal out the therby all things shal be brought to desolation and not only the earth but the whole world shal come to nothing Yet thrée daies and Niniue shal be destroied yet but a while and y● a litle while and the time of the world shal be expired For the end of all things is at hand Plentifull Sodom bewtiful Gomorrha are defaced their beastly lustes and the abusing of Gods benefits was the cause Man should neuer haue died if he had neuer disobeied and the bewtie of the world should still haue continued if the inhabitants of the world had giuen no other cause But now all things tend to their decay the heauenly powers do faile in their operations and the hearbes haue not their former force and the Phisitian is driuen to vncertainties The bodie of man is not so perfect and healthfull as in the beginning but subiect to manifold diseases his time holdeth not out to hundreths as heretofore it hath done but fewe are his daies because his daies are euill Death to man destruction to the world yea all the creatures of the earth do grone vnder the burthen of that misterie whereunto they
are subiect by man and hope to be deliuered of it and hope to be purged from their corruption When our Sauiour Christ came neare to Ierusalem he wept to thinke of the desolation and destruction that should come on Ierusalem that faire and bewtifull Ierusalem that glorie and wonder of all the earth And the more that wée knowe the excellent woorke of God in the creation of the worlde and his creatures wherein we cannot choose but take passing delight so often as we doo consider and meditate on the same euen there withall also when we thinke that all thinges shall come to a ruine and downefall that the heauens and the earth shall be consumed with fire then may we begin to shead forth teares in a lamentable consideration that so glorious a workemanship and so wonderfull a frame should come to a finall destruction When Elisha the man of God looked stedfastly vppon Hazael he 2. Kin. 8. 12 wept because hee foresawe what great miserie hee should worke against the children of Israel Which thing saith he the Lord hath shewed me The woes that shall come vpon the worlde in the latter time shall make the godly minded to mourne in their thoughtes Reue. 12. 12. Wo to the inhabitants of the earth and of the sea for the diuell is come downe vnto you which hath great wrath knowing that hee hath but a short time and that his mischiefe ouer the world shall ende with the world Which thing maketh them to wish that their liues were at an ende that they might not behold such great calamities as also to reioyce at their estate which haue lest the earth and possesse the heauens Oh saith the Prophet Ieremy ca. 9. 1. that mine head were full of water and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weepe day and night for my people euen for the slaine of my people as if he had said for them that are and shall be destroyed Because they are all adulterers and an assembly of rebels This is a waightie cause to make vs all to wéepe which cause also doth make the earth and all creatures else to mourn and grone Go to now ye rich men saith the Apostle S. Iames weepe houle and so might he haue warned al people all sorts and all degrées to wéepe as King Hezechias did when he turned his face to the wall being sorie that he had offended God and that an end was come vnto him therfore to weep as the Apostle S. Peter did bitterly for his gréeuous sin whereby hée forsooke his Lord and maister Let this make euery one to wéepe both for others and for themselues in their chambers and in their closets at home and abroad where euer they go and what euer they do cōsidering that the sinnes of others as also their owne sinnes should be the cause of so great an ouerthrow Turne vnto mee with all your heart and with fasting and with weepiing and with mourning and rent your harts and not your clothes and turn vnto the Lord your God saith the Prophet For who knoweth whether God will return leaue a blessing Let euery one thus wéepe for themselues and thus turne vnto the Lord for who knoweth whether God will change his anger and forget our sinnes And though death and destruction of the world be a heauy plague that shall light vpon the most part of the inhabitants of the world I say who knoweth whether this shall turne to vs for a great blessing The consideration of which blessing will make vs turne our teares into ioy and our mourning into mirth not such ioy as the worlde but as the spirit of God shall mooue our hearts vnto It shall make vs lift vp our heades because that when the ende of the world shall be our perfect redemption shall bee accomplished Finally it shall also make vs more warie by this warning According to that of the Apostle Saint Peter The ende of all thinges is at hande Bee yee therefore sober and watching in prayer Take heed saith Christ least that day come on you vnawares For as a snare shall it come on the face of the whole earth Take héed least ye be taken in surfetting and drunkennesse in chambering and wantonnesse Take héed lest ye be choked with the cares of this world and be too earthly worldly minded when ye shuld be heuenly minded séeing that the world shal haue an end and we know not how soone nor how sodaine it shall be Loue not the worlde nor the delights of the world and let not thy heart cleaue thereunto but lift vp thy heart and thy mind to heauen and an other life whereas thy dwelling is like to be for euermore if so be thou beest not thy own hindrance and be taken amongst the fiue sléepie and foolish virgines spoken of in the Gospell Qualis vita finis ita For as the trée falleth so it lieth and if in the ende of the world nay in the ende of thy life which is the ende of the world to thée shall be fire and flame so thy ende shall be hell fire and such gréeuous torments which can neuer be vttered and shall neuer be ended The seconde principall consideration which I noted 2 vnto you in this text is Howe and after what sort the world and all the creatures therein conteined were made consisting on these thrée circumstaunces First that God Of nothing made all things of nothing Secondly that they were made by his word and commandement Thirdly that all his creatures were created verie good A straunge and incredible maner that God should make all things of nothing Yet as we reade in the Epistle to the Hebrewes Chapter 11. 3. Through faith we vnderstand that the world was ordeined by the word of God so that the things which we see are not made of things which did appeare For he made all things of nothing when as yet there was none of them Wherein the Apostle doeth well attribute the matter vnto faith for by our naturall reason we were neuer able to comprehend it but contrariwise we should thinke it a matter too absurd and against reason As also in the conception of our Sauiour Christ that he should be borne of a pure virgin without the helpe of man hath séemed vnto many a matter in no wise to be beléeued In so much that some haue bene bold to say and their spéech vngodly inough that the bodie of our Sauiour Christ was rather a fained bodie then a bodie like vnto ours of flesh and blood Our Sauiour Christ said vnto his disciples That it was easier for a rope to passe through the eye of a néedle then for a rich man to enter into the kingdome of heauen Whereat they maruelled saying Who then shall be saued To whom Christ answered To men this seemes impossible but to God all thinges are possible And herein is the difference betwixt the workes of God and mē that they can bring nothing
to passe but by means but God sheweth his power vnto vs in y● without meanes of nothing he can doo all thinges Sarah Abrahams wife laughed when shée heard that shée should haue a sonne in her olde age séeing it had ceased to be with her after the manner of women and that her wombe had so long bene barreine and as it was to be thought now dead What saith shée after I am waxed olde and my Lord also shall I haue lust But the Angel answered Shall any thing be heard to the Lord who as of nothing made infinit creatures so caused he of one euen of one which was dead to spring so many as the starres of the skie in multitude and as the sande of the sea which is innumerable What more impossible then to put life into a stone Yet saith Iohn Baptist vnto the Iewes that boasted themselues that they were Abrahams posteritie God is able of these stones to raise vp children vnto Abraham Howe should we say in the Articles of our beliefe I beleeue in God the father Almightie vnlesse wee were fully perswaded that hee were able to doo all things whatsoeuer he would Which things also the Diuels knowe and doo beleeue Else the tempter woulde not haue saide vnto Christ If thou be the sonne of God commaund that these stones be made bread What foolishneshnesse is it then for vs to measure the infinit power of God within the narrow strait of our owne conceit Much like the seruant of the Prophet Elisha who sawe nothing when as there were round about his maister and himselfe horses and char●ts of fire the mountaine full Yet this matter of Gods Almightie power is more manifest in the resurrection that after our bodies haue béene consumed to earth and ashes and hath beene meate for the foules of the aire the beastes of the earth and the fishes of the sea when euery part and parcell of our bodies are brought to nothing yet shall they returne to their former estate and be renued againe As Iobe saith I hope to see my Redeemer in the latter day not with anie other but with these same eyes What is it for him when all thinges are vanished and consumed to nothing to bid them returne againe who as the Prophet faith Renueth the face of the earth and doth cloath it yearely as it were with a newe garment What is it for him to make a plentifull lande barraine and to bring foorth nothing as hée did by the lande of Sodome and Gomorrha and to make a barraine land to be plentifull and to bring foorth all things For as hée turneth the flouds into a wildernesse and drieth vp the water springes Psal 107. 35. So againe he maketh the wildernesse a standing water water springs of a dry ground Darknes and light to him are both alike so is it his onely propertie both to make all thinges of nothing and that there should be nothing impossible vnto him Wherefore let vs not foolishly imagine that out of nothing nothing can be made as some haue thought and those not meanly learned but when we come to the view of the workes of God all learning and wisedome of man must 〈◊〉 And although we reade that man was made of the dust of the earth the fishes and foules of the water the woman of man yet the first beginning of all things was of nothing let vs with Iobe cap. 26. 7. beholde yet a little more nearer very manifestly and also with great delight The wordes of Iobe are these Hee hangeth the earth vpon 2. Esd 16. 501. nothing VVhiche thing is subiect euen to our sences For the heauens euerie way foorthe doo compasse the Earth and the Sea and the Earth and the Sea standeth of it selfe without any manner helpe but onelie from GOD. And although euerie one cannot perceiue so muche yet the learneder sorte haue tryed it and found it out by learning and some passengers and trauellers if not by land yet by sea haue aduentured it If it hang vpon nothing wonder not For God hath laide the foundations of the earth Psal 104. 5. that it neuer should mooue at any time making it fast and giuing it a lawe which should neuer be broken till he saw good and that all should be ended But that we should be somewhat more resolued in this By his word doubtfull matter this we are to learne that as God made all things of nothing that did appeare so also he performed this wonderfull worke onely by the word of his mouth The Potter maketh his vessels out of the claie the Carpenter buildeth his house of timber the Smith forgeth his instruments out of iron but shewe me the workeman that can but wish his woorke made ready to his handes without any other helpe but onely to haue it for the wishing Onely and alone it was God that commanded and said Let it be so and it was so Psal 135. 6. For whatsoeuer it pleased God that did he in the heauen and in the earth in the sea and in all déepe places To vs that haue a very smal insight in the infinit works and power of God it séemeth vnpossible it should bee so yet the word of God which is the foundation of all truth hath certified vs that it is so Psal 33. 6. ● By the word of the Lord were the heauens made and all the hoste of them by the breath of his mouth For he spake and it was done he commanded and it stood His effectuall power was in his word and commandement In the beginning God created the heauen and the earth and said Let there be light and there was light Let there be a afirmament and it was so Let the earth bud forth hearbes and trees and it was so Let there be lights in the heauen and there were lights Let there be foules in the aire and fishes in the sea and there were multitudes and God was delighted in the worke Let the earth bring foorth all beastes and cattell and presently they were to be seene This was that eternall word of God which was before all things the ingraued forme of the image of God the second person in the godhead by the which all things were made This was the word of God which was before his works of old which was set vp from euerlasting from the beginning and before the earth When there were no depthes neither any fountaines abounding with water before the mountaines were setled and before the hilles he had not yet made the earth nor the open places nor the height of the dust in the world when he prepared the heauens it was there and when he set the compasse of the déepe When he established the cloudes aboue when he confirmed the fountaines of the déepe when he gaue his decrée to the sea that the water should not passe his commaundement when he appointed the foundation of the earth then was his word with him a nourisher and it was his daily delight
earth should be vnder and the water aboue For the water is a lighter element then the earth neither could the earth auoyd the mastery of the sea were it not that other order were taken and that God had set the sea his boundes as if he had said Here shalt thou staie and breake thy proude and swelling waues They goe vp saith the Psalme as high as the hilles and would faine bee aboue the mountaines they goe downe to the vallies beneath euen vnto the place which thou hast appointed for them Thou hast set them their boundes which they shall not passe neither returne againe to couer the earth Aske them which venture vppon the sea who sée the workes of the Lord and his wonders in the deepe and they will tell thée that they are now carried vp so high that they thinke themselues in the heauens aboue and by and by they fall downe into the déepe as if the waters should be their graue and no maruell that their soule melteth away because of the trouble and that they are at their wittes endes The sea hath his boundes set that man might haue his dwelling and this is Gods fauourable appointment Who not onely abateth the force of the sea but also maketh it nauigable to giue him rest at home and to bring him treasures from farre Yet is there an other matter well neare as straunge as this to sée howe God ordereth all thinges fit and conuenient for the habitation and dwelling of man For as GOD gaue a decrée vnto the Sea and Waters to giue man roome and not to hinder his dwelling so also hath he laide his commaundement vppon the wilde beastes and inclosed them within the desartes and waste places as it were setting vnto them also their boundes which they shall not passe So that although they roare after their praie and goe raunging about to deuoure yet they shall roare and raunge and rage no further then their compasse and the desart vnlesse God for a punishment vnto men doo giue them further leaue as I haue shewed you before These cruell creatures they come not where man hath his dwelling but only such creatures as are for his vse and for the maintenance of his life The hornet is in the wood the bée in the garden the lion the bear are in the desart kine horses at thy doore and in thy stable wolues farre away and shéepe about thée wilde beasts are in desolate places that man may be at rest and in quiet A manifest proofe of Gods ordinaunce herein is set downe in the Psal 104. Thou makest darkenesse ô Lord that it may be night wherein all the beasts of the forrest do mone The sun ariseth and they get them away togither and lay them down in their dennes Then man goeth forth to his worke and to his labour vntill the euening The wilde beastes saith the Prophet do mone but he maketh no further mention but of the forrest And that we néed not feare their rage he speaketh of the night when man taketh his rest and his doores are shut vpon him And for a further assurance of Gods gracious care ouer man he saith that assoone as the Sun riseth they get them away which could not come to passe vnlesse God had so wrought it God hath ordeined the day that man might labour therein and the night to giue him rest he caused the foules of the aire the cattle on the earth and the fishes in the sea to multiply and increase that man might take thereof for his foode The bread to streng then him the wine to cheare his heart the shéepe to cloath him diuerse hearbes for medicine to cure him in his sicknes Quarres for stone trées for timber that men might make them houses and dwelling places to keep them from the feruent heat in sommer and in the winter from pinching colde from storms and tempests In a word all things to comfort him all things to cheare him all things to reioyce him When God had thus created all things for man the earth to walk in the beasts to feede and ●loath him all things else for his vse and profit yet was man as it were all in a wildernes he sawe no creatur fit and conuenient to kéep him company yea when God himself had taken a view of all his creatures he sawe no helpe méete for man The Lord brought all creatures vnto man to giue them names and as they were all before God we reade that God found not a helpe méete for Adam And then he said It is not good that the man should bee himselfe alone I will make him a helpe Therefore the Lord caused a heauie sléepe to fall vpon the man and he slept and he tooke one of his ribbes and closed vp the flesh in stéed thereof And the rib which the Lord God had taken from man made he the woman and brought her to the man who before was like an vnperfect building Although God had speciall regard of the increase of mankind yet in the creation of the woman there is nothing so much spoken of as that she should bee a helpe But I would to God that men woulde more regarde Gods ordinaunce and consider there withall what for frailtie of men requireth If themselues bee able to refraine let them giue god thankes that hath so inabled them and if other haue not the same gift with them there is no cause why they should bee despised and disdained if they vse the remedie appointed and auoyd the extremitie Vnlesse they count whoredome more tollerable then marriage and that estate which the spirite of God dooth tearme honourable in all degrees of men to be contemptible in some Which matter neuerthelesse is so warily to bee handled that we runne not into contempt through want of wisedome and discretion It were to be wished saith the Apostle that all men were as I am but euery man hath his proper gift of God And the same Apostle foretelleth that in the latter dayes suche shall arise that shall forbid marriage Yet so to teach to forbid to scoffe or disdaine hath this marke to accuse their conscience in so doing that it is neither honest nor good nor laudable but only the doctrine of diuels Not onely hath God thus created all things to satisfie mans necessitie but also for his delight and pleasant contentation euen plentifully liberally and largely Yet so that we vse his creatures with moderation and not in excesie godly and soberly not wantonly and wickedly not wasifully and prodigally Either in thy diet by too much dei●caten●●e or gluttony or in thy apparrell vnto pride or in thy gorgeous building farre more then néed is to be laughed to scorne for thy vanitie The plentifull goodnes of God should be applied to good vses but such is mans either wanton●sse or foolishnesse that such matters slippe out of his remembrance and vanitie is entertained as though all these thinges were created for vanitie Aboundance should procure thankfulnesse
and the relief of the poore but in stéed of thankfulnesse steppes in a slumbring kind of idlenesse and in stéed of reliefe disdaine and contempt of the poore and charitie waxeth key cold where iniquitie beareth the sway and hath the vpper hand Behold saith the prophet Ezech. 16. this was the iniquitie of Sodome Pride Fulnesse of breade Aboundance of idlenes nether did she strengthen the hand of the poore and néedie The better sort vse Gods benifits to his glorie their comforts and the helpe of others But in the worser sort of people of whome the world is too full whose minds are giuen altogither earthly fleshly and sensually there is no such regard no such consideration but the more wanton and vain they are the more they think they please others euen such as are like them selues Otherwise they giue great offence to them that are godlie and well minded and vertuouslie disposed and prouoke gods anger against themselues Come say they let vs enioy our pleasures as though they were borne for nothing else but to eate and drinke and to play Let vs fill our selues with costly wine and ointments Let vs crowne our selues with rose buds before they be withered But to what purpose and what is their minde in so doing Their answere is this Let not the flower of our youth passe by vs and let vs all be partakers of our wantonnes and let vs leaue some token of our pleasure in euery place For that is our portion say they and this is our lot and this is the onelie life wée looke to haue They that sowe to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption and euerlasting heauinesse shall be theire portion For howe swéete so euer they thinke it is yet bitternesse shall be in the ende Though GOD haue created many things as well for delight as necessitie yet they turne them to a wicked delight as though the distemperature were the right vse Surfetting and drunkennesse pride and excesse whoredome and vncleannesse chambering and wantonnesse and what not Being farre from the minde of the holy Apostle Vse the worlde as though thou didst not vse it Let not this delight of the creatures drawe thée from thy dutie to thy Creator That which should prouoke thée the more to loue him let it not be a meane nor any occasion that his anger should be stirred against thée to punish thée The grace of God hath appeared to teach vs to liue not onely godly and righteously but also soberly in this present worlde looking not on these worldly delightes but wayting for the comming of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ who shall make our bodies lyke to his glorious bodie and at his comming who shall take vs togither with him into the heauens Let no man grudge if hée be debarred from some delightes For God hath not graunted to euery one alike and well is it for the poore if they haue sufficient to satisfie their necessitie although they also be not restrained from all the delightes of Gods creatures Wherein the rich and wealthie although they haue great liberty must also remember that God hath enioyned them a lawe of sobrietie let them looke vpon the wilde beastes which haue but their compasse and vpon the mightie waters which haue their boundes They that haue not this libertie let them take all things thankfully and be content with their estate which God hath placed them in And let them frame their mindes to the counsell of the Apostle Phil. 4. 12. I can bee abased and I can abound euerie where in all things I am instructed both to be full and to bee hungry and to abounde and haue want For I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am therewith to bee content If GOD hath graunted thée store and plentie thou maiest vse his creatures to thy delight but bicause the nature of man is giuen to excesse and fewe there be that know the meane therfore God with these delights requireth also sobrietie that all abuse may be auoided Vse a litle well that thou maiest be partaker of much more and so shall heauenly ioyes follow earthly delightes By these things god doth try vs whether we be méet and fit for him or whether wée will make our selues the seruauntes and slaues of the diuel God graunt wée be found gold and not drosse wheate and not chaffe which is lyke to be burnt vp with vnquenchable fire Ecc. 39. 26. The principall things for the whole vse of mans life are water fire and iron and salt and meale wheate and hony and milke the bloud of the grape and oyle and cloathing All these things are good to the godly but to the sinners they are turned into euill being made culpable and faultie before Gods iudgement seate by reason of their abusing of them Thus you haue heard how God hath created all things especially for his glory so also that they might serue to the health life necessitie and pleasure of man But more frankly and with greater consideration and respect to the good of his chosen people all which are vnto them as it were instruments ministers and meanes whereby God doing them good might be honoured and praised of them Onely man God created for himselfe and all the rest for man that man togither with all his creatures might set foorth his glore O speake good of the Lord saith the Prophet all ye workes of his in all places of his dominion and there withall doth stirre vp himselfe to do to Praise thou the Lord ô my soule For what is man ô Lord that thou hast such respect vnto him or the sonne of man that thou shouldest so regarde him So long as liue will I praise the Lorde and my mouth shall be full of his praises All thy workes praise thee ô Lord and thy Saints also giue thankes vnto thee they shew the glory of thy kingdome and talke of thy power That thy power thy glorie and mightinesse of thy kingdome might be knowne vnto men O praise the Lord ye Angels of his ye that excell in strength ye that fulfill his commandement and hearken vnto the voice of his words O praise the Lord all ye his hostes ye seruants of his that do his pleasure O praise the Lord of heauen praise him in the height Praise him Sunne and Moone praise him all ye starres and light Let them praise the name of the Lord. For he spake the word and they weare made hee commanded and they were created They were not made by blind chaunce but by the power of his word they wer created From the heauenly creatures the Prophet passeth to the creatures of the earth whome he maketh to sing the same song Praise the Lord vpon earth ye dragons and all depthes Fire and haile snow and vapours wind and storm fulfilling his word Mountains and all hilles fruitfull trees and all cedars Beasts and all cattell Wormes and feathered foules Lastly when he had giuen all other creatures their summons and their warning
he putteth men also in remembrance least they should be found more vnthankful then all other creatures and so not worthie of any of Gods benefits Praise the Lord ô ye kings of the earth and all people princes and all iudges of the world yoong men and maidens olde men and children high and low rich and poore one with another praise ye the name of the Lord. For his name only is excellent and his praise aboue heauen and earth In praising let vs end and ioyne our selues in this duty with the foure and twentie Elders spoken of in the Reuelation of S. Iohn béeing before the throne of God who fell downe before him that sat on the throne and worshipped him that liueth for euer who also did cast their Crownes before the throne saying Thou art worthie ô Lord our God to receiue glory and honour and power and to thee be giuen all dominion might and maiestie For thou hast created all things and for thy wils sake they are and were created Deo gratia solique gloria Of his Prouidence 2. King 7. 18. And it came to passe as the man of God had spoken to the King saying Two measures of Barley at a shekel and a measure of fine floure shall bee at a shekel to morrow about this time in the gate of Samaria But the Prince on whose hand the King leaned had answered the man of God and said Though the Lord would make windowes in the heauen could it come so to passe And he said Behold thou shalt see it with thine eyes but thou shalt not eate thereof And so it came vnto him for the people trode vpon him in the gate and he died After that God had created the world and all the creatures therein it may not be thought that he left them alone to themselues to liue or die to continue or perish although it maie séeme so to vs because when god had made his creatures he rested But he did neither cease nor rest as men do from theire workes which they haue made as after the house is built the worke man hath no further care and so in all other labours finished by mans hand Truth it is that God rested from making and creating more creatures but not from norishing and cherishing from gouerning and guiding the world and all the creatures therein Whose workes are wonderfull and daily séene of them which haue eies to sée it Wherein we must also consider howe God bringetth these matters to passe most commonly ordinarily and by meanes but sometimes extraordinarily and without meanes as the example set downe in this text which I haue reade vnto you doth shew Which Diuision text deuideth it selfe into these two parts whereof the first is a prophesie and a declaration of Gods gratious prouidence by the mouth of the prophet Elisha in these words Two measures of barley and so forth In the second part we may consider the vnbeliefe distrust and blasphemous spéech of one of the kings nobles as also the iudgement of God for his vnbeliefe and distrust and the iust punnishment for his offence in these words But the prince had aunswered and so forth In this first part not only is set downe the prouidence of God in nourishing but his mightie power and wise foresight in gouerning and ordering matters as séemeth best to the further manifestation of his glorie by his iustice and merice to the good of the godly and for a iust punishment to the wicked prophane and vngodly How God dooth nourish all his creatures cannot better bee set downe then by the words of the Prophet Dauid in his Psalmes Hee watereth the hils from aboue the earth is filled with the frute of thy woorkes hee bringeth foorth grasse and maketh the earth to bring out foode And least they should die for thirst hée also prepareth for their néede for hée sendeth the springs into the riuers which runne among the hilles All beasts of the fielde drinke thereof and the wilde asses quench their thirst Furthermore speaking of the infinite and innumerable company of Gods creatures in the Sea These saith hée wayt all vppon thée that thou maiest giue them meate in due season When thou giuest it them they gather it and when thou openest thy hand they are filled with good The eyes of all thinges looke vp vnto thée thou openest thine hand and fillest all things liuing with plenteousnes For hee maketh grasse to growe vppon the mountaines which may séeme verie straunge because of the patching heate of the Sunne For it is sayd that the Sunne doth burne the mountaines seuen times more then dooth the heate of a furnace His plenteousnes doth farther appeare in that as it is in the history of Iobe he not onely maketh the raine to fall vppon those places which are fit for mans dwelling but euen vppon the wildernesse also where no man is Iob. 39. 26. 38. How secret is his blessing and plentifull hand that he maketh euen the barren ground to yeelde forth pasture As in the same Chapter of Iobe we reade that he hath made the asse to dwell in salt places that is in vnfruitfull grounds whereas in mans reason there séemes no foode to grow Many creatures as farre as we can perceiue serue to no vse and that mightie creatures which will not be fed with a little yet God openeth his plentifull hand and they want not wherby we learne his great abilitie to preserue whatsoeuer wonderfully he hath made We cannot but wonder how beares and lions and suche deuouring beasts should be fed which are as it were vnsatiable Therefore Iob saith Wilt thou hunt the praie for the lion or fill the appetite of the lions whelpes Who is it that prepareth for the rauen when the birds cry vnto God wandring for lacke of meate The lions roaring after their praie do séeke their meate at God saith the Prophet Yea when cattle can looke for nothing else but drought and famine as in the time of winter when the earth denieth food and hath closed vp her sappe within her bowels and when the grasse is consumed with pinching frostes and couered with staruing snowes herein also is God said to open his hand and to be plentifull in that he graunteth them fodder and maketh the earth in sommer season to bring foorth aboundance that in time of néed the cattle may haue inough But some are so rash in their spéeches that they wil impute this ordinary course of gods daily prouidence to a secrete kinde of vertue which God say they hath giuen to euerie thing at his first creation Which reason of theirs howe fond and foolish it is we may perceiue by this that nothing can long endure without such foode as commeth by Gods hand and prouidence Some of them féeding vpon wholesome meate some vpon carrion some of grasse some of prouender some cleauing to stones and finding nourishment in them some on the sand of the sea and some vpon ●●ime and mud some on the
shall gods blessing reach and extend it selfe more to some then to other some When there was a famin in the land Abraham had to suffice him so also fell it out vnto Izake his sonne when there was a famine and he a stranger in the land God increased him with store But a far greater proofe of Gods prouidence in the behalfe of the godly is séen in the example of Ioseph the sonne and Iacob the father with all his children posteritie For when many lands were ready to starue they were fed liberally as it were from the kings table So it falleth out betwixt the godly and the wicked when we thinke of Gods prouidence Abraham Izake and Iacob haue plentie when Esau is almost dead for want of a messe of pottage when the prodigall sonne would faine haue filled his belly with the huskes that the swine did eate but no man gaue them him nor had pittie on him The lions do lacke and suffer hunger but they which séeke the Lord shall want no maner of thing that is good For the reliefe of the whole citie of Samaria but especially for the comfort of the godly did God send his Prophet Elisha to tel them of plentie saying Two measures of barley at a shekel and a measure of fine floure shall be at a shekel to morrow about this time in the gate of Samaria After great scarcitie vpon a sodaine great plentie and more store of corne then of money to giue for corne inough to satisfie them that were most hungry and besides to spare God neuer suffereth his to want long though for the wickeds sake they are somewhat restrained for a season Who by his prouidence is so aboundant that euen the wicked also as the Psalme saith are filled with his hid treasures Esau had rich possessions and Ismael was a great Lorde and from him came Princes The hand of God was opened in most liberall sort vnto the Canaanites yet therewithall wee must vnderstand that this lasted but for a time and also to teach vs that if God be so liberall to them which are without God in the world how much more carefull will he be ouer them that are godly Trust thou in the Lord and do good which two matters are sure tokens vnto vs that if we do so Gods prouidence will neuer faile vs dwell in the land and thou shalt be fed assuredly Delight thy selfe in the Lord and he shall giue thée thy hearts desire God maketh his Sunne to arise on the euill as well as on the good and sendeth raine on the vniust as well as on the iust Yea sometimes their portion is so great that they spread themselues like a gréen bay trée yet their time is but short I passed by saith the Prophet and ●o they were gone I sought them but their place could no where be found They that wayt vppon the Lord and fulfill his will they shall inherit the land yet a little while and the wicked shall not appeare the séed of the wicked shall be cut off and the righteous shall inherit the land and dwell therein for euer Fly from euill and be doing good and dwell for euermore And although the wicked be maintained by gods prouidence and that largely yet is it especially for this cause to make them without excuse whē they shall be called to account because they haue not liued in the feare of God seeing that God delt with them so plentuously Wherefore séeing the prouidence of God hath this consideration ioyned with it that they only that feare God and do his wil are truly partakers of the same let vs kéep our selues in compasse and desire no more of God then that which shall relieue our necessities and be a meanes to continue vs in gods feare Delicates and dainties are for them who are carried away with the lusts of the flesh I kept my body vnder saith S. Paul lest when I had warned other I my selfe might be reproued At mans first creation God appointed euery gréen hearbe to be his meate to teach him abstinence and ●obrietie In like sort in the Psalme 104. we reade of Gods ordinance for the sustenance of all creatures in these words Hee causeth grasse to growe for the cattle and hearbe for the vse of man and that the earth might yeeld him bread to strengthen his heart No spéech of delicates and dainties to bréede a contentment in our mindes Not but that according to their estates and degrées men may vse delicate fare in a good and godly sort but the vnruly nature of man is rather giuen to excesse then to a meane And happie is he that can vse the creatures of God without offence Reade the scriptures and for the most part you shall sée where mention is made of dainties it hath also these companions Sinne and Forgetfulnesse Excesse and Riot The Israelites they could not be content with Manna which came from heauen euen Angels foode but wanton they were and néeds they must haue other fare grudging and murmuring against God They fell a lusting and wept withall saying Who shall giue vs flesh to eate We remember the fish that we did eate for nought in Egipt the cucumbers and the pepons and the léekes and the onions and the garlicke whereof we had such store as we could wish but now our soule is dried away and we can see nothing but this Manna Then GOD sent them quailes euen daintie flesh The swéete mouthes of the Sodomites stirred vp the flesh and enforced the hart mind to consent to great filthinesse and their bodies were too ready to performe it Proud they were and idle forgetful of God of themselues and disdainfull toward the poore King Belshazzar as we read in y● procie of Daniel ca. 5. in his excessiue feasting did abound but euen then also he was carousing to his cōcubines and praising his idol gods of gold of siluer of brasse of irō of wood and of stone and further he abused the holy vessels of the temple The prodigall sonne had a dainty tooth and he must satisfie his mind and spend till all was gone and that quickly He spent it in excesse and whoredome The rich man fared daintily but he had no regard vnto the poore and harkened not vnto their cries But what became of these daintie people While the flesh of the quailes was betwixt the téeth of the Israelites a plague came from God and consumed a number of them Fire and brimstone from heauen burnt vp the Sodomites The same houre that King Belshazzar was feasting riotously and wickedly he sawe that with his eyes that troubled his thoughtes and made his countenance to change and his heart to melt and his knées to beate one against an other for feare and trembling A heauy matter was shewed him the losse of his kingdome he escaped not so but he lost his life too After the prodigall sonne had eaten vp his portion of goods and spent all in sugar and sauce
the blacke Moore which was in the kings house heard that they had put Ieremiah in the dungeon And he went vnto the king and said My Lord the king these men haue done euill in all that they haue done to Ieremiah the Prophet whome they haue cast into the dungeon and he dieth for hunger in the place where he is for there is no more bread in the citie Then the king had compassion and committed the matter vnto the Eunuch to take order for Ieremiahs reliefe The widow of Zarephath in great famine hauing but a handfull of meale in a barrell and a little oyle in a cruse when she and her sonne had spent that she looked for nothing else but present death But the Lorde did comfort her by the mouth of his Prophet Eliah saying The meale in the barrell shall not be wasted neither shall the oyle in the cruse be diminished vntill the time that the Lorde send raine vpon the earth and there be plentie And according to the words of the Prophet it fell out so vnto her When the Prophet Eliah had thought to haue giuen vp his life being in distresse the Angel of the Lord had brought him a cake and a pot of water and set the same at his head and touched him and awaked him out of his sléepe and sayd vnto him Vp and eate So hee arose and did eate and drinke and walked in the strength of that meate fortie dayes and fortie nights And if it bee lawfull to bring in forraine histories into suche w●●ghtie matters I will shewe you a thing as straunge as the former which is recorded in the historie of the warres of the lowe Countries Page 79. The words of the Author are these Now when I call to mind the wonderful workes of God I cannot passe ouer but tell you how that after the murther and massacre of Narden and the whole towne on a flaming fire a yoong Lad was saued by running out of the gates of the towne into a little gardain full of rootes The father of this boy was murthered and his mother being rauished was hanged vp by the armes of the Tyrantes Spaniards and when the fire came and tooke holde of her house shée beeing tied by the armes could not get away so that shée was burnt in her owne house The yoong Lad hauing not eaten any thing for the space of thrée whole dayes togither wept bitterly both for the death of his parents as also by reason that he was hungerbit But God who neuer forsaketh his sent him reliefe For the very same night there came vnto him a wel-fauoured yoong man in white apparrell who gaue him whereon to féede and said Wéepe no more my fatherlesse childe for I will neuer leaue thée Eate and be of good cheare for they that haue murthered thy father and mother shall haue a double plague light vppon them Thy teares shall be turned into ioy and gladnesse and their laughing into teares and mourning and forthwith the yoong man vanished out of sight When my father and mother forsake mee saith the Prophet the Lord taketh me vp And there ye sée that they that haue neither father nor mother want not no not when they are in great distresse Wonderfull are Gods woorkes and infinite are his mercies and his wayes past finding out Oh what is man fraile man wretched and miserable man that God should thus regard him may we well say with the Prophet And shall that God that prepared for man ere euer he was now forsake man when hée is if hée be not most vnkindly and too vnkindly forsaken of man It cannot be it can n●●●r be And therefore in all distresses let vs cast our eyes vpon him and thinke of such examples of his loue and rare prouidēce as these are which I haue recited vnto you and be sure that he knowing what we haue néed of will neuer forsake vs. All this it pleaseth God to worke in our behalfe God worketh for his owne glorie to the intent that he should be praised and honoured of vs. O Lord our God saith the Prophet howe excellent is thy name in all the world And againe Psal 146. 7. 9. Blessed is the Lord which giueth bread to the hungrie that relieueth the straungers the fatherlesse and the widow When Iacob met his brother Esau in token of good will he gaue him a rich present and therwithall acknowledged Gods bountifulnesse toward him in these words God hath had mercy on me and therfore I haue all things When Daniel was relieued by gods prouidence he gaue thanks and said O God thou hast thought vpon me and thou neuer failest them that seek thee and loue thee When our Sauiour Christ fed the people euen a great multitude with 5. loues 2. fishes he looked vp to heauen and gaue thankes We are earnest to craue good thinges of God but slowe to giue thankes To giue thankes for that which is receiued is a way to helpe vs to more in time to come to be thankfull for the old brings with it a new benefit and a new good turn But bicause by nature we are very backward in this dutie therfore God putteth his people in mind thereof by his prophet Moses When thou hast eaten and filled thy selfe saith he thou shalt blesse the Lord thy God for the good land which he hath giuen thee Beware that thou forget not the Lord thy God lest when thou hast eaten and filled thy selfe and hast built goodly houses and dwelt therein and thy beastes and thy sheepe are increased and thy siluer and gold is multiplied and all that thou hast is increased then thy heart be lifted vp and thou forget the Lord thy God who fed thee in the wildernesse with Manna frō heauen who brought forth water for thee out of the rocke of flint And again Bewa●● as though he could not speake it too often to such as were dull of hearing as Christ had his disciples Watch twice or thrice and yet found them sléeping Beware least thou say in thine heart My power and the strength of mine owne hand hath procured me this abundance But remember the Lord thy God for it is he and he onely which giueth thée power to get substance and onely in his blessing is all abundance Let not this be our first care if our store be increased to pull downe our barnes and make them larger but rather let vs lift vp our eyes to heauen in consideration that God hath so blessed vs and let vs pray that god will vouchsafe to giue vs the vse of his blessings to his glory and our comfort For to euery one to whom god hath giuen riches and giueth him power to eate thereof and to take his part and to enioy his labour this is the gift of god Otherwise a man may sée much good and peraduenture reioyce and boast of it but he shall neuer come to enioy it And then what profit and comfort is it to him that
heauen which shall be immutable and without chaunge and without swaruing For then shal we do nothing but that which good is and that with a constant minde alwaies to perseuere and to continue in la●ding and praising God and dooing his will as now the Angels of heauen doo And this may suffice concerning Freewill both that we may know what power of Fréewil was giuen to man in his first creation and also what is to be thought and how we ought to be perswaded of it When by mans Fréewill he came to his downefall then he proued Gods word to be true Thou shalt die the death whereas before he was in the state of life and immortalitie For he was created immortall with this condition if he had continued in Gods obedience but being wilfull and carelesse he came to his death and was in the way to hell when he thought to climbe vp into heauen When he was immortall he knew not what it meant but when through his follie hee perceiued his dayes to bee shortened he wondred at the one and gréeued to remember the other The estate of immortalitie wherein our first parentes were created was nothing else but a continuance and endurance of life and a freedome from death And although it be now vsuall and common and nothing more common then for euerie one of vs to die yet at the first it was not so If our first parents had obeied they had neuer suffered death but when they gaue themselues to sin and to deceitfull vanities then they knew themselues to be mortall and then death came vpon them As we read Rom. 6. 23. The wages of sinne is death but euerlasting life is the gift of God through Iesus Christ our Lorde And in the first Chapter of the same Epistle verse 12. As by one man meaning Adam the first man sinne entered into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men forasmuch as all men haue sinned so that the cause and only cause of death is sinne And because the best sort of men and women are sinfull though not in that degrée and in that measure as the wicked and vngodly are yet because euen they also haue procured the wrath of God through their sinne they must néedes vndertake the punishment of sinne which is death But there is a great difference to bee considered off For death to the godly is life and happie are they that are deliuered out of this miserable and wretched world For they knowe that while they are here they are absent from God that is from the enioying of his presence And againe they know that if their earthly house their bodies of dust and claie be destroyed they shall haue a building giuen of GOD that is an house not made with handes but eternall in the heauens For therefore they sigh desiring to be cloathed with their house which is from heauen that mortalitie might bee swallowed vp of life and their earthly mansion chaunged for an euerlasting habitation In the godly there is a great desire of death what moueth them hereunto Euen this that they may enioy immortalitie and be made partakers of that part of the image of God which by the meanes of sinne they were depriued off and put from But as for the vngodly it is nothing so with them For they tremble and shake at the remembrance of death as we reade of Naball who when his wife tolde him heauie newes which was toward him his hart died within him The sea men when they are tossed vp and down with the waues of the sea and néer to be cast away their ship drowned their soule melteth within them so the wicked their hart dieth within them al the parts of their body quake their soules within ar sore vexed miserably tormented with y● present forethought as it were feeling of y● euerlasting death and those endlesse torments which they shall endure And this moueth them in a wonderful secret sort to that feare they are in that they know by death they shal be taken from all their ioy and that they shall passe from this short life which they haue here in this world to death and from this light death which is no more but a seperation of the soule from the bodie to a second death which is euerlasting death And from death to these torments which are the worme of a continuall guiltie conscience the wrath of God increasing their punishment from time to time the restlesse crueltie of the diuell and hellish spirits to punish them where there shal be nothing else but wringing of hands weeping and gnashing of teeth Felix the gouernour shooke and trembled when he heard Paule disputing of righteousnesse and temperaunce and of other waightie matters as of death the resurrection and of the iudgement to come and willed him to depart out of his presence Much like to king Belshazzar who when he sawe a hand writing vpon the wall wherby was declared the end of his kingdome and the ende of his life his countenance chaunged his thoughts troubled him so that the ioynts of his loines were looced and his knees smote one against the other The feare of death is in them as it was in king Saul 1. Sam. 28. 20 who when he was tolde howe neare his death did approach he was sore affraied his soule fainted within him and he fell along on the earth neither was there any strength in him he refused meate and would not be comforted because through the sorrow of his death he had a taste of the death and torments which were to come The cause why we lost this benefit of immortalitie is sin and disobedience which brought vs to our death and to our last home The difference of death betwixt the godly and the wicked is this the one sort is greatly desirous to die the other are greatly affraied of death That man was created vnto immortalitie we may perceiue in that one part of man neuer dieth which is his soule Furthermore the bodie also shall receiue immortalitie at the day of resurrection when the generall iudgement shall be and when all flesh by the sound of a Trumpet shal be summoned togither from the foure quarters of the earth Then the bodies of all that haue bene departed from the beginning of the world togither with them that shall die vnto the end of the world being raised vp shal be ioyned vnto their soules and both shal be immortall and shall liue for euer either to receiue ioyes and euerlasting blisse or torments which shal neuer haue end The one sort to liue with God and his Angels the other sort with the diuel and the fiends of hell Which immortalitie of the bodie is confirmed by that of the Apostle writing to the Corinthians 1. Cor 15. 52. 53. In a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last trumpet shall the dead be raised vp incorruptible and we shall bee chaunged For this corruptible must
his grandfather before him was eaten vp of lice The stones of the stréete shall bee against the wicked and vngodly and at the shaking of the leaues of trées they shall be sore affraide And this is the rule that the wicked and vngodly haue ouer beastes that is that they are subiect vnto the beastes So doth God execute his vengeaunce and performe his wrath against offenders vsing beastes as instruments and meanes thereunto As we shall reade Ezec. 14. 15. in the Prophecie of Iere. 5. 6. Wherefore a lion out of the forrest shall slaie them and a wolfe of the wildernesse shall destroy them a leopard shall watch ouer their cities euerie one that goeth out thence shall be torne in pieces because their trespasses are many and their rebellions are increased and all repentance is banished and their hearts are hardned God foretold his people by the mouth of his Prophet Moses how after this sort he would punish them that disobeied him Leuit. 26. 21. And if ye walke stubburnly against mee and will not obey mee I will then bring seuen times more plagues vpon you according to your sinnes I will also send wilde beastes vpon you which shall spoyle you and destroy your cattle and make you fewe in number So your high waies shall be desolate because none dare passe thereby for feare of beastes Among the rest of gréeuous plagues wherwith God did minde to punish the people of the Iewes the plague of euil beasts was not the least as we shall read in Prophecie of Ezech. cap. ● 17. I will send vpon you famine and euill beasts and they shall spoile thee and pestilence and blood shall passe through thee and I will bring the swoord vpon thee I the Lord haue spoken it and therefore be sure of it The people of Israel Nomb. 2. 1. 6. because they murmured against God and against his seruant Moses God sent fierie serpents among them which stung them so that many of them died because they were not content with Gods prouidence and loathed the foode that God ordeined for them calling it light bread and naming it with disdain 2. King 2. 23. 24. As the Prophet Elisha was going by the way little children and wicked impes came out of the cittie and mocked him and said vnto him Come up thou bald head But two beares came out of the forrest and tore in pieces two and fortie children of them 2. King 17. 25. The Assirians that dwelt at Samaria at the beginning of their dwelling there they feared not the Lord therefore the Lord sent lions among them which slue them I read that the Tribe of Dan and of Gad because they wrought wickednesse in the sight of the Lord in persecuting them that kept the lawe that the Prophet Ezechiel gaue them a terrible token For Adders destroyed their children and all their cattle for their sinne and iniquitie Dorotheus in the life of Ezechiel As the waters are commanded not to ouerwhelme Iere. 8. 17. the earth so are beares and lions that they should not hurt and annoy men as we reade Psalme 104. The Esay 30. 6. nature of the lion is to deuoure man and beast what euer he méeteth withall but God restraineth him and maketh him couch in his denne Yea God hath appointed the light of the Sunne to strike a feare in him to this purpose that man may go forth to his worke and to his labour vntil the eueniug without either hurt or hinderance Yet we see when God determineth to worke his vengeance wrath on man for sinne they feare not the light of the Sunne but come forth to performe the will of God in their might and in their rage as I haue further declared in the Treatise of the worke of Gods creation Exod. 23. 28. God promised the Israelites to send hornets to driue out the Canaanites and other heathen people before them If ye amend your waies and do vprightly saith the Lord by the Prophet Ioel chapter 2. 25. I will render you the yeares that the grashopper hath eaten the cankerworme and the caterpiller and the palmerworme my great hoste whith I sent among you to eate vp and to consume all the increase of the earth and the fruites of trees To this purpose namely how God doth punish sinners and wicked people by euill beasts there is remembred a notorious and fearfull example and that not so straunge as true wherewith at this time I thinke good to end this matter hauing reserued it vnto the last place that it might the longer be kept in your remembraunce The example is this A king of Poland whose name was Popileus a king of infamous life and manners did oftentimes wish in his life to be deuoured of rattes At last according to his wish they set vpon him as he was making good cheare and being well tipled crowned with garlands smeared with swéete ointments and ouercome with surfit and excesse Which rattes saith the authour came from the dead carkasses of his vncles by the fathers side which he and the Quéene his wife had poysoned For rattes of a huge greatnesse being come forth leapt vpon the feasting tyranut and his wife and sonnes and bitte them cruellie His guard coulde not driue them away because when men were wearie the rattes continued day and night without anie wearines Burning fires were made and Popileus his wife and sonnes were placed amidst them but for all that the rats passing through the fire ceased not to gnawe the man-queller They assaid an other element and vsed the helpe of the water and this murtherer of his fathers brethren togither with his wife and children were carried to a déepe standing water Notwithstanding the rattes continually followed them and made holes in the boate and vessell where they were insomuch that the water entering in they were in daunger of drowning Wherefore the marriners fearing to be drowned brought the vessell to the shoare where an other company of rattes méeting them and ioyning with the former did more gréeuously annoy them Which when they perceiued the defenders knowing it to be Gods vengeaunce fledde all away Popileus nowe hauing none to defende him being altogither forsaken and forlorne of all his subiects and friendes séeing no other helpe got him to a high tower where hée founde himselfe no safer then he was before but the rattes hauing as it were a greater libertie runne vp to their praie with a swift course and there they destroy and deuoure the two boyes the wife and this wicked Popileus that neither he nor any of his generation should remaine aliue Small creatures and weake rattes to make an end of wicked people and where the image of God is not nor any sparke of grace doth appeare in respect of them brute beastes are of more account and wicked persons are despised and tormented of beastes who otherwise might be honoured of them and commanded by them Vnto the fearefull example of king Popileus the same authour addeth
mercy and compassion yea he onely forgiueth because he onely is offended I euen I saith he am he that putteth away thine iniquities for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Yea though they were as redde as scarlet and as a menstruous cloth as the starres of the skie and as the sande of the sea-shore which is innumerable Euen originall sinne which Originall sin is the roote of all mischief within togither with al the branches thereof the lusts of the heart the euill motions of the minde the consent of reason the déed performed He forgiueth all our negligence in not kéeping his commandemēts and our transgression and rebellion against them he hath deliuered vs from the guilt and from the punishment and hath fréely inriched vs with life eternall by the merites and intercessions of Christ Iesus our mediatour who is our redemption and sanctification and satisfaction that we might bee deliuered from condemnation for there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus whom God hath set forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse by the forgiuenesse of sinnes that are passed This is that righteousnesse of God through the faith of Iesus euen the remission of sins wherunto all the prophets witnesse The Apostle speaketh by way of proclamation Be it knowne vnto you therefore men and bretheren that through this man is preached vnto you the forgiuenes of sins and from all things from which ye cannot be iustified by the lawe of Moses by him euery one that beléeueth is iustified By way of consolation and comfort for they are glad tidings Litle children I write vnto you because your sinnes are forginen you for his name sake By way of doctrine And ye knowe that he was made manifest that he might take away our sinnes In whome we haue redemption through his blood that is the forgiuenesse of sinnes Neuerthelesse though we be fréed from the punishment yet are we subiect Affliction and correction to the correction which it pleaseth god to lay vpon vs either for the triall of our faith and patience or to bring vs to humilitie or for some other occasion which he in his wisdome best knoweth The second branch of the righteousnesse of God by faith 2. Imputation of Christ his righteousnes is the Imputation of Christ his righteousnes wherby we are iustified stand as righteous before the iudgement seat of God not being cloathed with our merits but being inriched with his mercy In cōsideratiō of which righteousnes we are to cite to summō our selues before the tribunall seat of Gods iudgement where we shal vnderstand what is that righteousnes which is required at out our hāds euē a most perfect and absolute obedience of the lawe which reqireth VVhat is the true righteousnesse Man is altogither sinne the heart and a most heauenly purenesse And séeing that man is full of corruption and wickednesse and from the sole of the foote vnto the head there is nothing in him but wounds and swellings and sores and that the head is sicke and the whole heart is heauy contrariwise Christ being man and taking our sinfull flesh vpon him yet being without sinne is in most glorious sort apparelled with righteousnesse yea euen the hemme of his vesture lacketh not vertue being so gloriously arraied in a vesture of broydered gold and néedle worke as the Prophet speaketh from Christ haue we all our clearnesse and puritie all our attire wherein we shine as Angels of light by whom all righteousnesse is deriued vnto vs which the prophet in the person of Iehoshua liuely Zachar●ah 3. 3. expresseth Now Iehoshua was clothed with filthy garmēts and stood before the Angel and he spake vnto those y● stood by him saying Take away the filthie garments from him And vnto him he said Beholde I haue caused thine iniquitie to depart from thee I will cloath thee with change of raiment And I said let them set a faire diademe vppon his head so they set a faire diademe vppon his head and cloathed him with garments and the Angel of the Lord stood by What may be the filthie garments Euen the vncleannesse of our wickednes the impurity of our thoughts our abhominable and daily weltring in our sinnes and vntill they are taken away howe ougly and contemptible are we in the sight of God Which place of the Prophet though some interpret it of Christ in that he was cloathed in our flesh and bare our sinnes yet in respect of vs it may haue this sence and meaning For what are wée else before it please god to take mercy vpon vs He it is that cleanseth vs from our sinnes for his name sake he it is that sawe vs when when we were polluted in our bloode and then he said we should liue euen when we were polluted in our blood he said Thou shalt liue Behold I haue caused thine iniquitie to depart away from thée and I will cloath thée with change of raiment For hee What the rich garment is wherewith the polluted sinner is a●●aied was made sinne for vs that knewe no sinne that wée should be made the righteousnesse of God in him Yea where sinne abounded there grace abounded much more that as sinne had raigned vnto death so might grace also raigne by righteousnesse to eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lorde Which righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ is imputed vnto all and vpon all that beléeue By this imputation we are cloathed with the righteousnesse of Christ through whome we behold the face of God to be vnto vs most chéerefull by whome we haue an enteraunce vnto the father by whose puritie and holinesse all our spottes are couered Without which imputation all our workes are vnrighteous for by the righteousnesse of faith are all our workes made perfect and being ingraffed into Christ and made partakeres of his righteousnesse our The effect of this righteousnesse workes are accounted before God as iust and righteous in whome all our imperfections are blotted out and those workes which are done of faith are accepted through the imputation of Christ his righteousnes For as in vs there is nothing but sinne so in Christ is all our sufficiency vpon whom as vpon the sacrifice was cast that curse of man that his condemnation might be our absolution and our happinesse his righteousnesse according to that of the prophet Dauid who knew it by his owne experience to be most true that the man is blessed vnto whome God imputeth righteousnesse without workes Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered Blessed is the man vnto whom the Lord imputeth not sin that the lord might only be iust and a iustifier of him that is of the faith of Iesus Who tooke vpon him our person was accused for vs and iudged as a sinner not for his owne but for the faults and transgressions of other being himselfe pure and
without spot that he might vndertake that punishment that was due vnto our sins and endue vs with his righteousnes So that now we are iust and righteous in him not that we can satisfie the iudgement of God by our owne workes but that we are accounted iust and righteous through Christ who is ours through faith Who is made vnto vs wisdome and righteousnesse satisfaction and redemption that he that reioyceth might only reioyce in the Lord for whose sake we are fréely accounted both iust innocent before god in whom are seene the glorious treasures of God that wée might bée inriched by him For if wée looke for saluation wée are taught by the very name of Iesus that it is in him if wée séeke for any other gifte of the spirit they are to bée found in his annointing if wée séeke for strength it is in his dominion if we séeke for cléerenesse it is in his conception if we séeke for tender kindnesse it sheweth it selfe in his birth whereby he was made in all things like vnto vs that he might learne to sorrowe with vs. If we séeke for redemption it is in his passion if we séeke for absolution it is in his condmnation if wée séeke for release of the curse it is in his crosse if we séeke for satisfaction it is in his sacrifice if wee séeke for clensing it is in his blood if wée séeke for reconciliation it is in his going downe into hell if we séeke for mortification of the flesh it is in his buriall if wée séeke for newnesse of life it is in his resurrection if for immortalitie it is in his victory ouer death if we seeke for the inheritaunce of the kingdome of heauen it is in his entraunce into heauen if wée séeke for defence for assurednesse for plentie and stoare of all good thinges it is in his kingdome And therefore this is the diademe and bewtifull crowne that is sette vpon our heads the fine linnen and the silke and the broidered worke wherewith wée are couered these are the ornaments wherewith wée are decked the bracelets on our hands and the chaine that is put about our neckes this is the frontlet on our face the earings in our eares this is the garment of siluer and gold wherewith wée are cloathed this is the fine flower the hony and the oyle whereby we become so bewtiffull Euen the remssion of our sinnes and the imputation of Christ his righteousnesse who hath put away our transgressions like a cloud and our sinnes like a mist and filled our harts with ioy and gladnesse that in a sure confidence we may break out and say Nowe there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus Reioice therefore O ye heauens at the goodnes and mercie of the Lord for he only hath done it shout ye lower partes of the earth brast foorth into praises yee mountaines 3. Sanctification The lawe is fulfilled of the regenerate by reason of Christ O forrest and euerie trée threin The third braunch is sanctification and holinesse of life whereby as before being vnregenerate we hated the lawe and the lawe was vnto vs the cause of death nowe being reconciled to God of our owne accord respecting our former rebellion we are readie and obedient to doe the will of God yea and all our delight is therein so nowe vnto vs it ceaseth to bee a curse and condemnation for the lawe of God is writte in our harts whereby we vnderstand the will of God and are stirred vp to the obedience thereof So then through faith the lawe is not made of none effect but it doeth rather establish the lawe For without Christ the lawe is not fulfilled yea it setteth our concupiscence on fire and maketh vs subiect vnto condemnation but in Christ we find the exact righteousnesse of the lawe for he is the end of the lawe to eucrie one that beleeueth by whom also we are sanctified and our hearts framed to the obedience of the lawe which though it be vnperfect yet doth it aime at perfection And this obedience procéedeth from faith which through the merit of Christ obtaineth the holie spirit which spirit doth make vs newe harts doth exhilarat vs doth incite and inflame our harts to doe the lawe willinglie Nowe the lawe in the regenerate that is in those whose sinnes are forgiuen vnto whom the righteousuesse of Christ is imputed who are sanctified bringeth foorth good frutes Therefore euill actions procéede not from the lawe and from The workes of the regenerate no cause of iustification the regenerate but from sinne and our corrupt nature Neither let vs thinke so highly of these frutes as though from thence our iustification were deriued For though we hate sinne in other men and especially in our selues although we delight in all things which are agréeable to the A true doctrine of good workes will of god although all our actions and conuersation do expresse the same yet are they but signes and tokens of our loue to God and arguments to vs of our election and frutefull examples to drawe others to that excellent knowledge which is in Christ The lawe in the regenerate a mind rightly formed and ruled perswaded on thing but corruption also which hath her seate in the regenerate an other thing for it striueth against the spirit and the lawe of the In the regenerate is a fight betwixt the flesh and the spirit An especiall comfort in this fight is that we are vnder grace mind so that they cannot either liue as wel as they would or be so voide of sinne as they could wish Neuerthelesse this is their comfort that they are not vnder the lawe but vnder grace whereby enioying the fauour mercie fréegoodwill and beneuolence of God towarde vs in Christ the reliques of sinne are not imputed vnto vs but we are reputed and accounted before God as men fullie and perfectly iust He hath giuen vs his spirit the fulnes whereof we do not enioy because in this life there will alwaies remaine in vs remnants of sinne which fight against the spirit Which conflict the Apostle plainly setteth forth before our eies hauing sufficient experience thereof in himself For the mind of a regenerate man is spirituall but he himself is carnall sold vnder sinne and that which he hateth that doth he in his flesh there is no good thing To wil is present but he findeth no means to perform that which is good yea euil togither continually is present with him and though his inner man delight in the lawe of God yet doeth he sée an other lawe in his members rebelling against the lawe of his minde and leading him captiue vnto the lawe of sinne which is in his members And that euen the godly might know that they are laden The profit of this fight with infirmities therefore is this sting left in their flesh that they might alwaies haue recourse vnto the Lord who is able to beate downe
sathan vnder their féete For this From whence is victory in this fight victory is in Christ and therefore S. Paul with a gladsome voice breaketh out I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Who indéed is sufficient wel able to endue vs with that strength that we may valiantly ouercome the assaults Armour of proofe and firy darts of satan For the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mightie through God to cast downe holds principalities and powers euen the prince of darkenesse of this world and al spiritual wickednes which is in high places as it were on the higher ground and hath maruellous vantage ouer vs. Wherefore we ought to be more héedfull We ought to watch and be diligent and diligent alwaies and watchfull that the enemy take vs not at vnawares séeing not only our enemies without vs are very strong but also our owne flesh is ready to betraie vs and to take armour against vs. And who knoweth not how hard a thing it is to behaue himselfe wisely and warily in a ciuill warre Wherein although wee knowe not which part shall haue the vpper hand yet to fight with an expert and renowned Captaine it séemeth vnto vs that the victorie is written in our handes yea and our hearts are fully perswaded and reioyce in hope thereof In this fight we cannot want a wise and expert Captaine whiche hath borne the brunts of this warre and ouercome the daunger by a greater force from aboue then euer was séene to be in man Whose The best coūsel in this fight is continually to resist sinne and to meditate and practise mortification counsell is that by all meanes continually wee resist sinne giuing vs to knowe and vnderstande that hée that obeyeth sinne is the seruaunt of sinne vnto death But wée are neither seruants nor debters vnto the flesh to liue after the flesh for if wée liue after the fleshe wee shall die for euer but if wée mortifie and kill the déedes of the bodie by the spirite wee shall liue If wee desire to beare about vs the dying of our Lord Iesus Christ the life of Iesus shal be made manifest in our bodies euen in our mortal flesh We are baptised in Christ euen into his death that as he was raised vp from the dead to the glory of thy father so we should walke in newnesse of life that our olde man being crucified the bodie of sinne might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serue sin in that we are dead thereunto Therefore because our life is hid with Christ in God let vs set our affections on those things which are aboue and let vs mortifie our members which are on the earth fornication vncleannesse inordinat affections euill concupiscence couetousnesse which is idolatry As the victory ouer sin consisteth in the mortification of our sinfull flesh So the way to happinesse is viuification and holinesse of life togither with all those workes of the flesh which the Apostle nameth Galat. 5. 19. 22. or elsewhere yea and all those which are contrary to the wholsom doctrine of Christ knowing that the wrath of God commeth vppon the children of disobedience and that the end of sinne is death and that the frute of holinesse and the end therof is euerlasting life for the wages of sinne is death but the gift of God is euerlasting life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Thinke ye therefore that ye are dead to sinne but are aliue to God in Iesus Christ our Lorde whome God hath raised vp and sent to blesse vs in turning euery one of vs from our iniquities that we might walke in the spirit and in all godlinesse of life whereby we may auoyd the lusts of the flesh and walke worthie of that vocation whereunto we are called being followers of God as deare children approuing that which is pleasing vnto the Lord By all meanes auoiding the fellowship of the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse and that as children of light we may fulfill the workes and bring forth the frutes of light and of the spirit in all godlinesse righteousnesse and truth hauing peace in our conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost to godward through Christ giuing thankes alwaies with spirituall songs singing and making melodie to the Lord in our hearts Now seeing we By this sanctification we are inabled to performe our dutie to are in Christ let vs be as new creatures for olde things are passed away behold all things are become new For whereas before we were haters of God and maliciously set against him now through his mercy who hath written his lawes in our harts and giuen vs a hart of flesh through the grace which we haue in Christ we are readie and willing to loue God to feare him and to kéepe his commaundements God whereby he dwelleth in vs and we in him ready to acknowledge him to be the giuer of all good thinges readie to giue him thankes for all his benefites readie in all necessities and agréeuances to pray vnto him and to séeke helpe at his hands to put our trust only in him Yea the image of God in a measure is renued and restored in vs that we might walke in newnesse of life because he is holy And as our life and conuersation is renewed to the glory of God so is it also profitable to the furtherance of our neighbour whome in all charitable order we are as Our neighbour willing to helpe as our selues being mercifull humble long suffering forbearing one an other forgiuing one an other as Christ forgaue vs. Prouiding for the necessities of one an other as Christ is plenteous toward vs in all good things hartily louing one an other laying aside all filthinesse not only for the loue of God and hatred of sinne but also for feare of offence least our brethren by our example should be drawne to euill Dealing in all simplicitie in that the old man is put off with his workes putting away all hatefull and cursed speaking for that the gospell and doctrine of Christianitie is in all kindnesse and brotherly loue which is euen the full accomplishment of the law submitting our selues one to another in the feare of the Lord. Having the peace of God ruling in our hearts the word of Yea we are instructed how to behaue our selues in all wisedome God plenteously dwelling in vs in all wisedome procuring all things honestly in the sight of God men hauing peace as much as in vs lieth with all men vsing this worlde as though we vsed it not neither being too much axalted in prosperitie nor cast downe in aduersitie but as the children of God we commit our waies vnto him yéeld our selues to the direction of his holy spirit in all obedience depend vpon his prouidence trust in his promises waite patiently for the day of reuelation the comming of Christ endure and perseuere vnto the end Yea we are mortified in the body because of sinne hauing our
he hath purposed in him In whom also we are chosen when we were predestinate according to the purpose of him which worketh all things after the counsell of his own wil. Gal. 1. 4. Iob. 9. 10. God doth great things and vnsearchable yea maruellous things without number Rom. 9. 20. O man who art thou which pleadest against god shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus That God hath the ordering of mens affaires as also of hardning the heart Gene. 45. 7. 8. Ioseph to his brethren God saith he sent me before you to preserue your posteritie in this land and to saue you aliue by a great deliuerance Now then ye sent me not hither but God who hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh and Lord of all his house and ruler throughout all the land of Egipt Esay 10. 5. 6. 7. 8. 11. 12. 13. 15. O Ashur the rod of my wrath and the staffe in their hand is mine indignation I wil send him to a dissembling nation and I will giue him a charge against the people of my wrath to take the spoile and to take the pray and to tread them vnder féete like the mire in the stréete But hée thinketh not so neither doeth his heart estéeme it so but he imagineth to destroy and cut off not a fewe nations For he saith Are not my princes altogither Kings Shall not I as I haue done to Samaria and to the idoles thereof so do to Ierusalem and the idoles thereof But when the Lord hath accomplished all his worke vpon mount Sion and Ierusalem I will visit the frute of the proud hart of the king of Ashur and his glorious and proud lookes Because he said By the power of mine owne hand haue I done it and by my wisdome because I am wise Shall the axe boast it selfe against him that heweth therewith or shall the sawe exalt it selfe against him that moueth it As if the rod should lift vp it selfe against him that taketh it vp or the staffe should exalt it selfe as it were no wood When God hath punished his children with the rod he casteth it into the fire Iere. 10. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe neither is it in man to walke and to direct his stepps For though man may purpose yet God will dispose 1. Kings 12. 15. The king Rehoboam Salomons sonne a wise father and a foolish sonne following the counsaile of young men and gréene heades harkened not to the lawfull request of the people For it was the ordinance of the Lord the he might performe his saiyng which he had spoken by Ahijah the Shilonite vnto Ieroboam the sonne of Nebat 2. Chro. 10. 15. A note out of the Geneua bible vpon this place of scripture concerning Rehoboam who yéelded vnto young mens counsaile Gods wil imposeth such a necessitie to the second causes that nothing can be done but by the same And yet mans will worketh as of it selfe so that it cannot bée excused in doing euiil by alledging that it is Gods ordinance 2. Chro. 11. 4. When Rehoboam had gathered nine score thousand chosen men of warre to fight against Israell that is those his subiects which did rebell against him the Lord warned him them by his prophet Shemaiah saiyng Ye shall not goe vp nor fight against your bretheren returne euery man to his house For this thing is done of me saieth the Lord. They obeied therefore the worde of the Lord and returned from going against Ieroboham 2. Chro. 22. 7. And the destruction of Ahaziah came of god in the he went to Ioram For when he was come he went forth with Ioram against lehu the sonne of Nimshi whom the Lord had annointed to destroy the house of Ahab 2. Chro. 25. 19. 20. King Ioash sent vnto king Amaziah and said Thou thinkest lo thou hast smitten Edome thy hart lifteth thée vp to brag Abide nowe at home why doest thou prouoke to thine hurt the thou shouldst fall Iudah with thée But Amaziah would not heare for it was of God that he might deliuer them into his hand because they sought the Gods of Edom. The note vpon the place Thus God oftentimes plagueth by these meanes wherein men most trust to teach them to haue their recourse only to him And to shewe his iudgements he moueth their hearts to followe that which shal be their destruction The ordering of the iourney of Abrahams seruaunt and of the thrée wise men that sought Christ by the leading of a starre the circumstaunces also of Christ his death and passion shewe how God ruleth the affaires of man Psal 64 8. 9. Their owne tongs shall make them fall insomuch that who so seeth them shall laugh them to scorne And all men that sée it shall say This hath God done for they shal perceiue that it is his worke Pro. 19. 33. The lot is cast into the lappe but the disposition thereof is of the Lord. Which thing is wonderfully expressed in the story of Ionas God ordereth not only their affaires but their affections also as hatred good-will ioy and sorow Pro. 21. 1. The kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the riuers of waters he turneth it whither soeuer it pleaseth him Ge. 21. 22. 23. Esther 15. 11. Acts. 4. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. Why did the Gentiles rage and the people imagine vaine things The kings of the earth assembled and the rulers came togither against the Lord and against his Christ For doubtlesse against thine holy sonne Iesus whom thou hadst annointed both Herode and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and people of Israel gathered themselues togither to do whatsoeuer thine hand and thy counsaile had determined before to be done 2. Sa. 16. 11. Dauid saide to Abishai and to his seruants Behold my sonne which came out of mine owne bowels séeketh my life then how much more now may this sonne of Iemini Suffer him to curse for the Lorde hath bidden him It may be that the Lord will looke vpon my affliction and do me good for his cursing this day Pro. 16. 7. When the waies of a man please the Lord hée will make also his enemies at peace with him Gen. 31. Now Iacob heard the words of Labans sonnes saying Iacob hath taken away all that was our fathers and of our fathers goods hath he gotten all his honor Also Iacob beheld the countenance of Laban that it was not towards him as in times past And the Lord said vnto Iacob Turne againe into the land of thy fathers and to thy kindred and I wil be with thée Then Iacob called his wiues and said I sée your fathers countenance that it is not towards me as it was wont and the God of my father hath bin with me And ye know that I haue serued your father with all my might But your father hath deceiued me and changed my wages ten times the is oftentimes but god suffered
him not to hurt me If he thus said The spotted shal be thy wages then all the shéep bare spotted if he said thus the party coloured shal be thy reward then bare al the shéep party coloured Thus hath God taken away all your fathers substance and giuen it vnto me And the angell of god said vnto me in a dreame Iacob lift vp now thy eies and sée all the héegoats leaping vpon the shée-goats the are party-coloured For I haue séen all the Laban hath done vnto thée And now arise get thée hence out of this country and returne into the land where thou waste borne Then his wiues aunswered and said vnto him Haue wée any more portion and inheritaunce in our fathers house Therefore all the riches which god hath taken from our father is ours and our childrens now then whatsoeuer God hath said vnto thée doe it Then Iacob rose vp and set his sonnes and his wiues vpon camels and he carried away all his flocks and all his substance which he had gotten and so fled Which thing when Laban heard he made haste and ouertooke them and spoke angerly vnto Iacob And againe he said I am able to doe you euill But the God of your father spake vnto me yesternight saying Take héede that thou speake not to Iacob ought saue good Iacob said vnto Laban Except the God of my father the God of Abraham and the fear of Isaac had béene with me surely thou hadst sent me away nowe emptie But God beheld my tribulation and the labour of mine hands and rebuked thée yesternight Then Laban said Now therefore come and let vs make a couenant Gene. 27. 41. Therefore Esau hated Iacob because of the blessing wherewith his father blessed him And Fsau thought in his mind the daies of mourning for my father will come shortly then I will slay my brother Iacob Gene. 32. Now Iacob went forth on his iourny and he was to méete with Esau And Iacob fearing his brother praied vnto God and said I am not worthy O Lord of the least of thy mercies which thou hast shewed vnto thy seruaunt I pray thée deltuer me from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau For I feare him least hee will come and smite me and the mother vpon the children Gene. 33. And as Iacob lift vp his eyes and looked behold Esau came and with him foure hundred men So Iacob went and bowed himselfe to the ground seuen times vntill he came neare to his brother Then Esau ranne to méete him and imbraced him and fell on his necke and kissed him and they wept And Esau said What meanest thou by all this droue which I met Who answered I haue sent it that I might finde fauour in the sight of my Lord. God chaunged Esaus murthering minde and malicious heart and turned it to loue his brother Iacob and to imbrace him louingly and friendly Concerning the hardning of hearts howe it pertaineth to God Rom. 9. 18. He hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardneth Deut. 2. 30. Sihon the king of Heshbon would not let vs passe by him For the Lorde thy God had hardened his spirit and made his heart obstinate because he would deliuer him into thine hand as appeareth this day Iosh 11. 20. It came of the Lord to harden their harts that they should come against Israel in battell to the intent that they should destroy them vtterly and shewe them no mercy but that they should bring them to naught as the Lord had commanded Moses 1. Sa. 2. 25. Ely warned his sonnes saying If one man sin against an other the Iudge shall iudge it but if a man sin against the Lord who will pleade for him Notwithstanding they obeyed not the voice of their father because the Lord would ●ley them Iohn 12. 40. He hath blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts that they should not sée with their eyes nor vnderstand with their hearts and should be conuerted and I should heale them To you saith Christ to his Disciples all thinges are opened that pertaine to the kingdome of heauen but to them which are without all thinges are spoken in parables God hath made mankinde of two sorts the one contrarieto the other the one to declare his mercy the other to declare his wrath and iudgement in both to set foorth his glory Rom. 9. 22. 23. The which thing the Apostle for our better vnderstanding doth teach vs by similitudes and comparisons Hath not the potter power of the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honor and an other to dishonor What and if God would to shewe his wrath and to make his power knowne suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction and that he might declare the riches of his glory vppon the vessels of mercy which he hath prepared vnto glory 2. Tim. 2. 19. 20. The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his and let euery one that calleth on the name of Christ depart from iniquitie Notwithstanding in a great house are not only vessels of gold of siluer but also of wood and of earth and some for honor and some for dishonor And that we may know and apply it to our selues whether wee pertaine to God or no he setteth downe the tokens and markes Verse 21. 22. If any man therefore purge himselfe he shall be a vessell to honour sanctified and méete for the Lord and prepared vnto euery good worke Fly also from the lustes of youth and follow after righteousnesse faith loue and peace with them that call on the Lord with a pure heart Rom. 8. 29. 30. Those which he knew before he also predestinate to be made like to the image of his sonne that he might be the first borne among many brethren Moreouer whom he predestinate them also he called and whome he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them also he glorified Concerning the other sort whom he made to declare his wrath and iudgement thus we reade Exod. 4. 21. And the Lord said to Moses when thou art entred and come into Egipt againe sée that thou doe all the wonders before Pharaoh which I haue put in thy hand but I will harden his hart he shall not let the people goe Cap. 10. 1. Againe the Lord said vnto Moses Goe to Pharaoh for I haue hardned his hart the hart of his seruants that I might worke these my miracles in the midst of his realme Caep 9. 16. Of Pharaoh God said And indéed for this cause haue I annointed thée to shewe my power in thée and to declare my name throughout all the world cap. 14. 4. I will harden Pharaohs hart that he shall followe after you so I will get me honour vpon Pharaoh and vpon all his host the Egiptians also shall knowe that I am the Lord. Pro. 16. 4. The Lord hath made all things for his owne
sake yea euen the wicked for the day of euill So that the iustice of God shall appeare to his glory euen in the destruction of the wicked Ro. 3. 5. Nowe if our vnrighteousnesse commend the righteousnesse of God what shall we say Is God vnrighteous that punisheth I speake as a man For thus the wicked vse to reason and yet them selues shal be found in fault and the workers of their ouerthrow Ro. 9. 19. The wicked say Why doeth he yet complaine and find himselfe agrieued at vs For who hath resisted his wil séeing he hath thus determined of vs The Apostle aunswereth them O man who art thou which pleadest a gainst God Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus Hath not the potter power of the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honour and an other to dishonour What and if God woulde to shewe his wrath and to make his power knowne suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction In this matter we ought not to dispute or to be inquisitiue but rather in high estimation to reuerence the will of God and perswade our selues that we are of the number of those on whom Gods mercy shall be shewed and labour by all meanes by praier and all other holy and vertuous exercises to assure our selues of the same Election proceedeth only from the will of God but not because he did foresee what was in vs. Deut. 4. 37. And because he loued thy fathers therfore he chose their féede after them and hath brought thée out of Egipt in his sight by his mightie power Ezech. 16. 59. 60. Thus saith the Lord God I might euen deale with thée as thou hast done Neuerthelesse I will remember my couenant Ioh. 15. 16. Ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you and ordeined you that ye go and bring foorth frute and your frute remaine Rom. 9. 10. Rebecca when shée had conceiued by one euen by our father Isaac ere that the children were borne and when they had done neither good nor euil that the purpose of God might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth It was said vnto her The elder shall serue the yoonger As it is written I haue loued Iacob and I haue hated Esau For he saith to Moses I will haue mercy on him to whom I will shewe mercy and I will haue compassion on him on whom I will haue compassion So then it is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy Therefore he hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 11. 5 Euen so at this present time is there a remnant through the election of grace And if it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace But if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke What then Israel hath not obtained that he sought but the election hath obtained it and the rest haue bene hardened According as it is written God hath giuen them the spirit of slumber eies that they should not sée and eares that they should not heare vnto this day Tim. 1. 9. Who hath sauid vs and called vs with a holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was Ephe. 2. 8. For by grace are ye saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God Not of workes least any man should boast himselfe For wée are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in them He hath chosen vs to doo good workes and not to be carelesse because we are chosen but rather to assure to our consciences our election by good workes According as we read Collos 1. 10. That ye might walke worthie of the Lord and please him in all things being fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of god strengthned with all might through his glorious power vnto all patience and long suffering with ioyfulnesse Giuing thanks c. Ephe. 1. 5. 11. Who hath predestinate vs to bee adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his wil In whom also we are chosen when we were predestinate according to the purpose of him which worketh all things after the counsaile of his owne will Although the causes of Reprobation procéed principally from the secret and hidden purpose of God yet are there also sufficient causes in our selues Among the rest these thrée Driginall sinne that is that naturall corruption wherein we are born Secondly the daily sinnes and offences which we commit Thirdly Vnbeliefe Gods hidden purpose Rom. 9. 13. I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau Where he saith not only that Esau was ordained to be hated before he did any euil for in so saying he should not séeme to exclude any thing but actuall sinne and incredulitie but also saith expresly before he was borne Wherefore he excludeth originall sinne also If the Apostle had grounded reprobation vppon mans corruption the case had bene cleare and resolute if it had bene true But forasmuch as he saith plainly if so pleased God and it was not in their power to change this his good pleasure he bridleth mans wisdom that it might reuerence and wonder at Gods misteries as it is most iust to do And also encourageth the elect to honour the grace of god which is declared and made famous by such a comparison Causes in our selues of reprobation Originall sinne Psal 51. 5. Behold I was borne in iniquitie and in sin hath my mother conceiued me Ephe. 2. 3. By nature we are the children of wrath Iohn 3. 19. And this is the comdemnation that light is come into the world and men loued darknesse rather then light because their déedes were euill Their owne corruption is a cause in themselues of their owne damnation Actuall and daily sinne Ephe. 4. 17. Hencefoorth walke not as other Gentiles walke in vanitie of their mindes hauing their cogitations darkened and being strangers from the life of god through the ignoraunce that is in them because of the hardnesse of their hart which being past féeling haue giuen themselues vnto wantonnesse to worke all vncleannesse euen with gréedinesse 1. Cor. 9. 10. Know ye not that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of god Gal. 6. God is not mocked For whatsoeuer a man soweth that shall he reape For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting Rom. 8. 13. If we liue after the flesh ye shall die But if mortifie the déeds of the bodie by the spirit ye shall liue Vnbeliefe Exod. 5. 2. And Pharaoh said Who is the Lord that I should heare his
How much more shall the blood of Christ which through the eternall spirit offred himselfe without spot to God purge your conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing god That this grace might not be in vaine God gaue with his sonne vnto his people all things pertaining to saluation and euerlasting life Rom. 8 3● 32. What shall we then say to these things If god be on our side whom can be against vs Who spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Iohn 17. 2. 9. 10. 11. 12. 22. 23. 24. 26. Thou hast giuen him power ouer all flesh that hee should giue eternall life to all them that thou hast giuen him I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast giuen me for they are thine and all mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them and now am I no more in the worlde and I come to thée holy father kéepe them in thy n●●e euen them whom thou hast giuen me that they may be one as we are while I was with them in the world I kept them in thy name The glory that thou gauest me I gaue them that they may be one as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loued them as thou hast loued me Father I will that they which thou hast giuen me be with me euen where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast giuen me for thou louedst me before the foundation of the world I haue declared vnto them thy name and will declare it that the loue wherewith thou hast loued me may be in them and I in them He openeth this secret when men least looke for it Gen. 3. 15. When God was appointing punishment vnto our first parents he interlaceth this comfort I wil also put enmitie betwéen thée meaning the serpent or the dinel by the serpent and the woman and betwéene thy séede and her séede He shall breake thine head and thou shalt bruise his héele Gen. 22. 18. When Abraham thought there was no way but death with his sonne because God had so commanded God altered his commandement and hauing tried his obedience he said That in his séede all the nations of the earth should be blessed Ephe. 2. 4. 5. God which is rich in mercy through his great loue wherewith he loued vs euen when wee were dead by sinnes hath quickened vs togither in Christ by whose grace ye are saued Rom. 5. 6. 8. 10. For Christ when wee were yet of no strength at his time died for the vngodly God setteth out his loue toward v● séeing that while we were yet sinners Christ died for vs. And when we were his enemies God reconciled himselfe vnto vs by the death of his sonne 1. Cor. 2. 7. 8. We speake the wisedome of god in a mistery euen the hid wisdome which god had determined before the world vnto glory Which none of the Princes of this world hath knowne for had they knowne it they wold not haue crucified the Lord of glory Collos 1. 25. 26. I am a minister according to the dispensation of god which is giuen me vnto you-ward to fulfill the word of god which is the mistery hid since the worlde began and from all ages but now is made manifest to his saints Eze. 16. 6. 8. 9. And when I passed by I sawe thée polluted in thine owne blood and I said vnto thée when thou wast in thy blood Thou shalt liue euen when thou wast in thy blood thou shalt liue Passing by thée and looking vppon thée behold thy time was as the time of loue and I spread my skirts ouer thée and couered thy filthinesse yea I sware vnto thée and entered into a couenant with thée saith the Lord God and thou becammest mine Then washed I thée with water yea I washed away thy blood from thée and I annointed thée with oyle Ephe. 2. 12. Ye which were without Christ and were aliants from the common-weale of Israel and were strangers from the couenants of promise and had no hope and were without god in the world Now in Christ Iesus ye which once were farre off are made neare by the blood of Christ 1. Pet. 2. 10. Which intime past were not a people yet are now the people of god which in time past were not vnder mercy but now haue obtained mercy Men are blinded and yet thinke they see Iohn 9. 41. Iesus said vnto them If ye were blinde ye should not haue sinne but now ye say we see therefore your sinne remaineth Iohn 3. 19. This is the condemnation of the world that light is come into the world and men loued darknesse rather then light Iohn 1. 10. 11. He was in the world and the world knew him not he came vnto his owne and his own receiued him not Philip. 3. 6. Concerning the lawe I was vnrebukeable saith the Apostle of himself examining no more but his outward life Then in mercy God causeth their dangerous estate to be set before them by preaching of the lawe Rom. 3. 20. By the lawe commeth the knowledge of sin Lawe chap. 4. 5. The lawe causeth wrath chap. 5. 20. The laws entred thereupon that the offence should abound that it might appeare to be notorious in the sight of god Rom. 7. 9. For I once was aliue without the lawe but when the commandement came sinne reuiued and verse 14. The lawe is spirituall but I am carnall Rom. 2. 15. Which she we the effect of the lawe written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnesse and their thoughts accusing one an other or excusing 1. Tim. 1. 9. 10. The law is not giuen to a righteous man but vnto the lawlesse and disobedient to the vngodly and to sinners to the vnholy and to the prophane to murtherers of fathers and mothers to men-stealers to liars to the periured and if there bee any other thing that is contrary to wholesome doctrine Gal. 5. 19. 20 21. 22. Moreouer the workes of the flesh are manifest which are adultery fornicatiō vncleannesse wantonnesse idolatry witchcraft hatred debate emulations wrath contentions seditions heresies enuy murthers drunkennesse gluttony and such like whereof I tell you before as I also haue tolde you before that they which doo such things shall not inherit the kingdom of god but verse 18. are vnder the curse of the lawe Deut. 25. 15. Rom. 7. 13. Sinne that it might appear sinne wrought death by the lawe 2. Cor. 2. 16. It is the sauour of death vnto death It casteth downe to hell it feareth and woundeth our consciences 2. Cor. 3. 9. It is the ministration of condemnation Ro. 7. 7. I knewe not sinne but by the lawe For I had not knowne lust except the lawe had said Thou shalt not lust 2. Tim.
25. 26. Instructing them with méekenesse that are contrary minded shewing their faults out of the lawe of God prouing if God at any time will giue them repentance that they may know the trueth And that they may come to amendement out of the snare of the diuell which are taken of him at his will Acts 2. 37. Now when they heard it they were pricked in their heart and said vnto Peter the other Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do Not that they should remaine in feare but beholding their danger might flie to Christ 1. Ihon. 2. 1. 2. My babes these things write I vnto you that ye sinne not and if any man sinne we haue an aduocat with the father Iesus Christ the iust And he is the reconciliation for our sinnes Ihon. 2. 12. As many as receiued him to them he gaue power to be the sonnes of God euen to them that beléeue in his name Ihon. 3. 16. 17. 18. God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beléeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life For God sent not his sonne into the world that he should condemne the world but that the world through him might be saued He that beléeueth in him shall not be condemned but he that beléeueth not is condemned alreadie Mat. 9. 13. I came not to call the righteous but the sinners vnto repentannce Ro. 1. 16. The gospel is the power of saluation to euery one that beléeueth And so almost in euery leafe of the whole scripture Called they are to comfort by the preaching of faith Ro. 8. 17. Then faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God Ro. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Chap. 5. 1. Then being iustified by faith we haue peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Chor. 5. 18. All things are of God which hath reconciled vs vnto himself by Iesus Christ and hath giuen vnto vs the ministery of reconciliation For God was in Christ and reconciled the world to himselfe not imputing their sinne vnto them and hath committed to vs the word of reconciliation Now thē are we imbassadours for Christ although God did beséech you through vs we pray you in Christ his stéede that yée be reconciled to God For he hath made him to be in sinne for vs that knowe no sinne that we should be made the righteousnesse of God in him 1. Pet. 1. 23. Being borne anew not of mortall séede but of immortall by the worde of god who liueth and endureth for euer Coloss 1. 27. 28. God would make knowne which is the riches of his glorious ministerie among the Gentiles which riches is Christ in you the hope of glorie Whome we preach admonishing euery man in all wisedome that we may present euery man perfect in Christ Iesus Gene. 3. 8. Adam and Eue heard the voice of the Lord God as he was walking in the garden in the coole of the day So God chooseth his best time to winne vs not in the time of our offence when indéede he might iustly destroie vs but after we haue committed sinne in mercy he calleth vs that we shall remember and haue remorse for that which we haue done Iohn 6. 47. Verely verely I say vnto y●● He that beléeueth in me hath euerlasting life The outward preaching profiteth not vnlesse the inward working of Gods good spirit be ioyned vnto it Ihon. 6. 44. No man can come to me except the father which hath sent me drawe him by the power of his spirit ●●d v. 65. Iesus said no man can come vnto me except it be giuen vnto him of my father Mat. 13. 10. 11. His disciples said to him Why speakest thou to the people in parables And he said because it is giuen vnto you to know the secrets of the kingdome of god but to them it is not giuen Iohn 4 10 Iesus said vnto her If thou knowest the gift of god who it is that saieth to thée Giue me drinke thou wouldest haue asked of him and he would haue giuen thée water of life Iohn 3. 3. Iesus said vnto Nicodemus verely verely I say vnto thée except a man be borne againe he cannot sée the kingdome of god 1. Cor. 2. 11. 14. For what man knoweth the things of a man sauing the spirit of a man which is in him euen so the things of god knoweth no man but the spirit of god But the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of god For they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he knowe them because they are spiritually discerned 2. Cor. 3. 5. Not that we are sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiencie is of god Ezek. 11. 19. The spirit of god worketh in vs by altering our hearts And I will giue them one heart and I will put a new spirit within their bowels and I will take the stony heart out of their bodies and I will giue them a heart of flesh Chap. 36. 26. Iohn 16. 13. When the spirit of truth is come he will leade you into all truth Psal 119. 18. Open my heart that I may vnderstand the wondrous things of thy lawe Ephe. 1. 9. 16. 17. 18. Hee hath opened vnto vs the mistery of his will according to his good pleasure which hee had purposed in him I make mention of you in my prayers that the God of our Lorde Iesus Christ the father of glory might giue vnto you the spirit of wisedome and reuelation through the knowledge of him That the eyes of your vnderstanding may be lightened that ye may knowe what the hope is of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance is in the saints And what is the excéeding greatnesse of his power toward vs which beléeue Esay 50. 5. The Lord God hath opened my eare and I was not rebellious neither turned I backe Psal 119. 73. Thine han●s haue made me and fashioned me O giue me vnderstanding therefore that I may learne thy commandements Collo 1. 9. We cease net to pray for you and to desire that ye might be fulfilled with knowledge of his will in all wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding Iere. 31. 34. And they shall teach no more euery man his neighbour and euery man his brother saying Knowe the Lord For they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord for I wil forgiue their iniquitie and will remember their sinnes no more 2. Tim. 2. 25. Prouing if God at any time will giue them repentance and open their hearts Luke 24. 16. 45. When our Sauiour Christ talked with the two disciples that went to Emaus their eyes were holden that they could not know him Then opened he their vnderstanding that they might vnderstand the Scriptures Acts. 16. 14. And a certaine woman named Lydia a seller of purple of the citie of the Thyatirians which worshipped
God heard vs whose hart the Lord opened that she attended vnto the things that Paul spake Our election is made sure vnto vs by the testimony of the spirit 1. Cor. 2. 12. Now we haue receiued not the Spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are giuen to vs of God 1. Ihon. 3. 24. Hereby we knowe that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit which he hath giuen vs. 1. Ihon. 5. 20. We knowe that the Sonne of God is come and hath giuen vs a mind to know him And by the testimony of our conscience Ro. 8. 15. 16. For ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but ye haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba father The same spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God Pal. 4. 6. And because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne into your harts which crieth Abba Father Ko 8. 14. For as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God By the vertue of Gods spirit the elect are deliuered from the slauerie of sinne and it doth perswade and conduct them to will and worke the things which please God Phil. 2. 12. 13. Wherefore my beloued as ye haue alwaies obeied not as in my presence onely but now much more in my absence so make an end of your owne saluation with feare and trembling For it is God which worketh in you both the will and the déed euen of his good pleasure Ihon. 8. 36. If the sonne therfore shall make you frée by his spirit ye shall be frée indéed Rom. 6. 18. Being then made frée from sin ye are made the seruants of righteousnesse But because this faith is but weake and only begun in in this life that we may not only perseuere in it but also profit by it it is sealed in our hearts by the vse of the Sacraments Mar. 16. 16. He that shall beléeue and be baptised shall be saued but he that will not beléeue shall be damned Act. 2. 38. Then Peter said vnto them Amend your liues and bee baptised euerie one of you in the name of Iesus Christ for the remission of sinnes and ye shall receiue the gift of the holy Ghost Rom. 6. 3. 4. Know ye not that all we which haue bene baptised into Iesus Christ haue bin baptized into his death We are buried then with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the father so we also should walke in newnesse of life Gal. 3. 26. 27. Ye are all the sonnes of God by faith in Christ Iesus For all ye that are baptised into Christ haue put on Christ verse 29. And if ye be Christs then are ye Abrahams séed and heires by promise Gal. 2. 11. 12. In whom also ye are circumcised with circumcision made without hands by putting off the sinful bodie of the flesh through the circumcision of Christ In that ye are buried with him through baptisme in whom ye are also raised vp togither through the faith of the operation of God which raised him from the dead Ephe. 5. 26. 27. 28. Christ so loued the church that he gaue himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word that he might make vnto himself a glorious church not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it shuld be holy without blame The note thereupon Baptisme is a token that God hath consecrated the church to himselfe and made it holy by his word that is his promise of frée righteousnesse and holinesse in Christ 1. Pet. 3. 21. Noahs flood To the which also the figure that now saueth vs euen Baptisme agreeth not the putting away of the filth of the flesh but in that a good conscience maketh request to God by the resurrection of Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 10. 16. 17. The cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the blood of Christ The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the bodie of Christ For we that are many are one bread and one bodie because we all are partakers of one bread Rom. 4. 11. After he receiued the signe of circumcision as the seale of the righteousnesse of the faith which he had For this occasion it is mentioned that we being iustified by faith haue peace with God Rom. 5. 1. 2. 3. 4. Then being iustified by faith we haue peace toward God through our Lord Iesus Christ By whō also we haue accesse through faith vnto this grace wherein we stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of GOD. Neither do we so only but also we reioyce in tribulations Where faith is there is also perseuerance and a stedfast purpose to continue Phil. 1. 6. And I am perswaded of this same thing that he that hath begun this good worke in you will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Nomb. 23. 19. God is not as man that he should lie neither as the sonne of man that he should repent Hath hée said and shall he not do it And hath he spoken and shall he not accomplish it Psal 23. 6. Doubtlesse kindnesse and mercy shall follow me all the daies of my life and I shall remaine a long season in the house of the Lord. Psal 27. 4. One thing haue I desired of the Lord that I will require euen that I may dwell in the house of the Lorde all the daies of my life to beholde the beautie of the Lord and to visit his Temple Mat. 24. 24. And except those daies should bee shortened there should no flesh be saued but for the elects sake those daies shall be shortned Lest they should fall away as it is said of Enoch that he was taken away lest he shuld be deceiued by wickednesse and sinne Iohn 6. 37. All that the father giueth men shall come to me and him that commeth to me I cast not away Iohn 17. 15. I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world but that thou kéepe them from euil Iohn 10. 27. 28 My shéepe heare my voyce and I know them and they follow me And I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of mine hand Iohn 13. 1. As he loued his owne which were in the world vnto the end he loued them Hebr. 10. 23. 24. c. Let vs kéep the profession of our hope without wauering For he is faithfull that promised And let vs cōsider one an other to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes Not sorsaking the fellowship that we haue among our selues as the manner of some is but let vs exhort one an other and that so much the more because ye sée that the day draweth neare For if we sinne willingly there remaineth a fearefull
Forasmuch as that which may be knowne of God is manifest in them For God hath shewed it vnto them For the inuisible things of him that is his eternall power and godhead are séene by creation of the world being considered in his workes to the intent that they should be without excuse Acts. 14. 16. 17. God in times past suffered all the gentiles to walke in their owne waies Neuerthelesse he left not himselfe without a witnesse in that he did good and gaue vs raine from heauen and frutefull seasons filling our hearts with foode and gladnesse And Chap. 17. 27. That they should séeke the Lord if so be they might haue groped after him Through there owne default Ro. 1. 21. Because that when they knewe God they glorified him not as God neither were thankfull but became vaine in theire imaginations and their foolish heart was full of darkenesse Iohn 15. 22. If I had not come and spoken vnto them they should not haue had sinne but nowe haue they no cloake for there sinne verse 24. If I had not done workes among them which none other man did they had not had sinne that is they had not bene so greatly in fault Ro. 2. 12. For as many as haue sinned without the law that is without the knowledge of the written lawe shall perish also without the lawe their conscience being a lawe vnto them Iohn 3. 19. And this is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men loued darknes rather then light because there déeds were euill And surely that which they can attaine vnto in knowing God by their light or rather naturall darkenesse albeit they neuer failed in the way but so cōtinued yet were it in no wise sufficient vnto saluation For it is necessary for vs that shall be saued that we know God not onely as God but as our father in Christ Iohn 17. 3. And this is life eternall that they know thée to be the onely very God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ And chapter 3. 26. He that beléeueth in the sonne hath euerlasting life and he that obeieth not the sonne shall not sée life but the wrath of GOD abideth on him The which misterie flesh and blood doth not reueale but the sonne himselfe to them whom his father hath giuen him Matt. 11. 27. All things are giuen to me of my father and no man knoweth the same but the father neither knoweth any man the father but the sonne and he to whom the sonne wll reueale him Mat. 16. 16. 17. Simon Peter answered and said Thou art that Christ the sonne of the liuing God And Iesus said vnto him Blessed art thou Simon the sonne of Ionas For flesh and blood hath not reuealed it to thée but my father which is in heauen Iohn 1. 10. He was in the world and the world knew him not But as many as receiued him to them he gaue power to be the sonnes of God euen of thē that beléeue in his name Which are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And chap. 3. 5. 6. Iesus answered Nicodemus verily verily I say vnto thee except that a man be borne of water and of the spirit he cannot enter into the kingdome of God That which is borne of the flesh is flesh and that that is borne of the spirit is spirit Secondly they are called by the preaching of the Gospell but because they are not of the number of the elect being called they heare not Luke 12. 47. That seruant which knewe his masters will and prepared not himselfe neither did according to his will shall be beate wiih many stripes Matt. 22. 14. For many are called but few are chosen Luke 13. 34. O Ierusalem Ierusalem which killest the Prophets and stonest them that are sent to thée howe often would I haue gathered thy children togither as the henne gathereth her brood vnder her wings and ye would not Chap. 19. 44. They shall make thée euen with the ground because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation Iere. 7. 27. Therefore shalt thou speake all these wordes vnto them but they will not heare thée Thou shalt also cry vnto them but they will not aunswere thée Pro. 1. 24. 26. 28. 26. Because when I called yée refused I will laugh at your destruction and mocke when your feare commeth They shall call vppon mée but I will not answere they shall séeke mée earely but they shall not finde mée Because they hated knowledge and did not choose the feare of the Lord. And forasmuche as they are not able to receiue the spirit of truth Iohn 14. 16. 17. And I will pray the father and he shall giue you an other comforter that hée may abide with you for euer Euen the spirit of truth whom the world cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth it him but yée knowe him for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you Chap. 12. 39. 40. Therefore could they not beléeue because that Esaias saieth againe hée hath blinded their eyes and hardned their heart that they should not sée with their eyes nor vnderstand with their heart and should be conuerted and I should heale them 2. Thess 3. 2. All men haue not faith Mat. 13. 9. 11. He that hath eares to heare let him heare To you it is giuen to knowe the secrets of the kingdome of heauen but to them it is not giuen 1. Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know thē because they are spiritually discerned The word of life is folly vnto them and an offence 1. Cor. 1. 18. The preaching of the crosse is to them that perish foolishnesse but vnto vs that are saued it is the power of God Verse 23. 24. We preach Christ crucified vnto the Iewes euen a stumbling blocke and vnto the Grecians foolishnesse But vnto them which are called both of Iewes and Grecians we preach Christ the power of God and the wisedome of God And finally the sauour of death vnto death to their destruction 2. Cor. 2. 16. To the one wee are the sauour of death vnto death and to the other the sauour of life vnto life Thirdly their hearts are opened but they beleeue generally Iam. 2. 19. Thou beléeuest that there is one God thou doest well the diuels beléeue it and tremble Fourthly they are most miserable of all who climbe a degree higher that their fall may be the more greeuous For they are raised by some gift of grace and yet fall away Heb. 6 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. For it is impossible that they which were once lightened and haue tasted of the heauenly gift and were made partakers of the holy Ghost and haue tasted of the good word of God and of the power of the world to come if they fall away should be renued againe by repentaunce séeing they crucifie
againe to themselues the sonne of God and make a mocke of him For the earth which drinketh in the raine that commeth oft vpon it and bringeth forth hearbes méete for them by whom it is dressed receiueth blessing of God But that which beareth thornes and briars is reprooued and is néere vnto cursing whose end is to be burned Yea for a time they seeme to haue receiued the seede and to be planted in the Church of God Mat. 13. 20. He that receiueth séede in the stony ground is he which heareth the word and incontinently with ioy receiueth it yet hath no roote in himselfe and dureth but a season And also shewe the way of saluation to others Acts. 1 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. Ye men and brethren this scripture must néeds haue bene fulfilled which the holy Ghost by the mouth of Dauid spake of Iudas who was guide to them that tooke Iesus For he was numbred with vs and had obtained fellowship in the ministration He therefore hath purchased a field with the rewarde of iniquitie and when he had throwne downe himselfe headlong he brast asunder in the midst and all his bowels gushed out And it is knowne vnto all the inhabitants of Ierusalem insomuch that that field is called in their owne language Aceldama that is the field of blood For it is written in the booke of Psalmes Let his habitation be voyd and let no man dwell therein Also Let an other take his charge But this is plaine that the spirit of adoption which wee haue said to bee only proper vnto them which are neuer cast forth but are written in the secret of gods purpose is neuer communicate vnto them Ezech. 13. 9. And mine hand shall be vppon the Prophets that sée vanitie and diuine lies they shall not be in the assembly of my people neither shall they be written in the writing of the house of Israel neither shall they enter into the land of Israel Iohn 6. 37. All that the father giueth me shall come to me and him that commeth to me I cast not away For if they were of the Elect they should remaine still with the Elect. 1. Iohn 2. 19. They went out from vs but they were not of vs For if they had bene of vs they would haue continued with vs. But this commeth to passe that it might appeare that they are not all of vs. 1. Cor. 15. 58. Therfore my beloued brethren be ye stedfast vnmooueable aboundant alwaies in the worke of the Lord forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Iude. 20. 21. Ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holy faith praying in the holy Ghost And kéepe your selues in the loue of God looking for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ vnto eternall life 2. Pet. 3. 17. 18. Beloued Beware lest ye be also plucked away with the error of the wicked and fall from your owne stedfastnesse But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lorde and Sauiour Iesus Christ to him be glory both now and for euermore Amen All these therefore because of necessitie and yet willingly as they which are vnder the slauery of sinne returne to their vomit and fall away from faith are plucked vp by the rootes to be cast into the fire Iohn 8. 34. Verily verily I say vnto you he that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne And the scruant abideth not in the house for euer Ephe. 4. 17. 1. Pet. 4. 3. 4. 5. Ro. 1. 28. As aboue looke in the margent for this marke ff Ro. 7. 14. For we know that the lawe is spirituall but I am carnall sold vnder sinne Ro. 8. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. They that are after the flesh sauour the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit For the wisedome of the flesh is death but the wisedome of the spirit is life and peace Because the wisedome of the flesh is enmitie against God for it is not subiect to the lawe of God neither indéed can be So then they that are in the flesh cannot please god Because the workes of the flesh beare such swaie with them 2. Pet. 2. 19. Of whomsoeuer a man is ouercome euen vnto the same is he in bondage For if they after they haue escaped from the filthinesse of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Sauior Iesus Christ are yet intangled againe therein and ouercome the latter end is worse with them then the beginning For it had bene better for them not to haue knowen the way of righteousnesse then after they haue knowen it to turne frō the holie commandement giuen vnto them But it is come vnto them according to the true prouerbe The dog is returned to his owne vomit and the sowe that was washed to the wallowing in the mire And fall away from faith 1. Tim. 4. 1. Nowe the spirit speaketh euidently that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith and shall giue héede vnto spirits of errour and doctrines of diuels Are plucked vp by the rootes Mt. 15. 13. Christ answered and said Euery plant which my heauenly father hath not planted shall be rooted vp Iohn 15. 2. Euery branch that beareth not fruite in me he taketh away and euery one that beareth fruite he purgeth it that it may bring foorth more fruite Mat. 3. 10. And now also is the axe put to the roote of the trée therefore euery trée which bringeth not foorth good fruit is hewen downe and cast into the fire Iohn 15. 6. If a man abide not in me he is cast foorth as a braunch and withereth and men gather them cast them into the fire and they burne I meane ●hey are forsaken of God who according to his will the which no man can resist and also according to their owne corruption and wickednesse their hearts are hardned their eares stopped and their eyes blinded Rom. 1. 24. Wherefore also God gaue them vp to their hearts lusts and vnto vncleannesse Acts. 14. 16. Who in times past suffred all the Gentiles to walke in their owne waies Whose will no man can resist Rom. 9. 19. For who hath resisted his will Sée more in the notes of the first chapter Hardeneth them through their corruption and wickednesse Rom. 1. 27. 28. And likewise also the men left the naturall vse of the woman and burned in their lusts one toward an other and man and man wrought filthinesse and receiued in themselues such recompence of their errour as was méete For as they regarded not to know God euen so God deliuered them vp vnto a reprobate mind to do those things which are not conuenient Maketh their hearts fat stoppeth their eares and blindeth their eyes Esay 54. 7. There is none that calleth vpon thy name neither that stirreth vp himself to take hold of thée for thou hast hid thy face from vs. And chapter 6. 9. And the Lord said Go and say vnto this people Ye
shall heare indéed but ye shall not vnderstand ye shall plainly sée and not perceiue o The Genena note vpon that place Whereby is declared that for the malice of man God will not immediately take away his word but he wil cause it to be preached to their condemnation when as they will not learne thereby to obey his will and be saued Hereby he exhorteth the Ministers to do their dutie and answereth to the wicked murmurers that through their owne malice their heart is hardened Mat. 13. 14. Act. 28. 26. Rom. 11. 8. Verse 10. Make the heart of his people fat make their eares heauy and shut their eies lest they sée with their eies and heare with their eares and vnderstande with their hearts and conuert and he heale them And to bring this to passe he vseth partly their owne vile concupiscences to the which hee hath giuen them vp to be ruled and led by Rom. 1. 26. For this cause God gaue them vp to vile affections c. Sée more in that chap. And Esay 64. 7. And partly also the spirit of lies who keepeth them wrapt in his snares 2. Thess 2. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Euen him whose comming is by the working of Sathan with all power and signes and lying wonders and in all deceiueablenesse of vnrighteousnesse among them that perish because they receiued not the loue of the truth that they may be saued And therefore God shall send them strong delusion that they should beléeue lies That all they might be damned which beléeued not the truth but had pleasure in vnrighteousnesse Iohn 3. 19. And this is the condemnation that light is come into the world men loued darknesse rather then light because their déedes were euill Ezay 63. 17. O Lord why hast thou made vs erre from thy waies and hardned our heart from thy feare Ro. 11. 32. For God hath shut vp all in vnbeliefe Acts. 7. 42. Then God turned himselfe away and gaue them vp to serue the host of heauen 1. Kin. 22. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. The Lord said Who shal intice Ahab that he may go fall at Ramoth Gilead And one said on this maner and an other said on that manner Then there came foorth a spirit and stoode before the Lord and said I will entice him And the Lord said vnto him Wherewith And he said I will goe out and be a false spirit in the mouth of all his Prophets Then he said thou shalt entice him and shalt also preuaile goe foorth and do so Nowe therefore behold the Lord hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these thy Prophets and the Lord hath appointed euill against thée 2. Cor. 4. 3. 4. If our Gospell be then hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the mindes that is of the Infidels that the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ which is the image of God should not shine vnto them By reason of their corruption from the which as out of a fountaine issueth a continuall flowing riuer of infidelitie ignorance and iniquitie 2. Tim. 2. 26. And that they may come to amendment out of the snares of the diuel which are taken of him at his will Whereby it followeth that hauing as it were made shipwracke of their faith 1. Tim. 1. 19. Hauing faith and a good conscience which some haue put away and as concerning faith haue made shipwracke Can by no meanes escape the day which is appointed for their destruction that God may be glorified in their iust condemnation Prou. 16. 4. The Lord hath made all things for his owne sake yea euen the wicked for the day of euil Rom. 9. 21. 22. Hath not the potter power of the clay to make of the same lumpe one vessell to honour and an other vnto dishonour What and if God would to shewe his wrath and to make his power knowne suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction The sixt Chapter Of the last and full accomplishment of Gods eternall counsell as well towards the elect as the reprobate FOrasmuch as God is iustice it selfe it is necessary that The full execution of god counsaile he should saue the iust and condemne the vniust Now they among men are only iust who being by faith ioined to Christ grafted rooted in him and made one bodie with him are iustified sanctified in him by him Wherof it followeth that the glory to the which they are destinate to the glory of God appertaineth to them as by a certain right or title On the other part they which remaine in Adams pollution death are iustly hated of God and so condemned by him not excepting so much as thē which die before they sin as Adam did But both these manners of executing Gods iudgements as well in these as in the other which are elected are in thrée sorts whereof we haue already declared the first For the elect in that same moment that they In the elect haue receiued the gift of faith haue after a certaine sort passed from death to life whereof they haue a sure pledge But this their life is hid in Christ till this corporall death make them to steppe a degrée further and that the soule being loosed out of the band of the body enter into the ioy of the Lord Finally in the day appointed to iudge the quicke and the dead when that which is corruptible and mortall shall be clad with incorruption and immortalitie and God shall be all in all things then they shall sée his maiestie face to face and shall fully enioy that vnspeakable comfort and ioy which before all beginning was prepared for them which is also the reward that is due to the righteousnesse holinesse of Christ who was giuen for their sinnes and raised againe from death for their iustification By whose vertue and spirit they haue procéeded and gone forward from faith to faith as shall manifestly appeare by the whole In the Reprobate course of their life and good workes Whereas altogither contrary the reprobate conceaued and brought vp in sin death wrath of God when they depart out of this world they fall into an other gulfe of destruction and their soules are plunged in that endlesse paine vntill the day come that their bodies soules being ioyned againe they shall enter into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuell and his Angels Then by these two waies which are The glory of God cleane contrarie one to an other the last issue and end of Gods iudgement shall set forth manifestly his glory to all men foramuch as in his elect he shall declare himselfe most iust and most mercifull Most iust I say for that he Perfectly iust and perfectly mereifull hath punished with extréeme rigour seueritie the sinnes of his elect in the person of his sonne neither did receiue them into the fellowship of his glory before
he had fully and perfectly instified and sanctified them in his sonne And most mercifull forasmuch as he fréely appointed with himselfe to elect them and according as he had purposed chose them fréely in his sonne by calling iustifying and glorifying them by meanes of that same faith which he had giuen them through the same grace and mercie On the other God is perfectly iust ther side touching the reprobate their corruption and infidelitie with such frutes as come thereof and testimonie of their owne conscience shall so reprooue and accuse them that although they resist and kicke against the pricke yet the most perfect iustice of God shall be manisest and shine by all mens confession in their iust condemnation The chiefe notes with proofes As God is iust so it is necessarie that he should saue the iust and condemne the vniust Nowe amongst men none are iust but by faith being by faith ioyned to Christ grafted rooted in him and made on body with him and thereby also iustified sanctified by him and in him Whereof it followeth that the glory to the which they are destinate to the glory of God appertaineth to them as by a certaine right or title Ge. 18. 25. Be it farre from thée from doing this thing to flay the righteous with the wicked and that the righteous should be euen as the wicked be it farre from thée shall not the iudge of all the world do right Ro. 11. 19. 20. Thou wilt say then The braunches are broken off that I might be graft in Well threugh vnbeliefe they are broken off and thou standest and are graft in by faith be not high minded but feare Colloss 2. 6. 7. 8. 9. As ye haue therefore receiued Christ Iesus the Lord so walke with him rooted and built in him and stablished in the faith as ye haue bene taught abounding therein with thanksgiuing Beware lest there be any man that spoile you through Philosophie and vaine deceit through the traditions of men according to the rudiments of the world and not after Christ Made one bodie 1. Cor. 10. 16. The cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion of the blood of Christ The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the bodie of Christ For we that are many are one bread and one bodie because we are all partakers of one bread Iohn 17. 21. I pray for them that they all may be one as thou O father art in me and I in thée euen that they also may be one in vs and the world may beléeue that thou hast sent me And thereby sanctified and iustified in him and by him Rom. 8. 30. Moreouer whom he predestinate them also he called and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them also he gloried 1. Cor. 1. 30. But ye are of him in Christ Iesus who of God is made vnto vs wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption Rom. 3. 25. Whom God hath set foorth to be a reconciliation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse by the forgiuenesse of sinnes that are passed through the patience of God To she we at this time his righteousnesse that he might be iust and a iustifier of him which is of the faith of Iesus And also glorified Rom. 9. 23. And that he might declare the riches of his glory vpon the vessels of mercy which he hath prepared vnto glory Ro. 8. 30. And whom he iustified them he also glorified Iohn 17. 22. 23. 24. 25. And the glorie that thou gauest me I haue giuē them that they may be one as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loued them as thou hast loued me Father I will that they which thou hast giuen me be with me euen where I am that they may be hold my glorie which thou hast giuen me On the other part they which remaine in Adams pollution and death are iustly hated of God and so condemned by him not excepting so much as them which die before they sinne as did Adam Ro. 5. 14. But death raigned from Adam to Moses euen ouer them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam Ephe. 2. 3. We were by nature the children of wrath as well as others The elect in that same moment that they haue receiued the gift of faith haue after a cerraine sort passed from death to life Ihon. 5. 24. Verely verely I say vnto you he that heareth my word beléeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death vnto life Whereof they hane a sure pledge the Spirit of God that dwelleth within them and certifieth their hearts 1. Cor. 1. 22. It is God which stablisheth vs in Christ who hath also sealed vs and hath giuen the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts And chap. 5. 4. 5. For indéed we that are in this tabernacle of this earthly body sigh and are burthened because we would not be vncloathed but would be cloathed vpon that immortalitie might be swallowed vp of life And he that hath created vs for this thing is God who also hath giuen vnto vs the earnest of the spirit Ephe. 1. 12. 13. 14. That we which trusted in Christ should be vnto the praise of his glory In whom also ye haue trusted after that ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospell of your saluation Wherein also after ye beléeued ye were sealed with the holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance vntill the redemption of the possession purchased vnto the praise of his glory But this their life is hid in Christ 1. Cor. 1. 7. 8. Ye are not destitute of any gift waiting for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ Who shall also confirme you vnto the end that ye may be blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5. 2. By whom also we haue accesse through faith vnto this grace wherein we stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God and chapter 8. 23. 24. 25. 26. And not only the creature but we also which haue the first frutes of the spirit euen we do sigh in our selues waiting for the adoption euen the redemption of our bodie For we are saued by hope but hope that is séene is not hope For how can a man hope for that which he seeth But if we hope for that we sée not we do with patience abide for it Colloss 3. 3. 4. For ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God When Christ which is our life shal appear then shall ye also appeare with him in glory Vntill this corporall death make them to step a degree further and that the soule being loosed out of the bands of the bodie enter into the ioy of the Lord. Ephe. 2. 6.
children of God that is euidently proued which wée tooke in hand to shewe that is forasmuch as we were predestinate by the eternall counsell and decrée of God the which he had determined in himselfe to be adopted in his sonne therefore we were giuen to him Whereof the conclusion The confidence to perseuere and to be saued is sure and certaine followeth that since by the most constant will of God which onely is grounded on it selfe and dependeth on none other thing we are predestinate and no man can take vs out of the hand of the sonne Also séeing that to continue and perseuere in the faith is necessary it followeth I say that the hope of our perseueraunce is certaine and so consequently our saluation so that to doubte any more of it is euill and wicked So farre then it is against reason to say that this doctrine maketh men negligent or dissolute that contrariwise this alone doth open vs the way search out and vnderstand by the power of the holy Ghost Gods déepe secrets as the Apostle plainly teacheth to the end that when we know them albeit wée knowe them here in this world but after a sort so that wée must daily fight with the spiritual armour against distrust we may learne to behaue our selues not idely but rather to perseuere valiantly to serue and honour God to loue him to feare him to call vpon him that daily more and more as saith Saint Peter asmuch as in vs lieth we may make our vocation and election certaine Moreouer how shall he stand sure and constant against so many gréeuous temptations both within and without and against so many assaults of fortune as the world doth terme it that is not well resolued in this point which is most true That is that God according to his goodwill doeth all things whatsoeuer they be and what instruments and meanes soeuer he vseth in working of the same for the commodity of his elect Of the which number he is that findeth himselfe The election only dooth comfort vs in all afflictions in this daunger and trouble As touching the other point which concerneth Reprobation because no man can call to mind the determinate purpose of election but at the same inistant the contrary will come to remembraunce besides that in the holie scripture these two are oftentimes ioyned togither it must néedes be that such as estéeme this part curious or vnprofitable and therefore not to be talked off The doctrine of Reprobation cught not to be suppressed neither applied to any particular company but wisely handled doo great iniury to the spirit of God Therefore this part is to be waied and considered but with such modestie that the height of gods iudgements may at all times bridle our curious fancies in such sort that we doo not apply it particularly to any man nor to any certaine company For in this also it differeth from election because election as hath bene said is reuealed to vs by the spirit of God within our selues not in others whose hearts wee cannot know And Reprobatiou is euer hid from men except it be disclosed by God contrary to the common course of thinges For who can tell if god haue determined to shewe mercy at the last houre of death to him which hath spent all his life past lewdely and wickedly But this trust ought not to incourage any man to maintaine and continue in his sinne and vngodlinesse For I speake of those things which we ought to consider in others for the examples of such mercy of god are very rare neither any man that is wise will promise to himselfe through a vaine securitie and trust that thing which is not in his owne power It is therefore sufficient if we vnderstand generally that there be vessels prepared to perdition The which séeing God doth not reueale vnto vs who they are we ought both in example of life and praier diligently endeuour to winne and recouer to their saluation yea euen very such of whom by séeing their horrible vices we almost VVe must labour to winne all men dispaire And if we obserue this order we shall receiue greate fruite of this doctrine For First by the knowledge héereof we shall learne humbly The doctrine of Reprobation maketh men humble to submitte our selues to the maiestie of God so that the more we shall feare and reuerence him the more we ought to labour to confirme in our selues the testimonie of our election in Christ It maketh the grace of God to be better knowen of the Elect. Secondly when we shalldiligently consider the difference which through the mercy of God is betwixt men which are all a like subiect to the selfe same course and malediction it cannot be but we must acknowledge and imbrace more earnestly the singular goodnesse of GOD then if we did make this grace common to all men indifferenly or else referred the cause of the inequalitie of this grace to men It bringeth a Godly care Thirdly when we knowe that faith is an especiall gift of God shall we not receiue it more willingly when it is offered and be more carefull to haue the same to increase then if we should imagine as some do that it is in euerie mans power to turne and repent when he will because they say the Lord would that all men should be saued and will not the death of a sinner Fourthly when we sée the doctrine of the Gospell not only despised of all the world but also cruelly persecuted It doth confirme vs against all offēces and when we sée so great falshood rebellion among men what thing can better confirme and fortifie vs then to be assured that nothing chaunceth by fortune that God knoweth his and that they which commit these things except GOD turne their hearts are those which are destinate not by chaunce but by the sure and eternall counsell of God to be as it were a glasse wherein the anger and power of God doth appeare Truth it is these things can neuer be so commodiously and perfectly treated of that mans reason and witte cannot finde out some thing to reply alwaies to the contrary yea and so kindleth with desire of contradiction that it is readie to bring an action against god and to accuse and blame him as chiefe author of all things But let the diuel roare and discontent himselfe and the wicked kicke and winse yet their owne conscience shall reprooue and condemne them when as ours being confirmed in the truth by the grace and mercy of god shall deliuer and frée vs in the day of Christ To whom with the father and the holy ghost praise glory and honour be giuen for euer So be it Notes and proofes To ground our righteousnesse vpon workes destroieth the foundation of the Gospel but the sure foundation is to be grounded on faith if faith be builded vpon the eternall counsell of God Gal. 2. 21. I doo not abrogate the grace of
God for if righteousnesse be by the lawe then Christ died without a cause Rom. 10. 4. For Christ is the end of the lawe for righteousnesse vnto euery one that beléeueth And chapter 11. 5. 6. Euen so then at this present time is there a remnant through the election of grace And if it be of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke Ephe. 2. 4. 5. 8. 9. 10. But God which is rich in mercie through his great loue wherewith he loued vs euen when wee were dead by sinnes hath quickened vs togither in Christ by whose grace ye are saued For by grace are ye saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of god Not of woorkes least any man should boast himselfe But that we should be carefull to shewe foorth good workes therefore hée speaketh in the next verse Verse 10. For we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in them 1. Tim. 1. 9. Who hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his own purpose and grace which was giuen to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was 1. Pet. 2. 12. And haue your conuersation honest among the gentiles that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall sée glorifle god in the day of the visitation Perseuerance in faith is requisite vnto saluation Mat. 10. 22. And ye shall be hated of all men for my name But hee that endureth to to the ende shall be saued Mat. 24. 45. Blessed is that seruant whom his maister shall finde so doing Now we need not feare lest this doctrine make vs negligent or dissolute For this peace of conscience whereof we speake ought to be distinct and seperate from foolish securitie and he that is the sonne of God seeing he is moued and gouerned by the spirit of God wil neuer through the consideration of Gods benefit take occasion of negligence and dissolution Rom. 5. 1. 2. Then being iustified by faith we haue peace toward god through our Lord Iesus Christ By whom also we haue accesse through faith vnto this grace wherin we stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of god Rom. 8. 12. 13. 14. 15. Therfore brethren we are debters not to the flesh to liue after the flesh For if ye liue after the flesh ye shall die but if ye mortifie the déeds of the body by the spirit ye shall liue For as many as are ledde by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God Ephe. 1 4. A● he hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before him in loue 2. Tim. 1. 7. For God hath not giuen to vs the spirit of feare but of power and of loue and of a sound mind 1. Iohn 3. 20. 21. 24. If our heart condemne vs God is greater then our hearts and knoweth all things Beloued if our heart condemne vs not then haue wée boldnesse towards God For he that kéepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he in him And hereby wée know that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit which hée hath giuen vs. This matter of Predestination is obscure aboue all others vnto the wit of man but opened and reuealed vnto vs by the word of God The Scripture therfore witnesseth that they that are predestinate vnto saluation are first called and that so effectually that they heare and beleeue and fructifie then also are they iustified and sanctified and in the life to come glorified Iohn 6. 44 45. No man can come vnto me except the father which hath sent me drawe him by the force of gods word and by the secret working of his spirit And I will raise him vp at the last day As it is written in the Prophets And they shall be taught of God Euery man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the father commeth to me Acts. 2. 47. And the Lord added to the Church by the Apostles preaching from day to day such as should be saued Iohn 10. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. ●ée beléeue not for ye are not of my shéepe as I said vnto you My shéepe heare my voice and I knowe them and they followe me And I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall ueuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand My father which gaue them me is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my fathers hand Acts. 13. 48. And when the Gentiles heard it they were glad and glorified the word of the Lord and as many as were ordained vnto eternall life beléeued And chap. 16. 14. And a certaine woman named Lidia a celler of purple of the city of the Thyatirians which worshipped God heard vs whose heart the Lord opened that she attended vnto the things that Paul spake Hebr. 3. 7. 8. Wherefore as the holy Ghost saith To day if ye shall heare his voice harden not your hearts as in the prouocation according to the day of temptation in the wildernesse And. chapt 42. For vnto vs was the Gospell preached as also vnto them but the word that they heard profited not them because it was not mixed with faith in those that heard it Consider by litle and litle and try diligenly if thou be iustified and sanctified in Christ through faith For these two be the effects or ftuites whereby the faith is knowne which is their cause 2. Cor. 13. 5. Proue your selues whether ye are in the faith examine your selues knowe ye not your owne selues except ye be reprobates Rom. 8. 30. Moreouer whom he predestinate them also he called and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them he also glorified As for this thou shalt partly knowe by the spirit of Adopion which crieth within thee Abba father Gal. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. That hée might redéeme them which were vnder the lawe that we might receiue the adoption of sonnes And because ye are sonnes God hath sent foorth the spirit of his sonne into your hearts which crieth Abba father Wherefore thou art no more a seruant but a sonne Nowe if thou be a sonne thou art also the heire of GOD through Christ Rom. 8. 15. For ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but ye haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba father And partly by the vertue and effect of the same spirit which is wrought in thee Rom. 16. 17. The same spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God If we be children we are also heires euen the heires of god and heires annexed with Christ 1. Iohn 3. 24. For he that kéepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he
in him And héereby we knowe that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit which hée hath giuen vs. The first effect is As if thou fall and so declare indeed that although sinne dwell in thee yet it doth no more raigne in thee Which matter is sufficiently handled in the whole sixt chapter of the epistle to the Romanes especially verse 11. 12. Rom. 7. For I allowe not that which I doo For what I would that doo I not but what I hate that doo I. If I doo then that which I would not I consent to the lawe that it is good Nowe then it is no more I that do it but the sinne that dwelleth in mée I delight in the lawe of GOD concerning the inner man But I sée an other lawe rebelling against the lawe of my mind and leading me captiue vnto the lawe of sinne O wretched man that I am The second effect of the spirit of God in vs is that it causeth vs not to let slippe the bridle and giue liberty willingly to our naughtie and vile concupiscences Hebr. 3. 12. Take héede bretheren least at any time there be in any of you an euill heart and vnfaithfull to depart away from the liuing God 1. Iohn 3 8. He that committeh sinne is of the diuell Verse 9. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not for his séede remaineth in him neither can he sinne because he is borne of God Verse 20. If our heart condemne vs God is greater then our heart and so foorth 2 Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his And let euery one that calleth on the name of the Lord depart from iniquitie Ephe. 4 82. Let him that stole steale no more And 30. And grieue not the holy spirit of GOD by whom ye are sealed vnto the day of redemption As they are accustomed whose eies the prince of this world blindeth 2. Timo. 2. 26. And that they may come to a mendement out of the snare of the deuill which are taken of him at his will Ephe. 2. ● Being dead intrespasses and sinnes wherein in time past yée walked according to the course of this world and after the prince that culeth in the aire euen the spirite that worketh in the children of disobedience And chapter 4. 17. Walke not as other Gentiles walke in vanity of their mind hauing their cogitations darkened and being straungers from the life of GOD through the ignoraunce that is in them because of the hardnesse of their heart Which being past feeling haue giuen themselu●s vnto wantonnesse to worke all vncleannesse euen with gréedinesse But ye haue not so learned Christ And Chap. 2. 12. Without Christ and aliants from the common wealth of Israel and straungers from the couenaunts of promise and haue no hope and are without God in the world Rom. 1. 29. Being full of all vnrighteousnesse fornication coueteusnesse wickednesse malitiousnesse 1. Pet. 4. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. That ye hencefoorth should as much time as remaineth in the flesh liue not after the lusts of men but after the will of God For it is sufficient for vs that we haue spent the time past of the life after the lust of the Gentiles walking in wantonnesse lusts drunckennesse in gluttony and in abhominable idolatries Wherein it séemeth to thē strange that ye runne not with them vnto the same excesse of riot therefore speake they euill of you which shall giue accounts to him that is ready to iudge quicke and dead The third effect of the spirit of God is that it moueth vs to pray when we are cold slouthfull who stirreth vp in vs vnspeakable gronings Ro. 8. 26. 27. Likewise the spirit also helpeth our infirmities For we know not what to pray as we ought but the spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed The fourth effect is that when we haue sinned yea and sometimes wittingly and willingly it ingendereth in vs a hate of the sinne committed and not for the feare of punishment which wee haue therefore deserued but because we haue offended our most mercifull father Rom. 7. 15. I allowe not that which I do for what I wold the do I not but what I hate the do I so forth as aboue The fift effect is that it testifieth that our sighings are heard also moueth vs to call daily God our God and our Father euen at that time when we haue trespassed against him Rom. 8. 27. But he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the meaning of the spirit for he maketh request for the saincts according to the will of God And. verse 15. Yée haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we crie Abba father And. verse 32. Who spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death Howe shall he not with him giue vs all things also Iohn 14. And. 16. 23. 24. The sixt effect is that it doth assure vs of our adoption because it is giuen vs as an earnest penny and certaine pledge to the same purpose For proofe whereof looke for this marke 8 in the margent towards the latter end of the notes of the sixt chapter Wherefore if we can gather by these effects that we haue faith it followeth that we are called and drawen effectually Rom. 11. 29. For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance We are therefore predestinate by the constant will of God which is grounded on it selfe and dependeth on none other thing and no man can take vs out of the hands of the sonne Also seeing that to continue perseuere in the faith is necessery it followeth I say that the hope of our perseuerance is certaine and so consequently our saluation So that to doubt any more of it is euill and wicked Hebre. 6. 17. 18. So God willing more aboundantly to shewe vnto the heires of promise the stablenesse of his counsell bound himselfe by an oath that by two immutable things wherein it is impossible that God should lye we might haue strong consolation which haue our refuge to hold fast the hope that is set before vs. Iohn 10. 27. 28. 29. 30. My shéepe heare my voice and I know them and they follow me And I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of mine hand My father which gaue them me is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my fathers hand 1. Iohn 3. 9. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not for his séede remaineth in him neither can he sinne because he is borne of God And therefore perseuereth and endureth to the end Iohn 3. 33. He that hath receiued his testimony hath sealed that God is true Rom. 4. 20. 21. Neither did Abraham doubt of the promise of God through vnbelief but was strengthned in the faith and gaue glory to God Being fully assured that hée which had promised was also able to do it Ephe. 3.
11. 12. According to the eternall purpose which he wrought in Christ Iesus our Lord. By whom we haue boldnesse and entraunce with confidence by faith in him 1. Thes 5. 24. Faithfull is he which calleth you which will also do it Hebr. 10. 23. Let vs kéepe the profession of our hope without wauering for he is faithfull that promised Rom. 8. 38. 39. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor thinges present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to seperate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. And therefore I cannot nor I may not doubt of my saluation So farre then it is against reason to say that this doctrine maketh men negligent or dissolute that contrariwise this alone dooth open vs the way to search out and vnderstand by the power of the holy Ghost Gods deepe secrets 1. Cor. 2. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. The things which eye hath not séene neither eare hath heard neither came into mans hart are which God hath prepared for them that loue him But God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his spirit For the spirit searcheth all things yea the déepe things of God For what man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him Euen so the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God Now we haue receiued not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are giuen to vs of God It maketh vs painfull in good workes Ephe. 2. 10. For we are his workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath ordained that we should walke in them 1. Iohn 3. 24. For he that kéepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he in him and thereby we know that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit that he hath giuen vs. Gal. 5. 17. For the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary one to the other so that we cannot do the same things that we would Knowing this infirmitie to be in vs it stirreth vs to good workes And chap. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. Be not deceined God is not mocked For whatsoeuer a man soweth that also shall he reape For he that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption And he that soweth to the spirit shal of the spirit reape life euerlasting Rom. 6. 1. What shall we say then Shall we continue stil in sin that grace may abound God forbid Hebr. 10. 24. And let vsconsider one an other to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes Iam. 3. 17. The wisedome that is from aboue is first pure then pe●●eable gentle easie to bee intreated full of mercy and good workes without iudging and without hipocrisie It maketh vs inuincible against all temptations and vexations For how shall he stand sure and constant against so many grieuous temptations both within and without against so many assaults of fortune as the world doth terme it that is not well resolued in this point of Gods predestination toward him and of his election in Christ Iob. 13. 15. Loe though hée slaie me yet will I trust in him Rom. 8. 28. Also we know that all things worke togither for the best vnto them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose Verse 31. What shall we then say to these things If God be on our side who can be against vs Verse 35. 37. Who shall seperate vs from the loue of Christ Shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednesse or peril or sword In all which things we are more then conquerours through him that loued vs. Iohn 16. 33. Maruell not though the world hate you In the world ye shall haue affliction but in me ye shall haue peace Be of good comfort I haue chosen you out of the world and none shall take you out of my hands Rom. 15. 3. Through Christ we reioyce in tribulations that we may say with the Apostle We are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but we perish not Ia. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. My brethren count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into diuerse temptations knowing that the trying of your faith bringeth forth patience And let patience haue her perfect work that ye may be perfect and intire lacking nothing Of the which number of the elect he is that findeth himselfe in this daunger and trouble Rom. 8. 16. 17. 18. The same spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God If we be children we are also heires euen the heires of God and heires annexed with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him For I count that the afflictions of this present time are not worthie of the glorie which shall be shewed vnto vs. Luke 23. 43. Iesus said to the théefe on the crosse Verily I say vnto thée To day shalt thou be with me in Paradice This part is to be considered and weighed and that with great modestie principally in these two considerations First that the height of Gods iudgements may at all times bridle our curious fancies Secondly that we doo not apply it to any man particularly or any certaine company For the first let it be sufficient that we vnderstand generally that there be vessels prepared by Gods iudgement and appointed to destruction The which séeing God doth not reueale vnto vs who they are we ought both in example of life and praier diligently to endeuour to winne and recouer to their saluation yea euen very such of whom by séeing their horible vices we almost dispaire Mat. 5. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may sée your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heauen 1. Pet. 2. 12. Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which speake euil of you as of euill dooers may by your good workes which they shall sée glorifie God in the day of the visitation And chap. 3. 15. 16. Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and be readie alwaies to giue an answere to euery man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you And that with méekenesse and reuerence hauing a good conscience that when they speake euill of you as of euill dooers they may be ashamed which blame your good conuersation in Christ 1. Cor. 9. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. For though I be frée from all men yet haue I made my selfe seruant vnto all men that I might winne the moe And vnto the Iewes I become as a Iewe that I may winne the Iewes to them that are vnder the lawe as though I were vnder the lawe that I may win them that are vnder the lawe to them that are without the lawe as though I were without the lawe when I am not without the
lawe as pertaining to God but am in the lawe through Christ that I may winne them that are without the lawe to the weake I become as weake that I may winne the weake I am made all things to all men that I might by all meanes saue some And this I doo for the Gospell sake Rom. 1. 14. I am debter both to the Grecians and to the Barbarians both to the wise men and vnto the vnwise Philip. 2. 12. 13. Make an end of your owne saluation with feare and trembling lest that through the deceit of sinne ye should fall away or else lest ye be any offence to the weake For it is God that worketh in you both the will the déed euen of his good pleasure Concerning the second that we do not apply this doctrine to any man particularly or to any certaine company For in this also it differeth from election Because election as hath beene said is reuealed to vs by the spirit of God within our selues not in others whose hearts we cannot know And Reprobation is euer hid from men except it bee disclosed by God contrary to the common course of things For who can tell if God haue determined to shewe mercy at the last houre of death to him which hath spent all his life past lewdly wickedly But this trust ought not to incourage any man to maintaine and continue in his sinne vngodlinesse For I speake of those things which we ought to consider in others For the examples of such mercy of God are very rare Neither any man that is wise will promise to himselfe through a vaine securitie and trust that thing which is not in his owne power Iam. 4. 13. 14. 15. 16. Goe too now yée that say To day or to morrow we will go into such a citie continue there a yeare and buy and sell and get gaine And yet ye cannot tell what shall be to morrowe For what is your life It is euen a vapour that appeareth for a litle time and afterward vanish away For that yée ought to say If the Lord will and if we liue we will do this or that Now if we cannot promise the continuance of life vnto our selues how much lesse may we assure our selues of Gods mercie at our pleasure Luke 12. 19. 20. The rich man said vnto his soule Soule thou hast much good lain vp for many yéeres liue take ease eate drinke and take thy pastime But God said vnto him O foole this night will they setch away thy soule from thée 2. Tim. 2. 25. The minister is willed to instruct the euill disposed with méeknesse and such as are contrary minded prouing if GOD at any time will giue them repentance Therefore repentance is not at our pleasure or leasure 1. Pe. 1. 14. 15. 16 17. 18. 19. Fashioning not your selues vnto the former lusts of your ignorance But as he which hath called you is holy so be yée holy in all manner of conuersation And if yée call him father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your dwelling heere in feare Knowing that yée were not redeemed with siluer and gold and such corruptible things Hebr. 12. 14. Follow peace with all men and holinesse without the which no man shall sée the Lord. And if we obserue this order wee shall receiue great fruite of this doctrine especially in these foure considerations First it maketh men humble and to submit themselues to God Secondly it maketh the grace of God to be better knowne of the elect seeing it is not common to all Thirdly it bringeth a godly care to receiue faith when it is offered and to labour to increase it Fourthly it doth confirme vs against all offences All which reasons are more plainly set downe in the last part of this eight chapter Deo gratia A Praier for the Queenes most excellent Maiestie O Most gracious God and heauenly Father by whose disposition Kingdomes and Kealmes are gouerned and by whose power Kings Princes raigne we giue thée hartie thanks that in thy great mercy thou hast set such a Prince and Quéene ouer vs vnder whose godly and peaceable gouernment we enioy glad tidings of thy Gospell and the truth of thy word in manifest sort deliuered vnto vs with peace and quietnesse and other worldly great blessings of thine in a plentifull measure Endue her so with heauenly gifts that her heart may be alwaies framed to the obedience of thy will that by her godly and gracious gouernment thy name may be glorified thy Church edified the poore members of Christ relieued vertue aduanced and vice beaten downe and punished that so in wealth she may surpasse that prosperitie y● was in the daies of King Salomon and that in life and health she may so be preserued long among vs to thy glorie and our comfort that the yeares of her royall fathers gouernment may bee doubled vpon her And although we for our parts haue and doo daily prouoke thy wrath against vs and haue worthily in respect of thy blessings deserued the contrary as for the heauenly vlessings of thy Gospell and truth ignorance idolatry and superstition for wealth and prosperitie penury and scarcitie for peace and quietnesse troubles and warres for our health and the continuance of our life diseases and death yet in thy mercy be fauourable vnto vs mollifie our hard and stonie hearts that we may repent mortifie sinne in vs that there may be séene amendment in our liues and conuersation that we may yéeld our soules and bodies to the obedience of thy blessed will and commaundements whereby thy manifold and good blessings and benefits may be both increased and continued toward vs. That the heauens may send downe their raine that the earth may giue forth her plentifull encrease that our garners may be full and plenteous with all maner of store that our shéepe may bring forth thousandes that our oxen may be strong to labour that there be no decaie no leading into captiuitie and no complaining in our stréets wherein we shall be blessed who haue the Lord for our God As for her enemies who séeke her destruction let them fall into the pitte that they haue digged for others and let their owne shame light vpon them And let thy crowne florish vpon her head whom thou hast annointed that in the maintenance of thy truth and of thy people it may be knowne that though the heathen rage so furiously togither and the Kings of the earth stand vp in armes against thée and against thine annointed that thou breakest the bowe and knappest the speare in pieces that thou art able to turne the swordes of her enemies to murther themselues And though the horse bee prepared vnto the battaile yet the victorie is from thée who can mightily confounde her foes and put a hooke in their nosthrilles and turne them backe the same way they came The straunge deliuerances which thou hast wrought in her behalfe both
from the secrete and malicious conspiracies treasons and trecheries of vnnaturall subiects and from the sauage cruelties of forraine foes doo giue sufficient cause not only to vs but euen to the enemie also to say That there is no God that can deliuer after this sorte but onely the Almightie that hath established her All these benefites O Lorde wée confesse doo procéede from thy goodnesse and from thy mercy toward vs. To thée belongeth praise and honour and power but to vs shame and confusion Yet grant vnto vs good Lord that we may both receiue these thy benifits thankfully and that we may performe our duties accordingly Increase her daies continue her gouernment defend her from her enemies keepe her in thy feare and after this life grant her all happinesse euen to rule and raigne with thée for euer among the blessed soules Grant also to vs that we may haue the benifit of thy truth and Gospell long among vs and that thy blessings of peace and prosperitie may be séene in this land So shall we be bound more and more to praise and magnifie thy name for thy great and infinit goodnesse towards vs For her Maiesrie and for vs thy seruants and her faithful subiects thus we conclude our praiers O Lord blesse and kéep vs O Lord make thy face to shine vpon vs and be mercifull vnto vs O Lord lift thou vp thy countenance vpon vs and giue vs thy peace All which benifits and blessings we begge of thée O heauenly Father for Iesus Christ his sake in that forme of prater which he himselfe hath taught vs saying Our Father c. A secret Meditation to God before the deliuery of the word LEt the words of my mouth O Lord and the meditation of my heart be alwaies acceptable in thy sight Set thou a watch before my mouth and so kéepe the doore of my lippes that speaking before this congregation assembled here in thy holy name I may specially intreat of those things which tend to thy glory the good of thy Church the discharge of my dutie the comfort of the afflicted conscience the euerthrow of sinne and the aduauncement of vertue through Iesus Christ our Lord. So be it I. D. A publque forme of Praier O Most mightie God most gracious and mercifull father we stand before thy maiestie defiled with the filthinesse of many and most gréeuous sinnes whereof we confesse we are not able to answere thée one of a thousand if thou O Lord shouldst enter into iudgement with vs. For in sinne were we conceaued and borne and therefore are guiltie of originall corruption and in sinne haue we liued and continued and therefore stand guiltie of actuall transgression which hath broken foorth vppon vs in thought word and déede from time to time continually euen vnto this present Wherefore we humbly craue thy mercy and the grace of forgiuenesse in Iesus Christ for therein we confesse standeth the only hope of our comfort and welfare And forasmuch as it hath pleased thée to giue thine owne sonne to be a flaine sacrifice for our sinnes and to offer the grace of reconciliation by the preaching of the Gospell to all them that repent and beléeue the same good Lord we beséech thée vouchsafe to make vs of that blessed number worke true repentance in our hearts increase our faith and giue vs grare to bring foorth the frutes thereof that so it may appeare that we haue not receiued thy holy grace in vaine And for this purpose good Lord we beséech thee blesse the Ministery of thy word at this present gius me grace to speak it as it ought to be spoken sincerely and boldly giue grace to this people to he are it attentiuely and reuerently giue grace to vs all to beléeue it stedfastly to follow it obediently and constantly to continue euen to the end That seruing thée faithfully in this life we may liue and raigne with thée for euer in the life to come through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen The Praier which M. Deering vsed before his Lectures O Lord God which hast left vnto vs thy holy word to be a lanterne vnto our féete and a light vnto our steppes giue vnto vs all thy holy spirite that out of the same word we may learne what is thy eternall will and frame our liues in all obedience to the same to thy honour and glorie and increase of our faith through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen An excellent speech of M. Deering a little before his death whereby thou maist clearly see and learne that there is a sweete peace in death to all such as painfully serue the Lord in life For he being raised vp in bedde and his friend requesting him to speake the Sunne shone on his face and thereby tooke occasion thus to say THere is but one Sunne that giueth light to the world there is but one righteousnesse there is but one communion of Saints If I were the excellentest creature in the world If I were as righteous as Abraham Isaac and Sa●ob for they were excellent men in the world yet we must all confesse that we are great sinners and that there ●●●o saluation but in the righteousnesse of Iesus Christ And we haue all néed of the grace of God And for my part as concerning death I féele such ioy of spirit that if I should haue the sentence of life on the one side and the sentence of death on the other side I had rather choose a thousand times séeing God hath appointed the seperation the sentence of death then the sentence of life Soli Deo laus gloria gratia IN euery Sermon for the most part these points are to be vsed The declaration of the order of the text by opening the circumstances The diuision The doctrine The confutation The vse and application Exhortation or reprehension or both The Conclusion wherin the chéefest matters must be remembred and briefly collected that the auditorie may the better kéepe and carry away those things which are necessary and for their vse All which although I haue not vsed I haue left the matter to the discretion of them that shall haue knowledge better to handle their matters then I haue handled mine Let thy text be applied to thy auditorie and haue care to vtter those thinges that are most waightie to be touched and of thy auditorie to be remembred Be circumspect wise and discréete Endeuour to be briefe and pithie There is an other Methode as profitable which Maister Vdall vseth in his Commentary vpon the Lamentations of Ieremy Consisting on these thrée points the Doctrine Reason Vse Some only learne for knowledge sake but that is curiositie And some for praise great paines do take but that is foolish vanitie Some learne for gaine but lightly those do leaue the text and vse the gloze But learning ioynd with vertues lore doth leade to Christianitie The glory of God and people taught the way is to eternitie To the Right Worshipfull and one
giuen for the purchase of a zealous giuing of our liues to those workes And therefore doth the Apostle tell vs that we are not our owne as to frame our liues after our owne liking but we are to serue the Lord both with our bodie and with our spirite because they are the Lords who hath bought them with a price If we humble not not our selues to a zealous following of good works we withhold the Lords due for he hath paide a great price to purchase a good life at our hands and dearly paide for a life ledde in zealous obedience vnto his word For we are not barely to giue some good words either to shewe some good countenance towards religion and Christian conuersation but to haue our conuersation declare that we are affected with the same and become studious of such an estate of life And such are they which declare themselues to be the peculiar people for whome the Lord laide out his life As for those who walke so indifferently betwéene true religion and false that a man cannot discerne whether they are more inclined vnto as also those that walke so euen betwéene a eiuill life and a Christianlike behauiour that the difference is not easily perceiued they doo declare themselues as yet not to be affected in desire toward those dueties which the Lord hath laid vpon his people to performe Now where this purchase of his hath taken place and effect they are become a peculiar people zealous of good workes And if cold and luke-warme christians may haue but litle comfort frō the death of Christ what shall become of them who are sworne enemies either to true religion or els to a good life and christian behauiour It is said here that we must be purged and so the Apostle would haue vs to become a peculiar people vnto our God zealous of good works Which agreeth with that of S. Peter 1. Ep. 2. 9. Ye are a chosen generation a royall priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people that ye should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darkenesse into his maruellous light Which in time past were not a people yet are now the people of God which in time past were not vnder me rcie but now haue obteined mercie He gaue himselfe to purge vs which office of purging the holy ghost performeth not by miracle but by meanes as I haue said afore Which spirite of God pray we that it may so worke togither with his grace in our heartes y● we may be throughly taught and also perswaded vtterly to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lustes as we haue made a vow and faithfull promise thereof in our baptisme so that we may liue soberly without excesse and riot righteously without doing iniurie and wrong and godly with a care to do all good workes whereby we may please God and liue in fauour and credit among men Spending as much time as remaineth in this life not after the lustes of the flesh or the vanities of the world or after the temptations of the diuell but after the will of God knowing this that if we liue after the flesh we shall die but if we mortifie the déeds of the body by the spirite we shall liue And what though some should mocke at vs for our reformed life and godly and holy conuersation for the diuell will stirre vs vp enemies inough for al such matters we must be pr●uided prepare our selues before-hand And this is a great comfort vnto vs in that matter to teach vs not to be dismaied but still to hold on our course constantly considering that they that are so wilfully and so maliciously bent against vs shall giue account of their doings to him that is readie to iudge them Rather let vs be contrarily minded vnto them and let vs learne to set out our selues against all worldly hinderaunces whatsoeuer framing our selues to be such as looke for the blessed hope and appearing of the glorie of the Almightie God and of our Sauiour Iesus Christ And let vs not make the death of Christ of so small account as not to be zealous and carefull of good workes séeing he tooke vpon him a bitter death for our sakes not only to deliuer vs from our ●innes but also that we should leade a godly a holie and sanctified life Which God graunt and giue vs the grace that we may so doo And the Lord guide our hearts to the loue of God and to the waiting for of Christ To God the Father God the Sonne and God the holy Ghost thrée persons and one euerliuing God be rendred all praise dominion and power now and for euermore Amen Deo gratia solique gloria Here endeth the Patterne of Sanctification To the Right Worshipfull and one of his chiefest friends M. Francis Newport Esquire Iustice of Peace and Quorum in the Countie of Salop S. I. wisheth blessings of God in this life and the ioyes of that which is to come THe remembrance of your former curtesies Right Worshipfull makes me that I cānot forget you when I remember my chiefest friends Wherefore deuising with my selfe how I might in some sort shewe my thankfull mind toward you I could not do it otherwise then by presenting this slender gift of my studie before your eyes wishing praying that the effect and meaning thereof might take so deep a consideration in your hart that it may worke your heauenly consolation assurance VVhose patronage likewise I humbly desire may giue credit and countenance thereunto I should haue remembred the right worshipfull my Ladie your mother but the matters of learning are more fit to bee directed to men of knowledge then vnto that sexe which is not so well acquainted therwith Only this I may say to shewe my good will from my heart and to giue vnto her Ladiship her due that although her estate be worshipfull yet is her report and remembrance honorable As long as she liueth she shall increase it when it shall please God to take her to himself she shall not loose it God requite vnto her and comfort her in her most need as shee hath bountifully relieued and comforted my father and mother and vs his children euen all the houshold of vs. And I doubt not but that many housholdes in Shropshire especially in Shrewesbury may saie the same Yet ought this so much to bee her comfort as that her onlie staie I meane her saluatiō is wrought by the death and precious blood-sheading of Iesus Christ our Sauiour onlie of his mercy without any desert of ours and by no other meanes whatsoeuer I would to God that many both honorable and worshipfull women in the lande whom God hath inriched no doubt to do good to others and to supplie the wants of those that stand in need would take her course that they might deserue the like commendation and haue the praiers and hearts of the people which is more woorth then all their landes and treasures or
before that we shal be receiued where we would wish to be Being thus framed to perfection as much as in this life may be and restored to the image of God in such a measure as it shall please God to inable vs God hath so appointed that we shal be tried by many sorrowes by many temptations before that our happy desire shal be accomplished The siluer and the gold by the furnace is purified from all drosse and those sorrows temptations and afflictions that shall please God to try vs withall shal be worthie meanes to purge vs and to purifie vs and to cleanse vs for no vncleane thing shall enter there Fine manchet hath many labours before it come to be set on the table beaten foorth with the flaile from the hus●e winnowed from the chaffe grinded in the mill si●ted in the sine baked in the ouen Many are the troubles and sorrowes of the righteous and who can name them or who is worthie to knowe them and all must be suffered and all must be vndertaken before we can be prepared to be as fine as manchet set on the Lordes table Necessitie hath no lawe and must hath no remedie And they that will liue godly in this world must suffer troubles and vexations and sorrows and there is no end till death make an end Verily verily ye shall weepe and lament But before I enter into the consideration of these sorrowes A generall consideration of sorrow which this text dooth specifie and of that bitter cuppe of persecution which Christ foretolde his Disciples they should drinke of let vs a little beholde those sorrowes generally which are incident in this worlde to the life of man especially to the godlie Whereof although héeretofore I haue discoursed yet will it not bee much amisse in this place also to make remembrance of them Man that is borne of a woman saith Iobe is of short continuance and full of trouble Hée said so because hée founde it to bee true King Salomon also beholding all the pleasures and ioyes of this vanishing worlde hauing had triall thereof dooth truly pronounce of them that they are but méere vanities Vanitie of vanities vanitie of vanities and all is but vanitie It is a temptation saith a learned man not to be tempted neither is that counted the life of a Christian which is not either seasoned or sowred with sorrow God laying this condition vppon vs dooth it to this purpose euen to trie our obedience as also to make our patience perfect or to make vs perfect through patience Looke how many wantes so many sorrowes howe many losses so many sorrowes howe many chaunges and howe manie troubles so manie sorrowes And manie are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord in time giueth ease to them all Our Sauiour Christ was neuer seene to laugh but to wéepe signifying that the life of them that should bee made like vnto his image should bee rather wéeping and lamentation then reioycing It is good saith Saint Peter to Christ to bee heere let vs therefore builde three tabernaces one for thee another for Moses another for Elias but he forgot himselfe and knewe not what hée said For that ioyfull presence was but for a moment and they were but foreshewers of troubles and sorrowes to come God commaunded the Isráelites to dwell in Tentes to put them in minde still of remoouing as though there were no ioy in this life but still it would haue his chaunge The Israelites were the people whome God appointed to bee heires of his heauenly kingdome but by their earthly peregrination into the lande of Canaan God shewed them and vs by them howe full of sorrowes this life is before we shall come to heauen For God brought not the Israelites straightway into the land of promise that goodly land flowing with milke and honie and abounding with all things which hee had sworne vnto their fathers that they should possesse but led them vp and downe too and fro in the wildernesse by the space of fortie yeares enduring many sorrowes By that meanes holding them in continuall obedience and teaching them to forsake the worlde and only to depend vpon him from whose holy spirit commeth all comfort It is a rare thing that a ship passing on the sea should still haue faire weather and a quiet calme to her iournies end Yea rather stormes and tempests surges and waues shelues and sandes rockes and whirlepooles and some of these it lightly méetes withall And how can the life of man bee without sorrow Yea the wicked themselues who séeme to haue all the ioyes and pleasures of this world according to Christes words The world shall reioyce Sorrow of the wicked they also sometimes féele smart and sorrow and wéeping also commeth to them but full sore against their willes And where by this meanes God trieth the patience of the godly so also in these sorrowes of the wicked their rebellion and impatiencie doth vtter itselfe grudging and murmuring fretting and suming cursing and swearing being rather monsters out of shape then men according to Gods making bearing the image not of God but of the diuell The sorrowes of the vnfaithfull and of the vngodly doe rather hurt them then prepare them vnto God In as much as their impatiencie is increased and they through their owne fault are brought to desperation and damnation But the sorrowes of the godly are so farre from hindering their felicitie and happinesse in heauen as that vsually they be helpes and furtherances thereunto and they make a benefite of them which the other can neither sée nor behold According to that the patriarcke Iacob foresaw that his posteritie should haue manie sorrowes troubles crosses and afflictions but his faith and setled hope was that the gratious hand of god should neuer be wanting O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation Wealthy Iob as I haue said saw sorrowes inough and wise Salomon saw no certaine ioyes as though the ioyes The sorrowes of the Patriarckes themselues were nothing els but vanitie and vexation of minde but especially we may sée it in the liues of the Patriarckes Abraham in feare of death for the beautie of his Abraham wife like to come to great trouble and griefe of minde through the discord of his and Lots seruauntes and to great dislike betwixt them and their families almost to hatred and heart-burning and man-slaughter if in godly wisedome he had not preuented it Trouble by hazard of warres to rescue Lot and his companie Great discord betwixt his wife and Hagar his maid-seruaunt whom hée so greatly fauoured His heart in manner rent in péeces to sée that he must slay his onely sonne beleued and liked and his greatest worldly ioy whome hée had so desired wished and earnestly prayed for saying O Lord God what wilt thou giue me seeing I go childlesse What bitter sorrow and griefe of mind thinke you was it to depart from so great a ioy Isaac like to be cut off in
and readie Marke the minde but of a worldly man that accounhimselfe greatly beholding to another is not this his courage that he could finde in his heart to die in his quarrell and to offer his seruice before he commaunded thereunto The readinesse of our Sauiour Christ whose example if it be too high for imitation yet that of the Apostle Saint Paule heerein is notable and able to giue the weakest minde great courage Get thée behind me Sathan saith Christ vnto Peter thou art an offence vnto mée because thou vnderstandest not the things that are of God but the things that are of men The Prophet Agabus Act. 21. tooke Pauls girdle and bound his owne hands and féete and said Thus saith the holy Ghost So shall the Iewes at Ierusalem binde the man that oweth this girdle and shall deliuer him into the hands of the Gentiles Then his friends perswaded him and besought him with teares that he would not go vp to Ierusalem To whom Paul answered and said What do ye weeping and breaking my heart for I am ready not to bee bounde only but also to die at Ierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus And in an other place And now behold I goe bound in the spirite vnto Ierusalem and knowe not what things shall come vnto mee there Saue that the holy Ghost witnesseth in euery citie saying that bands and afflictions abide me in Ierusalem but I passe not at all neither is my life deare vnto my selfe This is a notable example of incouragement beside the promise of excéeding great reward Hee that looseth his life for my sake shall finde ●● But weake mindes are soone offended and fraile flesh cannot beare out these bitter brunts neither stand to the triall of so worthie a cause when we shall behold as it were great mountaine to fall vpon vs and great surges readie to swallow vs vp No doubt we shall méet with hinderances inow and those mighty hinderances yet greater renowne it is to ouercome our selues then to winne a citie both are hard to do and to accomplish but the first most hard and to flesh and blood impossible True it is that we should cast off all hinderances in this so waightie a matter and deny our selues and in this combat betwixt the spirit and flesh and blood we should shewe our selues conquerers but our hearts for the most part are so faint that strawes can make vs stumble We bl●nch at the least matters and are astund euen at the very name of persecution When King Hezechiah heard of his death he wept sore and so do many of vs carry the like affliction that in no sort we can brooke affliction The pur●●●ion is too bitter although health and immortallitie bee the effect of it Why is it that we are readie to put finger in the eie when we heare that we must endure trouble but that the world a●desh and blood do carry more sway with vs then Gods spirit and that the ioy of this life can abide no sorrow Although God hath appointed this to be our lot Ye shall weepe and lament yea furthermore although we heare that our sorrow shal be turned into ioy Gladly we would be at peace with the world but when the world shall hate vs that beginneth to breake vs then are we surprized of sorrow and for the time swallowed vp of griefe The Prophet Ieremy a man of great courage patience and constancie before he could frame himselfe to drinke of this bitter cuppe as one most passionate breaketh out into these words and in the presence of God Cursed be the day wherin I was borne oh that my mother had bene my graue or her wombe a perpetuall eonception How is it that I came forth of the wombe to see labour and sorrow And againe chapter 19. Woe is me my mother that thou hast borne mee a contentious man and a man that striueth with the whole earth I haue done them neither hurt nor wrong yet euerie one doth curse me According to that of the Prophet Dauid They hated mee without any cause and that thou ô God knowest Yet should this matter be so farre from mouing vs to heauinesse that therein we should reioyce As the Apostle S. Paule doeth moue vs by his example Gal. 6. 14. God forbid saith he that I should reioyce in any thing but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ whereby the world is crucified vnto me and I vnto the world Our Sauior Christ hath foretold vs that we should be hated of all men for his name and for the profession of his truth And lest any of vs should faint he addeth further But hee or they that endure to the end they shall be saued What if the world and the mightiest in the world hate ve what if they séeke our blood Feare not their feare saith the Apostle neither be troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts Feare not them saith our Sauiour which haue power ouer your bodies and whose furie and rage can goe no further but rather feare him who after the body is distroied by death can cast both soule and body in hell God hath commanded vs vnto this wéeping and lamentation Foure principal● reasons to pers●●d●●s to vndertake perse●cution w● 〈◊〉 the first is Gods Commandement and appointed vs vnto this trouble and sorrow and persecution let vs not therefore feare men to auoid gods commandement but rather glorifie God by withstan●●ng euill men and such as are bent to resist and deface to suppresse and vtterly to roote out gods truth And because the world is giuen to nothing more then to oppresse gods truth therefore ought we the more to maintaine it and not to regard our liues in respect of the defence therof Striue for y● truth vnto death saith the wise man Eccle. 4. 28. And defend iustice for thy life God hath created vs for his glory and if we loue God and his loue be setled in our hearts wée ought to the vtmost of our power to maintaine his glory Dearely beloued saith the blessed Apostle thinke it not straunge concerning the firy tryall It pleaseth God to try you by the extremities of this wicked world whether ye will like valiant souldiours stand to the defence of his cause We count it a glorious matter and worthy of immortall fame to spend our liues in the defence of our prince and country yet is it more glorious if wée be called thereunto not to refuse any torment and extremitie in shewing our dutie and our loue to God and his Church Re. 2. 10. Vnto the Angell of the church of Smirna it was said Feare none of those things which thou shalt suffer behold it shall come to passe that the diuell shall cast some of you into prison that ye may be tried and ye shall haue tribulation tenne daies that is a long time Bee thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life Hee that ouercommeth shall not bee hurt of
According to that of the Apostle S. Paul Philip. 1. 12. I would you vnderstood brethren that the things which haue come vnto me are turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell So that my bands in Christ are famous throughout all the iudgement hall and in all other places In so much that many of the brethren in the Lord are boldned through my bands and dare more franckly speake the word Yea the aduersary king Agrippa himself was almost become a Christian Fiftly our constancy and courage shal be a cause of greater condemnation to our enemies whose consciences are by this means made without excuse As the same Apostle in the chapter recited saith In nothing feare your aduersaries enemies which is a token to them of perdition and destruction and to you a token of saluation and that of God For vnto you it is giuen for Christ that not only ye should beléeue in him but also suffer for his sake Sixtly and lastly we shall confound the kingdome of the diuel which is only established by lies and vntruth All which perswasions are forcible in●ugh to prepare vs Not to be ouer rash to make vs offer our selues as Peter did and me thinks I heare euery one say They are ready Mat. 20. 31. Christ said vnto his Disciples All ye shal be offended by me this night but Peter answered and said vnto him though all men should bee offended by thée yet will I neuer bee offended Iesus saide vnto him Verily I say vnto thée that this night before the Cocke crowe thou shalt denie me thrice Peter said vnto him though I should die with thée yet will I not deny thée Likewise also saide they all Yet for all that all of them were either offended or they denied or were scattered and Peter the foremost man denied and fors●ore Christ Sée the euent of foolish rashnesse and vndiscréete boldnesse Go to now ye that are so hastie and so hardie and so ready All such boasting is in vaine For that ye ought to say if the Lord will and if the Lord giue strength we will do so Know ye not that your wils are wauering and flesh is fraile and sathan is subtile and the world is tyrannous and cruell and againe ye know not how all things wil fall out Promise nothing before the time but pray to God to make thée able Sit down first and cast thy accounts bethinke thy selfe of the force of thy enemies the diuels potentates of thy weakenesse which of it self cannot stand and many the like matters This wil aske a long time to consult and deliberate with thy selfe Who seeth not that they that are most cowardly in the battel are most valiant before they come to the field Great boasters may well be compared to barking dogs which haue no courage to fight when they be set vpon Our sauior Christ moueth vs to great wisedom in this matter for he knew what was in man how that the boldest would be readie inough to draw backward For after that he had exhorted to the bearing of his crosse and the enduring of persecution he put forth a parable to make euery one fully to bethinke themselues lest they should reuolt after they were resolued Luke 14. Which of you saith he minding to build a tower sitteth not downe before and counteth the cost whether we haue sufficient to performe it lest that after he hath laid the foundation and is not able to performe it all that behold him begin to mocke at him saying This man beganne to build and was not able to make an end Be not rash without wisedome and ●ast with thy selfe what may fall out If thou be couragious and venterous then behold flattery faire meanes and sugred promises As King Antiochus went about to perswade the poungest of the seuen brethren not only with words but swore also vnto him by an oath that he would make him rich and wealthie if he would forsake the lawes of his fathers and that he would take him as a friend and giue him offices If there bee any shewe of faintnesse to bee perceiued in thée then come thundring threatnings like thunderbolts to cast thée downe Besides although thou be neuer so innocent and guiltlesse and without fault yet be sure thou shalt haue false reports raised vp mischéeuous accusations intollerable and diuellish slaunders deuised against thée and laide to thy charge These are they which subuert the state of the world and heere they are they obserue not the kings lawes therefore it is not the kings profit to suffer them When the Iewes led Christ to Pilate they did accuse him but falsly and vndeseruedly saying We haue found this man peruerting the people and forbidding to paie tribute to Cesar saying that he is Christ a king The malicious Iewes laid hands on the Apostle Saint Paul and mooued the people Crying Men of Israel helpe this is the man that teacheth all men euerie where against the people and the lawe and this place Certainly saith Tertullus the Orator accusing the Apostle before Felix the Gouernour we haue founde this man a pestilent fellowe and a moouer of sedition among all the Iewes throughout the worlde Looke to these matters cast thy count prepare thy minde least after thou hast appointed with thy selfe to be constant thou become wauering Many feares to hold vs back flesh and blood loth to depart from worldly comforts life swéete death bitter Thy enemies shal be they of thine owne houshold and of thy own kindred no trust in the world no comfort in the earth Be not too bold of thy owne strength mightie pillers haue fallen downe Peter an Apostle and one of the chiefest and most bold and venterous yet in time of triall was found nothing so but rather weake and childish Shall I present vnto you a domesticall example of one of our owne nation being had in reuerent regard and renoume of the enemy himselfe Doctor Cranmer archbishop of Canterbury and in high office and estimation with king Henry the eight of famous memorie dearely beloued of the king although he did contrary his procéedinges in many matters Who was so constant in the profession of Christ his trueth and christian religien that no threatninges could quaile him no torments feare him Yet marke and perceiue how flattery and faire meanes and swéete promises for the time ouercame him vntill God by his grace did lift him vp after his fall According to the swéet saying of the Prophet Dauid Psal 37. 32. The wicked watcheth the righteous and seeketh occasion to slay him but the Lord will not leaue him in his hand nor condemne him when he is iudged It may be thought a néedlesse worke to set downe word by word the Syren song and eloquent and forcible perswasion that made so excellent a member so constant a martyr to fall Againe if I should referre the Reader to the booke either the booke may not be in place because it is not of so easie
lament Which although we ought not to wish for yet being laide on our shoulders wee must both patiently and thankfully beare it According to the answeres of Ely the Priest and Hezekiah the King though in an other case It is the Lord let him doo what seemeth him good The Iere. 10. 19. word of the Lord is good which thou hast spoken The will of the Lord be done Act. 21. 14. 2. The next thing mentioned in the text is the difference betwixt the godly and the wicked concerning ioy and sorrow in these wordes And the world shall reioyce and ye shall sorrow Wherein it is worthy the consideration to know and vnderstand what is meant by this word world VVhat is meant by this word world Which generally is taken for the heauen the earth the sea and all thinges therein contained Yet more néerely it is taken for the people that dwell in the world Also the customes and fashions of the people are meant by this word world According to our prouerbe and vsuall phrase This is the world that is this is the dealing of the men in the world and this is practised now adaies Againe it is taken for a spéech of woonder It is a world to sée that is it is a maruellous matter Also for those chiefe desires wherwith men are much led and ouertaken in the world as honour dignitie and promotion riches pleasures All which are of chiefest account and doe most raigne in the world Confirmed by S. Iohn 1. Ep. cap. 2. ver 15. Loue not the world neither the thinges that are in the world If any man loue the world the loue of the father is not in him For all that is in the world as the lust of the flesh the lust of the eies and the pride of life that is ambition promotion and honour is not of the father but is of the world And the world passeth away and the lust thereof but hee that fulfilleth the will of God abideth for euer Elswhere it signifieth the wisdome of worldly minded men 1. Cor. 1. 21. For seeing the world by wisedome knew not God in the wisdome of God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue them that beleeue ca. 26. And we speake wisedome among them that are perfect not the wisedome of this world neither of the Princes and great men of this world which come to nought Sometimes it is taken for the elect people of God according to that we reade Iohn 3. 16. God so loued the world that he hath giuen his only begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue life euerlasting And although it be manifest that Christ his death is sufficient for all yet this benefite of his death doth rather properly pertaine to the elect that is to them that truely and vnfainedly haue repented them of their sinnes applying the mercies of God in Ieus Christ to the comfort of their distressed soules and relying and depending wholly vpon Gods promises But most commonly it is taken for the worser sort of the people in the world As it is said that Sathan is the prince of this world 2. Cor. 4. 4. Nay the God of the world because the most part serue him more then then God and in whose heartes and mindes and consciences he doth both rule and raigne The godly are against him and against his procéedinges and therefore by this word world the godly in the world are not meant but rather opposed against them that liue in the world Which is confirmed by the spéech of our Sauiour in his praier to God for the elect and godly Iohn 17. I pray for them which haue knowne me beleeued in me I pray not for the world The world hath hated them because they are not of the world as I am not of the world And in the fiftéenth chapter of the same Gospell verse 19. If ye were of the world the world would loue his owne but because yee are not of the worlde but I haue chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you And in this last sence this word World is taken for wicked and naughtie men for the haters and persecutors of Gods truth and his Gospell We know we are of God saith Saint Iohn 1. Epist cap. 5. 19. and the whole world lieth buried in wickednesse and is giuen ouer to euill doing In the world saith Christ ye shall haue trouble afflictiō persecutiō ye shal be hated of al men for my sake the Gospels be of good comfort I haue ouercom the world Hauing opened vnto you what is meant by the world The ioy of the world and of the wicked it followeth that I should shew you the difference concerning ioy sorrow betwixt them that are of the world and them that are not of the worlde The worlde hath many things wherein it reioyceth but it is an vsurped and a cou●erfeit ioy no true and sound ioy For the kingdome of God is not meate or drinke or any thing that the world yéeldeth but righteousnesse and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Ro. 14. VVorldly matters 17. As they are of the worlde so are worldly matters the chéefest cause of their ioy as to be in honour and high promotion with Haman and Absolon although they know not how neare they are to the fall to swimme in wealth and riches to fare deliciously euery day and to go in purple fine silke with the rich glutton spoken of in the Gospell to enioy large dominions and great possessions faire houses and pleasaunt orchiards swéete gardens with all things that may satisfie the eie and fill the soule with pleasure like to King Nabuchodonosor that b●sted of his beautiful pallace Yea they imagine such continuance that they call their houses lands after their owne names as though they should endure for euer The viole tabret singing and dancing feasting banquetting riot and brauery this is the life the ioy of the world while the troubles of Ioseph are not remembred and the poore altogither forgotten in their sight This was the sinne of Sodom Pride idlenesse fulnes of bread contempt of the poore and néedie So that although the people of Sodome be consumed with fire and brimstone from heauen yet it séemeth that their posteritie remaineth and will remaine vntill the wordes ende till fire come downe from heauen the second time and make a wofull and finall destruction The iestures also and dispositions of the world are giuen vp to foolish reioycing and if any be sober and sadde they are not for their company Childish and péeuish gigling prophane laughter dissolute mirth wanton striking out disordered lifting vp the voice and mirth with incontinencie in euerie place All their life is spent in meriment and pastime as though God had not called euery one to painfulnesse and labour in that course of life wherein he hath placed them In time of diuine seruice when we should
the day y● we looked for we haue found and séene it Yea they counted so basely of the Israelites that they would not vouchsafe to touch them saying Depart ye polluted depart depart touch not All our enemies saith the prophet haue opened their mouth against vs. Lam. cap. 1. 2. 3. 61. Thou hast heard their reproach O Lord and all their imaginations against me The lippes also of those y● rose against me and their whispering against me continually Behold their sitting downe and their rising vp howe I am their song Thus doth the world sollace themselues and reioyce at the sorrowes of the godly And if they see any crosse or punishment Rash in their iudgementi against the godly laid vpon them straightway they are readie to iudge the worst as the Barbarians when they sawe a viper hung on Paules hand surely say they this man is a murderer As the prophet Esay 53. reporteth of our Sauiour Christ He is despised reiected of mē we hid our faces frō him he was dispised we esteemed him not yea we iudged him as plagued smitten of God humbled The children of fooles and vilaines saith Iobe cap. 30. 8. and such as were more vile then the earth haue made me their song and I am their talke They abhorre me flie far from me and spare not to spit in my face because that God hath loosed my cord humbled me they haue loosed the bridle before me and in my misery they are impudent licentious The punishments and sorrows of the godly are the arguments reasons which caruall and worldly men through the sight of afflictions do make against the children of God especially against those whom couertly they hate Séeking thereby to quench the rage of their furious mindes vnder the colour cloake of the iustice of God Like haukes they pry behold and like lions they teare in pieces And if it be but the least fault that they can finde they amplifie it seuerely and tragically and paint it out to the vtmost As if they had said with our tongues we Biting in their tannts and scoffing in their behauiour will preuaile and who is Lord ouer vs Their lying lips are giuen cruelly disdainfully and despitefully to speake against the righteous whē they sée them they laugh them to scorne they shoote out their lippes and shake their heads In mine aduersitie saith the prophet they reioyced and gathered themselues togither yea the very abiects came togither against me vnawares making mowes at me and ceased not With the flatterers were busie mockers which gnashed vpō me with their téeth reioycing greatly at my trouble saying Aha Aha there there so wold we haue it My enemies liue are mightie they y● hate me wrongfully are many in number they also the reward euil for good are against me because I follow the thing that good is I wept and chastened my selfe with fasting and that was turned to my reproofe I put on sackcloth they iested vpon me They y● sit Ezekil 25. 3. 7. 26. 2. Ioy to see them oppressed and murdered in the gate and are rulers they speake against me poore and rich despise me and make a sport of my trouble Not only in iesting scoffing at the godly do they reioyce but also to sée them oppressed yea they delight in the ouerthrow and murthering of Gods saints Herod and Pilot are made friends in persecuting Christ And K. Antiochus 2. Mac. 7. maketh the blood of the Martyrs his spectacle Herod he killeth Iames the brother of Iohn with y● sword when he saw y● it pleased the Iewes he procéeded further Act. 12. 2. Many other examples might be alledged but y● I haue bin tedious And this may suffice to haue shewed how wherin the world reioiceth It may séeme some what impertinent to intreat in this The ioyes of of the Godly place of the ioy of the godly but only that by contrarieties matters are made more plain euident Among the ioyes of the godly this is one of the chiefest to haue the ioy quietnes of conscience vnto the which they haue a speciall regard The Apostle S. Paule being brought to his tryall and examination A good conscience first of all alledgeth this for himself Acts. 23. 1. Men and brethren I haue in al good conscience serued God vntill this day Writing to the Corinthians 2. Epist cap. 1. 12. Our reioycing is this saith he the testmony of our conscience that in simplicitie and godly purenesse by the grace of God we haue had our conuersation in the world The Prophet Samuel 1. Samu. 12. 3. taking his leaue of the people had nothing wherin he might so greatly reioyce before them as in the testimony of a good conscience I haue walked before you saith he from my childhood vnto this day Behold here I am beare record of me before the Lord and before his annointed whose oxe haue I taken or whose asse haue I taken or whom haue I done wrong to or whom haue I hurt or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blinde mine eies therewith and I will restore it you Then they said thou hast done vs no wrong nor hast hurt vs neither hast thou taken ought of any mans hand And he said vnto them The Lord is witnesse against you and his annointed is witnesse this day that yee haue founde nought in my hands And they answered he is witnesse Sée how he doubles it and almost trebles it and makes it all his song and the crowne of his reioicing Whose example the Apostle S. Paul following at his departure from the Ephesians excellently set downe Act. 20. 17. amongest the rest hath these words And now brethren I commend you to God and to the word of his grace which is able to build further and to giue you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified I haue coueted no mans siluer nor golde nor apparrell yea you knowe that these handes haue ministred vnto my necessities I haue shewed you all things and haue kept backe nothing but haue shewed you all the counsell of God Wherefore I take you to reccord this day that I am pure from the blood of all men And not only the soule of man which is the chiefest part within him reioyceth at the testimonie of a good conscience but also this ioy is séene in his countenance and in his louely behauiour which is meant by that saying set downe Prou. 15. 13. A ioyfull heart maketh a cheerfull countenance This is it whereby we are holy temples vnto the Lord and whereby we sanctifie the Lord as the Apostle S. Peter speaketh 1. Pet. 3. 15. Who also in the same chapter setteth downe two notable effects of a good conscience which cannot but bring great ioy to the godly The one is that when we be euill spoken of without desert then is the testimony of our conscience the chiefest comfort
The other is concerning praier A good conscience maketh request vnto God and when we haue an euill conscience with what heart shall we offer vp our praiers to God or how shal they be accepted at gods hand According to that we reade Iob. 11. 13. If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hand toward him if iniquitie be in thine hand put it farre away And therefore Mardocheus is bold to come into Gods presence vnder the warrant of a good conscience Hester 13. 12. Thou knowest saith he all things and thou knowest Lord that it was neither of mallice nor presumption nor for any desire of glorie that I did this and not bowe downe to proud Haman For I would haue bene content with a good will for the saluation of Israel to haue kist the sole of his feete But I did it because I would not preferre the honor of a man aboue the glory of God and would not worship any but onely thee my Lord. And this haue I not done of pride Séeing therefore the ioy of a good conscience is so great well might the wise man say Pro. 15. 15. A good conscience is a continuall feast and the greatest comfort in the greatest trouble and such a comfort that the world cannot giue The ioy and comfort whereof may appeare by the contrary in the wicked For where the want of a good conscience is there is neither ioy nor comfort but feare and sorrow As we reade Prou. 15. 13. A ioyfull heart maketh a cheerfull countenance but by the sorrow of the heart the mind is heauie And Iob. 11. 20. The eies of the wicked shall faile and their refuge shall perish and their hope shall be sorrow of minde An ill conscience bringeth great dumpes and the heart of the people is filled therewith And this is one of the chiefest iudgements that God doth lay vpon the wicked as we may reade Wisd 17. That they were sick and died for feare and they swounded when a sodaine feare not looked for came vpon them For it is a fearefull thing when malice is condemned by her owne testimonie and a conscience that is touched doth euer forecast cruell thinges By the which feare the succours which reason offereth are betraied for indéede no reason can allay the force therof but only the grace and good spirite of God which is farre from the obstinate and vnrepentant sinner Whose hope the lesse it is within the greater doe the tormentes to come séeme vnto them Wickednesse is full of feare and giueth testimonie of damnation against it selfe and a troubled conscience alway suspecteth cruell matters to be imminent and to hang ouer it selfe as it maketh account to haue descrued The miserable estate of a wicked mans conscience is also liuely described Iob. 15 in these wordes A wicked man is prooued all the daies of his life though time be vncertain how long he shall play the tyrant The sound of terror and feare is alwaies in his eares and although it be in time of peace yet he alway suspecteth some treason against him expecting on euery side the sword to come vpon him When hee sitteth downe to eate he remembreth that the day of darknesse is ready at hand for him tribulation terrifieth him and anguish enuironeth him euen as a king is enuironed with souldiers when he goeth to war What can be more miserable then that man that hath such a butchery and slaughterhouse within his own heart What are his fearee how great are his anguishes Suspecting all things doubting their own shadowes fearing euery little noise thinking euery one to come against them that come toward them and others that talke togither to talke of them and their sins Such a thing sin is that it bewraieth it selfe though no man accuse it it condemneth it selfe though no man beare witnesse against it Pro. 28. The wicked man flieth thogh no man pursue him And why doth he flie Because that he hath within his conscience an accuser pursuing him whom alwaies he carrieth about him And as he cannot flie from himselfe so cannot he flie from his accuser but wheresoeuer he goeth he is pursued and whipped by the same his wonnd incurable And wherehence groweth all this feare but only because our consciences shal be our greatest accusers at the day of iudgement as we reade Reuel 20. 12 And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the bookes of their consciences were opened and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in those bookes according to their workes Now therfore it appeareth that one of the chiefest ioyes of the godly is the testimonie of a good conscience which is only proper to the godly and vnto the which the wicked can in no sort attaine Without the which there is nothing but the feare of death and damnation Wherefore let euerie one haue care to make a good conscience his only ioy and let all our works be ruled thereby without the which all things no doubt shall go farre out of square The ioy also of the godly consisteth in this that they The glorie of God turne all their ioy to the setting forth of Gods glory According to the example Hamah the mother of Samuel who being in great sorrowe of minde because she was barren and wanted the ioy of children she made her humble and earnest request vnto god to make her a ioyful mother Promising therewithall that if God would vouchsafe to graunt her a child that she would him to the Lord and consecrate him to his seruice Contrary to the course of the wirked and the fashion of the world which perisheth who réferre and apply all their ioy to the fulfilling of their pleasures and the saisfying of their lustes Which thing the Apostle Saint Iames doth worthily reproue in them Chap. 4. 3. 4. Yee aske and receiue not because ye aske amisse that yee might consume it on your lustes Ye adulterers and adulteresses know ye not that the amitie of the world is the enmitie of God Whosoeuer therefore will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemy of God Looke what ye sowe ye shall reape if ye séeke Gods glory ye shall reape honour and if your ioy bee setled in worldly and sinfull matters your ioy shall be turned into shame And herehence ariseth another kind of ioy of the godly Heauenly blessings who counting worldly ioyes but sinne and shame or at lestwise but friuolous vaine haue resolued with themselues to settle all their delight in heauenly blessings and inward comforts and in such things wherin the wicked hath no delight As in praier to God in singing Psalmes in hearing his word in reading his lawe Blessed is the man whose delight is in the lawe of the Lord and who meditateth therein day and night And séeing they are risen with Christ they séeke those things which are aboue their treasure is in heauen where their heart is As for the earth they
sée that nothing is so rife there as corruption sinne and vanitie desiring to be deliuered from this bodie of sinne and from this vale of misery Let him that hath bought a yoke of oxen reioyce to proue them let him that hath purchased a farme make hast to furnish it and to possesse it let him that hath newly married a wife weary himselfe in his blinde pleasure let him that hath store of corne take care to build new barnes let him that hath wealth and riches and great store rest himselfe thereupon But let as many as are well minded with the Prophet Dauid say The greater sort craue worldly goods and riches do imbrace But Lord grant vs thy countenance thy fauour and thy grace For thou thereby shalt make my heart more ioyfull and more glad Then they that of their corne and wine full great increase haue had The Apostles wishing ioy to them that they wrote vnto mention not any worldly matters but the things that they wish vnto them are Grace mercy and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Iesus Christ They pray that God would open the eies of their minde and increase his knowledge in them How without our desert he hath chosen vs vnto life before the foundations of the world how through his mercie and precious death of his deare sonne we are redéemed and saued How of the enemies of God we are made his deare children by adoption howe by his grace and holy spirit we are not only called but also directed into newnesse holinesse of life how by his prouidence he suffereth vs not to want as also by the same how he turneth away all hurtfull things from vs and lastly how he nourisheth and cherisheth within vs the stedfast hope of the life to come That we may reioyce with the Apostle Eph. 1. 2. Blessed be God euen the father of our Lord Iesus Christ which hath blessed vs with all spirituall blessings in heauenly things in Christ Wherein although our chiefest ioy ought to be placed in heauenly things yet are we to be aduised that we do not make too base account and too vile a reckoning of those comforts and blessings which God hath graunted to vs in this world As to enioy publike peace and quietnesse to haue obedient wiues and tractable children trustie seruants and faithfull friends and such like tokens of Gods fauoure toward vs. And therefore hath God granted vs wisedom to estéeme of euery thing in his due place For if concerning those creatures of God which we think to be altogither vnprofitable the wise man willeth vs not curiously and disdainfully to aske What is this wherefore is that For God hath made all things for their owne vse howe much more concerning the blessings of this life ought we reuerently to be affected and also thankfully to accept of them But al the ioy of the godly concerning these worldly matters and blessings of this life is in the sober moderat vse of them wheras the wicked do abuse them to riot and excesse Wresting them from those ends for the which God hath appointed them which are his glorie our comfort and the mutuall benefit one of an other Wherin the Apostle 1. Cor. 7. 29. doth wisely counsel vs. This say I brethren because the time is short heereafter that both they which haue wiues bee as though they had none and they that reioyce as they that reioyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not and they that vse this world as though they vsed it not For the fashion of this world goeth away and here we haue no certaine dwelling place Whereas the ioy of the wicked in these worldly blessings which are no blessings to them but matters of further condemnation for their abusing of them is out of measure and altogither sinful Such as was in the daies of Noah they ate they dranke they married and gaue in marriage and such as was in the daies of Lot they bought they sold they planted they built their hearts being oppressed with surfetting and drunkennesse and they altogither ouercome and drowned in the cares of this life euen then when the latter day and the day of their destruction did suddeinly come vpon them To these may be added another ioy as comfortable to the Reioyce in infirmities soule conscience of a godly man as any of the rest And the is when they reioyce of their infirmities Not y● any should reioyce in their sins but y● by the grace of God by the power of his holy spirit we haue the mastry ouer those sins wherof we haue manifest proofe in our selues y● they would haue the mastry ouer vs wherby we should become y● bondslaues of y● diuel and wherby we shuld throw our selues headlong into hell Wicked inclinations grow with vs euen from the cradle which as time age and yéeres procéed come on take strength begin to master vs and rule vs. Our field is all growne ouer with thistles and thornes and our life is nothing else but a platforme of vices And as the foure complexions in man are mingled in the constitution of the nature of man yet one quallitie is predominant ruleth the rest for either we are sanguine and pleasant or cholericke and angry or melancholicke and sad or phlegmaticke and heauie so is the soule of man infected with the pollution of sinne and with the mingle mangle of naughtie corruptions that he can discern no remnant of that perfection wherin it was first created that you may well say the soule of man is nowe become a mixture of sinnes yet one sinne among the rest challengeth the chéefest roome and beareth the greatest sway One is giuen to pride and euerie one noteth him by that vice another to drunkennesse and hée is knowne to be a tosseposse another to theft and robbery and he is pointed at and priuily marked for that another to fighting and he is called a slasher and a swingbuckler another to whoredome and the beast is spued at and his company loathed for suspition of a French disease and so in all vices if a man list to runne through them Wherin the wicked folow the course of their wicked nature and y● with a great delight felicitie as though it were the only ioy to be desired and y● with such gréedines as though they could neuer be satisfied and withal such blindnes headlong affection that may wel be pitied but it is a doubt it will neuer be amended y● in mercy they might be saued That the Apostle might wel say of them 2. Tim. 2. 26. that they are in the snare of the diuel are taken of him at his wil. Yea they reioyce in his seruice and wil by no means be deliuered although they be neuer so much perswaded therunto no not after seuen seuen yéeres but offer their eares to be bored through in token of perpetual seruice and sell themselues to worke wickednesse as
ofscouring of all things vnto this time and a gazing stocke vnto the world In the time of the Prophet Zachariah they that followed the word of the Lord were continued in the world and estéemed as monsters Heare now saith the Prophet Zachariah cap. 3. 8. Heare now ô Iehoshua the high priest thou and thy fellowes that sit before thee for they are monstrous persons So likewise was it in the daies of Esay the Prophet cap. 8. 18. Behold I and the children whom the Lord hath giuen me are as signes and as wonders in Israel and such as are thought not worthie to liue Moreouer their estate in worldly matters what is it but hunger thirst nakednesse imprisonment to be buffetted to haue no certain dwelling place Be not dismaid at this estate but rather with Moses frame thy self to take part with the godly in their sorrow yea although thou mightest liue in y● pallaces of princes For he that will liue godly must looke and make account of sorrow and séeke for no ioy When Baruch was sory because he could not be partaker of his desire and of his ioy he had this answere from God by the mouth of the Prophet Ieremiah Seekest thou great things for thy selfe seeke them not Let vs remember what Christ said My kingdome is not of this world And why should the desire of ioy so tickle our minds or sorrow daunt vs and throw vs downe or any griefe discourage vs When all things goe according to our will then doo we easily slide into the forgetfulnesse of God but sorrow and miserie maketh vs knowe God and our selues I said in my prosperitie saieth Dauid I should neuer bee cast downe But it is good for mee that I haue bene troubled And many there are who haue giuen God more thankes for their sorrow and misery then for all the prosperitie that euer they enioyed So greatly it did instruct them and so great good it did them Sée howe profitable it is to haue sorrow rather then ioy If our estate be ioyfull and sorrow dooth not assault vs yet let vs wéepe with them that wéepe and pray to God to turne away his heauie hand from them on whom he hath laid sorrow Let there be fellow-féeling in thée of the sorrowes of others as if the case were our owne and let vs helpe to beare their burthen Consider if thou canst be without sorrow if thou countest thy selfe amongst the number of those that are godly Record with thy self what duties and good things thou hast omitted which thou shouldest haue done either to God or man either to our selues or others to our own charge committed to our hands and to our gouernment as wife children seruants or to strangers to our friends or to our enemies Let vs call to mind what euil we haue done wherby God hath bene dishonoured our neighbours iniuried our selues defiled other by our example allured to wickednes Let vs not be wilfully forgetfull that we haue omitted our dutie in praier and inuocation to God and in performing our humble seruice vnto him That we haue omitted the ministring to the necessitie of the Saints and the helpe we should haue shewed to the néedie brethren that wee haue omitted many good opportunities which haue bene offered for the increase of our vertues faith patience mercie and such like That we haue neglected the carefull visiting of the poore destitute which lie in our stréetes and complaine for their great miseries and are readie to perish before our eies for lacke of reliefe That we haue omitted many exercises of praier of preaching of reading and meditating in the law of God that we haue omitted many things which appertaine to godlinesse and true sanctification Againe let vs remember on the other side that we haue committed much wickednesse priuately publikely openly secretly in our soules in our bodies at home and abroad against God and men in our conuersation and in our communication All which being duly considered haue we not iust cause to chastice our selues by sorrowe and to afflict our selues by wéeping How canst thou but grieue in minde to sée the wicked flourish and they that are most against God and godlines The wicked to flourish and against the godly to beare the greatest sway in the world and they that indéede ought to be vile and of no account with vs yea although their personages and places and wealth and riches be great to sée them in greatest estimation and most honoured of the people This made the prophet Ieremy to muse and to wonder and the prophet Dauid almost to fall from God My féete had welny flipt Reade the ps 73. 37. Iob. 21. Where this matter is excellenly set downe and resolued The Prophet Ieremy 2. Esd 3. 21. 4. 1. in his 12. chap. ver 1. O Lord if I dispute with thee thou art righteous yet let me talke with thee of thy indgements Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper Why are they in wealth that rebelliously transgresse They doe not only liue when the good are taken away but also to the great admiration and grief many times of Gods children they greatly flourish they liue waxe old and grow in wealth and their séede is established in their sight with them and their generation before their eies their houses are peaceable without feare and gods rod is not vpon them neither are they in trouble and plauged as other men whome God more fauoureth therfore kéepeth them from the wantonuesse of this sinful world Lest as the world is lulleda sléep till their last sléep come vpon them so also they might grow in such forgetfulnes as to doubt whether there were a God that ruled the earth whether euer they should be taken frō the earth by death whether there were a iudgemēt day in the which they should be called to an account whether there were a heauen for the godly or a hell for the wicked As though the worlde should endnre for euer and the flonrishing estate of the wicked should neuer haue an ende I sawe saith the wiseman Eccle. 8. 10. the wicked buried and they returned that is other came in their places as bad as they and they that came from the holy place were yet forgotten in the citie where they had done right This also is vanitie yet though a sinner do euil anhundred times and God prolongeth his daies I knowe it shall bee well with them that feare the Lord and do reuerence before him But it shall not be well to the wicked neither shall he prolong his daies he shal be like a shadow because he feareth not before God In this world it commeth to the righteous according to the worke of the righteous This hath troubled many in all ages not only of the weaker sort but many of them also which haue bene stronger Iob Dauid Ieremy euen such as haue bene partakers of Gods secretes And why should not the same matter moue thée to sorrow also When
similitude and comparison of a woman in childbirth respecting her Throes and her ioye A woman when shee trauelleth c. Which confirmation by a similitude is more apparant in the application which is the second part of the similitude being furnished with thrée proofes Wherof the first is That he would see them againe The second That their hearts should reioyce The third That their ioy should no man take away from them Ye shall weep and lament But the Apostles counsell is Proposition comfortable Weepe as though ye wept not And Christ his words are heauenly Your sortow shal be turned into ioy He speaketh not of the sorrow of the wicked that their sorrow shall be turned into ioy for their sorrowes shall remaine Many shall be their sorrowes and great shall be their plagues And although they haue bene young and lustie as an heifer of thrée yeares old which neuer felt sorrow but liued in pleasure yet when their sorrow and mourning shall come it shall be so gréeuous that they shall be giuen to skritch and crie out yea it shall pittie the harts of others and they shall moue others to wéepe for them Their gladnesse and ioy shall be taken away saith the Prophet Esay 16. 9. 10. there shall be no singing nor shouting for ioy for I haue caused their reioycing to cease So likewise the prophet Ieremy 48. 33. speaketh of the ioy of the Moabites Ioy and gladnesse is taken from the beautifull field and from the land of Moab and I haue caused wine to faile from the wine-presse none shall tread with shouting My heart shall sound saith the prophet for Moab like a shamne As the custome was to play heauie and graue tunes at burialls Those euils and sorrowes which happen to the godly The worldly sorrowes of the godly turned into ioyes in this life God turneth to our good and as the Apostle saith All things fall out to the best to them that loue God so that we may reioyce though for a season we be in heauinesse This is God able to do because he is almightie and most readie and willing because he is most gracious vnto his people How long was patient Iob troubled yet his troubles and sorrowes had a happie end and his losses recompenced to his great contentment and ioy of heart The people of Israel how gréeuous was their affliction in Egipt and that for the space of many yeares vntill that the crie of their sore oppression came vp into the presence of God And God heard their crie and sent them reliefe For it pleased God to remember his holy promise so that in his due time he brought foorth his people with ioy and his chosen with gladnesse and he gaue them the landes of the heathen and they tooke the labours of the people in possession The portion of the godly is to haue many troubles and so to passe along this life toward the kingdome of rest and ioy After vexation some rest after trouble peace after paine pleasure doth ensue to the praise of Gods mercy who in time shall moderat what is amisse send vs some comfort for our recreation For as he seeth our griefes noteth our wrongs so when most néed is he will comfort vs and send vs ioy in our heauinesse Through the féeling whereof the Prophet Dauid vttereth these words The Lord is my strength and my shield my hart hath trusted in him and I am helped therfore my heart daunceth for ioy and in my song will I praise him True obediēce wants no crosses in this world to wait vpon it yet crosses haue their crownes Ioseph a iust man and one that feared God from his youth beeing subiect to sorrow and misery vpon false accusation was cast into prison whose féete they hurt in the stockes the iron entred into his soule Vntil the time came y● this cause was knowne when as the word of the Lord tried him The king sent and deliuered him the prince of the people let him goe frée He made him Lord also of his house ruler of all his substance That he might informe his princes and teach his senators wisedome Ioseph had honour and great wealth as well as libertie when God his time was come to turne his sorrow into ioy Whose posteritie when they were in a manner tired through slauerie and bondage and pinched with extréeme pouertie in a time vnlooked for God brought them forth With greate substaunce and gaue them fauour in the sight of their enemies so that they caried away from them their iewels of siluer and gold Sée and consider the end of the troubles of the godly when God will not only had his oppressed people libertie but also great substaunce happy passage mighty deliueraunce infinite good turnes if they had had eies to sée his miraculous and bountifull working in their behalfe that in their songs they might haue praised him and in their hearts they might haue giuen sufficient credit to all his promises But to their great hurt they gaue no credit vnto his word but thought scorne of that pleasaunt land Shadrake Meshake and Abednago because they would not worship the golden image which Nabuchodonozor the King had set vp they were cast into the firy furnace But behold in their extreme sorrow the comfortable presence of Gods Angel then followed the fauour of the King who before did so greatly hate them and after that promotion and dignitie and the chiefest offices in the realme Ioy vpon ioy to make sorrow to be forgotten Feare not the issue then of your woe whatsoeuer it is if you cleaue to God and hold fast by the word of his promise So true is that in 126. ps v. 6. 7. They that sow in teares shall reape in ioy And he y● now goeth on his way weping beareth forth good séed shal doubtlesse come again with ioy and bring his sheaues with him Bondage in Egipt a wearisome pilgrimage in the desert after the bondage but after their wearisome pilgrimage followed y● ioyful possession of y● plentiful land of of Canaan Then was their mouth filled with laughter and their toong with ioy Then said they among the heathen the Lord hath done great thinges for them The Lorde hath done great things for vs whereof we reioyce Such as their bondage in Egipt was so gréeuous also was their captiuitie vnder king Nabuchodonozor and the Chaldeans yet it pleased God to remember his poore afflicted and beloued remnant Go ye out of Babel flie ye from the Chaldeans with a voice of ioy Baruc. 4. I sent you out with wéeping mourning but with ioy and perpetuall gladnesse will I bring you againe And like as the neighbours of Sion saw your captiuity so also shall they shortly see your saluation frō God which shall come with greate glorie brightnesse from the euerlasting and they shall gather them from the East to the West to the praise of his honor O Ierusalem behold the ioy that commeth
world is my country Whereas the wicked enioying these earthly blessings do rather vsurpe them then that they are the true owners and lawfull possessours of them This straunge and wonderfull inriching of them that liue in the feare of God that wise King Salomon amongst the manifolde experiments of worldly affaies doth note and that is thus That howsoeuer the wicked labour and toyle for wealth riches yet at last it commeth into their hands that feare God and they are possessours thereof Eccl. 2. 26. So we reade in his booke called Ecclesiastes and these be the words verie héedfully to be marked of vs which this King layd vp in his highest remembrances Surely to a man that is good in his sight God giueth wisedome and knowledge and ioy but to the sinner hee giueth paine to gather and to heape to giue to him that is good before God Which words both the good and the bad may well consider and ●use vppon and laie it to their heart that they may learne and be wise Which words sence Iob. 27. 13. 16. 17. and meaning is confirmed in the historie of Iob. This is the portion of a wicked man with God and the heritage which he shall receiue of the Almightie Though he should heape vp siluer as the dust and prepare raiment as the clay He may prepare it but the iust shall put it on and the innocent shall diuide the siluer As it is in the booke of Prouerbs The wicked shall be a raunsome for the iust and the transgressour Pro. 21. 18. for the righteous When a plague and mischiefe and daunger is towarde the righteous shall escape and it shall fall vpon the wicked they shall be deliuered and the wicked shall come in their places so also though they gather great wealth and substance they shall be least owners of it for god will so dispose it that the good shall enioy it For it is nothing in the sight of god suddainly to make a poore man rich The Prophet Moses doth she we a manifest example and proofe of this commoditie and blessing from god towarde them that feare him God gaue the Deut. 6. 10. 20. Israelites his children and beloued people the land of Canaan which flowed with milk and hony and which abounded with all gods blessings hée gaue them this land which before was the possession of sinners But how He gaue them great and goodly Citties which they builded not houses full of all manner of goods which they builded not nor laboured for Wels of water necessary for their vse which they digg●d not Vineyards and Oliue trees to their comfort and delight which they planted not And this is it which is to be considered heerein that all came without their labour without their desert god gaue it it was his blessing As the selfe same Prophet dooth set it dewne for a punishment of them that feare not god Thou shalt haue Deu. 28. 4. 39. 30. Oliue trees in all thy coasts but shalt not annoynt thy selfe with the Oyle Thou shalt plant a Vineyard and dresse it but shalt neither drinke of the wine nor gather the grapes Thou shalt builde a house and shalt not dwell therein The excellent commodities which were performed to Abrahams posteritie were long before promised to Abraham for this cause onelie because hée feared god as we reade Genes 22. I knowe thou fearest God saith god to Abraham by the mouth of an Angel Therefore will I surely blesse thee and will greatly multiply thy seede as the starres of the heauen and so foorth as before I might enlarge this commendation of the feare of The greeuous punishments of the contrary god which is and ought to be the onely delight of a Christian minde by reckoning vp the miseries that fall on them in whome the feare of god is not séene Which are warre famine pestilence pouertie shame and discredite the torment of an euill conscience diseases and straunge kindes of death to make an ende of them in fearefull sort that they may bée an example vnto all other beside many other discommodities which now I doo not stand vpon but thinke good rather to leaue it to your consideration Helping your remembraunce with this one notable place of scripture recited in the Prophecie of Ieremy 15. 1. 2. 3. Then saide the Lorde vnto mee Ier. 15. 1. 2. 3. Though Moses and Samuel stood before me yet mine affection could not be toward this people Cast them out of my sight and let them depart And if they say vnto thee whither shall we depart then tell them Thus saith the Lord such as are appointed to death vnto death and such as are for the famine to famine and such as are for the captiuitie to the captiuitie And I will appoint ouer them foure kindes saith the Lord. The sword to slaie and the dogs to teare in peeces and the foules of the heauen and the beasts of the earth to deuoure and to destroy From riches and wealth which although it be a great The company of prophets holy men and angels blessing of God yet if it please God to exercise our faith and patience with pouertie and want we must take the one in as good part as the other let vs come to an other worldly blessing and great comfort and that is to a matter of credit and honour We should thinke our selues happie men if we might be thought worthie to entertaine and receiue into our houses those that were of highest account about the Prince but behold what great fauour is shewed them that feare God that not onely holy men and Prophets but Angels also haue made choice of them to come to their houses and to be familiar with them 1. King 18. Eliah that famous Prophet of the Lord appeared not to King Ahab but to his seruant Obadiah the gouernour of the house The reason is because Obadiah feared God greatly The same we shal read in the whole course of the Bible that the Prophets and messengers of the Lord they did not resort vnto the common sort but vnto them that feared God Whē our Sauior Christ sent foorth his Disciples to preach as it is in Mat. 10. 11. he willed them when they entred into a Citie or Towne to enquire who was worthie in it that is whether there were a man that feared God there and there to abide till they departed And that Angels haue resorted vnto them letting passe the rest it is recorded in the booke of Genesis of Abraham and of Lot Yea Angels haue comforted them in their distresses As the Angel that was séene with the thrée children in the firy fornace and the Angell that deliuered the Apostle S. Peter out of prison the Angels that comforted Iacob when he stood in feare of his brother Esau So is it Psal 34. 9. The Angel of the Lord pitcheth rounde about them that feare him and deliuereth them Let vs ascend yet higher from earthly commodities to