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A43515 A century of sermons upon several remarkable subjects preached by the Right Reverend Father in God, John Hacket, late Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry ; published by Thomas Plume ... Hacket, John, 1592-1670.; Plume, Thomas, 1630-1704. 1675 (1675) Wing H169; ESTC R315 1,764,963 1,090

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Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps whcih thou hast sucked But he said Yea rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it THis is the Sons day and not the Mothers This is Christs own day and not Maries Therefore it is not for the Wombs sake but for the Fruit of the Womb not for the Paps of a mortal woman but for the Infants sake an immortal God that I have chosen this Text. A good Israelitess she was that magnified Christ on this manner though she was not spoken to yet her heart was full and she must speak for her joy would have stifled her if she had not uttered it If you mark the Context of the Chapter immediately before these words our Saviour had taught his Disciples to pray most divinely he had cast out devils most triumphantly he had answered the Calumniations of the Pharisees most rationally he had put on glorious apparel as the Psalmist says and girded himself with strength While these wonderful works were fresh in memory the Lord from on high could have sent Legions of Angels to magnifie his Son and to praise him with celestial Canticles But to strike the greater shame into the Pharisees that had blasphemed him he stirs up a woman a nameless one a poor Plebeian one not admitted near him she stood afar off and was fain to speak aloud to be heard Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps which thou hast sucked It was a free acclamation a sudden start a passion that came from her spirit ex tempore and that I may give Christ his full honour and attribute no more to the woman than is truth she prophesied in this saying of greater things than at that time she understood The Holy Ghost gave her the priviledge to be the tongue that delivered this Congratulation but it remains to us to lend it an heart that we may truly conceive it For the inward sense of it is the gladsom contents of this day blessed be the Father of all mercies for the Incarnation of his Son that he was made of a woman for our sakes and blessed are all mankind that he hath taken flesh of our flesh and that he is made partaker of our humane nature But because it would not prove our benefit that he was born for us unless he be born in us likewise by faith and obedience it follows to make our joy and crown complete yea rather blessed are they that hear c. The parts are as manifestly two as the two hands wherewith we handle First Blessedness offered to us in Christs Incarnation Secondly Blessedness made complete in our own application The woman begins the Text in the first part Christ finished in the second She said well for his Incarnation Blessed is the Womb that bare thee He makes it much better by stirrig us up to the use and fruit of it yea rather c. She blesseth Christ and Christ blesseth us she would have all felicity to rest in him he would have a share of felicity to be derived to us A pretty strife between a devout Creature and a merciful Creator between an humble Servant and a bountiful Master between a true faith that heaps all honour upon God and between a gracious God that heaps the treasures of his riches upon a true faith To begin with that which the woman said it must be considered two ways in a Litteral sense such as flesh and bloud revealed to her And in a Prophetical sense above her understanding such as the Spirit of God hath revealed to us Blessed is the Womb that bare thee And so it was indeed according to the Latitude of this womans natural understanding For first she knew at large that it was a blessed thing to be an Instrument or conveyance of any great good unto others Blessed above women shall Jael the wife of Heber be blessed shall she be above women in the Tent Judg. v. 24. Shee had done her part to work deliverance for Israel And when Judith had sped in her adventure to cut off the head of Holofernes says Oziah Blessed art thou of the most high God above all the women upon earth Judith xiii 18. A good Messenger is called an happy and the feet of those are pronounced beautiful that bring glad tidings of peace It is a narrow and an abject conceit of some that think themselves fortunate and at the best when they receive and take in all that can be heapt upon them These men measure felicity backward for beatius est dare quam accipere it is more blessed to give than to receive Though that Maxim be not extant in any of the Evangelists St. Paul tells us upon his credit it was our Saviours The souls of them that are converted to true holiness shall bless the lips of the Priest the poor shall bless the liberal after Ages shall bless publick Spirits that do famous things and are provident for Posterity A Cistern that contains the waters poured into it is much inferiour to a Fountain that sends them forth It is nothing so laudible to be wrought upon as to work that which is honourable Even the Parents that have enricht the world with such as are ornaments unto it benediction reflects upon them for it because they are Conduit pipes of publick felicity Yet all those that have made others happy by their gifts and qualities had been for ever unhappy themselves if the Child that was born this day had not suckt the breasts of a Virgin O happy Parent whose Womb contained all the treasure that maintains the whole earth Somewhat she collineated at this meaning that said unto our Saviour Blessed c. And each Parent partakes in this reason that it is joy and honour to them to have a renowned Son and it may be this woman was partial to her own Sex that contented her self to speak of no more than the womb of the Mother In strict Divinity indeed her words are admirable for Christ had no Father according to the flesh but that is more than I collect out of St. Luke that she mentioned not his Father for that reason But in all humane births that prove successful and glorious the loyns of the Father are blessed as well as the womb of the Mother and the glory of children are their Fathers Prov. xvii 6. Yet in the next construction of mere natural capacity it was proper to say for his sake blessed is the womb because barrenness was a curse and fruitfulness of children a blessing They that propagate a faithful seed upon earth give the means to replenish heaven with Saints it is that wherein we exceed Angels to beget Sons and Daughters in our own likeness and to continue a Generation like our selves makes mankind by succession as incorruptible as the Angels God blessed all living Creatures mark that God blessed them and said unto them be fruitful and multiply Gen. i. 28. Though the Lord said
the deliverance of Israel when he was born that was the Redeemer of all deliverers This is that emplaister of which Isaiah Prophesied that it should lenifie all their sores Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith our God speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned Isa xl 1. And again the Lord shall comfort Zion he will comfort all her wast places he will make her Wilderness like Eden and her Desart like the Garden of the Lord joy and gladness shall be found therein thanksgiving and the voice of melody Isa li. 3. what a quick-sighted faith had Simeon that he could see so far into Christ upon what part of him did he cast his eye that he could find such a Champion in a little Infant wrapt in swadling clothes O what an heavenly light there shines before faith that the old man could espy in this little Bethlehemite that he should turn their captivity like the rivers in the South there was nothing to behold externally in Christ but contempt and weakness and poverty in those days who will distrust his protection now when there is nothing to be viewed about him but Power and Fortitude and Majesty O that men should be afraid to perish even in the presence nay even in the hand of such a Saviour He that is yet to seek for the peace of joy though death were at the door let him consume in his own infidelity Fourthly He had purchas'd peace before his departure because he had as much as could be askt his heart was satiated wirh good things a very greedy avarice had been in him if he could have askt any more And so Theophylact glosseth very judiciously upon my Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he that hath gained the sum and substance of all his hopes and petitions he may justly say that he can bid adieu to this world in peace So God promised to Abraham Gen. xv 15. thou shalt be buried in a good old age and thou shalt go to thy Fathers in peace that is thy desire shall be filled brim full and measure running over nothing that thou canst ask in Faith but I will give it thee So Simeon possessed the complement of all felicity he had so much that he could desire no more for he that hath given us his Son will he not with him likewise giue us all things And take this to your use from hence that a wishing heart which is ever thirsting for more strugling for some addition and yet some more to that cannot be said to be in peace no more than an Hydropical man that thirsts for drink continually can be said to be in health Crescit indulgens sibi dirus hydrops the satiating of one concupiscence begets another and that 's like a mill-horse in a circle that you can never say he is at his journeys end Therefore if you mean to be at ease and not to be wrackt with care let to morrow care for it self Fifthly And so to give this point its last allowance Origen and Irenaeus interpret my Text of that peace which Christ came to make between God and man St. Paul says that when we were darkened in our understanding walking in the lust of our own mind we were enemies with God and alas we are sure to come by the worst of that enmity for who is able to sustain his displeasure and it was no petty enmity but God did abhor us and provide all manner of scourges to plague us both in this world and in that which is to come No creatures which are noted for antipathies do shun one another at more distance than God doth abhor an impure soul and they are not sacrifices of Beasts that could make an attonement for us they were not Angels that could deprecate the Divine wrath and reconcile us they were glad to bring the tidings that an Eternal Son of an Eternal Father had done that good office for us Glory be to God on high and in earth peace it could never be well sung but at this Incarnation and therefore it could never be well said but at his Incarnation Lord now lettest thou thy servant c. You have heard of the supplicant and of his petition and the time which he sets and his good preparation of peace to go from hence and to be with the Lord. After this it is seasonable to speak of the assurance in which he trusted that God would grant him his desire for he askt nothing extravagantly and without warrant but it was secundum verbum tuum according to thy word and that word upon which he might stedfastly build is ver 26. it was revealed unto him by the Holy Ghost that he should not see death till he had seen the Lord's Christ revealed unto him But perhaps you will say why might it not be his own imagination that deluded him and no revelation from God We indeed that walk in the ordinary course of Grace may be cozened like Enthusiasts and think that our own doating fancies are inspirations from Heaven But Prophets that had extraordinary illuminations were able to distinguish between brain-sick notions and the word of God when it spake within them And Simeon you will mark it when I tell it you had a double and a double portion of the Spirit In the last days says Joel Your old men shall dream dreams and your young men shall see visions These are different graces for several persons only in this Prophet they concurr'd both He had the old mans dream to reveal unto him that he should not die till Christ was manifested and he had the young mans vision to accomplish his happiness His eyes did see his salvation No doubt then he had sufficient means to prove in himself that it was the word of God that is the word of the Holy Ghost from whom he received that Oracle and hence St. Athanasius doth learnedly prove the divinity of the Holy Ghost And the plenty of this point will contribute this especially unto us that it is presumption to expect any thing to be granted us without warrant and promise received from the word of God That 's the Organ or Tongue by which the Holy Ghost speaks with us and he that puts himself upon any hazardous action without encouragement from it to bring him off with safety he makes a snare to bring himself to destruction Satan durst not be so impudent to tempt our Saviour to fall down from a pinacle of the Temple without pretence of authority from the Psalm that He shall give his Angels charge over thee and therefore we justly exclaim against Monastical Vows of perpetual Chastity and we see how frequently they apostate from their Vow and wallow in all lust and uncleanness because it is no where written if any one will take this yoke upon him I will assist him and make it light It is a miserable thing to have no other staff to lean upon then
SERVE GOD AND BE CHEAREFVLL THE RIGHT RD. FATHER IN GOD IOHN HACKET L D BISHOP OF LICH AND COVENT Aged 78 Dyed 28. Oct. 1670. W. Faithorne sculp His face this Icon shewes his pious wit These Sermons would you know him further yet your selfe must dye for Reader you must looke In Heau'n for what 's not of him in this Booke A CENTURY OF SERMONS Upon Several Remarkable Subjects PREACHED BY The Right Reverend FATHER in GOD JOHN HACKET LATE LORD BISHOP OF Lichfield and Coventry Published by THOMAS PLUME D. D. LONDON Printed by Andrew Clark for Robert Scott at the Princes Arms in Little Britain MDCLXXV TO His Most Sacred MAJESTY CHARLES II. By the Grace of GOD King of Great Britain France and Ireland Most Gracious and Dread Soveraign I Here present with all Humility to Your Royal Majesty a Bundle of Holy Frankincense and Myrrh hoping that Your Majesties great Piety will please to admit It among the many Rarities of Your Closet and at times seasonable into the more sacred recesses of your Mind and Soul It was the Compound of a late Reverend and Learned Prelate exalted by your Majesty to be the Intelligence to rule the Orb of Lichfield and Coventry Who in his ordinary attendance upon your Majesty your Royal Father and Grandfather had the Honour to preach more than Eighty times at Court and in This one Volume has comprized no less than a Whole Body of Divinity wherein the Great Mysteries of our Christian Faith are clearly explained all mens Duty towards God sincerely taught your Majesties Regal Authority strongly maintained the Doctrine and Discipline of our Church by Law established learnedly Vindicated Long may your Majesty peaceably retain your rightful Jurisdiction over this Church and State Long may there be in it such Religious and Learned Prelates placed by your Majesty in Higher Spheres free from Parity and Poverty And long may your Majesty continue like the Sun not onely to Irradiate the Stars of greater Magnitude above but also in due time to cast more Lustre upon the lesser Luminaries of the Church that they may shine more bright beneath And then as your Majesty like your Blessed Saviour was attended with an Happy Star at your Birth so your Majesty shall likewise with Him be attended by a Good Angel at your Death to translate your Majesty to that Crown of glory that fadeth not away Which is the perpetual prayer of Your MAJESTIES Most humble Supplicant and Dutiful Subject THOMAS PLUME A TABLE Directing to the TEXTS of SCRIPTURE handled in the following SERMONS XV Sermons upon our Blessed Saviours Incarnation I. UPon S. Luke ii 7. And she brought forth her first born Son and wrapped him in swadling clothes and laid him in a Manger because there was no room for them in the Inn page 1 II. Vpon S. Luke ii 8. And there were in the same Country Shepherds abiding in the field keeping watch over their Flock by night p. 10 III. Vpon S. Luke ii 9. And lo the Angel of the Lord came upon them and the glory of the Lord shone round about them and they were sore afraid p. 20 IV. Vpon S. Luke ii 10. And the Angel said unto them Fear not for behold I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people p. 30 V. Upon the same p. 40 VI. Vpon S. Luke ii 11. For unto you is born this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord p. 50 VII Vpon S. Luke ii 13 14. And suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the heavenly Hoste praising God and saying Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace and good will towards men p. 60 VIII Upon the same p. 70 IX Vpon S. Luke xi 27 28. A certain woman of the company lift up her voice and said unto him Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps which thou hast sucked But he said Yea rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it p. 79 X. Vpon S. Luke ii 29 30. Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes have seen thy salvation p. 88 XI Vpon S. Luke i. 68. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for he hath visited and redeemed his people p. 98 XII Vpon S. Luke i. 69. And hath raised up an horn of Salvation for us in the house of his servant David p. 109 XIII Vpon S. Matth. ii 1 2. Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the dayes of Herod the King behold there came wise men from the East to Jerusalem Saying where is he that is born King of the Jews for we have seen his Star in the East and are come to worship him p. 118 XIV Upon the same p. 127 XV. Upon the same p. 136 VI Sermons upon the Baptism of our Saviour I. Vpon S. Matth. iii. 13. Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John to be baptized of him p. 147 II. Vpon S. Matth. iii. 14. But John forbad him saying I have need to be baptized of thee and comest thou to me p. 157 III. Vpon S. Matth. iii. 14 15. And comest thou to me And Jesus answering said unto him Suffer it to be so now For thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness p. 166 IV. Vpon S. Matth. iii. 15 16. Then he suffered him And Jesus when he was baptized went up straightway out of the water p. 175 V. Vpon S. Matth. iii. 16. And loe the heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting upon him p. 184 VI. Vpon S. Matth. iii. 17. And loe a voice from heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased p. 193 XXI Sermons upon the Tentation of our Saviour I. Vpon S. Matth. iv 1 Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil p. 205 II. Upon the same p. 214 III. Upon the same p. 224 IV. Vpon S. Matth. iv 1 2. Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil And when he had fasted forty dayes and forty nights he was afterwards an hungry p. 234 V. Upon the same p. 244 VI. Vpon S. Matth. iv 3. And when the Tempter came to him he said If thou be the Son of God command that these stones be made bread p. 254 VII Upon the same p. 263 VIII Upon the same p. 273 IX Vpon S. Matth. iv 4. But he answered and said it is written Man shall not live by bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God p. 282 X. Vpon S. Matth. iv 5. Then the Devil taketh him up into the holy City and setteth him on a pinacle of the Temple p. 292 XI Vpon S. Matth. iv 6. And saith unto him If thou be Son of God cast thy self down For it is written He shall give his
David What 's this inclination of the ear we cannot bow or stir that part as we may the hand and the knee Aures hominum sunt immotae ut sit velox ad audiendum says one the ears of man are not to be wagg'd and mov'd like the ears of a beast to the end there may be no impediment in attention but that he may be swift to hear But he is said to incline his ear who hath a submissive heart and listens diligently to that which is spoken If a frivolous tale suppose the feigned pilgrimage of some Errant Knight be told us every syllable shall be markt so heedily that you will be able to repeat it Conticuere omnes intentique ora tenebant But if God do send his servants to narrate his will and pleasure how many disturbances shall they find in their relation of heavenly things Sarah laught at the Angel Pharoah chafed and interrupted Moses the Jews mis-interpreted Christ himself Gallio marks not a word that 's said Eutyches sleeps the Athenians flout at Paul and say what means this babler who will take the pains to tell a message any more to him that will abuse it so neglectfully and if God should take away the preaching of his word from this people let them thank themselves who were so defective in all due and reverent attention But says John the Baptist The Friend of the Bridegroom standeth and heareth him and rejoyceth greatly because of the Bridegrooms voice John iii. 29. And so much for this word behold as it is a note of admiration of demonstration and lastly of attention Behold I bring c. Now the first of seven things which are remarkable in the message is that which hath met us often before in all the Texts upon this Gospel the consideration of the person that the Angel is sent unto us upon a peaceable entreaty Ecce ego Behold I bring you good tidings The children of men have so often provoked God to send Angels with a sword of vengeance to the earth that no doubt Gabriel was pleased to bring a welcome message with him A messenger cannot help it if he come with sorrowful news and yet for the most part men will be displeased at such a one whose tongue doth bode discomfort and infelicity Joab did tender the welfare of Ahimaaz the son of Zadok when he would not let him be the first that should certifie David how Absalom was dead says he Thou shalt bear tidings another day but this day thou shalt bear no tidings because the Kings Son is dead Therefore if you mark it Angels that came to inflict punishment or to threaten some ensuing mischief came single for the most part or never above two at once but to do a good office to men upon earth to protect Elisha from the Aramites to annuntiate that the Messias was come into the world they came by troops and multitudes no less in this chapter then a multitude of the heavenly host There were three with Abraham in his tent to tell him that Isaac the son of promise should be born unto him of Sarah in their old age and we cannot but take notice how one of the three vanisht and was gone when they went into Lot's house to warn him that Sodom should be destroyed with fire and brimstone How far are they from this Angelical benevolence that gird other men with the remembrance of their misfortunes and insult over their miseries as Shimei us'd David in his affliction a curse will fall upon them that love to be instruments to undo men rather than to raise them up that delight in the crosses of their brother rather than in their consolation Miserable comforters as Job said of his Friends that powred vinegar into his wounds to vex them not to heal them But these holy ones that are sent from above delight to be the Embassadors of joy the first of them all that I read of in holy Scripture came to administer help and succor to the distressed and that was the Angel that came to Hagar to chear up her drooping spirits and to put her into the way of safety when she and Ishmael the child were almost ready to perish And now one of them comes in my Text with good news to shew that a perfect friendship was made up between all parties in this verse between Angels and Men for Ego Evangelizo I come to rejoyce with you as a friend I bring you good news 2. A friendship between God and man for a Saviour is born unto you which is Christ the Lord. 3. Friendship and amity between man and man between Kingdom and Kingdom between one Nation and another people at the 14. verse On earth peace and good will towards men Yet when our sins cry out for vengeance this truce is broke of all sides The sword of our enemies shall be unsheath'd and all peace shall be dissolv'd between man and man our Saviour shall become our angry Judge neither shall the blessing descend from God to Man Lastly the Angel shall draw his sword and cause the pestilence to cut down thousands upon thousands as the Mower shears down the grass of the field I am sure the fury of such an angry Angel sticks still in our remembrance Therefore let every man for his part keep fast the bond of his tripartite friendship by sanctification and obedience then the Angels will come unto us not in fury but in mercy saying Ecce ego c. I proceed to the next circumstance Ecce Evangelizo we render it to bring good tidings but it is as if he had said I come to be an Evangelist I am no Law-giver whose voice was terrible I am a messenger of a better Covenant of the Gospel of Grace At this Text beloved the Spirit of God doth enter the word Gospel or Evangel quite to alter the state of the Church from what it had been before For the better understanding hereof I pray you mark it attentively in what manner God did dispence his will and pleasure to his Church from the beginning of the world to the end of all times And for order sake I will reduce it all to three heads to a Law which was given by God to Adam to a Law which was given by Moses to Israel and to these glad tidings to wit the Gospel of the New Testament which was given by Christ to all Nations from one end of the earth to the other 1. Now I buckle to the first of these a Law was given by God to Adam That Law was short and commandatory fac vive do this and live therefore that is rightly called the Law of Works but the Gospel says if thou believest thou shalt be saved therefore that 's called the Law of Faith The same God was the author of both these both were revealed to men and to no other creature both of them according as we perform them promise the same reward both of them have
and of Princely Justice that there is no impunity or connivency for them that scandalize the glory of the great King who ruleth over all Fourthly God hath his house wherein he hath promised to dwell let every thing therein be magnificent full of splendor bountiful fit to entertain his Majesty The Angels might have said Fie upon the earth when they sang glory in the highest to see Christ tumbled heedlesly in a Stable by most brutish hospitality I am sure men deserved no glory for this days work to bestow their Saviour in so ignominious a Lodging we may all blush to remember it but that I hope through all Ages we will satisfie for it as we shall be able and reform it Provide for him sumptuously in the beauty of holiness let no place be statelier than Christs Church among us Gentiles because no place was worse than the Manger wherein he was received among the Jews These things as I have laid them in order you may do well to do and then the good Angels have their wish but the Devil doth all he can to spoil their celestial musick We like not this partition says St. Austin wherein men have peace demised to them and God hath all the glory Et dum gloriam usurpant turbant pacem but they drive away their own peace by usurping glory O stulti filii Adae qui contemnentes pacem gloriam appetentes pacem perdunt gloriam Fond and silly men that neglect peace and seize upon glory to themselves and so they lose both peace and glory But most accurate is this distribution as the Choir of heaven hath laid it forth Here is nothing but discord and sedition in this lower world Nation against Nation and Kingdom against Kingdom nay the very bowels of the Church torn out with Questions and Controversies here the blessing of peace is most to be desired to bring bone unto his bone and sinew unto his sinew In the world above their is nothing but righteousness and zeal and purity therefore the proper Incense to be sent up thither is perpetual praise and glory Avoid Satan that wouldst confound these things that malignant Spirit knows it would be no peace in earth if men on earth should hunt for glory but peace will ensue here if glory be given to him that is above So runs these words which are the Angels Congratulation to God their Prayer for men their Sermon unto men Glory be c. The next staff of the Song is and on earth peace for the second happiness on earth is peace and there is but one blessing that is Gods glory before it Some take the word peace in this place personally for Christ himself as if the Song went Let God be glorified that hath sent Jesus the Prince of Peace upon earth who brings good will to men Qui in coelis glorificatur in terrâ est factus terrenus says one He that sitteth in the heavens and ruleth over all dwelt upon the earth and became the peace of earth and the chastisement of our peace is upon him Isa liii Indeed he is God from heaven man from earth partaker of both in his two natures and therefore fit to reconcile all and to put all in peace It is the Hypostatical union that brings both ends together the two extremes heaven and earth and by that inseparable union God greets us with the kiss of love and gives us osculum pacis the Symbol of much endeared friendship the kiss of peace All enmities were so compounded and well agreed for his sake that St. Paul says He is our peace Eph. ii 14. The principal reconciliation which he obtained was that man might have peace with God for God wanted his own glory through the Idolatry of the world and therefore men wanted their peace because of their sins Our first Fathers prevarication we must often look back to that woful estate had caused such a rupture between God and us that no doubt the very Angels wondred how that offence would ever be remitted and forgotten And indeed that rent could never have been made up unless God and man by an infinite dispensation had been pieced together in one person unless he that is greater than Moses had stood before him in the gap to turn away his wrathful indignation we should all have been as Sodom and we should have been like unto Gomorrah Justice hath a great voice among the Attributes of God carries a mighty sway and it roared out from Mount Sinai Cursed is he that keeps not this whole Law cursed be he that breaks a tittle Then Christ steps in the Malediction light upon me I will endure it but these Sheep let them be spared Why Justice could not say this was a total indulgence then it would have clamoured but only a commutation of punishment for our acquitment the Lord did lay upon his Son the iniquity of us all We must not say this was just therefore the Lord decreed it but the Lord decreed it therefore this was just Alius solvit pro debitore aliud solvitur quam debebatur one was the debtor and another satisfied one thing was owed to God I mean the life of sinners another thing was paid I mean the life of an innocent So Justice had no injury and Mercy had no denial but justitia pax osculatae sunt two things that stood at distance were brought together that is righteousness and peace did kiss each other Psal lxxxiv If we set not Christ before us the Mediator between God and man our unworthiness would be such that we durst not ask of God to be appeased with us We could expect nothing but tribulation and anguish upon every soul both Jew and Gentile and that all the Angels should be in arms like Souldiers to bid us battel and to slay us But Christ came into the world like an Herald to stop the battel the Angels sang of their arms Salvation appeared unto us we cast up our eyes with joy to heaven from whence cometh our help our help cometh even from the Lord which hath made heaven and earth therefore when Christ was brought with triumph into Jerusalem the Song of the people did a little vary from my Text Peace in heaven say they and glory in the highest for when the great Majesty of heaven was pleased to spare men on earth the sure part of the amity was peace in heaven for when Christ had reconciled us to his Father that the peace came downward the Covenant was sure and could never be broken The next peace which the Angels congratulate unto us is Interioris domus tranquillitas if Christ have attoned the variances which our sins made between us and God peace will succeed within the closets of the conscience where there was nothing but horror before and perturbation Therefore Theophylact doth thus connect the first and second part of this Song Gloria in excelsis Deo quia in terra pacem secit Glory
be to God on high because he hath made peace on earth Lord let me not be at war with my own heart though all the world should defie me and set themselves against me As a continual dripping of humors upon the lungs consumes the body so a continual disquieting of mind as if viols of anger from heaven were ready to be poured upon it breeds such an anxiety in the whole man that he will wish his whole substance were dissolved into nothing O thrice happy when God sends that serenity of favour into our thoughts and cogitations to make us truly say with David Turn again unto thy rest O my soul Psal cxvi 7. This is that peace which the world cannot give This is St. Paul's confidence against all opposers Who is he that condemneth it is Christ that justifieth When the Wise men askt Where is he that is born King of the Jews Herod was troubled and all Jerusalem with him So sore troubled that he would not spare poor inoffensive babes who could not offend him no not his own babes as some say who were the pillars of his family when he thrust his sword into them he digged into his own bowels No man is able to express what a discomfortable mutiny this wretch had within himself No plague like a wounded disturbed spirit whereas old Simeon that saw death at the door that felt one foot in the Grave was exhilerated for all that through the joy which he had in Christ and warbled that Swan-like Dirge over his own Grave Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace Wherefore if there be any of you which have a conscience sorely wounded with horror and even tempted to despair which God forbid chide it with David out of that dreadful moode Why art thou so sad O my soul and why art thou so disquieted within me Hath not Christ said there is peace between God and thee and dost thou say there is enmity foolish heart shall I not rather believe the tidings which an Angel brings than that which thou dost suggest and doth not he say Peace on earth Whosoever will not be cheared up will not be comforted will not be established with hope from this sweet proclamation which the Ministers of Heaven sang unto the Shepherds it had been better for him that he had never been born nay I speak it with reverence to God and condemnation to such a one it had been better for him that Christ had never been born because he receives not the Son of God into his heart neither believes in his Redemption Many flagitious sins do make men as execrable before God as the devil himself but he that despairs of Gods mercies as if Christ would not keep his Covenant of peace with him I may truly pronounce it against him that he is even possessed with a devil O cast forth that evil Spirit and be resolved the Lord would never have sent his Angel to sing the Hymn of peace unto men but to revive our souls and to raise them up from dust and despair because he is gracious and favourable to all penitent sinners And thus you have heard that upon the occasion of this blessed Nativity of Christs the Angels have congratulated both heaven and earth as David foretold it Psal xcvi 11. Let the heavens rejoyce and let the earth be glad The congratulation to men on earth hath been unfolded in two members that there is peace above us which passeth all understanding and peace within us such as the world cannot give Thirdly It follows they sing and rejoyce for our sakes that there is peace without us and on every side a good way laid open to take away all Schisms strifes divisions debates and as Solomon says in his mystical Song the voice of the Turtle is heard in our land What a hurly burly was in the world before Christ made his Church one body out of all Languages and Nations They that professed the Law of Moses you know had no communication with those millions of millions that knew no Schoolmaster to teach them but the law of nature Among those few that were zealous of the Law the Jew forsook them of Israel of the ten Tribes for Rebels and Idolaters Among the Jews the Pharisee condemned the Sadducce for an Heretick Then the Samaritan had an antipathy both against Jew and Israelite and all these accounted of the Gentiles no other ways than as bond-slaves of the Devil Here was nothing but hate and defiance between one Sect and another over all the world until Christ broke down the wall of separation made of two one invited them all to embrace and to greet one another with an holy kiss Thus the Prophet Isaiah upon it Chap. xix 23. in his stately but dark eloquence In that day shall there be a high-way out of Egypt to Assyria and the Assyrians shall come into Egypt and the Egyptian into Assyria and in that day shall Israel be the third with Egypt and Assyria that is there shall be traffique and friendship and conversation together from one Nation to another over all the earth And indeed National feuds are the more odious and unchristian by how much Christ hath called all people to the sprinkling of the same water and to alike participation of his Body and Blood at the same table And it was well apprehended of one that God hath given unto men more excellent gifts in the skill of Navigation since his Son is born than ever they had before that he might shew the way how all the Kingdoms of the earth should be sociable together for Christ hath breathed his peace upon all the Kingdoms of the world Then I descend from generals to specials The Angels did not only see that our Saviour had built a wall of Charity as it were about the whole earth and made it one but that his Gospel is the love knot and band of agreement between one member and another in all particular persons It turns the hearts of the Fathers unto the Children and of the Children unto the Fathers it makes peace conjugal between man and wife for Marriage is a Mystery of Christ and his Church and the instance which the Apostle lays before us is how Christ loved his Church and laid down his life for it It attones variances between Neighbour and Neighbour for it calls upon us to forgive and put up injuries it non-suits many actions of trespass between man and man with St. Pauls sweet proposition to the Corinthians Why do ye not rather suffer wrong That jangling fellow in the Gospel that came to Jesus to give him authority for his contention Dic fratri ut mecum dividat Master bid my brother that he divide the inheritance with me our Lord put him off and would hear of no division Such motions did jar in the ear of him that was the God of reconciliation The Law of Moses either was or did seem to be vindicative an eye for an eye
say to this objection Prayer is the Incense which ascends up to heaven and brings down God's blessing upon us for fourscore and two years without interruption God hath continued true Religion among us and blessed this Kingdom with peace and prosperity and not without the daily assistance of the Prayers of Cathedral Churches How the Lord will dispose of us if those places be silenced touching the frequency of that holy duty it is only in the foreknowledg of God and no man can guess it Secondly I will proceed to the other Wing of the Cherubin the great power of God to work our conversion and salvation which is Preaching and therein the use and convenience of Cathedral and Collegiat Churches hath been and we hope may continue so to be very great May it please you Mr. Speaker and this Honourable House it must be confessed that in the beginning of the Reformation under Queen Elizabeth of blessed memory many of our Parochial Churches were supplied with men of slight and easie parts but especial care was taken that in our Cathedral Churches to which great concourses did resort men of very able parts were planted to preach both on the Lords day and on some week day as appears by Dr. Alley afterwards Bishop of Exeter who preached such learned Sermons in the Church of St. Pauls that he hath left unto us good matter to collect out of him even to this day And give me leave Mr. Speaker to take occasion from hence to refel that slander which some have cast out that Lecture-preachers are a new Corporation Vpstarts and such other words of obloquy Sir this is nothing but ignorance and malice for as the local Statutes of all or the most Cathedral Churches do require Lecture-Sermons on the Week-dayes so from the beginning of Reformation they have been read in them by very able Divines And it is our humble suit Mr. Speaker unto this Honourable House that if our local Statutes have not laid enough upon us in the godly and profitable performance of Preaching that by the assistance of this Honourable House more may be exacted particularly that two Sermons may be preached in every Cathedral and Collegiate Church upon the Lords day and one at the least on the Week-days Our motion comes from this consideration that the Divines for the most part are studied and able men to perform them and those Churches are usually supplied with large and copious Libraries and the Monuments of Antiquity Councils Fathers Modern Authors Schoolmen Casuists and many Books must be turn'd over by him that will utter that which should endure the test and convince gainsayers In the third place Mr. Speaker I shall name that whose use and conveniency is so nearly and irrefragably concern'd by the prosperity of Cathedral and Collegiat Churches that it is as palpable as if you felt it with your hand and that 's the advancement and encouragement of Learning a benefit of that consideration that I am assured it doth deeply enter into the thoughts of this Honourable House And because our years ascend up by degrees therefore I will follow this speculation through three of those ascensions First touching our puny years in Grammar Schools Secondly touching young Students in the Vniversities that enter into their first course of Divinity Thirdly touching grave Divines of great proficiency who maintain the cause of true Religion by their learned Pen And first out principal Grammar Schools in the Kingdom are maintained by the charity of those Churches the care and discipline of them is set forward by their oversight fit Masters are provided for them and their method in teaching frequently examin'd and great cause for it for School-Masters of late are grown so fanciful inducing new Methods and Compendiums of teaching which tend to nothing but loss of time and ignorance so that it is not enough to nominate Governors to look unto them once in a twelve-month or every half year but there must be care without intemission to see that they swerve not as likewise for this use that the most deserving Scholars be transplanted to the Vniversities by their examination and choice so that these young Seminaries of Learning depend upon them and would come to lamentable decay if they had not such Governors For the next rank of young Students that are to begin the study of Divinity it must be confessed by all men that are conversant in the general experience of the world that they will be far more industrious when they see rewards prepared which may recompence the costs which they put their friends to in their education and make them some recompence for their great labours It is represented before them how many tedious dayes and nights they must devour prolix Authors that are set before them had they not need of encouragement to undergo it and where there is not a desirable Prize to run for who will toil himself much to contend for it Upon the fear and jealousie that these retributions of labour should be taken away from industrious Students the Vniversities of the Realm do feel a languor and a pining away already in both their bodies In a populous Colledge I mean Trinity Colledge in Cambridge wherein 70 or 80 Students were admitted communibus annis I have heard by two Witnesses of that Society that not above six were admitted from Allhalland-day to Faster Eeve Let any man ask the Booksellers of Pauls Church-yard and Little-Britain if their Books I mean grave and learned Authors do not lie upon their hand and are not sailable There is a timorous imagination abroad as if we were shutting up learning in a Case and laying it quite aside Mr. Speaker if the bare threatning make such a stop in all kind of literature what would it work if the blow were given To this end both the Universities have sent up their humble Petitions to this Honourable House which we greatly desire may graciously be admitted The third Rank are those that are the Chariots and Horsemen of Israel the Champions of Christs Cause against the Adversary by their learned Pen And those that have left us their excellent labours in this kind excepting some few have either been the Professors and Commorants in the two Universities or such as have had Preferments in Colledgiat and Cathedral Churches as I am able to shew by a Catalogue of their Names and Works For such and none but such are furnished with best opportunity to write Books for the defence of our Religion For as in the Universities the Society of many learned men may be had for advise and discourse so when we depart from them to live abroad we find small Academies in the company of many grounded Scholars in those Foundations and it is discourse that ripens learning as the spark of fire is struck out between the Flint and the Steel There likewise we have copious and well furnished Libraries to peruse learned Authors of all kinds which must be consulted in great
yet upon the birth no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would serve the turn the joy was too big for the Language of man to deliver How shall we then express our selves for the honour of the day Preaching is our present business but words were too little and therefore the Angels turn'd Musicians and sung it Musick was not enough and therefore Wise men brought Gifts unto the Cradle Neither were Gifts the way for you may see by the cratch and the swadling clouts that He affected Poverty The Tongues of men that is Preaching and Prayer the Tongues of Angels that is Musick and Singing the courteous Gifts of the Eastern men Gold Myrrh and Frankincense all are fit for the solemnity of these twelve days but not all sufficient This happy day made an end of the woful Captivity of the Sons of men under sin and Satan See how far David went when none but the Tribe of Judah came back from the Captivity of Babylon When the Lord turned the Captivity of Sion then were we like to them that dream This is the greatest strain of joy as we may interpret it I do not mean that we should doubt whether we were verily preserved from the captivity of Sin by the birth of Christ whether it were so indeed or but a dream like the Poets amorous fancy Credimus an qui amant ipsi sibi somnia fingunt or as Livy said of the Grecians when the Romans sent them unexpected liberty after their hard thraldom Mirabundi velut somni speciem arbitrabantur they were amazed as if they were not awake but sleeping but I would have your Soul transported as it were with an Extasie of devotion as if Zeal and the Love of Jesus Christ put you in a dream imagine strongly that this day is not the Anniversary to be celebrated after many years but the very day it self of Christs Nativity Cannot you think that this Church is the Cratch that received the Babe O cui cuncta possunt invidere marmora Cannot you think your selves to be those Shepherds whom the Angels sent of the good Errand to look out a Saviour Who had not rather be one of them Shepherds than any King in the world Then strongly possess your souls that you see the Son of God that you stand over him and behold him as he is wrapped in swadling clouts lying in a Manger O that we could so deeply perswade our Soul that this Text is no report but a vision before our eyes So we must do or else it is not full Christmas joy it is no true Angelical devotion And then you shall see in this verse Mary laid of her Child O the passing exaltation for flesh and bloud to be such a Mother and the Child laid in a Manger O the wonderful humiliation of the eternal God to be such a Son But that every part of the Text may be handled apart by it self in his own order I will insist upon these five things 1. Here is the strange condition of the Mother Et illa peperit and she brought forth a Son who by nature was no bearer for she was a Virgin 2. The strange condition of the Babe ejus primogenitus the first begotten of God was the first born Son of flesh and bloud 3. The strange condition of the Birth that it was without the curse of woman without the pangs of travail the Fathers collect it from hence that as soon as the Babe was born she could wrap him in swadling clouts a manifest sign that there was no debility or weakness in her 4. The strange condition of the place of the Nativity She laid him in a Manger Lastly the strange condition of men that there was no room in the Inn for Jesus and Mary these are the parts of my Text With great reverence be it spoken I may call them the swadling clouts wherewith I must wrap my Saviour First Let us consider the strange condition of a maiden Mother Et illa peperit and she brought forth a Son who by nature was no bearer for she was a Virgin A Doctrine which the Heathen and Pagan men will not admit and which the Incredulous Jew to this day after his manner derides The Heathen were so confident that a Virgin could not bring forth that as Orosius reports when Augustus Caesar had rest round about from all his enemies He shut up the Gates of Janus his Temple and called it the Temple of peace and enquiring from their Oracles of Sorcery how long it should stand shut it was answered Quousque Virgo pariet untill the time that a Virgin brings forth a Son The Messengers thought this answer to be as if he had said it should stand shut for ever and so they wrote upon the Gates Templum pacis aeternum The Temple of peace was eternal Let me dispute the case with a meer natural man How doth the harvest of the field enrich the Husbandman It is answered By the Seed which was sown in the ground Say again How came Seed into the world to sow the ground Surely you must confess that the first Seed had a Maker who did not derive it from the Ears of Wheat but made it of nothing by the power of his own hand Qui sine seminibus operatur semina c. says St. Austin then God could make a man without the Seed of man in the Virgins womb who made Seed for the corn before ever there was earing or harvest Nay there is an instance for it in the little Bees as the Poet doth Philosophize they do not bring forth their young ones as other Creatures do by the help of Male and Female together but they gather the seed which begets the young ones from the dew of leaves and herbs and flowers and so they bring them forth Nec concubitu indulgent nec corpora segnes in Venerem solvunt and therefore the Bee by some is called the Emblem of Virginity And as for the unbelieving Jew the darkness and blindness of his heart cannot put out the light of Isaiahs Prophesie Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son for what though the word in the Original signifie not only a Virgin but any woman of a young and tender age Yet in that place as St. Hierom says very well it must be nomen integritatis non aetatis a name of Virginal integrity and not of young age or else you drown the astonishment which the Prophet doth so much exaggerate and amplifie I will give you a Sign why what sign is it for a young woman to bear a Child No extraordinary one I am sure Nay says he Ecce Virgo behold and wonder at it Behold a Miracle which shall never be wrought but once in the world This was Virga Aaron florida nec humectata Aarons Rod which was not watered and yet being a dry stick which had the help of no sap to make it fruitful it flourisht and put out and brought
the same end to make us magnifie God for his Wisdom Goodness and Justice Nay I add compare the Law of Works imposed upon Adam and the Law of Faith imposed upon Christians and both of them are possible to be done For the first man according to the integrity wherein he was created and by the virtue of supernatural Grace bestowed upon him might have obeyed the Commandement given if he had not turned to disobedience and by the Divine help of the same grace we to whom God hath preached the glad tidings of his Son are endewed with power to believe that we may be saved Now in a word let us lay the difference of these two one against another God gave the Law in Paradise as a King in his Justice but he gave the Gospel in Sion as a Father of Grace and Mercy according to that Law the reward had been given ex debito by debt and due say the Schoolmen but to him that believes the reward is given by mere Grace which excludes boasting He that disobey'd that Law was to look for the most strict severity of Justice so condemnation belongs likewise to the unbeliever according to Justice but perhaps it shall be temper'd with some moderation for Christs sake Finally this is the main disagreement the first Covenant made with Adam did exclude all hope of remission of sins but the second Covenant made in Christ runs in this tenour to them that live by Faith your sins shall be blotted out and your iniquities forgotten After you have understood the first point how there was a Law imposed upon Adam when he was created and endewed with original Justice you must now give ear to the next thing in order what heavy and astonishing matter is contained in that Law which was given by Moses to the Children of Israel and remember that I consider the Law deliver'd in the two Tables at Mount Sinai Seorsim and by it self separated from all the promises contained in the Prophets and in the Psalms of David These then are the remarkable differences between the Covenant written in Tables of stone and this Covenant of the New Testament in the Blood of Christ First God gave the Law at Sinai being wrath with our sins for whereas we had lost both the wisdom of our understanding and the loyal obedience of our will by the transgression of our first parent yet God impos'd his Commandement upon us and exacts such measure of holiness which we are not able to perform Therefore that Law was given in the barren Wilderness because it is not able to bring one soul unto God likewise it was delivered with signs full of wrath thunder and lightning and a dreadful noise to shew that God was full of indignation when he laid it upon us On the contrary he made the new Covenant of peace being reconciled to them that were lost or at least proffering reconciliation in his beloved Son Read this Doctrine Heb. xii from the 18. to the 24. verse Ye are not come to the Mount that might not be touched and that burnt with fire nor unto blackness and darkness and tempest and the sound of a trumpet and the voice of words which they that heard entreated they might hear it no more They could not endure that which was commanded And so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake but ye are come to Mount Sion and to the City of the living God c. Wherefore the Gospel was presented with manifest tokens of love and benevolence Ecce Evangelizo behold I bring you good tidings 2. There 's a difference arising between the first Testament and the last from the several Mediators that came between God and the people Moses was a servant faithful in the Family and he was the Mediator of the Old Testament Christ is the Son and Heir of all he was the Mediator of the New The Law was given by Moses Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ 3. The old Covenant was ratified with the blood of Beasts but loe the New Covenant doth much surpass it which was ratified with the precious Blood of that immaculate Lamb which took away the sins of the world which is therefore called the Blood of the New Testament 4. The old Law in St. Paul's phrase contained poor and beggerly rudiments not able to bring to life It was a killing letter the ministry of death and condemnation it worketh wrath it entred that sin might abound it is like Hagar which gendreth children unto bondage Gal. iv 24. The Gospel is the power of salvation to every one that believeth a quickening Spirit it purgeth us from our sins it speaketh better things than the blood of Abel 5. That which Moses brought was an heavy burden which neither the Fathers nor the Children could bear but of the Gospel Christ saith his yoke is easie and his burden is light and in it you shall find rest for your souls Lastly the Old Testament endured unto Christ and no longer wherefore because it passed away it is called the Old the New Testament remaineth for ever so says St. Paul of our Blessed Saviour taking flesh who is not made after the Law of a carnal Commandment but after the power of an endless life No passage or comparison can be made between them but the Law given at Mount Sinai will appear to be an harsh and most unwelcome injunction and that which doth clear us from the curse thereof is Evangelium the best tidings that ever arriv'd at the ear of man Hitherto I have consider'd the Old Testament in no respect but as it contains the killing letter of the Law but you must not mistake that the Holy Spirit hath interlaced many fast-holdings of Faith and promises Evangelical almost every where in the Prophets and in the Psalms of David Nay the Old Testament is rather Promise than Law yet it was fit the rigour of the Law should be repeated that it might more appear how necessary the promise of Grace was that we could not live without it and that every man being convicted in his conscience by the sentence of the Law we might more ardently fly to Grace for the end of the Moral Law is double to set us a rule what we should endeavour to do and to discover our own impotency unto us what we are not able to do that we may seek a remedy in the satisfaction of Christ But this I say that the darkness and obscurity of the Old Testament was enlightned with many excellent promises that the believing Israelites might be partakers of Faith and of everlasting life they had the same Gospel which we have the same Christ the same Faith the same Spirit sealing the truth of promise unto them Where is then the priviledge you will say that the tidings are better to us then unto them or far surpassing on our side every way Israel that believed in the promised seed was an heir but under age
nothing different from a servant The faithful since the coming of Christ are adulti heirs come to age such I may say as have sued out their livery past pupillage past the pedagogie of Ceremonies for the yoke of Ceremonies was most troublesome that the coming of Christ which cancelled such things might the more be desired Then they beheld a Messias in types and shadows now he is manifest in his own person then Faith was obscurer now it is more clear then the Spirit was given scantily now it is poured out in full abundance Abundantia spiritus est elogium regni Christi then the preaching of Faith was included in the Kingdom of Israel now it is diffused throughout all the world Mark it now I beseech you how these three do differ The Law did terrifie and astonish there were no good tidings in that The promise of Grace and Mercy was an annuntiation of good news worth the hearing and it was fit that a promise should go before that the day of Christ might be long'd for and much desired before he came yet this did cool the comfort that hope deferred doth afflict the soul Wherefore when the desire of our eyes did come into the world to satisfie the Law for us and to satisfie he expectation of all promises then it became Evangelium good tidings happy news nothing shall be heard any more to vex us or to trouble us unless for want of Faith we would vex our selves And what ear will not listen to good tidings when old Jacob heard that Joseph was living his spirit reviv'd and Israel said it is enough Joseph my son is yet alive Joseph was advanc'd in Egypt by the wonderful providence of God that he might receive his brethren in the great distress of famine these were good tidings to Israel but is it not much better to hear of this sound out of Ephrata that Christ is come into the world to feed his brethren in the time of dearth with the bread of life O quoties quae nobis Galataea locuta est as a passionate woer longs to hear of a sweet message from the party whom he loves so the Spouse which is the Church rejoyceth to hear glad tidings from the Bridegroom that so it might enjoy his presence here that she might dwell with him hereafter for ever Calisthenes approacht towards Alexander the Great portending much alacrity in his countenance what says Alexander An Homerus revixit iterum are there any tidings to be brought which make you so merry unless Homer were alive again all that he could pitch upon for good news was if that divine Poet were alive again to record his story in a long lasting Poem O how infinitely do these good tidings surpass that ambitious fancy Christus natus est a Saviour is born to write our names for ever in the book of life St. Paul took out this lesson from hence Quam speciosi pedes Rom. x. 15. How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of things The Prophet Isaiah spoke of them that foretold of the delivery of Israel out of the Babylonish captivity and if those messengers were welcome that uttered things concerning bodily felicity much more shall their coming be acceptable that solace the inward man the heart and soul Beauty is that which attracts affections to it so the Apostles are said to be beautiful because they drew the world unto them and it was proper concerning them to say how beautiful are their feet rather than their lips for they did not rest in one place but took the whole world for their circuit from City to City and because of their dangerous and painful travel by Sea and Land the Prophet said How beautiful are their feet Despise not therefore such as succeed them though much unworthy in the same errand but have them in honour for their welcome message Though Christ hath not washt our feet to make them beautiful as he did his Disciples yet the very word that we have to say doth honour our lips for they are good tidings no things in the world compar'd to the comfort of the Gospel they are good tidings c. The main drift of the Text did hang upon this word how the Angel did Evangelize that is to say bring good tidings now we are clear'd and come off from that and although there are many things in the Gospel very harsh to flesh and blood as to leave all and follow Christ to suffer persecution c. Yet these things as I noted in the third place produce joy joy of a grand size in the intention great joy joy of an infinite measure in the extension everlasting joy joy that shall be says the Text and these are now to be consider'd together and first that the Birth of Christ bids us rejoyce and be glad Can the Children of the Bride-chamber mourn when such a Bridegroom is come unto them he came unto the world like ripe fruit in the fulness of time whereupon says St. Ambrose Christus tanquum maturitas advenit ut nihil acerbum nihil immaturum nihil immite sit He came when all the fruits of comfort were mellow and delicious that nothing might be sower or harsh or distastful to his beloved I alledged the Text of Isaiah before How beautiful are the feet of them that brought tidings of him The Septuagint according to some Editions read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what a spring there was in the Mountains when he was preacht whereupon says S. Cyril as the Spring chears up the hearts of men beautifies the earth and the fields after the desolating frosts of a wastful Winter so the preaching of this Nativity made every thing to flourish after the bitter blasting frosts of the Law If there were such joy at the birth of Isaac that they call'd him Isaac from laughter then let all the earth clap their hands and rejoyce when he was manifested in the flesh that made the laughter of Isaac For our more orderly proceeding I must consider joy three manner of ways 1. What true joy doth properly result from the Birth of Christ 2. What joy may be allowed and indulg'd to Christians 3. What joy is condemnable For the first that joy which doth properly result from the Birth of Christ is Risus ex serenitate conscientiae the mirth and delight of a good conscience for he that hath given us his only Son how shall he not with him freely give us all things Rom. viii 32. The Israelites were confident of victorious success when the Ark of God was in their Camp The Ephesians thought themselves safe and secure when they had but an Image which fell down from Heaven This was but a fiction like him that dreams of comfort and loe he is in desperate extremities but our case is most clear and happy to whom the God of Gods made his approach as one friend that visits another who
and a tooth for a tooth but the Gospel exhibiteth patience for wrongs received and benediction for injuries And indeed the charity of the Law was but partial as I may say it admonisheth fairly Levit. xix 18. Thou shalt not avenge nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self But this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or forgetting of all evil done unto them extended only to Israelites which was not the full and large duty but an epitome of Charity If aliens from their own stock had provok'd them though many years before there 's another lesson for it Deut. xxv 17. Remember what Amaleck did unto thee by the way when ye were come forth out of Egypt Such fruit grows upon the bramble of the Law not upon the Olive tree of the Gospel God forbid that we should keep a Register what Moab or Amaleck or what any adversary hath done unto us the peace which the Angels proclaimed forbids that after the beginning of the new year we should remember the enmities or discords that were occasion'd in the old whosoever nourishes old grudges and contentions when the heavens sing peace gives the lye unto the Angels Let your ear receive this with it that all other practises of Religion having not peace and perfect amity among them are but forms of godliness which deny the power thereof This is not far off to be proved but within the verge of the Text for it will not be regarded that you give glory to God on high if there be not peace below you must leave your gift upon the Altar your glory to God and go home for peace go and be reconciled to your brother and then you are a fit instrument to give God his honour Some are always wrangling for the glory of God as they pretend and care not which way peace goes on earth Every theological conclusion I say not Articles of Faith but disputable deductions not near the foundation of Faith must be maintain'd precisely as they apprehend it or they cry out that truth is violated further than can be endured Every ceremonial observation must be either taken off or discharg'd punctually as they score a line or else they contend bitterly that Gods Worship is abused All this while two things are quite forgotten First that there is a compass and latitude for mens wits and judgments to be diverse one from another and yet no unity to be broken All points touch not to the quick and in such things because every mans reason hath not the same kind of reach and notion there may be much variety of opinions without all dissention Secondly few lay it to their thoughts that to meet in agreement as far as possibly the conservation of truth will permit is far more acceptable to God than an inflexible pertinacy which is rather rigorous than pacificous There was much ado to settle the pure Doctrine of the Church in the first four hundred years but nothing avail'd more than that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Greek Fathers call it a condescending one to another making moderation the umpire of all strifes By these calm degrees God was more glorified among the Gentiles that were unconverted who perceived how the Christians kept the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace than if they had wrangled about every nicety and prosecuted every disagreement to an utter separation Peace on earth is a ready means that glory in the highest may not be scandalized And after all this that hath been said certainly the Angels meaning extends it self thus much further that the Child which was born in Bethlehem the Messias of the world would direct them in a way if men would be diligent to observe it that there should be no bloody Wars of seditious Princes in all the earth no Armies clattering together no rouling in blood it is his property to break the bow and knap the Spears in sunder and to burn the Chariots in the fire and it makes much that this is votum militare peace on earth comes from the mouth of Souldiers the Angels were arrayed like an host in battail when they preacht it as if military men could best tell the world what a blessed thing it is to have cessation from Wars and sweet agreement Our neighbour Kingdoms know the true rellish of this Doctrine who live in continual alarms losses destructions desolations alas their vintage is become not the blood of grapes but of men O 't is a most savage a very bruitish affection in them that are sick of the long continuance of peace and wish that Leagues and Truces were expired They are of another mind I warrant you that have felt the unutterable miseries of War for the space of fifteen years and more in their flourishing Empire without pause or respiration He that could certainly pronounce before them that they should enjoy the liberty of their conscience and no hostility should invade them they would receive him with as much gladness as the Shepherd heard the Angel say Glory he to God in the highest and on earth peace But the objection is ready to be cast in my way by every man I would it were not that all the divine inspirations of God have ensued plentifully upon Christs coming into the world but nothing less than peace Persecutions Massacres Contentions irreconcilable Wars these have entred in wheresoever the Gospel hath been taught and Jesus denied it not but said unto the twelve Think not that I come to send peace into the world I come not to send peace but a sword Mat. x. 34. Beloved opposition and war are not the right fruits of the Gospel no more than Ivy is the fruit of the Oak tree though it creep upon it But pre-supposing the malice and corruption of men the tidings of salvation though they exhort unto peace yet they will beget division for Satan reigns in the wicked and it makes him rage to hear celestial Doctrine preacht and that impiety which was asleep befere is roused up with the noise of the Gospel and grows tumultuous this is consequentiae necessitas non consequentis an accidental misfortune not a proper effect Yet very true that none is a greater adversary than our Saviour to some sorts of peace Pax Christi bellum indicit mundo voluptati carni demoni says Beda upon my Text The peace of Christ breaks the confederacy which sinners have in evil it defies the Devil and the vain pomp of the world it draws the sword against blasphemy and Idolatry it will not let a man be at quiet within himself when he is full of vicious concupiscence To make a Covenant with Hell as the Prophet speaks or to have any fellowship with the works of darkness as St. Paul speaks Illa mala pax est indigna hominibus bonae voluntatis that 's a pernicious peace and unworthy of those to whom that blessing belongs good will towards men
it in his wrath that the mothers womb should bring forth children in sorrow yet he never recalled his former Sentence of grace but that fecundity should be a benediction As a rich harvest is joyfully received when the Valleys stand thick with Corn and a rich Autumn is most welcom when the trees bow down their arms to reach us fruit So Children and the fruit of the womb are a most desired Heritage that cometh of the Lord. Old Jacob anon before he departed out of the world poured out the strength of his prayers upon Joseph and this benefit he did impropriate to him Gen. xlix 25. The God of thy fathers shall bless thee with the blessings of the breasts and of the womb But it had been better for us that all women had been barren if the Saviour of mankind had not been inclosed in the womb of Mary All fruitfulness is to be congratulated but hers especially Blessed is the womb c. Thirdly I make no scruple to affirm it that this was the very thought and fancy of the woman that uttered these words that the Mother was most honoured full of fame and glory who had a Son that spake so divinely and wrought such heavenly Miracles It is a great recompence which God gives to careful Parents upon earth when their off-spring live soberly and temperately to be their comfort and honour Do you question it but that Rebeckah was pleased above all contents which the earth could afford when Jacob whom she tendered as her hearts darling was so just and diligent in the fear of the Lord Do you suppose that Bathsheba knew not how many eyes of favour were upon her how many tongues did congratulate her when her Solomon was the wisest of all the Kings of the earth that sate upon a Throne With what exultation did Olimpia speak often of her Son Alexander and his Monarchy How did Cornelia the Mother of the Gracchi please her self when certain strangers noted her for a plain Matron that wore no rich or gaudy dressings as the fashion of the Roman Ladies was in those days but when her hopeful Sons came home she told her Guests those were her Cabinet of Jewels Hi sunt mei torques haec mea monilia And this is the reward on earth of all Paternal care and anxiety Spes surgentis Iuli that solace which you take in the ingenuous obedience of children as we call it towardliness And the neglect of their breeding a mischief which is seldom recovered if the Plant be marred in the first setting and tendance I say that neglect is a manifest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a plain want of natural affection which is a denying of the faith But the fear of the Lord which is instilled into Children from their Infancy is not only the Childrens but even the Parents happiness The rare endowments that appeared in Christ made a certain woman here cast the praise of it upon the Mother Blessed c. And thus far in the Litteral sense as far as flesh and bloud could reveal unto her But if she could have seen into the Scriptures as the holy Spirit hath enabled us to see into them there are other grounds of more Evangelical observation And first let it be noted that the blessedness which is attributed to the womb that bore our Saviour redounds to all the members of his mystical body Even as upon that saying of our Saviour to St. Peter Blessed art thou c. Mat. xvi St. Austin says that the words should not have a full and illustrious sense unless they were referred to the whole Church So this saying in my Text were maimed and imperfect unless we enlarged it thus to all Believers blessed and thrice blessed are all the Sons and Daughters of God through the Incarnation of Jesus Christ who was he that came down into this wretched world to make it almost equal with heaven it self Let the Earth be glad and let the Hills rejoyce let the Sea make a noise and all that is therein What a flower of Jessai did the earth bring forth instead of thorns and briars What a Day-star did shine upon our Hemisphere which was justly threatned with eternal darkness What Prince of peace was this which visited us when we were at war and defiance with God and our selves and with all the Powers of Heaven What purity was this which mixt with our uncleanness What Omnipotent that descended to our weakness What Immortal that would be dishonoured with our corruption and mortality All treasures of Wisdom are hid in his age of nonage all Strength in his infant infirmity all Riches in his state of poverty all Righteousness in him that was accused of iniquity all Freedom from bondage in him that was wrapt up in swadling clouts all Felicity in him that was encompassed with weakness and misery These are the fruits of his Nativity these are the benefits of his birth and infancy The Eternal Father did more for us when he made him flesh than when he made the heaven and the earth beside without his Incarnation the Earth had been our Curse all the Elements our Plague the Heaven above our Envy and the Hell beneath our portion for ever But as soon as ever the Babe who is blessed for ever did open the womb our fetters were broken in sunder the kingdom of darkness spoyled no Malediction remained in the Law any longer no curse in death Hoc est Christianae fidei fundamentum quia unus per quem ruina alius homo Christus per quem structura This is the foundation of Christian faith this is the scope of all the Scripture this is the ground work of all hearts ease and consolation that one man was our ruine and another man was our reparation As the Apostle says Heb. ii 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation we deserve to mourn if we do not magnifie God for this joy we deserve to be miserable for ever if we prefer not the blessing we received this day for the very crown of our happiness Though you now see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. i. 8. One man in a family having a fortunate advancement makes his whole blood and kindred fortunate with him how much more shall Christ make all mankind happy being made one of us accedens ad nos per id quod assumpsit ex nostro liberans nos per id quod mansit ex suo He is come near unto us all by that nature which he assumed of ours and he hath redeemed us all by that glorious Deity which was ever his own Finally there was a concurrency of all sorts of blessedness in this most mysterious Incarnation The Mother pure from all carnal copulation and incorrupt in her Virginity the place comfortable to the worst sinners because he chose his habitation among beasts in a stable and an ostery for the common resort of all
to comfort us whether coals of fire be kindled at his nostrils to consume us or whether he blow upon us with the breath of his compassion to revive us whether he give or whether he take away you know what follows in Job The effects upon our bodies are divers but the effect upon our spirit should be one and the same do you say Blessed be the name of the Lord. But to visit is also taken in good part as an act of grace and compassion Exod. iv 31. the people had heard that the Lord had visited Israel and looked upon their afflictions then they bowed their heads and worshipped Thou hast granted me life and favour and thy visitation hath preserved my spirit Job x. 12. And once more for all Thou visitest the earth and dost greatly enrich it with the river of God Psal lxv And welcome be that visitation which brings with it peace and good will such was the appearance of him that was born this day of a pure Virgin he did look out his sheep and visit them as a Shepherd doth visit his flock Ezek. xxxiv so the people of the Jews did well express the significancy of the word when our Saviour raised up the widows Son of Naim to life again a great Prophet is risen up among us and God hath visited his people Luke vii 16. God could have sent his Son to have judg'd the world but he did not send him to condemn us but that the world through him might be saved This is a benign and a courteous visitation But because the word will extend to divers particulars of grace and love I will do it right to lay them forth distinctly 1. To visit is the work of one that comes to do a charitable office to a sick person according to that place Mat. xxv I was sick and ye visited me So Christ came into this world because it languished of a sore disease Miseri erant quos visitavit captivi quos redemit we were far gone in the infirmities of sin when we had need to be visited we were wretched bond-men under the yoke of Satan when we had need to be redeemed Visitavit Dominus plebem longa infirmitate tabescentem says Bede upon my Text long had the Jews consumed in their sins faint and feeble they were destitute of all spiritual succor near to the brink of death then came the great Physician to bind up their wounds and to heal the broken heart as virtue went out of him and he healed all manner of fleshly griefs if they did but touch him so much more now he is in heaven he is an indeficient fountain of virtue and whosoever toucheth him by a living Faith he shall be cured of his ghostly imperfections or at least their malignity shall be asswaged 2. Visitare in the Latin tongue is a diminitive from videre to see a thing in a glance and so to pass it by without any great heed but the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is used in my Text is a Composit and is more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is rem penitus inspicere cujus egeat to look upon things very remarkablely with that purpose to know what it wants In the tenth of St. Luke the Priest saw the man that was wounded and passed by the Levite looked on and passed by but the Samaritan saw him and had compassion of him that was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to look on him with a commiserating eye and a tender heart and to none can it be so well applied as to the Son of God he looked upon us stedfastly and with a melting mercy he looked upon us as if his very bowels were in his eyes 3. To give a visit to another is a voluntary courtesie an act of kindness that hath no compulsion or unwillingness in it for he that visits any place or persons if he did not like them he might keep away but you cannot imagine more promptness and readiness in any one than there was in our Saviour to be humbled to that baseness to take our nature upon him When the Prophet had said Sacrifice and meat-offering thou wouldst not have but a body immediately follows Christs willingness to accept the motion O my God I am content to do it loe I come to do thy will O Lord Heb. x. how could any thing be entertained more heartily more chearfully he that says in Solomon hearken unto me ye children and blessed are they that keep my ways he says also my delights were with the sons of men Prov. viii 31. 4. There is not only willingness but friendliness in the appellation no man visits another but in the profession of a friend therefore St. Paul says upon the Incarnation Tit. iii. 4. the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man appeared 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was a sign that he did not abhor us nay that there was peace and bounty toward us because he did condescend to have such familier conversation among us When God talked with Moses face to face the Scripture expresseth with the admiration of Gods love that he talk'd with him as one friend talketh with more but to dwell among us and visit us as one neighbour and well-willer doth another surely there must be much more amity and familiarity in that strain of love This very word therefore that he visited us is enough to exalt us to be the friends of God Because he frequented the company of those that had led scandalous lives to call them to repentance the Pharisees gave him a character that he was a friend of Publicans and Sinners and Lazarus is called his friend John xi because he did often resort to Bethany to the house of his Sisters Mary and Martha Beloved since this visitation hath declared us his friends let us be at enmity with all those things which are opposite to the glory of Jesus Christ. 5. It is more than all which I have said before that he hath visited us that he did burst the heavens to come down that is offer violence as it were to the God-head to unite it in one person with our corruptible substance God spake in times past to the Fathers by the Prophets but in these last days he spake unto us by his Son nay he sent unto us his Son The Prophets were holy men yet they were but men here was a nature that visited us far more perfect than theirs theirs the nature of Almighty God They were faithful servants in the house of God but a servant is an unperfect condition in comparison of a Son neither were we visited by any of the sons of men but by his own Son the Son of God You know that they of Lycaonia were strangely taken with it Gods are come down among us in the shape of men when they supposed Barnabas to be Jupiter and Paul Mercurius since they were in such an extasie at their own deceit how should we be affected with the
truth that the very God became a perfect man and was Immanuel God with us says David Psal viii 4. When I consider the heavens the work of thy hands the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained what is man that thou art mindful of him or the Son of man that thou visitest him as who should say he that hath such rare and excellent heavenly bodies to delight in what should he do on earth what is the Son of man who is nothing but sin and misery that the Son of God should visit him O first let it be remembred with faith and thankfulness lest desolation come upon us as it did upon the Jews because we knew not the time of our visitation Luke xix 44. Secondly Let us answer the humility of our Saviour with all possible humility and say as the Centurion did Lord we are not worthy that thou shouldest come under our roof well deserved that all the succors of heaven should have fled from us and abhorred our face therefore blessed be his name for evermore that brought us peace from his Father sanctification from the Holy Ghost justification by his own merits humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in the day of his visitation as the vulgar Latin reads it 1 Pet. v. vi Thirdly Abraham made a feast to the three Angels when they visited him at his tent door Gen. xviii so let us prepare a table to entertain our blessed Lord that is come unto us not a feast of junckets and costly viands but let us receive him piously and devoutly as befitteth such a guest at his own Table Ipse est conviva convivium He is come to be feasted and he hath giuen us his own body to make us a feast and blessed be the Lord God of Israel that hath visited us and given himself to be the true spiritual food for the nourishment of our souls And so much of that act which is most conjunct with the festivity of this day Christ hath visited us yet peradventure we should esteem that work of courtesie and friendship but of no benefit at all unless it did extend it self to some further end and what can our desires wish to follow better than that which comes after in this place visitavit redemit by visiting he hath redeemed his people It is of such consequence above all things else that are needful to our well-being that St. Cyprian doth quite drown the former act in the latter and reads my Text thus Prospexit Deus redemptionem populo suo not a tittle about visiting but he hath provided redemption for his people Now captivity must be presupposed on our part because we did await and expect redemption Miseri sunt quos visitavit captivi quos redemit as I said before our soul was filled with a sore disease and therefore we were visited we were also under the captivity of sin and the Devil and lamentable were our case if we had not been redeemed Look upon the bondage out of which we were pluckt and it will make us more thankful for the freedom unto which we are called Ad servum rex descendisti ut servum redimeres says St. Austin thou didst descend to be a servant O King of Heaven to enfranchise a servant and to bring him out of thraldom Remember therefore at once for all since we all desire to have our part in this redemption we must all confess we were envassalled in a servitude So St. Austin against the Pelagians who denied the traduction of natural corruption from Adam says he How can Infants be said to be redeemed in Baptism unless they were captives before by original sin Therefore in imitation of our Saviours mercy as the Ancient Church 1200. years ago was copious in all deeds of Charity so their greatest care was to dispend their treasury to redeem captives and Paulinus a Pious Bishop as some stories say when all the stock of the Church was spent put himself into captivity to redeem a poor Christian miserably chained under the yoke of Infidels But this charitable deliverance of their brethren from temporal bondage was to shew how gratefully we should take it that Christ had redeemed all those that would lay hold of his mercies from eternal captivity Secondly As his goodness is amplified from our captivity so the redemption is the more valuable because none else could have pluckt us out of those fetters but the Holy One our Lord and Master Says David no man can deliver his Brother nor make a ransom to God for him for it cost more to redeem their souls so that he must let that alone for ever Psal xlix 7. when we had all incurred everlasting misery and mercy did so far prevail that the Divine Justice was content to forgive us the wisdom of God held the scale and arbitrated the case that when a law was broken and a mediation for pardon was entertained the best way was not to pass by the fault with a total indulgence but with a commutation of punishment And when men and Angels were unfit for that service then steps in the Son of God and undergoes the condition in his own person and became our brother flesh of our flesh that according to the Law being next of kindred to us he might redeem that which we had morgaged Lev. xxv 25. we had sinned and so needed a Redeemer and not so sinned but God the Father being placable a Redeemer would serve the turn And there the point had stuck for ever and we for ever had been helpless unless Christ had given himself a ransom for many Alius solvit pro debitore aliud solvitur quam debebatur one was the debtor and another satisfied one thing was owed to God I mean the life of sinners but another thing was payed I mean the life of an Innocent And let it make a third animadversion that the manner of our redemption doth greatly exaggerate the most meritorious compassion of the Redeemer there hath been redemption wrought by force and victory so Moses brought the Israelites with an high hand out of the slavery of Egypt There is a redemption which is wrought by intercession and supplication so Nehemiah prevailed with King Cyrus to dismiss the Jews out of the Babylonish captivity or thirdly either gold or silver or somewhat more precious is laid down to buy out the freedom of that which is in thraldom that 's the most costly and estimable way when value for value is payed or fourthly the body of one is surrendred up for the ransom of another life for life blood for blood and greater charity cannot be shewn than to bring redemption to pass by such a compensation So St. Peter extolls that act in our Saviour says he ye were not redeemed with corruptible things but with the Blood of Christ as a lamb undefiled So out of his own mouth Matth. xx 28. the Son of man came not
to do The ordinary means of salvation is to lend an ear to them who bring the glad tydings of peace for faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. x. 17. The very Heathen could say that the most barbarous Nations would be civilized and brought to good nurture if they would but hear Philosophy taught among them Nemo adeo ferus est qui non mitescere posset si modo culturae patientem accommodet aurem but far better effects must needs follow where Christianity is publickly taught and well observed in every mans private attention There are three sorts of them whose ear is shut when the Lord knocketh at the door to have them open First the Ignorant that doth not listen when he calls I fear there are too many so ungrounded in the first rudiments of Faith so unacquainted with the Text of Holy Screpture that they conceive as little of that which is taught as if we preacht in an unknown Language whose illiterate dulness makes plain English as unfruitful as Latin Popery These I may liken to Davids description of Idols They have ears and hear not noses but they smell not they do not apprehend nor smell the sweet savour of life in the Word of life therefore they set like Images in the Congregation they have ears and hear not Secondly there is the wilful and perverse that will not hear what is taught if it rub up his conscience and offend him this is like Davids deaf adder that stoppeth her ear which will not hearken to the voice of charmers charming never so wisely Psal lviii 5. such were the Jews that could not endure to hear of the eternal glory of Christ as soon as ever Stephen had said I see the heavens opened and the Son of man standing at the right hand of God they cried with a loud voice and stopped their ears and ran upon him Acts vii 27. God did open heaven unto him and they shut their ears against him And well they deserved says Nyssen to be left to such obdurateness they deserved not to receive such heavenly harmony into their ears as the sinful Samaritans shut their Gates against our Saviour for they deserved not to entertain him There is a third Auditor whom I may call the distracted man and cannot listen when God calls so many fancies and affairs buz in his brains when he comes into this sacred Assembly that he is presens absens as little here as if he were quite away When there is such a noise within we must needs lose our Errand when we knock at the ear without I called this the distracted Auditor because he is like that man in the Gospel possessed with an unclean Spirit that was both deaf and dumb and he that is deaf to hear I conclude he will be dumb to pray Out of this it is easie to deduce ignorance must learn to understand the truth obstinacy must take no offence at the truth The busie imagination must leave all cares and fancies at home and come to Church to mind the truth and then my Text will take place and prevail upon you This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear him I am loath to find fault with them that will but seem to be diligent in these most negligent times Yet that affectation which some have not only to spend but even to waste their time in hearing calls to mind the difference which Isocrates put between his two Scholars Ephorus and Theopompus the one by his good will would never take his Book in his hand the other by his good will would never lay it out of his hand the one said their Master had need of a Spur and the other of a Bridle Let me not be interpreted as if in this place in the sight of God I durst blame them that love to hear for blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness but where Religion is well planted and we rather want obedience than knowledge I would not have well-meaning people make Preaching an every days Tale for too much familiarity breeds contempt but excepting some special occasions to make it Sundays Religion A stomach over-charged is more prone to crudities than good digestion A seasonable rain enricheth the Earth with store but when showers come too fast one after another the fruits of the field are spoyled with must and rottenness And I would have this long-ear'd Age consider that six days practice in the Week are few enough to make use of one days instruction The Horse-leech sucks full and then drops off and is good for nothing take heed of that Especially take heed you be not puffed up in your mind that the number of Sermons which you hear shall be imputed to you for righteousness For as the Superstitious count their Prayers upon their Beads so some count their Religion by the multitude of godly exercises As the woman with the bloudy issue said within her self If I can but touch the hem of his garment I shall be healed So some seduced weak ones If we do but hear and hear often we shall be saved You deceive your selves for still I inculcate it is not audire but obaudire not the bare hearing but the fruit which comes by hearing that is acceptable to him who gives the reward This same simplex auditus to afford God the bare courtesie to hear him Turks and Pagans may do that and yet never believe To go further this same simplex credulitas to hear all and to trust God so far that all which he says is true sinners and reprobates may do that and yet never amend But they that are obedient and dutiful take the charge right who are not only hearers but doers of the Word of God This is that hearing which our Saviour puts into one verse both in the right and the wrong use Jo. viii 47. He that is of God heareth Gods words ye therefore hear them not because ye are not of God And as hearing is no vertue unless we obey so obedience and hearing are not matcht right together unless we intend them and apply them unto Christ the voice from heaven said Hear him When God the Father had spoken from above This is my beloved Son and when he had said it twice for the stronger confirmation once at the solemnity of Baptism another time at this miracle of the Transfiguration who would have thought any more needed to be added It is much that we should put him to it to say this moreover Hear him What strange men are we that we should be taught to hear him when we know he is the Son of God in whom alone the Father is well pleased But the begining of this Point shall be to shew that this administers Consolation and removs away some sadness which might have grown upon the Disciples Moses and Elias did appear upon Mount Thabor before they were look'd for and were gone in a trice before their departure
put this authority in execution for as they came down from the Mountain he charged them they should tell no man the things they had seen till the Son of man were risen from the dead The usual stile of our Saviour to his Apostles was Ite praedicate Go and teach all Nations What you hear in secret go and preach on the house top What I tell you in darkness that speak ye in light Mat. x. 27. At this miracle quite contrary what is here revealed He is marvelous light that you must conceal in darkness First Let us make use of it in thesi to illustrate that saying of Solomons Eccl. iii. 7. There is a time to keep silence and a time to speak There is a ripe season for every thing and if you slip that or anticipate it you dim the grace of the matter be it never so good as we say by way of Proverb That an hasty birth brings forth blind whelps so a good Tale tumbled out before the time is ripe for it is ungrateful to the hearer Where controversies about some difficile Points of Divinity have rather begot rage in the minds of men than obedience and devotion it hath been the religious care of godly Magistrates in all Ages to interdict those disputes on all sides that peace might ensue and dissentions by little and little be forgotten When there hath been cause to make use of this policy in our own Church would you think that some would exclaim against it under this colour that it is a tyranny if truth have not liberty to publish it self at all times in season and out of season And yet such late Writers whose judgments if I should name them few I think would refuse subscribe to this Maxim Intempestiva confessio veritatis plus nocet quàm adificat A confession of truth out of time and season doth rather hurt than edifie I will draw home to the instance of my Text anon to prove this when I have laid a stronger foundation out of another Text Matth. xvi 20. Then charged he his Disciples that they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ This was a temporary Precept like that about the Transfiguration to conceal it till after the resurrection Why the confession which Peter made for all his fellow Disciples was very right that 's undeniable to know that he was the Messias the Saviour of the World was necessary to salvation that 's indubitable what was in it then that this should be kept close and not be divulged to every creature the reason follows because he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things of the Elders and High Priests and be killed and rise again the third day I prove it that this was the reason Luke ix 21. even in this very Chapter he straitly charged and commanded them to tell no man that he was the Christ of God saying the Son of man must suffer many things and be rejected and slain and rise again the third day yet I must drive on a question further Why should this Article of faith be supprest that he was Jesus Christ because of his ensuing Passion Why 1. you know many were scandalized to see him crucified who had been perswaded that he was the Son of God if he be the Son of God let him come down from the Cross Noluit ergo Christus quod se moriente paucis accidit omnibus accideret says St. Hierom therefore by concealing that doctrine Christ prevented that all should not fall from the faith through infirmity as some had done Before his glorification had made amends for the great humility of his Passion he knew it would rather lose him Disciples than gain him any to advance this Doctrine openly that he was the Eternal Son of God 2. Our Lord and Saviour did ever foresee and provide that he would commit nothing which might hinder his death and passion that his willingness to die for our sakes might appear the greater No doubt he could have manifested himself his Divinity his Innocency so openly that Pilat would have forborn to condemn him and the Jews to crucifie him But wo is us then where had been the ransom to redeem us from eternal damnation Therefore this mysterie was so attemper'd that some raies of his Divinity did appear sufficient to convert his Enemies if they would have learnt and therefore they are inexcusable but with that qualification and diminution that pestilent men were left in unbelief and did not assent that he was the beloved Son in whom the Father was well pleased For had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of life 1 Cor. ii 8. Thus I have sifted this Interdict of our Saviour that he bad his Disciples suppress that he was Jesus the Christ for a time that the light might break out more clearly after his Ascension when the clouds of his Humility and Passion were removed away I shall leave an Objection behind my back if I take not away one scruple what here Christ forbids Mat. x. 7. he commands for he sent his Apostles abroad and when ye go preach saying the Kingdom of God is at hand and what 's that but the Kingdom of the Son of God St. Hierom takes it away thus it seems to me not to be altogether the same thing to preach Christ and to preach Jesus Christ Christus commune dignitatis est nomen Jesus proprium nomen est Salvatoris as who should say Jesus our Saviour is the name of God Christ is his name of dignity as he is the great Prophet and the Messias of the World Therefore he sent his Disciples to preach the Kingdom of Grace which Christ had brought into the World but not evidently till after his Glorification that he was the Son of God coeternal with the Father therefore I have sufficiently ventilated this Cause how Truth is the rich Treasury which God hath given us it is not necessary to lay out all the stock at all times and occasions but as judgment and discretion will light the candle to let us see how much is fit to be brought forth to gain our Brother and to glorifie God Est fideli tuta silentio merces silence doth advantage more oftentimes for peace sake than free utterance Demosthenes and the other Orator Aeschines fell to boasting among themselves which of them had taken most at one time for a see to plead a Cause Aeschines named a great sum and too much perhaps for an honest man to take at once from a Client but Demosthenes slighted it and replied he had received twice as much at one time to hold his peace But from this variance of these large-bribed Orators I will give you this application When a discord is unfortunately raised between party and party among the Members of the same Church so that the factions grow stiff and rigid on both sides the best way is to command silence to all that the fire of strife and
integrity of our Saviour against scandalous accusations when his lips were closed but as a Rest in Musick is not the close of the Song but a seasonable stop to make the next relish more graceful and harmonious so after the pause of silence which our Saviour made you shall now see the better how false and malicious the crimes of enditement were Before Cajaphas the High-Priest as I told you this only was objected that he threatned to destroy the Temple Three other capital crimes are laid against him Luke xxiii 2. that he perverted the Nation that he denied Tribute unto Caesar that he made himself the King of the Jews Here are two great sins against the Ecclesiastical Weal to pluck down the Temple and to pervert the Religion and two outrages against civil peace to pay no Tribute and to encroach upon the Title of the Kingdom let him be crucified a Gods name that pleads guilty to such abominations but if no more can be said against Jesus and we can shew in every particular that all this was forgery then let Pilate wash his hands and protest before them all that the life which they would take away is the bloud of a just person We heard him say He would destroy the Temple Never was such a syllable spoken Is not this the Temple wherein He bestowed his first blould at Circumcision a pair of Turtle Doves for a Sacrifice at his Mothers Purification Did He not shed his tears over this House of God in that pathetical lamentation O Jerusalem Jerusalem did He not spend his disputations with the Doctors his Sermons among the People his Prayer unto the Father and all under that holy Roof And now is his zeal turned to his reproach that He would pluck down the Sanctuary a while before did He not scourge the prophane Merchants and clense the Temple and now is He suspected for laying waste the dwelling place of the Most high Nay let them offer Swines flesh there let them change money and sell Doves I would rather bear with Superstition with Prophanation than with extreme Sacrilege O beware Beloved to open the lead of the Roof or to rent the walls of that Habitation where Gods Altar was inclosed He shall offend less that throws down any Mansion House in the World than he that cuts up but the Bramble-bush if he knew it wherein the glory of the Lord appeared 'T is pity that the stony hearts of men should suffer holy Buildings to moulder and crumble away into desolation I see a compassionate example before mine eyes O ye rich men of the World who is your God that you do not repair it But those Sons of Belial who prevent these ruins which time would bring upon the Houses of God 't is more pitty they should see the grey hairs of age in peace Surely as the Heavens which are the upper Court of Gods House shall melt away and be dissolved only by the power of God so Churches and Oratories here below which are the nether Courts of his Sanctuary should never be defaced in this World by any arm of flesh till the whole earth shall pass away and Gods own finger deface these Monuments of glory See but the hypocrisie of these Jews and Herodians they that are so careful a Temple should not be destroyed are furious to destroy the body of a man which is the Temple of the Holy Ghost Like the Popish Inquisitors most bold and zealous to curse those hotspurrs in our Kingdom who threw down a Church in their wrath and broke down the walls in their blind affection yet they themselves made havock of holy Praelats and did persecute their lives unto death and this was called Justice and Catholigue Religion to conclude this Accusation And why do they impeach our Saviour that He would destroy a Temple no such matter God knows Solvite templum hoc what means that why the Temple of his Body Why then who but they themselves do destroy the Temple which He spake of meaning the Temple of his Body The crime then you may perceive as it was objected against our Saviour it was slanderous but take this to the advantage of your instruction what judgment will God pour upon them who rob the Altar and spoil the Patrimony of the Church since these unconscionable Jews do confess that whosoever would destroy a Temple deserves to be crucified Yet Pilate was a Gentile and perchance would not heed the eracing of Gods House therefore to make the Romans look about them they have a second Objection in store That He would pervert the Nation Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as some read it the Nation of the Romans but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Nation Forsooth they fain an Accusation that he taught contrary to the Law of Moses and if new Doctrine be publisht let the Rulers look to it for this is as apparent as the light of the day that new Religion is ever new Rebellion but I do not say so of old Doctrine renewed It is a strange stupidity which the Devil puts into some mens heads you cannot perswade them to change for the better Simonides would rather learn the art of Forgetfulness than the art of Memory Velleius the Epicuraean was afraid of nothing more than to have learned Problems cast into his head which might rouze him out of ignorance Gryllus was so well in a Hogsty that he was unwilling to leave his swinish life and turn man again Are there not a thousand examples of wanton Ladies that had rather be Girls and Younglings than grow into years of understanding and discretion So the Jews had rather be ever kept under the Paedagogie of the Law than be perfect men and cast off the yoke of Ceremonies and live in the liberties of the Gospel Nisi cessassent ceremoniae non discernere licuisset hodie quorsum essent institutae says our learned Calvin had not those Shadows and Figures ceased in their due time when Christ brought a body into the world they had seemed impertinent we had never known for what they were instituted The Levitical Ceremonies were so obnoxious to alteration that the Schoolmen have set down their state in no less than five Conclusions 1. They were ever mortales the Covenant of these Observations was to fade away and not to endure for ever 2. From the time of John Baptist to the Burial of our Saviour they were moriturae inclining to dissolution 3. Upon the Commission which the Apostles had to preach the Gospel at the Feast of Pentecost they were mortuae quite dead and expired 4. As the Corps of a great Personage is not interred but in a decent time after his departure so till the weakness of the Jews was well instructed they were sepeliendae laid out to be buried But lastly when the faith of Jesus Christ was preached unto all Nations they were mortiferae not only dead but deadly unto him who should distrust in Christ and make himself a debter
glory Put thy fear into us all that we do not crucifie our Lord anew by Blasphemies by Vncharitableness by an Impenitent heart lest we be brought into the bondage of sin lest our heart wax gross and want understanding lest we lose thy favour as thine own Israel did upon earth lest we lose the light of thy countenance in heaven for ever O Lord hear us and be merciful to us for his sake who died upon the Cross c. THE SECOND SERMON UPON THE PASSION JOHN xix 34. But one of the Souldiers with a Spear pierced his side and forthwith came there out Bloud and Water WE cannot meddle with any part of our Saviours Body this day but we shall touch a wound and the greatest of them all without controversie is this in my Text. Thomas might put a finger in where the nails had entred but where the Spear had opened his side Christ bad him thrust in his hand Of Evils be sure to choose the least as David did but of Blessings such were all the wounds of Christs Passion wisdom without art will lead our meditations to the greatest And as Lot chose the Plain of Jordan to dwell there before all the Land of Canaan besides because it had variety of Springs of waters so this wound was the moistest and had the most plentiful issue of all the five it gushed out into two streams of blood and water I have not found such a passage in the Meditations of the Ancients that they came to drink at the hands or feet of Christ although the bloud trickled down from them also But it is usual with them in their Allegories to speak unto their Soul as if they laid their mouth unto the side of our Lord and did draw at it for the Fountain of everlasting life Did they suppose said I that they laid their lips there Nay Bernard could not satisfie his desire till he found a way to lay his heart upon the place and at length thus he hit upon it he believed as he had received that this Souldiers Spear entred at the right side of our Saviour Now says he that Elisha stretcht his living Body upon the dead Corps of the Child to raise it again to life it is a figure that Christ should apply his Body to our body which is dead in sin that it might live unto God his mouth which bled with buffeting upon our mouth that hath been full of deceit and bitterness his brows enameld with the pricks of thorns upon our heads which have contrived mischief and malice his hands which were riveted with nails upon ours that they may be washt in innocency his feet upon ours that have trod in the crooked ways of the Serpent then the Orifice of this Wound laying his right side to our left shall ly directly upon our heart and cure that part which disperseth iniquity to all the body The other three Evangelists exact in most circumstances of the Passion have all omitted this violence done to the dead Body of Christ surely had they wrote like meer men you might have thought the long story of these sufferings to be so lamentable that they could not for very compassion draw it quite out to an end John says in the next verse that he saw it done and that he knows he speaks the truth Amatus amans vulnera Domini the beloved Disciple that loved the wounds of his Master and would not let one of them be unrecorded this is the last wound that the Son of God received and therefore it is recorded by the last Evangelist The whole Story is comprized in this one verse and it will yield us these two points the malice of the living and the blessing that came from the dead The malicious action conteins four circumstances 1. Who was that evil person who did offer ignominy to the Body of Christ one of the Souldiers 2. What was the violence he offered he pierced him with a spear 3. Upon what part of his Body this fury did light upon his side 4. When he smote him you shall find by the thirtieth verse when he had given up the ghost In the second general branch which is the blessing that came from the dead there is the mystical opening of the Fountain of life wherein I consider first the two streams severally Bloud and Water 2. Their Conjunction Bloud and Water together 3. Their Order first Bloud and then Water 4. The Readiness of the Fountain that gushed out the stream could not be stopped no not for a minute forthwith there came out Bloud and Water Of these in their order Vnus militum one of the Souldiers did a despiteful fact upon the Body of Christ The Romans having the whole Nation of the Jews under their subjection at this time did gratifie them notwithstanding in many things to prevent rebellion and to satisfie their Law which forbids their dead to hang upon a tree after Sun-set lest the Land should be defiled Pilate gave them leave to take away the Bodies this day crucified from the Cross Wherefore to dispatch the Malefactors that they might be taken down two Thieves had their legs broken in whom there was life remaining It seems the chief Centurion would not be more rigid than the Law to do any further despite to Christ when he was dead already yet the cracking of his bones to splinters was the chief thing the Jews intended but one of the Souldiers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 certainly says the Father for a fee to please the people thrust a spear into his side I doubt me that those who delighted in war bore no good will unto our Saviour His birth was destinated by providence unto the days of peace his Name was the Prince of Peace his Doctrin was utterly against the Sword qui gladium sumpserit gladio ferietur now see what comes of it when he is faln into the hands of Souldiers Joab and the mighty men of the Camp were all for Adoniah and all against Solomon Adoniah was like to live in the field as his Father David had done but Solomon's hand must spill no blood that it may build up a Temple The Emperor Probus let a word of meekness slip from him equus nascetur ad pacem he hoped to have horses brought up to do service in peace and not in war and the Captains of the Host cut short his dayes and so it far'd with the great Preacher of Peace Christ had as good be guarded by one of the Pharisees as by one of the Souldiers As Aristotle said of Bees and Swallows Nec feri sunt generis nec mansueti they were neither reckoned among those creatures that were wild nor those that were tame but of a middle sort Such was the condition of these Spear-men somewhat ruder than civil men somewhat tamer than Savages but violent in their disposition as they are pleased or provoked Yet I am not of Tertullian's mind to
have taken away the Body of my Lord. It savours therefore of justice that she is the first that after his resurrection profest her self his Servant and said Rabboni which is Master Now in the manner of this appearance three things are eminent among many that may be observ'd First Christ was known by the tone of his voice when this holy Saint mistook his person Therefore you see by this where you shall always have Christ seek him in his Word and there you shall find him He sends us unto them Joh. v. 39. Search the Scriptures for in them ye look to have eternal life and they do testifie of me In the works of nature we may understand that God is good by the crisis of reason we may beat it out that he is a rewarder of them that serve him by the tenour of the Law we may read what Ceremonies will please him but if you would meet with Christ look him out in the words of that sweet and blessed Covenant of our salvation the Gospel O how sweet is that word of God which is the only instrument and none but it to make us see Christ our Redeemer As we have heard so have we seen says David love to hear his word and then you shall see him see him here in his Sacraments of grace and hereafter face to face in his Kingdom of glory Secondly it lies in his own breast I may say and in the power of his own saving grace when his Word shall be effectual to bring us to the knowledg of him Mark it that Christ spake more largely and more distinctly one would think to this pious Matron when she mistook him than when she came to take notice of him He began thus with her Woman why weepest thou whom seekest thou Was not this Sermon enough to bring her into the right way yet the darkness of her mind continued and she had no stronger faith but that his sacred Body was transported out of the Sepulcher by some malicious injury and not revived by his omnipotent Divinity Yet after this he speaks unto her again speaks but a very little no more but Mary and her heart was opened Like that celebrated piece of Rhetorick which C. Caesar used to his Souldiers with no long oration but with one word Quirites he drew them to accord and appeased their mutiny So that there is hope as we pray and put our trust in God that although some have taken arms in this Island and will not lay them down notwithstanding much hath been said by way of treaty much hath been written by way of motive and perswasion yet God knows his own time and will bring it to pass we trust when some few lucky words to which the Lord will give his blessing shall distil down as a joyful rain to bring forth the sweet fruits of peace and obedience It is not line upon line word upon word but the assistance of the Divine Spirit with the Word that works knowledg and salvation With a short invitement follow me and I will make you Fishers of men Peter and Andrew left their Nets and followed their Master With a little call or beckning rather Matthew forsook the Custom-house and became an Apostle A little was said to Zacheus and it produced wonders in him Less was said to the Saint of my Text than to any of them all no more but Mary and she saw and believed Thirdly here the doctrin of St. John is verified chap. x. 14. I am the good Shepherd and know my sheep and am known of mine Do you not spy an excellent order in the words the Sheep do not know him first but in the first place he knows the Sheep and then it follows that they know their Shepherd and his voice So he knew Mary Magdalen and called her aloud and then she was brought to confess the Lord. St. Paul corrected his own language to keep close to this method Gal. iv 9. Now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God our salvation begins at that end God hath chosen unto himself a people zealous of good works as who should say first he knows who are his but it is very preposterous to invert this as if first of all we did our endeavour to be known that is to be elected of God and to this is a witty allusion made Cant. ii 9. My beloved looketh forth at the window shewing himself through the lattess As if Christ did look through a Grate and saw us when we saw not him It is enough to have said thus much of the Apparition The remainder of my Doctrin must be raised out of the person of Mary Magdalen c. If this be the same Mary that was Sister to Lazarus of Bethany many learned Pens contend for it and let them for me but if it be the same woman Christ hath made good his promise to her and gone beyond it his promise was that wheresoever the Gospel was preached it should be told for a memorial of her how she had poured an Alabaster Box of Ointment upon his head to bury him but far more than so wheresoever the Resurrection is preached of she is enwrapt into the story and extol'd by a kind of singularity above all other persons he appear'd first to Mary Magdalen a thing which I dare say she did not request neither was that ambition in her to aspire to such a prayer that she might see the Lord before any of the faithful but it was a favour that was cast upon her Some immoderate zelots to the honor of the Blessed Virgin do little less than offer violence to the Evangelists for omitting that Christ declared himself immediately after he was risen to his Mother before Mary Magdalen saw him To prove it is impossible therefore to believe it is incredible None of the Ancients but Sedulius a Poet do adventure to affirm that Christ made any apparition to his Mother to shew he was no accepter of persons in way of carnal affinity He did appear to the Eleven and to those that were gathered together with them Luke xxiv 33. I suppose she was there at that time because she was St. Johns charge to take her with him He did appear to more than 500 Brethren at once it may conveniently be concluded she was one of that Assembly always preserving this priviledg to Mary Magdalen that he appeared first to her she was the first that saw Christ risen from the dead and the first that preached he was risen from the dead for she told it to the Apostles Yet that ye may know what soundness there is in Traditions Nicephorus pleads Tradition that after he rose to life first he made himself known to his Mother So Rupertus who allows to Mary Magdalen that she saw him first inter testes praeordinatos a Deo as a witness that should first preach him But the Blessed Virgin saw him before as one that did first rejoyce in him Bernard
Behold he goes before you to Galilee Was there any cause therefore that they should think to bless their eyes with him before they had made a journey into Galilee but behold the Angels had not all the mind of the Lord revealed unto them Jesus met the women hard by where the word was spoken and long before they went into Galilee So it is with all who are dear to God They look not for the vision of God till they are dead for no man shall see God at any time and live Yet before we get into Galilee before the Soul ascends into heaven he grants us that blessing to see him often with the eye of faith As the place is one part of the wonder so there is another Ecce another behold in the time just as they were going to tell the Disciples that an Angel had publisht at the Monument that the Master was risen just then he met them One hath made a good note of it qui communicant Christum aliis ipsum altiùs intelligent Teach the ways of the Lord to others and thou shalt understand them the better thy self Communicate unto the ignorant what thou knowest of Christ thy Saviour and thine own knowledg shall increase unto thee in the communication A great encouragement though the mysteries of faith are deep and inexplicable yet to preach them as we are able because we have this hope that Jesus the revealer of all secrets will meet us by the way And yet behold again that Jerusalem being so populous and at this time of the Passover throng'd with all sorts of strangers he was descerned of none but of these women these he meets and salutes them This is their reward that they left their soft Couch and some hours before the Sun rose came to seek the Lord. The Servants of God are called generatio quaerentium Psal xxii This is the generation of them that seek thee even of them that seek thy face O Jacob. He says in the Prophet Isaiah that he was found of them that sought him not much more will he be found of those that sought him Ask St. Cyprian why many that thought themselves Eagles could not behold him with their piercing eyes and that this little Nest of Sparrows these few women did encounter him St. Cyprian says quae ardentiùs dilexerunt quae devotiùs quaesicrunt such as loved him more affectionately such as sought him more devoutly they have the blessing to enjoy him But a wiser than Cyprian even Solomon says it Prov. viii 17. I love them that love me and those that seek me early shall find me In a word Christ meets all those that go in the way of faith and obedience as these women did And as the Father went out to meet his prodigal Son before his Son did look for him so go on in repentance in love in zeal in holiness and you shall see the unexpected day of the Lord. After this hear the words which our Saviour spake to the women St. Paul heard his voice from heaven but did not at first see him St. Stephen saw him stand at the right hand of God but did not hear him speak these persons had the blessedness both to hear him and see him and his tunable voice gave them this salutation before they spake to him all hail It is no question but Christ spake unto them in the Syrian or in the Hebrew tongue and their word of love and courtesie to one another when they met was shalom or peace And so the Syrian Paraphrast renders these words of my Text pax vobis peace be unto you But the Evangelist hath kept the Greek form of salutation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rejoyce The Latin tongue useth that word which was usual in the mouth of the Romans when they gave the wishes of a good day unto any avete an old Latian word whose meaning themselves did not know The Poet Martial was a good Critick that confessed it Exprimere Rufe fidicula licet cogant Ave latinum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potes Gracum Now at last to descend to our language we express it as you read it all hail which is a Saxon ideom for all health The optative form of the Hebrews was Peace of the Greeks Joy they were merry Greeks of us English health The common custom was that friends should meet friends with auspicious words with congratulation of happiness one to another whensoever they came together upon appointment or incidentary occasions Among the Heathen Humanity and Civility among us Christians Brotherly love is the original to salute one another with a Prayer when we meet But who is he among an hundred that thinks the name of God and a Prayer is in his mouth when he bids a Good morrow or a Good even to his Neighbour he hath no perceivance of his all hail or of those charitable words that come from him He doth not bless his Brother after the meaning of the phrase but he talks by rote like a Parrot And as it is most supine negligence to mean no good in our salutation and will fall into the condemnation of idle words so it is most devillish to give the outward salute of good words and to have war in our heart As Joab spake peaceably to Abner that is saluted him and then smote him that he died as Judas gave all hail to his Master and betrayed him with a signal of a courtesie A familiar thing in this wicked world to bid God save and God speed to them whose destruction we covet and to think of cursing in our heart at the same instant when the form of blessing is in our mouth Shame be to our dissimulation that it is but a form It began to be so odious among the Heathen to salute out of wanton fashion when they meant no kindness that it grew in use among them to confirm their Greetings with an oath In one of Terence his Comedies this passage is between two Servants Salve mecastor Parmeno tu aedipol Syra they swore they did verily mean them all the good wherewith they saluted them But this would not mend the matter in our dissembling age for we have many that will salute and swear and yet intend mischief to their neighbour and so will mix malice with perjury I leave them to the bitterness of their own sins and to have their portion with Hypocrites I am sure the salutation of our Saviour did really bring peace and joy and health to them that were saluted Gaudere eas jubet quae condemnatae erant ad habendum merorem says Euthymius womenkind in Eve was condemned to sorrow Gen. iii. Now Christ bids them rejoyce and obliterates the handwriting of sorrow that was against them Avete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now be merry and joyful now that you have seen with your eys that Christ is the resurrection and the life the Heavens and all the powers therein Archangels and Angels Patriarchs and Prophets
together enough to purchase a good Fee-simple in Canaan if the Lord had not given him his Portion Men think themselves now adays past the Law and penalties of death when they have sinned so much that they are grown wealthy in iniquity because if need be they can buy the favour of the Judg and he that has Achan's wealth a Wedg of gold and two hundred Shekels of silver legit ut Clericus I warrant him he is a learned Clerk and deserves his pardon But this man when he began to say deliciare anima when he was furnished to live sumptuously then he is cut off that as Solomon says the remembrance of death may be bitter to that man who thought it pleasant to live This was St. Austins rule when he was old and had learnt the World Mundus ille periculosior est cum se illicit diligi quàm cum se cogit contemni I fear no hurt from the World when it goes against me and casts a froward look upon my fortunes but my danger is near at hand when it smiles and flatters me as if all were happy When St. Basil observed how carefully Kings and Princes gathered up Pearls into their Treasury 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the wise God to shew the contempt of them had put into Oister-shells and scattered about the Sea-shore as vile and unprofitable You do not well says he to make a Treasury of that which is so mutable in the Generation and will ebb and flow from you like the Sea which begot them Fortune never stood long upon a Pinacle summo stare loeo nescia The Sponges that swell with liquors are most likely to be pressed and emptied You do all remember how Cesar gloried in his Victory among the cowardly Asiatiques veni vidi vici he did but set his feet upon their Soil and looked them in the face and so dismaied and vanquished them 'T is no more than King David tells of himself Psal xxxvii Vidi veni non inveni vidi I saw the ungodly flourish like a green Bay-tree veni I passed by and sought him non inveni he was quite gone in the twinkling of an eye I could not find him Now recollect these three qualities of Achan who was more likely to prosper than a Souldier in the flower of his age a joyful man at his journies end in the Land of his peace a wealthy man in the plenty of his riches Take it to thought all you that have the World tied unto you with a threefold Cord of health and peace and prosperity which men dream as if it could not be broken for it broke like Tow among the sparks and iste periit c. But as Demades said when news was brought that King Philip was dead and there was no other talk among the people Peace says Demades if he be dead to day he will be dead to morrow and the next day following so I will end my discourse how Achan perished it is the way of all sinners and not much to be lamented But for an innocent to be cast away it deserves pity wherefore St. Hierom reads my Text thus utinam solus periisset it makes not much for Achans death but I would he had perished alone in his iniquity There is no word of wonder beside this in the Text and here we must stay a while as all the Hoste of Israel did when they found the dead Corps of Amasa bleeding what the Spirit of God means by this vengeance non solus that he perished not alone in his iniquity It is St. Austins rule Relevatio mali non fit per communionem cladis sed solatium charitatis To perish together with more than our selves is no comfort at all but more anxiety So it made the Scene of Achan's Tragedy full and very bitter to see 36 Israelites that drew swords for the same Victory to be slain about him On the right hand there is more misery nati cruentâ caede confecti jacent the Sons ask for bread and their Father gives them stones to stone them Two things stand before us to be observed as the Angel did in Balaams way first what Companions Achan had in his punishment and secondly how it will stand with Gods justice that every man should not perish single by himself for his own iniquity First his fellow Souldiers turn their backs and are cut down at the Siege of Ai a sort of men that I presume are prepared alwayes to die but seldom provided to die well men that engender great love together as I think David and Jonathan did at first by entring their bodies into the same dangers Wherefore St. Paul did express his love to Epaphroditus in that name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my fellow Souldier and so to Archippus my fellow Souldier In the Roman Discipline it was held so honourable to save another of the same company that he carried for his reward civicam coronam a Crown upon his head made of the grass of that earth whereupon he saved anothers life The infamy of Achan was as notorious on the other side that caused six and thirty to be slain of the Camp of Israel To see that bad things are sure to do us hurt and the best things are not sure to help us The Ark of God was sent into the Camp at Shilob Arca fortitudinis Domini the Ark of Gods strength Psal 132. and yet the Philistins prevailed and the Ark was taken but if one Achan come down into the Battail there is plain treachery in that mans conscience and his Wedg of gold shall fight more against Israel than all the swords of the men of Ai. Good qualities stick close to them which have them as Virtue and Learning and we cannot part or bequeath them to any man Gifts of fortune as Honours and Riches may be removed to others as you like it But it is a hard case our vices are sure to fall down upon the head of such only as are dearest to us Beloved is it so Was the hand of the Lord in the battel of Israel and doth God direct the Sword of Simeon as well as the books of Levi Those that spend their bodies so courageously for our peace deserve to have their souls well instructed Nulla fides pietasque viris qui castra frequentant I trust it is but a slander that Souldiers have small Religion where the Angel of God did draw his Sword at the threshing flore of Araunah the Jebusite David built an Altar So in every just quarrel it is the Lord himself and his anointed King that draws the Sword Wherefore do not defile the Camp with oaths and lust and drunkenness for the ground is fit for Davids Altar and the place is holy I have told you what it was to Achan to lose his fellow Souldiers yet the loss was not Achans so much as Joshuahs and he like a loving Prince did fall upon the ground and shewed much bitterness for the death
neither thrive abroad nor at home Pyrrho haec Samnitibus I can wish our Enemies no greater harm than such corrupted minds That Pyrrhus it is in Plutarch was a rambling Warriour and cared not whom he oppressed Says Cyneas to him his best Counsellor Shall we live thus always No says Pyrrhus when we have vanquished the Romans Compotabimus in otio vivemus We will drink stoutly and live merrily His Horse would have said as much if he could have spoken that when his service was done he would stand in the Stable and eat his Provender But the end of War is Peace and the end of Peace is to die unto Sin and to live unto Righteousness These are the last words I have to say now In the justness of our Cause confidence of Faith fervour of Prayer amendment of our Lives United Hearts and in our Religious and Noble ends we commend our most serene and excellent Admiral the whole Royal and gallant Expedition which he manageth to God In whom alone is our help For there is none that fights for us powerfully and irresistably but only thou O God To which God c. A SERMON UPON PROV iii. 3. Let not mercy and truth forsake thee THE Children of Israel were exhorted from their Prophet Moses to write the Law upon the Posts of their doors and to have Copies of it in the Fringes of their Garments as if the whole Land of Jury had been bound into one Sacred Volume to make a Bible for them This was Mandatum latissimum as David said a Commandment exceeding broad but a Proverb being by the very interpretation of the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as St. Basil says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quaint speech used in every street of the City and every high way of the field it is more vulgar and common than the Law it self that thou maist be unexcusable O man when his words are gone forth into the ends of the world Now in this brief essay which I have read unto you as the Heathen were wont to set up the Image of Mercury in the turnings of high-ways to direct Passengers their journey which was called Mercurialis acervus so King Solomon in these words hath reared up a Pillar in the broad way to instruct our ignorance which is ready to turn aside and wander like the lost sheep that whithersoever we set our face we keep this Via Regia the Kings high way Let not c. Mercy and truth so excellent a workmanship that I reverse what I said before it is not like a Pillar set up for an heathen Idol but rather Solomon hath made a new Cherubin for a new Temple a Cherubin with two wings stretched out upon our soul The wings are Mercy and Truth which either bear up the body to heaven as David says My soul flieth unto the Lord before the morning watch I say before the morning watch Or if it grow laden with sin that so great a burden cannot be supported these wings can fly away alone these vertues will be gone like Elias in his firy Chariot for a wounded Conscience who can bear it But if it be true that Tertullian says Omnis spiritus ales est Every Spirit is winged to fly much more let the Spirit of every regenerate man be this Avis Paradisi that our soul may say as David the Sparrow hath found her a nest and the Swallow a place to lay her young ones even thine Altar O Lord of Hosts and being thus fledg'd Mercy and Truth shall not forsake us Out of which words I collect these parts in order The first wing of a Christian soul is Mercy He shall protect me under his wings and I shall be safe under his feathers so God was merciful unto David and mercy is a Wing Secondly The next that answers unto it is Truth For the word of the Lord is that flying roul which Ezekiel saw and the Word of the Lord is the truth it self so that Truth is a wing Thirdly Note their conjunction Mercy and Truth they are coupled together Mercy and Truth are met together righteousness and peace have kissed each other they met long ago in Christ the head and we must not part them in his members Fourthly You must know that we may be so careless in our holy Profession that we may be stript of all the good endowments which we had Mercy and Truth may forsake us and then say we had them Lastly If we look to our part the gifts of God are without repentance ne deserant let them not depart there is a careful way whereby we may imp these wings from flying that they shall not forsake us else ne deserant were sounding brass and no true doctrine these are the five Lamps it remains I put oyl into them I begin at Mercy the fairest Omen that ever the World had in it The unmerciful brethren of Joseph consulted to put the blame of their cruelty upon the beasts we will say a cruel beast hath devoured him It is very well that they durst not profess themselves to be men who were so barbarous But neither is ●t in every beast of the field to be stony hearted The fouls of the air are gentle in their kind witness the Ravens that fed Elias and for the Cattel upon the hills the Ass forsook not his old Master the Prophet that was rent by the Lion The meanest of Creatures then have mercy by instinct of nature yea and the most glorious also dread not the Angels though they be called flaming spirits but rather consider what pity they have shewn in their Function towards the Sons of men To execute Gods wrath few do always come down as loath to be Ministers of indignation One destroying Angel appeared to punish Jerusalem one alone brought weeping news to Bochim Jud. ii Three appeared unto Abraham to bring him the joyful Message of a Son but their company grew less by one and but two of them brought tidings to Lot of the vengeance of Sodom But Elishas Servant saw Chariots and Horsemen and thousands in the Mountain to protect them To publish peace and joy heaven it self as I may so speak it was empty and there appeared a multitude of the heavenly Host to the Shepherds and sang praises unto God surely then one of their wings is Mercy But we must fetch our example further than the Angels let us go boldly to the throne of grace and fetch it from the third heavens Be you merciful with a sicut says our Saviour as your heavenly Father is merciful And if we cast our eye upon that pattern it blossoms like the rod of Aaron into these two buds condonationem and donationem First To forgive and remit sins Secondly To give liberally as God hath enabled us In the first I will thus proceed First that it is Gods nature and property to forgive secondly that man should rather forgive than God It did well deserve record
were more remaining in his hand than he had taken out of his Coffers Yes if the old man were not purblind and knew not what he took out I accept their good will that relate it somewhat they have imagined like to this success of eternal memory touching the five Loaves and two Fishes while the owners possessed it to themselves it was but a handful when they fed the hungry with it they found themselves Masters of Gods plenty Says Solomon There is that scattereth and that increaseth that 's consonant to my Text and there is that holdeth more than is meet and it tendeth to poverty Prov. xi 26. This is a riddle to Unbelievers that bounty should make them rich and yet an Heathen confessed it in that saying Haec habeo quaecunque dedi and that Parsimony should make them poor and yet a thousand examples confirm this where the blessing of the Lord hath subducted it self from the niggard One instance is as much as a Volume which Eusebius hath in the life of Constantine Ablaevius was a principal Officer both in the Palace and in the Army every where much esteemed by the Emperor his main fault was he had amassed up an infinite treasure craved perpetually and lived most sparingly upon a time as he pressed his Master the Emperor to obtein a suit that would bring in no small sum Constantine with a Spear in his hand drew the proportion of Ablavius his body upon the ground and says he When I have given thee all I can this is all that thou shalt have at last if thou gettest so much That if was a Prophetical word and there was a Divine sentence in the lips of the King as Solomon says for at last Ablavius was torn in pieces by the rude multitude and not an handful of his body was left to be buried in a Sepulcher The sum is the state of him that is gripple and cruel will be improsperous to himself much more to his Posterity But as alms and charity thrived extremely with the Disciples so it shall be with all those that remember the afflictions of Joseph and the Sun of comfort will shine upon those clouds above that drop their fatness upon the earth beneath And I am yet within the compass of the first part of my Text till I have delivered unto you not only what the Disciples did as good men but also as good Pastors they distributed unto them that were set down that is they fed the Flock which was committed unto them to feed the hungry to see that the fatherless and Widow have sustenance is an Ecclesiastical care I an Episcopal duty in no small degree The Apostles though they gave themselves wholly to prayer and to the Ministry of the Word yet they took order how the poor should be relieved Act. vi But it is a greater matter that this Miracle points unto not so much how the hunger of the body should be refreshed with charity as how the soul should be fed with the Word of Life So the ancient Doctors do commonly allude to those words which were the Introduction to this great work Give ye them to eat that our Saviour appointed the Twelve to sow the seeds of wholsom Doctrin among the people that there might not be a famine of the Word but to give them meat that endureth to everlasting life And in all likelihood this is the true cause why Christ when he had blessed the bread gave it over unto them to part it to the Assembly to shew that a Disciple is magnus animarum oeconomus as Nazianzen said of Athanasius his Lords Steward to provide for souls nay that one man should be as it were a God unto another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a terrestrial God to bring him salvation To the conveyance of divers benefits God hath called to himself divers Instruments and joyned them by a great condescension of his glory as Partners to himself as our Parents in the work of our bringing forth our Teachers in our training up Kings and Magistrates in the preservation of our lives and peace but the Ministers of his Word and Sacraments for the erudition of our souls The Omnipotent needs no such assistants as we are What is Man who could not keep the possession of a pleasant Garden upon earth that he should procure a celestial Paradise for the remnant that shall be saved And yet that we may be disciplined in the way of eternal life by such means as are familiar and connatural to our own infirmities we are labourers together with God 1 Cor. iii. 9. Reason is a strong adversary against this and will say that it is too excellent a function for one that consists both of clay and sin to preach the Mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven What! would you have the Lord to speak out of the clouds with his own voice O you know not what you ask you that shrink at the roaring of thunder would run into the dust for fear of his Majesty if he should speak The Cherubins and Seraphins can scarce endure it but they hide their faces when they hear the Trumpet of his glory An Army of five hundred thousand men interceded with Moses Speak thou with us and we will hear but let not God speak with us lest we die Well if his Majesty make him too awful to be the Prolocutor of his Word and Testimonies yet would not the Angels be far better Ambassadors than Men to deliver the things pertaining to faith and godliness no nor they so fit For first Satan cannot now revile Gods justice that he is not repulsed upon equal terms as he overcame so is he vanquished again Us he tempted to disobedience and we are the mouth of the Lord to teach repentance and obedience Secondly better to have a Priest taken out among men than among Angels for men are compassed with infirmity and can have compassion of the ignorant and of them that are out of the way Thirdly since Christ took our flesh to make our Attonement with God in this nature this nature is the fittest to continue the working of that grace unto the end of the World This is ratified by an instance not to be controuled Act. x. An Angel comforts Cornelius that his Prayers and Alms were remembred before God medles no further but transmits him to the holy Priesthood of the Church Send to Joppa for one Simon he shall speak words whereby thou and thy houshold shall be saved The upshot is our Saviour could have finished this Miracle without Coadjutors and have given the portions of bread to the hungry with his own hands but to teach us that such as he delivers his Commission unto at no hand any others that they shall intercur in sacred Offices between him and his People The Disciples distributed to them that were set down And these were faithful Stewards that kept nothing back freely they received and freely they gave They were taught in this
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. She is a Jerusalem a visible fair City that 's her external Communion 2. A Jerusalem above that 's her internal Sanctity 3. A Jerusalem that is free which is her supernal Redemption 4. A Mother that 's her Fruitfulness 5. The Mother of us which comprehends her Unity 6. The Mother of us all which expresseth the Universality Somewhat upon each of these as God shall assist me that the hour may be profitable to the hearers Jerusalem is the Substantive or fundamental word that bears up the whole Text and it is as musical a word as most that run upon syllables but it offers more pleasantness to the understanding than to the ear full of happy signification a name given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Philosopher Plato was wont to say to accommodate to the Church Apostolical that unless God had foreseen that his saving truth should first grow up within the walls thereof it had never been called Jerusalem The first mention of it is to be required from Josh x. i. where we read that Adoni-zedek King of Jerusalem was afraid of Joshua when he had taken the strong City of Ai Yet I will not say that it was called Jerusalem in those dayes when Adoni-zedek lived It had two names before and the best Antiquaries of the Jews confess it is not spoken of by their Wise-men which name preceded The Rulers thereof whose mention is of the oldest time are Melchi-zedek and Adoni-zedek that is the King of Justice and the Lord of Justice so that the City was formerly called Zedek or Justice that without controversy but because through the corruption of our manners Justice may set mens teeth on edg when it is too severe and inflexible therefore it was also called Salem or the Border of Peace Melchisedech kept his chief Court there and he was King of Salem and Priest of the most high God And thus in the times fore-gone augusto augurio for a more fortunate Auspice it was known by the names of Zedek and Salem Justice and Peace both which were fulfilled in Christ our Lord who suffered there to satisfie his Fathers Justice and made our peace by the Propitiation in his bloud Things by-past so long agoe for the most part are all uncertain and it is not known whether it were David the renowned Conqueror of that City or some other holy Prophet that enlarged the short word Salem and made it Jerusalem Whosoever it was if our Doctors hit him right he had an excellent reason for it In this place the mighty Hill was called Mount Moriah in the dayes of Abraham Thither he brought his onely Son Isaac to sacrifice him as the Lord commanded but when the Ram caught by the horns did excuse his Son he called that high place Jehovah Jireth the Lord will be seen in the Mount This Jireth prefixt before Salem makes it Jerusalem as who should say this City the Church will bring you to the vision of peace Or thus let her be comforted in her persecutions Deus providebit pacem God will provide peace So that Justice Peace and Providence are the flowers that spring out of her names a sign that some great Blessing was hatching within her Circuit which was brought forth when the first Flock of Christ the great Shepherd was folded there who were sent from thence to baptize all Nations Neither have we of the New Testament encroached upon this Name without leave the Psalms the Prophets all that went before have given us authority for it To cite one for all those words of Jeremy come next to my mind At that time they shall call Jerusalem the Throne of the Lord and all the Nations shall be gathered unto it We are the Parties spoken of and we are that Jerusalem the Throne of the Lord. Not to rob them of it that first possessed the Name but that both of us might be marked with one stamp as with a Seal of Unity It was Jerusalem before unto them of the Circumcision and still it is Jerusalem unto us of the Uncircumcision The Law and the Gospel are at no discord unless they be perversly mistaken the one was Christ veiled the other is Christ reveiled they make not two Churches no more than an Infant and one of full age make two diverse men it is the same bough that bears the flower and the fruit they are both Jerusalem No conjunction in the World was intended by God to be more amicable than between us two that we should be one People one Body one Sheepfold one City one Jerusalem any thing what you will which was of multitude and will hold fast together and become the same How often is our Peace-maker called a Corner-stone that he might grow with us both into one frame of building he stretched him to both Walls that both might rest in him Yet for all this none under Heaven are worse agreed than we through the envy of the Devil Socrus Synagoga divisa est contra nurum Ecclesiam says St. Austin It is as our Saviour foretold the Mother-in-law the Synagogue is divided against the Daughter-in-law the Church and the Daughter-in-law the Church is divided against the Mother-in-law the Synagogue But the scandal of the rupture is theirs and the curse of it is upon them which will never escape them that affect schismatical separations and to be holy after their own cut It were lamentable to tell you what the Polity of the Jews is at this time a spiritual Sodom is an harsh word but we that march after the Standard of Christ are an holy Jerusalem Which word must needs gather up our mind into many notions wherein Jerusalem of old and the Catholick Church do symbolize both of them the Seats of the Oracles of God both of them the Thrones of the Priesthood both of them sown with the bloud of Martyrs both of them illuminated by Prophets immediately sent from God there the Lepers that were cleansed after due Rites performed were received into the Congregation here contrite sinners after due penance performed receive their absolution to that Kings brought Presents and Proselytes came from far to this the most glorious Monarchs have afforded their bounty and protection In the one Christ was sacrificed for the sins of the World but the new Jerusalem and none but it doth partake the merit of his Sacrifice If fancy will take scope these Analogies are without number therefore I pass them by And I refer my self to two things especially how the Name descended upon the Church First While the old Tabernacle stood Jerusalem was the chief place wherein men called upon the Name of the Lord. Secondly Out of the same Sion went forth the New Law and Jerusalem was the Mother of the first born in Christ For the first as you would call a School of good letters Athens a place of good Military Education Lacedaemon and a Country of intemperance and luxury Babylon so because the Worship of God
greatest probation of faith but it changeth faith into another species of Religion than it was before St. Austin speaks to some holy people that were ready to die for the testimony which they held Mox aurei eritis nunc argentei estis Now you are Silver that is you are clean and sanctified but if you be tried in the Furnace of Martyrdom ye shall become Gold And as Gold is deposited in the best place of a mans Treasury so those golden Saints I mean those that are slain for the Word they are received into the most precious and costly Cabinets of the Kingdom of God Upon those words of the Psalm xxvii 5. He shall hide me in the secret of his Tabernacle says Bernard Christ is a Tabernacle of protection for all his servants but he reserves the Altar for the Martyrs which is the principal part of the Tabernacle In acknowledgment that they had won the chief Garland which was propounded to them that run the race the bones of the Martyrs anciently were wont to be buried in no common place of the Church but under the Altar So St. Ambrose of the bones of Protasius and Gervasius buried in his Church of Millain under the Altar says he Let these triumphal Sacrifices be brought to that place where Christ is sacrificed I had destined that plot of ground for mine own burial It is meet that the Priest should sleep in peace where he was wont to offer up the Peace-offering Sed cedo sacris victimis dexteram portionem locus ille martyribus debebatur but I resign the right hand of the Altar to them it is due to the Martyrs How their names were read at solemn times out of the Diptyches to renoun their passions how their requests which they made to the Church before they died were granted for the pardon of any delinquent how their reliques were held precious though not exposed superstitiously to veneration these and much to that effect were too long to recite it is measure heaped and running over that Stephen the Captain of the bloudy Army saw the Heavens opened to immortalize his sufferings and that in the first File of all that are blessed St. John saw those that were slain for the Word of God Yet this service is so rough unto our tender nature to part with life for the custody of the truth that all men had rather owe it to God than pay it him O but it is a good thing to put your self to the question secretly between God and your self and do it not easily or hypocritically admit I had supplied the room of Stephen of James of Justin Laurence Cyprian quanta nomina Should I have stood it out to the shedding of my bloud Or should I have fainted If you stick at it and cannot make a constant resolution go to a new scrutiny and that the flesh may not say that you deceive it with a superficial examination make the most that you can of the pains which you shall be put to under the hand of the torturer yet put all things in a right Scale that the pains to be endured are over in a pair of hours at longest for the most part in a pair of minutes that the truth which you defend is ten thousand times dearer than a corruptible body that the passions of this life are not worthy of the glory which shall be revealed solicite your self often with these meditations till you have concluded with a mature judgment as St. Paul did I count not my life dear unto my self so I may finish my course with joy And then I will pronounce you a Martyr in extraordinary for God accepteth the will for the deed But howsoever the preconsiderations of many be stout I fear they would grow effeminate upon the trial You cannot discharge a strict Lenten Fast how would your delicate bodies digest the hunger of an Inquisition The ground is too hard for your knees to pray upon what hope is there that you would hold out to lie upon the bare ground of a prison A throng in hot weather stifles you that you cannot endure the Church how would your flesh endure a flaming fire I believe you think this deaths-head hath been set too long before you And is there no smoother way to be a Martyr than by being slain Yes St. Paul says there is a living Sacrifice as well as a dead And St. Austin Pervenitur non solùm occasu sed contemptu carnis ad coronam You may receive the Crown prepared for them that fight lawfully not only by extinguishing but by mortifying the flesh Mine eyes do persecute my chastity ambition doth persecute my humility revengeful malice doth persecute my charity concupiscence is always persecuting my soul which way can I turn my self but that every thing is a Martyrdom to a Religious Christian But if I mortifie the deeds of the flesh if I abandon covetousness if I repress lust if I bridle malice if I trample upon the world whereas I was a Martyr in affliction before and sin did reign over me I have expulsed it by another Martyrdom by renovation and by crucifying the old man But alas for pitty how many Martyrs have we if they may be believed upon their own testimony How many whining passages in by-corners and Satyrical Sermons touching the persecution of the Saints God shield that Saints should suffer in so Orthodox and so mild a Church Sure they are mistaken Nay but they exclaim over and over that they suffer for their conscience For their conscience That is another thing Do they suffer for the Word of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Complutensian Bibles read my Text I love not to insult over misery with many words let them sift their own case and it will prove they are supprest for contemning Authority But there are others far more obstreperous against our state If Pictures and Almanacks and Martyrologies and Beatifications of Traitors will condemn us we are up to the ears in these Certificates for savage cruelty in killing the Saints Do they not mean Jesuites and Seminaries that were forbidden upon forfeiture of their head not to enter into his Majesties Dominions It is as clear as the light of the Sun then that they were executed for breaking the Statute-Law and not for the Word of God or for the Testimony which they held Every Malefactor will pretend that he dies in a good cause to make his judgment odious in mens nostrils Such as serve in the Gallies will never be known what crimes they are in for but complain that they wear their Chain for Faith and Religion Alass say their Abettors that canonize them that Statute is violated but by accident they come to instruct their own Proselytes and to execute the Function of their Priesthood therefore by consequent they are slain for the Word of God I will match their case with a full place of St. Cyprian and so answer them The Proconsul that