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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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pass away undiscern'd But all might not behold in Mount Tabor what manner of splendour a glorified body should have What was the reason of the impediment Damascen thinks the greater part did stay behind that Judas might not see the beauty of the Kingdom of Heaven who was reserv'd for chains of endless darkness This answer is personal the next is very plain and literal Vt mysterium secretius ageretur many witnesses are not fit to keep a secret and Christ call'd out a paucity to stand by at this Solemnization because he would have it conceal'd till he was risen from the dead He bad them tell no man in those days what they had seen for what reasons it seemed fit unto him to have it carried so privily for a while I promise to unfold when I come to treat of the 36. verse of this chapter The third reason is very pat though it be figurative though there were very good men left below the Mountain yet this partition of three in one consort that did see his glory nine in another knot who were left out doth betoken multi vocati pauci electi that many are called and few be chosen Moses took up no more than Aaron and Hur when he went up to Mount Horeb to talk with God Christ took no more than the fourth part of the Apostles when He went up to Mount Tabor that God the Father might talk to him Major pars remanet terrae adhaerens the more numerous part of men cleave to the earth below Elias sits alone upon Mount Carmel like a Sparrow sitting alone upon the house-top The valleys are too full of them that mind earthly things Two men went up into the Temple to pray vel duo vel nemo when there is a throng abroad without the Temple O curvae in terris animae so much heaven to receive us for it is of an incomprehensible capacity so little earth to possess for it is but a drop of water and a crumb of dust in respect of the world above yet we strive to enlarge our possessions upon earth which will not hold many rich inheritors at once and neglect Heaven which would contain us all and afford every one a Kingdom to reign with God So far I have collected what I knew fit to be observ'd upon the three Disciples who did associate our Saviour It followeth in the third part of the Text Christ prepar'd himself for his Glorification with great humility facta est inter precandum species ejus vultus altera c. as he prayed the fashion of his countenance was altered Christ need not pray to his Father as if He that was God and Man in one person could not bring all things to pass without a prayer That was Martha's error the Sister of Lazarus Joh. 11. I know now whatsoever thou askest of God He will give it thee but Christ doth intimate in the same chapter that without asking the Father did always hear him yet through the whole course of his being abased upon earth He did make requests unto God upon all occasions that the Head might fulfil all that righteousness which his Members should perform The matter of his prayer who is able to recite it what it was since either He prayed in spirit and did not lift up his voice or else prayed a part that the Disciples did not hear Or if they did hear yet they have not imparted the relation of it in the Gospel This I may safely say there is a Prayer which would make a very convenient Collect at such a time Joh. xvii 24. Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Surely it sounds well to reason that he prayed for that which He obtained before He stir'd from that place namely that his Divinity might cast a splendour through his body in a most amiable and visible form and that a type of the glory of the life to come might be revealed to these three Apostles even so the same thing must be continually in our supplications that the glory of Christ may be spread far and wide from Nation to Nation which is the large of that Petition which himself taught us Thy Kingdom come And as he prayed the fashion of his countenance was altered O the wise God that would have the glory of transfiguration fall upon himself at no other time but in the fervor of prayer Miserable men are those that desire not to be transfigured and to cast off the old man but more miserable that think to be transfigured without continual prayer An Hypocrite would seem to be a transform'd man Satan would appear to have transform'd himself into an Angel of light Hypocrites and Devils all love to make a shew of transfiguration but they did never pray to God to change their inside which is nothing but filthiness and to be renewed in the spirit of their mind or if Hypocrites do pray it is with such a faint desire as if they had rather be denied than speed they are not instant with God they are not constant or if you will have a good thing impressed in a rough word they are not pertinacious tamdiu orandum quamdiu transformemur in viros alios hold on and cease not to pray till you be changed into new men As a Distiller keeps his extractions at the Furnace till he see them flower and colour as he could wish so as long as we feel the reliques of the old Adam remaining especially while we feel them reign and get the dominion over us we must ply our Saviour day and night with a restless devotion and a flagrant importunity and I am sure while we pray not the fashion of our countenance but the fashion of our heart shall be altered What a molesting Suitor would Gorgonia the Sister of Nazianzen have been to any Prince upon earth She was not troublesome to God yet says Nazienzen she should protest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 she would make him asham'd to deny her and never rise up from her knees till the light of his countenance shin'd upon her S. Hierom loved his Nebridius of whose perseverance in Prayer he testifies certè sic semper erat orans Deum ut illi quod optimum esset eveniret he was an uncessant Petitioner to God so that nothing befel him but that which was fittest for him I opened my mouth and drew in my breath for my delight was in thy Commandments says David Psal cxix 131. in which verse is to be understood that Prayer is the very breath of the spirit without which the spiritual man can no more live than the natural man can live without the breath of air The lungs must be always cooled with the Element of air and faith must always be enflamed with the breath of supplication Will you hear the ample commendation of a true Prayer comprized in two words In
opened that the Word should run swiftly throughout all the world when good tidings were diffusive great joy unto all people The sound came flying upon the wings of the wind that there was neither Speech nor Language upon the earth but their voices were heard among them The Law made a great din when it was published there came thunder with it and the noise of a Trumpet louder and louder Yet this noise was spread in the Desart of Sinai in a desolate and uninhabited Region But this sound which hapned when the Gospel was authorized to be preached in every Nation it had audience in the most populous place of all Judaea in the City of Jerusalem As who should say it was a communicable sound which should be received into the Imperial Cities of all Kingdoms I draw this only observation from it to your holy practice that the Lord loveth fragorem vocis not a whispering silence but an exalted voice a loud exclamation to praise him Open confession of Gods name is an effect individually connex'd with a true lively faith so says David Psal cxvi I believed and therefore I spake There are three things hateful to God which jar against it 1. Hypocritical profession when the protestation of the mouth is not rooted in the heart 2. Abnegation of the Faith whether they deny the truth for fear or for resolved Apostasie 3. There is another way to sin against the confession of the Faith and that is malum silentium not to glorifie God openly in our profession when it concerns his honour in whose person the Psalmist speaks I kept silence yea even from good words but it was pain nay it will be pain and grief unto them St. Paul complains of those Christians that were of Rome in his days that none would openly declare themselves of his side in the time of persecution At my first answer none stood with me but all forsook me I pray God it may not be laid to their charge 1 Tim. iv 16. The Lord would not have it lurk only in the secrets of our breast that we are Christs Disciples but that it should resound abroad to his glory for with the heart man believeth unto righteousness and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation And let Gods service be performed on all sides on the Priests part and on the peoples with fervor and strength of voice like the sound of many waters You may pray tacitly in the heart but sure the holy Spirit came not from heaven like a vehement sound to teach you to fumble in the mouth and scarce to open your lips when you are in Prayer Prayer is a calling upon God Call upon me in the time of trouble Psal l. Nay a roaring for very disquietness of heart says the same Prophet in another place Our humble Petitions are called Vituli labiorum Heb. xiii Their lips will offer their sacrifice aloud if the true incense of zeal do burn within for our Saviour says Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh A troubled soul I grant it sometimes cannot utter it self sometimes a dumb-born Prayer is very powerful as Hannah the Mother of Samuel is the great instance of it but in the ordinary way assuredly the more strength of voice we put to our Supplications the more we shake off the drowsiness of the flesh the more we stir up the grace of the holy Spirit which loves that the Eccho and chearful sounds of the voice should ascend up to heaven But the Scripture doth not leave at this that there came a sound from heaven it goes further and tells us the manner of the sound that it was like unto that noise which is caused by a vehement wind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if the wind had blown but it was but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says Oecumenius that you might not imagine the holy Spirit to be a corporeal breathing like the vaporous substance of the wind therefore the quasi is very significant that it had but the similitude of the wind Yet it is very inquirable why like that more than any thing else If we had been left to guess what sound it was why might not we have imagined it to be the purling of some soft streams Or the humming of Bees about their Hive Or the voice of harpers playing with their harps Rev. xiv 2. None of those it was but as the fragor of the wind And when God declares his vertue in some sensible object you must perswade your reason there is some great relation between the sign and the thing signified Did not our Saviour illustrate unto Nicodemus our Regeneration or new Birth from the blasts of the air Joh. iii. 8. The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the voice thereof and knowest not whence it cometh or whither it goeth so is every one that is born of the Spirit Yet more feelingly when he did infuse into his Apostles the power of the Holy Ghost bequeathing them that great Sacerdotal priviledge Whosesoever sins ye remit they are remitted and whosesoever sins ye retain they are retained Was it not conveyed by blowing upon them like the wind by insufflation Joh. xx 22. He breathed on them and saith unto them receive ye the Holy Ghost Now I will tell you together where both the mystery and the use of it do consist First As the breath which we send forth comes from the warmth of our Lungs and of our bowels within so the Spirit proceedeth from the substantial love of the Father and of the Son What was the meaning then of that sensible expiration But that as the breath which he vented out came from his Humane Nature so the Holy Ghost which he breathed on his Disciples came from his Divine Nature And this must follow to give it you by the way that Christ is very God for who but God can communicate the Holy Ghost For it was Gods Promise that He and none but He would pour out his Spirit upon all flesh Isa xliv And it stands as well proved that the Holy Ghost is God for the prime and supreme power to remit sins is the Holy Ghosts he was given to the Disciples for that end and none can forgive sins but God alone Secondly Christ communicated his spiritual gifts by breathing to shew that he even the same Lord was the Author both of our temporal and eternal life For in the Creation the Lord breathed into mans nostrils the breath of life Gen. ii 7. But this life shall pass away and the body shall crumble into dust Why behold the breath of the Lord will go forth again to cause a joyful Resurrection as it is in the Prophets vision of the dry bones Ezek. xxxvil 5. Thus saith the Lord unto these bones Behold I will cause breath to enter into you and ye shall live Yet if this body wherein sin reigns and inclines it only to
lest he pluck the house about our ears Do we provoke the Lord to anger are we stronger then be O provoke him not lest he swear that ye shall not enter into his rest but with holy reverence and stedfast faith submit your selves to his revealed will Amen THE FOURTEENTH SERMON UPON Our Saviours Tentation MAT. iv 8. Again the Devil taketh him up into an exceeding high Mountain and sheweth him all the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them THe Scripture makes mention that there is a season at the return of the year when Kings go forth to battel This is not the time all men know it well enough quite contrary now it is usual that the wearied Souldier should draw himself out of the Field into Garrison But all times and seasons are alike unto our Adversary the Devil all the changes and quarters of the year will serve his turn to fight against us who walks about continually seeking whom he may devour Wherefore I bring him out before you to let you see how he laid about him in his last skirmish for this third is his last tentation As the Carthaginians in their third Punick War lost their City and Kingdom to the Romans and never bore Arms more so you shall see Satan so repulsed at this onset that he left the Field to the Conquerour and never after propounded any blasphemous tentation in a visible shape to the Son of God David was much imboldned to fight with Goliah and assured himself of Victory because he had grappled with two savage beasts and slain them both and thus spake chearfully to Saul Thy servant slew both the Lion and the Bear and this uncircumcised Philistin shall be as one of them So the first tentation was unto our Saviour like a ravenous gluttonous Bear Command that these stones be made bread The second was like a ramping and a roaring Lion all boldness and presumption Cast thy self down from a Pinacle of the Temple Now he that escaped both these out of the paw of the Lion and out of the paw of the Bear shall triumph most victoriously over this great Goliah in the last and most bewitching tentation which begins in this form Again the Devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain and sheweth him c. How divers is Satan from himself How unlike is this course to that which he took before Since Christ was so tender of his safety that he would not fall head-long the Tempter casts his Net on the other side of the Ship and promiseth as much as any man can wish in this world that loves himself The odds therefore are very great between the former motion Cast thy self down from a Pinacle of the Temple and between this motion Behold all the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them c. The one is Passio corruptiva make away your self utter ruine and corruption This is Passio perfectiva the perfection and solace both of the eye and the heart to see the pride of the earth and all the excellency of it as upon a Theater The ways indeed are divers but the malicious intention is the same or rather far greater in this which I will demonstrate piecemeal as I handle the several particulars of which these are to be considered in this present Verse 1. The importunity of Satan he is upon our Saviour again Again the Devil taketh him up 2. The variety of his shifts from the Pinacle of the Temple he taketh him up to an exceeding high Mountain 3. Note by what gate or passage he would enter his tentation by the eye Ostendit illi he shews a goodly object unto him 4. The dignity of the Object he shews him Kingdoms 5. For the amplitude and generality All the Kingdoms of the world 6. In their most amiable and desirable shape he shewed them in their glory All the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them 7. Satan shewed himself to be an arch Juggler or Praestigiator as Artists call it for St Luke adds that he shew'd all this in a moment of time these are all distinctly to be handled and first of his importunity Again the Devil taketh him up c. A close Solicitor and a diligence worthy to be commended if it had been in a good cause But they that are in a wrong way are most zealous in their course and negotiate for hell more urgently than we do for heaven Many a soul is lost for want of teaching and instruction it is very dreadful to remember how God will require it at our hands but in this Satan triumphs that never any soul escap'd him for want of instance and prosecution And I hold it for a true Position that many times he is assiduous to subvert good men where there is no hope of speeding to provoke God to be angry with our lazy negligence upon the comparison I believe the Devil never thought to proceed so far as to a second tentation with our Saviour much less to a third but to get what he lookt for at the first motion yet since he found an hard match of it and was twice repulsed with such evidences of Scripture as could not be answered he redoubles his boldness and thinks in the end to weary out our Saviour as Dalilah did Samson with importunity St. Paul besought the Lord thrice that the Messenger of Satan might depart from him The one prayed often the other prick'd him often The evil Spirit vied it with the good Apostle the one exceeded in the number of devout Prayers the other was not one whit behind in the number of fleshly tentations St. Austin compared the Devil to a Mastive Dog Qui nec percussus ab hominis laceratione separatur Beat him thrust him away stave him off break his teeth in his head yet he flies upon you till he have torn and devoured you So this incensed Adversary never to be reconciled will not be quite driven from you with Vows with Fastings with Supplications but listens to hear you say as one discouraged with perplexity I am weary of my groaning untill this tyranny be overpass'd But that tyranny is uncessant the hatred of the Devil hath no stint expect it be ready for it and let it not sting your conscience with horrour if you find somewhat within you always warring against the Spirit tentations are not like some diseases which are not incident to a man above once in his life scape once and secure for ever but like hereditary infirmities which are ever recurring to torment the flesh A quotidian is more like to be cured if it be well look'd to than an Ague whose Paroxysms keep longer distance Nor shall the Tempter again or his importunities bow down our neck under the yoke of sin these quotidian fits shall not weaken the inward man if the fear of the Lord be ever in our heart and his name often between our lips to conjure down the Regiment of the Prince
of First-fruits which at this time by the Levitical Sanctions were waved to the Lord are rendred after the spiritual gloss of our Church to be amor Dei proximi the love of God and the love of our Neighbour and these must be weaved or heaved up after their manner what 's that why our integrity and piety must shine before men that they may see our good works and glorify our Father that is in heaven Beloved here 's the difference they gave first-fruits of earthly things this day unto God but this day we celebrate the memorial how God gave First-fruits of heavenly things unto man In Rom. viii 23. St. Paul speaks of the first-fruits of the spirit in a diminutive sense as the inchoation of grace the enlightning of faith the hope of better things that what he hath begun in us he will perfect but the first-fruits of the spirit which the Church reapt this day was that which sanctified the whole lump for ever after for this last correspondency and for the other forenamed the Apostles in a most acceptable time expected the Holy Ghost when the day c. A most delicious gift poured out from God in the very strength and deliciousness of the year A festival time it was you have heard and such a Festival as brought a Concourse of many Nations to Jerusalem so it appears in this chapter I have my authority from St. Ambrose that the Lord had this time much in mind to do it honor many years before for some Jewish Tradition hath encouraged him to say that the certain season when the Angel came down to the Pool of Bethesda to trouble the water that whosoever stepped in first might be made whole of his disease it was but once a year and that once was the Feast of Pentecost Mark how the Lord design'd out that day for his Angelical Miracle I will not engage my self into that Chronological question whether our first Whitsunday when the Holy Ghost appeared in firy tongues was the very Pentecost of the Jews or rather the day after To the latter opinion many incline upon that slight reason because St. Luke writ this Story of the Acts 28 years after Christ's ascension into heaven and then the Jews Pentecost was abolished the doubt is much uncertain wherefore I let it pass But I can assure you that in very ancient times of the Christian Faith yea in the most ancient if Clement his Constitutions were warrantable this day was kept with as high honour and devotion as the zeal of our Forefathers could excogitate Says Eusebius lamenting that his Master Constantine the Emperor died at the same time if I should call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holiday of Holidays we should not erre He adds that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it had honour done it seven weeks together This in my apprehension refers us to three things First the Church was wont to sing that chearful Anthem of Alleluia every Sunday from Easter to Whitsuntide an arbitrary Ceremony at the discretion of every particular Church and our Church of England since the Reformation continued the custom according to the first Liturgies set forth in Edward the sixth his Reign to sing or say alleluia from Easter to Whitsuntide at Morning Prayer 2. By the ancient Prescript no Fasts were bidden all those seven weeks nothing but joy and exultation was heard and practiced 3. During all that space they did not kneel at time of Prayer but stand upright looking towards Heaven from whence the Holy Ghost descended Nefas erat de geniculis adorare in Tertullian's time these were ancient Rites and Prescriptions to magnify this day in the beauty of holiness But whereas Eusebius adds that Christ ascended into Heaven the very same day the Holy Ghost descended this was his oversight though not his alone who would not pick the right sense Act. i. 3. that Christ was seen of his Disciples but fourty days speaking of the things of the Kingdom of Heaven therefore on the fourtieth day he was taken from them into Heaven and ten days after the plentiful showers of grace did rain down upon the Church the time is so precisely noted says Isidor Palcusiot to refute that proud Heretick Montanus who said the great promise of the Holy Spirit was not fulfill'd at the Feast of Pentecost but long after in his days This is the glorious day which the Lord hath made wherein he summ'd up the complement of all his benefits as the sixt day was the complement of the Creation All other preceding mercies were but words to this the Holy Ghost is the Seal or Signature of those words to make the deed the stronger in quo signati estis Eph. iv 30. in whom ye are sealed unto the day of Redemption Rejoyce in this day and keep it holy before the Lord not in decking the body in full diet in sport in idleness but in thankfulness in purity of mind in spiritual consolations in the feast of a good conscience and ever set before you at such seasons what Gregory said Quid prodest interesse festis hominum si contingat deesse festis Angelorum What profit is it to keep holiday with men if we should be excluded from keeping holiday with Angels for evermore So much for the time of the Holy Ghosts coming I repent me not that I have been long in it for it was most material The persons that received this power from on high are next in the way of my discourse omnes all of them Many there are that understand this note of Universality collectivè not as meant of all that were present but of all the Apostles The whole Church was gathered together for the Election of a new Apostle that 's apparent in the former chapter and the lot fell upon Matthias The number of names together were about an hundred and twenty Among these there were divers women Mary the Mother of our Lord is expresly mentioned for one of them these continued together in prayer and supplication even until the time that the Holy Ghost did fill the Room Now I would put the case into this distinction whether the spirit came down upon them all upon them all in some great measure no question but not upon them all with the same virtue and power and illumination Many talents of rare perfections were distributed among all the Believers that were present men and women for else Peter had not applied the place of the Prophet Joel so pertinently ver 17. of this chap. In the last days I will pour out of my spirit upon all flesh your sons and your daughters shall prophesie your old men shall dream dreams and your young men shall see visions St. Hierom leans to this side and says that the mighty gift of grace was given to all that believed even as God took the spirit of Moses and gave it to the 70 Elders and it came to pass when the spirit rested upon them
Child of wrath and those laudable actions were but sins or imperfections with a good gloss Will you say they desire and pray for the holy Spirit and therefore this illumination comes not suddenly but with invitation O but says the Arausican Council which handled this Point of the grace of God more copiously and Orthodoxly than ever any Council did the utterance nay the very thought of every good Prayer it is instilled by the divine irradiation of Gods help and the Holy Ghost is called the Spirit of Prayer and if any man say that the grace of God is bestowed upon our Prayer and Invocation and that grace did not first enable us to make that Prayer he contradicts the Prophet Isaiah and the Apostle Paul who both have these same words I am sought of them that asked not for me I am found of them that sought me not Thus that Council whereby you hear that we whose nature is rank corruption do not prepare and dispose the way to attract the blessing of heaven upon us by little and little upon congruity of Gods favour it comes suddenly and unawares when we least deserve it It must not be let alone without this addition to it which is S. Ambrose his descant on it Nescit tarda molimina spiritus sancti gratia the spirit of purity and renovation is quick and sudden in the work of conversion he doth not linger and mature his good effects by soft leisure he doth not creep like a snail or as a Father of our own Church says like a Serpent Serpentis est repere Commonly motions that come from the old Serpent the Devil creep upon us and men grow bold in iniquity by degrees Nemo repentè fit pessimus was the old Proverb but where the Lord loveth the man whom he chooseth he doth in an instant take away his stony heart and give him an heart of flesh And as the Resurrection of the dead shall be in an instant so in an instant he translates him from death to life It is done with such dispatch and celerity that the gift of Prophesie nay of Sanctification is called but the touch of the lips Says the Angel to Isaiah upon the living coal which he brought from the Altar This hath touched thy lips and thine iniquity is taken away and thy sin purged Isa vi 7. The loyal Israelites that feared God and the King are called a band of men whose hearts God had touched 1 Sam. x. 26. O admirable workman says Gregory Mox ut tetigeret mentem docet solùmque tetigisse est docuisse He doth but touch and teach and the mind is reformed in a moment as soon as ever the finger of his Spirit is laid upon it An Apostolical Spirit came suddenly upon St. Matthew penitent restitution upon Zaccheus confession and grace upon the Thief on the Cross The Eunuch made haste to believe and as soon as he believed he would be baptized of Philip at the next water he came to and go no further Men must not neglect present motions of grace though suddenly rising in them Now the Lord moves my heart and now at the first touch I will obey the Spirit This is a brave and a pious resolution But if you let the grace of God knock at door once and twice and do not open it is to be feared that you will grow deaf after a while and never hear it Modo modò non habebant modum Anon and to morrow and hereafter at more leisure and as Festus said to Paul Go thy way for this time when I have a convenient season I will call for thee these are not words of good manners to so great a King as the King of heaven Can Impenitancy or continuance in evil be good at any time Then break it off at the first pang and throw that the Conscience suffers for it The Spirit is a sudden wind he deceives his own soul that continues in a long consumption of any sin and thinks to be helpt out of it by a lingring remedy The description of the suddenness hath not been unuseful you see and we shall collect as much from that which follows that it was Flatus veniens vehemens a rushing mighty wind Methinks I see the Spirit of God set out here in his manifold strength and efficacy Is there any thing in it self so thin and poor as a puff of Air It is neither Iron nor Brass nor Bones and yet what strange effects it works Turns up Oaks and Cedars by the roots breaks the Ships of the Sea in pieces casts down Bulwarks and Fortresses so Epiphanius received it from some good hand that God overthrew the Tower of Babel with a violent wind So the principles of the Spirit seem to be very mean and foolishness to flesh and bloud the Instruments in which it wrought homely illiterate Fishermen yet the learning of five Synagogues putting their wits together was not able to resist the wisdom and the Spirit by which Stephen spake Acts vi 10. It brings down strong Holds and high Imaginations it brings into Captivity every exalting thought to the obedience of Christ Wisdom Learning Might Majesty all have stoopt before it As the Scripture says often that the Spirit came mightily upon Samson and then his Foes were sure to fall before him so it rusheth upon some holy men with a gallant heroick zeal and then all the subtilties of Satan are not able to make a part against it No Fear can dismay them no Persecution can make them hide their head no Favour or Reward make them swerve from a good conscience no Discipline so strict that they will not undertake for the love of Christ The Kingdom of heaven suffereth violence and the violent take it by force Mat. xi 12. The Kingdom of heaven was among the Jews but Rapuit regnum coelorum Centurio The Centurion did as it were invade it and take it from them for upon his confession our Saviour said I have not found so great faith no not in Israel Neither is it only expedient to make it manifest that the Spirit is strong and mighty like a stiff vehement wind in actu exercito in the power of it which the Saints of God have to exercise to others but also in actu primo informante when it enters into the heart of them whom God converts it comes with a mighty force and will not be gainsaid with the opposition of our rebellious nature Neque resistere ultra potest cui velle resistere sublatum est says a Reverend Father of our own Church that is neither shall our vicious nature resist the mighty working of Gods converting grace since the first thing that such grace works is to conquer our perverseness in resisting I do not say but our will hath always a liberty and indifferency in it to do or not do To chuse or refuse but the act to resist is suspended for that time by the grace of God and though
Noah sent up clean Prayers to God with the Oblation of every clean Beast and of every clean Fowl For while Zachary burnt Incense in the Temple the whole multitude were Praying without at the time of Incense Luk. i. 8. And Solomon gives us light what was done at Sacrifice he spread out his hands to heaven in Prayer and dedicated the fat of the Peace-offerings to the Lord. Nay more the Evening Sacrifice burnt all night upon the Altar and the Priests continued in the Temple till morning at Prayer You that by night stand in the house of the Lord lift up your hands in the Sanctuary and bless the Lord Psal cxxxiv. 2. I know not what company they had at the Prayers of the Sacrifice by night or day very little if their devotion were no greater than ours I read in the Ages upward what a thrust there was in their Churches at the daily service of Prayer which concourse is quite disused in our days and unless the office of Prayer be pieced out with a Sermon in all places you shall find a most contemptible paucity and yet we should know that in a Sermon God sacrificeth to us not we to him Let me be bolder with you they are scarce worthy to be called Prayers as they are most negligently handled The Priest reads I will not say how dreamingly sometimes the People gape about and have other business in their heads Some chop in at the latter end cannot spare leisure to all Some answer to one line and hold their peace at ten Some stand more upon their ease than to stand up or bow down when they should with reverend gesture What can there be in such Prayers as these to call them a sweet savour Our sins stink in the nostrils of God and are odious you confess that and miserable man have you no better than such careless shuffling Supplications to sweeten them They were Wisemen that took out Myrrh and Frankincense when they came to Christ Ad faetorem stabuli excludendum to correct the ill savour of the Stable where he lay but contrary to all reason when our heart is dung and our ways more filthy than Augias Stable we yawn out heedless heartless undevotioned Prayers to mend the matter O is it not to us that he speaks by the Prophet Amos v. 21. I despise your Feasts I will not smell in your holy Assemblies I will borrow a piece of a Sermon from St. Bernard to make up this Point Stand before the Lord chearfully reverently devoutly Non pigri non oscitantes non parcentes vocibus non praecidentes verba dimidia Be not drowsie let not your attention slip from you when God is praised leave not all the Prayers to the Priests care but every one make up his part do not mangle and chop Gods Service let your Spirits go with every word when you hear an Hymn or Psalmodie think of nothing else but that which is sung You are not allowed a good thought at that time if it be extravagant much less a worldly a malicious a wanton cogitation Pare away these superfluities that you may say My heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise Thus far that the devotion of Noah was very Aromatical in the sweet savour of his Sacrifice Secondly the care that this Patriarch had for the instauration of Religion above all things is like Mary's sweet Ointment which she poured upon our Saviour it shall be spoken of so far as the Word is Preaced in all the world Bethink you as well you may when Noah put forth his head out of the Ark to tread upon the earth which could afford him nothing but room to walk upon with how many thoughts he was distracted What house to put his head in where to be provided of Food and Raiment where were all the necessaries and comforts of life to be had How should he rake up a New World out of the Ruines of the Old All these instances and more than these were thoughts to take up a wise man and yet he laid all these under his feet and built an Altar upon them to institute a true form of Divine Worship in the first place that all the World might follow it Why it is evident that his heart gave him in charge to look to Religion above all the necessaries of life and to forget all things even himself till he had remembred God Abraham was a Pilgrim and it is ever observed in this Book of Genesis or with little exception that he never removed to any new place but first he built an Altar to the Lord. At the first quiet Station which the Children of Israel had vvhen they came out of Egypt Moses sanctified the first-born to God David was no sooner confirmed a King but he brought the Ark into its resting place We stand before a great God that will not be served with the second or third part of our care The Jews were rebuked that built houses for themselves when they were returned from Captivity and let the House of the Lord lie waste Christ did reprove it that the young man that was called to follow him should put in another thing between First let me go and bury my Father Can you find out any first before God that is the first and the Last Piety and Sacred Offices are sweetly managed when you give them the flower of your care and the pre-eminence before all things The day will shine prosperously on you if you give the first hour after you rise from your bed to Prayer The whole Week is blessed because the first day is the Lords-day to call holy Assemblies together The Heathen Romans began the Laws of the twelve Tables with a sanction of Religion Deos castè adeunto In all Commerce Confederacies Treaties let the honour of God be the prime and Master respect And all other fine devices will prove but counterfeits of wit to such sacred Policy Another thing makes this repair and settlement of Religion precious and highly valued for the unity and conformity of all parties present at it It was the first solemnity performed to God after the Floud that the Company before they dispersed might agree in one outward form of Divine Worship I do not know whether such a complete consent of all persons in the Earth was ever seen before or since the days of Noah Therefore it must needs afford an excellent savour There was no Idolatry in the world no different ways no divisions I am for this and I am for that This little Flock was at unity in it self the old Patriarch his Sons and Daughters agreeing in one Prayer and in one Sacrifice O rare and heavenly One Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts in the tongues of all the Angels is the most Angelical part of the Angels Ministry That is in heaven but the sacred Concord that I preach of was on earth An obedience running all one way no separations no
stand far off as you can from prophanness it hath a multiplying mischief in it there 's an infectious exhalation transpassant from man to man because sin is the biting of a Serpent O look up often to Christ and pray unto him to take away these Serpents from us our sins of daily incursion When your spirit is heavy and cast down with dispair prayer will make it rebound from earth to heaven It is the energetical expression of faith the Ambassador which hope sends up to God the fellowship of love the comfort of the Holy Ghost This may soon be done if we have a mind to it It is as easie to say Our Father which art in heaven as to see heaven which is alwayes in our sight If your Place and Calling take up much of your time let your Prayer be compendious well fill'd with matter an holy breathing speak home and be strong in sense But beware of high looks and high words Lord thou dost hear the desire of the humble and dost prepare their heart And beware of stiff joints Put your self back in great distance from the Lord that you may the better behold him in his excellent greatness Then the Serpent sin shall be taken from us The last point to be dispatched is about Serpent men There are such for our Saviour says of the Pharisees Ye Serpents ye generation of Vipers how can ye escape the damnation of Hell Matth. xxiii 33. The Heathen are meer men men of this World says the Psalm Good Christians are more than men Saints of God Bad Christians are not so good as men and have no wrong done them to be compared to beasts Of such as I shall speak of in reference to the feeling of our own condition I will tell you of their number that they are many of their continuance for length of time and of their qualities that they are crooked hissing subtle and venemous vermin Of these in as many strictures Take away the Serpents a multitude a plurality of them so my Text imports And so are ours though more to be endured yet not so many I hope as to be feared since great wisdom watcheth them I need not tell you you know it that they contrived themselves into seven interests If we were as confident Revelationers as they we should find the Beast with seven heads among them Revel xiii But those heads grew all upon one neck so do not these For not one of them hath an interest in the same Principles of Religion with the other The grave President of sedition that would not be seen among the rest can concur for mischiefs sake with those Fanaticks that will never be subject to his Classical Consistories O when shall we see a Bed of Roses grow so close together as Briars and Brambles black and white Thorn will twine into one Hedg The Spawn of seven Serpents all of different species can coagulate into one Roe Satan can melt his Heterogeneal Mettals and make them all run into one Furnace Every language that understands not the rest can help to build an internal Babel But our help is in him who sends us health from the seven Spirits that are before the Throne of the Lamb. Secondly a Serpent is slender but long And a long Council of Serpents held us many years in oppression Many fetches the old Dragon had to keep it together When it was cut in pieces some of the pieces according to the vulgar error came together again and brought the Servants of God and the King to scrape for Pearls of patience out of so great a Dunghil of misery Perhaps I had passed by this note of the length but that Pliny speaks of a great Serpent taken at the River Bagrada near to Old Carthage of 120 foot long whose body being consumed the skin was sent to Rome and what became of it there why it was hung up in the Capitol in their House of Parliament and hung up there so long as stuff could endure Note here a Serpent the longest that ever was heard of the skin remaining when the body was mortified and hung up in the Senate-house Any body may expound this Riddle without an application Thirdly we speak of a crooked creature Leviathan the crooked Serpent Isa xxvii 1. So are they that are devillish crooked and perverse Phil. ii 15. How hard is it to find their tract when they wriggle this way and that way in no direct line A right line is the shortest passage from point to point there you shall find sound Doctrin oblique deflections whether it be in Confession of Faith Form of Prayers or Discipline have as many shapes as the Moon One while a few Ceremonies shall be allowed and anon none at all sometimes they are stuck at but for inconvenient the next news that comes they are unlawful with the next tide we hear they are only unexpedient for the scandal sake of weak people At one hearing the Old Liturgy castigated will give content shortly nothing will serve but a new lump of Prayer which hath no congruity with any that ever was before in a while they will brook no set Form at all How many degrees hath the shadow run back upon their Dial 'T is like a motion in the Ches-board sometimes into a black chequer sometimes into a white but it is all one so they may check the King or move the Bishop How crooked are these Serpents and untraceable in their paths they can take any figure upon them be as square as a tile of the Pavement be as round as a hoop play at all weapons after the variety of the times As the Friar abused that of the Psalm Thy truth most mighty God is on every side This is able to pose the most prudent to make a clear observation upon it It was beyond Solomons wisdom Prov. xxx 19. four things are too hard for me to know the one is the way of a Serpent upon a rock for it is his own rule that which is crooked cannot be made right or after the Proverb a crooked Cucumer will never become strait It is only Prayer that can bring such things to be even and perpendicular But Lord take away the crooked Serpents from us And fourthly the hissing also the Rattle-snakes of one of our new Plantations their railings and invectives under the tone of whinings and lamentations This kind are Pulpit Serpents O impious for none but the Brasen Serpent should be set up in that place the Prince of peace and healing The Doctrine of the whole Clan is for anger and commotion Peragunt civilia bella cerastae as I may fitly say with Cato in the Poet When the Civil Wars were done the Asps and Adders begun a new Battel The hissing and the consequence are as pernicious as that of the false Prophets Mich. iii. 5. They make my people to err and bite with their teeth But it is a people bred in dark informations else such palpably
are the words of Calvin To call a Publick Fast is to draw a solemn profession from the tongues of all men in the behalf of all men So do we for those who out of stubbornness and frivolous exceptions against our Liturgy will not joyn with us in this Church duty So we do for those who out of blindness in a superstitious breeding had rather mutter they know not what in an unknown Tongue than pray with us in that Language wherein they may be comforted and edified So we do for those who out of profaneness and Atheism think not of these things and have no affection to bear a part in common Supplications We fast for all these to day as for our selves desiring God as it is in our Litany that he will have mercy upon all men The sick that desire to joyn with us in Prayer and cannot come Infants and Sucklings whose tongues are not yet framed to magnifie the Lord we represent all these and include them in our faithful and charitable Supplications for our selves and for all these we pray to our heavenly Father that as we spread not our Table this Noon so he will fit us against Night to eat our meal with a good conscience with confidence and comfort that he hath restored us to all his blessings again And though we have been Prodigal Children yet we shall be brought into our Fathers house to eat the bread of life and the fatted Calf even Jesus Christ A Fast is commonly the Eve before some Holy-day and I pray to God that this Publick Fast may be such the Eve or forerunning day to joyful times to come and so it will be if as sure as this is a Fast the time to come be observed with all diligence as holy to the Lord. And now in the conclusion of all that you may know that Nebemiah fulfilled all righteousness for Jerusalems sake when so many exercises of humiliation had gone before in the upshot he prayed before the God of heaven Weeping and Mourning and Fasting are about Prayer like prickles about a Rose But as no sweet Rose is without prickles so no powerful Prayer is without these or some of these But this is the Rose this is the flower of Religion this is the Odour of sweet Incense that ascends up before the Lord. Ibi nuntius noster oratio mandatum per agit quò caro pervenire non potest says St. Austin It delivers our Message like an Embassadour in the Sanctuary of God whither corruptible flesh and bloud cannot enter For as the Winds and Air have free access unto those places which are immured and watcht that no foot of man can approach unto them So though a Cherubim brandish a flaming Sword before Paradise that the Seed of mortal man cannot come to it without destruction yet our Prayers are Spirits and Angels that fly upon the wings of the wind and come boldly to that place where God is wonderful in light inaccessible A poor whelp hath found out a way by nature to lick it self whole with its tongue when it is bitten or wounded So when we are oppressed with any evil of sin or of punishment our tongue is our instrument to lick the sore Call upon the Lord in the time of trouble and he will hear thee and help thee Yet very much goes to it to make Prayer speeding and effectual Go unto the House of the Lord as often as you can and joyn in humble Petition with the Spirit of the whole Church with the Congregation of Saints and bring your mind with you as well as your body your zeal as well as your voice Observe your constant times of private Prayer at least every Morning and every Evening if oftener the better Cast your self upon your knees with a resolved preparation to be a faithful a penitent an earnest Supplicant Intermit not this practice for any worldly avocation either to serve your self or to serve your friends and I can tell you this will bring such admirable effects to pass when you have got the habit and perseverance of that vertue as I durst not name but that the Spirit of God hath got assurance of it It will give you knowledge of divine things when you will wonder how you learnt them It will pick the thorns of Concupiscence out of your flesh when you will marvel how you were rid of them It will give you courage in dangers when there is small hope to escape And content when desire is not obtained And chearfulness when every thing that should procure joy is far from you It is grace and peace health and wealth and every good thing that concerns this life and a better Only ask seek and knock ask with confidence seek with diligence knocb with perseverance No Father if his Child ask him bread will give him a stone or if he ask a fish will give him a Scorpion If they that are evil give good things how much more will your heavenly Father If we ask him Victory he will not give us a Defeat If we ask him Peace he will not give us continuance of War If we ask him for Justice he will not give us Oppression If we ask him for the continuance of true Religion he will not give us Idolatry and Superstition But ask zealously faithfully devoutly with love unfeigned with a clean heart as becometh Saints For if you ask amiss you shall go without Look towards the pattern of Nehemiah he was one of great integrity and uprightness and therefore fit to carry the Petitions of all the people in his lips to God He prayed before God not like an Hypocrite to be seen of men He set God always before him assured that he was present to hear his words and to see his ways But they that have the itch of the Pharisees to draw the eyes of men upon them the Lord will turn away his face and reject their Prayers He prayed before the God of heaven he did not pray to the Saints in heaven No says Friar Walden we confess that none of the just men in the Old Testament did ever pray to any Saint departed partly because the souls of the righteous were not admitted unto the Vision of God in heaven before Christ by his Ascension did open the Kingdom of heaven to all believers Even as much then as now for ought he knows and how much or how little either then or now it is hard for him or us to know But his second reason is that the Jews were kept from the custom of praying to Saints least they should run into Idolatry I thank him for that caution for that mis led practice of praying to Saints is a symptome of Idolatry Let us direct our Petitions to the Lord alone in whom we have assurance that he doth hear us and will help us I have said unto the Lord thou art my God hear the voice of my Prayer O Lord Psal xl 6. Is there any Precept in Scripture
humour into devotion and Prayer Is your Temperature Sanguine and chearful I can tell what that will do if this living water feed it the mind will be bountiful easie to remit injuries glad of reconciliation comfortable to the distressed always rejoycing in the Lord. If a man be Phlegmatick and fearful there is a trial likewise what God can bring forth from such a nature How wary will the Conscience be to give no offence How pitiful How penitent How ready to weep over its own transgressions Finally in every Age of the life old or young in every condition of fortune regal honourable or servile this living water where God pleaseth incorporates it self into it and makes it grow and fructifie according to that use and purpose for which it was planted It is water then which doth increase and vegetate every Plant which our heavenly Father hath planted but with much disparity from our common waters as you may apprehend by divers instances For first pour all that you can draw from your fountain upon a tree that is quite dead and your labour is lost it will never spring again but most wretched were the state of man if the water which Christ gives did not bring us to live again when we were quite dead in corruption And you being dead in your sins hath he quickned c. having forgiven you all your trespasses Col ii 13. All the Sons of Adam beside our earthly mortality are under the infliction of a double death by nature it is a spiritual death to be bereft of grace It is an eternal death to be guilty of hell fire We are St. Judes fruitless trees bis mortuae once were enough but we are twice dead pluckt up from the root yet if the light of Gods countenance shine upon us we shall sprout again and wax green like a Cedar in Libanus What a sapless tree was Zachaeus before the Holy Ghost the Lord and giver of life as we do well call him in the Nicene Creed did bring salvation to his house You might as soon have squeezed water from a Pummy stone as charity from a Publican before his conversion yet though he were dead in covetousness as soon as He began to live in him he scattered abroad and gave unto the poor As the Father said of his Prodigal Child being now come home into his bosom This thy brother was dead and is alive again So let every penitent soul confess my root was dried up how should it come to spring again but by some influence from heaven I was a withered tree that cumbered the ground how am I exalted like Aarons Rod to bring forth Buds and Almonds I was a sensless stone and God hath raised me from thence to be a Child of Abraham Take another instance of diversity in every Plant that lives water is the means to make it bear but in every Plant it makes it bear such fruit and no other as was first grafted upon it it causeth a Fig-tree to bring forth Figs and a Vine to be laden with Grapes But if the fruit were sowre and unpleasant by nature water it while your arms ake it will never help it But this water in my Text which is so worthy of our Saviours praise it will make you gather Grapes of Thorns and Figs of Thistles Indeed it should do so but our Preaching is no better with many than River water gushing upon a Crab-tree the more we teach the more you are laden with your own natural fruit Pride Luxury Intemperance Faction Malice and Incontinency are as rife as ever they were nothing grows upon the stock for all the labour that is spent but sowre Wildings that set the teeth on edge it seems the chief ingredient is wanting the blessing from above you mind other things and then the chief pipe of all will be stopt by which the Spirit should enter into our soul There are some and I would they were but few that put in Bill and Answer as it were against Gods plea they urge their personal infirmities and natural inclinations and think that God can ask no more I am dull of understanding says one and what I am taught I cannot bear it away I am suddenly transported with indignation and I cannot suffer I am retentive of a wrong and cannot easily be reconciled All these are in the same tune with those ill manner'd Guests in the Gospel we cannot come I pray you have us excused Humilitas sonat in ore superbia in actione To plead excuse is a form of humility but in effect it is an open arrogancy Spend this breath of excuse in Prayer and Supplication and cry out often and affectionately drop down upon this heart O Lord drop down upon it and it shall bring forth fruit quite against the grain of your custom quite against the bias of nature The high-minded shall be humble as a Lamb The implacable shall forgive his brother seventy times seven times The Impostor shall make restitution the Bravaries of the time shall confess and amend their vanity Loe this is an alteration which nothing can produce but living water from natural sterility of good to supernatural fruitfulness Origen confounds Celsus with this Argument that the Christian Religion must needs be the power of God and not of man For in all Kingdoms where it had success it did civilize the most barbarous Nations It did mollifie and intenerate the most stony hearts It brought in Justice and good Laws among them that lived by Rapine and Robbery A strange fruit to be found upon such wild Plants Could it otherwise come to pass than because they were watered from above I think you will like this Doctrine best in the Prophet Isaiahs expression Chap. xi 6. under the Kingdom of Christ so it goes before The Wolf shall dwell with the Lamb and the Leopard shall lie down with the Kid. The Calf and the young L●on and the Fatling shall feed together and a young Child shall lead them All that place is noted by Eusebius for a Prophesie to be meant of the conversion of the Gentiles whose brutishness and savage life was changed into good nurture and sweet conversation Ye were darkness but now ye are light in the Lord. O blessed are ye when that which is natural and inbred to our disposition drops off and grows no more Then if ye be planted by the River of God ye shall bring forth your fruit in due season and look whatsoever you do it shall prosper Take a third instance of diversity Our Elementary water helps a Plant to bring forth one kind fruit at one season of the year and this is a blessing of Gods left hand to fill us with the plenty of the earth but the water which is the blessing of his right hand hath this excellency to make the same tree bear all manner of spiritual fruit and at all times and seasons never unfurnisht never empty A moral temperate man may be unjust A
in the beauty of holiness few or none would break the publick Order and decent Customs of his Church but the whole Congregation generally rose and sate fell down or kneel'd and were uncovered together He liked Ceremony no where so well as in Gods House as little as you would in your own was his phrase but could by no means endure to see in this Complemental Age men ruder with God than with Men bow lowly and often to one another but never kneel to God He thought Superstition a less sin than Irreverence and Profaneness and held the want of Reverence in Religious Assemblies amongst the greatest sins of England and would prove it from many Histories that a careless and profane discharge of Gods Worship was a most sure Prognostick of Gods anger and that Peoples ruin When a Stranger Preached for him upon a Sunday he would often read the Prayers himself and with that reverence and devotion that was very moving to all his Auditors And upon Wednesdays and Fridays he would frequently do the like and thereby engaged many to resort better to them always assuring them God would soonest hear our Prayers in the Communion of Saints Sometimes when he had occasion to go into the City and saw slender Congregations at Prayer he would much wonder at his Countrymen that had so little love to holy Prayer but when he heard of any that would not go to Church to Prayer unless it were accompanied with a Sermon he would nor scruple to say he scarce thought them Christians and never deemed any Divine to be really famous and successful in his Preaching who could not prevail with his People to come frequently to Sacraments and Prayers He was a great lover of Psalmody and above all a great admirer of Davids Psalms so full of Divine Praises and of all Religious Mysteries great helps to Contemplation apt to beget a Divine Charity being a perfect supply for all our wants joyful to Angels grievous to Devils filling the heart with spiritual delights and a kind of representation of the Celestial felicity That he constantly call'd upon his People to be present at them and at all parts of the Churches Prayers remembring them that after our Blessed Saviour had cast our the Sheep and Oxen yet he still called His House the House of Prayer to shew that though those Sacrifices were at an end yet this should never end and therefore the Apostles themselves after his death resorted to the Temple at the Hours of Prayer He ever took great care to procure a grave and able Curate a Master of Arts at least for the instruction of the younger sort in the Church Catechism Visiting of the Sick Burial of the Dead Preaching of Funeral Sermons Christnings and Marriages These he generally left to the Curate for his Perquisits and better encouragement and would often complain that in great Parishes there was not competent maintenance to keep many Curats under the Parish Priest that might be able to live at the Altar and better discharge all private and domestick duties of piety sorrowing that herein Popish Countries were better provided for who had ten for one that wait at the Altar there more than we have among us and therefore though he would much recommend daily visiting of the Flock from house to house yet found it was impossible for one Minister to perform the Publick and Private Duties both Private Baptisms he would never countenance unless in Cases of necessity or some great convenience as being expresly contrary to the Constitutions of our Church and greatly derogatory to the dignity of the Sacrament to be dispensed in a Parlour or a Chamber and not with that Solemnity that our initiation into Gods Church required and therefore greatly commended the Lutherans who baptized none at home but the sick and the spurious Funeral Sermons though he rarely preached himself yet he defended them to be no Novelty brought in with the Reformation for John Fisher Bishop of Rochester hath one in Print for Henry the Seventh and in Edward the Sixth his time an Herse was set up in St. Pauls Church for King Francis the First of France and a Funeral Sermon likewise preached for him by Dr. Ridly Bishop of Rochester While he lived in this Parish he would give God thanks he got a good Temporal Estate Parishioners of all sorts were very kind and free to him divers Lords and Gentlemen several Judges and Lawyers of eminent quality were his constant Auditors whom he found like Zenas honest Lawyers conscientious to God and lovers of the Church of England and very friendly and bountiful to their Minister Sir Julius Caesar never heard him preach but he would send him a broad Piece and he did the like to others and he would often send a Dean or a Bishop a pair of Gloves because he would not hear Gods Word gratis Judge Jones never went to the Bench at the beginning of a Term but he fasted and prayed the day before and oftentimes got Dr. Hacket to come and pray with him This strict Judge condemned one for stealing a common-Common-Prayer Book out of his Church whom he could not save the Judge would by no means forgive him because of the sacredness of the place but accepted well of his Intercession and said he should prevail in another matter and when the Doctor saw he could not succeed he thanked the Judge for his severity Anno 1631 the Bishop of Lincoln made him Archdeacon of Bedford whither he ever after went once a year commonly the Week after Easter and made the Clergy a Speech upon some Controversial Head seasonable to those Times exhorting them to keep strictly to the Orders of the Church to all regular conformity to the Doctrine and Discipline by Law established without under or over doing asserting in his opinion that Puritanism lay on both sides whosoever did more than the Church commanded as well as less were guilty of it And that he only was a true Son of the Church that broke not the boundals of it either way About this time of King Charles the First 's Reign it was justly said Stupor mundi Clerus Anglicanus and whereas in the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's Reformation Siquis's had been set up in St. Pauls If any man could understand Greek there was a Deanry for him if Latine a good Living but in the long Reign of Queen Elizabeth and King James the Clergy of the Reformed Church of England grew the most learned of the World for by the restlessnes of the Roman Priests they were trained up to Arms from their youth and by the Wisdom and Example of King James had wrote so many learned Tractates as had almost quite driven their Adversaries out of the Pit and forced them to yield the Field So that now we were only unhappy in our own differences at home But above all the Bishop admired that People should complain in those days for want of Preaching wherein lived
Rebellions Julian the Apostate reading the Bible with a malicious intention to quarrel at it said that Christianity was a Doctrin of too much patience but he could never find any place in it to object that it was a Doctrin of Rebellion If the Administration of a Kingdom were out of frame our Bishop maintain'd it were better to leave the redress to God than to a seditious Multitude and that the way to continue purity of Religion was not by Rebellion but by Martyrdom To resist lawful Powers by seditious Arms and unlawful Authority was not the Primitive and Apostolical Christianity but Popish Doctrin not taught the first 300 years but much about 1000 years after our Saviour's ascension into Heaven by the Pope of Rome the very time the Spirit of God said Satan should be let loose viz. by Gregory the VII who first taught the Germans to rebel against the Emperor Henry the fourth Yet this poison was now given the English People to drink out of the Papal Cup while they pretended quite contrary But our Bishop ever asserted this was not the way to pull down Antichrist but Protestant Religion and therefore he warn'd the Non-conforming Divines with whom he lately treated to have a care how they cried up a War and became famous only in the Congregation as Erostratus by setting the Temple on fire To prevent that fatal Bill of Root and Branch the Committee condescended to print the Liturgick Psalms in King James's Translation to expunge all Apocryphal Lessons and alter some passages in the body of the Book of Common-Prayer and certain other things which divers of the Presbyterian Divines said were satisfactory save that the furious Party of them put the Commons upon the violent way in particular old Mr. John White told many of the party who still pressed at Conferences for further Abatement of Conformity and the Laws established Time would come when they would wish they had been content with what was offered While this Committee was sitting the House of Commons having now entred upon the debate of taking away the whole Government Ecclesiastical by Bishops Deans and Chapters together with all their Revenue several Members of that House being friends to the Hierarchy mov'd that no mans Freehold might be taken away in Parliament without hearing them first speak for themselves whereupon the whole Committee imposed the Task upon Dr. Hacket forthwith to depart to his own House and Study and meet them again to morrow morning prepared to speak as the Advocate of the Church of England in the behalf of Deans and Chapters The Speech it self I found among his Papers which in regard that it was never yet published at large I have thought meet to add as follows May it please you Mr. Speaker and this Honourable House OVr expectations to be heard by Council in this great Cause hath brought us unto you most unprepared to deliver that which might be utter'd upon so copious Subject Yet since we have that favour from this Honourable House that we may be heard or some one of us in our own persons somewhat shall be offered to your prudent considerations by the meanest and most unpractised in pleading and forensecal causes of all those that attend you this day The unexpectedness to be thus employed it was imposed upon me but yesterday afternoon as my Brethren know is joyned with another disadvantage that we have not heard upon what crimes or offences of the Deans and Chapters so great a Patrimony as they enjoy is called in question that we might purge our selves of such imputations but only reports that fly abroad have arrived at our ears that Cathedral and Collegiate Churches with their Chapters are accounted by some to be of no use and convenience I aim at perspicuity and therefore I will cast what I have to say into as clear a method as I am able The use and convenience of Deans and Chapters I reduce unto two heads quoad res quoad personas first in regard of some things of great moment secondly in regard of divers persons whom I know the Justice of this Honourable House will take into consideration And first since God hath called his House the House of Prayer I shall keep a right order without derogation to any thing that follows to present them unto you as very convenient for the service of Prayer which is offered up to God in them daily both in his Morning and in his Evening Sacrifice In the antient Primitive Church as many learned Gentlemen in this Honourable House do know and as my Brethren that assist me can attest unto it the Christians did every day meet at Prayers and for the most part at the Blessed Sacrament if persecution did not distract them Then it is fit in a well-govern'd Church that there should be some places in imitation of them where daily Thanksgivings and Supplications should be made unto God And whereas it cannot be supposed but that divers remiss Christians do neglect oftentimes their daily duty of Prayer and some are forced to omit that length to which they would produce their Prayer by their multitude of business it is fit that there should be a publick duty of Prayer in some principal places where many are gathered together to supply the defects that are committed by private men And though I am sure the publick Duty of Prayer shall find great acceptance and approbation before so Christian an Auditory yet I confess I have heard abroad that the Service of Cathedral Churches gives offence to divers for the superexquisiteness of the Musick especially in late years so that it is not edifying nor intelligible to the hearers For this Objection in part I will confess it is strong and forcible in part I will mollifie it It is a just complaint Mr. Speaker and we humbly desire the assistance of this Honourable House for the reformation of it that Cathedral Musick for a great part of it serves rather to tickle the ear than to affect the heart with godliness and that which should be intended for devotion vanisheth away into quavers and air we heartily wish the amendment of it and that it were reduced to the form which Athanasius commends ut legentibus sint quàm cantantibus similiores But though these fractions and affected exquisiteness be laid aside yet the solemn Praise of God in Church Musick hath ever been accounted pious and laudable yea even that which is compounded with some art and elegancy for St. Paul speaks as if he had newly come from the Quire of Asaph requiring us to praise God in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs Surely he would not have exprest himself in such variety of phrase I think if he had not approved variety of Musick in the Service of the Lord. Some will say per adventure What if this daily duty of making Prayers to God were intermitted in Cathedral Churches might it not be supplied in other Parochial Churches I have but thus much to
nothing but the ruine that came He was naturally of a very pleasant and chearful temper but sad news made his soul retire a great way further into him and quite of another humour Indeed no man was more troubled and angustiated in mind for the miseries and distresses of this Church and Kingdom I have often heard his deep Sighs and his great Complaints when he did profess he did only breath but not live I have seen the heaviness of his eyes when he spake nothing his grave and ripe wisdom made him apprehend Fears more deeply than other people did But when his Majesties sufferings in Person came no man could conjecture the load of sorrow that was upon him He would say he felt his old heart wither within him and could not but sigh away his spirit he would often repent He had done no more by Preaching and Writing to prevent it and after the Kings Death frequently desired nothing else but to depart from this world of sin and suffering crying out Satur sum omnium quae video aut audio But next to the Death of his Royal Majesty he would bewail the cutting up the pleasant Vine of the Church of England and alienating the Churches Patrimony together with those of the King Queen Loyal Nobility and Gentry whereby the whole Kingdom of England was then in the hands of unjust Possessors For the Citie 's abetting this bloudy War He was now grown to a strong aversation toward London the place where he was born baptized bred and nothing could ever move him to go thither more until the Earls of Holland and Norwich both requested his Assistance at their expected deaths The Earl of Holland was very penitent for that he had deserted so good a Master in the beginning of the Wars Norwich was very chearful in the comforts of a good Conscience He would much admire how God sometimes gives secret admonition of things contrary to all humane expectations for the Earl of Holland had many Messengers came and told him they had Votes enough and to spare for his life yet nothing would perswade him but he should die within a few days and so he did The Earl of Norwich that knew of no friends yet would not believe but he should escape and so he did After this he return'd to his Rural retirement to end his Old Age in continual Prayer and Study omitting all exercise of body whereupon he fell into a great fit of sickness and upon his recovery the famous Dr. Harvy enjoyned him two things to renew his chearful conversation and take moderate walks for exercise assuring him that in his practise of Physick since these times he observed more people died of grief of mind than of any other disease and that his studious and sedentary life would contract him frequent sickness unless he used seasonable exercise Whereupon afterwards for his healths sake he would every Morning before he setled to his study take large walks very early to make him expectorate phlegm and other cloudy and fuliginous vapours whereby he afterwards continued Vegete and healthful to the last At this time he did much good in the Country by keeping many Gentlemen firm to the Protestant Religion who were much assaulted by lurking Priests who sought to perswade them that it was then necessary to joyn with the Roman Church or else they could be of none for they saw as the others said the Protestant Church quite destroyed But the good Doctor advised them better that the Church of England was still in being and not destroyed rather refined by her sufferings God then tried us as Silver is tried in the hot fire of persecution which purifies but wastes not Then especially our Church resembled the Primitive which grew up in persecutions and as the Earth is said to be the Lords in all its Fulness so the Church of England was the Lords in all its penury and emptiness And in these lowest of times he was full of faith and courage that himself should still live to see a better world one day and would greatly blame any of the Kings Friends who despaired of seeing the time of the restitution of all things His opinion was the Youths at Westminster spun a Spiders Web that could not last long and therefore was very confident of his Majesties return and would instance in Josephs case who was sometime sold for a slave imprisoned as a Malefactor yet afterwards advanced to be Governour of the Kingdom and in David who was hunted over all the Mountains of Israel yea and forced to fly his Country too and yet after brought to the Throne and also in Caius Marius who was forced to hide himself in the Flags of a Fenny ditch from the pursuers of Sylla so that the Historian asks Quis eum fuisse Consulem aut futurum crederet Who would ever have thought him to have been Consul or should live to be Consul again And therefore when any would say There was but little hope he would answer Tum votorum locus est cum nullus est spei They ought to pray the more and Prayer was a good reserve at the last cast Accordingly he would acknowledge that his many cares for the welfare of the King and Church of England did often send him to his Prayers but gave God thanks that his Prayers did always expel his cares After a day spent in Prayer he would tell an especial Friend he found in himself a marvelous illumination and chearfulness in the Evening and that as usually thick clouds in Winter cause dark weather till they were dissolved in rain or snow but then the Sun would shew himself and the air grow pleasant again So sorrows and cares cloud the mind and soul till we are able to dissolve them into devotion and holy Prayers and then post nubila Phoebus and professed nothing more contributed to his divine joys than his often reading and meditation upon Davids Psalms which he conceived they had done very wisely who set them in the midst of the Bible as the Fourth Commandment for Religious Assemblies was by God himself in the midst of the Decalogue In those doleful days that was done in St. Paul's London which Selymus threatned to St. Peter's at Rome to Stable his horses in the Church and feed them at the High Altar whereupon our Doctor was very confident their ruine grew ripe apace and not long after hapned the death of Oliver of which being suddenly told and the manner of it he only said as Tully of a Villain Mortem quam non potuit optare obiit and that we should see within a little while all the world would stink of him and disdain his Arbitrary and bloudy usurpations and accordingly in a very short time we saw all things incline to work about the happy revolution towards the accomplishment whereof no man was more active in stirring up the Nobility Gentry Clergy and People to desire a free Parliament and Petition General Monk
the Arms of the City to this day Therein before the Wars had been a most beautiful and comely Cathedral Church which the Bishop at his first coming found most desolate and ruin'd almost to the ground the Roof of Stone the Timber Lead and Iron Glass Stalls Organs Utensils of rich value all were embezell'd 2000 shot of great Ordnance and 1500 Granadoes discharged against it which had quite batter'd down the Spire and most of the Fabrick so that the Old man took not so much comfort in his new Promotion as he found sorrow and pity in himself to see his Cathedral Church thus lying in the dust so that the very next morning after his Lordships arrival he set his own Coach-horses on work together with other Teems to carry away the Rubbish which being cleared he procured Artisans of all sorts to begin the new Pile and before his death set up a compleat Church again better than ever it was before the whole Roof from one end to the other of a vast length all repaired with stone all laid with goodly Timber of our Royal Soveraign's gift all leaded from one end to the other to the cost of above 20000 l. which yet this zealous and laborious Bishop accomplished a great part out of his own bounty with 1000 l. help of the Dean and Chapter and the rest procured by Him from worthy Benefactors by incessant importunity the Gentry of Staffordshire Derbyshire Warwickshire contributing like Gentlemen whose names are entred into the Registry of the Cathedral unto which work none were backward but the Presbyterians whom our Reverend Bishop yet treated with more civility than their cross-grain'd humours deserved This rare Building was finished in eight years to the Admiration of all the Country the same hands which laid the Foundation laying the Top-stone also All which owes it self to his great fidelity incredible prudence in contriving bargaining with workmen unspeakable diligence in solliciting for money paying it and overseeing all Nehemiah's eye was ever upon the building of the Temple and therefore the work proceeded with incredible expedition The Cathedral being so well finished upon Christmas Eve Anno 1669 his Lordship dedicated it to Christs honour and service with all fitting solemnity that he could pick out of antient Rituals in the manner following His Lordship being arrayed in his Episcopal Habiliments and attended upon by several Prebends and Officers of the Church and also accompanied with many Knights and Gentlemen as likewise with the Bailifs and Aldermen of the City of Lychfield with a great multitude of other people entred at the West door of the Church Humphry Persehouse Gent. his Lordships Apparitor General going foremost after whom followed the Singing-boyes and Choristers and all others belonging to the Choir of the said Church who first marched up to the South Isle on the right hand of the said Church where my Lord Bishop with a loud voice repeated the first verse of the 24. Psalm and afterward the Quire alternately sung the whole Psalm to the Organ Then in the same order they marched to the North Isle of the said Church where the Bishop in like manner began the first verse of the 100 Psalm which was afterward also sung out by the Company Then all marched to the upper part of the Body of the Church where the Bishop in like manner began the 102. Psalm which likewise the Choire finisht Then my Lord Bishop commanded the doors of the Quire to be opened and in like manner first encompassed it upon the South side where the Bishop also first began to sing the first verse of the 122 Psalm the Company finishing the rest And with the like Ceremony passing to the North side thereof sung the 132. Psalm in like manner This Procession being ended the Reverend Bishop came to the Faldistory in the middle of the Quire and having first upon his knees prayed privately to himself afterwards with a loud voice in the English Tongue call'd upon the People to kneel down and pray after him saying Our Father which art c. O Lord God infinite in power and incomprehensible in all goodness and mercy we beseech thee to hear our prayers for thy gracious assistance upon the great occasion of this day This sacred House dedicated of old time to thine honour hath been greatly polluted by the long Sieges and dreadful Wars of most prophane and disloyal Rebels Thine holy Temple have they defiled and made it an heap of rubbish and stones yea they did pollute it with much bloud in all manner of hostility and cruelty We beseech thee good Father upon our devout and earnest prayers to restore it this day to the use of thy sacred Worship and make us not obnoxious to the guilt of their sins who did so heinously dishonour this place which was set apart for thy glory Thou art the God of peace of meekness and gentleness and wouldst not let thy Servant David build a Temple to thee because his hands were stained with the bloud of war we beseech thee that this thy Sanctuary having long continued under much pollution may be reconciled to thee and from henceforth and for ever be acceptable unto thee and that the spots of all bloud prophaneness and sacriledge may be washed out by thy pardon and forgiveness and that we and all thy faithful servants that shall succeed us in any religious Office in this place may be defended for ever from our enemies and serve thee alwayes with thankeful hearts and quiet minds through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen ALmighty Lord the restorer and preserver of all that is called thine since this Cathedral Church is once again made fit for thy Service and reconciled to thy Worship and Honour preserve it henceforth and for ever that it may never even to the second coming of Jesus Christ suffer the like devastation again that befel it by the impiety and disloyalty of a long and most pernicious Rebellion Save it from the power of violent men that such as are enemies to thy Name and to the beauty of holiness may never prevail to defile it or erace it Confound those ungodly ones that shall say of it down with it even to the ground Let the true Protestant Religion be celebrated in it as long as the Sun and Moon endure And we implore thee with confidence of thy love and with all vehemency of zeal that thy heavenly Spirit may fill thy hallowed Temple with thy Grace and heavenly benediction Hear the faithful prayers which thy Congregation of Saints shall daily pour out here unto thee And accept their sorrowful contritions in fastings and humiliations and in the days of joyful thanksgivings let their spiritual and gladsome offerings ascend up unto thee and be noted in thy Book Receive all those into the Congregation of Christs Flock with the pardon of their sins and the efficacy of thy Spirit to suppress the dominion of sin in them that shall here be presented to be baptized Let
to beg the Kings leave to let him go home before the end of the Session sometimes in frosty Winter weather to be like the good Pastor among his Sheep where they might hear his voice at Christmas and the other great Feasts and accounted silence a Womans vertue but not a Bishops who if sickness and great Affairs molested not was still bound to labour in the Word and Doctrine and held it a mistake to prefer Governing before Preaching whereas it was ever contrary as appeared by 1 Tim. 15.17 Let the Elders that rule well be accounted worthy of double honour especially they who labour in the Word and Doctrine and therefore the Bishop alwayes preached and the Presbyter never before him but when deputed or in his absence so that when he was sometimes told by his friends that he was now Miles emeritus and might lawfully lay aside his Preaching pains in his extreme old age he would by no means consent but still lay-by his other Studies upon Saturday afternoon and retire to his preaching Meditations and for the most part preacht once upon Sunday mornings both to profit others and to warm himself Three Sundays at least every Month he would preach up and down his Diocess and not only in his chief City of Lichfield or near to his own Cathedral but like to a benign Star would irradiate all places within his Orb He would often take Coach and go more than seven miles sometimes nine or ten upon Sunday morning and yet be at Church before most of the Parish and go home again to dinner and yet alwayes have the full Service of the Church before Sermon and many times afterwards rectify disorders in Churches and sometimes differences about Seats or Pews This Custom he continued till he died often mentioning the words of Bishop Andrews who was wont to institute all his Ministers in curam meam tuam and therefore thought he must no more hide his Talent in a Rochet than they might theirs under a Cassock Thus was his diligence equal to any of the Ancients and his success answerable reducing multitudes in all places to piety and conformity with the Church of England almost like another Gregorius Thaumaturgus Bishop of Neocaesarea a great and populous City who when he came thither found but seventeen Christians and when he died gave God thanks he left but seventeen Pagans This great success did owe it self not only to his frequent preaching and diligent study but to his eximious piety and perpetual prayer Formerly he had taken great pains in the Study of Antiquity and for Ecclesiastical History especially he was inferior to very few no man could give a better account of the Travels of the Apostles after the day of Pentecost and the Conversion of the World by the Primitive Christians and for the History of the Reformation after the second Pentecost no man I think could give the like Narrative how miraculously in all places it was effected In our own Church there was nothing whereof he was ignorant all the Councils and passages of the Reformation from the first beginning or Matrix thereof he perfectly understood But of late years he would say his Studies were not to be more wise and learned but more holy and good and therefore laid aside Polemical Divinity wholly and his principal study were Cases of Conscience Canon Law and the Liturgies of the Antient Church in which he was very skilful yet would often complain he found this last an unlearned study and much against his own nature who was a lover of Philology and Rationality But he much wondred that any learned men could contrary to the practice of the whole Church lay aside all use of Liturgies even against the sense of Calvin himself who wishes there might be in every Church an uniform Liturgy for preservation of Unity and prevention of Vainglory and other inconveniencies from which it should be unlawful for Ministers to depart but especially in our Church where so many young men are ordain'd he wondred any wise man would be against a set Liturgie and refer all the Service of God to free Prayer and would assert that it was more easie to marr than to mend the Book of Common-Prayer and therefore we ought not to adventure the one for the other but in regard the Minister of the Parish was permitted to compose a Prayer of his own before his Sermon he thought no Sectary had cause to complain Bidding of Prayer before Sermon he never practised and said no more did Dr. Ravis and Dr. Fletcher Archbishop Whitgift's Chaplains afterwards Bishops who drew up the 55. Canon whom he knew very well and often heard preach and always used a Form of their own and no Bishops Articles ever examined or found fault with it and was certainly used by St. Ambrose in Antiquity and therefore in the Convocation 1640 it was carried for a Form And although it was his mind that all Students were not to be tied up to Canonical hours but such only whose Devotion need not be interrupted by necessary study and employment yet he would rarely intermit them himself unless want of health or very extraordinary business constrained him In a morning he would rarely permit any to visit or disturb him but held that time was made for God rather than for men as the Historian says of Charles the fifth Manè frequentior cum Deo quàm cum hominibus sermo therefore the first thing after his sleep was his private Devotion with reading of the holy Bible Psalms and Chapters then gentle walking for health then Study then Publick Prayer then Private Prayers again before Dinner presently after Dinner to his Private Prayers again and then to his Study unless Ecclesiastical Affairs or sutable Company prevented him for an hour or so and of all sorts of Prayer he would especially abound in thanksgiving using St. Paul's words often In every thing give thanks for this is the will of God and wish that our Common Prayer had more Forms to that purpose and would sometimes wonder that when the world had been so cloyed with Religious Orders Predicants Humiliats Oratorians Mendicants and many other titles yet there was never any called Eucharistici a Congregation appointed to give God thanks for all the good things wherewith this World is replenished In the Evening of every day Recount thy own actions and the divine preservations was his rule to others and customary to himself and to pray for the pardon of the one and praise God for the receit of the other And in all his Prayers day and night he was a continual sollicitor for the peace of the Catholick Church All his counsels like Melanchton's were ever moderate and he often wished such a Form of Prayer were composed that all Christians might joyn in being a great Enemy to sharpness and violence in the matters of Religion and would often use Erasmus his words Mihi adeò est invisa discordia ut
without a Lutrum or satisfaction This stops the mouth of the Devil that he cannot calumniate and it resounds the praise of God that the iniquity of the world did not escape unrevenged Caiaphas meant to speak bitterly and to blaspheme but the Lord turned the curse of his mouth into the words of blessing It is expedient for us that one man die for the people and that the whole Nation perish not Joh. xi 50. Secondly They divulge the honour of Christ unto the ends of the world for the mercy that came down with him upon all those that should believe in his name if his Justice was not forgotten in their Song surely his Mercy should be much more solemnized The Angels for their own share were unacquainted with mercy 't was news in heaven till this occasion hapned they had felt gratiam confirmantem but not gratiam condonantem that is the Lord bestowed upon the good Angels grace to confirm them in grace but for those rebellious ones of their Order that had sinned they found no grace to remit their trespasses properly that is called mercy but a thing so rare and unheard of in heaven that as soon as ever they saw it stirring in the earth they sing Glory to God in the highest Thirdly They praise the Lord on high for the Incarnation of his Son because the dignity of the work was so from himself that no Creature did merit it none did beseech or intercede unto him for it before he had destinate it nothing but his own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and compassion could move him to it Nemo in hoc opere glorietur nullius merito ascribatur no man can ascribe it to his deserts no man can partake in the glory What was man that the Son of God did visit him For him we shall be glorified by him we have obtained peace through him good will hath shined upon men therefore unto him be all the glory This was the Angels Congratulation and no doubt God shall be glorified in his holy places on high but shall that God who is most high be worshipped and glorified by us below That is it the Angels pray for and wish for our sakes and for our Salvation that we of the Militant Church beneath may extol the name of the Lord and give him glory Among men sinners pray for sinners and it is but one for another the People pray for the Prince and the Prince for the People The Priest for the Congregation and the Congregation for the Priest Great and small there are no odds in that they requite one another with their mutual Charity the head cannot say unto the feet I have no need of your Prayers nor the feet unto the head Dum singuli orant pro omnibus omnes orant pro singulis while every particular man prays for all Christians in the Church all Christians in the Church pray for every particular man but as I said this is sinners for sinners quid pro quo But when the Angels are sollicitous in Hymns and Supplications for us it is not that we should pray to them or pray for them again but shew charity that cannot be requited They know that many Sacrifices of Prayers are requisite to bless any Congregation on earth that God may have his due honour from it and therefore all the powers in heaven above assist us with their intercession And especially they are mindful over us to make that Petition on our behalf that we may never forget that our condition is base and as low as the clay and dust of the earth and that God is highly exalted above all the world therefore that we are made to worship him and to fall down before him and to render the homage of our humility to our Chief that is dominion and glory to him that is the highest We find this title of most high in Melchisedechs title Gen. xiv 18. and never before There it comes in as some say whom I approve for this reason Melchisedech is the first in holy Scripture that is called a King that being the greatest name of pre-eminency among men God blazons his own honour just at the first discovery of that name to shew how far it exceeds all earthly Principality and calls him Melchisedech King of Salem a Priest of the most high God And indeed there was a glory due to that Melchisedech and to every one in his rank that is set on high above the people but take heed we let not our Worship and Service rest in them and in the admiration of their outward Pomp and go no higher God set Princes in their Thrones of Majesty to be bowed unto and obeyed that we may rise up in our Meditations and consider how excellent and superlative he is that gave such power and dominion to men Before Christ came into the world it was Gloria in excelsis men worshipt their Idols in every high place as the Prophets did greatly complain of it but it was not Deo in altissimis they worshipt the Host of heaven and things above but they did not lift up their hearts to him that sitteth above the heavens Therefore this is the sum of the Angels Prayer that men may give dominion and praise and thanksgiving to the true God and their wish was as effectual as they could desire for even immediately upon the Birth of Christ Idolatry went down the heathen Gods were discovered more and more to be but Wood and Stone the work of mens hands and the praise of the true God began to be sounded forth in all places The next issue of this first Point is the Angels teach us by the contents of their Prayer that Gods glory is to be sought before all things Nihil aequius est quam ut pro quo quis oret pro eo etiam laboret says St. Austin Whatsoever we pray for we must not only stand wishing it but as much as in us lies endeavour it also First repeating often the marvelous works which he hath done for the conservation of those that praise him and for the destruction of his enemies O God we have heard with our ears and our Fathers have declared unto us the noble works that thou didst in their days and in the old time before them Secondly By confessing of our grievous sins which makes his mercy and his grace so excellent throughout all the world and depressing our best works to be as ineffectual as our sins unto Salvation unless the Lord will cover the stains that are in them with the bloud of Christ Surely the reward which he brings with him is much exalted when we deny not but the best thing we do is less than the least of all his mercies Thirdly by defying by shunning by resisting nay by rooting out the children of Belial that blaspheme his glory for God will avenge himself of them that are tame and patient when his name is violated and his honour prophaned it is the glory of humane Laws
bad to pry as far as to the highest and most secret Ark of glory above Secondly Sometimes the heavens are said to be opened Non reseratione elementorum sed spiritualibus oculis says St. Hierom not by a real apparition in the heavens but the intellectual fancy travels in child-birth with a divine passion and it seems to be opened to our soul when it is wrapt as it were with an extasie sent from God So Ezekiel being ravisht from himself in the Spirit saw the heavens opened and the visions of God In like manner Paul was wrapt up into the third heavens and saw unutterable strange things but he could not resolve himself whether he were in the body when he saw them This is intellectual Vision which cannot agree with my Text for the rarity of the wonder is that divine things became obvious to men in a visible manifestation the Son of God in the flesh the Holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove the voice of the Father brought sensibly to the ear Then surely this apparition of the heaven opened came not secretly to the understanding but openly to the eye of man They that go the third way bind themselves to the plain Letter of the Scripture that some part of the heaven was drawn open like a Curtain that a prospect of glory might be seen to enamour the soul of all Spectators Others reject it and say that it were superfluous to make a rupture in the heaven if not impossible Thou hast molted the heavens and founded them like brass Job xxxvii Suppose that true in the Literal sense it follows that it is therefore inviolable to be broken asunder by any natural cause howsoever God can crack their solidity and rent them asunder Yet hear with what subtilty it is pleaded that this were superfluous for Heaven is a Diaphanous body you may see through it we behold the Sun and fixed Stars so many thousand thousand cubits distant from us above the Spheres why then should the junctures of the Orbs be opened to shew an Object when they are more transparent than the air But admit the heaven is opened what shall fill the Hiatus or vacuity All the Element of fire and air would not suffice to replenish a breach from the concave of the Moon to the highest Orb. You must not say the space is left void Vacuum was never heard of in nature besides unless the space of the rupture were filled up no species could be conveyed unto the eye to make an Object visible For when some Philosophers delivered that if it were not for the interposition of the Element of Air a Fly might be seen as far as heaven Aristotle shews their error that if it were not for the medium of the air no man could see a Milstone at the distance of an inch These reasons according to nature are undeniable that the heavens need not be really opened to discover any thing above but if God would have it so to make it a complete evident sign that by our Saviours mediation the heavens shall open and receive our bodies hereafter into glory then is it frivolous in man to dispute that it must be superfluous Fourthly Lira when he had studied upon it how the heaven was opened says it was no more but that the Air was disparted by a great glance of lightning The Heathen indeed called that the opening of the heaven Ruptoque polo micat igneus aether It was a lightning from heaven that cast Saul upon his face unto the ground Acts ix 3. And among other terrors of Gods Majesty David rehearseth this Psal xviii 13. The Lord thundred from heaven his lightnings gave shine unto the world the earth saw it and was afraid By the rule of these instances this opinion should be discarded because this opening of the heaven was sweet and amiable to the beholders no ways terrible yet since it is obvious in heathen Writings especially among their Poets to allow some flashes of bright lightning for fortunate and auspicious therefore I do not disprove nor yet greedily embrace this conjecture Fifthly The Air is so often taken for the lowest heaven as nothing more usual he rained Manna upon them and gave them food from heaven Psal lxxviii 25. And when the Deluge did drown the world it is said when the Air poured forth rain that the windows of heaven were opened Gen. vii 11. Wherefore a mutation in the Air above might be a representment in this place that the heavens were opened as thus a fair and delightful passage might seem to be spread abroad by the condensation or thickning together of the upper part of the Air making it a shining body and by the rarefaction of the lower part of the Air through which the object might be conveyed with much grace and beauty to the beholders Now out of these three last conjectures how the heavens were opened choose ye which ye will The first is literal but full of difficulty the second not improbable the last without exception and above all the rest most usual Being past the first consideration what is meant by the opening of the heavens which I acknowledge is not clear from all uncertainty the next Point I am sure is most certain what did procure such a Miracle that the glory from heaven did appear to men upon earth for it is evidently certified Luk. iii. 21. Jesus being baptized and praying the heaven was opened Elias shut up the heaven by the word of the Lord and he prayed again and the heaven gave rain unto the earth If the supplication of the Servant was in such force with the Master then how forcible must the Prayer of the Son be of the well beloved Son before his Father He shall not only bring down the rain upon us like Elias but the waters above the heavens to fall down upon our heads all the searching graces of the Holy Ghost But from each of those examples you may see what part of Religion that is which is clavis coeli the Key to open the gate of heaven it is Prayer For how should God open the heaven to you if you will not open your lips to God I return to the pattern of Elias whose words were commendatory to close or unclose the skie according as he made intercession to God Well did Elisha entitle him the Chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof Quia magis juvabat Israelem oratione zelo quàm magna curruum equitum multitudo Out of the Chaldee Paraphrase for his Prayer and Zeal did stand Israel in better stead than a multitude of horsemen and Chariots Observe with me two things most remarkable in his Prayer and then think if he were not a man like to prevail in his intercessions 1. He cast himself down upon the earth and put his face between his knees as if by that strange humble miserable gesture he would compel God to hear him 2. He rose from his Prayers
may be referred to his glorie to deny all manner of sustenance to our selves for a time Beloved thus it stands that we acknowledge our selves in fact not in word only to be unworthy of all those good gifts with which he hath replenisht the earth that we deserve no longer to be fed with his liberality and so we humble our selves before Almighty God confessing we deserve not with the little Whelps to pick up the crums under his Table and desiring that they who deject themselves under his mighty power may not be trodden down by Satan and his Ministers of perdition Moreover take away Oyl from the Lamp and the flame will go out by little and little and surely hunger and thirst and afflicting the body joyned with prayer and repentance shall obtain this mercy that the violence of Voluptuousness and Luxury shall be abated in our sinful flesh Not that a Fast is acceptable to God of it self without other good offices of Religion but being well accompanied with Prayer and godly sorrow for as the Apostle speaketh Bodily exercise profiteth nothing of it self it disposeth and inclineth us to mortification and chastity In times of old abstinence and fasting more than ordinary were held a special part of their praise that did practice them It is the character of Anna the religious widow how she continued in prayers and fastings Luk. ii And our Saviour himself teacheth how to fast and proposeth a reward to them that did it well and not for ostentation and hypocrisie Mat. 6. There Christ taught it and here he did it this is the true demonstration of the Spirit Cum dixit quid faciendum sit probat faciendo As the old bird will fly forth sometimes not upon necessity but to teach her young ones to fly after So Christ fasted in the Wilderness not to gather strength by that means in his own person against the Devil but to teach his young ones as well as they could to fly or flutter after him and he tells us there is a kind of Devil which will not be cast out but by prayer and fasting Mar. ix 29. If any man put in a cross saying How can Fasting have a defensive force in it against temptation since almost all Writers say upon weighty considerations Christ had not been tempted but that he fasted I answer Our case and this are far unlike Satan durst not assail Christ so long as he doubted him to be the eternal Son of God but upon his fasting and hunger he took boldness to joyn issue with him because he falsly collected from those signs he was but the Son of man Neither do I deliver unto you that he will not tempt such as fast and pray for I have taught already how envy drives him on that where there is abundance of sanctity there will be abundance of tentation but I do deliver that Fasting and Prayer shall have prosperous success to overcome temptations So Aquinas Si non profuit jejunium ut non tenteris tamen profuit ut à tentationibus non vincaris I do not promise you peace from tentations though you fast often religiously before God but I promise you victory The second part of Christs will and pleasure in this Fast is ratione membrorum to do our humane nature honour by temperance for the reproach which it suffered by intemperance and to triumph over the Devil upon the same conditions that he overcame our first Parents There was the First Adam here was the Second there was a Paradise where the first man had store of all things here was a Wilderness where Christ had nothing that disobedient Son of God eat of that which was forbidden this most obedient Son of God refrained from those things which were lawful Adam did not eat for need but for his lust he was not an hungry Christ was so abstinent that he would not satisfie necessity for he was an hungry By gluttony we lost our honour and fell low to be compared to the beasts that perish But here is one that continued and maintained sharp hunger against all tentations who in the beginning of this story kept company with the beasts but in the end was ministred unto by Angels Uno tanto jejunio universam Johannis abstinentiam superavit says Cajetan This one fast and his constant continuance in it mauger the devises of the old Serpent did exceed all the abstinence of John the Baptist who for many years fed upon Locusts and wild honey For John was abstinent to himself Christ fasted to bring us out of the thraldom of Satan and for the expiation of our Gluttony Quaelibet actio Christi fuit nobis meritoria passio ejus meritoria satisfactoria it is commonly said of the School Divines The Death and Passion of Christ did both merit for us before Gods mercy and satisfie for us before his justice but every part of Christs obedience as this fasting among the rest was meritorious for his members Such wits as delighted in holy ingenuity have applied the several parts of Christs merit and sufferance and passion unto us in the notions of Physick and Chirurgery Curavit non per diaetam cum jejunavit per electuarium quando corpus sanguinem dedit in coenâ discipulis c. He took upon him to cure us by the prescription of a diet when he fasted By an Electuary when he gave his body and bloud to his Disciples in his last Supper By a Sweat when drops of bloud trickled from him in the Garden By an Emplaster when his face was smeared with Spittle By a bitter potion when he drank Vinegar upon the Cross By cutting and lancination when his feet and hands were pierced with nails and his side with a Spear There was no disease of sin whereof we were not sick there was no kind of cure to be invented which was not practised to restore us And so much for this exercise of fasting as he made use of it for the members of his body Thirdly As his will was always subject to his Father according to that Prayer in the Garden not my will but thy will be done so the Divine Nature did suggest a reason to his Humane Nature to fast to put a fallacy upon Satan that he might peremptorily conclude Christ was no more than a man who suffered hunger and sought for somewhat to eat in the Wilderness and was not replenished As if a Lion should put on the skin of a silly sheep to draw on a ravening Wolf to set upon him and thereupon devour the Wolf who came to be the devourer So our Saviour walked about the Desart in the person of a silly man half famish'd the Tempter was in great suspense and knew not what to think of him and stood ambiguously in this Dilemma says St. Chrysostome He hath fasted forty days and eat nothing I dare not meddle with him this is no man but after forty days ended he is hungry and wants food I will
with his Granaries Christ was made poor that we might be made rich and for the good use of our riches he hath made many poor I did read you even now what Exposition might be made upon those words of David I never saw the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging their bread some not unfitly do bend it to this sense The Psalmist commends liberality in the preceding verses and those that are prone to relieve the helpless Now lest any man might object yet I may cloath others so far that I may leave my self naked I may supply others till I be drawn dry No says he in that verse no misfortune shall come to such liberality I never saw the righteous forsaken meaning such righteous as he spake of before that are liberal and lend I never saw his seed beg their bread The charitable shall have his loan again sometimes corporally sometimes spiritually always certainly And thus you have heard my reasons to controul Satans rule that there are and have been divers opprest with necessity and want of bread and yet God doth not cease to be their Father and they must retain the comfort that they are his Sons Only take in this to the advantage of the Point As Satan is vigilant to espy who are in want and to suggest doubts and infidelity into their heart so there is no man shall think he is not in want if he will be ruled by his perswasion I told you before out of Theophylact what he propounded to our Saviour Cum panis unus sufficeret jubet lapides in panes converti When one loaf of bread might satisfie a mans hunger he required all the stones in the Wilderness which were near at hand to be turned into bread It is he that makes our prodigal Feasters wish their chear were better when they have already too much To have bare enough in his construction is to want and nothing is sufficient but an Epicures superfluity Perhaps the plenty which is present will evict the greatest murmurer and make him confess here is well and enough for the present occasion O but says the Tempter are you sure of large suppeditation for the time hereafter If you are not aforehand with the world you are in a bad case and want bread If your condition be not more comfortable than your Prayer Give us this day our dayly bread you may pray and perish Howsoever Beloved do you rely upon this that Gods providence will be the best interpreter of his own Prayer he that bids you pray for the sustenance of one day best knows how he will cherish and relieve you tomorrow Whereas in the former petitions we are taught to ask that the Kingdom of heaven might come it were unwise having so good a thing in our wish to ask much for the bread of this life One days dimensum is enough to ask for at once for who knows whether after a day he shall go from hence for ever and be no more seen If happily a worldly man be satisfied to say I have enough for one and enough for my time Soul thou hast much goods laid up in store for many years yet Satan will object that you want bread for you have not enough laid up for your Posterity and for many generations and because men know not how their stock may increase and fructifie therefore they dilate their appetite in infinitum and say after the words of that Disciple Whence shall I have bread for so many that come out of my Loyns that every one may have a little Gehazi did not say his Master had need of Naamans Rayments or his money but there were two children of the Prophets lately come to him and he would have two change of Rayments and a Talent of Silver for them So many will confess they have wherewithal to serve their own turn they cannot complain but their own necessities are liberally provided but they would have change of Rayments and Talent upon Talent for their children And if it were possible like Noah and those that came out of the Ark with him they would have the whole world to be distributed among their Sons and Daughters All these ways our Adversary the Devil doth shape discontent in our hearts to make us say we lack and have not enough then he objects Who is then your Father that should provide for you What Son is he that wanteth bread if he have a merciful Father And so far upon the first general part of the Text. And as this Satanical rule upon which I have spoken depraves our judgment in the most capital conclusion of true Religion the next rule which I now come to open bars and corrupts our practise in all manner of justice and righteousness it is thus whosoever wants bread let him get it by any stratagem or device by any unlawful slight which Proposition though it be not exprest in such plain terms in my Text yet the wit of Satan neither would nor could insinuate that bad meaning in any other Language to Christ than as we read it Command that these stones be made bread I know Christ hath extended his miracles to supply worldly blessings to his people especially at a push as Peter found ready pay for his Masters Tribute and for his own out of the head of a Fish and lest the people should faint that had continued fasting three days to hear Christ preach in the Wilderness a wonderful increase of food was multiplied to satisfie many thousands out of five loaves and two fishes God did get himself glory by these works in the sight of all Jury But the case is quite altered in this which Satan demands Christ was private by himself in the Desart when he had fasted forty days and forty nights and was afterwards an hungry the Devil had no colour in that place to bid him filch or cheat or do any base office to feed his belly The worst therefore he could say was altogether to omit he should call upon God nay rather since the Lord had destituted him of all provision without expectation of help from the Divine Providence do the best you can for your self Command that these stones c. This is that Maxim which those Heathens that had no Equity nor Philosophy in them did maintain Quocunque modo rem stand not upon the niceties of Truth and Law and Justice but get your living as you can Victum tibi confice quem Deus non suppeditat as our most literal Expositors do Paraphrase my Text God cares not for you but shift for your self as well as you can you must have bread Such are those irreligious and discontented words 2 Kings vi 33. The evil is of the Lord what should I wait for the Lord any longer There is no Commandment of the two Tables can be unviolated if you remove the bounds of justice and give your wit and conscience scope to make a fortune upon all jugling and devices Blasphemy Idolatry
such the Lord doth ever provide for the building up of his Church who are able to convince the gain-sayers and the weaker brethren must be satisfied by them whose lips the most wise hath appointed to preserve knowledge Secondly Beware to trample upon Pearls as Swines do beware to touch the Scripture with defiled hands He that dispenseth this portion of meat to his fellow-servants should not only be a wise Steward but ought to have a clean heart and a sincere conscience I dare say it prospers much the better with a good man Let Paul deliver any thing out of prophane Authors and he makes it profitable Let Satan deliver any thing out of the Prophets or the Gospel and he makes it abominable Origen compared it so before me Paulus assumpsit verba de his quae foris sunt ut sanctificet ea Paul did sanctifie Poetry and Philosophy with his gifts the Devil did pollute Divinity with his distorsions What more pithy than this of Solomon Prov. xxvi 7. The legs of the lame are not equal so is a Parable in the mouth of fools For as the legs of the lame will not reach one another so the Scripture never fits his purpose that doth not use it to the glory of God When Plato said that certain Daemones I know not what aerial Spirits offered the Prayers of mortal men to the Gods Says St. Austin what Prayers do they offer Incantations Or holy Petitions Si magicas nolunt tales Dii si licitas nolunt per tales If they be Charms God will reject that they bring if they be good Prayers he would not have them to bring them So I may say Why do the Devil and his Angels or why do the Sons of Belial usurp those words which the Prophets and Apostles have written Unto the ungodly said God why dost thou take my Covenant into thy mouth If it be true and entire Scripture God will not hear it from them if it be ill applied Scripture God will not hear it at all Aquinas puts forth a question Whether a man may expound Scripture who hath committed any mortal sin whereof he hath not repented He answers it if it be a sin secretly committed he may do it for God will make Reprobates Instruments of his glory but if the sin be publickly known it is better for such a one to hold his peace because of the scandal I see no reason but rather to say whether the sin be secret or publick such a one should not dare to take Gods Laws into his mouth until he have made attonement for his iniquities by newness of life and repentance Obmutescit facundia si aegra sit conscientia The tongue will lose its cunning to perswade where the conscience is defiled I doubt not therefore but Satans woe and torments shall be encreased for mixing Scripture with his most presumptuous tentations They are not worthy here to be answered that baul at the Reformed Churches because they alledge Scripture for their Reformation but none of their Doctors wrought Miraracles to commend their Doctrine Nec Diabolus à Scripturis abstinuit says one of them no Sir Nec à miraculis The Devil says he did fly to the Scriptures but once Sir in these three Tentations to the Scriptures but twice here and often after and before to miracles It is for a faith newly planted to advance it upon miracles not for the most ancient faith emerging out of darkness where it was much obscured In that case our Doctors quote the Scriptures not like the Devil as these Rabshekahs say but like Christ in the verse following when he confuted the Devil And so much for the third general Point upon what authority he moves Christ to tumble headlong Scriptum est It is written In the last part of all Satan would be our Saviours remembrancer what assistance he may promise unto himself both Supreme and Instrumental The Supreme is God the Instrumental are the Angels Ille mandabit He shall give charge It was some modesty in the Devil that he would not name God with his blasphemous throat but understands him by the Pronoun of excellency and none other can be meant because he calls them his Angels that is his Domestiques and his Family There is nothing strange in these words how the very Devil knew that God is tender to preserve his Children Every living thing nay every inanimate thing hath some instinct that he supports all things with the word of his power When the Sea wrought tempestuously Jonas i. Every Mariner called upon his God An Atheist that in his jollity will know no God put him suddenly in fear of death then he will find a God to call upon O testimonium animae naturaliter Christianae When malicious wit is surprized unawares that it cannot corrupt Nature Nature being left to it self will fly to the Almighty for defence Quench not this spark of Nature I beseech you but call upon the Lord in time of trouble and he will hear you Take the Devil at his word that our heavenly Father will give his Angels charge concerning you Do not distrust that for shame which Lucifer durst not deny But first take this Weapon by the handle and turn the point against the Devil St. Hierom shews you how If God will keep me in all my ways as you confess certainly he will preserve me from you He will not give you over to him above all enemies in the world that he should oppress you He was not so busie about Peter but God was more vigilant Peter Satan hath desired to winnow thee but I have prayed that thy faith should not fail Secondly This tender charge unto which we are committed bids us by all means regard our safety and avoid our enemies Non tam magna pro nobis in coelo sollicitudo gereretur si non magna nobis necessitas incumberet All the powers of heaven would not be so sollicitous for us but that we are thrust upon great necessity God hath placed us in the midst of so many and so great dangers that we may keep our selves within the Walls of a good Conscience and within the Fortress of Prayer and supplication He that understands what hard adventures he must undergo will provide accordingly and he that is sollicitous to be saved did never want Salvation Thirdly Let not an innocent man be afraid of those enemies whom the Devil in all likelihood doth raise up against him be not out of hope because your foes are visible and your help is invisible If you were stedfast in faith an intellectual comfort is far greater than a sensible yet all things are knit together in such a link of Charity that if men be not Recreants and forget that heavenly order which puts the weaker under the protection of the stronger all people may feel and handle the succour which is appointed for them Not to draw your attention so high yet as the custody of Angels observe in
the Monopoly of Scepters and Diadems at his command All these things will I give thee And before whom could he have told this tale to be taken in a lye so soon as by driving this bargain with Christ as if a thief should steal Plate and offer to sell it to the owner or a Plagiary filtch a great deal out of a book and rehearse it for his own before the Author so the Tempter had rob'd Christ of that Honor and Majesty which was most properly his own I mean he rob'd him of it by the blasphemy and falshood of his tongue and then brings it to Christ to barter it away for other merchandise Autori quae autoris sunt repromittit What theft more palpable than this the Father gives all things by the Son by him He made the worlds by him He hears the prayers and supplications of the Church by him He gives us health and salvation by him He gives Rulers and Princes to go in and out before his People and yet Satan intrudes as if he were our Mediator in part at least in setling Thrones and Monarchies he was the means for those things and it was his hap I say the more to discredit his impudency to tell this tale to our Saviour from whom truly and indeed the Kings of the Earth do hold their Royalty Vtrobique regnatur per Christum he sets the Crown on their heads that wear them both in this world and in the world to come Observe it that He rides upon the white horse with many Crowns upon his head Revel xix 12. This is a Vision and this is the interpretation of it that those that honor him He will honor he settles the Royalty on whom He pleaseth not one or two Kingdoms and bequeatheth the rest to the fortune of war to the free choice of popular elections much less is any such good thing deliver'd up to our adversary the Devil Christ had many Crowns on his head for the whole earth shall stand in aw of him he lifteth up whom he pleaseth and setteth him with the Princes of his people When Wisdom proclameth that of Solomon which I laid for my first ground in this point by me Kings reign indefinitely it is to be understood of God but restrictively of Christ the second person in Trinity he is appropriatively the wisdom of the Father he is meritoriously and by way of an Impetrator the conduit pipe of all benefits to high and low rich and poor therefore we endear all our prayers to God with this conclusion per Christum Dominum nostrum through Christ our Lord. But what dulness was in the Manichaeans to fall upon such Texts as this and to build upon them that the God of Heaven made all invisible blessings and that Satan had divisum imperium cum Jove he was Lord of all visible and material things What are any of these the sooner his because he said they were deliver'd to him and to whomsoever he would he gave them Why it was as cheap in his mouth and he could have said it with the same labour that he could help whom he pleased to the Kingdom of Heaven It is the Most High that ruleth in the Kingdom of men and he appointeth over it whom he will Dan. v. 21. The cause of preservation is the cause of constitution God rules the hearts of the Subjects to obey and gives them commandment for allegeance and fidelity if any commotion be like to rise the Lord stilleth the raging of the sea and the madness of the people from God is the power of soveraignty and through his good spirit the duty of obedience but Satan stirs up seditions jealousies and cross humors in people never to submit therefore he plucks down the Kingdoms of the world and obscures the glory of them he is not the founder of order but of confusion O but sayes the Manichaean if Satan have not the total managing of these Powers beneath yet a share cannot be denied him They that govern by tyranny and injustice they that lift up themselves in their pride against heaven shall we not yield that these are of his ordination No why the Prophet Hosea says chap. viii 5. Ipsi regnaverunt sed non ex me they have set up Kings but not by me they have made Princes and I knew it not In my opinion the literal and textual answer to that place is that they chose unto themselves Heathen Idols Gods of silver and gold and forsook the Lord Howsoever this distinction giveth unto Caesar that which is Caesars and unto God that which is Gods Regnaverunt non ex me quoad viam sed quoad potestatem that evil way which they chose to follow that perverse manner by which they reigned and troubled all was not from God but he gave power to Manasses to Rehoboam to Ahab as well as unto David unto Josiah and to the best Kings that rul'd with righteousness Or as another limits it a Deo bono sunt potestates a malo Angelo potestatis ambitio the Power on earth is Gods the ambition to usurp that Power is the Devils Take that which is thine Satan and leave the rest to Christ When occasion is given to speak of a wicked Magistrate the Phrase is Hos xiii 11. I gave them a King in my anger angry I was when I gave him but I gave him though and that which He gives we must take it and keep it be it scourge be it blessing it is most foul rebellion to say the Lord shall not fasten evil upon us we will not keep that which the Lord hath given us And so much for the claim of the Giver in my Text whom we have found to have no right or title to deliver unto any one the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them Indefinitely all Kings reign by Christ good and bad but the justice of the good more peculiarly is from the grace of God the tyranny and ambition of the worst is from the suggestion of Satan and nothing about them is his but that which is worse than nothing the iniquity of Princes Now I proceed The gift was furtum theft in the highest degree that which he profer'd was not his to bestow the giver mendacium he falsified his evidencies and laid title to that which was only Gods to bestow The condition now follows to be handled which is fire and sulphur mixt together blasphemy and idolatry he requires that Christ should fall down and worship him Let me begin upon this point as Solomon said when Adonijah askt Abishag to wife Let him ask the Kingdom also Satan himself was not able to speak such another word I think for horror and impiety it exceeds that sin for ought we know by far which provokt the Lord at first to cast him out of Heaven into chains of eternal darkness For Isaiah tells us in the Parable of the King of Babylon chap. xiii the insolency of that sin consisted in these
great things for them Why because they obeyed not his word They knew it was not their Idol but the Lord who had deliver'd them yet they are said to have forgot the Lord because they worshipped him after their own inventions and did not obey him Next to this weigh but the actions of Micah of Mount Ephraim Jud. xvii he that can but spel words and put them together shall find his Mother dedicated her silver to the Lord for her Son to make a graven Image Micah had these Images for the honour of God and having those abominations still profest himself a Priest of the Lord therefore this must be his crime that he worshipped God in his Images Cajetan and Abulensis are of that judgment that where the Idol hath a peculiar name as Baal Ashteroth the people seduced served the very Idol but where the Idol had no peculiar name as in my instance of Micah's Images and the Calf that Aaron made there they served the true God in the Idol If this be not directly the Popish Doctrine the Sun hath no light in it To be even with their evasion every way the very Heathen as well as they could apprehend the eternal God by the light of nature worshipt him in their Idols and Penates few or none of them thought the matter of an Idol to be a God Seneca says says that by Jupiter standing in the Capitol with lightning in his hand they understood the Preserver and Governor of all things the Maker of the world Mark now nether the Jewish nor Heathenish Idolaters did any more than worship the true God in or before or with their Images Give them audience by the way how they profess both moral and natural Philosophy for their defence Moral first how he that honoureth the Image of the King honoreth the King himself this is called St. Athanasius and St. Basil's morality and so it is but Lord how little to the case The Arrians contended that glory was to be given to one eternal God but if one were the person of the Father another of the Son there were two Eternals to be glorified those Fathers answer the Son is the Image of the Father the express image of his person and the brightness of his glory and he that honour'd that Image of the King honour'd the King himself Is there not main difference between the carved Image which stands for Christ's manhood and between his personal filiation wherein He is the Image of his Father The outward Image stands for Christ by humane imagination it hath no eminent undeniable right to present him but Religious Adoration is founded upon that Union which is personal substantial relative by divine ordination And for the moral rule he that honours the King will honour his Image it holds only in negative honour a good Subject will not deface the Kings Picture in a despiteful spleen against the exemplar no more do we dishonour the Images of Christ and the Saints unless where flagrant Idolatry is committed to them then with good zeal they may be burnt or defaced to do God honour against the Creature Is their natural Philosophy any sounder 't is Aristotle's Idem est motus in imaginem exemplar his meaning is the abstractive understanding considers the abstracted notion of a material thing and the thing it self at once the verbum intellectus as it is called the intellective word and the real thing understood at once This is all he says but they have made a matter of it that when I see Christ's Image and rememorate Christ upon it and then worship him I must worship the Image together with him To deliver you quickly out of these thorny passages I say there cannot be the same motion of the mind towards this Image and the Exemplar for the mind is fixt upon the Image as upon a Sign and upon an Object much inferiour to the Exemplar The Image is a thing create Christ uncreate they confess a respective difference that Christ is adored simply and for himself the Image in regard of similitude and reference to the principal The Image is not the terminus of worship for it self but for Christs sake therefore the motion of mans heart toward Christ and the Image cannot be one but divers When I desire the means because of the end here are two distinct actions and motions of the will to wit election of means intention for the end But with them the worship of Christ and his Image is one and the same physical act of the body at once they talk that it is virtually twofold but if they hold there is the same motion of the mind too to both at once that will make it complete idolatry No marvail you see if you have quite lost the second Commandment out of some Portresses and Breviaries when they have found it again in their larger Missals they will not keep it When men have rampar'd witty shifts against truth it is in vain to tell them from S. John Babes beware of idols or from St. Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What agreement hath the Temple of the Lord with idols they will tush at it and say they mean the Idols of Pagans St. Pet. 1. Ep. c. iv v. 3. speaks against lusts excess of wines revellings abominable Idolatries Speaks he not against the lust and drunkenness and riot of Christians verily and as manifesty against Christian Idolatries But if they toy with the Scripture that is against them let them point to that Scripture that doth license their religious honour done to Images for faith comes by hearing hearing by the word of God What not one Text to suit for them then belike it holds of Tradition nay Suarez says neither Scripture nor Tradition hath commended it but invaluit ex praxi consuetudine ecclesiae practise and custom hath allowed it How easily if time did not shorten me could I shew that for the first 500 years neither the Image of Christ or his Saints were set up in any Church so little was the practise of worshipping them on foot A little of antiquity will spend but a little time says Origen Who having his right wits after the Commandment of God will look upon Images to pray to them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or by the sight thereof offer prayers thereby to him that is resembled St. Austin upon the 113. Psalm hath a full Sermon of it these few words are the pith quis adorat vel orat intuens simulacrum who is he that doth either pray or worship looking on an Image who is he marry an Idolater Procopius hath a memorable passage that from twenty Generations after Adam the Son did ever survive the Father which is most natural but Thare buried his Son Haran who was the first that made Images and God made him an example for doing a work so hateful to him I will confine my self to one instance more Serenus Bishop of Marseilles offended that some
which was in them all brought out an harmony of the same truth from several Authors apprehend it if you will by this vulgar similitude A Gardiner curious in devices had taught four several learners to draw the same artificial knot upon the ground and every of the four laid out his knot as he was instructed upon several beds but each set it with several kinds of herbs you will not say I hope but the knot is the same albeit the herbs planted upon it are different So all the four Evangelists were taught by one Holy Ghost to draw out the same model of our Saviour's life his Transfiguration his Passion his Resurrection the herbs indeed with which every Gospel is planted are divers the narrations differ in words but that 's the excellency of the truth of our Gospel that in several phrases every one of those holy Scribes sets down the same Lord Jesus Christ This I have added to the illustration of this seeming difference after six days Christ was transfigured 't is true and as true it was about an eight days after these sayings The last respect unto the time is joyned with the place this Transfiguration fell out after he was gone up into a mountain to pray A valley is as capable of Gods glory as a mountain for God is God of the valleys as well as of the hills whatsoever Benhadad the King of Syria said to the contrary but Christ chose this high hill as well for the exercise of Prayer as for the mystery of his Transformation there may seem to be two intentions that he desired such a place for prayer quia coeli conspectus liberior quia solitudo major First upon the higher ground there is the more free contemplation of Heaven the place to which we lift up our eyes and our hearts in prayer for though our Lord is every where both in heaven and earth and under the earth yet thither we advance our devotions as to the chief Throne of his Majesty Next our Saviour left a concourse of people beneath and went to the mountain to pour out his devotions there as in a solitary sequestration where he should not be troubled Into such unfrequented hills he did often retire alone as if he would teach us to bid all the world adieu and all earthy thoughts when we utter our supplications before our heavenly Father neither doth it seem expedient to act the miracle of the Transfiguration upon a meaner Theater than an exceeding high mountain to shew what ascensions must be in their soul who have a desire to be exalted to Gods glory Our heart according to its own evil inclination cleavs unto the dust like a serpent our thoughts are of low stature like Zachaeus if they will climb up let it be for no other end or errand but as he did to see Christ There are two mountains says Bernard which we must ascend but not both at once First there is the mountain where the Son of God did preach Mat. v. and after that go up to the mountain where he was transfigured Mat. 17. Non solum meditemur in praemiis sed etiam in mandatis Domini I beseech you first meditate upon the Sayings and Commandments of God and afterward upon his Transfiguration upon the reward of glory and not as it is the vain custom of the world run on presumptuously upon assurance of glorification and to forget the true order first to ascend upon the mountain of obedience If you think it material to my expositions to know what mountain this was on which the dignity of this great work did befall you shall be informed in that also I know none but Ephrem the Syrian that says it was Mount Sinah He had his fetch oportebat in eo suggeftu consignari novum testamantum in quo conscriptum fuit vetus it behoved he speaks as if he would appoint God it behoved the New Testament to be chiefly honoured in that place where the old Law was delivered But God is not bound to man's witty divinations for this Mountain as it appears in our Saviour's journeys was in Galilee and Sinai is in Arabia Galat. iv 25. St. Hierom did long dwel and study in the Region of Judaea and he says in his Epitaph or Funeral farewel to Paula that it was Mount Tabor And Euthymius interserts as much Psa lxxxix 13. upon those words Tabor and Hermon shall rejoyce in thy name This was so constantly believed that Helen the Mother of Constantine built a Church upon that ground to celebrate the place where Christ had been wonderfully dignified and if relations deceive us not there are the ruins of two little Chappels more upon Mount Tabor at this day erected by some superstitious conceipt because St. Peter said Master let us build here three Tabernacles All that I read beside is in Josephus that it was the most craggy and steepy high place in all Galilee in some parts inaccessible the fitter to resemble the Kingdom of Heaven to which we cannot ascend but in one rugged path repentance and faith And the Historian who was a famous Captain also adds that he built a wall about it in 40 days that the Jews might defend themselves there as in a strong Castle from the incursion of the Romans It is more than all these have said that S. Peter calls it the Holy Mount This voice we heard when we were with him in the holy mount Holy because the Sacred Trinity did open it self in that place as I will shew hereafter holy because Jesus the Holy of Holies did shine there in the bright lustre of beatitude not as if there were any holiness in the soil and all other earth prophane God did not mean so when he said to Moses Put off thy shoos from thy feet for the place on which thou standest is holy ground but because it puts an holy reverence into a man that approacheth either in body or mind and thinketh seriously what wonders were done upon that holy Mountain So I have done with the first part of my Text the circumstance of time and place which is the entrance into this Miracle It cannot be unpleasant to examine the smallest parcels of such divine works to them that love the History of Christ In the next general part we read as there was choice of time and place so there was choice of persons He took Peter and John and James What a-do should we have had with some men if none but Peter had followed his Master into the Mountain upon this glorious occasion as it is Leo caught hold of it to speak strange words and such as may amuse the Reader The Lord did take Peter into the fellowship of the indivisible Trinity When the Wolf in the Fable peept into the Shepheards house and saw him and his servants dress a Lamb to be eaten says the Wolf what a stir would have been made if I had done as much So I dare be bold
quâ tanta sit fides ut speret omnia tanta devotio ut Deum videatur cogere let it be strong in faith to hope all things strong in patience to persist at all times and I know not what it is not able to effect to cast mountains into the sea says Christ to be transfigured says my Text into the glory of God to bring Peter out of Prison when Herod had locked him up within a brazen Gate yet then at the dead hour of the night did the Angel bring him forth and at the same time of midnight Peter found the Church at prayer for his deliverance Acts xii 5. Well I pray you remember that when our Saviour went up into the Mountain as well to be transfigured as to pray yet the Text names this only that he went up into the mountain to pray that name stands in chief and drowns the mention of the other business as if Prayer were a greater work than that resplendent Transfiguration And what needed he to pray but to bring us upon our knees humbly and frequently before his Father and our Father As Solomons Temple had three especial Ornaments the Golden Candlestick the Table of Shewbread and the Altar of Incense so three things of principal use do correspond to these in the Church of Christ the Word Preached which doth enlighten our darkness is the Golden Candlestick which is dearer says David than much fine gold Instead of the Table of Shew-bread we have the Communion of Christs Body and Blood the Table of the Lord. And instead of the Altar of Incense we have that which is much sweeter in Gods nostrils the Incense of Prayer Now abide these three to direct us in a good way says Bernard Verbum Exemplum Oratio the Word Preached the Edifying Examples of Holy men and Zealous Prayer but the greatest of these is Prayer Ea namque operi voci gratiam efficaciam promeretur for whether they be the actions of a pious life or the words of an eloquent tongue it is Prayer which accompasseth from Gods mercy that all should be effectual I have amplified this the more because some Ignaroes out of a preposterous zeal shuffle off this Christian duty with a most wicked and a regardless negligence if any man be transfigured from such a corrupt opinion by that which I have deliver'd it is that which I aimed at and which I desire of God yea it is that which our Saviour intended when he would be occupied in Prayer at that time and in nothing else when he was transfigured in glory Now in the fourth and last general Observation upon the Text as our Lord prepared himself with much humility in Prayer so in the consequent he was exalted in much honor the fashion of his countenance was altered and his raiment was white and glistering Beloved we are all like the Children of Israel standing below the Hill and dare not go up to pry in to the mystery of the inscrutable glory Let it suffice us to enquire into three things that follow which we may safely do since all Scripture is written for our instruction They are these 1. The Final Cause why Christ was transfigured 2. The Efficient Cause from whence this splendour was derived And 3. The Effect it self alteration in his countenance whiteness and glistering in his raiment In these three I will be brief without offensive curiosity to make us not only search but find out the cause why He would be transfigured I have regard to this rule of Damascens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every thing that Christ did in his conversation upon earth it is to be referr'd to the good of man First then I render this reason that the Redeemer of Souls lived in great humility upon earth nay like an abject worm to attract the love of the Church now he chang'd himself into this admired excellency to encrease their faith St. Peter pronounced a Confession of faith for all the Apostles Matth. xvi which their Master did exceedingly commend Thou art Christ the Son of the living God Yet they who did see the Majesty of God to be in him and did adore it were as yet ignorant of what glorification his body was capable which was the Veil of the Godhead He had suspended all outward appearance of Divine lustre that it should not shew it self in him To this meaning you cannot well choose but refer that of the Prophet Isaias chap liii 2. He hath no form nor comliness and when we shall see him there is no beauty that we should desire him that is he was pleased for a season not to look like one whose body had an illustrious influence from the soul and from the union with the Godhead he did suppress it till he was pleased to make it known Psal xciii The Lord is King he hath put on glorious apparel and in another place Thou art cloathed with Majesty and honour Indeed to have a brightness in his body as great or greater than the light of the Sun was as natural to that humane nature which is united to the Godhead as it is for the Sun to shine in the Firmament The Disciples marvailed that his face should glister this one time so that no Fuller on earth could make a thing so white whereas the greater marvel is that it was not so at all times Majus miraculum fuit hujus gloriae influxum reprimere quàm eam perpetuò retinere It was a greater miracle to restrain the apparition of this glory at any time than to have it alwayes dwel upon his face for blessed souls which enjoy God always have a virtue of claritude in them which redounds of it own accord into the body Therefore well might the Psalmist say of Christ whose soul was always blessed Thou art fairer than the children of men And though at other times his brightness was discoloured by humility yet now he removed the cloud and let his Witnesses see the fair beams of his Divine honor for a little time which is the first motive of his Transfiguration Secondly by this Apparition the three Disciples saw in what form he would come to judgment It is no dreadful thing to a good man either to see or to meditate with himself in what manner Christ will come in the Clouds at the last day to call the Quick and the Dead before him The Wicked that know they have crucified him again and trampled the blood of the Covenant under their feet will run into the dust for fear of his glorious presence and call for the Hills to cover them and the Mountains to fall upon them as for the Righteous that then shall be found upon earth in whose hearts he hath sealed the promise of his Holy Spirit they shall tremble with an awful reverence but when they have gain'd their memory to recall that he cometh with his reward in his hand they will praise that pomp of Judgment and say now our labour
industry that can attain to such excellent things but by Gods grace and clemency Yet we must not think to fold onr arms together and sleep out our time with Solomons Sluggard and yet be made happy we must awake from sin before we receive the hope and comfort of that future glory in this life and we must awake from death before we can see God and his glory face to face hereafter O that we could awake from the sluggishness of the flesh and open our eyes illuminated by faith then we should see many admirable mysteries which now pass away from our knowledg and we never seek them out Wake thou that sleepest stand up from the dead and Christ shall give thee light There is an eye-salve of Prayer and humility and long-suffering in these dayes of trial to dispel the mists of darkness which obscure our faith and when we awake up after thy likeness O blessed Jesus we shall be satisfied with it AMEN THE FOURTH SERMON UPON The Transfiguration LUKE ix 33. And it came to pass as they departed from him Peter said unto Jesus Master it is good for us to be here and let us make three Tabernacles one for thee and one for Moses and one for Elias not knowing what he said UPon my entrance into the handling of this beautiful miracle of the Transfiguration we found Christ at Prayer and he continued in that exercise by himself alone for he needed not to have his Petition recommended to his Father by any other mouth by any Intercessor in Heaven or Earth He indeed prays for every mans wants but in all the Gospel throughout no man prays for him Pro quo nullus interpellat sed ipse pro omnibus hic unicus verusque mediator est says St. Austin He in whose behalf no man sollicits the Father to bless him and he whose Lips bless every man this is the true and only Mediator of Mankind But though we found Christ at Prayer yet we did not find his Apostles waking to say Amen If God be for us who can be against us Rom. viii 31. I answer the Apostle though God be for us all a man may be his own Enemy and fight against himself Christ was occupied in Prayer Who could be against Peter when his Master was on his side But Peter slept while his Master prayed therein he was against himself Thrice our Saviour rose from Prayer in the Garden and found him sleeping therefore the watchful Cock was a sign unto him soon after that he had denied his Master thrice So to lay this upon our own building if the three Disciples whom Christ took with him to Mount Thabor had imployed their time in watchfulness and Religion as their Master did doubtless the Lord had guided their understanding in the right way but because they laid them down to rest when they should have prayed and did not lift up their hands as an Evening Sacrifice therefore the Lord sent upon them the Spirit of slumber Rom. xi 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an imagination as dark as the darkness of Egypt in which they could discern nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Aquila reads it Isa xxix 10. a strong drowziness which is in the manner of a Lethargy a Spirit of error and stupidity Loe what words do come from Peter in my Text let him shake himself as Samson did when he came out of sleep and he shall find that the Spirit of the Lord was gone from him He did not watch and pray that he might not fall into error therefore he slept and fell into error that he might pray to come out of it Because his tongue was tied when it ought to speak therefore when he began to speak he knew not what he said And that shall appear unto you both this day and once again God willing upon this whole Verse which I have read At this present I have bounded my meditations to go but half way It came to pass as they departed from him Peter said unto Jesus Master it is good for us to be here All this matter must not be drawn into an heap but into this order 1. What came to pass which caused Peter to speak now when he had been silent before Why Moses and Elias were taking their leave and he would have retained them It came to pass as they departed from him Peter said 2. To whom he did direct his speech not to his fellow servants Moses and Elias but to his Master Peter said unto Jesus Master 3. That his Disciple went about to teach his Master in the words following Master it is good for us to be here Those being the words of especial use to spend our time upon I will enlarge my self to shew that they contain three things to be well allowed and six things to be doubted of that I may not say condemned 1. At the first blush that he saw Christ in glory he said it was bonum he was excellently delighted with it for the glory of the Gospel is no affrighting thing but a delectable object 2. He said true it was bonum nobis good for us for God doth shew his glory for us and for our satisfaction 3. It is as true that it is very good to be continually present with his glory and never part from it O it is the best of all goods to enter into the joy of our Master Thus far he built upon a Rock his foundation is infallible In the rest he builds upon the sands yet to censure the errors of so great an Apostle with modesty I will contrive all that is objected against him into six questions 1. An bonum non videre mortem Whether it were good for us not to see death 2. An bonum non affligi If it be good to remain in pleasure and not be afflicted 3. An bonum sit in terrâ manere Whether it could be good to dwell always upon the earth 4. An bonum sit quod paucis solummodo bonum Whether that can be a true good which is restrained to few Bonum nobis if it were not enlarged beyond those that were present 5. An bonum consistit in aspectu humanitatis Whether it could be the supreme good of man to behold the Humane Nature of Christ only beautified without the revelation of his divine glory 6. An bonum sit Christum non crucifigi If it could be good for them that Christ should entrench himself in Mount Tabor and never go to Mount Calvary to be crucified These are the parts of the Text not one to be spared They shall not trouble you with length though they do with multitude I begin with the occasion which moved Peter to speak it was the departure of the two Witnesses Factum est cum illi discederent ab eo dixit He was ever prompt to speak and now he could not hold when those two the most heroical Prophets that ever had lived did now come from another world and
of Heaven ut gentilis deprecatione ultio sanguinis istius à nobis ablata sit that the vengeance of his blood should be denounced against Israel and the Nations excused but yet Pilat was but mungril good and therefore his hand was in this bloody passion as well as the men of Jerusalem both Jew and Gentile did concur to his sufferings says Origen ut pro persecutoribus qui oraret gentiles non excluderet that when he prayed for his Persecutors the Gentiles might be at one end of his persecution and be partakers of his Prayers Had Pilat been as malicious as the Jews we poor souls had been liable to the vengeance of his blood had Pilat stopt his ears against the outcries and never yielded to the passion we had not been in the number of those Persecutors for whom he made intercession therefore this luke warm Magistrate began with Jacobs voice but ended with the hands of Esau neither could he say he was innocent of the blood of this just man Nay then I must tell you to forget Pilat a while were you all in this Assembly dearly beloved of none other but of the very choice and flower of the resurrection of the just a Rank of Patriarchs an Army of Martyrs a Company of holy Prophets yet Qui omnes conclusit sub peccato omnes conlusit suh homicidio he that doth lay sin to every mans soul doth lay the murder of our Lord and Saviour to every mans charge for the redemption of sins And then are you better than your forefathers Are you more righteous than the Prophets that you alone are innocent No you are also the crucifiers of your Redeemer and if your consciences do not say so bear witness of my words for an action of slander Solum peccatum homicida est Not Pilate but hypocrisie not Caiaphas but Simony not Herod but incestuous lust not the Souldiers but Bands and Troupes of Rapines and Blasphemies were the murderers of Christ When a Bullock was slain for a sin Offering to make an attonement for the whole Congregation Lev. iv 25. All the Elders of the City says Moses shall lay their hands upon the head of the Bullock that they being the representative body of all Israel might testifie that every soul in Israel was accessory to the death of the Sacrifice This was a figurative expression how the whole Generation of mankind did concur to be guilty of the bloudy Oblation of the Son of God As the trial hath been seen upon murderers when they have drawn near to the Carkass which hath been slain by their hands either fresh bloud from the wounds of the Carkass or an issue of their own bloud hath betrayed them as some say so let me question you when you stand before Christ especially when he stands before you in the holy Sacrament do not your hearts bleed within you to express your guiltiness of his Passion O give the flux a passage to come out I do not say in bloud but in tears which are the bloud of the soul The bleeding of the Vine draws away the life of the tree and leaves it barren of the Clusters which should hang upon it but the flowing of tears makes us fruitful to bring forth many Bunches of good works not the Clusters of an earthly but of an heavenly Canaan And now let me ask you as I would ask of men that shun those places out of horrour wherein they have spilt anothers bloud I say Why do you love this world so much wherein you have killed Christ Why are you not aweary of this place What can please us in such a soyl which should be unto us all as Aceldema was to Judas the Theater to act sins and therefore the field of bloud Wherefore do we not rather say with Tertullian Nihil nostri refert in hoc mundo nisi de eo quàm citò excedere We Christians have nothing to do in this earth but to make haste to forsake it for a better especially abandon the thoughts of deadly revenge do not wish for more bloud at any hand we have all spilt enough already in the funerals of our Saviour were he not both a Sacrifice slain for us as he is a Sacrifie slain by us more than ever we could answer for Make not your revengeful heart like Golgotha where Christ was crucified a place of dead mens sculls But least any man should be swallowed up with too much grief because he is endited for this hainous crime the bitter death of his Saviour let him take this for his comfort to put gladness in his heart it is not one death that our Lord Jesus doth stand upon Passus est quia voluit he never shrinks for one death but stretched out his arms upon the Cross to embrace it Take heed only that you do not crucifie him anew Nay mistake me not here though you sin ten thousand times over yet he can die but once for you but my meaning is the Summa totalis of all mens sins did abase the Son of God to the ignominy of the Cross yet this dolorous day was from Gods preordination But that we may not crucifie him anew first Do not neglect his death as if it were some common and uncommiserated anguish Secondly Do not run into admiration of your own merits as if had there been all such as you in the world his Passion had been spared Lastly Do not presume upon grace as if Remission of sins were a safe Indulgence for sins to be multiplied They that do commit such things are guilty not once but often to crucifie the Lord of life To conclude then against Pilates falshood and hypocrisie three things do concur in the crucifying of our Saviour Destinatio passionis executio passionis iteratio passionis In the Predestination of Christs Passion God did look upon all mankind the Elect especially as lapsed into sin and therein Pilate was not innocent The execution of his Passion upon earth was committed by the envy of the Priests the cruelty of the Souldiers and the power of Pilate What though his mind did not consent Yet he lent them his authority Herod was not willing it seems to have John Baptists head but it comes all to one pass if Herodias must have her content and therefore in the execution was not Pilate innocent The iteration of his Passion lights upon those who make an impenitent end and do not apply his sufferings to their sin-sick conscience and since Pilate lived a Vagabond for ever after and died like a desperate cast-away either by drowning at Vienna or falling upon his own Sword at Lions that is the difference of the History neither in this respect nor in any else could he say I am innocent of the bloud of this just person And so I pass to the second general part of my Text from this lie which Pilate told to his true testimony concerning Christ that he was a just person Yet I commend this disposition in
fall out with the whole Profession of Chivalry for one Miscreants sake that pierced my Saviours side or for four at the most as some say that scourged him Quis requiescet super lonco quo perfossum est Christi latus for by that reason we should fall out with the Priests and High-Priests too who were deeper interested in the business than the Souldiers The Sons of Aaron were his first Enemies as you would say Hereticks and corrupt Teachers that sow Tares among the Wheat were the first Adversaries against the Church of Christ The Military men were his last Enemies they that wounded him in my Text and belyed the truth of his Resurrection afterward watching at the Sepulcher So the Battels of usurping Princes put on pestilently to be the last ruin of the Church Caesaris milites Caesar's Souldiers such as these were his Souldiers that would be an Universal Monarch the Caesar over all the Princes of the earth Some Expositors out of their respects to the honour of a Martial life would have this person to be ne unus militum no Souldier at all rightly called but by abuse and usurpation and I think you will say they speak reason when I tell you why When Hannibal was Master of the field against the Romans a People of Italy called Brutiani revolted to the Conquerors side But fortune turn'd and the time came that the Romans had clear'd the Coast of the Carthaginians and could take revenge of their Enemies at home then they neither would let those Brutiani live so happily as in Peace nor so honourably as to bear Arms in War but took them along with their Camp and made them Lictores Lorarii that is base Instruments for correction and execution of Malefactors so that by good conjecture this was but unus è Brutianis an Executioner and not a Souldier but as he lived in the Camp Now where villany was bred in the bone and the condition of the man was to be like Satanas emissus ad vexandum orbem appointed to vex all that came into his hands what could be expected but that he should thrust his Spear into the bowels of an Innocent As it was said of Maximinus the Tyrant who was born a Barbarian both by Father and Mother in quo fuit conscientia degeneris animi he did not apply himself to good because his conscience always told him that his original was base and degenerous Let him be as bad as we would have him or as good as the Text calls him he was as we are in one thing a Gentile and not a Jew a Gentile that did malice Christ The divisions of both those two great Houses did concur to these cruel and dolorous sufferings that both in their Posterity to the worlds end might think themselves indebted to expiate so great an offence both had an interest in these bloody passions prosecuting our Saviours death ut qui pro persecutoribus oraret Gentiles non excluderet says Origen That since he prayed for his Persecutors the Gentiles who were at one end of his Persecutions might be partakers of his Prayers And the counterfet Gospel of Nicodemus tells us what success this Gentile had upon our Saviours most potent Intercession and Prayer for his Enemies For this Longinus that name his new Godfathers have given him having lost the use of one eye long before a little sprinkling of this bloud did light upon it and restore it again The miracles and the grace of God made him a Christian and finally a constant profession of him that was crucified made him a glorious Martyr Whether the Story be true or false I dispute not this Author knew that there was a possibility we might believe it For 't is true that St. Hierom said upon the conversion of many Publicans and Harlots Christus est succinum ad congregandas sibi stipulas paleas many who had copious vices were drawn unto Christ as the Coral and the Jet draw chaff and straws and things of the least moment about them Men and Brethren to this day Christ is crucified to this day Armed men and Souldiers bend their fury against the Church of Christ are about his Cross For as the Philosopher said that an ill man was the worst of all Beasts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for he was arm'd with wit and reason to do injustice So every sinner is not so strong as a Souldier to hurt nor furnisht with ability to be so bad as he would be he wants a spear to thrust Christ into the side as Isaiah said of the Army of Senacharib which threatned sore against the Temple of the Lord but fell short of their purpose The Children are come to the birth and are not able to bring forth But when I see Power and Authority make the worst use of it to oppress when I see a pregnant Wit set it self to scoff and libel when I hear Eloquence whet her tongue to plead against the innocent alas say I this is robusta iniquitas this impiety is armed with a Spear the weapons of malice are girt about it my Saviour and his poor Members are sure to smart for it Says the Prophet Ezekiel chap. xxxii they shall go down to Hell with their Weapons of War that is with their violent and powerful sins Transgressors we may be Souldiers that fight against Heaven I hope we will never be Cast away the weapons of Satan and put on the armour of light I have done with the Person I come to the Violence offered lanceâ fodit he pierced him with a Spear The hand of Jereboam which was stretched out against the man of God dried up and withered the hand of the Emperor Valens shook with an extreme Palsie and could not subscribe to the Banishment of Basil the Great says Theodoret but the hand of the Persecutor which aimed at the Body of Christ himself that was stedfast no infirmity in it no sinew shrunk Let these go their way says Christ of his Disciples when they were all taken together in the Garden let not these be apprehended the Shepherd rather than the Sheep the Master than the Servants In me convertite ferrum whosoever escapes his own flesh shall never flinch at torment St. Austin asks why his dearest flesh was pierced and despitefully mangled but according to the Scriptures not a bone of him was broken quia ossa sunt electi eorum virtutes his flesh was the Sacrifice which must be offered upon the Altar of the Cross but his Elect and their Virtues are understood by his bones and whatsoever betides himself yet his Elect that is his bones must not be broken In the Similitude of the Vine whereunto our Saviour is compared more than once Bernard hath thus continued the Allegory that in Circumcision he was vitis praecisa a Vine that was pruned and though a little cut yet no substantial part was wounded In the captious questions of the Pharisees when
loud voice Lazarus come forth AMong all the miracles that our Saviour wrought this suscitation of Lazarus or raising him up from the dead it was his true Benoni or Son of sorrow None came off with so much anxiety none cost him so dear in all the Gospel Twice he groaned in Spirit and once he wept his Passions were as variable as the life and death of Lazarus Look back to the fifteenth verse and you shall see it wrought comfortably I am glad for your sakes that Lazarus is dead Look unto the 35 verse and you shall see it wrought bitterly Jesus wept What alterations are there says St. Austin Gaudebat propter discipulos flebat propter Judeos horum fides confirmabatur horum incredulitas augebatur It joyed him for the Disciples sake that their faith would be confirmed and revived It grieved him for the Jews sake whose hearts were hardened The preparation then of this Miracle was not without sorrow but the event and sequel was worst of all For although the Counsel of the High Priests stomach'd at our Saviour long before yet they wisht his life no hurt till he had wrought this wonder which all the world were amazed at From that time Caiaphas began to talk like a Wizard That one man must die for the people and Christ must suffer Now you see good cause why our Lord might groan and weep Israel shall pass over into Canaan but Moses must die upon Mount Nebo the birth of Benjamin shall be Rachels funeral Lazarus shall be revived and Jesus crucified Yet I can tell you one thing Beloved how the Son of God shall neither groan nor weep for Lazarus but rejoyce in Spirit and be glad even at this day be glad as he stands at the right hand of God and it lies upon you to do it Did he then groan for the infidelity of the Pharisees Then sure he will now rejoyce if we believe in his works and have faith in the Resurrection Did he then weep because his own death was contrived for doing good Then he will now be comforted if you take heed that you do not again crucifie the Lord of life T●llite lapidem as it is in verse 39 remove the stone the hardness of your heart and joy will follow in heaven for the conversion of a sinner Do you consider that the days past were a time of mourning and sad contrition Why here is a Text which was not preach'd without Christs mourning and lamentation Do you remember his Passion but the other day Why this is the Text which was an occasion to bring him to his Cross and Passion What do you meditate upon this day but our Saviours issuing out of the Grave Why here is Lazarus broke out of the Tomb Lazarus come forth Which words as I have read them rise up into two eminent heads like Tabor and Hermon You shall perceive that the business in my Text is a work of great dignity that is one part and a work of great Divinity that is the other part The dignity consists in these two Points 1. In that which Christ had spoken before when he had said thus And what was that He pray'd unto his Father wherefore it is dignum oratione a work worthy of a Prayer for the preparation 2. It is Dignum proclamatione it was cried with a loud voice and fit to be published to all the world The Divinity appears in these three circumstances 1. Exeat mortuus that a dead man is summoned to appear 2. Exeat Lazarus Lazarus after four days departure comes forth 3. Exeat ligatus one who was bound hand and foot with Grave-cloaths walks upon his feet O strange Divinity the Monuments which were shut did open for Christ did call who had the Key of David The dead who lay in silence could hear his tongue for it was the same voice which makes the Hinds bring forth young ones and called Adam from the dust of the earth The body which lay putrified four days gave no offence in the smell Christ was at hand who is a sweet savour for us unto God The feet which were bound with Grave-cloaths could walk before him for in him we live and move and have our being Was not this excellent work worthy of a Prayer So far we have gone this day in our morning Sacrifice Was it not worthy of the proclamation of a loud voice fit to be preached that the world may hear of it and believe and be saved And that is the business which doth now take up your attentions With these two circumstances of the Miracle I must first begin the preparation of our Saviours Prayer and the promulgation of his loud voice or preaching And when he had thus said c. That is when he had prayed unto the Father Dimidium facti qui benè caepit habet And he that begins his work with Prayer as Christ did hath half dispatch'd it Vox clamantis the voice of a Crier was the fore-runner of Christ when he came upon the earth Vox orantis the voice of Prayer must be the fore-runner of our necessities when we look for any thing from heaven As the people shouted when the foundation of the Temple was laid grace grace be unto the first stone of the building so let the foundation of every thing be laid with shouting and strong Ejaculations to our God that he may say upon the moving of the first stone Grace be to the building In Gen. xii Abraham removed three times to several quarters and still before he pitcht his Tent he built an Altar to Jehovah remove not stir not enter upon no new task before you have built an Altar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says St. Chrysostom wheresoever you are pray and your own heart is a Temple or the Alter of Jehovah Religion is the Bow and the heart is the String but Prayer is that which bends the Bow Religion is unbent as it were and the Shafts cannot fly untill Prayer dispatch them Well might Peter who was prompt of tongue and ready to speak upon all occasions be counted a chief Apostle for Prayer which is the tongue of Religion and our Consciences Orator is the chief of all our vertues Debilem facito manu debilem coxâ pede no matter for infirmities in the feet for diseases in the hands so the dumb Devil be not in our tongues The penitent Thief had no hands to hold up they were nailed to the Cross no knees to bend for his legs were broken he had a tongue to say Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom and it did him service enough to open Paradise O the delusions of the Devil For all this that I have said you shall sooner make ignorants and vain people believe that Diseases are curable by unsignificant Charms by unhallowed mutterings than by godly Prayers As if the Devil could go further with Non-sense than a good Christian with Faith and Prayer One Talent in
the Gospel could do no good for it was but one Talent upon the return but one single Petition will fructifie like a grain of Wheat into stalks and handfuls For as it is said of the nine Muses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 call but upon one by name and all her Sisters beside will assist the invocation so call but for one blessing piously and though you ask but for a drop much abundance of waters of comfort will gush out when the spout is opened Fear not Zachary says Gabriel when he came to tell him of the birth of John for thy prayers are heard Luk. i. 13. Why surely says St. Austin he prayed for the whole Congregation at that time and not for Children Not for Children for his Wife was old and barren he despaired of Issue What of that He prayed for the publick good and God gave him joy in particular he prayed for the Congregation as it was fit for the Father of a Flock and God made him the Father of a Son Such notice was taken of this solemn Prayer which our Saviour made for Lazarus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says St. Chrysostome a Church was built from the ground in that place where the Monument of Lazarus had been before For who would not flock to pray in that place where Jesus had prayed unto his Father It was na Oratory wherby the Prelates of the highest state might learn to officiate by Christs example and execute in their place Alas of too much contempt to pray in the Congregation The proud Emperors of Rome did so perswade themselves Vt sibi viderentur Principes esse desinere si quid facerent tanquam Senatores They thought it did derogate from the Magnificence of a Prince to employ their pains toward the publick good like Senators So to mutter Mass once a year is enough for the Roman Bishop to bless the people with so much breath as to pray for them by the Book O it is too mean a Function for a dignified person What And was it a disparagement to the Son of God to pray among the people when he raised Lazarus The Arrians indeed did object against Christs Divinity in this place for making a Petition in the behalf of Lazarus Where was the vertue of his own Godhead Where was his Omnipotency Say those graceless Hereticks is it not a token of infirmity to ask that of another which we are not able to do by our own efficacy And doth this offend them that Christ should pray that he might conjoyn with us in our infirmities But to give a larger resolution to the doubt Says Martha in the 21 22 verses before Lord if thou hadst been here my brother had not died but I know even now whatsoever thou dost ask of God God will give it thee Christ then had no need to pray for Lazarus to support his own power but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to satisfie the desire and weakness of Martha he betook him to a prayer Says the Centurion Lord only say the word and my servant shall be healed Be it so says Christ and he went no further O says another Come and heal my daughter vouchsafe your presence to the sick person Why Christ came and healed her Could they ask any more Not only the diseases were remedied but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was done in what fashion or circumstance they pleased Will Martha have her brother raised with a formal supplication before She hath her will and Jesus prayed unto the Father It was not done then for Lazarus his sake it needed not not for Martha's sake only but for the people that stood by nay that 's not all not for them alone but for us and for as many as shall hear the Gospel preached to the ends of the world For as the beating of the wings and the crowing of the Cock raised up Peter when he was buried in the sins of the High Priests Hall so the knocking of the breast and the voice which cries unto the Lord before the morning watch is that which must raise us up from the luxurious beds of sensuality Some Orders of Mendicant Friers wander about and present themselves to the eyes of men but say not a word for an Alms to make themselves known to the ear of the charitable This is rather sharking than begging for benevolence Let them bear the badge of St. Francis but we the badge of Christ ask and pray for a quickning spirit if you would be raised up to newness of life Hezekiah having emptied his heart of some words which were well disgusted out an as if he had opened a vein in each eye to let out tears by that means saw fifteen years more after a desperate sickness Ahaziah's Child perchance had gained twice fifteen years if the Father had done as much but it lived not fifteen hours after the King had sent for Physick to the God of Ekron Like Coriolanus whom the people thought worthy of any favour if his proud heart would have stoopt and asked for favour Not long before the destruction of Jerusalem the great Gate toward the East fast barr'd and lock'd opened of its own accord says Eusebius This is good luck said the more confident Priests Deus aperuit nobis portam bonorum God hath opened unto us a gate of good fortune of his own accord Nay said the more wise Hostibus introitum patefecit He hath opened a gap for the enemy to come in and that proved to be the truest Divination Dearly Beloved if a blessing fall into your lap when you were dissolute irreligious and never thought of God to give it the gates of your heart being barr'd and fastned do you dream like the foolish people of Jerusalem that a gate of good fortune is opened of its own accord No no beware the after-clap It may be pleasant it may be rich which comes without a Prayer to usher it into the world but like a base-born child it is seldom prosperous Me thinks I should be very much afraid if God had sent me any blessing for which either in special or in general I had not earnestly prayed Whatsoever good thing you possesse and never pray'd for it I pity your title you came to it by robbery And so much for the first dignity of this work it had the preparation of a Prayer Jesus first cast up his eyes and opened his lips to heaven before he stoopt to the Corps beneath and opened the Monument before he cried with a loud voice Lazarus come forth He cried with a loud voice and that is the dignity of the publication When our Saviour issued out of the Grave the third day it was done early in the morning the stone was rolled away and no noise was heard that which was done was done with wonderful silence Why doth Lazarus come out with a loud voice Nay why shall the Angel at the Great Day call the dead out of the earth with the blast
Jordan his Disciples being with him What did this advantage them why Mors Lazari cum Lazaro discipulorum fides surgit cum sepulto says Chrysologus Lazarus was translated from death to life and this did increase the Disciples faith which lay half dead before 2. Martha sollicits for her Brother and 't is strange that Christ came to Bethany on purpose for Lazarus sake and yet spent more time with Martha than with them all The case is plain says Theophylact 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alas her belief was near unto death almost quite gone and Christ came especially to quicken her with his grace that was Martha's resurrection 3. Her Sister Mary was a woful woman and she falls down in compassion about out Saviours feet St. Austin takes her to be the very same Mary that was the publick sinner which washt his feet with her tears and wip'd them with the hairs of her head Luke 7. whereupon he infers Maria peccatrix magis resuscitabatur quàm Lazarus Mary the Sinner was more revived when she was made a penitent Saint than Lazarus was when he was made a living man that was Marries resurrection 4. Here were divers Jews that came to comfort the two Sisters they were witnesses of this work and did glorifie God and believe Christ thanked his Father for it Whereupon says St. Ambrose Non unum Lazarum sed fidem omnium suscitavit it was a Resurrection day not for Lazarus alone but for the faith of all the multitude that were present whether they were the Disciples or Martha or Mary or the multitude of the Jews they had not been as they were if Christ had not made one in every part of the Miracle wherefore let us make a difference between them that came to gaze and them that came to believe a Miracle from the twelfth of this Gospel and the ninth verse The Jews came not only for Jesus sake but to see Lazarus also We come not together this day so much to see Lazarus reviv'd as to see the strength of Jesus above the power of death I have entred once before into this verse and the former both which rise up into two eminent heads like Tabor and Hermon First it is a work of great Dignity that 's one part and a work of great Divinity that 's the other part The Dignity consists in these two points First in that which Christ had spoken before when he had thus said and what was that he prayed unto his Father wherefore it is dignum oratione a work worthy of a Prayer for the preparation Secondly it is dignum proclamatione it was cried with a loud voice and fit to be publisht to all the world The Divinity appears in these three Circumstances 1. Exeat mortuus that a dead man was summon'd to appear 2. Exeat quatriduanus Lazarus after four days departure comes forth 3. Exeat ligatus he that was bound hand and foot with Grave-cloaths and his face with a Napkin he comes forth of the Monument O strange Divinity the Sepulchers which were shut did open for Christ did call who had the key of David the dead who lay in silence could hear his tongue for it was the same voice which makes the Hinds to bring forth young ones the Body which lay putrified four days gave no offence in the smel Christ was at hand who is a sweet favour for us unto God the feet which were bound with Grave-cloaths could walk before him for in him we live and move and have our being Was not this work worthy of a Prayer was it not worthy of a Proclamation so far I have gone already as likewise into the first Circumstance of the Divinity that a dead man was raised up As Aelian says of the Sybarites that they invite their Guests to a Feast a just year before the day of the Feast so long is it since I promised you the dispatch of this Text and now I am come to perform it you see what remains for this hours employment the two latter Circumstances Quatriduanus excitatur Lazarus is raised up after he had been four days in the Grave and 2 ligatus excitatur it was he that was bound hand and foot with Grave-cloaths and his face with a Napkin two strange parts of his resurrection not lightly to be passed over for to speak of a Miracle suddenly and in a word non dat lucem videntibus sed pavorem it is like lightning says one the flash that glides by of a sudden it may terrifie the eye but not enlighten it First of ille quatriduanus he came forth alive who had been four days asleep in the Monument It is hard to perswade death to part with any thing it hath gotten The Devil strove with the Angel about the Body of Moses think you that Death would not strive with Christ much more about the Soul of Lazarus what a Guest of four dayes continuance and let him go I may say to the Grave as the Prophet said to Ahab for letting Benhadad escape Why hast thou let a man go out of thy hand who was appointed to utter destruction Wherefore St. Chrysostom brings in Death to complain of this fact for a sore grievance on this wise Elias rais'd up a Child whose soul was departed for a time Elisha did as much likewise this I took for a violence done to nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but here 's a Conqueror that 's more violent than them both he takes a dead man out of my chaws who stinks and hath been four days in the Sepulcher The same Father replies again this is a small thing to raise up one from burial after four days do you complain of that what if he were putrified what if he were dry bones what if he were dust and clay yea what if that dust were converted into other creatures Adam shall be cloathed again with flesh Noah hath lived in two Worlds he shall live again in a third And according to the Basil Edition of the 72. Job was one of those that rose and appeared in the holy City unto many Matth. 27. Si attendamus quis fecit delectari debemus potiùs quàm mirari says St. Austin If we do but attend who it is that doth all these things we shall rather break out into a passion of Joy than into Admiration For Christ that died for us and rose again for our Justification he hath the Keys of Life and Death and therefore we shall not see corruption for ever Martha had a faith that God could raise up her Brother again and that He would do it if Christ would pray unto him I know even now whatsoever thou wilt ask of God God will give it thee O Woman says Chrysologus thou art yet but of little faith Judex ipse est quem tu postulas Advocatum Wouldest thou make Christ thine Advocate to plead thy Cause Nay Comfort is nearer at hand he is the Judge whom thou
xiv 8. Briefly the Gospel was now to launch forth and to flote upon the waves of many trials and persecutions and therefore it had need of a Helm to turn it about whithersoever the Governor listeth and that little Helm is the tongue Jam. iii. 4. I told you even now that the wantonness of the eye had a gracious vision to amend it so here came a remedy from Heaven to correct the iniquity of our mouth which is the very forge of Hell and a tongue descended from above to sanctify it As the Devil can put no worse thing into us than an evil tongue and then it becoms the worst member that we have Jam. iii. 6. so God can send us no better thing from the store of his mercies than a tongue to praise him and then David calls it in the old Translation of our Psalms the best member that we have Psal cviii 1. We had need to let that Prayer come in often among our earnest supplications that God would touch our lips with a coal from his altar as he sent a Seraphin with that blessing to the Prophet Isaiah It is very meet that we consider in our vote with the Psalmist Set a watch before my mouth pone ostium circumstantiae as the vulgar Latin hath it make such a door for my mouth that I may look to every circumstance of every syllable that passeth out Oret lingua ut dometur lingua Says St. Austin O let the tongue pray for it self that it may be ruled how often trips it in swearing how often doth it murmur in discontent in boasting above measure in pride lofty in anger furious in perjuries blasphemous in curses bitter in vain talking never quiet glib as honey in hypocrisie subtle in lying smooth in deceiving impudent in flattery What a happy thing it is to have a fence about the lips that no such evil spirits as these may come in or out and notwithstanding all these exorbitancies of the mouth to which we are so obnoxious God can purifie our speech and season it with salt that it shall not corrupt For if man by wit and industry can tame wild beasts which he hath not made can not the Lord much more tame the tongue which he hath made a Watch can suppress and curb those in that would break out of their holds and the Lord can make such a door for our lips as shall inhibit all the petulancy of vain breath and shut and open for his own glory Ostium aperitur clauditur says Gregory unto it a door is made to let our friends and familiars in but to keep out theevs and robbers so the tongue must be open to confess our sins and shut if hypocrisie shall attempt to excuse them the mouth must be open unto the praise of God and barred against our own commendation it must be open to teach the humble but shut and silent if the obstinate will not learn for answer not a fool in his folly says Solomon He that openeth and no man shutteth he that shutteth and no man openeth can give us this power from above to speak unto his praise and to be silent unto evil therefore the Holy Ghost descended in the apparition of a tongue To pierce further as far as observation will give me leave upon this point as the tongue naturally is an instrument of two functions of speaking and of tasting so these extraordinary tongues were destined for two properties to preach the Gospel and to discern spiritual things in their true gust and sapor The first intent was to give the Apostles a door of utterance to proclaim salvation to all that were prepared to hear and that all men should confess with boldness that Jesus is the Christ The Spirit came in the former verse like a rushing mighty wind that was for inspiration for the Apostles own sakes to sanctifie themselves but the gift of tongues was for elocution to impart the benefit to more than themselves This is the antient gloss of the Fathers upon my Text especially Gregorie's and that in two places Pastores primos in linguarum specie spiritus sanctus insedit quia quos repleverit de se protinus loquentes facit the Holy Ghost sat upon the first Pastors of the Church in the shape of a tongue for whomsoever of that rank the Divine Spirit fills he opens their lips to preach the Lord Jesus In both of St. Pauls Epistles to Timothy one of his Injunctions upon a Bishop is that he should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apt to teach In his admonitions to Titus the same lesson again A Bishop must be able by sound doctrin to exhort and convince gainsayers Tit. i. 9. and St. Hierom says very truly how that character is more appropriated to a Bishop than all the rest the rest ought generally to be found in all holy Christians not to be given to filthy lucre nor to quaffing of wine to be the Husband of one Wife to be hospital just unblameable but this is intrinsecal first to Episcopal then to Priestly vocation to be cymbolum mundi the loud Cymbals of the world the tongues of the Church to be apt and painful to teach And therefore Espencaeus though of the Roman party exclaims much against the Pontifician Bishops for giving Monks and Friars licence to preach who are no Successors of the Apostles and therefore never received an Evangelical tongue in their Predecessors but says he the Prelates that ought to do that work themselves will not and therefore they grant licence to those to teach the Gospel who ought not but he cries out unto them to live according to St. Pauls Canons charged upon those two famous Bishops Timothy and Titus and then eant Episcopi se a docendi necessitate si possint excusent mark that Reverend Fathers says he and excuse your selves if you can from the necessity of preaching No there is no excuse for these tongues descended now after a mighty rushing wind quasi exeuntes è loco tonitrui as if they had been bolts after a clap of thunder to signify that these are the Trumpets which God sends forth to call us to repentance before the day of Judgment Ante adventum judicis ipsi clamando gradiantur says Gregory And howsoever some may justly attain to such place in the Church as to sway the Staff of Government in their hand yet they must remember that they are never released of this duty that their tongue must edify In the old Book of Ordination in this Church as well as in the Church of Rome the Bishop Elect at his Consecration had the Bible given him in one hand to teach and the Pastoral Staff in the other hand to govern the Flock It was never meant he should let fall the Book out of one hand and hold the Staff in both nay beware he be not beaten with the Staff that lets go the Book Latratu baculo rabies luporum deterrenda est
residue the Lord will give victory to his chosen people But as Cyrus in Xenophon speaks of the manner of the Median hunting beasts in Gardens that they did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hunt beasts that were bound so to follow these turncoat Fugitives which have sheltred themselves in Cloisters and are sworn to do us mischief it were vincta venari to pursue that which was entangled therefore I leave them with Judas and this brand upon both their foreheads concluding the second part of my Text c. I am now descended in the third place to the stratagem of this day and am faln upon the haters of my Lord the King A King who is an uniter of Kingdoms into one body as David was of Judah and Israel none more zealous no not David himself for the prosperity of Jerusalem and the magnificence of the holy Temple Under Christ not only the Supreme Head but under Christ the most careful Watchman of our Churches and as Christ did tenderly affect his Apostles above all other men so the Successors of the Apostles the Reverend and most holy Bishops of our Church have found not the smallest place in the love of our gracious Soveraign Surely above all men if the Clergy be not careful to set forth the honour of this day with great joy and solemnity it is their ignorance or their negligence Ignorance is the very annihilating of a Scholar negligence the foulest fault in a Labourer Had these furious Sword-men that laid their weapons to his throat sound an austere Master nay a Tyrant they must have born with it and not touch the man that bears the character of the Lords Anointed But his Peers are verè par●s welcom as his equals his familiar friends Had they been out of the lists of counsel not acquainted with secret affairs what should they do but be thankful for the peace which they enjoy without trouble and pray for that Government which fills them with plenteousness without their labour but they were familiars in whom he trusted adventuring his Royal Person not only under their roof but under their locks and custody Lastly had his bounty no way flown into their Coffers and whose bounty among all the Kings of the earth hath replenished more yet their bodies are secure by the protection of his Laws their souls secure by his maintenance of true Religion their goods secure by his Courts of Justice and yet his own c. Did eat of his bread that is true But to feed upon the Kings hospitality is a curtesie every day common to thousands that visit the Court But for a mighty Monarch to grace his Subjects Table with his Royal Presence and to eat of his bread this is not the felicity of every one Pauci quos aequus amavit Jupiter it is a respect of high honour where it lights and the glory of an illustrious Family And out of doubt that mind must be very sordid and avaricious that esteems it not the more noble grace to make their service find acceptation that they may expend somewhat rather than receive somewhat of a mighty Potentate I can spare no more time to publish the black sin of the Authors of this treachery It was Dionysius his saying to Plato that if he should dismiss him and give him leave to depart for Greece Plato would make him the common talk of Athens Do not think O King says Plato that we have so little care of learned conference that we would chuse you for our discourse So I hope beloved that our hearts are so full charged with thankfulness to God for this days deliverance that in twenty years and more we have no leisure as yet to think of the Malefactors Let this day be spent and many days following only in Prayer and Supplication and Thanksgiving to that God who hath given victory to his Anointed and will do to his Seed for evermore Nay let me add one thing coronidis vice and I have quite done we have found this verse to tax Achitophel to condemn Judas and lastly to lie at their door who perished deservedly this day in their own fury Bonaventure hath yet smelt out another enemy and such a one as none more familiar none more intimate to any of us all Is not this fair warning beloved And will you know who it is O man it is thy self He that prays to God to bless him from his enimies is afraid of malice indeed it is a dreadful thing He that prays to God to bless him from his friends is afraid of treachery and indeed no mischief less avoidable But let me pray to God to bless me from my self no enemie so full of flattery so like to prevail so cunning in tentation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is the Civil War which wastes the inward parts it is the carnal man against the spiritual Self-love is every mans disease Why You are your own familiar friend Confession of sins can hardly be extorted from us Why We trust to our selves too much Gluttony and Riot are within our Walls Why We feed our selves and are our own carvers From our enemies defend us O Christ from Forain Invasion from Domestical Conspiracy from the malice of Satan and from the corruption of this vile Flesh the body of death which we carry about Good Lord deliver us AMEN THE FIRST SERMON UPON THE Fifth of November AMOS ix 2. Though they dig into Hell thence shall my hand take them WE have two sorts of Holy-days and Festivals to call Assemblies together into the Church of God Some in honour of the Saints who are our friends that their Piety may redound to our imitation Some occasioned by the malice of our enemies to sing praises for our preservation both are useful if we advise aright And who knows whether King David was instructed better from Hushai his Friend or from Shemei that reviled him He that would be safe says Plutarch and walk sure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he must either have true Friends or bitter enemies And as God would have it the Church hath plenty of both sorts Saints of honour in heaven spiteful men to undermine it upon earth darkness beneath to complot treachery light above to reveal it There is both manus fodiens an hand digging into Hell against us and manus educens the eternal hand that fashioned all things on our side to take them out Beloved here are two chief instructions from two main ways to inform our faith blessed is every one that hath duly prepared one heart to receive them Which that we may the better do I pray observe what a lofty Hyperbole the whole verse doth consist of threatning the ungodly that they shall neither have advantage by Heaven nor Hell Though they dig c. They that go about to cast away themselves are not in their way except they wander And that you may know how sinners straggle whithersoever they go mark what several interpretations the words do bear Hugo the
Carkasses of our Fore-fathers rotten long ago in their Graves But Noahs charity was wider than one Country saving that the whole world was but one Country at that time and he included all Ages to come in the intention of his Burnt-offering and Prayers So Patrial so publick so universal are the endeavours and supplications of all good men I will cite you a piece of a Prayer out of St. Ambrose Vouchsafe to hear me O Lord for the tribulations of all people for the groanings of them that are in Captivity the miseries of Widows and Orphans the relief of Strangers the languor of the Sick the impotency of the Aged for the distractions of every troubled Conscience for the Woes of all that are desolate and that the whole World may be in peace and safety the very Cream of our own Litany This is a full song of all parts whose loud volley must needs pierce the Heavens He that prays for the thousand thousands of all that are in distress will be heard as if he prayed with ten thousand voices Noahs Sacrifice was an intercession for all mankind and it was sweet as Christ died for the sins of the whole World to whose example St. Paul bids us frame our charity Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and given himself for an Offering and a Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Eph. v. 2. Which brings in the last grain of Incense in this sweet savour God looked on his own Son appointed to be slain on the Cross it was Noahs Faith in that Sacrifice which found such gracious favour more precious than all the Powders of Arabia God will be pleased with righteous men such as this Patriarch was though in many things they sin he could not but be well pleased in Christ because in all things he was obedient Which well-pleasing in him redounds to all that are his true members Who are an holy Priesthood to offer up spiritual Sacrifice acceptable to God by Jesus Christ 1 Pet. ii 5. Let us put our Prayers our Thanksgiving our Repentance our Alms our Sufferings in his hand or they will never be well taken The Intercession of Christ should be continually in our remembrance He is the Angel Rev. viii 3. with the golden Censor to whom much Incense was given that he should offer it with the Prayers of all the Saints upon the Golden Altar which was before the Throne For take us in our selves without him and we are noysom ulcerous Swine wallowing in the mire but we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ 2 Cor. ii 15. They that verse continually with or near to carrion smells lose their sent and never stop their nose at them So the fetor of our sins is not so well discerned as it should be because we carry their contagion always about us The implacable Spirit thinks that revenge is sweet he that lives by wrong and robbery says Stoln waters are sweet It was the ancient word of the covetous Dulcis odor lucri ex re quâlibet any thing is sweet that brings in gain the Wanton doats of his unlawful pleasure and is so far from perceiving it to be obscene that he is catcht with the Harlots enticement Prov. vii 17. I have perfumed my bed with Myrrh Aloes and Cinnamon Alas these are the savour of death unto death and in St. Pauls Phrase they offer up the Sacrifice of Devils But put the trial upon our good actions good according to the perfection of parts though not of degrees all is unprofitable all short of Legal exactness and of Evangelical too unless our Father will say to us for Christs sake Well done good servant thou hast been faithful in a little The comfort which old Isaac took in the fragrancy of his Sons Rayment may be better applied to the sweet savour which is never separable from our gracious Redeemer The smell of my Son is as the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed Gen. xxvii 27. The great zeal of some and no mean ones to prove that every thing without Faith is fulsom and odious and that nothing is sweet but that which is washed in the bloud of Christ hath made them raise a report upon the incredulous Jews how true I know not but not easily laid that a corrupt rankness steams from their bodies ever since they crucified our Saviour Marcus the Emperour and Ammianus Marcell and other Heathen called them of old faetentes Judaeos nasty smelling Jews The Christian reporters add when any of them are converted and baptized that loathsom smell is never more perceived in them This record likewise is of good antiquity in Baronius That under Lucas Bishop of Constantinople a Synod was held in Trullo to which the Hagarens were summoned and warned to receive Baptism they and their Children They answered their Children were baptized What says the Bishop in the name of Christ No. Why then are they baptized The Hagarens reply that their children till they received that Sacrament were vexed with Devils and stunk worse than Dogs For my part I lend no ear to these relations because they of the Roman Profession that make them report no better of us Protestants than they do of the Jews One of them thought to discredit the Reformed Religion with this tale That the next day after Luther was laid in his Grave some came near to it and his body not to be found but such a pestilent evaporation of stink as offended all that were present All this while Luther was alive received this lying Pamphlet and read it and gave it such an answer as a slanderous Libel deserved I doubt not but the Lord smelt a sweet savour in that zealous Servant of his because he put his trust in Christ and believed that in the mercy of the most highest he should not miscarry And a better savour was in him I may resolutely say than in those his Adversaries who think they find much Nard and Cassia in the Condignity of their own merits By Faith Abel offered up a more excellent Sacrifice than Cain By Faith Noah being warned Heb. xi 7. prepared the Ark and became heir of the righteousness which is by Faith By Faith we must offer up our selves holy unblameable living Sacrifices that we which know Christ now by Faith may see him hereafter in perfect Glory AMEN THE FIRST SERMON UPON LOT'S WIFE GEN. xix 26. But his Wife looked back from behind him and she became a pillar of salt SInce the least sin that ever was committed deserves eternal punishment I am sure any sin that ever was done deserves an hours reprehension especially one of so great magnitude as this of Lots Wife He that will judg himself and take a strict account of his faults let him look this way to my Text and observe with me how many ways this woman transgressed through so small a motion as to turn about He that will examin his repentance and his vivification as well
the light that was before and to turn to the smoak that was behind This is no distorted amplification but an evident spot in her crime yet not in her alone but in all those that cannot shew the use of good examples in the fruits of their lives A good Example is the fairest transcript of Gods will texted in capital letters so that he that runs may read and as a Picture expresseth the life more when colours are laid upon it than when 't is drawn out only in the rude figure so where piety lives and moves in the actions of virtuous men 't is more illustrious so by far than in empty Precepts and God expects it at our hands that where we are deaf to plain instruction yet we would easily be won with imitation We will run after thee in odore unguentorum says the Spouse in the smell of those fragrancies which the Worthies of the Church have left behind them Our Church which hath omitted no opportune occasion to put sound devotion in our mouths hath taught us often to pray in several Collects in that admirable piece of piety the common-Common-Prayer Book for grace of conformity with the best of Gods Children that we may learn to love our enemies by the example of his Martyr St. Stephen that after the example of John the Baptist we may constantly speak the truth and patiently suffer for the truths sake that we may follow all the Saints that are knit together in one communion and fellowship in vertuous and godly living this is the true celebration of their Holy-days to tread their footsteps as they have gone before us unto everlasting life But Novelists had rather be talkt of that they began a fashion and set a Copy for others than that they contein'd themselves within a strict imitation of the most excellent Presidents Be ye followers of me says Paul to the Church of Corinth and is it not better says Nazianzen to one Nichobalus upon the mention of those words to come after the Apostles heels than be a ringleader or the formost among Sectaries Praestat infra aquilas paululum quàm supra alaudas volitare it is a fairer pitch to fly a little under an Eagle than to soar somewhat above a Lark The Age is blessed the days are blessed when conspicuous facts of holy men are like Beacons on a hill which cannot choose but be gazed upon And if our sluggishness obscure such rare Examples for want of emulation and make them vanish like prints in snow that are soon forgotten the Lord will set up others of a contrary kind that shall last longer to our terror For since the memory of the just is no more regarded which is eternized for our imitation he will powder and make brine of the wicked for our confusion Here 's an instance in my Text of one that observ'd not a faithful Leader that conducted her She would not be tied to example and in that place where she refused to learn she was left for an example to all posterity But why do I stick at this only that she would not be a Scholar to Lot he was a frail man and had need of a Guide himself herein rather it appears that she was most averse from discipline nothing would make her wise for there was an Angel or twain in the Troop they were the Leaders of this little Flock out of Sodom yet she order'd her steps disobediently even in the sight of an Angel No earthly means or perswasions no nor heavenly patterns can reduce some head-strong sinners to repentance they have hardned their hearts like the nether milstone The rich Glutton in Hell thought that by some new device his Brethren might be converted if one would come from the dead and admonish them And do not most of you imagin if an Angel were sent from Heaven to preach there would be great reformation among us we would mend apace yes perhaps as much as Lots Wife did who would tread her own path though the Angel were at her elbow They that will not hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ and be converted for that they would be at the same stay though Angels walked daily among them The express words of my Text have afforded me hitherto all that I have objected against this sinner and what I shall say more shall be deducted out of it both by facil and easie consequence and by fair authority especially in the imputations of incredulity and recidivation And to come to them with the more perspicuity and order I observe the same rottenness in the sin of Lots Wife which Cajetan discovered in the transgression of Eve Eve cavilled upon that which God had commanded two wayes first she turned that absolute sentence in the day thou eatest that fruit thou shalt die into ye shall not eat of it lest you die or as the Vulgar Latin ne forte lest perhaps ye die Then she cloyed the Commandment with more austerity than was in it to shew she was weary of it ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it concerning the not touching her own loathing of the Law did put in that addition So the poison of the Devil had crept into her understanding and into her affections says Cajetan In intellectum per haesi●ationem poenae in affectum per displicentiam praecepti in her understanding she doubted no such punishment would follow as was threatned in her affections she distasted the Commandment and these are just so in the Subject we handle In the 10. of Wisdom ver 7. I name an Author of all that are in the Apocryphal List next to Canonical credit Lots Wife is called a standing Pillar of salt as a Monument of an unbelieving soul An unbeliever is one that gives not faith to that which God hath said and revealed Now she fell into unbelief in one of these two points or in both either she believed not that the place from whence she came should be destroyed as the Angels had denounced or else she believed not it would conduce to her safety whether she looked back or no the former she would try out of curiosity and the latter she would put to hazard upon peevish presumption The Sun rose clear that morning ver 23. there was no thunder nor darkness in the Heavens she began to suspect she was drawn from home to no purpose and they were wiser that stayed behind So she stood in motu trepidationis she knew not whether she should believe or not believe at last she resolved to trust Gods Messenger no further than she saw cause and would make her own eyes her sureties though she were strictly forbidden You cannot provoke God to anger sooner than by reserving power and license to your self to judg whether all his sayings are certain and infallible He that believeth not is condemned already Faith is the eye of all Religion if you wink with that eye you shall never see the Lord Especially to think you can discern
man were frustrate then God riseth up in his greatness goodness and Majesty expels the wonder of a vengeance by a wonder of healing removes the punishment of the body by a blessing of salvation and drives away the Serpents by Christ I have now spoken enough to the Sin of Israel which was Murmuring and to the Punishment of their Sin by Serpents That was their grief and not ours Now by way of application I must tell you of those Serpents which we must pray unto the Lord to take away from our selves And those are three the Serpent Satan the Serpent Sin and the Serpent Man when he changeth himself from manhood into such a beast The first that may justly be called a Serpent is Satan For it is all one to say the Serpent beguiled Eve and Satan beguiled her 'T is frequent to involve the principal cause in the name of the instrument The Devil indeed is not so much as named Gen. iii. but necessarily to be understood Though his name lie in silence his effects bewray him for none else is left to father the wickedness God can tempt none to sin the good Angels wish us good and no harm there were none of humane generation on earth but Adam and Eve themselves bruitish creatures could not contrive it None is left to own it but the Serpent called the Devil and Satan who deceiveth the World Revel xii 9. Therefore God did not say to the creeping worm why hast thou done this as he charged our first Parents for that Creature did not do it As the words which a man says that is possest are not his own but the spirits that is entred into him so the evil that is attributed to the Snake was not his doing but the Devil 's that managed it Take warning therefore of the malice of that evil Fiend who never forgave himself that injury but seeks continually whom he may devour Be watchful of him for we wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against the Rulers of the darkness of this World Eph. vi 11. He makes out matter of tentation by the words that often fall from our mouth notes our usances searcheth into all our inclinations there is no passion nor frailty wherein we lie open to assault but he knows it As David was more afraid of the counsel of Ahitophel than of all the Host of Rebels that followed Absolom so all that the wicked world can muster together is not so dangerous as the methods of Satan Fast as you are able pray that God would bruise him under your feet So did Paul three times when the Messenger of Satan was sent to buffet him Paul had much grace grace that was sufficient for prayer Holiness becometh the House of Prayer and holiness becometh the mouth of Prayer What have they to do with Prayer that have no fellowship with holy Practice To come before God with a lapful of sins and a mouthful of prayers is a motley Sacrifice And in Fasting and Prayer watch your wandring heart that the Devil steal it not away with idle fancies when you pray against him which will flutter in your mind like motes in the Sun But challenge him of Sacriledg that he hath rob'd you of your devotion follow him with hue and cry and he will fly away from you Let there be any thing that we are more eagerly set upon to obtain than all the rest we will never start aside never run out of the circle when we come to that Petition And this Petition is as useful as any That the Lord would take away the old Serpent from us If Satan be a Serpent so is sin Partus sequitur ventrem such as the Dam is such is the Issue Then secondly pray unto God against Serpent sin The mortifying of it is called crushing a Cockatrice in the egg and Solomon says of drunkenness it bites like a Serpent and stings like an Adder Prov. xxiii 32. To begin with original sin 't is fitly called by Tertullian Plaga antiqui serpentis the biting of the old Serpent And many good Authors delight themselves for good cause to note it on the accident that I preach of that the people in the Wilderness did pray that the Lord would take away the Serpents from them yet he did not and for all that their Prayer sped well For God gave means to as many as were stung to be healed by looking on a Serpent that was lifted up So we are all wounded with a loathsom disease from our Mothers womb and remain wounded Baptism and Prayer make the wound less howsoever still it is a wound but God hath provided how to cure the guilt of it by intuition of faith looking on Christ who bare our sins upon his Cross And as the living Serpents were charm'd by the dead one that they had no power to kill so sin that lives in us is weakned that it shall not condemn by the Son of God that died to save us And as this sin is one by likeness in us all so one Saviour crucified for the sins of the World is sufficient to help us all The Israelites had not distinct Serpents erected after the number of their Tribes much less many more according to the number of their Families but one Serpent lifted up and but one Mediator between God and Man Aim by that level and you hit the mark The hope of remedy is founded in unity Our Gods are not plural our Redeemers are not many they that have divers Saviours have never a Saviour They that have tutelary Saints for every day for every disease Patron Martyrs for every Kingdom almost for every Parish have a serpentine swarm of superstition But as our wound is one in all so one Jesus is rich in mercy unto all Likewise a serpentine corruption is notorious in all our actual and wilful sins For the biting of a poisonous worm is not only perillous to that part of the flesh in which it fixeth its tooth but every drop of bloud draws in the malignity of that which was next unto it till there be no sound part remaining So one member of the body being tainted with the venom of sin traduceth corruption to another If the ear be tickled with filthy talk the loins will be unchast if the eye be wanton it will run into the heart Observe it by another propagation when you commit one sin you are at the brink of another the second offence makes the way smooth and slippery for a third Any transgression not presently physicked with the antidote of repentance will fetch in so many that they will sink you into the bottomless pit Yet there is another serpentine dispreading in the works of the flesh One sinner is an hundred sinners in the catching infection of his leprosie one Absolom is an Host of Rebels one Ringleader a shole of Schismaticks one Jeroboam a Kingdom full of Idolaters one incestuous Corinthian a leaven that will leaven the whole lump Therefore
needless exceptions as they hear would hiss at themselves But what charge can be worse and yet a true one that their very Prayers not seldom are Serpents and of the hissing Dialect exposing those they pray for to the ill opinion of their Auditors And when they speak to God they traduce man Is this to lift up holy hands without wrath 1 Tim. ii 8. Would not such hissing throats be silenced Not so will their well-willers say for they are diligent and profitable in their Ministry But what is the Church the better nay is it not the worse if Satan stamps his figure upon the finest mettal and to say a man hath all the Ornaments of a Preacher but a peaceable spirit is like the praise that Tacitus gives to Poppaea Sabina That she had all tbe Ornaments of a brave Lady but an honest mind Praeter honestum animum Perhaps my Doctrin will not scape hissing for this point but this is plain dealing and the Serpent is subtle That 's the fift note The Devil is a beguiler and the Master of the School he hath entailed a cunning craftiness to the mystery of iniquity Then why should not mischievous plotting be as hateful to us as a Basilisk as odious as Satan Wo be to those who have their sharpness of wit from no better Prompter that have no measure in their dissimulation no trust in their word no fidelity in their oath no distinction of causes or persons whom they ruine I do not altogether blame the Turks if it be true that they repute natural fools to be Saints I am sure they are Saints in comparison of such cunning Gipsies But a good Christian is a compound out of the better part of two qualities Rom. xvi 19. Wise to that which is good and simple concerning evil This is right inoffensiveness tempered with intelligence the simplicity of the Dove mitigating the wiliness of the Serpent To say all in a little Foul actions are supported by forgery and stratagems vertue by sage knowledg the City of Satan is for malevolence the City of God for providence the one is a Machiavel the other a Solomon Subtlety is the web and snare of the Spider but his substance is poison so is the Serpents Take it either with David Adders poison is under their lips Psal clx 3. Or with St. Paul That their word eats as doth a canker The venom of pernicious Doctrin is the most fatal cup of death The worst fraud is to poison the conscience with a deadly drink For of all pestilent contagions the worst is that which infects the spirits The greatest trust between man and man is the trust of giving counsel then what can be more scandalous than to be unfaithful in a trust of the greatest concernment It is not making over a crackt title in the sale of Lands nor turning over light and adulterate money in payment nor thrusting bad wares into the hand of a Chapman Those are shuffling dishonest tricks But in the other the ignorant committed his soul unto thee and thou didst betray it He gave thee the custody of his strongest Fort to keep for him and thou betrayedst it to the power of the enemy Christ came into the World to seek and to save that which was lost and the empoisoner hath done his part to lose that Soul which Christ would have saved He laid a stumbling block before a Disciple who should have been eyes to the blind And cursed be he that maketh the blind to wander out of the way Deut. xxvii 18. Now the conclusion of all is to pray that the Serpent Man may be taken away from us thereby the Canker-worm that spoileth flieth away Nahum iii. 15. We are assured that Moses prays for all his Israel And it is the office of him or them that have great interest in God to bless others with their prayers All must do their part all are concerned The greater Saints may prevail with God one by one others had need to meet by hundreds and thousands in great Congregations that every single mans prayer may be a drop in a shower Keep set and appointed times for that purpose for to pray only when you are at leisure is to give God the worst of the day your spare and idle time Pray with the Church which will teach you words that will meet with all your necessities Be not in love with your own conceits Make not a Form for Moses and as if without that you would leave the Communion of Saints And let the People joyn together with the Priest in sweet returns and answers to fill up the work with a Quire of voices If any one would refer all to the lip of one single mouth and says there is no benefit to interpose the suffrages of the Congregation he is he and I am I shall he perswade me that his is best when I feel the contrary in my own heart Do not others know better than he what they are sensible of in the motions of their own spirit But the season of Lent calls for Fasting to be joyned with Prayer And St. Ambrose says lib. 6. Hexam c. 4. that if a Serpent suck up the fasting spittle of a man it is mortal to it Finally pray and look up to Christ the brazen Serpent Lift up your Prayer on high higher than Satan the Prince of the Air. Get the upper ground of him it is a good advantage against an Enemy Maxim Taurin says of Simon Magus let the Story be of what credit you please that having made himself as it were sails to hover in the air St. Peter ascended higher with his Prayers and threw him headlong down Ante pervenit justa petitio quàm iniqua praesumptio So dart your Prayers out of strong zeal to enter into Heaven and say From all the Serpents of this evil Age from all Sedition and privy Conspiracy from all false Doctrin and Heresie good Lord deliver us AMEN A SERMON UPON JOSHUAH xxii 26. And that man perished not alone in his iniquity AND that man was Achan the Son of Zera that did commit a Trespass in stealing the accursed Spoils of Jericho I hope you make not dainty of the Story it is famous in the seventh of Joshuah How easily we have found him out All Israel on a time were quite to seek and seriously enquired for such a man Joshuah rent his cloaths and lamented to know his name and now if we read the first line of this verse he is discovered Though his iniquity was as close as Hell though he durst trust nothing but the dull earth with the secret of his sin yet Babes and Children learn it now in their Paedagogy that iste the man pointed at no less unhappy in his punishment than unjust in his crime was Achan the Son of Zerah that perished c. Let us enter into these words not without our demurest thoughts and holy reverence for what place of the Church is more beautiful than the
non in domo sed in viâ nascitur Our Saviour himself was born but in an Inn as if he took up his lodging for a night in this world and were but a Passenger They that were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sine aris focisque without an hearth to kindle a fire says Aristotle of all men they were the most poor and wretched That is no good Divinity says St. Austin writing concerning the tears of Judah by the waters of Babylon Mirum hoc esset si aliquò duci poterant ubi Deus eorum non esset If they that were hurried into Babylon could be carried away where God was not with them then and not till then their translation were a misery But as the Israelites removed from one journey to another according as the Pillar of smoke did remove by day and the Pillar of fire by night so I tell you of such men in my Text that turned their station every where as Gods Glory and his Worship did direct them Whether it be affliction or whether it be fear to give offence when we are in a strange Land sure I am somewhat is in it that makes such men most careful of their Religious Conversation Deborah found the Kenites those sojourners most ready to pursue that Tyrant Sisera Jehu could find no man to cleave unto him against the Idolatry of Baal but even this Jonadab the Founder of this order of the Rechabites who renounce all Mansion dwelling and vow for ever to live in Tents And as Abigail said to David Let thine Handmaid be a servant to wash the feet of the Servants of my Lord the King So Jonadab puts his Children in a way to think themselves not worthy of Cities and Possessions among the Royal Nation whom God had chosen but Shepherds they must be and underlings to tend the Flocks of the Servants of the Lord. Foelix illud saeculum fuit ante architectonas says one Fair buildings and curious houses had they been unreared the Kitchins had not been plied so much to provide Banqueting and Luxury It was a scoff cast upon the Rhodians that they built as if they would live three Ages and they fed as if they would die in three days As if their fair Palaces moved them to make Feasts and their Feasts were occasions to make them surfeit and to sleep out their days in a Lethargy You shall not wag your heads another day at these mens Tenements and cry woe unto the houses that were built by Extortion The stone out of the Wall and the Beam of the Roof cannot condemn the Master You shall not censure them as Seneca did his own Country-men the Romans Vnicuique suum si restituerent ad casas reducerentur If every Nation whom they have robb'd and spoiled had their own they would have nothing left them but that which they began with their Shepherds Cottages And when you have erected such a place that you may set your name upon it says the Psalmist yet what have you done but pay'd Tribute where ye needed not says Plutarch Quare homines in auratis lectis dormiant c. Why should men put themselves to such cost to pay for their sleep when if they will chuse the open fields with Vriah or chuse a Tent with the Rechabites it will cost them little or nothing Nay some are so curious that they will not only have their houses for their lives but set up Tombs for their dead Carkasses before they die Nay they dare endite Hic jacet upon their Monument when they are yet alive when God knows whether their dust shall be scattered into all the quarters of the earth This that hath been spoken may serve to let you know how plausible it did seem to Jonadab to institute such a Vow because his Brethren were strangers in the Land of Jury And secondly it was well considered because their fortune might turn worse and worse they might be greater strangers For who is he that had not heard the threatning of the Babylonish Captivity Nay There are Psalms of Thanksgiving for their joyful return in the Prophet David Did not Solomons heart misgive him in this matter Observe but one passage in his heavenly Prayer at the Dedication of the Temple 1 Kings ix 46. If they carry us away captive into the Land of the enemies far or near and thy people repent then hear our supplication in heaven and maintain our cause The time drew so near that Jeremy and many Prophets spoke of it as if the Calamity were already begun in the borders of the Country Now when Captivity did ring in their ears who would only live as if one day would be every day and never provide for the Evening sorrow which might fall upon them Who would not exercise his mind to know what it was to lose Who would not cast away his burden against the flight of persecution So did the Rechabites For when the Chaldaeans should sweep away the people as an Ox licketh the grass they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one Wain could carry them their Tent and their Family Tectumque laremque armaque it was but a progress to pass over Euphrates but great was the sorrow of all the Tribes leaving their Houses and Vineyards it made Jeremy endite a book of Lamentation Noah left all he had unto the world seven days before the Floud began and what got they who thought him foolish and themselves happy to divide the spoils Lot forsook his house and the Sodomites did not enjoy it an hour who succeeded him A good Christian is indifferent to be cast into any mould by the hand of God He that is prepared to die but one kind of death is not yet fit to be a Martyr And he that is prepared to live but one kind of life is not yet fit to be a Confessor for the name of Christ A good Actor says Synesius can represent either Creon or Telephus and all is one in his skil to play the Prince or the Bondslave Hence ariseth all the misery of mankind says Athenagoras in Plutarch Quod quippiam nobis inexpectato accidit That something befals us which we did not expect nor were provided for it Foolish men who love nothing but their present life are like bad roots that grow sullen if you remove them from the earth that feeds them There is no life to Shemei if he may not run at random and rail and backbite in every corner As good it were to hang him out of the way as to confine him to one City though it were Jerusalem Such as can look no further into the world than that they may retire to their own home if need be are comprized under the Emblem of the Snail that goes a very little space from her Shell with this word Si pluit ingrediar a dash of rain drives them back again Your constant setled man is made for every fortune that is cast upon him his Emblem is Corpus quadratum
sands of bondage and slavery Vbi desinit Pharisaeus ibi incipit Monachus the Pharisees if they took an oath upon the Altar not to relieve their Parents thought it enough to say I know you not to the Grey head which gave them education and to the paps which gave them suck Philo the Jew had it from hence when he concluded doctrinally that a man was bound to provide sustenance for his Parents unless he had vowed the contrary Not one jot more charitable are those shaven Crowns who afford their Parents no remembrance of their Birth but to repent that they bore Children Moreover what obligements did lie upon the Rechabites but such as were calculated for common frailty A Shepherds life the drink of an abstemious man the Estate of a Foreiner to have neither Lands nor Possession this doth neither press nor overload Obedience But Sulpitius tells another tale for Monastical duty nullum unquam recusaturus quamvis indignum toleratu imperium to be commanded to sow the wind and to reap folly this is to abuse our Creation which gave us bodies to do something not to be set on work to lose good hours and do nothing to please a Superior Besides thus the Rechabites continued their life to follow the Statutes of Jonadab that they might be accepted for their harmlesness and innocency as Strangers and Pilgrims in Israel Are the Jesuits so those undertakers of State affairs who endenison themselves in every Kingdom whose eyes as one said very well are like Burning-glasses which fire all things upon which they look But this is their practice to entitle the Worthies of the Scripture by the name of their own Orders to whose conversation their life was nothing agreeable Baronius makes the Mother of our Lord to live a cloistred Virgin in the Sanctum Sanctorum until she was betrothed to Joseph and there was fed familiarly with Angels Do you not believe it when she trembled to hear one bring that good salutation Ave Maria In Nyssens time this was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a report that knew not the Author and out of doubt a Fable John the Baptist is tossed about in the Schools for the example of a contemplative Anchorite because he lived in the Wilderness But to be abroad in the Desert did no more make him an Hermite than it made Nebuchadonosor who was mad seven years among the wild beasts They presume also that Philip the Evangelists Daughters were Nuns and had entred into some Covenant of Virginity whereas in the third Book of Eusebius's Ecclesiastical History and the thirtieth chapter the story is upon record that they were all happily married St. Chrysostom conjoyns an Eremite and Elias in some similitude but to what purpose I would our Adversaries would heed it better that although an Eremite were as devout as Elias in the Wilderness yet he would prefer a Bishop before him who in the Cities of God taught the Word and dispensed the Sacraments St. Hierom I find calls the Rechabites Monks in the 13. Epist ad Paulinum not as if the causes or institution of both their lives were alike but because they concurred in some points of austerity If there be such sutableness between our Predecessors in the Law and the Religious Orders of Rome now adayes methinks Balaam should carry these marks of a Jesuit First Balaam died in Arms Jos 13. and Loiola was a Souldier in the Field Balaam was a great complotter with the King of Moab they are busy and factious in all Kingdoms of Europe Balaam was ready to curse Gods Inheritance for a reward this pernicious Fatherhood have laid their heads together to root out our reformed Israel Balaam had the good gifts of Prophesie but wanted grace and so confer the Writings of the Jesuits and their practice and you will say as Isaac did to his Father Here 's a pile of wood but where is the Sacrifice In like manner we may say here 's a Volume of Divinity in our works learned Fathers but in your lives not an ABC of Religion To conclude this point Howsoever they bear the World in hand that Vows of Monastical perfection are expressed in the Word of God yet the alleged Examples are either such as never did vow I mean the Virgin Mary John Baptist Elias and Ananias says Cardinal Cajetan or such as vowed rashly out of precipitant zeal like Saul and Jephta or such as made no such Vow as they contrive by the Pattern I mean the Nazarites the Rechabites and St. Pauls Widows Who kept a College to entertain Disciples and to tend the Funeral of Christians like those Widows who washt the Body of Tabatha Acts 9. If you will needs know from what Quiver they draw their Shafts sift the Pythagoraeans and their captive obedience sift the Vestal Maids and their Devoted Virginity sift the Pagan Philosophers and their Obstinate Poverty is not the very Name to be found that Cloister Lubbers were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by Heathen appellations Search the Scriptures and search Pagan Education and the case will appear on our side that the Romish Votaries enter into Orders not by the Door of the good Shepherd but by the dark Entry of Philosophers And so much I have spoken to shew that the Patrons of Monastical Perfection are much mistaken though we praise the Rechabites The end and last part of all is this That forasmuch as God was well pleased with these abstemious People that would drink no Wine therefore promise unto the Lord and do the deed for that is my final conclusion that a Vow justly conceived is to be solemnly performed When we have breathed out nunquam bibemus a resolved Protestation before God it is like the hour we spake it in past and gone and can never be recalled Effudi animam says David I have poured out my soul in prayer as if upon his supplication it were no longer his but Gods for ever Surely if our Soul be gone from us in our Prayers then much more in our Vows they are flown up to Heaven like Lazarus to the Bosom of Abraham they cannot they should not return to earth again He that changed his Sex in the Fable is not so great a wonder as he that changeth any Covenant which is drawn between God and his Conscience He that hath consecrated himself to God doth as it were carry Heaven upon his shoulders Support your burdens in Gods name lest if you shrink the wrath of God press you down to the nethermost pit I admonish the Friers of Italy to look to this they cast a colour upon their Vow of Lenten fasting but they lie unto the Holy Ghost whereas their Vow is not to eat bread till toward the Evening as if God knew not how the day went but by the Church Saints-Bell they read Even-song before twelve a clock at Noon that the Clergie may go to Supper Right Judas quicquid facis fac citò he had his sop
Gregory frames this clear Meditation upon it Persecutionis tempore ponenda est anima pacis tempore frangenda sunt desideria In the time of persecution lose your life that you may gain Christ that Lesson God be praised is out of date with us in the time of peace lose your vast concupiscence that you may gain content Here comes in our part who have leisure to gather great store and peaceable security to enjoy and increase it for that we may lay our desires level with a moderate fortune it is fit above all things to know that you shall never measure these earthly things to the bottom and you cannot measure the joys of heaven to the top so said our Saviour to the Samaritan as I have read it unto you c. Now to bring on the division of the Text I lay this ground Man is a most desiring and a wishing creature his heart doth reach it self forth so much to get and gain that it resembles nothing better than an house with a deep Mote round about it but for the most part the mote is full of puddle water if that were cast out which is the first part to be handled a water which makes us always thirst there is a sluce to let in better which is contained in the second For these two shall be the general heads to which I will refer all that I shall speak the lading out of bad waters from our soul and the letting in of better I will not venture beyond the former of these two at this time Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again And St. Austin preaching upon those words did thus divide them Et verum est secundum hanc aquam verum est secundum quod significat haec aqua It is true being spoken upon those waters drawn out of Jacobs well and upon any other water and it is true being spoken upon that unto which the Element of water did allude that is the riches and glory of this world according to the very waters which our Saviour lookt upon when he preacht I will speak to these three points 1. That all the refection of our body is commended in the phrase of drinking waters 2. Heat consumes our moisture and makes us thirst which is the punishment of our nature 3. We thirst and thirst again which is the punishment of our sensual appetite According to the water unto which our Saviour alluded I have three things more to observe 1. That all these worldly things are compared to waters which slide away 2. Here is the greediness of our heart to be filled with them we would pour them in and drink them down 3. Here 's their emptiness they will never fill us for drink both much and often yet whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again And first a few words litterally of that outward Element which the Woman of Samaria came to draw in her Pitcher upon which this is the former observation that all the refection of our body especially that which cools our thirst is delivered in the phrase of drinking waters Indeed before temperance was perverted this phrase was well understood of all men to drink waters From the Creation to the Floud above sixteen hundred years it is affirmed by divers scarce denied by any that the World knew not what belonged to Wine or to any artificial liquor the great Rivers of the Earth were all their Sellarage and they filled their Cup from thence without cost or labour Therefore in the first of Genesis God stinted our first Parents and their Posterity what they should eat namely the fruits of several Trees all but one and the Herbs of the Field but they were not stinted what they should drink because their nature was inclined to nothing but to the Fountain Element And Noah having never perceived the malignity and headiness of too much Wine neither in himself nor any other person surely not out of intemperance we may well excuse him that but out of ignorance he became drunken It is too much perhaps to look back so far as before the Deluge now we are sure that every Creature of God is sanctified by Prayer and Thanksgiving to them that use it well it is the Lord that makes the Vine to swell with comfortable juyce that men may take it for infirmity of health and upon occasions of chearfulness yet the good Patriarchs would never lay down the primitive sobriety of the World I will go no further to shew it than the verse before my Text. Says the Woman Art thou greater than our Father Jacob who drank himself of this Well and his Children and his Cattle The Flocks and Herds quenched their thirst with no worse than their Master did according to which simplicity of diet God in the beginning allotted the same food for the Beasts that he made for Man Gen. i. 30. I have given you says He to Adam every herb bearing seed which is upon the face of all the earth c. and to every beast of the earth and to every foul of the air and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth wherein there is life I have given every green herb for meat and it was so We and the Cattle you see had once the same allowance or there was very little to choose between our Pasture and theirs I will wind about no longer the scope is to let you see the difference between the frugal institutions of nature and the monstrous inventions of that luxury which at this time prevails among us Why doth the Scripture express all manner of Beverage in forty places by the name of water but to insinuate sobriety Why doth Gods word in an hundred places call the whole repast of the belly by the name of bread but to insinuate frugality The Scripture makes but two words of that whereof affected gluttony hath made twenty thousand The Apostles did break bread from house to house and eat their meat with gladness Acts 2.46 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alimentum non delicias says St. Chrysostom plain necessary nourishment is meant which nature earns for and cannot want not piled dishes one upon another to the intolerable scorn of God Almighty's first Laws as if you did not set but build a Banquet Our Saviour will condemn you out of your own mouth if you pray his Prayer as you ought Give us this day our daily bread if the word be a Synechdoche one part of sustenance for all Gods gifts I know it is so yet it circumscribes our desires to ask a little and no excess and if you pray with Christs words and not with Christs meaning God will not bless but curse your supplications As the Fable goes of Dido that she asked no more Land than an Ox Hide would compass but she cut that Hide into small thongs and took in as much ground as to build a City so it is a cheat to ask God for bread and water and to mean all
if he had pleased but to grasp the Loaves or to hold them in his Palm it was a full signification that his power and liberality were eminently met together for it is that hand which openeth and filleth all things The Apostles knew where these Loaves were forth-coming but they set not their mind upon them they would not meddle with them The People were an hungry and far from home in a desart place where there was nothing but grass Two hundred penyworth of bread perchance would have staid their stomachs and Philip thought that would be too little Howsoever they had not the money to buy it Five barly Loaves and two Fishes were all they had in store and who durst take them forth and shew them openly lest they should scramble and quarrel for them The People were ready to stone Moses and Aaron in the Wilderness when they were pinched with scarcity of food Therefore some gave counsel to send them away betimes certainly suspecting a mutiny But here is an accepit which runs cross to all their imaginations Christ betakes himself to those means which they contemned instead of dismissing the Congregation he calls them closer together instead of referring them to the Villages round about he contents them amply in that barren place Instead of the Tumult which was dreaded the issue came to great applause and admiration In all their days they had never seen such a Feast as this Table in the Wilderness where every Crum became an Handful Great things became vile and vile things became great by the dispensation of Christ In his own Person the stone which the builders refused became the head of the corner and in his own hand the Loaves which the Disciples refused became such a Banquet as never was prepared Lord take it first into thine own hand whatsoever we receive and then it will increase and prosper Give us our daily bread and if it be thy gift for no more than one day the vertue of it will last a year Labour not then so much to have good things as to have them of God As David did quickly cast up a chearful account of all his estate O Lord my God all the store that we have it cometh of thine hand 1 Chron. xxix 16. whatsoever drops from his fingers is sweet smelling Myrrh Cant. v. 5. but all false ways he utterly abhors and whatsoever comes in by fraud by extortion by cavillation it will consume away as fast as ever the Loaves and Fishes increased But surely the whole quaternion of Evangelists have set down this Preamble to the Miracle with such joynt consent He took the Loaves that it cannot choose but have some depth of observation in it St. Chrysostome hath reacht it so far that great numbers follow him namely that our Saviour did impatronize himself thereby to the work which followed and published himself from thence to be the Author of the Miracle It was alike easie to his Omnipotency to say the word and to make bread of nothing Or to take a little into his hand and to amplifie it into a great quantity Depend upon this what we have he can increase and what we have not he can create it is all one to him But by handling the lump and so giving vertue to the augmentation the People might behold him as the Fountain of all Power and Majesty and say with the Lycaonians God is come down unto us in the likeness of man Hear what that Father says more unto it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It was very expedient that the People should be taught these two Articles of their belief that Christ came from the Father and that he was equal with the Father The one must be proved by power the other by holiness The one by taking the Loaves the other by giving thanks The one by doing all the other by calling upon God when he did all Put the case he had looked up to Heaven and furnished them with satiety of victuals out of nothing what would the multitude have said why this comes from above this is Gods doing and this Jesus is a Prophet that 's come from God O but can humane reason be brought to no better opinion of him 't is true whatsoever can be done they that are unbelievers may gain-say it yet to subdue all contradiction in them that are willing to obey the truth he took the bread and took the glory to himself to make every loaf content a thousand that they might cry out with the Centurion this is of a Truth the Son of God and it is no robbery to say he is equal with the Father So at Cana in Galilee he did not create wine when they wanted and supplied them out of nothing but he turned water into wine water of their own fetching as this was bread of their own bringing a pre-existent matter whose substance they knew to be vulgar and natural he wrought upon these sensible things before their eyes that they might impute the transmutation to his own Divinity Unto which of the Prophets therefore can you liken him in this Miracle Moses obtained Manna from Heaven by prayer and supplication Christ did this by his own hand The Widows Barrel of Meal did not waste nor her Cruise of Oyl fail it was Elias his prediction not his immediate operation Elisha bad his Servant set twenty barley loaves before an hundred men they did eat and left thereof yet for his own part he did not meddle with it because he would have the children of the Prophets ascribe all to the Word of the Lord they did according to that spirit upon them which was circumscribed and limited God had lent them a tongue to declare his noble acts but the hand which did all was far above the hand of power was radical in Heaven therefore this is a distinctive note to know the Master from his Servants he took the loaves He took them indeed but for justice sake it is fit to ask unde habuit from whence he had them A mean question many times hath found a grave resolution it may prove so in this Whence he had them Why some say the Disciples did own them for they answer him Matt. xiv 17. We have here but five loaves and two fishes The words bear it as if they were theirs because their Master was wont to carry them into desolate places and to detein them there all night it was their wonted providence to carry some small refection with them in their journey as it appears Matth. xvi 7. When our Saviour bad them beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and of the Saducees they reasoned among themselves saying it is because we have taken no bread Then they had not yet usually they do not forget it and it may be this was their provision for the present season But the votes of them are more that conceive they did belong to some other In the nineth verse Andrew says there is a Lad here
their avengers It cannot utterly be gainsaid therefore but that the Grammatical words will bear this sense that the Souls under the Altar pray for deliverance rather than revenge For the deliverance of their Brethren that suffer not for the confusion of those Malefactors that spill their bloud I confess if you take Revenge in the usual way for a cankered desire to see the hurt of another this construction were the safer And for Analogy of Faith it agrees well with that that the holy Ones in the sight of God pray that their Brethren may be pluckt out of the jaws of their Tormentors and fill up their Society in Heaven So St. Cyprian Illic copiosa turba nos desiderat de suâ immortalitate secura adhuc de nostra solicita An innumerous company of holy ones in Heaven desire our coming resting secure in their own peace and glory but solicitous for ours And Bernard very vehemently Vnde tibi hoc ô caro foetida How comes this to pass O filthy and sinful flesh of man that they in whom Gods Image is repaired should long for thy fellowship in whom it is defaced That they who are made white with the bloud of the Lamb should wish for thee that art polluted So I leave this Point with a probable assent but no more that the Saints desire not the vengeance of the ungodly but the deliverance of the righteous It is drawn up more solidly in the fourth Conclusion That vengeance indeed is no part of their Petition in Heaven it was their love and forgiveness of their Enemies which God accepted when he exalted them thither and surely their Charity is increased and not diminished But how then will St. Johns Vision and their Charity hold together Well enough directly they pray for that which is fit for the voice of Saints but because no good thing is good to them that hate the Church obliquely it brings vengeance upon them Cajetan is the great abettor of this Interpretation I shall find another Author for it they are our Saviours words Luk. xviii 7. Shall not God avenge his own Elect that cry day and night unto him Says he The assiduous cry of the Elect tends formally to this that the Kingdom of God would come and that he would accomplish all things but forasmuch as when this Kingdom is come and the Elect are gathered together from the four Winds the wicked shall be turned into Hell and all the people that imagined evil against his Sanctuary therefore virtually and indirectly they invocate God that his Foes may be swept away with the Beesom of destruction Affectu orant pro persecutoribus effectu pro vindictâ Their affections are sweet and tender that all Infidels who defie the Gospel of Christ may be converted but the effect which follows their Prayers shall not be their Salvation but their Subversion for ever The Casuists express this after a pretty manner that the Will of any man is Mother to some effects and Grandmother to other some Such things as it wisheth for expresly it is the Mother of those desires when many things fall out consequently upon these desires and quite beside the intention of the wish they are not the Children of our own Will but our Daughters Daughters as it were and our Will is but Grandmother unto them I desire fair weather meerly for mine own delight my fancy covets nothing else but this may hinder the Seeds-man in the Field or burn up his Flowers that hath planted a Garden those effects are not begot by my Will their relation is that they came to pass out of that which I desired they are my Childrens Children and so remotely they are mine Or as a Ward wisheth that he were come to Age and had sued out his Livery his aim is to be seized of his own Inheritance yet that desire cannot be accomplished in some instances without wringing his Estate out of the hand of his Guardian and leaving him poor and succourless So says Gregory the Great to this case in my Text Sancti petunt mundi consummationem atque indui corporibus These blessed Souls call for the consummation of the World for a joyful Resurrection and to be cloathed with their bodies But woe unto violent men that have insulted upon the Righteous when that shall come to pass then shall their cruelty begin to be requited The Saints do praise God day and night and the Incense of their Prayers is lifted up unto him for a greater amplification of their triumph yet since their honour must be the ruine of many this must necessarily be derived out of their Petitions that the Lord would judge and avenge their bloud on them that dwell on the Earth But you will say I have not yet made it to appear that the primary and direct Petition of the Saints is that God will reveal his utmost glory in the end of all things and in the Resurrection of their bodies I refer you for that to the verse which follows my Text for why had each of them his white Robe given Or why is it said That they should rest for a little season and till all were fulfilled This is no answer to the words of my Text but an answer to their uncessant Prayer for the future Resurrection that the pittance of glory which they had must satisfie them and in due time when the whole body was gathered together there should be an accomplishment of their blessedness I do not say That the time deferred is irksom to them for their heart is so devoted to every thing that God pleaseth to have done that it is sweeter to them since the Lord will have it so to have the time adjourned when they shall be cloathed with their house which is from Heaven than if it were now at hand Yet the Spirit hath such a thirst to resume the Flesh again that it spends their affections in part upon the object which otherwise would freely and intirely without deducting any share be consecrated to the praise of the Eternal Majesty To dispatch this Conclusion now if I look right upon it it is sound and hath no flaw namely that the proper ingredients of the prayer of the Saints departed are for the hastening of Christs Kingdom and for a speedy Resurrection but to the terror of them that are destructive and unmerciful that heavenly supplication devoves them by consequent to the nethermost Hell There is but one Conclusion more behind the fifth and last which stands upon this firm Basis that if any man will be contentious that revenge is every way to be exploded out of the Prayers of holy Martyrs though his conscience receive scandal unjustly where none is given yet there is one interpretation left which is obnoxious to no exception namely that these words are not Oratio personae sed rei the Martyrs themselves do not utter such a Prayer in the ears of God but the wrongs and injuries which they sustained