Selected quad for the lemma: reason_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
reason_n day_n lord_n rest_v 3,802 5 9.7803 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A07953 The devout soules search with the happie issue of comfort found : in a sermon, preached at Paules Crosse, Ian. 14. 1610 / by Thomas Myriell ... Myriell, Thomas, d. 1629. 1610 (1610) STC 18323; ESTC S1309 34,861 106

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE DEVOVT SOVLES SEARCH With the happie issue of Comfort found IN A SERMON Preached at Paules Crosse Ian. 14. 1610. By Thomas Myriell Preacher of the word of God at Barnet Bonus es domine animae quaerenti te Si quaerenti quanto magis inuenienti Si tam dulcis est memoria qualis erit praesentia Bern. LONDON Printed by T. C. For Iohn Budge and are to be sold at his shoppe at the great South dore of Poules 1610. TO THE RIGHT REVEREND FATHER IN God the Lord Byshop of Bath and Wells my very good Lord heauenlie grace and earthlie peace RIGHT Reuerend Father in God my very good Lord. THere is no such motiue to giue life nor meanes to preserue life in the affection of loue as loue it selfe Neither is anie thing so kindely to mans nature or so naturall to mankinde as to loue when one is beloued Therefore euen hee which is loue it selfe takes this course hee loues vs first that wee may loue him first and last Quid tam populare quam gratia saieth that generous Byshop Fauour and grace as we affect and desire nothing more So nothing so much affecteth and delighteth vs. Hence my Lord it is that as by dutie I must not but honor so by affection I cannot but loue your Lordship my selfe in particular hauīg receiued as good cause to doe this as you giue to others in generall iust reason to doe that Your Lordships promise that you would remember mee doth make me vowe neuer to forget you Your kinde affection in wishing you might do me good did me much good presently as soone as you wished it And certes I no wayes doubt such is your Lordships loue and respect with God himself in heauen and his vice-gerent vice-regēt in earth such your dignitie and eminencie in the Church and Court that anie reasonable matter is or can be so difficult that your Lordship may wish for it and yet not haue it I know your Lordship looke for no requitall and indeed I can make none Yet if I should not so much as once shew some willingnes I should more then make shewe of great vnworthinesse Aeschines a poore scholler to Socrates when hee saw manie of his companions bestow great gifts on their maister himselfe grieuing hee could not be a companion with them in giuing rewards as hee was in receiuing Learning thus said Nihil dignum te quod dare tibi possim inuenio Et hoc vno modo pauperem me esse sentio Itaque dono tibi quod vnum habeo meipsum Hoc munus rogo qualecunque est boni consulas cogite●que alios cum multum tibi darent plus sibi reliquisse I can finde nothing to giue you which is anie way worthie of you and heerein onely I finde my selfe to be poore Therefore loe euen all that I haue I giue you that is My selfe This gift I desire you be it neuer so simple to take in good worth and to reckon of others that though they gaue much to you yet they kept more for thēselues To whom Socrates made this answere Quidni tu mihi magnum munus dederis nisi forte paruo te aestimas Habebo itaque curae vt te meliorē tibi reddam quàm accepi Without doubt thou hast giuen me a great gift vnlesse thou accountest thy selfe little worth I will therefore endeuour that I may restore thee againe vnto thy selfe better worth then I tooke thee at the first The like gift my Lord I a poore Aeschines doe most willingly bequeath to your Lordship that because I verelie hope that with graue and wise Socrates you will ere long restore mee to my selfe againe now scarcely apud me through an Ocean of worldlie crosses much better then you now find me And for a pledge of this gift I beseech your Lordship to accept this rude sermon and to giue it your countenance to grace it and protection to defend it And then I doubt not but as it was once carefully attended from my mouth by honorable and religious hearers since earnestly requested from my hands by worshipful and deare friends So now much more it will be thankfully receiued in the hearts of all deuout Christians not because it is any longer mine but for that it is become whollie your Lordships And so humblie crauing pardon of your Lo for my boldnes I cease further to trouble you euer resting your Lordships humbly to be commanded Thomas Myriell TO THE READER DEare Christian Reader for deare I reade thee if thou be a Christian To thee I trust I need not Apologize for Printing this Sermon If it profit spoken it cannot but profit written For other if any complaine a Eccl. 12.12 There is no end of making many bookes I answere it is meant of many books made to no end But for a Sermon there is great reason as to make it out of a book in the pulpit so to make it into a booke in the Presse Euery good thing the more cōmon the more commodious And it is no lesse griefe to the spirituall father to see that his ofspring bred of his braine and brought forth by his breath should die as soone as it begins to liue thē it is for the naturall mother to behold one and the selfe same day to be vnto her child dies natalis and dies fatalis a day of birth and a day of death And surely wee liue in an age where all knowledge abounds saue the true experimentall and practicall knowledge of Christ and therefore wee had need now with the Prophets of old to b Isa 28.10 adde praecept vpon praecept by speaking and line vnto line in writting These reasons with the importunitie of many friends haue made me yeeld to the publishing heereof Vse it and enioy it in the Lord in whom and to whome I leaue thee euer resting c August ad licent epist 41. Seruus tuus per ipsum conseruus sub ipso Thomas Myriell THE DEVOVT SOVLES SEARCH Mark 16.6 But he said vnto them Be not afraid Ye seeke Iesus of Nazareth which was crucified he is risen he is not heere behold the place where they put him THough the wisest of the Sonnes of men had not saide it yet the experience of the sonnes of men had long since prooued it that a Can. 8.6 Loue is as strong as death Cant. 8.6 As strong saith Augustine in a double respect b Siue quia nemo eam vincit sicut mortem siue quia in hac vita vsque ad mottem est meosura charitatis August ad Hieron Epist 29. Either because no man ouercomes loue no more then death or else because the measure of loue extendeth euen vnto death so as the partie louing shrinketh not at the sharpest sting of death to expresse his affection to the partie beloued Nay if we say loue is strōger then death we say no more then reason will defend which telleth vs Death may extinguish life but
his passion z Mat. 27.52 the graues opened many dead bodies of the Saints arose Mat. 27.52 And which is most of all himselfe beīg dead yet thē was able to raise vp himselfe which no man in the world euer did which all the mē in the world could neuer do Therfore as he was declared truely to be the Sonne of man by yeelding vnto death so a Rom. 1.4 saith Paul he was declared mightily to be the Sonne of God by the Resurrection frō the dead Ro. 1.4 b Bern. paru Serm. 14. qui Agnus extitteraet in passione factus est Leo in Resurrectione Hee saith Bern that was a Lambe in his Passion became a Lyon in his Resurrection When hee was to be crucified c Isa 53.7 he was led saith Isay as a sheepe to the slaughter Isa 53.7 But when hee arose againe it was Iacobs Prophecie that d Gen. 49.9 As a Lyons whelpe hee should come vp from the spoyle Genes 49 9. From the spoyle indeed that is from hauing spoyled as a most victorious and conquering champion death and hell sinne and Sathan with the whole rabble of the infernall powers from all such force as they had gotten against him and all his members Hence it is well obserued that Christs resurrection hath a double priuiledge aboue the resurrectiō or rather resuscitation of all others For though others rose from the dead as well as Christ yea and in time before him yet saith Bernard e Bern. in die 〈◊〉 Pasch Serm. 1. Resurrexerant mortui iterum morit●ri They rose indeed when they were dead but yet to die againe when they were raised But f Rem 6.9 Christ rising frō the dead dieth no more death hath no more power ouer him Ro. 6 9. And therfore iustly is hee called g 1. Cor. 5.20 Primitiae dormientium the first fruites of them that deepe which only rose to immor●alitie h Bern. Et fic resurrexit vt cadere ●on adijciat rose in such manner at once as he was to fall againe neuer after Againe all those which had power giuen them to raise others yet had no power to raise themselues Elizeus that raised vp another man dead yet hath no power to raise vp himselfe i Bern ibi supra Loe how many yeares hath he liue in the graue expecting a ioyfull resurrection at his hand which hath triumphed ouer the graue by which it appeares that all such as raised others did it potestate precariâ non propriâ by a power not resiant in themselues but receiued from God But Christ saith Bernard k Bern in die Sanct. Pas Ser. 1. Virtute propria victor prodijt de Sepulchro by his owne power raised vp himselfe and by the strength of his owne arme made all things giue way vnto him l Amb. de virg lib. 3. Erras mulier saith Saint Ambrose quae putas de monumento Christum esse sublatum O woman that thinkest some bodie hath taken away thy Lord and laid him thou knowest not where thou errest grosely This victorious Sampsō stoutly caried away the gates of m Iudg. 16.3 Azzah burst opē the dore of his Tombe where the Philistine Iewes had shut him in the morning when they sought him was risen was not there But the womans errour Saint Ierome salueth n Hieron ad Hedibiam quaest Error mulieris cum pietate societus est An errour of infirmitie ioyned with deuotion But the Iewes who can excuse O foolish Iewes tell vs why did you seale and locke downe the stone so fast Because said some of your rulers o Mat. 27.63 We remember that this deceiuer said within three daies I will rise vp again Ma. 27.63 p Bern in die Sanct. Pas Ser. 1. Vere seductor saith Bern Sed pius non malitiosus A deceiuer he is indeed but an holy not a malicious deceiuer and you may well say with Ieremiah your Prophet q Ierem. 20.7 O Lord thou hast deceiued me and I am deceiued thou art stronger then I and hast preuailed Ierem. 20.7 What thinke you of him now Is he still but the Carpenters sonne A Carpēters sonne he is we grant Sed r Bern hominis fabri filius fabricator hominis the sonne of man and such a Carpenter as made man and all the world Will you still be obstinate Will you not yet beleeue You will say If he had come downe from the crosse we would haue beleeued in him Indeed so said some of your rulers ſ Mat. 27.42 Desdendet de cruce c. Matt. 27.42 But ô how like their father the diuell speake these wicked children saith Saint Chrysostome t Chrysost Serm. de passione The diuell said Cast thy selfe downeward from the Temple and these men say Let him come downe from the crosse u Fraudu lenta promissio Hie. rom But all this is but dissembling For x Bern in die Sa Pas Serm. 1. Si non creditis resurgēti nec credidissetis descēaenti Surely if you beleeue him not rising out of the graue neither would you haue beleeued in him if he had come downe from the crosse Leauing then these obstinate Iewes in the depth of their vnbeliefe till the time of refreshing comes Let vs proceed to the second point the speed of his resurrectiō in these words he is not here Wherein the Angell declares that though these women were earely comming to him yet Christ was risen and gone before their comming at him I may iustly therfore apply this secōd speech to the speed of his resurrection Who though he were to answere the figure which himself spake of Mat. 12.40 As Ionas was three daies and three nights in the whales bellie so must the sonne of man be three daies and three nights in the heart of the earth y Mat. 12.40 yet in verie truth he was not so long time in the bowels of the earth as Ionas was in the bellie of the fish For about the ninth houre he died on the crosse and about three houres after that was he laid into his graue Now this in our account was about three of the clocke in the afternoone This is but a small part of a day yet this is reckoned for the first day The second day being the day of rest to the Iewes he himself also rested in his graue The third day being the first day of the weeke so soone as the sunne of the firmament rose to cheare the eies of the world this glorious Sonne of righteousnes arose also to cheare the harts of the elect Here you see is but one whole day with the end of that which went before it and the beginning of that which followed after it and yet it is reckoned for three daies and that iustly for the first day saith Augustine is taken z August lib. de Trinit 4. Secundum partem sui posteriorem according to the latter part thereof the secōd day Secundū
se totam integram according to it selfe whole intire the third Secūdum partem sui prima onely according to the former part thereof And what may be the reason of this hast may you say If any think he thus hasted away least his bodie should putrifie he thinkes amisse For seeing putrifaction is a punishment of sinne then surely there was no reason that Christ should feare corruption For as Augustine in another case saith a August de ciuit dei lib. 13.4 Cur esset vllo paena vbi non erant vlla punienda Why should there be any feare of punishment where nothing was found due to be punishment In verie deed therefore the causes were these First b Vt propheta fidelis inueniatur Bern in die Sanct. Pas Ser. 1. that the prophet might be found faithfull who saith Hos 6.2 c Hos 6.2 He that is the Messias shall quicken vs after two daies and the third day he shall raise vs vp and we shall come into his presence Wherein he signifieth the small time that Christ was to remaine in his graue No doubt but death as he was very greedie to deuour Christ so he was verie desirous to retaine him But Peter saith d Act. 2.24 It was impossible that he should be held of the sorrowes of death Act. 2.24 That which death did and doth to all other men swallow and deuour he was not able to do to the mā Christ Iesus but e O mors ero mors tua ero morsus tuus inf●t●e Hos 13.14 was swallowed and deuoured himselfe And looke as Adams stomacke could brooke all the allowed fruits but when he came to the tree in the midst of the garden and tasted of it he set his teeth on edge and surfeited euen so death that feedes vpon all other flesh and can brooke it well enough when he would needs be feeding on this mediator of God man surcharged his stomacke surfeited of sweet meate within three daies vomitted him vp againe out of his bowells Secondly he arose within three daies that there might be a certaine resemblance and analogie betweene the two great workes of the creation of the world and the redemption of the world At the beginning in the sixt day of the weeke God created man The next day God rested from all his workes The third day he ceased from his rest Euen so Christ Iesus the sixt day of the weeke redeemed man on the crosse being the verie day wherein he made him at the first The day following f Bern in die ●anct Paul Serm. 1. sabbatizauit in monumēto saith Bernard he kept sabboth in the graue And the third day as the first fruits of the dead he appeared a new man in the face of the earth Yea not onely himselfe was then become new but euen all the creatures became new againe with him and the whole world seemed to begin afresh for ioy of the resurrection And as Lactantius saith the budding of plants blossoming of trees an springing of flowers sufficiently witnessed g Lactan. in carminibus Omnia cum domino dona redisse suo that all the creatures were returned from death with their Lord and wee may now fitlie with Paul and Isay sing h 2. Cor. 5.17 Is 43.19 Olde things are done away behold all things are now become new 2. Cor. 5.17 Thirdly hee arose within three dayes to be a type vnto vs of our condition after him There is not one of vs but hath and shall haue as Christ our three dayes First a day of suffering in this life Secondly a day of rest in the graue Thirdly a day of resurrection vp againe Now he hath instructed vs what wee must doe in those dayes and what those dayes shall be vnto vs. In this first day of ours wherein we liue i Mat. 16 24. we must take vp our Crosse and follow him Matth. 16.24 k Bern. in die sanct Pasch Serm. I. Neminem audiamus fratres saith Saint Bernard non carnem sanguinem non spiritum quemlibet descensum a Cruce suadentem Brethren if anie man in the world if our owne flesh and bloud if anie manner of spirit counsell vs to come downe from the crosse let vs heare none of them all Yea if our deerest friendes bid vs fauour our selues as Peter did Christ let vs replie to euery one as Christ did to Peter l Mat. 16.23 Get thee behino me Sathan thou art an offence vnto me Mat. 16.23 Thus if we spend the first day at the secōd day the day of our death we shall rest with Christ sweetly we shall sleepe quietlie in the graue For Christ hath gone to bed thither before vs as it were to warme it against our comming Therefore Ambrose saith m In Ambrose Sepultura Christi quies Christiani The buriall of Christ is the rest of a Christian By it Christ hath both abated the sting of the paine and also increased the strength of the patient For looke as the first Adam was content to be cast into a sleepe and to haue a ribbe or bone took from him to make a wife and to haue the place filled vp with soft flesh againe Euen so the second Adam CHRISTIESVS was content to be cast into the sleep of death to giue a bone that is strength and Fortitude vnto his Spouse the Church haue receiued nothing from her for it but onely the infirmities and weaknesse of the flesh Now if we be crucified with him the first day rest with him the second day the third day n Hos 6.2 he wil raise vs vp we shall com into his presence Hos 6.2 For saith Paul o Rmo. 8.17 If we suffer together with him we shall raigne with him in glorie Rom. 8.17 Indeed we also graunt the wicked shall rise but not by vertue of the resurrection of Christ but by the power of the iust iudgement of God They shall rise I say but not to life p Bern. super Cent. Serm. 26. Imo ad vitam saith Bern. vt vim in morte infoelicius moriantur yea to life too in some sort that liuing a dying life and dying a liuing death they may euer liue in most direful deadly damnation But the righteous shal be sure as they liued to Christ in this world so to liue with him in the world to come For Pauls rule is certaine q Rom. 8.11 If the spirit of him that raised vp Iesus dwell in you hee that raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you Fourthly he arose within three dayes that he might not any lōger perplex the hearts of his disciples When he died one sold him another foreswore him all forsooke him When he was dead and risen againe some belieued some doubted some were resolute in vnbeliefe If they were thus perplexed when hee tarryed from them but three dayes what would they