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A36296 Fifty sermons. The second volume preached by that learned and reverend divine, John Donne ... Donne, John, 1572-1631. 1649 (1649) Wing D1862; ESTC R32764 817,703 525

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to fetch fire at the hearth and incapable of any drop of Christs blood from heaven or of any teare of contrition in themselves not a sheard to fetch water at the pit I will breake them as a Potters vessell quod non potest instaurari says God in Ieremy There shall be no possible meanes of those means which God hath ordained in his Church to recompact them againe no voice of Gods word to draw them no threatnings of Gods judgements shall drive them no censures of Gods Church shall fit them no Sacrament shall cement and glue them to Christs body againe In temporall blessings he shall be unthankfull in temporall afflictions he shall be obdurate And these two shall serve as the upper and nether stone of a mill to grinde this reprobate sinner to powder Lastly this is to be done by Christs falling upon him and what is that I know some Expositors take this to be but the falling of Gods judgements upon him in this world But in this world there is no grinding to powder all Gods judgements here for any thing that we can know have the nature of Physick in them may are wont to cure no man is here so absolutely broken in pieces but that he may be re-united we chuse therefore to follow the Ancients in this That the falling of this stone upon this Reprobate is Christs last irrecoverable falling upon him in his last judgment that when hee shall wish that the Hills might fall and cover him this stone shall fall grinde him to powder He shall be broken and he no more found says the Prophet yea he shall be broken and no more sought No man shall consider him what he is now nor remember him what he was before For that stone which in Daniel was cut out without hands which was a figure of Christ who came without ordinary generation when that great Image was to be overthrown broke not an arme or a leg but brake the whole Image in peeces and it wrought not onely upon the weak parts but it brake all the clay the iron the brasse the silver the gold so when this stone fals thus when Christ comes to judgement he shall not onely condemn him for his clay his earthly and covetous sinnes nor for his iron his revengefull oppressing and rustly sinnes nor for his brasse his shining and glittering sinnes which he hath filed and polished but he shall fall upon his silver and gold his religious and precious sinnes his hypocriticall hearing of Sermons his singular observing of Sabbaths his Pharisaicall giving of almes and as well his subtill counterfeiting of Religion as his Atheisticall opposing of religion this stone Christ himselfe shall fall upon him and a showre of other stones shall oppresse him too Sicut pluit laque●s says David As God rained springs and snares upon them in this world abundance of temporall blessings to be occasions of sinne unto them So plues grandinem he shall raine such haile-stones upon them as shall grinde them to powder there shall fall upon him the naturall Law which was written in his heart and did rebuke him then when he prepared for a sinne there shall fall upon him the written Law which cryed out from the mouthes of the Prophets in these places to avert him from sinne there shall fall upon him those sinnes which he hath done and those sins which he hath not done if nothing but want of means opportunity hindred him from doing them there shall fall upon him those sinnes which he hath done after anothers dehortation and those which others have done after his provocation there the stones of Nineveh shall fall upon him and of as many Cities as have repented with lesse proportions of mercy and grace then God afforded him there the rubbage of Sodom and Gomorrah shall fall upon him and as many Cities as in their ruine might have been examples to him All these stones shall fall upon him and to add weight to all these Christ Jesus himselfe shall fall upon his conscience with unanswerable questions and grinde his soule to powder But hee that overcometh shall not bee hurt by the second death he that feeles his own fall upon this stone shall never feel this stone fall upon him he that comes to a remorse early and earnestly after a sinne and seeks by ordinary meanes his reconcileation to God in his Church is in the best state that man can be in now for howsoever we cannot say that repentance is as happy an estate as Innocency yet certainly every particular man feels more comfort and spirituall joy after a true repentance for a sin then he had in that degree of Innocence which he had before he committed that sinne and therefore in this case also we may safely repeat those words of Augustine Audeo dicere I dare be bold to say that many a man hath been the better for some sin Almighty God who gives that civill wisdome to make use of other mens infirmities give us also this heavenly wisdome to make use of our own particular sins that thereby our own wretched conditions in our selves and our meanes of reparation in Iesus Christ may be the more manifested unto us To whom with the blessed Spirit c. SERMON XXXVI Preached at Saint Pauls upon Christmasse day 1621. JOHN 1. 8. He was not that Light but was sent to bear witnesse of that Light IT is an injury common to all the Evangelists as Irenaeus notes that all their Gospels were severally refused by one Sect of Hereticks or other But it was proper to Saint Iohn alone to be refused by a Sect that admitted all the other three Evangelists as Epiphanius remembers and refused onely Saint Iohn These were the Alogiani a limme and branch of the Arians who being unable to looke upon the glorious Splendour the divine Glory attributed by Saint Iohn to this Logos which gave them their name of Alogiani this Word this Christ not comprehending this Mystery That this Word was so with God as that it was God they tooke a round way and often practised to condemne all that they did not understand and therefore refuse the whole Gospell Indeed his whole Gospell is comprehended in the beginning thereof In this first Chapter is contracted all that which is extensively spred and dilated through the whole Booke For here is first the Foundation of all the Divinitie of Christ to the 15. verse Secondly the Execution of all the Offices of Christ to the 35. verse And then the Effect the Working the Application of all that is who were to Preach all this to the ends of the world the calling of his Apostles to the end of the Chapter for the first Christs Divinity there is enough expressed in the very first verse alone for there is his Eternitie intimated in that word In principio in the beginning The first booke of the Bible Genesis and the last booke that is that
bowells When Christ is disseised and dispossest his truth profligated and thrown out of a nation that professed it before when Christ is wounded by the blasphemies of others and crucified by thee in thy relapses to repented sinnes wilt thou not say to Them to Thy selfe in the behalfe of Christ why persecute yee me Wilt thou not make Christs case thine as hee made thine his Art not thou the bowells of Christ If not and thou art not if thou have not this sense of his suffering thou hast no interest in his death by thy Baptisme nor in his Resurrection by thy feeble halfe repentances But in the duty of a child as thou art a servant in the simplicity of a child as thou hast sucked from him in the interest and inheritance of a child as thou art the Son of his bowells in all these capacities and with all these we have done God calls thee come ye children and that is our next step the Action Come Passing thus from the Persons to the action Venite Come we must aske first what this comming is The whole mystery of our redemption is expressed by the Apostle in this word venit that Christ Iesus is come into the world All that thou hast to do is to come to and to meet him Where is he At home in his own house in the Church Which is his house which is his Church That to thee in which he hath given thee thy Baptisme if that do still afford thee as much as is necessary for thy salvation Come thither to the participation of his ordinances to the exercises of Religion there The gates of heaven shall be opened to you at last in that word Venite benedicti come ye blessed the way to those gates is opened to you now in the same word Venite filii come ye children come Christ can come and does often into thy bed-chamber in the visitation of his private Spirit but here he calls thee out into the congregation into the communion of Saints And then the Church celebrates Christs coming in the flesh a moneth before he comes in four Sundays of Advent before Christmas When thou comest to meet him in the Congregation come not occasionally come not casually not indifferently not collaterally come not as to an entertainment a show a spectacle or company come solemly with preparation with meditation He shall have the lesse profit by the prayer of the Congregation that hath not been at his private prayer before he came Much of the mystery of our Religion lay in the venturus that Christ was to come all that the law and Prophets undertooke for was that venturus that Christ was to come but the consummation of all the end of the law and the Prophets is in the venit he is come Do not clogge thy coming with future conditions and contingencies thou wilt come if thou canst wake if thou canst rise if thou canst be ready if thou like the company the weather the man We finde one man who was brought in his bed to Christ but it was but one Come come actually come earnestly come early come often and come to meet him Christ Jesus and no body else Christ is come into the world and therefore thou needest not goe out of the world to meet him He doth not call thee from thy Calling but in thy Calling The Dove went up and down from the Arke and to the Arke and yet was not disappointed of her Oliveleafe Thou maiest come to this place at due times and maiest doe the businesses of the world in other places too and still keep thy Olive thy peace of Conscience If no Hereticall recusancy thou dost like the Doctrine no schismaticall recusancy thou dost like the Discipline no lasie recusancy thou forbearest not because thou canst not sit at thine ease no proud recusancie that the company is not good enough for thee if none of these detain thee thou maist be here even when thou art not here God may accept thy desire as in many cases thou maist be away when thou art here as in particular thou art if being here thou do not hearken to that which is said here for that is added to the coming and follows in a third consideration after the capacity Children and the Action Come The disposition Hearken Come ye children hearken Upon those words of David Conturbata sunt ossa mea St. Basil faith well Habet anima ossa sua The soul hath bones as well as the body And in this Anatomy and dissection of the soul as the bones of the soul are the constant and strong resolutions thereof and as the seeing of the soul is understanding The eyes of your understanding being opened so the Hearing of the soul is hearkning in these religious exercises we doe not htar except we hearken for hearkning is the hearing of the soul. Some men draw some reasons out of some stories of some credit to imprint a belief of extasie and raptures That the body remaining upon the floore or in the bed the soul may be gone out to the contemplation of heavenly things But it were a strange and a perverse extasie that the body being here at a religious exercise and in a religious posture the soul should be gone out to the contemplation and pursuit of the pleasures or profits of this world You come hither but to your own funeralls if you bring nothing hither but your bodies you come but to be enterred to be laid in the earth if the ends of your comming be earthly respects prayse and opinion and observation of men you come to be Canonized to grow Saints if your souls be here and by grace here alwayes diffused grow up to a sanctification Bonus es Domine animae quaerenti te Thou art good O Lord to that soul that seeks thee It is St. Augustines note that it is put in the singular Animae to that soul Though many come few come to him A man may thread Sermons by half dozens a day and place his merit in the nūber a man may have been all day in the perfume and incense of preaching and yet have receivd none of the savor of life unto life Some things an Ape can do as wel as a Man some things an Hypocrite as wel as a Saint We cannot see now whether thy soul be here now or no but to morrow hereafter in the course of thy life they which are near thee know whether thy former faults be mended or no know whether thy soul use to be at Sermons as well as thy body uses to go to Sermons Faith comes by hearing saith the Apostle but it is by that hearing of the soul Hearkning Considering And then as the soul is infused by God but diffused over the whole body so there is a Man so Faith is infused from God but diffused into our works and so there is a Saint Practise is the Incarnation of Faith Faith
speake for him After that first and heavy curse of Almighty God upon Man Morte morieris If thou eate thou shalt die and die twice thou shall die a bodily thou shalt die a spirituall death a punishment which no sentence of any law or law-maker could ever equall to deterre Men from offending by threatning to take away their lives twice and by inflicting a spirituall death eternally upon the Soule after we have all incurred that malediction Morte moriemur we shall die both death we cannot thinke to scape any lesse malediction of any law and therefore we are all Intestabiles we are all intestable in all these senses and apprehensions which we have touched upon We can make no testament of our owne we have no good thing in us to dispose we have no good inclination no good disposition in our Will we can make no use of anothers testament not of the double testaments of Almighty God for in the Old testament he gives promises of a Messias but we bring into the world no Faith to apprehend those promises and in the New testament he gives a performance the Messias is come but he is communicable to us no way but by baptisme and we cannot baptize our selves we can profit no body else by our testimony we are not able to endure persecution for the testimony of Christ to the edification of others we are not able to doe such workes as may shine before Men to the glorifying of our God Neither doth the testimony of others doe us any good for neither the Martyrdome of so many Millions in the primitive Church nor the execution of so many judgments of God in our owne times doe restifie any thing to our Consciences neither at the last day when those Saints of God whom we have accompanied in the outward worship of God here in the visible Church shall be called to the right hand and we detruded to the left shall they dare to open their mouthes for us or to testifie of us or to say Why Lord these Men when they were in the world did as we did appeared and served thee in thy house as we did they seem'd to goe the same way that we did upon Earth why goe they a sinister way now in heaven We are utterly intestable we can give nothing we can take nothing nothing will be beleeved from us who are all falshood it selfe nor can we be releeved by any thing that any other will say for us As long as we are considered under the penalty of that law this is our case Interdicti intestabiles we are accursed and so as that we are intestable Now as this great malediction Morte marieris in volves all other punishments upon whom that falls all fall so when our Saviour Christ Jesus hath a purpose to take away that or the most dangerous part of that the spirituall death when he will reverse that judgment Aqua igni interdicitur to make us capable of his water and his fire when he will reverse the intestabiles the inte●●ability and make us able to receive his graces by faith and declare them by works then as he that will reedifie a demolished house begins not at the top but at the bottome so Christ Jesus when he will make this great preparation this great reedification of mankind he beginnes at the lowest step which is that we may have use of the testimony of others in our behalfe and he proceeds strongly and effectually he produces three witnesses from heaven so powerfull that they will be heard they will be beleeved and three witnesses on earth so neare us so familiar so domestique as that they will not be denied they will not be discredited Three are three that beare Record in heaven and three that beare record in earth Since then Christ Jesus makes us all our owne Iury able to conceive and judge upon the Evidence and testimony of these three heavenly and three earthly witnesses let us draw neare and hearken to the evidence and consider three things Testimonium esse Quid sit and Qui testes That God descends to meanes proportionable to Man he affords him witnesse and secondly the matter of the proofe what all these six witnesses testifie what they establish Thirdly the quality and value of the witnesses and whether the matter be to be beleeved for their sakes and for their reasons God requires nothing of us but Testimony for Martyrdome is but that A Martyr is but a witnesse God offers us nothing without testimony for his Testament is but a witnesse Teste ipso is shrewd evidence when God says I will speake and I will testifie against thee I am God even thy God when the voice of God testifies against me in mine owne conscience It is more pregnant evidence then this when his voice testifies against me in his word in his Scriptures The Lord testified against Israel by all the Prophets and by all the Seers When I can never be alone but that God speakes in me but speakes against me when I can never open his booke but the first sentence mine eye is upon is a witnesse against me this is fearfull evidence But in this text we are not in that storme for he hath made us Testabiles that is ready to testifie for him to the effusion of our bloud and Testabiles that is fit to take benefit by the testament that hee hath made for us The effusion of his bloud which is our second branch what is testified for us what these witnesses establish First then that which a sinner must be brought to understand and beleeve by the strength of these witnesses is Integritas Christi not the Integrity as it signifies the Innocency of Christ but integrity as it signifies Intireness not as it is Integer vitae but Integra vita not as he kept an integrity in his life but as he onely is intirely our life That Christ was a person composed of those two Natures divine and humane whereby he was a fit and a full satisfaction for all our sinnes and by death could be our life for when the Apostle writ this Epistle it seemes there had been a schisme not about the Mysticall body of Christ the Church but even about the Naturall that is to say in the person of Christ there had been a schisme a separation of his two natures for as we see certainly before the death of this Apostle that the Heresie of Ebion and of Cerinthus which denied the divine nature of Christ was set on foot for against them purposely was the Gospell of Saint Iohn written so by Epiphanius his ranking of the Heresies as they arose where he makes Basilides his Heresie which denied that Christ had any naturall body to be the fourth herefie and Ebions to be the tenth it seemes that they denied his humanity before they denied his Divinity And therefore it is well collected that this Epistle of Saint Iohn being written long
doe not meane in his intention that the virgin Mary is equall to the Trinity but onely an assistant this is not onely an impertinent but an impious addition to that God that needs no assistant And as in our baptisme we take no other name necessarily but the name of Christ So in our Christian life we accept no other distinctions of Iesuits or Franciscans but onely Christians for we are baptized into his name and the whole life of a regenerate man is a Baptisme For as in putting on Christ sanctification doth accompany faith so in baptisme the imitation of his death that is mortification and the application of his passion by fulfilling the sufferings of Christ in our flesh is that baptisme into his death Which doe so certainly follow one another that he that is truly baptized into the name of Christ is also baptized into his death as that Saint Paul couples them together Was Paul crucified for you or were you baptized into the name of Pa●l If you were not baptized into his name then you have no interest no benefit by his death nor by any thing which he suffered that his merits or his works of supereragation should be applied to you And if he did not suffer for you if all that any Paul much lesse any Ignatins could doe were but enough and too little for himselfe then you are not baptized into his name nor to be denominate by him This is then to be Baptized into Christs death Habere reddere testimonium Christam pro me mortuum to be sure that Chirst dyed for me and to be ready to dye for him so that I may fulfill his sufferings and may think that all is not done which belongs to my Redemption except I finde a mortification in my selfe Not that any mortification of mine works any thing as a cause of my redemption but as an assurance and testimony of it 〈◊〉 sit pignus sigillu● redemptionis It is a pledge and it is a Seale of my redemption Christ calls his death a Baptisme So Saint Augustine calls our Baptisme a death Quod crux Christo Sep●lcr●m id nobis Baptisma Baptisme to us says he is our Croffe and our passion and our buriall that is in that we are conformed to Christ as he suffered dyed and was buried Because if we be so baptized into his Name and into his death we are thereby dead to sinne and have dyed the death of the righteous Since then Baptisme is the death of sinne and there cannot be this death this conquest this victory over sinne without faith there must necessarily faith concurre with this baptisme for if there be not faith none in the child none in the parents none in the sureties none in the Church then there is no baptisme performed Now in the Child there is none actually In the sureties we are not sure there is any for their infidelity cannot impeach the sacrament The child is well baptized though they should be misbeleevers for when the Minister shall aske them Doest thou beleeve in God dost thou renounce the Devill perchance they may ly in their owne behalfes perchance they doe not beleeve they doe not renounce but they speake truth in the behalfe of the child when they speake in the voyce of the Church who receives this child for her childe and binds her selfe to exhibit and reach out to that child her spirituall paps for her future nourishment thereof How comes it to passe says Saint Augustine that when a man presents another mans child at the font to be baptized if the Minister should aske him Shall this man child be a valiant man or a wise man shall this woman child be a chast and a continent woman the surety would answer I cannot tell and yet if he be ask'd of that child of so few dayes old Doth that child beleeve in God now will he renounce the Devill hereafter the surety answers confidently in his behalfe for the beleefe and for the renouncing How comes this to passe says Saint Augustine He answers to this that as Sacramentum Corporis Christi est secundum modum Corpus Christi so Sacramentum fidei est fides As the Sacrament of the body and bloud of Christ is in some sense and in a kinde the body and bloud of Christ says Augustine so in the sacrament of faith says he that is Baptisme there is some kinde of faith Here is a child borne of faithfull parents and there is the voyce of God who hath sealed a Covenant to them and their seed Here are sureties that live by Gods gratious spirit in the unity and in the bosome of the Church and so the parents present it to them they present it to the Church and the Church takes it into her care It is still the naturall child of her parents who begot it it is the spirituall child of the Sureties that present it but it is the Christian child of the Church who in the sacrament of Baptisme gives it a new inanimation and who if either parents or sureties should neglect their parts will have a care of it and breed it up to a perfection and full growth of that faith whereof it hath this day an inchoation and beginning As then we have said that Baptisme is a death a death of sinne and as we said before sinne dyes not without faith so also can there be no death of sinne without sorrow and contrition which onely washes away sinne as therefore we see the Church and Christs institution furnishes this child with faith which it hath not of it selfe so let us bring to this action that sorrow and that condoling that we produce into the world such miserable wretches as even by peccatum involuntarium by that sinne to which no act nay no will of theirs concurred that is Originall sinne are yet put into the state of damnation But let us also rejoyce in our owne and this childes behalfe that as we that have been baptized so this child that shall be have and shall put on Christ Jesus in Baptisme Both as a garment for Sacramenta sunt vestimenta As Christ is a garment so the Sacraments are Christs garment and as such a garment as Ornat militem and convincit desertores It gives him that continues in Gods battailes a dignity and discovers him that forsakes Gods tents to be a fugitive Baptisme is a garland in which two ends are brought together he begins aright and perseveres so Ornat militem It is an honour to him that fights out in Gods battaile but Convincit Desertorem Baptisme is our prest-money and if we forsake our colours after we have received that even that forfaits our lives our very having been baptized shall aggravate our condemnation Yea it is such a garment as those of the children of Israel in the wildernesse which are by some expositors thought to have growne all the forty yeares with their bodies for so by Gods blessed provision
one person in him My flesh shall no more be none of mine then Christ shall not be man as well as God SERMON XV. Preached at Lincolns Inne 1 COR. 15. 50. Now this I say Brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdome of God SAint Gregory hath delivered this story That Eutychius who was Bishop of Constantinople having written a book of the Resurrection and therein maintained that errour That the body of Christ had not that our bodies in the Resurrection should not have any of the qualities of a naturall body but that those bodies were in subtilitatem redacta so rarifyed so refined so atten●ated and reduced to a thinnesse and subtlenesse that they were aery bodies and not bodies of flesh and blood This error made a great noise and raised a great dust till the Emperour to avoid scandall which for the most part arises out of publick conferences was pleased to hear Eutychius and Gregory dispute this point privately before himself and a small company And that upon conference the Emperour was so well satisfyed that hee commanded Eutychius his books to bee burnt That after this both Gregory and Eutychius fell sicke but Eutychius dyed and dyed with this protestation In hâc carne in this flesh taking up the flesh of his hand in the presence of them that were there in this flesh I acknowledge that I and all men shall arise at the day of Judgement Now the principall place of Scripture which in his book and in that conference Eutychius stood upon was this Text these words of Saint Paul This I say brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdome of God And the directest answer that Gregory gave to it was Caro secundum culpam non regnabit sed Caro secundum naturam sinfull flesh shall not but naturall flesh that is flesh indued with all qualities of flesh all such qualities as imply no defect no corruption for there was flesh before there was sin such flesh and such blood shall inherit the Kingdome of God As there have been more Heresies about the Humanity of Christ then about his Divinity so there have been more heresies about the Resurrection of his body and consequently of ours then about any other particular article that concerns his Humiliation or Exaltation Simon Magus strook deepest at first to the root That there was no Resurrection at all The Gnosticks who took their name from knowledge as though they knew all and no body else any thing which is a pride transferr'd through all Heretickes for as that sect in the Roman Church which call themselves Ignorantes and seem to pretend to no knowledge doe yet believe that they know a better way to heaven then all other men doe so that sect amongst them which called themselves Nullanos Nothings thought themselves greater in the Kingdome of God then either of the other two sects of diminution the Minorits or the Minims did These Gnosticks acknowledged a Resurrection but they said it was of the soul onely and not of the body for they thought that the soul lay dead at least in a dead sleep till the Resurrection Those Heretickes that are called the Arabians did as the Gnosticks did affirm a temporary death of the soul as well as of the body but then they allowed a Resurrection to both soul and body after that death which the Gnostickes did not but to the soul onely Hymeneus and Philetus of whom Saint Paul speakes they restrained the Resurrection to the soule but then they restrained this Resurrection of the soule to this life and that in those who were baptized the Resurrection was accomplished already Eutychius whom wee mentioned before enlarged the Resurrection to the body as well as to the soul but enlarged the qualities of the body so far as that it was scarce a body The Armenian hereticks said that it was not onely Corpus hum●num but Corpus masculinum That all should rise in the perfecter sex and none as women Origen allowed a Resurrection and allowed the Body to be a naturall body but the contracted the time he said that when we rose we should enjoy the benefits of the resurrection even in bodily pleasures for a thousand years and then be annihilated or absorpted and swallowed up into the nature and essence of God himselfe for it will be hard to state Origens opinion in this point Origen was not herein well understood in his owne time not doe we understand him now for the most part but by his accusers and those that have written against him Divers of these Heretiques for the maintenance of their severall heresies perverted this Scripture Flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God and that occasioned those Fathers who opposed those heresies so diverse from one another to interpret these words diversly according to the heresie they opposed All agree that they are an argument for the resurrection though they seem at first to oppose it For this Chapter hath three generall parts first Resurrectionem esse that there shall be a Resurrection which the Apostle proves by many and various arguments to the thirty fifth verse And then Quati corpore the body shall rise but some will say How are the dead raised and with what body doe they come in that thirty fifth verse And lastly Quid de superstitibus what shall become of them who shall be found alive at the day We shall all be changed verse fifty one Now this text is the knot and corollary or all the second part concerning the qualities of the bodies in the resurrection Now says the Apostle now that I have said enough to prove that a resurrection there is now now that I have said enough what kind of bodies shall arise now I show you as much in the Negative as I have done in the Affirmative now I teach you what to avoid as well as I have done what to affect now this I say brethren that flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God Now though those words be primarily principally intended of the last Resurrection yet in a secondary respect they are appliable in themselves and very often applied by the ancients to the first Resurrection our resurrection in this life Tertullian hath intimated and presented both together elegantly when he says of God Nobis arrhabonem spiritus reliquit arrhabonem à nobis accepit God hath given us his earnest and a pawn from him upon earth in giving us the holy Ghost and he hath received our earnest and a pawn from us into heaven by receiving our nature in the body of Christ Jesus there Flesh and bloud when it is conformed to the flesh and bloud of Christ now glorified and made like his by our resurrectien may inherite the kingdome of God in heaven Yea flesh and bloud being conformed to Christ by the sanctification of the holy Ghost here in this world may inherit the kingdome of God here upon earth for God hath a
find him upon the consideration of the cause of all these distresses That it is from the Contemplation of the anger of God There is no soundnesse in my flesh because of thine Anger there wee shall finde a way offered to him that may if hee pursue it aright bring him to a Reparation to a Redintegration for if hee look upon the Anger of God in a right line it will shew him that as that Anger is the cause of his Calamities so his sinnes are the cause of that Anger May wee not piously apply that Proverbiall speech Corruptio optimi pessima that when good things take in another nature then their own they take it in the highest exaltation thus that when God who is all mercy growes angry he becomes all anger The Holy Ghost himselfe seemes to have given us leave to make that application when expressing God in the height of his anger hee calls God then in that anger a Dove wee read it the fiercenesse of an oppressour but Saint Hierome reads it The anger of a Dove And truly there is no other word then that in that tongue the word is Ionah that signifies a Dove and that word does signifie a Dove in many other places of Scripture And that Prophet which made his flight from God when hee sent him to Nineveh is called by that name Ionah a Dove And the Fathers of the Latine Church have read and interpreted it so of a Dove Some of them take Nebuchadnezzar to be this angry Dove because hee left his owne Dove-coat to feed abroad to prey upon them and some because the Dove was the Armes and Ensigne of the Assyrians from the time of Semiramis But the rest take this Dove to bee God himselfe and that the sinnes of men had put a Gall into a Dove Anger into God And then to what height that anger growes is expressed in the Prophet Hosea I will meet them says God when hee is pleased he says hee will wait for them as a Bear no longer a Dove as a Bear robbed of her whelpes sensible of his injuries and I will rent the caule of their hearts shiver them in peeces with a dispersion with a discerption And I will devour them as with a Lyon nothing shall re-unite them again But I will break them as a Potters vessell that cannot be made whole again Honour not the malice of thine enemy so much as to say thy misery comes from him Dishonour not the complexion of the times so much as to say thy misery comes from them justifie not the Deity of Fortune so much as to say thy misery comes from her Finde God pleased with thee and thou hast a hook in the nostrils of every Leviathan power cannot shake thee Thou hast a wood to cast into the waters of Marah the bitternesse of the times cannot hurt thee thou hast a Rock to dwell upon and the dream of a Fortunes wheel can not overturn thee But if the Lord be angry he needs no Trumpets to call in Armies if he doe but sibilare muscam hisse and whisper for the flye and the Bee there is nothing so little in his hand as cannot discomfort thee discomfit thee dissolve and powr-out attenuate and annihilate the very marrow of thy soul. Every thing is His and therefore every thing is Hee thy sicknesse is his sword and therefore it is Hee that strikes thee with it still turne upon that consideration the Lord is angry But then look that anger in the ●face take it in the right ●line as the Originall phrase in this text directs à facieirae Dei There is no soundnesse in my flesh from the face of thine anger As there is a Manifestation of Gods anger in this phrase The face of Gods anger so there is a Multiplication a plurality too for it is indeed Mippenei à faciebus the faces the divers manifestations of Gods anger for the face of God and so of every thing proceeding from God is that by which God or that work of God is manifested to us And therefore since God manifests his anger so many usefull and medicinall ways unto thee take heed of looking upon his anger where his anger hath no face no manifestation take heed of imagining an anger in God amounting to thy Damnation in any such Decree as that God should be angry with thee in that height without looking upon thy sinnes or without any declaration why hee is angry Hee opens his face to thee in his Law he manifests himself to thee in the Conditions by which he hath made thy salvation possible and till he see thee in the transgression of them he is not angry And when he is angry so be glad he shews it in his face in his outward declarations that fire smothered would consume all Gods anger reserved till the last day will last as long as that day as that undeterminable day for ever When should we goe about to quench that fire that never bursts out or to seek reconciliation before a hostility be declared Therefore Saint Bernard begs this anger at Gods hands Irascaris mihi Domine O Lord be angry with me And therefore David thanks God in the behalf of that people for his anger Thou forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions The fires of hell in their place in hell have no light But any degrees of the fires of Hell that can break out in this life have in Gods own purpose so much light as that through the darkest smother of obduration or desperation God would have us see him Therefore Saint Hierome makes this milder use of this phrase that God shewes faciem irae but non iram that his face of anger is rather a telling us that hee will bee angry then that hee is angry yet the corrections that God inflicts to reduce us if wee profit not by them were anger Ab initio wee shall suffer for the sinnes from which those corrections should have reduced us and for that particular sinne of not being reduced by them but if they have their effect there was not a drop of gall there was not a dramme of anger in the anger Now that that God intends in them is that as wee apprehend our calamities to proceed from Gods anger and to discharge Destiny and Fortune so wee apprehend that anger to proceed from our own sinnes and so discharge God himselfe There is no rest in my bones because of my sin As we are the sons of Dust worse the sonnes of Death we must say to Corruption Thou art my Father and to the worm Thou art my Mother so we may say to the anger of God it is our grandfather that begot these miseries but wee must say too to our sinne Thou art my great-grandfather that begot Gods anger upon us and here is our wofull pedegree howsoever wee be otherwise descended 'T is true there is no soundnesse there is misery enough
are nearest and clearest glasses for thee to see thy self in and such is this glasse which God hath proposed to thee in this house And therefore change the word of the Text in a letter or two from Egredimini to Ingredimini never go forth to see but Go in and see a Solomon crowned with his mothers crown c. And when you shall find that hand that had signed to one of you a Patent for Title to another for Pension to another for Pardon to another for Dispensation Dead That hand that settled Possessions by his Seale in the Keeper and rectified Honours by the sword in his Marshall and distributed relief to the Poore in his Almoner and Health to the Diseased by his immediate Touch Dead That Hand that ballanced his own three Kingdomes so equally as that none of them complained of one another nor of him and carried the Keyes of all the Christian world and locked up and let out Armies in their due season Dead how poore how faint how pale how momentany how transitory how empty how frivolous how Dead things must you necessarily thinke Titles and Possessions and Favours and all when you see that Hand which was the hand of Destinie of Christian Destinie of the Almighty God lie dead It was not so hard a hand when we touched it last nor so cold a hand when we kissed it last That hand which was wont to wipe all teares from all our eyes doth now but presse and squeaze us as so many spunges filled one with one another with another cause of teares Teares that can have no other banke to bound them but the declared and manifested will of God For till our teares flow to that Heighth that they might be called a murmuring against the declared will of God it is against our Allegiance it is Disloyaltie to give our teares any stop any termination any measure It was a great part of Annaes prayse That she departed not from the Temple day nor night visit Gods Temple often in the day meet him in his owne House and depart not from his Temples The dead bodies of his Saints are his Temples still even at midnight at midnight remember them who resolve into dust and make them thy glasses to see thy self in Looke now especially upon him whom God hath presented to thee now and with as much cheerfulnesse as ever thou heardst him say Remember my Favours or remember my Commandements heare him say now with the wise man Remember my Iudgement for thine also shall be so yesterday for me and to day for thee He doth not say to morrow but to Day for thee Looke upon him as a beame of that Sunne as an abridgement of that Solomon in the Text for every Christian truely reconciled to God and signed with his hand in the Absolution and sealed with his bloud in the Sacrament and this was his case is a beame and an abridgement of Christ himselfe Behold him therefore Crowned with the Crown that his Mother gives him His Mother The Earth In an●ient times when they used to reward Souldiers with particular kinds of Crowns there was a great dignity in Corona graminea in a Crown of Grasse That denoted a Conquest or a Defence of that land He that hath but Coronam Gramineam a turfe of grasse in a Church yard hath a Crown from his Mother and even in that buriall taketh seisure of the Resurrection as by a turfe of grasse men give seisure of land He is crowned in the day of his Marriage for though it be a day of Divorce of us from him and of Divorce of his body from his soul yet neither of these Divorces breake the Marriage His soule is married to him that made it and his body and soul shall meet again and all we both then in that Glory where we shall acknowledge that there is no way to this Marriage but this Divorce nor to Life but by Death And lastly he is Crowned in the day of the gladnesse of his heart He leaveth that heart which was accustomed to the halfe joyes of the earth in the earth and he hath enlarged his heart to a greater capacity of Joy and Glory and God hath filled it according to that new capacity And therefore to end all with the Apostles words I would not have you to be ignorant Brethren concerning them which are asleepe that ye sorrow not as others that have no hope for if ye beleeve that Iesus died and rose again even so them also which sleepe in him will God bring with him But when you have performed this Ingredimini that you have gone in and mourned upon him and performed the Egredimini you have gone forth and laid his Sacred body in Consecrated Dust and come then to another Egredimini to a going forth in many severall wayes some to the service of their new Master and some to the enjoying of their Fortunes conferred by their old some to the raising of new Hopes ● some to the burying of old and all some to new and busie endeavours in Court some to contented retirings in the Countrey let none of us goe so farre from him or from one another in any of our wayes but that all we that have served him may meet once a day the first time we see the Sunne in the eares of almighty God with humble and hearty prayer that he will be pleased to hasten that day in which it shall be an addition even to the joy of that place as perfect as it is and as infinite as it is to see that face againe and to see those eyes open there which we have seen closed here Amen SERMON XXXIIII LUKE ●●●● Father forgive them for they know not what they do THe word of God is either the co-eternall and co-essentiall Sonne our Saviour which tooke flesh Verbum Caro factum est or it is the spirit of his mouth by which we live and not by bread onely And so in a large acceptation every truth is the word of God for truth is uniforme and irrepugnant and indivisible as God Omne verum est omni vero consentiens More strictly the word of God is that which God hath uttered either in writing as twice in the Tables to Moses or by ministery of Angels or Prophets in words or by the unborne in action as in Iohn Baptists exultation within his mother or by new-borne from the mouths of babes and sucklings or by things unreasonable as in Balaams Asse or insensible as in the whole booke of such creatures The heavens declare the glory of God c. But nothing is more properly the word of God to us then that which God himself speakes in those Organs and Instruments which himself hath assumed for his chiefest worke our redemption For in creation God spoke but in redemption he did and more he suffered And of that kinde are these words God in his chosen man-hood saith Father forgive them for they know not what they do
are circumcised with them which are not circumcised If we circumcise in part leave some sinnes and cleave to others we shall be in the sight of God altogether uncircumcised Adam was not the lesse naked in Gods sight for his Figge-leafe halfe-repentances are no repentances either we are in a privation or in a habit covered over with righteousnesse or naked When therefore the Lord and his Spirit cals thee to this spirituall Circumcision remember that Abraham did not say when he was call'd Lord I have followed thy voyce in leaving my Country Lord I have built thee an Altar what needs more demonstration of my obedience Say not thou Lord I have built an Hospitall Lord I have fed the poore at Christmas Lord I have made peace amongst thy people at home I have endowed an Almes-house but persevere in doing good still for God takes not the Tree where it growes but where it fals for the most part the death of a man is such as his life was but certainly the life of a man that is his everlasting life is such as his death is Againe Abraham did not say of this that it was a Commandement in a flight and frivolous and uncivill matter doe not thou say that it is an impertinent thing in this spirituall Circumcision to watch thy eating and drinking and all such indifferent actions and to see that all they be done to the glory of God for as the Apostle saies That the foolishnesse of God is wiser then the wisdome of man so we may piously say that the levity of God is graver then the gravity of all the Philosophers and Doctors of the world as we may see in all his Ceremontall Lawes where the matter seemes very light in many places but yet the signification very important and therefore apply this Circumcision even in thy least and most familiar action So also Abraham was not diverted from obeying God by the inconvenience of having all his family diseas'd at once he did not say I am content to circumcise my Sonne but would spare my Servants yet for necessary uses doe not thou say thou art content to circumcise thine eldest Sonne to abate somewhat of that sinne which thou beganst with in thy youth but wouldst faine spare some serviceable and profitable sinnes for a time and circumcise them hereafter To pursue this example Abraham did not say Cras Domine Lord I will doe all this to morrow but as the Commandement was given in that phrase of expedition Circumcidendo circumcides In Circumcising thou shalt circumcise which denoted a diligent and a present dispatch so Abraham did dispatch it diligently and presently that day Doe not thou say Cras Domine to morrow some other day in the day of mine age or of my Death or of affliction and tribulation I will circumcise all for age and sicknesse and t●ibulations are Circumcisions of themselves a Feaver circumcises thee then or an Apoplexy and not thy Devotion and incapacity of sinning is not sanctification If any man put off his Repentance till death Fateor non negamus quod petit saies Saint Augustine I dare not deny that man whatsoever God may be pleased to grant him Sed non presumimus quod bene erit I dare not presume to say that that man died well Non presumo non vas fallo non presumo saies that Father with some vehemency I dare not warrant him let me not deceive you with saying that I dare for I dare not And Beloved that is but a suspicious state in any man in which another Christian hath just reason to doubt of his salvation as Saint Augustine doth shrewdly doubt of these late Repenters Sicut ejus damnatio inoerta it a remissio dubia As I am not sure he is damned so I am not sure he is saved no more sure of one then of the other It is true we have the example of the Crucified Thiefe but it is but a hard case when a Thiefe must guide us and be our Example we suspect wills that are made of temporall goods in that state at the last gaspe and shall we think a Man to be compos mentis of a perfect understanding for the bequeathing of his Soule at his last gaspe non presumo non nos fallo non presumo I should deceive you if I should say it I dare not say it sayes that Father Come therefore to this Circumcision betimes come to it this Day come this Minute This Day thy Savior was Circumcised in the flesh for thee this Day Circumcise thy heart to him and all thy senses and all thy affections It is not an utter destroying of thy senses and of thy affections that is enjoyned thee but as when a Man had taken a beautifull Woman captive in the warres he was not bound to kill her but he must shave her head and pare her nailes and change her garments before he might marry her so captivate subdue change thy affections and that 's the Destruction which makes up this Circumcision change thy choler into Zeale change thy amorousnesse into devotion change thy wastfulnesse into Almes to the poore and then thou hast circumcised thy affections and mayest retaine them and mayest confidently say with the Apostle we are the Circumcision which worship God in the spirit and rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh Doe this to day as God this day gives thee a New yeare and hath not surpriz'd thee nor taken thee away in the sinnes of last yeare as he gives thee a new yeare doe thou give him a New-years-gift Cor novum a new and a Circumcised heart and Canticum novum a new Song a delight to magnifie his name and speak of his glory and declare his wondrous works to the Sonnes of men and be assured that whether I or any other of the same Ministry shall speake to you from this place this day twelve month and shall aske your consciences then whether those things which you heard now have brought you to this Circumcision and made you better this yeare than you were the last and find you under the same uncircumcision still be assured that God will not God cannot be mocked but as he wil receive us with an Euge bone serve Well done my good and faithfull Servant so he will say to you Perditio tua ex te Your destruction is from your selves Enough hath been done for you by me enough hath been said to you by my Servants Quare moriemini Why will you die ô house of Israel And after a long despising of his graces he will come to a finall separation you shall come to say Nolumus hunc regnare we will not have Christ Jesus to reigne over us and Christ Jesus shall come to say Nescio vos I know you not nor whence you are Hodie si vocem ejus If you wil heare his voice this day Hodie eritis This day you shall be with him in Paradise and dwell in
it all the yeare and all the yeares of an Everlasting life and of infinite generations Amen SERMON L. A Sermon Preached in Saint Dunstans 1 THES 5. 16. Rejoyce evermore WE reade in the naturall Story of some floating Islands that swim and move from place to place and in them a Man may sowe in one place and reape in another This case is so farre ours as that in another place we have sowed in teares and by his promise in whose teares we sowed then when we handled those two words Iesus wept we shall reape in Joy That harvest is not yet it is reserved to the last Resurrection But the Corne is above ground in the Resurrection of our head the first fruits of the Dead Christ Jesus and that being the first visible steppe of his exaltation begins our exultation who in him are to rejoyce evermore The heart knoweth his owne bitternesse he and none but he others feele it not retaine it not pity it not and therefore saies the Text A Stranger doth not intermeddle with his joy He shall have a Joy which no stranger not he himselfe whilest he was a stranger to God and to himselfe could conceive If we aske as Christs Disciples asked of him Quod signum what shall be the signe of thy comming of this Joy in the midst of thy bitternesse Ipsae lachrymae laetitiae testes nuncii The tears themselves shall be the sign the tears shall be Ambassadours of Joy a present gladnesse shall consecrate your sorrow and teares shall baptize and give a new name to your passion for your Wormwood shall be Manna even then when it is Wormwood it shall be Manna for Ga●debitis semper you shall Rejoyce evermore But our Text does more then imply a promise to us for it laies a precept upon us It is not Gaudebitis you shall Rejoyce by way of Comfort but it is Gaudete Rejoyce see that you doe Rejoyce by way of Commandement and that shall be our first part Cadit sub praecepto It hath the nature of a commandement Angels passe not from extreame to extreame but by the way betweene Man passes not from the miseries of this life to the joyes of Heaven but by joy in this life too for he that feeles no joy here shall finde none hereafter And when we passe from the substance of the precept to the extent thereof which will be our second part from the first word Rejoyce to the other Rejoyce alwaies we shall cleave that into two periods Gaudete in bonis Rejoyce in your prosperitie and Gaudete in malis Rejoyce in your adversitie too But because it is in sempiternum that must be in sempiterno because it is alway it must be in him who is alwaies yesterday and to day and the same for ever Joy in God Joy in the Holy Ghost which will be another branch in that second part of which Joy though there be a preparatory and inchoative participation and possession in this life yet the consummation being reserved to our entrance into our Masters Joy not onely the Joy which he gives that 's here but the Joy which he is that 's onely there we shall end in that beyond which none can goe no not in his thoughts in some dimme contemplation and in some faint representation of the Joyes of Heaven and in that Contemplation we shall dismisse you First then it is presented in the nature of a Commandement and laies an Obligation upon all at all times to procure to our selves and to cherish in our selves this Joy this Rejoycing What is Joy Comparatur ad desiderium sic ut quies admotum As Rest in the end of motion every thing moves therefore that it may rest so Joy is the end of our desires whatsoever we place our desires our affections upon it is therefore that we may enjoy it and therefore Quod est in brutis in parte sensitiva Delectatio in hominibus in parte intellectiva est gaudium Beasts and carnall men who determine all their desires in the sensuall parts come no farther then to a delight but men who are truly men and carry them to the intellectuall part they and onely they come to Joy And therefore saies Solomon It is the joy of the just to doe judgment to have lyen still and done no wrong occasions is not this Joy Joy is not such a Rest as the Rest of the Earth that never mov'd but as the Sunne rejoyceth to runne his race and his circuit is unto the end of heaven so this Joy is the rest and testimony of a good conscience that we have done those things which belong to our calling that we have mov'd in our Sphere For if men of our profession whose Function it is to attend the service of God delight our selves in having gathered much in this world if a Souldier shall have delighted himselfe in giving rules of Agriculture or a Architecture if a Counsellour of State who should assist with his counsell upon present emergencies delight himself in writing Books of good counsell for posterity all this occasions not this joy because though there have been motion and though there be Rest yet that is not Rest after the Motion proper to them A Man that hath been out of his way all the day may be glad to find a good Inne at night but yet 't is not properly Joy because he is never the neerer home Joy is peace for having done that which we ought to have done And therefore it is well expressed Optima conjectura an homo sit in gratia est gaudere The best evidence that a Man is at peace and in favour with God is that he can rejoyce To trie whether I be able by Argument and disputation to prove all that I believe or to convince the Adversary this is Academia animae the soules University where some are Graduats and all are not To trie whether I be able to endure Martyrdome for my beliefe this is Gehenna animae the rack the torture of the Soule and some are able to hold it out and all are not But to trie whether I can rejoyce in the peace which I have with God this is but Catechismus animae the Catechisme of the Soule and every Man may examine him selfe and every Man must for it is a Commandement Gaudete semper Rejoyce evermore It is we cannot say the Office but the Essence of God to doe good and when he does that he is said to rejoyce The Lord thy God will make thee plenteous there is his goodnesse and he will Rejoyce again over thee for good as he rejoyced over thy Fathers The Lord will love thee there is his goodnesse and rejoyce in thee and he will rest in his love Such a joy as is a rest a complacency in that good which he hath done we see is placed in God himselfe It is in Angels too Their office is to minister to Men for