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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A03497 Three sermons vpon the Passion, Resurrection and Ascension of Our Sauior preached at Oxford, by Barten Holyday, now archdeacon of Oxford. Holyday, Barten, 1593-1661. 1626 (1626) STC 13619; ESTC S104172 41,348 128

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it is day in steed of seeing to correct their judgement made by night they confirme it leading our Sauiour from this Cleargy-censure to the Secular execution When behold the mercy of treason Iudas has a minde to bee godly and seeing his master condemned by Caiaphas he is with a swifter judgement condemned by conscience Now hee repents him of his bargaine and as if hee could as easily haue beene rid of his guilt as of his hire he brings backe the money that would not be put to vse and though it were fearefully refused in the presence and Temple of God hee throwes it downe flying from it as the Priests would haue done from death and indeed it was the wages of sinne His sinne now does acknowledge it selfe and our Sauiour's innocency This loyall Traytour betrayes his treason And would you not thinke that now againe hee hath almost vn-Iudas'd himselfe shall not Iudas also now againe bee among the Apostles Does he not seeme practised in the order of repentance He grieues he confesses he restores O would hee stay heere but Loe hee departs from the temple the God of the temple he departs and hangs himselfe He that is couetous fals into temptation and the halter of the Deuill Hee hangs himselfe and breakes asunder What could you looke for lesse but that the Dragon should breake with the pitch-ball You may remember he conceiued a sop and now behold hee brings forth a Deuill and thus by the riddle of damnation hee is both the childe and parent of the Deuill Hee breakes asunder and is deliuered of his bowels It was the wit of justice hee should lose his bowels that had lost his compassion But since Iudas hath left vs let vs leaue him and from this spectacle of justice got see our Sauiour the spectacle of injustice trauelling from Caiaphas to Pilate and from Pilate to Herod This was a Iew of a delicate Atheisme who in a reprobate joy and phansie had a most intentiue desire to see a fine miracle or two But his impietie was seuerely deluded by the silence of our Sauiour which changing the tyrants curiositie into scorne he returnes him to Pilate clad in a garment of ridiculous honour and simplicitie But Pilate desirous to free him not so much by the mercy as the custome of the Iewes proposes to the easie choice of their pardon Iesus and Barabbas a murtherer and whiles they are heere at their deliberation as he on the judgement-seate behold his loue is increased by feare His wife prompted to compassion not by a bribe but by a dreame sends to her husband to warne rather then request him to desist from judgement the trouble of a vision hauing frightned and instructed her and sure this was the best counsaile shee ere tooke of her pillow But the people possessed with the Priests demand Barabbas which was an impious yet a fit request for could there bee an apt●r fellowship then of a murtherer with murtherers As for Iesus as if they would crucifie him twice they twice cry-out Crucifie him Crucifie him Is now the voice of the people the voice of God Sure we are that the voice of this people is the voice of their Priests by whom Pilate being conquered yeelds-vp our Sauiour vnto souldiers who multiply scourges vpon him as they doe sinnes and plagues vpon themselues as if their madnesse would whip his diuinitie out of him making it ashamed to stay in so torne a carcasse But O you Souldiers how shall you wish that a happy palsie had made faint your hands And O thou Lord of glory how hath thy mercy wooed thy God-head vnto this ignominious patience O Lord of mercy we are scarce more saued by the power of thy mercy then confounded with the wonder of it the condemnation of a world being a cheaper losse then the least effusion of thy redeeming bloud Yet the mercilesse souldiers beyond this crueltie scornfully clothe him with a Purple Robe though their crueltie in this had preuented their scorne his innocent bloud clothing him with a nobler purple But now because in the art of crucifying they had no separated torment for the head by the increase of inuētion they inlarge their science of murder fixing on his head a crowne of thornes and thus as if he had a distinct soule in euery part they distinctly murder euery part And is not now the Lilly verily among the thornes This tender head of our beloued encōpassed with the affliction of a crowne A crowne neither of gold nor Roses Neither of honour nor pleasure Behold a goodly fruit The Lord planted a Vineyard and when he comes to gather grapes he receiues thornes They abuse his hand with a scepter of reede his hand the power whereof was the scepter and that their mouthes might sinne more then in wordes they spit vpon him But their owne darke eyes had more need to be touched with our Sauiours purging spittle For had they seene what they had done they would not haue spit vpon the Lord of glory This affecting spectacle softens Pilate and by an errour of humanitie taking Iewes to be men and that their eyes peraduenture might mooue their hearts he presents him to them with this preface of compassion Behold the man But alas Pilate can any man behold this man Will not all eyes bee sooner blinded with gratefull teares Or how can they heere behold a man A man lost in his owne bloud Which striues as much to obscure his body as his body his God-head Yet the vnmooued Iewes with broad eyes of crueltie gaze vpon him And shall wee yet thinke Deuealion's people a fable Sure these children were raised vnto Abraham from stones And now they are so readie to crucifie Christ that they are ready also to condemne Pilate not fearing to pronounce him a hypotheticall Traytour if hee does not crucifie Christ Wherefore through the conquest and policie of ambition he thinkes at once to satisfie the Iewes and God so to secure his estate and conscience In the presence of the people hee takes water and washes his hands protesting himselfe innocent from this innocent bloud Hee had need to rub hard that meanes to wash away guilt with so weake an element guilt neuer to be washed away but by the water of repentance and baptisme It was in his power as well as in his desire to haue set him free but he pronounces him innocent and punishes him he condemnes himselfe and crucifies Christ he deliuers 〈◊〉 beloued Barabbas to their pardon and Christ to their crosse which now he beares as afterward it beares him But in this trauaile toward mount Caluary his strength is lesse then the burden and needs must it be a heauie crosse which was laden with a world of sinnes Wherefore to hasten the execution not to ease our Sauiour they make one Simon carry the weight of the crosse our Sauiour yet carrying the weight of the sinnes Happy Simon now eases Christ of his burden but Christ hereafter will