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A00593 Clavis mystica a key opening divers difficult and mysterious texts of Holy Scripture; handled in seventy sermons, preached at solemn and most celebrious assemblies, upon speciall occasions, in England and France. By Daniel Featley, D.D. Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1636 (1636) STC 10730; ESTC S121363 1,100,105 949

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some pastours and eminent professours to sow his field in future times and propagate Religion to posterity These may and ought to flie in time of persecution provided first that they flie not when their conscience perswadeth them that their flight will be a great scandall to Religion and a discouragement to the weaker and they feele in themselves a great and earnest desire to glorifie God by striving for his truth unto bloud For being thus called by God and enabled and encouraged they must preferre Gods glory before their life and a crowne of martyrdome before any earthly condition 2. That they leave not the Church destitute For Christ giveth it for one of the characters of an hireling to y John 10.13 flie when hee seeth the Wolfe comming and looke to his owne safety taking little care what becommeth of his flocke 3. They must not use any indirect meanes to flye they may not betray Gods truth or their brethren to save their owne life he that saveth his life upon such termes shall lose it and he that loseth his life in Gods cause shall finde it You will say peradventure how may this be I answer as that which is lost in Alpheus after a certaine time is undoubtedly found againe in Arethusa so that which is lost on earth shall be found in Heaven Hee that loseth his life for Christs sake in this vale of teares shall finde it at the last day in the z Psal 16.11 river of pleasures springing at the right hand of God for evermore When the Starres set here they rise in the other hemisphere so when Confessours and Martyrs set here they rise in heaven and shall never set againe Therefore as Christ spake of Virginity wee may say of Martyrdome what he spake of the garland of white roses we may of the garland of red Qui potest capere capiat Hee that is able to receive it let him receive it he that is not able let him trace the footsteps of the woman here that fled Into the wildernesse Not by change of place saith a In Apoc. c. 12. Fugit non mutatione loci sed amissione status ornatus Pareus but change of state and condition I see no reason of such a restraint the Church may and sometimes doth flye two manner of wayes 1. Openly when being persecuted in one country shee posteth into another 2. Secretly when shee abideth where shee was but keepeth her selfe close and shunneth the eye of the world and worshippeth God in secret mourning for the abominations and publike prophanations of true Religion Thus then wee may expound the words the woman fled into the wildernesse that is she withdrew her selfe from publike view kept her exercises of Religion in private held her meetings in cryptis hidden places as vaults under ground b Heb. 11 38. They wandred in deserts mountaines and dens and caves of the earth dens and caves in the earth or if persecution raged above measure and without end removed from country to country and from city to wildernesse for safety By wildernesse some learned Expositors understand remote countries inhabited by Paynims and Gentiles where yet the fire of persecution is not kindled For say they though such places be never so well peopled yet they may be termed deserts because never manured by Gods husbandry never sown with the seed of the Word never set with plants of Paradise never watered with the dew of heavenly grace And if the Church had not removed into such wildernesses she had never visited us in England severed after a sort from the whole world Toto divisos Orbe Britannos But such hath beene Gods goodnesse to these Ilands that the woman in my text was carried with her c Ver. 14. And to the woman was given two wings of a great Eagle Eagles wings into these parts before the Roman Eagles were brought in here our Countrey submitted it selfe to the Crosse of Christ before it stooped to the Roman scepter Howbeit I take not this to be the meaning of this Scripture For the propagation of the Church and the extending her bounds to the remotest regions of the world maketh her catholike and by it she becommeth glorious whereas the Spirit speaketh here of her as in some eclipse The wildernesse therefore here meant must needes be some obscure place or region to which she fled to hide her selfe If you demand particularly when this prophecy was fulfilled I answer partly in those Hebrewes of whom St. Paul writeth that they lay in wildernesses and dennes and caves of the earth partly in those Disciples that were in Jerusalem in the time of the siege and a little before who mindfull of our Saviours commandement fled into the mountaines and were miraculously preserved in Pella as Eusebius writeth partly in those Christians who in the dayes of Maximinus and Dioclesian fled so farre that they never returned backe againe into any City but were the fathers of them that live in woods and desarts as Hermites or inclosed within foure walls as Recluses and Anchorites partly in those Orthodoxe beleevers who in the reigne of the Arrian Emperours tooke desarts and caves under ground for sanctuary of whom St. Hilarie writeth saying d L. adver Auxent Ecclesia potius delituit in cavernis quam in primariis Urbibus eminebat The Church rather lurked in holes and vaults under ground in those dayes than shewed her selfe openly in the chiefe Cities partly in those professours of the Gospell who ever since the man of sinne was revealed have beene by him put to great streights and driven to lie hid for many yeeres in solitary and obscure places in all which persecutions of the Church God prepared for her not only a place to lodge in but a table also that they should Feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Some referring this prophesie to the Jewes abode in Pella find the time to be precisely three yeeres and an halfe others by dayes understanding yeeres reckon from the declining age of Constantine till the great reformation in our age neere upon a thousand two hundred and threescore yeeres in all which time the true Church hath played least in sight and beene in a maner buried in oblivion But neither is this calculation exact neither as I conceive doth St. John speake of one flight onely nor of any particular place nor definite number of yeeres but after the manner of Prophets putteth a definite number for an indefinite and foresheweth that the true Church must for a long time lie hid and withdraw her selfe out of the worlds eye as it is afterwards exprest a time times and halfe a time a time under the heathen Emperours times under severall Heretikes and last of all halfe a time in that last and greatest tribulation immediately before the utter overthrow of Antichrist For that e Mat. 24.22 persecution shall be shortened as our Saviour intimateth for the Elects sake lest all flesh should
a threefold inconvenience of sinfull courses because they who pursue them reape no fruit from them sustaine much losse by them come to an evill end through them for the End The end is taken 1 Either physically 2 Or morally Either for the finall cause or for the finall effect Death is not the finall cause of sin but the finall effect for no man sinneth for death but dieth for sinne Others distinguish of ends which are 1 Intermediate as wealth honour or pleasure 2 Ultimate as happinesse Death say they is not the intermediate end but profit or delight but it is alwayes the ultimate end of sinne unrepented of A third sort make a difference betweene the end 1 Peccantis of the sinner that is the end which the sinner intendeth 2 Peccati of sinne that is the end to which sinne tendeth this distinction seemeth to mee coincident with the first Death say they is not the end of the sinner but of the sinne not the end which the sinner propoundeth to himselfe but the end which his sinne bringeth him unto Withall they acutely observe that the Apostle saith not the end of those men is death but the end Of those things By those things hee understandeth the state of the unregenerate or those sinnes which were rife among the Romanes and are reckoned up chap. 1. which may bee reduced to three heads 1 Impiety against God 2 Iniquity against their neighbours 3 Impurity against their owne body and soule yea and against nature also 1 Impiety with this hee brandeth them vers 21. 2 Iniquity with this hee chargeth them vers 29. 3 Impurity with this hee shameth them vers 24 27. Of those things the end is Death The second death say some for he that hath no part in the first resurrection hath his portion in the second death A double death saith Saint Ambrose à morte enim ad mortem transitur for a sinner from one death passeth to another Others more fully thus The end of those things is death 1 Of your estate by ruine of your fortunes 2 Of your good name by tainting your reputation 3 Of your body by separation from the soule 4 Of your soule by separation from God The most naturall interpretation and most agreeable to this place is That by continuing in a sinfull course all our life wee incurre the sentence penalty and torment of eternall death for that death is meant here which is opposed to eternall life Verse 23. which can bee no other than eternall Yea but is sinne in generall so strong a poyson that the least quantity of it bringeth death and that eternall are all sinnes mortall that is in their owne nature deserving eternall death It seemeth so for hee speaketh indefinitely and without any limitation and as before hee implyed all sinne to bee unfruitfull and shamefull so also now to bee deadly What fruit had ye in those things that is in any of those things whereof ye are now ashamed Now it is certain that the regenerate are ashamed of all sins therefore in like manner it followeth that the end of all sinnes is death For the Apostle here compareth the state of sinne and state of grace in generall and as hee exhorteth to all good workes so hee endevoureth to beat downe all sinne as unfruitfull shamefull and deadly See what will ensue hereupon first that there are no veniall sinnes secondly no pardons for them in purgatory thirdly no fee for pardons If all sinnes are mortall and which all Papists will they nill they must confesse no man is free from all sinne for t Jam. 3. ● in many things wee offend all saith Saint James and u 1 Joh. 1.10 if we say that we have no sin wee deceive our selves saith Saint John what will become of their Romish doctrines concerning the possibility of fulfilling the law the merit of congruity or condignity and works of supererogation Si nulla peccata venialia nulla venalia if no sinnes are veniall then no sale to bee made of sinnes no utterance of pardons no use of the Church treasury no gold to bee got by the Monks new found Alchymy Yee will say this is but a flourish let us therefore come to the sharpe Mitte hebetes gladios pugnetur acutis The speech of Cornelius Celsus the Physitian is much commended by Bodine Nec aegrotorum morbi nec languentium vulnera dicendi luminibus curantur Soft words cure no wounds wee may say more truely soft words give no wounds and therefore are not for this service of truth against errour and heresie up in armes against her * Hom. Il. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hector truely told Paris that his golden harpe and purfled haire and beautifull painting would stand him in no stead in the x Sen. ep 51. In primo deficit pulvere ille unctus et nitidus field it is not the wrought scabbard but the strong blade nor the bright colour but the sharpe edge of it that helpeth in danger and hurteth the enemy In which regard I hold it fittest to handle schoole points scholastically in tearmes rather significant than elegant and labour more for force of argument than ornaments of speech First then after their plaine method I will explicate the state of the question next meet with the adversaries objections and last of all produce arguments for the truth and make them good against all contrary cavils and frivolous exceptions Sins may bee tearmed veniall or mortall two manner of wayes 1 Either comparatè in comparison of others 2 Or simplicitèr simply and in themselves and that three manner of wayes Either 1 Ex naturâsuâ of their owne nature 2 Ex gratiâ by favour or indulgence 3 Ex eventu in the issue or event Wee deny not but that sinnes may bee tearmed veniall comparatè that is more veniall than others and if not deserving favour and pardon yet lesse deserving punishment than others Secondly veniall ex eventu or in the issue wee acknowledge all the sinnes of the Elect to bee and some sinnes of the Reprobate also or veniall ex gratiâ that is by Gods favour and clemency all the question is whether any sinne of the Elect or Reprobate bee veniall ex suâ naturâ that is such as in its owne nature deserveth not the punishment of death but either no punishment at all or at least temporary onely The reformed Churches generally resolve that all sinnes in their owne nature are mortall the y Bellar. de amis grat stat pec c. 9. Qui dixerit fatue reus erit gehennae ignis ex his tale conficitur argumentum manifestum convitium facit reum gehennae ignis non item subita iracundia c. Romanists will have very many to be veniall Their allegations are chiefly these the first out of Matthew 5.22 Whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment and whosoever shall say to his brother Racha shall bee in
accessary to the death of the Lord of life And not only those that committed high treason against the sacred person of the Lords Annointed and imbrued their hands and stained their consciences with that bloud which cleanseth us from all sinne 1 John 1.7 but also Nero and Domitian and Trajan and Antoninus and Severus and Maximinus and Decius and Valerianus and Dioclesianus and Maxentius and all other Emperours that employed their swords and Simon Magus and Cerinthus and Arrius and Nestorius and Manes and all other obstinate arch-Heretickes who employed their pens against him none have hitherto escaped the heavie judgement of God who have bid battell to the Christian Faith and have wilfully and of set malice given the Spouse of Christ the least wound or skarre either by a gash with their sword or a scratch with their pen. Bee wise now therefore O yee Kings Psal 2.10 11 12. bee instructed yee Judges of the earth Serve the Lord with feare and rejoyce with trembling Kisse the Sonne lest hee bee angry and yee perish from the way when his wrath is kindled but a little blessed are all they that put their trust in him Some Interpreters by Judgement understand the spirituall government of Christ which is managed in his Church with excellent wisedome and judgement and by Victory the prevalent power of grace in the faithfull wherby they are victorious in all temptations in such sort that though Sathan labour with all his might to blow out a poore sparke yet hee shall not be able to quench it and that the smallest degree of faith like a grain of mustard seed is stronger than the gates of hell and is able to remove mountaines of doubts and oppositions cast up by Sathan and our rebellious hearts between God and us And from hence they inforce the Apostles exhortation to all the souldiers of Christ to be strong in the Lord Ephes 6.10 and in the power of his might not to looke who are their enemies but who is our Captaine not what they threaten but what hee promiseth who hath taken upon him as to conquer for us so to conquer in us These are sweet and comfortable notes but as I conceive without the rule of this Text for questionlesse the Donec or Untill is not superfluous or to no purpose but hath reference to some future time when Christs mild proceedings shall be at a period and he shall take another course with his enemies such as I have before described in the particular judgement of the Jewish Nation and the generall judgement of the whole World But if Judgement and Victory bee taken in their sense there needed no untill to bee added For Christ even from the beginning of his preaching when he strived not nor cryed nor brake the bruised reed nor quenched the smoaking flaxe sent forth judgment unto victory according unto their interpretation that is wisely governed his Church and gave victory to the faithfull in their conflicts with sinne and Sathan That therefore the members of this sentence bee not co-incident and that the donec or untill may have his full force I conceive agreeably to the exposition of the ancient and the prime of the later Interpreters that in this clause Till hee bring forth judgement unto victory the Prophet determineth the limits of the time of grace Whosoever commeth In between the first and second comming of Christ shall be received into favour but after the gates of mercy shall bee locked up Yet our gracious Ahasuerus reacheth out his golden Scepter to all that have a hand of faith to lay hold on it but then he shall take his Iron mace or rod in his hand to bruise his enemies and breake them in pieces like a potters vessell I must sing therefore with holy David of Mercy and Judgement mercy in this life and judgement in the life to come mercy during the day of grace but judgement at the day of the Worlds doom For although sometimes God meets with the Reprobate in this life yet that judgement which they feele here may bee accounted mercy in comparison of that which shall be executed upon them hereafter without all mitigation of favour release of torments or limitation of time Now the vials drop on them but then they shall bee poured all out upon them Wherefore let us all like the bruised reed fall downe to the earth and humble our selves under the mighty hand of God Let us like smoaking flaxe send forth bitter fumes of sighes for our sinnes assuring our selves that now whilst the day of grace lasteth hee will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoaking flaxe but if we neglect this time of grace and deferre our repentance till he send forth judgement unto victory we shall smoake for it Cogitemus fratres de tempore in tempore ne pereamus cum tempore Let us thinke of time in time lest we perish with time Let us imagine that we now saw the Angel standing upon the sea Apoc. 10 5 6. and upon the earth and lifting up his hand to heaven and swearing by him that liveth for ever who created heaven and the earth and the sea and the things that are therein that there should be time no longer Jonas 2.8 O let us not forsake our owne mercy but to day if wee will heare his voice harden not our hearts but mollifie them by laying them asoake in teares Let us breake off our sinnes suddenly by repentance and our iniquities by almes-deeds Now is the seed-time let us now therefore sow the seeds of faith hope mercy meeknesse temperance patience and all other divine Vertues and we shall reape a plentifull harvest in heaven Cypr. ad Dom. Hic vita aut amittitur aut tenetur hic saluti aeternae cultu Dei fructu fidei providetur Galat. 6.8 For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption but hee that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life everlasting Which God of his infinite mercy grant that we may all do in heaven through the merits of his Sonne by the grace of the holy Spirit to whom c. THE TRAITORS GUERDON A Sermon preached on the Gowries conspiracy before his Grace and divers Lords and persons of eminent quality at Croydon August 5. Anno Dom. 1618. THE FIFTH SERMON PSAL. 63. VER 9 10 11. 9. But those that seeke my soule to destroy it shall goe into the lower parts of the earth 10. They shall make him run out like water by the hands of the sword they shall be a portion for Foxes 11. But the King shall rejoyce in God every one that sweareth by him shall glory but the mouth of them that speake lyes shall be stopped Most REVEREND Right Honr. Right Wor sh c. WEe are at this present assembled with religious Rites and sacred Ceremonies to celebrate the unfortunately fortunate Nones of August which are noted in red letters in the Romane Calendar as
affect the judicious eare which expresse more by expressing lesse the sentence being broken off in the midst to shew the force of violent passion which bereaveth us on the sudden both of sense and speech The Musicians also in their way tickle the eare by a like grace in musicke to that figure in speech by unexpected stops and rests making a kinde of Aposiopesis and harmonicall Ellipsis Surely as the broken joynts and maimed limbes of men uncovered much move us to compassion so the imperfect and maimed members of sentences uttered in anger or griefe are aptest both to signifie and to move passion Such is that broken speech of b 2 King 13.14 Joash the King concerning Elisha over whose face hee wept and said O my father my father the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof And that of c Psal 6.3 David My soule is sore troubled but thou O Lord how long And the like of our d Luke 19.42 Saviour If thou hast knowne even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong to thy peace And semblable thereunto is this in my text Shikethka Jisrael perdidit te or perditio tua it hath undone thee or thy ruine O Israel For those words ex te which we finde in many latine copies are added by the Translator to fill up the breach in the sentence in the Hebrew there is a verball Ellipsis or defect which expresseth a reall Ellipsis or utter failing of Israels strength and a figurative Ellipsis and seeming deficiency in God himselfe through a deepe taking to heart of Israels now most deplorate estate e Virg Aen. 2. ruit Ilium ingens Gloria Dardanidum The Crowne of Israel is fallen from his head and all his honour lyeth in the dust Israel after many grievous strokes and wounds received now bleeds at the heart and is a breathing out his last gaspe and the God of Israel by a Sympathy of griefe seemeth to lie speechlesse For his words faulter thy destruction Israel or it hath destroyed thee Israel is destroyed who hath destroyed Israel or why is Israel destroyed why is the cause and author of Israels woe concealed and the sentence left abrupt and imperfect f Tertul. adver Hermog c. 22. Adoro Scripturae plenitudinem Tertullian speaking of the perfection of Scripture saith I adore the fulnesse of the Scriptures in another sense yet true I may use the contrary attribute and say I adore the deficiencies and seeming vacuities in Scripture sentences where the roome left for words is anticipated by passion and filled up with sighs and grones Will you have the cause why God expresseth not the cause of Israels plagues Because he would not adde unto them Had he filled up the bracke in the contexture of the sentence it must have bin with these or the like words by the consent of Interpreters It is thy stubborne heart O Israel and thy open rebellion against mee it is thy stoning my Prophets and killing my messengers sent early and late unto thee it is thy spirituall fornication and Idolatrous worship of Jeroboams golden calfes that hath heretofore brought all thy miserie upon thee and now hath wrought thy finall overthrow But alas this had beene to mingle judgement with wormewood to kill them with a word whom he meant to smite with a sword It is enough for a Judge to pronounce the dreadfull sentence of death it is too much then to fall foule upon the prisoner with amplifications and bitter invectives Howbeit whether for these or better reasons best knowne to himselfe God doth not here particularly set down the author or cause of Israels woe yet in the other member of the sentence but in mee is thy helpe removing the cause from himselfe and professing that there had beene helpe in him for them but for some barre he giveth them to understand in generall what it was hee forbare to speake but they could not but conceive and wee must gather out this Scripture for our instruction that the cause of Israels overthrow and the ruine of all other Kingdomes is in their sinnes and from themselves As in musicke though each string hath a different sound by it selfe yet many of them strucke together make but one chord so the last translation which I follow and all the former which I have read though they much differ in words yet they accord in the sense by mee now delivered For whether wee reade as some doe Rex tuus thy King or as others Vitulus tuus thy calfe or as Calvin Aliquid praeter me something besides me hath destroyed thee or as St. Jerome doth Perditio tua ex te thy destruction is from thy selfe or as the Kings Translators render the Hebrew thou hast destroyed thy selfe the sentence is all one thy mischiefe is from thy selfe but all thy hope of help is from thy God Julian gave for his armes in his Scutchion an Eagle strucke through the heart with a flight shaft feathered out of her owne wing with this Motto propriis configimur alis our death flies to us with our owne feathers and our wings pierce us to the heart To apply this patterne to my text and leave the print thereof upon it to imprint the doctrine thereof deeper in your memories The Eagle strucke dead is the Church and Common-wealth of Israel the arrow is the swift judgement of God the feathers shed out of her owne wings which carried the arrow so swift and drave the head of it in so deepe are Israels sinnes It is a lamentable thing to heare of the ruine and utter overthrow of any Kingdome how much more of the downefall of Israel Gods chosen people his chiefe treasure his only joy But that Israel should be Israels overthrow that Israel should be felo de se and accessarie to his owne death and utter confusion this must needs pricke the quickest veine in our hearts And these are the three points which by the assistance of Gods spirit I am first to cleare to your understanding and after to presse upon your religious affections 1. The accident to the subject Destruction 2. The subject of this accident Israel 3. The cause of this accident in this subject Thou or thy sinnes thou by thy sinnes hast destroyed thy selfe O Israel First of the privative accident destruction Destruction is opposed to construction as corruption to generation and as that is the death and dissolution of all naturall bodies so this of all artificiall I except not such as are purposely made to preserve corpses from corruption and putrefaction as coffins of lead and sepulchres of Marble For these also in time corrupt and moulter away Sunt ipsis quo que fata sepulchris Nay we may make this strong line of the Poet a little stronger ver 14. and say truly sunt ipsis quo que fatis fata death it selfe hath his dying day for my Prophet in this chapter threatneth g O death I will be
in Lambeth Chappell A.D. 1622. March 23. THE TENTH SERMON JOHN 20.22 And when hee had said this hee breathed on them and saith unto them receive yee the holy Ghost Most Reverend Right Honourable Right Reverend Right Worshipfull c. A Diamond is not cut but by the point of a Diamond nor the sunne-beame discerned but by the light of the beame nor the understanding faculty of the soule apprehended but by the faculty of understanding nor can the receiving of the holy Ghost bee conceived or delivered without receiving in some a Aug tract 16. in Joh. Adsit ipse spiritus ut sic eloqui possimus degree that holiest Spirit b Ci● de mat Qui eloquentiam laudat debet illam ipsam adhibere quam l●●dat Hee that will blazon the armes of the Queen of affections Eloquence must borrow her own pencill and colours nor may any undertake to expound this text and declare the power of this gift here mentioned but by the gift of this power Wherefore as in the interpretation of other inspired Scriptures wee are humbly to intreat the assistance of the Inspirer so more especially in the explication and application of this which is not onely effectivè à spiritu but also objectivè de spiritu not onely indited and penned as all other by the spirit but also of the spirit This of all other is a most mysterious text which being rightly understood and pressed home will not only remove the weaker fence betweene us and the Greeke Church touching the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Sonne but also beat downe and demolish the strong and high partition wall betweene the reformed and the Romane Church built upon S. Peters supremacy For if Christ therefore used the Ceremony of breathing upon his Apostles with this forme of words Receive yee the Holy Ghost as it were of set purpose visibly to represent the proceeding of the holy Spirit from himselfe why should not the Greeke Church acknowledge with us the eternall emanation of the holy Ghost from the Sonne as well as the Father and acknowledging it joyne with us in the fellowship of the same spirit Our difference and contestation with the Church of Rome in point of S. Peters primacy is far greater I confesse For the head of all controversies between us and them is the controversie concerning the head of the Church Yet even this how involved soever they make it may be resolved by this text alone For if Christ sent all his Apostles as his Father sent him if he breathed indifferently upon all if he gave his spirit and with it full power of remittting and retaining sinnes to them all then is there no ground here for S. Peters jurisdiction over the rest much lesse the Popes and if none here none elsewhere as the sequell will shew For howsoever Cajetan and Hart and some few Papists by jingling Saint Peters c Mat. 16.19 Keyes and distinguishing of a key 1 Of knowledge 2 Of power and this 1 Of order 2 Of jurisdiction and that 1 In foro exteriori the outward court 2 Foro interiori the inward court of conscience goe about to confound the harmony of the Evangelists who set all the same tune but to a different key yet this is confessed on all sides by the Fathers Hilary Jerome Austine Anselme and by the Schoole-men Lumbard Aquinas Allensis and Scotus alledged by Cardinall d Bellar. de Rom. pont l. 1. c. 12. Bellarmine that what Christ promised to Peter e Mat. 16. he performed and made good to him here but here the whole f Hieronymus adver Lucifer Cuncti claves accipiunt super omnes ex aequô ecclesiae fortitudo solidatur bunch of keyes is offered to all the Apostles and all of them receive them all are joyned with S. Peter as well in the mission as my Father sent mee so I send you as in the Commission Lastly as this text containes a soveraigne Antidote against the infection of later heresies so also against the poyson of the more ancient and farther spread impieties of Arrius and Macedonius whereof the one denyed the divinity and eternity of the Sonne the other of the holy Ghost both whose damnable assertions are confuted by consequence from this text For if Christ by breathing giveth the holy Ghost and by giving the holy Ghost power of remitting sinne then must Christ needs bee God for who but God can give or send a divine person The holy Ghost also from hence is proved to be God for who can g Mar. 2.7 or Esay 43.25 forgive sinnes but God alone So much is our faith indebted to this Scripture yet our calling is much more for what can bee spoken more honourably of the sacred function of Bishops and Priests than that the investiture and admittance into it is the receiving of the holy Ghost * Primum in unoquoque genere est mensura regula caeterorum The first action in every kind of this nature is a president to all the rest as all the furniture of the Ceremoniall law was made according to the first patterne in the Mount such is this consecration in my text the originall and patterne of all other wherein these particulars invite your religious attention 1 The person consecrating Christ the chiefe Bishop of our soules 2 The persons consecrated The Apostles the prime Pastours of the Church 3 The holy action it selfe set forth 1 With a mysterious rite he breathed on them 2 A sanctified forme of words receive ye the holy Ghost 1 First for the person consecrating All Bishops are consecrated by him originally to whom they are consecrated all Priests are ordained by him to whom they are ordained Priests the power which they are to employ for him they receive from him to whom h Matth. 28.18 all power is given both in heaven and in earth By vertue of which deed of gift he maketh i Matth. 10.2 choice of his ministers and hee sendeth them with authority k J●h 20.21 as my Father sent me so I send you And hee furnisheth them with gifts saying receive yee the holy Ghost and enableth them with a double power of order to l Matth. 28.19 Teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 11.24 This do in the remembrance of me preach and administer both the sacraments and of jurisdiction also Matth. 18.18 Verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall bee bound in heaven and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven And that this sacred order is to continue in the Church and this spirituall power in this order even till Christ resigneth up his keyes and kingdome to God his Father S. Paul assureth us Eph. 4.10.11.12 Hee that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens that he might fill all things and he gave some
downe like a cord or finew and within a few months reacheth the ground which it no sooner toucheth than it taketh root and maketh it selfe a tree and that likewise another and that likewise a third and so forward till they over-runne the whole grove To draw nearer to you my Lord to bee consecrated and so to an end This scripture is part of the Gospell appointed for the Sunday after Easter knowne to the Latine Church by the name of Dominica in albis Which Lords day though in the slower motion of time in our Calendar is not yet come yet according to exact computation this Sunday is Dominica in albis and if you either respect the reverend presence Candidantium or Candidandi or the sacred order of Investiture now to be performed let your eyes be judges whether it may not truely be termed Dominica in albis a Sunday in whites The text it selfe as before in the retexture thereof I shewed is the prototypon or original of all consecrations properly so called For howsoever these words may bee used and are also in the ordination of Priests because they also receive the holy Ghost that is spirituall power and authority yet they receive it not so amply and fully nor without some limitation sith ordination and excommunication have bin ever appropriated and reserved to Bishops And it is to be noted that the Apostles long before this were sent by Christ to preach and baptize and therefore they were not now ordained Priests but consecrated Bishops as Saint c Greg. in Evan. Horum nunc in ecclesiâ Episcopi locum tenent qui gradum regiminis sortiuntur grandis honor sed grave pondus est istius honoris Gregory saith expressely in his illustration of these words Receive the holy Ghost whose sinnes yee remit c. Now Bishops who fit at the sterne of the Church hold the place of those to whom Christ gave here the ghostly power of forgiving sinnes a great honour indeed but a great charge withall and a heavie burden so ponderous in Saint Barnards judgement that it needs the shoulders of an Angell to beare it The Apostles had made good proofe of their faithfulnesse in the ministry of the Word and Sacraments before Christ lifted them up to this higher staire as likewise the venerable Personage now to bee taken up into that ranke hath done For more than thirty yeeres hee hath shined as a starre in the firmament of our Church and now by the primus motor in our heaven is designed to bee an Angell or to speake in the phrase of the Peripatetickes an Intelligence to guide the motion of one of our Spheres Which though it be one of the least his Episcopall dignity is no whit diminished thereby In Saint d Hiero. ad Evag Omnis Episcopus sive Romae sive Eugubii aequalis est meriti Hieromes account every Bishop be his Diocesse great or small is equally a Bishop Episcopatus non suscipit magis minus one Bishop may be richer than another or learneder but hee cannot bee more a Bishop Therefore howsoever e Basil epist 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazianzen tooke it unkindly at Saint Basils hands after hee was advanced to the Metropolitical See of Cappadocia and had many good Bishopricks in his gift that he put him upon one of the meanest being ill situated and of small revenue telling him flatly that he gained nothing by his friendship but this lesson not to trust a friend yet it never troubled great Austine that obscure Aurelius worked himselfe into the great and famous Archbishopricke of Carthage whilest this eminent light of the Church stucke all his life at poore Hippo for hee well remembred the words of our Lord and Master f Matth. 25.21 Be thou faithfull in a little and I will set thee over much Suffer I beseech you a word of exhortation and but a word Be faithfull to your Master seeke not your owne but the things that are Jesus Christs It is not sufficient in Nazianzens judgement for a Bishop not to be soyled with the dust of covetousnesse or any other vice g Nazian orat 1 de fuga in pont Privati quidem hominis vitium esse existimet turpia supplicioque digna perpetrare praefecti autem vel antistitis non quam optimum esse he must shine in vertue and if hee bee not much better than other men h Idem orat 20. Antistes improbitatis notam effugere non potest nisi multum antecellat hee is no good Bishop Wherefore as it was said at the creation of the Romane Consul praesta nomen tuum thou art made Consul make good thy name consule reipublicae So give mee leave in this day of your consecration to use a like forme of words to you my Lord Elect Episcopus es praesta nomen tuum you are now to be made a Bishop an Overseer of the Lords flocke make good your name looke over your whole Diocesse observe not onely the sheepe but the Pastors not only those that are lyable to your authority jurisdiction but those also who execute it under you Have an eye to your eyes and hold a strict hand over your hands I meane your officials collectors and receivers and if your eye cause you to offend plucke it out and if your hand cut it off Let it never bee said by any of your Diocesse that they are the better in health for your not visiting them as the i Eras apoth Eò melius habeo quod te medico non utor Lacedemonian Pausanias answered an unskilfull Physician that asked him how hee did the better quoth he because I take none of your Physick Imprint these words alwayes in your heart which give you your indeleble character consider whose spirit you receive by imposition of hands and the Lord give you right understanding in all things it is the spirit of Jesus Christ he breathed and said receive the holy Spirit This spirit of Jesus Christ is 1 The spirit of zeale Joh. 2.17 Bee you not cold in Gods cause whip out buyers and sellers out of the Church 2 The spirit of discretion Joh. 10.14 I am the good shepheard and know my sheepe and am knowne of them Know them well whom you trust with the mysteries of salvation to whom you commit those soules which God hath purchased with his owne blood lay not hands rashly upon any for if the k Matth. 6.23 light be darkenesse how great will the darkenesse be If in giving holy orders and imposition of hands there be a confusion hand over head how great will the confusion be in the Church 3 The spirit of meeknesse Matth. 11.29 Learne of me that I am meek breake not a bruised reede nor quench the smoaking flaxe sis bonus O foelixque tuis be good especially to those of your own calling Take not l Histor Aug. in Aureliano Aurelian for your patterne whose souldiers more feared him than the enemy
grant at the suite and for the merit of Jesus Christ and him crucified to whom with the Father and blessed Spirit bee rendered all glory praise and thanksgiving now and for ever Amen THE TREE OF LIFE SPRINGING OUT OF THE GRAVE OR Primitiae Sepulchri A Spitall Sermon preached on Munday in Easter weeke April 22. THE THIRTEENTH SERMON 1 COR. 15.20 But now Christ is risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that slept Right Honourable c. Plin. in panegyr Aegyptus gloriata est se nihil imbribus coeloque debere Siquidem proprio semper amne perfusa tantis segetibus induebatur ut cum feracissimis terris quasi nunquam cessura certaret PLiny the younger writeth of Egypt that she was wont to boast how shee owed nothing to the clouds or any forreine streames for her fertility being abundantly watered by the sole inundation of her owne river Nylus A like or greater priviledge it must bee confessed this renowned City hath for a long time enjoyed in that she hath not beene indebted to any wandering clouds nor needeth shee to fetch the water of life from any forreine river or neighbour spring being richly stored by the overflowing industry and learning of her most able and painefull Preachers within her selfe filling not onely the lesser cisternes of private congregations but the greater also of these most celebrious and solemne assemblies And for mine owne part so let the life blasts of the spirit refresh me in the sweat of my holy labours and the dew of heavenly benediction fall upon your religious eares as I never sought this place nor am come hither to make ostentation of any so much as conceived gifts in mee nor to broach any new opinions of mine or any other nor to set before you any forbidden fruit though never so sweet and to a well conditioned stomacke wholesome nor to smooth or levell the uneven wayes of any who plow in the Lords field with an oxe and an asse much lesse to gaine vulgar applause or spring an hidden veyne of unknowne contribution by traducing the publicke proceedings in the State or Church but onely in obedience to the call of lawfull authority to build you in your most holy faith and elevate your devotion to the due celebration of this high feast of our Lords resurrection and by crying as loud as I am able to awake those that sleepe in sinfull security that they may stand up from the dead and Christ may give them and us all light of knowledge joy and comfort Which that I may bee enabled to performe I humbly entreat the concurrence of your patience with your prayers to God for his assistance in opening the scripture now read in your eares But now Christ is risen c. This is no sterill or barren text you heare of fruits in it and although the harvest thereof hath beene reaped by many Labourers before mee yet there remaine good gleanings for mee also and those that shall leaze after me even till the Angels shall thrust their sickle into the large field of the ripe world and reape the reapers themselves The fruit is of two sorts 1 Christs prerogative 2 The deceased Saints priviledge who in their degree participate with him Hee is above them yet with them hee is the first-fruits and they are the rest of the heape and a Rom. 11.16 if the first fruits bee holy the whole heape is holy The ground which beareth this fruit Occasio scopus is the doctrine of the resurrection from the dead which the Apostle like a provident husbandman first fenceth and maketh sure and after breaketh and layeth it downe Hee fenceth it from the beginning of this chapter to the 35. verse by invincible arguments confirming the truth of the resurrection afterwards to the end of the chapter he layeth it downe by apt and lively similitudes declaring the manner thereof And this hee doth with much vehemency and contention of arguments his zeale being kindled through blasts of contradiction by some in the Church of Corinth who directly denyed the former verse 12. and obliquely carped at the latter verse 35. Neither did these alone at Corinth as much as in them lay subvert this maine article of our faith b 2 Tim. 2.18 but Hymeneus and Philetus with others at Ephesus perverted the sense of it saying that the resurrection was past already Obser 1 Whence I first observe against Bellarmine Parsons and other Papists that the Divell tyed not himselfe as they have surmized to any rule of method ex occas in laying his batteries against the articles of the Creed in order For the resurrection of the flesh is the last article save one yet hereticall impiety as you have heard first ventured on it Howbeit the Cardinal that he might more conveniently tye all whom hee supposeth Heretickes in one chaine and thrust us into the lowest place c Bellar. orat habit in Gymnas Ro● anno 1576. H●manigeneris ostis e●itotus alioqui perversus ordinis perturbator esse soleat tamen non sine aliquo ordine catholicae ecclesiae veritatem oppugnate vol●●t c. beareth his Reader in hand that the enemy of mankinde albeit in other things hee bee a disturber of order yet in impeaching the Apostles creed hath kept a kind of order 1 For within 200. yeeres after Christ hee assaulted the first article concerning God the Father almighty maker of heaven and earth by the Simonians Menandrians Basilidians Valentinians Marcionites Manichees and severall kinde of Gnostickes 2 After 200. yeeres hee set upon the second article concerning the divine nature of Christ by the Praxeans Noetians Sabellians and Samosetanians 3 In the next age he opposed the divine person of our Saviour by the Photineans Arrians and Eunomians 4 From 400. to 800. he impugned the third fourth fifth sixth and seventh concerning the incarnation passion resurrection ascension of our Lord and his comming to judgement by the Nestorians Theodorians Eutychians Acephali Sergians and Paulians 5 From the yeere 800. to 1000. hee bid battell to the eighth article concerning the holy Ghost by the schisme and heresie of the Graecians 6 Lastly from the 1000. yeere to this present age hee hath oppugned the ninth and tenth articles concerning the catholicke Church and remission of sinnes by the Berengarians Petrobrusians Waldenses Albigenses Wicklefists Hussites Lutherans Zuinglians Confessionists Hugonites and Anabaptists Refut Were these calculations exact and observations true the Cardinall deserved to bee made Master of ceremonies amongst heretickes for so well ranking them But upon examination of particulars it will appeare that his skill in history is no better than his divinity To begin where hee endeth First hee most falsly and wrongfully chargeth the worthy standard-bearers of the reformed religion before Luther with the impeaching the ninth and tenth articles of the creede They impeach neither of them nor any other nay they will sooner part with the best limbe of
their body than any article of their creede whereas on the contrary side the Romanists as they impeach the article of Christs incarnation of the Virgin Mary by teaching that his flesh is made daily by the Priests in the Masse not of her blood but of bread and of his ascension and sitting at the right hand of the Father till hee come to judge the quicke and the dead by teaching that his body is at once in a Million of places on earth even wheresoever Masses are said so they most manifestly overthrow the articles he instanceth in viz. 1 The ninth tenth The ninth by turning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 universall into particular and empaling the whole Church within the jurisdiction of Rome as the Donatists did of old within the Provinces of Africa The tenth by branding them with the markes of heretickes who believe the remission of their owne sinnes by speciall faith 2 As the Cardinall is foulely mistaken in the point of divinity so also in the matter of history both of former ages and this present wherein wee live For who knoweth not that other articles besides the ninth and tenth are at this day oppugned by the Servetians Antitrinitarians Sosinians Vorstians Anabaptists Libertines and Familists whose heresies strike at the soveraigne attributes of God the Trinity of persons deity of Christ his incarnation satisfaction second comming and life everlasting 3 Neither were these two articles instanced in first impugned in our age or since the 1000. yeere as hee accounteth but long before in the third and fourth ages by the Novatians Donatists Luciferians Meletians and Pelagians 4 Neither was Sathan so long in setting heretickes on worke to undermine all the articles of the creede If you peruse the bedroll of heresies in Irenaeus Epiphanius Philastrius and Augustine you shall finde that within the space of 400. yeeres the Divell so bestirred himselfe that hee left no article of the Apostles creede untouched by them 5 And lastly neither had the enemy of mankinde any care at all of order in employing heretickes to overthrow our christian beliefe more than an enraged enemy all set upon spoile in demolishing an house thinketh of pulling downe every stone in order for to what end serveth order when nothing but present confusion is sought Therefore against the rule of method set downe by Bellarmine Sathan in the second age called in question the last article of the creed by Papius and the Millenaries In the third age hee called in question the eighth article concerning the holy Ghost by the Macedonians and Pneumatomachi In the first age hee called in question the second article concerning the divinity of Christ by the Ebionites and Cerinthians as also the eleventh by the Ephesians and those Corinthians whom the Apostle taketh to taske in this chapter and confuteth in my text Obser 2 My second observation from the occasion is that some heresies as namely this of the Corinthians concerning the resurrection against which the Apostle bendeth all his forces have beene very auncient and some heretickes contemporaries to the Apostles As God is stiled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 d Dan. 7.13 that is Auncient of dayes or rather Auncient to dayes as God speaketh of himselfe e Esa 43.13 Before the day was I am so the Divell is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the old Serpent whose spawne are all heresies as well old as new No truth at the first delivery thereof could bee auncient nor can any errour after it hath long passed from hand to hand bee new Time is without the essence of those things that are measured by it and consequently cannot make that which is in it selfe evill good nor that which is good evill Antiquity can no more prescribe for falshood than novelty prejudice the truth Bare antiquity therefore is but a weake plea in matter of religion f Tertul. de Vol. Virg. quodcunque contra veritatem sapit haeresis est etiam vetus consuetudo whatsoever savoureth not of truth or is against it is heresie yea although it be ancient and plead custome 1 It was the Samaritans plea against the Jewes g Joh. 4.20.22 Our Father worshipped in this mount c. But it was rejected by our Saviour saying you worship you know not what 2 It was the plea of the hereticks called Aquarii against the Catholicks but disproved by Saint h Ep. 74. Consuetudo sine veritate est vetustas ●rroris Cyprian saying Custome without truth is no better than inveterate errour 3 It was the plea of Guitmundus against the practice of the Romane Church in Gregory the great his dayes but disparaged by him saying custome ought to give place to truth and right i Grat. dist 8. for Christ said not Ego sum consuetudo I am custome or prescription but Ego sum veritas I am truth Nay it was the very plea of the Paynims against the Christians and long agoe disabled by the ancient Fathers Saint Ignatius Arnobius Ambrose and Augustine Ignatius thus puts it by Some say they will not believe the truth of the Gospell if wee produce not ancient records for it to whom my answer is k Ignat. epist ad Philad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is my antiquity his words are to mee in stead or as good as all ancient records l Arnob. l. 2. cont gent. Quod verum est se●um non est c. Arnobius gravely determines the point the authority saith he of Religion is to be weighed not by time but by the divine author thereof that which is true is not to be traduced as late or too new Saint m Amb. l. 3. ep 30 Reprobatis messem quia sera est foecunditas c. Ambrose seconds Arnobius saying to the heathen doe you finde fault with our Christian religion because it is later than your heathenish superstition you may by the same reason picke a quarrell with harvest because it comes not till the end of summer and with the vintage because it falls late in the yeere and with the olive because hee beareth fruit after other trees Lastly Saint n Quaest vet novi Test Quasi antiquitas praejudicet veritati hic est mos diabolicus ut per antiquitatis traducem commendetur fallacia Austine returnes them a smart answer for this absurd plea They say that that religion which is elder cannot bee false as if antiquity or custome could doe the truth any prejudice at all 't is a divellish custome to vent falshood under the title of antiquity Whereunto may be added that in propriety of speech that is not antiquity which is so esteemed the age wherein wee live is indeed the eldest because nearest to the end of the world and those times which wee reverence as elder are by so much the younger by how much they were neerer to the beginning of the world and the birth of time it selfe The Catholike Christian Church was never so
visus in grosse For hee will certainly call all men to a most strict and particular account of every moment of time they have spent of every particular grace they have received of every particular duty they have omitted of every particular sinne they have committed in deed word or thought nay of the first motion and inclination to evill The smallest atomi or moates that flye in the ayre are discerned in the Sunne so the smallest sinnes and offences shall be discovered at the brightnesse of Christs comming And as the words that are written with the juyce of a Lemmon cannot be read when they are written but may be plainly and distinctly if you hold the paper to the fire and dry the letters so the smallest letters in the book of our conscience yea the least notes and points and scratches which neither any other nor our selves see well now shall easily be discerned by the fire of the last judgement The conceit whereof tooke such a deep impression in the render heart of Saint Hierome that he professeth x Victor Reat in vit Hieron Sive comedo sive bibo sive quid aliud facio semper videtur mihi tuba illa terribilis sonare Surgite mortui venite ad judicium wheresoever he was whatsoever he did whether he ate or dranke or walked abroad or sate in his study or talked with any he thought he heard the last Trump sound shrill in his eares Awake yee that sleep in the dust and come to judgement At which time that you may be all more perfect I would advise you to y Barradius comment in concord Evang. Ascendat mens tribunal judici rationem ratio exposcat reckon before hand with your selves either at private fasts or every evening Among z Pythag. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythagoras his golden Verses these seem to mee to be most weighty Before thou suffer thy temples to take any rest resolve these three questions Wherein have I transgressed What have I done What part of my duty have I left this day undone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 According to which rule Seneca recordeth it to the eternall praise of Sextius that every evening hee put these interrogatories to his soule * Quod hodiè malum san●st cu● vitio obstitisti qua parte melior factus es What wound hast thou healed this day What vice hast thou withstood Wherein art thou better than thou wert the day before thus Pythagoras advised thus Sextius did and yet neither of them for ought appeareth thought of any other judge than their reason nor accusers than their thoughts nor tormentors than their vitious affections nor hell than their owne conscience What suppose yee would they have done what care would they have taken how oft would they have revised their accounts if they had thought they should have been brought to answer for all their actions speeches gestures affections nay thoughts purposes intentions deliberations and resolutions before God and his holy Angels at the dreadfull day of judgement If the consideration of these things no whit affect you you shall one day give an account among other your sins for the unprofitable hearing of this Sermon His word which I have preached unto you this day shall testifie against you at that day Give me leave therefore a little to rouze you up and by applying the steele of my Text to your flinty hearts to strike out of them the fire of zeale I told you before of foure sorts of Stewards the sacred the honourable the wealthy and the common and ordinary I will begin with the sacred 1. Appl. to Ministers Thou to whom the Oracles of God and soules of men are committed who hast received grace by imposition of hands not to gaine applause to thy selfe or an high step of dignity on earth but to win soules to God and bring men to Heaven thou to whom the mist of blacke darknesse is reserved for ever if thou departest from the holy commandement and drawest others after thee but an eminent place amongst the Starres if thou turne many to righteousnesse how is it that thy minde study and endeavour is not to build Gods house but to raise thine owne not to adde by the ministery of the Gospel those to the Church that shall be saved but Imponere Pelion Ossae to lay steeple upon steeple and preferment upon preferment and adde dignity to dignity either not preaching at all or like the high Priest in the old Law entering but once a yeere into the Sanctum sanctorum or at the most furnishing but some few high Festivals with some rare and exquisite peeces of stuffe embroidered with variety of all arts and sciences save Divinity Is this to preach Christ crucified Is this to a John 21.16 17. feed feed and feed is this to be b 2 Tim 4.2 instant in season and out of season to reprove rebuke to exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine is this to c Acts 20.27 I have not shunned to declare unto you all the counsell of God declare the whole counsell of God is this to d 1 Tim. 4.13 attend to reading to exhortation to doctrine to continue in them is this to give themselves wholly to the worke of the Ministery that their profiting may appeare unto all is this to e Acts 20.31 warne every one publikely and house by house day and night with teares to save themselves from the corruption of the world the snares of Sathan wrath to come Will a purchased dispensation of absence from thy Cure upon some plausible pretence or thy Curates diligence excuse thy supine negligence or secure thee from the Apostles f 1 Cor. 9.16 Vae Woe be to mee Paul if I preach not the Gospel in mine owne person O thinke upon it in time to make a better reckoning before thou be summoned to give up the last accounts in the words of my Text Give an account of thy Stewardship of thy Ministery Next to the sacred Steward commeth in the minister of State and Magistrate to bee rounded in the eare with the admonition in my Text. 2. To Magistrates Thou to whom both the Tables are committed who art ordained by God and appointed by thy Soveraigne to see religion maintained justice executed and peace kept how commeth it to passe that the sword of justice lyeth rusty in the scabard and is not drawne out against Sabbath-breakers contemners of the Church discipline blasphemers swearers drunkards lewd and scandalous livers Doest thou use the authority committed to thee to revenge thy selfe and not to redresse wrongs done to the law nay doest thou protect and bolster iniquity and impiety doest thou live by those sinnes and draw a revenue by licensing those places of disorder which thou art made a minister of justice to suppresse Is this to be a man fearing God and hating covetousnesse is this to stop the mouth of impiety to cleanse the
all men are deprived of the glory of God and in many things wee offend all every man layeth his hand upon his heart and acknowledgeth himselfe to bee of the number and as when wee read Wee must all appeare before the tribunall seat of Christ every good Christian applieth it unto himselfe and maketh full account one day to answer at that barre so when peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost and assurance of eternall blisse are promised to all beleevers in Scripture every faithfull heart rejoiceth at them as having speciall interest in them I would faine know of our adversaries when a Proclamation is published in the Kings name to all his loyall subjects whether every particular man within his realmes and dominions bee not liable to the Kings high displeasure in case hee disobey this his Majesties edict though no man be therein particularly named Now what are the Ministers of the Gospell but Gods Cryers to proclaime his good pleasure concerning the receiving all penitent sinners and beleevers into grace and favour Our adversaries themselves beleeve that this Pope Urban the eighth is Christs Vicar and cannot erre in Cathedrâ and that this Priest viz. Fisher or Musket hath power to remit sinnes and in the administration of the Sacrament to turne the bread into Christs body yet let them turne over all the Bible they shall no where finde the name of Priest Musket Father Fisher or Pope Urban Here if they flye to generall promises made to all the Apostles and their successors they stifle the winde-pipe of their owne objection and confesse consequently so the generall be in Scripture wee need not trouble our selves with the particular But the generall I have proved at large out of Scripture that assurance of salvation is a priviledge granted to all the children of God that heare the testimony of the Spirit and see the infallible markes of Gods chosen in themselves Resp ad 2. The second blot is thus rubbed out This white stone the assurance of a mans particular salvation is comprised in the first words of the Creed which according to the exposition of the e Eusch Emissen in symb Ancie●●s importeth I trust in God for salvation For wee say not I beleeve there is a God which is credere Deum nor I beleeve God which is credere Deo but I beleeve in God that is I put my religious trust and confidence in him Beside the true meaning of that article I beleeve the forgivenesse of sinnes is not only I beleeve there is a remission of sinnes in the Church which the divell himselfe doth and yet is no whit the better for it but I beleeve the remission of my owne sinnes as I doe the resurrection of my owne flesh And if this bee the true meaning of that Article which Rome and Rhemes shall never bee able to disprove the assurance of our owne justification and salvation is not as they cavill a thirteenth article of the Creed but part of the tenth To which Saint f In psal 32. Dicit anima fecura Deus meus es tu quia dicit Deus animae ego sum tua s●lus Austine subscribed The devout soule saith confidently thou art my God because God saith to the soule I am thy salvation Resp ad 3. The third blot is thus wiped out Prayer for remission of sinnes and assurance thereof may well stand together After the Prophet Nathan had said to David The Lord hath taken away thy sinne David beleeved the remission thereof yet hee prayed most fervently for it g Psal 51.7.14 Purge mee with Hyssope and I shall be cleane wash mee and I shall bee whiter than snow Hide thy face from my sinnes and blot out all mine iniquities deliver me from blood guiltinesse O God thou God of my salvation Our blessed Redeemer was assured that God would deliver him from the power of death and h Psal 16.10 hell yet in the i Heb. 5.7 dayes of his flesh he offered up prayers with strong cryes to him that was able to save him Saint Paul was assured by faith that God would k 2 Tim. 4.18 deliver him from every evill worke and preserve him to his heavenly kingdome yet hee ceased not to pray Libera nos à malo Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evill To cut all the sinewes of this objection at once wee distinguish of three sorts of Christians 1 Incipients 2 Proficients 3 Perfect Incipients pray for the remission of their sinnes and assurance thereof to their conscience Proficients for greater assurance and farther growth in grace those that are perfect so farre as perfection may be attained in this life for the abolishing of all power of sinne in them and their publike acquitting at the last day and all three for a pardon of course at least for such sinnes of infirmity as sticke so close unto us that we cannot shake them off till we put off this earthly tabernacle For albeit every true beleever is firmely perswaded of the love of God and the free pardon of all his sinnes in generall yet because no particular sinne can be actually remitted before it be committed neither is the remission of any promised but upon condition of repentance and confession to God of all knowne sinnes in speciall and l Psal 19.12 Who can understand his errours O cleanse thou me from secret faults unknowne in generall every one that is carefull of his salvation and mindfull of the command of Christ implyed in the patterne of all prayer will sue out a pardon for every new sin which through the frailty of his nature he falleth into by humble confession and prayer to God Which prayer because it cannot be acceptable to him without faith he who prayeth for the remission of his sinnes in the very instant when he prayeth beleeveth that God will heare him and that he either hath or will certainely pardon him And so we see that this third objection either hath no edge at all or if it hath any woundeth the adversaries cause if it be thus retorted against him Whatsoever we pray to God for according to his will we ought stedfastly to beleeve that we shall receive it But every true beleever prayeth for the remission of his sins according to Gods will and command Therefore every true beleever ought stedfastly to perswade himselfe that his sinnes are or shall be certainely forgiven him The fourth blot is thus wiped out Feare is twofold 1 That which is opposed to carnall security 2 That which is opposed to spirituall confidence The former is commanded in all the texts above alledged and must stand with assurance of salvation the latter is forbidden by Esay m Esay 41.14 Feare not thou worme Jacob and ye men of Israel I will helpe thee saith the Lord and thy Redeemer n c. 43. ver 1. Feare not for I have redeemed thee I have called thee by thy name thou art mine
words of the Psalmist k Psal 49.20 being in honour have no understanding but may bee compared to the beast that perisheth Their purple robes are no sooner on but they reflect upon their owne worth and wisedome and trample those who were before their equals under foot 4. The fourth stratagem policie or device is To tempt us by method beginning with questionable actions thence proceeding to sinnes of infirmity from them to wilfull transgressions after to heinous crimes and last of all to obstinacy and finall impenitency No wooll or cloath is dyed purple or scarlet at the first but after divers tinctures at the last taketh that deepest dye so doth the soule scarlet and crimson sinnes after many lesser faults of an inferiour dye or staine i Juven Sat. 2 Nemo repentè fuit turpissimus No man at one leap gets up to the top of all impiety therefore Satan takes him by the hand and leads him by these severall steps 1 An evill motion plot or designe 2 The entertainment of it with some kind of approbation 3 A determination to pursue it 4 A vitious action 5 An evill habit or custome 6 The defence or justification of his wicked course 7 Glorying in it and in a reprobate sense Hee that hastily turnes the pegge to winde up a treble to his pitch will sooner breake the string than tune it but if hee straine it up by little and little hee bringeth it without danger to the height Had Satan at the first dash tempted Saint Peter to forsweare his Master and curse himselfe doubtlesse the Apostle would have abandoned the suggestion and defied the tempter who yet wrought upon him by degrees and at length obtained his end First hee cooleth his zeale perswading him not to runne upon danger but if he were resolved to see what would become of his Master to follow him afar off when hee comes slowly to the high Priests pallace hee sets a damosell upon him to question him and upon a light apprehension of danger he gaines from him an unadvised deniall after upon greater feare a double and treble abnegation in conclusion an oath to make good his former denials If this grand Impostor of the world and cunning supplanter of soules meet with a man of a strict conscience who endevoureth to walke uprightly before God first he tryeth to bring him to venture upon questionable actions such things as may beare a dispute whether they are sinnes or no as statute usury to take eight in the hundred legall simony to buy the next advowson of a living the Incumbent lying desperately sicke customary sacriledge to pay a certaine rate for the tithe though far lesse in value than the due If hee get thus much ground of him hee easily presseth him forward to commit some undoubted sinnes but small in the kinde as to let his eyes range about vaine objects to entertaine a wanton thought for a while to keepe from Church in foule weather to salve a fault with a hansome excuse to mis-spend an houre or two with a friend in a Taverne after Satan hath gained thus much of him hee will easily draw him from making little account of small sinnes to make small account of great For as the wimble bores a hole for the auger so lesse sinnes make way for greater idlenesse for wantonnesse lust for adultery wrath for murder lying for perjury errours for heresies good fellowship for drunkennesse and all wickednesse Milo by carrying a calfe at the first and after a bullocke was able in fine to beare an oxe And it is storied of Mithridates King of Pontus that by taking weak poysons at the first by degrees stronger in the end he brought his body to that temper that no poyson could worke upon him Effecit poto Mithridates saepe veneno Toxica ne possint saeva nocere sibi Thus custome in small sinnes at the first and in greater after makes us in the end insensible of all This rule of Satans method extendeth farther than private corruption in mens mindes For thus sensim sine sensu tyranny heresie and superstition overran the greater part of the Church The Bishop of Rome in the beginning contended but for a bare primacy of order which considering the great power of that City being the seat of the Empire was without much difficulty yeelded unto him after hee pretends to a little more viz. receiving the last appeales from the sentence of the other Patriarchs this Sozimus stickled for alledging for it a Canon of the Councell of Nice which the African Bishops proved to be forged By Boniface the third his time he durst to put in for the title of Universall Bishop which hee obtained though m Plat. in Bonif 3. An. 666. with much adoe through the Emperour Phocas his meanes who murdered his Master Mauritius By vertue of this title his successour Vitalianus tooke upon him to give spirituall lawes to the whole Church and after him Pope Hildebrand to give temporall lawes to Kings and Princes to depose them at pleasure and to dispose of their crownes As tyranny so superstition and Idolatry stole pedetentim into the Church First to confirme Christians in the faith of the resurrection and to encourage them to constancy in their holy profession in the Church Liturgy there was some commemoration made of the dead after this commemoration succeeded anniversary panegyrickes in their commendation soone after publike giving thankes to God for them by name and last of all direct invocation of them In like manner grosse Idolatry crept into the Church First images and pictures of Saints were used in private for memory history or ornament onely after upon the like colour of pretence in St. n Epist ex Regist 9 Adorate Imagin●s omnibus modis devita Gregories dayes they were brought into the Church with an expresse prohibition of worshipping them In the next age the worship of them was enjoyned by Pope Adrian in the second Synod at Nice yet not for themselves but respectively onely in regard of that which they represent but now in our age since the Councell of Trent it is the tenent of the Roman Church that Images are to be worshipped for themselves o Bell. de imag sanct l. 2. c. 21. Ut in se considerantur non tantum ut vicem gerunt exemplaris and farther the Heathen goe not in their Idolatry nor the wiser of them so farre 5 The fift stratagem policy or device of Satan is to bring us from one extreme to another when our heart smiteth us for any grievous sinne out of detestation thereof unlesse we walke circumspectly we are easily carried to the opposite vice With this engine Satan maketh great batteries upon many weake Christians not onely because it is a hard thing to hit the middle but because we are apt to thinke that the extremest opposition to that vice which lieth heaviest upon our conscience is the worke of grace in us not considering that vices are not only
licitos esse censuisset When ye walked in lasciviousnesse lusts revellings banquettings and unlawfull and abominable idolatries What need saith hee Saint Peter deterre us from unlawfull idolatries if some kind of idolatry were not lawfull Good God! Idolatry lawfull holy hypocrisie pious frauds honest sodomy Did ever Nicolaus of Antiochia or Jezebel of Thyatira set abroach such impure and unsavoury doctrine did ever the Carpocratians who let the reines loose to all kinds of lewdnesse and villany maintaine more damnable positions But to keepe close to the patterne in my text and to draw a perfect picture of the Church of Rome by notes taken from Jezebel Imposture First Jezebel called her selfe a Prophetesse and doth not the Church of Rome usurpe the same title and boast of her Propheticke Spirit If any be ignorant hereof let him cast but a looke into * L. 4. c. 15. D●odecima nota est lumen propheticum Bellarmine his booke of the notes of the Church there shall he see Lumen propheticum the light of prophesie drawne out in a faire and goodly character for the twelfth note of the Romane Church You see the first marke of Jezebel visible in the Church of Rome As Jezebel calleth her selfe a Prophetesse so the Church of Rome arrogateth to her selfe that supernaturall gift Impurity The second marke is as foule as the other is faire in shew She teacheth to commit fornication I would be loth to cast so foule an aspersion upon the Roman Church if the ancient Rubrick in the Canon law blushed any thing at these words q Distinct 34. Qui non habet uxorem loco illius concubinam debet habere He that hath not a wife ought to have a concubine in stead of her or the Pope his holinesse were ashamed to draw a revenue of many thousand Duckets by the yeere out of somewhat worse than Vespasian his tribute ex lotio But sith the Marozia of Sergius the Matildis of Gregory the s venth the Lucretia of Alexander the sixt the Magdalena of Leo the tenth the Constantia of Paul the third were as infamous as Ovids Corinna sith ancient Popes have erected stewes and later take toll of them at this day in Rome Vid. Wess●l Groni●g de indulgent Avennion and elsewhere sith ancienter Popes have dispensed with unnaturall lusts and the later with incestuous marriages sith the Riarius of Sixtus the fourth the Germanus of Julius the second the Hippolytus of Leo the tenth and Innocentius de monte of Julius the third gave but too much cause to Mantuan and other later Poets to proclaime to the world Sanctus ager scurris venerabilis ara cinoedis Servit honorandae divûm Ganymedibus aedes Sith their owne r L. method concord Ne admittantur sacra concubinariorum quos Deus magis odit qu●m manifestarios incestus Wicelius professeth himselfe scandalized at the allowed concubines of Masse-Priests and the Germans in their ſ L. centum gravam Gervam Episcopi eorum Officiales non tantum sacerdotum tolerant concubinatum dummodo certa persolvatur pecunia sed Sacerdotes continentes qui absque concubinatu degunt concubinatus censum persolvere cogunt grievances put up this for one That the Bishops and their Officials doe not onely tolerate concubines in Priests so they pay a certaine rate for them but also constrain Priests who live continently and keepe no concubines to pay the former taxe sith Picus Mirandula in ep ad Leo. 10. and Cardinal Alliacus in his treatise of the reformation of the Church report of their Cels that they were become meere stewes sith Costerus yea and Cardinal Bellarmine teach in expresse words That it is a greater sinne in a Priest or Votary to marry than to commit fornication Est majus malum sic nubere quàm fornicari sith Panormitan their great Lawyer delivereth it for a ruled case t Panor extra de consang affin Ideo hodie ex simplici fornicatione clericus non deponitur That a Clergy man is not to be deposed for simple fornication nay sith the Councell of Toledo u Concil Tol. Potest admitti ad communionem qui concubinam habet modo non sit uxoratus admitteth such persons to the holy Communion who keepe a concubine so they bee not married no Papist can have an action of slaunder against me for charging their Church with somewhat more than bare toleration of simple fornication Verily * Espenc com in Tit. c. 1. Espenceus had good cause to affirme That more naughtinesse and filthinesse might bee learned out of Taxa camerae Apostolicae whereunto I adde Zanche's de Matrimonio and other Casuists than out of all the obscene satyres and epigrammes of profane Poets What Christian eares can endure that preface of Pope Gregory x Greg. extrav de jud c. 4. De adulterio aliis minoribus criminibus potest Episcopus cum Clericis post poenitentiam dispensare For adultery and other lesser sinnes the Bishop may dispence with a Priest after penance But I list not to bring to light other of their works of darknesse let the night cover her owne shame I proceed from Jezebels corporall to her spirituall whoredome wherein the Church of Rome exceedeth her For Jezebel taught onely that it was lawfull to keepe company and make merry with Idolaters and partake of their offerings but the Church of Rome partaketh with them in their Idoll-worship For albeit shee pretendeth that shee tendereth no religious service to the Idols of the Heathen the enemies of God but to the images of Saints and shrines of Martyrs this no way cleareth her from spirituall uncleannesse For it will not be allowed for a good plea in a disloyall wife to say that she gave no entertainement to any of her husbands enemies but onely made much of his dearest friends and admitted them into bed for his sake The adulterie in it selfe is foule with whomsoever it be committed and Idol-service in it selfe is abominable to whomsoever it be performed To pay the debt of conjugall love to any save her husband in a wife is adulterie and to tender divine honour to any save God is idolatrie Therefore if wee can bring any good proofe hereof that the Church of Rome doth this and avoweth the doing of it we doe her no wrong to call her the great Whore of whose cup of abominations whosoever drinke become so giddie that they fall before stockes and stones like men whose braines are intoxicated take images and pictures for men and women bring presents to them put costly apparell on them speake to them embrace and kisse them y Lactan. divin instit l. 2. Adorant insensibilia quisentiunt irrationabilia qui sapiunt exanima qui vivunt terrena qui oriuntur è coelo O sottish folly the living image of God falleth downe before dumb and dead pictures and statues men to whom God hath given sense and reason adore
an ornament to beautifie us well may we like the Church of Sardis have a name that we live but we are dead we are in the gall of bitternesse and the burden of sinne hath pressed us downe to the bottomlesse pit which is now ready to shut her mouth upon us O then let us cr● out of the depth abyssus abyssum invocet let the depth of our misery implore the depth of his bottomlesse mercy and behold the Angel of peace is at hand for now and never before are we fit subjects for this good Samaritan to worke upon Come unto mee all that are heavie laden The Spirit of God is upon mee to preach health to those that are broken in heart liberty to the captives and to them that mourne beauty for ashes and the garment of gladnesse for the spirit of heavinesse whence you see that none are admitted into Christs Hospitall but lame sicke and distressed wretches for whom hee hath received grace above measure that where sinne appeared above measure sinfull grace might appeare without measure pitifull Wilt thou then have thy wounds healed open them Wilt thou that I raise thee up to heaven deject thy selfe downe to hell Ille laudabilior qui humilior justior qui sibi abjectior Use 2 As this may serve to rebuke such Seers as labour not to discover the filthinesse that lyeth in the skirts of Jerusalem but sow pillowes under mens elbowes and dawbe up with untempered mortar the breach of sinne in our soules Use 3 so may it lesson all hearers as patiently to abide the sharpe wine of the Law as the supple oyle of the Gospel as well the shepheards rod of correction as his staffe of comfort in a word to endure Bezaliel and Aholiab to cut off the rough and ragged knobs as they desire to be smooth timber in that building wherein Christ Jesus is the corner-stone poenitentia istius temporis dolor medicinalis est poenitentia illius temporis dolor poenalis est now our sorrow for our sinnes will prove a repentance not to be repented of then shall our sorrow be remedilesse our repentance fruitlesse our misery endlesse Wherefore I say with Bernard Illius Doctoris vocem libenter audio qui non sibi plausum sed mihi planctum moveat I like him that will set the worme of conscience on gnawing while there is time to choake it rodat putredinem ut codendo consumat ipse pariter consumatur In the meane time let this bee our comfort that God will not suffer the sting of conscience too much to torment us but with the oyle of his grace will mitigate the rage of the paine and heale the festred sore which it hath made with the plaister of his owne bloud And I will ease you Thus farre you have traversed the wildernesse of Sin tired out in that desart and languishing in that dry land and shadow of death now behold gaudium in fine sed sine fine Happy your departure out of Egypt and blessed your travell and obedience you are now to drinke of the comfortable waters that issue out of the spirituall rocke in Horeb Christ Jesus and to refresh your wearied limbes and tired soules therewith I will ease you Doctr. 4 I. Man cannot for man is a sinner and a sinner cannot be a Saviour Angels cannot for man in Angels nature cannot bee punished God cannot for he is impassible Saints neither may nor can for they need a Saviour but I will For I am man and in your nature can dye I am God and by any infinite merits can satisfie and so by my means Gods mercy and justice may stand together righteousnesse and peace may kisse each other Thus that faith may looke out of the earth to embrace you the day-springing from on high hath visited you Thrice blessed then must poore hunger-bit and distressed soules bee who have not a churlish Nabal with power wanting will nor a King of Samaria with will wanting power but Elshaddai a God all-sufficient to relieve and satisfie them and for his will no Assuerus so ready to cheare up a dolefull Hester as he a drouping soule no Joseph so ready to sustaine his father in famine and death as he is ready with pitty to save a soule from death Noli fugere Adam quia nobiscum est Deus Who shall lay any thing to our charge sith it is God that doth justifie Pleasant and sweet were the waters of Meribah to the thirstie Israelites of Aenochore to Sampsons fainting spirits gratefull the newes of life to sicke Hezekiah but our Saviours Epiphonema thy sinnes are forgiven thee goe in peace is mel in ore melos in aure jubilum in corde The strings of my tongue cannot be so loosened that I may expresse the extasie of joy which every sin-burdened soule feeleth whether in the body or out of the body shee cannot tell in that by assurance of faith shee can say My Justifier is with mee who being Emmanuel God with us is also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man with God one with God in will and power and wholly for us in power and will Use 1 Woe worth then all such as forsaking the fountaine of living water dig to themselves broken pits of their owne merits Saints intercession and the Churches treasurie Is there no balme in Gilead to cure us no God in Israel to help us Si verax Deus qui promittit mendax utique homo qui diffidit saith St. Bernard For I demand Doe they distrust his power All power is given him in heaven and in earth Matth. 28.18 Doe they doubt his will Behold he saith Come unto me before we offer our selves and I will ease you not do my best or endeavour it is no presumption to beleeve Christ on his word and rest on it with full assurance Use 2 Againe can none say but Christ I will ease you How hopelesse then is their travell how endlesse their paine who seeke for hearts-ease in any garden but the Paradise of God or hope for contentment in any transitorie object the world affordeth To see Asses feed upon thistles for grapes were enough to move the spleene of an Agelastus they have a faire shew like flowers but pricke in the mouth Alas what anguish and horrour must there needs be Cum domus interior gemitu miseroque tumultu Miscetur when their consciences like Sauls evill spirit haunteth and vexeth them at the heart when they brave it out in the face and what is their foolish laughter among their boone associates but the cracking of thornes under a pot suddenly extinguished and turned into ashes and mourning Well may they like the heathenish Romans of old have their gods of feare and terrour but sure they can have none of ease comfort or quiet O let not our soule enter into their secrets but let our peace be still as it is in God and the repose of our troubled conscience in our Saviours love who was made a curse for us that
Cedars stately built and richly furnished with all the rarities which nature or art affoords Why were Jewels and precious Stones and rich metals created but for mans use And what better use can be made of them than to shew forth the glorie of God and the splendour and magnificence of his Vicegerents on earth Certainely they were never made to maintaine the luxurie of private men which is now growne to that excesse especially at Court that the Embassadours of forreine Princes speake as loud of it abroad as the poore cry and wring for it at home Where shall we finde a Paula deserving the commendation which St. q In Epitaph Paul Non in marmora sed lapides vivos Jerome giveth her for laying out her money not upon marble or free-stone but upon those living stones which she knew one day should be turned into gemmes and laid in the foundation of the heavenly Jerusalem Doth not the liberality of most of the wealthy of this age resemble their heart which is hard cold and stony The greatest expence they are at is in building houses of Cedar for themselves by which they are better knowne than their houses by them As the world so the Proverb is turned upside downe it stood thus Non domus Dominum sed Dominus domum but now it is thus overturned Non Dominus domum sed domus Dominum the house gets no credit by the owner but the owner if he have any by the house Ye will thinke when ye come into many of them that ye are fallen into an Egyptian Temple most glorious without but within nothing to be seen but the picture of a Jack an Ape or a Cat or some such contemptible creature as that superstitious Nation worshipped I sharpen my stile the more against this abuse of our age because it is well knowne that the superfluous expence upon the Sepulchres of the dead and the erecting of houses of Cedars for the living farre above I will not say the wealth but above the ranke and worth of those that dwell in them is the cause why the Arke of the Lord lieth yet in many places under the curtaines nay not so well but under the open aire without cover or roofe to keepe out raine and weather If that which hath beene luxuriously cast away in building houses of pleasure and ambitiously if not superstitiously consumed in erecting Statues Obelisques Tombes or Monuments for the dead had beene employed in rearing up houses for Prophets and erecting Temples to the living God the Prophets of God should not need to complaine as now they are constrained against the men of this age in the words of the Prophet Haggai c. 1. ver 4. Yee dwell in sieled houses and the house of the Lord lieth waste or in the like in my text Behold now ye dwell in houses of Cedars and The Arke of the Lord within the Curtaines Before the Sunne rise you see no light but through mists and vapours and shadowes on the earth even so before the Sunne of righteousnesse Christ Jesus arose in the Firmament of his Church there was no light of the Gospell to be seene but through mists and obscure shadowes so the Å¿ Heb. 8.5 10.1 Apostle termeth the types and figures of the old Law among which the Tabernacle and in it the Arke and therein especially the Tables Rod and Pots of Manna shadowed the state of the Christian Church and presented to the eye of faith the principall meanes of salvation under the Gospell which are three 1 The preaching of the Word summarily contained in the two Tables 2 The Sacrament of Christs body and bloud figured by the Manna 3 The exercise of Ecclesiasticall discipline lively set forth by the budding of Aarons rod. As for Baptisme which is the Sacrament of entrance into the Church the type thereof was set at the entrie into the Tabernacle where stood a great Laver in which those that came to worship God after they had put off their clothes bathed themselves as we Christians put off the old man and wash away the corruption of originall sinne in the Font of Baptisme before we are admitted as members into the Christian Church whereunto three sorts of men belong 1 Some that are to be called 2 Others that are already called into it 3 Such as are called out of it into Heaven 1 The first are in the state of nature 2 The second in the state of grace 3 The third in the state of glorie Answerable whereunto God commandeth three spaces or partitions to be made 1 Atrium the outward Court for the people 2 Sanctum the holy place for the ordinarie Priests 3 Sanctum sanctorum the most holy place for the High-Priest to enter once a yeere and shew himselfe to God for the people Which are similitudes of true things For as by the outward Court the Priest went into the holy place and from the holy place into the most holy so from the state of nature the children of God are brought into the state of grace and from the state of grace into the state of glorie If any question these mysticall expositions for the first I referre them to St. t Apoc. 11.2 John who saith expressely that the Court was given to the Gentiles and was not therefore to be mete with a golden reed for the second to St. u 1 Pet. 2.9 Peter who calleth all Christians Priests for whom the holy place was appointed for the third to St. * Heb. 9.24 Paul who openeth the vaile of that figure and sheweth how Christ our High-Priest after his death entered into the holy of holies and there appeared before God for us To these observations of the Tabernacle may be added many the like resemblances betweene the Arke and the Church In the fore-front of the Tabernacle there was the Altar of burnt-offerings and a place of refuge for malefactors who if they could take hold of the hornes of the Altar were safe Christs Crosse is this Altar the hornes whereof whosoever take hold by faith be they never so great malefactors escape Gods vengeance In the Sanctuarie was the mercy seat towards which the Cherubims faces looked to teach us that the Angels of x 1 Pet. 1.12 heaven desire to looke into the mysteries of the Gospell The dimensions of the Arke were small and the limits of the militant Church in comparison of the malignant are narrow The outside of the Arke was covered with skins but the inside was overlaid with gold in like manner the Church hath for the most part no great outward appearance pompe or splendour but yet is alwayes most y Psal 45 13. glorious within The arke when it was taken by the Philistims conquered Dagon and cast him downe on his face even so the Church of Christ when shee is in captivitie and greatest weakenesse in the eye of the world getteth the better of her enemies and is so farre from being diminished by persecution that
Thou shalt plant vineyards and dresse them but shalt neither drinke of the wine nor gather the grapes for the worme shall eate them Thou shalt have olive trees throughout all thy coasts but thou shalt not annoint thy selfe with the oyle for thine olive shall cast his fruit Hereunto if we adde the infinite armies of plagues and judgements mustered in this chapter against Gods enemies we cannot but subscribe to the Prophets conclusion Non est pax impio there is no l Esay 48.22 57.21 peace to the wicked saith my God there is no fruit of sinne for it is the vine of m Deut. 32.32 33. Sodome and of the fields of Gomorrah the grapes thereof are the grapes of gall their clusters are bitter Their wine is the poyson of Dragons and the cruell venome of Aspes Would yee know all the miseries that sinne hath brought into the world reckon then all that are or ever were in the world For they are all concomitants effects or punishments of sinne Sinne cast the Angels from Heaven into Hell thrust man out of Paradise drowned the old world burnt Sodome and Gomorrah with fire and brimstone ruinated the greatest Monarchies destroyed the ancientest Cities and hath rooted up the most flourishing Churches and shall wee looke for better fruit of it But this interrogatory of the Apostle What fruit had yee seemeth to mee rather to aime at the particular endammagement and detriments of sinne which every soule that committeth it sustaineth within it selfe whereof many have been already recounted yet the greater part is behind among whom this is not the least that it blindeth the eyes of the mind and infatuateth the sinner Whereupon Saint Austines observation is If a theefe or fellon should presently upon his fact lose the sight of his eyes every body would say that it was the judgement of God upon him Oculum cordis amisit ei pepercisse putatur Deus behold God hath taken away the sight of his soules eyes and doest thou thinke that hee spareth him or letteth him goe n Cic. de Arusp respons Oculorum caecitas ad mentem translata est unpunished What greater losse to a noble mind than of libertie which is forfeited by sinne Sinne enthralleth our soule to our body and our body and soule to the Divell If captivitie of the body be so grievous a calamity what may wee judge of the captivitie of the soule If wee so disdaine to be slaves to men how much more should wee to bee vassals to beastly lusts To speake nothing of peace of conscience which crying sinnes disturbe and divine motions which worldly cares choake and heavenly comforts which earthly pleasures deprive us of and sanctifying graces which impure thoughts and sinfull desires diminish to leave the consideration of shame and death for matter of ensuing discourses by that which hath been already delivered all that are not besotted by sin and blind-folded by Sathan may see great reason for this question of the Apostle What fruit had yee A question which the proudest and most scornfull sinners who have them in derision that make conscience of unlawfull gaine shall propound unto themselves one day and checke their owne folly therewith as we reade in the booke of o Wisd 5.8 Wisedome What hath pride availed us or what profit hath the pompe of riches brought us Then shall they change their mindes when they cannot their estates and sigh for griefe of heart and say within themselves looking up to Heaven and seeing the felicity of the righteous crowned with eternall glory Ibid. Ver. 4 5 6 7. This is hee whom wee sometimes had in derision and in a parable of reproach Wee fooles thought his life madnesse and his end without honour But now how is hee accounted among the children of God and what a portion hath hee among the Saints Therefore wee have erred from the way of truth and the light of righteousnesse hath not shined upon us We have wearied our selves in the wayes of wickednesse and have gone through many dangerous pathes and the way of the Lord wee have not knowne Howbeit two sorts of men in the opinion of the world seeme to make great gaine of sinne the covetous and the ambitious the former is indebted to his extortion oppression and usury for his wealth the other to his glozing dissembling undermining perfidious and treacherous dealing for his honour and advancement in the Court of Princes The spirit of the former hath been conjured downe heretofore by proving that whosoever gathereth wealth or mony by unjust and indirect meanes putteth it into a broken bagge and that his mony shall perish with him unlesse hee breake off his sinne by repentance and make friends of unrighteous Mammon I come to the Politicians who correct or rather pervert that sentence of Saint Paul Godlinesse is great gaine thus a shew of godlinesse is great gaine of whom I would demand what shew of reason they have for this their politicke aphorisme If they beleeve there is a God that judgeth the earth they cannot but thinke that hee will take most grievous vengeance on such as goe about to roote out the feare of God out of mens hearts and make Religion a masque and God himselfe an Image the sacred Story a fable Hell a bug-beare and the joyes of Heaven pleasant phantasies If men hold them in greatest detestation who faulter and double with them shall not God much more hate the hypocrite who doubleth with his Maker maketh shew of honouring and serving him when hee indeed neither honoureth nor serveth him at all Simulata sanctitas est duplex iniquitas counterfeit sanctity is double iniquity and accordingly it shall receive double punishment When our Saviour threateneth the most hainous transgressours that they shall have their p Mat. 24.51 portion with hypocrites hee implyeth that the condition of none in Hell is lesse tolerable than of the hypocrite The q Psal 14.1 foole hath said in his heart there is no God and even in that hee shewed himselfe the more foole in that hee said it in his heart supposing that none should heare it there whereas God heareth the word in the heart before it bee uttered in the tongue and what though other know it not sith hee whom hee wrongeth who is best able to revenge it knoweth it But to wound the Politician with his owne sword If a shew and appearance of Religion is not onely profitable but necessary in politicke respects shall not Religion it selfe be much more Can there bee a like vertue or power in the shadow or image as in the body it selfe If the grapes painted by Zeuxis allured the Birds to pecke at them would not the Birds sooner have flowne at them had they been true grapes All the wit of these sublimated spirits wherewith they entangle the honest simplicity of others cannot wind them out of these dilemmaes If it bee a bad thing to bee good why doe they seem so If
night and are very earnest at their game but in the midst of it the candle goeth out they perforce give over who no doubt if the light had lasted would have played all night This inch of candle is the time of life allotted to a wicked man who is resolved to spend it all in sinfull pleasures and pastimes and if it would last perpetually he would never leave his play and therefore sith he would sin eternally though by reason that the light of his life goeth out hee cannot he deserveth eternall punishment 4. Though the sins of the reprobate are finite in respect of the time and the agents yet as they are committed against an infinite Majesty the guilt of them is infinite Here it will be objected That if sinnes be infinite in any respect they must needs be all equall because infinity admitteth no degrees nothing can be more or lesse infinite I answer that although b Camp rat 8. Paradox Campian and other Papists charge the reformed Churches with that absurd Paradoxe of the Stoickes That all sinnes are equall and consequently that it is as great a wickednesse to kill a Capon to furnish a luxurious feast as to kill a man yet their heart cannot but smite them for so notorious a calumny for they themselves teach That mortall sinnes as they are committed against God are of infinite guilt and deserve infinite and eternall punishments and yet they hold not that all mortall sinnes are equall their Casuists teaching that parricide is a greater sinne than murder incest than adultery blasphemy than perjury all of them being mortall As for the knot of the former objection it is thus easily untyed That sinnes may be considered either in a genericall notion as they are breaches of the eternall Law offend an infinite Majesty in which respect as they are infinite so they are equall or in a specificall reason as they are of this or that kind clothed with such such circumstances as they are breaches of the first or second Table as they are committed immediately against God or mediately once or often on the sudden or unadvisedly ignorantly or wilfully out of infirmity or presumptuously tending much or little to the hurt or prejudice of our neighbour In all which and divers like respects the guilt of sinne is improved or diminished and one sinne is more hainous and lesse pardonable than another We have said enough to these words for their coherence sense and construction let us now see what they say to us for our further use and instruction There is no physicke but if it worke maketh the patient sicker for the present and for the most part the smarting plaister most speedily cureth the wound These observations are true in corporall physicke and much more in spirituall because the smart of sinne and trouble of conscience for it are not so much signes and symptomes of maladies as the beginning of cures Some say the feare of the plague bringeth it but if we speake of this plague and other judgements of God for sinne it is certaine that the feare of them is the best preservative against them he onely may be secure of the avoiding Hell torments and escaping the pangs of eternall death who feareth them as he ought and he that feareth them not is in a most fearfull case O c Ecclus. 41.1 death how bitter is the remembrance of thee It was spoken of the first death but may with greater reason of the second some tastes whereof I wil give you at this present as well to make you loath the morsels of Sathan as the better to rellish the fruits of the tree of life The first shall be out of Saint Matthew d Mat. 25.10 Clausae sunt fores the doores were shut Conceive ye that to be now which if ye prevent it not certainly shall be that after ye have heard the Archangel sound the last Trump and with him a Quire of heavenly spirits singing an Epithalamium or marriage song ye should see the gates of Heaven opened and the Sonne of man marching out of them with an innumerable company of Angels presently sent abroad to gather the Elect from the foure windes and soone after infinite troupes of them assembled from all parts in goodly order and glorious armour accompanying our Saviour in his triumphant returne into heaven to receive each of them a crowne of glory and you caught up into the clouds pressing hard after them to enter with them into heaven should be presently stayed and the gates shut against you and fastened with everlasting barres O! what a corrasive would this be what a disgrace what an unspeakable griefe to have a glimpse of the celestiall Jerusalem and to be excluded for ever out of it to see those whom ye sometimes scorned reviled and trod under foot admitted into Christs Kingdome before your face and you repelled with a non novivos Away from mee I know you not Have ye enough of this taste or doe ye yet desire a second ye have it in Saint Matthew e Mat. 25.30 Projicite in tenebras exteriores Cast the unprofitable servant into utter darknesse there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Suppose ye were stripped stark naked and then bound hand and foot with iron chaines and throwne into a deep darke loathsome and hideous dungeon full of Adders Vipers Basiliskes and Scorpions hissing croaking biting stinging you in all parts of your body you being not able to stirre a joynt or make any resistance at all Are yee affrighted at this The torment of the damned is farre worse for the stinging of Serpents is nothing to the tormenting with Divels nor the darknesse of a dungeon to the horrour of Hell For though there be fire there yet it yeeldeth no comfortable light but as the flame in the bush had the f Exod. 3.2 light of fire yet not the consuming heat so on the contrary the flames of Hell have the scorching heat but not the comfortable light of fire As ye like this take another taste g Mar. 9.44 Vermis eorum non interit Imagine that whilest ye lye in the darke dungeon bit stung in your outward parts there should be a venemous worme within your bowels gnawing at your very heart and upon remembrance of every hainous sinne giving you a deadly bite what paine and torment might this be yet it is nothing to that which Christ there addeth Ignis eorum non extinguitur Their fire is not quenched There is none such a blocke but apprehendeth what unsufferable paine it is to lye soultering in the fire or boyling in a river of brimstone or frying in the flames of a furnace and crying but for one drop of water to coole the tip of the tongue and not obtaining it If these tastes affect you not take you yet a fourth made of the very gall of Aspes h Apoc. 20.10 They shall be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone and shall
Papists in their transcendent charity exclude Protestants out of all possibility of salvation See Wright his motives That Protestants have no faith no God no religion Fisher his Treat Out of the Romish Church no salvation Bellar. apol 8. Jacobus quia Catholicus non est Christianus non est W.B. his discourse entituled the Non entitie of Protestants religion deny them to have any Church any faith any hope of salvation any interest in Christ any part in God yet wee have learned from the Apostle to render to no man evill for evill nor rebuke for rebuke nor slander for slander wee deny them not to have a Church though very corrupt and unsound wee doubt not but through Gods mercy many thousands of our fore-fathers who lived and dyed in the communion of their Church and according to that measure of knowledge which was revealed unto them out of holy Scripture in the mysteries of salvation led a godly and innocent life not holding any errour against their conscience nor allowing themselves in any knowne sinne continually asking pardon for their negligences and ignorances of God through Christs merits might bee saved though not as Papists that is not by their Popish additions and superstitions but as Protestants that is by those common grounds of Christianity which they hold with us All that I intend to shew herein is that in some practices of theirs they may bee rightly compared to the Heathen as when the Apostle saith that he that provideth not for his owne family is worse than an Infidell his meaning is not that every Christian that is a carelesse housholder is simply in worse state than a Heathen but onely by way of aggravation of that sinne hee teacheth all unthrifts that in that particular they are more culpable than Heathen In like manner my meaning is not to put Papists and Heathen in the same state and ranke as if there were not more hope of a Papist than a Painims salvation but to breed a greater loathing and detestation of Popish idolatry and superstition by paralleling Baalites and other Heathens together I will make it evidently appeare that some particular practices of the Romane Church are no better than Heathenish See Hom. against the perill of Idolatry p. 3. Of this mind were they who laid the first stones of the happy reformation in England Our Image maintainers and worshippers have used and use the same outward rites and manner of honouring and worshipping their Images as the Gentiles did use before their Idols and that therefore they commit idolatry as well inwardly as outwardly as did the wicked Gentile Idolaters If any reply that these Homilies were but Sermons of private men transported with zeale and carry not with them the authority of the whole Church of England I answer that as those Verses of Poets alledged by the Apostle were made part of the Canonicall Scripture by being inserted into his inspired Epistles so the Homilies which are mentioned by name in the 35. Article and commended as containing godly and g His Majesties declaration We doe therefore ratifie and confrme the said Articles which doe containe the doctrine of the Church of E●gland requiring all our loving subjects to continue in the uniforme profession thereof and prohibiting the least difference from the said Articles wholesome doctrine and necessary for the times are made part of the Articles of Religion which are established by authority of the whole Convocation and ratified and confirmed by the royall assent Were not this the expresse judgement of the Church of England whose authority ought to stop the mouth of all that professe themselves to be her children from any way blaunching the idolatrous practices of the Romane Church yet were not the fore-heads of our Image-worshippers made of as hard metall as their Images they would blush to say as they doe that the testimonies which wee alledge out of Scriptures and Fathers make against Idols and not against Image-worship For the words are h Levit. 26.1 Yee shall make no Idoll or graven Images nor reare up any standing Image nor set up any Image of stone to bow downe to it The words are i Exod. 20 4. Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any Pesel that is any thing carved or graven And if there may seem any mist in this generall word to any the words following cleerly dispell it Nor the likenesse of any thing that is in heaven above nor in the earth beneath nor in the waters under the earth The third Text is thus rendered in their own vulgar Latine k Deut. 4.15 16 17. Take therefore good heed to your soules for yee saw no manner of similitude in the day which the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire lest peradventure being deceived Custodite sollicit● animas vestras non vidistis aliquam similitudinem in die quâ Dominus vobis locutus est in Horeb in medio igne ne fortè faciatis vobis sculptam imaginem vel similitudinem masculi vel foeminae ye make you a graven Image the similitude of any figure the likenesse of male or female the likenesse of any beast that is on the earth the likenesse of any winged fowle that flyeth in the aire the likenesse of any thing that creepeth on the ground the likenesse of any fish that is in the waters beneath the earth Neither is our allegation out of the Prophet Esay lesse poignant than the former To whom will m Esay 40.18 19 20. ye liken God or what likenesse will yee compare unto him The workman melteth a graven Image and the goldsmith spreadeth it over with gold and casteth silver chaines Hee that is so impoverished that hee hath no oblation chooseth a tree that will not rot hee seeketh unto him a cunning workman to prepare a graven Image c. As tor the words Imago and Idolum if wee respect the originall they are all one for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying the shape or species of any thing and therefore not onely Aristotle calleth the shapes of things which are received into our senses the idols of the senses but Cardinall n Com. in c. 20. Exod. Cajetan also the images of the Angels in the Arke Idola Cherubinorum If wee regard the most common use of the words they differ as mulier and scortum that is a woman and a strumpet For as a woman abused or defiled by corporall fornication is called a strumpet so all such Images as are abused to spirituall fornication are called Idols Thus Saint o Lib. 8. de orig c. 11. Idolum est simulachrum quod humanâ effigie est consecra●um Isidore defineth an Idoll An Idoll is an Image consecrated in an humane shape And at the first all Idols were such but after men fell into grosser idolatry and turned the glory of God not only into the similitude of a p Rom. 1.23
many jewells I make no doubt but that you will resolve with the Apostle to desire to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified Let Israel hope in the Lord saith the b Psal 130 7. Psalmist for with the Lord there is mecrcy and with him is plenteous redemption Plenteous for what store of bloud shed he in his agony in his crowning with thornes in his whipping in his nailing and lastly in the piercing of his side whereas one drop of his bloud in regard of the infinite dignity of his person might have served for the ransome of many worlds one drop of his bloud was more worth than all the precious things in the world As Pliny writeth of the herbe c Plin. l. 22. c. 15. Scorpius herba v●let adversus animal sui nominis Scorpius that it is a remedy against the poyson of a Scorpion so Christs death and crosse is a soveraigne remedy against all manner of deaths and crosses For all such crosses make a true beleever conformable to his Redeemers image and every conformity to him is a perfection and every such perfection shall adde a jewell to his crown of glory This death of Christ so precious so soveraigne we shew forth in shadow as it were and adumbration when either we discourse of the history of Christs passion or administer the Sacrament of his death but to the life when as Saint Francis is said to have had the print of Christs five wounds on his body so wee have the print of them in our soules when we expresse his death in our mortification when we tye our selves to our good behaviour and restraine our desires and affections as he was nailed to the crosse when we thirst after righteousnesse as he thirsted on the crosse for our salvation when we are pierced with godly sorrow as his soule was heavie unto death and when as his flesh so our carnall lusts are crucified when as hee commended his soule to his Father so we in our greatest extremities commit our soules to God as our faithfull Creatour Cui c. THE SIGNE AT THE HEART A Sermon preached on the first Sunday in Lent THE LXVII SERMON ACTS 2.37 Now when they heard this they were pricked in their heart and said unto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren What shall we do SInnes for repentance to worke upon and repentance for sinne take up in a manner our whole life Not onely the wicked in their endlesse mazes in the rode to hell but even the godly who endeavour to make the streightest steps they can to heaven Ambulant in circuitu walke in a kind of circuit From fasting to feasting and from feasting againe to fasting from Mount Gerizin to Mount Hebal and from Mount Hebal to Mount Gerizin from sinnes to repentance and from repentance backe againe though against their will to sin It is true that grace in the regenerate never quits the field but groweth more and more upon corrupt nature and in the end conquereth her yet so conquereth her as Lucullus and other Romane Captaines did a Cic. de leg Manil. Ita tamen superarunt ut ille pulsus superatusque regnaret Mithridates that nature still ruleth in the members and often putteth the mind to the worst alwaies to much trouble Wherfore as the Sea-mew that maketh her nest on the sea shore is forced daily to repaire it because every day the violent assault of the sea waves moulter away some part thereof so the regenerate and sanctified soule hath need to renew the inward man daily and repaire the conscience by repentance because every day nay almost every houre by the violent assaults of tentation and sinnes as they are termed of ordinary incursion some breach or other is made into it Now albeit private repentance hath no day set nor time prefixed to it but is alwayes in season yet now is the peculiar season of publike when the practice of the primitive and the sanction of the present Church calls us to watching and fasting to weeping and mourning to sackcloth and ashes to humiliation and contrition when in a manner the whole Christian world I except only some few Heteroclites accordeth with us in our groanes and consorteth with our sighes and keepeth stroake with us in the beating our breasts and setteth open the sluces to make a floud of teares and carry away the filth of the whole yeere past Abyssus abyssum invocet let this floud carry away the former deluge Verily such is the overflowing of iniquity and inundation of impurity in this last and worst age of the world that the most righteous among us can hardly keep up their head and hold out their hands above water to call to God for mercy for themselves others hath not then the Church of God great reason to oppose the Eves Embers Lent fasts as so many floud-gates if not quite to stay yet somewhat to stop the current of sin Anselme sometimes Archbishop of Canterbury whom the Church of Rome hath inserted into the Canon of Saints but he ranketh himselfe among the Apocrypha of sinners recounting with hearts griefe and sorrow the whole course of his life and finding the infancy of sinne in the sinnes of his infancy the youth and growth of sinne in the sinnes of his youth and the maturity and ripenesse of all sinne in the sinnes of his ripe and perfect age breaketh forth into this passionate speech Quid restat tibi O peccator nisi ut totâ vitâ deploret totam vitam What remaines for thee wretched man but that thou spend the remainder of thy whole life in bewailing thy whole life What should wee Beloved in a manner doe else considering that even when we pray against sin wee sin in praying when we have made holy vowes against sin our vowes by the breach of them turne into sinne after wee have repented of our sinnes we repent of our repentance and thereby increase our sinne In which consideration if all the time that is given us should be a b Hier. ep 7. In quadragesima abstinentiae vela pandenda sunt tota aurigae retinacula laxanda Lent of discipline if all weekes Embers if all daies of the weeke Ashwednesdayes how much more ought we to keep Lent in Lent now at least continually to call upon the name of God for our continuall blaspheming it Now to fast for our sinnes in feasting now to weep and mourne for our sinnes in laughing sporting and rioting in sinfull pleasures to this end our tender mother the Spouse of Christ debarreth us of all other delights that wee should make Gods statutes our delights for this cause shee subtracteth our bodily refection that wee may feast our soules therefore shee taketh away or diminisheth our portion in the comforts of this life that with holy David wee should take God for our c Psal 119.57 portion This is a time as the name importeth Lent of God to examine our
God only knowes Jam ad Triarios res rediit now the whole shock of the army and the maine battell is to advance and upon the sinceritie of the humiliation and fervency of devotion and strength of our united praiers sighes this day dependeth much the safety and life of our State and in it of our Church and in it of our true and incorrupt Religion Let no man goe about with Mercuries inchanted rod to close the eyes of our Argus's let no man sow pillowes under the elbowes of our true Patriots to make them sleep in security lest destruction steale upon us at unawares It is certaine our enemies sleep not and it is most certaine that our crying sinnes have awaked Gods justice it standeth us therefore upon to watch and pray Judgement is already begun at the house of God the Angel hath poured out his viall of red wine upon the Churches of Bohemia and their fields are thicke sowne with the blood of Martyrs the same Angel hath emptied another viall upon the Churches in the Palatinate and the sweet Rhenish grape yeelds in a manner now no liquor but blood a third viall runneth out at this houre upon the reformed Churches in France and our sinnes as it were holloe to him to stretch his hand over the narrow sea and cast the dregges of it on us who have beene long settled upon our lees and undoubtedly this will bee our potion to drinke if wee stretch not our hands to heaven that God may command his Angel to stay his hand If hee have already turned his viall and wee see drops of bloud hanging in the ayre yet the strong wind of our prayers may blow them away and dispell them in such sort that they shall not fall upon us a gale of our sighes may cleare the skie Moses praiers manicled the hands of Almighty God and shall not the united devotions of this whole Land either stay or turne his Angels hand Away with all confidence in the arme of flesh away with all hope in man away with all cloakes of sinne and vizzards of hypocrisie there is no dissembling with God no fighting against him Albeit our land bee compassed with the sea as with a moat and environed with ships furnished with ordnance as with brazen and iron walls though the most puissant Princes on earth should send us innumerable troupes to succour and aide us yet we have no fence for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we lye open to heaven wee are naked to the arrowes of the Almighty and no carnall weapons for succours can stand us in any stead onely the helmet of salvation and the buckler of faith and the powder of a contrite heart and the shot of pious ejaculations may doe us some good It is our pride Beloved that hath throwne us downe and it is humility which must raise us our divisions have weakened us and it is union that can strengthen us our luxury hath imbezelled us and now nothing but fasting and abstinence can recover us our sinnes have made a breach and nothing but repentance can make it up our profane oathes our sinfull pleasures our carnall security and sensuality hath driven away the Spirit of grace and comfort from us and nothing can wooe him to returne backe againe but our vowes of amendment unfeigned teares and sorrowfull sighes Let us therefore ply sighes and b Cyp. ep 1. Incumbamus igitur gemitibus assiduis deprecationibus crebris haec enim sunt arma coelestia quae stare perseverare fortiter faciunt haec sunt munimenta spiritualia tela divina quae protegunt nos Et serm de laps Oportet transigere vigiliis noctes tempus omne lachrymosis lamentationibus occupare stratos solo adhaerere cineri in cilicio volutari sordibus prayers for these are the spirituall weapons we alone can trust to through the intercession of Christs bloud which speaketh better things for us than the bloud of Abel These weapons our Lord himselfe made tryall of in my Text and sanctified them to our use viz. passionate teares and compassionate prayers When hee drew neere to Jerusalem and fore-saw in spirit that shee drew neere to her ruine his eyes melted with teares he beheld the City and wept and his heart breaketh out into sighes Oh that thou knewest Teares trickle not down in order neither are sighes fetched by method Expect not therefore from mee any accurate division or methodicall handling of this passionate Text only in the first place fasten the eye of your observation upon the eyes of our Saviour and you shall discerne in them 1. Beames of love He beheld 2. Teares of compassion He wept over it In the next place bow the eares of your religious attention towards his mouth and ye shall heare from him 1. Sighes of desire Oh or if that thou knewest 2. Plaints of sorrow But now they are hid from thine eyes I have pitched as you see upon a c Hom. Il. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moist plat or fenny ground wherein that your devotion may walke more steadily I have laid out for you five knolls or steps to rest upon and pawse 1. Venit He came 2. Vidit He beheld 3. Flevit He wept 4. Ingemuit He sighed 5. Oravit He prayed 1. Venit or appropinquavit he drew neere The end of our Saviours life here was the sacrifice of his death he was borne that he might die for us and by one oblation of himselfe on the crosse satisfie for the sinnes of the whole world Now all sacrifices by the Law were to be offered at Jerusalem to Jerusalem therefore hee comes up to finish the worke of our redemption and he maketh the more haste because Easter was neere at hand when he was to eate the Paschall Lambe with his Disciples and to be eaten of them in the mysterious rite of the Sacrament to kill the passover in the type but to be killed himselfe in the truth Oh how farre hath our Saviour left us behind him in his love He came with a swift foot to us we returne with a slow foot to him he made more haste to give himselfe than we make to receive him After hee received the commandement from his Father to lay downe his life for his sheep he rode more cheerfully into Jerusalem and was led more willingly to the altar of the crosse where hee lost his life than we repaire to his holy table there to be partakers of the bread of eternall life He came neere to the City that he might view it he viewed it that hee might weep over it hee wept over it that hee might testifie a threefold truth 1. Naturae of his Nature 2. Amoris of his Love 3. Doctrinae of his Doctrine or prophesie 1. Veritatem naturae the truth of his humane nature He must needs be a true man who out of compassion sheds teares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sic fatur lachrymans Cold stone or metall relenteth not a phantasme