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A03949 Bromelion A discourse of the most substantial points of diuinitie, handled by diuers common places: vvith great studie, sinceritie, and perspicuitie. Whose titles you haue in the next page following. S. I., fl. 1595.; Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605. Summa totius Christianismi. English. 1595 (1595) STC 14057; ESTC S107410 412,250 588

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as the worlde giueth giue I vnto you Therfore let not your heart be troubled nor feare The worlde can giue but outward comforts if it shewe neuer so much fauour but as for the inward comfort of the minde and conscience it cannot reach thereinto it is past the power thereof and must let that alone to the working of an other And if it were not for the heauenly comfort the heart of the godly would soone fall away And vnlesse our Sauior Christ had perceiued such weaknesse and such doubtfulnesse in the féeble and vnconstant nature of man hee would not haue vttered these words to make their comfort stedfast and sure in him Ye haue heard saith he how I said vnto you I goe away and will come vnto you If ye loued me ye would verily teioyce because I said I goe vnto the father for my father is greater then I. As if hee had saide If ye loued mee throughly and my loue were stedfast in you your hearts would reioyce and no troubles should mooue you and no discomfortes should perswade you to the contrary This haue I spoken vnto you before it come that when it is come to passe ye might beléeue and your hearts then might abound with ioy For surely those things which I haue promised shall come to passe and therefore doubt nothing and let your hearts be confirmed and setled in ioy Ouer and besides I will send the comforter vnto you my holy spirit the comforter of the elect and chosen which shall not suffer your hearts to faile but stil shal raise them vp in comfort in their greatest griefes and sorrowes What cause therefore haue the godly séeing these great comforts as mightie proppes may staie them from falling though in the sight of the world there be great cause of sorrow but séeing they are we aned from the world and are not of the world what cause haue they I say to cast downe their hearts with sorrow and pen●●uenesse Wherefore let the counsell of the wise man take place with them Giue not ouer thy minde to heaninesse The ioy of the heart is the life of man and a mans gladnesse is the prolonging of his daies Griefe and sorrow shorten the time and bring age before the time Wherefore comfort thy heart and driue sorrow farre from thée For sorrow hath slaine many and there is no profit therin Sorrow did slaie the hearts of the Canaanites because God had weakened their hearts According to the confession of Rahab of whom we reade Iosh 2. when she talked with the spies I know saith she that the Lord hath giuen you the land and that the feare of you is fallen vpon vs and that all the inhabitants of the land faint because of you And when we heard of you our hearts did faint and there remained no more courage in any of vs all This is one of Gods great punishments toward them that do not liue in his feare and obedience that he wil giue them a trembling heart and a sorrowful mind Le. 26. 36. to throw them out of their possessions and to make them haue no ioy of their goods Which we may partly see in the example of churlish Nabal denying to giue comfort to them that were greatly distressed Who when his wife had told him what heauie things were toward him his hart died within him and he was like a stone For the Lord smote Nabal with that sorrowe that hee died Samu. 25. 38. But séeing in all wel-doing God doeth comfort our hearts why should we be enemies to our selues and to our owne welfare With the Apostles imprisoned let vs sing Psalmes to testifie the ioy of our hart to Godward Speaking vnto our selues in Psalmes and himnes and spirituall songes singing and making melodie to the Lord in our hearts And séeing all our hope is or ought to bee in God who is our only treasure why should not our hearts be there also Saying with the blessed virgine My soule doth magnify the Lord and my spirit hath reioyced in God my Sauiour Who although he be absent from vs yet hath he promised to come againe and to sée vs and to comfort our hearts and to make them reioyce So that when your redemption shall drawe nigh then lift vp your heads and when your ioy shall approach let your hearts also be lifted vp with excellent comfort Considering what hath béene fortold long agone by the Prophet Esay 65. 13. 14. Concerning the sorrow of the wicked and the ioy of the Godly Thus saith the Lord God Behold my seruants shall eate and yee shal be hungry Behold my seruants shall drinke and yee shal be thirs●ie Behold my seruants shall reioyce and yee shal be ashamed Behold my seruants shall sing for ioy of heart and yee shall cry for sorrow of heart and shall houle for vexation of mind Foure times Behold for the certaintie thereof and in token of admiration as also to establish the hearts of the godly with ioy As for all worldly ioy which doth not agrée with God and godlinesse let vs vtterly abandon it and banish it farre from vs neither let our hearts in any sort delight therein Because they be meanes to drawe vs from God All these will I giue thée if thou wilt fall downe and worship me Wherefore if thou mightst be set vpon the highest mountaine there to beholde the ioy of earthly maiestie if thou mightst be possessed and inthroned in the glory thereof yet farre is it that thy heart should be setled in any certain comfort Take hold of that comfort and ioy which Christ thy sauiour and redéemer hath promised which though thou canst not sée as yet in due time thou shalt be partaker therof Let thy heart therefore rest vpon this and despise the other for the one shall vanish the other shall neuer deca●e Which is very well confirmed by the last place of proofe in the application Your ioy shall no man take from you I will see you againe your harts shall reioyce and your Your ioy shall no man take away from you ioy shall no man take from you Which toy is so much the more estéemed because it is no common ioy no worldly ioy where sorrow and trouble may follow as a chaunge For worldly ioyes are often taken away and haue diuers ellipses alterations and chaunges Soone come and soone gone soone ripe and soone rotten Moses could not sée that goodly mountaine and Lebanon which if he had séene the sorrow and trouble of the back-sliding people would haue danted his ioy Besides his longing would soone haue bene satisfied and there is a kinde of glut in worldly ioyes But although he could not sée that goodly mountaine of Lebanon yet he was brought into the highest mountaine farre more goodly beautifull and pleasant then all the mountaines of the world being full of oliue braunches for Noahs doues Where such ioyes are setled and are hereafter to be séene which suffer no chaunge no alteration no
and readie Marke the minde but of a worldly man that accounhimselfe greatly beholding to another is not this his courage that he could finde in his heart to die in his quarrell and to offer his seruice before he commaunded thereunto The readinesse of our Sauiour Christ whose example if it be too high for imitation yet that of the Apostle Saint Paule heerein is notable and able to giue the weakest minde great courage Get thée behind me Sathan saith Christ vnto Peter thou art an offence vnto mée because thou vnderstandest not the things that are of God but the things that are of men The Prophet Agabus Act. 21. tooke Pauls girdle and bound his owne hands and féete and said Thus saith the holy Ghost So shall the Iewes at Ierusalem binde the man that oweth this girdle and shall deliuer him into the hands of the Gentiles Then his friends perswaded him and besought him with teares that he would not go vp to Ierusalem To whom Paul answered and said What do ye weeping and breaking my heart for I am ready not to bee bounde only but also to die at Ierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus And in an other place And now behold I goe bound in the spirite vnto Ierusalem and knowe not what things shall come vnto mee there Saue that the holy Ghost witnesseth in euery citie saying that bands and afflictions abide me in Ierusalem but I passe not at all neither is my life deare vnto my selfe This is a notable example of incouragement beside the promise of excéeding great reward Hee that looseth his life for my sake shall finde ●● But weake mindes are soone offended and fraile flesh cannot beare out these bitter brunts neither stand to the triall of so worthie a cause when we shall behold as it were great mountaine to fall vpon vs and great surges readie to swallow vs vp No doubt we shall méet with hinderances inow and those mighty hinderances yet greater renowne it is to ouercome our selues then to winne a citie both are hard to do and to accomplish but the first most hard and to flesh and blood impossible True it is that we should cast off all hinderances in this so waightie a matter and deny our selues and in this combat betwixt the spirit and flesh and blood we should shewe our selues conquerers but our hearts for the most part are so faint that strawes can make vs stumble We bl●nch at the least matters and are astund euen at the very name of persecution When King Hezechiah heard of his death he wept sore and so do many of vs carry the like affliction that in no sort we can brooke affliction The pur●●●ion is too bitter although health and immortallitie bee the effect of it Why is it that we are readie to put finger in the eie when we heare that we must endure trouble but that the world a●desh and blood do carry more sway with vs then Gods spirit and that the ioy of this life can abide no sorrow Although God hath appointed this to be our lot Ye shall weepe and lament yea furthermore although we heare that our sorrow shal be turned into ioy Gladly we would be at peace with the world but when the world shall hate vs that beginneth to breake vs then are we surprized of sorrow and for the time swallowed vp of griefe The Prophet Ieremy a man of great courage patience and constancie before he could frame himselfe to drinke of this bitter cuppe as one most passionate breaketh out into these words and in the presence of God Cursed be the day wherin I was borne oh that my mother had bene my graue or her wombe a perpetuall eonception How is it that I came forth of the wombe to see labour and sorrow And againe chapter 19. Woe is me my mother that thou hast borne mee a contentious man and a man that striueth with the whole earth I haue done them neither hurt nor wrong yet euerie one doth curse me According to that of the Prophet Dauid They hated mee without any cause and that thou ô God knowest Yet should this matter be so farre from mouing vs to heauinesse that therein we should reioyce As the Apostle S. Paule doeth moue vs by his example Gal. 6. 14. God forbid saith he that I should reioyce in any thing but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ whereby the world is crucified vnto me and I vnto the world Our Sauior Christ hath foretold vs that we should be hated of all men for his name and for the profession of his truth And lest any of vs should faint he addeth further But hee or they that endure to the end they shall be saued What if the world and the mightiest in the world hate ve what if they séeke our blood Feare not their feare saith the Apostle neither be troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts Feare not them saith our Sauiour which haue power ouer your bodies and whose furie and rage can goe no further but rather feare him who after the body is distroied by death can cast both soule and body in hell God hath commanded vs vnto this wéeping and lamentation Foure principal● reasons to pers●●d●●s to vndertake perse●cution w● 〈◊〉 the first is Gods Commandement and appointed vs vnto this trouble and sorrow and persecution let vs not therefore feare men to auoid gods commandement but rather glorifie God by withstan●●ng euill men and such as are bent to resist and deface to suppresse and vtterly to roote out gods truth And because the world is giuen to nothing more then to oppresse gods truth therefore ought we the more to maintaine it and not to regard our liues in respect of the defence therof Striue for y● truth vnto death saith the wise man Eccle. 4. 28. And defend iustice for thy life God hath created vs for his glory and if we loue God and his loue be setled in our hearts wée ought to the vtmost of our power to maintaine his glory Dearely beloued saith the blessed Apostle thinke it not straunge concerning the firy tryall It pleaseth God to try you by the extremities of this wicked world whether ye will like valiant souldiours stand to the defence of his cause We count it a glorious matter and worthy of immortall fame to spend our liues in the defence of our prince and country yet is it more glorious if wée be called thereunto not to refuse any torment and extremitie in shewing our dutie and our loue to God and his Church Re. 2. 10. Vnto the Angell of the church of Smirna it was said Feare none of those things which thou shalt suffer behold it shall come to passe that the diuell shall cast some of you into prison that ye may be tried and ye shall haue tribulation tenne daies that is a long time Bee thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life Hee that ouercommeth shall not bee hurt of