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A14678 Alæ seraphicæ The seraphins vvings to raise us unto heauen. Deliuered in six sermons, partly at Saint Peters in Westminster, partly at S. Aldates in Oxford. 1623. By Iohn Wall Doctor in Diuinity, of Christ-Church in Oxford. Wall, John, 1588-1666. 1627 (1627) STC 24985; ESTC S119339 77,171 152

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pure heart and a good conscience and faith vnfained I remember God charged the Priest to sanctifie the breast of their shake offering as well as the shoulder of the heaue offering That we might see it is not so much the outward man as the inward wherein he delighteth neither is it enough to beare Christ in the head as Minerua did Iupiter vnlesse we beare him in the heart as Mary did our Sauiour Grauidare potuit grauare non potuit beatam virginem He might well fill her wombe with the glorie of his flesh he could not burden her with trouble of his presence How then will they satisfie this demaund that haue no heart vnto goodnesse The armie Philopoemen is likened vnto a man that hath legs feete but no belly because they wanted money which is the heart of warre so I feare in the Church militant there be diuerse that haue legs and feete but no bellie they haue the legges and the feete of outward conuersation but they want the heart and the belly of inward deuotion Non vitae sed famae negotiatores as Tertul. makes the charachter such as negotiate and trade more for a good name then for a good life for a good report then a good conscience If the Lord will be on the eare who so readie to attend his word and to call for a Sermon If the Lord will be on the tongue who so forward to confesse his name or to speake of Religion till they haue turned Sacramentum in sermonem as Saluianus speakes the sacred vse of his glorious name into vaine babling and the foolish contention of words and trifles But let him call for the heart they are quite blanke either it is losteth the cares of this world or sold to worke deceit and wickednesse Thus haue they a shew of godlinesse but denie the power thereof like fidlers that are more carefull in tuning their instruments then in tuning their liues their tongues are their instruments if they be in tune and the strings thereof well set to faire language and glozing hypocrisie all is well they haue done their parts and dutie I know not whether I may say they haue no heart or a double heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Hebricians vse to speake a heart and a heart one for Christ another for Belial one for God another for the Diuell Sure I am they are cardiaci and fall vnder the curse the wise man hath denounced Vae duplici cordi Woe to the double heart for the Lord will not part stakes with any neither hath righteousnesse any communication with vnrighteousnes They are not many hearts but one that he desireth howbeit the conditions thereof be diuerse For it must be a new heart and a cleane heart a sound heart and a broken heart renewed by his word clensed in his bloud sound by the truth of doctrine broken by the contrition of spirit else will he forsake the tabernacle of our body and abhorre both heart and arme which is the second receptacle of our Sauiour Put me vpon thy arme For though Loue precede Faith in order of perfection yet Faith precedes Loue in order of generation did the Prophet begin to speake before the heart waxt hot and the fire was kindled in his breast First beleeue with thy heart then confesse with thy mouth yet so that heart and mouth and hand and arme may go together Good workes ioyned to Faith are as a strong building on a good foundation the building of gold and siluer vpon that ground which is laid of old I meane Christ Iesus Mary had no sooner borne Christ in her wombe and presented him in the Temple but Simeon takes him in his armes and embraceth him ioyfully For we must not be ashamed of our profession but carrie the ensigne of our Sauiour openly before vs that so the vertue and the patience and the meeknesse and the obedience of Christ Iesus may be found in euery part but chiefly in our actions Christ on the heart is like seed on the earth Christ on the arme is like corne on the eare Christ on the heart like a tree planted by the riuers of water Christ on the arme like a tree bringing fruit in time of Autumne and therefore true Religion and vndefiled before God is practicall and operatiue in the workes of mercie To visit the fatherlesse and widowes in aduersitie and to keepe our selues vnspotted of the world If our lips drop hony by the preaching of his word and the sweetnesse of his doctrine it is good and commendable but if our hands drop myrh by the crucifying of him and the mortification of our earthly members by the obedience of Christ and the perfect imitation of Christian holinesse it is most comfortable and heauenly There be that follow the paths of Christ and to vse the words of Saluianus Patentiora faciunt Domini vestigia they make the footsteps of our Sauiour more plaine and easie by the example of their vertue and the euidence of their bountie These be they which beare him in their armes and carrie him as a lampe burning in their hands for the benefit of others Do men gather figs of thornes or grapes of thistles Ye shall know them by their fruite And as Christ said of himselfe interrogate opera aske my workes for they speake of me so may we say of them interrogate opera aske their workes for they speake of them looke not on the face regard not the voice they may haue the voice of Iacob but the hands of Esau enquire of their workes they beare witnesse of them and are the surest markes of euery Christian Auditur cum videtur saith Tertullian A good Philosopher is best heard when hee is seene and a true Christian best knowne by the glasse of his life and the president of his actions It is a good resemblance that ancient Father vsed in his Moralls Alis feriunt vbi opera ostendunt The works of the Saints are as the wings of the Cherubins that touch one another for as they smite one another by their wings so we excite one another by our workes and prouoke as it were to godlinesse of liuing remember then I beseech you the end of your vocation that ye are the workmanship of God created in Christ Iesus to good workes That he gaue his life for you to the end you might be a peculiar to himselfe zealous of good workes die vnto sinne liue vnto righteousnesse cast of the workes of darknesse put on the armour of light that ye may be worthy of the Gospell of Christ and the doctrine of our Sauiour in all things may be honoured Ye are they of whom the Apostle doth trauell in birth that Christ may be formed in you and you transformed into him as well in arme as in heart as well in body as in spirit O let it neuer be said of these blessed armes the armes of your workes as Milo said of his armes the armes of his flesh Hi
occidit prauitas I will follow him whom my sinnes hath put to death but his owne power hath raised to life that he may triumph and be exalted and seeme wonderfull in the holy places by working our peace and obtaining our redemption which is the fruite and benefit of all our trauell and expects the short continuance of our frailtie and patience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hauing found an eternall redemption for vs. Sinne is the aduersary that deliuered man bound to God as to the Iudge God the Iudge that deliuered man bound to Satan as to the Iaylour Hee was bound to the diuell in the seruice of vnrighteousnesse he was bound to God for the punishment of his transgressions but now hee is redeemed from both and this stands as the Schooles note in the price and the solution the price the bloud of Christ the solution at the death of Christ In that he died we haue the ransome of our sinnes in that he died but once we haue the sufficiency of that ransome for with him there is plenteous redemption and for vs eternall redemption Eternall in respect of Gods decree which is before time Eternall in respect of those which are redeemed they are immortall spirits Eternall in respect of the worke it selfe which is perfect and absolute neuer to bee abolisht or renewed From the bricke and the clay of foule acts and more then Aegyptian seruitude but the originall is more Emphaticall then our translation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hauing found an euerlasting redemption Whereby we vnderstand that it was sought with paine and griefe and sorrow and trauell vnder the heauie yoke of his intollerable crosse and vnsupportable agonie yet so little doth he esteeme whatsoeuer he endures that he counts that found which he dearely bought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hauing found an euerlasting redemption Which indeed is full of comfort and sounds as musicke to the eare for as in a chaine hee that takes the first linke drawes on all the rest so in the golden chaine of our saluation redemption is that which drawes on all the rest if we be redeemed we shall be iustified if we be iustified we shall be sanctified if we be sanctified we shall be glorified so that to be redeemed is all that can bee imagined to escape the feare of death to receiue a crowne of life to put on white robes to iudge the Tribes of Israel and to possesse that which is farre more excellent aeternum gloriae pondus an eternall weight of glory It is like a cluster of grapes where all the benefits of Christs death and mans safetie are heaped and treasured vp together and therefore saith Chrysologus Plura nobis parta c. Wee got more by the tree of the crosse then euer wee lost by the tree of Paradise What shall I mention the dreame of Saint Origen That promiseth redemption after a thousand yeares to the diuell and his Angels Sure I am it is for vs and that it is for vs alone is manifest by his incarnation for that is redeemed which at first was assumed hee tooke not the Angels but the seede of Abraham and therefore hee saues not the Angels but the seede of Abraham Wee are the heritage which he redeemed with his pretious bloud agreeable to that of Fulgentius Id solum in corpore regnantium quod praecessit in capite ad coelum Wee that receiue his word beleeue his promises admire his loue embrace his mercies crying with these soules vnder the altar to him that was made a sacrifice vpon the altar how long sweet Iesu Holy and true wilt not thou auenge our bloud vpon those which dwell vpon the earth I know not how this moues you mee thinkes it should worke vpon the sencelesse creature and rayse vp children vnto Abraham from the very stones or rather praise and glory thankes and honour to the God of Abraham from the stonie hearts of most obstinate and rebellious children If Galen made profession when he lookt vpon man in his first creation that if all the members of his body had bene tongues they would not haue bene sufficient to expresse the glory of the Lord how should wee magnifie the goodnesse of our Sauiour that beheld man in his second creation deliuered from the bondage of sin and translated into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God redeemed from the curse of the Law and cloathed with the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus That so he may shine as the stars of heauen in those euerlasting spheeres of safetie protection When Flaminius had deliuered many Cities of the Grecians and made open Proclamation of their libertie they lifted vp their voyces and cryed for ioy till the birds of the ayre were astonied and fell dead before them See beloued here is a generall Proclamation of saftie and redemption not from the Consull of the Romanes but from the Doctor of the Gentiles not to the Cities of Greece or the inhabitants of Iudea onely but to all the Nations and countries vnder heauen bond and free Iew and Gentile they are all deliuered and haue receiued vnfranchisement from their spirituall captiuitie O that our hearts were enlarged rowards God and the loud shout of our spirituall reioycings and doubled Haleluiahs might be as a clap of thunder to fright the Prince of the ayre and flat the top of vaine thoughts and proud imaginations that nestle in the clouds till they sinke and lie dead before vs. I wish that of Bernard might be an incentiue to your deuotion and blow the coales of true loue and Christian pietie in all that heare me Quam bonus suauis es Domine Iesu c. O sweet Iesu how good and pleasant art thou to all that seeke thee The Redeemer of such as are lost the Sauiour of those that are redeemed the hope of such as wander the helpe of those which labour the comfort and refreshing of euery bleeding soule that runnes after thee in the sweate of teares and the painefull anguish of their crosse and miserie Great is thy name and most worthy to be praised and let all the creatures both in heauen and earth giue thankes vnto thee for the humilitie of thy passion the glory of thy exaltation the might and power of thy victorious triumph and euerlasting redemption Thou hast saued vs from death and installed vs in the holy place that we may stand before thee and draw neare with boldnesse vnto the throne of Grace not with a few peeces of siluer as the Iewes bought thee but with many drops of bloud spilt vpon the earth This is it that dies our robes and turnes our sackcloth into scarlet that annoints our soules and makes vs Kings and Priests to God the Father or rather a sanctuarie of his Spirit and liuing temples of the holy Ghost What remaines but since he hath giuen himselfe for vs wee giue our selues to him our soules which he hath redeemed our bodies which he hath sanctified O yee house of Iudah
mortui sunt they are dead and there is no life in them But let the power and the courage and the vigour and the Spirit of Christ Iesus quicken and make ye vigetatiue in all goodnesse Anatomists do obserue there is a veine runnes from the heart to the arme and bounds on the finger where the ring is worne if Christ be our ring and seale he must be so on the arme that he leaue not the heart so on the heart that he reach vnto the arme for direction of faith and manners Here might I call heauen and earth to record and witnesse before God and his Angels how iniuriously we are traduced to despise the Law and not to care for the decalogue to rely vpon a naked faith without the fruite of holinesse or the obseruation of his precepts Oh thou which bindest thy words as signes vpon our armes and as frontlets betweene our eyes pleade our cause and vindicate vs from this calumnie tell these men thou art not onely as a seale vpon our hearts by the knowledge of thy truth but as a signet vpon our armes by the conformitie of life and the exercise of holinesse And so I hasten to the seale and closure of discourse which is the forme and semblance and that is a seale or a signet Put me as a seale and a signet Well may hee be tearmed a seale that is the brightnesse of his Fathers glorie and the engrauen forme of his substance but that which is here a seale or a signet is onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Originall A ring or a seale that as we haue borne the image of the earthly so we may beare the image of the heauenly by similitude and conformitie to our Sauiour whether in his obedience and his righteousnesse or in his patience and his sufferings For as no siluer is currant vnlesse it beare the image superscription of the Emperour so there is nothing auaileable before God without the stamp of his Sonne and the character of our Sauiour Thoughts vowes meditations prayers intentions actions are but vaine and friuolous and will neuer be able to purchase heauen vnlesse they be sealed in Christ and the assurance of his mercie in whom all the promises of God are yea and Amen This made the Church in her Liturgie seale vp her petitions in the name and mediation of Christ Iesus in all her supplications and intercessions she doth adiure God and bind him as it were by this seale Per Iesum Christum Dominum nostrum Through Iesus Christ our Lord through Iesus Christ our onely mediator and redeemer I will not draw my Text to the Crosse in Baptisme because it is not said he will be a seale but as a seale and there is a good meaning of that in Saint Austin Deus amat signorum suorum factores non pictores Yet let me tell the turbulent Schismaticke and factious Noualist that it is an ancient Ceremonie deriued from the Primitiue Church grounded vpon reason and obseruation For what is the signe of Christ but the Crosse of our Sauiour are not the Sacraments of God the seales of God wherein we are sealed and confirmed by the arrabon and witnesse of his Spirit As the doores and threshold were signed with the bloud of the Paschall Lambe so it is the bloud of Christ our true Passouer that doth seale both our hearts and foreheads I do not say with Austin Repellit exterminatorem si Christū inueniat habitatorem Though in his 50. Tract vpon Iohn it be twise repeated within the space of sixe lines Yet let me borrow so much from that learned Father Nihil olim in carne intolerabilius nihil modo in fronte gloriosius Heretofore there was nothing more bloudy and intollerable to the renting of our flesh and the tearing of our bodies Now there is nothing more glorious and honourable to the acknowledgement of faith and the beautifying of our foreheads But what meanes the seale of my Text And why is he desirous to be as a signet Take it actiuely take it passiuely for the impression that is made or the seale and ring that maketh the impression it is diuersly vsed and hath many singular effects Ad custodiam ad notificationem ad gratiam ad confirmationem For beautie and exornation that his glorie may shine in vs for distinction and notification that we might be knowne from strangers for custodie and preseruation that nothing go in nor out to annoy and hurt vs. For assurance and confirmation that we be not drawne from God or relinquish the truth of our profession Thus are wee become as an enclosed garden or a fountaine sealed vp like that Eastgate in Ezechiels Sanctuary which was shut and might not be opened lest any should enter Open locks tempt theeues but that which is sealed remaines inuiolate So if Faith and Truth and hope and ioy and the graces of the Spirit and the mysteries of our saluation be not sealed in Christ they may be stolne from our hearts and become a prey to the enemy But if they lie vnder this seale they are fast and sure No heresie no vanity no crueltie nor policie shall be able to rob and spoyle vs of our glorie Well may Satan come in like a theefe by the windowes and enter through the passages of our sence if once he espie this seale vpon the heart he will recoyle and fly backe It is a strong munition able to repulse and exterminate all the diuels in hell though multiplyed and banded in troopes and legions Now we haue the force of the Originall and the emphasis of Septuagint the one vpon the other about he will be vpon our hearts to suppresse the euill that is within and to preuent the danger that is without he will be about the arme that wee may be enuironed on euery side and secured from the inrode of spirituall wickednesse Should I distinctly prosecute the seuerall vertues of this seale you might call for a seale vnto my lippes and therefore I labour to be short Yet is there one meaning of this Embleme which I may not forget and that is loue and honour with a deare respect and most precious estimation Consider that of Ieremie If he were as the seale of my right hand yet would I plucke him thence Remember that of Haggai I will make him as the signet of mine arme because I haue chosen him what doth this sound but of grace and fauour It is the seale of our ring and the image of our friend whereof we are proud and boast Ventilat aestiuum digitis sudantibus aurum Thus will he be as the seale of our hand or as the gemme of our finger that he may be held more deare and pretious then thousands of gold and siluer For what is more sweete what more pleasing what more glorious what more honourable then Christ Iesus at whose beautie the Sunne and the Moone are abashed on whose face the Angels looke with admiration and astonishment His
on a thousand mountaines For Christ is our Passeouer and it is the sprinkling of his bloud that must purifie the vessels of our Sanctuarie Who shall take away the sins of the world but the Lambe of God or what satisfaction to bee made without price of his bloud that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nissen speakes the abolisher and destroyer of Mosaicall rites but the establisher and confirmer of spirituall righteousnesse This made the Lord cloathe him with a garment dipt in bloud Apoc. 19. and verifie that Prophesie of Iudah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He shall wash his coate in wine and his cloake in the bloud of grapes Caro eius stola eius saith Ambrosius his coate is his flesh and his cloake is the puritie of his manhood that hides our sinnes and couers our infirmities This did he wash and rence and purge and clense in the bloud of grapes that he might consecrate the whole bodie of his Church and present her glorious to the Father without spot or wrinkle Whence is that elegant speech of learned Austin Non vis habere maculam lauare in sanguine non vis habere rugam in crucem extendere Wilt thou haue no spot be thou washt in the bloud of Christ wilt thou haue no wrinkle bee thou stretcht vpon his crosse Oh the staine and pollution of our sinnes that will not bee purged without the bloud of Christ Iesus O the bowels and compassion of our Sauiour that is prodigall of his life to purge our iniquities hee tooke from vs the death of his flesh and spilt for vs the bloud of his life or rather as the text is read by Hierome Sanguinem animae the very bloud of his soule Hic est sanguis noui foederis this is the bloud of the new Couenant which is shed for you and for many shed and showred on the face of the whole earth in great plentie and abundance that it might worke in vs the fruite of good liuing and produce those heauenly flowers of loue charitie patience humilitie deuotion pietie and whatsoeuer is most pleasing to the Lord of glorie Indeed God tooke a Ramme for Isaac but if his owne Sonne do not come with his owne bloud there will neither be entrance for him nor redemption for vs. Hee is the Ramme that was caught in the bush of thornes and must be a sacrifice for all the sonnes of Abraham It is his bloud that stickes vpon the doores of the Isralites and to this day keepes away the destroying Angell from the Tabernacles of the Christians Well might the Iewes haue spared that scarlet robe which they cast vpon his loynes for before they had left him they made scarlet of his flesh died and dipped in the bloudie torrent of his rosie passion The best scarlet is but dibaphum twise died but his once and againe and a third time yea there were seuen effusions of his bloud as so many streames from the head of Nilus The first as soone as hee was borne when they tooke away the fore-skin of his flesh and spilt his bloud before it was well receiued A second in the garden when he was cast into a bloudy sweat the curtaines of Solomon were rent and the pores of his body were opened whilst euery part sent forth bloud and water trickling on the ground The third in his scourging when they plowed his backe with whips and made long furrowes on his shoulders A fourth at his coronation when they placed him as a rose among thornes and set a prickling crowne on his head the white rose became red and the puritie of his innocencie tooke colour from the misery of his sufferings The fift in the nayling of hands A sixt in the piercing of his feete but the seauenth and last when his side was opened and the depth of his wounds discouered the tendernesse of his bowels the iron went into his soule the speare toucht his very heart that hee might haue a feeling and sympathie of our infirmities Now did the spouts runne and the fountaines streame with the sweetnesse of the grape and though he were fastened on the crosse yet died he like Seneca in a bath not of water but of bloud and that his owne once shed but euer springing to safetie and redemption that it might drowne our sins and purge our soules and quench that sierie blade which the Cherubin hangs ouer the gate of Paradise to keepe vs from the tree of life the portion of our inheritance Where but on the crosse when but at the effusion of his bloud did hee say to that cursed malefactor Hodie mecum eris in Paradiso this day thou shalt bee with me in Paradise Then were the gates of heauen set wide open and there was a way through bloud to that euerlasting portion which he tooke from the hand of the Amorite by his sword and by his bow his sword his word his bow the mysterie of his incarnation where the maiestie of the Godhead stoopt to the weakenesse of the manhood and bowed as it were to the strings of humane frailtie In vaine then do men crucifie themselues and are perswaded that martyrdome is the onely way to heauen like those Priests of Baal and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Rome that teare their flesh with hookes and whips the bloudie instruments of voluntarie pennance as if they would redeeme the transgressions of their soules with the fruite of their bodies and expiate diuine iustice with the cruell butchering and most vnnaturall oblation of their sonnes and daughters vnto Idols It cost more to redeeme soules neither shall any deliuer his brother by the execrable practises of so great impieties Nor by Orizons nor by Dirges nor by Pardons nor by Indulgences or the like inuentions of superstitious dotage In this case we may vse the words of Saluianus Semper redempti nunquam liberi They are euer redeemed but neuer freed For we are not bought with things corruptible but with the pretious bloud of Christ as a Lambe without spot If the Sonne free vs then are we free and where the Spirit is there is libertie Qui melior aduocatus saith Ambrose what better aduocate then hee which gaue himselfe for vs Are not the figures ended and the ceremonies abolished Is not the Temple destroyed and the Priesthood of Aaron quite extinguished Let the Iewes meete and seeke to repaire their temple fire shall breake from out the earth as in the dayes of Iulian to deuoure them and roote out their foundation for we haue no Priest but Christ no altar but his Crosse no sacrifice but his flesh no ransome but his bloud no incense but deuotion no fire but the Spirit no temple but heauen no order but that of Melchisedech which stands and abides for euer And let all such know that wallow in flesh and bloud the bloud of their sinnes and the bloud of their iniquities that delight in bloud and make no conscience how they spill innocent bloud Christian bloud that are
time yee should awake and returne with the Shunamite I would to God yee were as those Switzers who are ready to serue for the best pay If Satan bee able to giue more follow him If Satan be able to promise more follow him Quis fascinauit Who is it that hath bewitched you as the Apostle writeth to the Galatians had ye rather eate huskes and feede swine with the prodigall then haue bread enough and sit at table with the children Had yee rather lie in hell as sheepe that death may gnaw vpon you then raigne in heauen as Iudges that life may abide in you By how much it is better to sit in a throne and iudge the tribes of Israel then to stand at the barre and here the sentence of condemnation by so much is it more safe and comfortable to follow God then man Christ then Belial 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nazian Let vs flie the world and the Prince thereof but seeke Christ and sticke vnto his mercie the exhortation is enforced by that of Ambrose teneat clauus si reuocat infirmitas If the weaknesse of our flesh and the infirmitie of our nature draw vs from him let the remembrance of his death and the nayles of his crosse pin vs to him Who could make vs but hee who did saue vs but hee who but hee shall adorne vs with his grace and crowne vs with his glorie set vs in his presence where there is fulnesse of ioy and place vs at his right hand where there are pleasures for euermore how can yee neglect so great saluation how can ye leaue so great felicitie ye haue seene his starre in the East and hee that bringeth light out of darkenesse hath shined in your hearts to the light of knowledge in the face of Christ Iesus There is no excuse left but the stay of his promise and the expectation of his goodnesse that it is not yet but shall be hereafter in the second birth of the whole vniuerse which is the terme and point of this complement and perfection My last circumstance that knocks at the doore of your hearts and eares to keepe them open It is stored of a Romane that he neuer beheld the rubbish of old marble or lookt vpon the ruines of any ancient building but he wept and cryed Recordatione temporum meliorum ploro I grieue and lament to thinke of the dayes which are gone and past But wee are contrary and as he lookt backe with griefe and sorrow on that which is past so wee looke forward with ioy and comfort towards that which is to come the changing of our flesh the instauration of our nature the renewing of the world the transformation of the elements when the creature that trauels and groanes vnto this present shall bee deliuered from the bondage of corruption for then it is wee must enioy the right and seate of Iudicature and prehemmence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the regeneration Which some call the resurrection others call the redemption of our bodies when mortalitie shall bee swallowed vp of life and this corruptible shall put on incorruption For the first generation and birth of man is when hee comes into the world the second generation and birth of man is when hee is raised out of the world and taken into heauen Ad contemplandum lumen aeternitatis as Saint Gregorie speakes to contemplate the Lord and to behold eternitie and as there is a regeneration of the inward man after the image of God by grace and faith in the bloud of Christ and the lauour of Baptisme termed by the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The lauour of regeneration where he is begot of the immortall seede and borne as it were anew of water and the spirit so must there be a regeneration of the outward man by the power of God Who shall change our vile bodies and make them like vnto his glorious body which extends to euery creature sublunarie as the elements coelestiall as the heauens Behold saith God I create a new earth and a new heauen Behold saith Iohn I see a new earth and a new heauen So that we may boldly cry with Peter Expectamus nouos coelos We looke for a new earth and a new heauen according to his promise wherein dwelleth righteousnesse For he shall change them and they shall be changed the earth shall be changed and cloathed with beautie the aire shall be changed and purged from obscuritie the fire shall be changed that is do not consume the water shall be changed that it do not putrifie the heauens shall be changed for they shall rest from motion and receiue a greater perfection of brightnesse and claritie the Sunne shall stand in the East and the Moone in the West where first they were created that wee may behold the faire beautie of the Lord and looke vpon his Sonne in a throne of glorie Sonne of God and yet Sonne of man for hee shall iudge as hee was iudged and returne in the same forme wherein he was despised that euery eye may see whom they pierst and be not affraid of him they crucified for the greatnesse of his power and the brightnesse of his presence Quid facturus saith that notable Moralist if his enemies went backe and fell to the ground when he came in weakenesse and humilitie to be iudged how shall they start and bee confounded when he comes in power and maiesty to iudge the world and to pronounce the sentence of condemnation against euery cursed malefactor Foelix trembled at the mention of it and these vnhappy Foelixes shall neuer be able to abide the sight of his glorious throne enuironed with a guard of heauenly souldiers At length wee see what our hope is and when it shall be reuealed not before the day of iudgement and the coming of our Sauiour Beware then lest yee bee ouer hastie to iudge before your time I speake onely of priuate censure vncharitable suspition malicious calumnie spightfull detraction which is not iudicium but praeiudicium not iudgement but preiudice Eagle-sighted in the faults of others and ready to sticke as flies in the sores and vlcers of their griefes and infirmities As for that golden pillar of publike iudicature The ground and basis of regular states and well ordered kingdomes it is strengthened in my text and ministerially with subordination deriued to such as are Apostolique For if wee shall iudge the tribes of Israel and the families of the earth nay the whole world together with the blessed Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how much rather smaller things and such as pertaine vnto life the argument is not humane but diuine drawne from the mouth and pen of that great Doctor and vessell of election in the sixt Chapter and the first Epistle to the Corinthians Where hee speakes inclusiuely and makes himselfe a Iudge as well of things temporall as of things eternall and let all such as hold the sonnes of Zadocke most vnworthy of all iusticiarie function
thirsteth in the midst of waters but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Come into the ioy of thy Master and take part of it with delight and satisfaction as one that doth feele and tast how good the Lord is Thus doth one deepe call vpon another Abyssus luminosa abyssum tenebrosam The depth of light and claritie vpon the depth of blindnesse and obscurity the depth of power and maiestie vpon the depth of weaknesse and humilitie the depth of goodnesse and mercie vpon the depth of wretchednesse and misery And all this for the noise of the water pipes which is nothing but the sound and the cry of repentance and humilitie Hee sware vnto the generation of our fathers they should neuer enter into his rest because they prouoked him in the wildernes Hee saith onely to the generation of their children they shall enter into his rest If they obey his precepts What is his word as good as his oath yes when he that speaketh is truth it selfe and he sweareth that hath none greater then himselfe For his passion was our redemption and if I may vse the words of Bernard Clauus penetrans clauis aperiens The nayles that fastned him to the crosse the speare that ran him through the lance that opened his side the iron that went into his soule is made a key to vnlocke heauen and to make vs enter Therefore do wee sing triumphantly in the Churches Liturgie When thou hadst ouecome the sharpnesse of death thou didst open the kingdome of heauen to all beleeuers Agreeable whereunto is the vision of Saint Iohn I lookt and behold there was a doore opened in the midst of heauen and the first voice I heard was as the sound of a trumpet saying Come vp higher But if God himselfe did not rest the seuenth day before he considered the works of his creation and found them good God saw all that was made loe it was very good Gen. 1. 31. How shall we hope to enter his rest that eternall Sabboth of our bodies and our spirits before we haue done some good examined our hearts tried our faith prooued our workes and found some goodnesse in the midst of their imperfections wee may not please God without faith or see God withour holinesse The bridegroome will passe by without notice of vs if wee haue neither faith in our hearts nor oyle in our vessels The oyle of grace the oyle of mercy the oyle of deuotion the oyle of charitie shining and burning to the comfort of our brethren As wisedome doth not enter the house of an euill soule so an euill soule doth not enter the house of wisedome Therefore doth he stand at the doore and knocke with an aperi sponsa aperi columba Open my loue open my done Open to me the gates of righteousnesse that I may open to thee the gates of blessednesse For except your righteousnesse exceed that of the Pharises yee shall neuer enter the kingdome of heauen Looke vpon those Elders which stand before the throne they are clothed with white robes and haue palmes in their hands which is nothing but the flower and beauty of their good workes and Christian pietie It is storied of the Scythians that once a yeare they made a great feast where none may come but such as haue slaine an enemie The feast God makes vs is the ioy of my Text a great feast and in the simplicitie of termes exceeding gaudies but there is no entrance or admission before we haue crucified the body of sinne slaine an enemie sacrificed a rebell yea many enemies and many rebels that fight against the soule by true confession and heartie repentance neuer to be repented of Adiebus Ioannis Baptistae saith Christ Since the time of Iohn Baptist the kingdome of heauen suffers violence Why since the time of Iohn Baptist But onely to shew the vertue of repentance because hee taught repentance and was neuer without a poenitentiam agite in his mouth Repent for the kingdome of God is at hand Repent for the kingdome of heauen is at hand Whence is that of Gregorie Rapiamus fletibus quod non debetur meritis Let vs snatch that by force of teares which is not due to the merits of workes If any bee meeke patient humble penitent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Christ taught in a Sermon vpon the mount theirs is the kingdome of heauen and theirs onely is the kingdome of heauen I know there bee many pretend keyes and would faine leade vs into a fooles paradise by a vaine conceit of their deceitfull merits witnesse that great Clauiger of Rome that vsurpeth all power in heauen and earth as if he alone had the key of Dauid That openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth It is not enough for Christ to loose if hee binde it is not enough for Christ to remit if he retaine it is not enough for Christ to say enter if hee say be gone O the cursed blasphemie of that open sepulchre how doe they spoile God of his naturall right and peculiar iurisdiction And yet they are not the keyes of heauen but of hell which these men keepe abyssi claues as Saint Iohn writes the keyes of that bottomlesse pit where they leade many by the heresie of their doctrine and the impiety of their actions If not by the thunder and lightning of their fierce anathemaes and direfull imprecations It is a pretty story which I read of Pope Leo when he was troubled in conscience and toucht with the remorse for his iniquities his Confessor cheared him vp with a Quid times sancte pater Holy father what makes you affraid Haue not you the keyes of heauen and the merits of Christ at your dispose There is none in the world that hath so great power and command as your selfe O saith Leo know yee not that hee which sells any thing hath no right in that which is sold I feare since wee haue so often sold Christ and his merits we shall haue no right nor interest in them our selues Wretched men that yee are who shall deliuer yee from the body of despaire May we not say to them as Christ did to others in the Gospell Woe be vnto you yee take the keye of knowledge but yee do not enter your selues and such as come yee forbid Woe be vnto you ye take vnto you the keyes of heauen but you do not enter your selues and such as come yee forbid or rather indeed yee bid all that come at your publike Iubilies as base Hucsters of Gods free mercy in the sale and market of Pardons and Indulgences But howsoeuer these men abuse that power against the truth which is giuen for the truth we are sure Christ hath left keyes with his Church Tibi dabo claues was a grant made to the Apostles in the name of Peter and stands good to euery Minister of the Gospell vnder the broad seale of the Crosse To thee will I giue the keyes of heauen They haue all the
ioy their works are the acts of ioy their thoughts are the springs of ioy their language is the voice of ioy whilst they sing and cry Ioy within the gates of Hierusalem and peace bee on Sion One day in thy Courts is better then a thousand I had rather bee a doore-keeper in the house of the Lord then to liue at ease in the tents of vngodlinesse Can there bee a feast or a bankquet without ioy there shall be the supper of the great King Can there bee a wedding or nuptials without ioy There shall bee the marriage of the Lambe where the Lord shall worke a greater miracle then euer he did in Cana and conuert the teares of outward heuinesse into the wine of inward gladnesse till wee bee drunke with the sweetnesse of his loue and the pleasures of his kingdome hauing as Nyssen writes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A sober kind of drunkennesse for if ioy be an act of loue and the effect of charitie as the Schooles haue determined there must needs bee great ioy where there is so great loue perfect ioy where there is perfect charitie ioy in our owne saluation ioy in the felicitie of our brethren whom wee shall loue as our owne soules by the vnitie of the Spirit But we may not thinke to find out the springs of Nilus or the seuerall grounds of these infinite reioycings O that I had a pitcher large enough to draw the well is deepe and my heart is not able to containe much lesse to present you with the ioyes of that heauenly kingdome Helpe mee with your prayers raise mee with your spirits let not the cry of Rome drowne the cry of Ierusalem the one calls to paine and torment the other calls to ioy and comfort the one calls to a Limbus Patrum the other calls to the garden of Eden The one calls to the fire of Purgatory the other calls to the life of glory the one calls to the triall of your workes in imaginary flames the other calls to the crowne of your workes in reall blessednesse and that by the example of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Intra in gaudium Domini tui Enter into thy masters ioy Here then is one key more to raise our ioy a little higher and that is a relatiue terme Domini gaudium our masters ioy It skils much who is ioyned with vs in the partaking of any good Some had rather die with their friends then liue with their enemies and the poore Indians chose rather to go to hell with their ancestors then to heauen with the Spaniards If then it bee sweet and comfortable to be in ioy what is it to be with our Lord and Gouernour To enter his ioy to eate and drinke with our master at his table and in his kingdome or rather to make him our meate and drinke that is the bread of life and the well-spring of saluation Yet thus doth God intreate his seruants and there is nothing so deare to him but they shall haue part with him His owne ioy his owne secret his owne sweetnesse his owne comfort his owne robe his owne iustice his owne clothing his owne righteousnesse nay his very life and spirit shall be giuen to them as a seale and pledge of extraordinary grace and speciall fauour Much like that of Cyrus though humane resemblances come short of diuine presidents who neuer liked any dish but he sent part to his friends Semesos anseres semesos panes saith my Author sometime the bread himselfe did eate sometime the meate himselfe did tast from his trencher with this kind and friendly salutation Cyrus tibi ista quod ipsi fuerint iucundissima The King sends you this because he likes it best himselfe and holds it choise and daintie It is a small thing for the Saints of God to reioyce vnlesse it bee in the Lord. The ioy of the creature is transient the ioy of the Creator permanent They must partake of their masters ioy and reioyce in that where his soule delighteth Quo gaudet quod praestat the ioy hee giues and the ioy hee takes the ioy he loues and the ioy he is Whereupon saith Bernard Non aurum pollicetur Dominus the Lord doth not promise gold nor siluer or pretious stones but himselfe He will be our ioy and hee will be our comfort our substantiall ioy our euerlasting comfort our solid ioy our euerlasting glorie and the very crowne of our ioycing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Nyssen speakes the giuer of the crowne and the crowne that is giuen the disposer of the treasure and the treasure that is disposed the merchant that sells the pearle and the pearle that is sold by the merchant from whose golden beames and smiling rayes all the creatures in heauen and earth receiue beauty and perfection The reason is taken from that diuine master of humane knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the chiefest good is most pleasant and voluptuous in himselfe because most good most blessed most absolute most perfect and as hee reioyceth in himselfe so wee must reioyce in him The vision of his nature the contemplation of his Dietie where there is fulnesse of ioy and pleasure for euermore It is his brightnesse must clarifie our vnderstanding his goodnesse must sanctifie our affections his fulnesse possesse our hearts and satisfie the vastnesse of our greatest spirits What though Adam were affraid at the voyce of God walking in the garden we shall triumph at the sight of God riding in the heauens Gau●isi discipuli viso Domino saith the Euangelist The disciples reioyced when they saw the Lord but the whole world shall be rauished with ioy when they looke vpon Christ not as hee is in his works but as he is in himselfe his Essence his diuinitie with the cleare eyes of loue and knowledge like those creatures in the Apocalyps Which are full of eyes about the throne and amidst the throne about the throne in the sight and comprehension as it were of diuine greatnesse amidst the throne in the tast and fruition of diuine goodnesse O thou bright Sonne of eternall glory that dost create the Saints exhilarate the Elders diaper the heauens serene the elements inspire the Cherubins inflame the Seraphins enlighten the temple of Ierusalem and make glad the Citie of our God thy loue is our ioy thy peace our ioy thine eyes our ioy thy lookes our ioy If thou wert like a bundle of my the in thy sufferings thou art as a heape of Camphire in thy blessings Thou dost cheare vs now but it is imperfectly and as it were by a proxie the proxie of thy creatures the proxie of thy seruants Sometimes the fatnesse of the earth and the dew of heauen sometimes by the comfort of friends and the abundance of thy treasure at most by the pretious influence of thy inuisible graces but thou shalt one day cheere vs by thy selfe the maiestie of thy presence the fruition of thy company the vision of thy person the
aspect of that face which the Angels desire to behold and that continually Whereupon saith Dauid Letificabis nos in lumine vultus tui Thou shalt make vs glad with the ioy of thy countenance And this is it which is termed Domini gaudium our masters ioy For indeed wee are all seruants of one master King and Priest sheepheard and flocke Prophet and Disciple Magistrate and subiect which made that great Emperour Constantine neuer writ to any Christian though neuer so meane but with this direction as Eusebius noteth ad fratrem conseruum to his brother and fellow seruant Worthy to bee obserued by such as are Grandes and Demigods vpon earth lest at any time they despise the humilitie of others low condition But I would not haue the name of master take vs from the ioy of our master that is it I would imprint into you that you may be receiued into it O that your hearts were fixt vpon it and that ye would seeke after the fountaine of eternall happinesse Then would yee fly your selues and abandon the corruption of humane infirmitie like that good man in Nazianzene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that would not suffer the nobilitie of his soule to bee depraued with carnall filthines How doth it come to passe that so many are caught with vanitie led with curiositie taken with desire inflamed with pleasure wract with enuie defiled with luxurie poysoned with malice enraged with furie stung with serpents haunted with maladies troubled with cares vexed with heauinesse drowned and plunged in the sea and gulfe of inextricable miseries but onely for neglect of this ioy because they do not looke after their masters ioy and sing with the blessed Virgine My soule doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit hath reioyced in God my Sauiour God forbid we should forbid any to reioyce the Text perswades it the Lord commands it and my heart is enlarged towards you with ioy and gladnesse Laetemur iugiter modo innocentèr Let vs reioyce daily so it be without hurt in the Lord in our master Wee haue iust cause to feare that many preferre the ioy of the world before the ioy of the master mutable vanitie before true felicitie And yet let me do them no wrong they are very desirous of their masters ioy but who is their master Is not pride or couetousnesse or violence or extortion or some domineering habit of malitious wickednesse Lust calls to one and sayes I am thy master Reuenge to another and sayes I am thy master seuerall vices to seuerall humours with the like claime of subiection and obedience So that where God hath many seruants created vnto good workes the Diuell hath as many pensioners sold vnto euill workes Base slaues mercenary hirelings if not for pleasure at least for profit they come into the diuels ioy his baites and his contentments the Diuell comes into their ioy their soules and their consciences into some by a pot into others by a sop as hee did that accursed miscreant and Apostate Iudas but wee hope better things of you and such as doe accompanie saluation For mee thinkes yee are come alreadie into your masters ioy the Tabernacles of God the Courts of his Sanctuarie Where yee serue him with gladnesse and come before his presence with a song For if there were ioy in heauen for one sinner that repenteth what ioy shall there bee with the Lord of heauen for so many Christians that mooue toward his Courts and fly as the Doues to their windowes O how beautifull are your feete how aimiable are your doings How is the Lord pleased with your sacrifices and oblations whilst yee come from the East and stand in the gates of the daughter of Sion and open your treasure and present the Lord with the riches of your substance euen gold and myrhe and frankincense For this it is that hee doth open his bosome and stretch forth his armes and lift vp his voyce and extend the golden scepter of his louing kindnesse to the end yee may come to his royall Pallace saying to vs as the King did to Hester What is thy petition and what is thy request it shall be giuen thee to the halfe of my kingdome Come with mee from Lebanon euen with mee from Lebanon or rather as it is in my Text Intra in gaudium Domini tui Enter into thy masters ioy O let not the ioy of man draw vs from the ioy of God O let not the ioy of the creature draw vs from the ioy of the Creator O let not the ioy of the left hand draw vs from the ioy of the right hand O let not the ioy of things visible and temporall draw vs from the ioy of things inuisible and eternall Could the ioyfull sound of Amphions harpe raise stones to the fencing of Thebes And shall not the ioyfull cry of our Sauiours Spirit draw vs to the building of that heauenly Ierusalem Audite vocantem quia exaudit inuocantem saith Austin be not slow to here the Lord when hee calls vnto you because he is ready to heare you when you call vpon him Yee see the power of your vocation yee are called by our Sauiour yee see the nature of your inheritance it is ioy and gladnesse yee see the benefit of your seruice it is the ioy of your Lord and master as the Romanes painted the Graces so hath God planted his children Semper gaudentes semper ridentes they were euer laughing and these are euer lauding lauding and praising and singing and reioycing with ioy vnspeakable and glorious My prayer shall be with Moses Si inueni gratiam if I haue found grace in thy sight shew vs thy way if wee haue found grace in thy sight shew vs thy selfe and shew vs thy glorie bring vs vnto thy rest and take vs into thy ioy that Israel may bee truly Israel and see God that Israel may bee glad in him that made him and Sion may bee ioyfull in her King euen Iesus Christ thine onely ioy and our onely Sauiour to whom with the Father and the Spirit three persons and one God bee ascribed all power maiestie and dominion this day and for euer Amen Angelorum ANTIPHONIA The Angels Antheme BERN. Cant. Ser. 13. Tibi Domine gloria maneat illibata mecum bene agitur si pacem habuero LONDON Printed for ROBERT ALLOT THE SIXTH SERMON LVKE 2. 14. Glorie bee to God in the highest on earth peace good will towards men WHat Iob prophesied time hath verified that when the corner stone was layd the sonnes of God reioyced and the starres of the morning praised him together Christ our Sauiour is the stone of the corner that lyeth in the foundation of his Church the starres of the morning are the glorious Angels and Citizens of heauen that shine as Iasper about the throne of God and cry Hosanna in the highest Blessed is hee that cometh in the name of the Lord Hosanna in the highest whereupon saith Ambrose Laudatur in coelis
temporall blessings are for the most part Catholike and Vniuersall bestowed promiscuously without exception yet grace and peace and righteousnesse and adoption are neuer giuen to the reprobate For there is no peace vnto the wicked saith my God but fightings without and frightings within as the Apostle noteth they fly when none doth pursue and are afraid where no feare is Horrendum quatiente animo tortore flagellum well are they compared to a raging sea that neuer rests whose waters cast out mire and dirt their desires as winds that stirre and raise their passions their passions are as waues that turmoile and tosse their soules their soules are as ships that float to and fro and are carried vp and downe with restlesse motion and violent agitation in the midst of their bodies For as Bees are driuen away with smoake forsake their hiues so the coales of wrath and the stifling fumes of choaking enuie do remoue and exterminate the diuine sweetnesse of Christian peace and quietnesse Whence is that of Chysologus Haeretici in ira Christiani in pace Simeon is glad Herod is troubled the sheepe of Christ are quiet Wolues are inraged the Angels reioyce and are exalted the Diuels tremble and are confounded The Arke of Gods Church is safe and lyeth at Anchor the barke of Infidels floates and lies in continuall danger I remember in the reigne of Selymus when a Persian Embassadour came to entreate peace of the Turkes a desperate fellow discharged a shot and would haue slaine him being taken and examined hee neuer changed countenance but replyed hee was an enemie to his Lord and most vnworthy any peace the like answer shall be giuen to the wicked when they seeke for peace and the Lord will sweare they shall not enter into his rest Looke vpon the troubles of their heart and consider their manifold distractions who is able to expresse the stroakes and the scourges the wounds and the torments that make them bleede within the furies that haunt their breast and twine as snakes about them the seuerall pleits of the writhen thoughts and perplexed cogitations They are cursed in the field and cursed in the Citie cursed in the fruit of their land and cursed in the fruit of their bodie their children perish and neuer behold the Sunne their cattell are smote with lightning and their flocks of sheepe with hot thunderbolts their vineyards are destroyed with hailestones and their mulbertie trees with frosts the Caterpiller eates their grasse and the Grashopper their labour the Lord doth smite them with Feuers and Agues and blastings and mildewes and neuer leaue till they be destroyed the Lord doth cast vpon them the furiousnesse of his wrath trouble and displeasure with the immission of diuels and incursion of euill spirits For they are enemies of God and most vnworthy of this peace that peace which is here published and confined to his seruants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To men of good will Not to men of good vnderstanding onely For knowledge puffes vp but to men of good will For charitie buildes vp Not to men of good deeds onely for sometimes they may bee hypocriticall and Pharisaicall but to men of good will for they are perfect and Angelicall Such as embrace Christ willingly and receiue his word ioyfully with true loue and hearty deuotion These are quadrati lapides as Saint Austin square stones that neuer fall howsoeuer they be turned Their life is like the breeding of those Halciones which makes their nest in the sea as long as the one liues the other breeds there is a great calme and wonderfull serennitie Beware then of enuie and the Lord deliuer vs from hatred malice and all vncharitablenesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Basil as God is loue and he that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God so the Diuell is hatred and he that abideth in hatred abideth in the Diuell O yee that feele the arrowes of God sticke fast in you returne into your hearts and examine your consciences see whether your will bee good or bad rectified or depraued If the Lord make way to his indignation and giue your life to the destroyer if your riuers be dryed vp and your waters turned into bloud if the heauens bee as brasse ouer your head and the earth as iron vnder your feete if yee haue dust for raine for dew ashes if your sheepe be giuen to the enemy and your labour to the stranger if your hearts boyle with anguish and the sorrowes of death compasse you round about thinke it is for lacke of this good will because yee haue not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good will towards your maker good will towards your neighbour If yee had good will ye would not be so much disquieted They are men of good will that are the vessels of peace and the subiect of this blessing and the good will that dwelt in the bush will dwell in none but such as haue good will In this God is like that Romane Emperour Odit pallidos macilentos His soule doth abhorre such as are leane with enuie and pale with malicious wickednesse O that diuine charity were shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost and the vertue thereof spread as a veine through the body of our Church O that our soules were as the Pallace of Salomon and the midst thereof paued with loue toward the daughters of Hierusalem Then would the Lord couer vs all the day long and we shall dwell in safetie then would hee lie betweene our shoulders and wee should be as Ioseph that was separate from his brethren Beloued I may say of these breasts as Christ doth of the Churches Meliora vino ●bera Thy breasts are more pleasant then wine The breasts of pietie and deuotion the breasts of mercie and compassion the breasts of true loue and Christian affection I would to God I could see them run and flow as spouts and conduicts in the midst of your habitations And me thinks I do to the honour of God and the abundant increase of your rest and quietnes Yet this is not enough vnlesse yee adde bowels vnto breasts breasts will soone dry vp if they bee not fed with the melting of our bowels and therefore saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Put yee on the bowels of compassion that as Christ was inuested in our flesh so we might be inurserated with his bowels the tender bowels of mercie louing kindnes If thy heart rise against thy neighbour remember the peace thou hast with God if thy soule delight in honour think of the glory that is giuen to the Lord. Non venit Dominus vt impleret aqua Hydrias sed vt animas spiritus sancti gratia irrigaret saith Ambrosius the Lord is not come to fill our water pots with wine but to water the soules of men with the graces of his spirit that we might haue peace with our selues good will towards others and the sacrifice of praise for him that dwelleth in the highest Neuer was that of the Psalmist more fitly vsed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let the heauens reioyce and the earth be glad Let the earth be glad for there is peace in it Let the heauens reioyce for there is glorie in the highest Let the earth be glad for hee that was heauenly was made earthly Let the heauens reioyce for he that is earthly was and is heauenly and let both take vp that which the Angels sung vnto the sheepheards Glorie to God on high on earth peace good will towards men when the Angels sang Christ was naked on the earth now we sing he is glorious in the heauens Therefore doth our solemnitie exceed theirs and we may better say Glorie to God on high on earth peace good will towards men I reade of one Pope that would haue none reade this verse but onely the Priests but we know that all the elect are Kings and Priests to God A royall Priesthood a holy Nation purchased redeemed with his bloud and therfore let vs ioyne in this dochologie and neuer rest saying Glorie to God on high on earth peace good will towards men I will shut vp all in that closure of the Apostle Now the very God of peace sanctifie you throughout and I pray God that your whole spirit and soule and bodie may bee kept blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus To whom with the Father and the Spirit bee in honour and glorie in the earth as it is in heauen till the earth mooue and the heauens forget their motion Amen Amen FINIS
and men of Israel get ye into the holy place the closet of your hearts the secret of your consciences looke vpon the wine that runnes and the hony that streames from the treading of the grape and the opening of the rocke consider the sharpnesse of his death if there were any sorrow like vnto his the sweetnesse of his loue if there were any mercy to be compared with his and let your spirits melt and bleed and distill and bee power'd forth into a sweet ointment and great libution for the merit of his death and the benefit of your redemption Martialls Flie play'd so long vnder a tree that at length it was wrapt in amber and congeal'd in the drops that came from the boughs Sic modo quae fuerat vita contempta manente Funeribus facta est nunc praetiosa suis The best of vs are but wormes let vs not despise to be as this Flie still houering about the tree of the crosse and the ointment of his bloud till wee be wrapped and closed and buried and entombed in the pretious amber of his bleeding wounds and the sacred gum of that tree which growes in the midst of Paradise For if we suffer with him we shall raigne with him and if we bee conformed to the similitude of his death we shall bee transformed to the image of his glory Effundam de spiritu meo saith God the Father I will powre out my Spirit vpon all flesh Effudi de sanguine meo saith God the Sonne I haue powr'd forth my bloud for all flesh See the price of your redemption and the pledge of your saluation by this ye enter the holy place and are assured of that kingdome where neither height nor depth nor things present nor things to come nor life nor death nor any other creature shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is Christ Iesus O Lord enflame this loue in vs and crowne this hope on vs for the bitter death and meritorious passion of thy Sonne and our Sauiour to whom with the Father bee ascribed all honour and glorie power and dominion throughout all generations Amen Sanctorum GLORIA The glory of the Saints GREG. Mor. lib. 6. Quia in hac vita discretio operum erit in illa discretio dignitatum LONDON Printed for ROBERT ALLOT THE FOVRTH SERMON MATH 19. 28. Ye which haue followed me in the regeneration when the Sonne of man shall sit in the throne of his glorie yee shall also sit vpon twelue thrones iudging the twelue tribes of Israel I Know not whether that of Theodosius do sauour more of wisedome or abound more with the sweetnesse of deuotion sure I am it is most pious and Christian Gaudeo magis c. I reioyce more to be a seruant of the liuing God then to be a Monarch of the whole earth For as his yoke is easie and his burthen light so is his protection mightie and his seruice honourable witnesse that of our Sauiour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if any man serue me the Father will do him honour It pleased Satan to vpbraid Iob with a numquid Deum gratis colit Doth Iob serue God for nought We may heare the same and neuer bee ashamed or rather pronounce without question Non colimus Deum gratis we do not serue God for nought Hee is our reward our great reward our exceeding great reward as hee doth encourage Abraham in the 15. of Genesis and therefore let me take vp the eccho of that double voyce Consolamini consolamini be comforted be comforted all ye that labour and trauell vnder the burthen of his crosse bee it father mother wife children house lands or whatsoeuer ye leaue for his names sake ye shall receiue an hundred fold and at length inherit life eternall For we haue a good master and there is ioy in the expectation of the righteous good in his promises good in his threatnings whether hee amend vs with his punishments whether hee strengthen vs with his comforts whether hee adorned vs with his graces whether he crowne vs with his mercies euery way good vnto vs. Not a man of you shall depart from the Court of his tabernacle or the presence of his maiestie without a gladsome heart and a chearefull countenance Whence is that of sweet Bernard Non Isaac sed aries molietur Though we be neuer so much affraid it is not Isaac but the Ram that must bee sacrificed it is not the delight and pleasure of our soules that shall be taken from vs for that indeed is Isaac but it is the obstinacie and contumacie of our spirits that must bee tamed in vs for that indeed is the Ramme that stuck in the bush and is neuer without the prickling thornes of anguish and vexation Do we serue God it is God that serues vs Doe wee honour the Lord it is the Lord that doth honour vs and will do more when my text shall be verified Yee that haue followed me in the regeneration when the Sonne of man shall sit in the throne of his glorie yee shall also sit vpon twelue thrones iudging the twelue tribes of Israel These words are a gracious promise made to the Apostles but extended to the Gentiles and do concerne the whole familie of God for as they exclude Iudas though present when Christ spake by reason of his Apostasie so they include vs though many generations after Christ spake through faith in his mercie Will ye know the substance of the promise They sit and iudge Sit vpon twelue thrones There is the state and maiestie of their wonderfull exaltation Iudge the twelue tribes of Israel There is the eminencie and prerogatiue of their infinite iurisdiction Will ye learne the circumstance of this promise It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the consummation and renouation of the whole world when he that was in the forme of a seruant shall take vpon him the forme of a Iudge and that in a Throne of glorie But vpon what termes haue we so great honour Is it giuen to any without condition No 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are such as follow him and obserue his doctrine Not all that leaue all but all that follow him Ye that haue followed me in the regeneration when the Sonne of man shall sit vpon a throne of glorie shall also c. Here then we haue first a president of Christian imitation Ye that haue followed me Secondly a reward of blessed enthronization Shall sit vpon twelue thrones and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel Last of all the determinate point and terme of this glorie and perfection it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the renouation and instauration of the whole world when the sonne of man shall declare himselfe to bee the Sonne of God in a throne of glorie Yee that haue followed me in the regeneration when the sonne of man shall sit vpon a throne of glorie yee also shall sit vpon twelue thrones iudging the twelue tribes of Israel My whole