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A03792 The troubled mans medicine verye profitable to be redde of al men wherein they may learne pacyently to suffer all kyndes of aduersitie made [and] wrytten by wyllyam Hughe to a frende of his. Hugh, William, d. 1549. 1546 (1546) STC 13910; ESTC S109482 59,726 236

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churche vnto suche tyme as the Anabaptistes a pestilent kynde of men whose madnesse is execrable broughte it of late dayes into the world● againe But as all other of their opinions be peruerse abhorring from the trueth and deuelysshe so is this Declarynge his patroues not to be taught in Christes scoole but in Galens rather whiche affyrmeth the deathe of the soule necessarylye to followe the death of the bodye But leuyng the vayne fantasyes of the boting Anabaptistes let vs gyue eare to gods worde It is wrytten Ecclesia 12. The puste shall returue to his earthe frome whense it came and the spirite to God whiche gaue it Where I hope he shal be so farre frome deathe and slepe that he shall lyue delyted with Ioyes vnspeakeable He that heareth any words sayeth Christe and beleueth in hym whiche sent me hathe lyfe euerlastynge and he shall not comme into condemnation but he shal passe from death to lyfe Iohn 5. Marke that he sayeth not frome death to slepe but from death to lyfe The parable in the. 16. of Luke doth well improue theyr false opinion Where it is written that Lazatus after his deathe vsed Ioye and gladnesse On the other parte that the ryche gluttou was greued and tormented If the soules of men should slepe as the Anabaptystes say● neyther shoulde any Ioye haue ben attributed to Lazarus nor to the glutton punysshement What wyll they saye to these wordes whiche Christe spoke to the these This day thou shalt be with me in paradyse Wyll they make vs beleue that Paradyse is a dormitorte or a place to slept in In cast it be a manne wolde thinke that christ is or was ones a stepe therin for he sayth thou shalt be with me in paradise S● Paule was tapt 2. cor 12. into paradyse there dyd heare wordes which a man may not lawefully speake These wordes he hearde not with the eares of his bodye for it laye prostrate on the groūd Actu 9. But of the soule whiche part of Paule was rauysshed in ●o paradise where he dyd heare and se misteries Therfore I can not beleue that paradyse is a sle●inge place seynge that Paule was so occupied there in heryng of secretes Moreouer where as saynt Paule defired to dye and to be with Christe me thinke he shoulde rather haue wisshed for the prorogatiō of his lyfe it that the soule shuld continually slept to the last daye for in this morld after a sorte we haue the fruition of god as thoughe it were by a glasse as saint Paule him selfe teacheth But after this lyfe yf the opinions of the Anabaptistes be true we shal haue no fruition of god at all ercepte it be through dreames vuto the daye of iudgement Therefore faynt Paules wysshe if we cre●●t these antechristes must nedes seme to be soolyshe The lorde sayth that he is the god of Abrahā the god of Isaac the god of Iacob not the god of the deade but of the 〈◊〉 uynge Betwyrte the deade and the Anabaptistes slepers I s● no difference If saule hadde ben taughte by anys of the old● prophetes that the soules of men shoulde slepe he wolde not haue gone about so busely to haue ca● sedvp Samuel We rede 1. Pet. 1 that Chryste wente in spyrite and preached vnto the spyrites whiche were in pryson and were disobebyente ones whan the lenytis of God was loked for in the dayes of Noe. Agayne in the fourthe of the same epystle that the gospell was preached vnto the deade By the whiche testymonye what is mente but thatthe soules of the dead didde scle the vertue of chrystes death whiche they coulde not haue bone in case they hadde slepte accordynge to the Anabaptistes dreame Therfore I saye beleue not these false deceyuours whiche endeuour not oncly to pcrswade the slepc of soules but also to euacuate the resurrcction of the deade and so to abolysshe an article of our fayth to make oure religion vayne And hereafter whan you shall readde or heare any such scriptures as is a parte of the fourthe chapyter of the fyrste epistle to the Thessoloniās where is mencyned the slepe of the deade asscribe it to the bodies which in dede shall slepe to the daye of iugement and than shal arise agayne the soules toy ned to them and awake frō they● slepe vndoutedly Therfore saith Iob I knowe that my redeme● doth lyue and in the last daye I shall ryse frome the earth and in my flesshe shall se my sauyoure Iob. 19. O that happy and mery laste daye at the lest to the faythfull whan christe by his coucnaunte shall graunt vnto theim whiche shall ouercome and kepe his workes euen to the ende that they may ascende and syt in seat with hym as he hathe ascended and sytteth in throne with his father Apo. 2. 3. where so ro we shall be turned into gladnes that no m●̄ shall take frtome them Then as writeth Esai They whiche be redemed shall returne and comme into Syon praysyng the Lords and eternall merynes shall be ouer theyr heades they shall obseyne myrthe and solace sorowe and waylynge shall be vtterlye vanquished 51. Than the Sonne shall no more gyue them lyghte nor the moone discusse the darke nes for them but the Lorde our god shall be theyr lyghte anb comforte continuall 60. Than dout ye not be we only constant here in the loue and faith of god we shall haue for earthly powertye heauenly ryches for hunger and thurste saturitie of the pleasaunt presene of god for bondage liberte for sickenes health for death lye euerlastynge For this tyme frende Urbane I shall desyre you to take this poore letter how so euer it be in good worthe and hereafter if it shall please god to call me to a more quiet lyuyng as ye knowe I am yet compelled necessarily● to besto we in maner all my tyme and studye in teachynge of yon●● scollets I wyll write to you more largely of this argument and peraduenture God the auctor of all good thinges gyuynge me grace more learnedly Thus fare you wel at Orforde the rd daye of Marche FINIS ¶ Prynted at London in Aldersgate strete by Iohn̄ Herford ANNO. 1546. Gaudete in domino semper Philip. 4. Tristicia seculi mortem operatut● 2 Corinth 7. ¶ A swete consolatiō and the second boke of the troubled mans medicine made and pronounced by Wyllyam Hugh to his frynd lying on his death bedde Watche for ye knowe no day nor houre Math. 25. Certius est ꝙ mors ꝙ mors incertius est nil If ye lyst to lerne wyliyngly to dye And that semeth dredefull death to desire Reade this briefe boke the doctrine therof try But death shal not be dredful to the godly wise ¶ To the ryght Worshypfull and his singular good lad● and may stres lady Deny hyrhumble feruaunte wyllyam hughe wysshethe health YF that happi●● right worshypfull and my s●● gular good ●●-dy may happ●● to the estate a●● condition of seruauntes amo●● the happiest
vse daungerous the losse deadlye what I say haue we gottettranqiuilite of mynder no truly but accesse of vnquietnes for the more that goodes yrowe the more gre weth care Miserable saieth the poete is the kepyng of much money In the which respecte Hora tius Uulteurs desired his frende after he had made hym ryche to take his goodes frome hym agayne What then satisfyeng of thy appetite that thou haddest to worldly thynges nothyng lesse for as he which hath the dropsy the more he drynketh the more he thirsteth in lyke case the worldly man the more he hath the more he courteth Iucrease of vertues no rather an explosion of them all What than truely a baite to al vice and mischefe And if thou take not very good hede an instrument to worke thyne awne confusion O perlous and moost pestilent harlot I meane the worlde whiche is transfigured in pleasures and aboundaunce of ryches of the earthe in pleasures and voluptuousnes And I call hyr not onely an harlot but the moost fylthy and moost durtye queane whose face is foule how rible sharpe bytter andctuell And in this mooste wherein all they be counted without forgeue nes whome the deceyueth And althoughe hyr countenaunce be so fylthye and so wylde so ba● barouse and so cruell yet many be snared by her and when they se all thynges in hir body full of peril ful of death ful of mische● yet she is desyred of theyin ai● counted a thyng to be loued and coupted Notwithstandyng that she maketh no man better wiser nor more teperate no man more fauourable gentle nor prudente Finally that she rhaungeth no angry person into a man meke of behaulour neyther teacheth the voluptuous man sobrietie nor the impudent shainefastnes neyther at any time by hyr is got ten any kynde of vertue to the soule No rather lyke Circe whithe as Homere writeth chalinged by enchauntmentes Vlisses men into hogges dogges and other brute beastes she maketh of thē which be vertuous vieious of reasonable men beastes vnreasonable Wherunto may we impute the fault that some which haue ben meke and gentle as it thaūceth oft by the reason of yre furiousnes be chaunged from men as though it were into raginge lyōs but to the enchaunting Circe the worlde What maketh them whiche haue ben modeste sobre and temperate as we haue examples to manye for theyr dronkennes and beastly intemperancie most like vnto the vncleane and filthy hogges the en chauntynge Circe the worlde What taketh out wittes frō vs by the reason of pride and causeth vs shamefully to forget our selfes and out mortall state the enchauntynge Cyrce the world To be shorte this same enchauntynge Circe the world chaugeth euen the most part of them which haue to do with hir wooryshe ornamentes extept it be some spirituall Vlisses into very brutisshe asses if ye haue respecte to heauenly wisdome Horace consyderynge hir hoorisshe charmes calleth hir riches and ornamentes matter of the greate euyll and counselleth them whiche be loth to be wicked to hurle them into the see Let vs therefore not passe for the lacke or losse of riches or other worldly thynges that be so perlous but rather prepare oure selues partly to folow the counsell of Horace thoughte he were an ethnicke not in casting a way of our goodes if we haue them but lyuing as thoughe we had them not And gyuynge them away rather than our soules whiche god hath dearely boughte shulde take hurte by them Remembrynge that christe sayeth Math. 5. It is better to go to he a uen hauing but one eye or one arme than to the fier of hel with u●eyes or two armes It is better with pouertie and afflictions to be fauoured of god than with we lth and prosperity to haue his displeasure Let the children of the worlde and the deuil whiche is the prhree of the worlde seke their welth that is propre vnto them and let them enioye it Let vs whiche be of christe seke and enquyre for beauenly welth whiche by goddes promyse shall be peculiar to vs. Let the Cretians Epicures Beotians with suche other beastly barbarous and ca●nal people passe for thinges that be pleasaunt for the bodye and perteyne to this present transite rie life Let vs which be or ought to be spirituall passe for thinges that perteyne to the spirite and lyfe to comme But I wyll returne agayne to the gentiles for I beganne to declare with what thynges they were moued to the contempte of the worlde There were other of them of the which forte I haue named two or thre before whom she desie of know ledge moued to dyspise worldelye thynges vtterlye perceauynge that it was hard and vneath for them hauynge the vse and aboundaunce of tempo all goodes attently to applye theyr studye In this poynte who doth not se theim to be commended aboue the more part of vs Christans whiche althoughe our religion requireth mindes more alienate from the world and addict to the contemplacion of spiritual thinges yet our whole mindes and strengthe by wholy intente to thynges that be vayne and earthlye scarcelye beleuynge the sayenge of Christ No man can serue two maisters God and the worlde Mathew 6. Neyther regardynge the sayenge of saint Paule No man seruynge in the wayes of God entangleth hym selfe with worldelye besynes 2. Timoth. 2 that is to saye in my Iugdement is cheiflye and whooly gyuen to the purchasynge and dysposynge of carnall and earthye thynges eyther yet the cōmaundement wherein god requireth our loue with all oure hartes myndes and soules not bestowing any part of it of these temporall cloudes and vayue shadowes Math. 19. it is ashame that the naked knoweledge of naturall and vile thinges shuld obtayne of the gentiles whiche neyther the knoweledge of heauenly thinges neyther the ca●● of our soules the commaundementes nor promyses of god can obteyne of vs that be Christen men Other of the gentyle were in whose nōbre was Aristedes moued with no hope of good thinges the shuld chaunce after this lyfe euen for very vertues sake onely fansied not but neglected worldly welthe Cheiflye seynge it for the mooste parte chaunce to the worste noughty selowes to the best and most vertuous miseries troubles The thinge is partely declared by the aunswers of pouertie and riches in Aristotles probleme It was asked of riches whye he vsed to dwell with the worst the best as though they were disdayned He aunswered that his mynde was ones to haue taryed euer with them that were good but Iupiter enuieng this his purpose put oute his eyes and sence he loste his sight it was euet his chasice lyghtely to happen on the worst It was also asked of pouertie whye she dyd styl visite the good men and pane by them that were wycked and noughtie She aun swered that good men coulde tel howe to intreate her 〈◊〉 ou shall reade that suche murtherers as Tantalus Ambitious as Crcsus Couitous persons as Crassus Sycophantes as Cyllicon had of
thy most louynge brother and aduotate Christ Esa that washed the from thy synnes in his bloude 20. 8. hathe purchased continually prayenge for the. Hast thou not herde how mercyfull I shewed my selfe to Dauid to the Niniuites and Athab Do ●agoalen to the these the publican and other innumetable why doest thou not open the eramples of them as a table or glasse wherin thou mayst well l●athe how exorable I am ho●redy I willyng to forgyue sword● der with thy selfe how heynow fautes I haue pardoned them theft adultery mirrder ●olatry 〈◊〉 what not 〈…〉 B● to therfore be o● good there lyfte vp thyne ●yrs mistrust me no lēger turne to me a thou shalt be saued cōmend thy syyr●● into my hādes Esa ●● the prin●● of this world shal haue nothyng to do w e the for by me the god of truth thou art truely rebemed Whan so euer deadly dispayre shall trouble thy conscience set this oration before thyne eyes Which is nothing els in dede but gods owne word written by his most holy prophetes apostles finally the art so tost troubled that it shuld seme that god had clene forg●t the. ●eade the. 49. of Esal where thou shalt fynde these wordes ●iō said he meaneth gods elect the lord hath lefte me the lord hath also forgot me Can the nother forgete her infante not pitye the chyld she hath hrought forth But whether she can or no. I can not a Sion forget the. A●●as howe shuld he forgette them that beleue in hym with whome as it semeth by his owne wordes he suffereth What soreuer is done to one of these litle ones wh●the belene in me the same is done unto me Math. 25. Be that toutheth you toucheth the very ball of myne eye Zacha. 2. And this shuld be no litle cōsolatiō for the faithfull seinge the they haue god him self as cōpanion partakes of their sorowes for all our afflittiōs grefes of the mind let vs require remedies of gods word which without fayle cā mitigate al●ynsnes that orcupie the har●● of them whiche beleue in hym Wherfore it is not bayne tha● Christ saith in the gospell com●● vnto me all ye that laboure an● be looden and I shall refres●● you Neyther withoute a caust that Dauyd whiche hadde 〈◊〉 experyence of the comfort teceyued of goddes wor●e sayd th●● Do we swete be thy mordes 〈◊〉 Lorde to my Iawes mort del●tynge my tayste than the honcombe What so euer is written it is written for out learnyng 〈◊〉 by patience and comforte of scr●●tures we may haue hope Rom. ● By this you maye gather the ou●● cōforte is to be requyred of scripture beleue me though the mo●● heynous waues and tempeste● of this see the world be raised by thretening drownyng to Peter ●●ippe Yet if it be fastened with ●anchor of gods word well they may moue it but ouerwhelme it they cā not And among all other ●et us haue in mynde those scriptures wherin we be ascerteyned that our bodies after this commune death shal rise agayn won ●erfully glorifed by the same power that formed thē fyrst Chose also wherein the eternall felicitie that shal be gyuen to all thē wh●the after the erample of Christst suffer aduersities and ouercome the deuyl the worlde with theirs ●s promised for they shal aboun●auntly comforte the beleuynge people Lo sayth the lord mentionyng the resurrection and reunynge of oure bodies I wyll put breth into you and you shall be quyckened I will gyue you synnowes and couer you● with flessh and skynne I will put into you a spirite and you shall lyue and know that I am the lord Eze. 37. We loke for Iesu christ our sau●● our whiche shall trans●igurate oure vile bodies cō forme them to his glorious body by the same vertue wherwith he is hable to subdue al thynges Phi● Doutles like as a grane of wheat so men in the gronud is fyrst putrified brought as into a thing of noughtryet after the springeth bpfresshly with a goodlier fourme than he had before So mās body sowen in the groūd after this temporal life is first corrupted 〈◊〉 in maner brought to nothing yet at the last by his power which did create al thinges of nothinge i● shal rise againe with a fourme of much more excellencye then euer was the first Though this things be wonderful yet intredible it is not for he the was able to make all the world with his creaturs of nothing must nedes be able to make our bodies againe of fresh of some thynge for the matter of ●ur bodyes shal euer temayne in grasse wormes duste stones or some other forme euen to the last ●ay And than surely euen as La ●arus christ wherof we be mem●res therfore must nedes at the ●ast rise with him being our heaue ●as resuscitate from their slept so I may cal this corporal deth ●n lyke case shall the bodyes of all men some into the resurrecti● of tudgement some of lyfe But this word slept fr●nd ●r●ane bringeth me in remēbraūce of a quest tō which you moued to ●e at our last beinge together or as much as I coulde not thā for lacke of opportunite connuen●ently gyue you an aunswer by these letters you shall know my mynd howbeit very brefly for I purpose to deferre the reasoning of the matter to our ne●t metting Youre question was whether that the soule of man after this temorall death slepeth as doth the body voyd both of paine an● pleasure vnto the day of iudgement or no I aunswere that it is as muche agaynst the nature of the soule to slepe as it is agaynst the nature of the sonne to be a darke body or of the fyre to be with out heate The soule of man beynge an heauenly spirite is s●lyuelyke and constant so strong● and vigilant a substaunce that naturaly it can not but perpetually perseuer in operatiō for of his owne nature it is a very op●ration and motion it selfe which neuer ceaseth but lyke as the sonne whiche maye so euer he is moued shyneth and inflammeth wherof Phaeton as we reade in the poetes hadde a sufficiente proffe so the soule of man whether so euer it is brought lyueth and moueth continually Yea though the body whiche of nature is grosse and drousy be oppressed with stepe yet the soule is styll occupied in the memorye in the intellection or in other of the more excellent powers as by drcames euery man mayese Muche lesse can it slept whan it is cleane deliuered from the stug gys●he bodye Therfore as the body slepeth so the soule can not for as much as it is a substaunce accommodate to continuall mouyng and can not be wery Truely the error of them is great which perswade them selfes tha● the soule seperate from hte body shall slepe vnto the last day and this errour is olde and was confuted by Drigen other of his tyme. Neyther was it euer synce receaued into the
art not thou taught by my sonne Iesu Math ● to call me thy father haue not I promised that I wolde be thy father by my prophet Hierel my Hiere 31. and thou shuldest be my son why doest thou not therfore aske me forgyuenes well hopinge for pardō who is it of you although you be euyll that wyl not forgiue his sonne forthynkynge his fautes being supplyant desiring pardon and promisyng amendment notwithstandyng that he hathe prouoked him to angre an hundreth tymes And thynkest thou that I whiche am the father of mercies Ephe. 3 of whome all fatherly nes in heuen and earth is named which possesse the ryches of good nes patience longanimite Rom. 2 not to be redy to forgyue my chyldrē truly repentinge Be of good comforte my chylde be of good comfort mistrusryng not my mercy ● hyche surpasseth not onelye mans mercy how greate so euer it be but all my owne workes also Iudgement withoute mercye shall they feale whose hartes be obdutate hardened and will not resent whiche delyte styll in their syns and will neuer leaue their wyckednes which contemne my worde and trust me not frō the in dede health must nedes be fur away But as for the Math 3 repent and the kyngdome of heauen shall drawe nyghe trust and thy fayth shall saue the. for as Moyses hath exalted a serpē● in the desert Mat. 9. so hath my sōne ben exalted tha● euery mā beleuyng in hym might be saued Ioh. 3. and haue lyfe euerla stynge I wolde haue all men ●abe sauyd 1 Timo● ● and no man to peryssh my fashyon is euer to retreate thynkynge lest he perishe vtterly whych is abiect It is not my w●●● beleue me that one of these mylytle ones be cast away Math. 18. Whome I haue euer loued so well that I wolde vouchesafe to gyue my only sonne for them But thy trespaces be greate wherfore thou arte not lyghtly perswadyd to truste in my mercy Chryste Iesu came into the worlde to saue synnets 1 T●moth 1 He is thyne aduocate 1 Ioh 1 and not for thyne only but for the synnes of the hole world he came to call transgressours not the iust to saue that which waslost I knew 〈◊〉 thou an offender shuldest offēd Mat. 9. and as a transgressor I called the from thy mothers wombe yet for my names sake wyll I make my fury farre of thy good workes be of no suche perfeccione ●sal 46. that they may be able to saue the nor thine euyll workes so that thou repent with hope of mercy can hurle the into the helly fyer for I am I am which put away thine iniquities for myne owne sake and thy syns wyll not I remember Eas● 43 I am dere sonne I am that puttethe awaye thy lynnes for my selfe for my selfe and wyll gyue my glorye to none other Suppose thy synnes be as redde as scarlette they shall be made as whyte as snowe Whyche I haue scattered as clowdes and as mystes haue dyspearsed them Tourne to me I say for I haue redemed the. I haue redemed the whiche haue pitie of all men and for repentaunce wynke at mens syns Saps 11. I wold thou shuldest know that I thy lorde god am meke and gētle 2 par 36 nether can I turne my face from the so that thou wilt return to me It is commonly saide that if a man dimisse his wyfe and she departinge marieth an other husbande shall he returne to hyr any more Hiert ● shall not she be as a polluted and a defiled woman thou haste committed fornication with many louers yet for all that am I rede to returne to the so that thou wylt retourne to me Such is my facilite so gētle I am such is my benignite so greate is my mercy whyche thy most louyng brother and aduocate christ that wasshed the from thy syns in his bloude hathe purchased continually prayenge for the Hast thou not herde how merciful I shewed my selfe to Dauid to the Niniui●●s and Achab to Magdalen to the thefe others innumerable why doest thou not open the examples of thē as a table or glasse wherein thou mayest well learne howe exorable I am howe redye and wyllyng to forgiue Consyder with thy selfe howe heynous ●●utes I haue pardoned them theft adultrye murder idolatrye Hir● 3 and what not Go to therfore be 〈◊〉 good chere lyft vp thine eyes mistrust me no lēger turne to me and thou shalt be sauyde Esal 45. Commende thy spirite into my handes and the prince of this world shall haue nothyng to do with the. for by me the lorde of trueth thou art truely redemyd Who hearynge these wordes of hys heauenly father as they be his wordes in dede so swetly alluringe hym so earnestly confortyng hym so pleasauntly drawynge hym to hym selfe wyll any more doute of his mercy Dispaire you not vtterlye dere frende nor yet be you sorrowfull for anye thynge But if youre false ennemie the deuy●● approche obiectynge against you the multytude and greuousnes of your synnes turne you to g●● and say vnto hym Curne a●●● thy face from my syns good l●● and looke on the face of thy 〈◊〉 Iesu Thy syns saithe your enemie in number passe the sandes of the sea Answere The mercye of god is moch more plenteouss How canst thou hope for the ●●warde of iustice beinge all together vniuste Christ Iesu is ●y iustice Shalt thou beyng co●ered with synnes entre 〈◊〉 teste with Peter and Paule Na but with the thefe which hardem the ●●sse this day thou shalt be with me in paradise Howe haste thou this trust whiche neuer d●●veste good I haue a good lorde an exorable iudge and a gratious admeare Thou shalt be drawen to hell My heade is in heauen all ●●dy from it the inferiour members cā not be seueryd thou shalt be dāned the art a fals accuser no ●●dge a dāned spirit no cōdener Many legiōs of deuyls do wait for thy soule I shuld despaire in ●ede yf I had not a defe●er whiche hath ouercōmed your tirāny God is vniust if he geue for euill ●●des euerlasting life He is iuste ●kepeth his promise I haue alredy appelid frō his iustice to his mercy Thou doest flatter thy self with v●me hope The trueth 〈◊〉 not lye To make false promissi● belongeth vnto the. what tho● leauest here thou seest but wh●● thou shalte haue thou seeste not Thynges which are sene are 〈◊〉 por●ll but thinges which are 〈◊〉 sene are eternal Thou goest 〈◊〉 loden with euyll d●des and ●●●ked of al good workes I shal be syre god to eronerate me of myne euyls couer me with his goodnes God heareth no synners yet be heareth them that repent and for synners be dyed Thy rep●●taunce is to late It was not 〈◊〉 late for the thefe The thefe ha● a stedfast faithe thyne is w●●● tynge I shall desyre god that 〈◊〉 wyl encrease my fayth Thou ●●●est falsly persuade