Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n breath_n life_n soul_n 5,736 5 5.8177 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A11811 A godlie sermon of repentaunce and amendment of life, togeather with the acompt which we must render at the day of iudgement Preached at the Rolles Church in London the second of Maye, and taken out of the fifth chapter of Saint Paule his Epistle to the Corinthians. Scott, Thomas, preacher at the Rolls Chapel. 1585 (1585) STC 22108; ESTC S102984 32,354 84

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

haue beene brent and consumed to ashes slayne in fieldes and veuoured of wild beastes or corne in peeces with vermine or which haue miscarried on the seas they thinke it impossible that those bodies should be brought againe But that which is impossible to man is possible with God al is one with him whether the sea hath receaued vs or lande the Church or the Chancel earth or water and as easie it is for him to raise vp our bodies out of the earth sea or land as it was easie for him at the firste of nothing to make vs something and with the breath of his spirite to breath into vs a liuing soule which before were boyde of life Dost ●oe thou see it is possible for thee being but a man and the creatour of God to strike ster out of the harde flint where before thou flindest it it may seeme impossible to haue fier And why shouldest thou thinke it were impossible thy creator and maker which hath giuen that nature to the stone that power to thee himselfe hauing greater power to raise thy body out of y e dust water or cinders seeing at first he gaue thee thy bodye Those that finde not them selues thus satisfied with the consideration of the omnipotent power of God but requyre to be further satisfied with reason the apostle saith there are fooles mad men as thaugh he should say the resurrectiō of the body is either to be beleeued that it shalbe then to be reasoned vpon how it can be they but fooles madd men that will stand reasoning about it when they are bound simply to beleue it Nay he that will call in question euery kind of doctrine in the scriptures wherof he cannot conceaue or giue a reason maye chaunce to doubt of the highest points of a christian mans faith and religion For what reson in there that there should be one and one three as that the Father shoulde be God the sonne God and the holye Ghoste God yet not three Gods but one God a trinity in vnity and an vnitye in trinitye What reason is there that a Virgine shoulde conceiue with childe beare a childe and yet after her conception and birth remain a pure and vndefiled virgine stil What reason is there that a man deade buried laid in his graue three daies should rise again aliue Or what is he that baring the name of a Christian dare denye or doubt of the truth of these thinges because he seeth not the reason of thē No God almighty his misteries are hid and inserchable not to be construed by reason but conceiued by faith And we are taught in the scriptures bound to beleeue many things whereof our reason can conceiue but few I come to the lord his table who hath hidden me vnder the signe of bread wine to receiue his bodye and drincke his bloud and I doe nothing doubt but he doth truly offer him selfe to me and I do truely receiue him Howbeit if anye man aske me how hee beeing in heauen shoulde be receiued in earth I aunswere as Maister Caluine De modo si quis me interrogat fateri me non pudebit sublimius esse attamen quam vt vel meo ingenio comprehendi vel enarrari verbis queat atque vt apertius dicam experior magis quam intelligam Itaque veritatem dei in qua acquiescere tuti licet hic sine controuersia amplector That is If anye man aske me of the maner howe Christe is present in the Sacrament I will not shame to confesse that it is a higher mistery than can either bee conceiued with my wit or expressed with my tongue and to speake more plainely I rather feele it then vnderstande it And therefore in this poynt I doe willinglye embrace God his truth wherein I doe safely rest stay So for the resurrection of the dead though I see no reason in it or that the reason is hid from me yet I doe acknowledge it to be an article of my Christian faith and therefore do vndoubtedly beleeue that the spirit of him that raysed Iesus from the dead shall raise my mortall and corruptible bodye and that my bodie and all mens bodies throughe his omnipotente power and myght being so raised Must appeare before the iudgement seate of Christe c. But heere now leaste anye man shoulde thinke that among such a multitude as must then appeare it were possible for some to hide themselues from the presence of their iudge and so escape the seueritie of his sentence therefore the Apostle saith we shal not onely be summoned by the trumpe of the Lorde and so dismissed agayne but of necessitye We must ad appeare before him and can no waye hide our selues from him The worde Apparere that is appeare is very emphaticall in this place notinge vnto vs the appearaunce of the soule as the bodye the inwarde heart and conscience as well as the outward man And because the nature of the wicked is to promise themselues perpetuall impunitie of those simes before God whereof they can not bee detected before the world to confute and confound that vain hope of theirs the Apostle telleth them plainly they must then appeare Which importeth so much as if he should saye whereas we haue heere played the Hipocrites dissembled our selues and oure sinnes before men with a counterfaite show of vprightnes not beeing the same men before God in our consciences now we must haue the vizardes pulled of frō our faces and be vncased laid wide open to the whole world Euen as though our bodyes were ript in peeces for euerye man to view vs to looke ouer vs vnder vs round about vs and into vs. Naie either the verye heartes in our bodyes which now we 〈◊〉 count the most feereat partes of vs shal be so 〈◊〉 sought and searched into as if they were 〈◊〉 in smell peeres for euerye 〈…〉 and discerne the secreates thereof which now are onelye knowne to oure selues Let vs take herd therefore we be no bescher incouraged to bee 〈◊〉 for the 〈◊〉 of our 〈◊〉 or the 〈◊〉 〈…〉 of the place wherein we doe 〈◊〉 For how 〈…〉 we be in our selues or how 〈…〉 yet will our wickednesse one daye appe●●● when nothing can hide it Nothing so secreat but it shall 〈◊〉 Sayth Christ it is not alwayes reuealed as it is done but it shall be The wicked presumptuous sinner who 〈…〉 ●he world with his glosing speech and ●ocketh God with his abhominable lyfe thinking that his hipocrisie shall neuer be found out because it is not alwayes pi●nished and detected of God But God by the Prophet telleth him an other ca●e When thou sawest a theife thou diddest consent to him and haste bene partaker with the adulterers Thou hast let thy mouth speake wickednesse and with thy tongue thou hast set foorth deceit Thou sattest and spakest againste thy brother yea thou hast slaundered thy owne mothers sonne these thinge haste thou
field foules of the ayre and fishes of the sea to be subiect to man who likewise according to Gods firste ordinaunce is borne at his appointed time and at his appointed time also returneth againe to duste from whence he came and so obseruing all the workes of God to holde on that course of nature at this daye without any change which he gaue to euery one of them in their kind at their first creation many yeares since thereupon they promise and presume of an eternall perpetuitie in all thinges concluding with the Precher Mundus durauit hactenus ergo finem non habebit The wor● hath endured hitherto ergo it shall haue no ende and thus as much as in them lyeth both in the examples of their liues and wordes of their lippes discredyting nay deriding the promise of the comming of Christe and mocking the threatninges of God his iudgementes Such mockers in these dayes of ours which the Apostle termeth the last are manye One sort of them saye in their heartes there is no God In which number the moste and greatest part of vs I feare me may be comprehended we are not so impudent to say with our tonges there is no God but loke into our liues our offices and functions marke how euery man walketh in that state of lyfe wherein he is placed of the Lorde and you shall see we are not ashamed to say in our heartes There is no God We all saye with our tongues that we esteeme our soules a thousande times more deare then our bodies but compare that which we do to the one with that which we say of the other and you shall see that in our heartes we haue a greater care to preserue our filthye carcase then to instruct our conscience we all say with our mouthes we would goe to heauen if wishing would bringe vs to heauen but we frame our lyues as though in our hearts we neither hoped for heauen nor beleeued there is a hell but looked alwayes to liue vppon earth Wee cry out with our mouthes fie of the flesh and we defte the Diuell in our wordes but we are ready to take his part in our workes and the least temptation that is offered vs is able to vanquishe vs and cause vs to giue the Diuell our consent with our heartes Thus we mocke God and we deceaue our selues but the Diuell he will neither be deceiued nor mocked of vs when time shall bee that the secreats of all hearts shall be opened and the deedes of all men iudged he will challenge that which is his and bring in good and sufficient euidence to prooue vs to bee his then by our owne workes and not his whose now we pretend to be with oure mouthes Then shall we finde that in earnest which now beeing preached to vs and yet not felt of vs we esteeme but as a mocke or iest A second sort of mockers there is who although they confes there is a God yet saye they non veniet dies iudicii that God will neuer come in iudgement Let vs therefore cate and drinke for to morrow we shall die there is noman known to haue returned from the graue We are borne at all aduenture and wee shall bee hereafter as though we had neuer bene our breath is like a smoke in our nostrels and words like a sparke raised out of our hartes which being extinguished oure bodie shall be turned into ashes and our spirite shall vanishe as the softe aire our life shall passe awaye as the trace of a cloude and come to naught as the miste that is driuen awaye with the beames of the same and put downe with the heate thereof our name also shalbe forgotten by litle and litle and no man shall haue our works in remembrance for our time is a day shadowe that passeth away and after oure ende there is no returning Come on therfore let vs enioy the pleasures that are present and let vs cheerefullye vse the creatures like as in youthe Let euery one of vs bee partakers of oure voluptuousnesse let vs leaue some token of our pleasure in euery place for this is our portion and this onely our lot Let vs oppresse the pore righteous let vs not spare the widowe or old man let vs not regard the heads that are graye for age and so forth as it followeth in the booke of wisedome where the life and manner of these second sorts of moekers and epitures is liuely described and set foorth at large The Apostle tearmeth them ennemies to the crosse of Christ whose end is damnation whose God is their belly and glory to their shame minding onely earthly things and not seeking after those thinges that are aboue The third sort of mockers there is which saye with the ill seruant Tardat dominus venire these proue there is agod that God wil at last come in iudgement but yet presuming of his mercy life they differ their repentaunce to the houre of death thinking they may repēt them when they will that they shall haue leisure enough when they are old ready to dye But O ye fooles and mockers of God remēber with your selues that like as God is mercifull so goeth wrath from him also his indignation commeth downe vppon sinners Make no tarrying therfore to turne to the Lord and put not off from day to daye for sodenlye shall his wrath come and in the time of vengeance he shall destroy thee Put not of thy repentance therefore in hope to attaine to old age or to find God mercifull at the laste houre For thou knowest not whether thou shalt liue till thou arte olde and death when he commeth hee asketh not howe long a man hath liued but as hee findeth him so hee taketh him But suppose thou liuest till thou art old how art thou sure that thou shalt haue the space of an houre on quarter or minute of an houre before that death doth strike thee with his dart Olde father Isaac confessed hee knewe not the day of his death much lesse dost thou knowe the howre of thy death For as fishes are taken with the angle and birdes cought in the share euen so are men ouertaken with death But when thou dost sicken what if thou doste liue an houre a day a weeke before thou die art thou sure in y e howre day or weeke to haue a mind to call for God his grace and repente thee of thy life misliked Or dost thou thinke that a wicked man can repent him when he will and when he list why then did not Caine repent why did not Saul why Iudas why Esau who as the apostle saith founde no place of repentance though he sought it carefully with teares No repentance is the free gift of the grace of God who giueth it to euery man when he will to whom he will and in what measure hee will according to the riches of his mercie which