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A14032 An exposition vpon the canonicall Epistle of Saint Iames with the tables, analysis, and resolution, both of the whole epistle, and euerie chapter thereof: with the particular resolution of euerie singular place. Diuided into 28. lectures or sermons, made by Richard Turnbull, sometimes fellow of Corpus Christie Colledge in Oxford· now preacher and minister of the word of God and the holy Sacraments, in the citie of London. Turnbull, Richard, d. 1593. 1591 (1591) STC 24339; ESTC S118931 472,056 683

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are void whom selfe-loue opinion of wisdome pride of heart hauing Iude 2. 2. Pet. 2. 10. puffed vp despise gouernment and speake euill of thē that are in authoritie to whom in the vanitie of their opinions in the fancies of their own braines in the conceits of their grene heads they wil not obey though they haue neither found ground nor sufficient reason nor euident proof to lead induce them to their false perswasions Wherefore they also are farre from this wisdome whose propertie it is easilie to be entreated 5 Another qualitie or propertie of this wisdome is Isai 55 1. John 2 mercy it is full of mercy and mercy is specially in two things 1. in pitying the bodily needes of our brethren in pouertie and distresse whereof is largely spoken 1. chapt verse 27. 2. In pitying the spirituall needs of the saints and of all men as when they lacke good councell to minister it when they run astray to call them home againe when they offend to tell them of it that they may be reclaimed to draw them by all meanes out of the snare of satan whereby they otherwise might be caried away to their destruction Whereence it appeareth that the wisdome frō aboue hath a mercifull regard both to the bodies and also to the soules of the saints of God whereof if wee become carelesse then haue wee not that wisedome which is full of mercie 6 The sixt propertie hereof is that it is full of good workes as constancie in profession paciēce in afflictions carefulnes in our vocation continuance in prayer mortification of the flesh renouation of the spirite reformation of our life and finally whatsoeuer tendeth to true sanctification 7 It is also without iudging which is either without respect of persons to regard the matter 2. chapt 1. Ether without ambition and rigour in iudging thy brethren 3. chapt 1. Either without greedie and busie inquiring seeking into other mens liues either iudging all in the worst part either vnaduisedly to iudge or condemne one another These kinds of iudgings either partially either ambitiously and rigorously either curiously either malitiously either rashly are here condemned Not taking away a right estimation and iudgement betwixt man and man thing and thing good and bad truth and falshood iustice and iniurie oppression equitie or any the like either ecclesiasticall or ciuill iudgement 8 Finally this wisdome from aboue is without hypocrisie This doth nothing colourably or counterfetly suttlely or guilefully this wisdome beareth not two faces vnder one hood this wisdome pretendeth not one thing openly and meaning another secretly this doth al things plainely and purely simply and sincerely as proceeding from God the God of truth to whome no dissembling no counterfetting no double dealing is or can be pleasant and these are the properties of heauenly wisedome By this distinguishing of wisedome he stoppeth the dore and gate to all impuritie to all contentiousnes to all rigorousnes and desire of reuenge to all stubbornnes to be corrected or informed to all irreconciliablenes and vntractablenes of men to all vnmercifulnes to all wickednes euill iudgement hypocrisie dissēbling before God and man Where vnto who so is giuē how so euer he haue that earthly sensuall diuelish wisedome yet hath he not this diuine wisedome which commeth from God These things being thus disposed the last thing in this treatise is why wee should shewe by good conuersation our workes in meekenes of wisedome because the fruites of righteousnes are sowen in peace of them which make peace a reason from reward in so much as they shal reape the fruites of righteousnes which they haue sowen in peace This place teacheth vs that whatsoeuer we do whether good or euill it is a seede sowen whose fruite hereafter is to be expected if the seede be good we shall receiue Gal. 6. Job 8 good if euill then shall we receaue euill things euen punishments Which saint Paul confirmeth be not deceiued God is not mocked for whatsoeuer a man soweth that shall he also reape if he sowe to the flesh hee shall of the flesh reape corruption if he sowe to the spirite he shal of the spirite reape life euerlasting That they may receiue pleasant and delectable fruite from the liberall hande of God the Apostle exhorteth them to sowe good seede euen the seede of peace that they may receiue and reape the reward of peace mentioned by our Sauiour which is Mat. 5. eternall blessednes and to be reckoned for the children of God And this reason is set downe to perswade the saints to embrace peace against the corrupt iudgement of the world who iudgeth them miserable foolish wretched that liue peaceably but the spirit of truth teacheth here the contrary that hovvsoeuer the vvorlde iudgeth of peaceable persons yet shall they assuredly in due time reape and receaue the reward of peaceable righteousnes Which reward ought to allure all men to meekenes of wisdom which ought of christians so far foorth to be folowed as a good conscience be retained vice and iniquitie suppressed vertue and godlines promoted loue and charitie in the holy feare of God cherished And this is peaceable wisdome by the Apostle commaunded This wisdome Christ Iesus our Lord who of GOD is for vs made wisdome and righteousnes sanctification and redemption graunt vnto vs that in all peace and quietnes of heart we may serue one another in loue and in one spirite and one trueth with one minde and one mouth maye glorifie God the God of peace To whom with Christ Iesus his sonne our Sauiour and the holy Ghost our comforter be praise in the great congregation of the Saints Amen The Analysis of the fourth Chapter of S. Iames. This fourth Chapter 〈◊〉 foure things or places 1 Is of contentions warres therein 5. thinges are to be marked from v. 1. to 7. 1 An interrogation or question concerning the beginnings and causes of contentions and warres among men verse 1. 2 An answeare to the question conteyning the assignment of the causes which are two 1 Vnruelie pleasures fighting in our members 2 Immoderate desire of increasing our priuate estate and wealth verse 1. 3 A condemning of those pleasures and desires of men which bring with them nothing but anguish and sorrow v. 2. former part 4 Why these desires are without effect or ineffectuall the causes are two 1 Because either men aske not those thinges at Gods hand part of the second verse 2 Or because if they aske thē yet aske they amisse v. 3 5 A sharp reproof of these things Wherein there are 3. things noted 1 The reproofe it selfe v. 4 first part 2 The reason of this reproofe v. 4. 2 part 3 The preuenting of an obiection v. 5. 6. 2 Place is of our duety to God consisting of two things namely 1 Submission to him wherin three things are to be noted v. 7. 1 What he commandeth to submitte our selues to God 2 The contrarie to resist the
greatest brunt of his afflictions in liuely hope in assured faith in wonderfull confidence in inward feeling of rare comfort of the holy Ghost breaketh out and saith I know that my redeemer liueth and that I shall rise againe in the latter day shall see God in my flesh and not with other but with these same eyes This point of wisdome had Dauid learned whē Psal 23. in great confidence and truste and singular consolation of the spirite he brake out and cried Though I shoulde walke through the shadow of death yet will I feare no euill for thou Lord art with me thy rod and thy staffe comforte me This wiseome was in the Prophets Apostles holy Martyrs whereby their torments and sufferings being in themselues extreame yet became to them tollerable To know therefore the ende and vse of the crosse and outward afflictions to feele the presence of the spirit of God in midst of our miseries comforting vs whereby the burthen of the crosse is lightened This is surely the wisdome mentioned by the Apostle If any man lack wisdome 2 This wisdome is not a qualitie in nature but grace an excellent grace and gift of God therefore of him onely is this wisdome to be sought which the Apostle to intimate willeth that if any man lack this wisdome he should aske it of God to beare the crosse patiently to know the vse of affliction truely to feele the comfort of the spirite inwardly this is wisdome not of man but of God not of our selues but from his heauenly goodnesse from whom all wisdome floweth as from a fountain truely therefore Salomon The Lord geueth wisdome out of his mouth commeth knowledge and vnderstanding And Pro. 2. 6. the holy Patriarke Iob searching and seeking out the fountaine of wisdome and the wel-head from whence all heauenly Job 28. knowledge commeth and confessing that there is no naturall meane by which men might attaine thereunto concludeth finally that it is the speciall gift of God who only knoweth the way of wisdome and vnderstandeth the place thereof When the dreame of Nabuchodonosor was reuealed vnto Daniel the prophet the Prophet Dan. 2. referring all wisdome vnto him as vnto a fountain geueth thanks and praise to God the name of God be praysed for euer and euer for all wisdome and strength are his hee changeth times and seasons he taketh away kings setteth vp kings he geueth wisdome ro the wise and vnderstanding to those that vnderstand This Solomon the king rightly considering praieth for wisdome vnto the Lorde 3. Kings 3. 4. 29. who gaue him wisdome in wonderfull manner aboue all kings and princes To this infallible trueth wise Sirach subscribing in the entrance of his treatise and booke of Ecclus. 1 Esd 3. 4. 60. wisdome confesseth All wisdome saith he commeth of the Lord and hath beene with him for euer and is with him for euermore and as a I wisdome generally is from him so is this speciall grace and gift to beare the crosse paciently and not to faint vnder the yoke and burden of afflictions Which when Paul perceiued confesseth to Philip. 1. the Church of Philippi that it was giuen them not onely to beleeue in Christ but also to suffer for him To this purpose it serueth that almightie God is called the God of Rom. 15. pacience consolation because he giueth both pacience and consolation vnder the afflictions of this life Can flesh and blood beare the heauie yoke of Christ vnlesse it bee strengthened by Christ through whom wee can doe all things Could man indure infinite and intollerable torments Philip. 4. and so manifold afflictions as whereunto wee are subiect vnlesse it were giuen him from God Could anie suffer the spoile of their goods the losse of their children the slandering of their names the restraint of their libertie the beating of their bodies the departure from their countrey the sicknesses and diseases wherewith they are compassed the diuers temptations whereinto they fall dayly were it not that they had receiued this wisedome from God The holy and blessed Apostle therfore acknowledging this to bee the gift of God wisely to behaue our selues vnder the crosse affirmeth that it is a gift from God of whom onely we must looke to craue it if any man saith he lacke wisedome let him aske it of God 3 Paciently to beare the crosse and wisely and well to behaue our selues in our afflictions being a gift from God what hope haue we to obtaine it by asking of h●● Three wayes are we here to conceiue hope of obteining this wisedome from God 1 From the promise we haue from God that hee will heare when we call open when we knocke giue when we aske it of him almightie God assureth vs of this hope by his Prophet by whom he willeth vs in the dayes of tribulation Psal 50. Luke 15. 30. to call vpon him with promise that he will heare vs In fine he protesteth that he is more readie to heare vs then we to call vpon him and more willing to supplie Isai 65. our neede then we desirous to aske it at his hands therefore saith he before they call I will answere while they Mat. 7. speake I wil heare them Our blessed sauiour inuiteth vs to pray by this hope of obtaining aske and you shall haue seeke and you shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you therefore in another place he assureth his that John 14. whatsoeuer they shall aske in his name he would doe it that the father might be glorified in the sonne And againe in that day shall you aske me nothing verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer you shall aske the father John 16. in my name he will giue it you hitherto haue you asked nothing in my name aske and you shal receiue that your ioy may be full And the Apostle in this place promiseth that if we aske we shall receiue the wisdome we pray for Seeing then wee haue promise to obtaine whatsoeuer we aske at the hands of our heauenly father if we aske it according to his will And particularly Saint Iames here 1. John 5. promiseth that wisdome shall be giuen vs when we aske it of God then is there great hope we shall obtaine it let vs therefore aske it 2 As from the promise is made vs that we shal obtaine so from the liberalitie of God we must conceiue hope of obteining the thing we pray for God giueth to euery man liberally shall he not giue vs wisdome who is liberall to all men Shall we distrust his goodnesse who is rich to all Rom 10. that call vpon him Shall we suspect his bountifulnesse which powreth out plentifully his blessings vpon al flesh Rom. 8. So liberall is our God that he hath not spared his owne sonne but hath giuen him for vs all vnto death how shall he not together with him giue vs all things also Such is the bountie
obtaine this vvisdom from God we must aske it in faith vvithout wauering otherwise our praiers are turned into sinne for whatsoeuer Rom. 14. Against 2. epist Pelag. is not of faith is sinne as auoucheth the Apostle And S. Augustine thereunto subscribeth Our righteousnesse is discerned from vnrighteousnes not by the law of vvorks but of faith without which faith whatsoeuer seeme good works are sins turned into sins neither is it likely such praiers should be heard and obtained because they please not God vvhom to please vvithout faith is impossible as affirmeth the Apostle Let vs therefore vvhen vvee aske Heb. 11. vvisdome paciently to beare the crosse imposed and laide vpon vs vvhen vve aske faith to be confirmed and strengthened in Gods promises vvhen vve aske forgiuenesse of sinne and vvith God to be reconciled vvhen vve aske release of paine reliefe of bodie comfort in distresse health in sicknesse ease in miserie or vvhatsoeuer other thing either touching the soule or concerning the necessitie of this present vvorld pray euermore in faith and hold fast the counsell vvhich in this particular the Apostle giueth If any man lacke vvisdome let him aske it of God vvho giueth to euery man liberally and vpbraideth none and it shall be giuen him but let him aske in faith and vvauer not And thus the Apostle by preuenting turneth avvay and ansvvereth that obiection vvhich might haue beene made against him by the Saints We vvould faine count it exceeding ioy vvhen vve fall into temptations but this passeth our povver and strength neither are vve able to do this of our selues Hereunto the Apostle ansvvereth that paciently to beare the crosse is the speciall gift of GOD and therefore the gift of pacience is to bee desired from him vvhereunto these wordes in the fift and part of the sixt verses pertaine If any man lacke wisedome c. Let vs therefore pray vnto God from whom as all other graces so all wisedome proceedeth that he would vouchsafe vs his holy spirit in all our temptations and afflictions to guide vs and to power this heauenly wisedome into our hearts that in all things we being subiect to his will may in our afflictions and calamities glorifie him here and be glorified of him in the life to come through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom with the father and the holy Ghost be all honour and glory now and for euermore Amen Iames Chapter 1. verses 6. 7. 8. Sermon 3. 6 He that wauereth is like a waue of the Sea tost of the winde and caried away 7 Neither let him thinke that he shall receiue any thing from the Lord. 8 A double minded man is vnstable in all his wayes 2. Part or place of the Chapter IN these wordes the Apostle commeth and slideth as it were to the seconde place in this first Chapter contained which is of doubtfull and wauering praiers whereunto he discendeth by the way of digression for in these wordes and verses leauing the matter in hand and in question touching the pacient bearing of the crosse he falleth into a discourse against wauering and doubtfull praiers whereof the occasion was ministred him necessarily as it were by the wordes of the text before expounded for in the preuenting of their obiection which might haue beene made against him concerning pacience vnder affliction whence we haue it euen from God the Apostle exhorting the Saintes to aske it in faith without wauering hee hath iust occasion to speake of doubtfull and wauering praiers of men and so he doth 6. 7. 8. verses and 9. 10. 11. 12. returneth againe to his purpose In this place he speaketh against vnfaithfull praiers of men When they with doubting and double mindes come to craue things at the hands of God This sinne and euill is condemned here by three wayes 1 By a similitude doubtfull praiers are as the waues of the sea which neuer are stable nor stand still therefore such praiers can not please God 2 By a reason from discommoditie and disaduantage he that is wauering in praier can obtaine nothing at the hands of God therefore he laboureth in vaine 3 By a generall and common sentence receiued as true of all men a wauering minded man is vnstable in all his waies Touching the wauering praiers of men conceiued from a double and doubtfull minde distract and drawen partly into hope partly into feare partly into beleefe partly into mistrust of obtaining The Apostle condemneth it first from a comparison or similitude wherein the doubtfull and wauering person in prayer is compared to a waue of the sea he that doubteth saith Iames either of the power or willing readinesse of God is like a waue of the sea tost of the winde and caried away For as a waue or surge of the sea swelleth by the rising and hoisting of the winde and by the strength thereof is caried hither and thither and neuer remaineth steddie but alwaies is troubled So a wauering minded mā is like a waue or surge of the sea rolled vp and downe and tost of the winde neuer stable but alwaies troubled for his manifolde imaginations his sundrie cogitations his diuerse thoughts of heart so tosse him and carie him vp and downe that his minde can neuer rest but is alwaies vexed and disquieted neuer surely fixed or settled vpon one thing for now he thinketh God will heare him and by and by he misdoubteth now he perswadeth himselfe God can giue him his hearts desire and forthwith he mistrusteth nowe he conceiueth hope and immediately he fainteth now he saith with himselfe I will make my suite to God but straightvvay he feareth Thus is he tossed troubled by his ovvn cogitations and caried avvay vvith the vvinde of his ovvn vanitie and neuer resteth Wherefore he is vvell compared to a vvaue of the vvinde and moued aier tossed and tumbled For men thus to be carried away in prayer is a great euill in our suites to God to propose no certaintie in our supplications to God to rest vpon nothing in our petitions alwaies to shake and wauer and neuer aime stedelie at any particulars in these our necessities to be betwixt hope and feare and alwaies wauering now to thinke this thing now that now to beleeue now to distrust now to be of courage now to faint in heart nowe to assure our selues now to dispaire of his mercie now to rest and relie vpon his power and ptomise now to fall away through infidelitie is no doubt like to the waues of the sea which are now here now there tost and carried away of the windes This in constancie the Apostle condemneth this instabilitie Saint Iames reproueth in this place by this similytude and comparison he that wauereth is like a waue of the sea toste of the winde and caried a way This is a great euill and sinne worthily to be reproued As almightie God in all other things condemneth inconstancie and wauering of the minde of men so especially in our praiers and supplications of
saide to his Soul Soul eate and drinke for thou hast much goods laide vp for thee Seing his state was so vncertaine as that night it should be changed The Apostle Iohn disputing of the vanitie of worldly wealth and pompe what so euer concludeth 1. Iohn 2. the world vanisheth and the things therin Finally the preacher concluding all worldly things vnder a most vncertain fraile and brittle condition censureth them all 1. Eccles. with one iudgement Vanitie of vanitie all is vanitie See we not by dayly experience the miserable vanitie of this worldly condition came not Craesus the rich Prince of whom it became a prouerb richer then Craesus to miserie for all his wealth was not Xerxes the King of Persia for all his pompe and glorie discomfited did not Dionisius the King of Siracuse fall from a King to bee a scholemaster came not holy Iob from greate riches to miserable pouertie for a season do not many now florish in wealth to morow come to extreame penurie Seeing these things are of fraile vncertaine and dowtefull condition shal men thereof by the will of God bereft mourn and not rather reioyce as the Apostle exhorteth Saint Iames therefore to persuade men to reioyce when God turneth their condition by affliction and so humbleth them draweth his reason from the vncertainnes and vanitie of their nature wherby being humbled we ought to reioyce The vanitie and vncertaintie of worldly wealth and riches the apostle describing thereunto vseth a similitude and comparison resembling the glorious state of this li●e vnto a flower There is nothing for the time more beautifull flourishing and excellent then the flower yet the flower and the beautie thereof vanisheth away and withereth speedely for though it now flourish sprout spring vp though the beautie appeare wonderfull and excellent that Salomon in all his royaltie was not to be compared to the lillie of the field for brauerie of beautie yet if the sun Mat. 6. appeare in heate it drieth it vp it scorcheth it it burneth it and so it withereth falleth away and the goodly shape thereof perisheth So that the lillie the rose the violet and other flowers of account which in the morning were beutifull in sight fragrant and sweet in smell moist in hande are in the euening consumed and pearished So when the sunne and burning heate of persecution and trouble shall arise vpon the riches of this world they are easily remoued and pearish quickly This comparison wherein mans pompe and worldly glorie is compared to a flower is in sundrie places and not altogether in diuers things vsed in holy Scripture The Prophet of God speaking not only of worldly riches Isai 40. but of mans life also with al the pompe and glorie he can here attaine vnto and whatsoeuer is in him vseth the same comparison in a thing not altogether diuers and therefore saith I heard a voyce saying Crie And I saide What shall I crie He saide that all flesh is grasse and all the glorie thereof as the flower of the field the grasse withereth and the flower fadeth away because the spirite of the Lord blewe vpon it Whereby it appeareth that not onely worldly wealth and riches but also all mans wisdome and naturall powers are as the flower that withereth The Prophet Dauid describing the miserable weake Psal 103. and frayle condition of man hereunto compareth him also The daies of man are as grasse as a flower of the fielde so flourisheth he For the winde goeth ouer it and it is gone and the place thereof shall know it no more As ●hen the flower which in the morning florisheth through the burning heate of the sunne withereth and pearisheth Euen so they which now wallowe in wealth and haue all things at their willes which are now cloathed in fine silke and purple who now glitter and glister with golde and Luke 16 pearles which are now attended on with great traines and troupes of men who leade mightie armies and are caried in coaches like princes who for aboundance of all things and perfect beautie and glory in worldly respectes are as mortall Gods vpon earth oftentimes are bereft of all their riches and glorie and pearish as the grasse And thus all their pompe glorie wealth earthly felicitie is vncertaine What foolishnes then hath wrapt vp our vnderstanding what blindnes hath possessed our heartes what vanitie hath bewitched vs and rauished our mindes what miste of errour hath compassed and ouershadowed the light of our knowledge that we see not the frailtie of our owne state and condition to learne a better profession of the holy Apostle that being humbled by afflictions we may reioyce as we are exhorted let the brother of lowe degree reioyce when he is exalted and againe the rich man when he is made lowe for as the flower of the grasse shal he vanish away for as when the sun riseth with heate then the grasse withereth his flower fadeth away and the goodly shape thereof pearisheth euen so shall the rich man wither away in all his waies And thus the Apostle proueth by the distinguishing of the persons of men that the doctrine of the crosse and the patient bearing of the same is profitable to all men both to poore and rich and so to all The persons thus distinguished the next secōd thing in these verses which is the fourth and last thing in the Fourth thing in the treatise of the crosse whole treatie of the crosse and comfort taking therein is the conclusion Seeing therfore the case thus standeth that we must coūt it exceding ioy when we fal into diuers tēptations seeing the bearing of affliction is the triall of our faith which to suffer to be tried is comely and honest for a Christian seeing by triall of our faith we attain to that worthy vertue of patience seeing patience attained vnto maketh vs perfect seeing the crosse and the doctrine thereof is necessarie and profitable for poore and riche therefore blessed is the man that endureth temptation for when he is tried he shall receaue the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him In which conclusion fiue things may be obserued 1 The reward it selfe promised to such as patiently endure the crosse which the Apostle noteth vnder the word blessed Blessed is that man that endureth temptations Blessednes is the greatest of all rewards geuen vnto men wherein whatsoeuer is good is conteined the Apostle therefore to pricke them forward and to stirre them on to pacience promiseth happines and blessednes to those that endure tēptatiō Our Sauiour Christ entreating of the reward which the poore in spirite that is such as by Mat. 5. sundrie miseries and calamities which are ioyned with pouertie were afflicted promiseth them happines and felicitie Blessed are the poore in spirite for theirs is the kingdom of heauen And a little after vnfolding this pouertie by her kinde and particulars as persecution reproach and
large discourse sheweth that by patience we are commended and presented to God that anger is repressed the tongue refrayned the minde gouerned and man thereby on euery side perfect True then is the Apostles saying auouching that patience maketh vs perfect and entire lacking nothing But now that the Apostle here saith that by pacience we are made perfect we may note that perfection is double One perfection there is of the substance of thinges as he that beleeueth constantly vpon Christ without wauering is perfect in faith for hee hath the perfection of the substance of faith Who so holdeth the doctrine of Christ as the infallible word of trueth and therunto cleaueth immoueably as to the anchor of the soule both sure and stedfast hee hath the word of God perfectly concerning the substance Who so constantly continueth in the Heb. 6. profession of his religion that neither with blast of vayne perswasion neither with storme of cruel persecution he be remoued is perfect Thus men in this world may be perfect in vertues when they haue the true substance of the vertues for which they are commended There is another perfection which is of degrees which is such as cannot be encreased in any degree as to haue such faith as that we need not to pray Lord increase Luke 17. our faith to haue such knowledge as wee neede not with Dauid desire further to be enstructed in the wayes of the Psal 25. 119. 86. Lord to haue such patience as that cannot be augmented such perfection as in nothing canbe encreased thus no man is perfect in this infirmitie and weaknes of nature by patience we grow to perfection of the substance of sundrie vertues but not to perfection in degrees but to such a measure as of men in this life may be attayned whereunto the name of perfection is geuen Thus both men in holy Scripture and things are sometimes called perfect as Iob Zacharie and Elizabeth and others yet not absolutely but either in comparison of the wicked and vngodly then whom the Saints are more holy and in comparison perfect either because the Saintes excell in the greater part of their life in excellent vertues as S. Augustine auoucheth and another father to like purpose Men 2. De meritis remis c. 2. are called perfect not that there is no imperfection in thē but because they are commended with a great heape of vertues Or finally because that measure whereunto wee grow and those vertues whereunto we aspire and clime are reputed in the Saints for perfect by the imputation of the perfection of Iesus Christ whereby all the vertues of the Saints are accepted with God Seeing then by patience vnder the manifold afflictions of this life we increase in vertue and growe to be entire perfect and as lacking nothing shall we not thereby be moued to holde fast the exhortation and proposition of the Apostle Brethren count it exceeding ioy whē you fall into diuers temptations knowing that your triall of faith bringeth foorth patience and let patience haue her perfect worke that you may be perfect and entire lacke nothing And these are the three reasons wherefore wee ought to count it exceeding ioy when we fall into diuers temptations These things thus set down the Saints might haue obiected 3. A preoccupation against his doctrin It were good thus to do we deny not but it is not so soon done as easilie spokē as thogh we were able of our selues thus in our afflictions to moderate our selues that whensoeuer we be afflicted to accoūt it exceeding ioy This obiection the Apostle answereth I know this is not a qualitie in the power and strength of nature but it is a speciall grace and gift of God in our affliction to comfort our selues that we be not cast downe nor faint hearted but rather be glad and reioyce Therefore it is to be asked of him which onely geueth this heauenly wisdome In which place there may two things be obserued 1. The obiectiō which might haue been made 2. Then the answere thereunto 1 The obiection is Wee cannot of our selues thus beare the crosse we haue no such strength in nature there is nothing more vnpleasant or vnsauourie to the flesh then is the crosse We know that in vs that is in our flesh Rom. 7. dwelleth no good thing of our selues as of our selues wee cannot so much as thinke a good thought How vnequall 2. Cor. 13. are we then to the bearing of so heauie a burthen Wee must needes sinke vnder the crosse wherefore in vaine O holy and blessed apostle in vain assuredly is this doctrine preached vnto vs. 2 The answere hereunto is this I know that this is a hard doctrine to the flesh I confesse wee are vnable of our selues to performe it this is the speciall grace gifte of God to account our afflictions exceeding ioy vnto vs. Therefore is it not to be hoped for in our selues but from him to be praied for wherfore if any man lack wisdome let him aske it of God which geueth to all men liberally and reproacheth none and it shal be geuen him but let him aske it in faith and wauer not In which answer foure things are to be considered 1 What this wisdome is It is the doctrine of the crosse here specified namely to endure patiently whatsoeuer God layeth vpon vs and to know that God in singular loue correcteth all those with the rodde of affliction whom he purposeth to make heires of his eternall glory This to knowe is wisdome farre greater then the wisdome of men This wisdome standeth in two things 1. In knowledge that we wisely vnderstand the causes for which we are thus afflicted of God as that partly for the punishmēt of our sinnes as the princely Prophet recordeth For iniquitie Psal hast thou chastened man partly for the more manifestation and plainer triall of our faith as Abraham Iob Israel the seruant and people of God partly for the aduauncement of Gods greater glory that thereby in the deliuerance of men from their calamities hee might be more glorified Finally that hereby wee being touched 1. Cor. 11. might repent lest that wee perish with the worlde Hereof to haue true vnderstanding and knowledge is a great point of wisdome euen of this wisdome whereof the Apostle speaketh As the wisdome how to beare the crosse consisteth in knowledge and vnderstanding of the ends wherefore it is inflicted and laide vpon vs so also it consisteth in an inward feeling and iudgement when in our heartes soules and consciences we haue sense and feeling of the comfort of the spirite which in afflictions of this life and in the crosse wherunto we are subiect vpholdeth and supporteth vs and with assured hope of safe deliuerāce in due season vnderproppeth vs This point of wisdome to feele inwardly the comfort of the spirite was in holy Iob who therefore in the Iob. 19. midst of all his miseries and in the
v. 10. slaunder he promiseth like reward vnto that affliction also Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen blessed shall you be when men reuile you and persequute you and say all manner of euill saying against you for my sake falsly reioice and be glad for great is your reward in heauen Thus then if we endure pouertie and miseries therunto annexed if we endure temptation of persecution slander reproach and such like we are pronounced blessed Hereunto Saint Peter subscribeth who exhorting men patiently 1. Pet. 3. to beare persecution and affliction for righteousnes sake reasoneth from the rewarde which with Iames he calleth blessednes Who will harme you if you follow that which is good notwithstanding blessed are you if you suffer for righteousnes sake Yea feare not their feare neither 1. Pet. 4. be troubled And a little after touching the reward of our patient abiding and suffering for Christ he calleth it happines and blessednes if you bee rayled on for the name of Christ blessed are you for the spirite of God and of Christ resteth on you Who then is spoiled of his goods for Christes profession who suffereth persecution for Christian religion who endureth imprisonment for the testimonie of his conscience who abideth patiently the triall of his faith by sundrie temptations is both by Christ and his holy Apostles accounted blessed The rewarde of our patience then is happines and felicitie Wherein the Apostles defend a paradoxe and an opinion contrarie vnto the iudgemēt of men of this world for the world holdeth them onely for happie who abound in wealth who haue all things at their pleasures willes who neuer come into any misfortune neither are vexed or afflicted with any miserie or calamitie But such as are pressed with pouerty distressed with greefe tempted by afflictions assaulted with miserie subiect to calamitie these they count for cursed miserable of all men most wretched as they in the Prophet counted our Sauiour to bee Isai 53. in wofull plight because he was vnder the rodde of his father and thereby plagued and the wicked condemned the Wisd 3. Saints and censured them miserable and their ende greeuous because they suffered paine and were tried in afflictions among men From whose iudgement and opinion Saint James dissenting calleth and counteth them which endure temptations happie Let worldlings then count prosperitie their felicitie let Epicures count plenteousnes of bread their happines let greene and flourishing youth make the desiers of their hearts their blisse let other men count worldly delights carnall pleasure wicked mammō vaine pompe quiet rest and continuall securitie their cheerest good and only ioy in this world yet with Iames must all the Saints count the triall of their faith the exeresse of their patience the bearing of the crosse the suffering of affliction the enduring of temptations their happines and felicitie and holde the sentence of the Apostle for sure Blessed is the man that endureth temptations If happines and felicitie be the reward of our patience and all men by instinct of nature desire happines as the very heathen philosophers haue in their learned writings plentifully discoursed shall there be any man or woman so carelesse of himselfe so voide of reason so farre from knowledge so great an enemie to his soules health which shall refuse the burthen of the crosse seeing patient endurance purchaseth our happines Let vs in the feare of God addresse our selues to the bearing of the crosse let vs arme our selues against the day of affliction let vs in full assurance of hope indure the temptations which are laide vpon vs that thus induring we may receiue our ful reward euen eternal blessednes for euer 2 This reward of our endurāce shal then be geuen when we are tried the crowne is promised after our contentions the hire is rendred after our labour If then wee will enioy the reward and haue our blessednes in the king dome of God then must we in this world be tried by affliction The doctrine of this place is that we must first suffer before we be rewarded first be tried before we be recompenced Which thing Saint Paul preacheth vnto Timothie setting downe the labour before the hire and the contending before the crowne No man saith he is crowned 2. Tim. 2. 2. Tim. 4. except he striue lawfully The same Apostle setteth downe his trauel before his reward and his labour before his recompēce when he saith I haue fought a good fight I haue finished my course I haue kept the faith frō hencefoorth therefore is the crowne of righteousnes laide vp for me which the righteous iudge shall geue mee at that day and not me onely but all those that loue his appearing There is no price where there is no striuing there is no garland where there is no goale to runne to there is no crowne where there is no triall of masteries there is no victorie where there is no enemie there is no hire where there is no labor there is no happines where there is no triall by temptation Now the full triall of man is not at once or twise but in the whole course of his life so that the whole life of man is nothing els but a continuall triall and warfare vpō earth striuing and strugling against all afflictions miseries calamities and troubles of this world In which contention and conflict if we acquit our selues like men and in inuincible constancie endure temptations to the end we shall bee blessed whereof our Sauiour Christ assureth Mat. 10. 24. Reuel 2. vs He that continueth saith he vnto the end shall be saued And the Angell to the Church of Smyrna Be thou constant and faithfull vnto death and I will giue thee the crowne of life When therefore to the ende of our life and in the whole course thereof we bee pacient when to the ful measure of our trial which is in the ende of this mortall condition we endure temptations then shall we bee blessed for blessed is the man which endureth temptations for when hee is tried he shall receiue the crowne of life If our trial then must goe before our happines which is geuen vs in reward and our labour before our hire then do those Christians flatter and deceue them selues who thinke to be pertakers of this reward without affliction in this life Seing the triall of our faith by troubles must goe before our happines Vaine therefore and slouthfull too dainty and too delicate are they who refusing the burden of the crosse and the induring temptatiōs hope to attaine to this happines by wallowing in wealth by stretching thē selues vpon their beddes of downe by pampering and puffing vp of their flesh with riotous life by pricking and prankinge vp them selues in intollerable pride by weariing and wasting their bodies with carnall pleasures with liuing at harts ease and in all securitie in this world for the Apostle
heare not only but do also therefore he admonisheth them to be doers of the worde not hearers onely To do the worde is double 1 To doe it absolutely and perfectly so that both the heart consent and the outward A double doing of the worde life answere fully to the law of God in perfect measure To which doing God in the lawe did promise life for in the law it is said I haue giuen thee lawes statutes and ordinaunces which if thou doe thou shalt liue in Leuit. 18. them Our Sauiour in the Gospel thereunto respecting telleth the foolish lawyer who by doing would obtaine Luke 10. life that if hee would loue God with all his heart with all his soule with all his strength with all his thought Rom. 2. and his neighbour as himselfe hee should liue The Apostle shewing the Iewes which so much boasted of doing the lawe that they must perfecty fulfill the lawe if thereby they would looke to be saued saieth That not the hearers thereof but the doers of the lawe shall be iustified before God This perfect fulfilling and doing all that the law requireth is that doing which the law and Gospell mencioneth and requireth in them which by their workes hope to attaine life This no man can possibly performe for what man euer could loue God with a perfect heart with all his soule with his whole affection strength and power What man euer loued his neighbour as himselfe VVhere is he and who is he that continueth in all things that ●eue 17. are written in the law to do them VVhere is that either man or woman that neither in thought word nor worke hath broken the commaundements of God this is the obedience this is the fulfilling this is the doing which the lawe requireth which no man perfourmeth Saint Peter the Apostle therefore calleth it a yoke intollerable which neither they neither their fathers could Acts 15. beare And Saint Paul a little before to the Antiochians Acts 13. in Pisidia protesteth that by the law wee could not be saued from our sinnes because we could not perfourme it which was so weakned through the infirmitie of the flesh that it could not possibly deliuer man from sinne from death Which defect is not by nature of the law but thorowe the naturall impotency and weaknes of man which cannot doe that in perfect measure which the lawe with great exactnes requireth Saint Augustine therfore in his booke of the Spirit and letter saith very well and wisely De spiritu lit c. 19. The law is not therefore not accomplished for any fault in the law but by the fault of the wisdome of the fleshe Which fault is to be shewed and made manifest by the lawe but to be healed through grace The holy men of God therefore seeing themselues to come short of the doing of the word and lawe in this matter and manner of doing haue in the humilitie of their mindes accounted themselues as sinners and therefore haue confessed their iniquities and transgressions their sinnes and vnrighteousnes before the Lord as the Patriarches as Job Dauid Daniel the Apostles and all the Saints of God as it appeareth Seeing thē that no man is able thus to do the word there must some other kind of doing the word be by Saint Iames here required Therefore there is a doing of the word and law vnder the Gospell when Christ for vs and our saluation fulfilleth the law in perfect measure therfore Rom. 10. is called the fulfilling of the law to all that beleeue and therewith also geueth vnto his Saints as members of his body the holy Ghost the spirite of sanctification that thereby they after some measure may truely doe his will earnestly cleaue vnto his word faithfully beleeue his promises vnfeinedly loue him for his goodnes and feare him with reuerence for his mighty power And finally loue their neighbour though in great infirmitie great imperfection great weaknes This our doing of the word and fulfilling the law of God almighty God accepteth and taketh in good part for his sonnes sake who hath in all points and parts perfectly fulfilled the lawe for all those that beleeue And this our doing of Gods worde is not thereby to attaine to righteousnes with God which thing before we haue receiued by faith in Christ only but partly to testifie that by Christ we are made righteous before God and partly to shew our obedience to God therfore whose workmanship we are prepared vnto good workes that we should walke therein Such then as knowing themselues to be iustified by Ephes 2. faith in Christ before God to testifie their righteousnesse to men and their obedience to God endeuour to expresse in their deedes the hope they haue in Christ and labour in their whole life to walke worthy the calling whereunto they are called that in their conuersation they may beautifie their profession and God may in all things through them be glorified in Iesus Christ are said to be doers of Ephes 4. the word and these are the doers whom the Apostle here mentioneth Be ye doers of the worde not hearers onely And hereunto serue so many exhortations in holy Scripture whereby we are stirred and pricked forward to the practise of good workes and studie of vertue whereof the Epistles of the Apostles are full and the whole bodie as it were of the holy Scripture therewith replenished This godly endeuour according to the measure we haue receiued this studie and practise of good workes vertue prescribed this performance of obedience offered to God must shine in the Saints which as necessarie in al professorus of gods word is ioyned with the hearing therof Our Sauiour Christ ioyning the hearing and doing of Mat. 7. the word together saith That he that heareth the word doeth it is like to a wise man which buildeth his house on a rocke And shewing whom he accounteth for his brethren and his mother he saith That they are his brethern Luke 8. and mother not which heare onely but which heare and doe the will of God And to the woman which said vnto Mat. 12. Luke 11. him Happie is the wombe that bare thee and the pappes which gaue thee suck he replieth Yea rather happie are they which heare the word of God and doe it Finally when he had washed his Disciples feet mouing them to the imitation and following of his owne example in conclusion of the exhortation he shutteth vp the Iohn 13. matter in this wise If you know these things happie are you if you doe them To heare or know then the will of God and not to doe his word preuayleth nothing This knew the holy Prophets who therefore ioyned practise of the will with the hearing of the word and lawe of God as in Deut. 4. v. 1. 5. c. v. 1. Ierem. 11. 6. This the holy Angell Reuel 1. in the Reuelation weighing and pronouncing them
praise of God Herence is it that Saint Paul teacheth the Saintes Rom. 7. that they are freed from the law to serue God in the newnesse of the Spirite and not in the oldnes of the letter Whom afterwards he exhorteth to walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit and thereby to mortifie the lusts of the flesh that they might liue Faith in these is the Rom. 8. 13 good tree which bringeth foorth good fruite in some thirtie in some sixtie in some an hundred fold without which the grace of Christ is voide the holy Ghost queanched the Spirite of sanctification expelled iustification in vaine profession fruitlesse and faith dead according vnto Mat. 7. this doctrine Euen so faith if it haue no workes is dead in it selfe which is the application of his similitude whereby he prooueth faith without good workes to preuayle nothing After the similitude and the application thereof in the next and third place followeth an ironicall and mocking preuenting of an obiection set downe of purpose by the Apostle against those hypocrites and counterfet professours which so much brag and boast of faith when as they haue no good workes at all in them they might saye to James What say you of vs haue wee no faith doe not we protest that we beleue in God Is our faith a dead faith also Therunto the Apostle answereth with their iust reproofe and mockage Some man may say that is euerie man may thus conuict thee of hypocrisie and beat downe thine intollerable pride and insolency thou hast the faith and I haue workes Shew me thy faith out of thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my workes Let a man say he hath faith yet hath no workes he may be iustly reproued for his hypocrisie for faith must be shewed by workes as the cause is shewed by his effect the effectes of faith are workes Good workes you haue none to auouch the vnfeinednes of your faith therefore haue you indeede no true faith For if you haue faith shew it by your works as I will shewe you my faith by my workes If you cannot shewe your faith by your works then are you hypocrites bragging of faith when you haue none Thus therefore may euery man beate downe your glorious boasting and the pride of your hearts Thou hast faith I haue works shewe mee thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works The force of this place is that faith is an internall thing and habite of the minde impressed and imprinted in our hearts by the finger of God and the power of his spirite and therefore being a qualitie of the minde cannot be knowen or made manifest but onely by workes as the signes and effects thereof For as other gifts and qualities of the minde as wisdome knowledge and learning are not perceiued in men but by speach practise working or other like effects whereby these qualities are expressed and vttered foorth euen so faith lyeng hidden secretely in the minde is not knowen but by good works as fruites proceeding from it And as the goodnes of the tree whose sappe in winter season lieth lowe in the roote is not knowen but when in the Spring time it first geueth sappe to euery branch then buddeth blassometh and finally in her due time bringeth foorth fruite So faith lieth cloased in our breastes and bosomes and is not knowen but by budding blossoming and bringing foorth good workes in vs the liuely fruites of righteousnesse in some thirtie in others sixtie in some an hundred folde This S. Jame● knew wherefore to beate downe the insolencie pride of these hypocrites with mocking reproofe he saith Some man might say thou hast the faith and I haue works shew me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works Hereby if we cannot shewe our faith it is fruitlesse it is dead it is barren for the inward affection is shewed by the outward action and the outwarde action sheweth of what nature or qualitie the inwarde affection is Our Sauiour would his outwarde actions to bee the witnesses of his pure affection wherefore he saith to the John 5. Iewes The works which the Father hath geuen mee to finish the same workes which I doe beare witnesse of mee Iohn 13. that the Father sent me To like purpose willeth hee his to embrace loue that thereby they might be knowen to be his Disciples by louing one another Mat. 7. In another place deciphering and discouering false Prophets whose hypocrisie lyeth secretelye couered in Sheepes cloathing when within they are rauening and deuouring wolues he would their inward and secrete disposition to be knowen by their outward actions therefore he Ge. n 22 saith By their fruites you shall know them The promptnes and obedience of Abrahams minde was made apparant by his outward actions Euery inward habite of the minde must by outwarde signes and tokens be made manifest Faith therefore being a qualitie of the minde must appeare either sound or counterfet by works Gal. 5. proceeding from it therefore worketh it through loue as Saint Paul affirmeth And Saint Iames thus much signifieth by these works Shew me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by my works If therfore we wil make our election sure and certaine if we will shewe the 2. Pet. 1. Rom. 8. 2. Cor. 1 Ephes 4. grace of Christ to be in vs effectuall if we wil make it manifest that wee are sealed vp with the holy seale of Gods spirite to the day of redemption if we will make it knowen that we are inwardly moued by the holy Ghost Finally if we will approue our faith for true and liuely faith in Iesus Christ then must we be studious zealous of good works that thereby our faith may be shewed least we incurre most iust reprehension and for our hypocrisie bee worthely thus mocked Shew me thy faith by thy workes and I will shewe thee my faith by thy workes Herence it then appeareth that good workes are tokens and argumentes of mens faith Whereby it may be knowen whether they haue true faith in Iesus Christ or not If workes declare our faith what shall we say of the workes of the Infidels and mis-beleeuing heathen whose workes were most glorious most vvorthie most excellent in the sight of men What shal be said of the vvorkes of the proud Pharisies halting hypocrites vvhose vvorkes are often to the vievv of men more vvorthy and more precious then the vvorks of the very Saints Shall vve thinke that their vvorks are expresse and liuely testimonies and arguments of faith What shall vve say to the vvorks of men before their iustification Can they shevve faith being before and vvithout faith To these it may be ansvvered that no vvorkes vvhether vvithout faith as in Infidels and hypocrites or before faith as in the Saints before iustification can be accounted or called good Many
man be iustified by the like The deuils beleeue and tremble yet not iustified not saued Now that the deuils beleeue there is one God yea and confesse Iesus Christ to be his onely sonne yet tremble before his throne and diuine presence the holy word of God and the most sacred scriptures do teach vs when our blessed Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ was come into the land of the Gergesens there mette him two m●n possessed with deuils which came out of the graues very fierce and terrible so that no man might passe by that way And these deuils possessing these two men cried out vnto Christ with trembling and feare Iesus thou sonne of God what haue we to doe with thee art thou come hether to torment vs before the time In another Euangelist in like manner when the people preaced about Christ to be healed the vncleane spirites which were in them whom Christ then cured seeing him fell downe before him and cried saying Thou art the sonne of God The deuill possessing him whom neither fetters could holde nor chaines could binde nor bandes could bridle seeing the Lord Iesus a farre of running and worshipped him crying with a lowde voyce what haue I to doe with thee Iesus the sonne of the most high God To this sense soundeth that also in the Euangelist Saint Luke 4. item v. 41. eius deus Luke 8. 26. Luke who writeth that the vncleane spirite possessing the man in the Synagogue of Capernaum in Galile knew Christ God blessed for euermore and also confessed him openly Whereof the Euangelist saieth thus In the Synagogue there was a man which had a spirite of an vncleane deuill which cried with a loude voice saying vnto Iesus Christ Oh what haue we to doe with thee Iesus of Nazareth Art thou come to destroy vs I know whom thou art euen the holy one of God These places nowe cited out of Saint Matthew cap. 8. ver 18. 19. of S. Marke 3. cap. ver 11. and cap. 5. ver 2. 3. c. of Saint Luke cap. 4. ver 33. 34. c. and 5. 41. Luke cap. 8. ver 26. and many such like places doe euidently shewe a kinde of beliefe to bee in the deuils whereby they be perswaded there is a God Their confessing also the sonne of God Iesus Christ to be God euen the sonne of the most highest and their prostrating and casting downe of themselues before his diuine presence Finally their feare least he should torment them and their desiring of him not to sende them into the deepe the place of their punishment confirmeth this truth the deuils beleeue also and tremble The deuills then doe not onely beleeue there is one God but also confesse Iesus Christ to bee his sonne and tremble for feare of his mightie power To conclude this beliefe of the deuils and vnclean Acts 19. spirites saint Luke in the Acts of the holy Apostles setteth forth most euidently in the storie of the seuen sonnes of Sceua the priest and Iewe. Which sonnes of his being Exorcists and taking vpon them to call on the name of Iesus whom Paul preached coniured therby the foule and vncleane spirites to come out of men but the euill spirit by them thus coniured in a certaine man answered them and said Iesus I know and Paul I know but who are you Thus did the deuil nor only beleeue but confesse also not onely Christ the sonne of the most highest but Paul also the seruant of the Lord and of our blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ Albeit these testimonies out of the newe Testament bee most cleare to teach vs that the deuils beleeue there is one God yet let vs also cast our eyes vppon the former generations and looke euen from the beginning and in the succeeding ages and wee shall see out of the olde Testament also this same confirmed and so haue a most sweete and pleasaunt harmonie of them both together VVhen God Almightie had made man and placed him in the most pleasaunt garden of Eden and had giuen Gene. 3. him commaundement that he shoulde not eate of the forbidden fruite which grewe in the middest of Paradise euen of the tree of the knowledge of good and euill Satan tempting man to disobedience doth not denie that there was anie God which had giuen such commaundement to man but as beleeuing there was one God and confessing the same vnto Euah asketh her whether God indeede had commaunded them not to eate of the tree of knowledge VVhen the sonnes of God the holie Angels stoode all about the throne of God and Satan himselfe comming from the compassing of the earth and the worlde Iob 1. 2. presented himselfe also before his diuine Maiestie and God had demaunded of him whether he had considered Iob his seruant The deuill as beleeuing the heauenlie and diuine nature confesseth the Godheade in his accusation of Iob hath Iob serued God for nought Thus the deuill at that time also beleeued Finally when the Lorde Almightie sitting vpon his heauenly throne and hauing all the hoste of heauen about 3. Kings 22. him as it were consulting and deuising to bring a iust plague vpon Ahab the wicked and vngodly King of Israell had but asked the question who woulde entice Ahab that he might perish in Ramoth Gilead Satan the deuill as beleeuing that diuine nature and excellent maiestie to be God submitted himselfe to Gods will offered himselfe to the execution of his iudgements and sayd I will entice him Thus then both the testimonies of the olde and the authorities of the newe Testament confirme the doctrine of our Apostle the deuils beleeue and tremble Nowe where the Apostle Saint Iames saieth thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well the deuils also beleeue and tremble this speach thou doest well may haue a double sense For either it may be taken irronically and in taunting wise as iustly vpbraiding and reprouing them for their vaine ostentation of fayth and their boasting in their beleefe which is no better then the faith of diuels VVherefore as when men doe most wickedly yet we in reproouing in taunting in mocking and checking manner say O it is well done and so reproue their iniquitie So here Saint Iames bitterly and sharpely inueighing agaynst the wicked and iustly reproouing their vaine faith sayeth Thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well the deu●ls beleeue also and tremble and so condemneth their hypocrisie As who should say is it well done in deede when thou doest beleeue no better then deuils do Or else it may be spoken affirmatiuely and to this sense thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well for it is a good thing thus to doe but yet is not this all neither is it inough or sufficient neither must thou rest in that degree of fayth but goe on and proceede and growe from faith to faith and then to beleeue there is one God is well Otherwise thy faith shall not profite thee for the deuils
also beleeue there is one God yet tremble they in desperation VVherfore then if a man shoulde describe vnto vs faith in this manner it is faith to beleeue there is one God this definition declaration or description of faith were altogether imperfect neither is this the faith wherby a man may bee saued for the deuils themselues haue as good a faith as this and yet are not saued As then it were absurde for any to say that the deuils shall be saued which no man affirmeth vnlesse hee be voide of knowledge bereft of reason enwrapped in errour doting through follie so it is no lesse absurde for men to seeke to bee saued through that faith which is common vnto the deuils also yet can not saue them which thing our Apostle here teacheth and telleth vs thou beleeuest there is one God thou doest well the deuils beleeue also and tremble To make a plaine euident and apparant difference Credere deum Credere deo Credere in deum betwixt true faith and feigned the faith of the Saints and the shadowe of faith in the wicked the holy auncient and reuerend fathers haue shewed that it is one thing to beleeue that God is and another thing to beleeue God and another thing to beleeue in God 1 To beleeue that God is is to beleeue there is a God and the same the creator and the gouernour of heauen and earth which the verie sight and view of the creatures and the frame of the worlde doth teach all Nations and people be they neuer so rude neuer so sauage neuer so barbarous as the heathen man and Oratour of the Romaines Tullie in sundrie of his bookes and 1. Lib. de natur deorum 1. Tuscul 1. de Legib. workes hath confessed And the verie deuils themselues Seeing the wonderfulnesse of his woorkes the omnipotencie of his power the incomprehensiblenesse of his wisedome the terrour and seueritie of his iudgements and the excellencie of his Maiestie are also forced will they nill they to beleeue and perswade themselues there is one God This faith then is common to the heathen and to the Saints vnto men and vnto deuils and therefore therby can we not be saued 2 To beleeue God is to beleeue Gods worde to be Psal 145. true to beleeue that God is faithfull in all his sayings and holy in all his workes Which thing albeit the wicked sometimes seeme to doe yet simplie can they not be saide to beleeue God For if they either beleeued him to be true in his promises or constant in his threatnings then would they neither so maliciously persecute vertue neither so greedilie follow after vice as experience doth teach they dayly do If they beleeued God then either the hope of heauen promised in mercie to the righteous or dreade of damnation threatned in iustice to the wicked woulde withdrawe them from wickednesse but neither the one neither the other doth perswade them therefore do they not rightly beleeue God 3 To beleeue in God is not onely to beleeue that God is neither only to beleeue all things in his holy word to be most certaine and most sure but also particularly to embrace and specially apply vnto our owne selues all the promises made by God the father in his son Iesus Christ both concerning mercie and also remission of sinnes vnto the Saints to relie rest and stay onely vppon his mightie power to haue all hope of happinesse in his onely fauour to perswade our selues of true righteousnesse release of sinne imputation of iustice eternall saluation onely through his deare sonne our Sauiour Iesus Christ the righteous who onely died for our sinnes and rose againe Rom. 4. 1. Pet. 3. Rom. 10. for our iustification who onely once suffered for vs the iust for the vniust to bring vs to God who onely is the fulfilling of the law for al that beleeue and therefore alone of god for vs made wisdome iustification sanctification 1. Cor. 1. redemption that according as it is written he that reioiceth let him reioice in the Lord. This faith who so hath from God doeth not onely beleeue God is neither alone acknowledge him as a most mightie Lorde and most iust iudge neither onely perswade himselfe generally the things in scripture contained to be true which in some sort is common both vnto men vnto deuils to the Saints and to the wicked but also doth loue God as a father full of all mercy hope in him for pardon of sinnes as in the onely fountaine of grace and goodnesse and this faith is chiefly proper vnto the Saints in whom also it bringeth forth the fruites of righteousnes that in them God in all things may be glorified through Iesus Christ To beleeue therefore that there is one God is faith more large and generall then may be accounted sounde and liuely faith whose proper marke and specifical difference is to applie the sure promises of mercie by God made vnto the Saints vnto our selues which neyther the wicked of the world neither the deuils do therefore by that their faith can they not be saued yea rather as vtterly without all hope through feare of endlesse damnation they tremble But a man might say that the faith of Gods elect seruaunts is not voide of feare for to be voide vtterly of feare is a thing most wicked Wherefore Paul hauing in many wordes noted the wickednesse of the naturall Rom. 3. and vnregenerate men setteth downe this as the full measure of their iniquitie the feare of God is not before their eyes True it is there is feare in the Saintes which God himselfe commendeth vnto vs by his Prophet to whom shall I haue respecte but to such as are poore humble Isai 66. in heart and tremble at my sayings This feare Salomon commendeth as the beginning of wisedome and Saint Prou. 1. Paul opposeth it to wicked presumption be not high minded but feare and requireth it in the Saints as a Rom. 11. marke of saluation worke out your saluation with feare and trembling This feare proceedeth from loue and Philip. 2. care we haue to please God loth in any thing to offende him as our father most mercifull most bounteous and louing not so much for feare of receyuing punishment as for care not to loose the benefite of mercie as Saint Augustine wisely hath obserued Epist 120. Honorato Mat. 25. But as for the feare and trembling of wicked men and damned spirites it is alwaies through remembrance of Gods iudgementes and their owne endles torments which in hell they shall suffer which are prepared for Satan and his Angels They feare because hee alwaies threateneth torments neuer promiseth reconcilement alvvaies appeareth rigorous neuer fauourable alvvaies dreadfull neuer amiable wherefore they carying daily in their breastes and bosomes tormenting furies which holde them day and night vnder dread of endlesse destruction when they see continually the countenaunce of God against them armed with all the weapons of
vsurpe authoritie rashly to iudge and condemne the brethren This I would to God our sharpe censurers and seuere iudgers would weigh who geue definitiue and peremptorie sentence of al men who chalenge a chiefe power and absolute authoritie ouer all their brethren who condemne without charitie whatsoeuer doeth not please them selues Would God they would but turne ouer the leafe wherein their owne infirmities are registred and turne the other ende of the wallet before them to fixe their sight vpon their owne blemishes and blottes of corruption then would their pride be abated their heate asswaged their chollor cooled their iudgementes moderated their arrogancie delaied and qualified and thēselues brought to a temperature not so ambitiously to vsurpe and arrogate to themselues the censuring of their brethren Which to effect and compasse in the Saints the Apostle vseth this reason also My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation for in many things we sinne and fall all Of our manifolde fallings many are the occasions sundrie are the causes 1 The original corruption which lieth couched in our bosomes wherby we are led captiue vnto sinne 2 The snares of Sathan which he laieth to take vs and intangle vs in the pitfold of iniquitie 3 The euil examples which are presented before vs whereby we are drawen to all vngodlines euery day 4 The lenitie of the gouernours of discipline who according to the rule of iustice take not execution vpō sinne whereby others are pricked forwarde to like sinne For whereas punishment is not executed saith Salomō speedelie there are the hearts of men set vpon mischiefe Eccles. 8. Psal 101. Therefore Dauid saith hee would betimes destroy all the wicked of the land that he might cut off all the workers of wickednes from the citie of God 5 Finally the fearefulnes and flatterie of the Ministers of the word who either for feare or for fauour tell not men of their manifolde offences wherby they are occasioned sundrie waies to fall The reason of the Apostle is this Seeing all men are subiect to many falles and infirmities therfore must they not be too seuere against their brethren be not many masters saith the Apostle knowing that we shall receiue the greater condemnation for in many things we offend all Now the fall of man is double either particular or generall Particular as to fal into any one sinne or more as theft dronkennes adulterie murther couetousnes vsurie extortion slaunder lying blasphemy and the like Into some or many of these euen the most holy Saintes haue may and doe daily fall Generall falling is when men fall Heb. 6. 1. Iohn 5. Mat. 12 away not in one onely sinne but generally in all resist the grace of God offered This is apostacie this is the sin vnto death this is the sinne against the holy Ghost euen a generall and vniuersall falling away frō the knowen trueth Heb 6. 10. 2. Pet. 2. Whereof the authour to the Hebrewes affirmeth that who so doeth so sinne cannot be restored by repentance And S. Peter auoucheth that it were better for mē not to haue knowen the trueth then after that they haue knowen it to fall away from the holy commaundements Thus doe not the Saints fall but onely the reprobate Of the former kinde the Apostle speaketh for al men fal particularly in many things which we ought alwaies to cōsider that it might teach vs not to vsurpe authoritie ambitiously to censure and iudge our brethren whereunto this place and exhortation serueth My brethren be not many masters for we shal receiue the greater iudgement for in many things we offende or fall all Whereas Saint James willeth that wee be not many masters doeth it take away the authority of masters ouer their seruāts No assuredly for then would neither S. Paul so carefully nor Saint Peter so diligently haue geuen precepts concerning obedience of seruantes to their masters Saint Paul exhorteth seruants to be subiect to their 2. Tit. Ephes 6. masters and to please them in all things to be obedient to them which are their masters according to the flesh with feare and trembling in singlenes of minde as vnto the 1. Tim. 6. Lord. In another place in this wise he councelleth them Let as many seruants as are vnder the yoke count their 1. Pet. 2 masters worthy all honour that the name of God and his doctrine be not euill spoken of To whom Saint Peter subscribeth Seruants saith he be subiect to your masters with all feare not onelie to the good and courteous but also to the froward Seeing these Apostles haue enioyned this obedience to seruants towards their masters and the same spirite spoke in them and in Iames our Apostle it foloweth then that the authoritie of masters is not here abandoned If we must not be many masters neither be iudges ouer our brethren shall we thinke that power is taken away hereby from Princes iudges and magistrates ouer their Subiects and such as are vnder them Neither For then woulde not the Scriptures teach what magistrates should be in common wealthes neither enioyne obedience to be performed vnto them Moises being wearied with the gouernement of the whole people of Israel Exod. 18. is taught by Jethro his father in law the priest of Midian to chuse more offiicers and gouernours vnder him whose qualities are foure Men they must be 1 of courage 2 fearing God 3 dealing truly 4 hating couetousnesse Moises according to this counsell ordained Deut. 1. 16. officers and iudges ouer the people taught them their dueties and set downe the qualities in them required To whom obedience by the law of God is to bee performed Exod 20. Which God contained in the fourth commaundement where it is said honour thy father and thy mother not onely the parents of our bodies but the parents and fathers of the countrie which are princes and magistrates in common wealthes This obedience he requireth when he giueth them authoritie to determine causes and willeth Exod. 22. men to stande to their verdit Our Sauiour Christ taught the same by his own example who in tokē of ciuil Matt. 17. subiection paied tribute to Caesar And afterwarde being tempted by the Scribes and Herodians and demaunded Matt. 22. the question whether it were lawfull to giue tribute to Caesar or no answered them in this wise Giue to Caesar that which belongeth to Caesar and to God that which belongeth vnto God S. Paul by Christes spirit taught willeth euery soule to be subiect to hier powers because Rom. 13. their power is from God Finally S. Peter exhorteth all men to submit themselues to all maner humaine ordinance 1. Pet. 2. for the Lords sake The soueraintie of the prince ouer the people the correcting controlling and iudging of the magistrate and ciuill officer of the transgressing and offending persons is not hereby remoued VVhat if we may not bee many masters shall
that in both he may bee glorified through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom with the Father and the holie Ghost our sanctifier be all prayse dominion power and maiestie now and for euer Amen Iames Chap. 3. verses 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. Sermon 16. 13 Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge among you let him shew by good conuersation his workes in meekenesse of wisedome 14 But if you haue bitter enuying strife in your hearts reioice not neither be liers against the truth 15 This wisedome discendeth not from aboue but is earthly sensuall and diuelish 16 For where enuying and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes 17 But the wisdome which is from aboue is first pure then peaceable gentle easie to bee entreated full of mercie and good fruites without iudging without hyhocrisie 18 And the fruit of righteousnes is sowen in peace of them that loue peace 3. Place THese woordes are concerning the thirde and last parte or place of this Chapter which is touching meekenesse and gentlenesse to bee perfourmed of Christians These words in these sixe verses conteined minister the consideration of foure thinges vnto vs Namely 1 The exhortation to meckenes 13. 2 The opposing of strife and enuying to the worthie vertue of meekenes verse 14. 3 A distinguishing of wisdome where by a gate is shutte vp to many euils 15. 16. 17. 4 A reason wherfore the saints should follow peace and meekenes drawen from reward verse 18. 1 Of these foure the first is the exhortation to meekenes The exhortation inferred and brought in by the way of an interrogation Who is a wise man saith he and indued with knowledge among you Let him shew by good conuersation the meeknes of wisdome As who shoulde say All men seeke to be counted wise but if any wil be wise in deede let him by meeknes shew his wisdome For therin indeed wisdome consisteth The occasion of this exhortation may be the sinne which the Apostle in the first place condemned namely that many chalenged authority to themselues to reproue and checke their brethren and to bee as censurers ouer them thereby seeking the opinion of wisdome among men which notwithstanding were themselues enuious and contentious Saint James here to abate their pride to beat downe the arrogancie of their spirites to asswage their malice and to coole the heate of their madnes and furie telleth them that it is not the way to be counted wise to be contentious among mē but rather that herin wisdome consisteth that they shew themselues modest quiet meeke and gentle in their whole conuersation This place condemneth the sophisticall scholemen this condemneth the brauling Anabaptists this condemneth al such whose liues are spent in contention of words this condemneth popish persons seditious seminaries tumultuous Iesuits the vain curious contentious men of out time who geue themselues to tumults contentions seditions dissencions brauling and brabling most deadly to the disturbance of the commonwealth disquietnes of the church slaunder of the gospel hurte to priuate states and conditions of men In which practise wisdome consisteth not but in meekenes Christian wisdome is not in ambitious vsurping authoritie ouer the brethren neither in quarrellous braulings contentions about trifles neither in vnbrideled pride and arrogancie of spirite neither in tumultuous vprores and disquieting of the people neither is it sillogistically and sophistically to striue about words neither insolētly to oppose our selues against such as are in chiefe authoritie neither standeth it in foolish affecting of rigorous seueritie But in gentle behauiour in tractablenes of life meekenes of conuersation wherof the Apostle telleth vs Who is wise and indued with knowledge among you Let him shewe by good conuersation his works in meekenes of wisdome Meekenes is a vertue moderating pride and anger repressing desire of reuenge forgetting offences and pardoning iniuries for priuate and publique quietnes sake Whereunto our Sauiour Christ exhorteth pronouncing Mat. 5. them blessed which are meeke to whom also the inheritance of the earth appertaineth Blessed saith he are the meeke for they shall inherite the earth Saint Paul reckoning vp the fruites of the spirite in men reformed among Gal. 5. other most holy and excellent vertues putteth downe meekenes The fruites saith he of the spirite are loue peace ioy long suffering gentlenes goodnes faith meeknes temperance against such there is no law Who also exhorting all men to liue walk worthie the calling where-they Ephes 4. are called instructing them how they should so do Walke worthie saith he the calling whereunto you are called in all humblenes and lowlines in meekenes with ●ong suffering supporting one another in loue endeuou●ing to keepe the vnitie of the Spirite in the bonde of ●eace In like manner perswading the Colossians to put on Col. 3. ●hose vertues and chiefe ornaments of their liues where●y their profession might be better beautified exhorteth ●fter this manner Now as the elect of God holy and ●eloued put on the bowels of mercie kindnes humble●es of minde meekenes long suffering forbearing one an ●ther forgeuing one another if any man haue a quar●ell to another euē as Christ forgaue so doe you Finally instructing Titus his scholer and the chiefe 3. Tit. Minister of Creta how he should infourme the people of that I le and countrie geueth him this charge Put them ●n remembrance that they be subiect to the principalities and powers and that they be obedient and readie to euery good worke that they speake euil of no man that they be no fighters but soft shewing all meekenes to all men Whereunto in this place the Apostle hauing respect vseth like exhortation Who is a wise man and indued with knowledge among you Let him shew his good conuersation in meekenes of wisdome Of which vertue sundrie are the examples whereby we may be drawen to imitation For if we looke well about vs we shal finde almightie God a most liuely patern and president hereof who in great meekenes forbore the sinnes of the world along season and suffered his owne people sinning and prouoking him fourtie yeares in the wildernes forgetting and forgeuing daylie the innumerable sinnes of men For which cause he is celebrated and Exod. 34. 6 Psa 103. 6 Ioel 2. 13. c renowmed to be a god of patience long sufferance meeknes and gentlenes towards the sonnes of men Neither God the Father onely but Iesus Christ his sonne our sauiour in like manner is our example who inuiteth and calleth men to the imitation of the same vertue in him selfe Come vnto me all ye that are laden and Marke 11 wearie and I will refresh you take my yoake vpon you learne of me for I am humble and meeke and you shall finde rest vnto your soules If wee require examples of men as more familiar vnto vs we haue not a few excellent for wisdome prepotent in power renowmed for vertue herein
this proceedeth from those who beeing sensuall and carnall men men naturall not regenerate perceyue not the things of GOD neither can they vnderstand them because they are spirituallie discerned This is a part of Rom. 8. the wisedome of the flesh which is enmitie with God and neither is neither can bee subiect to him This Isai 5. is a poynt of selfe-wisedome where against the Prophet denounceth vengeaunce wo to them which seeme wise in their owne eyes and prudent in their owne sight Thus to doe wee haue of our mother witte and fathers wisedome euen from our prime parents and first fathers from whome wee drawe all maliciousnesse enuie and iniquitie Hereunto our owne sense mooueth our owne desire leadeth our owne nature pricketh which wee haue sucked with our conception from Adam and Eue and is altogether sensuall and naturall To giue our selues then to bitter enuie to brawling contention to strife and emulation to trust in our owne wits to flatter our selues in our owne conceit to stand too much vpon our pantiples to be quarrelous through pride to chalenge authoritie ouer other men and not to abide the checke of anie to striue and contend with euery one is wisedome in a false perswasion of men but wisedome worldly and wicked VVherewith who so are indued are carnall not spirituall sensuall not regenerate hauing not the spirit but led with their owne sensualitie as beasts in whom is no reason this the Apostle to intimate telleth vs that this wisdome is sensuall also 3 Finally and thirdly it is diuelish The originall of enuie and contention wherein the wicked worldlings repose wisedome is from Satan himselfe the authour the fountaine the well-heade of maliciousnesse enuie contention debate and sed●tion among men whereunto onely through him are men mooued Therefore the Apostle calleth this wisedome diuelish because it is not inspired by God but suggested by Satan not infused from heauen but powred into vs from beneath not instilled from the father of light but ministred vnto vs by the prince of the darkenesse of this world and therefore called diuelish Satan was contentious from the beginning lifting vp himselfe euen against God through the insolencie of his minde for which hee was cast downe from heauen Jude v. 6. and is reserued in euerlasting darknesse to the iudgement of the great day He was a murtherer from the beginning Iohn 8. as Christ witnesseth from whome all enuie hatred malice debate and contention aryseth He is therefore called the enuious man who soweth tares among the corne Matt. 13. of the husbande man euen the seede of hatred sedition debate and contention in the Church of Christ and in the common wealth also By him was the sedicious contention of Core Dathan and Abiram caused by him were Jannes and Iambres stirred vp to withstand Moises Num. 16. Exod. 7. 11. 2. Tim. 3. 8. by him the bellowes of all brawlings were blowne in the Pharisies and Scribes to contend and striue agaynst the open truth of Iesus Christ by him were the malicious Iewes pricked forwarde to withstande and contende agaynst the Apostles and preachers of the Gospell by him were the heretiques hatched who contended against the Catholike fathers in the primitiue Church by him were the proude Popes and prelates of Rome raysed vp to sowe the seede of sedition in all the Churches of Christendome by him are now contentious persons stirred vp to disturbe the peace of Hierusalem by him rebels rise vp against lawfull Princes princes are stirred vp one against another for couetous desire and ambition of minde each to seeke the casting downe of each others crowne and kingdome by him are priuate men set at deadly variance and prouoked often to the shedding of the blood of their brethren by him all contention and sedition all brawlings and brabblements all fallings out and quarrels in priuate states are caused so that we may right well conclude with the Apostle that wisedome to contention strife and debate in whatsoeuer kinde it be is from the diuell and therefore diuelish and these are the qualities and properties wherby it is described Nowe as the worldly and wicked wisedome is by properties noted so is it also set downe by effects which follow contention and strife Whereof Saint Same 's sayth where enuying and strife is there is sedition and all maner of euill workes Whereby he teacheth that sedition and all maner of euill workes ensue and follow contention and strife among men and therefore ought it with all carefulnesse and diligence be auoided That sedition and all maner of euill workes proceed from enuious aed contentious wisedome in few wordes it appeareth out of Salomon who witnessing that when Prou. 13. euery man contendeth striueth for the preheminence and will not giue place to another much mischiefe great disturbaunce disquietnesse and disdaine to ensue sayth Onely by pride doth man make contention and of contention all euill as experience proueth followeth Pride is cause of contention contention of sedition tumults rebellions vprores in cōmon wealths Salomon not in the former place only but elswhere also cōsumeth the first he Prou. 28. that is of a proud heart stirreth vp strife the example of Corah Dathan Abiram cōfirmeth the second for their Num. 16. contentiousnes caused them seditiously to rise vp against Moses Absolom of a contentious spirit couering his aspiring minde with sugered flatterie fell from contention 2. Kings 15. with Ioab to rebellion and sedition against Dauid his owne father The proud and contentious spirite of Ieroboam sonne of Nebat moued him to lift vp his hand against Salomon the king his master and openly to rebel against Rehoboam his sonne for euer Zimrie in like manner 3. Kings 11. 12. through pride became contentious and of contentious seditious and rebellious So that he being Captaine of halfe the hoast of Basha rose vp against Basha his sonne 3. Kings 16. the king and slewe him and raigned in his stead The contentiō of Lacedemō Athens ended in sedition Themistocles enuious contentiō against Aristides raised sparks of sedition among the people Silla Marius contention ended in ciuil dissention The like may be saide of Caesar and Pompey Anthonie and Augustus and infinite the like whose contentions and enuie hath ended in sedition This is true in the Commonwealth This is true in priuate states of men This is true in the Church of Christ This is true in all states and degrees so that Saint Iames saith truely that where enuie and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes Seeing then contention enuy strife causeth sedition and all manner of euill works The wisdome which vpholdeth contention strife and enuie may worthely bee condemned which Saint Iames doeth both in describing the qualities and setting downe the effectes If you haue bitter enuying and strife among your selues reioyce not neither be liers against the trueth This wisdome discendeth
the 1. Pet. 5. name of the Lord thy God in vaine for he will not holde him giltlesse that taketh his name in vaine If hee tempt Exod. 20. vs to vsurie drawe out this sword of the spirit this word of God it is written thou shalt not geue to vsurie vnto thy Deut. 23. brother vsurie of money vsurie of meate or of any thing which is put to vsurie which who so doeth shall not dwell in the Lords tabernacle nor rest vpon his holy mountain Psal 15. If we be tempted to deceite and sraudulent dealing let vs resist by this it is written let no man oppresse or deceaue 1. Thess 4. his brother in bargaining for the Lord is a iudge of such things If he moue vs to dronkennes remember it is written 1. Cor. 6 the dronkard shall not inherite the kingdome of God and of Christ If he moue vs to disloyaltie and disobedience to Princes let vs resist him with that of Paul let euerie 1. Cor. 6 Rom. 13. soule be subiect to the higher powers for there is no power but of God and who so resisteth power resisteth the ordinance of God and shall receaue vnto themselues condemnation If he sollicite vs to vnnaturalnes to our parents let vs driue him back and say it is written honour Exod. 20. Ephes 6. thy father and thy mother that thy daies may be long vp pon the land which the Lord thy God geueth thee If hee moue vs to slaunder and backbiting if he moue vs to bribery corruption if he moue vs to false iudgement if he moue vs to filthie talke and ribaldrie if hee moue vs to wastfulnes and prodigalitie finally to what sinne or iniquitie soeuer he moueth vs we must resist him with this we are by God commaunded the contrarie And thus shall we haue him alwaies at a bay thus shal we keep him still at swords point and thus shall we resist him that hee hurt vs not 5 To conclude this our enemie is resisted by the aide of Gods spirite and by the presence of his power whereby we subdue our enemies therefore are we exhorted to be strong in the Lord in the power of his might therefore is the spirite of power the spirite of might the Ephes 6. Luke 10. 18. Isai 11. spirite of wisdome the spirite of strength the spirit of fortitude the spirite of boldnes promised the Church that by the help thereof not onely our mortall enemies but our ghostly aduersaries might be resisted By these or the like waies ought al the saints of god to oppose themselues to Sathan and resist the deuill as they are admonished thus should Adam and Euah thus should the men of the first world thus should the Sodomites thus should the Israelites thus should Dauid thus should Salomon thus should the Iewes thus should Judas haue resisted when by satā they were solicited and stirred vp to wickednes thus finally must all Gods seruants resist him if they will perfourme true submission vnto God Very well therefore admonisheth S. Cyprian fol. 196. de zelo liuore 3 The precept and the contrarie being thus sette downe the thirde thing in this former part of duetie is the reason of the contrarie why wee shoulde oppose our selues vnto Sathan and set our selues to resist him Which reason is drawen from hope of victorie if we thus and by al meanes resist him then he flieth from vs then is he put to flight repelled and put back Resist the deuill and hee will flie from you that they may put Sathan to flight and triumph victoriouslie ouer him men ought by all meanes to resist him Sathan the deuill is of a dastardlie and cowardlie nature fierce and furious against the fearefull but flieth away from such as withstand and resist him Saint Barnard 1. Epistle saith to this purpose truely of him The enemie more willingly pursueth thee flying thē sustaineth thee resisting more audaciouslie and boldly followeth at the back then resisteth to the face Wherefore he may very worthely be compared and resembled to the Crocodile who as it is Crocodile affirmed flieth away when a man turneth boldely vnto him but followeth very fiercely when he is not resisted So Sathan that olde dragon that cruell crocodile flieth when he is resisted but followeth vs hardly when we geue place vnto him Seeing men to withstande him by strong faith earnest praier true holines the sword of Gods Spirite which is the word of God and by the aide of the power and Spirite of God he flieth wherefore wee hauing this hope of victorie ouer him we ought to be encouraged to resist him But how is this true that if we resist the deuill hee flieth from vs when daily experience teacheth the contrarie See we not that where he is withstood yet not long after he renueth his battle and giueth a new attempt and assault against vs I answere that albeit the deuill be infatigable and neuer wearied albeit in one battle put to flight hee renue his assaults and prepare new temptations for vs yet so often as he tempteth and setteth vpon vs if wee thus resiste him he shal flie from vs and we in al temptatiōs shall haue the vpper and better hand of him He is therfore like a malicious professed enemie who oftentimes put to the soile and ouercome driuen See Luk. 4. 13 out of the field and put to flight yet so long as he liueth he is alwaies rising and resisting daiely preparing newe force to geue a fresh battle Euen so Sathan bearing a tyrannous hatred and malicious minde against the sonnes of God by whom through Gods resisting grace repelled and driuen back often yet euer anon renueth his battle and geueth new assaults vnto vs. Neitheir is his subtiltie altogether vnlike the order of Players who hauing for a time spoken for a time again voyde the Stage goe out disguize thēselues change their apparel so at length come in again as if they were others so satan somtimes leaueth the stage of tēptations and departeth from vs for a season in the meane time hee 2. Cor. 11. disguiseth himselfe and changeth as it were his apparell transformeth himselfe euen as it were into an angel of light and entreth the place againe as if he were some other and then plaieth a new part and prize to deceiue vs. Finally as the beast Camelion turneth it selfe into all Camelion formes and fashions so this great beast the deuill and satanas changeth himselfe into a thousand shapes tenne thousand fashions with all wilines falshoode lying wonders all craftines and spirituall wickednes in high places assaulting and assailing men to drawe them to iniquitie In all which conflicts the Apostle exhorteth vs to resiste him To which endeuour he promiseth assured victorie resist the deuill and he shall flee from you This must be our comfort in this dangerous skirmige this must be our encouragement in this
not all then vnder this condemnation Let as many then as haue any feare of God before their eies any care of their owne saluation any desire to escape endlesse condemnation any remorce of conscience for their sinne in this behoofe cōmitted any sparcle of grace any feeling of the Spirite of God whereby they are sealed vp to the day of redemption Ephes 4. repent themselues of this wickednes correcte this grieuous sinne in their manners reforme and refraine their lippes from all vaine swearing and blasphemie that thereby they fall not into condemnation but may liue for euer If condemnation be threatened to the vaine swearing of men how much more subiect thereunto are they which geue themselues to horrible periuries and false swearings Which thing almightie God reseruing finally to be punished in eternall torments of hell fire yet to shew how greatly hee detesteth this wickednes euen in this life in some measure he punisheth it When Iosua Josua 9. the Princes of Israel had made a faithfull othe to the Gibeonites Saul afterward violated it almightie God in the 2. King 21. daies of Dauid punished it with three yeares famine thorow out Israel till the seuen sonnes of Saul were geuen to the Gibeonites to bee slaine When Mataniah named by Nabuchodonosour Zedichiah had sworne subiection to the 4. Kings 24. 25. King but afterward forswearing him sealfe and rebelling the Lorde punished his periurie by the King of Babylon who tooke him prisoner slue his sonnes before his eies then put out both his eies and caried him bounde into Babylon where he was kept in perpetuall miserie I neede not say that therefore none of the posteritie of Edward the fourth came vnto the possessiō of the crowne of England because he solemnely swore at Yorke to holde him sealfe contented with his owne duke dome and to performe loyall obedience to the King Duke Elphred conspiring against King Adelstane for swore him sealfe in his purgation therefore at Rome wherefore almightie God stroke him presently in Saint Peters church there and so hee died Earle Godwine hauing treaterously slaine Alphrede brother to King Edward the third thereof charged by the King at table at a certaine time the Earle tooke breade in his hand and swore desiring that the bread might choake him if he were there of giltie which breade hee eating was there with all sodenly choaked that hee fell downe and died To be shorte one may stande for many which is notoriously knowen that a woman which in the yeare 1575. for alittle flaxce forswore her selfe in wood-streate in London therefore was presently stroken and miserably died with great torture tormentes and terrour Infinire like exampls of the iuste iudgements of God in this behalfe are exstant and albeit God doe not alwaies strike all persons in like manner offending yet that it might appeare how greatly he detesteth this wickednes he giueth men a taste of his anger and wrathfull indignation euen in this life present shewing thereby how much more sharpely they shal be punished in the world to come And thought in great patience he beareth with this intollerable sinne of men for a long time and season yet shall they not be vnpunished for euer Truely in this thing therefore saith the poet Tibullus Though that periurie be at the first couered yet at length punishment commeth without noyse secretely And Homer in like manner saith Albeit God foorthwith punish not periuries yet doeth hee at length whereby most grieuous punishments falle on the authour his companion and children which hath committed them Which thing seemeth to haue beene fulfilled in Philip king of Macedonia his children whom Pausanias recordeth to haue fallen into so many miseries calamities and troubles because he violated his othes and falsified his promises so often Wherfore howsoeuer either vain swearers or periured persons doe here escape the reuenging hand of God yet shall they vndoubtedly be subiect to eternall condemnation vnlesse they both leaue their wickednes and speedely repent themselues of their sinne embrace the councell of the Apostle who correcteth this euil Let your yea be yea and your nay nay least ye fal into condemnation This reason drawen from danger not temporal only but eternal rather might be a sufficient stop and stay to keep our lips from this wickednes from which refraining we are so far that we pretend excuses to our vanity 1 Some therefore say I am forced to sweare men otherwise will not beleeue me Shall man force thee to blaspheme and shal not Gods word drawe thee to obedience shall man make thee to doe more in transgressing then Gods word in obeying Is there any necessitie to force thee to doe that which doing thou fallest into condemnation yea is not thy owne vanitie thy inconstancie in thy words thy falshood in thy promises thy periurie in thy othes thy often swearing not vainly only but vntruely also cause that no man giueth thee credit if in al thing● thy deedes were agreeable to thy words thy performāces according to thy promises if thou wert thy words master and neuer protestedst but the trueth if thy tongue were geuen to simplicitie and thy lippes not defiled with lies then shoulde thy worde be beleeued as well yea rather better then thine othe but because thy wordes are but wind and in thy speaches there is no hold because thy promises are without perfourmance in thy saying there is no faith because in thy tongue there is no trust and in thy talke there is no trueth therefore thou swearest yet thou art not beleeued The law saith He that is once presupposed and taken for an euill man is alwaies so presupposed and he that is taken once for faithlesse vntrustie is alwaies so presupposed Aristotle as Laertius writeth or Demetrius as other affirme being asked what Laertius de vitaphilo profite men gate by their lies falshoode and vntrueths in them answered this onely that oftentimes whē they tell the trueth yet men will not beleeue them The fault therfore redoundeth vpon thy owne head that thou art not beleeued so farre therefore is this pretence from excusing thy swearing that it rather encreaseth thy offence 2 If we pretend our custome doeth this excuse our sinne Nay doeth not custome of doing euill aggrauate the wickednes that seruant that is accustomed to rob his master and doeth it therefore more commonly is more punishable thē he that hath once done it so hath done The childe that by vse and custome groweth to be disobedient deserueth with more seueritie to be chastened then he that once offendeth and so leaueth Euery wickednes how much more commonly it is done so much more hainous is it The man more accustomed to adulteries is the more filthie whoremonger the wife that hath more vsually prostituted her selfe to others is the more detestable harlot the theefe that by custome robbeth deserueth more iustly to be hanged the more vsually any euill is committed the more haynous
Homilie let the inquisition and inquiring out of thy sinne be in thy hearte and thought Of confess and repent this inquiring and iudgement let it be without witnes let God alone see thy confessing which onely doth not vpbraid thee with the sinnes but forgiueth them Saint Augustine not abiding that proude presumption Lib. 10. confes c. 3. of men sharpely inueigheth against them in his confessions what haue I to doo saith he with men that they should heare my confessions as if they could heale my sores a curious kinde of men to know the liues of others and a slouthfull to correct their owne How know they when they heare of me of my selfe whether I 1. Cor. 2. speake the truth sith no man knoweth what is done in man but the spirite of man that is in him This intollerable arrogancie of men to heare the confessions of other mens sinnes Lysander could not abide wherefore when he asked counsell in Samothracia Lysander of the Oracle being willed by the priest and keeper thereof to tell the greatest sinne that euer he committed asked whether he should do it at his bidding or at the commaundement of the gods When it was tolde hm it was the commaundement of the gods he willed the priest to stande a parte and he would tell it the gods if they did aske him Thus the very heathen detested this auricular confession of their sinnes vnto others Wherefore let that be abandoned farre from the schoole of Christ which the very heathen by reason did not admit and let it be condemned for euer as an errour or heresie not tollerable which neyther Scripture confirmeth nor Fathers allow of Saint James in this place speaketh nothing hereof but only of confession of offences priuately committed which either for mutuall comfort or for mutuall reconciliation ought to be mutually confessed as Erasmus Bede expound it Vnto which cōfession mutual praier is ioined wherof albeit in the 14. 15. verses he had spoken yet to shew the excellencie and necessitie thereof here repeateth it againe requireth it Which he cōmendeth from the effect that all men might see and know that there is nothing more effectuall and forceble to the healing of our bodily diseases then vnfained praier proceeding frō a liuelie faith a pure heart and good conscience to God Which effect of mutuall confession and praier is health acknowledge your faults one to another and pray one for another that you may be healed our mindes cleere of malice our hearts of hatred our affections of enuie our desires of wrath and reuenge our bodies shall the sooner be restored to health by the Lord. Seeing then such an effect followeth mutuall prayer we ought to be councelled by the holy Ghost and aduised by the Apostle to praie one for another that wee may be healed But of this more hath beene spoken vpon the 14. and 15. verses before going Where Saint Iames exhorteth vs to pray one for another it no whitte at all fauoureth the opinion of Popish persons either for their praiers to the dead or for the dead To the deceased Saints herence are we not moued to pray as to mediatours and aduocates for vs to God For here the Apostle as before desireth the liuing saints to pray one for another that they may be healed The Lords prayer teacheth that men aliue may pray for men liuing therefore therein we pray not for our selues alone but for the whole bodie of the Church One man may sue to God for another being aliue and we are willed to seeke for the praiers of the liuing Saints that they may be poured out for vs to God But to sue for the helpe of the praiers of the soules and spirites of men and women deceased neither doeth this place neither any other in the canonical Scriptures of God teach or perswade vs. And as we are not taught to sue to the dead so neither are we taught to sue for the dead for the liuing saints must pray one for another being aliue they are willed to praie for those that are sicke but not dead Dauid praied 2. Kings 12. for the childe begotten of Bersebah when it was sicke but assoone as it was dead he ceased Abraham praied for the Gen. 18. Sodomites being aliue but when they were destroyed we heare no prayer for them Moises praied to GOD for the Leuit. transgressing Israelites but when they were destroyed by the hand of God he praied not Saint Paul praied for the Rom. 9. 1● lewes his brethren according to the flesh but it is neuer mentioned that he praied for any of them deceased Prayers for the soules in purgatory therfore herence can no wise be gathered Now that health followeth the praiers of Gods saints we must not take it that as all they for whom praier was made were alwaies healed in the time of the Apostles euen so also now but that as in that time it was the ordinarie meane and had his effect in all euen so ought it to be a meane now and no doubt in sundrie it shal be and is assuredly very effectuall though the gift of healing be not as it was in the time of the Apostles for GOD will heare the praiers of his seruants and will fulfill their desires whose eares are open to the suites of the righteous and will graunt their requests as shall stand best with his heauenly wisdome This effect oftentimes to followe the praiers of the Saints it is shewed for that the praiers of the righteous are very forcible and preuaile much if they be feruent Of the force of the Saints praiers see Sermon 2. vpon S. Iames leafe 19. 1. page c. Sermon 3. leafe 26. page 1. c. Sermon 17. vpon 4. Iames leafe 184. page 1. c. To which places this also may here be added that Two things required in prayer that it may be effectuall to the efficacie of mens praiers the Apostle requireth two things One in him that praieth the other in the praier it selfe 1 Touching him that praieth if he wil haue his praier heard he must be iust and righteous for it is here saide that the praier of the righteous auaileth much They must be such as feare God and beleeue in Iesus Christ such as are carefull to serue him in spirite and trueth such as doe walke before him in holines and righteousnesse of life These are they whose praiers auaile much For this cause Saint Paul exhorteth men to praie to God lifting vp pure 1. Tim. 2 Psal 145. Psal 34. 1. Peter 3 handes vnto him The Princely Prophet Dauid affirmeth that God will fulfill the desires of them that feare him and heare their crie and saue them And in another place which is alleadged carefully by Saint Peter the prophet promiseth the present helpe and the priest aide of god to our praiers when we are righteous the eyes of the Lord are ouer the righteous and his eares are open to