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A68126 The vvorks of Ioseph Hall Doctor in Diuinitie, and Deane of Worcester With a table newly added to the whole worke.; Works. Vol. 1 Hall, Joseph, 1574-1656.; Lo., Ro. 1625 (1625) STC 12635B; ESTC S120194 1,732,349 1,450

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laid to which if they shall adde but one scruple it shall be to mee sufficient ioy contentment recompence From your Hal-sted Decemb. 4. Your Worships humbly deuouted IOS HALL THE FIRST CENTVRIE OF MEDITATIONS AND VOWES DIVINE and MORALL 1 IN Meditation those which begin heauenly thoughts and prosecute them not are like those which kindle a fire vnder greene wood and leaue it so soone as it but begins to flame leesing the hope of a good beginning for want of seconding it with a sutable proceeding when I set my selfe to meditate I will not giue ouer till I come to an issue It hath beene said by some that the beginning is as much as the middest yea more than all but I say the ending is more than the beginning 2 There is nothing but Man that respecteth greatnesse Not God not death not Iudgement Not God he is no accepter of persons Not nature we see the sonnes of Princes borne as naked as the poorest and the poore childe as faire well-fauoured strong witty as the heire of Nobles Not disease death iudgement they sicken alike die alike fare alike after death There is nothing besides naturall men of whom goodnesse is not respected I will honour greatnesse in others but for my selfe I will esteeme a dram of goodnesse worth a whole world of greatnesse 3 As there is a foolish wisdome so there is a wise ignorance in not prying into Gods Arke not enquiring into things not reuealed I would faine know all that I need and all that I may I leaue Gods secrets to himselfe It is happy for me that God makes me of his Court though not of his Counsell 4 As there is no vacuity in nature no more is there spiritually Euery vessell is full if not of liquor yet of aire so is the heart of man though by nature it is empty of grace yet it is full of hypocrisie and iniquitie Now as it is filled with grace so it is empty of his euill qualities as in a vessell so much water as goes in so much ayre goes out but mans heart is a narrow-mouthed vessell and receiues grace but by drops and therefore takes a long time to empty and fill Now as there be differences in degrees and one heart is neerer to fulnesse than another so the best vessell is not quite full while it is in the body because there are still remainders of corruption I will neither be content with that measure of grace I haue nor impatient of Gods delay but euery day I will endeuour to haue one drop added to the rest so my last day shall fill vp my vessell to the brim 5 Satan would seeme to bee mannerly and reasonable making as if hee would bee content with one halfe of the heart whereas God challengeth all or none as indeed hee hath most reason to claime all that made all But this is nothing but a craftie fetch of Satan for he knowes that if hee haue any part God will haue none so the whole falleth to his share alone My heart when it is both whole and at the best is but a strait and vnworthy lodging for God if it were bigger and better I would reserue it all for him Satan may looke in at my doores by a tentation but hee shall not haue so much as one chamber-roome set a part for him to soiourne in 6 I see that in naturall motions the neerer any thing comes to his end the swifter it moueth I haue seene great riuers which at their first rising out of some hills side might bee couered with a bushell which after many miles fill a very broad channell and drawing neere to the Sea doe euen make a little Sea in their owne bankes So the winde at the first rising as a little vapour from the crannies of the earth and passing forward about the earth the further it goes the more blustering and violent it waxeth A Christians motion after hee is regenerate is made naturall to God-ward and therefore the neerer he comes to heauen the more zealous he is A good man must not bee like Ezekias Sunne that went backward nor like Ioshuahs Sunne that stood still but Dauids Sunne that like a Bridegroome comes out of his chamber and as a Champion reioiceth to runne his race onely herein is the difference that when hee comes to his high noone hee declineth not How euer therefore the minde in her naturall faculties followes the temperature of the body yet in these supernaturall things she quite crosses it For with the coldest complexion of age is ioined in those that are truly religious the feruentest zeale and affection to good things which is therefore the more reuerenced and better acknowledged because it cannot bee ascribed to the hot spirits of youth The Deuill himselfe deuised that old slander of early holinesse A young Saint an old Deuill Sometimes young Deuils haue proued old Saints neuer the contrarie but true Saints in youth doe alwaies proue Angels in their age I will striue to bee euer good but if I should not finde my selfe best at last I should feare I was neuer good at all 7 Consent harteneth sinne which a little dislike would haue daunted at first As wee say There would bee no theeues if no receiuers so would there not bee so many open mouthes to detract and slander if there were not so many open eares to entertaine them If I cannot stop another mans mouth from speaking ill I will either open my mouth to reproue it or else I will stop mine cares from hearing it and let him see in my face that he hath no roome in my heart 8 I haue oft wondered how fishes can retaine their fresh taste and yet liue in salt waters since I see that euery other thing participates of the nature of the place wherein it abides So the waters passing thorow the chanels of the earth varie their sauour with the veines of soile thorow which they slide So brute creatures transported from one region to another alter their former qualitie and degenerate by little and little The like danger I haue seene in the manners of men conuersing with euill companions in corrupt places For besides that it blemisheth our reputation and makes vs thought ill though wee bee good it breeds in vs an insensible declination to ill and workes in vs if not an approbation yet a lesse dislike of those sinnes to which our eares and eies are so continually inured I may haue a bad acquaintance I will neuer haue a wicked companion 9 Expectation in a weake minde makes an euill greater and a good lesse but in a resolued minde it digests an euill before it come and makes a future good long before present I will expect the worst because it may come the best because I know it will come 10 Some promise what they cannot doe as Satan to Christ some what they could but meane not to doe as the sons of Iacob to the Sechemites some what they meant for the
different actions as persons yet all haue one common intention of good to themselues true in some but in the most imaginary The glorified Spirits haue but one vniforme worke wherein they all ioyne The praise of their Creator This is one difference betwixt the Saints aboue and below They aboue are free both from businesse and distraction these below are free though not absolutely from distraction not at all from businesse Paul could thinke of the cloke that he left at Troas and of the shaping of his skins for his Tents yet thorow these he look't still at heauen This world is made for businesse my actions must vary according to occasions my end shall be but one and the same now on earth that it must be one day in heauen 3 To see how the Martyrs of God died and the life of their persecutors would make a man out of loue with life and out of all feare of death They were flesh and bloud as well as we life was as sweet to them as to vs their bodies were as sensible of paine as ours wee goe to the same heauen with them How comes it then that they were so couragious in abiding such torments in their death as the very mention strikes horror into any Reader and we are so cowardly in encountering a faire and naturall death if this valour had beene of themselues I would neuer haue looked after them in hope of imitation Now I know it was he for whom they suffered and that suffered in them which sustained them They were of themselues as weake as I and God can bee as strong in me as hee was in them O Lord thou art not more vnable to giue me this grace but I am more vnworthie to receiue it and yet thou regardest not worthinesse but mercie Giue mee their strength and what end thou wilt 4 Our first age is all in hope When wee are in the wombe who knowes whether wee shall haue our right shape and proportion of body being neither monstrous nor deformed When wee are borne who knowes whether with the due features of a man wee shall haue the faculties of reason and vnderstanding When yet our progresse in yeeres discouereth wit or follie who knowes whether with the power of reason wee shall haue the grace of faith to bee Christians and when wee begin to professe well whether it bee a temporarie and seeming or a true and sauing faith Our middle age is halfe in hope for the future and halfe in proofe for that is past Our old age is out of hope and altogether in proofe In our last times therefore we know both what wee haue beene and what to expect It is good for youth to looke forward and still to propound the best things vnto it selfe for an old man to looke backward and to repent him of that wherein he hath failed and to recollect himselfe for the present but in my middle age I will looke both backward and forward comparing my hopes with my proofe redeeming the time ere it be all spent that my recouerie may preuent my repentance It is both a folly and miserie to say This I might haue done 5 It is the wonderfull mercie of God both to forgiue vs our debts to him in our sinnes and to make himselfe a debtor to vs in his promises So that now both waies the soule may be sure since hee neither calleth for those debts which hee hath once forgiuen nor withdraweth those fauours and that heauen which hee hath promised but as hee is a mercifull creditor to forgiue so is hee a true debtor to pay whatsoeuer hee hath vndertaken whence it is come to passe that the penitent sinner owes nothing to God but loue and obedience and God owes still much and all to him for he owes as much as he hath promised and what he owes by vertue of his blessed promise we may challenge O infinite mercie Hee that lent vs all that wee haue and in whose debt-bookes wee runne hourely forward till the summe be endlesse yet owes vs more and bids vs looke for payment I cannot deserue the least fauour hee can giue yet will I as confidently challenge the greatest as if I deserued it Promise indebteth no lesse than loane or desert 6 It is no small commendation to manage a little well He is a good Waggoner that can turne in a narrow roome To liue well in abundance is the praise of the estate not of the person I will studie more how to giue a good account of my little than how to make it more 7 Many Christians doe greatly wrong themselues with a dull and heauie kinde of fullennesse who not suffering themselues to delight in any worldly thing are thereupon oft-times so heartlesse that they delight in nothing These men like to carelesse guests when they are inuited to an excellent banquet lose their dainties for want of a stomacke and lose their stomacke for want of exercise A good conscience keepes alwaies good cheere● hee cannot chuse but fare well that hath it vnlesse hee lose his appetite with neglect and slothfulnesse It is a shame for vs Christians not to finde as much ioy in God as worldlings doe in their forced meriments and lewd wretches in the practice of their sinnes 8 A wise Christian hath no enemies Many hate and wrong him but hee loues all men and all pleasure him Those that professe loue to him pleasure him with the comfort of their societie and the mutuall reflection of friendship those that professe hatred make him more warie of his waies shew him faults in himselfe which his friends would either not haue espied or not censured send him the more willingly to seeke fauour aboue and as the worst doe bestead him though against their wills so hee againe doth voluntarily good to them To doe euill for euill as Ioab to Abner is a sinfull weaknesse To doe good for good as Ahasuerus to Mordecai is but naturall iustice To doe euill for good as Iudas to Christ is vnthankfulnesse and villanie Onely to doe good for euill agrees with Christian profession And what greater worke of friendship than to doe good If men will not be my friends in loue I will perforce make them my friends in a good vse of their hatred I will be their friend that are mine and would not be 9 All temporall things are troublesome For if wee haue good things it is a trouble to forgoe them and when wee see they must bee parted from either wee wish they had not beene so good or that wee neuer had enioyed them Yea it is more trouble to lose them than it was before ioy to possesse them If contrarily wee haue euill things their very presence is troublesome and still we wish that they were good or that we were disburdened of them So good things are troublesome in euent euill things in their vse They in the future these in present they because they shall come to an end these because they doe
Angels stand in his presence it could not bee but Gods fauour would bee sweeter his chastisements more easie his benefits more effectuall I am not my owne while God is not mine and while he is mine since I doe possesse him I will enioy him 46 Nature is of her owne inclination froward importunately longing after that which is denied her and scornfull of what she may haue If it were appointed that we should liue alwaies vpon earth how extremely would we exclaime of wearinesse and wish rather that we were not Now it is appointed wee shall liue here but a while and then giue roome to our successors each one affects a kinde of eternitie vpon earth I will labour to tame this peeuish and sullen humour of nature and will like that best that must be 47 All true earthly pleasure forsooke man when he forsooke his Creator what honest and holy delight he tooke before in the dutifull seruices of the obsequious creatures in the contemplation of that admirable varietie and strangenesse of their properties in seeing their sweet accordance with each other and all with himselfe Now most of our pleasure is to set one creature together by the eares with another sporting our selues onely with that deformitie which was bred through our owne fault yea there haue beene that haue delighted to see one man spill anothers bloud vpon the sand and haue shouted for ioy at the sight of that slaughter which hath fallen out vpon no other quarrell but the pleasure of the beholders I doubt not but as wee solace our selues in the discord of the inferiour creatures so the euill spirits sport themselues in our dissentions There are better qualities of the creature which we passe ouer without pleasure In recreations I will chuse those which are of best example and best vse seeking those by which I may not onely be the merrier but the better 48 There is no want for which a man may not finde a remedie in himselfe Doe I want riches He that desires but little cannot want much Doe I want friends If I loue God enough and my selfe but enough it matters not Doe I want health If I want it but a little and recouer I shall esteeme it the more because I wanted If I be long sicke and vnrecouerably I shall be the fitter and willinger to die and my paine is so much lesse sharpe by how much more it lingreth Doe I want maintenance A little and course will content nature Let my minde be no more ambitious than my backe and belly I can hardly complaine of too little Doe I want sleepe I am going whither there is no vse of sleepe where all rest and sleepe not Doe I want children Many that haue them wish they wanted It is better to be childlesse than crossed with their miscariage Doe I want learning He hath none that saith he hath enough The next way to get more is to finde thou wantest There is remedy for all wants in our selues sauing onely for want of grace and that a man cannot so much as see and complaine that he wants but from aboue 49 Euery vertuous action like the Sunne eclipsed hath a double shadow according to the diuers aspects of the beholders one of glory the other of enuy Glory followes vpon good deserts Enuy vpon glory He that is enuied may thinke himselfe well for he that enuies him thinkes him more than well I know no vice in another whereof a man may make so good and comfortable vse to himselfe There would be no shadow if there were no light 50 In medling with the faults of friends I haue obserued many wrongfull courses what for feare or selfe-loue or indiscretion Some I haue seene like vnmercifull and couetous Chirurgians keepe the wound raw which they might haue seasonably remedied for their owne gaine Others that haue laid healing plaisters to skin it aloft when there hath beene more need of Corrosiues to eat out the dead flesh within Others that haue galled and drawne when there hath beene nothing but solid flesh that hath wanted onely filling vp Others that haue healed the sore but left an vnsightly scarre of discredit behinde them He that would doe good this way must haue Fidelitie Courage Discretion Patience Fidelitie not to beare with Courage to reproue them Discretion to reproue them well Patience to abide the leisure of amendment making much of good beginnings and putting vp many repulses bearing with many weaknesses still hoping still solliciting as knowing that those who haue beene long vsed to fetters cannot but halt a while when they are taken off 51 God hath made all the World and yet what a little part of it is his Diuide the World into foure parts but one and the least containeth all that is worthy the name of Christendome the rest ouer-whelmed with Turcisme and Paganisme and of this least part the greater halfe yet holding aright concerning God and their Sauiour in some common principles ouerthrow the truth in their conclusions and so leaue the lesser part of the least part for God Yet lower of those that hold aright concerning Christ how few are there that doe otherwise than fashionably professe him And of those that do seriously professe him how few are there that in their liues deny him not liuing vnworthy of so glorious a calling Wherein I doe not pittie God who will haue glory euen of those that are not his I pitie miserable men that doe reiect their Creator and Redeemer and themselues in him And I enuy Satan that he ruleth so large Since God hath so few I will be more thankfull that he hath vouchsafed me one of his and be the more zealous of glorifying him because we haue but a few fellowes 52 As those that haue tasted of some delicate dish finde other plaine dishes but vnpleasant so it fareth with those which haue once tasted of heauenly things they cannot but contemne the best worldly pleasures As therefore some dainty guest knowing there is so pleasant fare to come I will reserue my appetite for it and not suffer my selfe cloied with the course diet of the world 53 I finde many places where God hath vsed the hand of good Angels for the punishment of the wicked but neuer could yet finde one wherein he emploied an euill Angell in any direct good to his children Indirect I finde many if not all through the power of him that brings light out of darknesse and turnes their euill to our good In this choice God would and must be imitated From an euill spirit I dare not receiue ought if neuer so good I will receiue as little as I may from a wicked man If he were as perfectly euill as the other I durst receiue nothing I had rather hunger than wilfully dip my hand in a wicked mans dish 54 Wee are ready to condemne others for that which is as eminently faulty in our selues If one blinde man rush vpon another in the way either complaines of others
There is a mutuall hatred betwixt a Christian and the world for on the one side the loue of the world is enmitie with God and Gods children cannot but take their Fathers part On the other The world hates you because it hated me first But the hatred of the good man to the wicked is not so extreme as that wherewith hee is hated For the Christian hates euer with commiseration and loue of that good he sees in the worst knowing that the essence of the very Deuils is good and that the lewdest man hath some excellent parts of nature or common graces of the Spirit of God which he warily singleth out in his affection But the wicked man hates him for goodnesse and therefore findes nothing in himselfe to moderate his detestation There can be no better musicke in my eare than the discord of the wicked If he like me I am afraid he spies some qualitie in me like to his owne If he saw nothing but goodnesse hee could not loue me and be bad himselfe It was a iust doubt of Phocion who when the people praised him asked What euill haue I done I will striue to deserue euill of none but not deseruing ill it shall not grieue me to heare ill of those that are euill I know no greater argument of goodnesse than the hatred of a wicked man 76 A man that comes hungry to his meale feeds heartily on the meat set before him not regarding the metall or forme of the platter wherein it is serued who afterwards when his stomacke is satisfied begins to play with the dish or to reade sentences on his trencher Those auditors which can finde nothing to doe but note elegant words and phrases or rhetoricall colours or perhaps an ill grace of gesture in a pithie and materiall speech argue themselues full ere they came to the feast and therefore goe away with a little pleasure no profit In hearing others my onely intention shall be to feed my minde with solid matter if my eare can get ought by the way I will not grudge it but I will not intend it 77 The ioy of a Christian in these worldly things is limited and euer awed with feare of excesse but recompenced abundantly with his spirituall mirth whereas the worldling giues the reines to his minde and powres himselfe out into pleasure fearing onely that he shall not ioy enough He that is but halfe a Christian liues but miserably for he neither enioyeth God nor the world Not God because he hath not grace enough to make him his owne Not the world because hee hath some taste of grace enough to shew him the vanitie and sinne of his pleasures So the sound Christian hath his heauen aboue the worldling here below the vnsetled Christian no where 78 Good deeds are very fruitfull and not so much of their nature as of Gods blessing multipliable We thinke ten in the hundred extreme and biting vsurie God giues vs more than an hundred for ten yea aboue the increase of the gaine which wee commend most for multiplication For out of one good action of ours God produceth a thousand the haruest whereof is perpetuall Euen the faithfull actions of the old Patriarchs the constant sufferings of ancient Martyrs liue still and doe good to all successions of ages by their example For publike actions of vertue besides that they are presently comfortable to the doer are also exemplary to others and as they are more beneficiall to others so are more crowned in vs. If good deeds were vtterly barren and incommodious I would seeke after them for the conscience of their owne goodnesse how much more shall I now be incouraged to performe them for that they are so profitable both to my selfe and to others and to me in others My principall care shall be that while my soule liues in glory in heauen my good actions may liue vpon earth and that they may be put into the banke and multiply while my body lies in the graue and consumeth 79 A Christian for the sweet fruit hee beares to God and men is compared to the noblest of all plants the Vine Now as the most generous Vine if it be not pruned runs out into many superfluous stems and growes at last weake and fruitlesse so doth the best man if he be cut short of his desires and pruned with afflictions If it bee painfull to bleed it is worse to wither Let me be pruned that I may grow rather than cut vp to burne 80 Those that doe but superficially taste of diuine knowledge finde little sweetnesse in it and are ready for the vnpleasant rellish to abhorre it whereas if they would diue deepe into the Sea they should finde fresh water neere to the bottome That it sauours not well at the first is the fault not of it but of the distempered palate that tastes it Good metals and minerals are not found close vnder the skinne of the earth but below in the bowels of it No good Miner casts away his Mattock because he findes a veine of tough clay or a shelfe of stone but still delueth lower and passing thorow many changes of soyle at last comes to his rich treasure We are too soone discouraged in our spirituall gaines I will still perseuere to seeke hardning my selfe against all difficultie There is comfort euen in seeking hope and there is ioy in hoping good successe and in that successe is happinesse 81 Hee that hath any experience in spirituall matters knowes that Satan is euer more violent at the last then raging most furiously when he knowes he shall rage but a while Hence of the persecutions of the first Church the tenth and last vnder Dioclesia● and Maximinian and those other fiue Tyrants was the bloudiest Hence this age is the most dissolute because neerest the conclusion And as this is his course in the vniuersall assaults of the whole Church so it is the same in his conflicts with euery Christian soule Like a subtill Orator he reserues his strongest force till the shutting vp And therefore miserable is the folly of those men who defer their repentance till then when their onset shall be most sharpe and they through paine of body and perplexednesse of minde shall be least able to resist Those that haue long furnisht themselues with spirituall munition finde worke enough in this extreme brunt of temptation how then should the carelesse man that with the helpe of all opportunities could not finde grace to repent hope to atchieue it at the last gaspe against greater force with lesse meanes more distraction no leisure Wise Princes vse to prepare ten yeeres before for a field of one day I will euery day lay vp somewhat for my last If I win that skirmish I haue enough The first and second blow begin the battell but the last onely wins it 82 I obserue three seasons wherein a wise man differs not from a foole In his infancy in sleepe and in silence for in the two former
we are all fooles and in silence all are wise In the two former yet there may bee concealement of folly but the tongue is a blab there cannot be any kinde of folly either simple or wicked in the heart but the tongue will bewray it He cannot be wise that speakes much or without sense or out of season nor he knowne for a foole that saies nothing It is a great misery to be a foole but this is yet greater that a man cannot be a foole but he must shew it It were well for such a one if he could be taught to keepe close his foolishnes but then there should be no fooles I haue heard some which haue scorned the opinion of folly in themselues for a speech wherein they haue hoped to shew most wit censured of folly by him that hath thought himselfe wiser and another hearing his sentence againe hath condemned him for want of wit in censuring Surely hee is not a foole that hath vnwise thoughts but he that vtters them Euen concealed folly is wisdome and sometimes wisdome vttered is folly While others care how to speake my care shall be how to hold my peace 83 A worke is then onely good and acceptable when the action meaning and manner are all good For to doe good with an ill meaning as Iudas saluted Christ to betray him is so much more sinfull by how much the action is better which being good in the kinde is abused to an ill purpose To doe ill in a good meaning as Vzza in staying the Arke is so much amisse that the good intention cannot beare out the vnlawfull act which although it may seeme some excuse why it should not be so ill yet is no warrant to iustifie it To meane well and doe a good action in an ill manner as the Pharisee made a good praier but arrogantly is so offensiue that the euill manner depraueth both the other So a thing may be euill vpon one circumstance it cannot bee good but vpon all In what euer businesse I goe about I will enquire What I doe for the substance How for the manner Why for the intention For the two first I will consult with God for the last with my owne heart 84 I can doe nothing without a million of Witnesses The conscience is as a thousand witnesses and God is as a thousand consciences I will therefore so deale with men as knowing that God sees me and so with God as if the world saw me so with my selfe and both of them as knowing that my conscience seeth me and so with them all as knowing I am alwaies ouer-looked by my accuser by my Iudge 85 Earthly inheritances are diuided oft-times with much inequality The priuilege of primogeniture stretcheth larger in many places now than it did among the ancient Iewes The younger many times serues the elder and while the eldest aboundeth all the latter issue is pinched In heauen it is not so all the sonnes of God are heires none vnderlings and not heires vnder wardship and hope but inheritors and not inheritors of any little pittance of land but of a Kingdome nor of an earthly Kingdome subiect to danger of losse or alteration but one glorious and euerlasting It shall content me here that hauing right to all things yet I haue possession of nothing but sorrow Since I shall haue possession aboue of all that whereto I haue right below I will serue willingly that I may reigne serue for a while that I may reigne for euer 86 Euen the best things ill vsed become euils and contrarily the worst things vsed well proue good A good tongue vsed to deceit a good wit vsed to defend errour a strong arme to murther authority to oppresse a good profession to dissemble are all euill yea Gods owne Word is the sword of the Spirit which if it kill not our vices kils our soules Contrariwise as poisons are vsed to wholesome medicine afflictions and sinnes by a good vse proue so gainfull as nothing more Words are as they are taken and things are as they are vsed There are euen cursed blessings O Lord rather giue me no fauours than not grace to vse them If I want them thou requirest not what thou doest not giue but if I haue them and want their vse thy mercy proues my iudgement 87 Man is the best of all these inferiour creatures yet liues in more sorrow and discontentment than the worst of them whiles that Reason wherein he excels them and by which he might make aduantage of his life hee abuses to a suspitious distrust How many hast thou found of the fowles of the aire lying dead in the way for want of prouision They eat and rest and sing and want nothing Man which hath farre better meanes to liue comfortably toyleth and careth and wanteth whom yet his reason alone might teach that he which careth for these lower creatures made onely for man will much more prouide for man to whose vse they were made There is an holy carelesnesse free from idlenesse free from distrust In these earthly things I will so depend on my Maker that my trust in him may not exclude all my labour and yet so labour vpon my confidence on him as my endeuour may be void of perplexity 88 The precepts and practice of those with whom we liue auaile much on either part For a man not to bee ill where hee hath no prouocations to euill is lesse commendable but for a man to liue continently in Asia as he said where hee sees nothing but allurements to vncleannesse for Lot to be a good man in the middest of Sodom to bee abstemious in Germany and in Italy chaste this is truly praise-worthy To sequester our selues from the companie of the world that we may depart from their vices proceeds from a base and distrusting minde as if wee would so force goodnesse vpon our selues that therefore onely we would be good because we cannot be ill But for a man so to bee personally and locally in the throng of the world as to withdraw his affections from it to vse it and yet to contemne it at once to compell it to his seruice without any infection becomes well the noble courage of a Christian The world shall be mine I will not be his and yet so mine that his euill shall be still his owne 89 He that liues in God cannot be wearie of his life because he euer findes both somewhat to doe and somewhat to solace himselfe with cannot bee ouer-loth to part with it because hee shall enter into a neerer life and societie with that God in whom hee delighteth Whereas he that liues without him liues many times vncomfortably here because partly he knowes not any cause of ioy in himselfe and partly he finds not any worthy employment to while himselfe withall dies miserably because hee either knowes not whither he goes or knowes he goes to torment There is no true life but the life of faith O Lord let me
liue out of the world with thee if thou wilt but let me not liue in the world without thee 90 Sinne is both euill in it selfe and the effect of a former euill and the cause of sinne following a cause of punishment and lastly a punishment it selfe It is a damnable iniquitie in man to multiplie one sinne vpon another but to punish one sinne by another in God is a iudgement both most iust and most fearefull so as all the store-house of God hath not a greater vengeance with other punishments the body smarteth the soule with this I care not how God offends me with punishments so hee punish mee not with offending him 91 I haue seene some afflict their bodies with wilfull famine and scourges of their owne making God spares me that labour for hee whips mee daily with the scourge of a weake body and sometimes with ill tongues He holds me short many times of the feeling of his comfortable presence which is in truth so much more miserable an hunger than that of the body by how much the soule is more tender and the food denied more excellent Hee is my Father infinitely wise to proportion out my correction according to my estate and infinitely louing in fitting mee with a due measure Hee is a presumptuous childe that will make choice of his owne rod. Let mee learne to make a right vse of his corrections and I shall not need to correct my selfe And if it should please God to remit his hand a little I will gouerne my body as a Master not as a Tyrant 92 If God had not said Blessed are those that hunger I know not what could keepe weake Christians from sinking in despaire Many times all I can doe is to finde and complaine that I want him and wish to recouer him Now this is my stay that he in mercie esteemes vs not onely by hauing but by desiring also and after a sort accounts vs to haue that which we want and desire to haue and my soule affirming tells me I doe vnfainedly wish him and long after that grace I misse Let me desire still more and I know I shall not desire alwaies There was neuer soule miscarried with longing after grace O blessed hunger that ends alwaies in fulnesse I am sorry that I can but hunger and yet I would not bee full for the blessing is promised to the hungry Giue mee more Lord but so as I may hunger more Let me hunger more and I know I shall be satisfied 93 There is more in the Christian than thou seest For he is both an entire body of himselfe and he is a limme of another more excellent euen that glorious mysticall body of his Sauiour to whom he is so vnited that the actions of either are reciprocally referred to each other For on the one side the Christian liues in Christ dies in Christ in Christ fulfils the Law possesseth heauen on the other Christ is persecuted by Paul in his members and is persecuted in Paul afterwards by others he suffers in vs he liues in vs he workes in and by vs so thou canst not doe either good or harme to a Christian but thou doest it to his Redeemer to whom he is inuisibly vnited Thou seest him as a man and therefore worthy of fauour for humanities sake Thou seest him not as a Christian worthy of honour for his secret and yet true vnion with our Sauiour I will loue euery Christian for that I see honour him for that I shall see 94 Hell it selfe is scarce a more obscure dungeon in comparison of the earth than earth is in respect of heauen Here the most see nothing and the best see little Here halfe our life is night and our very day is darknesse in respect of God The true light of the world and the Father of lights dwelleth aboue There is the light of knowledge to informe vs and the light of ioy to comfort vs without all change of darknesse There was neuer any captiue loued his dungeon and complained when he must bee brought out to light and libertie whence then is this naturall madnesse in vs men that wee delight so much in this vncleane noysome darke and comfortlesse prison of earth and thinke not of our release to that lightsome and glorious Paradise aboue vs without griefe and repining We are sure that we are not perfectly well here if we could bee as sure that we should be better aboue we would not feare changing Certainly our sense tells vs we haue some pleasure here and we haue not faith to assure vs of more pleasure aboue and hence we settle our selues to the present with neglect of the future though infinitely more excellent The heart followes the eies and vnknowne good is vncared for O Lord doe thou breake thorow this darknesse of ignorance and faithlesnesse wherewith I am compassed Let mee but see my heauen and I know I shall desire it 95 To be carried away with an affectation of fame is so vaine and absurd that I wonder it can be incident to any wise man For what a mole-hill of earth is it to which his name can extend when it is furthest carried by the wings of report and how short a while doth it continue where it is once spread Time the deuourer of his owne brood consumes both vs and our memories not brasse nor marble can beare age How many flattering Poets haue promised immortalitie of name to their Princes who now together are buried long since in forgetfulnesse Those names and actions that are once on the file of heauen are past the danger of defacing I will not care whether I bee knowne or remembred or forgotten amongst men if my name and good actions may liue with God in the records of eternitie 96 There is no man nor no place free from spirits although they testifie their presence by visible effects but in few Euery man is an Oast to entertaine Angels though not in visible shapes as Abraham and Lot The euill ones doe nothing but prouoke vs to sinne and plot mischiefes against vs by casting into our way dangerous obiects by suggesting sinfull motions to our mindes stirring vp enemies against vs amongst men by frighting vs with terrors in our selves by accusing vs to God On the contrary The good Angels are euer remouing our hinderances from good and our occasions of euill mi●gating our tentations helping vs against our enemies deliuering vs from dangers comforting vs in sorrowes furthering our good purposes and at last carrying vp our soules to heauen It would affright a weake Christian that knowes the power and malice of wicked spirits to consider their presence and number but when with the eies of Elishaes seruant he sees those on his side as present as diligent more power full he cannot but take heart againe especially if he consider that neither of them is without God limiting the one the bounds of their tentation directing the other in the safegard of his children Whereupon
is without witnesse Openly many sinister respects may draw from vs a forme of religious duties secretly nothing but the power of a good conscience It is to be feared God hath more true and deuout seruice in Closets than in Churches 54 Words and diseases grow vpon vs with yeeres In age we talke much because wee haue seene much and soone after shall cease talking for euer Wee are most diseased because nature is weakest and death which is neere must haue harbingers such is the old age of the World No maruell if this last time be full of writing and weake discourse full of sects and heresies which are the sicknesses of this great and decaied body 55 The best ground vntilled soonest runs out into ranke weeds Such are Gods Children Ouer-growne with securitie ere they are aware vnlesse they bee well exercised both with Gods plow of affliction and their owne industry in meditation A man of knowledge that is either negligent or vncorrected cannot but grow wilde and godlesse 56 With vs vilest things are most common But with God the best things are most frequently giuen Grace which is the noblest of all Gods fauours is vnpartially bestowed vpon all willing receiuers whereas Nobilitie of bloud and height of place blessings of an inferiour nature are reserued for few Herein the Christian followes his Father his praiers which are his richest portion he communicates to all his substance according to his abilitie to few 57 God therefore giues because he hath giuen making his former fauours arguments for more Man therefore shuts his hand because hee hath opened it There is no such way to procure more from God as to vrge him with what hee hath done All Gods blessings are profitable and excellent not so much in themselues as that they are inducements to greater 58 Gods immediate actions are best at first The frame of this creation how exquisite was it vnder his hand afterward blemished by our sinne mans indeuours are weake in their beginnings and perfecter by degrees No science no deuice hath euer beene perfect in his cradle or at once hath seene his birth and maturitie of the same nature are those actions which God worketh mediatly by vs according to our measure of receit The cause of both is on the one side the infinitenesse of his wisdome and power which cannot be corrected by any second assaies On the other our weaknesse helping it selfe by former grounds and trials Hee is an happy man that detracts nothing from Gods works and addes most to his owne 59 The old saying is more common than true that those which are in hell know no other heauen for this makes the damned perfectly miserable that out of their owne torment they see the felicitie of the Saints together with their impossibility of attaining it Sight without hope of fruition is a torment alone Those that here might see God and will not or doe see him obscurely and loue him not shall once see him with anguish of soule and not enioy him 60 Sometimes euill speeches come from good men in their vnaduisednesse and sometimes euen the good speeches of men may proceed from an ill spirit No confession could be better than Satan gaue of Christ It is not enough to consider what is spoken or by whom but whence and for what The spirit is oftentimes tried by the speech but other-times the speech must be examined by the spirit and the spirit by the rule of an higher word 61 Greatnesse puts high thoughts and bigge words into a man whereas the deiected minde takes carelesly what offers it selfe Euery worldling is base-minded and therefore his thoughts creepe still low vpon the earth The Christian both is and knowes himselfe truly great and thereupon mindeth and speaketh of spirituall immortall glorious heauenly things So much as the soule stoopeth vnto earthly thoughts so much is it vnregenerate 62 Long acquaintance as it maketh those things which are euill to seeme lesse euill so it makes good things which at first were vnpleasant delightfull There is no euill of paine not no morall good action which is not harsh at the first Continuance of euill which might seeme to weary vs is the remedy and abatement of wearinesse and the practice of good as it profiteth so it pleaseth He that is a stranger to good and euill findes both of them troublesome God therefore doth well for vs while he exerciseth vs with long afflictions and we doe well to our selues while we continually busie our selues in good exercises 63 Sometimes it is well taken by men that we humble our selues lower than there is cause Thy seruant IACOB saith that good Patriarch to his brother to his inferiour And no lesse well doth God take these submisse extenuations of our selues I am a worme and no man Surely I am more foolish than a man and haue not the vnderstanding of a man in me But I neuer finde that any man bragged to God although in a matter of truth and within the compasse of his desert and was accepted A man may be too lowly in his dealing with men euen vnto contempt with God he cannot but the lower he falleth the higher is his exaltation 64 The soule is fed as the body starued with hunger as the body requires proportionable diet and necessary varietie as the body All ages and statures of the soule beare not the same nourishment There is milke for spirituall Infants strong meat for the growne Christian The spoone is fit for one the knife for the other The best Christian is not so growne that he need to scorne the spoone but the weake Christian may finde a strong feed dangerous How many haue beene cast away with spirituall surfets because being but new-borne they haue swallowed downe bigge morsels of the highest mysteries of godlinesse which they neuer could digest but together with them haue cast vp their proper nourishment A man must first know the power of his stomacke ere he know how with safetie and profit to frequent Gods Ordinary 65 It is very hard for the best man in a sudden extremity of death to satisfie himselfe in apprehending his stay and reposing his heart vpon it for the soule is so oppressed with sudden terrour that it cannot well command it selfe till it haue digested an euill It were miserable for the best Christian if all his former praiers and meditations did not serue to aide him in his last straits and meet together in the center of his extremitie yeelding though not sensible releefe yet secret benefit to the soule whereas the worldly man in this case hauing not laid vp for this houre hath no comfort from God or from others or from himselfe 66 All externall good or euill is measured by sense neither can we account that either good or ill which doth neither actually auaile nor hurt vs spiritually this rule holds not All our best good is insensible For all our future which is the greatest good we hold onely in hope and
relate ought better than he would he redoubles the question as being hard to beleeue what he likes not and hopes yet if that be auerred againe to his griefe that there is somewhat concealed in the relation which if it were knowne would argue the commended partie miserable and blemish him with secret shame He is readie to quarrell with God because the next field is fairer growne and angerly calculates his cost and time and tillage Whom he dares not openly backbite nor wound with a direct censure he strike smoothly with an ouer-cold praise and when he sees that he must either maliciously oppugne the iust praise of another which were vnsafe or approue it by assent he yeeldeth but shewes withall that his meanes were such both by nature and education that he could not without much neglect be lesse commendable so his happinesse shall be made the colour of detraction When an wholsome law is propounded he crosseth it either by open or close opposition not for any incommoditie or inexpedience but because it proceeded from any mouth besides his owne And it must bee a cause rarely plausible that will not admit some probable contradiction When his equall should rise to honour hee striues against it vnseene and rather with much cost suborneth great aduersaries and when hee sees his resistance vaine he can giue an hollow gratulation in presence but in secret disparages that aduancement either the man is vnfit for the place or the place for the man or if fit yet lesse gainfull or more common than opinion whereto he addes that himselfe might haue had the same dignitie vpon better tearmes and refused it He is wittie in deuising suggestions to bring his Riuall out of loue into suspition If he be courteous he is seditiously popular if bountifull he bindes ouer his clients to a faction if successefull in warre he is dangerous in peace if wealthy he laies vp for a day if powerfull nothing wants but opportunitie of rebellion His submission is ambitious hypocrisie his religion politike insinuation no action is safe from a iealous construction When hee receiues a good report of him whom he emulates he saith Fame is partiall and is wont to blanch mischiefes and pleaseth himselfe with hope to finde it worse and if Ill-will haue dispersed any more spightfull narration he laies hold on that against all witnesses and brocheth that rumour for truest because worst and when he sees him perfectly miserable he can at once pitie him and reioyce What himselfe cannot doe others shall not hee hath gained well if he haue hindred the successe of what hee would haue done and could not Hee conceales his best skill not so as it may not be knowne that he knowes it but so as it may not be learned because he would haue the world misse him He attained to a soueraigne medicine by the secret Legacy of a dying Empericke whereof he will leaue no heire lest the praise should be diuided Finally he is an enemy to Gods fauours if they fall beside himselfe the best nurse of ill Fame a man of the worst diet for he consumes himselfe and delights in pining a thorne-hedge couered with nettles a peeuish Interpreter of good things and no other than a leane and pale carkase quickned with a Fiend FINIS SALOMONS DIVINE ARTS OF 1. ETHICKS 2. POLITICKS 3. OECONOMICKS THAT IS THE GOVERNMENT OF 1. BEHAVIOVR 2. COMMON-WEALTH 3. FAMILIE DRAWNE INTO METHOD OVT of his PROVERBS and ECCLESIASTES With an open and plaine Paraphrase vpon the SONG OF SONGS By IOS HALL By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON Printed for THOMAS PAVIER MILES FLESHER and John Haviland 1624. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE AND HOPEFVLL LORD ROBERT Earle of Essex my singular good Lord all increase of Grace and true HONOVR RIGHT HONOVRABLE WHilest J desired to congratulate your happy returne with some worthy present I fell vpon this which I dare not onely offer but commend the royallest Philosopher and wisest King giuing you those precepts which the Spirit of God gaue him The matter is all his nothing is mine but the method which I doe willingly submit to censure In that hee could not erre in this J cannot but haue erred either in Art or application or sense or disorder or defect yet not wilfully I haue meant it well and faithfully to the Church of God and to your Honour as one of her great hopes If any man shall cauill that I haue gone about to correct Salomons order or to controule Ezekias seruants I complaine both of his charity and wisdome and appeale to more lawfull iudgement Let him as well say that euery Concordance peruerts the Text. J haue onely endeuoured to be the common place-booke of that great King and to referre his Diuine rules to their heads for more ease of finding for better memory for readier vse See how that God whose wisdome thought good to bereaue mankinde of Salomons profound Commentaries of Nature hath reserued these his Diuine Morals to out-liue the world as knowing that those would but feed mans curiositie these would both direct his life and iudge it He hath not done this without expectation of our good and glory to himselfe which if we answer the gaine is ours J know how little need there is either to intreat your Lordships acceptation or to aduise your vse It is enough to haue humbly presented them to your hands and through them to the Church the desire of whose good is my good yea my recompence and glory The same God whose hand hath led and returned you in safetie from all forraine euils guide your waies at home and graciously increase you in the ground of all true honour Goodnesse My praiers shall euer follow you Who vow my selfe your Honours in all humble and true dutie IOS HALL SALOMONS ETHICKS OR MORALS JN FOVRE BOOKES The 1. Of FELICITIE 2. Of PRVDENCE 3. Of IVSTICE 4. Of TEMPERANCE FORTITVDE By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON Printed for THOMAS PAVIER MILES FLESHER and John Haviland 1624. SALOMONS ETHICKS OR GOVERNMENT OF Behauiour and Manners THE FIRST BOOKE FELICITY § 1. Of Ethicks in common The description The chiefe end which is Felicitie ETHICKS is a Doctrine of wisdome and knowledge to liue well Ec. 1.17 Ec. 7. ●7 and of the madnesse and foolishnesse of vice or instruction to doe wisely by iustice and iudgement and equity and to doe good in our life Pr. 1.3 The end whereof is to see and attaine that chiefe goodnesse of the children of men Ec. 3.12 Ec. 3.2 which they enioy vnder the Sunne the whole number of the daies of their life § 2. Wherein Felicity is not Not in pleasure Not in wealth for herein is 1 No satisfaction 2 Increased expence 3 Restlesnesse 4 Want of fruition 5 Vncertaintie 6 Necessitie of leauing it WHich consists not in pleasure for I said in mine heart Goe to now Ec. 2.1 I will
is sure and eternall If any man will doe my Fathers will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God TO M. EDMVND SLEIGH EP. IV. A discourse of the hardnesse of Christianity and the abundant recompence of the pleasures and commodities of that profession HOw hard a thing it is deare Vncle to be a Christian perhaps others are lesse dull and more quiet more waxen to the impressions of grace and lesse troublesome to themselues I accuse none but whom I dare my selfe Euen easie businesses are hard to the weake let others boast I must complaine To keepe our station is hard harder to moue forward One while I scarce restraine my vnruly desires from euill ofter can find no lust to good My heart will either be vaine or sullen when I am wrought with much sweat to detest sinne and distaste the world yet who shall raise vp this drosse to a spirituallioy Sometimes I purpose vvell and if those thoughts not mine begin to lift me from my earth loe he that rules in the aire stoopes vpon me with powerfull tentations or the vvorld puls me downe with a sweet violence so as I know not vvhether I be forced or perswaded to yeeld I finde much weakenesse in my selfe but more treachery How vvilling am I to be deceiued How loth to bee altered Good duties seeme harsh and can hardly escape the repulse or delay of excuses and not without much strife grow to any rellish of pleasure and vvhen they are at best cannot auoid the mixture of many infirmities which doe at once disquiet and discourage the mind not suffering it to rest in vvhat it vvould haue done and could not And if after many fighes and teares I haue attained to doe well and resolue better yet this good estate is farre from constant and easily inclining to change And whiles I striue in spight of my naturall ficklenesse to hold my owne vvith some progresse and gaine vvhat difficultie doe I finde vvhat opposition O God what aduersaries hast thou prouided for vs vveake men what incounters Malicious and subtill spirits an alluring vvorld a serpentine and stubborne nature Force and fraud doe their vvorst to vs sometimes because they are spirituall enemies I see them not and complaine to feele them too late Other-whiles my spirituall eyes see them with amazement and I like a cowardly Israelite am ready to flee and plead their measure for my feare Who is able to stand before the sonnes of Anak Some other times I stand still and as I can weakely resist but am foiled with indignation and shame Then againe I rise vp not without bashfulnesse and scorne and vvith more hearty resistance preuaile and triumph when ere long surprized with a sudden and vnwarned assault I am caried away captiue whither I vvould not and mourning for my discomfiture study for a feeble reuenge My quarrell is good but my strength maintaines it not It is now long ere I can recouer this ouerthrow and finde my selfe whole of these wounds Besides suggestions crosses fall heauy and worke no small distemper in a minde faint and vnsetled vvhose law is such that the more I grow the more I beare and not seldome when God giues me respite I afflict my selfe either my feare faineth euils or my vnruly passions raise tumults vvithin me vvhich breed much trouble whether in satisfying or suppressing not to speake that sinne is attended besides vnquietnesse vvith terror Now you say Alas Christianitie is hard I grant it liue gainfull and happy I contemne the difficultie when I respect the aduantage The greatest labours that haue answerable requitals are lesse then the least that haue no regard Beleeue me when I looke to the reward I would not haue the worke easier It is a good Master whom we serue who not onely payes but giues not after the proportion of our earnings but of his owne mercy If euery paine that wee suffer were a death and euery crosse an hell we haue amends enough It were iniurious to complaine of the measure when we acknowledge the recompence Away with these weake dislikes tho I should buy it dearer I would be a Christian Any thing may make me out of loue with my selfe nothing with my profession I were vnworthy of this fauour if I could repent to haue endured herein alone I am safe herein I am blessed I may be all other things and yet with that dying Emperor complaine with my last breath That I am no whit the better let me be a Christian I am priuiledged from miseries hell cannot touch me death cannot hurt me No euill can arrest me while I am vnder the protection of him which ouer-rules all-good and euill yea so soone as it touches mee it turnes good and being sent and suborned-by my spirituall aduersaries to betray mee now in an happy change it fights for me and is driuen rather to rebell then wrong mee It is a bold and strange word No price could buy of me the gaine of my sinnes That which while I repented I would haue expiated with blood now after my repentance I forgoe not for a world the fruit of hauing sinned if not rather of hauing repented Besides my freedome how large is my possession All good things are mine to challenge to enioy I cannot looke beyond my owne nor besides it and the things that I cannot see I dare claime no lesse The heauen that rowles so gloriously aboue my head is mine by this right yea those celestiall spirits the better part of that high creation watch me in my bed guard me in my wayes shelter me in my dangers comfort me in my troubles and are ready to receiue that soule which they haue kept What speake I of creatures The God of spirits is mine and by a sweet and secret vnion I am become an heire of his glory yea as it were a limme of himselfe O blessednesse worthy of difficulty vvorthy of paine What thou vvilt Lord so I may be thine what thou wilt When I haue done all when I haue suffered all thou exceedest more then I want Follow me then deare Vncle or if you will leade me rather as you haue done in these steps and from the rough way looke to the end Ouer-looke these trifling grieuances and fasten your eyes vpon the happy recompence and see if you cannot scorne to complaine Pitie those that take not your paines and persist with courage till you feele the weight of your Crowne To Mr W. L. EP. V. Expostulating the cause of his vnsetlednesse in Religion which is pleaded to be our dissensions shewing the insufficiencie of that Motiue and comparing the state of our Church herein with the Romish I Would I knew where to finde you then I could tell how to take a direct ayme whereas now I must roue and coniecture To day you are in the tents of the Romanists to morrow in ours the next day betweene both against both Our aduersaries thinke you ours we theirs your conscience findes you
what if heauen fall say you His Holinesse as you hope vvill take none such courses Woe vvere vs if our safety depended vpon your hopes or his mercies Blessed be that God which malgre hath made and kept vs happie and hath lift vs aboue our enemies But what hope is there that he who chargeth subiects not to sweare allegeance will neuer discharge them from allegeance that those who clamorously and shamelessely complaine to the world of our cruelty will forbeare to sollicit others cruelty to vs Your hopes to you to vs our securities Is this the Religion you father vpon those Christian Patriarkes of the Primitiue Age O blessed Ireney Clemens Cyprian Basil Chrysostome Augustine Ierome and thou the seuerest exactor of iust censures holy Ambrose how vvould you haue sp●t at such a rebellious assertion What speake I of Fathers whose very mention in such a cause were iniury were impiety Which of those cursed heresies of ancient times for to them I hold it fitter to appeale haue euer bin so desperately shamelesse as to breed to maintaine a conceit so palpably vnnaturall vnlesse perhaps those old Antitactae may vpon generall termes be compelled to patronize it vvhile they held it pietie to breake the lawes of their Maker For you if you professe not to loue willing errors by this suspect and iudge the rest you see this defended with equall resolution and with no lesse cheerefull expence of blood In the body where you see one monstrous deformitie you cannot affect if you can doe so in your religion yet how dare you since the greater halfe of it stands on no other ground Onely God make you wise and honest you shall shake hands with this faction of Popery and I with you to giue you a cheerefull welcome into the bosome of the Church To my brother M. SA HALL EP. V. A discourse of the great charge of the ministeriall function together with particular directions for due preparation thereunto and cariage therein IT is a great and holy purpose deare Brother that you haue entertained of seruing God in his Church for what higher or more worthy imploiment can there be then to do these diuine duties to such a master and such a mother wherin yet I should little reioyce if any necessity had cast you vpon this refuge for I hate and grieue to thinke that any desperate mind should make Diuinity but a shift and dishonour this Mistresse by being forsaken of the world This hath been the drift of your education to this you were born dedicated in a direct course I doe willingly incourage you but not without many cautions Enter not into so great a seruice without much foresight When your hand is at the plow it is too late to looke backe Bethinke your selfe seriously of the weight of this charge and let your holy desire be allayed with some trembling It is a foolish rashnesse of yong heads when they are in Gods chaire to wonder how they came thither and to forget the awfulnesse of that place in the confidence of their owne strength which is euer so much lesse as it is more esteemed I commend not the waiward excuses of Moses nor the peremptory vnwillingnesse of Ammonius and Frier Thomas who maimed themselues that they might be wilfully vncapable Betwixt both these there is humble modesty and religious fearfulnesse easily to bee noted in those whom the Church honours with the name of her fathers vvorthy your imitation wherein yet you shall need no presidents if you well consider vvhat worth of parts what strictnesse of cariage what weight of offices God expects in this vocation Know first that in this place there wil be more holinesse required of you then in the ordinary station of a Christian for whereas before you were but as a common line now God sets you for a copy of sanctification vnto others vvherein euery fault is both notable and dangerous Here is looked for a setled acquaintance with God and experience both of the proceedings of grace and of the offers and repulses of tentations which in vaine we shall hope to menage in other hearts if we haue not found in our owne To speake by aime or rote of repentance of contrition of the degrees of regeneration and faith is both harsh and seldom when not vnprofitable We trust those Physicians best vvhich haue tryed the vertue of their drugs esteeming not of those which haue onely borrowed of their bookes Here will bee expected a free and absolute gouernment of affections that you can so ●●ere your own vessell as not to be transported with fury with selfe-loue with immoderation of pleasures of cares of desires with excesse of passions in all which so must you demeane your selfe as one that thinkes hee is no man of the vvorld but of God as one too good by his double calling for that which is either the felicitie or impotency of beasts Here must be continuall and inward exercise of mortification and seuere Christianitie whereby the heart is held in due awe and the vveake flames of the spirit quickned the ashes of our dulnesse blowne off a practice necessary in him whose deuotion must set many hearts on fire Heere must be wisedome and inoffensiuenesse of cariage as of one that goes euer vnder monitors and that knowes other mens indifferencies are his euils No man had such need to keep a strict meane Setting aside contempt euen in obseruation behold wee are made a gazing stocke to the world to Angels to men The very sayle of your estate must be moderated which if it beare too high as seldome it incurres the censure of profusion and Epicurisme if too low of a base and vnbeseeming earthlinesse your hand may not be too close for others need nor too open for your owne your conuersation may not be rough and sullen nor ouer-familiar and fawning whereof the one breeds a conceit of pride and strangenesse the other contempt not loosely mery nor Cynically vnsociable not contentious in small iniuries in great not hurtfully patient to the Church your attire for whither doe not censures reach not youthfully wanton not in these yeares affectedly ancient but graue and comely like the minde like the behauiour of the vvearer your gesture like your habit neither sauouring of giddy lightnesse nor ouerly insolence nor wantonesse nor dull neglect of your selfe but such as may beseeme a mortified minde full of worthy spirits your speech like your gesture not scurrilous not detracting not idle not boasting not rotten not peremptotorie but honest milde fruitfull sauourie and such as may both argue and worke grace your deliberations mature your resolutions well grounded your deuices sage and holy Wherein let me aduise you to vvalke euer in the beaten rode of the Church not to runne out into single paradoxes And if you meet at any time with priuate conceits that seeme more probable suspect them and your selfe and if they can win you to assent yet smother them in your brest and doe
fire vnquenchable Whether Infidels beleeue these things or no we know them so shall they but too late What remaines but that we applaud our selues in this happinesse and walke on cheerily in this heauenly profession acknowledging that God could not do more for vs and that we cannot doe enough for him Let others boast as your Ladiship might with others of ancient and Noble Houses large patrimonies or dowries honorable commands others of famous names high and enuied honours or the fauours of the greatest others of valour or beauty or some perhaps of eminent learning and wit it shall be our pride that we are Christians To my Lady HONORIA HAY. EP. IV. Discoursing of the necessitie of Baptisme and the estate of those which necessarily want it MADAM MEthinks children are like teeth troublesome both in the breeding and losing and oftentimes painfull while they stand yet such as wee neither would nor can well be without I goe not about to comfort you thus late for your losse I rather congratulate your wise moderation and Christian care of these first spirituall priuiledges desiring onely to satisfie you in what you heard as a witnesse not in what you needed as a mother Children are the blessings of Parents and Baptisme is the blessing of children and parents wherein there is not onely vse but necessitie necessitie not in respect so much of the end as of the precept God hath enioyned it to the comfort of parents and behoofe of children which therefore as it may not be superstitiously hastened so not negligently deferred That the contempt of baptisme damneth is past all doubt but that the constrained absence thereof should send infants to hell is a cruell rashnesse It is not their sinne to die early death is a punishment not an offence an effect of sinne not a cause of torment they want nothing but time which they could not command Because they could not liue a while longer that therefore they should die euerlastingly is the hard sentence of a bloody religion I am onely sorie that so harsh an opinion should bee graced with the name of a Father so reuerend so diuine whose sentence yet let no man plead by halues He who held it vnpossible for a childe to be saued vnlesse the baptismall water were powred on his face held it also as vnpossible for the same Infant vnlesse the sacramentall bread were receiued into his mouth There is the same ground for both the same error in both a weaknesse fit for forgetfulnesse see yet how ignorant or ill-meaning posterity could single out one halfe of the opinion for truth and condemne the other of falshood In spight of whom one part shall easily conuince the other yea without all force since both cannot stand both will fall together for company The same mouth which said Vnlesse yee be borne againe of water and the Holy Ghost said also Except yee eat the flesh of the Sonne of Man and drinke his blood an equall necessitie of both And lest any should plead different interpretations the same S. Austin auerres this later opinion also concerning the necessary communicating of children to haue been once the common iudgement of the Church of Rome A sentence so displeasing that you shall finde the memory of it noted vvith a blacke coale and wip't out in that infamous bill of Expurgations Had the ancient Church held this desperate sequele what strange and yet wilfull crueltie had it beene in them to deferre baptisme a whole yeare long till Easter or that Sunday which hath his name I thinke from the white robes of the baptised Yea what an aduenture vvas it in some to adiourne it till their age with Constantine if being vnsure of their life they had been sure the preuention of death would haue inferred damnation Looke vnto that legall Sacrament of circumcision which contrary to the fancies of our Anabaptists directly answers this Euangelicall Before the eight day they could not be circumcised before the eight day they might die If dying the seuenth day they were necessarily condemned either the want of a day is a sinne or God sometimes condemneth not for sinne Neither of them possible neither according with the iustice of the Law-giuer Or if from this parallel you please to looke either to reason or example the case is cleere Reason no man that hath faith can be condemned for Christ dwels in our hearts by faith and hee in whom Christ dwels cannot be a reprobate Now it is possible a man may haue a sauing faith before baptisme Abraham first beleeued to iustification then after receiued the signe of circumcision as a seale of the righteousnes of that faith which he had when he was vncircumcised Therefore some dying before their baptisme may yea must be saued Neither was Abrahams case singular he was the Father of all them also which beleeue not being circumcised these as they are his Sonnes in faith so in righteousnesse so in saluation vncircumcision cannot hinder where faith admitteth These following his steps of beliefe before the Sacrament shall doubtlesse rest in his bosome without the Sacrament without it as fatally absent not as willingly neglected It is not the water but the faith not the putting away the filth of the flesh saith S. Peter but the stipulation of a good conscience for who takes Baptisme without a full faith saith Hierom takes the water takes not the spirit Whence is this so great vertue of the water that it should touch the body and cleanse the heart saith Austin vnlesse by the power of the word not spoken but beleeued Thou seest water saith Ambrose euery water heales not that water onely heales which hath the grace of God annexed And if there bee any grace in the water saith Basil it is not of the nature of the water but of the presence of the Spirit Baptisme is indeed as Saint Ambrose stiles it the pawne and image of our resurrection yea as Basil the power of God to resurrection but as Ignatius expounds this phrase aright beleeuing in his death we are by baptisme made partakers of his resurrection Baptisme therefore without faith cannot saue a man and by faith doth saue him and faith without baptisme where it cannot bee had not where it may be had and is contemned may saue him That spirit which workes by meanes will not be tyed to meanes Examples Cast your eyes vpon that good thiefe good in his death though in his life abominable he was neuer washed in Iordan yet is receiued into Paradise his soule was foule with rapines and iniustice yea bloody with murders and yet being scoured onely with the blood of his Sauior not with water of baptisme it is presented glorious to God I say nothing of the soules of Traian and Falconella meere heathens liuing and dying without Christ without baptisme which yet their honest Legend reports to be deliuered from hell transported to heauen not so much as scorched in Purgatory The one by the prayers of Gregory
the other of Tecla What partiality is this to deny that to the children of Christians which they grant to knowne Infidels The promise is made to vs and our seed not to those that are without the pale of the Church Those Innocents which were massacred for Christ are by them canonized for Saints and make one day in their Kalendar each yeare both holy and dismall whereof yet scarce any liued to know water none to know baptisme Yea all Martyrs are here priuiledged who are Christened in their owne blood in stead of water but where hath God said All that die without baptisme shall die for euer except Martyrs why not except beleeuers It is faith that giues life to Martyrs which if they should vvant their first death could not auoid the second Ambrose doubted not to say his Valentinian was baptised because he desired it not because he had it he knew the mind of God who accounts vs to haue what we vnfainedly wish Children cannot liue to desire baptisme if their Parents desire it for them why may not the desire of others be theirs as well as according to Austins opinion the faith of others beleeuing and the mouth of others confessing In these cases therefore of any soules but our owne it is safe to suspend and dangerous to passe iudgement Secret things to God He that made all soules knowes vvhat to doe vvith them neither will make vs of counsell But if wee define either way the errors of charitie are inoffensiue We must honour good means and vse them and in their necessarie want depend vpon him who can vvorke beyond vvithout against meanes Thus haue I endeuoured your Ladiships satisfaction in what you heard not without some scruple If any man shall blame my choice in troubling you with a thornie and scholasticall discourse let him know that I haue learned this fashion of Saint Hierome the Oracle of Antiquitie vvho was vvont to entertaine his Paula and Eustochium Marcella Principia Hedibia and other deuout Ladies with learned canuases of the deepe points of Diuinitie This is not so perplexed that it need to offend nor so vnnecessary that it may be vnknowne To Sir RICHARD LEA since deceased EP. V. Discoursing of the comfortable remedies of all afflictions WISE men seeke remedies before their disease sensible patients when they begin to complaine fooles too late Afflictions are the common maladies of Christians These you feele and vpon the first groanes seeke for ease Wherefore serues the tongue of the learned but to speake words in season I am a Scholler of those that can comfort you If you shall vvith me take out my lessons neither of vs shal repent it You smart and complaine take heed lest too much There is no affliction not grieuous the bone that vvas disioynted cannot bee set right without paine No potion can cure vs if it worke not it vvorkes not except it make vs sicke we are contented with that sicknesse which is the vvay to health There is a vexation without hurt such is this We are afflicted not ouer-pressed needie not desperate persecuted not forsaken cast downe but perish not How should we vvhen all the euill in a Citie comes from the prouidence of a good God which can neither be impotent nor vnmercifull It is the Lord let him doe vvhat hee will Woe were vs if euils could come by chance or were let loose to alight where they list now they are ouer-ruled wee are safe The destinie of our sorrowes is written in heauen by a vvise and eternall decree Behold he that hath ordained moderates them A faithfull God that giues an issue vvith the tentation An issue both of their end and their successe He chides not alwayes much lesse striketh Our light afflictions are but for a moment not so long in respect of our vacancy and rest If wee weepe sometimes our teares are precious As they shall neuer be dry in his bottle so they shall soone be dry vpon our cheekes He that wrings them from vs shall vvipe them off how sweetly doth hee interchange our sorrowes and ioyes that we may neither be vaine nor miserable It is true To be strooke once in anger is fearfull his displeasure is more then his blow In both our God is a consuming fire Feare not these stripes are the tokens of his loue he is no Sonne that is not beaten yea till he smart and cry if not till he bleed no Parent corrects anothers childe and he is no good Parent that corrects not his owne Oh rod worthy to be kissed that assures vs of his loue of our adoption What speake I of no hurt short praises doe but discommend I say more these euils are good looke to their effects What is good if not patience affliction is the mother of it tribulation bringeth forth patience What can earth or heauen yeeld better then the assurance of Gods Spirit Afflictions argue yea seale this to vs. Wherein stands perfect happinesse if not in our neere resemblance of Christ Why was man created happy but because in Gods image The glory of Paradise the beauty of his body the duty of the creatures could not giue him felicitie without the likenesse to his Creator Behold what wee lost in our height wee recouer in our miserie a conformitie to the image of the Sonne of God he that is not like his elder brother shall neuer be coheire with him Loe his side temples hands feet all bleeding his face blubbred ghaftly and spitted on his skin all pearled with a bloody sweat his head drouping his soule heauy to the death see you the vvorldling mercy soft delicate perfumed neuer wrinkled with sorrow neuer humbled with afflictions What resemblance is here yea what contrarietie Ease flayeth the foole it hath made him resty and leaues him miserable Be not deceiued No man can follow Christ without his Crosse much lesse reach him and if none shall raigne with Christ but those that suffer vvith him what shall become of these iolly ones Goe now thou dainty worldling and please thy selfe in thy happinesse laugh alwayes and be euer applauded It is a wofull felicitie that thou shalt finde in opposition to thy Redeemer He hath said Woe to them that laugh Beleeuest thou and dost not weepe at thy laughter and with Salomon condemne it of madnesse And againe with the same breath Blessed are yee that weepe who can beleeue this and not reioyce in his owne teares and not pitie the faint smiles of the godlesse Why blessed For ye shall laugh Behold wee that weepe on earth shall laugh in heauen we that now weepe vvith men shall laugh vvith Angels while the fleering worldling shall be gnashing and howling with Diuels we that weepe for a time shall laugh for euer who would not be content to deferre his ioy a little that it may be perpetuall and infinite What mad man would purchase this crackling of thornes such is the vvorldlings ioy with eternall shrieking and torment hee that is
God wee did not finde it a sure rule that as it is in this little world the older it growes the more diseased the more couetous we are all too much the true sonnes of our great grandmother and haue each of vs an Eues sweet tooth in our heads we would be more than we are and euery man would be either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either the man or some-body If a number of your consciences were ript O yee that would be Christian Gentlemen Lawyers Citizens what doe we thinke would be found in your mawes Here the deuoured patrimonie of poore Orphans there the commons of whole Towneships here the impropriate goods of the Church there piles of vsury here bribes and vnlawfull fees there the raw and indigested gobbets of Simonie yea would God I might not say but I must say it with feare with sorrow euen of our sacred and diuine profession that which our Sauiour of his Twelue Yee are cleane but not all The multitude of our vnregarded Charges and soules dying and starued for want of spirituall prouision while they giue vs bodily would condemne my silence for too partiall In all conditions of men for particulars are subiect to enuy and exception the daughters of the horse-leech had neuer such a fruitfull generation They cry still Giue Giue not giue alone that is the bread of sufficiency but giue giue that is more than enough But what is more than enough What is but enough What is not too little for the insatiable gulfe of humane desires Euery man would ingrosse the whole world to himselfe and with that ambitious conqueror feares ●t will be too little and how few Agurs are there that pray against too much From hence 〈◊〉 that ye Courtiers grate vpon poore Trades with hard Monopolies Hence ye Merchants load them with deepe and vnreasonable prices and make them pay deare for dayes Hence ye great men wring the poore spunges of the Commonalty into your priuate purses for the maintenance of pride and excesse Hence ye cormorant Corne-mongers hatch vp a dearth in the time of plenty God sends graine but many times the Deuill sends garners The earth hath beene no niggard in yeelding but you haue beene lauish in transporting and close in concealing Neuer talke of our extreme frosts we see Gods hand and kisse the rod but if your hearts your charity were not more frozen than euer the earth was meane House-keepers should not need to beg nor the meanest to starue for want of bread Hence lastly our loud oppressions of all sorts cry to heauen and are answered with threats yea with variety of vengeances Take this with thee yet O thou worldling which hast the greedy-worme vnder thy tongue with Esaies dogs and neuer hast enough Thou shalt meet with two things as vnsatiable as thy selfe the Graue and Hell and thou whom all the world could not satisfie there be two things whereof thou shalt haue enough Enough would in the graue enough fire in hell I loue not to end with a iudgement and as it were to let my Sunne set in a cloud We are all Christians we should know the world what it is how vaine how transitorie how worthlesse We know where there are better things which we professe our selues made for and aspiring to Let vs vse the world like it selfe and leaue this importunate wooing of it to Heathens and Infidels that know no other heauen no other God Or if you like that counsell better Be couetous Be ambitious Couet spirituall gifts 1 Cor. 14.1 Neuer thinke you haue grace enough desire more seeke for more this alone is worthy your affections worthy your cares Be still poore in this that you may be rich be rich that you may bee full bee full that you may bee glorious Bee ambitious of fauour of honour of a kingdome of Gods fauour of the honour of Saints of the Kingdome of glory whither he that bought it for vs and redeemed vs to it in his good time safely and happily bring vs. To that blessed Sauiour of ours together with the Father and his good Spirit the God of all the world our Father Redeemer and Comforter be giuen all praise honour and glory now and for euer Amen FJNJS THE PASSION SERMON PREACHED AT PAVLS CROSSE ON GOOD-FRIDAY Aprill 14. 1609. By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON Printed for THOMAS PAVIER MILES FLESHER and John Haviland 1624. TO THE ONELY HONOR AND GLORY OF GOD MY DEARE AND BLESSED SAVIOVR WHICH HATH DONE AND SVFFERED ALL THESE THINGS FOR MY SOVLE HIS WEAKE AND VNWORTHY SERVANT HVMBLY DESIRES TO CONSECRATE HIMSELFE AND HIS POORE LABOVRS BESEECHING HIM TO ACCEPT AND BLESSE THEM TO THE PVBLIKE GOOD AND TO THE PRAISE OF HIS OWNE GLORIOVS NAME TO THE READER I Desire not to make any Apologie for the Edition of this my Sermon It is motiue enough that herein I affect a more publike and more induring good Spirituall nicenesse is the next degree to vnfaithfulnesse This point cannot bee too much vrged either by the tongue or Presse Religion and our soules depend vpon it yet are our thoughts too much beside it The Church of Rome so fixes her selfe in her adoration vpon the Crosse of Christ as if she forgat his glory Many of vs so conceiue of him glorious that wee neglect the meditation of his Crosse the way to his glory and ours If wee would proceed aright wee must passe from his Golgotha to the mount of Oliues and from thence to Heauen and there seeke and settle our rest According to my weake abilitie I haue led this way in my speech beseeching my Readers to follow mee with their hearts that wee may ouertake him which is entred into the true Sanctuary euen the highest Heauens to appeare now in the sight of GOD for vs. THE PASSION SERMON IOH. 19. VER 30. When Iesus therefore had receiued the Vineger he said It is finished and bowing the head he gaue vp the ghost THE bitter and yet victorious passion of the Sonne of God Right Honourable and beloued Christians as it was the strangest thing that euer befell the earth so is both of most soueraigne vse and lookes for the most frequent and carefull meditation It is one of those things which was once done that it might bee thought of for euer Euery day therefore must bee the Good-Friday of a Christian who with that great Doctor of the Gentiles must desire to know nothing but Iesus Christ and him crucified There is no branch or circumstance in this wonderfull businesse which yeelds not infinite matter of discourse According to the solemnitie of this time and place I haue chosen to commend vnto your Christian attention our Sauiours Farewell to Nature for his reuiuing was aboue it in his last word in his last act His last word It is finished his last act He gaue vp the Ghost That which hee said hee did If there bee any theame
them on earth to whom perhaps the fiends light firebrands below As Caesarius the Monke brings in Petrus Cantor and Roger the Norman disputing the case of Becket so wee haue many titular Saints few reall many which are written in red Letters in the Calendar of the world Holy to the Lord whom God neuer canonizes in heauen and shall once entertaine with a Nescio I know you not These men yet haue Holinesse written vpon them and are like as Lucian compares his Grecians to a faire gilt bossed booke looke within there is the Tragedie of Thyestes or perhaps Arrius his Thalia the name of a Muse the matter heresie or Conradus Vorstius his late monster that hath De Dev in the front and Atheisme and Blasphemie in the text As S. Paul saies to his Corinths Would God yee could suffer me a little Yee cannot want praisers yee may want reprouers and yet you haue not so much need of Panegyricks as of reprehensions These by how much more rare they are by so much more necessarie Nec-censura deest quae increpet nec medicina quae sa●et saith Cyprian A false praise grieues and a true praise shames saith Anastasius As Kings are by God himselfe called Gods for there are Dij nuncupatiuè and not essentialiter as Gregorie distinguishes because of their resemblance of God so their Courts should be like to heauen and their attendants like Saints and Angels Decet domum tuam sanctitudo agrees to both Thus you should be But alas I see some care to be gallant others care to be great few care to be holy Yea I know not what Deuill hath possessed the hearts of many great ones of our time in both sexes with this conceit that they cannot be gallant enough vnlesse they be godlesse Holinesse is for Diuines or men of meane spirits for graue subdued mortified retired mindes not for them that stand vpon the tearmes of honour height of place and spirit noble humours hence are our oaths duels profanesses Alas that wee should be so besotted as to thinke that our shame which is our onely glory It is reason that makes vs men but it is holinesse that makes vs Christians And woe to vs that wee are men if wee be not Christians Thinke as basely of it as yee will you shall one day finde that one dram of holinesse is worth a whole world of greatnesse yea that there is no greatnesse but in holinesse For Gods sake therefore doe not send holinesse to Colledges or Hospitals for her lodging but entertaine her willingly into the Court as a most happy guest Thinke it a shame and danger to goe in fine clothes while you haue foule hearts and know that in vaine shall you bee honour'd of men if you bee not holy to the Lord. Your goodly outsides may admit you into the Courts on earth but you shall neuer looke within the gates of the Court of heauen without holinesse Without holinesse no man shall see God O God without holinesse we shall neuer see thee and without thee we shall neuer see holinesse write thou vpon these flinty hearts of ours Holinesse to thy selfe Make vs holy to thee that wee may bee glorious with thee and all thy Saints and Angels All this onely for thy Christs sake and to whom c. THE IMPRESE OF GOD. THE SECOND PART By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON Printed for THOMAS PAVIER MILES FLESHER and John Haviland 1624. THE IMPRESE OF GOD. THE SECOND PART ZACH. vlt. 20. IT is well-neere a yeere agoe since in this Gracious Presence we entred vpon this mysticall yet pertinent Text. You then heard what This day is what these Bells or Bridles what this inscription what these Pots and Bowles And out of That day you heard the proficiencie of the Church out of Holinesse written on the Bells the sanctification of the Church You shall now heare out of these bells or bridles of warlike horses thus inscribed the change of the holy warre and peace of the Church out of these pots aduanced to the likenesse of the bowles of the Altar the degrees of the Churches perfection and acceptation All which craue your gratious and honourable attention That conceit which yet is graced with the name of some Fathers that takes this in the literall sense of Constantines bridle wee passe as more worthy of smiles than confutation Questionlesse the sense is spirituall and it is a sure rule that as the historicall sense is fetcht from signification of words so the spirituall from the signification of those things which are signified by the words For this inscription then it shall not be vpon the bells for their owne sakes but for the horses not as bells but as bells of the horses And on the horses not for their owne sakes but as they serue for their Riders The horse a military creature there is no other mention of him in Scripture no other vse of him of old when the eyes of Elishaes seruant were open he saw the hill full of horses 2. King 6. Euen the celestiall warfare is not expressed without them Hence you shall euer finde them matcht with Chariots in the Scripture And the Poet Nunc tempus equos nunc poscere currus hee rusheth into the battell saith Ieremy and he is made for it for he hath both strength and nimblenesse He is strong there is fortitudo equi Psalm 47. and God himselfe acknowledges it Hast thou giuen the horse his strength Iob 39. He is swift saith Ieremy 4.13 yea as Eagles or Leopards saith Abacuc We must take these horses then either as continuing themselues or as altered If the first The very warres vnder the Gospell shall be holy and God shall much glorifie himselfe by them He saith not There shall be no horses or those horses shall haue no bells or those bells no inscription but those horses and their vse which is warre and their ornaments which are bells shall haue a title of Holinesse While Cornelius Agryppa writes of the vanity of Sciences wee may well wonder at the vanity of his opinion that all warre was forbidden vnder the Gopell But let Agrippa bee vaine in this as a meere Humanist and the Anabaptists grosly false as being franticke heretiques it is maruell how Erasmus so great a Scholler and Ferus so great a Text-man could miscarry in this Manichean conceit Alphonsus a Castro would faine haue our Oecolompadius to keepe them company but Bellarmine himselfe can hardly beleeue him No maruell when he sees Zuinglius die in the field tho as a Pastor not as a Souldier and when our swords haue so well taught them besides our tongues that the hereticks are as good friends to warre as enemies to them It is Gods euerlasting title Dominus exercituum To speake nothing of the old Testament What can Cornelius Agrippa say to Cornelius the Centurion I feare no man would giue that title to him that opposed warre which Gods spirit
your leisure could allow you to walke along with me a while thorow these sweet and flowrie Meades of Vnity and happy conspiration of thoughts And yet I shall not so much bend the residue of my speech to the praise of vnity to what purpose were that waste as to the necessary vindication of it from the vniust challenges of the enemies of peace It is an heauy crime and of all other the most hainous wherewith we are charged by the Romanists That we are fallen off from the Catholick Church that we haue rent the seamlesse coat of Christ yea broken his bones and torne his very body in peeces whereof if we were indeed guilty how vnworthy were we to breathe in this aire how most worthy of the lowest Hell But we call heauen and earth to record how vniustly this calumny is cast vpon vs yea we protest before God and men that the enuie of this so foule a crimination lights most iustly vpon the heads of the accusers May it please you to heare a short Apologue A certaine man inuited to a feast one or two of his friends entertained them bountifully They sate together louingly they are together and were merry one with another In the second course as the custome is the Master offereth them wine sets before them an apple now a worme had somewhat eaten the apple and a spider by chance had falne into the cup The guest sees and balks it The Master vrgeth him Why doe you not eat quoth he why drinke you not I dare not saith the other t' is not safe to doe either seest thou not this vermine in the cup and that in the apple Tush saith the Master what so great matter is this It was I that set this before thee It was I that began to thee in the other Drinke it eat it at least for my sake But suffer me first replies the guest to take out this spider to cut out this worme the wine the apple likes me well enough the spider the worme I cannot away with Away with such ouer-nine and curious companions quoth he againe Fy vpon thee thou vngratefull fellow that dost so little regard my friendship so contemne my cheere and with that in a rage throwes the platters and pots in the very face of his guest and thrust him out of doores all wounded Tell me now I beseech you worthy Auditors whether of these violates the lawes of hospitality I dare say you haue easily applied it before me There was a time when we sate together in a familiar manner with these Romanists and fared well The spider in the cup The worme in the apple what else be they but superstition in their worship rotten and vnwholsome traditions in their faith without these the Religion pleaseth vs well But they will needs importunately thrust these vpon vs and we refusing are therefore scorned spit vpon beaten and cast out Had they but giuen vs leaue to take out this spider this worme we had still eaten and dranke together most gladly They obstinately resisted and prefer'd their owne headstrong will to our good and safety nay they repell vs with reproaches strike vs with their thundering Anathemaes condemne vs to the stakes what should we doe in this case Heare oh heauens and hearken oh earth and thou Almighty God the Maker and Gouernor of them both suffer thy selfe and thy glorious spirits to be called to the testimony of our innocencie We are compelled we are driuen away from the Communion of the Church of Rome They forced vs to goe from them who departed first from themselues We haue willingly departed from the communion of their errors from the Communion of the Church we haue not departed Let them renounce their erroneous doctrine we embrace their Church Let them but cast away their soule-slaying Traditions we will communicate with them in the right of one and the same Church and remaine so for euer But alas I must be forced to complaine and that not without extreme griefe of heart how that it cannot be determined whether those that boast themselues for Catholikes be greater enemies to Truth or to Charity To Truth in that they haue of late forged new errors and forced them vpon the Church To Charity in that they haue not stuck to condemne the aduerse part and to brand them with the black marke of Heresie I will speake if you please more plainly Three manner of waies doe these Romanists offend against Charity First that they will not remit any thing either of their most conuicted opinion or vitious practice no not for peace sake Secondly that for Articles of Christian faith they put vpon the Church certaine opinions of their owne false doubtfull and vncertaine peculiar onely to the schooles which doe no whit touch the foundation of Religion And lastly that if they meet with any faithfull and sound monitors which doe neuer so little gainsay these new Articles they cruelly cast them out of the bosome of the Church and throw them headlong into Hel Away with these Schismaticks Hereticks Acheists Iwis the Protestants haue no Church no faith no saluation Good Lord what fury what frenzy distempers Christians that they should be so impotently malicious against those who professe themselues to be redeemed by the ransome of the same most precious bloud At length At length O yee Christians be wise and acknowledge those whom the God and Father of mercies holds worthy of his armes yea of his bowels Let frantick error bawle what it list we are Christians we are Catholicks the vndiuided members of one holy Catholick and Apostolick Church Let vs meet at this barre if you please Le● who will maintaine the plea What is it which maketh a Church What is it which maketh that Church One holy Catholick Apostolick Is it not one holy Catholick Apostolick saith But which is that Is it not the same which was deliuered by Christ and the Apostles to the whole world and was alwaies and euery where approued through all Ages euen vnto our times Wherefore are the Scriptures wherefore the Creeds wherefore were the primitiue Councells but that there might bee certaine markes whereby Catholicks might be vndoubtedly discerned from Hereticks You know the Epilogue of the Athanasian Creed This is the Catholick Faith If we may beleeue Leo the heads of all heresies are quite cut off with this one sword of the Creed How much more then with that two-edged sword of the Scriptures and of the Fathers their Interpreters What then Those that then were Catholicks can they in any age be condemned for Hereticks No Faith is alwaies constant to it selfe and so is the Church that is built vpon that Faith Did we euer deny or make doubt of any Article or clause of that Ancient Diuinity Either then Christ himselfe the Apostles Councells Fathers erred from the Catholick truth or wee yet remaine Catholicks What euer other opinions we meet withall concerning Religion neither make nor marre it Say they be false
them that loue our soules and hate them that loue our sinnes They are these rough hands that must bring vs sauory dishes and carry away a blessing truth is for them now thankes shall be for them hereafter but in the meane time they may not be iudged by the appearance Lastly if we shall iudge friendship by complement salubrity by sweetnesse seruice by the eye fidelity by oathes valour by brags a Saint by his face a deuill by his feet we shall be sure to be deceiued Iudge not therefore according to appearance But that yee mistake not though we may not iudge onely by the appearance yet appearance may not bee neglected in our iudgement Some things according to the Philosopher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seeme and are are as they seeme Semblances are not alwaies seuered from truth Our senses are safe guides to our vnderstandings Wee iustly laugh at that Scepticke in Laertius who because his seruant robbed his Cup-bord doubted whether hee left his victuals there What doe wee with eyes if wee may not beleeue their intelligence That world is past wherein the glosse Clericus amplectens foeminam praesumitur benedicendi causà fecisse The wanton imbracements of another mans wife must passe with a Clarke for a ghostly benediction Men are now more wise lesse charitable Words and probable shewes are appearances actions are not and yet euen our words also shall iudge vs If they bee filthy if blasphemous if but idle wee shall account for them wee shall bee iudged by them Ex ore tuo A foule tongue shewes euer a rotten heart By their fruits yee shall know them is our Sauiours rule I may safely say No body desires to borrow colours of euill if you doe ill thinke not that we will make dainty to thinke you so When the God of loue can say by the Disciple of loue Qui facit peccatum ex diabolo est Hee that committeth sinne is of the deuill Euen the righteous Iudge of the world iudgeth secundum opera according to our works we cannot erre whiles wee tread in his steps If wee doe euill sinne lies at the doore but it is on the street side Euery Passenger sees it censures it How much more he that sees in secret Tribulation and anguish vpon euery soule that doth euill Euery soule here is no exemption by greatnesse no buying off with bribes no bleering of the eyes with pretences no shrouding our selues in the night of secrecy but if it be a soule that doth euill Tribulation and anguish is for it Contrarily If we doe well shall we not be accepted If we be charitable in our almes iust in our awards faithfull in our performances sober in our carriages deuout in our religious seruices conscionable in our actions Glory and honour and peace to euery man that worke●h good we shall haue peace with our selues honour with men glory with God and his Angels Yea that peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding such honour as haue al his Saints the incomprehensible glory of the God of peace the God of Saints and Angels to the participation whereof that good God that hath ordained vs as mercifully bring vs for the sake of his deare Sonne Iesus Christ the iust To whom with thee O Father and thy good Spirit one infinite God our God be giuen all praise honour and glory now and for euer Amen THE GREAT IMPOSTOR LAID OPEN IN A SERMON AT GRAYES INNE Febr. 2. 1623. By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON ❧ Printed for NATHANIEL BVTTER 1624. TO THE MOST NOBLE AND WORTHILY HONOVRED SOCIETIE OF GRAYES INNE AT WHOSE BARRE THIS JMPOSTOR WAS openly arraigned J. H. HVMBLY DEDICATES THIS PVBLIKE LIFE OF HIS WEAKE AND VNWORTHIE LABOVR THE GREAT IMPOSTOR LAID OPEN OVT OF IER 17.9 The heart is deceitfull aboue all things I Know where I am in one of the famous Phrontisteries of Law and Iustice wherefore serues Law and Iustice but for the preuention or punishment of fraud and wickednesse Giue me leaue therefore to bring before you Students Masters Fathers Oracles of Law and Iustice the greatest Cheator and Malefactor in the world our owne Heart It is a great word that I haue said in promising to bring him before you for this is one of the greatest aduantages of his fraud that hee cannot bee seene That as that old Iugler Apollonius Thyanaeus when he was brought before the Iudge vanished out of sight so this great Impostor in his very presenting before you dispeareth and is gone yea so cunningly that he doth it with our owne consent and we would be loth that he could be seene Therefore as an Epiphonema to this iust complaint of deceitfulnesse is added Who can know it It is easie to know that it is deceitfull and in what it deceiues though the deceits themselues cannot bee knowne till too late As wee may see the ship and the sea and the ship going on the sea yet the way of a ship in the sea as Salomon obserues wee know not God askes and God shall answer What hee askes by Ieremie he shall answer by S. Paul Who knowes the heart of man Euen the spirit of man that is in him 1 Cor. 2.11 If then the heart haue but eyes enow to see it selfe by the reflection of thoughts it is enough Ye shall easily see heare enough out of the analogie and resemblance of hearts to make you both astonished and ashamed The heart of man lies in a narrow roome yet all the world cannot fill it but that which may be said of the heart would more than fill a world Here is a double stile giuen it of deceitfulnesse of wickednesse either of which knowes no end whether of being or of discourse I spend my houre and might doe my life in treating of the first See then I beseech you the Impostor and the Imposture The Impostor himselfe The heart of man The Imposture Deceitfull aboue all things As deceitfull persons are wont euer to goe vnder many names and ambiguous and must be exprest with an alias so doth the heart of man Neither man himselfe nor any part of man hath so many names as the heart alone For euery facultie that it hath and euery action it doth it hath a seuerall name Neither is there more multiplicitie than doubt in this name Not so many termes are vsed to signifie the heart as the heart signifies many things When ye heare of the heart ye thinke straight of that fleshie part in the center of the body which liues first and dies last and whose beatings you finde to keepe time all the body ouer That is not it which is so cunning Alas that is a poore harmelesse peece meerely passiue and if it doe any thing as the subministration of Vitall spirits to the maintenance of the whole frame it is but good no it is the spirituall part that lurkes in this flesh which is guilty of such deceit We must learne of
with his verie pen hath so laid error vpon the backe that all the world cannot raise it what a shame were it to be wanting to him to Truth to our selues But perhaps now I know some of your thoughts you would buy Truth ye thinke you would hold it if ye could be sure to know it There are many slips amongst the true coyne Either of the mothers pleaded the liuing childe to be hers with equall protestations oathes teares True yet a Salomons sword can diuide Truth from falshood and there is a test and fire that can discerne true metals from adulterate In spight of all counterfeiting there are certaine infallible marks to know Truth from Error Take but a few of many whether in the originals in the natures in the ends of both In the first Truth is diuine Error is humane what is grounded vpon the diuine word must needs be irrefragably true that which vpon humane Traditions either must or may be erroneous In the second Truth is one conforme euer to it selfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as one said Omne verum omni vero consonat All Truth accords with euery Truth as Gerson and as it is pure so peaceable Error is full of dissonance of cruelty No particulars of ours dissent from the written verity of God We teach no man to equiuocate Our practise is not bloudy with treasons and massacres In the third Truth as it came from God so is referd to him neither hath any other end than the glory of the God of Truth Error hath euer some selfe-respects either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filthy lucre or vaine-glory profit or pride We doe not pranke vp nature we aime not either to fill the cofers or feed the ambition of men Let your Wisdomes apply and inferre and now if ye can shut your eyes that you should not see the Truth and if ye care not for your soules when ye see it sell it Let no false tongue perswade you there is no danger in this sale How charitably so euer we thinke of poore blinded soules that liue in the forced and inuincible darknesse of error certainly Apostasie is deadly How euer those speed that are robbed of Truth you cannot sell Truth and be saued Haue mercy therefore on your own soules for their sakes for the sake of him that bought them with the deare ransome of his precious bloud And as God hath blessed you with the inualuable treasure of Truth so hoard it vp in your hearts and menage it in your liues Oh let vs be Gens iusta custodiens veritatem Esa 26. A iust nation keeping fast the Truth So whiles ye keepe the Truth the Truth shall keepe you both in Life in Death in Iudgment In life vnto death in death and iudgement vnto the consummation of that endlesse and incomprehensible glory which the God of Truth hath prepared for them that ouercome To the happy possession whereof he that hath ordained in his good time as mercifully bring vs and that for the sake of the Son of his Loue Iesus Christ the Righteous To whom with thee O Father and thy blessed Spirit one infinite God be giuen all praise honour and glory now and for euer Amen A SERMON PREACHED AT THE RECONCILEMENT OF THE HAPPILY-RESTORED and reedified Chapell of the Right Honourable the Earle of EXCETER in his House of S. IOHNS ON SAINT STEPHENS DAY 1623. By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON Printed for GEORGE WINDER and are to be sold at his shop in Saint DVNSTONS Church-yard 1624. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE MY SINGVLAR GOOD Lady the Lady ELIzABETH Countesse of Exceter RIght Honourable this poore Sermon both preached and penned at your motion that is to mee your command now presents it selfe to your hand and craueth a place though vnworthy in your Cabinet yea in your heart That holy zeale which desired it will also improue it The God whom your Ladiship hath thus honoured in the care and cost of his House will not faile to honour you in yours For me your Honour may iustly challenge mee on both sides both by the Druryes in the right of the first Patronage and by the Cecils in the right of my succeeding deuotions Jn either and both that little J haue or am is sincerely at your Ladiships seruice as whom you haue merited to be Your Honours in all true obseruance and duty IOS HALL A SERMON PREACHED AT THE REEDIFIED CHAPEL OF THE RIGHT HONOVRAble Earle of Exceter in his House of Saint Iohns HAGGAI 2.9 The glory of the latter house shall be greater than of the former saith the Lord of Hosts and in this place will I giue peace saith the Lord of Hosts AS we haue houses of our owne so God hath his yea as great men haue more houses than one so hath the great God of Heauen much more more both in succession as here the latter house and the first and in varietie He hath an house of flesh Ye are the Temples of the liuing God An house of stone Salomon shall build me an house An house immateriall in the Heauens 2 Cor. 5.1 Wherfore then hath God an house Wherefore haue we ours but to dwell in But doth not he himselfe tell Dauid and so doth Stephen the Protomartyr vpon whose day we are falne tell the Iewes that He dwels not in Temples made with hands True He dwels not in his House as we in ours by way of comprehension he dwels in it by testification of presence So doe we dwell in our houses that our houses containe vs that we are only within them and they without vs. So doth he dwel in his that yet he is elsewhere yea euery where that his house is within him Shortly God dwels where he witnesses his gracious presence that because he doth both in the Empyreall heauen amongst his Angels and Saints and in his Church vpon earth therefore his dwelling is both in the highest Heauen in perfect glory and on Earth in the hearts and assembly of his children As of the former our Sauiour saith In domo Patris mei In my Fathers house are many Mansions So also may we say of the latter There is much variety and choice in it There was the Church of the Iewes the Church of the Gentiles There is a materiall and a spirituall house In the one Salomons Zorobabels such piles as this In the other so much multiplicity as there are Nations yea Congregations that professe the Name of Christ One of these was a figure of the other the Materiall vnder the Law of the Spirituall vnder the Gospell Yee see now the first house and the latter the subiect of our Text and discourse The latter commended to vs comparatiuely positiuely Comparatiuely with the former Maior gloria Positiuely in it selfe In this place will I giue peace Both set out by the stile of the promiser and a vower saith the Lord of Hosts All which challenge your
say that our Nation haue yeelded some in all these faculties which need not stoope vnto the proudest fortainer ours haue no fault but one that they are our owne and what hath their Countrey offended if their Art offend not It is an humorous giddinesse to measure the goodnes of any thing by the distance of miles and where there is equality of worth to neglect the neerest I flander our Nation if it be not sicke of this disease in the course of all Sciences And if neerenesse and presence be the cause of our dislike why doe we not hate our selues which are euer in our owne bosome Why loe we not hate this fastidious curiosity which is too close to vs Perhaps perfection in these qualities is thinner sowne amongst vs than some other-where so as our Iland for want of worke and encouragement affoords no such multitude of masters but how can we complaine of rarenesse since if our age yeeld vs but one excellent in each kinde it is more than we are willing to vse and if the fault were not in our selues one candle might light a thousand To instance in the best The Horse is a noble creature which as it is the strength and pride of France so winnes the hearts and heeles of that Nation The generality of their skill is nothing to a stranger each priuate mans cunning rests in himselfe it is onely the Teacher whose ability may concerne vs. And whereas there is a double kinde of menage as I haue heard one for seruice the other for pleasure in the first our Masters thinke they cannot yeeld vnto the best in the latter if they grant themselues exceeded how many men haue taught their dogge the same tricks with no lesse contentment In both we haue the written directions of their greatest Artists who for the perpetuity of their owne honour failed not to say their best And if these dead Masters suffice not we haue had we may haue the best of their liuing The conscience of a mans excellency will abide no limits but spurs him forth to winne admiration abroad and if therewithall hee can finde aduancement of profit how willingly doth he change his home We haue had experience of this in higher professions much more of these vnder foot One obscure towne of Holland in our memory had by this meanes drawne together at once the greatest lights of Europe and made it selfe then no lesse renowned for Professors than it is now infamous for Schisme Feare of enuy forbids me to name those amongst vs which haue honoured this Iland in the choice of their abode Where Art is encouraged it will soone rise high and goe farre and not suffer a channell of the Sea to stay it from the presence of a more bountifull patronage SECT XIV BVT let vs grant these faculties so fixed vpon any Nation that all our water must necessarily bee fetcht at their Well and adde vnto these a few waste complements and mimicall courtesies which must needs bee put into the match of our ordinarie trauell and now let vs set downe and see what we paid for this stock count our winnings What must our compleat Traueller stake downe for this goodly furniture of his Gentrie If not losse danger danger of the best part if not all a double danger of corruption of religion and deprauation of manners both capitall And can we thinke these endowments so precious that they should be worth fetching vpon such an hazard Will any man not desperate run into an infected house to rifle for a rich suit Will any man put his finger into a fiery crucible to pull out gold It is wittily taken of Chrysostome when our Sauiour said Ne exeatis in eremum that he sayes not Go forth into the desart and see but beleeue not but giues an absolute prohibition of going forth at all that they might be out of the danger of misbeleefe Tush idle and melancholicke feares say some of our Gallants wherefore serues discretion but to seuer good from ill How easily may a wise man pull a Rose and not pricke his hand How freely may he dip in this streame and not be drowned Little doe these peremptorie resoluers know either the insinuatiue power of euill or the treacherie of their own heart in receiuing it or the importunitie of deceiuers in obtruding it They are the worse for their trauell and perceiue it not An egge couered with salt as our Philosophers teach vs hath the meat of it consumed whiles the shell is whole many a one receiues poyson and knowes not when he tooke it No man proues extremely euill on the sudden Through many insensible declinations doe we fall from vertue and at the first are so gently seazed by vice that we cannot beleeue our accusers It is mischiefe enough if they can bee drawne to a lesse dislike of ill which now by long acquaintance is growne so familiar to their eyes that they cannot thinke it so loathsome as at the first view The societie of wilfull Idolaters will now downe with them not without case and good meanings begin to bee allowed for the clokes of grosse superstition From thence they grow to a fauourable construction of the mis-opinions of the aduerse part and can complaine of the wrongfull aggrauations of some contentious spirits and from thence yet lower to an indifferent conceit of some more politike positions and practises of the Romanists Neither is there their rest Hereupon ensues an allowance of some of their doctrines that are more plausible and lesse important and withall a censure of vs that are gone too far from Rome Now the mariage of Ecclesiasticall persons begins to mislike them the daily and frequent consignation with the crosse is not to no purpose The retired life of the religious abandoning the world forsooth sauours of much mortification and Confession giues no small ease and contentment to the soule And now by degrees Popery begins to be no ill religion If there cannot be a false fire of mis-deuotion kindled in them it is enough if they can be cooled in their loue of truth which how commonly it fals out amongst vs I had rather experience should speake than my selfe Some there are that by a spirituall Antiperistasis haue growne hotter in their zeale by being encompassed with the outward cold of irreligion and error who as they owe not this grace to themselues so are they more for wonder than imitation If Daniel found a guard in the Lions den shall another put himselfe thither for shelter And if Peter walk't vpon the pauement of the water did the rest of the Disciples step forth and follow him That valiant Champion of Christ since we are fallen vpon his name who durst draw his sword vpon a whole troupe after all his protestations of his inseparablenesse from his Master was yet infected with the aire of the High Priests Hall and whiles he but warmed himselfe at that fire cooled in his respect to his Sauiour Although perhaps this
whence he fetches his forceablest r r P. 94. Refut Testimony for forced Continency slit in the Nose and bored in the Eare long-since by ſ ſ Censur Coci p 133. Salmeron Baronius Bellarmine and Francis Lucas Of the same stampe that the Reader may here see once for all how he is gulled by this false Priest with foysted Authorites is his Augustine De bono Viduatis t t Refut p. 20. 49. 68. thrice by him here quoted not without great triumph branded by Erasmus Hosius Lindanus as likewise u u Refut p. 40. his Augustine de Eccles dogmat confessed counterfeit by Bellarmine his friends of Louain and x x Refut p. 80. the Sermons de Tempore cashier'd by Erasmus Mart. Lypsius the Louanians Whereto let vs adde the book of great Athanasius de Virginitate y y Refut p. 35. produced in great state by C. E. not without great wrong and shame fathered vpon that Saint as if Erasmus and Nannius did not shew the ridiculous precepts therein contained would speake enough To follow all were endlesse Of this kind lastly is his Cyprian de Disciplin bono Pudicitiae not more magnificently z z Refut p. 36. brought forth by C. E. then fairely eiected by Erasmus Espencaeus These are the glorious Testimonies which grace the swelling Pages of mine Aduersarie These are the pious frauds wherewith honest Readers are shamefully coozened It shall suffice thus in a word to haue thanked my Reuerend Monitor for his sage aduice and to aduise my Reader to know whom he trusts Vid. supra Refut p. 74 75. Refut p. 78. Pag. 79. For Origen we haue already answered My Detector could not haue chosen a better man for the proof of the facility of this Worke then him who according to the broad Tralation of his rude Rhemists gelded himselfe and made himselfe no man for it That all graces are deriued to vs from the Fountaine or rather the full Ocean of Christs Merits and Mercies which he shewes from S. Hierome we willingly teach against them so farre are we from being iniurious to the Passion of our Deare Redeemer But if he will therefore inferre that euery man may be a perpetuall Virgin he may as well hope that therefore euery Scribbler may write all true Our Sauiour himselfe which said I will draw all men vnto me yet said All men cannot receiue this not I cannot giue it but they cannot take it As for that practice which he cites from S. Austin of forcing men both into Orders and Continency it shewes rather the Fact then the Equity what was done in a particular Church rather then what should be The Refuter himselfe renounceth it in the precedent Page For the Church forceth none thereunto neither is it any other then a direct restraint of that which the Councell of Nice determined to bee left free Lastly that there may appeare to be no lesse impossibility of honest Truth in some men then true Chastity he cites one place for all out of S. Austin * * Lib. 2. c. 19. de Adulter Coniug vid. sup Let not the burden of Continency affright vs it will be light if it be of Christ it will be of Christ if there be Faith that obtaines of him which commands the thing which hee doth command See Reader with what fidelity and by this esteeme the rest S. Austin speakes there of persons diuorced each from other whom necessity as he supposes the case cals to Continency the Detector cites him for the power of voluntary votaries The very place confutes him It will be Christs yoke saith Austin if there be faith that obtaines of him which commands the thing which he doth command There can be no Faith where is no command Now C. E. will grant there is no o o Neque enim sicut non ma●haueris non occides ita dici potest non n●bes Aug. de Virg. Sanct. l. sing c. 30. Refut p. 80. vsque ad 87. command of single life to all Therefore all cannot aske it in Faith therefore all cannot thinke it the Yoke of Christ all cannot beare it SECT XV. NOw at last like some sorie Squip that after a little hissing and sparkling ends in an vnsauoury cracke my Refuter after all these Flourishes of their possibilitie shuts vp in a scurrilous Declamation against our Ministerie granting it indeed impossible amongst vs to liue chaste and telling his Reader that wee blush not to blaze in Pulpits and printed Bookes this brutish Paradox that Chastitie is a vertue impossible to all because so it is to such lasciuious p p Illud dixerim tantum abfuisse vt ista coacta castitas illam coniugalem vicerit c. saith Polydor Virg. This I may say that it is so farre off that this compelled Chastitie excelled the Coniugall Ch●stitie that no crime of any offence could bring more hatred to the state of Priesthood or more disgrace to Religion or more sorrow to all good men then the blemish of the vnchaste life of Priests c. Polyd. l. 5. c. 4. Libertines sensuall and sinfull people as Heretikes are and here are sordes dedecora scabies libidinum the brutish spirit of Heresie fleshly and sensuall Impure mouth How well doth it become the sonne of that Babylonian Strumpet to call the Spouse of Christ Harlot How well doth it become lips drencht in the Cup of those Fornications to vtter blasphemous Slanders Spumam Cerberi against Innocence By how much more brutish that paradox is so much more deuillish is the vniust imputation of it to vs Which of vs euer blazed it Which of vs doth hate it lesse then the lye that charges it vpon vs How many Reuerend Fathers haue wee in the highest Chaires of our Church how many aged Diuines in our Vniuersities how many graue Prebendaries in our Cathedrall Churches how many worthy Ministers in their rurall stations that shine with this vertue in the eyes of the World If therefore the proper place of Chastitie be the Church of God as this Cauiller pleads it is ours in right q q Hier. l. 2. in Ose Quicunque amare pudicitiam se simulant vt Manichaeus Marcion Arrius Tatianus inflauratores veteris haereseos venenato ore mella promittunt caeterùm iuxta Apostolum quae secretò agunt turpe est dicere Minut. Fal. Octau theirs in pretence And so much more noble is this in ours for that in ours it is r r Inuiolati corporis virginitate fruuntuur potius quàm gloriantur free in them ſ ſ Talis castitas quia non est spontanea non habet magnam retributionem Bran. Carthus O mysteria O mores vbi necessitas imponitur castitati authoritas datur libidi●i Itaque nec casta est qua metu cogitur nec c. Illa pudica qua these tenetur Ambros l. 1. de Virg. forced Infida custos castitatis necessitas as that
lies not in the place yet choyce must be made of those places which may be most helpe to our deuotion Perhaps that he might be in the eye of Israel The presence and sight of the Leader giues heart to the people neither doth any thing more moue the multitude then example A publike person cannot hide himselfe in the Valley but yet it becomes him best to shew himselfe vpon the Hill The hand of Moses must be raised but not emptie neither is it his owne Rod that he holds but Gods In the first meeting of God with Moses the Rod was Moseses it is like for the vse of his trade now the proprietie is altered God hath so wrought by it that now he challenges it and Moses dare not call it his owne Those things which it pleases God to vse for his owne seruice are now changed in their condition The bread of the Sacrament was once the Bakers now it is Gods the water was once euery mans now it is the Lauer of Regeneration It is both vniust and vnsafe to hold those things common wherein God hath a peculiaritie At other times vpon occasion of the plagues and of the Quailes and of the Rocke he was commanded to take the Rod in his hand now he doth it vnbidden He doth it not now for miraculous operation but for incouragement For when the Israelites should cast vp their eyes to the Hill and see Moses and his Rod the man and the meanes that had wrought so powerfully for them they could not but take heart to themselues and thinke There is the man that deliuered vs from the Aegyptian Why not now from the Amalekite There is the Rod which turned waters to blood and brought varieties of plagues on Aegypt Why not now on Amalek Nothing can more hearten our faith then the view of the monuments of Gods fauour if euer we haue found any word or act of God cordiall to vs it is good to fetch it forth oft to the eye The renewing of our sense and remembrance makes euery gift of God perpetually beneficiall If Moses had receiued a command that Rod which fetcht water from the Rocke could as well haue fetcht the blood of the Amalekites out of their bodies God will not worke miracles alwayes neither must we expect them vnbidden Not as a Standard-bearer so much as a suppliant doth Moses lift vp his hand The gesture of the body should both expresse and further the piety of the soule This flesh of ours is not a good seruant vnlesse it helpe vs in the best offices The God of Spirits doth most respect the soule of our deuotion yet it is both vnmannerly and irreligious to be misgestured in our Prayers The carelesse and vncomely cariage of the body helpes both to signifie and make a prophane soule The hand and the Rod of Moses neuer moued in vaine Though the Rod did not strike Amalek as it had done the Rocke yet it smote Heauen and fetcht downe victorie And that the Israelites might see the hand of Moses had a greater stroke in the fight then all theirs The successe must rise and fall with it Amalek rose and Israel fell with his hand falling Amalek fell and Israel rises with his hand raised Oh the wondrous power of the prayers of faith All heauenly fauours are deriued to vs from this channell of grace To these are wee beholden for our peace preseruations and all the rich mercies of God which we enioy We could not want if we could aske Euery mans hand would not haue done this but the hand of a Moses A faithlesse man may as well hold his hand and tongue still hee may babble but prayes not hee prayes ineffectually and receiues not Onely the prayer of the Righteous auayleth much and onely the beleeuer is Righteous There can be no merit no recompence answerable to a good mans prayer for Heauen and the eare of God is open to him but the formall deuotions of an ignorant and faithlesse man are not worth that crust of bread which hee askes Yea it is presumption in himselfe how should it be beneficiall to others it prophanes the name of God in stead of adoring it But how iustly is the feruencie of the prayer added to the righteousnesse of the person When Moses hand slackned Amalek preuailed No Moses can haue his hand euer vp It is a title proper to God that his hands are stretched out still whether to mercy or vengeance Our infirmitie will not suffer any long intention either of bodie or minde Long prayers can hardly maintaine their vigour as in tall bodies the spirits are diffused The strongest hand will languish with long entending And when our deuotion tyres it is seene in the successe then straight our Amalek preuailes Spirituall wickednesses are mastered by vehement prayer and by heartlesnesse in prayer ouercome vs. Moses had two helpes A stone to sit on and an hand to raise his And his sitting and holpen hand is no whit lesse effectuall Euen in our prayers will God allow vs to respect our owne infirmities In cases of our necessity hee regards not the posture of body but the affections of the soule Doubtlesse Aaron and Hur did not onely raise their hands but their minds with his The more cords the easier draught Aaron was brother to Moses There cannot be a more brotherly office then to helpe one another in our prayers and to excite our mutuall deuotions No Christian may thinke it enough to pray alone Hee is no true Israelite that will not be ready to lift vp the weary hands of Gods Saints All Israel saw this or if they were so intent vpon the slaughter and spoyle that they obserued it not they might heare it after from Aaron and Hur yet this contents not God It must be written Many other miracles had God done before not one directly commanded to bee recorded The other were onely for the wonder this for the imitation of Gods people In things that must liue by report euerie tongue addes or detracts something The word once written is both inalterable and permanent As God is carefull to maintaine the glory of his miraculous victory so is Moses desirous to second him God by a booke and Moses by an Altar and a name God commands to enroule it in parchment Moses registers it in the stones of his Altar which he raises not onely for future memory but for present vse That hand which was weary of lifting vp straight offers a sacrifice of praise to God How well it becomes the iust to be thankfull Euen very nature teacheth vs men to abhorre ingratitude in small fauors How much lesse can that Fountaine of goodnesse abide to be laded at with vnthankfull hands O God we cannot but confesse our deliuerances where are our Altars where are our Sacrifices where is our Iehouanissi I doe not more wonder at thy power in preseruing vs then at thy mercy which is not weary of casting away fauours vpon the ingratefull
be brought to nothing and Atomes and dust is neerest to nothing that in stead of going before Israel it might passe thorow them so as the next day they might finde their god in their excrements To the iust shame of Israel when they should see their new god cannot defend himselfe from being either nothing or worse Who can but wonder to see a multitude of so many hundred thousands when Moses came running downe the Hill to turne their eyes from their god to him And on a sudden in stead of worshipping their Idoll to batter it in pieces in the very height of the noueltie In stead of building Altars and kindling fires to it to kindle an hotter fire then that wherewith it was melted to consume it In stead of dancing before it to abhorre and deface it in stead of singing to weepe before it There was neuer a more stiffe-necked people Yet I doe not heare any one man of them say He is but one man We are many how easily may we destroy him rather then hee our god If his brother durst not resist our motion in making it Why will we suffer him to dare resist the keeping of it It is our act and wee will maintaine it Here was none of this but an humble obeysance to the basest and bloodiest reuenge that Moses shall impose God hath set such an impression of Maiestie in the face of lawfull authoritie that wickednesse is confounded in it selfe to behold it If from hence visible powers were not more feared then the inuisible God the world would be ouer-runne with out-rage Sinne hath a guiltinesse in it selfe that when it is seasonably checked it puls in his head and seekes rather an hiding place then a fort The Idoll is not capable of a further reuenge It is not enough vnlesse the Idolaters smart The gold was good if the Israelites had not beene euill So great a sinne cannot be expiated without blood Behold that meeke spirit which in his plea with God would rather perish himselfe then Israel should perish armes the Leuites against their brethren and reioyces to see thousands of the Israelites bleed and blesses their executioners It was the mercy of Moses that made him cruell He had been cruell to all if some had not found him cruell They are mercilesse hands which are not sometimes imbrued in blood There is no lesse charitie then iustice in punishing sinners with death God delights no lesse in a killing mercy then in a pitifull iustice Some tender hearts would be ready to censure the rigour of Moses Might not Israel haue repented and liued Or if they must dye must their brethrens hand be vpon them Or if their throats must be cut by their brethren shall it be done in the very heat of their sinne But they must learne a difference betwixt pity and fondnesse mercy and vniustice Moses had an heart as soft as theirs but more hot as pitifull but wiser He was a good Physician and saw that Israel could not liue vnlesse he bled hee therefore le ts out this corrupt blood to saue the whole body There cannot bee a better sacrifice to God then the blood of Malefactors and this first sacrifice so pleased God in the hands of the Leuites that he would haue none but them sacrifice to him for euer The blood of the Idolatrous Israelites cleared that Tribe from the blood of the innocent Sichemites Contemplations THE SIXTH BOOKE The Vayle of Moses Nadab and Abihu Aaron and Miriam The Searchers of Canaan Corah's Conspiracie BY IOS HALL D. of Diuinitie and Deaue of WORCESTER TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE THOMAS LORD VISCOVNT FENTON CAPTAINE OF THE ROYALL GVARD ONE OF HIS MAIESTIES MOST HONOVRABLE PRIVY COVNSELLORS ONE OF THE HAPPY RESCVERS OF THE DEARE LIFE OF OVR GRACIOVS SOVERAIGNE LORD A WORTHY PATTERNE OF ALL TRVE HONOR I. H. DEDICATES THIS PART OF HIS MEDITATIONS AND WISHETH ALL INCREASE OF GRACE AND HAPPINESSE Contemplations THE SIXTH BOOKE Of the Vaile of MOSES IT is a wonder that neither Moses nor any Israelite gathered vp the shiuers of the former Tables Euery sheard of that stone and euery letter of that writing had beene a Relike worth laying vp but he well saw how headlong the people were to Superstition and how vnsafe it were to feed that disposition in them The same zeale that burnt the Calfe to ashes concealed the ruines of this Monument Holy things besides their vse challenge no further respect The breaking of the Tables did as good as blot out all the Writings defaced left no vertue in the stone no reuerence to it If God had not beene friends with Israel he had not renewed his Law As the Israelites were wilfully blind if they did not see Gods anger in the Tables broken so could they not but hold it a good signe of grace that God gaue them his Testimonies There was nothing wherein Israel out-stripped all the rest of the world more then in this priuiledge the pledge of his Couenant the Law written with Gods owne hand Oh what a fauour then is it where God bestowes his Gospell vpon any Nation That was but a killing letter this is the power of God to saluation Neuer is God throughly displeased with any people where that continues For like as those which purposed loue when they fall off call for their tokens back againe So when God begins once perfectly to mislike the first thing he with-drawes is his Gospell Israel recouers this fauour but with an abatement Hew thee two Tables God made the first Tables The matter the forme was his now Moses must hew the next As God created the first man after his owne Image but that once defaced Adam begat Cain after his owne Or as the first Temple razed a second was built yet so far short that the Israelites wept at the sight of it The first workes of God are still the purest those that he secondarily works by vs decline in their perfection It was reason that though God had forgotten Israel they should still find they had sinned They might see the footsteps of displeasure in the differences of the Agent When God had told Moses before I will not goe before Israel but my Angell shall lead them Moses so noted the difference that he rested not till God himselfe vndertooke their conduct So might the Israelites haue noted some remainders of offence whiles in stead of that which his owne hand did formerly make hee saith now He● thee And yet these second Tables are kept reuerently in the Arke when the other lay mouldred in shiuers vpon Sinai like as the repaired repaired Image of God in our Regeneration is preserued perfited and layd vp at last safe in Heauen whereas the first Image of our created innocence is quite defaced so the second Temple had the glory of Christs exhibition though meaner in frame The mercifull respects of God are not tyed to glorious out-sides or the inward worthinesse of things or persons He hath chosen the weake
the iourney and curse of the couetous prophet if God had not stayed him How oft are wicked men cursed by a diuine hand euen in those sins which their heart stands to It is no thank to lewd men that their wickednesse is not prosperous Whence is it that the world is not ouer-run with euill but from this that men cannot be so ill as they would The first entertainment of this message would make a stranger thinke Balaam wife and honest Hee will not giue a sudden answer but craues leasure to consult with God and promises to returne the answer he shall receiue Who would not say This man is free from rashnesse from partiality Dissimulation is crafty able to deceiue thousands The words are good when he comes to action the fraud bewaries it selfe For both he insinuates his own forwardnesse and casts the blame of the prohibition vpon God and which is worse deliuers but halfe his answer he sayes indeed God refuses to giue them leaue to goe He sayes not as it was He charges me not to curse them for they are blessed So did Balaam deny as one that wisht to be sent for againe Perhaps a peremptory refusall had hindered his further sollicitation Concealement of some truths is sometimes as faulty as a deniall True fidelity is not niggardly in her relations Where wickednesse meets with power it thinkes to command all the world and takes great scorne of any repulse So little is Balac discouraged with one refusall that he sends so much the stronger message Mo Princes and more honorable Oh that wee could be so importunate for our good as wicked men are for the compassing of their owne designes A deniall doth but whet the desires of vehement suitors Why are we faint in spirituall things when we are not denied but delayed Those which are themselues transported with vanity and ambition thinke that no heart hath power to resist these offers Balacs Princes thought they had strooke it dead when they had once mentioned promotion to great honour Selfe-loue makes them thinke they cannot be slaues whiles others may be free and that all the world would be glad to runne on madding after their bait Nature thinks it impossible to contemn honor and wealth and because too many soules are thus taken cannot beleeue that any would escape But let carnall hearts know there are those can spit the world in the face and say Thy gold and siluer perish with thee and that in comparison of a good conscience can tread vnder foot his best proffers like shadowes as they are and that can doe as Balaam said How neere truth and falshood can lodge together Here was piety in the lips and couetousnesse in the heart Who can any more regard good words that heares Balaam speake so like a Saint An housefull of gold siluer may not peruert his tongue his heart is won with lesse for if he had not already swallowed the reward and found it sweet why did he againe sollicit God in that which was peremptorily denyed him If his mind had not beene bribed already why did he stay the messenger why did he expect a change in God why was he willing to feed them with hope of successe which had fed him with hope of recompence One prohibition is enough for a good man Whiles the delay of God doth but hold vs in suspence importunity is holy and seasonable but when once he giues a resolute deniall it is prophane saucinesse to sollicit him When we aske what we are bidden our suites are not more vehement then welcome but when we begge prohibited fauours our presumption is troublesome and abhominable No good heart will endure to be twice forbidden Yet this opportunity had obtained a permission but a permission worse then a deniall I heard God say before Go not nor curse them Now he sayes Goe but curse not Anon he is angry that he did not goe Why did he permit that which he forbade if he be angry for doing that which he permitted Some things God permits with an indignation not for that he giues leaue to the act but that he giues a man ouer to his sinne in the act this sufferance implies not fauour but iudgement so did God bid Balaam to goe as Salomon bids the yong man follow the wayes of his owne heart It is one thing to like another thing to suffer Moses neuer approued those legall diuorces yet he tolerated them God neuer liked Balaams iourney yet he displeasedly giues way to it as if he said Well since thou art so hot set on this iourney be gone And thus Balaam tooke it else when God after professed his displeasure for the iourney it had beene a ready answer Thou commandedst me but herein his confession argues his guilt Balaams suite and Israels Quailes had both one fashion of grant in anger How much better is it to haue gracious denials then angry yeeldings A small perswasion hartens the willing It booted not to bid the couetous prophet hasten to his way Now he makes himselfe sure of successe His corrupt hart tels him that as God had relented in his licence to goe so he might perhaps in his licence to curse and he saw how this curse might blesse him with abundance of wealth hee rose vp earely therefore and saddled his Asse The night seemed long to his forwardnesse Couetous men need neither clocke nor bell to awaken them their desires make them restlesse O that we could with as much eagernesse seeke the true riches which onely can make vs happy We that see onely the out-side of Balaam may maruell why he that permitted him to goe afterward opposes his going but God that saw his heart perceiued what corrupt affections caried him hee saw that his couetous desires and wicked hopes grew the stronger the neerer he came to his end An Angell is therefore sent to with-hold the hasty Sorcerer Our inward disposition is the life of our actions according to that doth the God of spirits iudge vs whiles men censure according to our externall motions To goe at all when God had commanded to stay was presumptuous but to goe with desire to curse made the act doubly sinfull and fetcht an Angell to resist it It is one of the worthy imployments of good Angels to make secret opposition to euill designes Many a wicked act haue they hindered without the knowledge of the agent It is all one with the Almighty to worke by Spirits and men It is therefore our glory to be thus set on worke To stop the course of euill either by disswasion or violence is an Angelicall seruice In what danger are wicked men that haue Gods Angels their opposites The Deuill moued him to goe a good Angell resists him If an heauenly Spirit stand in the way of a Sorcerers sinne how much more ready are all those spirituall powers to stop the miscariages of Gods deare children How oft had we falne yet more if these Guardians had not
Elkanah haue wished Peninna barren and Anna fruitfull but if she should haue had both issue and loue she had bin proud and her riuall despised God knowes how to disperse his fauours so that euery one may haue cause both of thankfulnesse and humiliation whiles there is no one that hath all no one but hath some If enuy and contempt were not thus equally tempered some would be ouer hauty and others too miserable But now euery man sees that in himself which is worthy of contempt matter of emulation in others and contrarily sees what to pitty and dislike in the most eminent and what to applaud in himselfe and out of this contrariety arises a sweete meane of contentation The loue of Elkanah is so vnable to free Anna from the wrongs of her riuall that it procures them rather The vnfruitfulnesse of Anna had neuer with so much despight been laid in her dish if her husbands heart had been as barren of loue to her Enuy though it take aduantage of our weaknesses yet is euer raised vpon some grounds of happinesse in them whom it emulates it is euer an ill effect of a good cause If Abels sacrifice had not been accepted and if the acceptation of his sacrifice had not beene a blessing no enuy had followed vpon it There is no euill of another wherein it is fit to reioyce but his enuy and this is worthy of our ioy and thankfulnesse because it shewes vs the price of that good which we had and valued not The malignity of enuy is thus well answered when it is made the euill cause of a good effect to vs when God and our soules may gaine by anothers sin I doe not finde that Anna insulted vpon Peninna for the greater measure of her husbands loue as Peninna did vpon her for her fruitlesnesse Those that are truely gracious know how to receiue the blessings of God without contempt of them that want and haue learned to be thankfull without ouerlinesse Enuy when it is once conceiued in a malicious heart is like fire in billets of Iuniper which they say continues more yeeres then one Euery yeere was Anna thus vexed with her emulous partner and troubled both in her prayers and meale Amidst all their feastings she fed on nothing but her teares Some dispositions are lesse sensible and more carelesse of the despight and iniuries of others and can turne ouer vnkinde vsages with contempt By how much more tender the heart is so much more deeply is it euer affected with discourtesies As waxe receiues and retaines that impression which in the heard clay cannot be seene or as the eye feeles that more which the skin of the eye-lid could not complaine of Yet the husband of Anna as one that knew his duty labours by his loue to comfort her against these discontentments Why weepest thou Am not I better to thee then ten sonnes It is the weakenesse of good natures to giue so much aduantage to an enemy what would malice rather haue then the vexation of them whom it persecutes We cannot better please an aduersary then by hurting our selues This is no other then to humour enuy to serue the turne of those that maligne vs and to draw on that malice whereof we are weary whereas carlesnesse puts ill will out of countenance and makes it with-draw it selfe in a rage as that which doth but shame the author without the hurt of the patient In causlesse wrongs the best remedy is contempt She that could not finde comfort in the louing perswasions of her husband seekes at in her prayers she rises vp hungry from the feast and hies her to the Temple there she power out hers teares and supplications Whatsoeuer the complaint be here is the remedy There is one vniuersall receit for all euils prayer when all helpes fayle vs this remaines and whiles we haue an heart comforts it Here was not more bitternesse in the soule of Anna then feruency she did not onely weepe and pray but vow vnto God If God will giue her a sonne she will giue her sonne to God backe againe Euen nature it selfe had consecrated her sonne to God for he could not but be borne a Leuite But if his birth make him a Leuite her vow shall make him a Nazarite and dedicate his minority to the Tabernacle The way to obtaine any benefit is to deuote it in our hearts to the glory of that God of whom we aske it By this meanes shall God both pleasure his seruant and honour himselfe whereas if the scope of our desires be carnall we may be sure either to fayle of our suit or of a blessing ELY and ANNA OLd Ely sits on a stoole by one of the posts of the Tabernacle Where should the Priests of God be but in the Temple whether for action or for ouer-sight Their very presence keepes Gods House in order and the presence of God keepes their hearts in order It is oft found that those which are themselues conscionable are too forward to the censuring of others Good Ely because he markes the lips of Anna to moue without noyse chides her as drunken and vncharitably misconstrues her denotion It was a weake ground whereon to build so heauy a sentence If he had spoken too loud and incomposedly he might haue had some iust colour for this conceit but now to accuse her silence notwithstanding all the teares which he saw of drunkennesse it was a zealous breach of charity Some spirit would haue been enraged with so rash a censure When anger meets with griefe both turne into fury But this good woman had been iniured to reproches and besides did well see the reproofe arose from misprision and the misprision from zeale and therefore answers meekely as one that had rather satisfie then expostulate Nay my Lord but I am a woman troubled in spirit Ely may now learne charity of Anna If she had bin in that distemper whereof he accused her his iust reproofe had not bin so easily digested Guiltines is commonly clamorous and impatient whereas innocence is silent and carelesse of mis-resports It is naturall vnto to all men to wipe off from their name all aspersions of euill but none doe it with such violence as they which are faulty It is a signe the horse is galled that stirs too much when he is touched She that was censured for drunken censures drunkennesse more deeply then her reprouet Count not thi●e handmaid for a daughter of Belial The drunkards st●●e begins in lawlesnesse proceeds in vnprofitablenesse ends in misery and all shut vp it the denomination of this pedegree A sonne of Belial If Anna had bin tainted with this sin she would haue denied it with more fauour and haue disclaimed it with an externiation What if I should haue bin merry with wine yet I might be deuout If I should haue ouerioyed in my sacrifice to God one cup of excesse had not bin so hainous now her freedome is seene in her seuerity Those which
fore-seeing that which hee should not bee able to auoid Foolish men giue away their soules for nothing The itch of impertinent and vnprofitable knowledge hath beene the hereditary disease of the sonnes of Adam Eue How many haue perished to know that which hath procured their perishing How ambitious should wee bee to know those things the knowledge whereof is eternall Life Many a lewd Office are they put to which serue wicked Masters one while Sauls seruants are set to kill innocent Dauid another while to shed the bloud of Gods Priests and now they must goe seeke for a Witch It is no small happinesse to attend them from whom we may receiue precepts and examples of vertue Had Saul beene good hee had needed no disguise Honest actions neuer shame the doers Now that hee goeth about a sinfull businesse hee changeth himselfe hee seekes the shelter of the night hee takes but two followers with him It is true that if Saul had come in the port of a King the Witch had as much dissembled her condition as now hee dissembleth his yet it was not onely desire to speed but guiltinesse that thus altered his habit such is the power of conscience that euen those who are most affected to euill yet are ashamed to be thought such as they desire to be Saul needed another face to fit that tongue which should say Coniecture to me by the familiar spirit and bring me vp whom I shall name vnto thee An obdurate heart can giue way to any thing NOTVVITHSTANDING the peremptory edict of Saul there are still Witches in Israel Neither good Lawes nor carefull executions can purge the Church from Malefactors There will still bee some that will ieopard their heads vpon the grossest sinnes No Garden can be so curiously tended that there should not bee one Weed left in it Yet so farre can good Statutes and due inflictions of punishment vpon offenders preuaile that mischieuous persons are glad to pull in their heads and dare not doe ill but in disguise and darknesse It is no small aduantage of Iustice that it affrights sinne if it cannot be expelled As contrarily wofull is the condition of that place where is a publike profession of wickednesse This Witch was no lesse crafty than wicked shee had before as is like bribed Officers to escape inditement lurke in secrecy and now shee will not worke her feares without securitie her suspition proiects the worst Wherefore seekest thou to take wee in a snare to cause mee to dye Oh vaine Sorceresse that could bee wary us auoid the punishment of Saul carelesse to auoid the iudgment of God Could wee fore-thinke what our sinne would cost vs wee durst not but be innocent This is a good and seasonable answer for vs to make vnto Satan when hee sollicites vs to euill wherefore seekest thou to take mee in a snare to cause mee to dye Nothing is more sure than this intention in the tempter than this euent in the issue Oh that wee could but so much feare the eternall paines as wee doe the temporary and bee but so carefull to saue our soules from torment as our bodies No sooner hath Saul sworne her safetie than shee addresseth her to her Sorcery Hope of impunitie drawes on sinne with boldnesse were it not for the delusions of false promises Satan should haue no Clients Could Saul be so ignorant as to thinke that Magick had power ouer Gods deceased Saints to rayse them vp yea to call them downe from their rest Time was when Saul was among the Prophets And yet now that he is in the impure lodge of Deuils how senselesse hee is to say Bring me vp Samuel It is no rare thing to lose euen our wit and iudgement together with graces How iustly are they giuen ouer to fottishnesse that haue giuen themselue ouer to sinne The Sorceresse it seemes exercising her coniurations in a roome apart is informed by her Familiar who it was that set her on worke shee can therefore finde time in the midst of her Exorcismes to binde the assurance of her owne safetie by expostulation She cryed with a loud voyce why hast thou deceiued mee for thou art Saul The very name of Saul was an accusation Yet is he so farre from striking his brest that doubting lest this feare of the Witch should interrupt the desired worke hee encourages her whom hee should haue condemned Be not afraid Hee that had more cause to feare for his owne sake in an expectation of iust iudgment cheeres vp her that feared nothing but himselfe How ill doth it become vs to giue that counsell to others whereof wee haue more neede and vse in our owne persons As one that had more care to satisfie his curiositie than her suspicion hee askes what sawest thou Who would not haue looked that Sauls haire should haue stared on his head to heare of a spirit raised His sinne hath so hardened him that hee rather pleases himselfe in it which hath nothing in it but horror So farre is Satan content to descend to the seruice of his seruants that hee will approue his fained obedience to their very outward sences What forme is so glorious that hee either cannot or dare not vndertake Here Gods ascend out of the Earth Else-where Satan transformes him into an Angell of light What wonder is it that his wicked Instruments appeare like Saints in their hypocriticall dissimulation if wee will bee iudging by the appearance wee shall bee sure to erre No eye could distinguish betwixt the true Samuell and a false spirit Saul who was well worthy to bee deceiued seeing those gray haires and that Mantle inclines himselfe to the ground and bowes himselfe He that would not worship God in Samuel aliue now worships Samuel in Satan and no maruell Satan was now become his refuge in steed of God his vrim was darknesse his Prophet a Ghost Euery one that consults with Satan worships him though hee bow not neither doth that euill spirit desire any other reuerence than to be sought to How cunningly doth Satan resemble not onely the habit and gesture but the language of Samuel Wherefore hast thou disquieted me and wherefore dost thou aske of mee seeing the Lord is gone from thee and is thine enemy Nothing 〈…〉 pleasing to that euill one than to be solicited yet in the person of Samuel hee can say Why hast thou disquitted w●●e Had not the Lord beene gone from Saul hee had neuer co●ne to the Deuillish Oracle of Endor and yet the counterfetting spirit can say Why dost thou arke of 〈◊〉 seeing the Lord is gone from thee Satan cares not how little hee is knowne to bee himselfe he loues to passe vnder any sonne rather than his owne The more holy the person is the more carefully doth Satan act him that by his stale hee may ensnare vs. In euery motion it is good to try the spirits whether they be of God Good words are no meanes to distinguish a Prophet from a Deuill
Samuel himselfe whiles hee was aliue could not haue spoken more grauely more seuerely more diuinely than this euill ghost For the Lord will rent thy Kingdome out of thy hand and giue it to thy neighbour Dauid because thou obeyedst not the voyce of the Lord not executedst his fierce wrath vpon the Amalekites therefore hath the Lord done this vnto thee this day When the Deuill himselfe puts on grauity and religion who can maruell at the hypocrisie of men Well may lewd men bee good Preachers when Satan himselfe can play the Prophet Where are those Ignorants that thinke charitably of charmes and spells because they finde nothing in them but good words What Prophet could speake better words than this Deuill in Samuels Mantle Neither is there at any time so much danger of that euill spirit as when hee speakes best I could wonder to heare Satan preach thus prophetically if I did not know that as hee was once a good Angell so hee can still act what hee was Whiles Saul was in consultation of sparing Agag wee shall neuer finde that Satan would lay any blocke in his way Yea then hee was a prompt Orator to induce him into that sinne now that it is past and gone hee can lade Saul with fearefull denunciations of iudgement Till wee haue sinned Satan is a parasite when wee haue sinned hee is a Tyrant What cares hee to flatter any more when hee hath what hee would Now his onely worke is to terrifie and confound that hee may enioy what he hath wonne How much better is it seruing that Master who when wee are most deiected with the conscience of euill heartens vs with inward comfort and speakes peace to the soule in the midst of tumult Ziklag spoyled and reuenged HAd not the King of the Philistims sent Dauid away early his Wiues and his people and substance which hee left at Ziklag had beene vtterly lost Now Achish did not more pleasure Dauid in his entertainment than in his dismission Saul was not Dauids enemy more in the persecution of his person than in the forbearance of Gods enemies Behold thus late doth Dauid feele the smart of Sauls sinne in sparing the Amalekites who if Gods sentence had beene duly executed had not now suruiued to annoy this parcell of Israel As in spirituall respects our sinnes are alwayes hurtfull to our selues so in temporall oft-times preiudiciall to posteritie A wicked man deserues ill of those hee neuer liued to see I cannot maruell at the Amalekites assault made vpon the Israelites of Ziklag I cannot but maruell at their clemencie how iust it was that while Dauid would giue aid to the enemies of the Church against Israel the enemies of the Church should rise against Dauid in his peculiar charge of Israel But whilst Dauid rouing against the Amalekites not many dayes before left neither man nor woman aliue how strange is it that the Amalekites inuading and surprizing Ziklag in reuenge kill neither man nor woman Shall wee say that mercy is fled from the brests of Israelites and rests in Heathens Or shall wee rather ascribe this to the gracious restraint of God who hauing designed Amalek to the slaughter of Israel and not Israel to the slaughter of Amalek moued the hand of Israel and held the hands of Amalek This was that alone that made the Heathens take vp with an vn-bloudy reuenge burning only the w●●es and leading away the persons Israel crossed the reuealed will of God insparing Amalek Amalek fulfils the secret will of God in sparing Israel It was still the lot of Amalek to take Israel at all aduantages vpon their first comming out of Egypt when they were weary weake and vnarmed then did Amalek assault them And now when one part of Israel was in the field against the Philistians another was gone with the Philistims against Israel the Amalekites set vpon the Coasts of both and goes away laded with the spoile No other is to bee exspected of our spirituall Aduersaries who are euer readiest to assayle when wee are the vnreadiest to defend It was a wofull spectacle for Dauid and his Souldiers vpon their returne to find mines and ashes in stood of houses and in steed of their Families solitude Their Citie was vanished into smoke their housholds into captiuitie neither could they know whom to accuse or where to enquire for redresse whiles they made account that their home should recompence their tedious iourney with comfort the miserable desolation of their home doubles the discomfort of their iourney what remained there but teares and lamentations They lifted vp their voyces and wept till they could weepe no more Heere was plentie of nothing but misery and sorrow The heart of euery Israelite was brim full of griefe Dauids ranne ouer for besides that his crosse was the same with theirs all theirs was his alone each man looke on his fellow as a partner of affliction but euery one lookt vpon Dauid as the cause of all their affliction and as common displeasure is neuer but fruitfull of reuenge they all agree to stone him as the Author of their vndoing whom they followed all this while as the hopefull meanes of their aduacements Now Dauids losse is his least griefe neither as if euery thing had conspired to torment him can hee looke besides the aggrauation of his sorrow and danger Saul and his Souldiers had hunted him out of Israel the Philistim Courtiers had hunted him from the fauour of Achish the Amalekites spoyled him in Ziklag yet all these are easie aduersaries in comparison of his owne his owne followers are so far from pittying his participation of the losse that they are ready to kill him because they are miserable with him Oh the many and grieuous perplexities of the man after Gods owne heart If all his traine had ioyned their best helpes for the mitigation of his griefe their Cordials had beene too weake but now the vexation that arises from their fury and malice drowneth the sence of their losse and were enough to distract the most resolute heart why should it bee strange to vs that wee meete with hard tryalls when wee see the deare Annoynted of God thus plunged into euils What should the distressed sonne of Ishai now doe Whither should hee thinke to turne him to goe backe to Israel hee durst not to goe to Achish hee might not to abide amonst those waste heapes hee could not or if there might haue beene harbor in those burnt wals yet there could bee no safety to remayne with those mutinous spirits But Dauid comforted himselfe in the Lord his God oh happie and sure refuge of a faithfull soule The earth yeelded him nothing but matter of disconsolation and heauinesse hee lifts his eyes aboue the hils whence commeth his saluation It is no maruell that God remembreth Dauid in all his troubles since Dauid in all his troubles did thus remember his God hee knew that though no mortall eye of reason or sence could discerne any euasion
so they must shew it vpon all good occasions letting passe no opportunitie of making spare of bloud Ishbosheth was it seemes a man of no great spirits for being no lesse than fortie yeares old when his father went into his last field against the Philistims hee was content to stay at home Abner hath put ambition into him and hath easily raised him to the head of a faction against the annoynted Prince of Gods people If this vsurped Crowne of Sauls Sonne had any worth or glory in it hee cannot but acknowledge to owe it all vnto Abner yet how forward is vnthankfull Ishbosheth to receiue a false suggestion against his chiefe Abettor Wherefore hast thou gone in to my fathers Concubine Hee that made no conscience of an vniust claime to the Crowne and a maintenance of it with bloud yet seemes scrupulous of a lesse sinne that carried in it the colour of a disgrace The touch of her who had beene honoured by his fathers bed seemed an intolerable presumption and such as could not bee seuered from his owne dishonour Selfe-loue sometimes borrowes the face of honest zeale Those who out of true grounds dislike sinnes doe hate them all indifferently according to their hainousnesse Hypocrites are partiall in their detestation bewraying euer most bitternesse against those offences which may most preiudice their persons and reputations It is as dangerous as vniust for Princes to giue both their eares and their heart to mis-grounded rumors of their innocent followers This wrong hath stript Ishbosheth of the Kingdome Abner in the meane time cannot be excused from a treacherous inconstancy If Sauls sonne had no true Title to the Crowne why did hee maintaine it If hee had why did he forsake the cause and person Had Abner out of remorse for furthering a false claime taken off his hand I know not wherein he could be blamed except for not doing it sooner But now to withdraw his professed allegeance vpon a priuate reuenge was to take a lewd leaue of an ill action If Ishbosheth were his lawfull Prince no iniury could warrant a reuolt Euen betwixt priuate persons a returne of wrongs is both vncharitable and vniust how euer this goe currant for the common iustice of the World how much more should we learne from a supreme hand to take hard measures with thankes It had beene Abners duty to haue giuen his King a peaceable and humble satisfaction and not to flie out in a snuffe If the spirit of the Ruler rise vp against thee leaue not thy place for yeelding pacifieth great offences now his impatient falling although to the right side makes him no better than traiterously honest So soone as Abner hath entertained a resolution of his rebellion hee perswades the Elders of Israel to accompany him in the change and whence doth he fetch his maine motiue but from the Oracle of God The Lord hath spoken of Dauid saying By the hand of my seruant Dauid will I saue my people Israel out of the hand of the Philistims and out of the hand of all their enemies Abner knew this ful well before yet then was well content to smother a knowne truth for his owne turne and now the publication of it may serue for his aduantage hee wins the heart of Israel by shewing Gods Charter for him whom he had so long opposed Hypocrites make vse of God for their owne purposes and care onely to make diuine authority a colour for their owne designes No man euer heard Abner godly till now neither had he beene so at this time if he had not intended a reuengefull departure from Ishbosheth Nothing is more odious than to make Religion a stalking horse to Policy WHO can but glorifie God in his iustice when he sees the bitter end of this treacherous dissimulation Dauid may vpon considerations of State entertaine his new Guest with a Feast and well might hee seeme to deserue a welcome that vndertakes to bring all Israel to the league and homage of Dauid but God neuer meant to vse so vnworthy meanes for so good a worke Ioab returnes from pursuing a troupe and finding Abner dismissed in peace and expectation of a beneficiall returne followes him and whether out of enuy at a new riuall of honour or out of the reuenge of Asahel hee repaies him both dissimulation and death God doth most iustly by Ioab that which Ioab did for himselfe most vniustly I know not setting the quarrell aside whether wee can worthily blame Abner for the death of Asahel who would needs after faire warnings runne himselfe vpon Abners Speare yet this fact shall procure his paiment for worse Now is Ishbosheths wrong reuenged by an enemy wee may not alwayes measure the Iustice of Gods proceedings by present occasions Hee needs not make vs acquainted or aske vs leaue when hee will call for the arrerages of forgotten sinnes Contemplations THE FIFTEENTH BOOKE Contayning VzZAH and the Arke DAVID with MEPHIBOSHETH and ZIBA HANVN and DAVIDS Ambassadors DAVID with BATHSHEBA and VRIAH NATHAN and DAVID AMON and THAMAR ABSALOMS returne and conspiracie TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE MY VERY GOOD LORD William LORD BVRLEIGH ALL GRACE AND Happinesse RIGHT HONOVRABLE THere are but two Bookes wherin we can reade God The one is his Word his Workes the other This is the bigger Volume that the more exquisite The Characters of this are more large but dim of that smaller but clearer Philosophers haue turned ouer this and erred That Diuines and studious Christians not without full and certaine information Jn the Workes of God we see the shadow or footsteps of the Creator in his Word we see the face of God in a glasse Happinesse consists in the Vision of that infinite Maiesty and if wee be perfectly happy aboue in seeing him face to face our happinesse is well forward below in seeing the liuely representation of his face in the glasse of Scriptures Wee cannot spend our eyes too much vpon this Obiect For mee the more J see the more J am amazed the more I am rauished with this glorious beautie With the honest Lepers I cannot bee content to enioy this happy sight alone there is but one way to euery mans Felicity May it please your Lordship to take part with many your Peeres in these my weak but not vnprofitable Contemplations which shall hold themselues not a little graced with your Honourable Name Whereto together with your right Noble and most Worthy Lady I haue gladly deuoted my selfe to bee Your Lordships in all dutifull obseruance IOS HALL Contemplations VzZAH AND THE ARKE REMOVED THe house of Saul is quiet the Philistims beaten victory cannot end better than in deuotion Dauid is no sooner settled in his house at Ierusalem than he fetcheth God to bee his guest there the thousands of Israel goe now in an holy march to bring vp the Arke of God to the place of his rest The tumults of Warre affoorded no opportunity of this seruice onely peace is a friend to Religion neither
disdainefull haluing of his haire and Robes in the person of his deputies The name of Embassadours hath beene euer sacred and by the vniuersall Law of Nations hath caried in it sufficient protection from all publike wrongs neither hath it euer beene violated without a reuenge Oh God what shall wee say to those notorious contempts which are dayly cast vpon thy spirituall Messengers Is it possible thou shouldst not feele them thou shouldst not auenge them Wee are made a gasing stocke to the World to Angels and to men we are despised and trodden downe in the dust Who hath beleeued our report and to whom is the Arme of the Lord reuealed How obstinate are wicked men in their peruerse resolutions These foolish Ammonites had rather hire Syrians to maintaine a Warre against Israel in so foule a quarrell besides the hazard of their owne liues than confesse the errour of their iealous misconstruction It is one of the mad principles of wickednesse that it is a weaknesse to relent and rather to Die than yeeld Euen ill causes once vndertaken must be vpheld although with bloud whereas the gracious heart finding his owne mistaking doth not onely remit of an vngrounded displeasure but studies to be reuenged of it selfe and to giue satisfaction to the offended The mercenarie Syrians are drawne to venture their liues for a fee twentie thousand of them are hired into the field against Israel Fond Pagans that know not the value of a man their bloud cost them nothing they care not to sell it good cheape How can we thinke those men haue Soules that esteeme a little white earth aboue themselues That neuer inquire into the Iustice of the quarrell but the rate of the pay that can rifle for drammes of siluer in the bowels of their owne flesh and either kill or die for a dayes wages Ioab the wise Generall of Israel soone finds where the stength of the battle lay and so marshals his troupes that the choice of his men shall encounter the vantgard of the Syrians His brother Abishai leades the rest against the children of Ammon with this couenant of mutuall assistance If the Syrians be too strong for me then thou shalt helpe mee but if the children of AMMON bee too strong for thee then will I come and helpe thee It is an happy thing when the Captaines of Gods people ioyne together as brethren and lend their hand to the aide of each other against the common aduersary Concord in defence or assault is the way to victorie as contrarily the diuision of the Leaders is the ouerthrow of the Armie Set aside some particular actions Ioab was a worthy Captaine both for wisdome and valour Who could either exhort or resolue better than hee Bee of good courage and let vs play the men for our people and for the Cities of our God and the Lord doe that which seemeth him good It is not either priuate glory or profit that whets his fortitude but the respect to the cause of God and his people That Souldier can neuer answere it to God that strikes not more as a Iusticer than as an enemie Neither doth he content himselfe with his owne courage but hee animates others The tongue of a Commander fights more than his hand it is enough for priuate men to exercise what life and limmes they haue a good Leader must out of his owne abundance put life and spirits into all others If a Lyon leade sheepe into the field there is hope of victorie Lastly when he hath done his best hee resolues to depend vpon God for the issue not trusting to his sword or his bow but to the prouidence of the Almightie for successe as a man religiously awfull and awfully confident whiles there should be no want in their owne indeauours he knew well that the race was not to the swift nor the battle to the strong therefore hee lookes vp aboue the hils whence commeth his saluation All valour is cowardise to that which is built vpon Religion I maruell not to see Ioab victorious while hee is thus godly The Syrians flee before him like flockes of sheepe the Ammonites follow them The two sonnes of Zeruiah haue nothing to doe but to pursue and execute The throates of the Amonites are cut for cutting the Beards and Coates of the Israelitish messengers Neither doth this reuenge end in the field Rabba the royall Citie of Ammon is strongly beleagured by Ioab The Citie of waters after wel-neere a yeares siege yeeldeth the rest can no longer hold out Now Ioab as one that desireth more to approue himselfe a loyall and carefull subiect than a happy Generall sends to his Master Dauid that he should come personally and encampe against the Citie and take it Lest saith he I take it and it be called after my name Oh noble and imitable fidelitie of a dutifull Seruant that preferres his Lord to himselfe and is so farre from stealing honour from his Masters deserts that he willingly remits of his owne to adde vnto his The Warre was not his hee was only imployed by his Souereigne The same person that was wronged in the Ambassadours reuengeth by his Souldiers The prayse of the act shall like Fountaine Water returne to the Sea whence it Originally came To seeke a mans owne glory is not glory Alas how many are there who being sent to sue for God wooe for themselues Oh God it is a fearefull thing to rob thee of that which is dearest to thee Glory which as thou wilt not giue to any Creature so much lesse wilt thou endure that any Creature should filtch it from thee and giue it to himselfe Haue thou the honour of all our actions who giuest a being to our actions and vs and in both hath most iustly regarded thine owne prayse DAVID with BATHSHEBA and VRIAH WIth what vnwillingnesse with what feare doe I still looke vpon the miscarriage of the man after Gods owne heart O holy Prophet who can promise himselfe alwayes to stand when he sees thee falne and maymed in the fall Who can assure himselfe of an immunitie from the foulest sinnes when hee see thee offending so haynously so bloudily Let prophane eyes behold thee contentedly as a patterne as an excuse of sinning I shall neuer looke at thee but through teares as a wofull spectacle of humane infirmitie Whiles Ioab and all Israel were busie in the Warre against Ammon in the siege of Rabbah Satan findes time to lay siege to the secure heart of Dauid Who euer found Dauid thus tempted thus foyled in the dayes of his buzie Warres Now only doe I see the King of Israel rising from his bed in the euening The time was when he rose vp in the morning to his early deuotions when he brake his nightly rest with publike cares with the businesse of State all that while he was innocent he was holy but now that he wallowes in the bed of idlenesse hee is fit to inuite a tentation The industrious man hath
than the delicate Bed of her whom he thought as honest as he knew faire The Arke saith hee and Israel and Iudah dwell in Tents and my Lord Ioab and the Seruants of my Lord abide in the open Fields shall I then goe into my house to eat and drinke and lye with my Wife by thy life and by the life of thy soule I will not doe this thing Who can but bee astonished at this change to see a Souldier austere and a Prophet wanton And how doth that Souldiers austeritie shame the Prophets wantonnesse Oh zealous and mortified Soule worthy of a more faithfull Wife of a more iust Master how didst thou ouer-looke all base sensuality and hatedst to bee happy alone Warre and Lust had wont to bee reputed friends thy brest is not more full of courage than chastity and is so farre from wandring after forbidden pleasures that it refuseth lawfull There is a time to laugh and a time to mourne a time to embrace and a time to bee farre from embracing euen the best actions are not alwayes seasonable much lesse the indifferent Hee that euer takes libertie to doe what hee may shall offend no lesse than hee that sometimes takes libertie to doe what hee may not If any thing the Arke of GOD is fittest to leade our times according as that is eyther distressed or prospereth should wee frame our mirth or mourning To dwell in seeled Houses whiles the Temple lyes waste is the ground of Gods iust quarrell How shall wee sing a Song of the Lord in a strange Land If I forget thee O Ierusalem let my right hand forget her cunning If I doe not remember thee let my tongue cleaue to the roofe of my mouth yea if I preferre not Hierusalem to my chiefe ioy As euery man is a limme of the Communitie so must hee bee affected with the estate of the vniuersall bodie whether healthfull or languishing It did not more aggrauate Dauids sinne that whiles the Arke and Israel was in hazard and distresse hee could finde time to loose the reines to wanton desires and actions than it magnifies the religious zeale of Vriah that hee abandons comfort till he see the Arke and Israel victorious Common dangers or calamities must like the rapt motion carrie our hearts contrarie to the wayes of our priuate occasions He that cannot bee moued with words shall bee tried with Wine Vriah had equally protested against feasting at home and societie with his wife To the one the authoritie of a King forceth him abroad in hope that the excesse thereof shall force him to the other It is like that holy Captaine intended onely to yeeld so much obedience as might consist with his course of austeritie But Wine is a mocker when it goes plausibly in no man can imagine how it will rage and tyrannize hee that receiues that Traytour within his gates shall too late complaine of surprizall Like vnto that ill spirit it insinuates sweetly but in the end it bytes like a Serpent and hurts like a Cockatrice Euen good Vriah is made drunke the holiest soule may be ouer-taken It is hard gaine-saying where a King beginnes an health to a subiect Where oh where will this wickednesse end Dauid will now procure the sinne of another to hide his owne Vriahs drunkennesse is more Dauids offence than his It is weakly yeelded to of the one which was wilfully intended of the other The one was as the Sinner the other as the Tempter Had not Dauid knowne that Wine was an inducement to Lust hee had spared those superfluous Cups Experience had taught him that the eye debauched with Wine will looke vpon strange women The Drunkard may bee any thing saue good Yet in this the ayme failed Grace is stronger than Wine Whiles that with-holdes in vaine shall the fury of the Grape attempt to carry Vriah to his owne Bed Sober Dauid is now worse than drunken Vriah Had not the King of Israel beene more intoxicate with sinne than Vriah with drinke hee had not in a sober intemperance climbed vp into that Bed which the drunken temperance of Vriah refused If Dauid had bin but himselfe how had he loued how had he honoured this honest and religious zeale in his so faithfull Seruant whom now he cruelly seekes to reward with death That fact which Wine cannot hide the Sword shall Vriah shall beare his owne Mittimus vnto Ioab Put yee Vriah in the fore-front of the strength of the Battle and recule backe frō him that he may be smitten and dye What is becomne of thee O thou good spirit that hadst woont to guide thy chosen Seruant in his former wayes Is not this the man whom we lately saw so heart smitten for but cutting off the lap of the Garment of a Wicked Master that is now thus lauish of the bloud of a gracious and well-deseruing Seruant Could it be likely that so worthy a Captaine could fall alone Could Dauid haue expiated this sinne with his owne bloud it had beene but well spent but to couer his sinne with the innocent bloud of others was a crime aboue astonishment Oh the deepe deceitfulnesse of sinne If the Deuill should haue comne to Dauid in the most louely forme of Bathsheba her selfe and at the first should haue directly and in termes solicited him to murder his best Seruant I doubt not but hee would haue spat scorne in that face on which hee should otherwise haue doted now by many cunning windings Satan rises vp to that tentation and preuailes that shall bee done for a colour of guiltinesse whereof the foule would haue hated to bee immediately guiltie Euen those that finde a iust horror in leaping downe from some high Tower yet may bee perswaded to descend by stayres to the bottome Hee knowes not where he shall stay that hath willingly flipt into a knowne wickednesse How many doth an eminent offender draw with him into euill It could not bee but that diuers of the Attendants both of Dauid and Bathsheba must bee conscious to that adulterie Great mens sinnes are seldome secret And now Ioab must be fetcht in as accessary to the murder How must this example needs harden Ioab against the conscience of Abners bloud Whiles he cannot but thinke Dauid cannot auenge that in mee which he acteth himselfe Honour is pretended to poore Vriah death is meant This man was one of the Worthies of Dauid their courage sought glorie in the difficultest exploits That reputation had neuer beene purchased without attempts of equall danger Had not the Leader and Followers of Vriah beene more treacherours than his Enimies were strong hee had come off with Victory Now hee was not the first or last that perished by his friends Dauid hath forgotten that himselfe was in like sort betrayed in his Masters intention vpon the dowrie of the Philistims-fore-skinnes I feare to aske Who euer noted so foule a plot in Dauids reiected Predecessour Vriah must be the Messenger of his owne death Ioab must be
perhaps doth not let downe this nourishing liquour so freely so easily Euen so small a variety ●●fres●eth a weake Infant Neither will there perhaps want some pal●tes which wil finde a more quick pleasing relish in this fresher sustenāce these I thought good to please with a taste ere they come to sate themselues with a full Meale of this diuine nourishment in emulation of the good Scribe that brings forth both olde and new If it please God to inable my life and opportunities I hope at last to present his Church with the last seruice of the Historie of either Page wherein my Joy and my Crowne shall bee the edification of many Jn the meane time I dedicate this part vnto your Name whom J haue so much cause to obserue and honour The blessing of that God whose Church you haue euer made your chiefe Client bee still vpon your head and that honorable Societie which reioyces in so worthy a Leader To it and your selfe J shall be euer as I haue cause humbly and vnfainedly deuoted IOS HALL Contemplations THE ANGELL AND ZACHARIE WHen things are at the worst then God beginnes a change The state of the Iewish Church was extremly corrupted immediately before the newes of the Gospell yet as bad as it was not onely the Priesthood but the courses of attendance continued euen from Dauids time till Christs It is a desperately depraued condition of a Church where no good orders are left Iudea passed many troubles many alterations yet this orderly combination endured aboue an eleuen hundred yeares A setled good will not easily be defeated but in the change of persons will remayne vnchanged and if it be forced to giue way leaues memorable footsteps behinde it If Dauid fore-saw the perpetuation of this holy Ordinance how much did he reioyce in the knowledge of it who would not bee glad to doe good on condition that it may so long out-liue him The successiue turnes of the Legall ministration held on in a Line neuer interrupted Euen in a forlorne and miserable Church there may bee a personall succession How little were the Iewes better for this when they had lost the Vrim and Thummim sinceritie of Doctrine and Manners This stayed with them euen whiles they and their Sonnes crucified Christ What is more ordinary than wicked Sonnes of holy Parents It is the succession of Truth and Holinesse that makes or institutes a Church what euer become of the persons Neuer times were so barren as not to yeeld some good The greatest dearth affoords some few good Eares to the Gleaners Christ would not haue come into the World but hee would haue some faithfull to entertayne him Hee that had the disposing of all times and men would cast some holy ones into his owne times There had bin no equalitie that all should either ouer-run or follow him and none attend him Zachary and Elizabeth are iust both of Aarons bloud and Iohn Baptist of theirs whence should an holy Seede spring if not of the Loynes of Leui It is not in the power of Parents to traduce Holinesse to their Children It is the blessing of God that feoffes them in the vertues of their Parents as they feoffe them in their sinnes There is no certaintie but there is likelyhood of an holy Generation when the Parents are such Elizabeth was iust as well as Zachary that the fore-runner of a Sauiour might bee holy on both sides If the stocke and the griffe bee not both good there is much danger of the fruit It is an happy match when the Husband and the Wife are one not only in themselues but in God not more in flesh than in the spirit Grace makes no difference of sexes rather the weaker carries away the more honour because it hath had lesse helps It is easie to obserue that the New Testament affordeth more store of good women than the old Elizabeth led the ring of this mercy whose barrennesse ended in a miraculous fruit both of her body and of her time This religious paire made no lesse progresse in vertue than in age and yet their vertue could not make their best age fruitfull Elizabeth was barren A iust soule and a barren wombe may well agree together Amongst the Iewes barrennesse was not a defect only but a reproach yet while this good woman was fruitfull of holy obedience shee was barren of children as Iohn which was miraculously conceiued by man was a fi● fore-runner of him that was conceiued by the Holy Ghost so a barren Matron was meet to make way for a Virgin None but a sonne of Aaron might offer incense to God in the Temple and not euery sonne of Aaron and not any one at all seasons God is a God of order and hates confusion no lesse than irreligion Albeit he hath not so straitned himselfe vnder the Gospell as to tie his seruice to persons or places yet his choice is now no lesse curious because it is more large Hee allowes none but the authorised Hee authoriseth none but the worthy The Incense doth euer smell of the hand that offers it I doubt not but that perfume was sweeter which ascended vp from the hand of a iust Zacharie The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to God There were courses of ministration in the legall seruices God neuer purposed to burthen any of his creatures with deuotion How vaine is the ambition of any soule that would loade it selfe with the vniuersall charge of all men How thanklesse is their labour that doe wilfully ouer-spend themselues in their ordinarie vocations As Zacharie had a course in Gods house so hee carefully obserued it The fauour of these respites doubled his diligence The more high and sacred our calling is the more dangerous is our neglect It is our honour that wee may be allowed to wait vpon the God of heauen in these immediate seruices Woe be to vs if we slacken those duties wherein God honours vs more than we can honour him Many sonnes of Aaron yea of the same familie serued at once in the Temple according to the varietie of imployments To auoid all difference they agreed by lot to assigne themselues to the seuerall offices of each day The lot of this day called Zacharie to offer Incense in the outer Temple I doe not finde any prescription they had from God of this particular manner of designement Matters of good order in holy affaires may be ruled by the wise institution of men according to reason and expediencie It fell out well that Zacharie was chosen by lot to this ministration that Gods immediate hand might be seene in all the passages that concerned his great Prophet that as the person so the occasion might be of Gods owne choosing In lots and their seeming casuall disposition God can giue a reason though wee can giue none Morning and Euening twise a day their Law called them to offer Incense to God that both parts of the day might be consecrate to the maker of
time The outer Temple was the figure of the whole Church vpon earth like as the holy of holiest represented heauen Nothing can better resemble our faithfull prayers than sweet perfume These God lookes that wee should all his Church ouer send vp vnto him Morning and Euening The eleuations of our hearts should be perpetuall but if twise in the day we doe not present God with our solemne inuocations we make the Gospell lesse officious than the Law That the resemblance of prayers and incense might be apparent whiles the Priest sends vp his incense within the Temple the people must send vp their prayers without Their breath and that incense though remote in the first rising met ere they went vp to heauen The people might no more goe into the Holy place to offer vp the incense of prayers vnto God than Zacharie might goe into the Holy of holies Whiles the partition wall stood betwixt Iewes and Gentiles there were also partitions betwixt the Iewes and themselues Now euery man is a Priest vnto God Euery man since the veile was rent prayes within the Temple What are w● the b●●ter for our greater freedome of accesse to God vnder the Gospell if wee doe not make vse of our priuiledge Whiles they were praying to God hee sees an Angell of God as Gede●●s Angell went vp in the smoke of the sacrifice so did Zacharies Angell as it were come downe in the fragrant smoke of his incense It was euer great newes to see an Angell of God but now more because God had long with-drawne from them all the meane● of his supernaturall reuelations As this wicked people were strangers to their God in their conuersation so was God growne a stranger to them in his apparitions yet now that the season of the Gospell approached he visited them with his Angels before he visited them by his Sonne He sends his Angell to men in the forme of man before hee sends his Sonne to take humane forme The presence of Angels is no noueltie but their apparition they are alwayes with vs but rarely seene that wee may awfully respect their messages when they are seene In the meane time our faith may see them though our senses doe not their assumed shapes doe not make them more present but visible There is an order in that heauenly Hierarchie though wee know it not This Angell that appeared to Zacharie was not with him in the ordinarie course of his attendances but was purposely sent from God with this message Why was an Angell sent and why this Angell It had beene easie for him to haue raised vp the propheticall spirit of some Simeon to this prediction the same Holy Ghost which reuealed to that iust man that he should not see death ere hee had seene the Messias might haue as easily reuealed vnto him the birth of the fore-runner of Christ and by him to Zacharie But God would haue this voice which should goe before his Sonne come with a noyse Hee would haue it appeare to the world that the harbinger of the Messiah should bee conceiued by the maruellous power of that God whose comming hee proclaimed It was fit the first Herald of the Gospell begin in wonder The same Angell that came to the blessed Virgin with the newes of Christs conception came to Zacharie with the newes of Iohns for the honour of him that was the greatest of them which were borne of women and for his better resemblance to him which was the seede of the woman Both had the Gospell for their errand one as the messenger of it the other as the Author Both are foretold by the same mouth When could it bee more fit for the Angell to appeare vnto Zacharie than when prayers and incense were offered by him Where could hee more fitly appeare than in the Temple In what part of the Temple more fitly than at the Altar of Incense and where abouts rather than on the right side of the Altar Those glorious spirits as they are alwayes with vs so most in our deuotions and as in all places so most of all in Gods house They reioyce to be with vs whiles we are with God as contrarily they turne their faces from vs when we goe about our sinnes Hee that had wont to liue and serue in the presence of the master was now astonished at the presence of the seruant so much difference there is betwixt our faith and our senses that the apprehension of the presence of the God of spirits by faith goes downe sweetely with vs whereas the sensible apprehension of an Angell dismayes vs Holy Zacharie that had wont to liue by faith thought hee should die when his sense began to bee set on worke It was the weaknesse of him that serued at the Altar without horror to bee daunted with the face of his fellow seruant In vaine doe wee looke for such Ministers of God as are without infirmities when iust Zacharie was troubled in his deuotions with that wherewith hee should haue beene comforted It was partly the suddennesse and partly the glory of the apparition that affrighted him The good Angell was both apprehensiue and compassionate of Zacharies weaknesse and presently incourages him with a cheerefull excitation Feare not ZACHARIAS The blessed spirits though they doe not often vocally expresse it doe pittie our humane frailties and secretly suggest comfort vnto vs when we perceiue it not Good and euill Angels as they are contrarie in estate so also in disposition The good desire to take away feare the euill to bring it It is a fruit of that deadly enmitie which is betwixt Sathan and vs that hee would if hee might kill vs with terrour whereas the good spirits affecting our reliefe and happinesse take no pleasure in terrifying vs but labour altogether for our tranquilitie and cheerefulnesse There was not more feare in the face than comfort in the speech Thy prayer is heard No Angell could haue told him better newes Our desires are vttered in our prayers What can we wish but to haue what we would Many good suites had Zachary made and amongst the rest for a sonne Doubtlesse it was now some space of yeares since he made that request For he was now stricken in age and had ceased to hope yet had God laid it vp all the while and when hee thinkes not of it brings it forth to effect Thus doth the mercie of our God deale with his patient and faithfull suppliants In the ●●●uout of their exspectation he many times holds them off and when they lea●● thinke of it and haue forgotten their owne suite hee graciously condescends Delay of effect may not discourage our faith It may bee God hath long granted ere wee shall know of his grant Many a father repents him of his fruitfulnesse and hath such sonnes as he wishes vnborne But to haue so gracious and happie a sonne as the Angell foretold could not bee lesse comfort than honour to the age of Zacharie The proofe of children makes
that Story whereon the faith and saluation of all the World dependeth Wee cannot so much as doubt of this truth and bee saued no not the number of the moneth not the name of the Angell is concealed Euery particle imports not more certainty than excellence The time is the sixth moneth after Iohns Conception the prime of the Spring Christ was conceiued in the Spring borne in the Solstice Hee in whom the World receiued a new life receiues life in the same season wherein the World receiued his first life from him and hee which stretches out the dayes of his Church and lengthens them to Eternitie appeares after all the short and dimme light of the Law and inlightens the World with his glory The Messenger is an Angell A man was too meane to carry the newes of the Conception of God Neuer any businesse was conceiued in Heauen that did so much concerne the earth as the Conception of the God of Heauen in Wombe of earth No lesse than an Arch-Angell was worthy to beare this tydings and neuer any Angell receiued a greater honour than of this Embassage It was fit our reparation should answer our fall an euill Angell was the first motioner of the one to Eue a Virgin then espoused to Adam in the Garden of Eden A good Angel is the first reporter of the other to Mary a Virgin espoused to Ioseph in that place which as the Garden of Galile had a name from flourishing No good Angel could be the Author of our restauration as that euill Angell was of our ruine But that which those glorious spirits could not doe themselues they are glad to report as done by the God of Spirits Good newes reioyces the bearer With what ioy did this holy Angell bring the newes of that Sauiour in whom wee are redeemed to life himselfe established in life and glory The first Preacher of the Gospell was an Angell that office must needs be glorious that deriues it selfe from such a Predecessor God appointed his Angell to be the first Preacher and hath since called his Preachers Angels The message is well suited An Angell comes to a Virgin Gabriel to Mary He that was by signification the strength of God to her that was by signification exalted by God to the conceiuing of him that was the God of strength To a Maid but espoused a Maid for the honour of Virginitie espoused for the honour of Marriage The marriage was in a sort made not consummate through the instinct of him that meant to make her not an example but a miracle of women In this whole worke God would haue nothing ordinary It was fit that she should be a marryed Virgin which should bee a Virgin-mother Hee that meant to take mans nature without mans corruption would bee the Sonne of man without mans seed would bee the seed of the woman without man and amongst all women of a pure Virgin but amongst Virgins of one espoused that there might be at once a Witnesse and a Guardian of her fruitfull Virginity If the same God had not bin the author of Virginity and Marriage he had neuer countenanced Virginity by Marriage Whither doth this glorious Angell come to finde the Mother of him that was God but to obscure Galile A part which euen the Iewes themselues despised as forsaken of their priuiledges Out of Galile ariseth no Prophet Behold an Angell comes to that Galile out of which no Prophet comes and the God of Prophets and Angels descends to bee conceiued in that Galile out of which no Prophet ariseth He that filleth all places makes no difference of places It is the person which giues honour and priuiledge to the place not the place to the person as the presence of God makes the Heauen the Heauen doth not make the honour glorious No blind corner of Nazareth can hide the blessed Virgin from the Angell The fauours of God will finde out his children wheresoeuer they are with-drawne It is the fashion of God to seeke out the most despised on whom to bestow his honours we cannot runne away as from the iudgements so not from the mercies of our God The cottages of Galile are preferred by God to the famous Palaces of Ierusalem he cares not how homely he conuerse with his owne Why should we be transported with the outward glory of places whiles our God regards it not We are not of the Angels diet if we had not rather be with the blessed Virgin at Nazareth than with the proud Dames in the Court of Ierusalem It is a great vanitie to respect any thing aboue goodnesse and to dis-esteeme goodnesse for any want The Angell salutes the Virgin he prayes not to her Hee salutes her as a Saint he prayes not to her as a Goddesse For vs to salute her as he did were grosse presumption For neither are we as he was neither is she as she was If he that was a spirit saluted her that was flesh and bloud here on earth it is not for vs that are flesh and bloud to salute her which is a glorious spir●t in Heauen For vs to pray to her in the Angels salutation were to abuse the Virgin the Angell the Salutation But how gladly doe we second the Angell in the praise of her which was more ours than his How iustly doe we blesse her whom the Angell pronounceth blessed How worthily is she honoured of men whom the Angell proclaimeth beloued of God O blessed Mary hee cannot blesse thee he cannot honour thee too much that deifies thee not That which the Angell said of thee thou hast prophesied of thy selfe we beleeue the Angell and thee All Generations shall call thee blessed by the fruit of whose wombe all Generations are blessed If Zachary were amazed with the sight of this Angell much more the Virgin That very Sex hath more disaduantage of feare if it had bin but a man that had come to her in that secrecie and suddennesse she could not but haue bin troubled how much more when the shining glory of the person doubled the astonishment The troubles of holy mindes end euer in comfort Ioy was the errand of the Angell and not terrour Feare as all passions disquiets the heart and makes it for the time vnfit to receiue the messages of God Soone hath the Angell cleared these rroublesome mists of passions and sent out the beames of heauenly consolation in the remotest corner of her soule by the glad newes of her Sauiour How can ioy but enter into her heart out of whose wombe shall come saluation What roome can feare finde in that brest that is assured of fauour Feare not MARY for thou hast found fauour with God Let those feare who know they are in displeasure or know not they are gracious Thine happy estate cals for confidence and that confidence for ioy What should what can they feare who are fauoured of him at whom the Deuils tremble Not the presence of the good Angels but the temptations of the euill
to other ends than their owne This Edict went not so much out from Augustus as from the Court of Heauen What did Caesar know Ioseph and Mary His charge was vniuersall to a world of subiects through all the Roman Empire God intended this Cension onely for the blessed Virgin and her Sonne that Christ might bee borne where he should Caesar meant to fill his Coffers God meant to fulfill his Prophesies and so to fulfill them that those whom it concerned might not feele the accomplishment If God had directly commanded the Virgin to goe vp to Bethleem shee had seene the intention and exspected the issue but that wise Moderatour of all things that workes his will in vs loues so to doe it as may be least with our foresight and acquaintance and would haue vs fall vnder his Decrees vnawares that we may so much the more adore the depths of his Prouidence Euery Creature walkes blind-fold onely he that dwels in light sees whither they goe DOVBTLES blessed Mary meant to haue beene deliuered of her diuine burden at home and little thought of changing the place of Conception for another of her Birth That house was honored by the Angell yea by the ouer-shaddowing of the Holy Ghost none could equally satisfie her hopes or desires It was fit that hee which made choice of the Wombe wherein his Sonne should bee conceiued should make choice of the place where his Sonne should bee borne As the worke is all his so will he alone contriue all the circumstances to his owne ends O the infinite Wisdome of God in casting all his Designes There needes no other proofe of Christ than Caesar and Bethleem and of Caesars than Augustus his Gouernment his Edict pleades the truth of the Messias His Gouernment now was the deepe peace of all the World vnder that quiet Scepter which made way for him who was the Prince of Peace If Wars be a signe of the time of his second comming Peace was a signe of his first His Edict now was the Scepter departed from Iuda It was the time for Shilo to come No power was left in the Iewes but to obey Augustus is the Emperor of the World vnder him Herod is the King of Iudea Cyrenius is President of Syria Iurie hath nothing of her owne For Herod if he were a King yet hee was no Iew and if hee had bin a Iew yet he was no otherwise a King than tributary and titular The Edict came out from Augustus was executed by Cyrenius Herod is no actor in this seruice Gaine and glory are the ends of this taxation each man profest himselfe a subiect and payd for the priuiledge of his seruitude Now their very heads were not their owne but must bee payed for to the head of a forreine State They which before stood vpon the termes of their immunitie stoop at the last The proud suggestions of Iudas the Galilean might shed their bloud and swell their stomacks but could not case their yoke neither was it the meaning of God that holinesse if they had bin as they pretended should shelter them from subiection A Tribute is imposed vpon Gods free people This act of bondage brings them libertie Now when they seemed most neglected of God they are blessed with a Redeemer when they are most pressed with forreine Souereignty God sends them a King of their owne to whom Caesar himselfe must bee a subiect The goodnes of our God picks out the most needfull times of our reliefe and comfort Our extremities giue him the most glory Whither must Ioseph Mary come to be taxed but vnto Bethleē Dauids Citie The very place proues their descent Hee that succeeded Dauid in his Throne must succeed him in the place of his Birth so cleerly was Bethleem designed to this honour by the Prophets that euen the Priests and the Scribes could point Herod vnto it and assured him the King of the Iewes could bee no where else borne Bethleem iustly the house of bread the bread that came downe from Heauen is there giuen to the World whence should wee haue the bread of life but from the house of bread O holy Dauid was this the Well of Bethleem whereof thou didst so thirst to drinke of old when thou saydst O that one would giue me drinke of the water of the Well of Bethleem Surely that other water when it was brought thee by thy Worthies thou powredst it on the ground and wouldst not drinke of it This was that liuing Water for which thy soule longed whereof thou saidst else-where As the Hart brayeth after the water-brooks so longeth my soule after thee O God My soule thirsteth for God for the liuing God It was no lesse than foure daies iourney from Nazareth to Bethleem How iust an excuse might the blessed Virgin haue pleaded for her absence What woman did euer vndertake such a iournie so neerelier deliuery and doubtlesse Ioseph which was now taught of God to loue and honour her was loth to draw forth a deare Wife in so vnweildy a case into so manifest hazard But the charge was peremptory the obedience exemplary The desire of an inoffensiue obseruance euen of Heathenish authority disgests all difficulties Wee may not take easie occasions to withdraw our obedience to supreme commands yea how didst thou O Sauiour by whom Augustus reigned in the wombe of thy Mother yeeld this homage to Augustus The first lesson that euer thy example taught vs was obedience After many steps are Ioseph and Mary come to Bethleem The plight wherein she was would not allow any speed and the forced leisure of the iournie causeth disappointment the end was worse than the way there was no rest in the way there was no roome in the Inne It could not bee but that there were many of the kindred of Ioseph and Mary at that time in Bethleem For both there were their Ancestours borne if not themselues and thither came vp all the Cousins of their bloud yet there and then doth the holy Virgin want roome to lay either her head or her burthen If the house of Dauid had not lost all mercy good nature a Daughter of Dauid could not so neere the time of her trauell haue bin destitute of lodging in the City of Dauid Little did the Bethleemites thinke what a guest they refused Else they would gladly haue opened their doores to him which was able to open the gates of heauen to them Now their in hospitality is punishment enough to it selfe They haue lost the honour and happinesse of being host to their God Euen still O blessed Sauiour thou standest at our doores and knockest Euery motion of thy good Spirit tells vs thou art there Now thou commest in thy owne name and there thou standest whiles thy head is full of dew and thy lockes wet with the drops of the night If we suffer carnall desires and worldly thoughts to take vp the lodging of our heart and reuell within vs whiles thou waytest vpon our
Fruitlesse is the wonder that endeth not in faith No light is sufficient where the eyes are held through vnbeliefe or preiudice The Doctors were not more amazed to heare so profound a childhood than the parents of Christ were to see him among the Doctors the ioy of finding him did striue with the astonishment of finding him thus And now not Ioseph he knew how little right he had to that diuine Sonne but Mary breakes forth into a louing expostulation Sonne why hast thou dealt so with vs that she might not seeme to take vpon her as an imperious Mother it is like she reserued this question till she had him alone wherein she meant rather to expresse griefe than correption Onely herein the blessed Virgin offended that her inconsideration did not suppose as it was that some higher respects than could be due to flesh and bloud called away the Sonne of God from her that was the daughter of man She that was but else mother of humanity should not haue thought that the businesse of God must for her sake be neglected We are all partiall to our selues naturally and prone to the regard of our owne rights questionlesse this gracious Saint would not for all the world haue willingly preferd her owne attendance to that of her God through heedlesnesses she doth so her sonne and Sauiour is her monitor out of his diuine loue reforming her naturall How is it that yee sought mee Knew yee not that I must goe about my Fathers businesse Immediately before the blessed Virgin had said Thy father and I sought thee with heauy hearts Wherein both according to the supposition of the world she called Ioseph the Father of Christ and according to the fashion of a dutifull wife she names her Ioseph before her selfe She well knew that Ioseph had nothing but a name in this businesse she knew how God had dignified her beyond him yet she sayes Thy father and I sought thee The Sonne of God stands not vpon contradiction to his mother but leading her thoughts from his supposed father to his true from earth to heauen he answers Knew yee not that I must goe about my Fathers businesses It was honor enough to her that he had vouchsafed to take flesh of her It was his eternall honour that hee was God of God the euerlasting Sonne of the heauenly Father good reason therefore was it that the respects to flesh should giue place to the God of Spirits How well contented was holy Mary with so iust an answer how doth she now againe in her heart renew her answer to the Angels Behold the seruant of the Lord be it according to thy word Wee are all the Sonnes of God in another kinde Nature and the world thinkes wee should attend them we are not worthy to say we haue a Father in heauen if we cannot steale away from these earthly distractions and imploy our-selues in the seruices of our God Christs Baptisme IOhn did euery way foren●e Christ not so much in the time of his Birth as in his office neither was there more vnlikenesse in their disposition and carriage that similitude in their function both did preach and baptize only Iohn baptized by himself our Sauiour by his Disciples our Sauiour wrought miracles by himselfe by his Disciples Iohn wrought none by either Wherein Christ meant to shew himselfe a Lord and Iohn a seruant and Iohn meant to approue himself a true seruant to him whose harbinger he was hee that leapt in the wombe of his mother when his Sauiour then newly conceiued came in presence bestird himselfe when he was brought forth into the light of the Church to the honor and seruice of his Sauiour hee did the same before Christ which Christ charged his Disciples to doe after him Preach and Baptize The Gospell ran alwayes in one tenor and was neuer but like it selfe So it became the Word of him in whom there is no shadow by turning and whose Word it is I am Iehoua I change not It was fit that he which had the Prophets the starre the Angels to foretell his comming into the world should haue his Vsher to goe before him when he would notifie himselfe to the world Iohn was the Voyce of a Cryer Christ was the Word of his Father it was fit this Voyce should make a noyse to the world ere the Word of the Father should speake to it Iohns note was still Repentance The Axe to the root the Fan to the floore the Chaffe to the fire as his raiment was rough so was his tongue and if his foode were wilde Hony his speech was stinging Locusts Thus must the way be made for Christ in euery heart Plausibility is no fit preface to regeneration if the heart of man had continued vpright God might haue beene intertained without contradiction but now violence must be offered to our corruption ere we can haue roome for grace if the great Way-maker doe not cast downe hills and raise vp valleys in the bosomes of men there is no passage for Christ neuer will Christ come into that soule where the Herald of repentance hath not beene before him That Sauiour of ou●s who from eternity lay hid in the Counsaile of God who in the fulnes of time so came that hee lay hid in the wombe of his mother for the space of forty weekes after he was come thought fit to lye hid in Nazareth for the space of thirty yeeres now at last begins to shew himselfe to the world and comes from Galile to Iordan He that was God alwayes and mought haue bin perfect man in an instant would by degrees rise to the perfection both of his Manhood and execution of his mediator-ship to teach vs the necessity of leasure in spirituall proceedings that many Suns and successions of seasons and meanes must be stayed for ere we can attaine our maturity and that when we are ripe for the imployments of God we should no lesse willingly leaue our obscurity than we took the benefit of it for our preparation He that was formerly circumcised would now bee baptized what is Baptisme but an Euangelicall circumcision What was circumcision but a legall baptisme One both supplyed and succeeded the other yet the Author of both will vndergoe both He would be circumcised to sanctifie his Church that was and baptized to sanctifie his Church that should be that so in both Testaments he might open a way into heauen There was in him neither filthinesse nor foreskin of corruption that should need either knife or water He came not to be a Sauiour for himselfe but for vs we are all vncleannesse and vncircumcision he would therefore haue that done to his most pure body which should be of force to cleare our impure soules thus making himselfe sinne for vs that we might be made the righteousnes of God in him His baptisme giues vertue to ours His last action or rather passion was his baptizing with bloud his first was his baptization with water
now all hearts are cold all faces pale and euery man hath but life enough to runne away How suddenly is this brauing troupe dispersed Adonijah their new Prince flies to the hornes of the Altar as distrusting all hopes of life saue the Sanctity of the place and the mercy of his riuall So doth the wise and iust God befoole proud and insolent sinners in those secret plots wherein they hope to vndermine the true sonne of Dauid the Prince of Peace he suffers them to lay their heads together and to feast themselues in a iocund securitie and promise of successe at last when they are at the height of their ioyes and hopes he confounds all their deuices and layes them open to the scorne of the world and to the anguish of their owne guilty hearts DAVIDS end and SALOMONS beginning IT well became Salomon to begin his Raigne in peace Adonijah receiues pardon vpon his good behauiour and findes the Throne of Salomon as safe as the Altar Dauid liues to see a wise sonne warme in his seat and now hee that had yeelded to succession yeelds to nature Many good counsels had Dauid giuen his Heire now hee summes them vp in his end Dying words are wont to bee weightiest The Soule when it is entring into glory breathes nothing but diuine I goe the way of all the earth How well is that Princely heart content to subscribe to the conditions of humane mortality as one that knew Soueraigntie doth not reach to the affaires of nature Though a King he neither expects nor desires an immunity from dissolution making not account to goe in any other then the common track to the vniuersall home of mankind the house of age Whither should earth but to earth and why should we grugde to doe that which all doe Be thou strong therefore and shew thy selfe a man Euen when his spirit was going out he puts spirit into his Sonne Age puts life into youth and the dying animates the vigorous He had well found that strength was requisit to gouernment that he had need to be no lesse then a man that should rule ouer men If greatnesse should neuer receiue any opposition yet those worlds powers A weake man may obey none but the strong can gouerne Gracelesse courage were but the whetstone of tyranny Take heed therefore to the charge of the Lord thy God to walke in his wayes and to keepe his Statutes The best legacy that Dauid bequeathes to his heire is the care of piety himselfe had found the sweetnesse of a good conscience and now he commends it to his successor If there be any thing that in our desires of the prosperous condition of our children takes place of goodnesse our hearts are not vpright Here was the father a King charging the King his sonne to keepe the Statutes of the King of Kings as one that knew greatnesse could neither exempt from obedience nor priuiledge sinne as one that knew the least deuiation in the greatest and highest Orbe is both most sensible and most dangerous Neither would he haue his sonne to looke for any prosperity saue onely from well-doing That happinesse is built vpon sands or Ice which is raised vpon any foundation besides vertue If Salomon were wise Dauid was good and if old Salomon had well remembred the counsell of old Dauid he had not so foulely mis-caried After the precepts of pietie follow those of iustice distributing in a due recompence as reuenge to Ioab and Shimei so fauour to the house of Barzillai The bloodinesse of Ioab had lien long vpon Dauids heart the hideous noyse of those treacherous murders as it had pierced heauen so it still filled the eares of Dauid He could abhorre that villanie though he could not reuenge it What he cannnot pay hee will owe and approue himselfe at last a faithfull debtor Now hee will defray it by the hand of Salomon The slaughter was of Abner and Amasa Dauid appropriates it Thou knowest what Ioab did to me The Soueraigne is smitten in the Subiect Neither is it other then iust that the arraignment of meane malefactors runnes in the stile of wrong to the Kings Crowne and dignity How much more 〈◊〉 thou O Sonne of Dauid take to thy selfe those insolencies which are done to thy poorest subiects seruants sonnes members here vpon earth No Saul can touch a Christian here below but thou feelest it in heauen and complainest But what shall we thinke of this Dauid was a man of Warre Salomon a King of Peace yet Dauid referres this reuenge to Salomon How iust it was that he who shed the blood of warre in peace and put the blood of war vpon his girdle that was about his loynes should haue his blood shed in peace by a Prince of peace Peace is fittest to rectifie the out-rages of Warre Or whether is not this done in type of that diuine administration wherein thou O father of heauen hast committed all iudgement vnto thine eternall Sonne Thou who couldst immediately either plague or absolue sinners wilt doe neither but by the hand of a Mediator Salomon learned betimes what his ripenesse taught afterwards Take away the wicked from the King and his Throne shall be established in righteousnesse Cruell Ioab and malicious Shimei must be therfore vpon the first opportunity remoued The one lay open to present iustice for abetting the conspiracy of Adonijah neither needes the helpe of time for a new aduantage The other went vnder the protection of an oath from Dauid and therefore must be fetcht in vpon a new challenge The hoare head of both must bee brought to the graue with blood else Dauids head could not bee brought to his graue in peace Due punishment of malefactors is the debt of authority If that holy King haue runne into arerages yet as one that hates and feares to breake the banke he giues order to his pay-master It shall bee defraid if not by him yet for him Generous natures cannot be vnthankfull Barzillai had shewed Dauid some kindnesse in his extremity and now the good man will haue posterity to inherite the thankes How much more bountifull is the Father of mercies in the remuneration of our poore vnworthy seruices Euen successions of generations shall fare the better for one good parent The dying words and thoughts of the man after Gods owne heart did not confine themselues to the straites of these particular charges but inlarged themselues to the care of Gods publike seruice As good men are best at last Dauid did neuer so busily and carefully marshall the affaires of God as when he was fixed to the bed of his age and death Then did he lode his sonne Salomon with the charge of building the house of God then did hee lay before the eyes of his sonne the modell and patterne of that whole sacred worke whereof if Salomon beare the name yet Dauid no lesse merits it He now giues the platforme of the Courts and buildings Hee giues the gold and siluer for
I see foure Temples in this one It is but one in matter as the God that dwels in it is but one three yet more in resemblance according to the diuision of them in whom it pleases God to inhabite For where euer God dwels there is his Temple Oh God thou vouchsafest to dwell in the beleeuing heart as we thy silly creatures haue our being in thee so thou the Creator of heauen earth hast thy dwelling in vs. The heauen of heauens is not able to containe thee and yet thou disdainest not to dwell in the strait lodgings of our renewed soule So then because Gods children are many and those many diuided in respect of themselues though vnited in their head therefore this Temple which is but one in collection as God is one is manifold in the distribution as the Saints are many each man bearing about him a little shrine of this infinite Maiestie And for that the most generall diuision of the Saints is in their place and estate some strugling and toyling in this earthly warfare others triumphing in heauenly glory therefore hath God two other more vniuersall Temples One the Church of his Saints on earth the other the highest heauen of his Saints glorified In all these O God thou dwellest for euer and this materiall house of thine is a cleare representation of these three spirituall Else what were a temple made with hands vnto the God of spirits And though one of these was a true type of all yet how are they all exceeded each by other This of stone though most rich and costly yet what is it to the liuing Temple of the holy Ghost which is our body What is the Temple of this body of ours to the Temple of Christs body which is his Church And what is the Temple of Gods Church on earth to that which triumpheth gloriously in heauen How easily doe wee see all these in this one visible Temple which as it had three distinctions of roomes the Porch the Holy-place the Holy of Holies so is each of them answered spiritually In the Porch wee finde the regenerate soule entring into the blessed society of the Church In the holy place the Communion of the true visible Church on earth selected from the world In the Holy of Holies whereinto the high Priest entred once a yeare the glorious heauen into which our true high-Priest Christ Iesus entred once for all to make an atonement betwixt God and man In all these what a meer correspondence there is both in proportion matter situation In proportion The same rule that skilfull caruers obserue in the cutting out of the perfect statue of a man that the height bee thrice the breadth and the breadth one third of the height was likewise onely obserued in the fabricke of the Temple whose length was double to the height and treble to the breadth as being sixty cubits long thirty high and twenty broad How exquisite a symmetry hast thou ordained O God betwixt the faithfull heart and thy Church on earth with that in heauen how accurate in each of these in all their powers and parts compared with other So hath God ordered the beleeuing soule that it hath neither too much shortnesse of grace nor too much height of conceit nor too much breadth of passion So hath he ordered his visible Church that there is a necessarie inequalitie without any disproportion an height of gouernment a length of extent a breadth of iurisdiction duely answerable to each other So hath he ordered his triumphant Church aboue that it hath a length of eternitie answered with an height of perfection and a breadth of incomprehensible glory In matter All was here of the best The wood was precious sweet lasting The stone beautifull costly insensible of age The gold pure and glittering So are the graces of Gods children excellent in their nature deare in their acceptation eternall in their vse So are the ordinances of God in his Church holy comfortable irrefragable So is the perfection of his glorified Saints incomparable vnconceiuable In situation the outer parts were here more common the inner more holy and peculiarly reserued I finde one Court of the Temple open to the vncleane to the vncircumcised Within that another open onely to the Israelites and of them to the cleane within that yet another proper onely to the Priests and Leuites where was the Brazen Altar for sacrifice and the Brazen sea for washings The eyes of the Laitie might follow their oblations in hither their feet might not Yet more in the couered roomes of the Temple there is whither the Priests onely may enter not the Leuites there is whither the high Priest onely may enter not his brethren It is thus in euery renewed man the indiuiduall temple of God the outward parts are allowed common to God and the world the inwardest and secretest which is the heart is reserued onely for the God that made it It is thus in the Church visible the false and foule-hearted hypocrite hath accesse to the holy ordinances of God and treads in his Courts onely the true Christian hath intire and priuate conuersation with the holy One of Israel He only is admitted into the Holy of Holies and enters within the glorious vaile of heauen If from the wals we looke vnto the furniture What is the Altar whereon our sacrifices of prayer and praises are offered to the Almightie but a contrite heart What the golden Candlestickes but the illumined vnderstanding wherein the light of the knowledge of God and his diuine will shineth for euer What the Tables of Shew-bread but the sanctified memory which keepeth the bread of life continually Yea if we shall presume so farre as to enter into the very closet of Gods Oracle Euen there O God doe wee finde our vnworthy hearts so honoured by thee that they are made thy very Arke wherein thy Royall law and the pot of thine heauenly Manna is kept for euer and from whose propitiatorie shaded with the wings of thy glorious Angels thou giuest thy gracious Testimonies of thy good spirit witnessing with ours that we are the children of thee the liuing God Behold if Salomon built a Temple vnto thee thou hast built a Temple vnto thy selfe in vs We are not onely through thy grace liuing stones in thy Temple but liuing Temples in thy Sion Oh doe thou euer dwell in this thine house and in this thy house let vs euer serue thee Wherefore else hast thou a Temple but for thy presence with vs and for our worshipping of thee The time was when as thy people so thy selfe didst lodge in flitting Tents euer shifting euer mouing thence thou thoughtest best to soiourne both in Shilo and the roofe of Obed-Edom After that thou condescendedst to settle thine abode with men and wouldest dwell in an house of thine owne at thy Ierusalem So didst thou in the beginning lodge with our first Parents in a Tent Soiourne with Israel vnder the law and now makest
should not import enough since others haue beene honoured by this name in Type he addes for full distinction The Sonne of the most High God The good Syrophenecian and blind Bartemeus could say The Sonne of Dauid It was well to acknowledge the true descent of his pedigree according to the flesh but this infernall spirit lookes aloft and fetcheth his line out of the highest heauens The Sonne of the most high God The famous confession of the prime Apostle which honoured him with a new name to immortalitie was no other then Thou art the Christ the Sonne of the liuing God and what other doe I heare from the lips of a fiend None more diuine words could fall from the highest Saint Nothing hinders but that the veriest miscreant on earth yea the foulest Deuill in Hell may speake holily It is no passing of iudgement vpon loose sentences So Peter should haue been cast for a Satan in denying forswearing cursing and the Deuill should haue beene set vp for a Saint in confessing Iesus the Sonne of the most high God Fond hypocrite that pleasest thy selfe in talking well heare this Deuil and when thou canst speake better then he looke to fare better but in the meane time know that a smooth tongue and a foule heart caries away double iudgements Let curious heads dispute whether the Deuill knew Christ to bee God In this I dare beleeue himselfe though in nothing else he knew what hee beleeued what hee beleeued what he confessed Iesus the Sonne of the most high God To the confusion of those semi-Christians that haue either held doubtfully or ignorantly mis-knowne or blasphemously denied what the very Deuils haue professed How little can a bare speculation auaile vs in these cases of Diuinitie So farre this Deuill hath attained to no ease no comfort Knowledge alone doth but puffe vp it is our loue that edifies If there be not a sense of our sure interest in this Iesus a power to apply his merits and obedience we are no w●●t the safer no whit the better onely we are so much the wiser to vnderstand who shall condemne vs. The piece of the clause was spoken like a Saint Iesus the Sonne of the most high God the other piece like a Deuill What haue I to doe with thee If the disclamation were vniuersall the latter words would impugne the former for whiles hee confesses Iesus to be the Sonne of the most high God hee withall confesses his owne ineuitable subiection Wherefore would he beseech if he were not obnoxious He cannot hee dare not say What hast thou to doe with me but What haue I to doe with thee Others indeed I haue vexed thee I feare in respect then of any violence of any personall prouocation What haue I to doe with thee And doest thou aske O thou euill spirit what thou hast to doe with Christ whiles thou vexest a seruant of Christ Hast thou thy name from knowledge and yet so mistakest him whom thou confessest as if nothing could be done to him but what immediately concernes his owne person Heare that great and iust Iudge sentencing vpon his dreadfull Tribunall In as much as thou didst it vnto one of these little ones thou didst it vnto me It is an idle misprision to seuer the sense of an iniury done to any of the members from the head Hee that had humilitie enough to kneele to the Son of God hath boldnesse enough to expostulate Art thou come to torment vs before our time Whether it were that Satan who vseth to enioy the torment of sinners whose musick it is to heare our shrieks and gnashings held it no small piece of his torment to bee restrained in the exercise of his tyrannie Or whether the very presence of Christ were his racke For the guilty spirit proiecteth terrible things and cannot behold the Iudge or the executioner without a renouation of horror Or whether that as himselfe professeth he were now in a fearfull expectation of being commanded downe into the deepe for a further degree of actuall torment which he thus deprecates There are tortures appointed to the very spirituall natures of euill Angels Men that are led by sense haue easily granted the body subiect to torment who yet haue not so readily conceiued this incident to a spirituall substance The holy Ghost hath not thought it fit to acquaint vs with the particular manner of these inuisible acts rather willing that wee should herein feare then enquire but as all matters of faith though they cannot be proued by reason for that they are in an higher sphere yet afford an answer able to stop the mouth of al reason that dares bark against them since truth cannot be opposite to it selfe so this of the sufferings of spirits There is therefore both an intentionall torment incident to spirits and a reall For as in blessednes the good spirits find themselues ioined vnto the chiefe good and herevpon feele a perfect loue of God and vnspeakable ioy in him and rest in themselues so contrarily the euill spirits perceiue themselues eternally excluded from the presence of God and see themselues setled in a wofull darknesse and from the sense of this separation arises an horrour not to be expressed not to be conceiued How many men haue wee knowne to torment themselues with their owne thoughts There needs no other gibbet then that which their troubled spirit hath erected in their owne heart and if some paines begin at the body and from thence afflict the soule in a copartnership of griefe yet others arise immediately from the soule and draw the body into a participation of misery Why may we not therefore conceiue meere and separate spirits capable of such an inward excruciation Besides which I heare the Iudge of men and Angels say Goe yee cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the Deuill and his Angels I heare the Prophet say Tophet is prepared of old If with feare and without curiositie wee may looke vpon those flames Why may we not attribute a spirituall nature to that more then naturall fire In the end of the world the elements shall be dissolued by fire and if the pure quintessentiall matter of the skie and the element of fire it selfe shall be dissolued by fire then that last fire shall be of another nature then that which it consumeth what hinders then but that the omnipotent God hath from eternitie created a fire of another nature proportionable euen to spirituall essences Or why may wee not distinguish of fire as it is it selfe a bodily creature and as it is an instrument of Gods iustice so working not by any materiall vertue or power of it owne but by a certain height of supernaturall efficacie to which it is exalted by the omnipotence of that supreme and righteous Iudge Or lastly why may wee not conceiue that though spirits haue nothing materiall in their nature which that fire should worke vpon yet by the iudgement of the almightie Arbiter of the world iustly
willing their torment they may be made most sensible of paine and by the obedible submission of their created nature wrought vpon immediately by their appointed tortures Besides the very horrour which ariseth from the place whereto they are euerlastingly confined For if the incorporeall spirits of liuing men may bee held in a loathed or painfull body and conceiue sorrow to bee so imprisoned Why may wee not as easily yeeld that the euill spirits of Angels or men may be held in those direfull flames and much more abhorre therein to continue for euer Tremble rather O my soule at the thought of this wofull condition of the euill Angels who for one onely act of Apostasie from God are thus perpetually tormented whereas we sinfull wretches multiply many and presumptuous offences against the Maiestie of our God And withall admire and magnifie that infinite mercy to the miserable generation of man which after this holy seueritie of iustice to the reuolted Angels so graciously forbeares our hainous iniquities and both suffers vs to be free for the time from these hellish torments and giues vs opportunitie of a perfect freedome from them for euer Praise the Lord O my soule and all that is within me praise his holy Name who for giueth all thy sinnes and healeth all thine infirmities Who redeemeth thy life from destruction and crowneth thee with mercy and compassions There is no time wherein the euill spirits are not tormented there is a time wherein they expect to be tormented yet more Art thou come to torment vs before our time They knew that the last Assises are the prefixed terme of their full execution which they also vnderstood to be not yet come For though they knew not when the Day of Iudgement should be a point concealed from the glorious Angels of heauen yet they knew when it should not be and therefore they say Before the time Euen the very euill spirits confesse and fearfully attend a set day of vniuersall Sessions They beleeue lesse then Deuils that either doubt of or deny that day of finall retribution Oh the wonderfull mercy of our God that both to wicked men and spirits respites the vtmost of their torment He might vpon the first instant of the fall of Angels haue inflicted on them the highest extremitie of his vengeance Hee might vpon the first sinnes of our youth yea of our nature haue swept vs away and giuen vs our portion in that fierie lake he stayes a time for both Though with this difference of mercy to vs men that here not onely is a delay but may be an vtter preuention of punishment which to the euill spirits is altogether impossible They doe suffer they must suffer and though they haue now deserued to suffer all they must yet they must once suffer more then they doe Yet so doth this euill spirit expostulate that he sues I beseech thee torment mee not The world is well changed since Satans first onset vpon Christ Then hee could say If thou be the Sonne of God now Iesus the Sonne of the most high God then All these will I giue thee if thou wilt fall downe and worship me now I beseech thee torment mee not The same power when hee lists can change the note of the Tempter to vs How happy are wee that haue such a Redeemer as can command the Deuils to their chaines Oh consider this ye lawlesse sinners that haue said Let vs breake his bonds and cast his cords from vs How euer the Almighty suffers you for a iudgement to haue free scope to euill and ye can now impotently resist the reuealed will of your Creator yet the time shall come when yee shall see the very masters whom ye haue serued the powers of darknesse vnable to auoid the reuenges of God How much lesse shall man striue with his Maker man whose breath is in his nostrils whose house is clay whose foundation is the dust Nature teaches euery creature to wish a freedome from paine the foulest spirits cannot but loue themselues and this loue must needs produce a deprecation of euill Yet what a thing is this to heare the deuill at his prayers I beseech thee torment me not Deuotion is not guilty of this but feare There is no grace in the suit of Deuils but nature no respect of glory to their Creator but their owne ease They cannot pray against sinne but against torment for sinne What newes is it now to heare the profanest mouth in extremitie imploring the Sacred Name of God when the Deuils doe so The worst of all creatures hates punishment and can say Lead me not into paine onely the good heart can say Leade mee not into temptation If wee can as heartily pray against sinne for the auoiding of displeasure as against punishment when wee haue displeased there is true grace in the soule Indeed if wee could feruently pray against sinne we should not need to pray against punishment which is no other then the inseparable shadow of that bodie but if we haue not laboured against our sins in vaine doe wee pray against punishment God must be iust and the wages of sinne is death It pleased our holy Sauiour not onely to let fall words of command vpon this spirit but to interchange some speeches with him All Christs actions are not for example It was the errour of our Grand-mother to hold chat with Satan That God who knowes the craft of that old Serpent and our weake simplicitie hath charged vs not to enquire of an euill spirit surely if the Disciples returning to Iacobs Well wondred to see Christ talke with a woman well may wee wonder to see him talking with an vncleane Spirit Let it be no presumption O Sauiour to aske vpon what grounds thou didst this wherein wee may not follow thee Wee know that sinne was excepted in thy conformitie of thy selfe to vs wee know there was no guile found in thy mouth no possibilitie of taint in thy nature in thine actions Neither is it hard to conceiue how the same thing may bee done by thee without sinne which wee cannot but sinne in doing There is a vast difference in the intention in the Agent For on the one side thou didst not aske the name of the spirit as one that knew not and would learne by inquiring but that by the confession of that mischiefe which thou pleasedst to suffer the grace of the cure might bee the more conspicuous the more glorious so on the other God and man might doe that safely which meere man cannot doe without danger thou mightest touch the leprosie and not be legally vncleane because thou touchedst it to heale it didst not touch it with possibility of infection So mightest thou who by reason of the perfection of thy diuine nature wert vncapable of any staine by the interlocution with Satan safely conferre with him whom corrupt man pre-disposed to the danger of such a parle may not meddle with without sinne because not without perill It is
forth their hands to wickednesse No man will put his hand into a fiery crucible to fetch gold thence because hee knowes it will burne him Did wee as truely beleeue the euerlasting burning of that infernall fire we durst not offer to fetch pleasures or profits out of the midst of those flames This degree of torment they grant in Christs power to command they knew his power vnresistible had hee therefore but said Backe to hell whence hee came they could no more haue staid vpon earth then they can now climbe into heauen O the wonderfull dispensation of the Almighty who though hee could command all the euill spirits downe to their dungeons in an instant so as they should haue no more opportunity of temptation yet thinkes fit to retaine them vpon earth It is not out of weaknesse or improuidence of that diuine hand that wicked spirits tyrannize here vpon earth but out of the most wise and most holy ordination of God who knowes how to turne euill into good how to fetch good out of euill and by the worst instruments to bring about his most iust decrees Oh that wee could adore that awfull and infinite power and cheerefully cast our selues vpon that prouidence which keepes the Keyes euen of hell it selfe and either lets out or returnes the Deuils to their places Their other suit hath some maruell in mouing it more in the grant That they might be suffered to enter into the Herd of Swine It was their ambition of some mischiefe that brought forth this desire that since they might not vexe the body of man they might yet afflict men in their goods The malice of these enuious spirits reacheth from vs to ours It is sore against their wils if wee be not euery way miserable if the Swine were legally vncleane for the vse of the table yet they were naturally good Had not Satan knowne them vsefull for man he had neuer desired their ruine But as Fencers will seeme to fetch a blow at the legge when they intend it at the head so doth this Deuill whiles he driues at the Swine hee aimes at the soules of these Gadarens by this meanes he hoped well and his hope was not vaine to worke in these Gergesens a discontentment at Christ an vnwillingnesse to entertaine him a desire of his absence he meant to turne them into Swine by the losse of their Swine It was not the rafters or stones of the house of Iobs children that hee bore the grudge to but to the owners nor to the liues of the children so much as the soule of their father There is no affliction wherein hee doth not strike at the heart which whiles it holds free all other dammages are light but a wounded spirit whether with sinne or sorrow who can beare What euer becomes of goods or limmes happy are wee if like wise souldiers we guard the vitall parts whiles the soule is kept sound from impatience from distrust our enemy may afflict vs he cannot hurt vs. They sue for a sufferance not daring other then to grant that without the permission of Christ they could not hurt a very swine If it be fearfull to thinke how great things euill spirits can doe with permission it is comfortable to thinke how nothing they can doe without permission Wee know they want not malice to destroy the whole frame of Gods worke but of all man of all men Christians but if without leaue they cannot set vpon an hogge what can they doe to the liuing Images of their Creator They cannot offer vs so much as a suggestion without the permission of our Sauiour And can hee that would giue his owne most precious blood for vs to saue vs from euill wilfully giue vs ouer to euill It is no newes that wicked spirits wish to doe mischiefe it is newes that they are allowed it If the owner of all things should stand vpon his absolute command who can challenge him for what hee thinkes fit to doe with his creature The first Fole of the Asse is commanded vnder the law to haue his necke broken what is that to vs The creatures doe that they were made for if they may serue any way to the glory of their Maker But seldome euer doth God leaue his actions vnfurnished with such reasons as our weaknesse may reach vnto There were sects amongst these Iewes that denied spirits they could not bee more euidently more powerfully conuinced then by this euent Now shall the Gadarens see from what a multitude of deuils they were deliuered and how easie it had beene for the same power to haue allowed those spirits to seize vpon their persons as well as their Swine Neither did God this without a iust purpose of their castigation His iudgements are righteous where they are most secret though wee cannot accuse these inhabitants of ought yet hee could and thought good thus to mulct them And if they had not wanted grace to acknowledge it it was no small fauour of God that hee would punish them in their Swine for that which hee might haue auenged vpon their bodies and soules Our goods are furthest off vs If but in these we smart wee must confesse to finde mercy Sometimes it pleaseth God to grant the suits of wicked men and spirits in no fauour to the suitors He grants an ill suit and withholds a good He grants an ill suit in iudgement and holds backe a good one in mercy The Israelites aske meat hee giues Quailes to their mouthes and leannesse to their soules The chosen vessell wishes Satan taken taken off and heares onely My grace is sufficient for thee Wee may not euermore measure fauour by condescent These Deuils doubtlesse receiue more punishment for that harmefull act wherein they are heard If wee aske what is either vnfit to receiue or vnlawfull to begge it is a great fauour of our God to bee denied Those spirits which would goe into the Swine by permission goe out of the man by command they had stayed long and are eiected suddenly The immediate works of God are perfect in an instant and doe not require the aide of time for their maturation No sooner are they cast out of the man then they are in the Swine They will leese no time but passe without intermission from one mischiefe to another If they hold it a paine not to be doing or of euill Why is not our delight to bee euer doing good The impetuousnesse was no lesse then the speed The Herd was caried with violence from a steepe downe place into the lake and was choaked It is no small force that could doe this but if the Swine had beene so many mountaines these spirits upon Gods permission had thus transported them How easily can they carie those soules which are vnder their power to destruction Vncleane beasts that wallow in the mire of sensualitie brutish drunkards transforming themselues by excesse euen they are the Swine whom the Legion caries headlong to the pit of perdition The
of ioy and thankfulnesse Hee knew well this meteor was not at the biggest it was newly borne of the wombe of the waters and in some minutes of age must grow to a large stature stay but a while and Heauen is couered with it From how small beginnings haue great matters arisen It is no otherwise in all the gracious proceedings of God with the soule scarce sensible are those first workes of his spirit in the heart which grow vp at last to the wonder of men and applause of Angels Well did Elijah know that God who is perfection it selfe would not defile his hand with an inchoate and scanted fauour as one therefore that fore-saw the face of heauen ouer-spread with this cloudy spot hee sends to Ahab to hasten his Charet that the raine stop him not It is long since Ahab feared this let neuer was the newes of a danger more welcome Doubtlesse the King of Israel whiles hee was at his diet lookt long for Elijahs promised showers where is the raine whose sound the Prophet heard how is it that his eares were so much quicker then our eyes Wee saw his fire to our terrour how gladly would we see his Waters When now the seruant of Elijah brings him newes from heauen that the clouds were setting forward and if hee hastened not would be before him The winde arises the clouds gather the sky thickens Ahab betakes him to his Charet Elijah girds vp his loynes and runnes before him Surely the Prophet could not want the offer of more ease in his passage but he will be for the time Ahabs lacquey that the King and all Israel may see his humility no lesse than his power and may confesse that the glory of those miracles hath not made him insolent Hee knew that his very sight was monitorie neither could Ahabs minde be beside the miraculous workes of God whiles his eye was vpon Elijah neither could the Kings heart be otherwise then well-affected towards the Prophet whiles he saw that himselfe and all Israel had receiued a new Life by his procurement But what newes was here for Iezebel Certainly Ahab minced nothing of the report of all those astonishing accidents If but to salue vp his owne honour in the death of those Baalites hee made the best of Elijahs merits hee told of his challenge conflict victorie of the fire that fell downe from Heauen of the conuiction of Israel of the vnauoidable execution of the Prophets of the prediction and fall of those happy showers and lastly of Elijahs officious attendance Who would not haue expected that Iezebel should haue said It is no striuing no dallying with the Almightie No reasonable creature can doubt after so prodigious a decision God hath wonne vs from Heauen hee must possesse vs Iustly are our seducers perished None but the God that can command fire and water shall bee ours There is no Prophet but his But shee contrarily in stead of relenting rageth and sends a message of death to Elijah So let the gods doe to mee and more also if I make not thy life as the life of one of them by to morrow about this time Neither scourges nor fauours can worke any thing with the obstinately wicked All euill hearts are not equally dis-affected to good Ahab and Iezebel were both bad enough yet Ahab yeelds to that worke of God which Iezebel stubbornly opposeth Ahab melts with that water with that fire wherewith Iezebel is hardened Ahab was bashfully Iezebel audaciously impious The weaker sexe is euer commonly stronger in passion and more vehemently caried with the sway of their desires whether to good or euill She sweares and stamps at that whereat shee should haue trembled She sweares by those gods of hers which were not able to saue their Prophets that she will kill the Prophet of God who had scorned her gods and slaine her Prophets It is well that Iezebel could not keepe counsell Her threat pre●e●ted him whom shee had meant to kill The wisedome and power of God could ●●ue found euasions for his Prophet in her greatest secresie but now he needs no other meanes of rescue but her owne lips She is no lesse vaine then the gods shee sweares by In spight of her fury and her oath and her gods Elijah shall liue At once shall she finde her selfe frustrate and forsworne She is now ready to bite her tongue to eat her heart for anger at the disappointment of her cruell Vow It were no liuing for godly men if the hands of Tyrants were allowed to be as bloody as their hearts Men and Deuils are vnder the restraint of the Almighty neither are their designes more lauish then their executions short Holy Elijah flees for his life wee heare not of the command of God but we would willingly presuppose it So diuine a Prophet should doe nothing without God His heeles were no new refuge As no where safe within the ten Tribes hee flees to Beersheba in the Territories of Iudah as not there safe from the machinations of Iezebel hee flees alone one dayes iourney into the wildernesse there hee sits him downe vnder a Iuniper tree and as weary of life no lesse then of his way wishes to rise no more It is enough now O Lord take away my life for I am not better then my Fathers O strange and vncouth mutation What is this wee heare Elijah fainting and giuing vp that heroicall spirit deiected and prostrate Hee that durst say to Ahabs face It is thou and thy fathers house that troubleth Israel hee that could raise the dead open and shut the Heauens fetch downe both fire and water with his prayers hee that durst chide and contest with all Israel that durst kill the foure hundred and fifty Baalites with the sword doth hee shrinke at the frownes and threats of a woman doth hee wish to be rid of his life because hee feared to lose it Who can expect an vndaunted constancie from flesh and blood when Elijah failes The strongest and holiest Saint vpon earth is subiect to some qualmes of feare and infirmitie To bee alwayes and vnchangeably good is proper onely to the glorious Spirits in heauen Thus the wise and holy God will haue his power perfited in our weaknesse It is in vaine for vs whiles wee carie this flesh about vs to hope for so exact health as not to be cast downe sometimes with fits of spirituall distemper It is no new thing for holy men to wish for death Who can either maruell at or blame the desire of aduantage For the weary traueller to long for rest the prisoner for libertie the banished for home it is so naturall that the contrary disposition were monstrous The benefit of the change is a iust motiue to our appetition but to call for death out of a satietie of life out of an impatience of suffering is a weaknesse vnbeseeming a Saint It is not enough O Elijah God hath more worke yet for thee thy God hath more honoured thee
and danger of it 222 Small A true note of a false heart is to bee nice in small matters and negligent in great 147 Societie Christian society how good 15 Our behauiour in society and priuacie 30 31 An inconstant man vnfit for societie 36 Solitarinesse How dangerous 15 The benefit of it 296 No cause hath he to bee solitarie that hath God with him 976 An help to the speed of temptation 1192 Sorrow How to bee well resolued in sorrow 16 Of the sorrow not to bee repented of 301 Against sorrow for worldly crosses 309 Soule Gods and the worlds profer for the soule compared 52 Our carelesnesse for our soule set downe 437 Spa Described to bee more wholesome then pleasant and more famous then wholesome 282 Speech The praise of a good speech 10 A good thing to inure youth to good speech 11 The censure of much speech and little wit 12 Not what or how so much as the end of a mans speeches are to be considered 145 Spirit It is good to try the spirits 1112 Spirituall spirituall things how soueraigne or hurtfull 1046 State Where the temporall and spirituall state combine not together see what followes 1062 Strife There are three things that wise and honest men neuer striue for 27 Subiect His duty to Prince and fellow subiects 233 234 The close relation betweene Prince and subiect 1117 The Soueraigne is smitten in his subiect 1259 Successe We must not measure our spirituall successe by our owne power c. 917 Good successe oft lifts vp the heart with too much confidence 955 The custome of successe what it doth in sinne 1007 Suffer In suffering euill wee must not looke to second causes 26 Suggestions It is more safe to keepe our selues out of the noise of suggestions then to stand vpon our power of deniall 1007 Sunne Of its standing still at Iosua's prayer 967 Superfluitie The affectation of it what 141 Nothing seemes so superfluous as religious duties 865 Superstition Its character 198 What it doth 900 It is deuotions ape 1047 How iniurious to God 1117 Superstition how it befooles men 1354 Suspition Charitie it selfe when it will allow suspition 958 Where it is good to bee suspitious 972 Suspition is quick-●ighted 1144 Swine What swine the Deuill enters into 1302 T TAbernacle Sweet allusions of the Tabernacle with heauen 467 Tamar Of her and Ammon 1144 Her bewailing her virginitie 1146 Teachers The sinnes of Teachers are the teachers of sinne 1061 Teares Obseruations of them 135 That here our eyes are full of teares 462 How precious 463 The world full of causes of weeping 464 Temperance In diet words actions and affections 223 Temple Both the Tabernacle and it were resemblances of the holy Church of God 467 The Temple abused to Idolatry whether it may bee vsed to Gods seruice 593 Of their founders and furnishers ibid. The state of the Temple and our Church in resemblance 597 It is good comming to the Temple howsoeuer 870 There is now no Christian but is a Temple 1175 The building of the Temple 1266 Foure Temples to be seen in that one 1268 The resemblances of it with the Temple of our body 1268 1269 Temporals they are all troublesome 47 Temptations they are more perillous in prosperity then in aduersity 13 Those temptations are most powerfull which fetch their force from pretence of Religious obedience 1100 Christs temptation 1191 Strong temptation is a signe of sound holinesse ibid. The Deuils boldnes in tempting Christ ibid. Solitarinesse a great helpe to it 1192 In euery temptation there is appearance of good 1193 Satans motiue in the temptation of Christ worse then his motion ibid. 1194 No place left free from his temptations 1198 No temptation so dangerous as that which comes vnder the vaile of holinesse 1320 Tempter hee that would alwaies be our tormenter cares but sometimes to bee our tempter 1294 Testaments the maruellous accordance betweene the two Testaments 896 Thank-fulnesse we can neuer do though for a thankefull man 866 A true token of a thankefull heart 1032 Throne what it signifies 465 Thoughts good thoughts make but a thorow are in the wicked 874 Time its pretiousnesse and reasons of redeeming it 48 What to doe that time may neither steale on vs nor from vs. 60 Our wisdome in taking times for ought we doe 474 1051 Tongue the tongues and hearts correspondence 38 The tongue will hardly leaue that which the heart is enured to 149 A foule tongue punished with a foule face 915 Innocency no shelter for an euill tongue 921 How should men bee hypocrites if they had not good tongues 1048 Of the threefold vse of the tongue 1287 Traditions the Papists and Pharisees parallel in matter of traditions 413 Traffique 697 Tranquility vide Quietnesse Trauells aduice therein with the description of some mens ends therein 288 Two occasions of trauel 669 Youth not so fit for trauell as some thinke 670 Of too much speed in sending them forth 671 Early trauell and early rising compared in 3 things 672 What the trauels of our Gentry robs them of 674 675 Trauell for table-talke censured 676 The Trauellers stake for the goodly furniture of his Gentry 678 The trauellers entertainmēt in popish places 680 What by trauell men get for manners 685 A suit to his Soueraigne and the gentry in this thing 686 Transubstantiation concerning it 656 Treachery what it doth 280 Truth the Churches happinesse when truth and peace kisse each other 6 Diuine truth is most faire and scorneth to borrow beauty 139 Truth in words 217 Truth in dealings with its practice and reward 218 Truth within keeps the wals without 281 The veine wherein truth lies 516 Not bought with ease ibid. It is of an high rate 517 Why men tho doe not so much as c●eapen it ibid. It is excellent alwayes thō the issue be distastfull 518 It stands not more in iudgement then in affection ibid. Of petty chapmen which sell truth for trifles 519 How neere truth and falsehood meet together 933 Truth is not afraid of any light 1060 Truth how it may be conc●aled though not denied 1077 1078 Truth must not be measured by the poll 1361 Truths lot ibid. V VAine-glory Its Character 294 Valiant the character of a valiant man 176 All valour is cowardise to that which is built vpon religion 1136 Vengeance Gods vengeance when it is hottest it maketh differences of men 921 vide Reuenge No strength can keep sinners for Gods vengeance 951 God hath more wayes for vengeance then he hath creatures 967 Small comfort in the delay of vengeance 1074 Vengeance against rebels may sleepe but cannot die 1263 Vertue euery vertuous action hath a double shadow glory and enuy 57 Vertue not lookt vpon alike with all eyes 853 Euery vertue a disgrace when euery vice hath a title 865 Those men are worse then deuils that hate men for vertue 1023 Vertue what great riches it is 1027 Vestals Prettily described 281 Vice Euery vice hath a title
strike many terrors into our weaknesse we could not be dismayed with them if wee did not forget our condition Wee haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but the spirit of Adoption whereby wee cry Abba Father If that Spirit O God witnesse with our spirits that wee are thine how can wee feare any of those spirituall wickednesses Giue vs assurance of thy fauour and let the powers of Hell doe their worst It was no ordinarie fauour that the Virgin found in Heauen No mortall Creature was euer thus graced that hee should take part of her nature that was the God of nature that hee which made all things should make his humane body of hers that her wombe should yeeld that flesh which was personally vnited to the Godhead that shee should beare him that vpholds the world Loe thou shalt conceiue and beare a Sonne and shalt call his name Iesus It is a question whether there be more wonder in the Conception or in the Fruit the Conception of the Virgin or Iesus conceiued Both are maruellous but the former doth not more exceed all other wonders than the latter exceedeth it For the childe of a virgin is the reimprouement of that power which created the World but that God should bee incarnate of a Virgin was an abasement of his Maiestie and an exaltation of the creature beyond all example Well was that Child worthy to make the Mother blessed Here was a double Conception one in the wombe of her body the other of the soule If that were more miraculous this was more beneficiall That was here priuiledge the was her happinesse If that were singular to her this is common to all his chosen There is no renewed heart wherein thou O Sauiour art not formed againe Blessed bee thou that hast herein made vs blessed For what wombe can conceiue thee and not partake of thee Who can partake of thee and not be happie Doubtlesse the Virgin vnderstood the Angell as hee meant of a present Conception which made her so much more inquisitiue into the manner and meanes of this euent How shall this bee since I know not a man That shee should conceiue a Son by the knowledge of man after her Marriage consummate could haue bin no wonder But how then should that Sonne of hers bee the Sonne of God This demand was higher how her present Virginity should bee instantly fruitfull might bee well worthy of admiration of inquirie Here was desire of information not doubts of infidelitie yea rather this question argues Faith It takes for granted that which an vnbeleeuing heart would haue stuck at She sayes not who and whence art thou what Kingdome is this where and when shall it bee erected But smoothly supposing all those strang things would be done shee insists onely in that which did necessarily require a further intimation and doth not distrust but demand Neither doth shee say this cannot be nor how can this be but how shall this be so doth the Angel answer as one that knew he needed not to satisfie curiositie but to informe iudgement and vphold faith Hee doth not therefore tell her of the manner but of the Author of this act The Holy Ghost shall come vpon thee and the power of the most High shall ouer-shaddow thee It is enough to know who is the vndertaker and what he will doe O God what doe wee seeke a cleere light where thou wilt haue a shaddow No Mother knowes the manner of her naturall Conception what presumption shall it be for flesh and bloud to search how the Sonne of God tooke flesh and bloud of his Creature It is for none but the Almighty to know those workes which hee doth immediatly concerning himselfe those that concerne vs hee hath reuealed Secrets to God things reuealed to vs. This answer was not so full but that a thousand difficulties might arise out of the particularities of so strange a message yet after the Angels Solution wee heare of no more Obiections no more Interrogations The faithfull heart when it once vnderstands the good pleasure of God argues no more but sweetly rests it selfe in a quiet exspectation Behold the Seruant of the Lord bee it to mee according to thy Word There is not a more noble proofe of our Faith than to captiuate all the powers of our vnderstanding and will to our Creator and without all sciscitations to goe blindfold whither he will leade vs All disputations with God after his will knowne arise from infidelitie Great is the Mysterie of godlinesse and if wee will giue Nature leaue to cauill we cannot bee Christians O God thou art faithfull thou art powerfull It is enough that thou hast said it In the humilitie of our obedience wee resigne our selues ouer to thee Behold the Seruants of the Lord bee it vnto vs according to thy Word How fit was her wombe to conceiue the flesh of the Sonne of God by the power of the Spirit of God whose brest had so soone by the power of the same Spirit conceiued an assent to the will of God and now of an Hand-mayd of God shee is aduanced to the Mother of God No sooner hath shee said bee it done than it is done the Holy Ghost ouer-shaddowes her and formes her Sauiour in her owne bodie This very Angell that talkes with the blessed Virgin could scarce haue bin able to expresse the ioy of her heart in the sense of this diuine burden Neuer any mortall Creature had so much cause of exultation How could shee that was full of God bee other than full of ioy in that God Griefe growes greater by concealing Ioy by expression The Holy Virgin had vnderstood by the Angell how her Cousin Elizabeth was no lesse of kinne to her in condition the fruitfulnesse of whose age did somewhat suit the fruitfulnesse of her Virginitie Happinesse communicated doubles it selfe Here is no strayning of courtesie The blessed Maid whom vigor of age had more fitted for the way hastens her iourney into the Hill-countrey to visit that gracious Matron whom God had made a signe of her miraculous Conception Only the meeting of Saints in Heauen can paralell the meeting of these two Cosins The two Wonders of the World are met vnder one roofe and congratulate their mutuall happinesse When wee haue Christ spiritually conceiued in vs wee cannot bee quiet till wee haue imparted our ioy Elizabeth that holy Matron did no sooner wel-come her blessed Cosin than her Babe wel-comes his Sauiour Both in the retyred Closets of their Mothers Wombe are sensible of each others presence the one by his omniscience the other by instinct He did not more fore-runne Christ than ouer-runne Nature How should our hearts leape within vs when the Sonne of God vouchsafes to come into the secret of our soules not to visit vs but to dwell with vs to dwell in vs THe birth of CHRIST AS all the actions of men so especially the publike actions of publike men are ordered by God