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A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

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it is spiritus Dei which he breathed into our bodies Now to consider of the words somewhat more seriously we see that the soul is a breath but so that it is Neshema a spirituall and celestiall breath which properly is understood of the winde and ayre by which we see that is next of kynne to the Spirits which have no body as our bodyes are next of kynne to the wormes that are in the earth which soul for that cause is invisible but not unperceiveable As we cannot see the winde and the pulse yet we perceive them by divers effects So is our Soul and the excellency of it made known and discerned And that it might not be imagined or thought to be only a bare blast of breath or as a puffe of winde he therefore addeth a spirit of lives And least we should deem the soul and the life to be but one thing and to end and vanish away together Job telleth us 27. 3. that the spirit or soul of a man is one thing and 〈◊〉 life is another distinct Though there be a spirit of life in beasts and not only in earthly creatures but also in celestiall spirits yet only the spirit of man is spiritus vitarum that is of more lives than one which our Saviour Christ telleth us in Matth. 10. 28. Men may take away the one life of our body but they cannot the other life of the soul that is only in Gods power This then is the difference between the soul of a man and all other things which confuteth the Epicures 1. which held that the Soul was but a hot salt humor to keep the body from rottennesse and corruption Moses maketh choice to compare the Soul to breath First because it hath a piercing and a searching quality being Totus in toto totus in qualibet parte Pro. 27. 2. This candle of the Soul diffuseth his light and heat and life in every member searching and piercing all Secondly the Soul is compared to breath to humble us and not make us presume on this life seeing the soul and body is but knit and conjoyned together vinculo aëreo by an airie thred Esay 2. 22. Mans breath is in his nostrills which being stopped his life is gone Psal. 103. 14. 15. which causeth our life sodainly oftentimes to be taken away and our soul and our body in an instant or moment to depart a sunder Psal. 78. 39. Even because the union that holdeth soul and dody together is but a little blast of aire and winde easily broken and smitten asunder so sodainly doe we passe away and are gone This may teach us the shortnesse and sodainnesse of this life and death The use of which is that seeing we received our life from God therefore we must now live the life of all godlynesse seeing we live by the spirit of God naturally we must seek for the spirit of God and the graces of it that we may live holily seeing our Soul is the light of God let not this light become darknesse in us for then great is that darknesse Seeing our Soul is the Image of God we must not deface it with the ugly form of Sathan The holy man Job 26. 4. hearing his friends speak foolish and vain words asketh 〈◊〉 spirit cometh out of them As who should say seeing you have the spirit of God speak not such words as if an evill or vain spirit were in them So must we say to those men that doe evill works Whose spirit or what spirit hast thou in thee These deeds are the works of evill Spirits but thou had'st in thee the good spirit of God 2. Now we are come to the second estate of our soul which is set down in this So man became a living Soul which is added to shew that God not only gave that spirit inspired into him a power of life by which it could live but also another power unto the body which before was a dead peece of Earth wherefore the soul being in every part of the body so made by and by it was lively in every part and stood up and performed the actions of life which now it doth in us This is a good and profitable sense of these words as some doe understand But the best Divines weighing these words more deeply doe finde out another state of the soul which sheweth another priviledge of the soul of man For besides that it is as we have seen a spiritual essence occupied in spiritual actions being immortall and pertaining and leading to another life Besides this speciall priviledge it hath here also another common prerogative namely to enforme the body that is in a word besides being a spirituall essence it is also a natural essence it had hath and shall have a power to live without the body and also it hath a power in the body to quicken and give life to it and every part thereof that is it can animare informare corpus which we know the Angels and celestial spirits cannot for when they appeare in a body their souls of life though they live yet they doe not informe that body but they are in it as in a Case which they take to them and leave off again But our soul is not only a spiritual essence and consistence as the Angels but also a natural consistence in the body to inform and animate it which the Angels have not And this is the other prerogative There is none that doe doubt but they have naturalem animam and thereof they are called naturales homines 1 Cor. 15. 46. But by their actions one would think that their souls were only fleshie souls because they never give them selves to spiritual and heavenly actions as a Celestiall spirit shall move them But only they are given to actions of this bodily life which is temporall yea to earthly fleshie and sinfull actions as if the soul that were in them were but after that fort a natural soul of life for a time They see by their natural studies senses motions and actions that they have a natural soul of life quickning the body which else could not live But they think not that it is a spiritual soul and heavenly essence which shall have an eternall being after this life and therefore they never care to 〈◊〉 for such heavenly and spiritual actions of Godlinesse wherefore we will briefly prove and shew that the state of the soul is celestial and 〈◊〉 that we may be moved to think of such actions as that estate doth require And first that the soul and the life and estate thereof doth not depend upon the body but hath his being and life without the body after the body is dead and turned to the Earth because it hath his dependence on God which is immortall and eternal which appeareth to reason in the judgement of the Heathen because the soul hath in the will a power and faculty and ability to effect and perfect an action
nineteenth They that live in ease are weary of it Salomon in the first of the Kings the eleventh chapter and the fourth verse died in his age Abraham in the twenty fifth of Genesis and the eighth yeelded the spirit and died a good age Death is a resting from Labour and from sinne and death is not only a resting from labour but from sinne also Paul in the seventh to the Romans and the twenty fourth desireth to be delivered from the body of sinne which he calleth the body of death The holy Fathers on that place but this difference that the Martyrs desire to die that they might not sinne the Malefactors because they have sinned A delaying of the punishment The other part of the delay is the chiefest which is the consideration that there is an exemption of death from the best part of man a qualifying of the punishment A bodily punishment for the soul and body both offended but the body only is punished the soul mans better part is free that is not touched He saith not here thou shalt die the death but thou shalt return to dust for as it is in the third of the Preacher and the twentieth all 〈◊〉 of the dust and all shall return to dust It is the body only that returneth to dust but the soul returneth to God that gave it Mans heavenly part shall be free from this sentence The Soul immortall the head of man his soul which is neerest God shall be safe though his heel be bruised The earthly part shall return to that it was but the heavenly 〈…〉 still the immortality If Christ be in us the body is dead because of sinne but the spirit is life for righteousness sake the eighth of the Romans and the tenth This then giveth comfort in death that though the body die the soul shall live for ever This gave comfort to Adam that he had thus well escaped Hevah the Mother of the living that in the very next verse he calleth his Wife with joy Hevah which is the Mother not of the dead but of the living for Hevah is mater viventium In the twentieth of Luke the thirty seventh and thirty eighth verses The Lord is Deus viventium The Lord is called the God of Abraham of Isaac and of Jacob yet is he not the God of the dead but of the living for all live unto him yet then the Patriarchs were dead but though the Grave had their body God had their soul the Patriarchs died their soul lives the third of Exodus the sixth to be compared with the former place for after death they were not dead but removed to another state of life God will bring his again from the depth of the Sea Psalme the sixty eight and the twenty second The first death so the godly shall suffer the first death Revelations the twenty first and the eighth expoundeth that place But the wicked and the accursed shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death The second death the first death is the death of all the first death only is the death of Saints but the second death is the death of sinners Davids soul is delivered from the sword Psalme the twenty second and the twenty first but death seedeth 〈◊〉 upon the wicked as sheep feed upon a Common and as their life was without repentance so their death shall be without end the godly wish for death to rest from their labours the wicked wish for death that live in torment which is great Revelations 9. 6. The gates of death are mentioned in the Psalmes and in the seventh of the Proverbs and the twenty seventh Penetralia mortis the Chambers of death The wicked live not only in the Gates in the Courts in the Chambers of death but even in the Dungeon of death in the twenty third Psalme and the fourth verse and in the seventh of the Romans the twenty fourth are to be delayed in the one is mention of umbra mortis in the other corpus mortis they are to be delayed with the 9. of Marke the 1. where it is said that some there are that shall not taste of death till they have seen the Kingdome of God come with power So that the first death takes hold of the gody but the second death toucheth them not For they that be faithfull unto death shall be crowned with a crown of life Revel 2. 10. and in the 11. verse the godly that overcome shall not be hurt of the second death Isaiah 26. 19. Death naturall and eternall they are subject to the naturall death but free from the eternall death This is their comfort in the first death to have deliverie from the second death Resurrection By the resurrection of the dead to life is a second return for by the first return the body returneth from dust to dust but the second is from dust to glorie Return which is a return not of the soul but of the body also according to that of Job This body of flesh shall be covered with immortalitie and according to that of Hosea the 13. Chapter and the 14. verse The godly shall be redeemed from the power of the grave and death and according to that place of the Prophecie Christ will be the death of death it self but most plain of all is that of the 1. of the Revelations the 18. spoken of Christ That he is alive but was dead but now he is alive for evermore and he hath the keyes of hell and of death This then doth alay and qualifie the bitterness of this sentence The use hereof is diverse to learn Hence now may we gather use to our selves in these five things 1. Humility The first is though it be bitter yet it is wholsome the first use is taken out of pulvis es Learn hence unde es from whence thou art thou art but of a clod be not proud thou treadest upon that thou art made let that put thee in minde of humilitie boast not of thy honour for thy honour is in the dust There is nothing in the grave whither thou goest Preacher 9. 11. Quid ergo attollis cervicem in pulverem reversuram this is a means to learn humility learn of your selves what you are and then be humble Austin saith that the time will come to give an account to God of thy doings remember thy own frailty and be not proud for God knoweth whereof we be made he remembreth we are but dust Psal. 103. 14. 2. To regard things of this life as dust The second use is out of pulvis in pulverem dust to dust We must remember whither we are to goe we are now dust but sub alienâ formâ in the likeness of flesh but we shall be dust in the likeness of dust it self our flesh of dust shall be turned into dust and according to that of
fac cito John the thireenth chapter and the twenty seventh verse only Cain and Judas wanted but opportunity which so soon as they had obtained they committed their sinne actually The causes of Cains proceeding to the committing of this act are diverse down after diverse sorts First he seeketh a convenient place and opportunity and maketh choyce of the field because he would not be hindred in doing the murther for he could not have any opportunitie at home for Adam and Eve being at hand would have been ready to hinder him And as he makes choyce of this place not to be hindered so in that after he denyed the fact it appeareth his desire was as well not to be discovered as not to be hindred Wherein we have to respect first his great blindness that could not see the nature of sinne for in that he sought such a place for the doing of it as might be hid and unknown It is strange he could not perceive it to be a work of darkness his own conscience did condemn him for he durst not be seen to doe that which he did but in hypocrisie would seem not to be what he was this was his way and we must beware that we walk not in it Again it is strange that he was more afraid of Adam a mortall man than of the omnipotent God and was more fearfull that Adam his Father a mortall man should see him than that God who is able to grinde him in a morter should behold his fact Wherefore as sinne is a dishonest thing perswading against all reason to fear man more than God so is it a dishonest thing for that we will not be seen to commit sinne as a thing that standeth not with their credits and therefore make choice of such places as are fittest for the concealing thereof Note Secondly he deviseth how to draw Abel to that place and what means to use that Abel might goe confidently with him thither To that end though he have not now spoken to him of a long time yet he is content to speak kindly to him The heathen man saith that if a man will hate he must doe it apertè unless he will be worse thin wilde beasts for they violenly flie upon those things which they hate Dissembled hatred discovered by silence but the Devill hath taught men to dissemble their hatred that they might be worse than beasts Hatred commonly is discerned by silence one argument of that hatred and grudge which Josephs bretheren bare to him was not potuerunt alloqui illum Genesis the thirty seventh chapter and so Absolom having conceived hatred and displeasure against Ammon spake neither good nor ill to him the second of Samuel and the thirteenth chapter but as the 〈◊〉 when he most of all hated our first Parents would seem to be touched with some commisseration of their estate Genesis the third chapter Note Hath God indeed said ye shall not eate Nay but he knoweth c. So he 〈◊〉 Cain to dissemble his hatred with fair words which dissimulation is a sinne condemned not only of the heathen but abhorred by the Saints of God For when such a one as walks in the house of God with him as his friend and companion should deceive him then David had cause to pray against such a one Psalm the fifty fifth Let death seize upon him Cain though he hated his brother and purposed his death yet to accomplish his purpurpose he makes a fair semblance of love Example So Absolom being minded to murther Ammon pretends great love to him he must needs have Ammon to the Sheep-shearing or else all his cost is lost But shall not Ammon my brother come the second of Samuel and the thirteenth chapter this course took Joab with Amasa the second of Samuel and the twentieth chapter so Judas dissembled his malice with hail Master and kissed him John the twenty ninth This sin is abominable yea it containeth seven abominations as the Wiseman tells us Proverbs the twenty sixth chapter and the twenty fifth verse and they that 〈◊〉 hatred with love and slattering words walk in the way of Cain That which Cain spake with Abel when they were alone as St. Jerome thinketh was that he 〈◊〉 Abel what God had said to him and what he had taught him the 〈◊〉 referres it to this verse that his words to him were eamus ad agrum whatsoever it was he said it was abominable hypocrisie Thirdly we see that Abel obeyed the voice of his elder brother for that it was Gods will he should bear rule over him so he went thinking all had been well The best natures not suspicious for the best natures are least suspicious as we have an example in Gedaliah who beleeved that Ishmael had no purpose to hurt him Jeremiah the fourtieth chapter for charity is not suspicious in the first to the Corinthians and the thirteenth chapter especially Abel had little cause to suspect him that was come from a Sermon and seemed to be a new man Note so that he spake kindly to him that had not given him a good look along time This change in Cain made Abel to goe with him and being in the place appointed Cain arose and slew him Degrees of Cains sinne 〈◊〉 Touching the death of Abel we are to observe from the words First it was a violent death for his life did not goe out of him but as the word signifieth it was rent from him Secondly it was a bloody death as the words of God to Cain shew The voice of thy Brothers blood which thou hast slain cryeth to me verse the tenth Thirdly it was a sudden death and therefore more grievous because thereby not only the body is killed but the soul also of such a party that is in state of sinne and hath not respite graunted to repent thereof In this act of Cain we have to observe these things wherby his sin is aggravated First the sinne which he committeth is murther a sinne the more grievous for that it is the defacing of Gods Image Genesis the ninth chapter Secondly his fact the more odious for that the party murthered is one more weak than himself for he was younger than Cain therefore it was a cowardly part to set upon his inferiour It is the thing which the Wise-man complaineth Ecclesiastes the eighth chapter I saw one man bear rule over another not for good so the authority and superiorty which was committed to Cain should have been for Abels good but he abused it to the hurt of his younger brother Thirdly where God will not have any innocent blood shed but sacrifice must be offered Deuteronomie the twenty first chapter Cain kills innocent Abel which doth in a third degree aggravate his sinne for to shed innocent blood is a thing that Pilate himself could not abide and therefore washed his hands declaing that he was clear from killing Christ Matthew the twenty seventh chapter and the twenty fourth
before in regard of man in state of Innocencie or that which 〈◊〉 in the next chapter in regard of Man after his Fall Naked before their fall In regard first of that which goeth before this verse The man and his wife were naked yet were not ashamed left that any should think any evill to be in them lest any 〈◊〉 should be suspected to be in this time of Innocencie it is 〈…〉 a man 〈◊〉 marrie 〈◊〉 Virgin 1 Cor. 7. 36. In their 〈◊〉 then was no uncomelinesse for saith St. Austin in the time of Innocencie in the marriage of Adam and Eve in their bodies or 〈◊〉 〈…〉 calor there was 〈…〉 〈…〉 there was no 〈◊〉 motion but since the fall it is otherwise when David saw 〈◊〉 naked 〈◊〉 her self 2 〈◊〉 11. 2. her beauty 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 after 〈◊〉 committed 〈◊〉 and murther But the state of Adam and Eve in Paradise was otherwife whose mindes were pure and chaste there was in them 〈◊〉 shame for there was no cause why they should be ashamed which sheweth that if any then more than any Adam and Eve were Saints and their state was Angelicall Naked after the fall In regard of that which followeth this verse There was no shame before the Fall in that their life was so innocent that there was nothing whereof they should be ashamed but now by sinne shame came into the World and want of shame now argueth wickednesse Man was in honor and regarded it not but Adam and Eve by disobedience and breaking the Law of God given them in Paradise turned their glory to shame which shame continueth in all their posterity so that this verse is necessarie in respect both of the precedents and subsequents The state of Adams Innocencie is grounded by the Fathers out of this very verse and they make much account of the 7. chapter of the Preacher 29. where the wiseman saith This only have I found that God hath made Man righteous fecit Deus hominem rectum God hath made Man streight and upright in regard of his minde his wisdome is without busying himself with many questions such was his wisdome in the 20. verse you see that he gave to all the Beasts apt names agreeing with their natures the other straightnesse was of his will there was in his will no perversenesse the first of these the Fathers doe call gratiam gratis datam the other they call gratiam gratum facientem it was knowledge that made him after the Image of him that created him Colossians 3. 11. And again as concerning his minde God created him in righteousnesse and in true holinesse Ephesians 4. 24. Mans original righteousnesse was like that of the new man Christ after the Image of God his body was straight and his minde was upright But some will ask Why was not mans wisdome in the 20. verse and his uprightnesse in this verse Why were not both these joyned together Wisdome say they is appropriate unto Man before Woman was and the wisdome which Woman hath is from Man in whom silence in publique place is commendable and if they will learn any thing let them aske their Husbands at home 1 Cor. 14. 35. Innocencie was their attire But Man is not said to be innocent and upright untill that Woman was made And the Fathers say well that innocencie and righteousnesse before the fall was vestis nuptialis the wedding garment which made them more seemly in the sight of God though they were naked than all the rich and costly attire that is to be found in a Princes Palace originall wisedome and righteousnesse made Adam and Eve wise as serpents innocent as Doves Matthew 10. 16. there was in them as the Fathers say well prudens simplicitas and simplex prudentia they were ripe in knowledge innocent in life So that neither ignorance nor error which is worse than ignorance did distort their wisdome pejus est errare quam ignorare There was in them no mallice no perversnesse to distort their will they counted Godlinesse great gain and were content with their estate as it is in 1 Tim. 6. 9. They laid themselves upon the strong foundation of their obedience that so in the end they might obtain life eternall that so there might be continuall quietnesse of minde and peace of conscience that passeth all understanding The division of the verse This verse divideth it self into two parts the one is in respect of their body in that they were both naked the other is in respect of their minde and they were not ashamed First We will speak of these parts severally then after of them joyntly though they were both naked yet were they not ashamed First of them severally Their bodie naked In respect of their body they were both naked they were borne naked as we are borne Naked came I out of my mothers womb saith Job in his first chapter 21. and so were they created The ancient Divines doe draw out of that that Man is borne naked without any covering not with a thick and hairy hide but with a thin and smothe skin without claws without talents without horns or hoofs they are borne inermes having no weapons whereby they argue that man is borne not to doe any harme or hurt but to be harmlesse He is borne for love and the first words that Adam spake were words of love Adam and Eve Man and Woman are borne ad adhesionem unionem to cleave together and be one flesh that they should be not as Lyons but as Lambs like the immaculate Lamb Christ Jesus that they should be not as Griffins but as Doves like the Holy Ghost which descended like a Dove we should be gentle as Lambs innocent as Doves It was Tubalkain that came from Cain who was a murtherer that first brought in weapons to be instruments for Warre and dissention between men Adam and Eve in time of their obedience were naked in body innocent in minde they were the two Lambs the two Doves in Paradise born to no harm Nakednesse opposite to vestimentum Nakednesse standeth here opposite to apparrel which is either to cover us or to adorn us For the first use it is sufficient that our apparel be comely with shamefastnesse and modesty 1 Tim 2. 9. For the clothing of man in Esay 61. 10. God hath clothed me with the garments of salvation and covered me with the robe of righteousnesse he hath decked me like a Bridegroom with this was naked Adam arrayed Apparel is either ornamentum or indumentum the one for comelinesse the other to cover nakednesse Adam and Eve had no need of apparel for these two uses Man then regarded not his outward apparelling but he cared that the hid man of the heart might be uncorrupt as it is in 1 Pet. 3. 3. Though we are borne naked yet so we cannot long continue No weather no winde could pearce them in time of Innocencie they were impassible they felt not the
take the sword and revenge his own quarrel but in case of necessity when there is none to defend it is lawfull to use the Sword for his defence It is not lawfull originally for Cain to make his 〈◊〉 his Wife as the Fathers prove Genesis the 2. chapter and the 4. verse so where God saith therefore shall a man leave his Father and Mother and cleave to his Wife his meaning is he will not have friendship kept within one Familie but will have men so to marry that 〈◊〉 Families may be linked together in love Again where both in Genesis the second chapter and Matthew the ninteenth chapter it is said they two shall be one flesh that is not true where Brother and Sister are joyned together for they are one flesh already in as much as they are born of the 〈…〉 Therefore where there is unity of blood between such 〈◊〉 is no lawfull marrying but necessity is without law and therefore Cain is dispensed withall because necessity caused him Touching the mixture of Brother and Sister it is 〈◊〉 to the Lord and his soul abhorrs it Leviticus the 〈◊〉 chapter and the twenty third verse but if this kinde of copulation were originally lawfull it would not be so abhominable that he would punish it in such sort Besides we see this is a thing so unlawfull that John Baptist chooseth rather to hazard his life than he will suffer this sinne unreproved which he would not have done but that it was originally unlawfull for Herod to have his Brothers Wife Matthew the fourteenth chapter For the knowledge Cain had with his wife we see that as Adam when he was cast out of Paradise knew his Wife so Cain being departed from Gods presence to a Land of trouble and disquietness having lost spirituall comforts seeks for rest in carnall delights For the procreation of Children as Sarah speaks Genesis the eighteenth chapter is an act of pleasure which albeit it be lawfull for Adam a repentant sinner yet not for Cain being in that state that he was for in the time of repentance the Bridegroom must come forth of his Camber and the Bride out of her Bedchamber Joel the second chapter and the sixteenth verse and they that are married may not so give themselves over to the flesh but that upon speciall cause sometime they give themselves to prayer and fasting in the first to the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the fifth verse but Cain standing as he did at this time transgresseth the Command of God And yet touching the third point Gods goodness appeareth herein that for all that he so blesseth 〈◊〉 which was unlawfull that she conceiveth It was in Gods hand and his sinne deserved it that she should have been barren for Jeremiah the twenty second chapter in the second of Samuel the sixteenth chapter the sinne of Jeconiah and Michal is the cause of their barrenness Therefore in Gods justice it is a due punishment to all sorts not to have Children but yet as he brings light out of darkness so to shew he can of evill Parents bring forth good Children he gives Cain issue as he brought good Ezekiah out of Achan and Josia out of Ammon For this cause he gives the wicked Children as also in this regard to shew that he is able to break the Serpents head not one way only by killing sinne in men but by making them examples of his justice as in Pharaoh Romans the ninth chapter For this cause have I stirred them up even as we see the bodies of Malefactors are given to Chyrurgeons for Anatomies that in them men may see the state of our bodies and so it may be for the good of others For as it were inconvenient that evill Parents should only have evill Children because by this means evill would be infinite so it is as inconvenient that good Parents should have none but good Children for so that which is of grace would be ascribed to nature And so we see that albeit the act be unlawfull and the seed stolne yet being cast into the ground we see God so blesseth it that it is fruitfull The fourth point is that Cain called his Sons name Enoch the meaning whereof is a dedication or consecration and this gives hope as if there were some goodness remaining in Cain for those things that are built to be dedicated are Altars and Churches things for Gods use as Noah built an Altar and offered burnt offerings Genesis the eighth chapter but that which Cain built is no Altar but a City and we know Cities and Towns are dedicated to the world and the consecration that he makes is to no God except he make the world his God Philippians the third chapter his position is that gain is godliness in the first to Timothy the fourth chapter and therein he bestowes his service But after we have another Enoch so truly called Genesis the fift chapter the Son of Seth who did not depart from Gods presence as this Enoch did but consecrated himself to God and became a Preacher of righteousness who as well by his preaching as by uttering the censure of excommunication behold the Lord commeth with a thousand of Angels as Jude speaks dedicated himself to the Church but the first work that Cains Enoch sets himself about is the world This is the difference between Cains Henoch and Seths Henoch the one builds a City on earth the other seeks for a City from above whose builder is God So that there is no hope of Cains return he consecrates his Sonne and City but it is to the wrong God if to any Secondly Touching the building of the City which is a matter respecting the world before wee come to that we must know there was now a great distance of yeeres betweene the time that Cain knew his wife and the time that hee built the City for hee built not the City only for himselfe his wife and childe but was now grown to bee so great a number that hee must have a City to place his posterity in for God respecting mankinde rather then the sinne of man made the seede sowne plentifull They that came of Abraham Isaac and Jacob came but to twelve and in few yeeres of those twelve came seventy five and for the increase of mankinde Hee makes the barren families like a flock of sheepe as it is in the hundred and seventh Psalme Therefore when Cain was grown to so great a multitude he built him a City It is true of Cain which the Apostle affirmeth Hebrews the third chapter No man departs from God but by an evil heart of unbelief So Cain thinks that albeit God hath cursed that part of the earth where Adam was yet it may be the Land toward the Sun rising may be better and therefore he makes triall like the Isrealites which being forbidden to keep any of the Manna till morning for all that would trie whether it would be full of worms and being forbidden to
forward to that perfection Hebrews the sixt chapter and the first verse That as we may not 〈◊〉 be babes in knowledge that must be taught line upon line Esay the twenty ninth chapter but labour to come to a fulnesse of knowledge which the Apostle calls A treasure of wesdome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Colossians the second chapter and the third verse So for being faithfull men we must not content our selves with a weak and feeble faith but must strive to attain to an assurance of faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebrews the tenth chapter and the twenty second verse not to say as Agrippa Acts the twenty sixt chapter I am somwhat perswaded to be a Christian that is but a beginning of faith but when we have this beginning we are to goe forward and so in hope we must not content our selves with a good perswasion at the first and so to rest in a mammering but proceed till we be fully assured And this St. Peter telleth plainly we must perfecte sperare the first epistle of Peter the first chapter and the thirteenth verse trust perfectly This is Peters desire as it is the Apostles here Which full assurance that it is a different thing from faith the Apostle sheweth Ephesians the third chapter and the twelfth verse In whom we have boldnesse and accesse with confidence by faith in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That confidence or fiducia as the Apostle calls it is the perfection of our hope and we attain to it as he faith per fidem This fiducia is the effect of faith as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 access and boldness of speech are the effects of hope the second epistle to the Corinthians the third chapter and the twelfth verse Those beginnings of hope and faith are not to be disliked Mark the ninth chapter and the twenty fourth verse I beleeve Lord help my unbelief but he that hath such a faith must strive to come to Abrahams faith Qui contra spem sub spe credidit Romans the fourth chapter So he hath that small meature of hope which the Prophet speaketh of Joel the second chapter and the fourteenth verse Who knoweth if the Lord will return and repent and leave a blessing hehinde him Jon. the third chapter and the ninth verse These 〈◊〉 beginnings not to be disallowed so that he strive further to the perfection of hope which was in Job Job the thirteenth chapter and the fifteenth verse Etenim si occiderit sperabo in eum Which made Paul say Romans the eighth chapter and the thirty eighth verse I am sure that neither life nor death things present nor to come c. Thirdly This fulnesse of hope must continue to the end and not abide for a time As Christ blames Luke the eighth chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the Apostle finds fault with temporary hope It is that which we see in Demas he beleeved and had hope and gave great hope for a time so that Paul acknowledged him his fellow laborer but his faith and hope had soon an end for he for look Paul and fell to embracing the present world the second epistle to Timothie the fourth chapter Therefore it is not enough to hope for a time but our hope must continue to the end for as the Apostle saith thou mayst see the goodnesse of God in breaking off the natural branches to graff thee in if thou continue for else he will shew like severity to thee Romans the eleventh chapter and the seventeenth verse but thou must permanere The same Apostle saith Galatians the fift chapter and the seventh verse You did run well as if he should say nay you fate still and therefore all is to no purpose Therefore the Apostle exhorts So to run that they may obtain the first to the Corinthians the ninth chapter as he himself doth in chastising his body and subduing it least while he preach to them he should be rejected His meaning is albeit he be assured That nothing shall separate him from the love of God Romans the eighth chapter and the thirty eighth verse yet he will runne still and keep his hope For the state 〈…〉 is like the fanctifying of the Nazarite If at the end of six dayes he did touch any unclean thing he was to begin again Numbers the sixt chapter and the twelfth verse So it is in the matter of hope and other virtues And therefore the Prophet prayeth not only for the spirit and an ingenious spirit but a constant spirit that may continue Psalm the fifty first The means are set down in these words First he would have them use Diligence Secondly it must be demonstrative and expert Diligence Thridly it must be the same Diligence that is shewed in the works of Love and Charity and in the distribution to the poor Of these three points the first is The Apostle 〈◊〉 we may deceive our selves in our hope He that said I shall never be moved Psalm the thirtieth and and the sixt verse had hope enough and too much and he that said Though all men for sake thee yet not I Matthew the twenty sixt chapter hoped enough and too much and therefore hope doth well in injoyning the means for as in the beginning of the chapter verse the sixt is matter of feare and in the end verse the eighteenth matter of hope so here he willeth them to shew diligence that this hope may appear and that it be not a negligent and sluggish hope as he speaks ut ne fit is semper sperantes For as fear if it be not mixed with hope doth degenerate into desperation so hope if it be not tempered with fear will turn to presumption And it was the case of these two Saints David and Peter and we see what came of it And therefore of Job who had such an assured hope in God even in death it is said Nonne timor tuus spes 〈◊〉 Job the fourteenth chapter he felt in himself a fear to commit sinne and that fear say the ancient Fathers was his hope And the Apostle that wills them perfectè sperare to trust perfectly the first epistle of Peter the first chapter and the thirteenth verse saith after verse the seventeenth Passe your time in fear He that before called for a perfection of hope doth here require fear for so our hope may not fall asleep or wax negligent And as Basil saith Vide spem num sit ver a spes The true hope is that which hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is coact and moved to diligence Such a hope is not his that perswades himself his Master 〈◊〉 his comming and so falleth to be negligent that is a confounding hope But the diligent hope is that which confounds not Romans the fift chapter and the fift verse For as faith teacheth that it is impossible to attain to Heaven so withall it tells us it is 〈◊〉 a matter of difficulty Wherefore Christ saith Vigilate Mark
Father This doth distinguish true Christians from Counterfeits which say I know not whether the Father doe give me to Christ and therefore I will not come but to such Christ answers Matthew the eighteenth chapter and the fourteenth verse Non est volunt as patris 〈…〉 de pusillis illis pereat De pusillis dixit saith Augustine non de 〈◊〉 Christ meaneth not such as are little in respect of the world but but little in their own eyes that are not possessed with a spiritual pride of their own righteousnesse as though they need not now to come another time will serve It was the opinion of 〈◊〉 Acts the twenty fourth chapter When I have convenient leasure I will 〈◊〉 for thee So they think another time will be more fit than the 〈◊〉 oceasion and so Christ must wait upon them they may not wait upon Christ. But as the Pharisees despised the counsel of God and would not be baptized by John Luke the seventh chapter and the thirtieth verse so doe these despise the counsel of Christ against themselves whose purpose happily was even at this time to have received them But because they despised his counsel that happeneth to them which besell Saul whom Samuel tels That if he had kept the Lords commandement he had now established his kingdome for ever upon Israel the first book of Samuel the thirteenth chapter and the thirteenth verse but for that he despised the oportunity now it is removed to another And of them that come it may be they will come but with Cains spirit not caring how or what 〈◊〉 they give to God But they must come as given of the Father and not tanquam ab hominibus 〈◊〉 they may not come like him that sate down at the Marriage without awedding 〈…〉 the twenty second chapter Who so commeth in that 〈◊〉 as he shall not be received for that he is not given of the Father so he shall be 〈◊〉 out into utter darknesse Thirdly The promise is They that come after this manner shall not be cast out Which is set out earnestly by Christ with a 〈◊〉 negation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is never at no hand This 〈…〉 for Christ doth performe it and 〈…〉 when the 〈◊〉 saith 〈◊〉 for sakest not them that seeke 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 the meaning is they not only 〈◊〉 God but with him 〈◊〉 joyes and glory 〈◊〉 So he that comes to Christ is 〈…〉 〈…〉 out but received to be a member of 〈◊〉 my 〈◊〉 body 〈◊〉 partaker of the divine nature the second 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chapter and the fourth verse What is meant by being 〈…〉 appears by the 〈◊〉 out of the dry branch that bringeth forth no 〈◊〉 John the 〈◊〉 chapter which is to be cast 〈◊〉 the fire by the 〈◊〉 that 〈…〉 and is cast out Matthew the fift chapter by the bad fish caught in the net which is cast away Matthew the thirteenth chapter and the fourty eight verse This casting out is a degree to that casting into utter darknesse which Christ speaketh of There is a second for as that is out of the Church as John the ninth chapter and the thirty fourth verse of whom Christ saith Mark the fourth chapter and the eleventh verse but to them which are without the first epistle to the Corinthians the fift chapter and the twelfth verse What have ye to doe with them that are without that is the Heathen And this is nothing but a disposition to the second for as that is to be cast out of the Kingdome of Heaven of which Apocalyps the twenty second chapter and the fifteenth verse for as autem er ant canes and to be cast into the lake that burns with fire and brimstone where their smoak shall ascend for ever where the worm never dyeth and the fire is never quenched where they shall wish for death and death shall flie from them This is the state of them that are cast out But Christ promiseth That who so commeth to him being given shall not be cast out but shall be quit from death and damnation He doth not only receive them and eat with them but receives them into that union that is inter alitum alimentum that is to be one with him which is a greater union than is either between brother and brother or between man and wife for herein is that verified That we are received to be partakers of the Divine nature by partaking whereof he is in us and we in him we and Christ are made one we receive him and he receives us So that as God cannot hate Christ so he cannot but love us being ingraffed into him Thus it comes to passe that we are not cast out but are made partakers of all the good things of Christ who saith to him that comes to him Luke the fifteenth chapter Omnia nostra tua sunt and Matthew the fifteenth chapter Intra in gaudium Domini that is the chief point in this promise As for them that come not to Christ howsoever they deserve to be cast out yet Christ doth not cast them out but they cast out themselves in as much as they sever themselves from this Sacrament which is the holy of holiest and from the memorial of his loving kindness He that commeth not to the Lords Supper sets himself in the state of the Heathen which albeit they have a kinde of prayer and a knowledg no lesse than we yet come not so farre as to celebrate this Sacrament He is in no better state than the Jews and Turks which albeit they beleeve the creation of the world and the last Judgment yet acknowledge not Christ nor come to him tanquam panis vitae But they must come to the Lords Supper if they will be bidden to the Lambs Supper Neither may they defer to come at their own pleasure for it may be now is the time that Christ will receive them and if they neglect the opportunity they shall be cast out as Saul was in the first book of Samuel the thirteenth chapter It remains that we stirre up in ourselves a willingnesse to come For to come is a voluntary action as Christ tells us John the fift chapter Vos non vultis venire adme nam qui venit ideò venit quia voluit venire unlesse we be as willing to come as Christ is to receive all is nothing Matthew the twenty third chapter and thirty seventh verse Quoties volui noluistis How often would I have gathered thy children together even as a Hen gathereth her chickens under her wings and ye would not Therefore we must beware of removing this willingnesse from our selves To this end we must continually pray that Christ will work in us this willingnesse that the Father will draw us by his spirit and say with Peter Matthew the fourteenth chapter and the twenty eight verse Domine mitte me ad te venire let me be in numero pusillorum non timentium one of those little ones that