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A04845 Lectures vpon Ionas deliuered at Yorke in the yeare of our Lorde 1594. By John Kinge: newlie corrected and amended. King, John, 1559?-1621. 1599 (1599) STC 14977; ESTC S108033 733,563 732

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him 4. He heareth of a great city of a wearisome perābulation asking the travell of 3. whole daies but he saveth the labor of his feete goeth into a litle vessel travelleth by sea a far easier iourney 5. He is bidden to cry but he is so far from making any noise that al the clamour and noise of the marriners could not awake him stir him vp 6. He heareth that the wickednesse of Niniveh is come vp before the presence of the Lorde notwithstanding hee feareth not to mocke and abuse the presence of the same Lord neither despaireth he to avoide it There is nothing in all these but stubbornes and rebellion which is as kindly to man as the flesh and bones that he beareth about him Amongst the other plants in the garden of Edē not far frō the goodliest trees of life knowledge grew the bitter roote of disobedience which our forfathers no sooner had tasted but it infected their bloud and the corrupt nutriment thereof converted it selfe into the whole body of their succeding linage The breasts of Eue gaue no other milke then perversnesse to her children and Adam left it for a patrimony and inheritance vnto all his posterity Though God had precisely said Of the tree of knowledge of good and evill thou shalt not eate for in the daye that t●ou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death though there were no comparison betweene their maker and a murtherer frō the beginning the father of truth and the father of lies a God and a divell and the one had forbidden but one tree and fenced it as it were with a double hedge of a two-fold death yet when the serpēt came to the woman with a meere contradiction to the voice of God yee shall not die the death how credulous and forwarde was shee to entertaine his suggestion Moses proved to the children of Israel in the 9. of Deuteronomy by a perfect induction that there was nothing but rebellion in them Remember and forget not saith he how thou provokedst the Lord thy God to anger in the wildernesse also in Horeb afterwardes in Taberah and in Massah and at the graues of lust likewise when the Lord sent you from Cadesh Barnea c. At length hee concludeth yee yaue beene rebellious vnto the Lorde since the day that I knevve you And God pronounceth of the same people in the fourth of Num. that though they had seene his glory and the miracles which he did in Aegypt and in the wildernesse yet they had tempted him ten times and had not obeyed his voice In the 17. of the same booke the Lord gaue commādemēt vnto Moses that Aarons rod which budded for the house of Levi when the other rods budded not should be kept in the arke for a monumēt of their murmurings rebellions forepassed To forbeare infinite other testimonies the whole world may bee the arke to keepe the monumentes of their and our disobedience it is so common to vs both when we are willed to aske for the old way which is the good way to answere wee will not walke therein when the watchmen cry vnto vs take heede to the sounde of the trumpet to answere wee will not take heede when wisedome crieth abroade and vttereth her voice in the streetes O yee foolish how long will yee learne foolishnesse c. to despise her counsell and to make a Skorne of her correction What worke of our handes bewrayeth not this malice vvhat word of our mouthes speaketh not perverse thinges almost what thought of our heartes kicketh not against the prickes of Gods sacred commaundementes and desperatelye adventureth her selfe vpon the point of his sharpe curse O that our waies were made so direct that wee might keepe his statutes then shoulde wee never bee confounded whilst wee had respect vnto all his commaundementes It is a question made by some though I make no question of it vvhether this detraction and refusall of Ionas vvere a faulte yea or no Dionysius Carthusianus vpon this place doeth partly excuse it I thinke it farre from excuse fot doubtlesse the voice of GOD is the first ru●e and rudimentes of all Christian instruction the first stone to bee laide in the whole building that cloud by day that piller of fire by night vvhereby all our actions are to bee guided Paule in his marveilous conversion desired no other lighte and load-starre to bee governed by but the vvill and vvorde of his Saviour Lorde what wilt thou haue mee doe The verie Prophet of Moab vvoulde not departe from this standarde for vvhen Balaac by his messengers sent him worde that hee woulde promote him and God did but keepe him backe from honour hee made this answere vnto him If Balaac woulde giue mee this house full of silver and golde I cannot passe the commaundement of the LORD to doe either good or badde of mine owne minde what the Lorde shall commaunde that same will I speake Hee had saide before to the king in person Loe i am come vnto thee and can I nowe saye anye thinge at all the worde that GOD putteth in my mouth that shall I speake The vvordes of Samuel to Saule determine the doubt and make it as plaine as the light at noone day that the fact of Ionas here committed was an vnexcusable offence Beholde saith hee to obey is better then sacrifice and to harken is better then the fat of rammes For rebellion is as the sinne of witchcraft and transgression is wickednes and idolatrie It followeth in the next wordes Because thou hast cast away the worde of the Lord therefore he hath cast away thee from being King You heare the nature of these two contraries Obedience and Disobedience kindly disciphered the one to be better then sacrifice for he that offereth a sacrifice offereth the flesh of a beast but he that obeyeth offereth his owne will as a quicke and a reasonable sacrifice which is all in all the other to be as witchcraft and idolatrie for what is disobedience but when the Lord hath imposed some duety vpon vs wee conferre with our owne hearts as Saul consulted with the woman of Endor or Ahaziah Kinge of Samaria with the God of Eckron Belzebub whether the word of the Lord shal be harkened to yea or no Thus we set vp an idol within our own breasts against the God of heavē forsaking his testimonies we follow the voice and perswasion of our owne devises Bernard alluding to this place before recited writeth thus The children of disobedience make their will their Idoll Hee addeth for further explication that it is one thing not to obey an other thing to purpose and prepense disobedience Neither is it the simple transgression of Gods commandement but the proud wilfull contempt of his will which is reputed the sin of idolatry And surely I see no reason they haue to conceale the infirmity of Ionas herein when Ionas himselfe if I mistake not the meaning
limites but of a continuall tract and course of seas 4. Not where the waters were placide and still but vvhere the floudes were ever fighting togither 5. Those floudes lie as a circle about him and keepe him in like armed men 6. Not onely the flouds annoy him the tides of the sea and the decourse of lande rivers but hee is also troubled with vvaues 7. They are not simply waues but surges vvaues of the vehementest collision and insultation 8. And not simply surges but such as are strengthned by the arme and animation of God his waues 9. As if there were no more in the world but they had all forsaken their proper places as they came to the siege of T●oy to turmoile this one sea hee tearmeth them in genelity all thy waues Lastly they were not aboute him as before but laie like a pressure vpon his body to keepe it downe There is yet a stinge in the taile of the Scorpion a danger behinde worse then the former which as it is reserved to the last place so hath it more venime in it then all the rest Then I saide I am cast out of thy sighte which containeth the weaknesse and distrust of his fearefull conscience See what a daungerous conclusion hee maketh against his soule not rashly apprehended but with leasure and deliberation conceived I saide that because the Lord had cast him into the bottome of the sea from the sight of men and the floudes and surges were over and about him therefore hee should thinke hee is cast from the sight of God that is that the lighte of his face brightnes of his countenance aspect of his mercy compassion had everlastingly forsaken him Ionas thou art deceived Thou speakest more to thy selfe thē ever the Lord said Hee that cast thee into the sea or caused the mariners to doe it never said that he cast thee out of his sight if thou hadst askt the seas and the flouds wherein thou wert overwhelmed they would never haue said it They know that the Lorde can say vnto the earth giue and to the sea restore keepe not those my sonnes daughters back whom I call for It is the voice of the serpent that speaketh this damnable sentēce vvithin thee Beware of his sophistry admit it not his reasoning is not good that because thou art persecuted driven to the bottome of the sea therefore thou art wholy cast out It is the pestilentest bait that ever Sathan laide to infect soules with Who being himselfe the sonne of perdition compasseth sea and lande to make others his proselytes the childrē of hel as deeply as himselfe is the cords wherwith he draweth thē into his own inheritance of destruction are to make the grievousnes of their sins the sense of their presēt but momētany afflictions markes of their finall dereliction and that the favour of God is vtterlie departed from them This vvas the snare that he set for the soule of Iob in the mouthes of his three friendes pronouncinge him a reprobate and hypocrite because hee was afflicted by God The like for the soule of David in the lippes of his insolent enimies vvhen they vpbraided him where is now thy God he trusted in God let God deliver him if hee will haue him Behold I shew you a sea indeede of a bottomelesse depth the ground whereof can no more be founded than the lowest hel He that is throwne into this sea is alwaies falling and descending and never findeth an end It hath no midst in it as the sea hath because it is vnmeasurable and infinite I meane a desperate conscience distrusting the mercies of God relinquished of it selfe the floudes and surges whereof restlesse turbulent vnplacable cogitations can never be quieted and the fightings therein as betwixt waters and waters in the sea betweene affirmations negations it is and it is not cannot be reconciled Let all the rivers and streames of fresh vvater which glad the citty of God and comforte the soules of the faithfull runne into it they are resisted and driven back There is no entrance I meane for any perswasion of the graciousnes kindnes of the Lord though it be preached a thousand times The salt vnsavory bitter quality in the soule wherewith it is baned before hath no communion with so sweete a nature Which sin of desperation as the nature of man hath iust cause to detest because it breaketh that league of kindnes which we owe to our owne flesh many a bloudy instrument hath it put into the hands of man to destroy himselfe which execution beeing done against the laws of nature a worse ever ensueth from the iudgmēt fear of God so for that iniury indignity which it ostreth to the Lord of heaven sooner shal he forgiue the apostasie of his reprobate angels than this dāned sin Ierome observeth vpon the Psalmes that Iudas offended more in despairing of pardon and hanging himselfe than in betraying his innocent maister to death Isiodore giveth a kinde of reason for it Because to commit an offence is the death of the soule but to cast of hope of forgiuenesse is to descende into hell What can ever be done more derogatorie and iniurious to that righteous nature of his than to change his trueth into a lye and the lyes of Sathan into trueth and to iustifie Sathan more than God that when as the Lord shall speake on the one side binde by promise confirme by oth and seale with the bloud of his onely begotten son touching his goodnes towardes al true penitent sinners that although he haue made a wound he wil heale it though broken hee will binde vp though killed he will giue life yet he is not beleeved But when the Devill contrariwise shal suggest for his parte that the iustice of GOD will never bee satisfied the heynousnesse of our sinnes never pardoned as if he had left his name of beeing the father of lyes any longer hee is harkened vnto VVhat else is this but to turne falshoode into trueth darcknesse into light and GOD for ever to be magnified into the Devill himselfe Ionas went not so farre as I nowe speake of For though it were a daungerous pang which hee was fallen into and there vvanted but age and strength to make it vp yet he persisted not therein his feete had vvell nigh slipte but he recovered them and he spake vnadvisedlye vvith his lippes but he recalled it againe Yet vvill I looke tovvardes thine holie temple I vvill not so much explicate the wordes at large as vrge their consequence This was the difference betweene Iudas and Ionas Iudas vvente out and never looked backe more The LORDE cast him foorth and the devil bare him awaye to a tree vvhence hee returned not till hee had hunge himselfe Ionas is cast out vvith an hope and minde to returne Hee forgetteth not the temple of the LORDE and the place vvhere his honour dwelt though hee vvere farre remooved
the sight of God speake we in Christ. Againe vvee walke not in craftinesse neither handle vvee the worde of God deceiptfullie but in the declaration of the truth vvee approoue our selues to every mans conscience in the sighte of God Nay to every conscience of men that is bee the conscience good or bad light or darkenesse they shall haue no iust cause against vs. What needeth longer discourse the sonne of God himselfe Ioh. 18. confesseth before Pilate For this cause am I borne and for this cause came I into the vvorlde that I mighte beare vvitnesse vnto the truth For when the truth of God is wronged then the advise of Cyprian taketh place wee must not holde our peace least it begin to savour not of modestie and shamefastnesse but distrust of our cause that wee keepe silence And vvhilst vvee are carelesse to refute false criminations vvee seeme to acknowledge the crime The trueth of Christians is comparably fairer than that Helen of the Greekes and the Martyres of our Church haue foughte more constantly in her quarrell against Sodome than ever those nobles and Princes for Helen against the Troianes There was never prophet true nor false in Israell nor Canaan but tooke it a greate reproach and stayne vnto them to bee toucht with falshood Micheas whome neither the court-like perswasions of the Eunuch that went for him nor the consent of foure hundred prophetes nor the favour of tvvo kings nor danger of his owne heade coulde drawe from the word of God standeth firmely in defence of the trueth Zedechias the false prophet in seeming as earnestly for the trueth likevvise yet these as contrary one to the other as Hiena and the dogge the one saieth goe to Ramoth Gilead and prosper the other sayth if thou returne in saftie the LORDE hath not sent mee The one to expresse it in life and by a visible signe maketh hornes of yron and telleth Ahab vvith these thou shalt push at Aram till thou haste destroyed him the other hath also an Image and a vision whereby to describe it I savv all Israell scattered vpon the mountaines like sheepe that had no shephearde Yet both for the truth Ieremy and Hanany agreeing like fire and vvater the one bidding the king to goe vnto Babylon the other advising the contrary the one sending fetters to the king and the nobles the other pulling the yoke from the necke of Ieremy and saying thus shall the yoke of Babell bee broken the one affirming the other denying yet both are champians for the trueth The devill a lyar and the father of lyes vvho abode not in the trueth because there is no trueth in him vvho vvhen he speaketh a lye speaketh of his ovvne that is his naturall and mother tongue is lying Ioh. 8. yet hee transformeth himselfe into an Angell of lighte therefore it is no greate thinge sayeth the Apostle though his ministers transforme themselues as though they vvere the ministers of righteousnesse vvhose ende shall bee according to their workes Christ is truth indeede Antichrist truth pretended The dayly exclamations of the Donatistes in Africke against the Orthodoxe and sounde beleevers was that they vvere traitours against the holy bookes and themselues the propugners of them Augustine answereth traitours not by conviction but by confiction and false accusation of their enemies Dioscorus crieth out himselfe an heretique in the Councell of Chalcedon I defende the opinions of the holy fathers I haue their testimonies not by snatches or at the seconde hande but vttered in their owne bookes I am cast out vvith the holy fathers as if truth it selfe had beene condemned in the condemnation of Dioscorus So is it at this day the Prophets of Babylō though they haue received the marke of the beast in their foreheades that all the worlde may knowe them to bee such yet as Cyprian in his Epistle to Iubaianus wrote of the Novatian heretique that after an apish manner hee taketh vnto him the authority of the Church so these by the like imitation take vnto them the Church trueth Scriptures Fathers all antiquity consent perpetuity vnto the ende of the world and rather than the worlde shall thinke that they deale not truely in defense of truth they spend both conscience and sometime life vpon it O quantum tegmen est falsitatis O howe greate a shew doth falshod make For our owne partes vvho by the grace of God are that wee are put in chardge for the gathering togither of Gods Saintes if we be harmed in our goodes or good names or in the carriage of our liues or in our wiues and children as sometimes the maner is we accompt them our private wronges and easilye may digest them It hath beene done in the greene in all the times that haue beene ever of olde much more in the drie they haue called the maister of the house Belzebub much more those of the housholde We preach not our selues but Christ Iesus the Lorde and our selues your servauntes for Iesus sake and for his sake we will endure it We are fooles for Christs sake and you are wise wee are weake and you are strong you are honourable and we despised Be it so But we will never abide that the honour of Christ Iesus himselfe shal be wounded through our loines that the rebukes which fall vpon vs shal redound to his disgrace that his gospell and truth shall be defamed the doctrine which we preach discredited our calling reproached which though in vessels of earth yet he hath sanctified and blessed to such a worke I meane the saving of soules as by the pollicy of man all forcible engins could never haue beene cōpassed How vsual a thing it is vpon every light surmise not only to chardge vs for false prophets but because we are prophets at al to cōtēne vs to disdain vs for that wherin we are most to be 〈◊〉 I report me to that common phrase of speech when if men will shoo●●oor●h arrowes against vs with poisoned heads even bitter sharpe wor●es they thinke it the greatest ignominy to cal vs Priests or Ministers Herein if the zeale of gods house his holy ordināce cōsume vs if the maintenance of his cause our calling beare vs away make vs forget the spirit of gentlenes for a time let no man blame vs. For is our office dishonored amongst you We tel them whosoever they be as David told Michol who scorned him for dancing before the Arke it was before the Lord which chose me rather than thy father and all his house commaunded mee to be ruler over the people And therefore I will play before the Lord and I will yet be more vile than thus and will bee low in mine owne sighte It is before the Lord that we are Priestes and Ministers to serue in his house and at his table who hath chosen vs rather than their fathers and whole stocke to serue in this office And therefore we will
his servant who being taken with thefte and alleadging for himselfe that it was his destiny to steale his maister aunswered And thy destiny to be beaten and accordingly rewarded him If these marriners had so disputed or sitten vpon the hatches of their ship their armes folden togither and their heartes onely desiring to escape their sorrows had there presently bene ended but neither their hearts nor hands were vnoccupied And therfore as in the curing of bodilie diseases though of the most highe commeth healing yet the phisition must be honoured with that honour that belongeth vnto him and the apothecary maketh the confection as in the warres of Israell against M●dia the sworde of the Lorde and of Gedeon went together and the cry of the people was not left out and as in preventing this ship-wracke spirites and bodies praier and labour heaven and earth If I may so say vvere conioyned so in all the affaires and appertenaunces of our liues we must beware of tempting God We must not lie in a ditch sullen and negligent of our selues and looke to be drawne out by others nor thinke to bee fed as the young ravens without sowing neyther to bee clothed as lillies of the fielde without spinning and labouring health commeth not from the cloudes without seeking nor wealth from the cloddes without digging Wee must cast our care vpon God that yet wee bee not carelesse and dissolute in our owne salvation O di homines ignavâ operâ philosophâ sententiâ I hate men that happily haue good and provident thoughtes but they will take no paines That which Metellus sometime spake by number I holde a trueth in him that is without number Our one and one-most God ijsdem deos propitios esse aequum est qui sibi adversarij non sunt It is meete that God favour them who are not enimies and hinderers to themselues But to leaue this point there is a time I perceiue when the riches of this world are not worth the keeping especially compared with the life of man Their wares adventures and commodities and not onely the ballast of the ship but the necessary implements furniture for the original word though signifying a vessell in particular is a generall name for all such requisite provision their victuall munitions and whatsoever was of burthen besides are they conveied landed by boat or any way thought vpon to be saved nay they are throwne into the sea to lighten their ship vvithout ever hope of recovery It ●s a proverbe iustified by trueth though the father of lies spake it Skin for skin and all that a man hath will hee giue for his life And it is a rule in nature allowed No man ever hated his owne flesh nay rather hee will nourish and cherish his life as the Lorde his Church Is not the life more worth then meate and thy body then rayment will not a man giue his riches for the ransome of his life The poorest worme in the earth which hath a life saith Austin as vvell as the Angell in heaven will not forgoe that life without resisting If either hornes or hoofes or tuskes or talentes or beakes or stinges of beasts birds flies vnreasonable creatures may withstand they will not spare to vse their armour and weapons of nature to defende themselues withall Is the life of the bodye my beloved brethren so deare and is not the life of the soule more precious is the life present so tender and the life to come so much inferiour will you vnlode a shippe to saue it vvill you burthen and surcharge a soule to destroy it shall the necessary instrumentes of the one be throwne out and shall not the accessary ornamentes superfluous sumptuous riotous delightes of the other bee departed with or are not soules better then bodies and incorruptible liues hereafter better then these present subiecte to corruption or are not riches a burthen to your soules Ho hee that encreaseth that which is not his owne and hee that ladeth himselfe with thicke clay how long Are not riches a loade or what doubt you of I know your aunswere wee encrease but our owne Your owne who intiteled you thereto Is not the earth the Lords and the fulnesse thereof are you Coloni or Domini Lordes of the earth or tillers manurers dressers dispensers Ierome vvriteth of Abraham and other rich patriarches of former age that they vvere rather to bee tearmed the bayliues of the Lorde then riche men But vvere it your owne hath the sea barres or doores to keepe it in and is your appetite without all moderation How long is there no ende of encreasing The widdow in the 2. of the Kings that had her liberty given to borrow as many vessels for oile to pay her debts as her neighbours could spare her had as large a scope I am sure and with better authority then ever was proposed to you yet there was a time when she said to her son giue me yet a vessel hee answered there are no more vessels and the oile ceased and I doubt not but with the oile her desire ceased to It may be you haue filled your vesselles with oile your owne and your neighbours your garners your coffers your bagges your warehouses your fieldes your farms your children are ful I aske againe with the prophet How long do you ever thinke to fill your hearts The barren wombe vnmercifull graue vnsatiable death will sooner bee satisfied It is a bottomlesse purse the more it hath the more it coveteth See an image hereof Alcmaeon being willed by Croesus to go into his treasure-house take as much gold as he could carry away with him provided for that busines a long hanging garment downe to his ankles and great bootes and filled them both nay he stuffed his mouth and tyed wedges of gold to the locks of his head I thinke but for hurting his braine hee woulde haue ferst the skull of his head and the bowels within his breast if hee coulde haue spared thē Here is an hart set vpon riches riches set vpon an hart heapes of wealth like the hils that wants cast vp Cumuli tumuli every hill is a graue every heape a tombe to bury himselfe in Is this to dispence Is this to exercise bayliwickes Is this to shewe fidelity in your maisters house In fewe wordes I exhorte you if the ship bee too full vnlade it cast your goods into the sea least they cast your selues cast your bread vpon the waters distribute your mercies to the needy where you looke for no recompence It is not certaine it is not likely and so it may fall out that it is not possible for those that are rich to enter into the kingdome of heaven You can dissolue that riddle I know our saviour you say meant of such as trust in riches do not you trust in them Do you not say to the wedge of golde in the applause that your selues
that can holde no water The change is very vnequall worse then the change of Glaucus who gaue his armour of golde for armour of brasse and the losse vnsupportable For what aequalitie betweene a naturall fountaine vvhich ever floweth because it is euer fedde in the chambers of the earth and artificiall cesternes or pittes fashioned by the handes of man cesternes that are broken and cannot holde I saie not water of life and perennity but no water at all But when they saw their folly herein as a thiefe is ashamed saith God when he is founde so was the house of Israell ashamed they and their kings their Princes their Priestes and their Prophets because they had said to a tree Thou art my father and to a stone Thou hast begotten me He yet proceedeth against thē They haue turned their backe to me and not their face but in their time of trouble they will say Arise and helpe vs. You see the fits and pangs of idolatours First they digge broken pits afterward they are ashamed first they flie to the tree stone for succour but when they are vexed they seeke after the help of the true God Clemens Alexandrinus marvelleth why Diagoras and Nicanor with others should be sir-named Atheists vvho had a sharper sight in discerning the false Gods thē their fellows Amōgst whom Diagoras hauing something to boile tooke his Hercules carved of wood thus spake vnto him It is now time O Hercules that as thou hast serued Euristheus in twelue labors so thou shouldest serue mee in the thirteenth so threw him into the fire as a piece of wood A practise not vnlike the counsell which I haue read giuen to Clodoveus the French king Worship that which thou hast burnt incense vnto burne that vvhich thou hast worshipped The childrē of Israel in the book of Iudges finding their error folly in idolatry made a recātation of it for whilst they served the Lord he deliuered them from the Aegyptians and Ammorites children of Ammō Philistines Sidonians Malachites Mahonites they cried vnto the Lord he saued them out of their handes But whē they worshipped strange Gods they were no more delivered nay they were vexed oppressed sore tormēted thē the Lord vpbraided them Go crie vnto your Gods which you haue chosen let them saue you in the time of your tribulation And to that exprobatiō they yeelded saying we haue sinned against thee because wee haue forsaken our owne God haue serued Baalam doe thou vnto vs whatsoever pleaseth thee onely deliuer vs this day The like irrision he vsed before in Ieremy to those that honored stockes and stones but where are thy Gods which thou hast made thee let thē arise if they cā helpe thee in the time of thy misery A forcible admonition to those whom a truth cannot draw from a doctrine of lies from the worke of their own hands worship of their own phātasies whom Clemens Alexandrinus not vnfitly matcht with those Barbarian tyrants who bound the bodies of the living to the bodies of the dead till they rotted togither so these being living soules are coupled and ioined with dead images vanishing in the blindnesse of their minds perishing in the inventions of their own braines And as the naturall pigeons were beguiled by the counterfet and flewe vnto pigeōs that were shaped in the painters shop so stones saith he flocke vnto stones stocks vnto stocks men vnto pictures as sensles of hart as stocks stones that are carved But whē they haue tired thēselues in their supposed imaginary Gods whō do they worship Praxiteles made Venus to the likenes of Cratina whom he loved Al the Painters of Thebes painted her after the image of Phrine a beautiful but a notorious harlot Al the carvers in Athens cut Mercury to the imitation of their Alcibiades It may be the pictures of Christ the blessed Virgin the saints which they haue placed in their windows vpon the walles of their houses fastned to their beds and carrie privily in their bosomes as Rahel hid her fathers idols in the camels straw are but Pigmalions pictures workes of their owne devising or draughts of their lovers friēds as vnlike the originals as Alcibiades was to Mercury Phrine Cratina to Venus Lactātius scattereth the obiections made for images in his times reneued in ours like fome For whē it was alleaged that they worshiped not the images thēselus but those to whose likenes similitude they were formed I am sure saith he your reason is because you thinke thē to be in heavē els they were not Gods Why then cast you not your eies into heauē why forgetting the feature of your bodies which are made vpright that your minds may imitate them not answering the reason of your name pore ye downe vpon the earth bow your selues to inferiour things as if it repeted you Non quadrupedes esse natos that you were not borne foure footed beasts Againe images were devised to be the memorials represētatiōs either of the absent or of the dead Whether of these two do you think your Gods if dead who so folish as to worship thē if absent as litle they deserue such honor because they neither se our actiōs nor heare the praiers which we powre before thē When they further replied that they afforded their presēce no where so sone or not at al as at their images he answereth it is iust as the cōmō people deemeth that the spirits ghosts of the dead walk at their graues reliques are most cōversant in churchyards I passe his further infectatiō how senseles a thing it is to feare that which it selfe feareth falling firing stealing away which being in timber was in the power of a contemptible artificer to bee made some thinge or nothinge vvhen no man feareth the workeman himselfe which must of force be greater then his worke when the birdes of the aire are not afraid of them because they roust and build and leaue their filthines vpon them and the figments themselues if they had any sense or motion would run to thāke worship the carver who when they were rude and vnpolished stones gaue them their being When Saint Augustine heard them say in his dayes that they tooke not the idoll for a God he asketh them what doth the altar there and the bowing of the knee and holding vp the hands and such like gesticulations They seemed in their owne conceiptes to bee of a finer● religion such are the pruners and purifiers of popery the cleanely Iesuites of these times which were able to distinguish I worship not the corporall image onely I beholde the portraiture of that which I ought to worship but he stoppeth their mouthes with the Apostles sentence and sheweth what damnation will light vpon them which turne the truth of God into a lie and worship the creature more then the creator which is to be
driue him to desperation the Sabaeans to store vp treasures of vvickednesse and to shew that stolne bread is sweet vnto them The envy and malignity of Sathan whence is it of God No. God borroweth and vseth his service I graunte but Sathan first profered it so the malice is his owne who was a murtherer from the beginning hee onely add●ng gouernement and moderation therevnto The furious and bloudy rapines of the other whence are they from God no. They lay in the cisternes of their owne heartes Sathan drew them forth by ins●igation themselues let loose the streame and when it was once on flote the Lorde directed and disposed the course by his wisedome For this present I ende God is of pure eies and can beholde no vvickednesse hee hath 〈◊〉 righteousnesse to the rule and vveighed his iustice in a ballance his soule hateth and abhorreth sin I haue served with your iniquities It is a labour service thraldome vnto him more than Israell endured vnder their grievous task-masters his law to this day curseth and condemneth sin his hands haue smitten scrouged sin he hath throwne downe angels plagued men overturned cities ruinated nations and not spared his owne bowels whilst hee appeared in the similitude of sinfull flesh hee hath drowned the world vvith a floud of waters shall burne the world with a floud of fire because of sin The sentence shall stand vnmooueable as long as heaven and earth endureth tribulation anguish vpon every soule that doth evil Ievv or Gentile All adulterers murtherers idolaters sacrilegious blasphemous covetous wretches liers swearers forswearers whom the Apostle calleth dogges barking at the iustice of God making a causelesse complaint against him as if he were cause of their sins shall one day see the folly and feele the price of their vnrighteous in●ectation Let God therefore be true and let all men be liers let God be iust and all men sinners let God be iustified in al his iudgements and let all his accusers vanish and consume in the madnes of their heartes as the fome vpon the waters THE XIX LECTVRE Chap. 1. ver 14. For thou Lord hast done as it pleased thee THe Mariners in this reason of their petition acknowledge 2. things directly 1. the worke of God in the casting foorth of Ionas Thou Lord hast done it 2. the ground of his workes his owne will as it pleased thee A third thing is acknowledged by implication the equity iustice of that will as the warrant for their deed for thou Lord c. their meaning is not therein either to charge him with a tyrānous will quod libet licet as the manner of grievous princes is to thinke that lawfull whatsoever pleaseth them either to insimulate and accuse him of iniustice to make him actor or patrone of any their sins who dealeth in the actions of mē sometimes with open sometimes with secret but alwaies with a righteous iudgement Therefore I noted their corruption who thinke themselues excused in their most enormous and execrable sins because they fulfill the will of God in one sense not that open and revealed will which he hath given in tables published by sound of a trumpet specified by blessings cursings promises threatnings exhortations dehortations and such like wherevnto they stand strictly bound but a secret and hidden will written in another booke wrapt vp in the couns●iles of his owne breast which neither they intended when they did their misdeedes neither were they ever charged therewith from Gods lips Secreta Domino revelata nobis filijs nostris Secret thinges belong to the Lord revealed to vs our children 1. Quantum ad ipsos fecerunt quod Deus noluit touching their owne purpose and intendment they have done that which God would not they have transgressed his lawe with contentation of heart perhappes with gladnes it may be with greedinesse taking a solace and pleasure therein and not wishing to have done otherwise they have pursued it to the third and fourth generation from the first assault or motion of sin to consent from consent to delight from delight to custome and yet not giving over till they come to a spirit of slumber or rather a death in sin 2. Quantum ad omnipotentiam Dei nullo modo id efficere valuerunt touching the omnipotencie of God they were never ab●e to doe it he sitteth in heaven that laugheth them to scorne he besiegeth them round about and his hand is vpon them They are not able to depart from his will more than if a ship were going from Ioppe to Tharsis as this ship was from West to East and one by walking vpon the hatches a contrary course as if he would goe from East to West from Tharsis towardes Ioppe againe might stay the motion or flight of the shippe he doth his endevour to hinder it by bending both his face and his pace backewarde but the ship is too well winged and of too huge a burthen to be resisted so those others shewe their will to frustrate and faile the will of God by committing sinne prohibited but yet they shall doe a will of his or rather his will shal be done vpon them maugre their malicious and sworne contradictions De hijs qui faciunt quae non vult facit ipse quae vult Of those that doe what he would not he doth what he would and as he commanded light to shine out of darknes so he can commaund good out of euill treasure from out the midst of drosse and commodity from the very heart of deepest wickednesse at least he will execute his iustice vpon offenders as he professeth Exod. 14. I will get me honour vpon Pharaoh and all his host for this cause he set him vp to shew his power in him and that his name might be declared to the whole earth Exod. 9. To reduce a diffused but a dangerous intricate question wherin as I then protested the warinesse of my proceeding so now I againe protest the subiection of my spirite to the spirites of prophets God forbid that I should not bee readier to learne than to teach I say to reduce it to heads I proposed vnto you the errors of some in 2. 〈◊〉 of extremities some going too far in that they make God the 〈◊〉 of sin others comming a● short that God doth only permit 〈◊〉 The former an error 〈◊〉 for devils than men the latter an error of humanity offending of simplicity rather then malice speaking truth of God when they acknowledge his permission of sinne but 〈…〉 who le truth because they thinke God only permitteth it both deny the godhead in effect the one destroying the goodnes and 〈◊〉 the other impairing the omnipotency providence government thereof in that they restraine it from some thinges The former of these two opinions that God is the author of sin most prodigious to cōceive though engendred in the braine I know not whether of men or devils yet is taken by
thou diddest it secretly but I will doe this thinge before all Israell and before the sunne Micheas told Ahab The Lorde hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of all thy prophets and the Lorde hath apointed evill against thee Ieremy to the face of GOD chargeth him Surely thou hast deceived this people and Ierusalem saying you shall have peac● and behold a sworde And the Lorde in plainer tearmes taketh it vpon him Ezech. 14. If the prophet bee deceived when he hath spoken a thing I the Lorde have deceived him God gave the Gentiles vp Rom. 1. to the desires of their heartes to vncleanenesse to defile their bodies betweene themselves c. into vile affections affections of dishonour dishonesty contumely shame to doe against nature it selfe into a reprobate minde Iulian interpreted al these speeches by Permittere as if then God did it when hee suffered it to be done so did many auncient writers by wordes of the like importance Passus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Augustine answered him that God doth not only permit then but declare his wrath power therein Iulian replied that they were phrases hyperbolicall that is in some sort exceeding trueth Augustine answered they were proper Iulian replied what needed God deliver them to these lusts wherein they were before it was sufficient to let them sticke fast therein Augustine answered It is one thinge to haue them an other to bee giuen over vnto them the wicked are giuen over to their lustes not only to haue them but to be had that is held and possest of them We have the like specified 2. Thess. 2. God shall sende them operation of deceite that they may beleeve lies I omit a hundreth places of no lesse significance Can there be mightier sinnes committed nay conceaved and comprehended in the minde of man than those I have named than hardnesse of heart the onely rocke to builde all iniquity vpon when one neither is nor can be ashamed than cursed and slanderous speech rayling at the Gods of the earth than adulteries constuprations open shamelesse even in the sight of the sunne lying deceaving sinnes of Sodom vnnaturall lustes in men women not to bee spoken of reprobate sense mighty illusions and such like All which notwithstanding the spirit of the counselles of GOD of whome it is most true that wisedome shall live and die with him vvho neither deceaveth any man neither can bee deceaved hath not forborne largely to speake of and to derive them in some sort from the throne of GOD where iustice it selfe is seated GOD did thus and thus To turne this night into day and to make it appeare vnto you how God shal be iust still and yet both nature and the workers of such thinges abhorred and abominated before him to the bottome of hell consider I beseech you attentively these two thinges First that in all the scriptures to-fore alleaged there is mention made of some precedent iniquity in those vngracious persons whom God so dealeth with deserving and procuring the hand of God thus heavily vpon them Recessurum non deserit antequam deserat God never forsaketh a man that will depart from him before hee forsaketh God plerumque facit ne deserat and often times he worketh so that hee shall not forsake him Hath God hardened Pharaoh Pharaoh hardened himselfe before God hardened Pharaoh by his iust iudgment Pharaoh himselfe by his free will Bad he Shemei curse David gave hee his wives to be defiled by his owne sonne David had deserved both for touching both the wife and life of Vriah VVilled hee a lying spirit to seduce Ahab Ahab would not giue credit to the right spirit and he had sold himselfe to worke all manner of wickednesse in the sight of the Lord. Did he seduce both people and prophets the leaders of the people they had before set vp idolles in their heartes and put a stumbling blocke of iniquitie before their faces Did hee giue over nations to lusts vncleanesse dishonest affections actions against nature reprobate senses the Apostle answereth in Gods behalfe it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a recompence of their former errors because they changed the truth of God into a lie worshipped the creature more than the creator turned the glory of an incorruptible God into the image of corruptible mē birds four-footed beasts creeping things And wherfore were they misled with strong illusions but because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved Now where sinne is plagued with sin as in the pollicie of God wherewith he governeth the world you shall finde it 1000. times then is not peccatum peccatum but iudiciū though sin in nature yet in respect of God not sin but iudgment it changeth the name cōmeth in another nature presenteth it selfe with another face countenance sin of it selfe I must confesse but as it cōmeth from God iustice for it is the repaiment retaliatiō of some former sin Iussisti Domine verè sic est vt omne peccatum sit poena peccantis O Lord thou hast commanded indeed so it is that all sin shall be a punishment to him that committeth it Envy hath much iustice in it though a malicious vniust quality in it selfe for it eateth vp the hart and marrow of her master as he desireth to eate vp another VVhen David gave charge for Shemei let him alone was it to iustifie Shemei in his wickednes No. He acknowledged the scourge of God for his sins in the tonge of Shemei boūd togither not of whip-chord but of the venemous reproches which Shemei cast forth He looked to the iudge frō whome it was iustice not to the instrument rod in the hand of the iudge frō whom it was malice therfore said It may be the Lorde will looke vpon my teares do me good for his cursing this day knowing that by the wisdome of God these bitter waters could easily be made sweete Things that are evil in nature God can handle not in evil maner Hemlocke of it selfe is a pestilent and noxious hearbe Yet the magistrates of Athens pronounce in iudgment that Socrates shall drinke a boule of hemlocke What is iudgement turned into wormewood iustice in to hemlocke is there poisoning destroying of men at a iudgement seate yea and good enough An action evill simply in it selfe may be good by a circumstance the poison is in the hearbe not in the magistrate he commādeth it to be drunken though as a bane to the malefactor to shortē his life yet a preservative of the cōmon wealth for the terror of others a punishment to him that hath poisoned and annoied the welfare thereof as it proceedeth frō the magistrate so leaveth it as it were the name nature of poisō is called iudgmēt The next thing which I wish to be harkened vnto is this that whatsoever God doth in the hardning of Pharaohs hart
for mee Charitie which is the thirde sister saith I runne and endevour to attaine vnto them Before he had saide that there was a neare affinitie betweene faith and hope For that which the one beleeveth shall bee the other beginneth to hope shall bee for her The prophet breaketh not the order of these two vertues first he beleeveth then hopeth For faith is the substance of thinges hoped for and no more can a man hope after that which he beleeveth not then a painter paint in the aire or vpon emptines Augustine in his enchiridion to Laurentius alleadgeth many differences betwixt faith and hope Namely these that more is beleeved then is hoped for as the paines of hell but nothing is hoped vvhich is not beleeved Againe faith apprehendeth both good and evill rewarde and punishmente thinges past thinges present and thinges to come as the death of Christ for the first for the seconde his sitting at the righte hande of God for the last his comming to iudgement Moreover faith hath to do in matters both concerning our selues and others for we also beleeue that that appertaineth to Angels But hope is the expectatiō only of good things such as are to come are proper to our selues So faith is evermore ampler then hope and hope is in a maner a contracted abridged faith Clem. Alex. faith that hope is the bloud of faith And whē hope hath given vp the ghost it is as if the bloud of faith had flowed out all her vitall power were exhausted The devils both know obey God Iob 1. they acknowledge his son Iesus Christ not only in the substance of his deity to be the son of God but in his office of mediation Thou art that Christ Marc. 1. and they professe publish that knowledge of theirs for Christ rebuketh them for it Luc. 4. neither are they ignorāt of his cōmission that al power is granted vnto him both in heaven earth And that he is ordained the iudge of the quicke the dead Therfore they aske why art thou come to vex vs before the time Math. 8. Yea they fall downe and worship him Mark 5. they feare trēble and beleeue 2. Iac. and they pray vnto him For the Legion instantlie besought him 4. Mark not to send them away out of the coasts of the Gadaren● ●o there is in the devils you see 1. knowledge and that very deepe and profound 2. confession 3. worship 4. feare 5. beliefe 6. praier and supplication what want they that which if christians wāt they haue a name that they liue but indeed are dead They want a particular confident faith the application of mercy which is the life of Christians and the defect whereof maketh devils For not to beleeue assuredly that God is rich in mercy to all that call vpon him in faithfulnes and truth to haue his loving kindnes in iealousie to distrust his promises which are yea and Amen to falsifie his word more stable thē the pillers of the earth to make him a lier what in vs lyeth to evacuate the testimony of his spirit speaking to our spirites that we are the sons of God as it were to pull off the seale whereby wee are sealed against the redemption of the iust is that damnable desperate infidelity which turneth men into devils and of the houshold of faith maketh them a family for the prince of darknes And not to speake more of this beautiful damsell as highly favoured of the king of kings as ever was Esther of the king of the Medes Persians not cōtenting her selfe to stay without at the gate but with an hūble presumptiō approaching into the inner court finding the goldē scepter of favor ever ready to be held out vnto her be ye assured in your soules and write it in the tables of your harts with the point of a Diamond with the perswasiō of Gods holy spirit that the writings of adversaries may never raze it out againe that if you erre not in the nature of a true faith if you take not shadowes of mountaines for men a fansie and shadow of faith for the body it selfe if it be sound substātial rightly informed properly qualified you may say vnto it goe in peace it shall walke through life death without controlement If it finde angels principalities powers things present things to come any other creature in the world stopping her passage rebuking her forwardnes she shal cleare her way notwithstanding with the strēgth of her hope and climbe into the presence of her God where if shee craue to sit at his right or left hand in his everlasting kingdome her suite shall be graunted He praied vnto the Lord his God out of the belly of the fish where he had as litle cōfort of life as blind Tobias had what ioy can I haue said he that sit in darknes and behold not the light of heaven Ionas might truly say in a double sense de profundis clamavi abyssus abyssū invocat out of the deepe haue I cried one depth calleth vpon an other who lay both in the bottome of a mōster in the lowest gulfe of afflictiō that ever soule was plunged in Might he haue had the liberty of the sons of God to haue entred into the house of the Lord the house of praier as the prophet calleth it the place where his honor dwelt there to haue hūbled himselfe powred out his soule to him that made it I woulde lesse haue marvailed to heare this duty performed Anna the daughter of Phanuell hath spent her daies in the temple of God serving the Lord with fastings and praiers night and daie and shee departed not thence David desired but one thing of the Lorde and that he would require that he might dwell in the house of the Lord all the daies of his life to beholde the beautie of the Lord and to visite his temple But in the belly of the fish there was no beauty to invite vnto devotion in this darkesome and deserte house no company or fellowshippe to draw him on Ibimus in domum domini Come vvee will goe into the house of Lord Our feete shall stande in thy gates O Ierusalem No not so much as swallowes and sparrowes which David envied because they had leaue to build their nestes by the altars of God yea if vultures and shrich-owles had but dwelte thereby it had beene some comforte Yet in this desolate and solitary house voider of haunte then the ransackte sanctuary of Ierusalem the pathes wherof foxes for want of passengers ran vp downe vpon wherin he lay as forlorne in a māner as he that made his abode amongst the tombes of the dead and frequented the company neither of men nor beasts even in this hatefull cage of filth vncleannes he setteth himselfe on worke humbling his soule in praier lower then his body was humbled in the water talking
There is not any knowledge of learning to bee despised seeing that all science whatsoever is in the nature and kinde of good thinges Rather those that despite it vvee must repute rude and vnprofitable altogither who would bee glad that all men vvere ignoraunt that their owne ignorance lying in the common heape mighte not be espied If Philosophie shoulde therefore not be set by because some haue erred through Philosophie no more shoulde the sunne and the moone because some haue made them their Gods and committed idolatrie vvith them It seemeth by the preface of M. Luther vpon the Epistle to the Galathians that the Anabaptistes condemned the graces and workes of God for the indignity of the persons and subiectes in vvhome they were founde Luther retorted vpon them Then belike matrimony authority liberty c. are not the workes of God because the men who vse them are some of them wicked Wicked men haue the vse of the sun the moone the earth the aire the water and other creatures of God Therefore is not the sunne the sunne and do the others loose their goodnesse because they are so vsed The Anabaptistes themselues when as yet they were not rebaptised had notwithstanding bodies and soules now because they were not rebaptized were not their bodies true bodies and their soules right soules Say that their parents also had a time when they were not rebaptized Were they not therfore truly married If not it will follow therevpon that the parentes were adulterers their children bastardes and not meete to inherite their fathers landes Likewise truth is truth wheresoever I finde it Whither vvee search in Philosophy or in the histories of the Gentiles or in Canonicall scriptures there is but one truth If Peter if the Sibylles if the devilles shall say that Christ is the sonne of the living GOD it is not in one a truth a lie in the other but though the persons motiues and endes bee different the substance of the confession is in all the same It was true which Menander the Poet spake before the Apostle ever wrote it to the Church of Corinth Evill wordes corrupt good manners And because it was a truth in Menander therefore the Apostle alleadged it which else hee woulde not The difference betweene them is that as in Lacedaemon sometimes when in a waighty consultation an eloquent but an evill man had set downe a good decree which they coulde not amende they caused it to bee pronounced by one of honest name and conversation and in such simplicity of wordes as hee was able presently to light vpon by that meanes neither crediting the bad authour so much as to take a iudgement from his mouth nor reiecting the good sentence so that which was a truth in the lips of Menander is not more true vttered by an Apostles tongue but it hath gotten a more approoved and sanctified author And surely as in the tilling of the ground the culter and share are the instrumentes that breake the cloddes and carry the burthen of the worke yet the other partes of the plough are not vnnecessary to further it so for the first breaking vp of the fallow ground of mens heartes and killing the weedes and brambles that are therein of Adams auncient corruption or for preaching the greate mysterie of pietie and comfortable spe●king to Sion touching the pointes of salvation the onely worde of God sharper then culter or share or two edged sword is onely and absolutely sufficient But a man must dayly builde vpon the former foundation and not onely teach but explicate by discoursing illustrate by examples exemplifie by parables and similitudes by arguments confirme shame the gaine-saiers convince the adversaries fashion the life to the doctrine plant iudgement and iustice insteede of vnrighteousnes stirre vp the affections and shewe himselfe every way a vvorkeman not to bee ashamed and rightly dividing the worde of trueth from whom if you take his knife that is his arte and cunning he shall rather teare it with his teeth and pull it asunder with his nailes than rightly divide it But you appeale to the consciences of beleevers and desire to knowe vvhither their first conversion to the faith vvere by reading or hearing of Gentile stories No. For who ever required that service of prophane learning which whatsoever the instrument or meanes be is principally and almost wholy the worke of the holy Ghost and wherein is fulfilled vpon every convert that commeth to the knowledge of the trueth that which Samuell comforted Saule with The spirite of the Lorde shall come vpon thee and thou shalt bee turned into an other man VVho else taketh the stonie hearte out of their bodies and giveth them an hearte of flesh And we know besides that the conversions of men to the faith haue not beene all after one sorte in some by the preaching of Christ crucified as in those that vvere added to the Church by the sermon of Peter in some by a word from the mouth of Christ Follovve mee in some by visions and voyces from heaven as Paule Act. 9. was throwne from his horse and smitten with blindnesse and a voice came downe from the clowdes saying Saul Saul why persecutest thou mee and Saint Augustine reporteth Confess 8.12 that by a voice from heaven saying Take vp and reade take vp and reade hee was directed to that sentence Rom. 13. Not in chambe●ing and wantonnesse c. Iustine Martyr witnesseth of himselfe in his Apology to Antoninus that when he saw the innocent Christians after their slaunderous and false traducementes carried to their deathes patient and ioyfull that they were thought worthy to suffer for the name of Christ it occasioned his chandge of religion Socrates and Sozomene write that many of Alexandria when the great temple of Serapis was repurdged and made serviceable for the vse of the Christians finding some mysticall letters or cyphers therein vvhereby the forme of a crosse was figured and signification long before given that the temple shoulde haue an ende thought it warning enough to forsake their heathenish superstitions and to embrace the gospell of Christ Iesus Many other Aegyptians beeing terrified by the strange inundation of Nilus higher than the wonted manner thereof was immediatlie condemned their ancient idolatry and applyed themselues to the worship of the living God Clodoveus the French King after manie perswasions of Crotildis his lady a religious Burgundian vainelie spent vpon him having at length receaved a great discomfiture and slaughter in a battaile against the Almannes and finding himselfe forsaken of all earthly aide cast vp his eies into heaven and vowed to become a Christian vpon condition that God would giue him the victory over his enimies which he faithfully performed Now it holdeth not in reason that because men are converted to the faith by miracles martyrdoms visiōs inundatiōs hieroglyphicks such meanes therefore they should alwaies be confirmed by the same or that those