Selected quad for the lemma: work_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
work_n bring_v good_a tree_n 9,027 5 9.0012 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A15819 Gods arraignement of hypocrites with an inlargement concerning Gods decree in ordering sinne. As likewise a defence of Mr. Calvine against Bellarmine; and of Mr. Perkins against Arminius. Yates, John, d. ca. 1660. 1615 (1615) STC 26081; ESTC S120537 353,274 440

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the world would censure me of flattery and if I knewe that selfe-loue were at home with your selfe then should I neuer feare want of intertainment in learning to dissemble but both the world and your selfe must pardon my boldnesse for I speake not to blaze abroad your praise but to intreat that kindnesse that men would admit of your example as a patterne for imitation Three things constraine mee to vtter my mind First that continuall care which you haue for resolution of many difficulties in diuinity the means which you haue vsed are but practised of few one is that you haue not bin content to take your resolution of diuine truth from translations but haue taken that paines that you are able to fetch it from the originall and drinke of the purest fountaine A second meanes is that of the Philosopher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make question of matters of religion whensoeuer you haue seene iust opportunitie and fit persons to resolue neither haue you been content to admit of superficiall answers but haue pressed argument vpon them to see the true tryall and often your own resolutions haue bin more agreeable with the truth and context of Sciptures then that which others haue said let this teach men of your place besides their continuall imploiments to set some time apart for this excellent knowledge of the originalls of the Bible and knowledge of that art A second good example is your continual care that the legges of iustice may not lie broken in the streets and no man to raise it vp A happie thing when men of place count their dignities to be conferred as a common good for Church and Commonwealth Thirdly for all manner of election this you onely haue not affirmed by word but performed by action that the place more then the person might haue cause to reioyce For my selfe I confesse I had no cause to be i●ticed from you as the Leuite was from Micah Iudg. 17. to become a Priest vnto a Tribe or familie in Israel but least through ignorance I should as soon serue in the ministery of Idols as the true God I desired to be a little longer trained vp in the schooles of the Prophets For my loue vnto your familie whereof once I was a member it is this that all of them might knowe the God of their fathers and serue him with a perfect heart a willing mind For your vertuous Lady whō God hath made as a fruitful vine on the sides of your house that she might likewise grow into the true Vine Christ Iesus and be fruitfull vnto her owne saluation For all your children that they might be as the Oliue plants of God round about your table For your eldest son Beniamin I hope in name and nature the sonne of your right hand the Lord make him the strength and crowne of your age the excellencie of your dignitie and the excellencie of your power But I feare I haue alreadie offended your desire is breuitie therefore to conclude I commend and commit this small labour to your patronage the text I am sure is excellent for these dayes but for my manner of handling it I leaue it to the censure of Gods Church How-euer it be I do more then hope that you will kindly accept it from me and entertaine it as a testimonie of my loue and not onely so but vse it for your comfort Now the God of peace that brought againe from the dead our Lord Iesus the great Shepheard of the sheepe through the blood of the euerlasting couenant make you perfect in all good workes to doe his will working in you that which is pleasant in his sight to whom be praise for euer and euer Amen Yours in all good affection IOHN YATES To the Christian Reader IT is a common saying that an Exorcist may sooner coniure vp a logion of deuills then adiure one of them out of his habitation And as it is with bodily possession so is it with the obsession of the soule for although the deuill cannot penetrate the soules dimensions yet he will sit so neere it that whosoeuer admits him the least good fellowshippe he shall not be freed of his company when he is wearie and with all his heart would shake hands with him The Papists challenge all our Churches as false because we can cast out no deuills but the whole world knowes that they can doe it to the admiration of thousands but for my part I knowe not how they coniure the deuill from the bodie yet this I dare boldly affirme that where they haue gotten one deuill out of mens bodies they haue admitted a thousand into mens soules and surely the deuill were a foole if he would not change his roome for a better lodging I am sure that there was neuer any church that hath coniured vp more heresies then they haue done and as yet I know not one that they haue adiured and sent packing into hell No marueile that they haue need of strange exorcismes for otherwise how should men be confirmed in their strange doctrines these questionlesse haue bin strong delusions to make them beleeue lies But if they please to admit of the holy Scriptures we shall at the first resolue them of a double meanes Math. 17.20.21 the first is miraculous and for a time the second ordinarie and so remaines in the Church the one is in the 20. v. the other in the 21. and this second meanes we haue I am sure the Church of God may pray and fast to deliuer both bodie and soule from the deuil But perhaps they will say shew vs whom you haue dispossessed I answer Prayer fasting are of the same nature that preaching and administring the sacraments they being conscionably vsed worke where and whensoeuer God pleaseth I doubt not but by the preaching of the word thousands haue bin cōuerted vnto the faith and where men get the deuil out of the soule he will haue small hope or comfort either to enter or stay in the body and so no maruell the deuill holds them so strongly and takes such good liking of them that he will be at their commaund to leaue the body and ascend into an higher roome for he is proud enough to intertain such a motion And though I deny not but we haue had some possessed among vs yet I dare boldly say the most haue bin of their owne making Let them take the credit of their art for questionles a blacke art best beseemes a religion of darknesse blindnesse and ignorance But to applie our Sauiours rule vnto our purpose Fasting and praier are admirable meanes in the Church of God not onely to cast out deuills and vncleane spirits but also to fill the soule with the spirit of grace and goodnes And here I tremble to speake and charge mine owne heart with exceeding great negligence as often as I call to remembrance the extraordinarie fasting and prayer of Arminius especially whensoeuer he entred this mysterie of mysteries Gods
that sinne is not in it selfe but by accident good and seruing for Gods glorie but the Lord which can bring light ort of darknes good out of euill is able to dispose of the euill of sinne by accident and of the goodnesse which is his owne worke by it selfe to make for his glorie True it is that God in his worke goes no further then the good of the euill and that he decrees the other is said very improperly for euill in his abstract nature is neither beeing nor the cause of any beeing and therefore no good in the true approbation of goodnes beeing not good it hath no ende and therefore is referred to Gods decree as it is said to belong to a beeing and the goodnes of a beeing and this is accidentall therefore accidentally decreed Sinne accidentally decreed yet impossible to be vndecreed but yet it cannot be vndecreed because the thing in him decreed could not haue beene without him for that good that comes out of sin could not haue beene except sinne had been and sinne could not haue beene except goodnesse had beene and therefore beeing in Gods created goodnes and also God bringing from him his owne goodnesse to his owne glorie he cannot escape Gods decree because both the other are of necessitie all men confessing vnder Gods decree directly And therefore if God would haue sinne to be in his good creatures and also goodnesse from sinne in them then must sinne stand to Gods determination because the other two cannot but presuppose sinne because a goodnesse from him Now that God is no author of sinne in all this it is plaine because the two former haue God for their author bring in the other as a hang-by and vnwelcome guest yet such a one as they could not throw off at their pleasure Diseaseslie in nature and sometimes do good to nature yet nature will neuer acknowledge the kindnesse because he knew the intent was his subuersion Iason had an impostume in his bodie An euill thing may doe good by accident the enemie thrusts his sword into it heales him of his impostume which the Physitians could neuer accomplish but no thank to Iasons enemie which sought his life and therefore if sinne doe any good either for God or to man it is no thankes to sinne seeing that sinne would dishonour God and destroy man Againe one may appoint the iourney lawfully but an other may walke it vnlawfully God appoints euery man his race but he himselfe runs it the horse carries a man to his iourneyes end and knowes not that he doth so much for mans good yet man knowes it well enough and guides him all the way yet for all this the horse vndergoes the trauell and would be feeding by the way and if he eate his owne poison or lame himselfe by a fall it is the horses fault yet must he to his ende if the man haue power to effect it so the Lord hath laid vpon man his decree he carrieth it with him all the dayes of his life he knowes not to what ende yet the Lord knowes it well enough and doth alwaies dispose of him vntill he come at his iourneys ende Now in his way man feeds on the poyson of sinne fals and stumbles in his way yet the Lord will haue him go on for he is able to doe it and he shall neuer rest vntill he haue accomplished the wil of the almightie And therefore if this be iust in men in the rule and dominion ouer their beasts shall it not bee as iust in the Lord I am sure that the Lord hath as much authority ouer vs as we haue ouer our beasts therfore let vs not be too bold in disputing with our creator but giue him the praise glorie of all ends Argum. 2 Whatsoeuer is ordered that is decreeed but sinne is ordered therefore decreed That sinne is ordered my text is plaine for it But you will answer that sinne is ordered in the bookes of conscience and not in the booke of Gods decree This is but a shift for graunt the last booke and you shall graunt both the former which I prooue thus If no bookes of conscience without the booke of the law and no booke of the lawe without the booke of Gods decree then the third beeing graunted the two former are concluded For if wee would make these three bookes one complete booke Three bookes one compleat booke wee must of necessitie diuide them in this order and method the first part is Gods decree the second is Gods reuealed law and the third is the testimonie of the conscience Now method tells me plainely that the first may be without the second for Gods secret will may be without his reuealed will but his reuealed can not be without his secret will And againe the law may be without this booke of conscience but this booke of conscience can not be without the law for no accusation or excusation but by the law of God Therefore graunt the third and you graunt the two former by ineuitable consequence Now this third booke can not be denied because my text prooues it and no man of reason contradicts it Againe euery schoole-boy can tell me that the breaking of Priscians head must be healed by Priscian himselfe the writing or speaking of false latine either against the first or second part of Grammar The rule before the fault must be ordered by the rule of Grammar it self now the rule was before the false latin therfore determines what false latine was long before the schoole boy practised it So the Law of God tells me what sinne is when I haue committed it but it determined what sinne was and to what end long before either I or my father Adam committed it therfore the determination was not to follow after though indeede the conuiction followed after the commission Therfore orthodoxall is the distinction of Gods decree and the execution of his decree of Gods determination and the accomplishment thereof of Gods definitiue sentence and the manifestation of it of his reprobation of a man and the conuiction of a sinner all the former I may tearme the premisses and the latter Gods conclusion in the premisses Againe there is the first proposition which is Gods truth and sole wisdome the second which we call the minor is the speciall application of it vnto man in his good time Gen. 15. Israel must serue 400. yeares but Exod. 12. 400 are compleat therefore must Israel out of Egypt that very selfe same day There is a day in which God will iudge the world Atheists may denie it 2. Pet. 3. but when the decree shall be assumed now is the day I dare boldly conclude that those persons shall perish So in like manner all men are decreed of the Lord to manifest his iustice and mercie in all that either God himselfe doth or man can doe but I am one of these all and therefore must I manifest either his iustice or
best zeale The second sort that abuse this all-seeing eye of God are such as labour of Ahabs disease very passionate affect strange gestures exceede in all externall humiliation horse-coursers iaydes will bound curuet and shewe more tricks then a horse well metled for the rode or cart these learne by smart to know their Masters and gaine no commendation by these outward fetches The third sort know God as courtiers know one an other complementally and bestow much holy water on one anothers faces but alas these faire words pay no debts these haue the worlds wealth yet care not to see their brother in want these stick vp feathers for the carkasse beguiling the simple coozening the world but chiefely themselues The fourth sort is such as cannot keepe their eyes at home their fire on their own hearths but like brinish lights sparkle and spit at others and like ill couched fire-works let flie on all sides onely out of their wisdome they know how to spare Agag and the great ones These crie out of such as labour to be precise in their courses and yet alas how should we be too precise seeing the eye of the Lord is neuer off vs Lastly others there be that are vnconstant commonly in the beginning they blaze like straw fires but in the ende goe out in smoake and smother These haue not cleared their eyes to consider with Dauid how deare they ought to make Gods thoughts vnto them and thereby to bee awaked that they might still be with God Iehu marched as a man of God and his word was The Lord of hosts but his proiect was the kingdome and therefore soone will the song be changed Demetrius cried great is Diana but he meant her little siluer shrines many haue spoiled copes but it was to make themselues cushions Iudas complaines of wast but his sorrow was that it fell besides his bagge If Iezabel proclaime a fast let Naboth look to his vineyard But he that knowes God indeede and is warmed with the heat of it will become a true Zealote whose feruency is in the spirit not in shew in substance not in circumstance for God not himselfe guided by the word not by humours tempered with charity not with bitternesse such a mans praise is of God though not of men such a mans worth caunot be set foorth with the tongues of men and angels Neither let any grieue that it cannot be done God that knoweth all things taketh notice of it and that which is kept in secret he will reward it openly onely let vs labour to keep nothing in secret from him But it is woe to see how little this walking with God is practised and to burne in the spirit is but counted the phrensie of the braine Such zeale as this is euery where spoken against it hath many enemies and few friends the world can no more abide it then the beasts can the elementarie fire the rebukes of many haue fallen vpon it the deuill weaues cunning lyes to bring downe the honour of it in this our earthly mould little fewell much quench-cole is hardly fired soon cooled in the worlds opinion it is as common as fire on euery mans liearth no mans heart without it if euery man might be his owne iudge But if they meane to follow Dauid they must rise a little sooner to rake it out of the embers of luke-warmenesse Dauid had care from Gods fire within him to maintaine it all the time of his owne life and also that it might not off Gods altar he would suffer the temples of his head to take no rest vntill he had found an house for it to dwell in therefore he is not vnmindfull to leaue it in command vnto his sonne and furthermore to enforce all the people to ioyne with Salomon he vrgeth them in the presence of God to keepe and seeke for all his Commandements especially he giues the charge vnto Salomon 2. Chron. 9. And thou Salomon my sonne knowe thou the God of thy father and serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind The argument that must mooue vnto this is the same with this in my text for the Lord searcheth all hearts and vnderstandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts therefore know thy God and serue him perfectly and willingly Vse 3. consolation First in trouble to know that they are not hid from the eyes of the Lord secondly in reproaches when the world shal slaunder vs with the name of hypocrites to consider that the Lord knowes the vprightnesse of our hearts thirdly in our imperfections when we find that we are not able to vtter so much concerning our profession as wee beleeue neither to lay open our wants vnto others as we could desire for our comforts here I say is sweet consolation because the Lord knowes the willingnesse of our mind and will accept of that as well as of our deeds Section 2. Of Gods integritie Observ 2. Is the integritie of the Lord without all partialitie in that he hath respect neither to the person nor the actions of an hypocrite but points him out and discouers his particular sinnes Integritie containeth two things truth ἀλήθεια and freedome παρρησία for an intire God must bee most true most free in thought word and deede in thought because he knowes the thing in himselfe and by himselfe and therefore is not tyed vnto any thing but knowes it and thinks it most freely when man is faine first to knowe the thing and himselfe by the thing and therefore his knowledge is dependent and not of that freedome which is in God Secondly most true and free in speech for the Lord can neither lie nor any waies be made to recall his words for shall the Lord speake and not doe no verily Let God be true and euery man a lyar that he may bee iustified in his words and ouercome when he is iudged Thirdly most true and free in his actions Shall not saith Abraham the iudge of the world doe right let there be but a righteous person found in Sodome and he shall find mercie so that wee may say the vnderstanding of the Lord is most true his will most free his desire most holy and pure praecipiens omnibus quae ipse facit Hence no accepter of persons or actions Act. 10.34 Of a truth I perceiue that God is no accepter of persons of works Ecle 12. last ver God will bring euery worke vnto iudgement with euerie secret thing whether it be good or euill both these are together the 1. Pet. 1.17 If ye call him Father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euerie mans worke and in all these he is most holy Zeph. 3.5 The iust Lord is in the middest thereof he will doe no iniquitie euerie mourning will hee bring his iudgement to light he fayleth not but the wicked will not learn to be ashamed they will needes haue the Lord to respect them because he is in the middest of his
men neither are they plagued with them but pride is as a chaine vnto them and crueltie couereth them as a garment What then can be answered for God surely still the consequence is not good bruit beasts may goe to the slaughterhouse without all baiting and it were questionlesse the part of a mad man to disturbe them that goe as heart would wish neither would the deuill for a thousand worlds that these men should once be disquieted to turn back againe and therefore yet you sticke in the question What then will you answer to an argument drawne from their life their eyes stand out with fatnesse they haue more then heart can wish they haue their tongues at libertie power to oppresse boast of it and yet presume thēy shall not be controlled for they dare speake against heauen and suffer their tongues to walke thorough the earth therefore God neither doth neither can he do any good to Israel Let Moses come to Pharaoh with let my people goe he shall be answered not as the deuills answered the Exorcists Act. 19.15 Iesus we acknowledge and Paul we knowe but who are yee It had been well if he had but said Aaron and Moses God I acknowledge and his p eople I know but who are yee that are so impudent with your king this is not his voice but who is God and Exod. 10.10 Let the Lord so bee with you as I will let you goe and your children behold for euill is before your face Here is blasphemie and execration of Gods people he imagines euill against them the Lord shall not preuent it and he desires that the Lord had no better affection to them then he was minded to let them goe What shall be answered to this proud argument that brings all into it they haue the controlment of heauen and earth and therefore how shall the Lord be good to Israel Well O flesh yet is God good to Israel this is but a small matter for neither heauen nor earth are in their hands it is an easie matter to turne their owne swords into their owne bowels for they haue fedde indeede but it is become a surfet and therefore if presently they be not like oxen knocked in the head they will pine away and neither God nor man shall haue profit by them they haue been licentious but soone may they be cooled they haue spoken wickedly of their oppression but a small matter will grauell them and bring them vnto an non plus they haue presumed but soone may they despaire they haue set their mouths against heauen but suddenly while they are about their mischiefe there may shine a most fearefull light yea lightning and thunder from heauen strike them to the ground make euerie ioynt breake a sunder the whole bodie tremble and the heart astonied neither shall they heare any voice from heauen Send for Ananias to put his hands vpon them that they may recouer their sight and haue their hearts comforted yet shall they heare a voyce from heauen Why haue you persecuted me it is hard for you to kicke against my prickes I will make your consciences pricke you to the death the sting shall neuer out of it there shall not be a Moses nor an Aaron to pray for you though you confesse with Pharaoh we haue sinned the Lord is righteous but I and my people are wicked Surely the spirit of God is strong my owne testimonie is answered the death and life of the wicked cannot euince the cause therefore I bring a third sort of reasons euen from the godly themselues v. 10. his people turne hither for waters of a full cup are wrung out to them Hence euen they say how doth God knowe it or is there knowledge in the most high wee dare boldly say the wicked prosper and increase in riches we haue clensed our hearts in vaine and washed our hands in innocencie to no purpose for daily haue we beene punished and chastened euery morning What may be said to this argument surely the testimonie of my brethren doth presse mee sore that they should bee so discouraged yet I hope when they shall haue considered my arguments propounded for the defence of their cause they shall recant their errour and say If I iudge thus behold the generation of thy children are vp against mee I haue therfore trespassed the reason was because I thought to finde out the discourse by my naturall reason but I confesse it was too painefull for mee therefore O Spirit the comforter of thy Church let me heare the arguments that will beare waight in the ballance of Gods sanctuarie First therefore I will begin with an artificiall argument which all men may gather out of the workes of God euen of his iustice They are set in slipperie places they stand but vpon the yee and therefore God may soone cast them into desolation which all the world may see to be done for how suddenly are they destroyed perished and horribly consumed all is but a dreame of their prosperitie but when I am awaked to see it and they to feele it then shall I consider my heauenly felicitie contemne all their vaine pompe and know assuredly that God makes all their image to be despised therefore I ingeniously confesse that the vexing of my heart and the pricking in my reines was because I was too foolish euen as a beast before God yet was I happie in all this for by faith I was alwaies with God and that my faith might not fall he hath holden me by his right hand Secondly for my selfe I haue taken this arguemnt that God will guide mee by his counsell and afterward receiue me to his glorie Thirdly I dare appeale vnto mine owne soule from both these arguments vnto a third whom haue I in heauen but God and I haue desired none in earth before him Fourthly I drawe an arguments from mine owne weakenesse and the daily experience I haue had of Gods goodnesse my flesh faileth and my heart also but God is the strength of mine heart and my portion for euer Therefore now I come to the determination of the question and thus I determine it for the wicked Loe they that withdrawe themselues from God shall perish thou destroyest all them that goe a whoring from thee and for my selfe I haue found that the deepest disputations doe alwaies bring forth the best conclusions and safest determinations therefore thus I resolue That as for me it is good for mee to drawe neere to God therefore I haue put my trust in the Lord God that I may declare all his works See but one place more Psal 77. When I entred the consideration of the dayes of olde and the yeares of auncient time called to remembrance my song of thankesginug in the night which vsually I sung in my prosperitie and now thinking vpon God am troubled and when I pray my spirit is full of auguish Thou keepest myne eies awaking all the long night it is time therefore to commune
be assured that all this is either to free me frō some sinne or els confirme me in some good worke begunne in me Secondly if in wisedome we would so prouide that afflictions might not quaile vs when they come then let vs in the time of prosperitie and quietnesse of soule cut off all head strong affections as greife sorrow and such like and then shall they not in our trouble preuaile against vs. Lastly learne to denie our selues and all our owne reason Luk. 9.23 if any man will come after me let him denie himselfe and take vp his crosse daily and follow mee The last thing requisit in all these is the keeping of a good memorie yea though our trouble be past yet still with feare to remember the hand of the Lord. The deliuerance of the children of Israel is often repeated in the Scriptures and surely for good endes because naturally wee forget the workes of God and his noble actes of ancient time which if they were faithfully treasured vp would doe vs much good in our times of need for either wee must thinke that God is not able to helpe vs or if hee be able yet wee are vnworthy of his helpe if wee doubt of his power see what hee did for Israel in Egypt in the red sea the wildernesse and among all their enemies If wee thinke wee are vnworthy then still thinke on Israel the worst people on the face of the earth for they were alwaies prouoking the holy one of Israel Psal 34.5.6 Yee shall looke vnto him and runne vnto him and their faces shall not be ashamed this poore man cried and the Lord heard him and saued him out of all his troubles And thus much of the efficient causes the matter followes out of which we are to draw some speciall comfort The matter of affliction is punishment and action Punishment therefore a morall good action therefore a positiue good The morall good first it corrects sinne past by opening our eyes to see it by humbling of vs and bringing of vs to meditation of heauen and heauenly things Secondly it cures sinne present by crossing of our nature Thirdly it preuēts sinne to come Fourthly it tries what is in our hearts All this doth a wicked man no good for the punishment is nothing but an execution of gods vengeance vpon them but to the godly it is a schoole-master to bring them vnto Christ For the second the worke of affliction though in it selfe a positiue good because an action yet it works but wofully in the vngodly but most comfortably in the children of God Heb. 12.11 it brings forth the sweete and quiet fruit of righteousnesse vnto all them that are exercised for it is a most certaine thing in Gods children that the more their afflictions growe the more their faith groweth the more Sathan striues to drawe them from God the more they drawe neere vnto God although in feeling they see not so much The third cause is the forme making an essentiall difference betwixt the afflictions of the godly and of the wicked They are in the godly corrections of loue for their good but in the wicked the vengeance of God to their euerlasting perishing The fourth last is the ende first in regard of Christ Phil. 1.20 to magnifie him and therfore an honour vnto his Saints Secondly in regard of our selues 2. Cor. 1.9 not to trust in our selues good to lay aside vaine confidence Thirdly for our vocation 1. Pet. 2.21 good to accomplish the end of our vocation Fourthly good in their owne vse all his well that ends well Ioh. 16.20 Your sorrow shall be turned into ioy To proceede to another demonstration that afflictions are good and comfortable may appeare in the fruits of it which are either within vs or without vs. The first is called the mortification of the flesh or the crucifying of the lusts thereof The second is called the mortification of the outward man by manifold afflictions To this is required a good cause Secondly patience voluntarie not perforce not mercinarie but to shew our obedience Thirdly constant not for a brunt Fourthly for a good end Now their is nothing in these afflictiōs but ioy these will neuer gall the conscience but make it stout and couragious therefore let vs see the effects of the other First it openeth the eare Iob. 33.16 then he openeth the eares of men euen by their corrections which he hath sealed Secondly it brings forth greife and is verie necessarie to bring on other effects Greife we know would faine haue ease whereof it is and it laboureth alwaies to lay it selfe open and to mooue pitie it seareth nothing more then to be hidden for which cause nature hath giuen more helps to bewray this affection then any other as heauinesse of countenance hanging downe of the forehead moouing of the eyes teares sighs and grones it teacheth eloquence and maketh vs to change our speeches and so we learne to amplifie the causes of our woe so that falling on any obiect of our greife we are loth to depart from speaking of it we double our speeches on that theame we know the matter of Ezekias greife forced his tongue to touch it twise my tongue my tongue shall praise thee When our Sauiour Christ spake of doctrine he neuer doubles his words but is content to vtter it in a word but when he came to the rebellion of Ierusalem it touched him so neerely that he cryes Oh Ierusalem Ierusalem and Dauid when he lights vpon his sonne Absolon O Absolon Absolon O my sonne Absolon Thirdly after greife it makes vs loath and detest our selues Iob. 42.6 therfore I abhorre my selfe and repent in dust and ashes Fourthly to seeke vnto God Hos 5.15 Psal 78.34 when he slew them they sought him and they returned and sought the Lord early Ier. 31.18 I haue heard Ephraim lamenting thus Thou hast corrected mee and I was chastised as an vntamed calfe conuert thou mee and I shall be conuerted after that I conuerted I repented and after that I was instructed I smote vpon my thigh I was ashamed yea euen confounded because I did beare the reproach of my youth Lastly from the subiect Colos 1.24 I full●ill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my body an excellent subiect that may be annexed vnto Christ 1. Pet. 4.13 reioyce in so much that ye are made partakers of Christs sufferings that when he shall appeare ye may be glad and reioyce Phil. 1.29 a high priuiledge to be a sufferer for it is giuen vnto vs as a speciall donation and therfore their be heads enough of yeilding comfort to euerie afflicted soule I know none to be tossed and turmoiled more in soule then the godly and yet none more free from danger then they Psa 88. Dauid hath all Gods waues go ouer him v. 17. They came round about him daily like water and compassed him together A sea-faring man labours for nothing more when he is vnder a dangerous storme
shall not keep silence or winke at some mens faults because hee dare not speake hee will neither drown his words nor eate them for the proudest Secondly his power is prooued first by his messengers 2. by his faithfull witnesses By his messengers vers 3. most excellently set out vnto vs 1. by their names declaring their nature fire and tempest and therefore who shall be able to stand before him if they misse the fire the tempest shall meete with them so that there shall be no escape out of the hands of this Iudge 2. By their effects deuouring and moouing therfore iudgment and swift execution 3. From their attendance they shall goe before him and round about him therefore way shall bee made before him and roome shall bee gotten round about him 4. By the adiunct a mightie tempest therfore shall it ouerturne all the bulwarkes of the wicked V. 4 His faithfull witnesses 4 5 6. verses called v. 4. executing 5 6. called first by name heauen and earth therefore shal iust euidence be giuen in against euery offender the earth shall couer no offences for the heauens shall reueale it neither shall any bill bee left vnread for all offences are written either in heauen or earth neither can there be any dropping for heauen and earth will gather vp all 2. They shall haue their charge from God for God shall call them and therefore they shal deale faithfully 3. The end of their calling is appointed and that is to iudge his people therfore in Gods Court there shall be no plea for ignorance for he that manifests the end will discouer all meanes that shall bring vnto the end V. 5 Execution is either the conuention of the people or the proclamation of the Iudge convention of the people v. 5. First there must be a gathering for all men are abroad at their workes vntil this iudge come and therefore woe vnto them that are gathered with their sinnes but happie shall euery soule be that is found weldoing when the Lord shall send to gather him 2. This gathering shall be of his Saints and all those that make a couenant with him with sacrifice and therfore the hypocrites shall be too blame that haue cried wee haue fasted prayed sacrificed and yet thou regardest not let this assure them that God regardeth 3. It must be before God alas before him at whose presence the Angels couer their faces and holy Prophets haue cried out most lamentably wee die because wee haue seene the Lord of hosts what then shall become of odious hypocrites 4. Both must come together but how shall that bee Psalm 1 5. seeing the wicked shall not stand in the iudgement nor sinners in the assemblie of the righteous yea they shall stand euen as they haue made the godly to stand in their assemblies to the perishing of them in regard of their wrath so shall they stand in the assemblie of the godly before the Lord to the perishing both of bodie and soule 5. Circumstance in the conuention is the worship of an hypocrite and that is a couenant with sacrifice and therefore let the wicked know that their righteousnesse shall not be hidde with the Lord but they shall haue their triall according to their own righteousnesse therfore let all proud Pharisies thanke God they are not as poore publicans they haue fasted twise a weeke they haue giuen tythes of al that euer they possessed they are no extortioners vniust adulterer c. well when they are tried with all their righteousnesse if they fall for lacke of iust payment let them thanke themselues for that they thought they had payed all and that they were in debt to no bodie V. 6 The last thing in the execution is the proclamation of the Iudge v. 6. Wherein we haue first the crier the heauens 2. The voice which is first the declaration of righteousnesse 2. of the cause of this righteousnesse which is God who will not post of the iudgement to others for God is iudge himselfe And thus much of the first part the Iudges comming his proceeding followes V. 7 Gods proceeding begins in the 7. v. and continues vnto the end the parts whereof are two in regard of a double obiect his Saints and hypocrites his proceeding with his Saints is from the 7. verse to the 16. his proceeding with hypocrits from the 16. to the end The first is done by way of reformation the second by way of condemnation the reformation of his Saints is necessarie for although they desire sincerely to worship God in the cerimonie and the substance in sacrifices and the truth of the sacrifices according to law and Gospel yet often times diuers things are amisse which the Lord must haue redressed or else all shall not goe well with his Saints Marke therefore how the Lord proceeds with his Saints by way of reformation which is double first correction of their error 2. direction of them in the truth Correction of error to the 14. v. direction in the truth 14 15. In the correction of their error there is a most exquisite methode obserued by the Lord which may be a patterne for all Christians to imitate and that is this first to manifest his loue v. 7. 2. to manifest their error v. 8. which must needs be very seasonable after the former 3. to take away the occasion of their error which must needs be profitable to ouerturne the second 4. And to giue reasons of the remoouall which must needs take away all cauill and fond oppositions of our vntoward natures v. 10 11 12 13. Let vs looke vpon them all first the manifestation of his loue v. 7. First a kind compellation and louing invitation to attention in this word heare if a man were sicke in his bodie hee would be very desirous that the Physitian would neuer make an end of speaking and therfore if wee had the same wisedome for our soules how attentiue should wee be when so excellent a Physitian as the Lord shal speake 2. From the relation that is betwixt God and them a gracelesse child that will not heare his father before all men in the world O my people oh Israel euery word an argument people therefore if all people shall bow downe and worship the Lord then is it their dutie not to exclude themselues 2. A note of peculiaritie my people chosen out of all nations 3. They are Israel so called of Iaacob their father because hee preuailed with God and therefore assuredly hee should preuaile with Esau and all wicked men Israel therefore is a strong bond first because it points out vnto them the couenant that was made with Abraham Isaac and Iaacob 2. the power they should haue with God and from God to preuaile with all power euen of hel death and damnation 4. Gods vehement affection to his people in doubling his exclamation O my people oh Israel 3. Reason to perswade is drawne from the best testimonie in the world I will
themselues to forget Christ and his flocke who are as great and deere vnto him as the price they cost him they cannot stagger but runne like hungrie dogges with an eie only to the fleshpots and sell both themselues and their people for a morsel of bread and a messe of pottage to the deuill and haue sworne like sonnes of the earth to possesse the earth for euer and leaue heauen and the heyres thereof to God himselfe Alas poore soules faine would they haue somewhat to keepe life and soule within them and therefore as famished and starued creatures which haue for a space been pownded vp and pinfolded in a ground of barrennesse debarred from all succour and releife will suffer any thing to go downe the throat be it as bitter as gall as deadly as poison they swallow bitternesse as sugar and licke vp death as sweet hony These things God knowes are too common among vs and for these how many threats and warnings from heauen from earth from God from men from foes abroad and friends at home Ierem 9. ● Shal not I visit for these things saith the Lord or shall not my soule bee auenged on such a nation as this I will assuredly prooue my selfe to be Lord of hosts muster vp the clouds call foorth the winds cause the fire to deuoure before me Psal 50 3. and a mighty tempest to be round about me all powers in heauen and earth shall be shaken and I will take the foure corners of the world and shake out this off-scouring I will raise vp the standerd blowe the trumpet bring destruction vpon destruction death vpon death plague vpon famine sword vpon both Another sort there be that declare my ordinances against which I haue many things such are like the Ostrich Iob. 39. which haue wings feathers not like the doues to flie vnto Gods arke to bring the faithfull newes of the abating of the waters of Gods wrath they haue no oliue leaues in their mouth no Gospel of peace vnto the heires of righteousnes receiued into the arke of Gods couenant but when the time is that is when they haue gotten themselues the wings of honour they mount on high mocke the horse and his rider they leaue their egges in the earth small thanks vnto them if they be made hote in the dust it is not their owne heate but the heat of an other sunne which perhaps the Lord makes to shine vnto them but in the meane time they forget that the foole might scatter them or the wild beasts might breake them Alas howe many in their pride tread the godly vnderfeete what store of wild beasts breake into the Lords vinyard therefore it cannot be but that they shew themselus cruell vnto their young ones as they were not theirs and are without feare as if they trauailed in vaine But let me tell them for all their learning and wisdome yet while they forsake Gods heritage they are depriued of all wisedome neither hath God giuen them any part of his vnderstanding Oh therefore for the loue of God and comfort of your owne soules recal your selues before this sentence come out against you God hath a long time holden his tongue it cannot be for euer for it is most certaine that he will reprooue for these things and set them in order re-enter therefore and recouer your forsaken charges languishing and worne away for want of pasture stretching on the ground for faintnes fetching their groanes deep and their pants thicke as readie to giue ouer and yeld vp the ghost if they die it must needs be laid to your charge Ier 5.3 and for these things God will haue you arraigned hereafter O Lord are not thine eyes vpon the truth yes assuredly and therefore the harmelesse sheep that droppe away by famine of the word hath raised a lowder crie and clamour in thine cares then any man is able to make by his iust complaint in the eares of men yet O God if any place for mercie and why should we doubt of mercie with thee who art the God of mercy looke not vpon this drosse and filth but sweep them out and open the rocke of stone againe let againe sweet Iesus the waters euen the liuing waters of the word flow out and let the sauing riuers of thy Gospel runne in all the drie places of our land We see the fruitfull weedes and thornes of prophannesse and iniquirie oh giue thine husbandmen hearts to roote them out we see the wofull ruines of vertue piety oh let the builders be readie to repaire them that so to thee who art the great Shepheard and Bishop of our soules we may render an account at the dreadfull day of thine Oecumenicall visitation In the meane time thou oh God which instructest the husbandman to haue discretion Esay 28. and doest teach him to cast in wheate and by measure euerie graine teach thy seruants how to plowe vp the fallow ground of mens hearts and keep them from sowing among thornes Againe Secondly 〈◊〉 taxe all v●●e formed professors as the words are specially directed against such ministers as would declare Gods ordinances and yet hate all reformation so likewise may they be applyed to euerie professor that would make a shew of godlinesse yet wholly denyes the power thereof and therefore the sentence is verie large neither can we come to make any vse of it vntil we haue cleared it by the rules of Gods wisedome which is better then mans The wit of man hath many strange inuentions Gods wisdome our direction first seene by analysis then imitated by genesis and therefore seeing I haue been so large vpon one small verse it may rather be thought to be mine inuention beside the nature of the text then that which Gods wisedome will any waies afford I will not therefore thinke it grieuous to expresse the way of mine inuention All wisedome lookes vnto God as the author analysis genesis and will acknowledge no more in man then obseruation and after that to followe God by way of imitation for the wisedom of God is as the Sunne ours as the beames no beames where the sunn hath not gone before his wisdome as the real and substantiall face ours as the reflexion or image in the glasse no image or reflexion without the presence of the bodie Gods wisedome is as the seale ours as the stampe no stampe but by the seale his wisdome is the fountaine ours the streames no streames where the fountaine is not open and sending foorth his water Let Iacobs well be stoped and he will presently complaine for want of water therefore no worke of the creature is primarie Imitation by obseruation but an imitation of Gods worke The husbandman could neuer haue pianted trees except hee had first obserued Gods plantation in the world Apelles could neuer haue painted any exquisite colours vnlesse he had taken notice of Gods most beautifull colours in nature Let it
not consent Quitacet consentire videtur yet he will spare mee for a time or howsoeuer I will hold mine own conclusions whatsoeuer the Lord shall doe vnto me IIII. Part. Of Gods reproofe and order in sinne Reprooue This word signifieth foure things First to argue or reason vpon any matter secondly by reasoning to prooue or disprooue any cause thirdly by proouing or disproouing to absolue or condemne any person fourthly after condemnation to punish or execute This fourth signification is specially meant in this place for he had his conuiction before therefore to reprooue in this place is as much as to plague for the reason following makes it plaine Oh consider this least I teare you in peeces shewing plainly what his reproofe was nothing but vengeance Set This word presupposeth things out of place secondly the placing of them againe in their rankes and orders shewing vs the nature of sinne First that sinne is gotten out of his own place for neuer a creature of God by his creatiō did acknowledge him and God himselfe did alwaies abhorre him therefore before the fal of men and angels Gods er●ation a deadly ●uemie to sinne sinne was like vnto that which we call in nature vacuum which is so abhorred of nature that the verie fire will descend and the verie water ascend before they wil yeeld him the least corner in the world so sinne by Gods creation was wholly excluded and God giueth his testimonie that euery thing that hee made was good and very good therefore that sinne should obtaine that in nature as to get him a place in the best of Gods creatures was neuer the placing of the Lord therefore the Lord cannot bee said to set sinne in this manner The way of Gods placing Cane The second setting is here vnderstood to wit bringing that into his proper place which hitherto hath beene out of his place and is done two manner of wayes First by bringing it vnto himselfe and the rule of his wisedome and so sin is set in the decree of God and ordered by his wisdome for that of the Philosopher is true Veritas iudex sui obliqui but what need we the testimonie of the Philosopher seeing that we haue the Apostle Paul Rom. 7.7 I knewe not sinne but by the lawe and without the law sinne is dead now the rule is alwaies before the breach of the rule therfore must needs determine of euerie fault Secondly sinne is set in order when it is brought vnto man by making him feele what his sinne was by the punishment of it Order Includeth three things Confusion di●ontion i●●●u●ination first confusion secondly comely disposition thirdly plaine reuelation as in the creation of the world Gods order is set forth vnto vs in the confusion of the first matter wherein all things were buried as in a dark dungeon Secondly how the Lord proceeded to bring out of this the heauens in their ranke with all the host thereof the firmament in his place the water and all therein in his place the earth and all thereupon in their place and thus was the worke of the Lord comely and full of beautie Thirdly the Lord brought foorth a light to separate from the darkenes and so was there a plaine reuelation of his workes so in this place here is sinne a greater confusion in m●n then euer was in that first chaos Secondly as the Lord brought all things out of that into their place so will he bring all the sins of man vnto a comely order so that plainly in the third place euery man shall see what he hath done to the dishonour of his creator This order is threefold according to a threefold booke the first is the booke of decrees 3. Bookes Gods dec●es Law Cons●ence the second is the book of Gods law the third the books of conscience and these three bookes doe most plainely order sinne The first booke being secret ordereth sinne secretly yet most iustly because most wisely for if the wisedome of God should not be seene in sin then should not God haue his glorie out of sinne therfore to answer all obiections that may arise out of this ordring of sin the prouing of the truth of this point I will in a few words take in hand the clearing of these two things first the remoouall of that which may obscure the truth secondly I will bring reasons for the confirming of this difficultie Answer The first obiection may be out of the words of the Psalme I will set them in order before thee therefore the order that is taken for sinne is after that sinne is committed For first God saith These things hast thou done 2. these things will I order 3. before thee all which plainely prooue that this order followeth sinne Answer To which I answer that in this place we are to vnderstand that the third booke which is the booke of the conscience is here to be vnderstood not excluding the former as though they were not but onely shewing that the bookes of conscience for the condemnation of a wicked man are sufficient and the onely cause of the execution of Gods plagues vpon him as appeareth plainly Reuel 20.12 And the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which is the booke of life and the dead were iudged of those things which were written in the bookes according to their works Here is mention of two bookes the booke of Gods decree and the booke of the Conscience Why the Lord tearmes the booke of conscience bookes called bookes because of the manifold bills and inditments that are written in the leanes of the conscience which are sufficient for the iudgement of the wicked therefore as often as we heare of Gods executions in punishing we heare nothing of the booke of his decree because to what purpose should God bring in his decree to conuince a wicked man when his conscience giueth in euidence sufficient against him it might rather cause cauill then true conuiction But in the execution of his mercie we heare of the booke of life because therein lieth a principall cause of our saluation Therefore I take it in this place Death only frō finne and therfore hath no ●●gher cause further then the cause no inqui●●e that the Lord speaking of bookes and of a booke would haue vs take notice that for iudgement we neede to looke no further then the bookes of conscience therefore I take it that the Scripture neuer speaketh of a booke of death Againe when we looke vpon our saluation we must eye the booke of life that so we may ascribe all the praise of our saluation vnto the Lord. So in this place the Lord is about his execution vpon the wicked God in himself workes out of all time in the are ●ure in due time therefore he pulls not out the booke of his decree but appeales vnto their owne consciences so that order which was before the Lord from all
denying graunt the one and graunt the other denie the one and denie the other Secondly because it is not onely the part of a wise man to produce his worke but also to direct it to his ende therfore most absurd to denie it of the wisest Thirdly because it is impossible that a thing should be produced by one wisdome and gouerned by another thus things would not serue the ende of their creation but another Observ 6. According to this wisdome euery nature worketh and to this he ought to obey Reason 1. Because they are Gods effects and therefore obeying the cause must needs obey the wisdome that ordered the causes sinne therefore beeing nothing obeies not God neither any sinner as he serues sinne Secondly this wisdome carries to the ende and euery thing obeies his ende and inclines bends and bowes vnto it Observ 7. This obsequie or obedience of the creature is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or true impression of this producing and gouerning wisdome This first wisdome is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The gouernement of the Creator the obedience of the creature or liuely seale that stamped that marke vpon the creature therefore the stampe is the liuely effigies or impression of that first wisdome and the obsequie or obedience of the creature is nothing but to imitate his gouernour A familiar example of this you may see in the seale and the impression vpon the waxe the seale leaues his marke and the marke is a plaine representation of the seale though the seale it selfe could be seene of none but him that stamped his marke vpon the waxe The waxe sets forth the creature the stampe the obedience and the seale Gods wisdome and this is that Idaea which is so much dreamed of whereof the creature is not capable yet the reflexion of it may be in the creature As for example sixe or seuen men may see their faces all in one glasse yet the glasse is farre lesse then any one of their faces for the naturall face of a man can not be put into the glasse but the image of his face reflected and that in most liuely proportion so Gods face no man can see yet his backe parts may be seene Exod. 33. now this face as I may say of Gods wisdome beeing stamped vpon his creatures carrie them in all their motions to their ends appointed of his Maiestie These things beeing well conceiued of wee finde two things most necessarie to concurre to the producing of any act 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 First facultie or power which God giues the creature when he giues them beeing 2. a rule of Gods wisdome to bring that facultie into exercise and so carrie it along vnto his ende The rule is the principall cause the facultie the instrumentall or ministeriall cause to ioyne with the principall neither alone can doe any thing but both together can doe any worke that the Creator would haue to be done To come then to our purpose God created man a reasonable creature indued with two most excellent qualities will and vnderstanding so that man was made able to vnderstand his Creator and will him as his onely good Yet man could not actually will God except God had giuē a rule to haue taught him so to doe the Lord bad man loue him with all his heart soule minde and strength and then to loue his neighbour as himselfe And for the effecting of this he gaue him a perfect rule of righteousnes to ioyne with his will in the performance of any dutie neither did God withhold this rule from him at any time and therefore God gaue man by creation power to will and rule sufficient for to haue taught him how to will so that neither for power or act any thing was wanting Let vs see then how these two things concurred in mans first fall How rule and facultie meet together in the first fall The deuill comes in the serpent and he beginnes to withdraw man from his rule knowing if man and woman had sticked close thereunto sinne should haue had no entrance He beginnes first to propound a question that so he might bring the woman to dispute with him and the question is made about the rule of obedience Hath God indeed said Ye shall not eate of euerie tree of the garden To this the woman answers first by affirmation we eate of the trees of the garden secondly by negation from the sentence of the law of the fruit which is in the mids of the garden God hath said not onely I The dispu●●● on of the 〈◊〉 man and 〈◊〉 deuill but neither I nor my husband must eate of it neither shall ye touch it and to the prohibition she laies the curse least ye die So then the rule would haue made his part good against the Deuill and haue taught the woman to haue holden this conclusion against all the deuills arguments The deuill replies againe vpon the woman and first he begins to take away that which might feare her in breaking the law yee shall not die at all and then to her negation brings a testimonie first from God God doth knowe secondly from contradiction to the law when ye shall eate therof thirdly a threefold reason to perswade them to that act of eating first knowledge your eyes shall be opened secondly the measure of this knowledge it shal make you like God himselfe thirdly from the kinds of their knowledge knowing both good and euill As yet no hurt was done Let vs now see how the Law concurres in the next The con●● of the 〈◊〉 and we shall easily see both Gods and the lawes confluxe with Adams fall The 1. act of the woman was approbation of the deuills reasons so the woman here 's consent against both God the law The 2. act was seeing here God concurred naturally and that by the rule of nature in optickes neither was this the breach of that rule but presently the will wheeles or turnes it selfe vpon the obiect and saies the tree was good and that approbation was also good for the tree was good by Gods creation but this goodnesse did so affect the will that Gods law must be forgotten and the tree beeing made good for that which the law forbad to wit that it was good for meat when before out of the sentence of the law she had saide the law and God himselfe hath saide ye shall not eate and to say it was good for meate was a direct affirmation against both God and his law and so could not haue their concourse and this was her internall iudgment The next is her externall iudgment in regard of the tree obiected to her eyes in these words and that it was pleasant to the eyes Now this was no where forbidden but that they might looke on it and it may be she said too much when she added we may not touch it yet this likewise is made a sinne for after the will is spoyled then all the other
his efficiencie The nature of Gods decree and omnipotency and is generally nothing else but sententia definita in consilio suo ab aeterno de rebus faciendis that is Gods definitiue sentence in his eternall counsell concerning the making of all things And that it riseth from omnipotencie and efficiencie it is plaine for in that he did it we say he could doe it and so decreed it and the sentence must bee of such things as are within his power so that election is nothing but the choise of a thing and decretum the decree nothing but the setting of it done definitiuely the word is of decerno to see a sunder and verie fitly signifieth this determination of God sententia sentence though the Lord doth all things simul and semel at once and together in respect of himselfe yet to vs he shewes it as if he did it peditentim step by steppe and that with great and long determination therefore a sentence where his will and power giue in their verdict and say sic sentio so I iudge The third word definita or definitiua definite or definitiue is the determination or defining of a thing inter cancellos within his bounds in consilio con salio where many things leape together or concurre to make vp one sentence so that a man is as it were distracted about the composing of them the Lord did it without all distractiō yet were there many things that the Lord brought together Eterno eternall because it was long before any thing was existent de rebus faciendis it is of matters to bee done and not of things alreadie done Properties in Gods deciee for that is more properly ordination the ordering and ranking of euerie worke brought forth according to his eternall decree Out of this breakes forth his constancie in performing euerie thing by deede that hee hath decreed not that God is tied thereunto but rather the thing to bee done is tied vnto him and his good pleasure so that stoicall destinie is not thereby brought in but true constancy 2. Veritie in performing it according to his word for so is verum quod pronuntiat vti res est that saies as the thing is yet here we are to inuert quando res est vti pronuntiat that the thing is because he pronounceth it Constanti test qua constanter decretum essicit veritas est qua dicretum essi it s●cun lum vor●● side est qua siat dictum for Gods pronunciare to pronounce is before the thing and God pronounced what should become of euerie thing long before they existed The third is sides fidelitie which is in performing the thing according to his promise A constant decree as he effects it most true as be effects it according to his word and most faithfull as he keepes his promise constancie truth and faithfulnesse bee three effects of Gods decree If from the effects we inquire of the manner of the cause we must needs confesse it was neither by nature nor necessitie or any chance and fortune but by counsell and therefore counsell beeing the manner of Gods working could not be considered as the genus of Gods decree but as it belongs ad causam illius essicientem to the efficient Eph. 1. God works all things secundum consilium voluntatis suae according to the counsell of his will And therefore Gods counsell is his deliberation of bringing euery thing to passe after the best manner So then by his decree appeares his counsel and his counsell makes his decree to bee wrought most willingly and most wittingly therefore his decree of sinne must be most willingly and wittingly performed otherwise it should be no decree therefore fecit Order of consequence in 〈◊〉 d●cree qua potuit qua potuit decreuit qua decreuit consuliò fecit qua consulto fecit gloriam spectauit qua gloriam spectauit sapientiae visum est qua sapientiae visum est bonum fuit qua bonum fuit absolute voluit God did the thing as hee might do it as hee might doe it so he decreed it as he deereed it so he did it by the best counsell as by the best counsell it respected his glorie as that it seemed to accord with his wisedome as that it was good and as good he absolutely willed it Surely with men in giuing counsell plus vident oculi quam oculus the more counsell they giue and the better but it is not so with God for he sees all things simul semel together and at once now when we speake of deliberation we must vnderstand it more humano according to our capacity that the Lord takes the best way to effect any thing Obserue further that the Lord when he is said to be causa consilio a cause by counsell must needes haue his ende and scope set before him and this must be of all things and what is that but his glorie Counsell therfore intends the glorie of God Glorie the fruit of vertue for as God is the beginning of all things so he is the ende of all things Now glorie is called the ende of God by a metanimie of the adj for subj because it is properly the fruit that follows vpon vertue intellectuall or morall in a word all his goodnesse Exod. 33. Moses cries to God that he would shew him his glorie God makes answer What Gods glory verta●● or goodnesse are that the glorie which Moses can see is the going of his goodnes before him whose backe parts he might see but for the face of it he could not see and liue this goodnesse breakes forth in the proclamation Exod. 34. And that goodnes is nothing but the appearance of his most absolute vertues especially iustice and mercie the reason is because these shine in the creatures and secondly because the ende thereof is to set forth his glorie As his counsell had a scope so it had some forme of working which we call the Idaea of all things A builder of an house first conceiues in himselfe the worke he intends to produce then secondly he lookes againe vpon his worke wrought and sees how it answers his first intended forme the painter eyes the naturall face and from that stamps by drawing limming and colouring the expresse image thereof and then he lookes vpon his worke to see how it answers the patterne The first knowledge we call direct the second indirect or reflexed so in God there is first of all the Idaea and plat-forme of all things and this is in God most direct who seeing in himselfe all things knows how to make all things out of himselfe How God in knowing differs from man and these may well be called Gods plots which he hath formed and fashioned in himselfe Now this wisdome of God differs from mans because his idaea or plot is first in the thing because he doth nothing primarily but by imitation and obseruation of that wisdome which he hath seene God lay open
yet bona venia with greater rashnesse seeing the Apostle intended no such thing as humane infirmitie to dispute with God but to musle vp the mouthes of the refractorie and peruerse Iewes and such like but yet he is to know that if the Apostle had brought his argument to that purpose onely then should he haue dealt with them as our Sauiour Christ did Ioh. 8. the Iewes they say we haue no neede to be made free Christ tels them Ye are the seruants of sinne therefore in vaine doe you boast of your freedom so here the Iewes might haue saide we are cast off and reprobates for so was the will of God and how should we haue helped it The Apostle might presently haue stopped their mouthes Yee are rebells against God and therefore he hath cast you off what could flesh and blood haue opposed to this But the Apostle makes no mention of this but resolues all into Gods will and that most iustly seeing to make and prepare his vessells is his own will alone When he shall come to the third to handle them as vessels of wrath the cause shall easily be found out to iustifie God and condemne man 6. Principle No mon can doe any thing but where God workes the will and the deed and it is done according to that measure lesse or more that God bestowes vpon vs. Of the concourse of Gods grace both of them agree onely that word absolute is disliked yet if in all effects the first cause bee absolutely required that the second may worke then God must absolutely concurre to the effecting of any good Seuenth principle No euill is avoided that God doth not keepe vs from in the working Of this it is agreed but the manner of working is doubted of whether it bee by omnipotencie causing a necessary impedition or of counsell causing an infallible impedition the first mooues the will naturally the second voluntarily To answer the distinction is not good for omnipotencie goes along with prouidence in the preseruation of the creature as well as it did in creation for the production of the same and therefore omnipotencie is seen in the creatures motions whether naturall or voluntarie Secondly that distinction of the wills naturall motion and voluntary is false for I demaund whether the will in both be an internall agent if internall then it suffers neither violence nor coaction but acts most freely and therefore by that modus efficiendi which is counsell Thirdly a necessarie impedition and infallible are not alwaies distinguished nay a necessarie impedition is alwaies infallible though infallible be not alwaies necessarie and therefore to make distribution of a whole into a part and a whole is against reason and opposeth those which are not opposed Fourthly the naturall or voluntarie motion of the will to an externall obiect is neuer necessarie but contingent Therefore if the Lord should mooue the will with a most certaine determination vpon some externall obiect it should not make the act necessarie Eigth Principle Gods will is iudged of by his word by reuelation and by euent Arminius excepts against the third because the euent may as wel belong to Gods permission of it as his action in it the former teacheth vs to resolue the euent affirmatiuely vpon the second cause but negatiuely vpon Gods will because he would not hinder it either by his power secundum modum naturae or perswasion secundum modum voluntatis liberae If wee graunt that God permitted sinne which before I haue shewed to bee false in regard that a manner of working in sinne is iustified of God without all blame yet doth it not follow but that the euent should be Gods Zach. 6.1 the foure charets of the world that is all euents East West North and South come from betweene mountaines of brasse Gods immutable decree which is as immooueable as a mountaine of brasse Againe that God must needes will the euent it is plaine from the order of his wisedome which runnes before and after all euents before to worke in them and dispose of them without which two causes they cannot bee he that is the first wisedome and the last will not suffer any euent that shall not be from him to him for in as much as any thing is to him in so much it is from him seeing it is equally good to both that is as good for God so good from God Now surely all euents fall between these two tearmes and therefore from God to God Againe as after the euent Gods wisdome doth either approoue or disprooue of the second causes working it and hence all euents are either ordered limited or punished of God 9. Principle No man can doe that good which he might doe by grace except God should worke in him both the will and the deede to effect the same To this Arminius replies that God neuer giues power but secondly all things that might concurre to bring that power into act This is most true for before we shewed that two things were required to produce any worke facultie and rule of working and God neuer put any facultie into his creature but he gaue him a sufficient rule to worke by But the strait tying together of these two makes the creature to stand firme and immooueable therefore religion which since the fall is properly so called a tying againe of man vnto God is this strait bond that ties the faithfull soule for euer vnto God I will put my feare into their hearts and they shall neuer depart from me This is eternall life to knowe thee c. So then beside the rule and the facultie a third thing is required not for sufficiencie of working but for certentie of working and that is when the Lord shall put into vs his spirit of grace which shall lead vs into all truth and keepe vs from falling away And this third thing Adam wanted and therefore Phil. 2.13 It is God which worketh in you both the will the deede euen at his good pleasure Obserue first it is said in you that is his faithfull ones secondly it is both will and deede thirdly it is his most free will and pleasure and therefore hee may doe it to whom he will and when he will therefore man had power and rule sufficient to haue stood but God did not so necessarily tie these together but that man might if hee pleased denie his concourse with the rule and so sinne against God 10. Principle The gouernement of the whole world and all execution of iustice is to be ascribed vnto God The exception to this is of small moment God doth all not onely in iustice but also in mercie and knowes where to bestow both this M. Perkins included in the gouernment of the world wherein both iustice and mercie are manifested The definition of Predestination reprehended in the genus or common nature in the subiect and in the ende The next examination is concerning the definition of Predestination wherein Arminius reprehends
more then conquerours and how should more then conquerers be conquered and they that are thus perswaded not in themselues but in him that loued them euer turne this their perswasion into miserable despaire And thus much of the lowest steppe in Predestination 2. ●●delis cum infi●●● Subiect is a beleeuer or an infidell Hence the Scripture bids vs make our election sure Prooue your selues whether you be in the faith or no know ye not Christ dwells in you except you be reprobates now this is in the second application of our redemption For first application is made vnto the Church secondly vnto the members in the Church so that this is more speciall then that and therefore by analysis riseth first yet is after the last not in Gods worke but in our seeing and feeling and to this concurre preparation vnto faith infusion of this grace insition into Christ vocation vnion instification imputation reconciliation regeneration and glorification Infidels on the contrarie haue no participation of these mercies and therefore forsaken of God And this is the second decree of God according to Arminius which he calls absolute and precise Electio reprobatio qualatatu● non personaru● because the other was but conditionall in singular persons To beleeuers and penitent God giues saluation in Christ for Christ and by Christ but impenitent and infidels damnation as strangers from Christ You are to vnderstand that this decree is precise in regard of faith and not of the person for he may denie the faith and become an infidell and so be damned And here againe he offers violence to the faith of Gods Elect against which Christ hath said The gates of hell shal neuer preuaile And thus by analysing by the way we haue discouered two of Arminius decrees with the falshoods therein contained 3. Subiect more generall then both these is the Church Ecclesia … zanijs and here is the proper place of the manifestation of Gods decree The Church consists of mon and angels and so both men and angels are the subiect of Gods decree Reprobation the manifestation of his hatred both vpon men and angels which are excluded from the true societie and communion that is in his Church Election the true declaration of his loue both vpon men and angels which he hath receiued into communion with himselfe vnder Christ Iesus the head of the Church I must descend a little in this that I may discouer a third decree of Arminius which onely belongs vnto this place but yet I am not come to the speciall head of it The Church is militant or triumphant for the triumphant Church in which God hath manifested his election as wel as the militant consists of saints and Angels Here then obserue that sinne and miserie do not goe before election and reprobation for so should they agree to the whole subiect and euery member of the same but sinne and miscrie agrees not vnto the holy angels Angels elect in the Church and yet neuer miserable and yet they are elect now as many as were elect could not fall into the sinne of apostacie and therefore the rest were not elected if not elected then reiected in Gods decree and that before they fell and therefore reiection before sinne But to descend to the Church militant which is with the tares first in Adam election and reprobation appeared in Cain and Abel in Abraham in Ismael and Isaac in Isaac in Iacob and Esau in Iacob called Israel the true Israel of God and the fleshly seede and now in the time of the Gospel here and there as it pleaseth God to reueale his will and counsell which long before was set down with himselfe and for the gathering together of his Church here vpon earth he hath left means sufficient And here comes in the third decree of Arminus that God hath left in his Church sufficient necessarie and effectuall meanes to bring men to faith and repentance And this we graunt onely we desire that these meanes may be vnderstood as onely resting in the bosome of the Church where God hath laid open the riches of his treasuries and onely to bee effectuall where Christ will apply them by the gratious worke of his spirit for the Church is not compounded of tares and wheat but the militant Church is wheate with tares as the sores of a bodie are not the part of a bodie but with the bodie and all cures are applyed for the bodie against the sores and so all these meanes are for the welfare of his Church but against the tares and the meanes are applied to both to the one for saluation but to the other for damnation 2. Tim. 2.19 Hymeneus and Philetus haue erred concerning the truth and meanes of their saluation this might make weake Christians stagger but the Apostle takes away all these doubts the foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his and therefore wil apply these meanes onely effectually to his owne for that opinion of vniuersall grace is damnable greater loue then this hath no man to lay downe his life c. If then he haue laid downe his life for the wicked he hath no greater loue for his own then he hath for the damned if Gods iustice be satisfied for the wicked how should he punish them and if Christ died for them then God wil acknowledge a satisfaction But they say all the fault is for want of application To this I answer that applicetion is as necessary an effect of redemption as burning is of the fire and there can be no redemption but of necessitie it must bring in application first in regard of Gods iustice which being appeased cannot but be reconciled to all those offenders with whome he is well pleased in his sonne Secondly in regard of Christs sacrifice Dan. 9.24 Messiah must bee slaine to reconcile the iniquitie and bring in euerlasting righteousnes this cannot be done without application for both iustification and reconciliation belong to application Thirdly in regard of beleeuers themselues who are his members and therefore cannot be without the deriuation of grace from their head Christ Iesus 4. Subiect is man captiuated vnder sinne Homo redimendus or redemptus and standing in neede of a redeemer Here comes in redemption which is in nature before application either to the Church or faithfull and therefore going backeward we come most orderly vnto it in the next place and here shall we finde Arminius building vp his first decree and hauing detected him here Arminius his foure decrees we shall neuer find him a step higher Hee hath fowre degrees which all of them are to be found not in the apostasie or falling of man but in his anastasie or rising againe The first is in redemption Volo Christum esse Mediatorem totius mundi I will haue Christ to be the Sauiour of the whole world The second is in speciall application Volo resipiscentes
of Samaria whose eyes were opened to let them then see how they were in the midds of their enimies that meant to doe a mischiefe vnto Gods messenger so the deuill hath lead these men blindfoulded into the midds of hell and there the Lord hath opened their eyes to let them see what they haue done against himselfe and all his Saints The summe then of the words is thus much A briefe recapit●●ation these things that is these sinnes before mentioned done that is committed and I held my tongue that is was mercifull in sparing and thou thoughtest that is framed me and my silence to thy owne conceit and liking like thee that is of the same mind nay more then that one altogether like thee and that which is most shamefull should neuer alter my mind toward thee but I wil reproue thee that is most certainly I will plague thee and set them that is sinne shall be brought vnto his own place In order that is make the booke of conscience most euident that thou may read in it distinctly without all confusion and haue it so fixed before thine eyes that I will keep thee to thy reading though thou would faine turne thine eyes another way Before thee that is in the eyes of thy conscience which shall be so vnlocked that it shall be impossible for thee euer to get them shut againe And thus much of the words CHAP. III. Concerning the disposition and reasons NOw I come vnto the reasons contained in the words The logicall analysis and as I goe along with them I shall raise my doctrines and my vses which after resolution is our imitation of Gods worke And therefore I first enter the consideration of the disposition of the words secondly of the simple inuention the first shewes how reasons are ioyned together the second what they are asunder For the first the bond that tyes them is twofold generall or speciall the generall bond is in this word but all that goes before it is called the antecedent all that followes the consequent The nature of the bond is to set apart such things as doe not disagree in themselues but in respect of some third thing vnto which they cannot both bee giuen and this alone makes them disagree So in this place the antecedent which containes the mercie of God and the consequent which containes Gods iustice do agree in themselues for mercie and iustice kisse each other and therefore the hypocrite hath set them at variance that God must no longer bee mercifull but iust in punishing him Partiu●● 〈◊〉 partium discre●es Therefore in this bond are two things to be iudged first the truth of both parts secondly the distinction or disagreement Truth is required on both sides for falsifie the one side and the other will not stand good because both of them make but vp one ioynt truth from whence these obseruations are truely gathered Obser 1. First that that God is equally iust and mercifull hee that will haue his mercy must be sure that he falsifie not his iustice for a breach of the one makes a breach of them both Reason 1. Because they are equall in God for they are indeed his verie beeing Hence ariseth an impossibilitie in God to forgiue an offence against his iustice by his mercy vntill a satisfaction of his iustice be made for the Lord cannot denie himselfe indeed men may passe by offences committed against them without satisfaction because their iustice is not their being but a qualitie in it and therefore the iniurie is lesse but in nature we see that whatsoeuer makes against the beeing of it cannot be indured or any peace made with it and therfore sinne beeing against the very beeing of God God can make no peace with man vntill reconciliation bee made by Christ that hath giuen a ful satisfaction to Gods iustice for the sinnes of his children Reas 2. Is the manifestation of his glorie God will equally haue the glorie of them both wicked men should neuer glorifie God except it were for his iustice Indeede we graunt that in regard of man there is an inequalitie for God may be said to be more mercifull vnto them that are saued then iust to them that are condemned for of condemnation the iust cause is in man but of saluation it is wholly from grace yet in himselfe they are both equall and also by them he is equally glorified seeing that nothing in God can receiue augmentation or diminution Reas 3. Is to leaue man without all excuse for he shal haue no cause to complaine of his iustice aboue his mercy but shall confesse that the Lord is equall in all his doings Vse 1. For confutation of errour 1. If God be equal in iustice and mercie then no mercy to bee expected but that which will stand with the iustice of God therefore mercie in Christ must stand with the iustice of God and Christ must bring in mercy by perfect fulfilling of the law Christ is the cause of life and saluation In Adam dying to die was necessarie vpon the transgression els peraduenture we shall die had been true therefore die we must either in Christ or in our selues if in Christ then by his death we are freed from that sentence of the lawe In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death being dead in Christ we are iustified from the sentence of condemnation But yet there is an other more effentiall part of the lawe Passiue obedience might free from death but actine brings life and that is doe this and thou shalt liue and God may as well free vs from death without dying as bring vs to life without doing We grant then that the passiue obedience of Christ hath taken away death and this is legally done on Christs part but most mercifully in regard of vs if then no more but this righteousnesse were imputed it would prooue of workes in regard of Christ though of grace in regard of vs. So then this mercie of our deliuerance from death is equall with Gods iustice Here is dying in stead of dying and so that part of the law that is sinne and die is repaired and fully answered but as yet all righteousnesse is not fulfilled for I am sure that this is a righteousnesse of the lawe as well as the other doe this and thou shalt liue and if this bee not done then Christ hath not fulfilled the speciall part of the righteousnes of the law for vs To doe and liue was our debt vnto God and therefore Christ our suretie must fulfill it for vs. And this wil prooue a wonderfull mercy to miserable man that hath Christ to pay his debts and bestowe the whole purchase of life and saluation vpon him It is a false dreame to think that non peccator and iustus a iust man and no sinner are equipollent tearmes For non peccator is a contradiction to peccator but iustus is an opposite habite and in act an
can swallowe the ground for their fiercenesse and rage and beleeue not that it is the noyse of any trumpet that cals to iudgement therefore their sound is ha ha they smell the battel a farre off and they neuer regard the noyse of the Captaines of the Lord and the shouting of the mighty angels with their approach attending vpon God neither shall they stagger at the thunders and the appearance of flaming fire when the Lord shall come to render vengeance on euery one that knowes him not or hath not obeyed his holy Gospel These are like the giants of Gath they haue fingers and thumbes enough they wil not loose it for the catch but alas poore creatures I feare these Gyants of Gath will prooue poore Adonizabesech that wants both fingers and thumbes to feed withall and therefore shall they perish as he did for want of apprehending the foode of their soules Christ Iesus therefore let all our propositions be out of Gods word nothing from our selues Vse 3. for consolation First for wel-doing when our hearts will tell vs we haue bin affected as well with mercie as iudgement to serue the Lord and that all our care was the keeping of a good conscience Secondly in regard of trouble whether it come for weldoing as a triall or for euill as a correction and that is to drawe good out of all cleane contrarie to the wicked which conclude all in verie ill forme and contrarie to the mind of God for thereby shall wee come to that blessed comfort which is laid downe Rom. 8.28 all things worke together for the best of them that loue God which wee may prooue best by our conclusions Obser 2. Wicked men do more then they directly thinke and yet in truth they think as much as they doe It is the nature of a wicked man to make vnknown conclusions for surely a wicked hypocrit wil denie this conclusion Did I euer make God like my selfe I knowe his ordinances and am well seen in his statutes therefore such matters are farre remooued from my thoughts But the conclusion is made and pronounced by the spirit of truth and therefore is no lie they haue made it but the Lord must inferre it their liues and practise haue set to their seales it is as good in lawe before God as if they had thought it for the Lord knowes they were not asleepe when they hated to be reformed and cast his lawes behind their backes they did this willingly and yet as willingly would they seeme to haue on their backes Gods apparell they would cloth themselues with an outward profession they would haue his law at their fingers ends declare his ordinances and take his couenant into their mouthes The deuill will speake as well as they Acts 16.17 These are the seruants of the most high God which shewe vnto vs the way of saluation neither was this constrained for shee did it many dayes surely for this ende that Paul might take notice that by her confession she was as good a professor as the best that followed Paul yet his spirit was able to see the imposture and deceit of Sathan and therefore grieued for her hee turnes about and bids the vncleane spirit be gone So these persons they crie the temple of the Lord they haue a faire crie but alas it is that they might liue in the church as the deuill liued in the woman yet assure themselues that as the deuill by this confession made a conclusion directly against himselfe so these men by these faire words make an vnknown conclusion and for the same shall be cast out of Gods Church and packt to hell with all those vncleane spirits which for their aduantage can open their mouthes and speake like the blessed angels The Indians would none of the Popes Catechisme because they saw the Priests liues demonstrate nothing but cruelty The Indians could iudge the Spanyards and priests in their army by their liues when they were readie to hang them and put them to death then must the priest stand out to catechize them and shew them the way to heauen but these poore Indians were able to ioyne a better conclusion to all their premisses then going to heauen for hauing asked what master they themselues serued and whither they meant to go answer beeing made they meant all of them to go to heauen and there should be their resting place after this life presently they bid the priest spend no more words in vaine for such seruants could haue no good masters and if they meant to go to heauen then they would go to hell good iudgement from the practise of these Priests and Spanyards all their faire shew of godlines made conclusions against themselues to wit that it was impossible that a good God would euer acknowledge them or that any place of blisse should be their resting place and therefore best for them to goe the cleane contrarie way euen to hell it selfe then haue such companions to be with them in heauen Reas 1. Blindnes of minde Ignorance which sees no further then the present propositions Euery man will say that a drunkard whoremaster vncleane person shall neuer inherit the kingdome of heauen the word of God is plaine for it and they yeild to the truth Againe come to the assumption and tell them You are of the number of these persons you know it your selfe and all your neighbours can testifie with you this present truth he will yeild vp that too but the conclusion that followes most necessarily he will not see but defie all them that shall bring it and say he shall be damned Great blindnesse that will not graunt a consequent as necessarie as burning to the fire would not the world count him a very ignorant person that should say here is fire but I make question whether it can burne Well foole the best argument for thee is put thy singer into the fire and see if thou can feele it So these men will yeild vp all but that which is as necessarie as the rest shall not onely be called into question but denied with an execration of all that bring it Therefore no resolution vntill God come and say In to hell fire and then shall they feele the conclusion of their waies Reas 2. is the diuersitie of lusts that leads them about Multitudes of lusts which make distraction of the mind and alwaies vnto it selfe nothing must conclude that pleaseth not his lusts 2. Thess 3.7 Which women are euer learning and are neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth the reason is in the verse before because they are simple women laden with sinnes and lead with diuers lusts Reas 3. is want of all good method in their liuing Disorder of life for he that keepes no order in his actions can neuer be able to bring any thing to good passe and it makes such a confusion in his head that he cannot tell what will be the issue of
generated from pure ayre whereby the heart and the braine are preserued in their functions so that what shall bee without reason to deny God his prouidence 3. In Iudiciall Astrologie Neither would I haue the Astrologians to thinke themselues free from this conceit when they make the starres the rule to square all actions as well voluntary as naturall and to determine of the ends and issue of them both Secondly it is strange Idolatrie that there should be any conceit of idolatrie seeing that nothing can be like God either in beeing or doing Isa 40. Againe all the idols of the heathen are known by their causes which to imagine of God is absolutly impossible The smith Isa 44. taketh an instrument worketh in the coales euē with the strength of his armes is an hungred his strength faileth he drinketh no water and is faint the like is said of the carpenter ver 13. and therefore verie strange that such feeble creatures as these should bring forth their creator nay stupid blockishnes that the workman should esteeme the worke of his own hands better then himselfe that made it The like may be said of the matter which is as fit in his owne conceit to warme his body and prepare his meat as be an idole for his soule folly incomparable that fit matter for the fire in his chimney should be as fit for the kindling vp of the fire of his zeale and deuotion in his heart strange againe that the picture of a man beast or the foules of the ayre should be counted better then the liuing man himselfe nay alas then the liuing God Lastly that whose ende is vanitie to be counted the felicitie of the soule is most shamefull and intolerable yet for all this Iere. 44. v. 17. We will burne incense to the queene of heauen and powre out drinke offerings vnto her haue they not reason for this yes assuredly they haue a double reason First losse in that they haue not done it ver 18. Since we left off this worshippe we haue had scarcenesse of all things and haue beene consumed by the sword and by famine A second reason is the profit of idolatry v. 17. when we did this then had we plentie of victualls and were well and felt no euill Thirdly Heresie Transubstantiation Consubstantiation no heresie but some reason for it as Transubstantiation must needes bee true because Christ hath said this is my body and consubstantiation must be as good as this because of the personal vnion of man-hood with the deitie A pretie dispute we haue in the 12. Christ not the Messias of Iohn betwixt Christ and the people concerning the Messias In the 32. v. Christ layes downe this proposition If I were lift vp from the earth I would drawe all men vnto mee this Christ meant of his death and so the people vnderstood it but he hath put an argument into their heads whereby they will conquer him ver 34. We haue heard out of the law that Christ bideth for euer therefore by thy owne confession thou art not Christ because thou saiest thou must die And I pray you consider how they triumph in this their argument How sayest thou now that the sonne of man must bee lift vp who is that sonne of man Fourthly Prophanation for prophanation see how the Apostle labours to preuent the wicked conceits of man concerning the abundance of grace 1. Of grace where sinne abounds there grace abounds much more a good reason in the conceits of wicked men to make them sinne the more that grace may abound Againe for Election and Reprobation see how men profane them If I must be saued let me doe what I will and I shall not be damned 2. Election Reprobation and if I must bee damned let mee doe what I will and I shall not bee saued Now should I come to discouer that the ground of all these opinions is nothing but thou thoughtest or it was thy conceit but because this is the last obseruation in the conclusion I wil put it off vntill I haue briefly giuen the reasons and made the vse of this point Reason 1. No man will denic himselfe and therefore though oftentimes he denie the rule of reason yet neuer will be absolutely denie reason because reason is one of the principall faculties in man and therefore must it trudge to make vp his broken conclusions Reason cannot act without reason and therefore men will haue false reason before they will haue none Reas 2. Is the simplicitie of truth and multiplicitie of errour From errors multiplicity and therefore though men cannot bring in truth to maintaine falshood yet may they haue many falshoods to make a faire shewe for one falshood Reas 3. Is the nature of opposition From opposition which on both sides is to defend his own Truth and falshood are deadly enemies and therefore as truth laboureth to confirme himselfe by all those that loue him so falshoold laboureth to gather together all his forces by those that maintaine him Hence it comes to passe that heretickes will neuer be coufuted but as long as they can breath they will vent what they haue conceiued Vse 1. reprehension First confutation of the wicked in that they adde sinne vnto sinne First to poyson themselues with strange opinions and secondly to enquire for reasons whereby they may ground themselues in these poysoned errors so that from errors they grow to heresie from simple ignorance to that which we call affected ignorance ignorance is so good a mother to deuotion that she will nource vp error and error will grow vp to heresie a child of rebellion Secondly correction of the godly that they yeeld not at any time to the least motions of errour least they become disputers for errors and opposers of Gods truth Many honest and well-minded persons haue gotten such familiar acquaintance with hereticks that they haue beene poysoned by them and so haue come to hate the truth which once they imbraced Vse 2. instruction First an admonition of the wicked that they be a little more sober in broaching of their errors least that the Lord seeing their malice against his truth come with a sharpe reproofe and cut them off suddenly Secondly direction for the godly to keepe themselues to Gods word and neuer labour to wrest it either to the right hand or to the left for the vpholding of any conceits that the deuill their owne flesh or the wicked world shall suggest vnto them Vse 3. consolation First in prosperitie to remember that euerie good thing we enioy shall willingly bee spent for the maintaining of the truth and the opposing of error euen vnto the death Secondly in aduersitie to consider how wee haue vsed no indirect meanes to bring our purposes to passe but still haue rested vpon the Lord for the reuelation of his will and the time of our deliuerance Obser 7. The ground of all wicked mens opinions and likewise
temple which thing the Prophet graunteth yet makes this exception that he is a iust Lord in the middest thereof and will doe no iniquitie for their sakes therefore the Lord doth punish grauissimè iustissimè certissimè most grieuously because of the greatnes of sinne most iustly because of the holinesse of his law most certainly because of the truth of his iudgement But it will be obiected Wicked men prosper wicked men flourish The answer is easie First it is but short Psal 37.35 36. I haue seene the wicked strong and spreading himselfe like a greene bay treee yet I passed away and loe he was gone and I sought him but hee could not be found Secondly they are punished in their consciences with deadly securitie while they liue in thier prosperitie Thirdly the more they liue in delight the greater is their punishment for that feedes them fat for the day of the Lord. Secondly it may be obiected that hee which is summè misericors debet remittere aliquid de suo iure he that is most mercifull must remit some thing of his right or els shall wee verifie that of the Lord which we speake of oppressions summum ius summa iniuria the vttermost right is the vttermost wrong and therefore if it be the commendation of a man to forgiue iniuries and the glorie of the King to passe by offences shal we not thinke that the Lord hath greater libertie to dispense with his iustice and pardon offences without satisfaction I answer mercy and iustice are in God in the highest degree and therefore equall as beeing God himselfe yet may they be intended or remitted appeare more or lesse in his creatures Secondly the Lord hath iust reason with himselfe of the shewing of his mercie and iustice yet this may we boldly say that the Lord can not pardon any sinne without the satisfaction of his iustice because iustice in God is fater an other manner in him then any other creature for in him it is his essence and therefore to denie his iustice were to denie himselfe The point then beeing cleared these may be the reasons 1. Reas First from the perfection of his nature for Integritie is that which consists of all complements and can admit of nothing neither in the excesse nor in the defect 2. Reas The rule of his wisdome which admits no exception but containes in it the conditions of a most absolute and necessarie truth A law more vnalterable then the laws of the Medes and Persians 3. Reas Because he will be iudge of the whole world and therefore must needes be intire and iust in all actions 1. Vse reprehension first of the wicked that dreame of all mercie and thinke with the hypocrite that God is nothing but silence yet let them know that it is impossible for God to crosse his nature and therfore must they needes feele the hand of his iustice Secondly a correction of the godly which by reason of some priuiledges abuse their christian libertie surely if we be not the seruants of sinne we must be the seruants of righteousnes and not our owne masters 2. Vse instruction First admonition to the wicked that they put not too much on Gods skore because the Lord will prooue a hard master and be sure to aske his owne Secondly a direction to the godly first To passe their time in feare for that is the vse that Peter makes of it 1. Pet. 1.17 And if ye call him father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your dwelling here in feare 2. Chron. 19.7 Wherefore now let the feare of the Lord be vpon you take heede and doe it for there is no iniquitie with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receiuing of reward Secondly confession of the Lords righteousnes Nehem. 9.33 Surely thou art iust in all that is come vpon vs for thou hast dealt truly but we haue done wickedly Dan. 9.7 O Lord righteousnesse belongeth vnto thee and vnto vs open shame as appeareth this day vnto euery man of Iudah and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem yea vnto all Israel both neare and farre off through all the countries whether thou hast driuen them because of their offences that they haue committed against thee Therefore v. 14. Hath the Lord made readie the plague and brought it vpon vs for the Lord our God is righteous in all his workes which he doth for we would not heare his voice Psal 119.137 Righteous art thou O Lord and iust are all thy iudgements An admirable disputation is laid downe in the 9. of Iob the question is this Whether any man compared with God may be iustified The first argument is drawne from the confession of all mouthes that they shall not be able to answer him one thing of a thousand The second argument is drawne from his wisdome and power Neuer any beeing fierce against God hath prospered The third argument is an induction of particular examples drawne from the mountaines ouerturned in his wrath and yet they feele it not the displacing of the earth that the very pillars thereof doe shake the staying of the Sunne from his rising the closing vp the starres as vnder a signet the spreading of the heauens the walking on the sea the making of Arcturus Orion the Pleiades and the climates of the South he doth great things and snsearchable yea maruelous things without number so that he may passe by and no man perceiue him take the pray and no man restore it Thus doth the Lord not withdraw his anger and the most mightie helps stoope vnder him Hence ariseth these confessions v. 15. to the ende Though I were iust yet could I not answer onely this would I doe make supplications to my iudge if I speake of strength he alone is strong if I speake of iudgement he alone shall plead if I would iustifie my selfe mine owne mouth should condemne me thus goes Iob along in confessions vnto the 34. v. where he shewes the way to bring in his confidence Let him take away his rodde from me and let not his feare astonish me then will I speake and feare him not but because I am not so I hold me still Thus from arguments God brings forth these confessions and these confessions doe better quiet the soule then arguments against the Lord. Vse 3. Consolation to all those that labour for sinceritie and striue to serue the Lord with willing and perfect mindes for vnto all those that dispose their waies in this sort shall bee shewed the saluation of God Sect. 3. Of Gods equitie Obser 3. Is the equitie of God without all contradiction the Lord iudgeth not vpon malice or suspitions as though hee hated the person of the hypocrite or suspected him for some notorious crimes but tells him plainely his conscience iudging with the Lord that these things are done alreadie committed and therefore no cause to complaine of the Iudge Thus the Lord dealt with our first
are in danger but it lights but vpon the pate of one of them and he falls to the ground wounded and yeelds vp the ghost all the rest quake and tremble at the sight and are speechlesse So the Lord is daily shooting forth his arrowes he neuer misseth his aime the watchmen of the citie tell the people the arrowe of God is among them and for all this no man is afraid it strikes downe some of the stoutest of them but alas all is giuen to some surfet or weakenesse in the man which they finding themselues free from thinke it is impossible for them to die as he did because they haue not his disease as though there were no more diseases to cut off life then that one If a messenger knocke at the doore and answer be giuen him presently hee is gone without delay so beloued Gods plagues would not still rage at our doores if we gaue God his answer yet still the Lord rings the bel at our doore Secondly a direction to the godly to watch continually that so they may escape the iudgements of the Lord and mourne for his iudgements vpon others for these April dewes will bring forth in them the May flowers of Gods spirit and in weeping stil respect our selues more thē other for that alone makes God carie handkerchifes to wipe away our teares and this sowing in teares will bring vs a speedie haruest and when the rod is vpon others let vs take it to our selues for is it not better to take the rod into our owne hands and beate our selues gently then the Lord who is a consuming fire should wast vs with it Bones out of ioynt the longer they goe they prooue more painfull betimes they are set more easily therefore let vs betimes set our selues in the waies of the Lord least he rebuke vs sharply We physicke purge sweate and all for the bodie can we indure nothing for the soule the vomite of the soule is the greife of repentance and tell me I pray you who euer repented him of repentant sorrow In these reproofes we are worse afraid then hurt rising out of a soft bed is exceeding tedious to a sluggard yet our vp doth not dare vs at all so is the awaking from the sleepe of sinne and slumbering in the reliques of sinne which still haue dwelling in the best of vs. To see a souldier wounded is no newes but to goe with it is desperate follie so our sighting in this world is no newes if it bring knocks and maimes vnto vs yet to let them goe and ranckle and fester is forlorne negligence therefore let this direction take his impression in our soules that we may make excellent vse of all Gods reproofes Vse 3. Consolation in trouble because the Lord will reward vs but punish them that cause vs affliction 2. Thess 1.6 7. For it is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you which are troubled rest with vs. Secondly in prosperitie to reioice that we can sorrow that the Lord reprooues any of our brethren to be grieued for the afflictions of Ioseph Daniel could find no comfort in his priuate prosperitie and great authoritie because he knew that the Church of God was in great miserie the like affection was in good Nehemiah so likewise on the contrarie to reioyce when we be reprooued to see Gods church to flourish so Paul beeing in prison was not so much grieued at his own bonds as he reioyced at the libertie of the Gospel of Christ Sect. 3. Of the obiect Thee God in his owne children loues the person and accepts of them in Christ and onely hates their sinne and reprooues that but in an hypocrite he hates both the person and the sinne for if he should onely bee offended with the sinne then should there be no difference betwixt the godly and the wicked for he hates sinne equally in them both and yet they are not both equally hated and therefore some thing more in an hypocrite is the obiect of hatred then his verie sinne But it may be obiected that nothing can be hated but that which is euill The obiect of Gods hatred now the persons of wicked men are good the sinne is onely euill therefore onely hated Answ Euill is considered two wayes First in the abstract as beeing not considered with the subiect in which it is and so it is equally hated of God euery where Secondly in the concrete when the euill and the subiect are put together euill absolutely taken and an euill man are diuers considerations the same cause of hatred in both but not the same manner for a godly man is of an other condition seeing sinne in him is but a tyrant and he is none of his lawfull subiects and therefore though sinne fights to subdue him vnto his kingdome yet the spirit of God resists and will be the ruler Therefore as the loue of the subiects stand toward their king so doth the king loue them Now the loue of sinne and wicked men is naturall and so is the loue of God and his children spiritually naturall and therefore must he needes loue his owne subiects and hate all his enemies for if an enemie should captiuate a loyall subiect the king would presently require him againe when he is content to let his enemies haue their owne libertie ouer their owne slaues Therfore the children of God lose not the name of righteous persons because they sinne for it is rather sinne in themselues then themselues that offend God Rom. 7. Paul saies It is no more I but sinne that dwells in me Therefore in a wicked man there be three considerations first of his euill 2. of his sinnefull person 3. of his personall beeing the two first are hated the third is loued of God so a godly man first his euill secondly his righteous person thirdly his personall beeing the first is hated the two last are loued of the Lord. Observ 1. A Reproofe must be passed vpon sinne Euery thing that is secret must be brought into light Eph. 5.13 All things when they are reprooued of the light are manifest for it is the light that maketh all things manifest Ioh. 16.8 And when he is come he will reprooue the world of sinne and of righteousnes and of iudgement So that this point is generall to the sinnes of all men especially to the wicked for they haue neuer desired by heartie repentance to bring their sinnes vnto the light and therefore because they would not iudge themselues by it it shall iudge them to their woe Indeede to behold the light is a comfotable thing but for sore eyes it is verie troublesome and therefore those that doe euill hate the light because their works are euill and so the Lord must needs araigne them euen in the cleare sunne-shine to the view of all men euen of their verie consciences Ioh. 3. Reas 1. Because sinne is the violation of Gods law and therefore must
together not as Samsons foxes by the tayles euery one to drawe sundrie waies they sustaine no double persons single will they be in all their waies they are troubled with no contrary laws they can make all agree well enough and therefore when cry they in the very desperation of their soules who shall deliuer vs they giue thankes to God not for Christ but for themselues that they are not like other men Therefore the spirit hauing not pulled downe the old building how shall it be possible to set vp the newe which is plainly to be seene in the chap. following Rom. 8. First where is their freedome from the law of sinne and of death neither Christ nor the spirit hath purchased it for them and I doubt that their owne paiment will not stand good in Gods court Secondly if things may be known by their sauours surely euerie man may see they sauour of the things of the flesh Thirdly if the wisedome of the spirit and the wisedome of the flesh be enemies I admire what peace and life can be in hypocrites when they will not denie their owne wisedome for as yet the bodie is not dead and quickned again by the spirit still are they debters to the flesh and will liue after him How will they prooue themselues to bee the sonnes of God if the spirit of bondage be gone and the spirit of adoption be entred into their hearts let vs heare the cry of Abba father let them prooue the witnesse of the spirit if they bee heires of God euen annexed with Christ let vs see how they can suffer with him how they esteeme of afflictions in comparison of their glorie doth the creature groane for them nay alas I feare against them because they subiect him vnto vanitie Let vs heare how they with patience looke for their redemption Is their hope for things not seene nay alas all for the present How doth the spirit assist them in their infirmities how is he with them in their prayers what requests doth he bring out of their soules where be their deepe sighes that cannot be expressed can they search the meaning of the spirit according to the will of God surely nothing lesse for all is but lip labour Againe haue they assurance that all works together for their good can they tell it from their predestination vocation iustification and glorification can they from hence conclude that God is for them and no man can be against them that there is no charges for them to pay that there is no condemnation no separation from the loue of God in Christ all afflictions cannot doe it no death no angels no principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come no place not heauen aboue is too high for them nor hell below is able to make them sinke into his depth yea in breife not any creature is able to doe it therefore no hypocrite is in Christ and therefore impossible that he should bee washed from his filthinesse beeing not washed hee must remaine in it And that will appeare if we mark his life and death life prosperitie aduersitie In prosperitie for his profession he is all courage and verie full of brags like the coward that before he come in the field is fire and towe but when he comes to the tryall is the first that flees the field when the couragious champion is very silent but when there is neede of him will shew that hee hath more tried sortitude in him then a thousand cowards So hypocrites make all the world ring with their Master though all the world forsake thee yet will I not forsake thee I will lay downe my life for thee yet when Christ shall come with a this night shall yee be put vnto it then will they flee with the first and if Christ haue no better champions then they he shall be left all alone Secondly come to the hearing of the word all promises they will make their owne all iudgements threatened they will put vpon others and for application of both it shall be as in this place God is like them he fauours them aboue all with his mercies and his iudgements passe ouer their houses Thirdly for his life no reformation For aduersitie if God be gone he is gone no more stout words no comming to Church no more outward reformation but labour to make the best of all Gal. 6.12 they will seeke to please to the face and labour to constraine to their profession that they may suffer no persecution for the crosse of Christ In speciall for their sinnes when they are in miserie it may be they will let a word come out against some knowne actuall sinne but with Dauid Psal 51. they neuer strike at the roote to wit their originall sinne for the punishment Mic. 6.6 they will part with any thing they haue to be freed from the stroaks of Gods rod but the thing required shall not once come neere them And for the thoughts of death many a Balaams wish but that is all for their life is nothing And lastly for death it selfe they either die like stocks and stones or else like bulls and bears roaring and bellowing out their shame and confusion Secondly this may be a direction to Gods children to approoue their sinceritie vnto God by alwaies setting themselues in the presence of the Lord. 3. Vse consolation First in trouble to reioyce when it shall please God to try vs in the fornace of affliction that so we may come forth as tryed gold refined and made the more fit for Gods kindome Secondly in our welfare to trust more in God then in our selues and to count the lifting vp of Gods countenance vpon vs in the face of his anointed more ioy of heart then when the corne wine oyle and all the pleasures and profits of this world are increased And thus much of the first part of Gods iustice to wit the power of it from the efficient in the forme and execution of it vpon the sinne and person of an hypocrite Now followes the orderly proceeding of this iustice Of the order of Gods iustice First in the cause Order In the handling of the methode vsed by the Lord in this place wee are to consider of the arguments Order is described first from the cause I thee Lord secondly from the effect which is to set or place things thirdly from the obiect in that word them that is thy sinnes 4. from a testimony drawn from the notice of the conscience which shall sufficiently witnesse of the worth of Gods methode For the cause of this order it is the Lord. Surely Gods wisedome is to be seene in nothing more then in methode and order for order is not from any brutish nature but the best and wisest so that the changes and multitude of alterations in this world are no casuall matters left in the hands of blind fortune If indeed we looke into Gods Church and see the varietie of colours and the instabilitie
of them wee shall either thinke that there is no prouidence or else so strange a prouidence that it should contradict it selfe Yet surely after due consideration we shall see all colours to paint out this excellent glorie and rauish vs with the beautie of it For as the skilfull painter is able to dispose of infinite varietie of colours in his curious worke to set forth the excellencie of his skill and produce the greatest praise which perhaps to the eyes of ignorant beholders in the beginning were nothing but the pictures of deformitie yet he himselfe knew full well that the chiefest of his arte was in the limming forth of that creature which afterward he meant with boldnes to commend vnto the eyes of the beholders so the Lord which in the creation replenished the world with all beautifull colors from whence all painters haue learned their arte the very imitation of Gods worke in nature shall be able to dispose of all the varietie of colours in his Church to shew that that piece of work which he limmed forth in his decree which men make a monster and since the beginning of the world hath set it forth in his liuely colours to be most admirable and full of beautie or as an exquisite Musitian which is able to make a most sweet harmonie of the greatest multitude of strings and in nature dissonant to sound forth his skilfull and most excellent arte which at his pleasure can extend or let fall as well the trebble as the tenor and the tenor as the base and mixe them with the counter-tenors the small bases or what soeuer seemes good vnto his will to ioyne extreames with middles and middles with themselues and all their extreames so that in all his musicke is neither heard harshnesse of stroke or vnpleasantnesse of sound so the Lord the best and most sweete singer in all Israel is able to put downe all artes because if they should striue with him they should but stand vp against their maker for he is the inuenter of them all and men and angels are but the obseruers of his wisdome and therefore all in heauen and earth shall meete together to sound forth the praise of the Lord and therefore the Lord can not but keepe good order in all his waies and if he will take sinne into his owne hands it shall not be spoiled for want of good handling Obs Sinne shall be an excellent means to glorifie God surely except it had bin for this cause I should haue vtterly despaired any good that euer could haue bin brought out of sinne but seeing my text informes me that God will haue the handling of it I dare boldly say that sinne is decreed made good of God and for no other end but that he may be glorified by it for God handles nothing that he wills not and what he wills he wills from all eternitie And therefore he deales not with sinne as men deale with ineuitable accidents to make a vertue of necessitie to take in hand to dispose of sinne when he could not mend it but the Lord had this work in his hands long before it came to passe and now it is sufficient for vs to admire at it and haue it in exceeding account Surely God hath ordered with himselfe and now he will order it with his creature it was in Gods eyes from eternitie and now shall it be in mans eyes according to Gods time alloted vnto him Reason 1. Because God is the God of order and therefore must he needes iudge as well of confusion as of order it selfe for that which approoues the one doth alwaies disprooue the contrarie Reas 2. Because God will haue his works seen as long as all did lie in the first chaos nothing was seene in his distinction but when the Lord had brought light out of it made it separate the euening and the morning brought euery creature into his place then became the worke of the Lord to be glorious Psal 19. the heauens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth forth the worke of his hand So when the Lord hath brought the light of his decree out of the confusion of sinne then shall all flesh see the glory of our God Reason 3. From the wicked which haue set themselues to crosse God and therefore if he wil be glorified by them he must haue it by his owne arme for they scorne to giue it him Reason 4. The consolation of his Saints for this puts them out of all heart to see things fall out a crosse Psal 37. is wholly spent vpon this subiect that the flourishing estate of the wicked is but transitory and destruction is their end but the misery of the godly in this world ends in peace and quietnesse because they are in the fauour of God therefore must they not fret or be enuious for the euill doers for they are soone cut downe like grasse and wither away as the greene hearb but trust in the Lord and doe good dwell in the land and they shall be fed assuredly Psal 73. yet God is good vnto Israel euen vnto the pure in heart there is the dispute about Gods order or prouidence in gouerning of the world The question is whether God be good vnto the faithfull The disputants are the flesh and the spirit the arguments are brought on both sides and by the arguments the cause is determined First the old man brings his arguments and proues the negatiue part that God is not good vnto Israel first he pulls two arguments out of his owne bosome want of wisedome and discontentednes of minde which were the fountaine of his errour he that can not guide his feete nor keepe his steppes from slipping may easily say God is not good vnto Israel but I the old man cā do neither of these and therefore must I needes thinke that God is not good vnto Israel Secondly he that can not indure the prosperitie of the wicked and the miserie of his owne soule may easily iudge God not to be good vnto Israel but thus were my affections guided and therefore from minde and heart from blindnes and affection I conclude that God is not good vnto Israel But the discerning spirit may easily answer these obiections with a nego consequentiam for they are but the witnesses of a lying spirit it is no good consequence to say that the sunne shines not because I am blinde and see it not no good consequence to say Gods hates me because he prospers the wicked Leaue these inartificiall arguments and dispute more solidly from some artificiall thing I will therefore beginne with their death and thus I dispute He that is not drawne vnto his death as a malefactour neither hath sicknes on him as the messenger of death but is without all bonds lusty and strong must needes prooue that God is better vnto him then his Israel and therefore not good vnto them the assumption I prooue They are not in trouble with other
his daies worke For we see men when they are confounded in their way stand still Ig●● satuus and fourtie to one they presently get into the wrong and so loose their iourney for as the going fire when once it hath dazeled the eyes is in daunger to lead a man into some pit or other so fares it with wicked men when they haue confounded themselues in sinne they know not what to doe but runne about like madde men so that now the deuill hauing gotten them into his mill and dealt with them as men vsually doe with mill-horses to put out their eyes that so they may serue their turnes the better so the deuill blindes the wicked after that driues them about by their lusts and alas when know they how soone they may dash out their braines against some post or other They that walke in their sleepe are in dāger to wrong themselues or others yet awaked mourne most bitterly so these persons shall doe when they come in hell 1. Vse reprehension 1. Confutation of the wicked which condemne Gods Ministers for beeing too rash in their conclusions Who made you iudges of your brethren where is your charitie that censure men so seuerely we heare nothing but damnation and all is iudgement you make men goe out of their wits therefore we will heare you no more Alas poore wretches let the premisses alone and you shall heare nothing of the conclusion but in this you condemne your selues for if you were not guiltie neither galled alreadie these conclusions would neuer trouble you for without premisses no conclusions are made therefore I pray you rather examine the premisses then the conclusion and as you find the premisses so iudge of the conclusion 2. Vse correction of the godly that are like Peter vnto Christ Master Master spare thy selfe be not so hastie in going vp to Ierusalem so oftentimes good Christians tell the Minister it is good to keepe in some conclusions but they must be answered I will not leaue a conclusion vnvttered that the premisses of Gods truth would haue concluded I would ye were more wise in other matters for I see by daily experience that you are vrging good Ministers to make conclusions when they haue no premisses for it Concealing of Gods truth is good when there is no ground out of the text to vtter it but he that speakes from the premisses of his text shall be able to iustifie himselfe conuince all gainsayers 2. Vse is instruction 1. an admonition to the wicked to let them vnderstand their miserable estate how vnreasonably they deale with their owne soules that will make inquisie for the truths as farre as the conclusion but then giue ouer Alas there lies all the danger for it is the termination and winding vp of the matter and therefore they see not that good which followes from good premisses neither can they auoide that euill which followes from the contrarie 2. A direction to the godly to deale sincerely with their soules and make good application of all Gods premisses 3. Vse is consolation first for well-doing when thy soule tells thee that thou hast as great a care to serue him in thy doings as in reading of his word that is to applie all to thy selfe that thou finds in Gods word and make some good conclusion out of it for so shalt thou make the word sweeter then the honie or the honie combe secondly art thou in trouble happie man for thou art vnder one of Luthers best schoolemasters for he hath but three affliction meditation prayer the first helpes to meditation and both of them stirre vp vnto prayer and therefore must thou needes take both large and profitable lessons out of which thou shalt gather such conclusions that thou maiest fill thy soule with a world of comfort and these two from the conclusion it selfe the rest ariseth out of his argument first ioyntly out of sinne and silence Obser 3. Wicked men are exceeding wise to deceiue themselues for the argument here drawne forth to inferre his conclusion is neither Gods silence alone for then should there be no force in the argument neither their sinnes alone for then should it be blasphemous but put them both together and then it will make a braue shew I sinne and God is silent therefore God is like vnto me Reas 1. Because the prince of this world The wisdome of the world is become as an angel of light that so he might carrie men the better to hell Vntill the comming of Christ he caried himselfe in expresse tearmes of worship but when Christ was come he could no more be worshipped in that manner and therefore since that time he hath gotten a new forme euen good confessions and gracious praiers as the world tearmes thē Act. 19.13 when the sonnes of Sceua could coniure no more in their old forme they begin a new and took in hand to name ouer them which had euill spirits the Name of the Lord Iesus saying We adiure you by Iesus whome Paul preacheth c. Here I must craue pardon a little Against deluded witches which swarme in the world vnder the name of blessers of men and beasts but more vsually of beasts then men or themselues to detect a strange deale of mischiefe in the world There are a sort of healing witches which are called Blessers of cattell and the world thinkes too well of them and they thinke well of themselues Once discoursing vpon this poynt one I trust that feareth God came to me and told me he had vsed a forme for healing of the eies wherein he conceiued no euill but now by the grace of God before he vsed it againe he would die therefore in hope that some other ignorant persons may be pulled out of the fire I will amplifie this reason in regard of those delusions And that they may see their good prayers I bring in the sinnes of some of their formes of praiers I will not vtter the formes any further then the sinnes contained in them First 2. Superstition for the blessing of cattell let them take notice of these sinnes 1. They go thrise about the beast forespoken and say ouer a set forme of words three times this can be no lesse then superstition Secondly 2. Blasphemie of Christs birth they blaspheme against Christ most horribly and the blasphemie is threefold first against his birth as though he had beene borne for cattell for so are their words Thou that was born in the bourght of Bethelem heale this beast Baptisme secondly against his Baptisme and was baptized in the fleame of Iorden or rather flumen Office thirdly against his office Thou that shed thy blood as though either Christ was baptized or shed his pretious blood for the washing and purging of bruit beasts Third sinne 3. Abuse of Gods power is abuse of Gods authoritie for stand ill stinch ill stanch ill can not be done but with great abuse of Gods