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

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nature veniall and not worthy of death more that our originall sinne is but the want of our first iustice no guilt of our first fathers offence no inherent ill disposition and that by Baptismall water is taken away what euer hath the nature of sinne that a meere man let mee not wrong Saint Peters successor in so tearming him hath power to remit both punishment and sinne past and future that many haue suffered more then their sinnes haue required that the sufferings of the Saints added to Christs passions make vp the treasure of the Church that spirituall Exchequer whereof their Bishop must keepe the key and make his friends In all these the gaine of Nature who sees not is Gods losse all her brauery is stolne from aboue besides those other direct derogations from him that his Scriptures are not sufficient that their originall fountaines are corrupted and the streames runne clearer that there is a multitude if a finite number of Mediators Turne your eyes now to vs and see contrarily how we abase Nature how wee knead her in the dust spoiling her of her proud rags loading her with reproaches and giuing glory to him that sayes he will not giue it to another whiles we teach that we neither haue good nor can doe good of our selues that we are not sicke or fettered but dead in our sinne that we cannot moue to good more then we are moued that our best actions are faulty our satisfactions debts our deserts damnation that all our merit is his mercy that saues vs that euery of our sinnes is deadly euery of our natures originally depraued and corrupted that no water can entirely wash away the filthinesse of our concupiscence that none but the blood of him that was God can cleanse vs that all our possible sufferings are below our offences that Gods written Word is all-sufficient to informe vs to make vs both wise and perfect that Christs mediation is more then sufficient to saue vs his sufferings to redeeme vs his obedience to inrich vs. You haue seene how Papistry makes Nature proud now see how it makes her lawlesse and wanton while it teacheth yet this one not so vniuersally that Christ dyed effectually for all that in true contrition an expresse purpose of new life is not necessarie that wicked men are true members of the Church that a lewd mis-creant or infidell in the businesse of the Altar partakes of the true body and blood of Christ yea which a shame to tell a brute creature that men may saue the labour of searching for that it is both easie and safe with that Catholike Collier to beleeue with the Church at a venture more then so that deuotion is the seed of ignorance that there is infallabilitie annexed to a particular place and person that the bare act of the Sacraments confers grace without faith that the meere signe of the Crosse made by a Iew or Infidell is of force to driue away Diuels that the sacrifice of the Masse in the very worke wrought auailes to obtaine pardon of our sinnes not in our life onely but when we lye frying in purgatory that we need not pray in faith to be heard or in vnderstanding that almes giuen merit heauen dispose to iustification satisfie God for sinne that abstinence from some meats and drinkes is meritorious that Indulgences may be granted to dispense vvith all the penance of sinnes afterward to bee committed that these by a liuing man may be applyed to the dead that one man may deliuer anothers soule out of his purging torments and therefore that hee who vvants not either money or friends need not feare the smart of his sinnes O religion sweet to the wealthy to the needy desperate who will now care henceforth how sound his deuotions be how lewd his life how hainous his sinnes that knowes these refuges On the contrary we curbe Nature we restraine we discourage we threaten her teaching her not to rest in implicit faiths or generall intensions or external actions of piety or presumptuous dispensations of men but to striue vnto sincere faith without which we haue no part in Christ in his Church no benefit by Sacraments prayers fastings beneficences to set the heart on worke in all our deuotions without which the hand and tongue are but hypocrites to set the hands on worke in good actions without which the presuming heart is but an hypocrite to expect no pardon for sinne before we commit it and from Christ alone when wee haue committed it and to repent before we expect it to hope for no chaffering no ransome of our soules from below no contrary change of estate after dissolution that life is the time of mercy death of retribution Now let me appeale to your soule and to the iudgement of all the vvorld whether of these two religions is framed to the humour of Nature yea let mee but know vvhat action Popery requires of any of her followers which a meere Naturalist hath not done cannot doe See how I haue chosen to beat them with that rod wherewith they thinke we haue so often smarted for what cauill hath beene more ordinary against vs then this of ease and liberty yea licence giuen and taken by our religion together with the vpbraidings of their owne strict and rigorous austerenesse Where are our penall workes our fastings scourges haire-cloth weary pilgrimages blushing confessions solemne vowes of willing beggery and perpetuall continencie To doe them right we yeeld in all the hard workes of will-worship they goe beyond vs but lest they should insult in the victory not so much as the Priests of Baal went beyond them I see their whips shew me their kniues Where did euer zealous Romanist lance and carue his flesh in deuotion The Baalites did it and yet neuer the wiser neuer the holier Either therefore this zeale in workes of their owne deuising makes them not better then we or it makes the Baalites better then they let them take their choise Alas these difficulties are but a colour to auoid greater No no to worke out stubborne wils to subiection to draw this vntoward flesh to a sincere cheerefulnesse in Gods seruice to reach vnto a sound beliefe in the Lord Iesus to pray with a true heart without distraction without distrust without mis-conceit to keepe the heart in continuall awe of God These are the hard tasks of a Christian worthy of our sweat worthy of our reioycing all which that Babylonish religion shifteth off with a carelesse fashionablenesse as if it had not to doe with the soule Giue vs obedience let them take sacrifice Doe you yet looke for more euidence looke into particulars and satisfie your selfe in Gods decision as Optatus aduised of old Since the goods of our father are in question whither should we goe but to his Will and Testament My soule beare the danger of this bold assertion If we erre wee erre with Christ and his Apostles In a word against all staggering our Sauiours rule
knowest I loue thee Why are you else in such awe to offend that a world cannot bribe you to sinne Why in such deepe griefe vvhen you haue sinned that no mirth can refresh you Why in such feruent desire of enioying his presence Why in such agony when you enioy it not neither doth God loue you neither can you loue God without faith Yet more Doe you willingly nourish any one sinne in your brest do you not repent of all Doe you not hate all tho you cannot leaue all Doe you not complaine that you hate them no more Doe you not as for life wish for holinesse and endeuour it Nothing but faith can thus cleanse the heart that like a good hous-wife sweeps all the foule corners of the soule and will not leaue so much as one webbe in this roomie house Trust to it you cannot hate sinne for it owne sake and forsake it for Gods sake without faith the faithlesse hath had some remorse and feares neuer repentance Lastly doe you not loue a good man for goodnesse and delight in Gods Saints Doth not your loue leade you to compassion your compassion to reliefe An heart truely faithfull cannot but haue an hand christianly bountifull Charitie and Faith make vp one perfect paire of Compasses that can take the true latitude of a Christian heart Faith is the one foot pitcht in the centre vnmoueably while Charitie vvalkes about in a perfect circle of beneficence these two neuer did neither can goe asunder Warrant you your loue I dare warrant your faith What need I say more This heat of your affections and this light of your workes wil euince against all the gates of hell that you haue the fire of Faith let your soule then warme it selfe with these sweet and cordiall flames against all those cold despaires whereto you are tempted say Lord I beleeue and I will giue you leaue still to adde Helpe my vnbeleefe To Mr ED. ALLEYNE EP. VII A direction how to conceiue of God in our deuotions and meditations YOu haue chosen and iudged well How to conceiue of the Deitie in our prayers in our meditations is both the deepest point of all Christianitie and the most necessarie so deepe that if we wade into it we may easily drowne neuer finde the bottom so necessarie that without it our selues our seruices are prophane irreligious wee are all borne Idolaters naturally prone to fashion God to some forme of our owne whether of an humane bodie or of an admirable light or if our minde haue any other more likely and pleasing image First then away with all these wicked thoughts these grosse deuotions and with Iacob burie all your strange gods vnder the oake of Shechem ere you offer to set vp Gods Altar at Bethel and without all mentall representations conceiue of your God purely simply spiritually as of an absolute being without forme without matter without composition yea an infinite without all limit of thoughts Let your heart adore a spirituall Maiestie which it cannot comprehend yet knowes to be and as it were lose it selfe in his infinitenesse Thinke of him as not to be thought of as one whose wisdome is his iustice whose iustice is his power whose power is his mercie and whose wisedome iustice power mercy is himselfe as without qualitie good great without quantitie euerlasting without time present euery where without place containing all things without extent and when your thoughts are come to the highest stay there and be content to vvonder in silence and if you cannot reach to conceiue of him as he is yet take heed you conceiue not of him as he is not Neither will it suffice your Christian mind to haue this awefull and confused apprehension of the Deitie without a more speciall and inward conceit of three in this one three persons in this one essence not diuided but distinguished and not more mingled then diuided There is nothing vvherein the vvant of words can wrong and grieue vs but in this Here alone as we can adore and not conceiue so we can conceiue and not vtter yea vtter our selues and not be conceiued yet as wee may Thinke here of one substance in three subsistences one essence in three relations one IEHOVAH begetting begotten proceeding Father Sonne Spirit yet so as the Son is no other thing from the Father but another person or the Spirit from the Sonne Let your thoughts here vvalke warily the path is narrow the conceit either of three substances or but one subsistence is damnable Let me lead you yet higher and further in this intricate vvay towards the Throne of grace All this will not auaile you if you take not your Mediator with you if you apprehend not a true manhood gloriously vnited to the Godhead without change of either nature without mixture of both whose presence vvhose merits must giue passage acceptance vigour to your prayers Here must be therefore as you see thoughts holily mixed of a Godhead and humanitie one person in two natures of the same Deitie in diuers persons and one nature wherein if euer heauenly wisdome must bestir it selfe in directing vs so to seuer these apprehensions that none be neglected so to conioyne them that they bee not confounded O the depth of diuine mysteries more then can be wondred at O the necessitie of this high knowledge which vvho attaines not may babble but prayeth not Still you doubt and aske if you may not direct your prayers to one person of three Why not Safely and with comfort What need we feare while wee haue our Sauiour for our patterne O my father if possible let this Cup passe and Paul euery where both in thanks and requests but with due care of worshipping all in one Exclude the other while you fix your heart vpon one your prayer is sinne retaine all and mention one you offend not None of them doth ought for vs without all It is a true rule of Diuines All their externall workes are common To sollicit one therefore and not all were iniurious And if you stay your thoughts vpon the sacred humanitie of Christ with inseparable adoration of the Godhead vnited and thence climbe vp to the holy conceit of that blessed and dreadfull Trinity I dare not censure I dare not but commend your diuine method Thus should Christians ascend from earth to heauen from one heauen to another If I haue giuen your deuotions any light it is well the least glimpse of this knowledge is vvorth all the full gleames of humane and earthly skill But I mistake if your owne heart wrought vpon with serious meditations vnder that spirit of illumination will not proue your best master After this vveake direction studie to conceiue aright that you may pray aright and pray that you may conceiue and meditate that you may doe both and the God of heauen direct you inable you that you may doe all To M. THOMAS IAMES of Oxford EP. VIII A discourse of the grounds of the Papists
of the sonnes of Anak the spirituall wickednesses in heauenly places If we looke at their number they are Legions If to their strength they are Principalities and Powers If to their nature they are spirits that rule in the aire We are men flesh and bloud single weake sinfull What euer we are our God is in heauen and doth whatsoeuer he will he is the Lord of Hosts though Cowards in our selues yet in him we are more than Conquerors he who is more than all power than All truth hath said it The Gates of Hell shall not preuaile against his Church Thanks be to God which giueth vs victory through our Lord Iesus Christ Lastly he is the Lord of hosts his vndertakings are infallible Hath he said that the glory of the Euangelicall Church shall exceed the Legall Hath he said that In this place he will giue peace How can the Church faile of glory or the soule of peace His word can be no more defectiue than himselfe impotent Trust God with his owne causes trust him with thy selfe doe that he bids expect what he promises haunt this House of his wait on his ordinances The Lord of Hosts shall giue thee that peace which passeth all vnderstanding and with peace glory in that vpper House of his not made with hands eternall in the Heauens To the possession whereof that God who hath ordained vs in his good time mercifully bring vs. And now O Lord God of Hosts make good thy promises to this House of thine Whensoeuer any Suppliant shall in this place offer vp his praiers vnto thee heare thou in Heauen thy dwelling place and when thou hearest haue mercy What Word soeuer of thine shall sound out of this place let it be the fauour of life vnto life to euery hearer What Sacrament soeuer of thine in this place shall be administred let it be effectuall to the saluation of euery receiuer Thou that art the God of glory and peace giue peace and glory to thy Seruants for thy mercies sake for thy Sonnes sake euen the Sonne of thy loue Iesus Christ the iust To whom with thee and the holy Ghost one infinite God be giuen all praise honour and thanksgiuing now and for euer TO THE WORSHIPFVLL AND REVEREND Mr. Dr. HALL DEANE OF WORCESTER my worthie and much respected Friend all happinesse with my loue in CHRIST IESVS REuerend Sir this Sermon I know is at the Presse before you expected But I thought as this glorious Chapell occasioned it so it might minister occasion of perpetuall remembrance of the Chapell by remaining its first Monument And altho both these were confined to the priuate the Chapell for the Family of my Right Honorable Lord the Earle of Exceter who hath giuen the materiall thereof sufficient luster and the Copie of the Sermon to the Cabinet of my truly Noble and vertuous Lady his Countesse yet both these are much and oft required to the publike the Sermon to be an instruction and so it is the Chapell to be an example and so it may be The Sermon to teach all to be all glorious in their soules The Chapell to teach some who build houses for their owne habitation to set vp another for Gods Religion The Sermon was craued at the hands of my Honourable Ladie that it might come to the Presse who of her owne pious disposition gaue forth the Copie and for her Noble esteeme of your selfe and of the worth of your sermon was willing and desirous to giue it way to the Printer And this I thought good to impart vnto you and to the courteous Reader that you may be satisfied of the meanes how and the cause why it comes in publike And so praying for you and desiring your prayers for me I remaine Your truly louing Friend H. BAGVLEY THE TRVE Peace-Maker LAID FORTH IN A SERMON BEFORE HIS MAIESTY AT THEOBALDS September 19. 1624. By IOS HALL SIC ELEVABITVR FILIVS HOMINIS Io 3. ANCHORA FIDEI LONDON Printed by IOHN HAVILAND for NATHANIEL BVTTER 1624. THE TRVE Peace-Maker ESAY 32.17 Opus Iustitiae pax The worke of Iustice or righteousnesse shall be peace MY Text you heare is of Iustice and peace two royall graces and such as flow from soueraigne Maiesty There is a double Iustice Diuine and humane there is a double peace outward in the state inward in the soule Accordingly there is a double sense of my Text a spirituall a ciuill sense The spirituall concerning Theologicall Iustice and inward peace The ciuill concerning humane iustice and outward peace The spirituall thus The Messias shall cause the fruit of his perfect iustice to be our inward peace with God and our selues The ciuill thus The Magistrate shall cause the worke of ciuill Iustice in his administration to be our outward peace with one another In both or either as Musculus well there is an allusion in the Hebrew word to a field the soile is the heart or the State the seed is Iustice the fruit peace That which was waste ground is now a Carmell a fruitfull field and the fruit of this field of Iustice is peace As there is good reason we will beginne with the spirituall Iustice and Peace The great King of Heauen will disforest that peece of the world which hee calls his Church and put it to tillage it shall be sowne with righteousnesse and shall yeeld a sweet crop of peace in this onely not in the barren heaths of the prophane world shall true peace grow At first God and man were good friends How should there bee other than good termes betwixt Heauen and Paradise God made man iust and iust man whiles he was so could not chuse but loue the iust God that made him sin set them at odds in one act and instant did man leese both his iustice and peace now the world is changed now the stile of God is Fortis vltor God the auenger Ier. 51.56 and the stile of men God the auenger The sonnes of wrath Filij irae sons of wrath Ephes 2.3 There is no possible peace to be made betwixt God man but by the perfect Iustice of him that was both God man I would there were a peace in the Church about this Iustice It is pitie shame there is not but there must be heresies As there are two parts of Diuinity the Law and the Gospell so each of these haue their Iustice there is a Iustice of the Law and an Euangelicall Iustice The Iustice of the Law when a meere morall man is iustified out of his owne powers by the works of the Law very Papists will giue so much way to S. Paul so much affront to Pelagius as to renounce this freely anathematizing that man who by the strength of humane nature or the doctrine of the Law shal challenge iustification Vnlesse perhaps some Andradius haue priuiledge to teach Morall righteousnesse that this Ethica Iustitia was enough to iustifie and saue the old Philosophers The Euangelicall Iustice is
bee no lesse Controuersie defacto than of the possibility of errour Besides there are other Popish opinions of the same stampe but more pragmaticall which are not more pernicious to the Church than to common-weales as those of the power of both Swords of the deposition of Princes disposing of Kingdomes absoluing of Subiects frustration of Oathes sufficiently canuased of late both by the Venetian Diuines and French and ours which are so palpably opposite to the libertie of Christian Gouernment that those Princes and Peeple which can stoope to such a yoke are well worthy of their seruitude and can they hope that the great Commanders of the World will come to this bent we all as the Comick Poet said truly had rather be free than serue but much more Princes or on the contrary can wee hope that the Tyrants of the Church will be content to leaue this hold What a fopperie were this For both those Princes are growne more wise and these Tyrants more arrogant and as Ruffinus speakes of George Ruff. l. 1. c. 23. Procaciter vt raptum Episcopatum gerunt c. the Arrian Gallant they insolently gouerne an vsurped Bishopricke as if they thought they had the managing of a proud Empire and not of a Religious Priesthood SECTION VI. That the other Opinions of the Romish Church will not admit Reconciliation BVt let vs bee so liberall as to grant this to our selues which certainely they will neuer grant vs for this olde Grandame of Cities thinkes her selfe borne to command and will either fall or rule Neyther doth that Mitred Moderator of the World affect any other Embleme than that which Iulian iestingly ascribes to Iulius Caesar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To rule all Iulian. Caesares or to Alexander the Great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to conquer all It was a degenerating spirit of Adrian the Sixt which caused to bee written vpon his Tombe Binius in vita Adrian in the Church of Saint Peter That nothing in all his life fell out so vnhappily to him Socrat. l. 5. c. 20. c. 14. as that he gouerned Let this I say be granted vs There want not I know some milder spirits Theodosians that can play with both hands which thinke if these busie points were by the moderation of both parts quietly composed it might bee safe for any man so it be without noyse to thinke what hee list concerning the other differences of Religion These are the Ghosts of that Heretike Appelles whose speech it was Euseb l. 5. c. 13. ex Ro●n● That it is sufficient to beleeue in Christ crucified and that there should bee no discussing of the particular warrants and reason of our faith Or the brood of Leonas one of the courtiers of Constantius Socrat. l. 2. c. 32. and his Deputie in the Seleucian Councell which when the Fathers hotely contended as there was good cause for the Consubstantialitie of the Sonne Get you home said hee and trouble not the Church still with these trifles Saint Basil was of another minde from these men who as Theodoret reports when the Lieutenant of Valens the Emperor Theodor. l● c. 27. perswaded him to remit but one letter for peace sake answered Those that are nursed with the sincere Milke of Gods Word may not abide one sillable of his sacred Truth to be corrupted but rather than they will indure it are ready to receiue any kinde of torment or death El●●sius and Syluanus which were Orthodox Bishops and those other worthy Gardians and as Athanasius his title was Champions of the truth were of another minde from these coole and indifferent Mediators Epiph. l. 1. Initio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cypr. de simplic praelat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So farre as the Sacred truth will allow vs wee will accompany them gladly but if they vrge vs further wee stand still or start backe and those two courses which Epiphanius aduised as the remedies of Heresie Heed and Auoydance both those doe we carefully vse and performe Great is the offence of discord and vnexpiable and such in the graue iudgement of Cyprian as is not purged with the bloud of our passion and iustly doe we thinke that Fiend of Homer worthy of no place but Hell But yet wee cannot thinke concord a meete price of truth which it is lawfull for vs to buy at any rate but to sell vpon any termes is no lesse than p●cular Let vs therefore a little discusse the seuerall differences and as it vses to bee done when the house is too little for the stuffe Let vs pile vp all close together It shall bee enough in this large Haruest of matter to gather some few Eares out of euery Shocke and to make a compendious dispatch of so long a taske 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The grossest of the Popish Heresies and as HIEROME obiects to ORIGEN the most venomous opinions of Rome which haue bred so much trouble and danger at this day to the Church of God are either such as doe concerne our selues not without some ●●spect to God or such as concerne God not without some respect to vs Of the former sort are those which in a certaine order such as it is of discourse are conuersant about Iustification Free-will the merit of our workes humane satisfaction Indulgences Purgatory and the differences of mortall and Veniall sinnes These therefore first offer themselues to our examination SECTION VII The Romish Heresie concerning Iustification THat point of Iustification of all other is exceeding important Caluin De vera Pacific contra Interim insomuch as CALVIN was faine to perswade that if this one head might bee yeelded safe and intire it would not quite the cost to make any great quarrell for the rest Would to God that word of CASSANDER might bee made good Consultat de Iustific which doubted not to say That which is affirmed that men cannot bee iustified before God by their owne strength merits or workes but that they are freely iustified by faith was alwaies allowed and receiued in the Church of God and is at this day approued by all Ecclesiasticall Writers Yea I would they would bee ruled by their Thomas Aquinas in this In Galat. in I●c 2. who attributes Iustification to workes not as Iustification is taken for an infusion of grace but as it is taken for an exercise or manifestation or consummation of Iustice If this were all in this point all would be peace Concil Trid. sess 6. c. 7. si quis dixerit sola fide c. Com. 9. But whilst the Tridentine Fathers take vpon them to forge the formall cause of our Iustification to be our owne inherent Iustice and thrust Faith out of Office what good man can choose but presently addresse himselfe to an opposition Who would not rather dye than suffer the ancient Faith of the Church to be depraued with these idle Dreames Goe now ye great Trent Diuines and bragge of your selues as
His Vow 992 A pretty expostulation of Ieptha's daughter in meeting her father 993 Iericho Of the siege of Iericho 950 Of their feare and courage 951 A pretty vse to bee made of the peoples walking about Iericho seuen dayes 952 Ieroboam 1315 He set vp two calues in Dan and Bethel 1316 Of his wife 1323 She is disguised but found out 1324 1325 The Prophets thunderclaps of vengeance against him 1325 Iesuite A caueat for Kings to beware of them 372 Their couetousnesse and ambition 416 417 The Iesuites cunning insinuations into those whom they hope to peruert 679 680 Accompanied with horrible vntruths 681 682 Their coniurations 683 They haue nothing but the ouside of Religion 684 Iezabel Of her counsell to Ahab in the matter of Naboth 1357 Ignorance It is a wise Ignorance not to pry into things not reuealed p. 1 Ignorance cannot acquit if it can abate our sinne 1067 the affectation of ignorance desperate ibid. Imitation A caution to be had in it 59 60 These sins that nature conuaies not we haue by imitation 1010 Impatience The ill wishes of the impatient often heard 929 Importunitie It s good speed 1205 Imprisonment Of its comfort 305 Impunitie Hope of it drawes on sinne with boldnesse 1111 Inconsideratenesse What it oft doth 969 Inconstancie The inconstant is vnfit for societie 36 The vnconstants Character 191 Increase A certaine way of it 1032 Indifferencie In humane things it is most safe to bee indifferent 136 Indulgences Popish Indulgences censured as against antiquitie reason and Scripture 433 Parents indulgence what 1015 Cruell to themselues 1034 It is a notorious sinne in Parents ibid. Infants Of them and Herod 1176 c. Infidelitie Its Character 196 A sharpe reproofe of it 425 505 Infidelitie is craftie yet foolish 891 It is lawfull enough to deale with Infidels with a caueat 1017 Infirmities Euen the best of Gods Saints haue them 1077 When they best appeare 1108 Ingratitude Three vsuall causes of ingratitude 26 Very Nature hates ingratitude 895 Inheritance Our heauenly inheritance glorious and not subiect to alteration 64 Iniuries Three things follow an iniury so farre as it concernes our selues p. 16 Iniuries hurt not more in the receiuing then in the remembrance 30 Iniuries like a wound 857 Innocencie It is no shelter for an euill tongue 921 Inquisition Its tyranny with a fearfull example on the executioners 283 Insultation That in the rigour of Iustice argueth creation 1020 Intention Good intentions cannot warrant vnlawfull acts 1128 What bewrayes euil intentions more then vicious Agents 1312 Inward Our inward disposition is the life of our actions 934 And a mans inward disposition doth presage the euent 948 Ioab and Abner 1119 Ioabs execution 1261 Iohn Baptist Of his baptising Christ his modesty 1190 1191 Ionathan Of his victory 1064 His admirable faith ibid. Of his loue and Sauls enuy 1086 His and Dauids loue prettily set out ibid. Iordan Of it diuided 948 Ioseph His brethrens enuy prettily described 853 Ioseph twice stript of his garment 854 Ioseph praised for his patience and wisedome ibid. Ioy vid. Reioyce It is shamefull for true Christians not to be ioyfull 46 47 Of worldlings ioy and the godlies 51 The ioy of such as haue an euil conscience is but dissembled 76 T is the safest way to reserue our ioy till wee haue good proofe of the worthinesse and fitnesse of its obiect 1058 Isaac He sacrificed 834 835 Israel His affliction 863 Israels iust now scoured 864 Israel fed with Sacraments ●92 Of their seuen mutinies against Moses 928 What pretences ●re be made a true Philistim will bee quickly weary of a true Israelite 1002 The great change in Israel 1127 Iudaisme The fearfull danger of being in it 426 Iudges A note for them in regard of partialitie 1074 1075 Iudging We may Iudge but we must take heed to the order 491 The not iudging according to appearance is a vsefull rule for auoiding errour in iudging 491 Excellent things of iudging a mans selfe 1060 God separates before hee iudgeth and so should wee 1074 What to doe that wee may not care to bee censured of men 1287 1288 Iudgements God is to be magnified in his iudgements 49 The Day of Iudgement how terrible shewed by resemblance 898 Wicked men neuer care to obserue Gods iudgements vntil thēselues be touched 931 Gods sentence of iudgement certaine 941 Gods mercy in letting vs to see his iudgements on others 1035 God knowes no persons in the execution of iudgements 1048 Nothing but grace can teach vs to make vse of other mens iudgements 1058 The Iudgements of God are not alwayes open but iust 1093 When wee make a right vse of the iudgements of God 1128 Iudgement assuredly attends on those that dare oft vp their hands against Gods Vicegerents 1263 Iunius commended 287 Iustice It giues to euery man his owne 215 A buyer of places of Iudicature will surely sell iustice 519 Of the two-fold iustice Legall and Euangelicall 538 Of Legall and distributiue iustice 1540 How Iustice is a notable work of mercy ibid. The Churches peace ariseth from iustice 541 Insultation in the rigour of iustice argueth cruelty 1020 Wee may not alwayes measure the iustice of God by present occasions 1121 The beautifull face of iustice both effects and light and comes to it 1245 Iustification The Romish heresie concerning it 643 K KIng vid. Princes described by his qualities actions Naturall Morall 229 c. Our King commended 479 Parallel'd with Constantine 482 483 The neere relation of sinne and punishment in the Soueraigne and subiect 484 Of Kings humouring their people in their sinnes 900 Kings sinnes are a iust stop to the people 915 Gods ancient purpose to raise vp a King to his people 1052 In Kings mercy and iudgement should bee inseparable 1059 A Kings first care must be to aduance Religion 1127 It well beseemes a King to heare a Prophet 1142 Kingdome Euery man hath a Kingdome within himselfe· 14 Kneeling at the Sacrament defended 583 Knowledge What 〈◊〉 best to know p. 31 Knowledge of a mans selfe is the best knowledge 36 Of knowledge without foundnesse 53 Wee must labour if we will haue a right rellish of diuine knowledge 63 Of our knowing one another in heauen 326 The itch of impertinent knowledge is hereditary 1110 L LAbour labouring minds are the best receptacles for good motions 1017 Laugh There is nothing more lamentable then to see a man laugh whē he should mourne 1109 Law Of it 896 How terrible in its deliuery 898 The power of it 〈◊〉 mans soule ibid. Learning Who fit to learne and and who to teach p. 10 Humane learning well improued makes way for diuine 1170 Legion What it imports 1300 Leuite Of Micha's Leuite 1010 1011 c. The Leuites Concubine 1015 Liberalitie What 221 The extreames thereof ibid. Life He that liues well cannot but dye well p. 9 The shortnesse of life how mans happinesse 17 Of his dissolution 23 Three things wherein