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A18014 The plaine ma[ns] spirituall plough Containing the godly and spirituall husbandrie. Wherein euery Christian ought to be exercised, for the happie encrease of fruite, to eternall life. By I.C. preacher of the word. Carpenter, John, d. 1621. 1607 (1607) STC 4663; ESTC S118755 136,138 254

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nos incipimus postea dei omnia adiuvamur Aug. in Psal 51. c. In euery good worke wee our selues doe not first begin the same and then afterward are assisted by the mercy of God but it is he that first inspireth both our faith and loue toward● him without any of our good deserts preceeding And seeing that this vertue as it is saide is a diuine motion inspired into mans heart I remember that Dauid praying to God for the same did first desire God Psal 51.10 to Create a newe heart within him As if he shuld say That which must steed me in this matter must come from aboue neither is there any thing in mine heart already that can be made to serue in this businesse therfore it is needfull not that my old heart be renewed but that I haue another heart not made or framed of the old but created to the which also ô Lord I beseech thee to renew within me thy spirit which I haue enioyed heretofore of thine especiall loue and fauour towards me Therefore although the Lord both commandeth and commendeth the labour and diligence of man as the meanes wherby he is willing to exhibite vs his graces yet doe all our labours and diligence nothing profit vs therin except there be both loue and grace in the Giuer that is in God who iustifieth and frameth mans heart to his Image and will for the sake of his sonne For this grace and mercy proceeding from that diuine loue doth euer preuent vs and go before our faith our loue our vertues our Iustice Yea this is the same whereby wee haue further engendred in our hearts and made able to apprehend that Iustice the which as a good Tree groweth and buddeth and beareth fruite namely all those godly vertues qualities and actions which are required of that man whom the Lord hath iustified And therefore in our iustification Two things in our Iusttification there is not onely the faith of the Belieuer but also the grace of him that iustifieth This meate our Sauiour when in his Doctrine he saide Ioh. 15. Without mee ye can doe nothing that is yee cannot bring fourth any manner fruite either healthfull or profitable neither are yee able to doe any good work acceptable to the Lord except ye belieue in me and by your faith remaine in me And hereof is it that when Saint Paul speaketh of mans iustification being very warie that nothing thereof be yeelded to mans workes or merits hee saith that we are iustified sometimes by grace sometimes by mercy sometimes by faith approaching grace for it is most certaine as Augustine saith againe that the grace is of him that calleth Ad Sympli g. 2. vocantis est Gratia c. Grace and faith and the good workes followe him which hath receiued that grace neither yet are the workes such as obtaine grace but such as proceede of grace And this he maketh plaine by a notable Simbole or similitude For the fire saith he scaldeth not that it may be hoate but therefore because it is hoate nor therefore runneth well the wheele that it may be round but for that it is already round So no man worketh well that hee may thereby receiue grace but therefore hee worketh well because hee hath already obtained it for how can he liue iustly which hath not bin iustified how can he liue holily who hath not bene sanctified So said Augustin alluding to the words of Christ First make the tree good and then the fruit will be good for a good man from the good treasure of his heart bringeth foorth that which is good but on the other side yee can not gather figges of thistles the euill man from the euill treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is euill and how can ye think or speake or do well when your selues are euill By this wee see that howsoeuer our aduersaries would that our perfect iustice should depend on our workes that no worke seeme it neuer so good before men is a perfect worke of Iustice except it be wrought by the person iustified Whereof it was saide that the very Prayers of the vngodly are turned into sin Neither may wee imagine No good worke but that which followeth grace that any work endeuour studie thought or Action is eyther acceptable to the lord or profitable for mans soule without this precedēt grace which proceedeth from the eternall loue of God in his sonne the Which we may explane by a familiar example though taken frō an heathen History without iust offence Valerius Maximus Valer. Max. Lib. 2. among his examples of memorable deeds maketh mention of one Liuius Torquatus Manlius a noble Consul of Rome and of his Son ● right valiant and couragious gentleman This gentleman saith he being of a couragious mind went forth with his men of Warre waged battaile against another Nation his fathers enemie but without his said fathers leaue fauor or know●edge and thereof got the victory and a famous conquest in the iudgement of all men who at his returne home praised his valiant exployt noble action with the highest applause the which they all hoped would not onely be confirmed but also tripled by his most noble father Howbeit Torquatus contrary both to their hope and his expectation did not onely presētly vnfold his great dislike of his son who aduentured to goe forth without his will consent and so in his disgrace but also al the action great exploit of his aduenture for he commanded him to be slaine for a sacrifice Satius iudicaus patrem forti filio quam patriam mili●ari disciplina carere Iudging it better that a father wanted such a valiant son then that the country should be depriued of her militarie discipline In like maner we should beware that we presume not to get credit with the Lord by any worke that we shall endeuour to doe without his grace good wil preuenting vs or to thinke that we can be righteous holy acceptable vnto him but that he first iustifie vs in his son And truly besides this memorable example the very experiment of mens dealing after the course of nature and reason informeth vs of those things The order of Noahs approbatiō Gen. 6.8.9 But passing by them let vs againe returne to those examples Testimonies of the holy Scriptures and therein first consider the method and order of the righteousnesse and approbation of holy Noah It is reported of him First that he found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Secondly that he was a righteous man Thirdly that he was perfect Fourthly that he walked with God In that he found grace are two things obserued First that the Lord louing him did fauour him next that hee gaue him faith wherby to finde and apprehend that diuine grace In that hee is saide to be righteous wee are taught that the Lord who had fauoured him and graunted him faith did also approue and
of men But that wherto the Prophet Hoseas exhorteth is that Righteousnes of God and the true perfect Iustice of the LORDS Elect Hos 10. after the which as from a cause there followe for effects good Actions good endeuors good works and an holie and sounde life in and by the which a man is iustified and commended before men as hee is iustified and commended in the sight of God by the former The former is called Iustice the latter is called Mercy And as the former is taken for the cause Calu. in Hes 10. the latter for the effect or the one for the tree the other for the fruite so is this latter made the definition of the former being indeede the very Symbole or signe as whereby the Righteousnes of God in Christ by the which we are approued with him is plainely expressed and set forth as elsewhere it is said that the obseruation of the second table of the law plainly testifieth the true performance of the first Table Therfore Faith expressed by dec●es Matt. ●5 aswel to teach perswade this vnto the Saints as to comfort encourage them in their dutie therin Christ remembreth and commendeth in them rather the obseruation of those workes of the second Table then those of the first that is their workes before their faith as that wherby indeed their true faith appeared therefore he saith not I was hungry thirsty naked harborles sick and in prison and ye beleeued in mee but he said I was thirsty ye gaue me drinke naked ye cloathed me harbourles and ye lodged me sick and ye visited mee in prison and ye came vnto me Thus he commended the work which expressed the faith for as a learned father wryteth after the saying of Saint Iames Pistis choris ergon necra hos erga dicha pisteos Gre. Naz. Eisto ha●ion baptisma Iam. ● 18 Matt 5. Faith is dead without works euen as the wo●ks are dead without faith Therfore it was the counsaile of the same Apostle that we should declare our faith by our workes alluding to that Commandement of the Lord So let your light shine before men that they may see your good workes c. In this cōsideration let vs remēber that as I said the Prophet Hosey commendeth to vs a double Iustice whereof the one is before God the other is towardes and before men Ro. 3 2.24.8 1. Cor 1 30. Ia● 2. ●● 2● Of the former spake Paul saying wee are iustified by faith and Christ is our righteousnes Of the latter spake Iames wee be iustified by works and Abraham was iustified by works And as eyther of them as the cause the time the persons and the occasions required haue duely attributed aswell to faith as to works Faith and works the due prerogatiue and honor of both so haue they taught and esteemed not onely the one but both of thē necessarie in a godly man The first which is the tree or cause of the latter is defined in the Newe Testament Our Righteousnes before God of two parts to be our Reconciliation with God by the means of Christ Iesus our Mediator Or our Approbation with the Father through the merite of the Sonne Or the free Remission of sinnes obtayned by them which beleeue in God and by the which we who who are guilty God pronoūceth iust for the sake of his Sonne And this defintiion hath two generall partes the one is remission of sinnes the other is the imputation of Iustice A remission of our owne sinnes An imputation of the Iustice of another wherin there is a fit allusion to the order and vsage of a gratious Prince towards his guiltie Subiect whom notwithstanding his faulte hee doth not onely pardon for his offence but also doth adorne with benefites The sinne is pardoned through him by whose Iustice and merite we are approued and pronounced Righteous that is not by any Angell or man or any other creature whatsoeuer which were not onely ashamed but also blemished by mans sinne but only in by the holy Messias the Lord Iesus who indeed for that purpose came down from his Father and died and with his pretious blood payed the debt of our transgression and set vs at libertie yea he beautified vs with the glorious beautie of himselfe Of the former member of this our Iustice wee haue a notable testimony of the Lord in Isaiah Isa 53. ●1 where he saith My righteous Seruant meaning Christ shall iustifie the multitude with his wisedome and how he tells for he shall beare their sinnes And that approoueth the Apostle where hee saith of Christ that he bare our sinnes in his body 1. Pet ● 21.14 hanging on the tree when there was no guile found in his mouth To this belongeth that example of the Publican Luke 18. whom the Lord approued before the proud pharisie for he prayed for pardon for his sinne which he confessed and that being granted hee was said to be iustified for his sinnes were not imputed therefore both after the Testimony of Dauid and of Paul he was blessed Ro. 4. ● 8 Gal. 3.8 as blessed is that mā to whō the Lord imputeth not sin Of the latter member of this Iustice the same Apostle speaking saith that God imputed Righteousnes to thē that beleeued that is 1. Cor. 1.30 the Righteousnes of Christ to the faithful that he is made vnto vs of God not onely wisedome sanctification and redemption but also Righteousnes and in one other sentence he comprehendeth either member thus Christ dyed for our sinnes Ro 4 1● hee rose againe for our iustification that is he dyed to abolish sinne and rose againe to worke our perfect Righteousnes This is our Righteousnes with the Lord The order of our Iustification to the which the former Iustice must be referred the order therof in the merite of the Sonne of God is as followeth viz. First we consider the eternall loue of God to mankind in Iesus Christ before all worlds according to that saying I loued thee with an euerlasting loue Secondly his diuine grace and fauour wherby he powreth forth on vs of his diuine blessings as of whose fulnes we all receiue grace vpon grace Thirdly his Mercie in drawing vs vnto him as hee saith by the Prophet By my mercie haue I drawen thee vnto me Fourthlie the merite of Iesus Christ working deseruing it in the Iustice of his Father Fiftlie his perfect Righteousnes the which of that his loue grace mercie and merite extended vnto vs Christ is made ours and his graces and vertues esteemed ours in by the which Mans merite excluded we are accepted as is the Sonne or Mediator Righteous and glorious before God Thus farre forth we finde man to be vtterlie excluded not onely from all merite but also from all action or meanes in himselfe of this Iustice and therfore hath hee no cause to boaste of that
which is not found in or of himselfe towardes his acceptation and Iustice before God Moreouer this Treasure is not laid vp in the fraile nature of man Where Iustice dwelleth but in the strong habitacle of the person of Christ as both in his proper place there wher it findeth the greatest preseruation and safetie for our better benefit For when Adam had that in his possession Pro. 3. after his free will the subtle Serpent preuented him he was iustly depriued thereof in his sin As if the Lorde should thus haue said I will from henceforth take on my selfe the protection of this high Treasure as where it shal be full safe and surely defended from all danger of losse And therfore in●eed when he came in the flesh although he were mightily tempted and assaulted by the Enemie of mans soule he was not vanquished or ouercome ●ut being most strong he vanquished and subdu●d Satan and all his Angells to his power as wher●f he said The Prince of the world commeth Ioh 22 3● 14.30 16.14 and findeth nought in mee Againe Now is the iudgement of ●his world the Prince of this world is cast out Howbeit the faithfull neuer want nor are they denyed ●he benefit of this treasure whensoeuer they look vp vnto him and draw towards his Diuine Grace with their Faith as the Eagles hasten vnto their praye in and by the which they finde peace and rest vnto their soules howesoeuer they be tempted persecuted and afflicted in this miserable world Loe this is that former Iustice or Righteousnes to the which the Prophet directeth vs when hee saith Sow yee to yourselues for Righteousnes Whereof wee haue spoken more largely in our * A book● so intituled Acolastos Dialogu 7. vv and not vnworthy the reading of all true Christians with godly deliberation and like consideration CHAP. VII The second kinde of Iustice which is that of the second Table is comprehended in the worde Mercie and necessarilie followeth the former in due order THe other kind of Righteousnes required of men What is this kinde of Iustice and defined and set forth in the word Mercie is the very fruit or effect of the former and conteineth the summe of those vertues duties works of Charitie conteyned in the second table of the Law as it is before said and often times expressed in the works of Charitie Agape Luk. 1.74 This the holy man Zacharie calleth Holinesse when he saith that wee are deliuered from our enemies hand that wee should serue God in holines and righteousnes And St. Paul consenting thereto 1. Thess 1.3.4 saith This is the will of God euen your holines The same meant the Lord when he said Be ye holy for I am holie And Christ in one word called it perfection saying Mat. 3.48 Ye shal be perfect euen as your Father which is in heauen is perfect We may not either speak or think otherwise of this vertue Iustice Mercie then wee haue before in effect saide and considered therof sauing that wheras before we placed and accepted the same apart by it selfe here we place it together with the former vertue that is Iustice and accept it as the definition or effectuall fruit therof neither may we imagine that eyther this can be without that or that perfected without this When the Lord God had made Adam and set him in Paradise yet for that he had not this help the Lord pronounced him as vnperfect saying It is not good that the man should be alone Gen. 2. I will therefore make him an helpe like vnto him So doubtlesse although the Lord had iustified the beleeuer Acts. 13. and by the bloud of his Sonne wee be deliuered from all things from which by the lawe of Moses wee could not be iustified nor deliuered yet is it not the Lords will that we should be ydle in the fielde or market place but his will is that we should endeuour that which hee of vs requireth in his law though not to that perfection which is needefull the which wee cannot performe yet according to that measure of abilitie which he hath to that ende giuen vs. To this did Isaiah Isa 1.17 the Prophet invite the people when hee saide Learne to doe well seeke iudgement releeue the oppressed iudge the fatherles defend the widowes And Micheas Mich. 6. the Prophet saying Doe iustlie loue mercie This remembred Daniel Dan. 4. in his good counsaile to the king Nebucadnezar Cut off thy sins with righteousnes he addeth thine iniquities by mercy to the poore that is Change thy crueltie into mercie and where as thou art a man prophane be thou henceforth holy righteous To this would S. Iohn the Baptist perswade the Iewes Yee say ye are Abrahams children beleeuers but I would ye should doe the workes of the faithfull and bring forth fruits worthie amendment of life And S. Paul after that he had strongly confirmed the foundation of our Iustification by the diuine grace accepted by faith without any the deeds of the law that men might not imagine he condemned those works which proceeded from the iustified man hee omitted not to builde on that foundation the excellencie of such actions and works as necessarilie followe the iustified man as the effects vsually follow the causes therefore he saith I beseech you brethren by the mercifulnes of God Ro. 12.1 that ye offer vp your bodies a liuing Sacrifice holie acceptable vnto God which is your reasonable seruing of God And this Saint Iames Iam. 2. laboureth to perswade with many mighty argumēts to thē who thought that a bare faith had bin ynough for a mā to come to heauē although hee neuer trauailed in the way of life by any work because Paul had preached that a man was iustified before God by faith not by works Loe thus ought the perfect Thumim Thumim perfection integritie to be made answereable to the bright Vrim Vrim light or knowledge that righteousnes which is by Faith in Christ manifested in Mercie and that holinesse which proceedeth from the influence of the holy Spirit wherwith they be baptized which beleeue declared before men that men may see our good works and glorifie our Father which is in heauen And so haue we seen what the Lord God requireth of vs in these two words Righteousnes Mercy Note But heere I would not that any man should gather that because wee say that GOD requireth good workes therefore wee are able to doe those workes without Faith or can beleeue without his grace or can merit life with those our works seeing wee be all sinners and vnprofitable but so as those workes are as the effectes of good causes fruits of a good tree and notes of our faithfull obedience to the Diuine will which we must aime vnto and therein feeling our great imperfection depend on the merit of our heauēly Sauiour Iesus
and commended vnto man as that he should eat and liue of the labours of his hands so haue not onlie the godly in their times but also the very heathen bin exercised in the honest labours of their vocations wherof Paul hath gathered and laid downe this peremptory law that hee which laboureth not 2. Thessa 3.10 should not eate as if he were vnworthie to enioy the vse of anie the creatures wherin he disdained to bestow his labours Therfore Idelnes and slouth haue not onely bene reproued and blamed but also deemed vnprofitable and worthy shame and wretchednes Thereof said Salomon Pro. 24 30 I passed by the vineyard of the idle husbandman it was couered ouer with bryers Againe How long wilt thou sleepe ô thou sluggard but pouertie shall invade thee as an armed man Therefore hee saith again Pr. 24.27 Prepare thy works without make ready thy things in the fielde afterward build thine house By this doctrine is remooued from vs that vaine imagination of the Iewes Corban Mar. 7.11 Spirituall ydlenes nought else but a kinde of spirituall Idlenes which Christ found reproued in them by the which as a Sacrifice offered or dedicated to the holie vses of the Temple they thought they fully performed the commandement and request of the lawe without any further action or work of piety though the whiles they neglected duty to their own naturall parēts whom they permitted to lie languish die wretchedly in the streetes for want of foode things necessary As who should say It is enough for vs that we giue of our goods and store to the Temples vse for by that as well our parents and the poore as our selues are relieued and benefited Thus they dishonored their parents infringed the lawe and blasphemed the Lord who in that and some other like respects contemned their sacrifices as abhominable saying that he required mercie and not such sacrifices And with this is likewise abandoned that faith A dead faith Deuotion Profession which beeing deuoid of good workes is called a dead faith that glorious deuotion which hath no deeds that holy profession which wanteth an honest godly life for as the seruice of God is not an idle seruice so is not he estemed for a good hearer or a sound beleeuer or a deuout Christian or a perfect professor who hath not good works good deedes and a Christian life accompanying the same as the bright shining of a cleare candle the timely fruit of a sound tree To this end are words orations preachings the vse of tongues for works are the finall cause or end of all words whereof I gladlie remember the saying of Miso reported by Diogenes Laertius Ougar eneca toon logoon ta pragmata sunteleisthai alla eneca ●oon pragmatoon tous logous Works are not done for the words sake but the words are spoken for the worke And therefore saith the Lorde by the Prophet Thou art taught what is good what the Lord requireth of thee namelie to doe iustice or righteousnes And Christ saith Mich. 6. Blessed is he that heareth the word of God and doeth the same for hee is likened to the wise man that buildeth his house on the Rock yea he is the mother Matth. 7 brother and sister of Christ as himselfe acknow●edgeth and with him in the ende shall be made partakers of his glorie This the Apostles well considered and therefore did not only assaye to imitate the Lord in holie life and good conuersation but also generallie taught that men should declare their faith by their workes according to that doctrine of their Maister Matth. 5. So let your light shine before men that they may see your good works And as the Lord hath bene willing by diuers similitudes of naturall things 2. The labour is of husbandry to teach instruct and perswade men to the right vnderstāding of things supernaturall and diuine in all the course of the holy scriptures so here by the labour of an husbādman toyling manuring the rude vncultured earth on the which he hath set him as in the place of his trauaile Gen. 3. hee teacheth vs what wee should obserue performe work in matters of Pietie as whereby to be directed towards the holy land the sooner for that there is not anie other particular labour work or action in any vocation or calling vnder the Sunne whereby this thing can be better displayed and set forth as that which of all others is most ancient most lawfull most profitable and most commendable in mans life Plin. h. 18. 4. 5. 6. ca. 1. 2. 3. This Plinie in his Naturall historie excellentlie proueth but wee better finde in the holie Scriptures that this was the same which the Lord God of all manuall labours 1. Husbandrie the most ancient labour of man first ordained for man immediatlie after his Creation that wherin next to the diuine seruices hee should be exercised in and for his life and maintenance and as the end of his placing in the garden of Eden as witnesseth Moses in these words Gen 2.15 The Lord God tooke the man whom he had made put him in the garden of Eden that he might dresse it and keepe it Neither was this omitted but confirmed to him after his fall Gen. 3. when he said that in the sweat of his face man should eate his breade the which therefore not onely Adam but also his children after him obserued for Abel was a keeper of the sheepe and Cayn was a tiller of the fieldes After this it is in Scripture reported Gen. 9.20 that Noah the righteous soone vpon the floud became an husbandman and planted a vineyard King Salomon planted gardens and orchyards Eccl. 2.6 much commended the exercise and profit thereof yea he protested that the king himselfe is maintained by husbandrie neither is hee able to helpe his poore people 2. K. Deut. 28.3 The kinde of husbandry except it please the Lord that way to blesse his vineyards and fieldes Moreouer the Lord God by his seruant Moses promised to them that feared him a blessing from the tillage of the earth and to them that disobeied hee threatned to withdraw the same for a cursing But here it may be demanded that as there be diuers pointes in the labour of husbandrie as the care of sheepe and cattell noted in Abel and Iacob the planting of vineyardes obserued in Noah and Salomon and such like commended vsed from the beginning by holie men lawfull for Christians so also whether the tilling of the ground which Cain vsed and which for mans sin was cursed be no lesse lawfull and commendable To this I answere that absolutely we may not doubt therof Indeede there be some Arts which in themselues are lawfull yet by reason of the end therof are become vnlawfull As it is lawfull for a mā to make a sword for the defence
of God and the benefit of men when the labourer in this husbandrie is furnished with those seuen former Vertues so well fitting his vocation and function But all those things shall by Gods grace be explaned in the place order of the proceeding of this heauenly Plough CHAP. IX What is meant by this that men must sowe for righteousnes and reape according to Mercie Wee must endeuour to perform that which is required of vs. AS the Prophet by these Metaphoricall wordes taken from Georgie and the common labours of husbandmen would teache what is required of vs in the spiritual husbandrie of the Lorde So thereby knowing what the will of God is and what shal be the end of our labours we should daily endeuour the practise of those things We must endeuour to performe that which is requi ed of vs. And therin with the husbandman let vs not omit at the seede time to manure and sowe our fields though with great labour like cost and afterward with all diligence to reape and gather the fruites of our labours with the true application and vse thereof as it shall be thought most conuenient for the glorie of God the discharge of our duties and the profit both of our selues and others in our seuerall functions and places Howbeit there bee Obiect which standing on their counterfait Corban as I said before produce the words of the Lord Iesus against those painfull endeuours of the true labourer saying Matth. 6.26 Be not carefull for your life what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink nor yet for your bodie what ye shall put on c. Beholde the fowles of the heauen for they sow not neither reape nor carie into the barnes yet your heauenlie Father feedeth them Are ye not much better then they Answer To the which although the laboures enioyned to men by the Lorde wherein they should be exercised not onely on the six daies in the week but also should walk whiles the twelue houers of the day lasteth the calling of labourers into the vineyard Muscul in Matth 6. Non dicie Christus propterea dico vobis ne labores pro victu c. were a sufficient answere yet for the better vnderstanding of the Lords meaning I gladly remēber the words of the godlie learned resoluing the doubt Christ saith not therfore I say vnto you that ye labour not for foode and cloathing but be ye not carefull hee forbiddeth not the labour but the carefulnes Paul saith to the Ephes 4. Let euery man labour with his hands that hee may haue what to giue to him that hath neede Againe Shall we nothing sowe nothing reape cary nothing into the barne he saith not so but by this he reproueth our incredulity or indeede the weakenes of our faith to whom although it be commanded of God that we should sowe reape plant and gather into the barnes that whereof wee may liue yet notwithstanding men haue neither that trust in God nor so much securitie as the fowles of the heauen which neither sowe nor reape nor bring into the barnes whereof to be sustained Therefore as it is said we must not be idle but industrious in our labours depend on the diuine grace without our excessiue carefulnes And here let vs not forget that which the Lord chiefly requireth namely Rihgteousnes To sowe for righteousnes for the which hee would wee should sowe and Mercie according to whose measure wee should reape that is to vse and practise those waies and meanes wherby we may obtaine the one perfo●me the other and expresse both the one the other in our charitable actions and godlie liues This is that sowing for Righteousnes that reaping after the measure of Mercie this is that hunger and thirst after Righteousnes whereof our Lord speaketh Iustice. Matth 5. wherein men hauing faith doe daylie desire studie endeuour and labour to praise and please God Mercie by walking in his wayes And this is that Symbole or token whereby we● expresse make knowen that Righteousnes of God Matth. 5. before men in the workes of Pietie For thus are men willed to measure out Righteousnesse in Mercie as whereof the Lord saide Doe Iustice and loue Mercie or execute Iustice by mercy The same which Daniel comprised in his good counsell giuen to the king of Babylon Cut off thy sinnes by Iustice thine iniquity by mercie meaning that he should alter and change the copie manner of his life that whereas before he was vnrighteous and thereby appeared as a sauage wilde beast cruell hard seuere and vnmercifull vnto his Subiects especially to the poore Iewes then vnder his captiuitie hee should now labour to become righteous as whereby he might embrace and declare humanitie gentlenes softenes benignitie mercie not only in word but in affection action good workes and all wayes and meanes And doubtles as there is not anie one thing commended and commanded vnto men by the Lord Vltra posse viri non vult Deus vlta requiri but with the lawfull wayes and meanes to be attained and performed so God willing we should liue he prepareth vs foode and willeth vs both to eat and vse it as the meanes of our life Againe too and for the same to be maintained hee would we should labour manure the soyle to sowe reape lay vp in the barne and that we should neither contemne nor neglect those lawfull waies and meanes offred but take and vse the the same To this purpose saith Christ I stand at the doore knock If any man wil open the doore to me I will come in vnto him Reuel 3. Wee knowe that Christ is able to enter in the gate beeing fast shut howbeit this he saith to stirre vs vp to vigilancie and to the studie of the workes of our vocation Christ is ready to enter into our hearts by his Spirit but hee would wee should open our hearts vnto him by our faith that wee should be prepared as Dauid wished to be when hee prayed for a newe heart Psalm 51. To this belongeth that which the Lord commandeth Seeke and ye shall finde Knock and it shal be opened vnto you So the talents being committed to our vse require a diligent trafficke and occupation for the increase Thus the Lord would that men hauing wisedome knowledge vnderstanding memory iudgement reason abilitie other ornaments as well of soule as bodie they should neither burie them nor restraine them but rightlie vse them And now as yee haue heretofore ploughed Iniquitie wherof ye haue reapte vngodlines haue beene ouermuch busied about the thinges of this life which are vaine transitorie directed by the wisedome of the serpent earthly sensuall and diuellish so it is required that henceforth yee turne another leafe and yet ye may not be ydle or exempted from labours but by the wisdome which is from aboue gentle easie to be intreated ful of mercie
to God to suffer and sustaine hunger colde nakednes watchings trauailes persecutions and all afflictions whereby the flesh is often manifested and subdued to the Spirit For this louing Taw Raban in sermon esteemeth nothing hard nothing bitter nothing heauie nothing deadly what hard yrons what bitter wounds what intollerable paines what mortall pangs preuaile to daūt Loue which is a shield impenitrable against all dartes withstanding all swords contemning all perils and diriding all deaths Therof could the most holy Spowsesse say Cant. 5 6 7. As strong as death is Loue much water cannot quench it neither can the floods drowne it If a man should giue all the substance of his house for Loue they would greatly contemne it Touching the second which is that Loue to the Sonne Psal 2. we heare the Psalmist say O kisse the Sonne lest he be angry and so ye perish by the way Againe He is the Lord Psal 45. and worshippe thou him To this the holy Apostles oft perswade and beyond all others 1. Ioh. 1. that most louely Apostle in Christ is in this very emphatical and the Lord Iesus himselfe as he exhorted his Apostles and followers to this vertue so hee willed them to expresse the same by the keeping of his commandements Ioh. 21. by feeding his flocke by mercie charitable actions The reasons may bee taken from the wordes of the Psalmist where hee saith Kisse the Sonne c. That is first he is the Son of God the Father of right ought to beloued next if we loue him not he will be angry thirdly if he be angry hee destroyeth them that prouoke him fourthly if we loue him we are blessed fiftly he is the Lord our God sixtly hee is our King our Priest our Prophet our Sauiour our Mediator our life Psal 2. 45. who shuld not loue his King his Priest his Prophet his Sauiour his Mediatour his life The Apostles haue gathered applied many reasons thereof which yet are thus concluded by a learned Father Aug. de Caten rudi Ama amorem illius qui amore tui amoris descendit in vterum virginis c. Loue his Loue saith hee who for thy Loue came downe into the wombe of a virgin and there made a copulation of his Loue with thy Loue by humbling himselfe and exalting thee and conioyning the light of his eternitie to the vile slime of thy mortalitie Moreouer touching the nature operation and vtilitie of this Loue in our selues from whence spring no meane causes to perswade vs. An other in a certain sermon calleth it fire light honie wine and the Sunne Fire in meditation purifying the mind from all blemishes Light in prayer illuminating the minde with the clearenesse of vertues Honie in thanksgiuing sweetning the minde with the dulcor of diuine benefites wine in contemplation consolating the minde with cheerefull delectation and a bright Sunne in the eternall happinesse clarifying the minde with gladsome and wholesome light brightening the minde with vnspeakeable ioy and eternall gladnesse This therefore is a most diuine treasure the which whosoeuer hath it is right rich and whosoeuer hath it not is wretched and poore The third linke is that loue of the holy Spirite when feeling our selues both sanctified comforted by the pleasant beames of the same wee are so rauished with the loue thereof as we embrace his most excellent graces not onely in our selues but also in all others This is that Spirit of wisedome and vnderstanding of counsell and strength of knowledge and of the feare of God the which resting on Christ made him prudent in the feare of the Lord the which all Christians do both admire and praise before all the vertues of men Isai 11.2 The same from his fulnesse diriued vnto men hath distributed diuersitie of gifts and the manifestation of the Spirite is giuen to euerie man to edifie withall 1. Cor. 12.7 For one from thence hath the word of wisedome an other the word of knowledge an other faith an other the gifts of healing an other the operations of great workes an other prophesie an other discerning of spirits an other diuersitie of tongues an other the interpretation of tongues And all these things worketh the same spirit distributing to euerie man seuerally as hee will the which are to be accepted and commended with ardent loue of this spirit Besides this by this Spirit is Christ Iesus present with vs in the world euen vnto the end thereof For he saith I wil be with you alwaies and where two or three bee congregated in his name he is in the middest of them that is by his Spirit By this wee haue our consolation in this world and therefore hee is called the Comforter as he saith I will send you another Comforter which shall remaine with you for euer Ioh. 14 16. This is the same which assureth vs in our spirits that we are Gods children and to be short by the helpe of this Spirit wee behold Gods face for hee sanctifieth vs without the which we cannot see the face of God Heb. 12.14 Therefore we are to embrace him and his rich graces with faithfull and godly loue These things Augustine deepely perpending made his prayer vnto the holy Ghost in these wordes Sanctum opus in me spira vt cogitem c. In epist ad quendam comitem Inspire in mee a good worke that I may thinke thereof prouoke mee to performe it perswade mee to loue thee confirme me that I may reteine thee keepe mee that I loose thee not The fourth lincke of this spirituall Taw signifieth the loue of our neighbour Wee cannot be ignorant both what the Lord in the Lawe and the Prophets and also in the Gospel biddeth in this point as namely that wee should loue our neighbour as our selues And this also the holy Apostle especially St. Iohn the Euangelst in their Epistles labour to perswade all Christians vnder that word agape that is Charity Loue or Charitie which is a right diuine facultie inspired into our hearts by that diuine Spirit by the which we euer wish well vnto our neighbours and according to the measure of our abilitie studie to helpe and benefit him for Christ his sake and in the name of God The true nature of this louely linke is well defined before in the word Mercy the which as Christ teacheth the Lord requireth of man towardes man to declare his iustice beyond all burnt offerings Mat. 9. Mich. 6. and externall sacrifices And to this are wee moued besides the former causes in that the nature thereof is good the vse profitable we are brethren the sonnes of one Father of the same baptisme the same faith the same familie people of the same God heires of one inheritance and partakers of life together through one Mediatour and Sauiour Now Saint Paul conioyning together those foure Linkes confirmeth Loue to bee the perfection of the Law that is
the same wherein is performed our duty both to God and man And speaking of the nature dignitie and office thereof hee thought hee could not sufficiently exalt the honour of the same 1. Cor. 13. but thus hee saith Though I speake with the tongues of men and Angells and haue not Loue I am as a soundiing brasse or tinckling Cimball Though I had the gift of prophecying and knew all secrets and all knowledge yea if I had all faith so that I could remoue mountaines and had not Loue I were nothing And though I feede the poore with all my goods and though I giue my body to bee burned and haue not Loue it profiteth mee nothing Loue suffereth long is bountifull enuieth not boasteth not is not puffed vppe disdaineth not seeketh not her owne is not prouoked to anger thinketh not euill reioyceth not in iniquitie but reioyceth in the truth suffereth all things beleeueth all things hopeth all things and endureth all things Loue neuer falleth away though that prophecyings bee abolished or the tongues cease or knowledge vanish away Againe Verse 13. Now abideth Faith Hope and Loue these three but the chiefest of these is Loue. Therefore Saint Augustine perusing Pauls praise of this most honourable vertue seemeth to recapitulate his manifolde members in his description thereof Thus is saith hee a right Will turned vtterly away from all earthly and present thinges ioyned in seperable to GOD and vnited with a certeine fire of the holye Spirite from whence it proceedeth and is saide to be enkindled estraunged from all filthy pollution ignorant of corruption empaired with no kinde of immutabilitie superiour to all thinges which are carnally minded the strongest of all affections desirous of holy contemplations not at any time conquered of any other in any thing the summe of all good actions the health of manners the end of the heauenly lawes the death of all crimes the life of vertues the strength of the fighters the palme of the victors the armour of sacred mindes the cause of good deserts the reward of the perfect that without the which no man pleaseth God fruitfull in the repentance gladsome in them that profite glorious in those which perseuere victorious in the Martyrs profitable in all beleeuers the same in the which euery good worke whatsoeuer hath and holdeth life Finally because Saint Paul hath conioyned together faith hope and loue wee finde them so placed in this Soole and conioyned that albeit we may distinguish them yet diuide them wee may not for it is necessary the one holde fast by the other nor worketh the one without the other The Taw is staied with the Key or Pinne and reacheth from thence to the Tractory or Lambe where by the Key is signified Faith by the Tractory Hope and by the Taw Loue as before it is declared Which three hauing their seuerall offices may well expresse the same in three words Faith saith I assure it Hope saith I expect it Loue saith I tend towards it For Faith is assured of the good thinges which God hath promised nor doubteth shee of the performance of his word knowing him to be righteous Hope with a longing desire euer expecteth and looketh to obtain those good things which God hath promised and faith hath assured and therefore is not wearie Loue in the daily exercise of the diuine vertues and fruits of faith standeth not still gaping for the same without her dutifull endeuour but worketh righteously and tendeth towards the attainement of that which is promised assured and hoped for Loe such a precious Iewell is Loue Such a powerfull Taw hath Pieties Plough And thus haue we the Soole throughly performed CHAP. XXVIII The Oxen which draw forth the Soole of Pieties Plough AS wee haue throughly perused the Soole of Spiritual Plough so now is it meete that we also peruse the Oxen which drawe the same wherein wee may consider three principall points viz. First those Oxen. Next their Labour Lastly their Reward First 1 The Oxen we might after the minde of some men vnderstand by those Oxen the Commaundements of God partly in regard of the number partly for the office 10. Oxen. There bee ten particular Commaundements in both the Tables of the Lawe which stand as for fiue yoke or couples whose strength is the force of true Contrition and the powerful draught of godly repentance by the which mans hard vncircumcised heart is fallowed and prepared for the seede whereof the Apostle called it a Schoolemaister vnto Christ for they drawe or force men to Christ in whome there is founde mercie and perfection Howbeit there bee other liuely Oxen the which the Maister husbandman hath both prepared yoked together and perswaded to draw strongly forth this Spirituall Soole 1. Cor. 9.9 1. Tim. 5.18 Saint Paul as well in his Epistle to Timothy as in that to the Corinthians likeneth the true labourers of the Lord in his spirituall worke Deu. 25.4 to Oxen. Thou shalt not muste the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the corne This hee taketh out of the Law and that wee might the better vnderstand his meaning hee addeth Doth God take care for Oxen As if hee saide God dooth not so much respect the Oxen themselues as hee doth men for whose sake this was written for the labourer in the Lordes worke is worthie of his hire as the labouring Oxe requireth to haue his fodder 2. King 19 19. Wee finde in the second Booke of the Kings that when Eliah went forth to annoint Elishah for a Prophet in his place hee found him in the Lande ploughing with twelue yoke of Oxen and himselfe with the twelue 12. Yoke of Oxen. After the which number wee may take for this labour certaine orders of holy and wise persons remembred and commended in the sacred Scriptures As first the twelue Patriarkes tied vppe vnder the yoke of the olde Testament and the twelue Apostles bearing the gentle yoke of the Gospell And these both yoked or numbred together make the iust twelue yoke and the number of those foure and twentie Elders mentioned by Saint Iohn in his Apocalyps In the like sense Apoc. 4. and 5. wee haue the number of the twelue foundations and twelue gates of the heauenly Ierusalem Saint Paul neuerthelesse 10. Orders of Oxen. alluding to the former number of the ten Commaundements maketh ten orders of those spirituall Oxen of the which in his Epistle to the Ephesians chapter 4. hee nameth fiue and in his former Epistle to the Corinthians chapter 12. hee nameth other fiue As first Apostles next Prophets thirdly Euangelists fourthly Pastours fiftly Doctours sixtly Powers seuenthly Healers eightly Helpers ninthly Gouernours tenthly Linguists And these are first those Doctours of the newe Testament immediately chosen called 1 Apostles and sent forth of Christ to teach the Gospel with a speciall power of the holy Ministerie 2 Prophets The second sort are those Preachers of the diuine mysteries
for the institution of the people The third 3 Euangelists are such as are sent to some particular Churches to preach the Gospel vnto them The fourth 4 Pastors are diuinely called and appointed to take charge of the soules to them committed to feed them with spirituall food to administer the Sacraments The fift 5 Doctours are called to catechize teach the principles grounds of Religion The sixt were to execute the faculty of the Spirit against wicked deriders of discipline 6 Powers to correct such as contemned the plaine doctrine 7 Healers The seuenth are to heale and worke beyond the common course of nature in the prime of the Church thereby the sooner to confirme the faith and doctrine preached transferred at this time vnto such as beyond some others bountifull and zealous in the works of mercie do refresh and comfort others The eight 8 Helpers are appointed as Deacons or Ministers to regard the necessitie of the Church to helpe the poore Christians with a faithfull collection and distribution of goods The ninth are to rule and gouerne others 9 Gouernors after the grace and wisedome giuen them thereto in the ecclesiasticall policie 10 Linguistes The tenth haue the gift of tongues and grace of interpretation of tongues for the better edification of the Church Here we haue fiue yoke of Oxen. The Oxen are the Preachers c and why In a word the Oxen which ordinarily drawe on this Plough are the Preachers Ministers and faithfull disposers of the secrets of the word of God vnto the people as before it is said who are not vnaptly likened to Oxen for fiue chiefe respects that is First for their wisedome secondly for their authority thirdly for their continency fourthly for their strength fiftly for their vtility The wisedome appeareth in the eyes the authority in the hornes their continencie in their castracie their strength in their labours their vtilitie in their vse It is said in the Apocalyps 5. that the Lambe had seuen eyes which noted his great wisedome 1 Wisdome and perfection of knowledge But the Oxe hath but two eyes whereby as Isaiah saith he knoweth his owner is ready to obey him By these two eyes is signified knowledge of the Lordes Law and Commandements and a willing obedience to the same And againe here is the loue of God and the loue of man alluding to those two tables in the Lawe In a word here is both wisedome and the worke of wisedome in the Oxe Secondly the Lambe hath also seuen hornes which noteth the perfect power and authoritie 2 Authoritie of Christ But this Oxe hath but two hornes to note a double vocation wherof the one is within the other without from the which the Christian especially the Pastor Preacher Minister or Elder taketh his power and authoritie for how can he preach except he be sent Thirdly the Oxe is gelded by the which he is made more tame readie 3 Chastitie and subiect to his worke and yoke And of certaine spiritual Oxen we heare the Lord say There be some chaste Mat. 19.12 which were so borne of their mothers wombe and there be some chaste which be made chaste of men and there be some chaste which haue made themselues chaste for the kingdome of heauen For some are chaste by nature and some others are made chaste beeing gelded by men but these hauing subdued their appetites vse the gift of continenci● in the seruice of God for they are disposed by the holy Ghost to beare the yoke of Christ with meekenesse of minde by the ripenesse of repentance the quietnesse of conscience the worke of obedience the grauitie of their modest conuersation and christian modestie 4 Strength Fourthly the Oxe is ordained for labour and so the Husbandman vseth him in his fielde and plough In like maner the Elders and Ministers of the Word in their spirituall Husbandrie are not to stand idle but to labour as said the Apostles Wee are Gods Labourers yee are his Husbandry And this was the saying of the good husbandman to them whom hee found standing idle in the Market-place Why stand you here all the day idle goe and enter my Vineyard and labour and whatsoeuer is iust ye shall receiue Here is labour required neither may such imagine which take this charge on them that they are worthy their rewards without labour nor that they shall be holden guiltlesse before the Lord except they worke and labour for they be spirituall Oxen. 5 Vtilitie Fiftly the Oxe bringeth great vtilitie vnto the Husbandman As not onely in that it easeth him of the great labour of his hand in tilling the earth which the Lord cursed as Gen. 15.20 but also in treading out his corne in yeelding him plentie of graine in drawing for his carriages and lastly in submitting his life and body to him for his victualles So able is the faithfull Minister of the Gospell to boulte out and dispose the hidden graine of Gods mysteries vnto the people in yeelding him plentie of foode at all times by preaching the Word in season out of season yea and to offer vp his body vnto the Lord a sacrifice as the holy Marters haue done for the confirmatiō of the faith and better comfort of the Church Thus hauing perused the Oxen let vs now consider something more of their kinde of labour 2 The labor of the Oxen The Apostle citing that place of the law saith that the chiefe labour of the Oxe is to Tread out the Corne. Meaning such a labour as whereby the Husbandman is prouided for and furnished with that whereof hee liueth And indeede the labour of the spirituall Oxe is the treading out of the spirituall foode vnto the people The good Householder saith our Sauiour bringeth forth out of his treasure thinges new and olde To this he compareth the Preacher or preaching of the kingdome of heauen in the which the Lawe applied to the Gospell and as well iudgements from the one as mercies from the other declared vnto men the field of the Lord is fallowed and prepared and a great abundance of good fruites brought vnto them that labour the same Saint Paul writing to Timothy 1. Tim. 5.17 speaking of those Oxen whom he there calleth Elders for ●●●ir wisedome grauitie authoritie and digni●●●●ommendeth vnto them two especiall duties viz. First good gouernment next studie and doctrine The Elders saith he which rule well Elders that rule well are worthy of double honour especially they which labour in the Word and Doctrine By this Ruling he noteth a gouernment but by well ruling he noteth the manner thereof neither is it much regarded that men rule but that they rule well in their places thus ought the Minister to rule well the Church the which that he may the better perform he must learn first to gouern wel himselfe and next his owne family for hee that cannot doe that
tou Kuriou Iesou alla kai muriakis ean iaie I am ready said Gordius not onely to labour but to die for the name of the Lord Iesus not onely once but a thousand times if it might so bee Ignat. in apost ad Trattia acts Epest 10. ad Ephes And I said Ignatius haue setled my hope in him who died for mee that is Christ For there is no guile founde in him Againe I am for Gods cause deliuered into the hands of murtherers as from the bloud of Abell the iust vnto the bloud of Ignatius the least Againe writing to the Romanes Suffer mee saith he to be made meate for the beastes appointed to deuour me Epist 11 that I may be made worthy of God For I am the wheate or corne of God and I shall be grinded with the teeth of beasts that I may become cleane bread for the Lord and therto ye may perswade those beasts that their wombes become my Sepulchre and that they leaue no part of my body whereby after my death the same may not remaine loathsome vnto any of them which liue Loe this is that which faithfull hope perswades and such are the Oxen such is their labour in this field and such is their remuneration with the Lorde and his Saints CHAP. XXIX 1 The Holder 2 The Leader 3 The Driuer of Pieties Plough WE knowe right well The working of God in the regeneration of man Dionys Areo in Caiest hierarchiae ca. 1. that no man commeth to the Father but by the Sonne that no man commeth to the Son but he whom the Father draweth and that no man commeth either to the one or to the other but by the power and motion of the holy Ghost So that in this worke the whole Trinitie of the diuine Deitie hath his action and perfect working therefore it is Cant. 1. that the most holy Spowsesse ●s Salomon testifieth prayeth to her most peerlesse head saying Draw me forth after thee and then will we runne Ier. 31. Ephraim implores as the Prophet Ieremie saith O Lorde conuert vs and wee shall bee conuerted The Apostles desire O Lorde encrease our faith And the Lorde Iesus himselfe sending forth his Apostles commaundes them to preach the Gospell and to Baptise the beleeuers in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost Therefore as the Plough is by the Holder thereof directed by the Leader allured and by the Driuer prouoked so is this spirituall Plough directed by God the Father allured by God the Sonne and prouoked by God the holy Ghost for God himselfe holdeth Christ Iesus leadeth and the holy Spirite prouoketh the Plough in this husbandrie and field of the Lord. Gen. 1.1 Thus in the great work of the Creation these three persons had not onely their seuerall but their ioynt operations as Moses testifieth Thus in the conception and birth of Christ God the Father begets Mat. 1. Luk 2. God the holy Ghost workes in the conception and God the Sonne is begotten and borne which three also worke in the begetting regeneration and new birth of the elected Saints albeit they are not three but one eternall God The Holder My Father saith Christ is an Husbandman and so called in regard of his wisedome prouidence and good endeuours had God is as a Husbandman Secund. Philoso and daily employed by him on the soyle of mans heart wherein semblant to the Husbandman whom the Philosopher Secundus in the presence of Adrian defined he is a Minister of labours an improuer of the desart a Phisitian of the earth a Planter of trees and a Measurer or Proportioner of monethes In this person we may here remember beyond many others two principall attributes or diuine vertues namely Gods iustice and mercie his Iustice and his Mercie both the which in the holding of this Plough hee aptly applieth as his two handes to those two Hales or handles of the Soole In the former we finde him euer vpright and seuere against presumptious sinners in the latter louing and cheerful to penitents The first is strengthened by the vigour of the Lawe the latter beautified by the comforts of the Gospel and therein both these are so tempted by the meditation of Messias his merite Gregor mor. in Iob. 35 lib. 26. cap. 10. that neither presumption hurteth nor desperation killeth him that truly repents For as God is a good Father so in his goodnesse he respects not only his naturall Sonne God and man but all such as haue their adoptiō by grace in him with a right fatherly loue and affection The Leader as it is said before is Christ Iesus 2 Christ is the Leader of the Plough who indeede goeth forth before all those his Oxen as their Head and Captaine and willing to bring man from errours to the truth and especially his Ministers to the right method and order of their vocation Aug. in Ioan. tract 22. he saith I am the Way the Truth and the Life As if he would say Falli non vis Ego sum veritas Mori non vis Ego sum vita Errare non vis Ego sum via Non est qua eas nisi ad me non est quà cas nisi per me Wilt thou not be deceiued I am the Truth Wilt thou not die I am the Life Wilt thou not erre I am the Way Thou hast not whither to goe but vnto me neither maist thou walke safely sauing by me This is the same to whom the Lawe directs the Prophets point the Figures ayme and whom the Father would that all men should heare and hee hath not onely shewed the way vnto the kingdome but louingly allures men to walke in the same Therefore he faith Mat. 11.29 Learne of me Come vnto me Neither hath he at any time required that of his followers in this worke which himselfe had not first vndertaken in his owne person In regard whereof Apo. 14.1 those hundred fortie and foure thousand redeemed soules which stand with the Lambe on Mount Sion followe him wheresoeuer he goeth and therefore as for him they are crossed they shall be with him also crowned finding that all the afflictions of this life for him Ro. 8. are not worthy that glory which shall be reuealed in him 3 The Driuer The holy Ghost prouokes the good Oxe The Driuer of this Plough is the diuine Spirite through whose instigation the goade is agitated the Oxen prouoked and the Plough furthered too and for the which it pleaseth him semblant to the Goad inch or driuer of Oxen to vse and apply sometimes Words sometimes Voices sometimes Songs or whistlings sometimes prickes and stripes The Words Words are the examples testimonies sentences and Parables of the holy Scriptures Eccle. 12. the which as saith Salomon as are goades and nailes fastened by the maisters of the Assemblies which are giuen by one Pastor goades to prouoke and nailes to confirme the working