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

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the tongue who will finde fault in this or that which God hath made this commeth to passe when men will seem to see more than God himself did see When that God did trie every work of his here seven times in this chapter as for the words of the Lord they are pure as silver tryed in a furnace of earth fined seven fold Psal. 12. 6. So are his works also and this is a bridle to our licentiousness to suspend our judgment and not to finde fault with Gods works God hath said they were very good habent ergo bonitatem etsi nobis ignotam Divers things are good in their place divers in their time Fire in the cold of Winter is good in the heat of Summer it is not so good Water in the Summer is good It is Gods curse and a great grief to eat in darknesse Preach 5. 17. In time things be good all things have their time Preach 3. In a word let every one say thus with himself God hath seen this or that good I silly man cannot see it otherwise Omnia sunt munda mundis sicomnia bona bonis all things are clean to the clean and all things good to the good God createth good things he ordereth evil things the thing is not ill but the ill applying is evil not the power There is potest as ad infestandum if it be applyed to the Malefactor it is even bonum justitiae Sic non est dedecus culpae sine dedecore vindictae God saith It shall be well with the just for they shall eat the fruit of their works but woe be to the wicked for it shall be evill with them Esay 3. The punishing the wicked and rewarding the just is good for we know that all things work to the best unto them that love God Rom. 8. 28. If any thing be amisse the evill is in man not in God God hath made us good but by Adams transgression and our daily sinne we are evill It is our iniquities that hath separated between us and our God it is our sinnes that have hid his face from us Esay 59. 2. and Jer. 5. 25. Say not then this is ill or that is ill but say I am ill and I am wicked God who made all things could best see that every thing was very good but either by ignorance or by ill desert we are dymme sighted 3. Lastly For imitation we must see as God did that we may see our works good Bonitas bonitatum omnia bonitas was the state of the first creation By sinne it was that Salomon saith the beginning of the Preacher that vanitas vanitatum omnia vanitas and therefore let us be warie Gods deeds were visible they were not good words only but good gifts let not us say only ecce dixi but let our acts be good to the needy with ecce dedi let us imitate God in that his goodnesse There are two good things come from man the one in 2 Pet. 1. 9. Knowledge temperance love c. The other in the 4. to the Philippians 14. to communicate to the afflicted benefacite communicate is the summe of all So the evening and the morning were the sixth day In the former dayes there was creation of nothing a disposition and ordering of things created and an adorning of things ordered Here is an accomplishment of all his works God before man was observed the dayes and the number but here he delivereth unto man the Kalender of times which we have received and shall be received to the worlds end The evening goeth before the morning rest is in the evening labor in the morning to the which man is ordained After this his last work cometh the seventh day the day of rest God he resteth not in the waters nor in the Earth he resteth not in the Heavens but to conclude with the excellent saying of St. Austin Requiescit Deus in homine ut homo in Deo requiescat God took his rest in man that man might take his rest for ever with God Which God of his mercy grant us all to whom be all honor glorie and praise world without end Amen AMEN LECTURES PREACHED UPON the second Chapter OF GENESIS LECTURES Preached in Saint PAULS Church LONDON Itaque perfecti sunt Coeli Terra omnisque exercitus illorum Gen. 2. 1. April 22. 1591. IN the course of the former Chapter ever we have seen the closing up of every dayes work to have this usuall and ordinary return dixit Deus Now the seventh day being come we are not to look for the old usuall dixit but for a new course of speaking and manner of dealing for as God finished and perfected his Law in ten words when he spake in Sinay So here in ten words he perfectly finished the whole work of Creation and therefore now need no more to command any thing else to be made because Heaven and Earth and all the fullnesse of them are thus perfectly done and finished If there be any thing in all the world either they are here spoken of or else are in lumbis terrae Creatoris in the loyns of the efficient or in the womb of the World For within the six dayes all things were made so that we may say with the wise man Preach 1. 9. What is now or shall be hereafter but that which hath been made or done before hand therefore there is now no new thing under the Sunne As that first Chapter was for the world so this Chapter some call Mans Chapter for it is but the remainder of the former Chapter and is accompted as only a glosse or Commentary of the Creation of man set down in the 27. verse of the first Chapter The former Chapter doth describe the great world in general but this speaketh especially of the lesser World viz. Man This Chapter doth consist of three parts 1. The first is the Complement of the Creation with the description of the Sabbath or rest or seventh day in the first three verses 2. The second containeth a brief summe and abridgement of the Creation of the great World from the 4. to the 7. verse 3. The third part is a repetition of the Creation of the little World or the continuation of the history of man from the 7. to the end Touching the first as it is contained in three verses so in it there are three parts or members to be marked 1. In the first The Holy Ghost standeth upon the perfection of Gods works 2. In the second he sheweth That having perfectly finished all he gave himself to rest 3. In the third That he instituted that day and sanctified it to be a sabboth for ever to be used observed and kept Which three parts doe depend one upon another for God having perfected all he rested and in that rest he blessed the seventh day and instituteth the Sabboth these are the three branches of the
and all that might be attained unto by bodily labor and work and not to seek for blessednesse in the six dayes work but only in the blessing of the seventh day given by his word which is above and beyond all that is in the Creatures But the other reason is more sensible which is because every one of the six dayes brought his reall blessing with it Of which Jobs wife had skill Benedictus Deus in donis suis Job 3. 9. Which is Oses blessednesse Benedictus dominus quo ditati sumus But the world hath no feeling of St. Pauls blessings which are spirituall who saith blessed be God which made us rich in all spirituall riches in Christ. Wherefore that we may know that we have more cause to blesse God for his spirituall blessings given unto us on the Sabbath day by his word then for his temporall blessings which we receive at other times by his Creatures therefore did he specially blesse this seventh day for God knoweth we are easily brought to say blessed be God and blessed be this day in which we receive temporall blessings and that place we will call the valley of blessing 2 Cro. 20. 26. And on the other side we think that day a cursed day as Job did in which we receive evills Job 3. 8. But seeing all true and eternall blessings doe follow and shine from the blessing of this day it is indeed to be esteemed a blessed day Object But I will ask Whether the other dayes were not also blessed Resp. Yes every one of them as we may see Gen. 1. chap. had his Benedixit which though they were temporall yet they have a very good Analogy and fit proportion with the spirituall blessings of this day of this day for as we have a natural good use of the goodnesse of the Creatures on the six dayes by their blessings given them So here on the Sabath we have a spiritual use of the Creatures For as the temporal and corporal use of the six dayes is ad cultum corporis so this spiritual use of the seventh day is ad cultum animae that so having blessings provided both for body and soul we may by both kindes of blessings come unto God in whose presence is the fullnesse of joy and blessednesse for ever Psal. 70. 4. Touching the blessing of the Sabath We say that thing is blessed of God to which God vouchsafeth some peculiar or special favour So Isaac is called Benedictus Domini Gen. 26. 12. because God shewed him such special favours It was the strife between Esau and Jacob because of the blessing that is the superiority Gen. 27. 37. What maketh the Sabath the chief day in the week Therefore this day having the special blessing is by it made the head and chief day of the week The honor which is given to this day is holinesse which is expressed by sanctifying or hallowing which consisteth in two things The first is Levit. 20. 26. which is separation or setting it apart from common and prophane uses to the which they were or might be applyed before before which they were called things common and prophane So was this day first a common and an ordinary day like to all the other ordinary dayes yea it might be thought to us before a waste emptie day bringing no good with it to us but now being set apart the day which the builders would refuse by this is made the head and chief day of building for as a man being set a a part to be a Magistrate is thereby made above ordinarie men so is this day now among other dayes being set a part by Gods word As the separation of it from prophane uses is the first part so consequently ensueth for the sanctifying of any thing the appropriation of it to Gods holy uses to the which he hath appointed it Levit. 27. 28. as the sanctified Instruments of the Temple must not serve to any other uses but to that holy use and purpose in the Temple for which they were made If we then so use this day and separate it from prophane things to holy exercises it will be a blessed day to us for Gods blessing given to this day is a real blessing and will cause us to grow in holinesse here and by it to blessedness in the life to come For this must needs be granted that he which 〈◊〉 it blessed it for some body if for some body then for himself or for some other but he made it not for himself for he is God for ever and ever blessed And as St. Paul saith Omnia munda mundis Titus 1. 15. so we may say Omnia sunt sancta sanctis and therefore all things being holy to him which is holiest of all it is sure that he sanctified it not for himself Then it followeth that it must needs be either for Man or for some other Creature but not for any other Creature because they themselves were all blessed and sanctified for us and our sakes so saith Christ Sabatum erat propter hominem non homo propter 〈◊〉 Now we come to the counsell of God in the institution of the Sabath the Psalmist saith 111. 2 3 4. That the works of God are great and to be sought out of all them which have pleasure in them And again That God hath so wrought his marvellous works that they ought to be had in remembrance It is Gods will and counsel therefore in these works first that we should have a remembrance of them and not to forget his benefits in them for he made them that we should not only have a corporal use of them but a spiritual use also as David had Psal. 143. 5. Recogitavi or recordatus sum omnia opera tua that is it should be our delight and pleasure to call to minde again and again his bounty and magnificence in his works that blessing him for these benefits we may be blessed of him for ever in the world to come Thus we see the dependence of this work and the counsel of God therein to the end that this counsell of God may prosper and succeed well that we may have fit occasion to call to minde his works to blesse him for it and to be blessed of him It was requisite and necessarie that God should take order to appoint a time in which setting aside all other worldly duties of our calling we should only and wholly as much as our weak nature can suffer apply our selves to this Christian duty of meditation and serving God which here is set down to be the seventh day in which circumstance of time we have four things to consider 1. First That some day or time must be appointed to that end 2. Secondly That it should be a day or time certain 3. Thirdly That the certain time should be in a certain number of dayes which the Fathers call taxatio temporis 4. Fourthly That it should be the seventh day
Corinthians the eleventh chapter and the twenty seventh verse among other miseries rekoneth cold and nakedness and as it is in the fifth of the Lamentations and the tenth the Prophet speaketh heat maketh the skin black as an oven so these clothes defended the skin from the offence of all weather For in nature every one nourisheth and cherisheth his own flesh the fifth to the Ephesians and the twenty nineth he nourisheth his belly with meat and cherisheth his back with clothes We doe account our selves debters to the flesh the eighth to the Romans and the twelfth These two are meant by things needfull for the body the second of St. James Epistle and the sixteenth but as it is in the thirteenth of the Romans and the fourteenth Put you on the Lord Jesus and take no thought for the flesh facere non perficere were vain to make a Creature and not to preserv it God will not but here we must learn to take heed that we make it a defence for necessity and not an offence for superfluity the first of James and the twenty first 4. Of Skins The fourth point is that this apparell was made of skins Herein are two things to be learned first that they were skins of beasts and then that the beasts were destroyed the beast was made to be destroyed but man was to be regarded they must die that man may be preserved from death God hath greater regard of us than of all the beasts we are of more value than many Sparrowes the tenth of Matthew and the thirty first he is allowed here to kill beasts for his apparrell and after to make their Tents of skins God hath given us more understanding than the beasts and more wisedome than the fowles of Heaven the thirty fifth of Job and the eleventh The second thing is the quality of the apparrell which is the first that God gave to Man which they weare for his liverie they are coverings of great frugality they are unlike unto ours which are for shew and not for durance It had been as easie for God to have made them of Silk and of Wool But God regarded not the gorgeous shew This simplicity of apparrell confoundeth the multiplicity of apparrell in these daies which they may well call a world of apparrell The gorgeous attire of the daughters of Zion the third of Isaiah and the sixteenth shall be altered to beggerie so that they shall discover their secret parts Here apparrell was made for the body but we make apparrell for apparrell vail upon vail the frugality confoundeth the riotousness and madness of apparrell and this simplicity our sumptuosness we are ashamed of Adams attire but Adam would be ashamed of us and our prodigality This apparrell was without pride Christ commandeth us not to care for our body what to eat or to put on in the sixth of Matthew and the twenty fifth the body is better than rayment but now mens apparrell is much more worth than the body for as farre as earth is from heaven so farre doe we differ in apparrell from the ancient world and now men consume their daies in vanity as it is in the 78. Psalme and the 33 before plainness was sufficient but now cutting and imbroiderie and needle-work on both sides nothing will suffice Esau for his belly sold his birth-right in the twelfth of the Hebrews and the sixteenth Achan for a little costly apparrell lost his soul in the seventh of Joshua the twenty first and with his 〈◊〉 he went to Hell it was a goodly Babylonish garment the simplicity of apparel was from Paradise but the pride of apparel seemeth by that place to be from Babylon The sumptuousnesse of apparel leadeth men into sundrie tentations the first to Timothie the sixth and the eight verse this is it that makes men to be lovers of themselves as it is in the second to Timothie the third chapter It draweth men to extortion but say rich apparel be worn without extortion or oppression or ill means yet it busieth the minde with vain thoughts and hindereth charitable works for often that too is bestowed upon vanitie which might better be bestowed in charity 5. Adam was content The fifth point and last is Adam looked not scornfully upon his apparel but was content with it which few of his posterity are for still though it be never so well yet one way or other they still mislike that is the first Secondly We must think well of such as weare such simple skinnes and not account vilie of them for having such apparel For those that went up and down in Sheeps skins and Goats skins were such quibus non dignus erat mundus of whom the world was not worthy the eleventh to the Hebrews the thirty seventh But he in the sixteenth of St. Luke the tenth verse that fared daintily that was elothed in purple and fine linnnen every day for all this he was not worthy of the world Salomon in his Canticles saith That the Kings daughter is beautifull within God respecteth the inward heart more than the outward shew the glory of apparel of gold or such like But if the hid man of the heart be uncorrupt and a spirit of humility before God is a thing much more set by the first of Peter the third chapter and the fourth verse Now we desire to be like golden sepulchres if the out side be gorgeous we care not how foul and filthy the inside is well therefore say the Fathers that nimia cura corporis ducit incuriam animae too much care of the body causeth the carelesnesse of the soul. Secondly They came hereby into Gods favour by wearing his liverie they became his servants and so of his houshold They are of the Princes house to whom he giveth bread and cloathing the third of Esay and the sixt verse If they were Gods servants then God was their Master and so it is said the sixt to the Ephesians the ninth that the Master of us all is in Heaven Out of these five clauses for things corporal we learn that out devising without Gods making cannot stand but is vain that God regardeth us more than all the beasts he had made he preserveth our life though by their death hence we may learn frugalitie and to flie vanity we may learn contentment and hate of pride hence we may learn that apparel was first instituted to cover lust not to provoke it Spiritual use And further than these literal points we may gather not only a bodily use but also a spiritual instruction He might have taken the hair of the Cammel or the wooll of the Sheep but the covering him with skinnes doth teach him humility to exalt him to glorie hence then may we gather matter of repentance and of humilitie hereby he hath to deject him in four regards the first is That by sinne he lay open in that he was after thus covered it put him in minde of his sinne though
chastity are a full comprehension of the duty of sanctification which God willeth us to perform And as Cains sinne stands first in the story so it is first in nature for a Child before he be able to speak one word will by his sower face shew that he hath a revenging spirit But in this story of Lamech we must observe a farther thing for it standeth upon two parts First in the ninteenth verse is shewed not only that he was infected with a spirit of uncleanness but also verse the twenty third a contemptuous and insolent spirit which is a degree beyond Cain for there he braggeth of his sinne and contemneth God and his Judgments as if he should not be revenged of him for it For when a sinner is not only possessed and infected with malice and envy in his heart and with lust in his reins but braggs of his sin in contempt of God and his Judgments then he is at the height of sinne Peccator cum in profundum venerit contemnit Thus where there are but three faculties of the soul all are corrupted by the infection of the Serpent as for reason it was corrupted in Adam when the Serpent perswaded him that he should be like God and the angry part was corrupted in Cain when he was stirred up to kill his Brother without all cause Thirdly the will and the coveting part was corrupted in Lamech so as neither the bond of nature nor the will of God which is a spirituall bond could keep in order but he will shew his uncleanness When not only Adam looseth faith and Cain charity but Lamech chastity then is sinne at the height In the first verse there is a genealogie of four discents wherein there is no matter of great edification Howbeit as when mens Fields and Closes are laid out all must not be taken up for pasture but a little way must be left whereby every man may pass to his own ground so in the Scripture there must be a passage from one storie to another And as in the body for that there are a great many lymbs and parts they must of necessity be compacted one with another by the help of the sinews so both in prophane Writers and in the Scripture many things are set down to shew the dependance that one story hath with another which otherwise would not seem so necessary Even so the shewing how Cain is joyned with Lamech which is done in this verse is very necessary Secondly There is a farther matter in this heaping of names besides the continuance of the story for it would have seemed strange that the Scripture doth make mention of Lamech and his wicked course unless it were withall shewed from whence he came But in setting down that Lamech is of the posterity of wicked Cain no man will marvell that he doe expresse the manners of Cains Besides that we may not think that this heaping of words is vain for as the Fathers note there is no name in Scripture without profitable consideration for howsoever men that deal in woods and base mettals care not to let chips and parings fall from them yet as they that work in gold and Silver will not lose the least parings The like is to be done in reading the word For it is pure as silver that hath been purified seven times Psalm the twelfth More to be desired than gold Psalm the ninteenth therefore we must have this conceit of it that whatsoever seemeth to be superfluous in the word of God hath great value both for faith and life For Isidor saith est in nominibus sacris sua theologia and as Jerome saith in nominibus sacrae Scripturae insculpuntur mysteria Therefore the Apostle saith That the Sonne of God is more excellent than the Angels in as much as he hath a more excellent name than they Hebrews the first chapter and the fourth verse so when the blinde man is sent to wash himself in Shilo John the ninth chapter and the seventh verse The word signifying sent importeth that he could not be purified by that water unless he was sent so in the names of holy Scripture we see as Jerome saith there are ingraven mysteries Now we give names to our Children ad placitum but in the old Testament the Fathers gave names of set purpose with great advise so we see Eve giveth a reason why she called her Sonne Cain Genesis the fourth chapter and the first verse so is there a reason of Seths name Genesis the fourth chapter and the twenty fift verse of Noah the Sonne of Lamech Genesis the fift chapter and the twenty ninth verse of Isaack and Jacob and all the Patriarches The reason why they had this regard in giving of names are reduced to two First in those that are the Children of the godly their names are a kinde of Prophesie concerning the disposition of the Childe which choice of names their Fathers made for that being endued with the spirit of God they foresaw the disposition of their Children On the other side the wicked and the reprobate cannot prophesie yet their names are specula paternae affectionis as the names of godly Children are prophesies puerilis indolis That it is thus in these names we shall observe an encounter made between the seed of Cain and the seed of Seth which as they were of a contrary disposition so gave their Children contrary names Cain called his Sonne Enoch that is dedicated to the pleasure of the world but Seths Sonne is called Enosh that is sorrowfull Genesis the fift chapter On the one side there was Cain on the other Kenan Irad on the one side Jerad on the other Methushael and Methushelah by which names the seed and posterity of godly Sheth shew a contrary affection and such as differeth from the wicked and the seed of Cain as appeareth by the signification of their names Touching the opposition that appeares to be between the generation of Seth and the posteritie of Cain Enochs name who was Cains Sonne signifieth dedication and there is one of the Children of God called by the same name Genesis the fifth chapter and the ninteenth verse but Seths Enoch as Jude saith was the seventh from Adam verse the fourteenth that is one dedicated to the seventh or Sabbath day one that gave himself wholly to the service and worship of God but Cains Enoch was the first and next to Cain that is one dedicated to the first day which is a working day to shew that he was one that gave himself to the affaires of this life that sought to be mighty on earth And this difference of affection holds to this day for all men are followers either of the first or second Enoch The next of Cain is called Irad that is Lord of a City the same that Herod signifieth wherein we see his ambitious spirit that he was such a one as sought to be great in the world And as Jeroboam when he was not able to maintain
two things in this verse The rude rudiments of the World First what the things were he made in the beginning before they were distinguished by God for they were void and vain confused things without order or form all covered with obscure darkness Secondly He sheweth how God did first order and dispose these rude things that they might be fit for distinction and perfection Of the first whereof at this time In the first verse we consider God as Deum Theologicum for it is a matter and a mysterie of Faith that God gave all things their being of nothing But now hereafter we shall consider him tanquam Deum Philosophicum for there is no Philosopher if you allow him his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this matter of the World but will confess that it was God as they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an understanding Spirit which is his power and wisdome framed all things in this order and forme even common natural reason alloweth and admitteth this rule because our Consciences doe see it That in every excellent work the action must by certain degrees and spaces come to perfection for before fire can burn any other things it must first warm then by little and little make black and parch and scorch the combustible thing after that it inflameth it and at last maketh it perfectly of its fiery nature able to doe that to another thing which the fire did to it at the first so every cause by an orderly course of proceeding doth bring his effect to perfection Moses sheweth therefore that God took that course which is very agreeable to natural reason and therefore first setteth down the imperfection of all things at their first beginning and then the degrees by which they come to their perfection For at the first there was a foggie gross darkness after he made the dawning or morning which is a mixture of some light and some darkness And after he made the perfect light So at the first he sheweth touching the waters that they were a bottomless gulfe afterward he made them quiet waters and at last made them salt Seas and fresh Waters Fountains and Springs in most necessary and orderly sort And for the Earth first the beginning of them which were the matter of all earthly things it was a desolate and disordered rude and deformed mass covered with water After God set it above the Waters and made it dry ground as the word signifieth And at the last he brought it to its perfection making it fruitfull and sanctifying it in all necessary things In the handling of which we will first generally behold them together and then severally and apart Touching the first It is even as if he had said all things in Heaven and Earth were not at the beginning in that comely and perfect order and manner in which you behold them now for now they present themselves to our eyes well fashioned adorned and replenished but then they were without form unshapely and void So the waters now we see serve for Navigation above and within them they are most profitable and fruitfull in bringing innumerable store of fith but at the beginning it was made void rude and raging Now we see the Heavens beautified and adorned with stars and lights but at the beginning it was but a gross mist and confused darkness without any light Wherefore one calleth them the swadling Clouts of the Worlds infancie Psal. 104.6 for the Waters overspread and covered all the Earth and the mist of darkness Job saith was the swadling band of the World 38.9 So the Cloudes were the swadling Clouts of the World in which it was wrapt up and the Seas were his Swathes to binde and swadle it up in its best infancie As the Worlds Creation was of nothing in the work of distinction all things were next kin to nothing for that without was rude and confused and within is void and emptic of any good is as a thing of nothing and such were all things saith Moses The Earth being distinguished from the Waters was somthing indeed but yet so dry and unprofitable that it was to no purpose nor use for any thing to dwell and remain on it Now we see the earth is set first if Moses had observed a curious order he should have placed heaven before earth as in the 1. 6. but the manner of the holy Ghost in the scripture is alwayes to begin to speak of that which is freshest in memory and that is commonly that which one speaketh of last The earth is called Toba Tobohu which hath this signification that it was a thing without shew in sight misshapen and deformed to outward view and within to have no inward vertue of good substance to make amends for Tohu signifieth a thing misshapen without and Tobohu signifieth a thing wanting all goodnesse and substance within to make amends for that and so it signifieth a thing of no commendation or value There are many things which are Tohu that is deformed without as Elisha 2 Reg. 2. 23. who was mocked and derided of the boyes in the street but yet within he had inward vertues which made amends for his outward want And there are some things which are Tobohu that is void and wanting all inward substance and good stuffing within without are very goodly and fair in shew to look too as Absolon which without was a man without blemish but within he had no good stufting answerable to that without but rather fraught with pride murder and disobedience But the earth was both Tohu and Tobohu without deformed and within void and empty not that it had no form for that were against reason but it was such a form as was altogether deformed for there is forma 〈◊〉 forma perfectionis and this deformed form it had which made it loathed having nothing to commend it it had as the prophet Esay 34. 11. speaketh line of deformity and the stones of emptinesse threatning to make wicked Cities such deformed things that is he will make them like the world at this state a confused head and the stones of the heap shall not be sound stones but unprofitable rubbish fit for no use Thus we see what the earth was at the beginning Now God in proceeding did replenish and fill that voyd emptynesse which it had with all good things which it wanted and beautified the deformity of it in this most glorious form as now we see and better shall perceive hereafter so that it is evident that both the fulnesse of things with which now it is replenished and this beauty which it hath it then wanted Et Spiritus Dei incubabat superficiei aquarum 2. SEcondly we are to consider of the deep which is called Abyssum which in the Scriptures is properly applyed unto the waters as in the 7. Gen. 11. and Esay 51. 10. and Luke 8. 22 23. These waters were the matter of which the heavens were made for God spread them abroad
good we must not call light darkness nor good evill Esay 5. 16. Secondly In regard of the light of grace we see as Job saith that there are some which are Lucifugae which fly and hate the light such Creatures are unclean Levit. 11. 19. 30. as Batts and Owles among birds Moules and Rats among Beasts they are odious to all men so among places Dungeons and darksome Roomes are odious also And as this is so in things natural so in things spiritual lucifugae actiones are of the like evill nature and odious to God and good men because both such men and their doings have an opposition to light and the author of light They come from darkness of the minde that is ignorance and unbelief and they are begotten by the Prince of darkness the Divell Ephes. 6. 12. and in the end they goe to utter darkness and therefore they are called the works of darkness Rom. 13. 12. And so no marveil though they love darkness and hate light if any cannot abide the light of Gods word to be reproved by it as Herctiques and Hypocrites such dig deep pits to hide their Counsells Esay 29 15. because they see the light is to them evill and as the shadow of death Job 24. 17. The emptiness of good things and the bottomlesnesse of ill things and the deformity of both proceedeth and commeth from darknesse and was inclosed in it as we have seen in it And so spiritually is all found in the ignorance of the truth Ephes. 4. 18 19. either the blindness of mens mindes which is natural or else that which is wilfull when men doe wittingly winke and will not see the light Wherefore we see God made light first before any other good And so our selves must receive spiritual light of knowledge before he will give us any better grace The third sort of men are catchers and fault finders with Gods Creatures such which think to know how Gods works which now are good might have been farre better as if God might have done well to have craved their counsell and help but Gods works both in particular and general are so good and perfect that they could not be mended Wherefore if the light seem ill for us we must confesse and acknowledge that the fault is not in Gods work but in the illnesse and infirmity of our eyes and understanding If the Word seem evil to us know that it seemeth so to us because we and our works are evil and therefore cannot abide the light John 3. 20. Wherefore to conclude that which God hath called and sealed up to be good let no man presume to call and count to be evill Act. 10. 15. For a work belongeth to such which call that is good evill and evill things good and darknesse light Esay 5. 20. But if we love the light of nature and praise God for it Psalm 148. 5 6. And if we love the spirituall light of grace in his word and glorifie and praise God for it 1 Pet. 2. 9. that hath called us out of darknesse into his marveilous light then God will at last reward us with his light of glory and bring us to that inaccessible light wherein he dwelleth which is the father of lights unto which no man can attain unlesse Christ the light of the World bring him and therefore let us pray that the father for his sonnes sake will make a way for us by his spirit of light to which three persons in unity be all praise and glory for ever Amen Et distinctionem fecit Deus inter hanc lucem tenebras Gen 1. 4. verse THere was in the first verse nothing before God made something of nothing after which at the first we saw it to be a 〈◊〉 dark heap without any good form or ability to receive any better But after followed the impregnation and indowment which God gave by which the things first created had a faculty and power given to receive this form which now they have Fourthly ensued the essence and being of all creatures they were prepared by the Spirit and perfected by the word of God where we considered first the essence and being of light and then the nature of it And lastly of all the goodnesse of the light both in regard of the presence of God who in his counsell thought it to be good and also after the creation by his approbation allowed the use and continuance of it unto us Now followeth the distinction and dividing which giveth yet a degree of perfection to the former light more than it had before for at the first he gave light such a being which should prodire in actum and not every being but a speciall good being which is a degree further of order and distinction against disorder and confusion to be in all respects laudible and that not every good being but that which is more an ordered and distinguished and comely good being which work of all other is the perfection of Creation as we shall see in the rest for things though they be never so good in them selves as St. Paul saith 1 Cor. 14. 7. of another thing in the like case yet they cannot be discerned of men to be so neither are they meet for any good use of men unlesse they have a certain distinction and order Order Therefore order is as some say very goodnesse of goodnesse it self for there are many good things which doe cease from being good to us yea become hurtfull being without the rank order and degree either of their set and distinct place or time As fire though it be good in the Chimney yet it is not good nay it is very evill in the top of the house Fire is very good in the Winter to warm us but in the Summer it is not so good but shunned of men So the light not being tempered and proportioned orderly but being any degree too-bright it hurteth and blindeth our eyes that we cannot see Act. 22.6 11. Excellens objectum corrumpit sensum So the fire being in any degree too fierce and too hot in the Chimney and Winter that is not moderated and ordered in a good degree it doth us no good Wherefore we see that a set and a distinct order must be observed in good things both touching the place time and degree And that the contrarie inordination deordination or want of order in these things which is called Babell hereafter that is a confusion maketh things to cease from being good to us which in their own nature are very good It was necessary therefore that God should proceed to this work of distinction as he in wisdome doth This then is as if Moses had said the light was good for else extingueret non distingueret Deus si non esset bonum he would not else have distinguished it but dashed it in peeces and destroyed it again Therefore because it was good he separated it and set it apart from darknesse by it self
hour every day to perswade us that are men which are farre more beholden unto God than any Creature else and yet it will not avail to make us obedient to his word As for conformity to his word it was sic even after the manner and form in all respects as he would have it But if we doe a thing it is lame and unperfect in some respect and not conformable to his will Last of all constancie and perpetuity Psal. 119. 91. they continue still according to their ordinance for all things serve thee He hath set thee a Law which shall not be broken Psal. 148. 6. For it is a wonder that such Seas of waters which hang and fly over our heads daily doe not fall on us and with their weight destroy us for we see what a bucker of water is for heavinesse in his fall yet the pillers of God uphold them that they fall not which pillers one would think should be aere that is made of brasse but they are aëreae airie pillers and yet last longer and are more durable then the greatest brasen pillers that we can imagine for in time they would corrupt and be eaten up of the waters but yet the power of God hath so strengthned the Aire that being the weakest thing that is as our Proverb saith As weak as Water not being able to sustain it self no not to be a piller to hold up a feather from the ground yet it is made a Firmament that is a most firm sure and durable piller to uphold all these Clouds and bottels of water above they move motu immobili varietate invariabili and so they continue after Gods ordinance even unto this day as the Psalmist saith Expansum autem hoc Deus Vocavit Coelum sic fuit vespera fuit mane diei secundi Gen. 1. 8. WHich words contain in them the second principall part of the second dayes work which is the word of denomination and entitling the Firmament thus with a new name When God made Abraham the Father of the faithfull he exchanged and gave him a new name Gen. 17. 5. When Jacob was exalted to the like dignity his name was also changed and he called Israel Gen. 32. 28. So here having made ex abysso Coelum that is as some say Coelum a coeno of the dreggs of that gulfe then he vouchsafeth according to the dignity of 〈◊〉 to give it a name agreeable thereunto Touching the denomination in general I shewed four things before which I will not repeat now but only call to your remembrance The first was The name of things are of freehold and therefore must move us to attention because though these works are beneficiall to all Creatures yet the apprehension of their names belong only to man at whom God did aime and levell in this work The second That the things which are divers in nature must be distinguished in name The third The manner of giving names must be in proportion agreeable to the nature of them And lastly What the significations of the names are Not repeating this generality we will now descend to the particularity of this name and see by the notations of the word what is signified thereby The old English called the Heavens aloft as though it were lifted up as it was out of the deep The Latines call it Caelum quasi caelatum that is embroidered and garnished as it is The Grecians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi terminus mundi as it were the border and bound of the World The Hebrews call it Shameshe Concerning which word there is three several opinions all which may be well and to good purpose received There are of the Hebrews which deduce the word from the verb Shama which is to wonder because of the admiration which all men have of this glorious World especially if we consider with David Psal 8. 4 5. that God having such excellent and glorious Creatures in Heaven should so notwithstanding regard man which is but a clod of earth as to endue him with these divine graces and with a reasonable soul The admirablenesse of this work consisteth first In that they being made of the dreggs of the deep are notwithstanding the most splendent and glorious Creatures of God Also in that they moving continually are immobilia and varying and changing in their courles alwaies are notwithstanding invariabilia for they move motu immobili varietate invariabili Also in that they consisting of water which is most weak and infirm are nothwithstanding most sure and firm of all other things The other opinion taketh it from the verb Magam and the adverb Iham as if God had appointed with his finger to the Heavens and said Here are all things if you want light waters either for soul or bodie here they are to be found and here you may have it as indeed all good graces come from above from our Father in Heaven Jam. 1. 17. The second note touching the word is in that it is of the duall number which implyeth that the Heavens are double and two fold which is apparent in the 17. verse where it is said that the Starres are in Heaven and in the 26. verse it is said that the Fowls also flye in Heaven Now this is plain and sensible in every mans eyes that the starres are not where the Birds doe flie neither doe the Fowles flie where the Starres are Out of Psal. 68. 33. the ancient Hebrews doe note to us that there was a former and later Heaven a higher and a lower Heaven made by God the lower Heavens in the Scriptures are usually termed and called Coeli Psal. 148. 4. and the upper Heavens which is the Seat of God is called Coeli Coelorum 1 Reg. 8. 27. and in other places for as there was in the Temple of Salemon Sanctum Sanctum Sanctorum so in the the great Temple of the world there is Coelum Coelum Coelorum to answer to it in the upper and higher Heavens as was shadowed in the Temple is the mercy Seat the Altar and the Propiciatory but in the nether is atrium I. Benjamin c that is a division of severall Courts for Starres Clouds Fowls Men c. Between the higher and the nether Heavens as it was in the Temple there is a Vail or Curtain spread Heb. 6. 19. which doth part the one from the other Besides these two Heavens we read of a third Heaven 2 Cor. 12. 2. which is the highest number we read of in Gods word so that besides the Merchant mans Heavens which is prosperous winde and besides the Husbandmans Heaven from whence commeth seasonable weather in Summer and Winter there is a third Heaven which we must seek for which is Regnum Coelorum for the Fowles doe flie per medium Coelorum 17. and 26. verses as the Angell did Rev. 8. 13. therefore there is a Heaven on both sides of this middle Heaven The impressions of the Aire are the
which is taxatio diet 1. For the first we see That reason consenteth to that which Salomon saith Preach 8. 6. That there is an appointed time for every action under the Sunne but especially 〈◊〉 it be a matter of weight and serious businesse indeed Then reason wills that we should make speciall choyce of a time when secluding all other things we may intend only and wholly to it alone For if we should not have a certain time appointed to us we of our selves are so carelesse that we would make accompt of very few dayes or none at all to sanctifie unto the Lords worship This matter then of Gods worship and Religion being a matter of our soul is the most weighty and serious businesse that can be in as much as the soul is the worthiest part of us And therefore it concerneth the freehold of our souls so neerly that if we neglect or set light by it Agitur de anima our soul is in jeopardy But if we set light of our soul which being so precious a thing is worth looking to yet in another regard it is a weighty duty and therefore we ought to be carefull of it because God is worthy of this service and duty which is opus Sabati wherefore indeed there is no time of our life but that we should think chiefly of this as the 〈◊〉 held That a man ought perpetually to be present and conversant with God And in our words send up short prayers and praises to God And that this is a bounden duty daily to be performed it is agreeable to the word of God Numb 28. which was shewed in their daily sacrifice every morning and evening offering oblations and incense to God But who is it that is able all the dayes of his life night and day to intend his businesse as he ought for this belonged as a duty not only unto the Jews but unto every Christian now Seeing this one businesse is to be intended above all other and every thing is then best ordered when we appropriate and apply the time and our studies only and wholly to it as the proverb is Quod unice id unum quod solicite id solum agas for this is the wisdome of man in matters of this life Then we must needs hearken to the counsell of the Prophet Psal. 46. 10. Desistite be still or leave off other things that ye may know I am the Lord c. And to the advise of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 5. we may leave off other matters and must consent so to doe for a time that the more fully and wholly we may be given to prayer and fasting This is called of some Induciae seculo a truce taken with the world for a time that not being troubled with the affairs thereof we may only set before us as much as our weak natures can our duty in the service of God which is our sanctification Therefore God appointed to this spiritual work a time at large that is appointed some time in which only and wholy Adam by necessity was enjoyed to this work Wherefore by all conveyance of reason by a much greater necessity must we know that we also must have a time at large for this businesse 2. The second point is That it was necessary not only that there should be a time at large that is some time of our dayes but also a certain set time or day appointed for it for otherwise God should have slender service or scarce any at all for if it were left at our liberty we would take liberty to serve him when we list and when we could intend it and when we had nothing else to doe Therefore one said well according to St. Peter Christiana libert as pallium est pessimis moribus And I referre me to your judgement how well God will be served if there were no time certainly appointed seeing this which is set down is so ill kept Those therefore which urge Christian liberty and would not have a set certain day but every day a Sabath they would have God stand at that portion of time and service which mens devotion and liberality would afford This then would be the inconvenience of uncertainty in this matter that perpetuum Sabatum jejunium would prove none at all And therefore God saw it necessary that we must have a set and a certain time And in this the Law of Nature agreeth with the Law of God for the Heathen had their statae feriae set and appointed holy dayes and the Hebrews call their holy-dayes by the name of Mogne which is a staid certain time still unmovable not at random but set down and appointed firm and perpetual 3. Now we are come to the third point That it must be one of the seven in the week which came not by natures light but by Gods ordinance his word setting it down therefore was it told Adam that he should tell it to the Posterities to come By which means the Gentills came to the knowledge of it and held it by tradition for in their books we shall plainly see it Lucianus testifieth that as the Jews kept their holy-day in which they worship God on the Saturday the Turks on the Friday the Egyptians on the Thursday the Assyrians on the Wednesday the Persians on the Tuesday The Grecians on the Monday And Christians now doe keep their day of worship the Sunday and first day of the week So that in all quarters and parts of the Earth every day and part of time is kept as a set day of divine worship And for the seventh day we shall see that the Pythagoreans had received a glimmering of this knowledge for they called the number of 7 numerum quietis and the number hallowed of God and the divine number or Gods number which they had no doubt not by the light of Nature and reason but by tradition from their Elders and so delivered it to their Posterity It is strange which Eusebius recordeth out of two Heathenish Writers 13. de preparatione Evangelii The one of Linus verse 2. That God made and finished all things the seventh day the other of Hesiod we agreeing to that saith that therefore the seventh day is the Lords holy-day And on the seventh day therefore the Gentiles called on their Gods and had their meetings in it and called the number of 7 Minerva by the name of their God Macrobius affirmeth that the Gentiles did mean by Pan and Jano and all other names of Gods only the great God Apollo as their chief God whom they served the seventh day But this is our rule most plainly revealed from Gods word that it is his will that we should keep the seventh day holy for seeing all the dayes are his he should have done no injurie if he had appointed and dedicated all the dayes of the week to be spent and imployed on his service yet he hath not done so St. Augustine saith That if God had
given us but one day of the seven to work in for our own commodity it had been more than he had owed us it had not been given of duty but of his largesse and liberality But now seeing he hath not given us one or two or every other day for our businesse but the whole six and reserved but one of the seven for himself to be served in this is so equall that none can complain or think to be hardly dealt withall If any man shall now be so sacrilegious having six dayes given him freely as to take from him that hath but one reserved to himself it is intollerable injury and not to be excused and as David saith 2 Samuell 12. 5. he may well be called the Child of death The fourth and last point is taxatio diei As the World had the knowledge of the former three points so this point standeth upon very good and sufficient reason for seeing that the day is or deined in remembrance of this work and benefit of Creation for that is the end why the Turks and Jews did celebrate holy-dayes in them to remember some notable work and benefit therefore it is reason that God should make choise of such a day in which the benefit might be best remembred And of all the dayes in the week we shall see the seventh day to be the fittest to retain and keep in memory the commendation of this benefit and work of Creation When God had performed this great work of Creation he took order also because it was the greatest benefit which as yet the World had or knew of that the seventh day should be alwaies had in remembrance because he had fully perfected all the work in it and the very same reason which made the Jews Sabath on the seventh day doth now also move Christians to keep it on the first day in the week for it is Gods will that the lesser benefit should surcease and give place to the greater Jer. 23. 7. and that the benefit of Creation as the lesser should yeeld and give place to the work of Redemption which is the greater benefit When Christ cometh we shall not then extoll and magnifie the deliverance out of Egypt but that shall cease and not be counted the greatest benefit But we shall talk of Christs work and deliverance from Hell and Satan So the day of Creation must give place to the day of Redemption Wherefore the Apostles after Christs Ascention changed the seventh day unto the first day of the week which we shall see is most fit to keep in memory this greatest work and benefit of Redemption as Athanasius and Ambrose doe hold and prove Because if B were the Dominical letter when Christ was borne his Nativity was on the first day of the week his Resurrection Apparition of the Holy-Ghost and Ascention was also on the first day in the week And also the first day is most fit to retain in minde the restauration of the World So it is not unmeet to remember the Creation which was begun the first day And besides all this it may serve as the fittest time to cause us to remember the benefit of glorification for seeing our Inheritance is in light Coll. 1. 12. And God made light the first day to come out of darknesse 2 Cor. 4. 6. Gen. 1. 3. therefore it is most fit to put us in minde of that also We will beginne the next time where we now leave And you remember the last time according to the division we then made we spake somewhat of the institution and observation or use of the Sabath The former being implyed in the word blessing the other in the word sanctifying Touching which we say with the ancient Fathers that quodlibet officium Dei est beneficium nostrum Therefore Adam having received so many benefits of God was bound by necessarie duty to performe some service to God for them which every day in part he should have done as duty required But some one day he ought wholly to apply all the powers of his minde and all the parts and members of his body about it alone Wherefore we have shewed 1. first That there must be some one day or time set a part to the solemne intending of the work and worship of God 2. Secondly That it ought to be some certain day 3. Thirdly That God measuring out his vectigal temporis the tribute of time due to him did assigne it to be once in seven dayes which revolution of seven hath a special use both in things natural and in things spiritual for in Religion as in seven dayes is the Sabath so in the feast of the seventh moneth is the feast of the Tabernacle or the feast of weeks 4. The last point is a positive day and time namely the seventh day which God chose as most fit for his work Touching which the Jews themselves did not so much stand in the strict limitation of the set day For they held That if a man by sleep or 〈◊〉 knew nor certainly which was the seventh day it was not a matter absolutely necessary so that he kept one day of the seven To this end therefore of worshipping God he would have us make a truce with the World And as Augustine saith we must have a vacation from the works of our Vocation And as Christ would have us Luke 10. 42. we must lay aside Martha's part that not being troubled with many things we might attend to Mary's part The better for separating our selves from worldly things and dedicating our selves to heavenly things is the ground of this institution Sabatum Ptradisi and this is the end and observation of the Sabath of Paradise Sinai But the Sabath of Sinai had three other accessory ends added to this 1. The first is Politicall set down Exod. 23. 12. 2. The second is Theicall or Ceremoniall which Ceremonies are excellently well divided thus 1. Some closures or fences Some were appointed as closures or fences to inclose and defend or aid the Law Ceremonies of Sinay as the sixth Precept had this Ceremonie for his fence That men should eat no blood to signifie 〈◊〉 them how greatly they should abhor murder 2. Rudiments to the Gospell The other Types or Ceremonies were rudiments and instructions leading us darkly as by Riddles and 〈◊〉 to some necessary points of the Gospel So the Ceremonie of the Saboth taught us a double Lesson and Document the one of a benefit already past and exhibited as of the Creation done on the seventh day The other of a benefit to be exhibited hereafter and perfected also on the seventh day that is the work of Redemption and Regeneration So now the promised Saviour being come that Ceremony of the set seventh day 〈◊〉 and the first day in the week is in its stead There was also another Ceremonie Heb. 4. 9. and that taught us to rest from finne in this life and
it became a great stumbling block to many in Religion and Divinity for where they compared this with the history of other writers and seek for a place where are four such great rivers coming from one head and fountain they died in it And again missing also in the knowledge of the Land of 〈◊〉 taking it for another Land it grew to a marvailous difficulty that they could not tell how to reconcile this part of holy 〈◊〉 with the histories of other men But I will come to the particulars and touching the first River it is 〈◊〉 after three names first by name it is called 〈◊〉 Secondly by the 〈◊〉 and compassing of it about havilah Thirdly by the commodies of that Country ophir which being taken by 〈◊〉 is included by gold 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 for by Gold is understood all kinde of metals by 〈◊〉 all kinde of Perfumes and Spices by the 〈◊〉 all kindes of Jewells and pretious Stones Touching the name it 〈◊〉 in Hebrew the rich and plentifull River which name 〈◊〉 giew to be called Armelcha the 〈◊〉 call it the kingly 〈◊〉 or stately River if we compare this River to Saul 1 〈◊〉 10. 23. We shall see it well called so For as he was taller by the head and shoulders then all the men in Israell so was this river 〈◊〉 longer and did passe with more state then all other The second is the circuit and compasse by the coast for it compasseth and runneth along by the Country Havilah the name of which Land and Country made the doubt amongst writers because in the 〈◊〉 we read of two Countries of that name the one in 〈◊〉 10. 29. For the sonne of Heber which is called Havilah did 〈◊〉 and it is sure that one of his sonnes also did plant himself in Ophir The other is 〈◊〉 Kings 10. 22. which is in the 〈◊〉 parts of the 〈…〉 of India And the old writers taking it for this which is very 〈…〉 from that did 〈◊〉 in the matter There was another Havilah which came from 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 Gen. 10. 7. which dwelt in that Country where the river 〈◊〉 is of which now some are called 〈…〉 In Strabo this Land is called Chavilah 〈◊〉 which as you see is very like 〈◊〉 and in this place was the Kings royall place and seat in the citie of Shushan 1 Hester 2. 5. Which for the commodities of it was called the citie of joy or pleasure as indeed Chavilah signifieth for in Hebrew it importeth most fruitfull rich and plentifull as if it were ever bringing forth and yet ever with childe This is the Country then that is next neighbor to Paradise bordering neerest upon it Touching the third point we necessarily infer and prove by the fruits and commodities which are here named that it must needs be this Havilah of which we have spoken for only it hath store of 〈◊〉 things as Plinie and Strabo doe witnesse The particular fruits here specified be those which in the opinion of all ancient writers are set down figuratively namely one chief for all of that kinde for it was the infinite store of all these rich commodities which made the King of Persia so proud in the City Shushan as we read in the 1 Hester First for Gold we see that it had not only store but also store of the best Gold for there were divers sorts as we doe make difference of ours here though there was great plenty of base and common Gold which came from Ophir yet the best and purest Gold came from Havilah For the other kinde of Bdelium some take it for a precious stone but indeed it is a tree and not a stone by which rare and excellent tree all spice and sweet perfumes which did there abound are comprehended and understood The third fruit is of jewels and precious stones where the best of all is specified for all the rest namely the Onyx stone for the Sardys is but a compound of it and of this kinde of stone we read was set in Aarons breast plate and also we read it to be one of the gates of the City and the Caldees doe call this stone the mother and seed of all other precious stones whatsoever and therefore doth contain all the rest And thus yee see what he meaneth by the fruits and commodities of this land by which Moses thinketh he hath sufficiently described unto us the place where Paradise was Now we must note and understand that all these commodities are in Havilah which is without Paradise and as it were in the backside and out-houses for these are not the things which doe principally commend Paradise but by this Moses is willing to shew the difference between the worldly Paradise and the Godly Paradise For worldlings when they come to Havilah and whilest they are amongst the gold and sweet perfumes and spices and precious stones which is before they come to Paradise they sit down there as if they were at their journeys end and had found the Paradise and happinesse which they looked for But Gods Children never stay nor rest themselves in Havilah amongst these earthly things but goe on still till they come to the tree of life which is in the mid'st of Paradise And as it is erronious to think that Gods Church is where all these earthly things are So on the the other side were it erronious to conclude that that could not be Gods Paradise where gold and silver and prosperity is Because Havilah and this 〈◊〉 is without the circuit and compasse of Paradise for though indeed the tree of knowledge and of life be the works of it yet the other trees of pleasure and profit are not denyed alwaies to the Church of God For God willed the People 〈◊〉 offer all their treasures Exod. 35. 4. And yet though these outward things doe accompanie the Church and profession of the truth yet we are not to rest in them as the true works of Paradise but as things adjacent and as part of the world in the outside thereof yet it is the property of our earthly nature more to admire these things than the true treasures of Paradise For when the Israelites saw 〈◊〉 first they asked what it was for they were ignorant of it they could not understand it nor tell what to make of it comming from Heaven but when they first saw gold glistering they called it by this name give it me There is no comparison between lignum vitae and lignum Bdelii nor between a wedge of gold and the tree of knowledge so saith Job 28. 16. yet the world thinketh that Job was in an error for they think all knowledge nothing in comparison of a wedge of gold But remember what our Saviour Christ saith Though we could get all the world what would it avail if we lose our souls Matth. 26. 15 16. wherefore we must remember to say as Eusebius reporteth of one Arcelius who being busie about worldly 〈◊〉 was wont often to say to
estate for it is a great point of wisedome so to distinguish the natures of Gods Creatures as to give them fit and proper names expressing their natures he knew as it appeareth not only rerum Idola but also was able to give verborum idiomata that is such a propriety of words and names to each severall thing whereby their divers natures and qualities might be discerned The man therefore gave names to all the Cattell c. The reason of the Mandate or Writ as we have heard was partly to honour man as Gods Lievtenant on earth and as Lord of all his Creatures and partly to express the great and singular wisedome and knowledge which God then had induced him withall The Content of which was to call a generall muster and assembly of all his Creatures before Adam that a survey might be made to see whether any meet help for man might be found to avoyd solitariness because it was not good for him to be alone and it was Gods purpose at this solemne meeting and Parliament to invest man into his dominion and to declare him to be their Lord by giving them names Now in this verse is first contained the execution of the Writ shewing all was so and then in the latter end of the verse is set down the retorn of the Writ in these words he found not a meet help for him As the Commandement had 2. parts namely the considering their natures and giving them names so hath all wise men distinguished by all the ancient Hebrews calling some men of profound judgement and deepe knowledge and others men of eloquence and excellent judgement and utterance Both which gifts of God hardly are found together in any one man 〈◊〉 are given ro divers diversly as it pleaseth the Giver But to Adam at the first both were given in a full and perfect measure and both of them are here gounded upon Gods allowance as being lawfull and good and also upon Gods Commandement as a thing most agreeable to the nature of man namely to spend his time in study for the increase of knowledge and in declaration of his knowledge to others by wise sentences and words for to this end God made man animal rationis orationis particeps with which no other earthly creature is endowed therefore the ancient Fathers have noted in Adam's two estates the one to be pater viventium the other to bee pater scientium that is The Father and teacher of all knowledge for as Tubal is said to be the father and author of Musick Gen. 4. 21. so may Adam be said to bee pater Theologiae Philosophiae Gramaticae Rhetoricae c. hee was the first that practised Contemplation and the first that practised Eloquution by that excellent light of nature which God had given him and the first as here wee see that gave proper sit and significant names and words to expresse the natures of things and hee was not only the father of all the liberal Sciences but also of all mechanical Arts Gen. 3. 19. pater agriculturae c. by all which wee briefly see the perfection of his minde and the excellency of his gifts with which hee was endowed So that Adam then must needes bee granted to bee the first and the chiefest Author of all Knowledge and Learning that ever since in all ages of the world hath beene among men for from him it was derived and spread abroad among his posterity into all parts of the world for Adam's knowledge both of Divinity and all other natural things was derived to the house of Sheth and from him to Noah and so conveyed to the house of Sem and after remained amongst the sonnes of Heber Gen. 10. 21. and from thence was kept and continued in Abraham's family which were called the Children of the East Gen. 52. 6. from which East parts of the world this Knowledge and Learning which was first in Adam was spread abroad among the learned men of Egypt Acts 7. 22. In which learning of the AEgyptians Moses was trayned up and therefore was prepared not only by the instrument of God's spirit but also by the known received truth of the knowledge of these points in all the world to set down unto us these things of our fore-Fathers in the beginning of the world and it may appeare by this that Adam was worthy to be counted the Father of all knowledge and learning because herein is seen the perfection thereof in him for to name all good creatures so infinite in number and so divers in kinde and that to give to every one of them a distinct name and yet so fit and proper to them according to their natures as that God would not change nor 〈◊〉 them but say so shall they be called this argueth in him an absolute perfection of knowledge which hath not since been had As he was the Father of knowledge within so was he of utterance and expressing it by words because we say that he was the first Linguist that was in the world and indeed intelligence and utterance have very neer affinity and friendship as the Latine words shew for Ratio and Oratio doe sound alike and in Greek the word doth signifie not only the act of contemplation for knowledge but also the act of utterance for speech and conference by which it is made known for the one is verbum 〈…〉 the other verbum ore 〈◊〉 and is agreed upon by all learned men that the Hebrew tongue is the originall tongue and most ancient by which Adam expressed his minde Hebrew the the ancient language and therefore it is called of many the holy 〈◊〉 for this tongue went from Adam to Noah from Noah to 〈◊〉 and from thence 〈◊〉 is manifested that it continued as the general tongue and language in all the whole world untill the confusion of 〈◊〉 Eusebius 〈…〉 doth prove this most plainly and 〈◊〉 that the 〈◊〉 tongue was the first and most ancient from the beginding and that which Adam here used in 〈◊〉 names to all the Greatures for he of purpose here confuteth the 〈◊〉 which doe affirm that all knowledge language and learning are derived from Chaldea which he first disproveth by the letters of the Alphabet And that the Greek tongue was derived from the 〈…〉 proveth because 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 which Greek words signifie their men of learning and knowledge are words plainly derived from the 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 they doe borrow their 〈◊〉 and original As therefore 〈◊〉 knowledge and wisdome being 〈◊〉 is most perfect and absolute so is this tongue and language of 〈◊〉 which Adam 〈…〉 rich and sufficient of it 〈◊〉 For whereas all other tongues even the Greek doe shew their beggerlinesse and argue and she 〈◊〉 imperfection in this that they borrow words and 〈◊〉 from their senior tongues and because they are sain to make 〈…〉 pounds to expresse their minds but this Hebrew and holy 〈◊〉 on the other side borrow 〈◊〉 not of any tongue
〈…〉 all and also 〈◊〉 in such simplicity of words and yet hath such a 〈◊〉 and majestle in every phrase that Eusebius faith well of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 〈…〉 for so we see that God approveth all the names which Adam giveth to the Creatures saying that as the man called them so should their 〈◊〉 and so continue to the worlds end Now we are come from this generall consideration of his tongue and language to consider of the names in particular which he gave Touching it I will give you but a taste of a few because it were infinite to reckon all the excellent significant and most fit names of the Creatures which he gave Adam having first severed the Beasts from the Fowls as being distinct in nature among all the Beasts he seeing a Horse he knew that God had made him for man to ride and trundle upon for his case and better speed doth therefore at the first sight according to the nature of him give this name which in 〈◊〉 signifieth a swift Runner So seeing the Sheep and knowing that God had made them to beare wooll to cloath and keep warm he by and by calleth him the man clothier An Asse he nameth the mase Porter because he knew his nature was to carry mens burdens c. So for the Fowls he seeing the Eagle to be the Prince and chief of Birds giveth him a name of the noblenesse of his nature The Peacock he calleth a pround Bird of that inward property of pride which he knew to be in him The Stork he calleth the gratefull loving or pitifull bird for the dutifull care and kindnesse which he hath of his Damme So for creeping things he calleth the Serpent by the name of subtilnesse or deceivablenesse which knowledge of his dangerous nature might have made him beware and take heed of him The Locust hath his name of going out in swarms The Bee hath his name given him of his artificiall cunning workmanship with which God hath naturally indued him in making his Combes of honey and waxe By all which Adams great wisdome and insight into the nature of things is seen because the name doth so fitly answer the nature of things And thus much of the execution of the Decree concerning the denomination of Creatures Now we are come to the 〈◊〉 of this Writ which is set down in these words He found not a meet help for him Touching which we may observe that he returneth not the answer of this that he had given meet names to all the Creatures by which they should be called for ever But letting this passe he saith that He could not finde a meet help for Man which sheweth indeed that this was the most chief and principall end of the assembling the Creatures before him that he might finde a help and fit companion for him if any were for not finding argueth a seeking and seeking argueth a desire to have a companion like him and that desire argueth a want which want made him to seek diligently but he could not finde therefore here he returneth Non est inventus This is then q.d. somewhat Adam found by search and seeking namely the divers natures and qualities of good Creatures which were made for his good But yet because they were all bruitish and unreasonable he refused them all to be his mate for in Adam God had placed naturally not only appetitus socii sed etiam similitudinis that is to be one of his own kinde nature and disposition but he found none as yet This confession of his want doth argue there this conclusion of his desire to God as Augustine saith 〈◊〉 simile non est simile ergo Domine fac simile Vocavissetque Adam nominibus pecudem quamlibet volucrem Coeli omnemque bestiam agri non aderat Adamo auxilium commodum Gen. 1. 20. Octob. 19. 1591. I Shewed that the Precept was directed to the Beasts and Fowl to come before man Gods Lieutenant whereby he was invested with honour and supremacie above the beasts here Gods generation in the 4. verse is named by man This verse standeth upon the execution and return of the Precept directed to man which commandement as I told you stood upon two parts Seeing and Calling The Hebrews in their tongue call themselves not only men of speculation but also men of utterance and practise adduxit ut videret vocaret It is received as approved in divinity that in Adam are two estates First out of the fourth verse of this Chapter that though God be Pater generationis yet Adam is Pater generatorum the father of the World as in the 20. verse of the next Chapter Hevah had her name for that she was Mater cunctorum viventium Adam pater contemplationis And secondly hence they say he is called Pater contemplationis for by the Divines both ancient and new there are in Adam two perfections the one of Minde and Understanding the other of his Will the one is gratia gratis dats the other is aceepta the one concerneth his Wisdome the other his Justice Hence they gather his Wisdome by the knowledge of natures to give apt names and his Justice out of the last verse of the first Chapter God bash made man righteous but they have sought many inventions saith the Wiseman Preach 7. 29. that is God made mans minde without corruption in the beginning his will was free his thoughts strait his understanding without questions The multitude of Quarists and Quomodists of those that make doubts and questions come from the Devill who saith in the beginning of the third Chapter cur praecepit vobis Deus ut non comederitis Wisdome in contemplation and utterance Tertulltan saith well that the knowledge of man standeth either in scientiis mutis as in contemplation in videre or in scientiis disertis that is in utterance in vocare that is as the School-men say in the science of Reals and Nominals For the first which is to weigh in silence Paul in 1 Cor. 13. 2. saith There is a knowledge of 〈◊〉 and of Mysterie Adam as it were induced with a propheticall spirit in the 23. verse said that she was bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh being before in an heavie sleep There was in Adam a science of Mysteries in that he was made in Gods Image the 26. of the first Chapter and by his obedience he knew the Mysterie of the tree of life which was his erernall reward as it is in the end of the 22. verse of the next Chapter Now last for the knowledge of The knowledge of Adam in naural Philosophie Philosophie it was in Adam The knowledge of wisdom is as gold of the Creation as of silver this of nature and of names as pearl Of Salomon Great was the knowledge of Salomon in natural Philosophie who spake of the nature of Trees of Beasts and of Fowls 1 Kings 4 33. Of Moses And Moses he was
by Saul was after the Lords spirit was taken from him and another evill spirit vexed him so unclean speeches proceed not from the holy Ghost that delighteth in modest termes 2. Again the term of knowledge is used as opposite to passion to teach men that they must dwell with their wives as men of knowledge the first of Peter the third and the seventh verse that they be not like fed horses neighing after their neighbours wives Jeremiah the fift chapter and the eighth verse Afterward The circumstance of time is noted in the word Afterward That is not before he was deprived of Paradise but when he was driven out For the pleasure of marriage is a mortall pleasure For as Christ saith In this world men marry but they that shall be counted worthie of the life to come neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the Angells of God Luke the twentieth chapter The use of marriage is that because men die they should beget sonnes and leave a posterity to stand up after them But the Children of the Resurrection dye as men and therefore he was made to beget Children And for spirituall joy or comfort it is none But postquam spiritus deficit venium ad solatia carnis It is a carnall pleasure For as Cain being cursed out of Gods City built himself a City in the fourth chapter of Genesis As Saul being cast out of the Lords favour would be honoured of man in the first of Samuell fift chapter So Adam being deprived of spirituall comfort and pleasure useth marriage as a carnall pleasure P●…itio For the point of division jointly in these this pair of Bretheren we have a view of all mankinde Adam had more Children but the Holy Ghost contenteth himself to set out mankinde in these two Even as the 〈◊〉 saith of Abraham that he had two sonnes one born after the flesh another after the Spirit Galatians the fourth chapter and the two and twentieth verse So were the sonnes of Adam To Cain are reckoned as his posteritie Henoch Lamech Nimrod Pharaoh and all the wicked To Abell Enoch Noah Shem Abraham Isaac and all the faithfull which is the great partition of mankinde For the holy Scripture setteth out which is Gods City that is Sion and Jerusalem and which is the Devils City by Babylon The one answering to Abell the other to Cain They set out the Devls city by amor sui ad contemptum Dei Gods city by amor Dei usque ad contempium sui Again by Abell is set out those that are in state of grace by Cain they that are in state of nature By the one are set out all them that are born after the flesh by the other such as are born anew and led by the Spirit Galatians chapter the fourth And this partion is made of all mankinde through the world till that last 〈◊〉 which Christ shall make of the Sheepe from the 〈◊〉 in the five and twentieth chapter of Mathew This partition we see in these two For that although they were both of one Father and Mother Contrary natures yet such was the diversitie and 〈◊〉 of their nature and disposition as they fitly represent the diverse state of mankinde The 〈◊〉 is in respect of their names the 〈◊〉 in respect of their works for the one rose up against the other and slew him Cain and Abell why so called The Devills 〈◊〉 in respect of their names is the one is called Cain that is a purchaser or possessioner that is such a one as thought it his 〈◊〉 to enjoy this world and contrariwise misery to lose it and the possessions thereof Abell 〈◊〉 sorrow and vanity But the other Abell that is sorrow and vanity such a one as doth with Salomon account all things in this life vanity and vexation of spirit in the first chapter of the book of Ecclesiastes such a one as hath sorrow by reason of continuall sinnes whereby he offendeth God of them Christ saith in the 〈◊〉 chapter of Matthew Blessed are they that mourne and sorrow for that they are out of their place As the Prophet speaketh in the one hundred thirty seventh Psalm By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept when we remembred thee O Sion For Abell was not a City of this world as Cain but was one of those that sought for a City in Heaven that was to come Hebrews the thirteenth and the second verse He is called Abell that is vanitie 1. First in respect of the shortnesse of his life in which regard every man is altogether vanity Psalm the thirty ninth 2. Then in respect of the afflictions of this life in which respect he saith Every man is vanity And therefore they that are of Abell will say We are strangers and sojourners as all our Fathers were Psal. 39. They are such as though they be in the world yet use it as if they used it not the first to the Corinthians the seventh chapter They set not their felicitie in this world as Cain but reckon all things in this world vanity and vexation of spirit and long to be restored to their heavenly Country 2. Contrary works Secondly As they have diverse dispositions so their works are contrary For as the Apostle saith of Ismael and Isaac Gal. 4. He that was borne after the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the Spirit So did Cain persecute Abell as the Apostle witnesseth Joh. 1. 3. that Cain was of that wicked One and slew his Brother Why Cain slew Abell And wherefore slew he him Because his own works were evill and his Brothers good So as their dispositions were diverse their works were contrary So in Cain there is a resemblance of all the persecutors and oppressors that have been in the world The Wicked persecute the Godly by hand and tongue And Abell is a pattern of all the Martyrs that have been slain by the hand of Cain or wounded and persecuted by the tongue of Ismael who by mocking persecuted Isaac in the fourth chapter to the Galatians In these two is fulfilled that envy which God proclaimed between the woman and the Serpent and between their seeds Genesis the third and the fifteenth verse who was not only of the seed of that evill one Joshua the first and the third verse that was of the Serpent and the reason why the name of Cain is set down in the Bible is to shew the performance of that Prophesie Genesis the third and the fifteenth verse and to shew his wrath upon the Vessels of wrath Romans the ninth and the twenty second such as was Cain Cham Pharoah and Nebuchadnezar and all the wicked ones of his Race for the order of their comming into the world as Cain who was first born was worst and Abell the last born was best so it is with all mandkind For as the Apostle saith first commeth that which is naturall and then that which
shall leave a seed behinde him Cain and Abell resemble all mankinde Elect Reprobate as the variety in names so in natures and dispositions Secondly you heard that from this tree doe sprout two branches that is a pair of brethren to whom all mankinde may be reduced from whom both Sion the City of God and Babell the City of Satan take their beginning concerning whom in the variety of their names we observed the variety of their natures the one called Cain that is a possession sets out those people whose felicity is to get and which count it the only misery to lose the things of this life the other called Abell that is vanity doth set out unto us those which reckon all things in this life to be vanity as the Preacher teacheth us to value them thereby we considered what account we made both of the one and the other In the world Cain is called a great Jewell and Abell despised as a thing of naught Second and third Division Now we are come to a second and third division 1 In their Trades For in this verse they are divided by their trades and calling 2. In their Religion in the next by their religion and profession in the service of God both which divisions have their ground the second chapter and the seventh verse Man consists of Body and Soul to fill both Earth and Heaven For where man is said to consist of two parts body and soul the one formed of the dust of the earth the other breathed by God that is to shew that as according to Gods commandement the first chapter of Genesis and the twenty sixt verse He hath a care to fill the earth by bringing forth children so he must be as carefull to fill heaven by a second generation that as he was to till the earth from whence his body was taken chapter the third Mans vocation maintain life and religion a spirituall life So he must imploy his study in Gods service from whence he received his soul his care must be not only to leave behinde him a long generation but semen sanctum Mal. the second chapter as they must have a vocation whereby to maintain naturall life So they must be religious and offer sacrifice that leading a spirituall life here on earth they may obtain eternall life in heaven 1. The naturall life then the spirituall and why But as Cain was first born after the flesh and then Abell So alwaies flesh goeth before the spirit nature before grace as the Apostle witnesseth the first of the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter That is not first which is spirituall but that which is naturall and then that which is spirituall Therefore God was first to feed the Israelites with Manna and to give them water out of the rock the sixteenth chapter of Exodus before they would receive the Law which after was published upon mount Sinai the twentieth chapter of Exodus For as the Apostle sheweth there is a debt due to the flesh Rom. the eight chapter which must be paid before the spirit can with quietnesse attend upon Gods service which being provided for the spirit is the fitter to attend upon Gods worship Children are not to be trained up in idlenesse and why Before we come to their severall vocations we have first to consider in generall that Adam would not have either of his children trained up in idlenesse and therefore he sets not only his younger sonne But to labor in a vocation but even his heir to a trade and occupation knowing that whereas God hath ordained that man shall live by some painfull vocation chapter the third there is a thing that both touched him and his the necessity whereof is such as Job saith Man is born to labor even as a bird to flie the fifth chapter of Job and the seventh verse And as he imployeth in trade as well the eldest as the youngest So Abell the good no lesse then Gain the wicked sonne for the godly have no liberty to live without some honest calling and therefore the Apostle saith Let a man abide in that calling wherein he is called the first of the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the twenty fourth verse If the godly may not live idlely much more ought wicked children to be set to some trade of life The second point to be observed is that there is no sooner mention made of the birth of these two brethren but presently the Holy Ghost setteth down their trade commending unto us from Adams example that which Salomon after teacheth the twenty second chapter of the Prov. Teach a childe in the beginning of his waies and he will not depart from it when he is old Seasonable instruction in youth and why for without seasonable instruction children and youth are but vanity the eleventh chapter of Eccle. and the third verse All are not fit for one and the same calling and why Both these sonnes are not set to one vocation to shew that all men are not fit and meet for one and the same calling for as there is this diversity in the earth out of which man is taken that one part of it is sandy some clay and some gravell And as in the heavenly light there is that diversity which the Apostle speaks of the first of the Corinthians the fifteenth chapter and the fourty first verse one star differing from another in glory So the like variety appeareth in the dispositions of men in so much as we see all men are not meet for one thing Fourthly from hence we learn that albeit the labors and trades of men be diverse Callings must be such as God alloweth and are serviceable to the Common-wealth and why yet they must be such as both God alloweth and such as are serviceable to the publique wealth we may not say because Cain a reprobate was a husbandman that therefore God dislikes husbandary for God affirmeth of Noah that he was a just and upright man and yet he was an husbandman Genesis the ninth chapter nor that the office of keeping sheep is therefore lawfull in Gods sight because Abell the just was a sheephcard for Juball the sonne of wicked Lamech was the father of them that dwelt in tents and kept Sheep Genesis the fourth chapter and the twentieth verse and yet himself a wicked man the person doth not make the calling lawfull but it must be taken from God himself and be such as God alloweth touching husbandry Christ saith My father is the Husbandman the fifteenth chapter of John and the first verse and you are Gods husbandry saith the Apostle the first of the Corinthians the third chapter and the ninth verse Therefore the calling of an husbandman is allowable for the other calling God himself is called the Shepheard of Israel the eightieth Psalme and the first verse and Christ saith of his Church I have other sheep which I must gather under my government
more than his providence for as he seeth the sacrifice of both so in justice he respects the good and rejects the evill Cain said as the wicked doe in their heart God doth not regard Psalm the tenth but if Cain desires that God should not regard Abel nor his good service he desires a thing unpossible for God is not unjust to forget the labour of our love Hebrews the sixt and the tenth verse Shall I justifie the wicked ballance and the bag of deceitfull weights the sixt chapter of Micha and the eleventh verse therefore whether we respect God or Abel this cause of Cains sorrow is unjust and his envy is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And therefore whereas other sinnes are punished only in the world to come and have pleasure in this life as if that future punishment were not sufficient for envy The envious man is a torment to him self God takes order that it shall have punishment in this life for the envious man is a torment to himself as the Wise man saith the fourteenth of the Proverbs and the thirtieth invidia est putredo ossium The degrees of Cains heaviness were that he was iratus valdè It was not one of the first degrees of anger which the Philosophers call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There are passions which are no sinne at all as in the fourth chapter of the Ephesians irascimini nolite peccare and the Lord saith dost thou well to be angrie Jonas the third chapter meaning there is some anger that is good so there is an anger that is no sin for the first motions of anger are not so hainous for the nature of men cannot keep away these passions no more than birds may be kept from lighting upon trees The Preacher saith Ecclesiastes the seventh chapter and the eleventh verse ira nidificat in sina 〈◊〉 whereupon one saith that although anger will light upon our nature whether we will or no yet we may keep it from making a nest in our hearts and so long it is no sinne therefore Cains sin is great in respect it was not only without a just cause but for that he suffered anger to rest in his heart Note The tongue the trumpet of the minde The falling down of his countenance is a fruit of the abundance of his heart as our Saviour Christ saith Matthew the twelfth chapter and the thirty fourth verse ex abundantia cordis os loquitur the tongue is the trumpet of the minde The countenance the glass of our affections and the countenance is the glass wherein we may behold the affections of the heart as the Preacher saith heaviness will appear in the countenance Examples so it did in Labans countenance Genesis the thirty first chapter no lesse than it doth here in Cain so in the Bretheren of Joseph Genesis the thirty seventh chapter Hatred cannot speak peaceable in so much as they could not speak peaceably to him so Saul ever after looked asquint on David after he conceived displeasure at him the first of Samuel and the eighteenth chapter Pride of heart appeares by proud looks so the Scripture sheweth that the pride of the heart appeares in the countenance by the proud look the one hundred and first Psalm and the high looks Proverbs the sixth chapter the adulterous minde is shewed by eyes full of adultery the second of Peter and the second chapter Countenance cast down a sign of ill when the minde imagineth evill then the light of the countenance is turned into darkness and the countenance which should be upright is changed in ruinam vultûs with casting down of the countenance because it is both an effect and sign of ill and the Apostle willeth that we abstain from any appearance of ill the first to the Thessalonians and the fifth chapter therefore we are to avoid it tristitia vultûs est hostilis tessara the outward badge and token of some inward evill conceived in the heart abscedendum est non 〈◊〉 a malo sed ab omni specie mali For the conclusion as we have already once seen the way what it is that we might not follow it Jude the eleventh verse so here again we are to consider his way which is of three sorts Note First not to rest and be content with that which God will have come to pass he was displeased because God respected Abel and not him Be content when God respected and contrary whereas he should have said with Eli the first of Samuel and the third chapter Deus est faciet quod bonum videtur in occulis ejus and with David the one hundred and ninteenth Psalm and the seventy fifth verse I know Lord thy judgments are right and that of very faithfulness thou hast afflicted me but to stomack God for any of his doings is a thing that every one must avoid that will not walk in Cains way Fret not thy self because of the ungodly saith the Prophet Psalm the thirty seventh and the first we may not think much that God doth respect the wicked and blesse them with temporall blessings much lesse are we to repine at the good of the godly Fret not at the prosperity of the wicked The Prophet affirmeth that he was offended at the prosperity of the wicked in so much as he said I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed my hands in innocency Psalm the thirty seventh he could not tell what to think of it till he went to the 〈◊〉 and there he learned that albeit they flourish in the world yet he sets them in slippery places that they may fall down to their distruction therefore we may not fret our selves considering that those things prove to Gods providence This was Davids meditation on the Sabbath Psalm the ninty second and the sixt and seventh verses That albeit the unwise know it not and fools doe not understand so much yet he was assured that when the wicked did grow as the grosse and all the Workers of wickedness did flourish then they should perish so that we have no just cause to be displeased with God if he respect the wicked seeing it is for his hurt but if he respect Abel and his good service we are to be glad When righteous men are in authority then the people rejoyce Proverbs the twentieth chapter and the second verse 〈◊〉 it is he joy of the world that the godly are respected of God and enjoy his favourable countenance and he that will not follow Cains way must confidere virtuti suae alienae non invidere Some rise not by virtue but by others fall when men doe not labour to exalt themselves by their own virtue but rise up by the fall of others that is Cains way which we must carefully avoid as we will ascape the wrath of God Thirdly the example of Abels good service and the favour which God vouchsafeth to
not here saith the Apostle any abiding City Hebrews the thirteenth chapter and the fourteenth verse that is true for albeit we have Cities yet they continue not therefore we seek for a City of Gods building Hebrews the eleventh chapter and the ninth verse and not a City built by Cain This is a point of examination for it is to be considered whether a man in the course of his life reach any further than these three If he goe no farther in the practise of his life but to get Children to build Cities and fair Houses and to get a name he is in the way of Cain But if with the other Enoch we continue still in Gods presence then we doe well Cain having life granted for repentance mispends it in building of a City and such like vanities And as there is a woe to him so woe to them that like him mispend their time which God giveth them for repentance Jude the eleventh verse Cain is in a place of torment where he cryeth woe that he mispent his time so vainly and therefore we must beware by his example for this is the use we are to make of Cain and the Reprobate that when we see what is their end we beware that we walk not in their waies that we mispend not our time in fulfilling the lusts of the flesh and vanity of buildings and seeking the glory and honor of this world because to all such there belongs a woe no less than to Cain as it is in the epistle of Jude Deinde Chanacho natus est Hirad Hirad genuit Mechujaëlem Machujaël verò genuit Methuschaëlem Methuschaël genuit Lemecum Assumpsit autem sibi Lemec uxores duas Gen. 4. 18.19 〈◊〉 9. 1599. IN these two verses we have two points to consider the one is a journey which the Holy Ghost undertaketh the other is the end of that journey In the journey Moses begins to set down the Pedigrees of Cain and the end of that journey is the story of Lameoh wherein it may justly be inquired First why any mention is made in Scripture of the Reprobate Secondly why it makes mention of the generation of Cain before the generation of Seth For the first It is a matter of absolute necessity that the Scripture should make mention of the ungodly and reprobate for whereas God proclaimed enmitie between the Serpents seed and the seed of the Woman Genesis the third chapter and the eleventh verse it was his will that it should appear in the world how the one was an enemie to the other therefore it is called liber bellorum domini Joshua the tenth chapter The life of man is called militia super terram Job the seventh chapter and the Church is called the Church militant haec est patientia Sanctorum Revelations the fourteenth chapter and the twelfth verse to shew that the godly have enemies in this world whereby their patience is tried Secondly why mention is made first of the pedigree of Cain there is sufficient reason to be given that is In as much as the wicked are called the men of this world Psalm the seventeenth and the Children of this generation Luke the 〈◊〉 chapter and the eighteenth verse it is reason they should be first remembred in this world for that they shall not be mentioned any where else they only have their interest in this life but in the morning the righteous have the dominion Psalm the fourty ninth and the fourteenth verse that is in the life to come 〈◊〉 shall be first made of the godly and therefore Christ before he speaks of 〈◊〉 the wicked saith first Metthew the twenty fifth chapter Venite benedicti patris mei that is in regard of the persons and for sinne it self as the Philosopher saith ad meminem ante venit mens bona quim animus malus every man is first possessed with an evill minde before he can have a good minde as the Apostle saith in the first to the Corinthians the the fifteenth chapter and the fourty fift verse That is not first which is spirituall but that which is naturall We are all by nature first the Children of wrath Ephesians the second chapter and belong to the posterity of Cain before we can be partakers of grace and therefore it is good reason that in Scripture our state by nature be first spoken of before our state by grace that the Law should goe before the Gospel the seed of the Serpent before the blessed feed of the Woman Thirdly It may be demanded why this passage is made to the story of Lamech next after the story of Cain the reason is for that it is Gods will to bring sinne to a head For as in Adam we saw the poyson of the Serpent and the infection of it in Cain so here is a new infection For as there is a spirit that lusteth after envy James the fourth chapter which made Cain kill his brother so in Lamech we see that spirit which Jude speaks of verse the seventh that is a spirit that longeth after strange flesh which he she wed in taking two Wives That is there is an unclean spirit as well as an 〈◊〉 spirit whereas there are two parts of the will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Cain the angry part was infected with the Serpents poyson his heart was inflamed with a desire of revenge Now in Lamech we see this infection goeth lower even to his reins and stirs him up to lust There are but two temprations Deuteronomie the thirty third chapter and the eighth verse which the Hebrews call meribah and Massah which the Apostle termeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebrews the third chapter the one is the temptation unto contention and revenge where with Cain was infected of which the Apostle saith James the fourth chapter and the first verse From 〈◊〉 are warres and contentions among you are they not from your lusts The other is the temptation of concupisence which poisoned Lamech In the Gospel we have them both that is spiritas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke the eighth chapter and the second verse Christ healeth certain women possessed with malignant and envious spirits and Luke the eleventh chapter The unclean spirit departing out of a man walketh in dry places The malicious spirit she wed his poyson in Cain by the temptation of meribah and now Lamech is infected with the unclean spirit and yeelding to the temptation of 〈◊〉 And in these two Reprobates infected with these two kindes of temptations the Holy Ghost sheweth the perfection of sinne For sanctification hath two parts First That we possesse our vessels in holiness which is an exposition to the uncleaness of Lamech and in the first to the Thessalonians the fourth chapter and the sixt verse that no man oppresse or tread down his brother which opposeth it self against the spirit of Cain who trod down his brother and violently slew him Charity and
case in the bitterness of her soul received from the Lord a blessed seed that was Samuel who restored religion and setled the state of the Kingdome in the first of Samuel the first chapter and the sixteenth verse but it is most plain in the birth of Solomon for after Davids great fall and the grievous punishment that God laid upon him upon his great repentance which followed whereof the fifty first Psalm is a perpetuall monument God gave him a Sonne that was Solomon the like whereof was never before nor hath been since in the second of Samuel the twelfth chapter As on the other side they that are born according to the flesh and begotten in the strength of nature prove wilde and rebellious as Israel and Absolom and of a contrary disposition to them that are born to them that are in the state of grace Secondly For his name and that little Sermon which Eve makes touching his name that is she called him Seth and renders a reason quia posuit eum 〈◊〉 semen aliud pro Abele quem occidit Cain In which Sermon there is no one word which hath not its severall sense It is said First He is positus Secondly By God Thirdly As a seed Fourthly Another seed Fiftly instead of Abel Sixthly Of Abel whom Cain slew For the term of putting or setting we have it in the third chapter of Genesis and the fifteenth verse where God saith I will put enmity Psalm the hundred fourty eighth He sets them a law Proverbs the twenty second chapter and the twenty eighth verse Remove not the ancient bounds which thy Fathers have set in the first epistle of John the fifth chapter The whole world is set on mischeif By which setting or putting is added stedinesse and permanency But we shall see the nature of the word most plainly in the twenty eigth chapter of 〈◊〉 Pono in Zion lapidem where it is used for laying a foundation or for the setting of a rift or graffe or root which as we know is set to growe and not to be pulled up by and by there is the sense of the word set or put In which sense it is not only referred 〈◊〉 to Abel who as we know was a transitory and no permanent seed for he was no sooner shewed to the world but presently he 〈◊〉 as taken away as one of whom the world was unworthy Hebrews the eleventh chapter But also to Cain whose land was the land of Nod To teach us That in the felicity of Gods Saints there is stedinesse and continuance but as for the pleasures of the wicked they continue not one hour but are uncertain So that it is in effect as if God should say before indeed I gave Abel but it was not my minde to have him continue but this seed whom I will give Adam shall stay so as neither Cain nor Lamech nor the gates of hell shall prevail against him Matthew the sixteenth chapter That is the meaning of the word set or put which was the first observation And this seting or putting receives great strength from the setter that is God whole weaknesse is stronger than the strength of man And therefore look what he sets shall continue to teach us that albeit the first Saint was taken away yet now he will have Saints to continue They shall not only be shewed to the world but shall have a foundation and take root being set by God Touching the wicked Eliphaz saith Their foundation is as an overflowing of water for they shall be carried away as Cains posterity was with a flood Job the twenty second chapter and the sixteenth verse But the righteous shall have an everlasting foundation Proverbs the tenth chapter For as when God will have a thing crooked no man can it make streight Ecclesiastes the seventh chapter and the fifteenth verse so what God will 〈◊〉 and have to take root it cannot be pulled up or removed Positi sunt ad hoc saith the Apostle in the first epistle of Peter the fourth chapter and the second verse and in the eighth verse They were ordained to stumble at the word Therefore being appointed by God to that end it is impossible they should be otherwise That is for the wicked On the other side Whom Christ taketh to his custody he saith of them in the tenth chapter of St. John No man shall take them out of mine hand and as the Apostle saith in the second to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 second chapter and the nineteenth verse The foundation of God abideth sure and stedfast Novit 〈◊〉 qui sunt 〈◊〉 neer 〈◊〉 this is that which the Apostle calls deposition that is 〈◊〉 thing 〈◊〉 to trust in the second to Timothy the first chapter and the fourteenth verse for even so God will have Saints and the 〈◊〉 of the godly to continue in the world till he come to call them out of it Thirdly it is said of Seth he is positus in semen for there is a person that is no seed that was Abel before God gave a man to Adam but he gave no seed to him for that is called seed of which there growes something But of Abel there came no 〈◊〉 or seed 〈◊〉 but as it is said of Christ that when he shall lay down his life videbit semen longaevum Isaiah the fifty third chapter that is a seed though not issuing out of his loyns yet 〈◊〉 from his spirit So we are to understand that spiritually there came a seed of Abel for there is a spirituall generation as well as a carnall so spiritually Elisha was the Childe of Elias because the spirit of Elias was doubled upon him in the second of Kings the second chapter and John Baptist is called Elias Matthew the seventeenth chapter because in these graces of the spirit that was in Elias he resembled him as the Child doth the Father It is the saying of the Prophet Isaiah the sixt chapter semen sanctum est substantia mundi and therefore Seth is appointed and set by God to be the spirituall seed of the Church as the seed of mankinde by carnall generation Fourthly But why should God need to give Adam and Eve seed he had seed enough already that was Cain and his posterity which were come to seventy seven persons yea but they are not content with that seed but would have another Cains seed pleaseth them not therefore they are earnest Suters to God for a holy seed As God promised Abraham first a seed that should be sicut pulvis terrae Genesis the thirteenth chapter and the sixteenth verse that is such as should grow in the earth and set their affections therein and after another that should be sicut stellae coeli Genesis the eighteenth chapter that is such a seed as should set their mindes in heaven and seek for a heavenly country Hebrews the eleventh chapter So Adams two seeds first Cain and his posterity which were like the dust of the earth such as were earthly affected and
there is an Angel under Christ which takes charge for the defense of the Church on earth which is Michael your Prince Dan. 10. 21. Secondly Out of Judes epistle verse the ninth the ancient Fathers prove that by Michael we are not to understand Christ for that which he affirmeth that Michael durst not check the Devill with cursed speaking cannot be ascribed to Christ which not only dare but hath trodden down Satan under his feet much more dare he check him which unlesse he could doe it were a plain signe that he is not Omnipotent Therefore by Michael here we are to understand some other and not Christ. Thirdly Out of this place Apocalyps the twelfth chapter and the fift verse In as much as the Child that was born was Christ it is not like that this Childe should suddenly be translated into an Archangel and fight with the Dragon And therefore both Theodoret and others say that Michael is a chief spirit among the created spirits that then took care of the Church in Jury and still is carefull of Christs Church unto the end of the world And to this we may add the judgement of the Church which on this holy-day doth thank God for the service of the Angels but makes no mention of Christ that it is he that in this place warreth with the Dragon and his Angels For the Dragon there is a farre more easie passage so as we may soon guesse what is meant by him for in this chapter he is called the Devil and Satan whereof their name signifieth a slanderer and he is justly so called for that he both slandereth God to man as if God did envy mans prosperity Genesis the third chapter and slanders man to God as he did Job whom albeit he were a blessed Saint yet he accuseth before God as an Hypocrite Job the first chapter The other name Satan signifieth a great enemie not only to the good whom he hath most cause to hate as being contrary to him but also to the bad That he is an enemy to the good it appears by this That he persecuted not only the child that was new born but the woman also and because he cannot shew his malice upon him he makes warre with her seed Apocalyps the twelfth chapter the thirteenth seventeenth verses That he persecuted also an enemie to the bad appears verse the ninth where he is called The seducer of of the whole world and the accuser of the brethren for that he first brings them to commit grievous sinnes and then pleads against them that the plague of God may come upon them These are the Leaders The Bands and Souldiers under their conduct are Angels on both sides The Angels that serve under Michael are they that excell in strength and doe the command of God in obeying the voice of his word Psalm the hundred and third and the twentieth verse they that the Apostle calls elect Angels the first epistle to Timothy the fift chapter and the twenty first verse The Angels that warre on the Dragons side are the evil Angels Psalm the seventy eighth and the fourty ninth verse The Angels that sinned the second epistle of Peter the second chapter And they that kept not their original as Jude saith these fight for the Dragon and he is their Captain as Christ saith The Prince of the Devils is 〈◊〉 Matthew the twelfth chapter For as among the good Angels there is principatus primus principatus so it is among the wicked Angels for there must be order in all companies Touching the Battail it self we are first to remove some things of offence not to think it strange that the Angels are here said to move battail For albeit they be called Angeli pacis Isaiah the thirty third chapter and the seventh verse because they bring peace yet in many places they are called Gods Hosts as Jacob seeing the Angels of God called the place where they were Nahanaim Genesis the thirty second chapter and the second verse and they magnisie God by that title Isaiah the sixt chapter Lord God of Hosts Luke the second chapter the Angels are called Heavenly Souldiers And where Christ saith If I pray to the Father he will give me more than twelve 〈◊〉 of Angels Matthew the twenty sixt chapter He compareth them to Troops and Bands of Souldiers for that they are not only Angels to Gods friends and servants but souldiers fighting against them that oppose themselves against God Further where their state is in a continual motion that must not offend us for the Angels themselves are not yet in the perfection of their felicity for we see they are imployed in doing service for us they continually aseend and descend from Heaven to Earth and from Earth to Heaven for the good of the godly for God saw it good that as well they as the Saints departed out of this life should not be made 〈…〉 Hebrews the eleventh chapter and the fourtieth verse which is illistrated Matthew the thirteenth chapter where the Angels are called Reapers giving us to understand thereby that as the 〈…〉 is not at rest till the Harvest be all in so it is with the Angels they must continually be imployed in doing service for them that shall inherit Salvation till the number of the Elect be accomplished So neither needs that to offend any that the Dragon is 〈◊〉 to have fought in Heaven for so he is said to have appeared before God among the sonnes of God And when Ahab was to be deceived a lying spirit stood before God the first book of the Kings the twenty second chapter All this was only by Gods permission For all this doth no make the Devil blessed no more than Adam was blessed being in paradise For having sinned and being thereby out of Gods favour he no more enjoyed that comfort of Paradise which he took before his fall but quaked and hid himself from the presence of God for tear Genesis the third chapter The Dragon is no more blessed for being in Heaven or appearing before God than a prisoner that for a time is brought out of prison into the Court to be arraigned for he takes no delight of the pomp and glorie of the Court knowing it is not for him but he must return to the 〈◊〉 from whence he was taken So it is with the Devil These offences being removed we come now to the Fight it self which was not in any bodily manner for they are spirits 〈◊〉 the hundred and fourth and therefore their fight is a spiritual fight Ephesians the sixt chapter And their 〈◊〉 not carnal but spiritaul the second epistle to the Corinthians the tenth chapter That as the Angels fight by temptations on the one side and by resistances on the other they fight by agonies and inward conflicts which is more truly called conflicts than any combat The other fight with bodily enemies for as some note Abraham would rather fight wich five Kings than abide that conflict
both agreeable to the action we have in hand and also a good dependance upon that wherein we have been heretofore conversant But that these words are to be applyed to the holy 〈◊〉 and Sacrament of the Lords Supper appears for that before he calls himself the bread of life verse the thirty fift The bread from Heaven verse the fourty first The living bread verse the fifty first and all along this chapter there is nothing spoken of Christ but as he is the matter of this Sacrament and therefore these words are to be understood of the holy Eucharist And so these words as they yeeld comfort to the commers perswading them that they are of those whom God the Father hath given to Christ so no lesse comfort is reached to them here for that they understand from Christs own mouth That if they come to him they shall not be cast out but received of him so as none shall be able to take them out of his hands John the tenth chapter and the twenty eighth verse On the other side They that come not may know from hence that as they are not in the number of the Fathers Donatives that is such as are given to Christ but are the portion of Satan For they shall be cast out into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Apocalyps the twenty first chapter and the eighth verse And into utter darknesse where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Matthew the eighth chapter and the twelfth verse Touching the dependance his words have with that part of Scripture which we usually have held when we spake of Cains departure from Gods presence we heard that he did set himself as neer Eden as he could be that he was content for a little trifling pleasure that shortly fadeth to forgoe Gods presence where is pleasure for evermore that for a little worldly gain with Balaam he gives over all godlinesse which is the true gain and that not he but the whole world through ambition as Lords doe seek the worlds honor with the losse of the honor and favour of God Being thus departed from God we heard he came to a Land called Nod that is a Land of unquietnesse and troubles both in respect of the inward disquietness of his soul by continual fear the outward vanities of the whole world where he found that having forsaken God with whom is fulnesse of joy he could not have his desire satisfied by any pleasure that the world could afford But we left not Cain there but heard that the end of that journey was woe as it shall be the end of all those that walk in Cains way Jude the eleventh verse And for that there is none but may fall into the same way it concerns every man to think how being departed from the presence of God he may come back to Christ and especially that he watch his opportunity to come at such a time as Christ will not cast him out And that is taught us here in these words where Christ saith That whosoever commeth to him as he is the bread of life he shall not be cast forth But we must watch this opportunity for there are two wenite's Come to me all ye Matthew the eleventh chapter that have departed from me to receive worldly pleasures and gain The other Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome Matthew the twenty fift chapter and the thirty fourth verse But he that will have his part in this latter venite must have his part also in the first He must come again to Christ by repentance else he cannot come to be partaker of the heavenly Kingdome In these words of Christ we have three persons First Pater dans Secondly Homo veniens Thirdly Christus non ejiciens Whereof the two former parts be the Condition the third person belongeth to the Promise The Condition stands in The Fathers giving and our comming The Promise is Christs not casting out Touching which parts joyntly we are to observe these That every one by experience sindes that the state of sinners live they never so pleasantly is but as Cain called his sonne Chanoch that is a good beginning For the mid'st of that state is unquietnesse and the end everlasting death Which being considered it will make every man willing to come again to God if there be any hope they shall be received In regard of our selves as St Paul speaketh of her that departed from her husband the first cpistle to the Corinthians the seventh chapter and the eleventh verse so it were just that in as much as we have willingly forsaken God and departed from him preserring transitory and earthly delights before his favour he should say Qui discedit discedat that being once gone from him he should not receive usagain But here we are to admire the goodnesse and mercy of God and Christ that instead of a revenger and punisher he is a mercifull receiver that where in Justice Christ might be a rock of offence to such as depart from him he will be a rock of refuge to them that he is so farre from casting out if they come that he is content to seek such as are lost Luke the nineteenth chapter and the tenth verse That he sends and sends again that they should come back Matthew the twenty second chapter That he stands at the dore knocking Apocalyps the third chapter And saith Come to us all ye Matthew the eleventh chapter So there is no doubt but Christ will receive them that come to him For as the ancient Fathers note If when he comes to us we cast not him out neither will he cast us out when we come to him And that no unworthinesse by means of any filth either of body or soul doth keep him from us we see for bodily uncleannesse he was content to be received by Simon the leper Mark the fourteenth chapter and the third verse And in regard of spiritual pollution howsoever a man know himself to be a sinner that is to have an unclean soul yet not to despair because Christ by the confession of his enemies is such a one as doth not only receive sinners but eats with them Luke the fifteenth chapter and the third verse yea he not only 〈◊〉 them that deserve to be cast out as unworthy to inher it s he Kingdom the first epistle to the Corinthians the sixt chapter and the ninth verse but doth also wash sanctifie and justifie them in his 〈◊〉 name and by the spirit of God The Condition on our part was That we come the meaning where of if we look into the ancient Fathers upon the thirty fift verse He that commeth to me is some externall part of Gods worship for so they expound it by the Apostles words Romanes the tenth chapter If thou beleeve in thy heart and confesse with thy mouth for 〈◊〉 eving is the affection of the heart but confession is outward in the conversation of life as some are said to deny God
John the eleventh chapter and the fourty ninth verse Touching the substance of the question and the first part First The part wherein that which Christ spake did work is the heart which is the commander of man for as the word comes our of the heart bonus homo ex bono thesauro cordis sui Luke the sixth chapter so if it have its right course it goeth to the heart for there be three wards and locks to be opened that the sound of Gods word may enter that is the eare Psalm the fourtieth Mine eare hast thou opened which is the gate of wisedome Secondly the understanding to conceive what is heard of which it is said here Their eyes were opened Luke the twenty fourth chapter and the thirty first verse that is oculi mentis Ephesians the first chapter and the eighteenth verse Thirdly the heart as Lydia's heart was opened by the Lord Acts the sixteenth chapter Many are present but hear not attentively what is said others hear but understand not and some have both these degrees and yet have not their hearts opened and so it is to no purpose that is spoken Though we hear and understand yet if the heart be not touched with it it is but verbum aerium it is mans word and not Gods for the property of Gods word is to pierce to the heart and marrow And to the dividing of the soul Hebrews the fourth chapter and the twelfth verse Therefore by the eare man may examine his own heart for unless he feel himself touched inwardly with the word his hearing is in vain And this is the service wich God rejects Isaiah the twenty ninth chapter and the thirteenth verse Matthew the fifteench chapter and the eighth verse populus labiis me honerat so if either we bring our eares alone or both eares and eyes both hearken and conceive yet so long as this is true of us that our heart is departed from God If the heart be not affected with the preaching of the word it is in vain For the profitable hearer is he that with an honest and good heart receiveth the word of God Which is the immortall seed that bringeth forth much fruit Luke the eighth chapter Secondly the work wrought in the heart is a burning or kindling as we shewed There is a double compunction First when a man being pricked in heart falls into a rage as they that heard Stephen Acts the seventh chapter Secondly when being prickt they seek for ease and comfort as in the second chapter of the Acts and the thirty seventh verse So there is a double fire For as there is a fire from the Altar which touched the prophets mouth Esay the sixt chapter so fire from Topheth Isaiah the thirtieth chapter there are firie tongues that fell upon the Apostes But they came from heaven Acts the second chapter but there are firie tongues that are set on fire of hell James the third chapter it is the fire from the Altar and the firie tongues from heaven that causeth the burning in the heart of such as hear aright and not the fire of Topheth For as the Devill with his hot Iron doth cauterise and sear the consciences of some so the fire of Gods spirit doth warm the hearts of others so as they heare the word of God with profit As there are wicked whose tongues and words are like pricks and swords Proverbs the twelfth chapter so there are others whose tongues are like hot Juniper coals Psalm the one hundred and twentieth which slanders others For the Devill that 〈◊〉 of man Matthew the thirteenth chapter 〈◊〉 up this fire in the hearts of men but this fire must be distinguished from that fire which Christ came to bring upon earth 〈◊〉 the twelfth chapter As this compunction was of saith and the other of fear so here the good fire proceeds from love and hope the effect of the other is desperate raging and hatred The true fire is from the spirit as it is in the sixt chapter of John Verba mea spiritus sunt vita for where there is spirit there is a heat and Christs words being spirituall doe warm the hearts of the hearers the Scriptures being inspired by the spirit of God cannot but work this heat in mens hearts besides God saith of his word Jeremiah the twenty third chapter and the twenty ninth verse meum verbum ignis est it is fire no man can deny it for whether we respect the Law it is ignta lex Deuteronomie the thirty third chapter and the second verse the word of prophesie is firie for the Prophet could not prophesie till the coal taken from the Altar had touched his lips Isaiah the sixt chapter and of the Gospel which Christ preached he saith 〈◊〉 mittere in terram quod volo misi ut ardeat Luke the twelfth chapter and the fourty ninth verse and after his ascention he gave order that the firie tongues should come upon the Apostles that their word might be a firie word that might kindle in the hearts of the hearers Now the word of God is therefore called fire because the quality of fire is most actuall for as some note that albeit many things be hid from the Sun Yet there is nothing hid from the heat thereof for it pierceth into all parts of the world Psalm the ninteenth so the word of God is such and mighty in operation and sharper than any two edged sword and entreth through Hebrews the fourth chapter For as the fire consumeth all things and turneth it into fire so doth the word of God turn the affections of man into word and not the word into affection As the word it self is fire so the motions which it stirreth up in the heart are firie and servent as the Apostle sheweth in the twelfth chapter to the Romans and the eleventh verse Ferventes spiritu Fervencie proceeds of two affections The one is hope in the twelfth verse that where before their hope was cold now it rejoyceth and revives verse the twenty first the other is of love which makes them compell him Luke the twenty fourth chapter to tarry with them verse the twenty ninth thus the word inflames their hearts with love and revives their spirits so as their hope is revived and by working these two affections in them he changeth them that there is not only fire but constancy in the word verba ignea faciunt igneos characteres so as where ink may be blotted out the stamp of the firie word of God continues for ever and is durable But the word hath a double operation against sinne First like water because with it the spot which comes from without is taken away Secondly as fire because 〈◊〉 rust must be burnt out so the inward corruption of our nature must be eaten out and consumed with the word therefore the Prophet compares his preaching to melting and founding Jeremiah the sixt chapter where he complains the bellowes are burnt the
sides Matthew the fourteenth chapter and the thirty first verse so Modica virtus Apocalyps the third chapter and the eighth verse Where there is great faith there is great virtue where no faith no virtue As it is no true faith which virtue doth not follow so no true virtue which faith doth not goe before It is called Grace in respect of God from whom it comes and virtue in regard of the effects The Philosopher called them habitus because they had them from themselves but virtus est 〈…〉 Domino virtutis to salve the error of the Philosophers The Apostle calls it Grace in the second epistle of Peter the third chapter and the eighteenth verse grow in grace so he calls it virtus He hath called us to glory and virtue in the second epistle of Peter the first chapter and the third verse and Philippians the fourth chapter and the eighth verse It is by good consequence that it is so called because it is wrought by the Gospel which is the power of God Romans the first chapter and the sixteenth verse His words are spirit and life John the sixt chapter Virtue must bring forth virtus The Philosophers Virtue had no divine thing in it they enured themselves to it and so ascribed it to themselves Our virtue proceedeth from faith which is a divine thing Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Romans the fourteenth chapter But the Heathen called their virtues habits as from themselves not from the grace of God To Virtue Knowledge He began with Faith a theological virtue then he added Virtue which is moral now he comes to Knowledge another theological virtue By this successive coupling we are taught not to stay at virtue but to proceed de virtute in virtute Psalm the eighty fourth and the seventh verse from strength to strength As before against infirmity and weaknesse of our nature he added virtue So for our error and ignorance he joyneth knowledge for there may be an active power to work and yet not aright as Romans the tenth chapter the second verse They have zeal but not according to knowledge But there must be not only power but wisdome not only homines improbi shall be cast out but foolish vigins Matthew the twenty fift chapter As virtue is required so is knowledge to direct us in that we doe We must seek for Non tam virtutem quam aurigam virtutis scientiam sine quâ ipsa virtus est vitium therefore Proverbs the twenty third chapter and the fourth verse Cease from thy wisdome And in Ecclefiastes the seventh chapter Be not nimium just us Knowledge is a key Luke the eleventh chapter and the fifty second verse And a Quire must have a key to set the song that is the key of knowledge In the Law nothing was to be offered without salt that is the grace of knowledge It is that which the Apostle calleth the inward annointing in the first epistle of John the second chapter and the twentieth verse which gives a sweet savour and sent to God So saith the Apostle in the second epistle to the Corinthians the second chapter We are a sweet savour to God But is not faith knowledge It is But yet where the object of faith is verum falsum Science hath for its object good and evil as Genesis the second chapter and the ninth verse the passions of Christ and the torments of Hell are indifferently the objects of faith but the affections are stirred by good and ill And it is knowledge that must discern between good and ill evil things may goe under the shew of good and therefore we must have knowledge to unmask them So the doctrin of repentance being a good thing hath a shew of ill and without the grace of knowledge men are hardly brought to beleeve it As there is prudentia carnis Romans the eighth chapter and the sixth verse and prudentia seculi in the 〈◊〉 epistle to the Corinthians the third chapter and the nineteenth verse so there must be a spiritual knowledge and wisdome to discern them and to measure what is good That all which we doe teach may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first epistle of Peter the second chapter and all you doe may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Romans the twelfth chapter we must add this knowledge Knowledge is lame without power and power is blinde without knowledge for knowledge is the lightning of the eyes of the minde the second epistle to the Corinthians the fourth chapter There is a knowledge falsly so called the first epistle of Timothy the sixt chapter and the twentieth verse The knowledge truly so called is not speculative but practique It is the knowledge from on high that directs our feet in the way of peace as Luke the first chapter and the seventy ninth verse And not only that which lightens our eyes Physitians of longest practise and Souldiers that have been trained are most respected so it is in worldly things and so it should be in divine things A man must animare praxin that was the advise of the Civilian give a soul to it as in the thirty third chapter of Deuteronomie and the eighth verse first Thummim and then Urim Jesus began to doe and teach Acts the first chapter and the first verse that is the touchstone of knowledg as Christ saith If any man will doe his will he shall know of his doctrine qui fecerit voluntatem Patris sciet de doctrina utrum sit ex Dec John the seventh chapter and the seventeenth verse for there are some that are alwayes learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth especially that knowledge that may be truly so called in the second to Timothy and the third chapter Scientiae verò continentiam continentiae verò tolerentiam 2 Pet. 1. 6. THE Apostle proceedeth now to the fourth voice of this quire having laid faith for the first and to it added that which the Apostle calls the work of faith in virtue in the second to the Thessalonians the first chapter and the eleventh verse and thirdly To virtue knowledge now in the fourth place he joyneth to it temperance It is the common course of the world so soon as they have a little taste of knowledge to ascend up to heaven but he tells us knowledge must goe down to our fouls and then proceed to godliness which we are taught in our conformity to our Saviours example of whom the Apostle saith Ephesians the fourth chapter and the ninth verse He that ascended the same is he that descended first The chief point of our duty is first to temper our affections and then to come to godliness after For the justifying of 〈◊〉 order in respect of the consequence this hath with the former there are three causes why he bringeth in temperance next after knowledge The first is because whereas corruption is in the world through 〈◊〉 verse the first and Ephesians the fourth chapter The
first epistle to the Corinthians the eleventh chapter The prayers of all the just are available but specially of the elders therefore send for them James the fift chapter A Serjeant Constable or Scrivener by virtue of his office may doe that which a greater man cannot doe so the prayer of a person called to that holy function may prevail more The Priests are appointed to offer up prayers and the calves of the lips Hosea the fourteenth chapter So Genesis the twentieth chapter Abraham is a Prophet and shall pray for thee Leviticus the sixt chapter and the seventh verse he shall pray for thee Orabit pro eo Sacerdos Therefore Hezekiah saith Lift up thou thy prayers Isaiah the thirty eighth chapter And Saint James saith in his fift chapter The prayer of faith made by the Elders shall save the sick The prayer of the just avails much but especially of the elders and Priests for to such a grace is given as in the first epistle to the Corinthians and the fifteenth chapter Gratia data est 〈◊〉 and this grace is not in vain Secondly But it must be oratio cum statione Phinehas stood up and prayed For as in the first epistle to the Corinthians and the eleventh chapter of a woman uncovered judge whether it be a comely thing to sit still in prayer All things in the Church must be done 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first epistle to the Corinthians the fourteenth chapter We must please and serve God etiam habitu corporis The Angels of God stood before God Job the first chapter The Cherubims stood and hid their faces Isaiah the sixt chapter And millions of Angels stood before the seat Daniel the seventh chapter Therefore we must conclude our sitting is not pleasing to God Sedentes orare extra Discipulum est The other sense is the execution or judgement And it hath a good relation to sinnes They prayed and wept Numbers the twenty fift chapter but that prevailed not till Phinehas executed vengeance upon the sinne but the vengeance being performed by Phinehas the plague ceased verse the eighth So then the wrath of God will cease if people cease to sinne or if Phinehas the Magistrate begin to punish sinne in the people For punishment is of two sorts First Every man in himself is to punish sinne as David smit his heart in the second book of Samuel the twenty fift chapter and the twenty fourth verse and the first epistle to the Corinthians the eleventh chapter judge your selves But if not Moses the Magistrate must take vengeance of sinne for if he will not God himself will set his face against that Magistrate Leviticus the twentieth chapter When the people look not at him that strikes them but to natural causes then shall the hand of God be stretched out still Isaiah the ninth chapter and the thirteenth verse The wrath of God for our sinnes being the cause of this plague we must appease him with prayer and repentance If we fail to doe this the devotion of the Priest and the zeal of the Magistrate must look to it else the plague cannot but still increase Amen Amen Addenda Vae vobis Legis interpretibus quoniam sustulistis Clavem cognitionis ipsi non introstis eos qui introibant prohibuistis Luke 11. 52. Octob. 13. 1590. Place this in the beginning of the book next before the Sermon upon Gen. 1. 1. For this was the Bishops first Lecture in Saint Pauls preached as an Introduction to his following discourse upon the four first chapters of Genesis KNOWLEDGE of 〈◊〉 things is compared by our Saviour Christ to a Key 〈◊〉 the eleventh chapter of Luke and the 〈◊〉 second 〈◊〉 as being a thing necessary both to 〈…〉 in this life the way we should walk in 〈◊〉 the second chapter the tenth and 〈…〉 as also for the entrance into the 〈…〉 of 〈…〉 the life to come For which cause holy men in 〈◊〉 have 〈…〉 to this kinde of knowledge Jeremiah the 〈…〉 chapter 〈◊〉 the thirty fourth verse and these have made it 〈◊〉 delight 〈◊〉 the fifty eighth chapter and the thirteenth verse and prefer it before their daily food Job the twenty third chapter and esteem it above all treasures Proverbs the second chapter and the fourth verse But such as are ignorant and know not these thing 〈◊〉 biddeth to goe out and dwell among beasts Cant the first chapter and the seventh verse as if they were not worthy the company of men and therefore Christ weepeth for them Luke the 〈…〉 chapter as if their case were most 〈◊〉 which knew not that they ought Wherefore God hath given 〈◊〉 means and wayes by which we may come to knowledge The one is the 〈◊〉 of the World by the view of his Creatures 〈…〉 hearing of his word by the Ministry of Men. These two are the two great leaves of this gate and way to Heaven which that 〈◊〉 of knowledge must unlock and set wide open that so we may 〈◊〉 enter therein Which two means are spoken of and 〈◊〉 unto us in Psalm the nineteenth the first and the 〈…〉 And St. Paul beginneth his epistle to the Romans with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first chapter the sixteenth and twentieth verses and it was his order in preaching and teaching men the knowledge of God 〈◊〉 at 〈◊〉 Acts the seventeenth chapter and the twenty third verse These are as it were the two great books of God which he would have known and read of all men For as his written word is called a scroll Ezekiel the third chapter and the second verse so is the frame of the world 〈◊〉 a book or scroll Isaiah the thirty fourth chapter and the fourth verse God spake once and twice saith David Psalm the sixty second and the eleventh verse Once he 〈◊〉 Job by the view of his Creatures Job the thirty eighth chapter and again he spake to Moses on Mount Sinai shewing his will Exodus 20. 1. These then being the two effectual means to attain to knowledge there is no place in the Scripture nor any book therein that doth more lively expresse them both than this book of Genesis which we have in hand For it setteth out to us the word of God by which all things were made fiet and the Word by which all things are increased 〈◊〉 multiplicamini and the word by which all men were corrupted non moriemini and the word whereby all are restored conteret caput Serpentis which is the word of Promise and of Faith We are willed to enquire for the old and good 〈…〉 〈◊〉 sixt chapter and sixteenth verse Christ warranteth that 〈◊〉 sheweth us both Matthew the sixteenth chapter the seventh and eighth verses It is the ancientest in time for it beginneth with the very beginning It is first in order and in place in the 〈◊〉 of Gods book and therefore I have thought it good to enquire of this way Some doe give this reason why John of all other is called the Divine