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A02186 Greenvvoods vvorkes contayned in fiue seueral tractates. 1. Of the day of iudgement. 2. Of the Lords Prayer. 3. Of the race to saluation. 4. Of the torment of Tophet. 5. Of the baptisme of Christ. Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5.; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Treatise of the great and generall daye of judgement. aut; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Race celestiall. aut; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Tormenting Tophet. aut; Greenwood, Henry, b. 1544 or 5. Joyfull tractate of the most blessed baptisme. aut 1620 (1620) STC 12329; ESTC S115797 129,145 422

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out into riuers of water because men kept not Gods Law The Prophet Ieremy cryeth out ●et 4. 19. ●● on this manner Ah my belly my belly Iam pained euen at the heart I cannot bee quiet because my people is a foolish people they are wise to do euill but to doe well they haue no knowledge That godly Matron Monica Saint Monica Augustines Mother wept daily and prayed for her sonnes conuersion for hee was before his conuersion a Manichee So likewise it is the duty of euery Christian to desire the conuersion of their brethren and to bewaile their wretched estates Sinne neuer more then in these our dayes of the Gospell abounded the greatest part of the world are Satanists diuels in conuersation worshippers of that vgly beast That Apoc. 13. 14. hath seuen heads and tenne hornes whose badge is blasphemy of the damned serpent The prince of the Eph. 2. 2. Ayre the grand enemy of Mankinde that goeth vp and downe like a roaring 1. Pet. 5. 8. Lyon seeking whom he may deuoure Yea Saint Iohn saith That Whatsoeuer 1. Ioh. 2 16 is in the world is either the concupiscence of the flesh or the concupiscence of the eye or the pride of life Haec tria pro trino numine mu● 〈◊〉 habet This is the trinity which the world doth worship In stead of God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost the world doth worship the diuell the world and the flesh the concupiscence of the flesh that is carnall luxury the concupiscence of the eye that is worldly couetousnesse and the pride of life that is hellish and diuelish ambition The way to hell is a broad and a wide way and whole multitudes walke in the same but ●ew there be that can finde out the narrow way of amendment of life The heathen man could say this Plurima pessima the Aristotle most are the worst Pretiosa non sunt numerosa good men are odde men Wasps and Hornets swarme but few painefull Bees are to be found that treasure vp the Honey of good workes in the hiue of their hearts and co●● l●●en home with the same as Virgil writeth of the Bées At ●essae multa referunt se nocte minores crura thymo plena No maruell therefore if Dauid cryed out to the Lord for helpe in his dayes saying Helpe Lord helpe Psal 12. 1. for good and godly men decay The world therefore may bee compared to the earth Aske the earth and it will tell thee Compar that it doth affoord much matter for base pots but very little stuffe for Gold aske the Gardiner and he will tell thee that hee hath more Nettles then Roses more Wéeds then Flowers more Brambles then Vines Yea aske thine owne conscience and Note it will tell thee that there is Magna plen●tu●o hominum sed magna solitudo honorum id est There is a great plenty of men but there is a great scarsitie of good men A good man is a Phenix he is Rara auis ●● terris nigroque si●ili●● I●●en cygno A rare Bird a blacke Swanne Wee haue many couetous Churles that wil with the foole in the Gospell commend their Soules to Plutus that was called of the heathen Deus d●●●tiarum The god of riches but more fitly he is Daemon d●●●tiarum the diuell of riches and thinke themselues safe when they haue spoken peace to their soules on this manner Soule take thy rest for thou hast goods Luk. 12. 19 layd vp for many dayes Making their chest their heauen and their pictures their god We haue many Achabs Tyrannicall extortioners deuourers of their brethren eating them vp like bread Many adulterers as appeareth by the great number of Bastards in this Realme Many rebellious Traytors and Antichristian conspirators as did appeare by the Gun-powder-treason Many conceited Herods many proud Nebuchadnezzars and many vaine-glorious Iezabels many swea●ers forswearers drunkards mock●o●s Many wee haue in a word damned hel-hounds cursed caytifes and most miserable miscreants How little doe these lamentable wretches think of the day of account How little doe they imagine of that wofull sentence Goe from me ye cursed c The Lord grant to all men one with another his grace that they may haue this Scripture alway sounding in their eares Of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue an account thereof at the day of Iudgement The consideration of this last day made Ierome afraid to offend Whether Ierom. I eate or drinke saith hee or whatsoeuer I doe else mee thinkes I heare this saying sounding in mine eares Arise ye dead and come to iudgement The which when I consider it makes mee quake and shake and not dare to commit sin which otherwise I should haue committed O that men would remember their end then they should neuer offend O that men would alwayes set before their eyes the quatuor nouissima The day of death the day of iudgement the ioyes of heauen and the torments of hell then would not men liue so loosely but they would with all diligence worke out their saluation with feare and trembling the which care of godlinesse the Lord grant to all men Thus much shall suffice for this first part of this Scripture namely for the parties that shall giue an account who they be namely all men whatsoeuer But I say vnto you that of euery idle word that men shall speake they c. 2 Of what things wee must giue an The second part account There must an account be made of many yea of things innumerable but especially of these foure 1 Of the thoughts of our hearts according to that of Salomon There Wisd 1. 9. shall inquisition bee made for the thoughts of the vngodly there shall not a wicked thought passe in iudgement If Adam had committed but one disobedient thought in heart against Almighty God with full consent of will to haue performed the same and though hee had not actually broken Gods Commandement it was necessary that the second Adam who is the raiser of our ruines the ransome of our offences and the restorer of life should come and suffer the tortures of hell as hee did or else wee with Adam had gone the high way to eternall misery No maruell therefore if our Sauiour Christ accounted him an adulterer that lusted after a woman saying Whosoeuer looketh on a woman to Mat. 5. ●8 lust after her hath committed adultery already in his heart It is the malicious nature of the Diuell as saith Bernard to intice men to mischiefe Daemonum est mala suggerere nostrum est Bernard non consentire ●● is the prop 〈…〉 of the Diuell to inti●● and to suggest men to euill and it is our parts not to consent to his inticem●nts but to resist them manfully according to that of P●●●● 1. Pet. ● ● Whom resist y 〈…〉 The diuel outwardly by the world and inwardly by the corruption of
bee in the world that will say the more it is to bee lamented I am young I will liue a while after my hearts desire and in my old age I will repent mee of my sinnes for God hath promised who will be as good as his word At what Eze. 18. 2● ●2 time soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinnes from the bottome of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance saith the Lord. And will pray to the Lord for forgiuenesse of their sinnes as Augustine Augustine said before his conuersion● Ignosce pater ignosce mihi at noli modò Forgiue mee my sinnes but not now let mee sinne in my youth and pardon me in mine age Thus they would desire to dye the death of the righteous but they would not liue the life of the righteous but let these gracelesse persons that thus defer repentance beware of two things 1 Let them beware of suddaine death let them take héed lest they be cut off in the middest of their sins as Iobs Children in the middest of their Iob 1. 18 banquetting and ryoting were suddainly slain by the fall of a house and as the Floud came vnlooked for and drowned the old world Liuie reporteth a fearefull example 〈…〉 of suddaine death saith hee There were two old men that frequented two Harlots and presently vpon the fact committed they both suddainely dyed the one was thrust thorow with a dagger the other dyed suddainly of an Apoplexy which is a disease ingendred of abundance of grosse humors which doe fill those vessels and receptories of the head from whence commeth feeling and mouing of the bodie as saith Galen and therefore 〈…〉 they that haue this disease are depriued of all sence feeling and moouing Let euery lusty Younke● and desperate russian set this fearefull example before his eyes Againe the young man dyeth as soone as the old the Lambs skin is brought to the Market as well as the old Crones true is the saying of Augustine Vita dum crescit decrescit vita Augustine mortalis mors vitalis id est Life while it increaseth decreaseth life is dying and death is liuing ● Let all men that refuse the mercy of God and deferre their repentance know that repentance is not theirs at command but it is the great mercy of God and it is to bee ●●ared that they that haue refused it offered when they would haue it they shall go without according to that country Prouerbe If you will not when you may when you will you shall haue ●ay And it is commonly seene that Qu 〈…〉 a ●●●●s ita as a man liueth commonly hee dyeth Hee that will liue without repentance must look to dye without repentance 〈◊〉 God spared the Thiefe at the la●● gaspe yet let no man presume of that for that was a medicine against desperation and not a matter of imitation saith one God spared one that no man might despaire hee spared but one that no man might presume Let euery man therefore in the feare of God without all delay seeke for amendment of life let them as Gregory wisheth Plangere plangenda Bewayle their sinnes that ought to bee lamented and as they haue giuen Rom. 6. 13 their members as weapons of vnrighteousnesse to iniquitie so let them now giue them as weapons of righteousnesse to holinesse Repent deare brethren betimes Vi●e Deo gratus toti mundo tumulatus Poet. Crimine mūdatus semper transire paratus That is Liue vnto God a thankefull wight And to the world dye Cleanse thy selfe from wickednesse Alwayes ready hence to flye Play the wise Steward lay vp treasures in heauen for thy soule imitate the Pismire which gathers in Summer whereby shee may liue in Winter Damascene reporteth an excellent Damascene History touching this purpose saith he There was a country where they chose their King of the poorest and basest sort of the people and vpon any dislikement taken they would depose him from his Throne and exile him into an Iland where hee should bee sta●ued to death Now one wise fellow considering hereof sent money before into that Iland into which hee should be banished and when he was banished he was receiued into the Iland with great triumph So against thou be banished by death from this world without penny or farthing for naked thou camest and naked thou must goe thou must prouide w●●le thou art in this life whereby thou mayst liue in Heauen hereafter Let nothing therefore make thée 〈…〉 erre thy amendment but whiles● Christ calleth thee runne vnto him Put on Ieromes resolution who said If my Mother were hanging Ierome about my necke if my brethren were on euery side howling and crying and if my Father were on his bare knees kneeling before mee to detaine mee in their wicked and sinfull course of life what would I doe I would shake off my Mother to the ground I would despise and hate all my kindred and kins-folkes and I would tread and trample my Father vnder my feete thereby to flye to CHRIST when hee calleth mee So shouldest thou resolue the amendment of life The Lord of heauen for his swéet Sonne Christ Iesus his sake grant to thée deare Reader and mee to both of vs his holy Spirit that wee may stand vnblameable before the Iudge at that great and generall day that we being ●l●athed with the long white robes of righteousnesse may bee in the number of those to whom it shall be said then Come yee blessed Children of my Father inherit the Kingdome which was prepared for you from the beginning of the world Grant this deare Father for thy deare Sonnes sake Christ Iesus our only Lord and Sauiour to whom with thee and the holy Spirit wee ascribe all Power Glory and Dominion and sing Halleluiah to thee O blessed Trinity for euer and euer Amen A True and Comfortable Exposition of the Lords PRAYER FOrasmuch as Prayer to the Soule is as necessarie as the ●eele to the Ship the Foundation to the House the moisture to the Tree and the sinewes and ioints to the body and forasmuch also as wee can haue neither grace to beleeue nor grace to obey without feruent and faithfull prayer I haue thought good as briefly as I can for the helping of the Ignorant in the performance of this Christian duety to expound the Prayer of our Lord being the perfect ground of all our prayers that so we praying in wisedome may pray with comfort for alacke thousands it is to be feared that haue this prayer Ad vnguem at their fingers ends are altogether ignorant of the worthy contents of the same Concerning which prayer I obserue these foure things First the occasion hereof and that ● was vpon the complaint and suite of the Disciples who being weake in this gift entreated Christs help saying Master teach vs to pray as Iohn Luk. ●● ● ● also taught his Disciples And hee said
GREENVVOODS VVORKES Contayned IN Fiue SEVERAL TRACTATES 1. Of the Day of Iudgement 2. Of the Lords Prayer 3. Of the Race to Saluation 4. Of the Torment of Tophet 5. Of the Baptisme of Christ The ninth Impression corrected and amended London printed for Henry Bell and are to be sold by Iohn Clarke at his Shop vnder S. Peters Church in Corn-hill 1620. A TREATISE Of the GREAT GENERAL Day of IVDGEMENT Necessary for euery Christian that wisheth good successe to his soule at that Great and Terrible day The ninth Impression corrected and amended MATH 12. 36. But I say vnto you that of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue an account thereof at the day of Iudgement London printed for Henry Bell and are to be sold by Iohn Clarke at his Shop vnder S. Peters Church in Corn-hill 1620. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVL AND my very good friends Sr. LESTRAVNGE MORDAVNT of Massingham Hall in the County of Norfolke Knight Baronet And to the Vertuous LADY the LADY FRAVNCIS MORDAVNT his louing Bedfellow Eternall wel-fare and euerlasting happinesse in Christ Iesus our Lord and Sauiour BEing earnestly requested and often intreated Right Worshipfull by many of my good friends to put in print this small Treatise of the Generall day of Doome which I lately preached and in publike place deliuered I haue being ouercome with their perswasions condescended to their earnest demaund although very vnapt and exceedingly vnworthy for the penning of so worthy a matter Wherfore I haue made choyse crauing pardon for my presumption herein of your wel-disposed Worships at this time being the Alpha of my tender and slender indeuours to sound in your sacred eares this last and generall Trumpe and to Dedicate to your Worships the same both in regard of the demonstration of my true vnfeined and lasting thankfulnesse to your benigne Worships for sayth Seneca Beneficium hominem gratum semper delectat ingratum semel id est A thankefull man will alwayes remember a benefite but an vnthankefull person will soone forget it for your extraordinary kindnesse bestowed vpon mee Absque vllo commerito without any desert in the World as also in regard of the great affection good deuotion and thrice welcome entertainment you beare to Diuine and Spirituall Tractates which appertaine to the euerlasting blisse of the Soule accounting them blessed which bring glad tidings of saluation I desire therefore idque more humillimo in most submissiue manner this one thing at your Worships hands that you would pardoning my boldnesse vouchsafe aequi bonique consulere to take in good worth this simple and slender gift Which thing if your Worships shal vouch safe to doe it shall not onely bee an incouragement to my future proceedings but also it shall bee Vinculum indissolubile an inuincible bond to tye mee in all duety and in all loue to your Worships Dum memor ipse mei dum spiritus hos regit artus so long as life shall last Thus humbly taking my leaue of your good Worships nothing doubting of the goodnesse of your natures in the acceptance of these my first presented fruits I commit you with yours to the safe protection of the Almighty alwayes begging before the Throne of his most Glorious Maiesty that he would in this life infuse his Holy Spirit with all his Graces into your hearts aboundantly and in the World to come crowne you with the Crowne of immortall Glory And that for CHRIST IESVS his sake our LORD and onely SAVIOVR Amen From Hempsted in Essex Ian. 10. 1620. Your Worships in all duety for euer to command HENRY GREENWOOD To the Reader GEntle Reader if in these following Tractates the Quotations of Latine other tongues do offend thee let them bee vnto thee as Country Stiles stepping ouer them thou losest not thy way by them for their Expositions follow them A Treatise of the Great and Generall Day of Iudgement necessary for euery Christian that wisheth good successe to his soule at that Great and Terrible day MATH 12. 36. But I say vnto you that of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue an account thereof at the day of Iudgement MAn in regard of the corruption of his Nature through the fall of his great Grand-father Adam who was the foyle of Man-kind the Parent of sinne and the author of death to all his posterity for asmuch as wee were all in ●umbi● Adami in his loines as hee is subiect to all sinnes whatsoeuer so is hee specially addicted to the sinne of security and carelesnesse Therefore as Adam sléeping securely in his transgression and hiding himselfe from the presence of the Lord behinde the bush had great need of that Watch-bel from God to rouze him from the sleepe of sinne and call him againe vnto God Adam vbies Adam where art thou So as Gen. 3. 9. necessary for euery sinfull Adamite to raise him from the sleepe of sinne wherein he was borne is this notable Memento this worthy rehearsall of the great and terrible day of Doome But I say vnto you c. Which words of our Sauiour Christ spoken to the Scribes and Pharises who would not beléeue that he wrought these miracles by the powerfull Spirit of God but slanderously and contumeliously Mat. 12. 24 told him to his face that he did cast out diuels through Beelzebubs name are as much in effect as if hee had said on this manner If account must be rendred at the day of Iudgement of euery idle word that men shall speake then much more of blasphemous words But I say vnto you that of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue account thereof at the generall day of Iudgement Ergo much more of blasphemous words as yours are in saying that I cast out diuels through the name of Beelzebub So that these words of our Sauior are nothing else but a true proposition and sound argument drawne a minore ad mai●s whereby Christ doth proue the greatnesse of punishment that should befall the blasphemous Pharises in regard of the greatnesse of their sinne In which portion of Scripture foure things necessarily must be considered 1. The persons that must giue an account who they be 2. Of what things these persons must giue an account 3. To whom this account must be giuen 4. When this account must bée giuen 1 The persons that must giue an The first part account they are expressed in this text in generall to be men That men shall speake Men yea all men must giue an account as wee may read in the Epistle of S. Paul to the Corinthians We must all appeare before the Tribunall ● Cor. 5. 10. seat of Christ that euery man may receiue according to his workes All men none excepted of euery age of euery sexe and of euery Nation rich and poore Princes common people noble and ignoble all that haue béene from the beginning of the world and shall be to the end of the
same shall appeare before Christes Iudgement seate and giue an account euery one for himselfe to God For It is appointed Heb. 9. 27. vnto men once to dye and after that commeth Iudgement As it is therefore most sure that all men must dye so is it as sure that all men must come to Iudgement This is the seuenth article of our Article 7. faith to beléeue that Christ shall come from heauen to iudge the quicke and the dead by the dead all those are to be vnderstood that shall be found dead at the second comming of Christ by the quicke all those are to bee vnderstood that shall be found liuing at his second comming Augustine in his Augustine Enchiridion to Laurentius Chap. 55 saith that this Article may bee expounded two wayes either by the dean saith hee may bee meant those that shall bee found corporally dead and by the quicke those that shall bee found corporally liuing at Christs comming or saith he by the dead may be meant those that be dead in sinne According to that in the Gospell of S. Mathew Let the dead bury their dead Mat. 8. 22. And by the quicke those that be dead to sinne and liuing to faith according to that of the Prophet Abac●k Hab. ● 4. The Iust shall liue by faith But this exposition is not agreeable to the simplicitie of the Creede Yet notwithstanding true it is that both the godly and the wicked shall come to iudgement for by the power of Christ all men shall bee raised vp The holy Angels with the great sound of a trumpet 〈◊〉 24. 31 shall bee sent forth into all the world and they shall gather together the Elect from the foure quarters of the earth from one end of the heauen to the other Then shall Christ separate the Mat. 13. 4● Elect from the Reprobates the Wheat from the Tares the Corne from the Chaste the Lambs from the Goats the Iust from the Vniust So that you see that the godly and the wicked yea all men whatsoeuer shall appeare before Christs tribunall 〈◊〉 and giue an account of themselues and for themselues to the terrible Iudge Obiect Ob. Some notwithstanding may obiect against this doctrine deliuered and say as it is in Iohn That he that Ioh. ● 18. beleeue him Christ shall not bee iudged or shall not come into iudgement and so by consequence all men shall not be iudged Answ To which I answere that An●… Iudgement in that place of Iohn as in many other places of sacred Scriptures is taken for condemnation in which sence true it is that he that beleeueth in Christ Iesus he that is ingranted into Christ by a true and liuely faith hee that is flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone one with Christ and Christ with him by the spirituall coniunction of the Church with Christ this party shall not come into iudgement s●il condemnationis that is of condemnation in iudgement he shall not be confounded condemned or ouerthrowne but he shall come in iudicium absolutionis that is into the iudgement of absolution In iudgement hee shall stand out hauing on the white robe of Christs righteousnes and being couered with the wedding garment of Regeneration The truth of which doctrine the preacher affirmeth saying God will iudge Eccl. ● 17. he Iust and the vniust the Iust vnto saluation and the vniust to damnation Seeing then that all must bee brought to iudgement let no man thinke with himselfe that it may be possible for him to escape this dreadfull day whither shal he ●lye from the presence of the Lord If he ascendeth Psal 139. ● 8 9. vp to heauen God is there if hee goe downe to hell God is there also if hee take the wings of the morning and fly to the vttermost parts of the Sea God will finde him out there also For God is euery where hee is in heauen by his glory he is vpon the earth by his mercy he is in hell by his iustice God is 〈◊〉 nusquam hee is euery where by his power and wisedome but no where in respect of circumscription of place beeing a Spirit In earthly and terrestriall Courts a man may haue his Proctor but then we must volentes nolentes whether we will or no personally appeare and pleade for our selues In terrestrial Courts bribes many times blind the eyes of the wise and for a little greasing the fist of the Magistrate many times small faults nay by your leaue great and scandalous crimes may bee winked at but at this great Court of Heauen the Iudge will not be partiall to any For Rom ● ●1 God hath no respect of persons Hee will execute iust iudgement vpon all men as the Psalmographer speaketh With righteousnesse will he iudge the Psal 58. 9. world and the people with equitie Bribes Friends intreaties howlings cryes lamentations nothing will then preuaile but a pure heart and a spirit vpright yea the damned in hell confesse the same Quid profu●● nobis superbia quid di●it●arum coput What hath pride profited vs or what hath the pompe of riches done vs good Alas these cannot saue our soules Let the Atheist therefore mocke God neuer so blasphemously let the Sadduce bragge of no Resurrection no Angell no Spirit neuer so Schismatically let the Epicure sing that cursed Epitaph of Sardanapalus neuer so beastly ●de bibe ●ude charum praesentibus exple delicijs animum post mortem nulla voluptas Eat drinke play be merry liue in all kinde of pleasure for after death there is no pleasure Yet notwithstanding let all these miserable wretches know that there will come a day and that a dismall day wherein they shall giue an account of euery idle word Alas lamentable world that men should thus murther their deerest darlings I meane their Soules which Christ hath holden so deare that men should with Esau sell their birth 〈◊〉 and heritage of heauen for a m●●●e of pot●age of worldly pleasure that men should delight in wallowing with the 2. Pet. 2. 2● Sow in the mire of sinne and with the dogge in swallowing the vo●i● of iniquitie and so purchase to their Soules and bodies euerlasting torment in the lake vnquenchable wheras they should aboue all things seeke the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof that they might haue heauenly mansions at the great day of account Let euery Christian therefore bewayle the great wickednesse of this world and lament the soule iniquitie of these dayes lest it be said of vs as of the carelesse and gracelesse Christian Cadit Asina est qui subleuet per●●● anima non est qui reco●it●t If an Asse falleth vnder his burthen there be some that will diligently helpe it vp againe but if a Soule perish no man regardeth it Men are like the Horse Asse and Mule that haue no vnderstanding the more is the good mans griefe Dauid Psal 11● 1 〈…〉 his eyes g●shed
put in his owne power yea Christ him selfe knoweth not of this day But of that day and home saith Marke Marke 13. knoweth no man no not the Angels which are in heauen neither the bonne himselfe ●a●e t●● Father id est Christ according to his humane Nature knoweth not of i● but according to his Diuine Nature he knoweth of it as well as God the Father for he is co-equall with God the Father in Knowledge Wisedome and in all things whatsoeuer yea he knew of this day before the foundation of the world was laid yea Hee himselfe shall sit Iudge at that day God will not haue vs know of this day when it shall be for these three causes 1 To proue and try our patience faith and other vertues to see whether we will put our whole trust and affiance in him although wee know not the time of our dissolution 2 To bridle our curiosity and p●●nish inquisition after such too high matters Quae supra nos nihil ad no● Aristotle That which is aboue our capacity we ought not to meddle withall 3 To keep vs in continual watchfulnesse for if we knew certainly the day of death and iudgement surely it would be a great and forcible motiue to draw vs to a loose negligent and secure kind of life Watch therefore Ma●●4 42 saith the Euangelist because yee know not when your Master will come For these thrée causes the Lord will not haue vs know of the time of iudgement Although my beloued in Christ we know not the certainty of the time of this day yet neuerthelesse wee must know that this great and generall day cannot be farre off both according to the Prophesies of holy fathers as also to the truth of holy Scriptures Augustine in his booke vpon Genesis 〈…〉 against the Manichees saith that the world should last six ages the first from Adam to Noah the second from Noah to Abraham the third from Abraham to Dauid the fourth from Dauid to the transmigration of Babylon the fifth from the transmigration of Babylon to the comming of Christ in the flesh the sixth from the comming of Christ in the flesh to his comming againe to iudgement So that according to his Prophesie wee 〈…〉 in the last age which last age is called of Iohn H●ra extrema or hora 〈…〉 nouissima the last houre But how long this last houre doth last he that is Alpha and Omega the First the Last the euerlasting God alone doth know The Hebrewes they boast of the Prophesie of Eliah a great man in Eliah those dayes hee prophesied that the world should last 6000. yeers 2000. before the Law 2000. vnder the Law and 2000. from Christ to Christ If this his prophesie holds true the world cannot last 400. yeares for since Christ his comming in the flesh it was 1619. at Christs-tide last past according to the computation of the Church from time to time But leauing men and comming to the Scriptures which cannot erre for Humanum est errare Man may yea and doe many times erre Saint Paul saith to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 20. 11. We are they vpon whom the ends of the world are come If therefore the ends of the world were come vpon those that liued aboue 1564. yeeres agoe then surely Doomes day cannot now possibly be farre off Iames also saith Behold the iudge Iam. 5. 9. standeth before the dore Iohn Baptist preached repentance Mat. 3 2 to the Iewes saying Repent for the Kingdome of Heauen is at hand So that by these places of Scripture it is euident that the generall day of Iudgement is at hand as also by the signes tokens which should goe before this day immediately of which many yea almost all are already fulfilled Moreouer wee must deare brethren know that there is a twofold iudgement the one called a particular iudgement the other called a generall iudgement 1 The particular iudgement is ● 〈…〉 2● exercised and executed vpon euery man imediatly after his death which is S● regatio animae à corpore A separation of the soule from the body Of this particular iudgement we may reade in the Epistle to the Hebrewes It is appointed vnto men that 〈…〉 they shal once die and after that commeth Iudgement And though the generall iudgement cōmeth not these 4000. yeers yet particular iudgment commeth at the day of our death and look as we at the day of our death shal be found so shall we bee iudged and as we then shall be iudged so shall we be iudged at the generall iudgement 2 The general iudgement of which this Scripture speaketh is exercised executed vpon all men together by Christ who shall by his power raise all those vp againe that haue bin dead from the beginning of the world to that time and they shall be presented all together being againe vnited to their soules before Christs Tribunall seat who shall come downe in a Cloud from heauen in great Maiesty and Glory with thousands of blessed Angels attending vpon him and hee shal giue sentence vpon al in general the wicked shall bee cast into euerlasting fire and the godly he shall carry vp with him into Coelum Empir●um the third and highest heauen where hee now in body reigneth and remaineth there to reape ioyes vnspeakable for euermore But some man may obiect and lay Ob. Why I pray you shall there bee a generall iudgement when as all are iudged in the particular iudgement what shall there be two iudgements executed There shall notwithstanding the A●● particular be a generall iudgement and that for three causes 1 Because in the particular iudgement the Soule of man is iudged only but then both Soule body and shal be iudged 2 In the particular iudgement the Soule only is either rewarded or punished but then both Soule and body either shall be rewarded with ioyes or punished with torments 3 There shall be a generall iudgement to declare to all the world assembled then together the iust iudgement of God that he hath iustly saued the godly and iustly condemned the wicked yea the very wicked themselues shall confesse no lesse By reason of this generall iudgement some light-braind Heretikes there be that say that there is no particular iudgement at all and that the Soule immediately after death is not iudged for whereas it is said Hodie mecum ●ris in Paradiso To day thou Luk. ●3 4● shalt be with me in Paradise the spéech of our Sauiour to the thiefe they take that word bodie id est to day for 1000 yeers and bring for proofe hereof the place of the Psalm A thousand yeeres Psal 90. 4. in thy sight are as yesterday But to answer them this place of Scripture is not so to be vnderstood as that a thousand yéeres should be taken for a day or a day for a thousand yeeres for he saith not a thousand yerees are a day but a thousand
God Thirdly because God doth there raigne perfectly and to him there is done absolute obedience Fourthly because from thence hee manifesteth himselfe to vs by Reuelations Oracles Visions and the like and from thence hee gouerneth the world sending light heate raine and such like So that in that he is said to bee in Note Heauen his Maiestie doth not onely appeare but also his Dominion and Power to which all things in heauen and earth are subiect as his Goodnes in the word Father so his power in these words in heauen are manifested to vs. Vses This therefore first teacheth vs that wee must humble our selues in ● our prayers before the great God of heauen and earth who is able to damne both body and soule in hell fire Secondly wee must come before Him with all possible reuerence because Hee is not an ignoble father or earthly but an heauenly Father and a glorious Maiestie Thirdly wee must mount vp our hearts to heauen when wee pray and there be present with God Fourthly wee must pray especially for Heauenly things we must look for all good things for body and soule from thence and our conuersations must likewise be holy and heauenly Thus much of the second part of this Preface The second part of this Prayer are The secōd part the Petitions themselues in number sixe The first thrée concerne Gods glory The first Petition the latter three our owne good The first Petition Hallowed bee thy Name This is put in the first place to Note shew that Gods glory is to bee preferred aboue all things euen aboue the care of our owne soules saluation By hallowed or sanctified is not Hallowed meant that we should adde holinesse to God but to acknowledge Gods Maiesty holy and euery way excellent as it is the like phrase is vsed in the Gospell of Luke Wisedome is iustified Luk. 7. 35. of her Children That is acknowledged and declared to be iust By the name of God is not heere Name meant his Commandements as Leu. 22. 32. Neither the authority of God as Math. 28. 19. But by the name of God is vnderstood the Essence of God as 1. Kin. 5. 5. and Psa 116. 13. and his Attributes by which his Maiesty is made knowne in some measure to vs as his Wisedome Power Holinesse Mercy Iustice c. So that in this Petition we desire these three things First that we may bee enlightned to know the Maiesty of God aright Secondly that wee may confesse and acknowledge the Lord to be such a one as the Scriptures haue recorded of him concerning his Greatnes Worthinesse and Attributes that he is a spirituall substance most Wise most Holy Eternall Infinite that he is Great without quantity Sweet without quality Euerlasting without time in his Greatnesse Infinite in his Power Omnipotent in his Wisedome inestimable in his Iudgements terrible Inuisible yet séeing all things Immutable yet changing all things Immoueable yet mouing all things Thirdly that wee may giue vnto ● him his due honour and beare his Image of holinesse before the world in the heart by louing him and beléeuing in him in the tongue by reuerent speaking of him by praying to him and praysing him in the whole man by obeying him and holily liuing to him These therefore faile in the performance of this first Petition First all Atheists that acknowledge no God Secondly all Heathen Idolaters ● and ignorant persons that worship not God aright Thirdly all Infidels that depend not vpon his al-commanding Power and might Fourthly all proud personal that séeke not Gods glory but their owne Fiftly all swearers and all that vnreuerently take the name of this great IEHOVAH in their mouths Sixtly all hard hearts that will neither be allured by his mercies nor moued by his iudgements Seuenthly all vnthankfull wretches for the benefits continually receiued from him Eightly all that are negligent in offering vp the Spirituall sacrifice of prayer and call not vpon his Name Ninthly all prophane people and vngodly liuers whatsoeuer as Adulterers Drunkards Lyers c. Thus much concerning the first Petition The second Petition Thy Kingdome The secōd Petition Thy come This word Thy sheweth that there is a double Kingdome First the Kingdome of God Secondly the kingdome of Satan called the kingdome of darknesse Col. 1. 13. Wee pray therefore that sinne may not reigne in our mortall bodies that wee may not bee bond-slaues to the prince of the ayre but that the Lord would admit vs into his Kingdome and rule and reigne ouer vs by his holy Word and Spirit This word Kingdome is taken Kingdom many wayes in the Scriptures First it is taken for the gouernment of the whole world as Psalme 145. 13. Thy Kingdome is an euerlasting Kingdome and thy Dominion endureth throughout all ages Secondly it is taken for that gouernment whereby the Lord ruleth and reigneth in the hearts of the Elect in this World by his Word and Spirit which is called the Kingdome of Grace The Kingdom of God is within vs Luke 17. 21. Thirdly it is taken for that gouernment whereby hee ruleth in heauen most perfectly in the Saints and Angels and this is called the Kingdom of Glory In this Kingdome the Elect shall reigne with Christ for euer Psal 94. 14. In this Petition the first acceptance is not to be vnderstood but the second of Grace and the third of Glory So that in this Petition we desire these thrée things First that the Lord would build in vs the Kingdom of Grace and rule in our hearts by his Word and Spirit sanctifying our spirits to all obedience and godlinesse Secondly that this Kingdome of Grace may bee increased in vs dayly that wee may grow Ephes 4. 15. in grace and godlinesse from the measure of the gift of Christ Eph. 4. 7. to the measure of the age of the fulnesse of Christ Ephes 4. 13. Thirdly that our hearts may bee inflamed to long for and desire the Kingdome of Glory that sinne and all wickednesse confounded we may perfectly glorifie our heauenly Creator as Paul prayed Phil. 1. 23. I desire to bee dissolued and bee with Christ and as the Saints of God Romans 8. 23. Wee that haue receiued the first fruites of the Spirit euen wee doe sigh and mourne waiting for the Adoption euen the Redemption of our body These therefore faile in the performance of the second Petition First they that suffer sin to raigne in their mortall members and yeeld obedience therevnto Secondly they that quench the Spirit of God and will not be ruled by the good motions and holy directions of the same Thirdly they that make no conscience of their wayes that contemne the counsell and hearing of the word and pray not heartily for the frée passage and flourishing estate of the same Fourthly they that labour not for perfection in grace Fiftly they that are not prepared for the comming of CHRIST neither wish nor long for
cannot be recouered time passed can not be recalled Ecc● nunc tempus acceptum sayth ● Cor. 6. 2. the Apostle Behold now the accepted time behold now the day of saluation This life is the time wherein our election must be made sure and sealed vp to our spirits by the infallible testimony of the good spirit of GOD This life is the time wherein enerman in his calling must worke out his saluation with feare and trembling This life is the time wherein wee must bee admitted into the kingdome of Grace if euer wee looke to be admitted into the Kingdome of Glory In this life must wee be matriculated into the mysticall body of the Church if euer we will look to sit at the Bridegroomes Table in Heauen In this life must we haue heauen in inchoation if after this life wee will haue i● in perfection The Husband-man will in no wise slacke his opportunity and omit his time in tilling and sowing his ground that in Summer he may haue the better croppe The Trades-man will not misse his Fayres Markets that hee may increase his stocke the more in those his painefull affayres The Storke in the Ayre the Turtle the Ie●em 3. ● Cra●e and the Swallow obserue their times as sayth the Prophet the little silly creature the Ant by name ●●ou 6● gathereth in Summer whereby shee may liue in Winter Euen so should euery Christian take his time and treasure vp with the painefull Bee the hony of good works in the hiue o● his hart in this life that he may will the faithfull seruant be welcommed into his Masters ioy in the life to come But alas alas men are so assotted with blindnesse and ignorance that they may be sent to the very senslesse creatures for wisedome in this point Aske the beasts and they shall Iob. 12. 7 8 teach thee and the fowles of heauen and they shall tell thee saith the iust man Iob or speake to the earth and it shall shew thee or the fishes of th● sea and they shall declare vnto thee Esays Oxe knoweth his Masters stall Esay 1. 3. ● and his Asse his Masters crib but miserable man hath not knowne his Maker O let vs not be worse then Horse Asse and Mule that haue no vnderstanding but let vs in the feare of God know our times and seasons Let vs seeke the Lord while he may be Esay 5●● found and call vppon him while he is neere Let vs in no wise post off our amendment from day to day Let vs ●iue no longer in carelesse security like sensuall bruitish and hellish Epicures that neither beléeue nor yet respect the iudgement to come that ●ing that cursed Epitaph of Sardanapalus ●●●e bibe lude charum praesentibus exple Poet. Deli●●●s animum post mortem nulla voluptas Id est Eate drinke play and be merry li●e in all kinde of pleasure for after d●ath there is no pleasure That say with the old man in the Poet Because my dayes are shor● which I haue heere to liue To women wine and pleasant sport I meane my selfe to giue Let vs not be like those foolish Virgins that knocked at the gates of heauen too late when the doores were shut against them For after this life there shall be no place for pardon no●●●●e for Repentance therefore in time looke to the wel-fare of thy deere Soule that thy Soule may fare well not for a time but for euer One depth saith the Psalmist calleth Psal ●●● for another The depth of our misery crieth for the depth of Gods mercy let vs therefore be as swift in running the race of Christianity as ou● liues are swift to leaue vs let vs b● as swift to kill sinne in vs as sinne is to kill vs. O beloued let vs b●e as swift to pull out the sting of the Scorpion which is sinne as he is with his sting swift and ready to st●bbe ●s a● the heart and wound our soules incurably that when death ●he end of our Race shall come which is m●s● certaine and yet his time most vncertaine it may be vnto ●● ●● it is to all the Saints of God Ia●●a 〈…〉 〈…〉 um ref●i●er●● ●●●l● ascensi●●is in c●lum id est The ga●●●● life the end of miseries the beg 〈…〉 of euerlasting refreshing and the 〈…〉 r of ascension to the highest a●● happiest heauens So runne that ye may obtaine Text. Secondly Qualiter currendum id est How must we runne To obtaine So runne If wee will runne to obtaine wee must runne these three wayes First Directè recta via the right way Secondly Celeriter seu festinanter Swiftly or speedily Thirdly Perseueranter Perseuerantly holding out to the end First therefore that wee may obtaine we must run directly the right way that leadeth to life Those that run in a race will not make the furthest way about the néerest ●ay home as wee say but they will take the shortest cut that may be and run the directe●t way that can be that they may the rather obtaine So should wee run in the right way that leadeth to life if wee will obtaine life euerlasting 〈…〉 speaking of mans creation 〈…〉 s●●th that H●mo inced● erectus in coelum id est Man goeth right vplifting his eyes toward Heauen Os homini sublime dedit coelumque tueri Ovid. iussit Id est God gaue man a lofty face a face to behold the heauens whereas other creatures fasten their eyes vpon the centre of the world from whence they came hanging down their heads to the earth like Bul rushes As man therefore was created pure and vp right in Soule and straight and right in body carrying his head toward heauen so must he run if euer he will obtaine heauen in the straight way and right path that leadeth to Heauen Many there are that séek the Lord and finde him not because they seek● amisse so many there are that runne yea all men liuing are runners y●● are they far from obtaining becaus● they run amisse There are foure sorts of groun● yet but one ●ructi●er●us there are foure wa●es in the world yet but ●●● and that a narrow one that leadeth to life Generally there are but these two the way of Godlinesse and the way of In●quity whereof the one in the Gospell of Mathew is called The broad way and th● other The straight and ●arrow gate yet S. Iohn considering the multiplicity of this dangerous Labyrinth doth cut out this ●road way into thrée maine heads into ●uxury Couetousnesse and Pride ● I●●●● ●6 saying Whatsoeuer is in the world is either the concupiscence of the flesh the concupiscence of the eye or the pride of life Haec tria pro trino numine mundus habet 〈…〉 Id est This is the trinity which the world doth worship These wayes are wide and large and whole multitudes walke in the same Magna ple●●●●d● hom●num sed magna solitudo bonorum id est There
they goe thorow some narrow cranny or other to loosen their skinnes and cast them within foure twenty houres So shouldest thou put off the old man Col. 3. 9. with all his workes And to doe this thou must goe Per strictam rimam poeniten●iae id est Thorow the narrow cranny and straight gate of amendment Meditate therefore with the Iust Psal 1. 2. man in the Law of God day and night Let the candle of faith burne cleere in the lampe of thy heart and nourish it with the oyle of loue and good works Walke not in the counsell of the wicked Psal ● ● stand not in the way of sinners ●it not in the ●ea●e of the scornefull but runne in the Race of 〈…〉 well that liuing well thou maist dye well and after death eternally spéede well obtaining that blessednesse Blessed Apoc. 13. 14. are they that dye in the Lord. So run tha● ye may obtaine Text. And that wee may run in the race of Godlinesse one Caueat is exceeding necessary namely that wee auoid wicked company which will draw away our hearts from this Race Celestiall Qui ●angit picem co●●quinabitur Eccles 13. ab ●a id est Hee that toucheth pitch shall bee defiled therewith Cum sancto san●●us eris cum peruerso peruerter●s id est With the holy thou shalt bee holy and with the ●●●ward thou shalt learne frowardnesse for birds of a feather will flye together It was not lawfull for a lew to conuerse with a S●●ari●ane if an Hebrew did ●a●e with an Egyptian it was counted an abomination so must we ●o●nt it abomination and hold it a point of reprobation to frequent the company of damned hel-hounds and hellish miscreants Let vs therefore flye all occasion and euery apparition of euill let vs delight in the company of those that ●eare the Lord and excell in vertue Well therefore saith Seneca Cum illis versare qui te meliorem S 〈…〉 sunt facturi vel quos meliores ●ffi●er● possis id est Keepe company with those that may make thee better or whom thou maist make better I command you therfore brethren 2. Thes 3. 6 as saith S. Paul in the name of our Lord IESVS CHRIST that ye withdraw your selues from euery brother that walketh inordinately and not after the instruction which yee receiued from me And to conclude this point I giue euery Christian this good counsell with good King Salomon My sonne if Pro. 1. 10 11 1● c sinners doe entice thee consent thou not If they say Come with vs wee will lay wait for bloud wee will swallow vp the Innocent wh●le like a graue wee s●●ll finde all precious ri●he● and ●ill ou● ho●●● wi●h ●poyl● 〈…〉 n thy lo● among ●s we will haue all ●ne pu●se My s●nne w●lke not thou in the way with them refrain● thy foot from their path for their feet runne to euill and make haste to shead Iob. ●9 23. 24. bloud O that these my words were written O that they were written in a booke O that they were written with an iron pen in Lead or in stone for euer O that they were ingrauen in brasse Table of euery young mans heart that so bad company may not be his destruction So run that ye may obtaine Text. Secondly if we will run to obtain we must run Celer●●er seu feslinanter swiftly and speedily Vita breuis vita longa saith S. Bernard Bernard si ●●s ●d metam peruenire incipe celeriter currere id est The liff of man is very short the way to heauen is very long if therefore thou wil● obtaine thou must run exceeding swiftly We sée that those that runne in an earthly race and that but for a mean reward how swiftly doe they straine themselues to runne according to that of the Poet Qui cupit optatā cursu contingere metam Poet. Multa tulit fecitque miser suda●it alsit Id est Hee that desireth first to touch the Marke taketh much paines sweateth abundantly and runneth exceeding swiftly Euen so should we that wee may obtaine an euerlasting reward in heauen runne in the path of Gods Commandements being shod with the shooes of the Gospel of peace like Roes excéeding swiftly The senselesse creatures are a 〈…〉 king-glasse to all Christians in 〈…〉 respect The Sunne as sayth the Psalmist Psal ● like a Gyant reioyceth to run his race that is valiantly and swiftly swift in his motion and speedy in his race for in the space of 24. houres hee compasseth the earth round about that nothing is hidden from him and passeth from the one end of heauen to the other that nothing is wanting in him So the Lord our God hath set euery man his task vpon earth which is To worke out his saluation wi●l feare and trembling A great worke a short time a long way from Egypt to 〈…〉 from the gates of hell to the doores of heauen therefore like Gyants we ●ad need to runne swiftly lest we come too late and bee shut out of heauen like the fiue foolish aforesayd Virgins As the Sun in the heauens is a looking glasse vnto vs in this regard so is also the Son of God Christ ●esus aboue the heauens to be imitated o● vs all in this point Omnis Christi actio 〈…〉 ●●str● deb●t esse instru●●io id est Euery action of Christ ought to be a matter of imitation to vs Christians As hee was I●mensus maiestate in 〈…〉 bilis ●●r 〈…〉 so was hee in 〈…〉 is celer●●●●● id est As hee was ●●●at in Maiestie incomparable in 〈…〉 o was ●e ●lso incomprehen●●●le ●● celeri●●e and swiftnesse Hee 〈…〉 w●ought the wo●ke● of him that ●ent 〈…〉 y without ●●y delay in the world This Bridegroome Christ Iesus ●●●n as the Su●●e went forth out of the Chamber of the highest Heauens from the bosome of the Father and from the inuisibility of the Diuinity and descended downe to the earth and became Man and was like vnto Man in all things sinne onely excepted and valiantly in the Wildernesse pitched a field against Satan that old Serpent and roaring Lyon and ouerthrew him in the Desart breaking his wyly head and ouercomming his chiefest power fulfilled the Law in euery point and tittle satisfied Gods Iustice for vs appeased his wrath against vs purchased celestiall mansions to vs by offering himselfe in Sacrifice to the Lord of H●sts vpon the Crosse at Gol●o●ha for the sinnes of the whole world by his death and passion by vanquishing hell by conquering death by his glorious resurrection and ascension and by sending of the Holy Ghost Hee Io● 16. 28. went from the ●ather and came into the world And in short time yea in the space of 33. yeeres wrought the redemption of all beleeuers And left this world and went againe to his Iob 1● 28. Father The Spouse of Christ considering her Husbands great velocity celeritie Can. 2.
tongue and beare much more malice in heart These cursed Hypocrites these dissembling Hel-hounds and these venemous Vipers are the very pictures of the Diuell and liuely representations of the old Serpent For as the Diuell lyeth coggeth counterfaiteth and dissembleth so doe these The subtill Serpent pretended great kindnesse to our first Parents counselling them to eate of the forbidden fruit that so they might see and be as gods but he intended their euerlasting destruction so these crafty Foxes séeme to be charitable Christians and to giue good counsel whersoeuer they become but yet they deuoure 〈…〉 Widdowes houses and that vnder colour of long prayers The subtill Serpent séemeth to be an Angell of light but yet he is a diuell of darknesse settered with the chaines of euerlasting darknesse So A 〈…〉 these Apes of the Diuell do beare an outward shew of holinesse and puri ty yet they are Wels without water and clouds carried about with euery tempest to whom the blacke darknesse 2. Pet. 2. 17 is referned for euer These Hypocriticall mock-gods may fitly be compared to Idols For as an Idoll hath an outward shape of 〈…〉 in 〈…〉 a liuing man but yet hath no life at all within So Hypocrites séeme to liue by the life of grace yet are they dead in sinne and rotted in corruption They are new vpstart Gyants hauing two faces vnder one hood they come neere vnto God with their 〈…〉 ●9 ●3 mouthes and honour the Lord with their lips but their hearts are farre remoued from him Deum laudant in t●mpa●o se● non in choro i● They praise the Lord in the Tabor but not in the dance they serue God in shew but not in truth they beare with the Figg●●trée great store of leaues but no fruit at all But alas alas these Hypocrites that thus deceiue thēselues hauing their reward on earth which they through vaine glory gréedily look for at the hands of men shall neuer obtaine a Crowne of righteousnesse being altogether vnrighteous but they shall haue their portion with Hypocrites where shall be weeping wayling 〈…〉 ●5 ●5 and gnashing of teeth For the Lord abhorreth all hollow hearts and double tongues all outward odlations and burnt sacrifices all outward shew and hypocriticall worship he is a Spirit and he will sp●e all such out of his mouth as worship him not in Spirit and Truth Simul●ta san●litas duplex iniquitas i. Counterfait godlinesse is so farre from holinesse a● it is double vngodlinesse I say therefore vnto thée with Saint Chrysostome Aut esto quod appares aut appar● 〈…〉 〈…〉 id est Either be as thou seem●st or seem as thou art It is not séeming but being that shall goe for pay Non audi●o●●s s●d f●●●or●s legis iustisic ibutur id est No● the hearers but the doers of the ●●●● shall be iustified N●● eandem pr●●i●●ntes sed eidem obedientes glorifi●●●untur id est Not professors but performers shall be glorified Woe therefore to all hypocriticall Mock-gods that run not in the Race of Christianity as they boast themselues by profession they shall roare at the gates of heauen and say Lord Lord haue wee not by thy name prophecied and by thy name cast out diuels and by thy Name done many good workes haue wee not professed thy Gospell and borne the name of thine But because they did not the will of our heauenly Father our Sauiour shal send them packing to hell with a Nescio vos professing on this manner vnto them I neuer knew Mat. 7. 22. 23. Mat. 23. 23 you depart from me yee workers of iniquity O yee viperous Serpents O ●ee generation of Vipers how shall ye escape the iudgement of hell Let euery Christian therefore beware of the leauen of the Pharises which is Hypocrisie Beware of false Prophets which come vnto you in ●●● 〈…〉 Sheeps cloathing but inwardly are rauening Wolues yee shall know them by their fruits doe men gather grapes of thornes or figges of thistles Walke wisely towards them that are Col. 4. 5. without redeeming the time for the dayes are euill That you may therefore preuent the damned traditions of this diuelish brood I say vnto you as our Sauior said vnto his Apostles a little before his Passion Behold I haue told you Mat. 24. 25 before Let euery Christian therefore auoiding all counterfait and hypocriticall profession runne in the Race of godlinesse seruing the Lord with all his heart with all his Soule with all his strength in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of his life God calleth for our hearts My sonne giue me thy heart The Lord Pro. 23. ●● August●ne as saith S. Augustine Quia totum fecit totum exigit id est Because hee made all hee will haue all not a piece of the heart nor a roome in thy heart but the whole heart for the Lord is a iealous God and as a iealous husband cannot indure that his wife should giue her hart or any part therof to any other man so the Lord cannot abide that wée should giue any part of our heart ●rom him He calleth not for a stony heart nor for a double heart but for a fleshy heart a heart purged by faith in CHRIST IESVS bathed in the bloud of the Lambe and throughly clensed by the fire of the Spirit not an old heart neither a corrupted heart but a new heart and a new Spirit for which the Prophet Dauid begged Create in Psal 51. 10 me a new heart O God and renew a right Spirit within me Let vs therefore I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God giue vp our bodies a liuing Sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God which is our reasonable seruing of God and let vs Rom. 12 1 2. not fashion our selues like to this world but let vs bee changed by the renewing of our minde In stead of dead beasts let vs giue vp our bodies which are liuely Sacrifices And in stead of the bloud of beasts which was but a shadow and pleased not God of it selfe let vs giue vp the acceptable sacrifice of the spirituall Man framed by faith to Godlinesse of life Let vs sanctifie the Lord 1 Pet. 3. 23. in our hearts who dayly calleth for our hearts let vs say with Dauid My Soule praise thou the Lord and all Psal 103. 1. that is within mee praise his holy name Let vs praise him in his Sanctuary and in the firmament of his power let vs praise him in his mighty acts and according to his excellent greatnesse let vs praise him in the sound of a Trumpet vpon the Violl and Harpe yea let euery thing that hath breath praise the Lord And that not onely in word and in tongue but in déede and in truth not in outward shew and profession only but in our pure lines and holy conuersations that so running in the Race of Godlinesse to the end of our liues we may be blessed for euer and
glorifying the Lord God by our holy conuersations in this world we may be eternally glorified of the Lord our God in the world to come So run that ye may obtaine Text. The last thing to bee obserued in this heauenly Race is Praemium promissum The promised reward to all those that runne lawfully so great a reward it is as should stirre vp euery Christian to run in the Race of Godlinesse If the King of his Princely bounty would offer 10000. pounds to him that should first come at a miles end would not thousands hazard their liues and aduenture a surfet willingly that they may obtaine the same But the Lord hath offered vs a Kingdome Yea it is the pleasure Luke 12. Heb. 13. 14 1. Pet. 1. 18. of our heauenly Father to giue vs a Kingdome an habitation not made with hands nor purchased with gold and siluer but with the bloud of the immaculate Lambe And shall not wée labour and straine our selues with might maine to run the race that is appointed for vs How wil men toile and moyle for a little trash How will men vse all their wits and bend all their studies to bee worldly rich Alas those are dung in respect of this reward shall we not therefore much more labour for the meat that shall neuer perish for this glorious reward that shall neuer be taken from vs The greatnesse of this reward is painted out vnto vs in the holy Scriptures by the diuersity greatnesse of the names thereof For first it is called by the name of Regnum coelorum i. The Kingdome of Heauen for there they enioy great liberty honor power pleasure glory and all good things whatsoeuer Secondly it is called by th● name of Regnum Dei Christi id est The Ephe. ● 21 Kingdome of God and of Christ because that Iesus Christ hauing ouer come death hell and damnation together with all the enemies that did oppose vs in the way to heauen doth rule there and gouerne his Church triumphant with heauenly peace and euerlasting tranquillity Thirdly it is called by the name of Paradisus id est Paradise in respect Luk● 23. of the aboundant plenty of all good and pleasant things which the Saints can either wish or possibly desire Fourthly it is called by the name of Caelum tertium id est the third heauen 2. Cor. 12. which is called Coelum Empyraeum i. igncum not in respect of fire but in respect of the glorious light that shineth therein For it is Situ altissimum quantitate maximum naturà purissimum luce plenissimum capacitate amplissimum id est High in situation great in quantity pure in nature full of light and exceeding large Able to receiue ten thousand times more persons thē there are drops of water in the sea or s●●d lying by the shore Fiftly it is called by the name of Sancla Ciuit●s an holy Citie built Apoc. 21. 10. with most precious pearles because the company that dwell therein are holy and pure shining in holinesse and glistring in purity as the portals of the burnish Sun Sixtly it is called by the name of Summa be ●titudo inestimable blessednesse Because the Saints inioy the full presence of the blessed Trinitie wherein true blisse consisteth Seuenthly it is called by the name of Vita aeterna Life euerlasting because there shall be no more death nor lamentation no more crying nor sorrow but the Saints shall enioy these blessed ioyes so ●ong as God shall be God which is for euerlasting This is the reward promised to all those that will runne in the race of Godlinesse holding out to the end A large reward and no man knoweth it but he that enioyeth it Adeò magna est quod nequit numerari adeò pretiosa quod n● qui● comparari adeò diutina quòd nequit terminari id est So great is this reward as it cannot bee numbred so precious as it cannot be valued so lasting as it is euerlasting it is great without quantity swéete without quality infinite without number euerlasting without end So great is this reward as neither ●e hath seene nor ea●e hath heard of 1. Cor ● he like neither can it bee expr●sted of 〈…〉 ●a●● of man Quod 〈…〉 saith S. Augustine Diligentibus se Augustine Deus side non capitur spe non attingitur charitate non comprehenditur desideria vota transgreditur adquiri potest aestimari non potest id est That which the Lord hath prepared for those that loue and feare his Name is not fully attained to by faith neither fully retained by hope neither fully contained by charity it farre surpasseth the desires of men Angels It may be in some measure bee obtained but valued it can neuer be Deus saith S. Bernard est mel Bernard in ore melos in aure iubilus in corde i. God is honie in the mouth melody in the eare ioy in the heart Ibi nihil in tus fastidiatur nihil foris quod appetatur ibi rex veritas lex charitas possessio aeternitas id est In heauen there is nothing that may seeme fulsome or loathsome out of Heauen there is nothing that may bee wished or desired for then were there no perfection in heauen for Persetium est cui nihil addi potest i. There is perfection where can bee no addition there the King is Verity the law Charity possession Eternitie Saint Augustine speaking of the ioyes of heauen saith thus Ibi laetitia sine Augustine tristitia locus sine dolore vita sine labore lux sine tonebris ibi i●uentus semper vigescit nunquam senescit ibi dolor nunquam sentitur nec gemitus vnquam auditur ibi tristitia nunquam videtur sed aeternum gaudium possidetur id est There is mirth without mone place without paine life without labour light with out darknesse there youth alwayes flourisheth and neuer decayeth there is no torment felt no howling heard no sorrow seene but possession of euerlasting ioyes Ibi est summa certa tranquillitas Augustine tranquilla foelicitas foelix aeternitas aeterna beatitudo beata Trinitas id est There is great tranquillity tranquill felicitie happy eternity euerlasting blessednesse and the blessed Trinitie O gaudium super gaudium vincens omne Augustine gaudium extra quod non est gaudium quando intrabo in te vt Deum meum videam qui habitat in te id est O ioy a boue all ioyes farre surpassing all ioyes without which there is no ioy When shall I enter into thee that I may see my God that dwelleth in thee This holy man Augustine considering the greatnesse of the ioyes of heauen sayth on this manner Faciliùs exponi Augustine potest quid non sit in coelo quàm quid sit in coelo id est A man may sooner tell what is not in Heauen then what is in Heauen for the ioyes